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Transcripts For FOXNEWSW Fox And Friends Sunday 20170702 10:00:00


what s going on in this world? abby: you hate daylight savings. train to the rest of us love summer because you want to go to bed at 7:00 in the morning show. clayton: i watch golden girls and i go to bed. abby: you love golden girls. if you guys aren t awake yet, hopefully now you are. pete: yesterday i got a treat to sit pete, clayton, can you just move out of the way. abby: love you guys. happy independence day weekend. we hope you ll celebrate with us and sadness in your home photos of how you are celebrating, how you are proud american country. #proud american. yesterday i did get a patriotic cat photo. i sent it to her producers. they refuse to run it. they refuse. were you guys refusing to unpatriotic cat shows on our
trade for one of the headlines from the other networks as trump attacks media at freedom event. you wonder why. abby: media loves to talk about it. clayton: he attacked them or challenge them at the event on his plane on the way there. they must have wi-fi on air force one. he was tweeting on air force one likely on the way to the event. the fake and fraudulent news media is working hard to convince republicans and others that i should not use social media. remember, i won a 2016 election with interviews and speeches and social media. i had to be fake news and day. we will continue to win. and the stories began the last few months at the candidacy he was holding those facebook life events. tens of thousands of people tuning in to see what he was singing around the mainstream media, would have their own narrative. he was able to put the cameras right there and actually talk
about it. he talked about yesterday taking on the fake media at this event. listen. the fake media is trying to silence us, but we will not let them. [cheers and applause] because the people know the truth. the fake media tried to stop us from going to the white house, but i am president and they are not. [cheers and applause] their agenda is not your agenda. you ve been saying it that i will never stop fighting for you. i am delivering on trade, on the economy, on the supreme court, on the second amendment, on the military for veterans. abby: the media just doesn t cover at the way they should. a lot of critics say you were president now, you ve got to be presidential. your commander-in-chief.
on twitter you said the use of social media is not presidential. it is modern-day presidential. make america great again. pete: he feels like twitter is going to fight back against it. his ability to expose them as part of his ability to advance what he believes in. if anything, he will have a legacy of things he s already achieved. the fact is exposed fake media for who they are and the agenda they have. when you read page eight of the philly new york times, there s an article about a canadian comedy used to deconstruct trump to deconstruct triumph. there is no land. they will find a new angle. abby: but he knows that. clayton: you know what, you re right. abby: heat-treated about it yesterday. i wonder how many retreats and likes compared to the others. trade for if you look at the mainstream media at these approval ratings for the president, the president was a big fan of bolstering the campaign.
he would look at these polls and rattle them off all the time. you could spend one way or the other. this new poll shows how the media is trying to spin a new approval rating and doesn t show when a reflection on itself because the new pullout in usa today shows president trump s favorable ratings are 40%. the news media is one of the stories here. the news media has mentioned in this poll and it s totally left out by the mainstream media. they dropped to 36%. abby: didn t even mention it. they ll like to talk about themselves when they look good. train for the glenn brush tweet about it said the suffolk u.s.a. poll shows better for trump, but we need to go into the cross tabs of the pdf of the poll to pull out the data about the media. nowhere in the usa today article. by the way, trump was more popular than we are. people have been exposed to this
year we are selling. but also congress 18%. we don t even talk about congressional approval rating anymore. there actually some viruses that have approval rating in congress. that should be a wake-up call to them. that audience right there is your audience. that is the american people. i mean, maybe it s time you focus on issues that matter most. if you report on what the president is talking about. whether you like them or not, that is your job to be fair and balanced and give the people what they deserve. clayton: the philly new york times, dayton is obese least about the constitution this morning i open it up as they often do unfortunately and they haven t annotated copy of the constitution inside its editorial pages. so you open it up. it s behind the coupons.
maybe i will hang this up on my wall. i don t really know. the whole constitution and basically democrats and media types commenting on what the founders were really singing. the front you ve got george washington and donald trump. the idea is that once was george washington, ben alex donald trump. he trashed our constitution. this is the same new york times that never figured out what the constitution means anyway. this sunday only in the paper we are bringing a special session that celebrates one of america s most important founding doc commands. learn what the country s operating manual written the time of george washington can tell us about the age of donald trump. so here s some other headlines. this is what they say about it themselves. maybe call into question their understanding of the constitution. these are the editorial pages.
should the president s words matter in court. in general the case of trump s travel ban except the supreme court came up nine to nothing on that point. the supreme court and say preposterous legal claim and makes a powerful defense of obamacare. the last one commended from across the pond the u.s. should consider monarchy. abby: wow. reverend jerry powell junior was found with judged in the last sentence of the president does the competition better than anyone. here s what he said. all about religious liberty, god. he s interested in defending the liberty of christians, not just muslims. i never heard a single liberal attack any muslim church for not having weddings and for not honoring women and is. but this president has gone the extra mile to honor people of
faith. i would appreciate when the left is pelting down, it s incredible to watch are they still haven t gotten over how donald trump one. pete: i was listening to that. at least in the annotated copy this is freedom of religion. so it does say other than here. clayton: they do have some good july 4th sales and coupons. abby: do want to bring in some other headlines. challenging china s military in the south china sea. now confirming the u.s. has failed by nearly one of the islands effectively claims made by the island sailing close to the island signal to the u.s. it does not recognize china s growing military aggression in the region. this is the second time under president trump the pentagon has done this. the fourth of july weekend in chicago, 20 people were shot
including a 13-year-old boy. so far three people died. the trump administration has said atf agents to chicago help stop the violence and curb the gang activity. 27 states are now refusing a card to the trump administration. a special commission requesting the data to investigate possible voter fraud during the 2016 election. numerous states are refusing to give information to the very voter fraud panel. what are they trying to hide? they have until july 14th. some headlines we are following. tree into the mainstream media repeatedly told you agencies agreed that russia hacked the election. two months ago our next guest flat out said that was a lie. with only three intelligence agencies. pete: i remember that segment. why did it takes a lot for the press to tell you the truth.
plus, he s back. former president obama taken a job at president trump for more than 10,000 miles away. if you steal my sunshine yeah, my dad says our insurance doesn t have that. what?! you can leave worry behind when liberty stands with you™. liberty mutual insurance.
but yes is here. you re saying the new app will go live monday?! yeah. with help from hpe, we can finally work the way we want to. with the right mix of hybrid it, everything computes. i looked at this assessment carefully and found some disturbing things. this is only three intelligence agencies. the russian said it was not coordinated with all intelligence agencies. i was an intelligence community community for a long time. the best way to skew an assessment as to limit the number of players. pete: those former cia analyst fred flights. i remembered that vividly. the margin of 17 agencies agreed russia hacked election. now the new york times and they are backtracking on the
reports, we ask why did it take so long for the press to tell the truth. fred fleitz joins us. thank you for being here. remember reading your op-ed and a couple days later you came on the program related out clearly that the fine print show this is not an assessment of all 17. first of all, why did you sort of discovered that? why is it important what does it mean? there were certain procedures to write an assessment like this. all intelligence agencies are supposed to weigh in. we found out from former director of national intelligence clapper a hand-picked group of 12 analysts wrote this. that s extraordinary. the cia or hundreds of experts should have had a hand in this. one final thing we discovered after i was on the show before, we learn from fbi director comey that the conclusion of this assessment that russia intervenes specifically to help trampling isn t based on a piece
of intelligence. that means the group of analysts who were chosen through some mysterious process, this is their opinion. pete: that s amazing. i know you always have to make assessments based on limited information. what does it tell you in a narrow down the number of people involved? would you limit the number of agencies or people? i don t use this word lightly. i think the assessment was. it was rigged to come up with the most negative possible and come up with the conclusion that the obama white house and the mainstream media. from my point of view i can see this any other way. pete: that is a powerful charge. there s information russia was attempting to meddle in our election, but they need to go to the next level and prove our government has found it. you think a small circle of individuals that we will have an ironclad document against a talking point to the left. i think that s does russia
attack in some way? i don t discount that, but did russia intervened to help trampling? there s no evidence to that. but the key democratic talking point and something fabricated by intelligence agents to heard mr. trump or the obama administration and pro-obama intelligence officials. pete: that s as bad as it gets if that is true. real quick, why did it take so long for the near times to figure this out and retract it? if you read new york times reporting that they ve always known this. last january they did specify that this was actually the assessment of only three agencies. they seem to stay silent the last few months. the evidence this analysis is a sham has been building and building at the new york times and the ap decided to back away from it. pete: powerful stuff. thanks for doing your homework and the fairly new york times really is fake news.
we appreciate it. coming up, 25 democrats passing a democrats passing a bill that deems president trump mentally unstable. are they the ones acting responsibly? a lot of great american movies out there, but which ones are the most patriotic? our own kevin mccarthy is hearing is going to tell us next. earn 1% cash back when you buy, and 1% as you pay. double means double.
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and you can only stream on two devices at once. this is fun, we re having fun. yeah, we are. no, you re not jimmy. don t let directv now limit your entertainment. xfinity gives you more to stream to more screens. pete: welcome back. quick headlines for you. an arrest is made in the violent shooting inside an arkansas nightclub that injured 20 people could rekey hampton, the rapper performing that night was just arrested with another man while performing in birmingham, alabama. the shooting unleashing panic. 25 people total were shot.
i m sure more details will emerge on that story. a new york shot and killed a hospital identified. tracey campbell is covering one of her coworkers shift when she was gunned down. the shooter smacking an air 15 killing one person and wounding six others before taking his own life. abby. abby: thank you, p. july 4th is that when feeling patriotic. dream for fox news contributor, kevin mccarthy has some pics for you in a pretty awesome suit. you are going to the theater to see because you might want to see wonder woman. these are ones you want to stay home and watch. yakima good morning to you. i m 33 are sold where a suit on national television. by the way, i mean tucker carlson s studio and this is pretty awesome. there s an upgrade in front of me with tucker s face on it. abby: that s a little scary.
pete: i need to get one of those. that s creepy. i m going to steal it. turn for the first movie on the list is the sandlot. listen, so many great patriotic films. patton, lone survivor, a million great films over the years. these are my personal favorites. number five is the sandlot. we ve been growing up in it speaks to america s favorite pastime. there s so many classic themes than this. you re killing me smalls, the s mores seen. been running with the pf flyers sign. pete: oil in a lotion and, motioning and oiling. wendi peppercorn when he gets the case after fake drowning. i love that scene so much. transfer what is number four? i m going to go to petri it. it s about a father avenging his
sons does with heath ledger and jason isaac feared mel gibson has made some incredible war films obviously. also, we were soldiers. a great film last year called hacksaw bridge. if you haven t seen that one can check it out as well. the patriot is an incredibly well-made film. one of my favorite movies, saving private ryan major list. no question. i ve spoken to many people and they say this is the most realistic battles they ve ever seen displayed on film, specifically about world war ii. the opening 20 minutes of this film really makes me cry. this entire film, the score, the music, tom hanks, everybody, even vin diesel is in this movie. a great cast. i loved it, one of the best movies of all time. abby: speaking a a great cast, get off my plane.
let s pause for this epic sound bite. watch this. get off my plane. pete: you don t have to watch it because you don t know how it s going to end. han solo and indiana jones playing the president of the united states of america. it does not get better than that. i want to see more films for the president is kicking. and gary is great in the movie. harrison ford s flying skills. you might not want to be on his plane. number one on his list. and you re going to pick this one. listen, there is no question this is arguably one of the greatest. there is no question. that sounds like an oxymoron, but there s no question this is one of the greatest presidential speeches ever given in a movie. take it away, bill pullman.
there is a day when they declare we will not go quietly into the night. we will not finish without a fight. we are going to live on. we are going to survive. today, we celebrate our independence day. abby: seems appropriate. july 2nd is world uso days. by producers had to tell me, what does that mean? great movie choice, kevin. thank you for a match. if you want a treat, let me know what your favorite teacher at elements. the wonderful rest of the weekend. go see baby driver and the execs. two best films right now. baby driver is awesome. pete: rivaling with wonder woman. abby: you are looking smashing today. i m feeling it.
abby: coming up, frightening scene all caught on camera. a motorcycle wobbling in the middle of the highway. wait until you see what happens right after this. pete: that is the tease right there. plus there plans the. our panelists here discuss the new strategy against our president, next. thanks for the ride around norfolk! and i just wanted to say, geico is proud to have served the military for over 75 years! roger that. captain s waiting to give you a tour of the wisconsin now. could ve parked a little bit closer. it s gonna be dark by the time i get there. geico®. proudly serving the military for over 75 years.
having a parking lot party abby: that was friday out here in our lot. lieber is taking the stage for our all-american concert series. what you may be missed was this. [cheers and applause] pete: sometimes when the cameras not necessarily live, this is lee brice given what his fans fans, 11-year-old madison one of his guitars after he performed. turns out it was her first concert ever. abby: she will never forget that. it wasn t over yet. the two met backstage. madison is now determined to
learn how to play the guitar. pete: well, she better. he set her up for success. clayton. clayton: thanks, guys. two dozen democrats have backed a new bill that questions the mental health of president trump in an effort to take him out of office. how responsible is it to suggest the president of the united states is mentally unstable? gop councilman joe gorelick have a professor at iona college, jeannie zaino and dr. marc siegel. i ve got to ask you because he saw bringing adopters, basically trying to diagnose the president is the president as if he had some form of dementia or is mentally unstable. smart move for the medical community? not smart. the american paycheck tick association has the goldwater rules that you just can t do this. the reason it s against the principle of medical ethics committee epa, american psychiatric association is
because these doctors have not examined president trump. they have it spent an hour with him. they haven t taken history. certainly no democrat has that s doing it. people are very different when you sit them down in a doctor s office to take a full history then when you see them on twitter. i met former president bush several times. he s very different in person than when you see them on television. we are going down the way wrong direction. i weigh different when you see me in person. way different. way more handsome. your take on this. the political side of this, which is crazy. is is red meat for the base here? what other motivation could there have for the 25 democrats being on board this bill to get the president out of office? it s absolutely red bait. i have to agree with the doctor. you never want to diagnose someone from afar. the issue is when you look at the 25th amendment, there is no discussion of how you determine incapacitation.
