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Transcripts For CNNW Smerconish 20180804 22:00:00


Michael Smerconish tackles the American political and news stories of the week, offering only one kind of talking points: his own.
the times, by the way, standing by her hire saying they understood her twitter past and understand it for what it was. we had candid conversations with sarah as part of the thorough vetting process which included a review of her social media history. she understands this rhetoric is not acceptable at the times and we are confident she will be an important voice for the editorial board moving forward. interestingly, the fact that the times already knew about her tweets is significant due to another hire in february, quinn norton. when some of miss norton s old tweets surfaced which included racial slurs and an internet troll which works for a neo-nazi website she ended stepping down that same day. in that case, it had not been aware of her tweets before it hired her. we reached out to miss jeong, but we were told she was unavailable. go to smerconish.com and answer this survey question. should sarah jeong s twitter
history have precluded her hire by the new york times as board member. joining me now, rich lowery, does it matter if she was counter punching? usually when you re counterpunching you re counterpunching directly or replying directly to other people on twitter. we all get nasty tweets thrown at us all of the time, but most of us don t react to that with years long history of racist tweets which she did here, so i think that explanation is complete nonsense. i don t like the practice of rummaging back through people s twitter accounts and firing them on the basis of that, so i would probably still support her being at the times, but i think the explanation here is total nonsense. listen, i want to know the context for all of these controversial tweets. i went looking myself and found that ridiculous animated movie. we can put up just a still image that shows the animation and at
the top of that f the police. maybe it s intended as a joke in that instance. i notice that there were others, many more, in fact, one relative to ferguson which the context, katherine, can you put the ferguson up one as well? teaching moment music, maybe maybe the lesson of ferguson is f most police. that doesn t seem to be in response to some twitter troll. and the same with the other anti-white tweets. i don t know how the times can justify firing quinn norton when we look back at her tweets and she re-tweeted the n word and it was someone using the n word sat iricily, and it was enough for her to be ousted from the times, and i don t know how you stand by sarah jeong and fire quinn norton. it goes to the point that there s a rank hypocrisy here.
the new york times i don t think has a defensible standard because if sarah jeong had used the n word, it doesn t matter what it was, she can go on for years saying horrible things about white people and that s okay. look, i m a big fan of the times. i read it multiple times online every single day so i m bending over backwards to try to be fair. in the statement that they released i know that they say for a period of time she responded to that harassment by imfating the rhetoric of her harassers implying they were all tit for tat, but it doesn t seem that way for me. they re racist on their face and there are some people who make the argument that there is no such thing as racism against white people. that s completely ridiculous, and if you have an imus based on the color of their skin and it s mostly blame worthy and sarah
jeong should open up to it and at least give us an honest and full explanation or apology. are you going in the public do main that this should have precluded her hire. i think when you play this game, very often innocent people get shot down the way quinn norton was. we should draw a fine line and i don t think people should get fired from media organizations unless they re saying something when they re currently employed and twitter is a medium where the context are very important and people are trolling and very often tongue in cheek and often misunderstood and i would not preclude firing her from the times, but again, the times standard here is indefensible because it did not have that bright line. it fired kwen norton before firing her and if you were to fire two of them, sarah jeong or
quinn norton in terms of the merit of who they should have kept and clearly it was norton and clearly they re defending sarah jeong and threw quinn norton overboard. i thought through the business ramifications and the way it would impact their brand and play into the hands of those who denigrate the times which i disagree with. thanks for being here. thanks for having me. what are your thoughts? go to smerconish and i will read your responses throughout the course of the program. what have we got? here is a person who is so overtly biased and eshg mobilely disordered in her thinking that the only job the new york times should ever give her is selling papers on the street corner. i want to be fair and see the totality of the record and i can get a weak attempt at humor. watching that ridiculous animated film about big bald
raccoon. i mean, are you blanking me? maybe she watches it today, f the police and then the ferguson tweet and all of the others and i can t put those in context. i want to know what you think. go to my website it s smerconish.com. answer this question. should sarah jeong s twitter history have precluded her hire by the new york times as an editorial member? is the tsa under fire for the secret skies program surveilling ordinary americans hoping to find terrorists and is the idea behind it entirely wrong? info wars, provok tour alex jones trying to throw out a defamation action stands from his hands that the sandy hook massacre was a hoax. at issue, is he a journalist or pol emcyst.
this week a secret tsa program called quiet skies monitoring ordinary u.s. citizens caused a lot of noise. for months or longer, federal air marshals have been tracking 5,000 or more u.s. citizens not suspected of any crime or on any terrorist watch list and collecting data about their movements and behavior and yet at the same time cnn exclusively reported the tsa is thinking of doing away with security altogether at small airports. both of these seem like unsettling approaches. in the quiet skies program according to an internal tsa bulletins from march small teams of undercover air marshals are trying to root out unknown or marshally known terror firsts by documenting things whether passengers fidget, sleep during the fight, seem overly familiar with the airport or have a cold,
penetrating stare. i want to know more before i ll join the critics. i have authored two books about airline security. i m a believer in empowering police to use instinct. just consider the good work of jose melendez perez. it was melendez, an immigration inspector, who stopped muhammad al kahtani who stopped him while entering an international airport. he was a saudi national because he incorrectly filled out a customs deck lakz. it came up negative. his documents seemed genuine. a check of his possessions, unremarkable, but melendez still didn t let him pass. why? as he told the 9/11 commission, quote, this guy just gave me the creeps. he also said throughout my ins training and military experience mi first impression of the subject was that he was a young male, well groomed with short hair, trimmed mustache, black
long-sleeved shirt, black trousers and black shoes, 5 6 in impeccable shape with large shoulders and thin waist. he had a military appearance. he had gestures that appeared arrogant. when i called him into secondary and matched him with papers he had a deep, staring look. the next time the united states encountered katari encountered khatani. he was given walking papers by melendez in orlando and there to pick him up as a new arrival was 9/11 ringleader muhammad atta that his conduct may have spared the capitol or white house an attack and with this added muscle of khatani on flight 93 as the 20th hijacker, they could
have continued to washington. the auth are on of the boston globe investigative piece jana winter who was the current globe spotlight fellow. i want to applaud your work and make clear that i thought it was a great report. i just have mixed opinion. i want instinct to be honored by law enforcement, but i don t want them on a fool s errand. do you think we can do both? i would like to think so. i mean, what we know now at this point is obviously there s been a lot of outrage, bipartisan outrage, i would note, which is pretty rare since the story of ours published last weekend and congress was briefed on thursday and ntsb officials said yeah, we ve followed 5,000 u.s. citizens who are not under investigation or suspected of any crime and not on any terrorist watch list and 5,000 since march and they have zero threats. they found nothing. they found no one that merited any follow-up and no suspicious
characters. nothing. i think according to the air marshalls i ve spoken with and other people within tsa that the resources which are slim to none should be focused on things that might actually be a threat. i think that s fair. give me an example. what stands out in your mind from those cases known to you of someone who has been followed in the sky that would seem ridiculous? i would encourage everyone to keep reading our reporting, but i ll say someone being assigned to follow a southwest flight attendant who was literally working the flight, writing down the behavior and anything they do if they change direction, the air marshals are looking at the behavior saying if she s not drinking anything, but pouring a drink, did she go to the bathroom? she s standing by the bathroom? for how long? flight crew get background
checked by the fbi and if they were a threat my sources say they d be a threat for every flight they worked and not just the one the air marshals are on. so what would have caused in that example that individual to show up on their radar to begin with. just where they had traveled previously? what this program is based on is not anything the person has actually done. it s based on whether your travel history matches that of a known or suspected terrorist. so we have flight attendants who have on its face suspicious travel because they re flying all over the place because that s what they do for work. so my family, we went to istanbul two summers ago on vacation. could something as benign as that cause them to want to then follow me? oh, yes, absolutely and then anyone you re traveling with. right now there s a huge focus on anyone who is in turkey for a certain amount of time. so where is this headed?
i know you re continuing to report on it. you ve already intimated that there must be more to come. what do you think congress is about to do relative to this tsa program. i think congress is really pissed off because tsa told me on the record that congress had been briefed and the committees had all been told about this program and during the closed-door briefing on thursday and there is a bit of a back and forth and the committee staff were, like, you ve never told us anything about this. so this is not something that s going to die down. there are some lawmakers calling for hearings and i think that would probably happen. i don t think anyone s letting this go. there s a lot of people filing. the aclu is doing some things and the civil liberties groups i don t think i think there s a lot to stay tuned for. thanks for the report. we ll continue to read. thanks. letty so see what you re saying on my smerconish and twitter pages. i can t get my head around
this. they follow people around who don t follow terror or fighting, what a waste. i think what we re hearing is you don t get followed for nervous behavior and once you re being followed and you might think the an appropriate defense, then you re noting everything, your habit asks your posture. look, i want to be clear, i really like what she s uncovered. as a taxpayer it seems like a waste of resources, but let s want go so far that heroes like jose melendez perez who are operating on instinct because the guy gives him the creeps and the guy turns out to be the 20th hijacker can t get stopped because i want them to be empowered as members of law enforcement. sandy hook parents are suing
provoktour alex jones. is that going to fly? in this primary in kansas thanks to the state s lack of age requirement, are several candidates ready for this? not yet old enough to vote for themselves. i ll talk to two about being part of the 2018 political climate. at crowne plaza, we know business travel isn t just business. there s this. a bit of this. why not? your hotel should make it easy to do all the things you do.
which is what we do. crowne plaza. we re all business, mostly.
zip-file? really big files? in seconds, not minutes. just like that. like everything. the answer is simple. i ll do what i ve always done. dream more, dream faster, and above all. now, i ll dream gig. now more businesses, in more places, can afford to dream gig. comcast, building america s largest gig-speed network. is making up a heinous lie about tragic deaths something you could be sued for or is it covered by freedom of speech. that s a case being litigated in the case of a parents whose child was killed in the sandy hook elementary school and they re suing alex jones for defamation for his repeated claims that the massacre is a hoax. here s a sample of jones assertions that the family finds actionable. the official story of sandy hook has more holes in it than
swiss cheese. my gut tells me the white house, people controlling the government were involved in this. so don t ever think the globalists that have hijacked this country that they killed little kids all day every day, it s not the government. it s the globalist. they re doing it. they re doing it. they re staging it. in court, jones lawyer admitted, quote, maybe it s fringe speech. maybe it s dangerous speech. that s not defamation. that s rhetorical hyperbole at its core. it s the citizen participation which protects citizens rights to free speech against those who which to silence them through costly litigation? joining me is a reporter who has been covering the trial, the chief political reporter for the austin american statesman. i remember speaking to you two years ago when alex jones was in the midst of a child custody battle. right. and his own lawyer at that time said this is all schtick.
don t take it so seriously. that would be like holding jack nicholson accountable for his depiction of the joker in the batman movie. same thing is going on here, right? pretty much. in fact, in that case which was back in april of 2017 they were largely able to exclude any use of alex jones on-air personality in that case so they didn t even have to make that argument to any great degree, but yes, it s the same thing. people tune in to watch the bombast and they have a certain expectation and they know this is alex jones and they know what he s doing and they don t take it literally, though apparently in a few cases they do take it quite literally and act on it. we know that some people take it literally because according to the plaintiffs in this austin-based defamation action they ve been stopped and they ve had to move a number of times. explain. well, so these are the
parents of one of the children who were killed and he has placed them in the middle of this sort of broad because he says in a cnn interview growing up de la rosa was with anderson cooper and they were using a blue screen so they weren t at the scene so there was something fishy about the way it was done and that would suggest they were a part of this hoax and as a result of this, they ve been stalked and there was a woman who ultimately was sent to federal prison for issuing death threats against them and she was instructed that on her release from prison she can t listen to willa exjones anymore. so they resisted suing him for many years and then back in april of 2017 he re-issued these claims and they decided enough
is enough and he s not going to stop doing this so they finally filed suit and in texas the defamation law requires you to file within a year. so by remaking or restating some of these claims he kind of revived their ability to sue him and that s part of what s at issue here is has he said enough within the year of the statute of limitations to qualify as defamation? here s the takeaway. at least according to me and you re on the scene. the takeaway is that people follow this guy. i mean, some people in high places follow this guy. when push comes to shove and he s challenged in a courtroom his lawyers say you didn t really believe that, right? it s the equivalent of wrestling, it s b.s., something jones has to fight against to keep that audience. yeah. yeah. in fact, on this blue screen argument his lawyer says you know, you can t prove that what he said was was defamatory
and even if it was wrong it was merely and his audience understands that it s opinion masquerading as fact. that s the term of art ask so he s saying that, you know, take it with a grain of salt. he s not a journalist and should not be held to journalistic standards and the plaintiffs have gone to some length to establish that he makes claims that he is an investigator, that he knows what he s talking about, that has blue screen claim is based on his deep experience in broadcasting, and that there s no reason that a listener should realize that he s not that he s not making these claims supported by fact and that he s essentially that because of who he is, he s he s risk-free and he can rant as much as he wants without having to back up his claims. thank you, jonathan. i want his audience to know to
the extent they re paying attention to me here at cnn that this is all schtick. it s an act. and that s his defense. so don t take it seriously and what an injustice done to those parents if their case is proven. thank you for being here. thanks a lot. let s check in on your tweets and facebook comments. what do we have? hey, smerconish, jones was an actor when he was getting divorced. now he s a journalist. we should call him what he is. we shou a vitamin supplement salesman. i get it. you get it. that audience don t get it and he s trying to have it both ways, people really don t believe this, do they? and trying to maintain that audience as a provocateur. it s horrible. should sarah jeong s twitter history have precluded her hire by the new york times as an
editor y editorial board member. my next two guests are official candidates on the ballot in the kansas gubernatorial primary this week, but they are not old enough to vote for themselves. i ll talk to them about their political experiences next. get your groove on with one a day 50+.
so there s something different about this state s primary in kansas for a governor who left a diplomatic post. several of the candidates aren t even old enough to vote yet. it s quite a crowded field. on the republican side the candidates include the current governor, secretary of state and state insurance commissioner, a doctor, a businessman and 17-year-old tyler ruzic. a former wichita mayor and a family doctor are up against 17-year-old jack bergeson and even participating in debates all before graduating from high school. i wanted to see what they ve learned and what they re thinking about their issues. jack, let me begin with you.
you re 17 and you can t vote. what should the voting age be? in local elections there has been a trend across the country to lower the age. what should that number be? i really believe 16 would be a better number. at 16 most people can drive. people can you can work a part-time job. you re paying taxes and a lot of 16-year-olds are productive members of our society and i believe they should have the right to say how the government functions and there are more 16-year-olds that are more politically aware they know than people that are much older. i don t think it s as much about age than with political awareness and with the rise of the internet it s easier than ever for younger people to know about politics and 16 would be a much better age than 18 is that it would get people involved earlier and it would allow for a grater involvement in the system. tyler, what s it been like out on the campaign trail. do people tend to take you seriously or do they think that this is somewhat of a lark? well, people definitely take
me seriously because i think that both on the republican and democratic side i am the most moderate candidate in this race. i am just about dead center, militant moderate as i like to refer to myself as, but they do take me seriously from the beginning. in an op ed that i wrote for the kansas city starsy is that ideas and not age that matters in the race. i think the voters are behind me. they re really taking me seriously, but of course, the state republican party has really been doing everything they can to suppress my voice by not including me in the state party-sponsored debates. a centrist. a man after my own heart. jack bergeson, medical marijuana. the rules have been relaxed in kansas. how far should we go? give me a quick answer. well, i really believe what we should do with marijuana is we can legalize it for recreational purposes and do
what washington has done and with that we can use the funds to fund the crumbling education and infrastructure system and colorado used it for the education system and we could use that in kansas and not only is it a civil rights issue and it is an issue about ensuring that we have the funds to properly educate our children. that sounds pretty liberal, tyler. are you prepared to go that far and open the doors on pot? you know, as i say, i d say the theme of my campaign is we have to meet in the middle and focus on where we agree instead of where we disagree, the principle of president reagan. what i believe is when it comes to marijuana i believe on the medical level it should be legalized, but on the y recreational level we should work to decriminalization before we go to full legalization. the stance and the issue in kansas has many different perspectives, obviously, cans ans are taking a more conservative look at the issue, and i think our action on the issue of marijuana should be
representative of the people in the state of kansas and not just following the trends of our great neighbors in missouri or colorado. being. jack, what should be the minimum wage? set the number, what should it be? i definitely believe it should be much higher. 15 would be ideal because that is the minimum, someone can work in the united states and not be in poverty. it is a crime that someone works 40 hours a week and still live in poverty. that is one issue we need to be incremental on and i believe going to tennessee or 12 in the very beginning, but the goal should be 15 and i want to make it very clear that we are working so no one has to work 40 hours a week and still be in poverty. tyler, what s the number? i think $7.25 may be a good base sign for it. i know many young people are able to start jobs at a higher pay than that, but obviously,
many minimum-wage jobs are low skill. they don t require a college degree or many times they don t require a high school diploma. i think that s why it s lower, but i believe that the federal government should get out of the wage issue, and i think it should be more localized and up to communities, municipalities and counties to set a better number so they can really set a wage that fits the individual economic and fiscal needs of businesses and workers in their communities. hey, guys, i think it s great that you re running. i myself ran when i was in my 20s. it didn t work out for me, but it was one of the best experiences of my life. so i salute you both and thank you for being here. yes. thank you so much for having us on today. yes. thank you. jack bergeson, tyler ruddzik on a ticket for all of us at some point in the future, don t you think? up next, when nuclear warfares were at their peak, the
u.s. built a secret bunker under a resort in west virginia large enough for both houses of congress to operate under ground. i visited this week. i still have several questions. ? yeah, wow..this must be for one of our new unlimited wireless plans. it comes with a ton of entertainment options. great, can you sign for this? yeah. hey, uh.. what s in that one? that s a shark. new and only with at&t, you can get unlimited data, 30+ channels of live tv, and your choice of things like hbo or pandora premium. more for your thing. that s our thing. visit att dot com.
about energy efficiency. we actually saved $50,000. and that s just one school, two semesters, three girls. together, we re building a better california. considering anxieties with russia, the combination business vacation trip that i made this week could not have been more
timely. with my family, i visited the top secret cold war bunker for the u.s. congress in case of nuclear war with the soviets. it s buried underneath west virginia s grin briar resort, a spectacular resort for american families and u.s. presidents. one of them. eisenhower, initiated the construction of the bunker at the outset of the cold war and for more than three decade, it was maintained as an active facility complete with a regularly rotated food supply to house potential inhabitants for up to six months. then in 1992, a journalist exposed the set up in a washington post magazine cover story called the ultimate congressional hide away. today, the tour costs $39 per person. it s worth the price. even though as a taxpayer, i thought i had paid for it. hidden behind four blast doors, contamination chamber, 18 dorms designed to house more than
1,000 people. a power plant with purification treatment, including storage tanks and three 14,000 gallon diesel fuel tanks. medical clinic with a dozen hospital beds and operating rooms, laboratory, pharmacy, icu, cafeteria and meeting rooms for the house and for the senate. this is a video of me checking out the thickness of one of the four blast doors. part of the genius of the bunker is how portions were hidden in plain sight. but the more i saw, the longer my list of open questions. the bupger is said to be roughly two underground football fields, is why did i see half that? we were told today the bunker is used for data storage by a division of the railroad that once owned the green brirks but did data storage power generators or the constant
filling of the watt rer tanks or the maintenance of the 42,000 gallons of diesel fuel? my mind race, i returned to my cottage and e-mailed ted. was it possible that the bunker was still hiding in plain sight i asked? indeed, it could be, the perfect cover, both decommissioned, but operational at a moment s notice, he replied. why not. he wrote adding personally, personally, i don t think so. but i ve often wondered. well, i m wondering, took into consideration but what a great vacation. still to come, the final survey results on this question. go vote. should sarah johns twitter history have precluded her hire by the new york times as an editorial board member?