as left up to the political realm. it s left up to the cabinet, vice president and a committee of congress. it is a political decision, not a medical diagnosis that would be made if this is coming to pass. never in american history has this come to pass. this is after john f. kennedy s assassination because there is a fear they didn t do a good job about what happens if a president has some kind of breakdown, unable to continue its work. never been used, not going to be used now and this is the democrats who appeal in 2018 coming out. it s not like it s woodrow wilson being incapacitated. the country doesn t really know about it. i love the excuse given at this rally the other day from democrats, which was he s not a gentleman and a role model. that makes them unfit to be president?
this is the next episode of a series of episodes in a movie called democratic meltdown 2017. this is something so beyond the pale, sending a few pointed out would replace the msnbc crowd and the late-night comics. democrats have to answer how does this help someone that voters that left them in 2016? how does that help a factory worker in pennsylvania or a cop in wisconsin? how are those people doing the meltdown of the democratic party in determining their credibility to get reelected going forward. it s bad politics, bad medicine and brad strategy. to me, the argument is this is you re trying to make this argument that the president is mentally unstable. democrats are also saying that about trump supporters. a veiled way they are attacking tram supporters in all of this. i think that s true to both declare republicans did the same thing to barack obama many times.
charges that he should be impeached for a variety of reasons including the fact he said he wasn t born in united states. the fact you are transgendered people to use the bathrooms of their choice. it is still too far. clayton: final thought. just because you certain personality traits that irritate the democrats, this is not the vice president, not the cabinet. this is really undermining the respect of the opposite deserves. transfer thank you for joining us. appreciate it. thanks to dr. marc siegel, jeannie and joe. abby, over to you guys. abby: other headlines we re following. a fisherman charged with killing his wife claims that she fell overboard. 38-year-old christopher leclerc called the coast guard claiming that his wife accidentally fell overboard after not feeling well during a boat trip on lake erie. investigators say they now believe he pushed her off the boat, but are still looking for a body. leclair was having affair at the time. he now faces criminal homicide
charges. a man loses control of his motorcycle on a busy highway. we want to warn you, this may be hard to watch. abby: that baker writing down the sacramento fire when he waffles and spins out of control. his head hitting the road, the bike dragging his body. miraculously, demand is expected to be okay. wow, unreal. former president obama told a crowd in indonesia, we are seeing a rise in aggressive kind of nationalism. we see both in developing countries. an increased development in the bad treatment of people who don t look like us are practices that they possess. i don t believe that future favors strong man.
i believe it is those who are tolerant and learn from everyone. obama on a 10 day vacation in jakarta. no surprise there. a little underlying job. pete: and subtly criticize the current president. abby: records outside. a little monkey. i lost them. did you find them? no. did you get the money? let s give a big smile. nice. you have three big teeth coming in there. they are looking good there. no braces i don t think. good for mom and dad. everybody to get outside. a little bit nicer across parts of the northern plains and around the great lakes. tens of cooled a little bit. humidity is come down a little bit. it is still sticky, but certainly better. we will put the map into motion,
but less rain today. we will see if you showers in the afternoon, but nothing as bad as we saw yesterday. came across the south. that said, some big rumors across parts of oklahoma later in the day. some this morning across parts of arkansas and louisiana. tens getting into the 90s across the high plains. you see the scattered showers, some may be a little severe later on today and across the west, mostly sunny in the heat is continuing. thank you for sharing that may smile at us. you are welcome. pete: what is the going rate for the tooth? reporter: how much did you get for those? like a quarter, nickel? one dollar. abby: a whole dollar? the question is how was she going to spend that dollar. she is so cute. thank you, rick. coming up, stick with social
media and keep on treating. deputy campaign manager david bossie is on next door to talk about that. pete: plus, shocking photo. american flags removed from veterans gravestones. one group has a plan to save them. that group leader will join us live. trade with the largest family festival come a four-day celebration faith and film. they ll take us behind the scenes. join us next. keeping the faithnd we know steve. switching to allstate is worth it.
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level. a new imac that requires employers to pay for mandatory harassment classes centered around gender identity for all employees. a literature headlines. i was looking at the headlines for the weed and there is a lady in a bear shirt. abby: megadeth is the largest family festival about faith and family and film. just wrapped up his or during dallas. fox news correspondent lauren green is there and she joins us now to share all about it. good morning. hey, good morning. inc. so much. first of all, the best way to describe make a fast is like getting inside the mind of the charismatic preacher with a global following. he really has created a safe conglomerate that reaches far beyond the church pew. would you please welcome to the stage, mr. mulley po file.
after the sox after the talk after the sox are of after the sox are after the stock sure fire helped kick off a four-day weekend festival of faith, family and film. all taken center stage at kay bailey hutchison convention center in dallas, texas. welcome to make a dash on springer, filmmaker of the 30,000 member worship center, the potter house. this is the day the lord has made. the event features fitness, health and well-being, service presentations to benefit injured soldiers. and even sports celebrities like former cowboy darren woodson. and i even got into participating the in the panel
to talk about change lives and about my boat, white house faith. things are alright. i m good. got the job, demand, this come everything i need and then something falls apart. is estimated some 100,000 people are attending make a fast. i sat down to see what people should take away from this four-day event. i ve come to learn it is an experience. it s the old-fashioned art of spending quality time at the people who matter the most to you in an atmosphere that supports the belief system you want to promote. reporter: his youngest daughter sarah jake s robbers said even though people are moved by his powerful preaching comment he is just the vessel. they didn t come to praise jake s. they came to praise god. i don t like to be confined come uri preacher.
god has other things that i m interested in. i m a person, father, guy, husband. i want to enjoy everything about life and share it with other people. reporter: also told me that any aspect of life can become a ministry of this is why he s been so much in the area of film. films are like modern-day parables. they have the potential to reach so many lives. back to you guys. such a great message. we are all talking about the movies. what are you doing? first i m going to go to church today of course. i ve got to tell you, independence day, yes, it s my favorite fourth of july movie. a little known fact come you don t know this because you are probably in a timetable back then. but independents and foxhounds keep one of 1996 before fox news channel launched. yet another reason why. thanks, lauren.
pete: watergate journals grow bernstein prepares the term presidency to a dangerous infectious disease. we are in the midst of the malignant presidency. a call for my leaders. it calls on our journalists do a different kind of reporting from a different kind of dealing with this president need. .straight years, and it s still recommended today. use as directed. g new cars. you re smart. you already knew that. but it s also great for finding the perfect used car. you ll see what a fair price is, and you can connect with a truecar certified dealer. now you re even smarter. this is truecar.
we are in the midst of a malignant presidency cannot malignancy is known to the military leaders of the country, known to the republican leadership in congress to recognize that and is known to the intelligence community. the presidency of donald trump is not functioning partly because of his character. it s not functioning partly because of attacks on the press. those who know him best are raising serious concerns. it calls on our leaders. it calls on our journalists to do a different kind of reporting, a different kind of dealing with this presidency. historical context is referring back it seems to john dean who was then white house counsel during the watergate years to president nixon said sir, there is a cancer on the presidency right now. the malignancy is what is referring to. abby: and things need to change. a new kind of reporting which makes me wonder what would be different. we keep asking ourselves
rhetorically, what are they going to figure it out and realize they ve been exposed? they are never, ever, ever, can i say ever again going to change because these newsrooms are full of liberals. i m thinking about changing the name to fake a new cnn to fraud new cnn. when you tell me you are independent give me bias. what he is calling for is even more. even more editorializing about the president from cnn that will only make the approval go down. abby: said people close to the president are concerned about him and his well-being. is that the sense you got? those who use closest to. pete: fake news. i ve talked to the top, top advisers. they re getting along, working hard. one of the stories later on the show is fighting between the vice president s office in s office and the trump camp so that there is infighting. abby: there is always quote, unquote infighting between the two.
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not. did russia hacking effect the election in some way? i don t discount that. it is red. they, but the most negative possible in the conclusion that the obama white house and the mainstream media resources. the abby: i ve got my game on. i love that song as we start out this sunday morning. we are all feeling so patriotic. you never know. clayton: high-end type. pete: it is high and tight for this summer. like a shearing the sheep.
abby: look great. trade for sending your photos this morning for independent day. we want to see your family, your pets, your neighborhood. i love looking at the streets with all the american flags down the street. do you are preacher pajamas? abby: please send us some photos of their patriotic cat. trade for a dog photos, picture of the talks. i love dogs, but how about some cats? it s tough to get cats and outfits, so maybe that s part of the problem. her patriotic cat happy. they named her cat after you. monique s cad authoring our heroes on this first. abby: and here s stephanie cat, sweet pea ready for the fourth of july. pete: did that cat had trump air? is that what it is? abby: i think you did. let s pull it up to make sure.
pete: there it is. they up the ante. abby: a trump tie and trump air. trade to keep them in. we love it. trades are we invited former donald trump deputy campaign manager and fox news contributor david bossie. did he bring a patriotic cat? i have three very patriotic dogs, but thankfully no cats. trade for sorry, eat. all those and came from social media, of course this past week quite a bit of a scandal and backlash of the president was taking on morning joe. yesterday he came out resilient lands that i m going to stick to social media. the fake and fraudulent news media is working hard to convince republicans and others that i should not use social
media. remember, i want the 2016 election with interviews, speeches and social media. we will continue to win. some people saying he should get off social media. what do you say? absolutely not. the president understands the new media better than anyone. it is the reason he s the president of the united states today. by the way, i was one of those during the campaign that would say hey, boss, what do you think about this or that? he always had the right instincts. he understands. really, he uses it for one reason, to bypass the liberal media, which has a common arm of the democratic party and speak directly to the american people. they work during the campaign and they will continue to work that that s what happens when you let a change agent. they disrupt the status quo. the status quo was that the
mainstream media is just cozy in bed in washington d.c. with the politicians on both sides of the aisle. when a politician as powerful as the president disrupts thought, it is something that they will never accept in one of the reasons you see unfortunately lowlifes like carl bernstein saying what he s saying. you just said that in this campaign. you would tell the president not to treat certain things. can you give an example of something you said we don t want to treat that in the president said don t do that. i don t kiss and tell. abby: it does make you wonder. you have the critics now saying fine, tweet what you want on the campaign trail. but now you are commander-in-chief. different time. you have a different title. he said my use of social media is not presidential. it is modern-day presidential. make america great again. your same keep tweeting,
president. i think you can say all you want about the media because everyone can agree there s a bias. but when it comes to a woman comments a woman come is that where you say maybe not so much, mr. president? let me just say this president is not going to allow himself to be attacked unmercifully by these folks in the mainstream media. these folks who have columns and pro-bernstein who is on cnn and others on other networks, they really don t have any downside but when they attack him. so what he s saying is i m going to fight back. i m going to stand up for myself because the mainstream media is so dishonest. that is all this is about. whether it is the attack on to host survey showed no one watches or any other tweets, the president understands the power of what he s saying. he does get it any gifted rather than anyone.
if he wants to come he s able to change the conversation of the day with a simple tweet. pete: very much so. we want to shift to something else the fake media loves to banter about. does the media wrongly predict did come a long list, whether it s the ouster, rants previous, steve bannon, sean spicer, kellyanne conway or the president himself. now new turmoil between president trump and vice president mike pence. we see this all the time. you talk to folks inside the white house. the relationship has looked as strong as any. can you give us insight as to what s happening in that relationship? first of all, you talk about the definition of fake news. this is it. there is no stronger bond than this administration and the president and the vice president of the united states. these two men worked closely together day in and day out.
they see each other all day. they speak to each other all day. they give each other advice and counsel all day. i find this to just be part of the ongoing that the media just can t get enough of. pete: to be totally clear, this is about the staff of the vice president and the president, not the two men themselves. according to these reports are warning right now. if they could mtv reality show. if you know the staff, these folks a lot of these folks that work on vice president pence s staff worked on the campaign with us. mark schubert, who is the director of legislative affairs for the white house to capitol hill was former chief of staff for governor pence. that white house is just interconnected with pads come the people all throughout the white house.
therefore, it is part of the fake news. this is just more of the stories they want to perpetuate, that the white house is broken when it is actually not. it is functioning perfectly well and they are trying to do their jobs. the mainstream media who every day once to continue the white house is not functioning properly because they continue to write the story said they want the american people to believe that. abby: really have to start questioning their credibility. another reports that secretary of state rex tillerson is the next one to go. pete: that he wants out. yeah, look, the secretary of state has been representing the american people in america abroad for the last four or five months. he s doing an incredible job. the one thing everybody has to stop and take stock and is that every four years, every time there s a new administration, or
growing pains, the white house always ones to make sure the presidential personnel is running the show. that s a fact, whether president obama, clinton, bush come in this administration. it is part and parcel of how it s done in washington. it can be honest disagreements over personnel and policy. what everybody has to remember at the end of the day where the were day where they were cabinet secretary or employee, you work at the will of the president of the united states and as long as you make sure you are taking to account, his positions on policy and what he wants from the standpoint coming or good place. tree into a live take note of the report from cnn. going into a holiday weekend, if you re a playing session with the white house during a look forward to the next week, two weeks or months weeks or months, what would you counsel the white house to focus on as they move forward? stay focused on health care. get health care done in the next
couple of weeks. there s no urgency to it, they get it done in the next couple weeks when you get back from recess. we have to make sure the senators on our side of the aisle state of mind. that s going to take some work. working with the different factions with an defendant to get the bill done. by doing that, you can give it directly to tax reform. not just some tax rate cuts, the actual tax reform, simplifying and taking care deductions and some middle-class tax efforts that will actually help the middle-class in america for the first time in a long time. abby: great advice. have a great holiday. pete: and more tweets. abby: more headline: the trump administration taking another step towards america first. now mandating all 284 and air force have direct flights to the u.s. install an explosive detecting scanners as part of
the ban on laptops. the terrorists could use it to hide a small bombing. they have three weeks to face possible dissension. an arrest is made in connection to the violent shooting inside a nightclub that injured 20 people see right here, the rapper who was performing along with another man in birmingham, alabama. as you can imagine, inside the power ultra lounge. 25 people total were shot, but all are to survive. on this independence day weekend, three following u.s. sailors who died aboard the uss fitzgerald. friends and families and also paid an emotional tribute among the fallen among the fall of 19 girls sailor dakota tioga b. along with 37-year-old fire patrolman first class leo
brennan junior who heroically save 20 other shipmates were honored. 26-year-old noah hernandez also remembered on board the uss fitzgerald when it collided last month with a cargo ship off the coast of japan. a total of seven u.s. soldiers lost their lives on that day. pete: all right. nancy pelosi will call president trump every name in the book. now, it is this. i think it is blatantly sexist. i don t think there s any question about it. train to the rambling press conference will reveal even more. debate just ahead. abby: president obama back in the spotlight for more than 10,000 miles away in jakarta. you know who else is back? our own in a quiet man. she is kicking off our proud american series. where are you? s., and. we have a big morning for you
here in north carolina. a preview of the naturalization ceremony, parade, food games, an antique car show coming out. don t go anywhere. you are watching fox and friends. a used car,
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we send our kids out into the world, full of hope. and we don t want something like meningitis b getting in their way. meningococcal group b disease, or meningitis b, is real. bexsero is a vaccine to help prevent meningitis b in 10 to 25 year olds. even if meningitis b is uncommon, that s not a chance we re willing to take. meningitis b is different from the meningitis most teens were probably vaccinated against when younger. we re getting the word out against meningitis b. our teens are getting bexsero. bexsero should not be given if you had a severe allergic reaction after a previous dose. most common side effects are pain, redness or hardness at the injection site; muscle pain; fatigue; headache; nausea; and joint pain. bexsero may not protect all individuals. tell your healthcare professional if you re pregnant or if you have received any other meningitis b vaccines. ask your healthcare professional about the risks and benefits of bexsero
and if vaccination with bexsero is right for your teen. moms, we can t wait. abby: welcome back to really quickly want to think our audience because we asked early in the show to send us cat photos. patriotic cat photos. our producers said they are so inundated with photos they can even hope it s on the show. thank you for listening to us. tree into thank you for ruining our morning. we appreciate it. the former president of the united states that you don t talk poorly about the clinton administration or open your mouth about the current president in office. they quietly go into the night, do their thing.