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double standard bigger than the raccoon balls and her antipolice video. hey, mathematician, point dually noted that if any other group were disparaged in the tweets, if it were not white folks the way some of these tweets do focus, if it had been minorities, people of color, some other ethnic racial group, i don t think they would have  hired her. i think your point is well taken in that regard. what else? smerconish, what s the difference between sarah john and roseanne barr other than her fancy degree. look, if she is sending back something nasty to a person who said to her if i saw you, i would sock you right if your lesbian face or somebody who says shut the f up, you dog eating, it s a slur. it s horrible. gook. she gets a license from me to say whatever she want to say.
to those individuals. counterpunching, i don t do it. i don t do it. i just ignore the nasty ones that come into my own feed, but to each their own. but unsog it is solis itted to go after cops, that s different. i looked at the video k maybe she thought she was being funny. f the police in the raccoon dog video. probably going to do wonders for that movie. but i see a difference. that which is unprompted and that which is in response to this sort of thing. another one. should trump be fired for his tweets? if not, then nobody else should be. now, dottie, you re ruining the program. because we haven t mention eed president this week chbment notb ratley. it s if fist ham i have done in

United-states , Police , Candidates , Kansas , Primary , 9-11 , Hire , The-times , Sarah-johns , Process , Part , Social-media

Transcripts For FOXNEWSW Fox News Sunday With Chris Wallace 20180805 23:00:00


Interviews with newsmakers and discussions of current affairs.
adviser john bolton and marco rubio, a top member of the senate intelligence and foreign relations committee. bolton and marco rubio only on fox news sunday . then a federal judge blocked a texas activist from putting blueprints online to make plastic on some 3-d printers. cody wilson joins us to explain why he thinks it s a good idea. hours after this - - i do not feel the media is the enemy of the people. chris: president trump bashes journalists again. what ever happened to fair press? what ever happened to honest reporting? they don t report it. they only make up stories. chris: we will ask our sunday panel about the trump family divine. all right now on fox news sunday . hello again from fox news in washington. top national security officials say the threat from russian meddling in the upcoming
midterms is real. president trump keeps calling it a hoax.one of several issues along with north korea and iran where the presidents statements appear at odds with the rest of his administration. in a moment, what talk about this seeming disconnect with the president national security advisor, john bolton. first, let s bring in kristin fisher in columbus, ohio where president trump held another of his highly charged rallies last night. reporter: this was president trump s second campaign rally since five of his top national security officials stood side-by-side sounding the alarm that pressure is continuing to try to interfere in our elections. yet, at both rallies, presiden trump has not backed them up . we ve got to stop meddling and everybody from attacking us. but there were a aa lot.
russia is there, china is they are. reporter: once again, president trump reviews placing the blame squarely on russia. but he had no problems charging china. china is smart and they know the american farmers love donald trump. they say, what can we do to stop donald trump? reporter: the retaliatory tariffs are hitting the presidents key constituencies. prompting a bailout for farmers. - - made clear, he s feeling the heat. so much for my brand-new beautiful suit. reporter: the president and republicans are also feeling the heat heading into tuesday s special election for ohio s 12th congressional district. it s why president trump came to this district to rally his supporters around - - was locked in a tight race with democrat danny o connor. a vote for danny boy and the democrats is about to let criminals and drugs for into
our country and to let ms-13 run wild in our communities. reporter: that is exactly what we can expect more of heading into the midterms. this is president trump third campaign rally this week. that case is only expected to accelerate. chris: kristin fisher reporting from columbus, ohio. joining me now is the president s national security advisor, john bolton. welcome back to fox news sunday . glad to be with you. chris: let s begin with breaking news, venezuelan president is calling an assassination attempt against him yesterday. let s put up this video. pretty striking. the president speaking at a military event when drums loaded with explosives exploded. you can see security protecting was ballistic blankets and military.
role and unnamed - - in the united states. these are things he s said before. you have to take them for what they re worth. if the government of venezuela has hard information that they want to present that would show a potential violation of u.s. criminal law, we will take a serious look at it. in the meantime, i think what we should really focus on is the corruption and oppression of the regime in venezuela. chris: let s turn to the apparent disconnect between what trump administration officials are saying about russian meddling in 2016 and 2018 and what president trump is saying about the here is how dhs secretary nielsen described in the president hours later. our democracy itself is in the crosshairs. i had a great meeting with putin and we discussed everything. now we are being hindered by the russian hoax.
it s a hoax. chris: ambassador, which is it?is it a threat to our democracy or is it a hoax? i know there s this narrative in the press that there is a disjunction between the president and the rest of his administration. i got to know eugene mccarthy, the late democratic senator. used to describe the process as a group of birds sitting on a telephone wire. one would fly off and then they d all fly off. that s what this narrative i think is all about. the president knew exactly what was going to be said at that press briefing on thursday. he s the one who directed it be held. it came as a result of a national security council meeting we held the friday before were the heads of the operating agencies who attended on thursday and others, told the president what we were doing. he thought it was important the american people heard directly from the people responsible for
election security at the federal level. in a nonclassified environment. chris: they are saying, this is a clear and present danger, that russia did it in 2016 and are continuing to do it now. you have the secretary of homeland security with her hair on fire think democracy is in the crosshairs and you have president trump think you re being hindered by the russian hoax. that is not the press making that up. anybody who looks at it has got to see it a difference there. i think what he s saying about the hoax is the idea that the russians directed control of his campaign or administration, that there were some conspiracy or violation of u.s. line 2016. chris: he s handed down an indictment of 12 military intelligence officers of the g are you. there s no question that s going on. the hoax is the idea that the trump campaign was a
beneficiary of a concerted effort together with the russians to affect the 2016 election. as to that, there s no evidence publicly. but everybody who participated in the press conference thursday agreed as has the president on several public occasions that the intelligence community assessment of russian meddling in 2016 is valid. chris: one of the most powerful ways mr. trump can try to prevent any meddling in the 2018 election is to stand up in public and call out vladimir putin and say, knock it off. i want to go back to helsinki and to the joint summit news conference there. i have great confidence in my intelligent people. but, i will tell you that president putin was is cleanly strong and powerful in his denial today. chris: i know you say it was the first issue that president trump brought up with putin in
that to everybody s been focusing on. that s who you focused on in your briefing. rights. there s no question that russia was the principal violator and their activity this year, puts them in the lead the activity so far at least is down from 2016. but it does not exclude for the potential for others to muddle. and i think the broader issue that i think christopher wray talked about in particular of influence efforts that go beyond the specifics of a particular election. i think that s very troubling too. chris: you talk about the media and the idea they all jump off the telephone line. not everyone but a lot of them. chris: in a much more direct way, the president critiqued the media. iwant to put up the streets. this tweets. this is one of them. the fake news hates me saying
relationship is typical. chris: we learned north korea continues to produce plutonium. continues to build new missiles. there are reports that north korea is violating the sanctions by ship to ship transfers. china and russia are stepping up their efforts to ease around the sanctions. at what point does the trump administration say that kim is playing us. there he isn t serious about denuclearization and basically call him on this? that point may well, as i ve said to you and others before. there s nobody in this administration starry eyed about the prospects of north korea the nuclear rising. i think the president is giving kim jong-un a master class in how to hold the door open for somebody.
if the north koreans can t
they retaliated.now we are talking about 25 percent on $200 billion more in chinese exports and they are threatening tariffs on $60 billion of u.s. products. here s larry kudlow. the president is impatient. so yes it to our team, take a look at raising the tariff on them. last 200. take a look. he s impatient. chris: how far is president trump prepare to go in his standoff with china and if chinese president xi jinping doesn t blink or back down, how long could this go on? i think as larry was in, don t underestimate president trump s resolve. for decades, china has been the principal malefactor trying to use a free trade aspiration. most of the rest the world has to pursue mercantilist goals. it steals intellectual
property. chris: how far you prepare to take this? far enough to get china to change its behaviorand they need to understand that. chris: if they don t ? i think the pressure will continue and the president has made that very clear. chris: ambassador bolton, always good to talk with you. when we come back, senator marco rubio joins us exclusively to talk about his push to hit russia if they meddle in our midterms as well as his plans for paid family leave. later, should blueprints to make a plastic gun in your own make a plastic gun in your own home be availablsurance that won t replace the full value of your new car? you d be better off throwing your money right into the harbor. i m gonna regret that. with liberty mutual new car replacement we ll replace the full value of your car. liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty this time, it s his turn. you have 4.3 minutes to yourself.
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off-the-cuff statements about russia, north korea and iran stand in contrast to the rest of his administration and much of the republican party. we want to discuss that with senator marco rubio, a key member of the senate foreign relations and intelligence committee. : two fox news sunday . thank you, thanks for having me back. chris: you are trying to get the senate to pass what you call the dieter act which would invoke automatic sanctions against russia or any country that interferes with u.s. elections. is what top intelligence officials at the trump administration send this week. russia attempted to interfere with the last election and continue to engage in maligned influence operations to this day. it s pervasive, it is ongoing. with the intent to achieve their intent and that is drive
the bill, it s the director of national intelligence, not the president who would certify that interference had taken place. given all the presidents talk about the russia hoax, don t you trust him to call out kremlin meddling? i do. especially if it happens in 2018. that s part of the bill we will probably have to rework because we want to pass the bill. we want to create an automatic way for sanctions to kick in. there will probably have to be an additional of a presidential waiver. the dni will play a key role. that s the way we crafted it but the partner i m working with, we are willing to make reasonable changes that allows us to pass it and that s probably one of those that we ve heardpush back on. we wantto do something done and do whatever it takes to pass a
law that will have real sanctions that will you can house pass past the house and senate. chris: president trump tweeted this. attorney general jeff sessions should stop this rigged witchhunt right now for it continues to stain our country any further. afterwords, you said special counsel robert mueller should be allowed to finish his work and all of the truth should come out. in pursuit of that truth, should president trump sit down with the special counsel to answer any questions about russian collusion, obstruction of justice and what if he refuses and the special counsel get the subpoena? the second question is really for the president lawyers. i m not in a position to give legal advice to the president. but let me talk about the first part and that is, this is no mystery. he believes strongly, he says he knows for a fact that he did not collude with the russians
the long-term. i think he s more than willing to tear apart the facilities, as he s got newer ones that work better. i believe, he believes, even if he gets rid of some of the new enrichment capability, he already has existing weapons and existing enriched capabilities that he can hide from the world. every time he does one of these productions, he is engendering goodwill internationally which is ultimately his goal. to undermine national support for sanctions by underlining all of these things i m doing. that s his goal in my opinion and i hope he s wrong. chris: it appears to be working. we understand north korea is violating the sanctions by doing ship to ship transfers. we hear that russia is doing business with north korea. they are bringing thousands of more workers into the country who are ineffective slaves to
send money back to the regime. isn t tim succeeding in lowering the temperature. breaking apart the alliance of sanctions and president trump is being played? neither one of those two things are new. the laborers to russia has been going on in the ship to ship transfer is the only way to evade. i think we need to be becareful about - - [indiscernible]. the chinese would love for this to be a step-by-step process that drags out. i don t know if the president is being played. i think he s hoping for the best but preparing for the worst.the sanctions remain in place. i think they need to be more cautious about continuing to engage our partners around the world that they are fully aware of what s happening and what isn t happening in north korea point what s real and what isn t real. i will have concerns about anything they ve done so far.
chris: i want to ask you about one of your other big issues and that is you have introduced legislation to create paid family leave. you take the money that would go to the parents of newborn children from social security payments they would get later on. democrats say the benefit is too small and it shouldn t come out of retirement payments and third, most people take family leave for illnesses. either their own or family members. they don t take it for childbirth. ivanka trump was a big supporter said there s no chance this is going to happen in this congress. nothing is going to happen other than the bills that are stacked up and ready to goal. if this is a big issue, it s a revolutionary idea and it will take time to pass. here s what it does, it s an option. you don t have to. the benefit is comparable to
what you get in the private sector in terms of paid family leave for the birth of a child. number three, the concept is this. if you choose to dictate families, at least six weeks, up to 12 weeks. you can decide some of your retirement benefits from your money and social security, you can advance and take now instead of later. a portion of it. it s a choice, an option you have. for the 85 percent of americans that today have no options at all other than to skip paychecks. how many people can afford to skip one paycheck not to mention 4-6 after the birth of a child? chris: senator marco rubio, thank you point please come back. up next, we bring in our sunday group to discuss president trump s escalating attacks on the media. the faceup with reporters gets even more heated. would you like to ask the panel about the presidents threat to shut down the government before the midterm elections over the midterm elections over funding for hi the world is full of different hair. that s why pantene
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need border security. it would be bad politics for the republican party to shut the government down. we d get blamed. chris: senator lindsey graham warning president trump not to shut the government down over immigration issues ahead of the midterms. it s time now for oursunday group. karl rove , philippe reines, susan page and jason riley. which heading down the government over the wall and immigration issues help or hurt republicans in the midterms? her to the republicans. they ve they are seen of having control of the government. regardless of how the president describes the culprits as being the democrats, it will hurt the republicans. the presidents approval is 46-51 and the latest fox poll. 43-55 on immigration. so don t push immigration?
don t shut down the government. if you want to shut down the government, shut it down over the economy but people don t believe particularly when it comes to the wall that it s the right thing. the wall is the weakest border security. you noticed he stopped talking about the wall and border security. even inside the white house, the wall is not as popular as border security. chris: we asked you for questions and on this issue of apollo spossible shutdown got this question. if potus shuts down the government, how will he get his supreme court pick confirmed and how will the republicans get blamed? as my insider knowledge of the gop, i think this is another example of the president putting a bigger problem to his own party than the democrats who most of the time that are just bystanders.
i don t know what he gets out of it but i don t think he cares. i don t think he really cares what happens in november. of course he does. he knows what happens to his agenda if he loses the house. i think he knows he gets to run against the house in 2020. i don t think he worries about impeachment. as much as his colleagues in congress to. chris: i m going to switch subjects in terms of the president bashing of the media. i know it s always all about us but it seemed to hit critical mass this week.you just heard my conversation with ambassador bolton in which the president says media can cause wars, they are sick. we had this conversation about ivanka trump who talked about the fake media and president
trump hours later. i have sensitivity around why people have concerns and gripes, especially when they feel targeted. i do not feel the media is the enemy of the people. they can make anything bad because they are the fake, fake, disgusting news. chris: susan, there was also that moment in the white house briefing room where cnn reporter jim acosta, some will say he was grandstanding. i kind of agree with that but he challenged sarah sanders, the spokeswoman to declare that the press are not the enemy of the people and she refused. i care more about what the president says then the press secretary. mr. bolton in your interview setting adversarial with white house is common. haven t covered six white houses, that is true.
but the rhetoric the president is using, enemy of the people, this is a phrase from stalin. it is chilling and unprecedented in modern times. it does not recognize the world that the founders sought for a free and vigorous press to hold officials accountable and to be the friend of the american people. i think it s enormously serious. chris: jason, let me ask you a question. you ve had un officials in charge of freedom of expression around the world this week say these kind of comments, again, i don t think were talking about criticism of the media. we are talking about fake news, starting wars, enemy of the people, that it undermines the role of the free press around the world to hold governments accountable. ivanka trump is right. the press is not the enemy of the people and you are right
that this rhetoric coming out of the white house is unprecedented. but so is some of the behavior of the media these days. media is supposed to be covering this white house objectively and is behaving much more like activists than on objective journalists. this too i think has reached a lumpy when that happens i believe the press deserves to be called out. the pressure not be the story. the story should be making sure the voters are informed and too often these days, they are making themselves the story. chris: the president makes them the story. that is due to this relationship that i think all administration s have. but the press often takes the bait. this is what we end up talking about. the press loves talking about the press. as a reporter, i do not love talking about the press. i think what is happening, there are certainly things to
criticize about the press. but i think with the president is doing is undermining faith in the institutions that stand to challenge him. chris: let me bring in karl, because as a white house officials, you felt you were probably unfairly targeted by the press. where is the line between what we do wrong and accurate reporting and what the president is doing right now? any white house has the right to be specific in criticizing that coverage. i think the administration ought to say we think this is what s wrong. but the ferocity of these generalized slurs if you will against the press and the frequency is disturbing to me.
i watched the speech. i lost track, about 18-19 times that the presidentwent after the press. every time he did, that crowd toward its approval . but that crowd represents the hard-core base. this does not help him with his bigger problem. 28 percent strongly approved. those with people strongly screaming when he said enemy of the people but 41 percent strongly disapprove. he is enraging the opposition while reinforcing a smaller base . chris: you were talking up before about losing the midterms with - - [indiscernible] it s working for him but that doesn t mean it s right. it s a part of a war on the truth. i ve been on the other side of this, you know that and susan probably knows that. chris: you worked for hillary clinton. the media is not always perfect but you get on the phone and you talk about it.
my beef now is the media has to accept that this is not normal behavior. they have to realize they are in combat they have to start acting differently. stop broadcasting the daily press briefings live, get rid of the soap opera aspect. the grandstanding. they have to use the word lie when he lies, etc. chris: well, i disagree with that. when we come back, the battle over 3d printed guns. cody wilson wants americans to have the information to make get your groove on with one a day 50+. get ready for the wild life complete multivitamins with key nutrients that address 6 concerns of aging, including heart health, supported by b-vitamins. your one a day is showing. you wouldn t accept an incomplete job from any one else. why accept it from your allergy pills? flonase sensimist relieves all your worst symptoms, including nasal congestion, which most pills don t. and all from a gentle mist you can barely feel. flonase sensimist.