clayton: that used to be the case. it seems to be changing a little bit. president obama yesterday, 10,000 miles away in indonesia to talk about climate change and other issues seeming to be taking some jobs about the current administration. the entire speech he talked about a temporary absence within the context of global change which is the holiest of shrines for the left. another portion of his critique, not even his slightly veiled critique of the term presidency. he has this to say in jakarta, indonesia about america. we are seeing in the rise in aggressive nationalism and developed and undeveloped countries and increased development against minority groups and the bad treatment of people who don t look like us or practice the same fate as that. i don t believe the future favors strong man. i believe the creatures those who are tolerant man. abby: is not actually mentioning the president by name, but underneath the strong wording said it all.
why can t you be strong man and also accepting of people? is that not possible today? dream to also stand for your country and not intervene in wars and create nationbuilding and be able to protect the people that our country is employed to do. we have defense of this country and purpose. we pay taxes to defend our country. not just open our borders to allow anyone and we want. the translation is easy. nationalism can be sovereignty or america. resentment toward minorities now would president trump is talking about. how about strongmen. maybe it s better to have a lid on the country then unleashed the arab spring and anarchy and chaos that leads to something like i something that crisis in the middle east. i love how the left talks about tolerance. abby: conditional love at its best. traded into the paris climate accords of course. but the president comes in and undermines him come he s not going to be happy about it.
friends out fine fox and friends. send everything they are. abby: still a big show to come. president trump has been called a lot of things, but that means true media against fake news event they are sexist. really? pete: justin bieber is tired of the bright lights of hollywood so he found a home on a quiet tree-lined street in the suburbs. [boy] cannonball! [girl] don t. [man] not again! [burke] swan drive. seen it. covered it.
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quick headlines for you. justin bieber spotted all over new jersey suburb of montclair near my home. in recent weeks he spent too much at the pool. maybe i ll run into him at the whole foods and playing basketball with neighborhood kids zone here and a white hoodie. is rumored to be spending time with his pastor who lives in that area. people are not liking jay lo on their blog. the singer sensation with a brief taping of her performance on the macy s fourth of july fireworks show. neighborhood residents are excited turn into a nightmare chaos in the fourth of july weekend. two of the world s hottest women are making the big apple their new home this summer. this universe and miss u.s.a. caramel cola are moving into an apartment together in manhattan. taking a break from traveling the world in new york. abby, pete. abby: really good. well, the president firing back
earlier this week on twitter for fueling fake news. house minority leader nancy pelosi had this to say about his comment. take a listen. it s sad to say i am still the highest ranking women. i thought i was all going to be resolved in november. instead, we have a person in the white house that doesn t happen to be a woman, but happens to disrespect women. abby: is that what the president was trying to do? vice chair for the coalition of democratic pollster or not they re up america in the age of trump, just guitar love. thank you. welcome to both of you. god bless america. abby: god bless you as well. happy fourth of july weekend. this is the atlantic or the launching of trump s sexist
attack, launches another sexist tweet on morning joe host. this is just to remind people, this is actually from yesterday. crazy joe scarborough are not bad people, but their low rated show was nominated by their nbc bosses. too bad. to all the sexism, arguments and attacks on him, what i would argue, is he trying to defend himself? it seems like he would say the same about men or women. i believe the president is simply trying to defend himself. honestly, i feel he deals with men and women with the same energy. because bernie sanders crazy, hillary crockett, called ted cruz lighting ted. because marco, little marco. that is our president. the problem is you have media that should be focusing on edifying the nation by telling us the information we need to
know, filling us in on the facts and instead they are using their motion in politics as a platform as opposed to doing what journalists are supposed to do and that is to inform the people. so many thoughts on this fourth of july weekend. i totally disagree. i think while the emphasis our president who does the lobby on everybody, they are only women who talks about. he said about megyn kelly that she had blood coming out of her nose or wherever, leaking down her face. we ve seen pictures. she did not have blood leaking down her face. you ve made a number of sexist comments. currently feeling says look at that face. i was blatantly sexist. i find it disturbing to hear from women that we can t have that discussion about the president of the united states of america appeared abby: what about comments to him? he s the president of the united
states. [inaudible] jessica, you have seen this flip, for example. i m not defending her, defending him. you said what she said about him. calling him a good, talking about the sides of his hands. across the board i don t agree with that. i ve spoken about that before. i don t think is appropriate. at first the level of national discourse. they actually feel this campaign. they had him on there. they were defending him and they went after hillary clinton really hard and it certainly hurt her campaign when you think about the audience msnbc has. the moderate democrat out there or black when or black winged democrats that the senate voted bernie sanders and maybe voted jill stein. maybe didn t show up to vote. they make sexist attacks in using the office of the presidency at this low level appropriate.
what i m saying i am a democrat and when you live [inaudible] yes, i m a democrat who voted for donald jay trump. an outsider coming yes. what i would say is this. you know, you don t make evil has come in the things they are doing anything about the president, they are beneath the dignity of our nation. excuse me, i m sorry i let you talk. you don t use your platform where you are supposed to be informing the public, letting us know the facts, keeping track of this white house and this government for your own political, emotional joy. you are supposed to be letting us know what s going on and they are not doing that. they are attacking this president. they are attacking supporters because we voted for him. this is a democracy. he s got three years and six months ago.
get your popcorn and drinks ready. trench three abby: quickly because we ve got to go. they will put their opinion out there. they were talking about does the president of the united states of america have to be classy? he is a class act. abby: we have to leave it here. our audience watching this, tell us what you think about all of this. friend that fox news.com. for now come up with have you with us. the mac happy fourth of july. happy fourth of july. abby: a debate that his oldest time. who is smarter? men or women? in the winter is coming out. president trump is going to stick with social media despite the backlash. mark levin is here live to react next hour. also pete and rick are cooking up some dad gum good barbecue for this fourth of july.
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proud americans. abby: the photo of her 3-year-old grandson who s proud to be american. transfer to reset a sharing does show saying she s part of her sons jordan ejects serving in the army. another tiny, proud american. karen s daughter at her annual fourth of july barbecue. abby: this photo of her granddaughter on her wedding day that these are two very proud millennialist. pete: a lot of patriotic millennialist. kevin mccarthy made good on his promise. the perfect complement to his american privacy. i m demanding one for each of us. trade through the great thing about tucker, i don t even think he would know if he had a bug with his face on it. he s just like okay. actually, he probably wouldn t he be very proud. turning now to other headlines, starting with the widow of the
virginia shooter claiming we will start with another one. she may have been able to stop this. sue hodgkinson, the wife of the killer saying saturday that her son opened fire on the ball field of republican shooting steve scalise, the retiree of illinois was gunned down at the leash rushed the alexandria field now recovering from the shooting. and now it is jill stein s turn to be caught up in the russian investigation. congress after she had dinner with the former national security adviser michael flynn and vladimir putin himself. yes, i was at a table where putin briefly came in. i was not an rt conference, which was their 10 year anniversary in order to communicate, the war in the middle east is an incredible
catastrophic disaster. abby: denied any accusations claiming democrats want a scapegoat. the feminist movement with new research now revealing them have average i.q. that is four points higher than women. what? the study came from the netherlands said it s also because they also slightly larger brains than the females do. i think we need to talk about this. clayton and pete. i don t like this. john macko morris here. celebrate with a backyard barbecue. take your barbecue to the next level. that is good. where the chicken recipe as mayor.
today is all about the fourth of july. what better thing to serve up then ribs? we ve got baby back ribs with the barbecue sauce. i had the pleasure of hanging out with kicks birks. we did his barbecue ribs from his coat book. so it is basically nine ingredients. garlic powder, oregano, cumin, cinnamon, chile, popper, cocoa and cayenne. but the dry rub all over your ribs and today as we always do, this desire of bluetooth master build electric smoker. we are going to face these ribs on the smoker. we did this for a dinner party based on john s recommendation. he was the best dinner party we ve ever had. so many ribs. it was amazing.
we want everybody to do that. these ribs, fight them over here on the play. we will show you how to cut those ribs up real quick. 225 degrees in three hours. you want to take these ribs and basically cut them in half. we are going to take this barbecue sauce and see these ribs are almost done with a transfer onto an aluminum tray. pete: did you pull the membrane off before you transfer them? otherwise you won t get the membrane off the baby back ribs so does the in there. pour it all over. all of that? yet. we ve got the dry rub on three
hours 225 degrees. the barbecue sauce and pour it all over. ended up on my time. just mop it all over. the barbecue sauce all over your ribs, they will be got in there. at what point do we get these things? these ribs poke doc on the smoker for one more hour. what that does is it gives the smoke flavor into the barbecue sauce. we are going to put that on there. we will take the ones on top of and show you what they look like. i feel like i m on qvc. have you ever seen anything so beautiful? abby: this is so not fair. you leave the pregnant lady inside just salivating. we ve got this as a video start to finish how to do this recipe with a dry rub in the
barbecue sauce. coming back for some chicken fingers and ribs. pete: abbey come in the next. transfer to bring some up with you. already moving on from the fake news kindled with the fake of democracy. dan bongino says they are fueling the fires of destruction. he is joining us next. and anna kooiman is back kicking off our proud american series. you are looking beautiful out there. trade abbey, good morning to you and everybody. that food looks good. we are here in north carolina getting ready for coverage this july 4th weekend. a preview of the cruisers to shine and show car show. a whole lot more coming out. how cool is this thing? be
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geico motorcycle, great rates for great rides. pete: we are back with some quick sports headlines. south korea s number is paid player nba history. the five-year 201 million-dollar contract for the golden state warriors, courageous help the warriors win their second championship. arguably the best shooter of all time in the sport of hoops. i think he deserves it. the tour de france suffers a nasty crash. four-time champion alejandro valverde fighting into the fence during this stage one time trial. the spanish writer suffering a deep cut edition and a broken kneecap. likely out for the rest of the two are an of the season.
a stunning upset in the boxing ring. australian jeff horning, a schoolteacher scoring a unanimous 12 round decision against filipino boxer manny takeo. the controversial decision earning him the wbo title. it s always fun to see the underdog take the win. abby: thank you, pete. a major desire under fire about his scandalous white house meeting that never took place. trade for all sorts of awful things have been following a top-secret meeting between epa chief scott pruitt and the ceo of dow chemical says a spokesperson confirmed that meaning was actually canceled, never happened. but that s not stopping the ap from debating the democracy this fourth of july weekend. the agenda for public and podcast post, dan bongino. good morning. happy fourth of july weekend to you. what do you make of ap, the way they are reporting in debating
the future of our democracy? you know, debating the future of our democracy, is that a joke? the flames are being fanned by the mainstream media. guys, listen. here s the problem and let me back this up so i don t just throw this out there. if we can t agree on a basic set of facts going forward is a constitutional republic, how were we supposed to debate the issues left and right about the media on my left. two plus two equals four. how can we debate arithmetic? you are not doing arithmetic. you are doing fairytales and stories and making things up. they make this stuff up and it s not just one thing. they are doing this repeatedly. it s becoming a real, genuine scandal. abby: we are talking about the future democracy the media is pushing. what about the future of journalism? how often we are reporting something from who knows who the
sources and it never ends up being true. who was holding the media accountable? there s reason to be concerned about the future of journalism. there is no future to journalism if we continue down this path now. i know you guys open the ppa, but there is another one that s just as bad. 17 intelligence agencies agreed that the russians tried to overthrow the election results. there are people on your network, who have been calling this out as es for months now. democrats have been like no, no, they all agree the russians try to influence the election. they say okay, i think we finally read the report and it was really only three intelligence agencies and the other 14 didn t say that. it s like guys, if we can agree for months that s not what we said in the report anyone could read, with the future of journalism? the answer is there is none. it s fairytale type stuff.
they would ve dug and dug to find out who many reports, who did they give campaign donations do. instead the left will repeat at nothing to your point. dan bongino, we appreciate it. abby: have a good fourth of july. we appreciate it. donald trump despite the media backlash. mark levin is live in our studio right now to react at the top of the hour. pete: anna kooiman is back to kick off our proud american series. we brought her back from australia. abby: a long flight. tree into where is she? lds strong until evening. fixodent plus adhesives. just one application gives you superior hold even at the end of the day fixodent. strong more like natural teeth.
pete: is part of our proud american series, traveling down to north carolina were patriots with the need for speed are celebrating america s birthday. train to a live look at proud american correspondent lifelong friend of the show, anna kooiman along with keith pearson. good morning. reporter: good morning, everyone. i got my start in wilmington, north carolina. absolutely gorgeous. take a look at the scenery this morning. this history for the fourth of july festivities go on like 200 years celebrating independence. and 50,000 people will come that started back in 1972. a big preview. you can see these gorgeous classic cars behind me.
good morning. how are you doing? great to have you on the program. normally get about 50 cars here. you re expecting more. why is that? our viewers love to come out in support and i hope they are supporting you, too. what are we looking at? this is a 1956 ford victoria. a two door hard top. with the ninja nannette, which means nothing. they are slow cars, but beautiful car since 1986. move on down to this one a little bit older. in 1829 ford pickup. it has the cabs which most of them did not have. it cruises along at 30 miles an hour. the proud american american
flag flying so proudly. this is in 1865 forward. what is under the hood? the big engine under the hood. the 55 chevrolet. two door hardtop. beautiful car been restored, then in the family for years. beautiful, beautiful car. what about this one here? this is in 1865 chevelle super sport 396. that means that it is loaded. the four speed is ready to outrun anything in town. the turbo jet engine. zero, are you all right? yeah. we ve got two markers to get through. this is in 1835 ford and it is a flat back.
this has been restored also. beautiful car. this is my favorite one. and finally. yes, ma am. this is the night team 56 ford victoria. it is solid black with black and white interior. beautiful car, straight drive. you don t see those much. the cars that we have here are winners everywhere we go. reporter: that s right. beside the show at no words are renée said. that is correct. everything will make it s for charity. reporter: very nice. back to the studio. pete: anacondas or cameraman okay? reporter: yes, all good. there s a lot of maneuvering we are trying to do out here with the humidity and a bunch of cars. abby: you are doing fabulous. thank you so much.
pete: coming up, the failing new york times is up with a special edition reprinting the constitution to its editorial pages. the great one, mark within a slide and studios. you can react next. you supported him through four years of undergrad. and medical school. it s no wonder he said, you don t have to pick me up. at lincoln financial, we get there are some responsibilities of love you gotta do on your own. and some you shouldn t have to shoulder alone.
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what do you think? he uses it. to bipartisan the liberal media, which becomes an arm of the democratic party and speak directly to the american people, and it worked on your campaign, and it s going to continue to work. the fake media is trying to silence us. but we will not let them. when i m president, and they re not. fireworks. it wouldn t be the fourth of july without them? we have to be safe with them too; right? this is overrated. i mean, they have these laws in minnesota what you can and can t do with fireworks where i live, but that s why we all
drive over to wisconsin and bring them over. abby: i m with you because i m from out west, and it can get so dry but if go goes wrong, it can be this huge disaster. are you pro fire? i m not pro fire. i m just pro fire, freedom, don t tell me what i can t do. i thought it was a fireworks display this morning. but it was beautiful. it does look like a fireworks display. clayton: tips on how not to blow your hand off out on the plaza later on. good stuff. clayton: also, as you re kicking off the weekend celebration, foxnews.com, you ve been sending your patriotic photos, here s sean and his wife lauren and son. take a look at picture there. abby: lily sends this picture of her patriotic cat maxi. clayton: i love the.
and you can use that in the litter box. and tracy sends this picture of her proud american baby. i love it. here s another one. logan is celebrating his first fourth of july. this one sent in by erica. abby: these are the cutest photos. cats, babies, america, we love all of this. we want to get to other headlines. starting with this, a bloody first day of the fourth of july weekend in chicago. 20 people have been shot, including a 13-year-old boy in several incidents. this as the trump administration sent 20 more permanent atf agents to the windy city to help stop that violence and get gang members off the streets. and 27 states are now reducing in part to send their voter information to the trump administration, a special commission requesting the data to investigate possible voter fraud during the 2016 election. president trump tweeting this. numerous states are reducing to give the information to the very distinguished voter fraud panel.
what are they trying to hide? all 50 states have until july 14th to comply. this one is for you. do you want to smell like a kitten? clayton: why not? abby: well, now there s a fume for that. now there s a fragrance library that s about to debut kitten s fur. a 3.2-ounce of kitten fur costs $32 and also comes in a spray, lotion. if you use that, i will not sit next to you on the couch. clayton: i will try it. i ll take one for the team. i ll try it. let s do it tomorrow. if i start purring. i ve always wanted to do bonfire perfume. abby: i m allergic to cats. clayton: mark has a brand-new
book out, number one on amazon. called rediscovering americanism now. who are you about to come up with a rail and punch in that photo. because it looks like you re about to take on great people. six days on amazon. i ll tell you what amazes me. you said the new york times has a whole page on the constitution today. july 4th, the constitution. do they know what happened the constitution? it was the declaration of independence. so they don t even know. the day of the constitution is december 17th. today is july 4th. clayton: wrong document. so we re not going to rely on them what s in the constitution. clayton: you bring up the declaration of independence. you re a philly boy. you walk through that courtyard where the decoration of independence was read aloud that quiet morning, that how far have we drifted from that
morning to where we are this morning? well, very far. here you have the paper record, which really is bird cage paper, to be perfectly honest about it. this is a huge day. what does our independence really mean? which i get into in the first chapter. can a what are natural law, natural rights? what do they mean by unalienable rights? and there they are writing about the constitution. i love the constitution. but the constitution is the manifestation of the declaration of independence. the men who fought for this country put their lives on the line. what were they all about? and the reason why you won t see that explained in the new york times is because who agree with it. the entire progressive movement rejects the declaration of independence. how do we know? they told us this. woodrow wilson told us this, other sides when the progressive side 100 years ago told us this. they don t believe in alienated rights. they believe rights come from
government and liberty also comes from government. they even say it. you cannot fulfill yourselves. this is about bernie sanders folks about free education, free health care because otherwise you re not free, according to them. pete: bernie sanders recently tweeted this. it s a great example. he should stop tweeting, by the way. pete: he should stop tweeting. republicans talk about a lot of freedom and choice but you can t truly be free if you can t afford health care and food and heads. exactly the point. and that s why you ll never see a full page of declaration of independence by the new york times. you think those men who fought the revolution and put their lives on the line, the big centralized government that redistributes wealth? they would be absolutely appalled. no. but that s the mind-set. you can t have health care unless the government controls it and redistributes it. you can t have education unless the government distributes it. abby: we re having a lot of headlines and a lot of critics
to the president saying you have to get off social media and off to twitter. and his response to that is, no, if anything, i m going to double down on twitter because this is my voice and the only way i can get my thoughts out there. take a look at what he says. the fake media is trying to silence us. but we will not let them. [applause] because the people know the truth. the fake media tried to stop us from going to the white house, but i m president, and they re not. [cheers and applause] their agenda is not your agenda. you ve been saying it. i will never stop fighting for you. i am delivering on trade, on the economy, on the supreme court, on the second amendment, on our military for our veterans. abby: he also admits to social media, he says it s not presidential. he tweeted this yesterday. it s modern day presidential. make america great again.
what are your thoughts? well, what is he supposed to do? allow cnn and nbc and all the rest of them interpret what he says? if anything s happened as a result of this, the media have completely disrespected themselves and the american people. they looked absurd. now, the president may have a bad tweet here and there. but 90% of them are quite good, as far as i m concerned. he needs to go over to the head of the media, the way reagan did. he s not reagan, he s trump. he has his own way of doing it. so the idea we spend five days on that one tweet when we ve had presidents in the oval office who have done a hell of a lot worse than donald trump has ever tweeted out is absurd. abby: are you surprised, though? am i surprised at the media? abby: that we focus so much on it, the mainstream media. it s ridiculous. who s the target? joe scarborough, mika brzezinski? there are more ratings in the airport sonogram than nbc. pete: well said.
they missed the point, and they did an assessment of the tweets. but the vast majority of where he wants to take the country. but now they say mentally unhinged if he shouldn t be qualified, the 25th amazement should disqualify. where are they going? first of all, that s absurd. they don t know what the 25th amendment is all about. you want to talk about nuts? the minute the men was elected, they re talking impeachment. they re trashing the constitution, which they don t get. now they want to trash the whole system how we elect members of the south. trump shut sweet. just be a little bit more careful. he has to go ahead of the media. pete: despite where you re going, what does americanism mean? that s the point, at a surface level, super sacrificial level, we want this.
we want where does all of this come from? in other words, people really need to appreciate this. not a lot of us do. but a lot of americans don t, and really, this comes down through the ages, and this country s so remarkable. not just because we say it, because it is. and this other force, this bernie sanders-type force is completely at odds with it. pete: well, we think about our american independence, it was to break off the shackles of european monarchy; right? and you write in the second chapter how we imported progressivism from that. we ve embraced progressivism to such a degree. how do we when americans are given free stuff, it s hard to wheel that back. we re going through this right now with health care. how do we real it in? because we explain to americans the real free stuff is your liberty. what does that liberty mean? we re losing it, and we need to understand it. we do need to fight this propaganda that comes from the left. what they ve done is hijack the word liberty. they don t mean by liberty
what we mean by liberty as pointed out by bernie sanders with his unbalanced tweet today we don t know freedom because we don t have free this or that. that s socialism. that s imported from europe. it s called idealism and other. who are their philosophy kings? people likes marks and rugo. this are disasters. who are ours? aristotle, you re not going to learn this in college history, and that s part of the problem. abby: do you think the american people get it, though? do you think they re smarter than many people give them credit for? because you think of this last election, the people telling them what to do, hollywood, you name it. they want to the polls and the american people did something different.
i think half of us are and half of us aren t. when you look at people who come into this country, and they watch the news and hear the left and benefiting redistribution of wealth& all the rest of it, we lose site. again, not at a superficial level, at property rights and all of these things are crucial. it sounds really good until you understand where our country came from, which is the whole point. mark s going to stick around. the mainstream media has been pushing that lie that 17 intelligence agencies only to bury their own correction. so why did the press push this when we reported the truth months ago? mark s going to be joining us when we come back right after the break. stick around. new bike? yeah, cause i got allstate.
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morning, and he was on the air number of months ago saying this. we had a number of people on fox saying the exact same thing. clayton: pointed out the document side by side. what do you make of this? i think it s exactly right. here s what i don t understan understand. if the congratulations involved in our election. whether there s 17 agencies or 3 agencies, i think the point is the president of the united states was barack obama. the head of the cia was brennon. the national intelligence director was clapper. the attorney general was loretta lynch. the fbi director was jim comey. my question is this. why aren t republicans on these committees digging in on this and making these points? instead, i watch the senate intelligence community, they re grilling jeff sessions, saying these other things. you have to watch mark warner going on do you realize how horrible this is? and i m sitting there saying do you realize that s on your watch? and what have you done about it? the idea that trump has colluded, don t you think if
the trump world has colluded by now, it would be leaked 14,000 ways? they did not clued with the russians. the democrats and the obama administration colluded to keep that information from the american people. this is a massive in my view cover-up to deflect it on trump world away from obama world. i ve also argued there was domestic surveillance involved with the unmasking of american citizens, including. clayton: members of congress. mike flynn. you ll remember this administration, the obama administration, they were spying on netanyahu, spying on the ambassador, members of congress, do you want to know where there s a massive scandal? it s the abusive intelligence. this is just the latest piece. abby: so why aren t we hearing about that in the media? there was that former barack obama knew about this back in august, but he did nothing about it because he assumed hillary clinton would win. i didn t hear about that anywhere. a one-day news story and then dropped it. because honestly, republicans in the senate and the house are weak. they control these committees,
and ought to be the focus of these committees. not trump world. they were running he was running for president of the united states. he had no say in what the russians were doing officially. abby: what are they scared of then? i think because there s only a few media outlets that will actually address this honestly. the other media outlets are in the back pocket of the democratic party. abby: what about republicans in congress? that s what i mean. they don t like to be attached. they don t want to be attached by network news and so forth. and it s appalling. pete: and that s where republicans are different. well, how is he supposed to get his message out? clayton: right it s a falling line. the book is called tyranny of progressivism. it s number one right now and has been for six straight days. i have a feeling it s still going to be after this show. mark, good to see you. abby: a lot of people tweeting this morning saying they loved your book. i appreciate it it. god bless. clayton: have you heard
facebook is just like church? that s what mark zuckerberg said. i bet father john has something to say about that. he s streaming live on facebook as he walks in. you guys don t have to go to church this sunday. don t worry about it (burke) at farmers, we ve seen almost everything, so we know how to cover almost anything. even a coupe soup. [woman] so beautiful. [man] beautiful just like you. [woman] oh, why thank you.
[burke] and we covered it, november sixth, two-thousand-nine. 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 we send our kids out into the world, full of hope. and we don t want something like meningitis b getting in their way. meningococcal group b disease, or meningitis b, is real. bexsero is a vaccine to help prevent meningitis b in 10 to 25 year olds. even if meningitis b is uncommon, that s not a chance we re willing to take. meningitis b is different from the meningitis most teens were probably vaccinated against when younger. we re getting the word out against meningitis b. our teens are getting bexsero. bexsero should not be given if you had a severe allergic reaction after a previous dose. most common side effects are pain, redness or hardness at the injection site; muscle pain; fatigue; headache; nausea; and joint pain. bexsero may not protect all individuals. tell your healthcare professional if you re pregnant or if you have received any other meningitis b vaccines.