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center of a legal battle over making the information available to everyone on the internet. mr. wilson, director of defense distributed joins us from austin, texas. simple question, why on earth do you think putting these blueprints for plastic guns online is a good idea? hi chris. i put the blueprints for all types of guns, all technical plans, all data past and present. i put them all online and that s the right i have secured. it s not that i m somehow only fascinated by the idea of a printable gun.it was a mere demonstration of a much wider capability. firearms which is in no way precluded by current law. chris: as i understand it, you say this is your first amendment right. information you re putting it online, not what happens after people receive that information. i ll have to tell you that the first amendment is not an
absolute right. you re not allowed to cry fire in a crowded theater. courts have exercised fire restraint to stop people from publishing movements in the time of war. it s not an absolute right. chris, i d expect you to not propagate that ignorance. fire in a crowded theater has not been law for over 40 years. that case was replaced with the standard is even the most inflammatory speech is protected by the first amendment unless it produces eminently unlawful action or is likely to produce imminent harm. these are not the standards. we need to correct people s ignorance. the first amendment without question protects this kind of data. lawfully produced, it s got a cognizant government authority. it s directly related to another protected right which is the second amendment. speech about another amendment is even more protected. chris: first of all, we don t know whether it s protected because a judge issued a temporary restraining order and
there will be a court hearing about this this week. i know you will be pursuing this. you talk about speech that incisor creates the opportunity for illegal action, here s the problem with putting these blueprints about plastic guns on the internet. it allows people to create, to make guns that are untraceable. there s no serial number. it allows them to make guns that are undetectable. they can get through a metal detector. it also allows people who would be prohibited from having guns, whether it s someone with a mental illness, a felon, domestic abuse or even a terrorist. it allows them to make guns. take a look at democratic senator ed markey. these downloadable firearms are available even to those who could not pass a background check. it s the ultimate gun loophole. chris: the nra has supported the law that makes these guns undetectable firearms, illegal.
for 30 years. i don t think ited markey kn you could legally make a gun until last week. this is their discovery that it s been legal to make a gun for yourself.i m sorry you just found that out. okay, but you should have made a law. make it illegal to make guns in this country. chris: they did make an undetectable firearms act that passed 30 years ago. it s legal to make a gun if you include a requisite amount of metal. that s why i m not in jail. my principal guns have the required amount of metal. maybe even that type of law ultimately couldn t survive second amendment scrutiny but i m not here to argue for or against our security norms. i m arguing that what i want in court was the right, not just
singularly but all americans have the right to share data for making firearms on the internet. this is not controversial. the progressive case, nuclear plants, these are protected by the first amendment. i m sorry that people are just waking up to the idea that the first amendment protects scientific inquiry. chris: you first put a blueprint online in 2013 and it was downloaded almost 100,000 times before you were stopped by the government. since you put the blueprint again after a settlement with thefederal government online, it was downloaded more than 20,000 times . is the genie already out of the bottle and we are arguing about something that s already happened? lex frankly, that s the case. when the attorney general came intowashington they said y
honor, he s going to release this august 1. in one sense i released it three years five years ago. these attorney generals have no standing. the judge can t review the decision the state department made so i m watching all of these gun files online and when we both know guns are now downloadable and they have been repeatedly demonstrated to be. chris: to a certain degree, i think you are saying i m just making the information available but i m not responsible for what people do once they get the information. the fact is, there are real-world consequences here. what if somebody takes your information, make the gun and then goes out and kill someone, potentially god forbid kills a member of your family. do you bear any responsibility? would you feel any remorse? i credit the question as an honest question as good faith but i believe in the second
amendment to the point of, it s all right and it should be expected there will be social cost for protecting a right. why is the people s right to keep and bear arms on the bill of rights? because we know there are downside and there are consequences to allowing free people to own the means of self-defense. we should expect and have a mature attitude that bad things can happen. chris: but the government has made decisions that for the best of society, certain people should be prevented from having guns. it should be easier to trace and to detect. you are going around all of that. i disagree. with respect, i disagree. the government has regulated manufacturers of arms but the government has never regulated the production of firearms that you are allowed to own. an american can make a gun and there s no requirement for the serial number on it and i m sorry that a bunch of politicians woke up to the
reality of this just last week but this is the way it s always been. chris: cody wilson, thank you for talking with us. up next, our power player of the week . the army s art collection puts come here, babe. ok. nasty nighttime heartburn? try new alka-seltzer pm gummies. the only fast, powerful heartburn relief plus melatonin so you can fall asleep quickly. oh, what a relief it is! (wienermobile horn) to put a better hot dog it s oscain every hand.ion and that s just what we do. with no artificial preservatives, no added nitrates or nitrites, and by waving bye to by-products. so you can get back to loving them. for the love of hot dogs. (wienermobile horn) your insurance rates a scratch so smallr you could fix it with a pen. how about using that pen to sign up for new insurance instead? for drivers with accident forgiveness, liberty mutual won t raise their rates because of their first accident. liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty.
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rockwell illustrations from world war ii. chris: do you ever feel like you re in that warehouse at the end of indiana jones? we make that joke all the time. chris: we were there to see the status of nazi propaganda. 586 pieces seized during hitler s fall and sent back to the u.s. hitler s retreat at - - the luxurious mountain residents. chris: the man in charge of the operation, - -, appointed by president roosevelt. why was it so important to remove this art from germany postwar? they believed the presence of these pieces in german society could be essentially a powder cake that could kick off additional incidents of the nazi rise. chris: this painting, in the beginning, was the word.
it s intentionally titled to mirror the first verse of the book of john in the bible and it very clearly equates adolf hitler with john the baptist. chris: and almost godlike figure in his disciples. there s another called the standardbearer. it portrays adolf hitler as a medieval night. he s carrying a nazi flag, mounted on a horse and he s prepared to lead his people into battle. chris: what is this? an american soldier took his rifle and he punched through the eye of hitler as a direct message. chris: the army found this in the eagles nest. when the nazis held meetings of triumph - - chris: a grand hall he used for grand meetings. the large-scale partconveys his personal power. chris: perhaps most fascinating are these watercolors painted by hitler.
as an inspiring art student and a soldier in world war i, long before his rise to power. one of the comments on the early evaluations of his work was that while he was pretty good at depicting buildings and structures, he was not so good at depicting human life. chris: the chances are you will never get to see any of these works in person. the army keeps them locked up and its mammoth storage facility. is there concern some of these pieces can be used as a rallying point for neo-nazis in this country? that s the heart of the tight control we maintain over the collection. chris: it could be potentially dangerous. the time i like to use is, powerful. chris: the army is building a national museum opening in 2020

Officials , Crosshairs , The-one , National-security-administration , One , Chris-wallace , Russia , Russia-hoax , Meeting , Disconnect , Putin , Indiscernible

Transcripts For FOXNEWSW Tucker Carlson Tonight 20180807 04:00:00


A look at the latest news and headlines of the day features discussions of politics and culture, analysis of political correctness in Campus Craziness and.
either you embrace the label and own it, or be like andrew cuomo and be off on the sidelines. brian: it s like the republican party is getting the gift that keeps on giving. new york s colleague kennedy s effort teachout, she wants to abolish i.c.e. i.c.e. has to be abolished and i say that as someone who is running for one of the top jobs in the country. i will prosecute i.c.e. for their criminal acts. brian: i m embarrassed for her. conservative lawmakers, officeholders and ordinary trump supporters continue to face harassment for those heeding the call of maxine waters. because if you see anybody from that cabinet in a restaurant, and a department store, at a gasoline station, you get out and if you create a crowd of. and you push back on them. and you tell them that they are
A look at the latest news and headlines of the day features discussions of politics and culture, analysis of political correctness in Campus Craziness and.
phony baloney foundation that is some kind of racket forgetting like a seven-figure psalms from leigh about saudi princes doing nothing. and that tented centrism and all the romance on the democratic party, you saw that with cynthia they are moving further and further left at an extraordinary rate. you have that woman on the left, now she has the rock star without without any legitimate substance. i can t remember if it is london or stalin, and the age of identity politics what matters is which side of that you are. are you the approved designated group is that young lady is. in the ice dispute, the reason they don t like ice is because detains illegal immigrants.
i thought the debate was through the drone s or the wall. the debate is now for open, for all n. again, that is like the old school democrats. of course i believe in border enforcement, once we have the amnesty and we legalize these hardworkingg people. it gets frustrating to have to do that. it is much easier to get your inner open border side out. their identity politics. they have headed with the the whole thing. they don t want to soldier any of that. they don t want to triangulate. at a certain level, they actually feel dirty from living with those accommodations. the last time around, if it had
been a prenominated process bernie sanders would have won. that is where the party is. $31 trillion. you had to this woman from new york who is going to getm te seat that he had. she came out and said, we are going to get rid of that money to give to the military. that is the fascinating thing. if you look at generally socialist countries, the average european democracy, scandinavia or whatever. they play for their socialism. what you have here is actually an antisocialism. they think none of this money g means anything, so let s give more trillions. mark will be filling in for tucker on wednesday, , and until then i will see you then. let s build that fence and keep you out. he is turned on me already.
not a socialist even though i work with him, i respect people who al who are consistent and no one is being inconsistent was part of his allure as president trump. that is why it would been an interesting matchup because they re so different in their philosophies. if you are someone who studies history in america you know that there is post be a big way for democrats. with these two policies in particular, doing everything they can to get rid of that wave. from what you see right now, do you pick up the 23 seats to gain the house? despite of what we just went over? e it might be a wave in some areas, but it could also be a flood that could drown everyone out in 2,020. people have to pay attention in the primary. like the cortes district, it might not work around the country. thes majority are in the center and it is democrat key thinking
that everyone is a socialist or everyone is all the way left, they are misinformed. i work with senator sanders it i m not a socialist. if they keep trying to box everyone out and t actually geto the ideas and figure out what people really want and pay attention to the polls than we are going to be in trouble. right now we know the economy is going to be in trouble, if you want people to keep that money don t raise health care costs. i m not saying pointed a finger at anyone, the party that understands health care and delivers quality health care at a probe to make affordable pri. i talk about it all the time. i have a staffing firm with 300 people, we went out of business because they were forcing temporary agencies to cover health care. it is still an issue that has not been resolved, we like to hear the word reform. it is not been completed.
people such as myself, you are absolutely right. something has to be done and if you can remove the partisan politics and have a real conversation on what does that mean for people like myself and small businesses, then we can be headed in the right direction. throat two names that you hope will be frontrunners who will run for president? what i can tell you it just because i work with senator sanders doesn t mean that he will automatically get my vote. i am looking to start saying, let s get ten, 12 candidates. pick a side, or step aside. what am looking to see is consistent candidates. like today, camilo harris said she doesn t believe in identity politics. democrats have been running on that for several decades. right now, i am just confused. i am interested to see and who will all come out, all the front liners as well as some people we have not heard of. not just anybody because they fitt what appears to be popular, but actually some real substance behind it as well. all right, you re going to
have a crowded stage. it will be all about that after the midterms. thank you so much. thank you. the media is melting down over another presidential tweet. what sent them off this time? that would come of that story, next. the violence in berkeley, dramatic video coming your way. wall street guy. what s the hesitation? eh, it just feels too complicated, you know? you know, at td ameritrade, we can walk you through your options trades step by step until you re comfortable. i could be up for that. step-by-step options trading support from td ameritrade keep it comin love. if you keep on eating, we ll keep it comin . all you can eat riblets and tenders at applebee s. now that s eatin good in the neighborhood. it is such a good time to dance
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a complete fabrication that i am concerned about the meeting my wonderful son donald had in the trump tower. thisd was a meeting to cut information on an opponent. i did not know about it. the media responded as they do to most trump tweets. a melt down as they claimed this was a huge breakthrough to the russian occlusion story. watch. president trump in a dramatic tweet, going back on previous denial. the purpose of his meeting with russia was to get information on hillary clinton. carelessly on a saturday morning tweet does it. an admission of lying. it starts to fit the dictionary of collusion. donald trump admitted they were all lying. what are the consequences of this? it is so weird to see so many negative stories on trump in thc morning. he said the same exact thing a
year ago. from a practical standpoint. most people would ve taken that meeting. it s position research, or research into your opponent. brian: so wait a minute, he said it already? he told everyone about this at noon yesterday. everyone ran with the story, we have to tell that paperboy that delivers a newspaper early. first off, how do you explain the hysteria? it is actually kind of difficult to explain. you heard george do monopolists say this. this is a dramatic new admissio admission, reversing the president s previous words. it simply wasn t. you can only argue that people forgot that a year ago, the president said the same thing. by the way, we played a little sound bite of president trump saying that in july of last yea year. he was even more in saint, he said most politicians would have
gone meeting like the onehe don jr. intended in order to get info on an opponent. brian: by the way, it was in his emails when the story became public that she was being solicited. he set up this meeting with his promoter friends. these people want to meet you to talk about whatever they said, theyey set it up, it went nowhe. everyone agreed. trump finally admits he colluded, the new york times and the washington post which are the tweet as a significant development on sunday. brian, we should admit it would have been the president last year after those emails to deny that the meeting, the proposal was about turning over some sort of incriminating information about hillary clinton. it was right there in the email. brian: i get the sense that he will win out over his legal team and sit down with mueller.
is that what you re stories are saying? people that is still very unclear. he is hearing over and over oner the dangers of talking with mueller. donald trump has been engaged in a lot of litigation in his career. this is not the first time that he sat down and been question. this idea that she would just fall apart if he faced questioning, it is not really an accurate one. he has had trouble with some of those in the past, so hopefully will realize he is not impervious. brian: great to see you, you had the story early and you stayed safe throughout the day. goodod luck. straight ahead, and he fell came back with violent demonstrations from portland to berkeley. that story, next. welcome! hi there. so, what do you look for in a vehicle? sleek designs. performance. he
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i should be in the shot now too. try head and shoulders two in one. brian: president trump has called out fake news, but now he is the preferred label for the mainstream media establishment, it is enemies of the people. complaints on the label, he is doubling down on using it. now the media is going back to calling trump a dictator. this is the type of behavior that happens and authoritarian societies. leaders and their supporters are pushing down the media. brian: when he means fake news, he means news that is is
not true. they think the news is being made up. folks, it isis not. trying to divide between good outlets and badut outlets. he does every time they give him a microphone. tammy cruz is the president, tammy who is right? the president is right. here s the issue, they took a poll on the importance of american media and americans believe they have an important role in our democracy. right? they are supposed be giving us the news and challenging power. just by not doing their job, which they clearly have abandoned since president trump. they have thrown their lot and within the political arena. they decided that they are going to help certain things along which is an abandonment of the american people in general. there is also a majority of people, 66% believes there is no
real fare of unbiased news that they can rely on. americans, at least there are otherr outlets. this has been an abandonment that has been incredible s the american industry. what s fascinating, if trump was a dictator of those opinions would be heard on the news. it has turned into a selfish, inward-looking entity. almost like an infant that is not getting what it wants. brian: there are so many deranged people out there, i worried about them targeting the media. you did see on c-span, a color called in and said i will shoot brian, so is disturbing. it is. the problem with the entire dialogue is at the media, as opposed to doing their job and reporting the news for people that would take all the steam out of what president trump would be saying, the same time, maybe he wouldn t be accusing them of being fake news. we do know, they have been hear heard.
attempted murders of 23 republicans. the attack of rand paul. threats and individuals being arrested for threateningre the president. we know that the rhetoric has compel people to do crazy thing things. we all need to recognize that. brian: now, another topic. over the weekend the president tweeted, lebron james was just interviewed by the dumbest man on television. he made lebron look smart. i like mike. the president was and suddenly labeled a racist, he has been happening to be calling white people dumb for years. lindsey graham, mitt romney, dumb and the worst candidate. mika presents key, dumb as a pile of rocks are you surprised people saw a race in this? lebron announced that he needed to do more than sports.
he is engaged in his community and that means talking about politics. he has in kitchen now. that is a reaction that is not against people of color, itra transcends race, i think lebron james is better than that. i think that everybody knows donald trump is incredibly transparent. he says all these things about all kinds of people on the fact is, donald trump is actually quite fair in the nature of who he is going to attack and trade based on the nature what they are doing as he reacts as what he sees. brian: i wish he wouldn t have done it. i wish he didn t do it personal tact. don lemon is not dumb. keep in mind, the president played golf this week with lindsey graham. a man he is insulted repeatedly took his phone number and read it to the hole world. one of the things that goes back to our first conversation, go after people on policy. talk about the issues that affect our lives, the personal
back and forth from the media to the president on the other way, it is not necessarily the most helpful thing. we need these policies. they help or labs directly. brian: last topic for you , we have proved that we can do goods. demonstrations in portland and in berkeley. they got violent.
brian: meanwhile candace owens wanted to have breakfast and they were harassed this morning at a philadelphia coffee shop. he got one man, they came flying in there and poured a drink on him while numerous activists screeched, no white supremacy! by the way, candace owens is black. i just saw tweeted, thanking the cops for stepping in at the right time. this could have been really ugly. it could have been. they smashed a car. antifa. you are looking at white supremacist, ultrabright. people who are pretty much living in their parents basements. you are dealing with portland and berkeley, which has not had a very good history with confronting these things. even recently in portland, the police and the mayor not acting
when someone was blocking an ice office. seem to prefer that these things get out of control. obviously the american people see this,pl it is not good for liberals. it is not good for our dialogue. it is unacceptable. the police department has to have a bit more aggression. brian: this is going to get really ugly. we are watching this violent group. candace owens for exactly example wants to have breakfast they just want to have breakfast in philadelphia where our country was founded, where the liberty bell sits. they have to take this type of abuse. the maxine waters, confront people. that was a message. it wasn t just about the administration. few people have access to the administration members, but you dot have access to akin and your
neighbor. that s why when you have someone like maxine waters, any other representative leadership needs to step forward. they have to say, really, enough is enough. they can stop this by signaling that hillary can stop it. paul ryan can. mitch mcconnell. across theco board, they can coe together a and say enough is enough if they really wanted to end. brian: of the will be on fox & friends tomorrow to talk about thatri incident. it soared to keep your cool, you don t know how out-of-control it will get. who knows what will happen next. thank you for watching. you ll be here tomorrow night. tomorrow night, in that chair. brian: meanwhile straight ahead, tucker is back after the break to interview a congressman who is already running for president. but it s all coming back me. baby, baby, baby.
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president nearly became the first national leader to be assassinated by a drone. i m not kidding. that is what the authorities are saying. after a drone apparently put overhead while he was delivering a speech that nobody was paying attention to. he certainly has no shortage of enemies. his country s economy has completely disintegrated. he is violently cracked down on protesters. he is accused of rigging and election last may. is it a convenient excuse for them to crack down? meanwhile, as we said earlier the democratic party has been descending into chaos. they are becoming more and more extreme on race and immigration. at the same time, they are harassing or even physically attacking anyone he disagrees. maybe there is another way though. congressman john delaney is a congressman who represents airlines. he spent the last year on a
presidential campaign and has published a book, the right answer. tucker recently spoke with him. here s what what he had to say. tucker: people are strongly in favor of reuniting the country. it is hard to find bipartisan consultants on anything right now. how would you do it? i think there are some areas, things like infrastructure, criminal justice reform. jill with the opioid crisis. there are things in our debate that we kind of agree with each other on and there are things that we disagree with each other on. we never spent any time on the things that we agree with each other on. that is part of the problem. john: in a way, our job is to do both. spew and i agree with that absolutely and completely. give us a reasserting list on some things that we agree on. john: i think we agree that we should invest more on our
infrastructure, we are falling behind on our competitors. we agree that we should reform our criminal justice system, we have looked at the data and it has been very unfair for a lot of our citizens. i think we agree that this opioid crisis is ravaging our country right now. there are things that we need to do. i think there is a pretty long list. we all should agree that technology is training everything in our country and it would be nice if we had a artificial strategy like many other countries do for how we coordinate the private sector and working together on some of these things. i think there is a lot of agreement with democrats and republicans that we need a new authorization for military forc force. we are relying on a 17-year-old to take care of all these documents are on the wall. there are some things that have lot of agreement tucker: but not in the congress? john: their reasons for
that. problem.ering is a big it creates districts that don t represent the american people. that is the core of the issue. that congress has broken in many ways. our democracy is broken, not in terms of two people cast votes? does the person with the most votes win? that clearly works. the representatives who go to washington don t go there with the spirit of trying to find some sense of unity and common purpose that has always forms the cornerstone of the american experience. they go there and they fight and they put their own political parties ahead of the country. as a result, we don t do anything. there is a huge cost associated with not doing anything i think we paid a price for a long time. tucker: no question about that. one final personal question. you bet in congress for a couple of terms and you are leaving to run for president. if you could do it over again, would you? did you like it? how awful was it?
john: i think it was terrific. a great privilege of my life to serve her congress. i think that this is a magnificent country even with the issues that we have today, we have the best hand at of any country in the world just have to play to little better. it is but an amazing experience, i ve learned a lot. i ve metll some terrific colleagues. have a very clear perspective on the leadership that we need, not only as president but i think that they are something deeper that we need in this country that is for the american people to have some responsibility associated with fixing our broken democracy and bringing us together. i would never have had that expectations if i d not served. tucker: you are an optimist. i hopeou your party agrees with you. john, thank you. i m not sure they do. why is agree just racism on the left being excused? that story will analyze next. motorcycle revving
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what a thing that happened? you re defending the times writer. not only that brian, good to see by the way. tucker and i didn t actually a quote sarah xiong s tweets. we are having a conversation about it. the only thing i can come up with is that on social media we are so divided. people are so angry about things that we are unable to have a conversation at somebody, whether on the left or right at this point was very angry that we were even having the conversation and people are petty. somebody flagged it and instagram lacks the system to actually review what is being posted. they remove it.ed they removed it. i found it really upsetting. it didn t make any sense when i saw that it was removed. brian: you re not the first one, but someone who is not necessarily a conservative talk show host to take that down because you are talking about a topic that many conservatives
found offensive. i think america found offensive. that was from a prior tweets and statements. what does that tell you on where we are headed? again, i think it is problematic that we can t have a conversation. that by having the conversation. there s definitely a legitimate concern when someone posts a hateful thing. some of the messages i get about my jewish background are absolutely reprehensible and should be taken down and marked. if if you going to vicious attak or call for violence, there is no place for that. i agree with that. platforms preserving those and protecting the edges, just toou have the conversation about something. brian, you and i engage in debates. i think it is normal, i think it is healthy. we all grow when we grow and debate. calling names in: violence, not necessarily a good thing. especially calling for violence, i reserve the rights for those plot forms to remove those.