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american airlines says they re now offering adult beverages in the economy session but don t get your hopes up. just to international to and from sydney, australia and new zealand. right and it s 18 hours and going to cost you $2,100 and a major wakeboard going viral. watch this. fourth of july weekend. trying to learn how to wakeboard for the first time. what is he doing? he let s go. that s not bad when you re in the water. it happened in up state new york. unclear if he s injured. unclear? abby: i bet he s not feeling good. every man in this studio. clear he s injured. just call it the church of facebook. founder mark entering claims that 2 billion strong social network can give people the sense of network the same way religion does. we all get meaning from our
communities and whether they re churches, they give the strength to expand our horizons and to care about broader issues. people who go to church are more likely to volunteer and give to charity not because they re religious but because they re part of a community. we have to build a world where every single person has a sense of purpose and community. abby: so is he right? that s a great question, abby. joining me now is fox news contributor. let s break this down a little bit because it s easy to pile on him. in a broader context of his speech last week was about community. facebook is going all in all of these facebook groups which people come together that are suffering from cancer or different world views. whatever. bringing them together. so that s his argument. but does it replace church? well, i think the issue here is his understanding of what religion is; right? if it s just community, if it s even just giving people a sense of purpose, then you
could say, yeah, maybe facebook is the way to do it. but for people to go to church to worship god, that s not what it s about. it s making a decision that i m going to get off the couch on a sunday morning, and i m going to say i believe in the existence of god, and i m going to exercise my faith in him by being with him and by praying and talking with him. and so mar mark zuckerberg is right on in many things but religion is not just community building. pete: so you believe that faith in god or belief manifests to deserve. those are consequences. but faith is at the center of what religion is. i m saying i have an insurance of my will to god himself. and if you re going to go and just build community, go to the ymca. i m not saying that facebook is not a good thing, and i
think it can be good for religion as well. let me give you two examples. later on this afternoon at 1:30 p.m., i will facebook live my homily, and there s going to be way more people on my facebook page that are in the pews. way, way more. that s a beautiful thing. that s building community. but that s a medium, and i used to be a paperboy, you know, growing up, and i would go drop the paper off. that s a little bit like facebook. it s a medium for content. and then of course now with facebook, people can respond. it used to be just getting information. but facebook allows us to respond. abby: there are a lot of good things but also totally disconnecting. we talk about that a lot on the show. in this environment unplugging and putting yourself in a place where you can totally focus on christ or god. and let s be honest, not all community is good community. we see that on facebook as well. you post something in the worst place the worst come out in people. things that you would never say, you say. even if it s your identity. but you re willing to do it
because you re sitting at home. going to church not only connects us with god, it connects us with each other in a very concrete way, in which we make ourselves better. pete: great point. clayton: you ll catch him on facebook later. facebook live. you don t have to go to church this sunday just kidding. clayton: father, great to see you. abby: happy fourth of july weekend. pete: still ahead, i bet you remember when president trump said this about cnn. just because the attack of fake news and attacking our network, i just want to ask you, sir. i m changing it from fake new brunswick, though. very fake news. oh, i love it. well, this morning, he s got a new nickname for that other cable news channel, any guesses? and the important safety particulars before shooting off fireworks. rickie fowler s a professional golfer.
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in fact, he doesn t i haven t seen him pin tweets to the top of his account before. but he pinned this one atop his twitter account. abby: how long? it s not there now. but it was a few hours. he s saying i m thinking about changing the name fake news cnn to fraud news cnn. this is if we thought he was going to back down, he s certainly not. he s doubling down on calling the fraud. clayton: well, who is he going to use for fake now s? nbc now? he s sharing that name with other networks. that s a broader name of what s going on. but cnn is so bad, it s the fraud news network. think about why he would say that. you have the video that came out, the three reporters that were fired. day in and day out, they re having to walk back from things and wait until more is found out on the russia stuff. abby: cnn used to be the breaking news place. that s what i remember when i was growing up. it has really taken a turn
this past year, and i think people realize that. when you turn it on, you know exactly what it s going to be. it s going to be antitrump. cnn is the epicenter of resistance. it truly is. and i ve heard other people say this, and i agree. i m almost offended. it s worse. it s more fake and more fraud when you pretend to be the middle, and i have to watch that stuff in the airport and pretend that s the middle of america. msnbc, you know at least they re a bunch of leftists. so if you have a better nickname for cnn, let us know. we would love to hear what you think. abby: i bet our audience has a lot of great ideas for that. we want to bring other headlines we re following. starting with this man is starting to be alive after losing control of his motorcycle on a busy highway. we want to warn you, though, this might be a little tough to watch. take a look.
abby: the biker riding down a highway when he wobbles and spinning out of control hitting his head on the road. the bike dragging his body, miraculously that man expecting to be okay. and president trump signature country club set to host the u.s. women s open in two weeks. but a top female golfer is urging the president to keep away from the tournament. american brittany telling the chicago tribune quote hopefully maybe he doesn t show up, and it didn t be a big debacle, and it will be about us and not him. did stop short of saying the u.s. open should be moved, but did say she will not be boycotting. okay. and brand-new law in florida allows parents so what is that? parents to challenge thank you, pete. that s why i have you. pete: spaying of on the teleprompter is very
important. dagen: parents being taught science class will have an unbiased review officer for complaints about any material complaint used in class. they will have the material removed. critics say will make it harder to teach evolution and climate change. pete: i love when those are the priorities. wonderful. abby: i love when you can sit next to me and help me out. pete: well, listen, i see it, and it s confusing for me too. dagen: thank you, pete. let s go to rick with the weather. how is it? you know, it s a lot better today than yesterday. just across the country in general. show you what s going on temperature-wise. a little bit cooler across the northern plains and in towards the great great lakes as well. anywhere with the yellow on the there were in the 70s, it s still humid. so up across parts of the northeast into the mid-atlantic, you ll have a warm day, less rain overall, though, than yesterday. so it s really going to be a great day. down to the east, we re going to see spotty showers because
it s humid and garden variety summer thunderstorms. a few showers also across parts of the central plains. that s going to be a little bit more severe later on tonight. but overall, just a warm day there and out across the west, tons of sunshine and the heat is back. 109 in phoenix. we always love talking about that 109 in phoenix. well, it is a dry heat. it is a dry heat. 109 is pretty bad, but it s not horrible. well, hey, everyone loves fireworks on fourth of july but before you try to put on your own show in your own driveway, here are things you need to know. the director of government affairs of phantom fireworks. the world s largest retail of consumer fireworks. welcome. welcome. everybody wants to be outside with fireworks right now, but it is a little bit dangerous if you do it wrong. it s important to follow the rules when you re using consumer fireworks. first of all, consumer fireworks are never for kids. never let children handle. even sparklers?
yeah. we do say don t let kids play with sparklers because they do burn pretty hot and even fifths done, it s not something you want to touch. we do have videos of people getting burned by those. there s a website fireworks.com that you can go and find out what the rules are. yeah. there s a section on the site called fireworks university and then you can find out state by state the fireworks laws. if you have a neighborhood over, a bunch of neighbors coming over for your barbecue and start to get dark outside, you bought some of these big three prong fireworks, these artillery shells. i mean, how far away from your house do you need to be? do you need to have water standing by? what do you need to do to make sure your safe? so how far back is the farther, the better. we recommend at least 7500 feet away. and when it comes to time to
shoot, you want to make sure you re shoulding on a hard, flat service. if we have any kind of malfunctioning fireworks, you want to do you say them with water and set them aside and go back the next day. yeah, don t come back and think that didn t go off, maybe i need to relight the fuse. don t do that. no. no. and what about the west where it s really dry? a lot of fires going on? so you always want to have a water source ready. if you can have a hose, a bucket of water, a fire extinguisher, all of those are great sources. what is this giant? i want to see what this is. holy smokes. so this is the biggest product in the store. it s called the grounds for divorce, tends to create conversation. my customers absolutely love it. and the bigger the item, the
more they want to take it home with them. and then your kids won t be able to afford to go to college. that will be the next one. next, do you have a deal for any fox viewer who goes into your store? today and tomorrow only, walk into any phantom fireworks in the country, name my name, and you can have the mother lode or any 99.99 repeater for 29.99. that s good for today and tomorrow only. i don t know what that is, but that s fantastic. that s a great deal. alabama, pete, inside. abby: thank you so much. clayton: well done, gentlemen. susan rice ready to testify under oath but behind closed doors about unmasking associates. our next guest helped blow that story wide open, and she will respond to that charge. abby: plus, she s back and bringing hard artillery this
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position. this is what she had to say in new york magazine. i m going to read the quote from susan rice. she said let me put it this way. i do not leak to the simple explanation that it s only about race and gender. i m ready to keep to my own theories to myself. it s not because i don t have any. she s insinuating that folks like you and other intelligence communities are doing it because of her race and gender. are you? of course not. incredible. i m a hispanic and a woman. it had nothing to do with that. it had to do with the fact that when we were looking into the unmasking accusations, we were actually following up on these stories. we came across documents that were declassified by the foreign intelligence surveillance court, pete, and these revealed that the obama administration two weeks before president trump took office so loosely that not only with susan rice but john brennan. does that have anything to do
with race and gender? john brennan, samantha powers, and others within the administration, the obama administration were actually unmasking american names. and what we discovered beyond that was that from november until january of his last month in office, they were unmasking at a exponential rate. so and let me go back even further. from 2011 until december, there was over 350% increase in unmasking of americans. this was incredible, and they were chided by the fisa courts for this, almost reprimanded saying this is a violation of fourth amendment rights. this has nothing to do with gender and race. pete: of course it doesn t. they just play identity politics. you ve done an awesome job. a key question is what s the motivation? why were they unmasking? was it related to specific investigations? politically moated have elevated? what have you seen?
well, this is a form of political espionage, and this is a reason why we haven t stopped writing these stories and looking at this. one of the things that we re allowed to do that the united states does legally is intercept overseas foreign phone calls. so from foreigners. but what they were doing is taking a back door. so it s an american made a phone call to a foreigner, they would just go ahead down on a piece of paper that they submitted to the nsa this is without warrant, you know, need to know. i need to know who this person is. but what we ve been told is that some of these documents that have been unmasked, these conversations had nothing to do with foreign state enemy actors or terrorism. so there s something else going on here, and they re also classified, pete. so we can t get our hands on it to see what those look like. but for sure, the intelligence committee is, and they subpoenaed not only susan rice, but john brennan and now samantha powers to see what they were looking at. yeah. got to be race and gender then; right? absolutely.
pete: fantastic work. i would say fake news media, take note because this is what investigative journalism actually look like. thank you, pete. pete: all right. the video is incredible. a former special forces operative turned aid worker dodging a hail of isis bullets to rescue a 6-year-old iraqi girl. take a look. [gunfire] pete: the hero in that video joins us live next hour. and anna is bringing out the big guns. she s prepping that canon for fire that there she is. she ll light the fuse, i would imagine just for us, and that s coming up next. having moderate to severe plaque psoriasis is not always easy. it s a long-distance run. and you have the determination to keep going.
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military ceremonies, all sorts of things. and now 40-50,000 people come. one of the big highlights is this guy. thor, the canon. i m going to bring in sandy. how are you doing? i m doing just fine. now, you re the gunner for thor. why thor? will be the has been it s the god of thunder. this is used for the primarily and what else? it s primarily used for weddings here at the building. but it s not necessarily something that was used during the revolutionary war or civil war, but it is a replica. exactly. it s a full scale replica, a bronze canon. and these things are used sometimes at even weddings; right? absolutely. they re available for rental. that s exactly right. that s what we do. that s where the income comes from. we re ready to see what this bad boy can do, sandy. okay. let s do it. what do you need to do? well, you need to fire. gentlemen, are you ready? can i give them a countdown? not yet.
prepare. oh, prick and prime. sorry. they re pricking and priming. the heat of the moment. okay. the primer goes in. three, two, one. no. prepare. prepare. now you can count it down. okay. here we go. i m jumping the gun a little bit, huh? all right. three, two, one, go. fire. does anybody have any eardrums left? that was pretty impressive. i can see why this is used pretty often. absolutely. and tell me, this canon was donated to the historical society. tell me that story. well, it was done up in clifton, virginia in his backyard, and he and his wife separated, and i had called him on one day, and i said who gets the canon? and he said he was looking for a place to donate it, and i said how about the southport historical society, and that s how it happened. very nice.
so much history here. we really appreciate your time. sandy, great stuff. what s this? that s the firing pin. the firing pin. so i get to keep this, huh? absolutely. guys, back to you in the studio. pete: can you hear us? barely. abby: we loved it so much. she said jumping the gun. i have to look that up. i wonder if that s where it comes from. pete: quick thinking. abby: and make sure you use your #proud american. you ve been sending us photos all morning. keep them coming up. coming up on the show, the president says he won t stop tweeting, despite backlash from the left. this morning, he s sending a message to the fake news media. pete: and incredible video showing special aids worker dodging a hail of isis bullets to rescue a 6-year-old iraqi girl. [gunfire] pete: oh, my gosh.
the hero in that video joins us live this hour worrying about your big. about the client dinner. you gonna wear? hannah. did you get that email i sent you? i need you to respond. .before you wake up. when life keeps you up. zzzquil helps you fall asleep in less than 20 minutes. because sleep is a beautiful thing.
some people think he should get off social media. what do you think? he uses it for one reason, to bypass the liberal media, which has become an arm of the democratic party and speak directly to the american people, and it worked during the campaign, and it is going to continue to work. the fake media is trying to silence us. but we will not let them. i m president and they are not. what is that? the classic country. this is sort of the new pop country. okay. can we talk about what s happening on our camera? we have the big smokers out there this morning. we are going to do barbecue on the plaza.
if you are in the area, come over here. we have a ton of barbecue. it is like a bugs bunny cartoon. you smell the smoke and it s kind of floating down the street. that s pete every morning on the show. it is. we know that s what you will be doing this sunday after church hanging out. if you are taking a long weekend, you have monday and tuesday and plenty of barbecue. we will be here. we are. the next two days. we re celebrating 4th of july weekend. i hope you are too. send us in how you are celebrating your proud american photos friends @ fox news.com. we have been showing them all morning long. check this one out. katherine sent this one in of her husband jack sitting on a couch that he made entirely out of beer cans. i don t throw around the term genius often. [laughter] when i do, i really mean it. it is a beer chair. that is cool. that is amazing. sharon sends us this photo of her creative grandson jonas and his sidewalk chalk art. look at that. looks like he is holding it. very cool.
katie sends us this picture of her son captain will and his friend anthony during their time in flight school for the u.s. air force thank you for your service. here s cindy s son who can t get enough of the stars and stripes. holding it up, wearing it, and painting it on his chest. i love that. that s amazing. well, president trump yesterday maybe he will send us a photo. he doesn t need to because we have video of him yesterday at this celebrate freedom rally in washington, d.c. he was there in washington, d.c. talking to veterans thanking them for their service. he also fired off a few shots at the media too. take a listen. these american heroes risk everything so that you and i can live in freedom. they gave all they had, everything for their comrades, their country, and for victory. they like winning. we like winning again, don t we? i want you all and all of our incredible wounded warriors to
know you have an entire nation of more than 300 million people behind you. and our nation s getting strong again. do you notice? we signed veterans accountability. they have been trying to do it for 40 years. couldn t fire somebody, they were horrible doing a terrible job for the veterans, robbing, stealing, hurting people. you couldn t do anything. and now you can say you re fired. [applause] what he is attempting to do and has done so far at the va, the va accountability act is significant legislative victory. it makes you think if we had a different president, would we have gotten this kind of emphasis on the va, on the vets on rebuilding the military? we take for granted how much laser focus has been on the things that matter to people out there. that s a great point. there s still more to do, but this is something he promised early on in the campaign trail, top priorities. he s stayed on that. he s done some great things to make changes.
he spent some time yesterday attacking the media. i know it is shocking. he actually took to twitter prior to his event in washington, d.c. maybe on air force one getting ready. he fired up the dial up mode you mean on the air force one and he said i m going to take to twitter and say the fake and fraudulent news media is working hard to convince republicans that i should not use social media. i won the 2016 election with interviews speeches and social media. remember when hilary clinton wouldn t do a lot of interviews. he said i had to beat fake news and did. we will continue to win. there were over 200 days where we didn t hear anything really from hilary clinton. you also forget how many people president trump ran against even on the republican side. i think the list was like 35 or something. many of them, most of them had been in politics most of their life. they already had this advantage, like jeb bush, you think about who had all that money well before he started. president trump had never been in politics, didn t have the money, to his point figured out a way to bypass the media and
all the politicos out there and proved he could win. he faced resistance then, still facing it now and still punching back. take a listen to what he said last night the fake media is trying to silence us. but we will not let them. because the people know the truth. the fake media tried to stop us from going to the white house. but i m president and they are not. [cheers and applause] their agenda is not your agenda. you ve been saying it. i will never stop fighting for you. i am delivering on trade, on the economy, on the supreme court, on the 2nd amendment, on our military - for our veterans. the criticism is the use of twitter is not presidential. some could argue maybe some of his tweets this past week maybe that s where they crossed the
line. he fired back and said my use of social media is not presidential. it is modern day presidential. make america great again. a lot of critics are saying you could be one way on the campaign trail. that s fine. but now you are commander-in-chief. you need to act differently to what he said no i m a different type of president. we re living in different times that s right. one of his deputy campaign manager he was on the program earlier and said this is a metaphorical weapon the president uses and uses effectively. listen. the president understands the new media better than anyone. it is the reason he won. it is the reason he is the president of the united states today. really he uses it for one reason, to bypass the liberal media, which has become an arm of the democratic party. and speak directly to the american people, and it worked during the campaign, and it is going to continue to work. so what he is saying is i m going to fight back. i m going to stand up for myself because the mainstream media is so dishonest. he does get it. he gets it better than anyone.
if he wants to, he s able to change the conversation of the day with a simple tweet. one of the other things that he said is that, you know, the mainstream media just angry that he s creating his own headlines and that back in the day, you pick up the newspaper, it should be our headlines as you are going to read. instead the president is driving the narrative. you are taking attention away from us. that s supposed to be our game. we debated it yesterday. i say more tweets. just fight because no one can change a narrative like he can. what is he going to do when twitter is going to go out of business? he will keep it in business. facebook. you can do facebook lives. i would like to see him do some snapchats. speaking of headlines today the failing new york times the paper that knows probably the least about the constitution or understanding how to interpret it, put out an annotated constitution this morning. i opened it up like i unfortunately do every morning. it s a big old document.
you know, a lot of words in there. but more almost as much text with how they are interpreting it than the actual constitution. you would think this would make sense. it s the 4th of july weekend. it would make sense to have the constitution. mark levin was on the show earlier. number one, first of all, the declaration of independence was the document that was read aloud on july 4th. he s at independence hall. he said look, they are not focused on the declaration of independence. you are never going to see them print that in the paper. take a listen to what he had to say the principles of this country that we re celebrating today, the men who fought for this country, put their lives on the line, what were they all about? the reason why you won t see that explained in the new york times is because they don t agree with it. the entire progressive movement rejects the declaration of independence. how do we know? they told us this. we don t believe in unalienable rights. they believe your rights come from government and liberty also
comes from government. they even say it. you cannot fulfill yourself this is why bernie sanders talks about free education, free healthcare because otherwise you are not free according to them. even before you open this up, he was pointing this out, they have a photo on the top of george washington and talking about our founding fathers and below it trump. good versus evil sort of thing, sort of like how times have changed. maybe that was subliminal message. who knows, just saying. this is a paper that, you know, has expressed indignation towards religious freedom, toward the right to bear arms, toward limited government, toward the 10th amendment which pushes power down to the states, and i did check it, at least their writing of the constitution does say freedom of religion. not freedom from religion. you still read that every morning. i do. you ve got to get inside the mind of the resistance movement and know what you are dealing with on fake news he likes the recipes and food section. style section. i do want to bring some other
headlines starting with the trump administration. taking another step to put america first. the department of homeland security now mandating that all 280 foreign airports that have direct flights to the u.s. install explosive detection scanners. it is part of the border ban on laptops that terrorists could use to hide a small bomb. the airports have three weeks to comply or face possible flight suspension. also, 27 states are now refusing at least in part to send their voter information to the trump administration. a special commission requesting that the data to investigate possible voter fraud during the 2016 election. president trump tweeting this, numerous states are refusing to give information to the very distinguished voter fraud panel. what are they trying to hide? these states have until july 14th to comply. what is more american than rescuing a bald eagle in washington, d.c. during the 4th of july weekend? oh, yeah. the great american bird found barely moving and unable to fly, but don t worry, wildlife
officials expected to recover and be just fine. that is really a story, huh? nation s capitol, nation s bird on the nation s birthday pretty good. the bird looks kind of angry in that photo, been through a lot. yeah, gave him a little hair cut too. a little shampoo. coming up here, two dozen democrats are getting behind a bill to declare president trump mentally unfit for office. but should anyone take this seriously? we have a guest on deck to react. former president obama back in the spotlight taking a jab at president trump for more than 10,000 miles away. where are we?
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welcome back. over two dozen democrats backing a new bill that questions the mental health of president trump. the draft legislation would establish a panel to determine whether the president is fit to serve. but should anyone really take this seriously? here to weigh in is fox news politics editor chris stirewalt. looking dashing as always, good to see you. thanks guys happy sunday. you think about the democratic party and where they are in terms of winning elections. they ve got a lot of work to do, and what their platform is, what they stand for, and then something like this comes down and you are thinking is that really going to get people to polls? i mean it will get some people to the polls. it will get people in those districts that are safely democratic to the polls. probably the best hope for them on this is that the president would notice that they are doing it and that he would comment on it or engage in it in some way or that his supporters would comment on it or engage in it, give it attention.
if they could get that and reinforce the notion that the president is mentally unwell, they are never going to successfully remove him from office this way. people go to the polls and they vote because of an agenda, because of policy, because of things that will hopefully make their life better. you look at some of the bills that have been put on their desk to pass, sanctuary cities, and we have calculated the numbers here, you have more democrats that supported the fact that the president is mentally ill compared to kate s law, the sanctuary cities i mean talk about priorities here, chris? well, certainly on kate s law, the republicans have an opportunity in the senate now to put some pressure on democrats in key states. they have some opportunities here. whether or not they can successfully pass it, this bill passed the house once before and was defeated in the senate, they need eight democratic senators at least to come on board to get it passed. if they can t get all eight, at least this is an opportunity for republicans to show voters in
states where they might have different opinion about this that they may be represented by somebody who doesn t agree with their values. let s a couple things here; right? democrats are getting on board this bill. they are not getting on board the healthcare bill. where do you see that going over the next few weeks? a lot of moving and shaking for we had governor huckabee on the show yesterday. he said trash the whole thing, it is a terrible bill. send it back to the states, let the governors deal with it. you still have to repeal it. and so the senator s idea that the president has embraced that you are going to hear i think more people come out and speak in favor of which is basically paul ryan s original plan. his original plan way back in march was scrap the bill, say that it s repealed, effective this date, in the future, and then look, i think everybody would agree that republicans squandered an opportunity in not having legislation ready; right? uh-huh. they didn t come to a consensus over the last eight years about what it is that they
saw as a replacement for obama care. they didn t have it ready. so rather than try to avoid unhappy it is better to face them. to face that, you say okay it is repealed and the senator s plan is you get a year. we re going to give ourselves a year to come up with a remedy. let s work through the end of the summer. let s skip august recess. let s stay here and do this. the president s on board with this plan. others are on board. this really now represents in a big way the best chance that republicans have to take some serious action. the argument is that the deadline sharpens the mind and in that year they have to get something done. you think they will shift to that plan, repeal on a time line and then attempt to replace. as opposed to finding the additional three or four votes in the senate. there are a lot more than three or four there are publicly stated maybe six short, but the truth is, there are others who i ve talked to who are out there, lindsey graham said it very well, this bill is either going to pass with 51 or fail with 35.
with legislation like this, no one likes this legislation, including the people who wrote it. but it faces an unhappy reality for republicans. they have very efficiently effectively pointed out that obama care is unravelling for the individual insurance market, for these exchanges, and we re talking about 20 million people out there that are covered in this space. that s a lot of americans. and something has to happen for them before november or it will not only be a political catastrophe, but it will also be a huge abrogation of the duties and responsibilities of the government. your show with dana perino is on tonight right at fnc? 9:00 p.m. it will be great. we have wonderful historians. we re not going to do too much on the news. we re going to focus on what the revolution meant and whether those founding ideas, those founding virtues are with us still today love it. we will be tuning in. good to see you. i read his hash time report
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for all of the love. warren and the rock may both be considering a run in 2020 after he made a mock announcement on snl earlier this year. see about that. pete, abby? incredible video shows a former special forces operative turned aid worker dodging a hail of isis bullets to rescue a 6-year-old iraqi girl. take a listen. [gunfire] that s incredible video. the hero in that video has made it his mission to help victims who are caught on the front lines of the war on terror. joining us now, that man, dave eubank.
thank you very much for joining us. that was taken in mosul three weeks ago. tell us why you are there. and what you are doing there. we re there because we think that s where god sent us. we love the iraqi people and that was a change in my heart which i attribute to jesus and we re there to give help and love and hope. also to people as they flee isis. we have been in the middle east about three years and on the mosul campaign for about nine months. one of those people was a 6-year-old iraqi girl seen in that video with you saving her in the middle of that attack. we can show just that video, but as we re watching it again, tell us what we re seeing, what happened, what was going through your mind in that moment. well, ma am, the whole time we have been trying to help against isis, we have seen them kill people. starting in may this year it was more and more civilians being killed, and on june the 1st, over 100 killed. many of the survivors came to
us, fixing them up and we went to see what was happening. a big highway across the first bridge in west mosul and they had slaughtered people in the streets. then we saw living people among the dead. so we prayed to god help. we called the americans, talked to the iraqis. the iraqis and iraqis coordinated. americans dropped smoke. iraqis gave us a tank. my team and i and a syrian refugee, we ran behind the tank to try to save this little girl. we saw two other men and got them as well. we ve got that image of you holding that girl, really powerful image. what s the next part of that story? well, i had her in my arms. we actually got two more men, one of them we lost in the shooting. one of my guys was shot in the leg himself. we rescued the girl and one of the men. as i was running back, isis is shooting at us, the tanks behind firing. i told the little girl and i prayed first i said if no one adopts you, i will. and when we got clear around the
corner, out of the fire, i called my wife because my wife and kids are there in mosul with me, at the collection point. i said honey, i have a little girl, hiding under her mom for two days. her mom is dead. she s not hurt but she s going to need love. we got to the medical facility, checked her, gave her a lot of water. got in my wife s arms and fell asleep. for the next week my wife and another iraqi family took care of her and the general mustafa. and now general mustafa is working on adopting her. that gives you chills. such an incredible story. thanks to you and everyone else who were such heros in that moment to save that little girl and other people. you say the iraqis love the americans and they love the current leadership. tell us about that. well, while i was there, you know, my heart changed. i love them. they love me. and literally gave their life for me. and i gave the same. and thank god i got to keep it. but what they told me over and over again is our military, your military, the american military doing a great job helping us. thank you.
you re not killing civilians. you are focused on killing isis. you care about us. and i saw a humility and a respect among our military, and that brought the iraqis to love us, and they said please tell your administration back in america we love you too. please help us more. and how do they feel about how president trump is doing and his leadership? two things, one is they didn t like the travel ban at first, when iraqis were on it, they said hey we re on your side. and the second thing they said was we like president trump because he knows isis is the big threat and he s helping us so thank you. we like him. he s doing a lot for our military. thank you for being with us and sharing your story and all you and your team are doing to make this world a better place. for your service and courage. thank you. god bless all of you. thank you. what a contrast between the absolute savagery and isis and the good guys. he risked his life with his wife and kids to save another kid. he s still so humble. doesn t want to take credit for it. amazing. makes you proud to be an american.
keep sending your photos in. you can t beat that one. that one will win the day. the president just launched another attack against the fake news on twitter moments ago and believe me, trust me, you ve got to see this one. that is a tease. speaking of attacks former president obama taking a swipe at president trump from more than 10,000 miles away. one more fight, the fight for freedom and independence would be the same it wouldn t be the same no, never. without some barbecue. cooking up some wings. rick is already eating them. we will be out there soon on the plaza. the red white and blue, as in blue cheese? blue [laughter] new bike? yeah, cause i got allstate. if you total your new bike, they replace it with a brand new one. that s cool. i got a new helmet. we know steve. switching to allstate is worth it.