brian: is this an algorithm algorithm? did this as a human being doing this? overall, the platforms have to have algorithms for removing posts. they default to remove first and then only one like fox news reached out, did a human father hto review it. there is nothing wrong with this post. we are counting on algorithms first. brian: in this case you were talking about something, that got targeted. thank you so much. brian, good to see you. brian: sarah xiong s overt racism, is it a concern? she still has her job. meanwhile, daniela greenbaum who had an article removed simply for defending scarlett johansson for acting as a transgender in a role as a movie. she is an actress. danielle, do you see some of the
double standards? i think the times to the right thing by defending her. maybe they shouldn t have hired for the first place. if they hired her, i think good for standing up. there is such a double standard for who gets to say what. this woman says i was kidding, it was a satire.ap art was responding to trolls and a troll-like fashion. the times and all of liberal twitter responded great, no problem. where is that courtesy when you were a conservative? brian: doesn t happen. he decided to write to scarlett johansson, she can play this role. why is there outrage. she is an actress!s. she is not doing a documentary. you pointed that out and your employees reaction was? to take the piece down. after my college expressed outrage at what i have done. you were hired to give your opinion. brian: to take that down
they added something else, they said they will be a committee if you will be posted in the future? e they wanted me to meet witha committee any time i wrote about them and that was culturally sensitive to make suree i wasn t going to ruffle to many others. brian: it was your reaction? to resign. brian: do you have any regrets? it s a little scary, police have my integrity. brian: what is this taught you from the store that i just read, candace own getting stopped? what has this whole process told you about that? what has been fascinating there been two camps of response from this woman s tweet. some people on the left said she was kidding, let s take that at face value. some people said it doesn t matter if she was kidding, if you are antiwhite it is fine because she is agent american. she is a woman. she is high enough
on the totem pole. my question is where is that courtesy? she gets accused of being islamophobic. how about the fact that she grew principal mia and was oppressed by muslims? of course we are seeing this crazy double standard of who gets to talk about what, when, what it is excused. what excuses we make. who we criticize. brian:: scares that over the weekend, maybe it s time we have to commit with regulation. or we get that point? i don t even know if that will work butng that is what they re talking about. i think we have s to have really clear lines, the only ont that i can see enforcing if you call for violence, remove it. anything short of that, like at the marketplace of ideas clean it up. brian: didn t yell you re be fine.
first statues were taken down, now some activists want to read in the state capital because it was named after a guy that defended slavery. that story from austin, texas, when we come back. how d that go? he kept spelling my name with an i but it s bryan with a y. yeah, since birth. that drives me crazy. yes. it s on all your email. yes. they should know this? yeah. the guy was my brother-in-law. that s ridiculous. well, i happen to know some people. do they listen? what? they re amazing listeners. nice. guidance from professionals who take their time to get to know you. i get it all the time. have you lost weight? of course i have- ever since i started renting from national. because national lets me lose the wait at the counter. .and choose any car in the aisle. and i don t wait when i return, thanks to drop & go. at national, i can lose the wait.and keep it off.
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let s get rid of them all. if we are going to go down this road, there s no stopping it. madison, wisconsin, how about that? there you go. jackson, mississippi.. this is the problem. when this whole thing started where we had to remove confederate statues and we had to rename schools that were named after confederate generals and jefferson davis. it was really obvious from the beginning that there was no limiting principle to the renaming, that once we start renaming schools and streets in cities and tearing down statues, eventually we are going to have to go after the founding fathers, we are going to have to go after abraham lincoln, we will have to have to go after woodrow wilson. everybody in the past who had opinions that today are unacceptable are going to have to go. brian: you can go back even a short time ago. a lot of political figures against same-sex marriage. now it s hard to find many that
are. people evolve, people get bette better. no one defends slavery but there s a lot to be proud of in our history and we should debate it, talk about it, go over it. have to give credit to george b busch. he s the only political figure i can see right now who stood up, the son of jeb. he said the nephew of the former president he says absolutely not, this will not be taken down. there would be no texas if it wasn t for steve austin, who took on the mantle of his father, moses austin who died before texas could become a state. but first it was its own nation. you can t deny that history. no, you can t. and we have to take our history, warts and all. one of the things we have to accept about american history is that it s painful, it s complicated and also the way we remember our history is complicated too.lio the statues, the naming of things after a confederate general and leaders. it s all now a part of our history. rather than tearing it down and trying to eradicate it and erase it, why don t we try to educate ourselves and our children about it?
why don t we add more explanatory plaques next to the statues instead of tearing them down so we understand better where we came from and where we are going instead of trying to erase the past and blot out the unpleasant parts? brian: 10-second answer, is it a mission of people to make america americans embarrassed about their history, or is this just coincidence? this is part of a ploy to use history and public memory as a political weapon. that s exactly what it is. brian: john daniel davidson, thank you so much. they do say it s unlikely that it will change, but they are focused on the confederate statue. that is it for us for now, join me again tomorrow morning on fox & friends and then of course you can check out my radio show, the brian kilmeade show from nine until noon and i hope you do that every single day. good night from new york and also, sean hannity is next from wherever he chooses to be.nn sean: i got a question. three hours this morning, then a three hour radio show, then you

Wall , Mexico , Southern-arizona , Left , Socialism , Democratic-party , Cynthia-nixon , Nightmare , New-york , Others , Thing , Matter

Transcripts For FOXNEWSW Tucker Carlson Tonight 20180807 00:00:00


anti-racist tweet and wants to it imagine a world where anybody can enter freely from mexico. take a second and just imagine no wall. no wall in southern arizona. brian: can you imagine that night. in new york cynthia nixon said it s time for the democratic party to push socialism and others on the left seem on board. the establishment is terrified of that word. socialism. but if we learned one thing from the obama years, it s that republicans will call us socialists no matter what we do. [cheers and applause]. so we might as well as give them the real thing. brian: this is going to be a big debate in 2020, isn t it? i don t think it will be a debate point.
A look at the latest news and headlines of the day features discussions of politics and culture, analysis of political correctness in Campus Craziness and.
brian: columnist mark stein here. there are times when you have to split hairs to find the problem. we don t have to split hairs here. socialism, let s just embrace it? right, 20 years ago during the clinton era when you watched campaign ads, the democrats all ran as pseudo-conservatives. i am fred smith. i am on tough on crime. you had to wait in the the end to find out if this was a republican or democrat pretending to be tough on crime or the rest. i understand that s frustrating. they want to let their inner leftist out. the last cycle moderate democrats got associated with the clinton campaign. hillary is just someone whose
illegal immigrants. anyone who has been been through legal immigration is not fond of that authority. brian: there are a lot of law enforcement officials and families, you might have a good friend of yours. when you say abolish ice, that hit homes everywhere. in what country is that a good split splitted political thing to do. 9 out of every 10 arrests through ice are people with criminal records. what is your problem with that? the reason the leftists are keen on that is because they don t care about that. you listen to the guy running for governor in arizona. he is saying imagine a world where anybody can enter from mexico. there is a name for that world.
it s mexico. if you let anybody in, the border moves north and then it s at the canadian border and you are all mexicans. brian: i thought the debate was between the fence or the wall. now it s for open? once we have amnesty and legalize these hard-working people. it s frustrating to have to do that. it s much easier to let your inner open borders side out. they are open borders. they are identity politics. they have had it with the whole clinton thing. i don t want sister-soldiers moments anymore. i think they feel dirty from living with those accommodations and the last time around.
even if i disagree because i am not a socialist, i respect people who are consistent. we are seeing inconsistencies across the board. brian: against president trump it would have been an interesting match up because they were different in philosophy. this is supposed to be a big wave for democrats. with these 2 policies in particular, they are doing everything to get rid of that wave. do you look from what you see right now, do you look for them to pick up 23 seats to gain the house despite what we just went over? well, it might be a way in some primary states. but it could be a flood that could drown everybody out in 2020. people have to pay attention to what works in the primary and in one particular district like courtez s district might not work across the country. if democrats think that
everybody is a socialist or all the way left, then they are misinformed. i worked with bernie sanders, yet i am not a socialist. if they try to box everybody up in one box and not figure out what people really want and pay attention to the pole polls, we will number trouble. brian: if you want people to keep money, don t raise health care costs. the party that hundreds health care and delivers quality health care at affordable prices will be in power. to get to the kitchen table in america, it s still health care. for me and my daughter it s over $430 to cover insurance for myself. when i had a staffing firm with 300 employees, we went out of business because they forced temporary agency to cover herlth herlth. health care. it s not resolved.
we would like to provide good health care for myself. your local news. you are absolutely right. brian: two names you hope will be front returns on the left? well, because i worked with senator sanders doesn t mean he will get my vote. i will start from scratch. let them line up. get 10 to 12 candidates. i tell people, pick a side or step aside. i look for candidates to be consistent on their message. like today harris said she doesn t believe on identity politics. right now i am confused. i want to see who all will come out. the front liners and people we may not have heard of. not just anybody because they are popular but substance behind
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fake news a fabrication i am concerned about the meeting my wonderful son donald had in trump tower. this was a meeting to get information on an opponent. and: the media responded with a meltdown as they claimed this was a huge break through to the russian collusion story watch. president trump reversed course on previous denials. saying the purpose of his son s meeting at trump tower was to get information on hillary. an admission of lying. it fits the dictionary of collusion. donald trump admits they are all lying. what are the consequences? brian: the only problem
president trump said the same exact thing a year ago. i think from a practical standpoint, most people would have taken that meeting. it s called opposition research or research into your opponent. brian: wait a second? he said it already. byron york told everyone about this at noon yesterday. everyone ran with the story. how do you explain the hysteria? it s hard to explain. you heard george stephanopoulos said that was a dramatic new admission. it simply wasn t. you could only argue that people forgot that a year ago the president said the same thing. you played a little sound bite of president trump saying that in july of last year. he was even more succinct in a tweet saying most politicians
would have gone to a meeting like the one don jr. attended to get info on the opponent. precisely what he said this time. brian: right. it was in don jr. s emails that he set up this meeting from his promoter friend in england. these people want to talk to you. he said great. they set it up and it went nowhere. the washington post said trump finely admits colluding with russia. we should admit, it would have been difficult for the president last year after those emails to come out to deny that the meeting, the proposal for the meeting was about turning over some incriminating information about hillary clinton who was right there in the email. brian: i get the sense the president will win out over his legal team and sit down with
mueller. is that what your sources are saying? that s still very unclear. he is hearing over and over of the dangers of talking to mueller. on the other hand, you have to remember. donald trump has engaged in a lot of litigation in his career. this is not the first time he s been questioned. this idea that perhaps trump would fall apart if he faced questioning is not an accurate one. brian: he had trouble in some depositions in the past. great to sigh. you had the story early and stayed sane. intentional came back with violent demonstrations in berkeley. that ugly story next. welcome! hi there. so, what do you look for in a vehicle? sleek designs. performance. dependability is top on my list.
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because national lets me lose the wait at the counter. .and choose any car in the aisle. and i don t wait when i return, thanks to drop & go. at national, i can lose the wait.and keep it off. looking good, patrick. i know. (vo) go national. go like a pro. brian: president trump called out fake news in the failing new york times. he has a preferred label for the mainstream media. it s new mexico lobos of the people. enemies of the people. complaints about the label embold ended the president. he is doubling down on using. it the media is calling trump a dictator. this is the type of behavior that happens in authorityian societies where leaders push down the media. when he says fake news he means news that is not favorable to me.
that s not how it is received to people to whom he is speaking. they think it s news that is made up. folks, it s not. dividing good outlets and bad outlets. it s bs. brian: tammy bruce joins us. who is right? the president is right. here s the issue. gallup did a poll about the importance of the american media. the super majority of americans believe they have an important roll in our democracy. they are spaceed to supposed to give us the news and challenge the power. they have thrown their lot in, between the political arena. they decided to help certain things along. that s abandoning the american people. there are a majority of people
who believe there is no unbiassed news they can relie on. there it are other outlets. you see it right there. what is fascinating if trump was a dictator, none of those opinions would be heard on the news. it s turned into a selfish, inward looking entity. like an infant that is not getting what it wants. brian: there are so many deranged people out there. i am worried about them targeting people. on c-span a caller said i will shoot brian stealther and that s disturbing. it s. the problem with this entire dialogue, the media just reporting to people would take the steam out of what president trump is doing. we know people have been hurt.
it s scalise, attempted murder of 23 other republicans. the attack of rand paul. you have threats and individuals arrested for threatening the president and other republican officeholders. the rhetoric has compelled people to do crazy things. brian: now another topic. over the weekend the president tweeted. lebron james was interviewed by the dumbest man on television. he made lebron james look smart which is not easy to do. i like mike. the president was label a racist but he s called other people who are white for years. called mitt romney the dumbest and worst candidate we have ever had. an equal opportunity offender. you are you surprised people saw race in this? look lebron announced he
needs to do more than sports. he is engaits. and that is talking about politics. he s in the kitchen now. that transcends complexion. it s a liberal answer to a text and it s a happen. i think lebron james is better than that. i think he knows and everybody knows that donald trump is transparent and saying these things about all kinds of people. donald trump is fair in the nature of who he attacks and praises based on the nature of what they are doing. brian: i wish he would not do it. lebron james took shots at him. he is not dumb and don lemon is not dumb. the president played golf this week with lindsey graham. a man he insulted. took his phone number and read it to the whole world. our first conversation that we can ease some of this: go
after policy. the personal back and forth from the media and the president is not the most helpful thing. we need policies that the president promotes to succeed because they help our lives. brian: our last topic for you. one thing over the weekend. antifa ugly again. demonstrations in portland and berkeley. they got violent. [shouting]. [bleep]. [shouting]. [bleep]. [bleep]. [shouting].
[shouting]. brian: conservative activist charlie and candace were harhassed this morning at a philadelphia coffee shop. one man poured a drink on her and others shrieked no white supremacy. she was black. she thanked the cops for stepping in. and antifa smashed the windows of a news agency. antifa living in their parent s basement coming out into the light. you are dealing with portland and berkeley which hasn t had a good history of confronting these things.
in portland the police and mayor not acting when antifa blocked the ice office. they seem to prefer these things get out of control. the american people see this. it s not good for liberals or our dialogue. the violence is unacceptable and the police departments have to be more control. brian: this will get ugly. when candace owens wants have to have breakfast with charlie in philadelphia where our country was founded and where the liberty bell sits and they have to take this type of abuse. the maxine waters message was to confront trump supporters. few people have access to the administration members. but you have access to candace and charlie and your neighbor.
when you have somebody like maxine waters any other representative, leadership needs to step forward. democratic leadership has to say enough is enough. hillary could help stop it. jessie jackson and paul ryan and mitch mcconnell, they could come together and say enough is enough if they want it to end. brian: right. candace and charlie will be on fox and friends tomorrow. thank you very much. a great job on the the five. you will be here tomorrow night. i will, in that chair. brian: tucker is back after the break. to interview a democratic congressman who is already running for president. no matter who rides point, there are over 10,000 allstate agents riding sweep.
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brian: the president venezuela was almost assassinated by a drone. he was delivering a speech. medura has no short an of enemy. he is accused of rigging the election last may. the attack gives him a convenient excuse for further crackdowns on country dissidents. the democratic party is descending to chaos. it s becoming more and more extreme on race, immigration and economics. at the same time, they are harassing or physically attacking anybody who disagrees. maybe there is another way, though. congress john delaney is a democratic congressman representing maryland.
he mounted a dark horse presidential campaign and published, a book, the right answer. . tucker spoke to him. tucker: people are in favor of the idea of reuniting the country. it s hard to find a bipartisan consensus. how would you do it? i think there are some areas. things like infrastructure and criminal justice reform and the opioids crisis. there are things in our debate we agree with each other on. there are things we disagree with each other on. there is a role for both things. but we never spend any time on the things we agree with each other on. that s part of the problem. it s simple but our job is to do both. tucker: i agree with that. absolutely and completely. give us a reassuring list of some of the things we agree completely on? that we should invest more in
our infrastructure. it s crumbling. we are behind competitors. we agree we should reform our crimmial sufficient system. justice system. the data is unfair for citizens. the opioids crisis is ravaging our country and there are things we need to do there. i think there is a long list of things. we should agree that technology is changing nevering our country. this would be nice if we had a national artificial intelligence sector. we need a new authorization for military force because we are relying on a 17-year-old document to engage in conflicts around the world. these are just some of the things i think there is agreement among the american people. tucker: but not in the congress? not in the congress. there is reasons for.
that. gerrymandering is a big problem. it creates district that don t represent the american people. congress is broken in many ways and our democracy is broken. not does the person with the most votes win? that still works. representatives in washington don t go there with the spirit to find unity and common purpose. they go there and they might. they put their only political parties ahead of the country. as a result we don t do anything. i think there say huge cost associated with not doing anything. i think we paid a price for a long time as americans. tucker: yes. i don t think there is a question about. a final person question. have you been in congress a couple of terms and you are leaveing to run for president? i am. tucker: if you could do it over again, would you do? did you like it?
how awful was it? i think it was terrific. it s the great privilege of my life to serve in the congress of the united states. i think this is a magnificent country. i think we have the best country in the world. i learned a lot and met terrific colleagues. i have a clear perspective on the type of leadership we need not only as president, but there is something deeper we need in this country. that s for the american people to have some responsibility associated with fixing our broken democracy and bringing us together. i would never had that perspective had i not served in the congress of the united states. tucker: you are an optmist. thank you. brian: on line and in print the right is being censored. why racism on the left being excused? we will analyze next. some cash back cards
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why do you think that happened? you were just retweeting something and defining the new york times writer. not only that, brian, tucker and i did actually quote sarah s tweet. we were having a conversation about it. the only thing i can come up on social media we are so divide. people are so angry about things. we are unable to have conversations. somebody on the left or the right at this point was very angry that we were even having the conversation. people are petty and somebody flagged it and instagram reviewed what was post ed, but lacks that system, so they removed it. i found it upsetting. brian: you are not the first one. someone not a conservative talk show host, for someone to take that down because you were talking about a topic that many conservatives found offensive
and americans found offensive. that was her prior tweets and statements. what does that tell you about where we are heading? again, i think it s problematic that we can t have a conversation or that people are upset even having a conversation. look are there legitimate concerns when people post hateful things. some of the messages i get about my judiciary background should be taken down and flagged and marked. if you call for violence. there is no place for that. i agree with these platforms preserving their terms of service. just to have the conversation about something, brian, you and i engage in debate regularly. it s important and healthy and we grow. calling for violence not a good thing. and calling for violence, i reserve the right of those platforms to remove those posts.
brian: do you think this is boxed? i think the platforms have to have algorhythms for moving posts. only when fox news reached out did a human review and say there is nothing wrong with this. they still have a lot of work to do. brian: so many times the topics that are conservative get targeted. in this case you talking about something got targeted. sarah s anti-white racism is not a concern for the new york times. she still hasener job. still has her job. another person had her article
removed about costing an actress in a trans-gender role. the are we are seeing a double standard on who gets to say what. this woman says i was kidding. it was a sapphire. satire. i was responding to trolls. and liberal twitter responds great, no problem. where is that courtesy when you are a conservative? brian: it doesn t happen. you write that scarlet can play this role. why is there outrage? she is an actress. she is not doing a documentary. you pointed that out and your employer s reaction was? to take the piece down after my colleagues wrote a series of letters expressing outrage at what i said and the way i said it. brian: you were hired to give your opinion and you gave it. they said you would have to take
that it down, and they said there will be a committee who decides if your column can be posted in the future. they wanted me to meet with the committee any time i wrote on something sensitive to make sure i didn t ruffle the wrong feathers. brian: your reaction? to resign. brian: do you have any regrets? it s scary not to know where i am going. i have been freelancing and i have my integrity. brian: what has this process showed you from the story we just read, what has this story told you? there were two responses. one said she was kidding. others said it doesn t matter if she was kidding. if you are anti-white it s fine. she is asian-american and high
enough on the totem poll to excuse anything she does. where is that courtesy? the fact she grew up in somalia and was oppressed by muslim. brian: she is black and muslim? exactly. it s a crazy double standard. who gets to talk and who we defend and who we criticize and who we fire. brian a retiring california congressman said we may have to get regulation. we have to clear lines. if you call for violence,ry move it. anything sort of that let the marketplace of ideas clean up that speech. brian: you will be fine. straight ahead, first statues
were taken down. now texas activists want to rename the state s capital because it was named after a guy that defended slavery. that story about austin, texas, when we come back. how d that go? he kept spelling my name with an i but it s bryan with a y. yeah, since birth. that drives me crazy. yes. it s on all your email. yes. they should know this? yeah. the guy was my brother-in-law. that s ridiculous. well, i happen to know some people. do they listen? what? they re amazing listeners. nice. guidance from professionals who take their time to get to know you.