you know, any good small town church has got a church bus. and they said we re putting it in red white and blue. that s why i love 4th of july. all red white and blue. we think about why we re proud to be americans. i wish this happened more throughout the year. we re going to be doing the 4th of july, who has the best fireworks in the country? i m going to go with philadelphia. where our country started. i was in nashville last year for proud america. i would have to say they have one of the best displays philly will say we have the best. i m going to go with forest lake minnesota where i m from awesome fireworks. there are fireworks coming from president trump s twitter account. he tweets out this video. you actually were the one that showed it to us. yeah. president trump out tweeting this morning this tweet all it says is hashtag fraud news cnn, hashtag fnn. fake news. what we re looking at here is a video from when president trump is in the media. he was with what was it wwe and would sometimes show up as a
character in wwe this is him body slamming someone from there with cnn s logo photo shopped on the head of that person. it ends with fraud news network. that s a real video by the way. that was actually president trump in the ring as you said back in the day wwe. they put the cnn on the person. wow. if you thought he was going to back down one bit, this indictment of the media, i think this is your answer right here. i like he s incorporating some video. maybe he will start using some video. i think he listened to you. you have been busy during the show today on the computer. did you edit that video? right. i said send some video out. please take a look at this. oh, gosh, we will stay on top of the twitter account. let s start with a fox news alert. an arrest made of a violent shooting inside a arkansas nightclub that injured 28 people. ricky hampton the rapper who was performing that night was arrested along with another man while performing in birmingham, alabama.
the shooting as you can imagine unleashing panic. 25 people total were shot there, but all are expected to survive. thank goodness. and more news this time claiming there is bad blood between president trump and vice president mike pence. this morning the president s former campaign manager denied that report to us, when he joined just a short time ago. there s no stronger bond in this administration than the president and the vice president of the united states. these two men work closely together day in and day out. well, this morning the white house also flatly denying that report that cites so called republican sources. so once again, a report that may not be true. there s this former president obama heading overseas before taking a swipe at president trump. he told a crowd in indonesia
quote we are seeing a rise in an aggressive kind of nationalism. we start seeing both in developed and developing countries an increased resentiments about minority groups and bad treatment of people who don t look like us or practice the same faith as us. i don t think the future favors strong men. i believe the future favors those who promote tolerances who are open to differences and learn from everyone. well obama is currently on a ten-day vacation in jakarta. and remember when all of these celebrities claimed they were going to go to canada. remember that because trump was elected. well it looks like everyone has chickened out. no one actually went. new stats show the number of people applying to move across the border over to canada rose just about 4% from 2016 to 2017. that s hardly a mass exodus. as for visas issued to people from the u.s., that increased just 1%. wow. okay. have fun in canada. [laughter] none of those celebrities followed through, shocker. are you surprised by that? not one bit.
out to clayton for some more barbecue i m hoping. clayton and rick? that s right. thank you guys. it is the 4th of july weekend. we are celebrating all morning with some delicious barbecue on the plaza. the chef is back. author of a cook book. that is good too. we are cooking some chicken today. we are. earlier we did ribs and today right now we re going to do some chicken wings. we have a red white and blue smoked chicken wing recipe. this is the blue portion of it. okay? because it is raw. because it is raw right now. it is a super simple recipe. we re going to take the raw chicken wings, spice them up, season them up with some celery salt. we re going to add some black pepper. the hotter you want them, the spicier you want them, the more black pepper you put on them. and then we re going to put those wings on to . guys, this is our latest smoker
that is thermal temp technology that basically allows you to guarantee temperature control. this one is available at home depot and lowe s. i see there s a propane tank associated associated with this one. yes, our electric smokers are digital control. this is pro pane. instead of electric we are doing propane. you put whatever woodchips you want for the flifr; right? flavor; right? woodchips down at the bottom here. all of your smoked flavor is coming from the woodchips. the heat source comes from the propane or electric. doesn t really matter they are way. really doesn t matter. we got our smokers available at retailers all over the country, sam s, wal-mart, you can get the retailers and the recipes on-line. our wings have been smoking for one hour. we take them off. we transport them are you joining us? he wasn t supposed to be out here. but when there s food
food, pete comes running. keep going, guys. transfer these wings to an aluminum tray, and then we re going to make the blue salts. okay? blue sauce. okay? this sauce is made up of olive oil, molasses, hot sauce and blue cheese dressing. put that on. you put the blue cheese with it so you don t have to dip it afterwards. there you go. so now we ve got that completely coating our wings so they ve been now for an hour, we re going to put them back on the smoker for 30 minutes. what that does, guys, is that takes these wings, and it bakes that sauce on to the wings. so we transfer it here and we re going to take these wings off right here. we have a hungry crowd out here, john. wow, look at that. are you ready for some of that? we are. the barricade is about to break down over there. [laughter] so guys, you think about the 4th of july.
smell of freedom. go get a smoker and let it do all the work for you in your backyard. spend time with your family, your friends. yeah. happy 4th of july. happy 4th of july. we love you, john. thank you very much. we want to point out, pete was not supposed to be in this. can we get a shot of our teleprompter here? rick and i are supposed to be doing this segment. it says there clayton and rick. [laughter] i m sorry, i needed more time. i can t help it. it is like the bugs bunny cartoon, smelled the smoke from inside and carried away. i didn t want to. i had to. i love it. is it good? i actually told pete to go out there and to bring me inside some barbecue. i think he ate it all. thanks a lot, pete. abby, i will bring some wings in for you. you are so sweet. i can smell it from in here. smells amazing. the mainstream media in hysterics once again, this time over the president s mental health. watch this.
he keeps getting worse. and mentally keeps getting worse. this is a man in decline. are they finally taking things too far? judge alex with his verdict and i m sure he s got one. that s up next. if you need some backyard games for the 4th of july, we have some coming up for you. stay with us.
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psychiatric community that nobody diagnoses from a afar. he is literally to the point where there is concern about his health. he s not well. he s not of sound mind. donald if you are watching we re from queens i will meet you in the schoolyard brother. are they finally taking things too far? here to weigh in is the former miami-dade county circuit court judge judge alex ferrer. thank you very much for being here this morning. thank you for having me. what do you think of all this back and forth? well, i mean, it s of course the mental illness is a touchy subject. we ve all known that couldn t take criticism or didn t take criticism as well. obviously president trump believes that criticism is unwarranted and malicious, at least. but we wouldn t call the people that we ve worked with who would slam you back if you criticized them mentally ill. that s not the label that we would use. now, of course when you re dealing with the president of the united states, the power is so huge, if a journalist really believes that there s evidence of mental illness, suppose they
have to take some action. the problem is that the media, number one, has no legitimate basis to claim he s mentally ill other than the fact they feel his responses are inappropriate for the office of the president. are there any rules then? go ahead, finish. no, not really. we can see the media does whatever it wants. it s done so since before president trump was elected. which leads to my second point which the media doesn t have any credibility when it comes to this. i mean, you think back, before he was president, they were basically scheming to keep him from being president. so much so that they had to apologize for their news coverage after he was elected. after he was elected, then there were all these suggestions that electors didn t have to vote that way, that they could vote their conscience to keep him from actually getting elected by the electoral college. it s been every day 24/7 an attempt to undermine anything he does with negative coverage around the clock. i think even the most well balanced individual would have a difficult time not going after
such an onslaught on almost every media outlet. if you want to claim that president trump is mentally ill because he responds in that fashion and i certainly don t agree with a lot of his responses, then what do you say about the journalists who basically are foaming at the mouth at every opportunity to take a shot at him and driving themselves insane about anything he does? yeah and calling themselves independent and unbiassed in the process. and there s clearly so much evidence to the contrary. i mean it seems like every other day we re finding evidence that this is anything but clear fair and unbiassed coverage. so judge i want to get your take on the travel ban from the court perspective. travel ban is place. court challenges begin of course. now there s these additional challenges up against what the supreme court has laid down while they take this up into the fall. what do you make of this? do those challenges hold any water at all? well, i think some of them will. and i also think that justice thomas predicted as much. he said if the language that we re using when we re saying
this was a win of course for president trump because his travel ban was basically left in place with the exception of any individuals who had a quote unquote bona fide relationship with individuals or entities in the u.s. as far as individuals are concerned, they said a bona fide relationship was a close familial relationship. those terms leave a lot to interpretation. so the trump administration came in and said okay, we think that parents and children and siblings etc. are close familial relationships but we don t grandparents and grandchildren are. that s going to be a legitimate challenge. the supreme court said mothers-in-law are how can you say a mother-in-law is but a grandparent is not? there will be legitimate challenges. there will also be those out there who want to undermine anything president trump does. and they will take the opportunity to challenge him in front of courts that are enemies basically. judge, thank you for being here. have a great holiday. you too. you have the food and drinks but what about the games for your backyard barbecue? we have you covered.
we have some great games coming up next. as moms, we send our kids out into the world, full of hope. and we don t want something like meningitis b getting in their way. meningococcal group b disease, or meningitis b, is real. bexsero is a vaccine to help prevent meningitis b in 10 to 25 year olds. even if meningitis b is uncommon, that s not a chance we re willing to take. meningitis b is different from the meningitis most teens were probably vaccinated against when younger. we re getting the word out against meningitis b. our teens are getting bexsero. bexsero should not be given if you had a severe allergic reaction after a previous dose. most common side effects are pain, redness or hardness at the injection site; muscle pain; fatigue; headache; nausea; and joint pain. bexsero may not protect all individuals. tell your healthcare professional if you re pregnant or if you have received any other meningitis b vaccines. ask your healthcare professional about the risks and benefits of bexsero and if vaccination with bexsero is right for your teen. moms, we can t wait.
common sign shop, these are custom game signs. so they are only $13. what makes them so special is that you can get it customized with the color of the font and the name of the game. so now to the games. we have rings to here. this is by the etsy yeah, try it out. this is the wooden tree boutique. this is $85 and again, when you re working with an etsy seller, it is great because you can customize it. so we had nice job! so we customized it for the 4th of july. that is adorable. i love that. yes. this is by the northern lumberjack shop. and again, because you re working with an etsy seller, you can customize it. you see the last names are here. you can put your name on it, a logo on it. great for a gift, great for your own backyard. it is like yard scrabble? yes, the yard scrabble.
this seller likes to call it yabble. this and the tic tac toe. it is $100, a great way to get the entire family involved and outside. out in the yard. i love that. one of my favorite games of all time is corn hole. yes, this is by crafted corn hole and again because here i will toss it to you and you can try it out. this is completely customized. so there s a lot of different levels, but this is by crafted corn hole. it is 275. but you re talking about you are giving almost you re giving them nice job! you are giving them the image and they are custom building the entire set for you. we will be right back. we re going to play some more games. thank you very much. thank you so much. there s a denture adhesive that holds strong until evening.