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and! we ll make heaven a place on earth yeah! oh, my angels! ooh, heaven is a place on earth [ sobs quietly ] brian: get ready for this. you ve got a backlash against proslavery historical figures and it has led to schools being renamed and statues being removed or destroyed and we told you that over the last two years. the latest victim could be one of america s largest cities. texas state capitol austin is named for stephen f. austin, the state s founding father. but austin supported slavery, owned slaves himself. now report by austin s cheek so my cheap equity officer, the city should consider renaming itself in an effort to blot out it s memory. john daniel davidson is a senior contributor at the federalist and joins us right now. do you think this should happen? get rid of austin?
let s get rid of austin, houston, washington, d.c. let s get rid of them all. if we are going to go down this road, there s no stopping it. madison, wisconsin, how about that? there you go. jackson, mississippi. this is the problem. when this whole thing started where we had to remove confederate statues and we had to rename schools that were named after confederate generals and jefferson davis. it was really obvious from the beginning that there was no limiting principle to the renaming, that once we start renaming schools and streets in cities and tearing down statues, eventually we are going to have to go after the founding fathers, we are going to have to go after abraham lincoln, we will have to have to go after woodrow wilson. everybody in the past who had opinions that today are unacceptable are going to have to go. brian: you can go back even a short time ago. a lot of political figures against same-sex marriage. people of all, people get
better. no one defends slavery but there s a lot to be proud of in our history and we should debate it, talk about it, go over it. have to give credit to george b busch. he s the only political figure i can see right now who stood up, the son of jeb. he said the nephew of the former president he says absolutely not, this will not be taken down. there would be no texas if it wasn t for steve austin, who took on the mantle of his father, moses austin who died before texas could become a state. but first it was its own nation. you can t deny that history. can t. and we have to take our history, warts and all. one of the things we have to accept about american history is that it s painful, it s complicated and also the way we remember our history is complicated too. the statues, the naming of things after a confederate general and leaders. it s all now a part of our history. rather than tearing it down and trying to eradicate it and erase
it, why don t we try to educate ourselves and our children about it? why don t we add more explanatory plaques next to the statues instead of tearing them down so we understand better where we came from and where we are going instead of trying to erase the past and blot out the unpleasant parts? brian: 10-second answer, is it a mission of people to make america americans embarrassed about their history, or is this just coincidence? this is part of a ploy to use history and public memory as a political weapon. that s exactly what it is. brian: john daniel davidson, thank you so much. they do say it s unlikely that it will change, but they are focused on the confederate statue. that is it for us for now, join me again tomorrow morning on fox & friends and then of course you can check out my radio show, the brian kilmeade show from nine until noon and i hope you do that every single day. good night from new york and also, sean hannity is next from wherever he chooses to be. sean: i got a question.

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Transcripts For FOXNEWSW FOX Friends 20180808 10:00:00


A morning show that highlights the latest headlines in news, weather, sports and entertainment, and is known for the cohosts casual and spontaneous.
A morning show that highlights the latest headlines in news, weather, sports and entertainment, and is known for the cohosts casual and spontaneous.
those who overstayed that s still a problem. the ones have to have round them up ice, tom homan. it s a great privilege to come in this country as a refugee nonimmigrant and to knowingly violate laws of this country after being given such a great privilege, that s somebody who needs to leave. they need to remove that privilege and remove them from the united states and send them home. brian: for example iraqi will came here as a refugee which he was just referring to. this iraqi in our country, multiple times including the latest one in colorado shooting a cop. and, yet, we re blaming ice for the people, for him being here. steve: that man s name right there is now charged with attempted murder of a colorado police officer. weighs involved in a shootout recently. here s the thing. there is no reason he should be in the country back in 2016, during the obama administration he was in ice custody, actually. and the courts said you know
of the list. abby: this article sparked our attention, brian. a notre dame professor. so he makes an outrageous claim. he says there is a similarity between soldiers and the media. here is what he said. we thank soldiers for their service because they devote themselves to protecting our freedoms and we should. we should also thank the media for the same reason especially when the stakes have never been higher. that is making the rounds. ben shapiro had his own reaction. here is what he says in response. so many members in the media who seem intent on treating the media as a separate class from the rest of americans. this is what americans are responding to. the media don t seem to care when americans are attacked on a regular basis by politicians or when media members attack regular americans on regular basis. real interest lies in self-protection not in standing um for the american people. this is a serious problem. steve: and why is our press free? because the men and women who wear the uniform every day to give us those rights to be able to here at the
couch tell you what s going on for folks in newspapers to write what s going on. but for this professor in management at motor dame to suggest there are parallels between the military and the press, some people have said, really? brian: he hopped on the media is the enemy line. i wish he won t say. to say you are satisfied with the what way other networks and web sites have r. treating you would be accurate as well. that s what the professor is talking about. abby: i have two members in the navy i could not imagine sitting down at the dinner table and say what i do is just as important as do you. they are important on different levels. to sail they are similar in any way. i can t imagine. they would probably be respectful because that s how our military is what they go out and do every day, steve, you said. this they allow us to do what we do. they allow us to sit on this
couch and talk freely they also don t ask what president they are serving they don t get political. brian: it s important did you go to turkey and say something against the turkish government you go to jail. same thing in russia. same thing in china. ask google, can t put certain phrases in order to put google in that country. anything that says anything antigovernment. so, i can see some merit in what he is saying. i don t necessarily see the equation. done correctly, journalism plays a vital role. abby: there are a lot of good journalists throughout that are in harm s way when they re covering war and in dangerous situation we don t want to undermine that to compare the two people need to give that deeper thought. send us what you think at friends@foxnews.com. brian: jillian cannot be compared with anybody. no one like her. jillian mele with the news. jillian: thank you very much. quite an introduction. a manhunt underway in new jersey after two officers
are ambushed at a red light. a gunman opening as many as 25 rounds at the undercover detective. when they were in unmarked car in camden. incredibly both officers have expected to survive. most recent attack comes just hours after an fbi agent was shot trying to arrest a murder suspect in los angeles. that agent is expected to survive. it s been three weeks since mollie tibbets vanished in iowa. this morning we are getting a better glimpse into exactly who she was. a friend posting this video from the day before she disappeared showing the 20-year-old laughing and smiling. this touching video from 2016 also surfacing online showing mollie sharing a personal story about fair during a faith event at her high school. i got down and i prayed and i asked god to give mee the strength to make it through it. tell me what to do to help me out with whatever happened and what his plan was. in that moment i knew that was god s moment showing me the power of prayer was really something.
abby: a reward leading to information up to $400,000. first ever medal honoring military dogs. the legs ipresident of the u.s.r dog association ron iello has been trying to make this happen. he says his dog stormy were one of the first 30 marine scout dog teams deployed during the vietnam war. i wouldn t be here today if it wasn t for my dog stormy. i can tell you the first patrol i went on she saved my life immediately. there was a sniper in the tree did a right flank and she alerted on the sniper. each branch will canine medal recipients. stormy there. abby: what a great story. brian: stormy back in the news. steve: rahm emanuel with
every excuse for the surge of violence in chicago land. one says the mayor has blood on his hands. and he is next. brian: one living legend says you will never see him kneel. jim brown s message for those protesters. t? smarter sleep. to help you lose your dad bod, train for that marathon, and wake up with the patience of a saint. and now, save up to $500 on select sleep number 360 smart beds. plus, no interest until january 2021. ends wednesday. it is such a good time to dance it is such a good time to [ laughing ] scoobidoo doobidoo scoobidoo doobidoo [ goose honking ]
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values about what is right and what is wrong. what is acceptable. steve: there have you got chicago mayor rahm emanuel on monday blaming gangs for a violent weekend in a city where 12 people were killed and i think over 60 people were shot. next guest says rahm emanuel is one of the people to blame. joining success former police officer and founder of seven star consulting dmitry roberts joins us from our nation s capital. good morning, steve. goo this is personal because your brother was shot. yes, he was. very unfortunate and very good man. outside of what s happened to me and my family, this is happening for a lot of people on both the south and west sides of chicago. at this point it really has to come to an end. steve: okay. the question is what are we going to do? we have heard a number of prominent democrats in chicago say mr. president, you have to help us because the people in charge here don t know what they are doing. i absolutely believe that
the president has the resources. he has the platform and right now he has the voice that can go in and bring some real change to these issues. and, again, i state, this has nothing to do with politics. this has to do with american lives. and some of our most vulnerable citizens in our communities that need to be protected. steve: i heard rahm emanuel say that apparently he and the chief out there are going to rede ploy people who are in the various pry 60 s, take them off of one job and put them out on the front lines is that enough? no. and that s never been enough. there has been redeployments. i was part of redeployments. that s not enough resources. that s not enough people. that s not going to curb the violence in chicago. it never has and it s not going to do it this time. that s an 11th hour response and that response is just not good enough at this point. steve: if you were advising the president of the united states because as you said it s not a political issue. this is about americans in chicago who are afraid to leave their house for fear that they would wind up getting shot as your brother did and by the way your brother, as you know, lost
his arm in that. what should the president think about doing regarding chicago? well, one, more resources. two, at a national level looking at u. not just how these issues are addressed in chicago but how these issues are addressed throughout the nation. these issues are going on in every major city in this country. and it has to be addressed on a national level. i can t stress enough that these underresourced communities are feeling the brunt of what s happening and that has to change. the president can do something about it with the stroke of a pen, as we know. steve: you think the president should visit chicago and even though he is not welcomed by probably rahm emanuel. rahm emanuel you feel will be voted out quickly? i think that this is rahm s last stand. and the reason for that is the folks that could have helped rahm stay in office are in the grave imrard, unfortunately. and, yes, the president needs to go there it s his duty and his respondsability to ensure that all americans are protected and taken care of at this point. steve: indeed, all right.
dmitry, thank you very much for your point of view. thanks, steve. steve: the united states now working on identifying dozens of remains returned from north korea. we are live with update on doctors working on iding them coming up next. you see me. but if you saw me before cosentyx. i was covered. it was awful. but i didn t give up. i kept fighting. i got clear skin with cosentyx. 3 years and counting. clear skin can last. see if cosentyx could make a difference for you. cosentyx is proven to help people with moderate to severe plaque psoriasis find clear skin that can last. don t use if you re allergic to cosentyx. before starting cosentyx, you should be checked for tuberculosis. an increased risk of infections and lowered ability to fight them may occur. tell your doctor if you have an infection or symptoms. or if you have received a vaccine or plan to.
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airport in guadalajara. you ever seeing a picture there. the drugs were headed to the states and worth about $270,000. now to abby. abby: unbelievable. thank you, brian. last week 55 cases of remains believed to be u.s. service members from the korean war arrived in hawaii, the d.n.a. testing began meadly in orde immediateld remains which could take months or years. here from the laboratory is dr. john bird and director of the dod and armed forces director examiner system dr. timothy mcmahon. thank you, very, both for being with us. thank you, abby. abby: dr. bird, this is so important to some families what y all will be doing the next month and over the years. tell us what s sifting through what is in there. this means so much. this is the only country i think would give the respect and proper burial to so many people who served this
country. well, it s a very meaningful mission for us. and for me, as a forensic scientist, it s one of the kinds of jobs that you just dream of where you have the opportunity to help families reach closure and to, you know, provide some kind of a service back to these service members who sacrificed their lives in the korean war. it s very meaningful and moving to be a part of it we re here this week for our annual meeting with the families of the missing from the korean war. we have the largest ever turnout and it just brings a lot of joy to all of us involved to be able to talk to these families about the progress that s being made. abby: so much joy to all of those family bringing some real closure. dr. mcmahon, why does it take so as long as. we have to take approach
to fit the qualities of the d.n.a. that are coming out. unlike a modern crime scene sample where the d.n.a. is very, very intact and we can get a result in pretty much 24 hours. this d.n.a. has been in the environment 70-plus years and has actually been degraded which we call being chewed up into very, very small pieces. it takes time. we have to do everything in duplicate because the last thing we want to do is give the wrong answer to the family and our addition to aid the dpaa in identification efforts. abby: dr. byrd you were talking about it earlier as doctors you have to be so meticulous. what was going through both of your minds when you saw those 55 cases coming into hawaii. where you had the flag draped over them. as a doctor, knowing what you were about to do what he was going throug, whatwas going. a lot of details what we were going to need to do to make sure we are pursuing these identifications as
aggressively as possible. but, at the same time, you know, having had the opportunity to go in to north korea, again, after many years and being able to ride with the remains back, i even was able to help drape the flags over the boxes for the ceremony when we got back to ow osson korea a it s a once in a lifetime experience. tremendous feeling. abby: i can t even imagine. dr. mcmahon, what does it mean to you. for me it was very exciting time for the first time since the early 1990s. we are receiving new samples that we ll be able to assist bringing our heroes home giving back to loved ones. all of the scientists in the lab the day they touched down in hawaii, there was an air of reverence and awe in the lab. and then getting ready to do the important mission that we need to do. abby: i also want to remind our viewers of the number to contact d.n.a. sample
location. the contact numbers put on our screen here. a few of them make sure we put them on the website as well. if you are a family member or know someone that might be connected or information d.n.a. please provide those numbers dr. byrd, dr. mcmahon, thank you for being here this morning. and when you do for this country. it s an important role that you play. thank you, abby. abby: while some protesters protest during the national anthem. jim brown says why you will never see him kneel. guess who isn t invited to dinner with the democrats? bill clinton that is a tease. we have to explain. first, a very happy birthday to the singer shawn mendes. one of my very favorite turns 21 years old. he is only 20? he has he had an amazing career. he is 20 years old today. happy birthday, sean. shawen.
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i m walking on sunshine abby: this is so exciting. i have been waiting for this day, janice for a very long time. if you didn t know, janice has been working so hard on a project near and dear to her heart. you can see it there tell us about it janice? janice: it s a memoir that is mostly sunny that s what it s called. brian: sounds french the way you said it memoir. janice: in the book i do talk about micah madian heritage. i do know french. i can speak french. brian: can you? san francisco january i can. not right now. brian: this is not a children s peculiar. this your book. janice: i have written children s books harper collins got in touch with me and said we know have you written children s books but do you have an adult book. i have dealt with challenges in my life. i was diagnosed with m.s. back in 2005. i have realized throughout the years and the challenges
that if you have a sunny outlook on things, you can get through pretty much anything. steve: right. because have you had a lot of rainy days. janice: i have had a few rainy days but you know what the sun always comes out after the storm. i m excited about. this abby, have you known about this for a while. you know, there is something about writing about your life and realizing the journey that you have been been on and thanking all the people that have helped you along the way. including all of you. there is no bad stories here on the couch. abby: janice, you are one of the sunniest. brian: i m not getting it. steve: we are all getting it. ache be a the cover is beautiful. every time we all sit down and talk to you we learn something new about you and your life. have you so many stories to tell. just a reminder for people to have an optimistic outlook and you can get through anything. janice: i m grateful for the people here at fox & friends encouraging me. i have been here 15 years there is a research for that you provide me with a sunny outlook. march 2019 you can preorder it i won t be talking about
it for another six months but we wanted to show you the cover. brian: fame musclesly charles barkley wrote a autobiography and said a lot of the stuff wasn t true. janice: this is all true. brian: it s all true. janice: all of it. steve: because you wrote it he may not have written miss own book. abby: was it therapeutic to write? absolutely. i m a kid from ottawa, canada to come here to new york city is a pretty big dream of mine. i m grateful to all of you and thanks to all the people who have been so supportive. brian: when is it coming out? janice: march of 2019. mostly sunny. that s hopefully out rest of my life. abby: janice, we adore you. we cannot wait for this and to read it congratulations. janice: i can t believe it it s so crazy. brian: generally i don t let abby speak for me but i will. we do adore you. jillian: janice, it is beautiful. i can t wait to read it get
you caught up on news. bill clinton s name is dropped from a democratic fundraiser amid rising pressure from the #me too movement. activists called for the former president s name to be removed from the new hampshire kennedy clinton dinner after he drew widespread criticism over his affair with monica lewenski. the name change dime emphasize the party s commitment to elect democratic women instead of being known as the kennedy clinton dinner. it will now be named after former first lady eleanor roosevelt. anti-trump comedian rosie o donnell still can t understand why president trump was elected to lead our nation. why do you think americans voted for him. i think largely because of the celebrity apprentice. i blame mark for creating a false narrative around this man. no one treated him with respect and dignity until this show came on. he was always considered a joke and laughing stock before the hit show. the comedian has been feuding with president trump
for years. she led a musical protest at the white house on monday. we telling you about that yesterday. high school students kicked out of class for wearing an nra shirt. one of their mothers says the teacher was way out of line. i think is he there to teach. i don t think he is there to discuss his personal beliefs. jillian: two sophomores say they were singled out and given a lecture why guns are bad by teacher in california. the school says the shirt did not right dress code policy. unclear if the teacher will face any consequences. listen to this might sound crazy ain t no lie baby bye, bye, bye. the way they all became the brady bunch the brady bunch jillian: we can t get enough of either of those songs. we now know who the mills industry buyer who is who beat out former nsync member in buying the house hgtv.
they plan to restore the home to its 170s glory. tweeting is he not mad and knows hgtv will, quote, do the right thing with the house. abby: maybe they will make a new show out of it. steve: didn t buy, buy, buy the house. jillian: he didn t b buy, buy, buy the house i m going to bye-bye bye. brian: is the nfl ever going to solve the problem with taking a knee during the national anthem. you are usually fervent in your belief. when jim brown the legendary running back came out famously stood by muhammed ali when he decided to boycott the vietnam war and kareem gentleman bulcan a this .
steve: he was at the career of hbo s hard knocks. he told this to the associated press. i will never kneel and i will always respect the flag. i m not going to denigrate my flag and i m going to stand for the national anthem. i m fighting with all of my strength to make it a better country but i don t think that s the issue. because what is the top side? are you going to stand up? this is our country, man. we work hard to make it better and that s my attitude. that is the attitude of jim brown. he also says he respects players rights to do what they feel is right but, when it comes to jim brown, the 82-year-old, you know, keep in mind since he retired from football he has been involved in social justice and change. he says he is always going to stand. abby: really powerful when a voice like that steps up and speaks. as you said, brian, he has been through a lot in this country. and taking a stand and saying it the way that he did, i think it speaks for some people in this country who feel the exact same way. brian: he knows the country
is not perfect. he lived at a time in sir cus black players you stay in a separate holt as white teammates. the white teammates said no, we will stay with you and the rest of our time. kept it together. very divisive time. also a guy who knows that the community teamed together money so he could go to syracuse and they told him he got a full scholarship. they knew once syracuse gave a look at him they did give him a full ride. greatest players ever in lacrosse and football. so he saw the injustice. he also saw the goodness in our country. abby: he still wants to make it better. brian: he does it everyday. abby: this may not be the most productive way to do it. soindz like another book to ride. brian: it s his book. one more thing to this. instead in his twilight years sitting back he goes into prisons and started a program the mayo americana program teaches skills to read, to write, to make a resume.
they get out they get a shot. that program has impressed the president he is taking elements of that and goes into the communities. abby: he went and sat down with the president. let vption that conversation and see if we can move forward together and make some change. steve: jim brown stands for the anthem and that s it. you met these identical twins on fox & friends. they are political opposites. one is a republican, one is a democrat. they both just ran for office. the results are. in they will join us live coming up. brian: a grouch pastors facing backlash because they met with president trump. that s the story. zachery woods here says the left should want those kinds of meetings to happen. as a democrat he says that and the world s going to know your name yeah how do you win at business?
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don t share needles or insulin pens. don t reuse needles. the most common side effect is low blood sugar, which may cause dizziness, sweating, confusion, and headache. check your blood sugar. low blood sugar can be serious and may be life-threatening. injection site reactions may occur. tell your prescriber about all medicines you take and all your medical conditions. taking tzds with insulins like tresiba® may cause serious side effects like heart failure. your insulin dose shouldn t be changed without asking your prescriber. get medical help right away if you have trouble breathing, fast heartbeat, extreme drowsiness, swelling of your face, tongue or throat, dizziness or confusion. (man) i found my tresiba® reason. find yours. (vo) ask your health care provider about tresiba®. covered by most commercial health insurance and medicare part d plans. brian: a group of pastors facing backlash for meeting with president trump, just meeting with him. and thanking him for his work on prison reform. so why not focus on positive
accomplishment from the meeting? why does everything break down on politics. joining us is zachery wood the assistant editor at the atlantic and the author of uncensored. meanwhile, zac great to see you. great to be here. brian: before i talk to you about your machine on this. i want you to hear the pass for van moody on saturday talk about his meeting with the president and the backlash he face you had. one was things that we see through that is that once we get beyond our disagreements, we have got to learn how to come together, find commonality for the common good. and that was the reach i went. brian: that s the reason he went. but the backlash he has gotten has been relentless. he doesn t regret it but he is really upset about it should he be? he should be. i think i respect the effort. and i think if you look at the history of this country, you will notice that the progress that we have made with respect to important issues it has always been difficult to achieve, whether you are looking at frederick douglass and abraham lincoln or a. philip randolph and fdr and martin
luther king jr. those are pressing issues of the time and they weren t always easy to have. but we have to make the effort. brian: you have a lot of people line van jones when the white house called me up i have been very critical. but when you talk about prison reform i care more about prison reform than i do politics. what else it going to take. if it s about the american people, if it s about addressing issues that are critical in terms of improving their quality of life, then we have to put political differences aside and say we are willing to make an effort to listen and understand. brian: why don t we? because we get caught up with the views and values that we hold dear. that makes it very difficult for tours reach across the aisle and say i m interested in gaining a deeper understanding. brian: i hear this. we don t want to legitimize the president. exactly. brian: he won. in this case i have to say i respect the effort that he made to bring these leaders together. and you know where i stand. i don t agree with the majority of policies that the administration has. brian: you liberal democrat. exactly.
brian: meanwhile, yesterday, we sat down with candace woodowens and charlie kirk and talked to them about being ambushed by antifa. this sadly is becoming video we are seeing every week whether it s sarah huckabee sanders, whether it s kirstjen nielsen trying to have dinner with her husband. what s going on here, zach. we see this time and time again. this is an example where we need to be having thoughtful, careful, considerate conversations about difficult issues and why are not able to do that. brian: right. this is an example of the worst that we see when it comes to addressing political issues right now. brian: we are at a point where maybe candace and charlie would be engaged on debate on the street. that s what we would hope for. brian: water and eggs and whistle and bull horn harass them. have you two college professors right now and you know i have been in the free speech for a long time now.
cornell west and robert george. robert george known conservative cornell west a leftist. they are going around the country and traveling and speaking about the most important issues and the value of listening and learning and higher education. brian: do you feel backlash when you listen and learn and don t attack back at republicans. i definitely feel backlash from my side of the aisle. brian: the book came out talks about that. exactly. brian: jim brown comes out and talking about the activist from the 60 s i stand for my country. kaepernick says i take a knee for my country. what does zach stand. i will stand. i will always stand. i understand the right of someone to make a different decision i believe it s protected by the first amendment. brian: zachr. wood. thanks for having me. we will do nothing cooperatively with ice if they do any criminal acts which a police force can do,
we will take criminal action. brian: nine out of every 10 have criminal records. that s our proud governor of new york. he talks resistance to a whole new level when you are talking about resisting law enforcement. and, you met these identical twins on fox & friends. who are political opposites. they both just ran for office. the results are in. and they will join us next live.
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live in the same area so i do not have to vote for her. steve: right. but i will say this. i will say that i am glad that there were a large number of individuals who came out and exercised their right to vote. steve: do you know what is amazing about you ladies. your story came out and we had you on a couple weeks ago talking about how you are political opposites you are from the same family and able to get along. i understand you told one of our producers yesterday that after had you begun speaking out about the red and the blue and the differences, families have come up to you and said, you know what? your message is so inspiring we are getting back together after hating each other s guts for a while. yes. that is so empowering. and we are so excited for that to happen. and if we can be that inspiration, then let s go for it. abby: why aren t we seeing that more. you mentioned bird. you are rare birds today. we don t see people from opposite ends of the political spectrum being
able to sit down and have a civil conversation. what advice do you have to people today to be able to do that? you know, take this one and get out of your feelings. we are so involved in our emotions and how we feel that we re not thinking of the other person, that we re not thinking of the end results and goals. we need to be solution oriented and solution-based and not just all the knee-jerk reactions based on the emotions and feelings that we have towards one party or the other. the president or whatever the situation is. steve: we have got to look at your family and figure out what your parents did to raise two people who have different points of view but can get along around the dinner table. we have amazing parents and, you know, they used to make us do debates against each other. we had something called an encyclopedia back then and the almanac and things like that. if we had an issue with each other. mom and dad would say write
it down, do your homework and then we would come back together but at the end of the day mom never let us fight. we would debate but we have to have a solution at the end of the day. abby: i love your message about the bird. the bird has a left wing and right wing. how often do we forget we are all in the same country. we are all fighting for the same thing. we all want at the end of the day to have our freedoms and to live in the best country in the world. how often we forget that. absolutely. i m sorry? abby: i say how often we forget that such a gee good reminder. it is. it is. and with shows like, this taking the positive high road approach, this is just what our country needs. steve: all right. abby: good luck. steve: jessica ann tyson the republican and the democrat. next stop november. thank you. thank you so much. abby: coming up on the show, a professor claims a journalist are just like soldiers. one veteran who has done both jobs is now outraged.
he is live with us next. steve: he is the super bowl winning head coach. now tony dungy has a new game planned for kids. he is going to join us live in the next hour subaru forester holds its value better than any other vehicle in its class according to alg. better than cr-v. better than rav4. better than rogue. an adventure that starts with a subaru forester will always leave you smiling. get 0% percent apr financing on the 2018 subaru forester.
are the most at risk for severe illness. help prevent this! talk to your doctor or pharmacist today about getting vaccinated against whooping cough. brian: the house special election in ohio still too close to call at this hour but we do have a leader. republican troy balderson and democrat danny o connor are separated by less than a point. steve: come out with a poll the top problem in the united states is immigration. democrats don t like the immigration crackdown. i will do nothing cooperatively with ice. i have said if they do any criminal acts we will take criminal action. chicago de ploying hundreds of police officers to combat rising gun violence. chicago mayor rahm emanuel blames gun violence and witnesses staying silence. we have evidence that bruce ohr was working hand in hand with christopher steele. there was over 60 different contacts made
between bruce ohr and christopher steele trying to get dirt on this president. brian: some football players protest during the national anthem jim brown miss message. steve: i m not going to denigrate our flag i m going to stand for the national anthem who says you can t go home who says you can t go home. steve: well, bon jovi who lives across the river from us here in manhattan stinging about you can t go home. apparently he and his son have a new ro rosea line we got the email blast from sue leonard. abby: he should send us some and see if it s any good. brian: do you feel resentful to your dad for showing up
and taking the spotlight away? abby: you are grateful for him because he gave you an opportunity. can you see it both ways. brian: i think they needs therapist to understand how great his dad is. abby: i need one too because i sit next to brian every day. brian: once in a while you do. abby: good morning. steve: that s right abby is in, ainsley is off. we start this hour with a fox news alert. the special election in ohio in the 12th district still too close to call at this hour. brian: right now president trump s pick is inches closer to victory results in four of the primaries also are coming. in. abby: griff jenkins is live to break it all down. don t pop the cork on the bottle bon jovi wine in ohio. the president is trying to give it to his candidate it is too close to call. republican troy baltdz and democrat danny o connor separated by less than a point. barltdz balderson leading by just over 1700 votes. america is on the right
path and we re going to keep it going that way. we made our case for change. we re going to make that case tomorrow. we re not stopping now. ohio s secretary of state says there are still some 8,000 absentee ballots to be tallied. the election board began counting those. to kansas we go and the republican primary for governor also too close to call. president trump s pick of secretary of state kris kobach with a razor then lead over jeff collier that would be a major primary upset. over in michigan congratulations to bill schuette who won the g.o.p. primary for governor predicting a big win in november where schuette will face democrat state legislator gretchen whitmore. interesting to note he defended the sanders alexandria ocasio-cortez will face debbie stabenow. calling james the future star of the republican party and finally we end in the
show me state. the president s last tweet of the night going to the attorney general who won there. congratulations to josh hawley on your big senate primary win in missouri. i look forward working with you toward a wig bin in november. we need you in washington. holly faces incumbent democrat claire mccass skill in november. that s one of the many hotly contested senate races. while it s hot in august it feels like we are already in november. brian: good job, griff. appreciate it we owe you a big favor for doing that because we didn t want to. steve: we owe him a favor for doing his job? brian: oh, sorry. what he said about josh hawley is good. he is the best opponent that the senator mccaskill has ever faced. for some reason she has had soft opponents over the years. she is going to be in for it. she tried to do i understand she tried to do an rv tour in a plane. abby: how did that work? brian: how do you touch people in a plane. steve: it was a little and they have been tagging her with that as well.
he made the point out in kansas if the candidate out there, the secretary of state, if he is able to pull it through, at the last minute, kris kobach, that would be extraordinary because donald trump is the one who said at the 11th hour with mr. kobach in the back of the pack, in the polls, said he is my guy. and so if he were to win, that would be big. abby: everyone was watching the race in ohio in that 129 district. a big take away was democrat o connor 31 years old. not only new fresh face for the party. he had a different strategy than we have seen from other democrats in the country. steve: being republican. abby: not anti-trump candidate. he ran on the issues. he gave voters an insight into what he wanted. steve: he was very moderate. abby: he was. the interesting thing balderson it was a lot closer than it probably should have been. however it ends, if balderson pulls through in the end and gets to the finish line it will be because president trump went to ohio and campaigned for him it still matters to be a
good candidate. you still have to be liked. i m not sure that he had that at the end of the day. steve: the thing though with 100% of the precincts reporting, the republican is slightly ahead. the big question is with those 3300 provisional ballots that they are going to be counting in the next day or two, who is more motivated to vote early? was it the democrats or was it the republicans? i mean, the president went in at the last moment. so maybe it was the democrats, which could turn that around. it s still too close to call. brian: a couple things also to think about, the democrats keep getting close. and they are pick up, i think karl rove did the math five points in every one of these races. the only one they won was that one district in pennsylvania. they are going to have a re-match in november. these same two guys. only have the job a couple months and go earn it again. the question is are these candidates going to be able to define themselves, aside from getting money and the fame and the proceeds from
prestige from being on stage with president trump. separate themselves. george stephanopoulos said we were afraid of a refused wave so we went with bill clinton out everywhere. after a few months it became clear we were hurting the candidate. so we had to pull back. i m wondering now do these men and women have to earn it themselves? abby: yeah. what will the democratic party look like in the end? because right now you are seeing two different versions of that party. you are seeing alexandria ocasio-cortez and. brian: elizabeth warren. abby: and o connor. the guy in pennsylvania much more moderate version. what will the party in 2020 be? if they want to be successful i think the answer is pretty clear. see what they go with. a lot of them are talking about sanctuary cities, abolishing ice and immigration continues to be the top of voter s minds when they go to the polls. steve: it does indeed. a lot of people have been troubled by what looks like happened at the department of justice and the fbi. in spying on donald trump. john solomon over at the
hill has apparently gotten some a look at some emails between christopher steele, he is the guy who put together the dossier that was unverified for the most part. and bruce ohr. a high ranking department of justice official. and the email show chris steele that guy right there. secretly funneled information to the fbi through that second man you just saw there, bruce over. the department of justice official even after steele was fired. even after it was clear he could not continue to funnel information to the fbi. he did. brian: here is an example of the text messages between them. steele andor are speaking. just want to check you are okay because sally yates was fired. still in the situation and able to help locally as discussed. locally meaning in britain? i m still here and able to help as discussed or came back with i will let you know if that changes. steele replied this. if you end up out though, i
really need another bureau question mark contact point number for someone who is briefed. steve: right. the other thing, keep in mind. brian: what is that about? steve: there is bruce ohr. his wife nellior worked for fusion gps. they are the people who were spreading the disinformation. so, bruce ohr, nellior, they are married. still working with chris steele. mark meadows, the republican from the great state of north carolina says this is a big problem. bruce ohr, who was with the department of justice actually was working as a go between, between them and the fbi. now, what we re also seeing is we re not talking about one or two or three contacts. there was over 60 different contacts made between bruce ohr and christopher steele trying to get dirt and actually sell dirt on this president. and we also have text messages now that confirm
that peter strzok actually worked with bruce ohr. so it s it s amazing that it has taken so long for this to come out. brian: the fbi and britain intelligence working together against a sitting president or president-elect? abby: to his point, why are we just hearing about this now? when you ride the president s tweets, there is a reason why he is so frustrated where we are. steve: sure. abby: what went on in the early days of the campaign. this is not the role of the justice department to do. steve: and the problem to your earlier question why are we just hearing about it now? because the department of justice and the fbi have been slow-rolling. this they have been stonewalling. just now congressional investigators are getting a look at these things. isn t this interesting? nellior, the wife, met with her husband and chris steele the day before operation crossfire hurricane was officially launched by the fbi. abby: steve, just a coincidence. brian: good news for chuck grassley. he can t get christopher steele to sit down with him.
but he is getting the dialogue and the testimony of christopher steele, speaking in britain on a buzzfeed case so the buzzfeed lawyers are going to allow that testimony to be ferried over to grassley and see if he can get some questions answers. steve: it s a video deposition and going to answer a lot of questions. abby: what s your thoughts on that? friends@foxnews.com. go over to jillian for headlines. jillian: following headlines out of new jersey. a fox news alert. a manhunt underway right now after two officers are ambushed at a red light. a gunman firing as many as 25 rounds at the undercover detectives in an unmarked car in camden. incredibly, both officers are expected to survive. we will be live in camden with an update on the story at the both hour. make sure you stay tuned for that this most recent attack on cops comes hours after a fbi agent shot trying to arrest a murder suspect.
is he expected to survive. mollie tibbets vanished in iowa three weeks ago. a friend posted this video the day before she disappeared showing the 20-year-old laughing and smiling. mollie s aunt sharing a video from 2016 when she spoke at a faith event. i got down and i prayed and i asked god to give meet strength to make it through it tell me what to do to help me out with whatever happened and to know what his plan was. in that moment i kind of knew that was god s way of showing the power of prayer was really something. jillian: the reward for information leading to mollie is over $300,000. today, a family will receive dog tags found with the remains of a fallen u.s. soldier sent from north korea. that sentimental item will be presented this morning to the soldier s sons. during that ceremony at the pentagon, we will also hear an update on the remains of the service members back home on american soil. lone survivor marcus
luttrell is helping a man who saved his life. former navy seal putting out the call to save money for david bo ramsey. he led the seem team of green berets who pulled luttrell off a mountain in afghanistan. is he paralyzed after a horrific motorcycle crash in may. luttrell wants to help his family build a wheelchair accessible home. go fund me page has been set up online. to say donate can you head to fox friends@foxnews.com. steve: marcus luttrell is unbelievable. brian: said it s going to take 80,000 the. i saw that number unless it increased 36. abby: we will get that go fund me site on our site. steve: that guy was left to die. abby: is he a hero is he. steve: yes, it is former mayor admits to stealing taxpayer dollars. now he wants the public to bail him out. have you got hear this story. brian: one comparing journalists to service members. one veteran who has done both jobs wants to weigh in. he is outraged.
he is here to respond next when you get worried i ll be a soldier 10 miles on every dollar they spend at thousands of hotels. all you have to do is pay with this at hotels.com/venture. 10 miles per dollar? that is incredible. brrrrr! i have the chills. because you re so excited? because ice. is cold. and because of all those miles. obviously. what s in your wallet? saynot todayis because of my bladder, obviously. thanks to tena intimates with proskin technology designed to absorb so fast, it helps to protect and maintain your skin s natural balance so you can feel fresh and free to get as close as you want all day, and now all night
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isn t the enemy, it is the protector. joseph holt writes, quote: we thank soldiers for their service because they devote themselves to protecting our freedoms and we should. but we should also thank the media for the same reason, especially when the stakes have never been higher. our next guest is a marine veteran who has done both jobs and he is here to set the record straight. dave brooks is editor for the daily caller news foundation also served in the marine corps for six years. as i said you have been in both roles in your life. when you saw this op-ed, and you read that comparison, what did you think? well, let s start with the obvious point. the vast majority of journalists didn t sign up to protect our nation and values. and this professor wasn t even talking about journalists who do put themselves in harm s way. he was talking about white house reporters who go to the press briefings and instead of asking questions, they pull out a soapbox and
deliver sermons until sarah sanders shuts them down and head to twitter like personal diaries and make the stories about themselves. after that they want to go to the trump rallies and when they get heckled by the president s supporters they act like they are marching the bawttle of fallujah. abby: this is close to my heart. i have two brothers in the navy who have serving. they hate when i bring them up because that is who they are. they are so humbled. never lost on me, dave, what they do what they sacrifice every day allows me to do my job. it allow me to be in front of this camera right now and to speak my mind. they are the ones out there fighting for our freedoms. what can we learn? what can our industry today learn from our brave men and women who serve? you make a good point. a lot of us are very awkward talking about our service. many of us, myself included never saw themselves in the line of fire. never had to fire their weapon in combat. but we went to our jobs
every day and we tried to do what we could do and we, the military are better placed an they found it. the difference being is a lot of these journalists out there right now. especially white house reporters who want to grandstand and make the stories all about themselves, they could take a lesson from that and you know, i write for a military satire site called did you feel blog. we thank for service all the time in self-deposit prix indicated manner so we don t get too self-inflated egos. that s the problem right now these journalists wanting to be thanked who go out and seek the self-adulation goes on sense of worth. abby: no by lines on the battlefield. they stand up for that flag so honorably. thank you for coming on. rahm emanuel using every excuse for the surge in violence across chicago. one former chicago officer says no more excuses. it is finally time for some action. you re going to hear from
him just ahead. plus, football legend jim brown taking a stand for the national anthem saying you will never see him kneel. what the super bowl winning coach tony dungy think about that? we re going to ask him. we re going to ask him. there he he s up next.
i believe brian kilmeade had one of them. brian: i had a 1969 one. the chassis cracked. thanks for bringing it up, steve. steve: never mind. finally two. that s how many teams are welcoming mayor cheerleaders this season. the rams and new orleans saints have preseason games tomorrow. stand by for that. brian: excellent. abby: thank you, steve. while some football players continue to kneel for the national anthem. one hall of famer making his message clear in a message to protesters. jim brown says i will never kneel and i will always respect the flag. i m not going to denigrate my flag. i m going it stand for the national anthem. i m fighting with awful my strength to make it a better country. but i don t think that s the issue because what is the top side? are you not going to stand up? this is our country, man, we work hard to make it better and that is my attitude. brian: here so-to-weigh in is tony dungy and he was kind enough to bring his wife laura dunningy. great to see both of you.
thank you. nice to be here. brian: first time have you been on the couch together. it is the first time. brian: austin plays fair and maria finds courage. two books to send message to kids about values, right? we are excited about our books. they were released yesterday. and sports related stories that kids can relate to. they can see themselves in the story because the kids face challenges that they all face when they are playing the game of sports. steve: you know what, tony, these could become a best seller just if you sell to the kids at your house. [laughter] get each one of them to buy one we are good. brian: 10 kids. 10 kids. abby: such big hearts. i come from a family two of my sisters are adopted. it s a wonderful thing. i know that s a passion of yours. yes, it is a passion. abby: give us your thoughts, coach, on the anthem. we were just talking about the hall of famer and people speaking out right now. what do you make of what s going on? well, first of all, i know a lot of these outcome
men and theyoungmen they are tra voice for people who don t have a voice. that s what the bible tells to us do. i respect that i respect jim brown s position. i think if i were still coaching what i would do is tell my players, let s come in and talk. tell me your issues. what you re upset about. give me some solutions. i will give you 10 minutes of my press conference every week so that can you get that voice. you want to be a voice, i will give you a platform. let s work together on this. maybe not use the three minutes before before the game during the national anthem. let s use a time where can you get your voice really heard and let people know what the issues are. brian: you don t hide from the issues. you know in america there are issues of social justice that need to be addressed. you know athletes have a lot of power and fame and should use it and so, tony, if you are you were a player and a coach. if you are a player, would you be standing if you are a coach, would you be standing? i would stand because i
personally think that s the way to go. i know my dad was in the service. he was in the military. that s why he fought. that s why he enlisted in world war ii to give us the freedom of choice to do what we think is best. but what i would do is get with my fellow teammates and my fellow coaches what s going to be the best way, the most effective way to get this out? and that s where i think we haven t done a good job. the nfl and the players come together. let s talk about solutions and how can we get this out. but, one thing, brian, these guys are not unpatriotic. they are not standing against our country. they are standing against what s kneeling against what s wrong in the country. abby: what do you teach your kids about this? my kids understand the story and the situation. but they also are understanding that they have to have respect for the team and for what s being taught, you know there. steve: do you think jerry
jones? dallas has the right approach if you are going to play for the cows you are going to stand with your toes on the line. he has the ability to run his team the way he wants to run it. if i m working for him toy v. to abide by his rules. steve: it s a job. it s a job. i understand it i personally wouldn t do it that way. if i everywhere the coach i would talk to my guys and say you have the freedom to do it but let s think about why. i understand that. brian: let s talk about two controversial subjects austin and maria. [laughter] in austin the theme is austin plays football one problem his team has lost six games in a row i guess in the end he quits and plays another sport? [laughter] not exactly. brian: have you him stick it out? he has wonderful coaches that walk alongside of him and support him. we happen to be the coaches by the way. we are the coaches and we are there to instill good values and just encourage them to do the right thing. and that s important. and many kids face those situations where they are not sure what to do. what s the best way to
handle this situation? tone tone the teammate that says we can win by cheating. they can figure out if they are going to play by the rules. brian: maria wants to play soccer. she wants to play soccer but hesitant because it s a new sport. not sure if this is the game for her. but with the encouragement of her coaches, again, she is out there and she plays and does well. brian: brand new book series came out this week. congratulations to both of you. thank you. brian: if you want the opportunity to be in the next book what do you. contest to severe your chilto enter yourchild. you can be a character. brian: who wouldn t want to be a character. brian: when the season starts you don t see him again he will be on the road broadcasting with nbc. thank you. ainsley: two police detectives ambushed now a massive manhunt is underway. we are live on the ground there that s next.
steve: this gives a whole new meaning to taking a plunge. a coast guard s wedding day turns into a rescue mission. details straight ahead catch me if you can i m going down in a blaze of glory going to last from wash to. .wear for up to 12 weeks. unstopables by downy. too hot to work? nah. this is the gator xuv835. with game-changing heat and air, it s never too anything for anything.
last year was a bad year across the nation. already just one shy of an officer being killed to tie last year s awful year. so, this year is getting even worse. fortunately, these two detectives are going to survive. they were just both shot in the arm and hand. man and woman. undercover cops. undercover car. and a guy at a red light just starts blasting at them through their windshield. the police chief held a news conference after this happened at 8:30 on national night out while cops in camden four different locations trying to build community trust, this happens. they were essentially ambushed. a male walked up and began opening fire. our officers have non life-threatening injuries. but not for the grace of god to be quite frank. the amount of rounds fired at close range. and so, they got a good look at this white van. and they also got some good shots at it they think it has bullet holes in it. it came back as a
registration in a philly suburb. put the bulletin out for philly police to be on the lookout for it may have clipped one of the guys. may be blood in the van once they find it dumped somewhere. also an alert out for the hospital. this should tell every law enforcement officer what they already know that they are targets in this day and age. guys? steve: steve kealy live in camden. was this random or targeted since they were in an unmarked car. do we know. they won t foe for sure when they catch this guy. often when you are under i don t cover under cover buy or busted somebody before, chances are you are recognized especially in a smaller city like camden. thought they were a couple on the street and road wage case. for some reason the cops think this shooter knew they were cops by what happened here. abby: steve kealy thanks for that live report. brian: as you know jillian you are from philadelphia do you know steve. jillian: i do know steve.
abby: is he fun. jillian: he is fun. brian: do you have a rivalry because i m sensing something. jillian: no. we are all philly people. get you caught up on news right now. starting in chicago. because chicago de ploying 600 police officers to combat rising gun violence. former chicago police officer dmitry roberts joined us earlier saying it s not enough. that s not resources. that s not enough people and that s not going to curb the violence in chicago. it never has and it s not going to this time. that s an 11th hour response and that response is just not good enough at this point. jillian: at least 12 people were killed and 70 injured in shootings in chicago over the weekend. chicago mayor rahm emanuel blames gang violence and witnesses staying silent within those communities. the governor of new york is once again threatening ice and refusing to work with
them. i will do nothing cooperatively with ice. that they do any criminal acts, which a police force can do, we will take criminal action. democrat andrew cuomo also says he thinks ice s actions are, quote, politically motivated by president trump. an off duty coast guardsman saves a man s life on his wedding day. take a look. the groom was taking photos on a beach in alabama. when someone alerted the couple about a struggling swimmer. zac edward s new wife mead told him to jump in the water. went to take off his bottoms. you don t have time. the guy was drifting farther and farther out. don t worry about your pants. just go. you have to listen to your wife because otherwise you are in trouble. jillian: new mrs. edwards says she got a package deal a hubby and a hero. that s great. herd of cows steer police to a suspect on the run. if you see the large grouch cows there, they are literally following her and chasing her.
jillian: the udd early awesome video show the cows corralling the woman after she jumped out of the stolen car and ran into pasture. the police moooving onto the woman if you will. arresting her and two others. i love adding cheesy lines into funny videos. abby: you are really good at it too, jillian. jillian: and be dramatic with it. brian: coming up later the farm report with jillian. let s see if she can adjust. abby: out to janice that lightning and thunder last night was unbelievable in new york. janice: it was crazy. unfortunately we had injuries. the national weather service always says when thunder roars, stay indoors. that s a smart phrase. hi, what s your name? frank. janice: where are you from. charlotte, north carolina. janice: what do you think of the weather here. better than yesterday but it s been a swamp like it has in charlotte. janice: something that swamp. have you had breakfast yet.
no. take your order. thank you for coming by the way. you only need one friend. 88 in providence is the daytime high today. it s going to be swampy like along the coast line. a lot of humidity. so just take precautions. make sure you are drinking lots of liquids, bring the kids indoors, airconditioning and pets and check on the elderly. last 24 hours we did have strong thunderstorms. we could have storms today as well and through the weekend because we have this trough in place along the northeast parts of the midwest as well. this is hurricane hector, my friends. still a category 3 major hurricane moving south of hawaii which is good news. still see some impacts. here are daytime highs today. a lot of 90 s on the map and going to be humid. do you want to say hi to somebody at home. say hi to my daughter sophia, miss you. janice: breakfast on you? you got it. janice: we re taking orders. back inside: you have one friend outside. you just asked him to go get you breakfast. janice: or should i be paying?
abby: right thing to do. janice: how about brian? can brian pay? brian: if she only had pockets she would be able to. all right. thanks, guys. abby: thanks, janice. brian: democrats and the left slamming trump for policies. the says the president is absolutely rights exclamation point. he joins us next. steve: back to school, lap desk for more than 60% off. meghan has that coming up (burke) at farmers, we ve seen almost everything
so we know how to cover almost anything. even vengeful vermin. not so cute when they re angry. and we covered it. talk to farmers. we know a thing or two because we ve seen a thing or two. we are farmers. bum-pa-dum, bum-bum-bum-bum
going mogul drug score giant cvs health planning to diagnose illnesses through smart phone app. launching a nationwide service to treat minor medical issue. each video visit will cost $59. steve? steve: all right, jillian, thank you. nengs guest immigrated to new york from gu guyana. he waited for his have as so-to-come. the hard decisions they had to make including leaving a sick child behind and the hours of studying that they had to do to pass the naturalization test. in a new op-ed he explains why that experience shows him president trump is right on immigration. writing, quote. today, if somebody hops the u.s. border and gives birth to a child that child gets the exact same benefit that took my child 8 years to achieve. that s a huge flaw in our immigration system. the author of that op-ed joins us right now, neil gouveia is a higher
education fundraiser and he joins us live in new york. neil, good morning to you. thank you. thank you for having me here. steve: what a story you have got. when you were a child your parents decided we are going to take a risk and go to the united states they had nothing but did it anyway. absolutely. america is a land of opportunities and this is a place where we could create our own destiny. definitely worth it. steve: when they came here from guyana, they decided rather than just melt into the landscape, and hide, we re going to do it the right way? absolutely. you follow the rules there was no skipping the line. there was a lot of patience. and so we just had to really pick our time and let things unfold. steve: why did they decide we are going to follow the rules? we re going to sign the guest book? we re going to wait it out? that was the only option. we wanted to be productive members of society. we came to assimilate. i want great. we wanted to be members of the american culture. steve: in the beginning it was tough. i think i read that your father died when you were 9 years old. he was a cleaner and he sold fruit and he lived a tough
life. but it was all to get you kids ahead. it was actually my little sister eventually passed away who we had to leave behind. she initially wasn t able to come to the united states because there is a strict physical you have to go through to come to the united states. so initially she didn t make it, so we had to make that journey to bring her back the legal way, you know, taking the proper steps. once she was here in the united states she eventually passed away. still a journey we had to take. steve: tell us why you feel as an immigrant who did it the right way the president is right on immigration? well, it s really important to enforce that this is a country of rule and laws. and we have to let people know that, you know, these rules were set up so they could be followed. we people like me and my family, we took we took the long way but we had to be really patient about it. but, this is the way to do it. there is no other way. if you want to be productive members of society in this country, you have to just follow the guidelines.
steve: you live in new york city. and you have a conservative point of view. where did that come from? well, this all happened in 2016 when i just started like thinking for myself. looking through a different outlook. meeting a lot of the conservatives. i realized conservatives aren t out to get me. they don t want certain ideologies forced upon them. so through dialogue and exchange i realized i actually have a lot in common with this group of people. steve: sure. the u.s. congress had a chance to do something in the past year on immigration reform. obviously, you want more people to come to the united states legally. but, right now, the system is screwed up. absolutely. i think what president trump is suggesting is actually these are things already practiced in australia and canada. merit-based immigration system where you invite people over t who want to embrace our ways of life, our values, which are very important in addition to having skills that fit the society. steve: you are proud to be an american, can i tell. absolutely, hard core.
steve: it s great to meet your acquaintance neil gouveia thank you for joining us live. thank you so much. steve: straight ahead on this wednesday, alexandria ocasio-cortez doesn t always have her facts straight. unemployment is low because everyone has two jobs: we re going to flip this seat red in november. we gave the military a 700 billion-dollar budget increase which they didn t even ask for. steve: well, if you thought that was inaccurate. wait until you hear what she just said about the middle class. plus, it s mega morning deals back-to-school edition. deals on back sets, book sets and so much more. good morning, meghan my momma told me you better shop around for all-day, all-night protection. can you imagine 24 hours without heartburn?
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don t bleed. have marker color saturation. steve: couple kids big set like that is awesome. $26. today the savings is 67% off. brian: tops? you don t have to worry about that? steve: not with the color pencils. these are lintel carry-all s they can hold your toiletries. open them up when you get to the bathroom. 10 bucks, you guys. brian: what s it normally. normally 29 to 45. today for you guys that s a savings of 67% off. this one goes inside your backpack or school bag. holds your laptop, your glasses, your charger. keeps everything protected nice and quilted. steve: no reason to lose anything. fun colors. you might have seen in the tease earlier lap desk. it s bamboo, really nice looking. steve: why do you need a lap desk.
are you kidding i m always working on a couch on a chair in front of tv. if you are in college, in your dorm, you don t always have you are always fighting over the one desk that the six people in the dorm have to share. abby: also gets hot whether you have a computer on your lap. went get hot. holds your phone and laptop and mouse pad and finally the backpack. poor kids carry so much stuff these days. love these because get these, this you guys, usb port in the backpack. so they can. steve: there is a battery in there. they can charge stuff. they are going to put their laptops in there they are are going to put their phones. it has the rfid protected pockets. antitheft pockets. no one can steal their id. water holder. padded back only 24 to 49 bucks today. a savings of up to 76% off. that s a mega morning deal, isn t it? steve: no kidding. people like more information go to our website friends@foxnews.com. look for meghan s mega morning deal logo.
click on that. brian: also look for meghan. maybe get some free stuff. steve: i think she is going to have that backpack and filled with. brian: colored pencils, absolutely. steve: how crazy is this? >?not all foxes are friends. brian: i hope it ends nicer than it starts. abby: meghan, thank you so much. i can t believe we are back-to-school already. back-to-school. abby: thank you so much. brian: hard to think about life without you meg began but we have to mo ahead. more than hundreds of thousands of foreigners overstaying their welcome in america. mark steyn was once a foreigner. we have gotten him now. he was once from canada. he is here next. abby: awesome menu at one owner s restaurant. owners taking a stand for our flag. they will join us and tell us why they did that. that s coming up. we re not going to take it anymore
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steve: the house special election in ohio, in the 12th district still too close to call. republican troy balderson and democrat danny o connor separated less than a point. op-ed says the press is not the enemy. it is protecter. notre dame professor says journalists are like soldiers. that is disservice to servicemen and women and those that signed up to protect the nation. investigation underway after two officers are ambushed. cops in camden four different locations trying to build community trust. according to economists the upper middle class is actually growing but according to alexandria ocasio-cortez it is a thing of the past. i think that politically, this upper middle class doesn t exist anymore. jim brown taking a stand for
the national anthem saying he will never kneel. what does tony dungy think about that. i would personally stand. that is the way to go. steve: those are the guys who actually figure out what to put on television from our control room, our high def control room in fox news channel. each and every day they look at all the television screens, they figure out what the best picture is. they decide this one is. abby: can you imagine if we ran the show. brian: i feel like i make most of the decisions. abby: glad you feel that way. [buzzer] brian: thank you very much. by the way they start with color bars. they fill up that whole thing. steve: what does that mean?
brian: color bars we start with the three-hour show. little by little. steve: we have color bars on the switcher. technical director push the button for a second. that is what they look like. brian: when they walk in, that is what they have. they fill it up with stuff. steve: figure out how to start the day. abby: they dive to be called out. they are wonderful at their jobs. steve: we thank you they have very much. 8:02 fox news alert. abby: we call it winning wednesday. fox news alert. all eyes on this. the house special election in ohio. it is still too close to call at this very hour. steve: president trump s pick, that man there, he appeared with him in ohio is inching closer to victory. results in four other state primaries we have for you. brian: our producers paid griff jenkins to update us what happened last night. hey, griff. reporter: no winner in ohio,
twice. it i too close to call. republican troy balderson and democrat danny o connor are separated by one point. balderson leading by 1700 votes. america is on the right path and what going to keep it going that way. we made our case for change. we ll make that case tomorrow. we re not stopping now. reporter: 8,000 provincial and absentee ballots yet to be counted. they begin to count those august 18th. grab toto. republican primary for governor too close to call. kris kobach with a razor thin lead against incumbent governor, jeff koller. that would be a major upset. president trump tweeting congratulations to bill shuete. president trump predicting a big win for him in november and
returning of car companies. and john james who the president calls a future star of the republican party, will face democratic incumbent debbie stabenow. in the show-me state, the president s last tweet of the night, congratulations to josh hawley on your big senate primary win. i look forward to working with you on a big win in november. we need you in washington. hawley faces democrat claire mccaskill in november. one of the most contested democratic races. will the wave be red or blue? anybody s guess? 14 primaries until november. steve: 100% precincts reported in the 12th district of ohio. it is coming down to the provisional ballots. the big question who was able to motivate people to do early voting, would it be danny o connor, the democrat or troy balderson who leads by just a little bit as you can see right there. abby: this should not have even been a close race. you look at that district.
since 1940 one time it has gone blue. this is reminder i think, brian, should set off alarm bells, even if he pulls through the finish line, you can t just have the trump name next to you. you have to be a good candidate. someone that connects with the people. brian: the trump name saved him. but in most cases these candidates will have to run hard. there is no lay-ups in this election cycle. seems as though the republicans are running about five point deficit everywhere. democrats almost won in georgia. almost won in montana. almost won in south carolina. money came in and seats were saved. they lost the pennsylvania 12th district. almost won this one. but in the end will not get them majority. they have to pull out victories. not get close. steve: strategy in this particular 12th district of ohio, danny o connor ran as
moderate. did not demonize trump voters. the republicans were trying to demonize nancy pelosi. danny o connor, if you win, would you vote for nancy pelosi to be speaker? and he kind of waffled on it for a little while. eventually said i will support whoever leadership is. they were trying to nationalize her with him. an right now he is losing by a little bit but still 3300 ballots to be counted. brian: nobody thinks he ran as liberal or socialist. alexandria ocasio-cortez believes she won the district in new york because she is a socialist and a liberal. no one really wanted her in that district because he had to pose himself as a moderate. makes you wonder if her message is resonating. she is getting a lot of fame. we re hearing a lot more about her. abby: she has ideas about saving america. here is what she said recently. a lot of folks in the political heyday in third way 90
politics and they were campaigning and really kind of, connected most to an electorate fighting for these seats. when they got the seats when we had more of american middle class. i think that politically, this like upper middle class is probably more moderate but that upper middle class doesn t exist anymore in america. steve: that is the problem. keep in mind, she in the past said look the reason unemployment is so low because people have two or three jobs and working 70 or 80 hours per week which a number of fact finders found as pants on fire lie. when you look what she said the upper middle class is gone, look at this 1979, it was 12.9%. if we put up the graphic. today the middle class has grown, more than double from that many years ago. brian: went out of the way to
put down democrats. joe manchin in tough fight. democrats in their states. we need better champions for the works class. thanks, appreciate it. if you re a democrat, wow. i lost my fastball. time has passed me by, i m not good for the working class. thanks for being in the corner. abby: there are two democratic parties we re seeing. ocasio cortez, elizabeth warren. cory booker is there wants to run in 2020. feels only way to get through the primary process to appeal to the far left-wing voter. if you want to win the general election is that the right strategy. o connor 31-year-old in ohio, his strategy was running to the middle. there is big middle in the country often gets missed, if democrats go all the way to the left good luck. brian: they have to get off the stage. donald trump got off the stage at number one.
they have 20 people going for this. how do you get off the stage, maybe the most different, radical thing possible? steve: we ll talk more about politics with pete hegseth in the next segment. we want to tell you what a management professor at notre dame, joseph holt wrote. he did an op-ed. he said this. we thank soldiers for their service they devote themselves to protecting freedoms and we should. we should thank the media for the same reason especially when the stakes have never been higher. abby: that is causing a lot of people to scratch their heads this morning. a lot of folks in the media an journalists it is not always safe and doing a very important job for this country, but when you compare the two, i spoke earlier this morning, two brothers in the navy serving, he if i sit down at dinner table say my job is the same as yours, i can t imagine doing that. they would be retech re
respectful. they allow us to do our job, allow us to sit on the couch. dave brooks on the show last hour. he was former marine vet. he is now at the daily caller. he has worn both shoes in his life. here is what he said about the comparison. professor wasn t even talking about journalists who do put themselves in harm s way. he was talking about white house reporters who go to the press briefings, instead of asking questions, they pull out a soapbox and deliver sermons until sarah sanders shuts them down. they head to twitter like personal diaries make stories about themselves. after that they want to go by the trump rallies get heckled by president s supporters act like they re in the battle of fallujah. that does a disservice for those that signed up to protect the nation. steve: facebook and tweet us because we read it all day long. abby: there is no byline on the battlefield.
you don t know the names often times of men and women. it is not about them ever. brian: i know jillian s name. jillian. jillian: good morning. abby: that was really good toss. jillian: how are you? brian: good. jillian: we continue to follow the story of mollie tibbetts. it has been exactly three weeks since mollie tibbetts vanished iowa. a friend posting this video from the day before she disappeared showing the 20-year-old laughing and smiling. mollie s aunt sharing a video from 2016 when she spoke at a event. faith event. i prayed god give me the strength to make me through it. tell me what to do. help me out with whatever happened. in that moment i kind of feel god was showing me power of prayer was something. jillian: reward for information leading to mollie is over $300,000.
big move to bring home an american pastor held in turkey. fox news confirms a turkish delegation is meeting with state department officials in washington to discuss ongoing tensions, including sanctions, punishing turkey for holding andrew brunson. he is accused supporting a coup in turkey in 2016 brunson denies the accusations. tension in the paul manafort trial is rising, the prosecutor so frustrated with judge that he tiered up. rick gates will be on the stand. he acknowledged having an affair. he admitted embezzling money from manafort his former business partner. he pleaded not guilty. hilarious first day of school picture going viral. take a look, that is sergeant nathan kendrick with a spider-man lunch box and pretty embarrassed look on his face. maybe just shy. the shelby county sheriff s office sharing photo on kendrick s first day on the job
as a school resource officer. isn t that great? steve: spider-man lunch box with writing on it? brian: do they make therm most with glass inside jell jill i have one with metal inside. brian: now you have to worry that they will smash it and drinking glass. don t drop those because they have a glass thermos. abby: brian, we want live in a what-if world. tony dungy is taking a stand for the flag. one florida restaurant is taking a stand of their own. they are joining us live next. steve: what does pete hegseth think of the results from the primary elections last night? come on up, pete. you re next on fox & friends . a scratch so small
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1700 vote margin. over 3,000 provisional ballots outstanding. 5000 outstanding absent tee ballots. question who cuts for. there was energy for early voting. hope on danny o connor. if you have 1hundred point lead with 100% of votes in be usually that holds. it was a victory for balderson, moral victories are thin for democrats. democrats are trying to claim a moral victory here. ultimately what matters who wins. they re pointing to conor lamb. that is type of pennsylvania wins in pennsylvania. that is greater upset. that was r plus 21 district. steve: conor lamb ran as republican even though he is democrat. as well as danny o connor. steve: lightning round in my home state of kansas. kris kobach, the secretary of state, is leading by a little bit. what is extraordinary he was
trailing until the president endorsed him. that s right. 500 votes separates them right now. they re waiting for johnson county, most poplous county. republican county. a lot of independents. new voting machines in johnson county. they are supposed to come in a few minutes. hoping to have them for the next segment. kobach hoping to squeak it out. steve: senate great state of michigan, kid rock-backed iraq war vet john james won. the president also endorsed him. that is the final right there. he beat mr. mr.pensler handily. separated himself with a great resume and campaign. debbie stabenow, won the seat in 2012 by 20 points. she has been a popular representative there. trump won narrowly. there is hope to be a pick up. real clear politics says likely dem seat. we ll see. steve: since she won the fourth
district here in new york state, alexandria ocasio-cortez, thank you very much, she has been the darling, been on a lot of television shows, the darling of the political left. doesn t look like she had a good night. steve: she hit the midwest wall and lost, lost. she lost by 20 points in the governor s race. her other candidate was fourth out of five in the primary. in missouri lost by 20 points. turns out socialism doesn t sell. bad night for cortez six weeks after the becoming darling of democrats. steve: bad night for socialism. midwest came through. appreciate it. steve: pete hegseth, senior political analyst. straight ahead a teenager kicks out of class wearing an nra t-shirt. this morning her family firing back. the nfl is off the menu at one florida restaurant. the owners are taking a stand
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a parking lot outside of ford headquarters. right here i have the very first ford mustang ever sold. gail weiss, bought it on april april 15th, 1964. you kept it ever since. back then did you think the car and you would be a celebrity 54 years later? no, i didn t. i m surprised and happy this happened. never sold it yet. ever think you will? no, not yet. mustang fans are loyal. i know another one not interested in selling his car. sean owns the very car used in the steve mcqueen film, bullitt. he owned it since the 1970s. no one knew it existed until couple months ago. this car is worth millions of dollars. worth more to you than that? absolutely. used to be a family car. she is part of the family.
so world tour. it has been amazing. to be back home. this is pretty awesome. american icon. 10 millionth coming off the line. you will not be able to buy it. ford will hang on to it for a while. figure out what to do with it, put it in a museum or auction block, you probably pay a pretty big premium. if you want to pick it up. abby: one of the america s favorite. you used to own a mustang. brian: it was faster than the tesla-made rocket. football players still kneeling for the national anthem. we earlier talked to super bowl winning coach tony dungy. he tells us how he exactly feels about that. i would personally stand, i feel that is the way to go. my dad was in the service, in the military, why he enlisted in world war ii, to give us freedom of choice to do what we think is best. brian: he would give ten minutes of my press conference every
day, for the players to speak up what is wrong with society. let s switch gears, keep on the same topic. a florida eatery feeling the same way as coach dungy, taking a stand for the flag, canceling the nfl-tv package, offering veterans a 40% discount. they are the owners of beef o brady s in brooksville, florida. i understand the nfl package costs 5000 bucks. if there is local game you put the game on. why are you canceling the package, janet. we felt this year we didn t want to spend money on that program because we do disagree with how, you know, the protesting is being done. and we just decided we would rather put our money towards our veterans which we have many in the area. and that is just the way we decided to go. brian: curtis, been a couple years now, third year, since colin kaepernick didn t play
year before. he took a knee. why now? last year is really ramped up, after week one we saw it was going to continue, we tried to cancel our subscription last year and they didn t allow us to. so we went forward with it last year but decided if they didn t change their stance, if the nfl didn t make a difference in the way everything was being handled, that this year we would do what we re doing. brian: curtis, are you hopeful in may when they said okay, everyone will stand, if you re not going to stand, go to the locker room. being they haven t made a stance, you re out? hopeful. but you know what? i don t believe what the ultimatum they gave the players was necessarily the right way. i think they ought to give the players a platform to bring their issues out but it doesn t need to be during the national anthem. brian: what is, what has been some of your customers reaction, janet? we had calls from all across the country thanking us.
we had a lot of local ones said they were thanking us, saying they would be in every sunday and throughout the week. it has been 99% positive. and it has been very touching actually they re calling to thank us when we re just trying to respect and thank them for what they do and allow us to live in the greatest country on earth. brian: 40% off food sundays for those in the military. on the counterargument, what about social injustice in this country? the complaint is that law enforcement unjustly, up justly applies the law to minorities in our country. that is why they re taking a knee or taking a seat. what is your reaction to that? like i said, i believe they have a valid point. i just feel, personally that they re doing it at the wrong time. i believe it is the nfl leadership that needs to get with the players association and come up with an appropriate time for them to bring their message forward. they need to bring the message forward. we need to make advances in this
country every way they can. if they do that, come up with agreement, give them airtime, advertisement time, five minutes each game. they could fit in their spots to put their issues out there and that would be great. brian: meantime beef o brady s in brooksville, florida, will not showing the games unless it is local and free. curtis, janet, thanks so much. thank you. brian: straight ahead, how did president trump come to power. rosie o donnell knows. i think largely because of the celebrity apprentice. i blame mark burnett for creating a false narrative about this man. nobody treated him with respect or dignity until this show came on. brian: finally put the blame where it belongs with reality show creator. more insults from rosie o donnell. rosy the resistor, next. number is startling. hundreds of thousands of foreigners overstating their visit to america. mark steyn is a foreigner
himself. he is from canada. did i say that right? next. we protected your money then and we re dedicated to helping protect it today. like alerting you to certain card activity we find suspicious. if it s not your purchase, we ll help you resolve it. it s a new day at wells fargo. but it s a lot like our first day.
so you can get the best deal on the right hotel for you. dates, deals, done! tripadvisor. visit tripadvisor.com he will do something here with a garbage can and, and, he put the garbage can behind abby: this is shot of the morning. this happens in minor league baseball. steve: brian didn t like the call, went into the dugout, got a garbage can, you know what, the ref, the ump is a garbage can. brian: after the one-game suspension for those antics he had to do a msa on keeping the stadium clean. there he is in the psa. steve: joining us right now live, mark steyn, author, columnist, radio guys. brian: go over the game first
off. do you feel as though he made the right move? i preferred the one with wite putine. monday morning? steve: tried to catch the ball in the big vat. chilly cheese fries. with the putine, janice, lady from ottawa will know this, i m in favor of canadians coming in and spreading putine all over america. steve: according to brand new statistic by department of homeland security more than 600,000 foreign nationals overstayed their visa last year. 40% of them of the 11 million in the country illegally overstayed. the top over stayers, mark steyn, canada, mexico, venezuela, united kingdom and then, you have got colombia. brian: why don t you people take it seriously? there is no reason to. what is interesting to me, if you look at visa applications of the 9/11 guys when they came out
after 9/11 steve: and overstayed. they had addresses in the united states, said holiday in, america. i remember listening to a radio station in london, somebody asking about the difficulty getting into america. the guy says put a mid-market hotel chain. holiday inn, comfort inn, everyone thinks that is reasonable. the 9/11 guys put that into action a month later. still nothing has been changed. americans shuffle shoeless like a craven cowed people if they want to fly from chicago to boston for thanks giving. brian: it s true. meanwhile millions and millions of people around the planet know you can game the system by ignoring it. by the way i agree with neil from guyana or british guyana we old school imperialists think of it, when he was talking about his poor sister, that is what happens if you actually go by the rules.
steve: she could not come into the country because she had cerebral palsy. you can t come in if you re going to be a drag on the system. if you re going to be a cost on the public purse. meanwhile, in california the entire hospital system has been overwhelmed by people who don t do what neil s parents do, who say, to hell with the whole system. brian: a lot of cases they go right from the streets to the hospital. they get sick. they re not paying taxes. basically california emergency rooms are the mexican health care system. it is ridiculous. abby: people come here the right way, some of those folks are the most outraged. they say we waited in line. we did this right way. we came because we wanted to be here. these numbers highlight. of course they don t want to leave. this we re bifurcating into a society where there are people who live by the rules and they re, as the shoeless thing emphasizes, they re put upon more and more each day. then there are people who just
ignore the rules. in new jersey a year or two back, a world war ii veteran with his wife visiting family here. the wife gets sick, goes into new jersey hospital. they have been married for 70 years. sew he stays with her and she dies in the hospital. he is a royal air force veteran. he flies back. he is told he can never visit his family in america again because he over stayed his visa by one day. if you follow the rules, your life is wrecked. millions ignore them. brian: canada is feeling pressure. we re cracking down. you guys have people stream to the canadian border. which this, just tin trudeau, the week of president trump s inauguration when he introduced the so-called muslim, so-called travel ban, he did this virtue signaling, we welcome, everyone. the planet took justin up at his word and have overwhelmed the montreal olympic system where you know, caitlyn jenner became
the first woman to win the decathalon in 1976 or whatever it was, and steve: bruce jenner. bruce jenner back then. brian: when he was a man. won the decathalon, that olympic stadium is now basically a refugee center, for refugees who overwhelmed the system. brian: created in 1976, you are hosting tucker tonight. you have an option to use the video. this is the individual very. the putine one. brian: whoa. steve: what do you like so much about it? he was so far away or spills food or just takes a header? as una simulated foreigner, i find it much easier to play american sports, not on grass, not on artificial turf, but putine. i think is gives much better grip. that s why we do jobs americans
won t do. guest-hosting for tucker. brian: you can not get an american. like seasonal agricultural libor, guest-hosting for tucker carlson. abby: how do you prepare to host? brian knows i guess. holding a quizzical expression for 58 minutes. when you re interviewing, i had no idea. you guys have different camera angles. they hold on tucker with the quizzical expression. steve: there is no cutaway on tucker carlson. he can do that. if you ever seen his one-man show on stage, he walks out in radio city and holds that expression for hour 1/2. brian: shows that every night. abby: mark, we will see you tonight at 8:00 p.m. brian: hope tucker doesn t see this. last time you will fill in. he is insecure like that. brian: you don t have jillian mele doing that. jillian: i can do that now. is that a fair compromise? we re continuing to follow the story out of new jersey. start with a fox news alert. a manhunt is underway after two
officers are shot at a red light. they were essentially ambushed. a male walked up and began opening fire. our officers have non-life-threatening injuries but not for the grace of god to be quite frank. with the amount of rounds fired at close range. jillian: a gunman firing as many as 25 rounds at the under cover detectives in unmarked car in camden. incredibly both officers are expected to survive. anti-trump comedienne rosie o donnell still can not understand why president trump was elected to lead our nation. why do you think americans voted for him? i think largely because of the celebrity apprentice. i blame mark burnett creating a false narrative. nobody treated him with respect or dignity until the show came on. abby: the come med yen has been feuding with president trump for years. she led a musical protest at white house on monday. high school student kicked out of class for wearing an nra shirt. their mother says the teacher was way out of line.
he is there to teach. i don t think he is there to teach his personal beliefs. jillian: the two sophomores were singled out and given a lecture why guns were bad. the school said the shirt did not violate the dress code policy. unsure if the teacher will face consequences. woman applying for new job on the lunch break gets busted. a local news crew was reporting on a job fair, put the woman on tv without realizing it. once someone told her what happened. she took matters, posting a screen shot online. so i didn t want my current job to know i was looking for another job. thankfully her manager hasn t confronted her about it. that is a little awkward. steve: a little bit. abby: at least she still has the job. steve: for now. abby: thanks, jillian. brian: let steve do it. steve: new york may soon require employees to take bereavement for three months which would deliver a crushing blow to small
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from. the first is texas. the top three states, we have texas, we have utah you re quite familiar with, and we have georgia. beginning with texas you have low start-up costs. you have very talented and educated workforce. there is a term that a recent survey used engaged employees. believe in the mission, giving their best. texas is great for engaged employees. lastly are the tax benefits. texas has receipts tax which a lot of folks don t like but there is no corporate tax. there is actually no income tax for folks in texas as well. abby: this is mix what businesses themselves are prioritizing but also the priorities of the state and laws put in place? it is, yes. a combination of policy coming down from the states and culture of the state itself. my company street shares, funds a whole lot of businesses across the country, we love texas. one of our three biggest states there is business ethic, and ethos in texas that is a
powerful thing. i hear that from everyone that lives in texas. my home state of utah. my dad was governor there a few years ago. the biggest priority was making the state attractive for outside businesses to come in. we want them to work and make their lives good. seems like it paid off. it has. silicon valley on the west coast. here in new york, it is silicon valley. this is the silicon slopes in utah. you have a couple of great things in utah. you have a young, educated workforce. second, you have these tax policies that encourage business to grow. abby: that is always a plus. so the last one we have i don t know if we have, georgia. georgia. abby: what about georgia? georgia comes down to costs. if you think about the costs of something like office space, right? here in manhattan it s through the roof, right? the average across the boroughs
here in new york city, $6 plus per square foot of office space. downtown atlanta, a buck 74. abby: people are flocking to the states. you want to be where business is thriving. usually everything else is thriving. mark, thanks. thanks so much. abby: coming up on the show next, it is back-to-school season. we re here to save on shopping with megamorning deals. that is up next. check in with bill hemmer what is coming up at the top of the hour. a lot to go through after the results last night. what we might be headed in the trump era. that wasn t cool, was it? big news in the manafort trial. we ll tell you what is happening there. iran with a strong reaction to president trump. senator joe lieberman. there we go. meet america s a-team. see you in ten minutes, 9:00 to noon. i discovered the true meaning of paperless discounts.
and the indescribable rush of saving drivers an average of $620. why does fear feel so good? i fell in love three times once with a woman, once with a country, and finally. with myself. -so, do you have anything to declare or not? -isn t that what i m doing?
abby: just in time to send the kids back to school we have got some exclusive savings on school supplies just for fox & friends viewers. steve: meghan meanie the host of megamorning deals. where do we start? we start right here. demo this for me. this is the yogi bow. instead of bean bag chairs. when students are working with late night studying, you get core strength. it won t slip away. except you re not looking too stable, mister. whoa. he needs a little practice. brian: there foes your endorsement contract. $44 today. maybe this one would be better for you. put it behind your bed when studying.
college dorm rooms are cool with that. packets, you freeze it. i pack my own kids lunches in these. isn t that fun. set of three. put them in the freezer. in the morning pack their lunches. by the way kids need a snack and lunch. you have to give them two. you get a pack of three. one for a picnic. $29. 67% off. steve: 10 bucks off. brian: animal prints are in. i use them myself. animal prints are in. moving to fitness trackers. these are great for kids. they have a comfort band. they re comfy. they download the app for free. keeps track of steps. it will give them a little alarm if they haven t moved lately. the app is free. 22 bucks. 56% off with megamorning deals. look for the icon on fox & friends. steve: you can track your kid? you can t track your kids?
you can t track your kids on these. abby: you can on your cell phone. activity, my friend. for the little preschooler, who doesn t love star wars. this is chewbacca. we have the favorite characters, yogi. what is his name. abby: yoda. there is a compartment. that is 12 bucks. that is 66% off, a great deal. and a leather ipad case. real leather, you guys, all sizes. mini ipads. fun prints, the map, the american flag. 66.99 today. that is 69% off. steve: just work for it pads or work with all tablets? you can put your non-ipad tablet in there, absolutely. brian: your knock off chinese tablet? steve: like amazon fire. brian: okay. who can do the best chewbacca imitation? come on. there you go.
abby: clayton moore did a great chewbacca,. back to school is coming. steve: for more information, go to our website, fox & friends .com. look for the megamorning logo. abby: you can wear these backpacks now. get with the program. abby: steve, work on that core, buddy. taking a breather. rewarded! learn more at theexplorercard.com
ito take care of anyct messy situations.. and put irritation in its place. and if i can get comfortable keeping this tookus safe and protected. you can get comfortable doing the same with yours. preparation h. get comfortable with it. (electronic dance music)

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