Abby , Love , Whats-going-on , World , Brest , Bed , Train , In-the-morning-show , Daylight-savings , 00 , 7 , Pete

Transcripts For KGO ABC World News Tonight With David Muir 20180124 01:30:00

tonight, the deadly school shooting. the gunman opening fire inside a high school. at least two dead, more than a dozen shot or injured. police and ambulances rushing to the scene. also tonight, the major headline in the russia investigation. robert mueller now reaching right into president trump s cabinet. interviewing attorney general jeff sessions. and tonight, abc news now confirming mueller wants to question the president on two key issues. the powerful 7.9 earthquake off alaska, launching a tsunami alert in alaska and along the west coast of the u.s. and what we have learned tonight about those plates shifting and how it might have made all the difference. you ll see it here tonight. the deadly flu. the 6-year-old girl dying after paramedics came to the home. she was not taken to the hospital. the warning from her parents to others tonight. and the major announcement the president says when he fired comey, he had the russia investigation on his mind. when i decided to just do it, i said to myself, you know, this russia thing with trump and russia is a made-up story. pierre thomas with us live tonight. and in the meantime, pierre, the president has claimed top fbi officials are biased against him. and tonight, we re learning of pressure on the new fbi director, christopher wray, to replace his own deputy? reporter: that s right, david. sources tell us that the attorney general has been urging director wray to remove his senior leadership, to basically clean house. but we re told director wray has been pushing back, saying the decision is his and his alone. david? pierre thomas with us here in new york. pierre, thank you. and as i mentioned, we have also learned tonight of two key issues robert mueller would like to ask president trump about. so, let s get right to our chief white house correspondent jonathan karl, who is here with us in new york tonight. and jon, what are you learning? reporter: well, we know that two of the issues that mueller wants to focus on are the firing of james comey and the firing of michael flynn, but i ve got to tell you, david, there is no guarantee this interview will happen. in fact, i think this could become a big fight. i have spoken to people very close to the president who say that he should do everything he should everything possible to stop this interview from happening, that it could be a disaster, even though he told me back in june he would be 100% willing to do it. yes, we remember that. and in the meantime, you heard the president today saying about jeff sessions being interviewed by mueller, that he s not at all concerned, were his words. what are you learning from your sources inside the white house? reporter: well, the president s legal team feel like this is another sign that mueller is wrapping up his investigation, he s getting to the final phases, but this is also an indication that mueller is getting very close to the president, david. he is leaving no stone unturned. jon karl with us in new york. good to have you here for a change. in the meantime tonight, the government shutdown now over after three days, and costing the u.s. taxpayer millions. and a reminder tonight that this spending they agreed on only lasts about three weeks. then what? tonight, democrats are demanding action on the dreamers, and what they ve now pulled from the table. here s abc s senior white house correspondent cecilia vega. reporter: after sitting out for much of the shutdown fight, today, president trump jumped back in the fray, but he would not promise that washington will actually reach a deal to save the dreamers by the looming deadline. he tweeted, nobody knows for sure that the republicans and democrats will be able to reach a deal on daca by february 8th, but everyone will be trying. could this white house envision a scenario in which these dreamers are deported? would that be something that the president is okay with? at this point, the president is willing to sign something to find a permanent solution. reporter: is the white house using these dreamers as a bargaining chip? is that the strategy? not at all. but you can t fix the problem if you just tinker with the immigration in a small way. reporter: just a few months ago, the president said the dreamers need not worry. should dreamers be worried? we love the dreamers, we love everybody. thank you very much. reporter: today, the white house said a daca deal must include tough new restrictions on immigration and funding for border security, like the president s wall. but democrats say they already had a deal to fund his wall. they accuse the president of not holding up his end of the bargain, and today, they said their offer is rescinded. we re going to have to start on a new basis and the wall offer is off the table. cecilia vega with us live at the white house. and cecilia, we saw senator schumer after his lunch with the president, he thought there was progress, that s what he said, before the government shutdown. he thought progress on a daca deal, then the whole thing seemed to blow up. now even republicans say they are looking for clarity from the president? reporter: yeah, david, and they are not hiding it. today, louisiana senator john kennedy, a republican, said that the president has only given them a general outline for what he wants on daca, but quote, you can t do a bill based on a general outline. that is what kennedy said. they want more specifics, david. as kennedy said today, who wants to pass a bill only to see it vetoed? cecilia vega from the white house again tonight. thanks, cecilia. next here, to the massive earthquake that woke up alaska, sparking tsunami alerts all along alaska, the pacific coast, the entire west coast of the u.s. in kodiak, alaska, people rushing to higher ground. you can see the traffic jam in the middle of the night. those tsunami fears stretched all the way to los angeles. and tonight, we show you how the earth shifted, how those plates moved that might have made all the difference. here s abc s kayna whitworth now. reporter: sirens waking the residents of kodiak, alaska, overnight. the entire west coast on alert. please evacuate immediately! reporter: inside homes, people recorded the shaking. oh, my gosh, it s an earthquake. reporter: and then scrambling to get to safety. we re leaving base now. reporter: with just five minutes to spare, many of kodiak s 6,000 residents rushing to a local high school. despite the quake s 7.9 magnitude, the seventh largest ever recorded near alaska, scientists say it could have been worse. the plates slid past each other. this will cause less uplift on the sea floor and there is less chance of a tsunami. reporter: had the fault line slid vertically, like this, there would likely have been a large tsunami. the quake occurred on the so-called ring of fire, a 25,000-mile stretch of seismic activity underneath the pacific ocean, where 90% of all quakes happen. and so, let s get to kayna whitworth, also with us tonight. and kayna, i know there s still concern this evening because there have been dozens of aftershocks. reporter: david, the largest one was a 5.0. and while that tsunami warning was canceled early, authorities i spoke with say this is a good reminder to everyone that they should be prepared and know their evacuation route. david? all right, kayna whitworth with us. thanks, kayna. and here in the east tonight, the flood watches from pennsylvania all the way up to maine, amid blinding rain and those ice jams. here s abc s gio benitez. reporter: tonight, that powerful winter storm now bringing heavy downpours and treacherous driving to the northeast. the problem is is that the rain is falling so hard that it washes the salt off of the road. oh, my goodness. reporter: icy roads creating frightening scenes like this in sutton, massachusetts. oh, my god. reporter: a school bus sliding backwards, crashing into a mailbox and then a car. 29 students onboard. luckily, no one hurt. the big thaw now causing problems, too. ice jamming up waterways across the region. the coast guard clearing the connecticut river today. all my life living in connecticut, never seen it like this. it s quite an ice jam. reporter: trying to prevent flooding like this near scranton, pennsylvania. and david, just take a look at this. it s just incredible. these ice jams go on for miles. and temperatures drop significantly tomorrow, so, there s no telling when this will all melt. david? all right, gio, thank you. overseas tonight, the u.s. now confirming that americans were among the victims of that hotel attack in kabul, afghanistan. six militants storming the intercontinental hotel on saturday, targeting foreigners. the siege lasting 12 hours. the taliban later taking credit. guests tying bed sheets together to escape off balconies. at least 18 people reportedly killed. those americans now among them. there is still much more ahead on world news tonight this tuesday. the fiery pileup on an american highway. one person killed. the chain reaction crash. traffic backed up for miles. the pictures coming in right now. also, the deadly flu tonight. the 6-year-old girl dying after paramedics came to the home. she wasn t taken to the hospital. and now, the warning. and the major announcement about neil diamond and his health. the very personal struggle now revealed. we ll have that and more. kelly! we re out of body wash! what aou doing?? i thought you had a cold?? i don t need all this. mucinex fast-max is powerful enough to handle pretty much every symptom. name one. how bout 9? sore throat, cough, even. yea i can read, you know. we re done here. ahhh! boogers to betsy! mucinex fast-max. 9 symptoms. 1 dose. max strength. start the relief. ditch the misery. let s end this. and for kid s multi-symptom relief, try #1 recommended children s mucinex. each unique piece comes to life in the same way.ands. a messy, sloppy, splattery way. but now she s found a way to keep her receipts tidy, even when nothing else is. brand vo: snap and sort your expenses with quickbooks and find, on average, $4,340 in tax savings. smarter business tools for the world s hardest workers. quickbooks. backing you. and sometimes, i don t eat the way i should. so, i drink boost. boost high protein nutritional drink has 15 grams of protein to help maintain muscle and 26 essential vitamins and minerals, including calcium and vitamin d. boost high protein be up for it it is with great reluctance and disappointment that i announce my retirement from concert touring, he said. cutting short his 50th anniversary tour on doctor s orders after being diagnosed with parkinson s disease. sweet caroline reporter: the last time we saw him, bundled up on new year s, his hands were shaking slightly as he warmed up the crowd in times square, but otherwise, showed no signs he might be struggling himself. early symptoms of parkinson s include tremors, stiffness and potential speech difficulties. he ll continue to write and record. his music has helped plenty of others weather tough times. most famously in boston after the marathon bombing. sweet caroline good times never seemed so good reporter: tonight, diamond is thanking his fans, saying this ride has been so good, so good, so good thanks to you. a number of the fans who had been hoping to attend some of the upcoming concerts have been donating their ticket refunds to parkinson s research. well, tonight, neil diamond and his wife expreedhanks for that, calling it a silver lining to this announcement. david? david, thank you. we are all pulling for an american favorite tonight. when we come back here, that deadly pileup i mentioned on the highway during rush hour tonight. the images coming in. also, the 6-year-old girl dying from the flu after paramedics came to the home. she wasn t taken to the hospital. hospital. now, the warning. rheumatiod ar. before you and your rheumatologist move to another treatment, ask if xeljanz xr is right for you. xeljanz xr is a once-daily pill for adults with moderate to severe ra for whom methotrexate did not work well. it can reduce pain, swelling and further joint damage, even without methotrexate. xeljanz xr can lower your ability to fight infections, including tuberculosis. serious, sometimes fatal infections, lymphoma and other cancers have happened. don t start xeljanz xr if you have an infection. tears in the stomach or intestines, low blood cell counts and higher liver tests and cholesterol levels have happened. your doctor should perform blood tests before you start and while taking xeljanz xr, and monitor certain liver tests. tell your doctor if you were in a region where fungal infections are common and if you have had tb, hepatitis b or c, or are prone to infections. xeljanz xr can reduce the symptoms of ra, even without methotrexate. ask your rheumatologist about xeljanz xr. alright, i brought in high protein to help get us moving. .and help you feel more strength and energy in just two weeks! i ll take that. -yeeeeeah! ensure high protein. with 16 grams of protein and 4 grams of sugar. ensure. always be you. you might be missing something.y healthy. your eyes. that s why there s ocuvite. ocuvite helps replenish nutrients your eyes can lose as you age. it has lutein, zeaxanthin and omega-3. ocuvite. be good to your eyes. when you have a cold, stuff happens. { sneezing ] shut down cold symptoms fast [ coughing ] with maximum strength alka seltzer plus liquid gels. previously treated withd platinum-based chemotherapy, including those with an abnormal alk or egfr gene who ve tried an fda-approved targeted therapy, who wouldn t want a chance for another.? who d say no to a.? who wouldn t want a chance to live longer. opdivo (nivolumab). over 40,000 patients have been prescribed opdivo immunotherapy. opdivo can cause your immune system to attack normal organs and tissues in your body and affect how they work. this may happen during or after treatment has ended, and may become serious and lead to death. see your doctor right away if you experience new or worsening cough; chest pain; shortness of breath; diarrhea; severe stomach pain or tenderness; severe nausea or vomiting; extreme fatigue; constipation; excessive thirst or urine; swollen ankles; loss of appetite; rash; itching; headache; confusion; hallucinations; muscle or joint pain; flushing; fever; or weakness, as this may keep these problems from becoming more serious. these are not all the possible side effect of opdivo. tell your doctor about all your medical conditions, including immune system problems, or if you ve had an organ transplant, or lung, breathing, or liver problems. a chance to live longer. because who wouldn t want.that? ask your doctor about opdivo. thank you to all involved in opdivo clinical trials. to the index of other news tonight. the deadly pileup in st. louis. at least one person was killed in the fiery crash during rush hour on i-64. police say the driver was killed after cutting off a tractor trailer. several people injured. as you can see, traffic backed up for miles. there is news tonight about the deadly flu epidemic. 6-year-old emily grace muth dying of the flu in north carolina, diagnosed at urgent care, sent home with tamiflu. her parents calling 911 when she had trouble breathing, they say an emt told them that was typical. they decided to monitor her at home. she died several hours later. her parents tonight stressing the importance of flu shots, which emily did not have. at least 30 children now have died from the flu this season alone. and another passing to note, the real-life rosie the riveter. naomi parker fraley has died. the iconic we can do it poster, a symbol of the women who answered the call during world war ii. the photo of her as a factory worker believed to have inspired the poster. naomi parker fraley was 96. when we come back tonight, take a close look at this moment right here. her hand to the glass, and why this movie is making headlines tonight, even before the oscars. we ll be right back. parker fraley was 96. when we come back tonight, take a close look at this moment right here. her hand to the glass, and why this movie is making headlines tonight, even before the oscars. we ll be right back. when this bell rings. .it starts a chain reaction. .that s heard throughout the connected business world. at&t network security helps protect business, from the largest financial markets to the smallest transactions, by sensing cyber-attacks in near real time and automatically deploying countermeasures. keeping the world of business connected and protected. that s the power of and. get ready for centrum micro-workouts. the bottle curl. the twist n turn. the stretch n grab. the gummy squish. centrum micronutrients fuel your body from the inside out. grab a centrum and join in. repeat daily. the mountain like i used to. i even accept i have a higher risk of stroke due to afib, a type of irregular heartbeat not caused by a heart valve problem. but whatever trail i take, i go for my best. so if there s something better than warfarin, i ll go for that too. eliquis. eliquis reduced the risk of stroke better than warfarin, plus had less major bleeding than warfarin. eliquis had both. don t stop taking eliquis unless your doctor tells you to, as stopping increases your risk of having a stroke. eliquis can cause serious and in rare cases fatal bleeding. don t take eliquis if you have an artificial heart valve or abnormal bleeding. while taking eliquis, you may bruise more easily. .and it may take longer than usual for any bleeding to stop. seek immediate medical care for sudden signs of bleeding, like unusual bruising. eliquis may increase your bleeding risk if you take certain medicines. tell your doctor about all planned medical or dental procedures. i m still going for my best. and for eliquis ask your doctor about eliquis. are you reluctant to eat in public because of your denture? try super poligrip® not only does it hold for 12 hours to reduce denture movement, it also helps provide better bite, seals out 74% more food particles, and enhances your denture fit. in fact, 95% of super poligrip® users surveyed believe it makes them feel more confident eating in public. eat, speak, and smile with confidence. try super poligrip® today. my bladder leakage was making me feel like i couldn t spend time with my grandson. now depend fit-flex has their fastest absorbing material inside, so it keeps me dry and protected. go to depend.com - get a coupon and try them for yourself. you or joints. something for your heart. go to depend.com - but do you take something for your brain. with an ingredient originally found in jellyfish, prevagen is the number one selling brain-health supplement in drug stores nationwide. prevagen. the name to remember. tracing the release of the pentagon papers. people are concerned about having a woman in charge of the paper. thank you, arthur, for your frankness. reporter: lady bird directed by greta gerwig, she is up for best director and best movie. and saoirse ronan up for best actress. you are so infuriating. please stop yelling. i m not yelling. oh, it s perfect. do you love it? reporter: also up for best movie, get out. jordan peele up for best director. and action. reporter: up for best actress and best supporting actress, margo robbie and allison janney, who play tonya harding and her mother in i, tonya. when i was a kid, did you ever love me? i made you a champion, knowing you d hate me for it. that s the sacrifice a mother makes. you cursed me. reporter: christopher plummer making headlines tonight, up for best supporting actor. i have never been more vulnerable financially than i am right now. reporter: he replaced kevin spacey after those allegations of sexual harassment, reshooting the scenes of all the money in the world in nine days. and in the best actor category, stiff competition. a newcomer, just 22 years old, timothee chalamet, in call me by your name, also up for best picture. trying to get me to like her? what would be the harm in that? reporter: among chalamet s competition, gary oldman, who plays winston churchill in darkest hour. oldman already winning the golden globe and the sag award. the movie also up for best picture. we shall never surrender. the oscars, sunday, march 4th, right here on abc. i m david muir. i hope to see you sooner than that, tomorrow night. good night. disturbing story in san francisco. a good samaritan swings into action when she sees a man on fire. what some businesses are telling us. tesla under scrutiny. a crash that has led to another investigation. announcer: this is abc7 news. a passionate debate in san francisco city hall. residents weigh in on who should be the interim city i am dan ashley. and i am dion lim. talking about possibly appointed an interim mayor. once they are finished speaking city supervisors will begin

Us- , Plates , Alaska , Tsunami-alert , West-coast , Flu , Parents , Home , Girl , Announcement , Hospital , Difference

Transcripts For DW PopXport - PopXport Special Top DJs From Germany 20180107 02:30:00


a d.j. producer and label manager and. even so he stays true to us now to his hometown in di was saxony. but. when i come home from all the excitement i m just happy to be and i was not broke then i came on white i feel good here and i m not many big hurry to leave virtually never can. love and choice is a star d.j. with both feet on the ground even if the video for the single you made with french d.j. david guetta is set to announce his face. close to the. sat is one of the highest
earning international d.j. s he produces songs for justin bieber and lady gaga and he s already won a grammy award here s the video to his hit track state. solution . is to leave. the need to do so. so. just. his so so.
is. ed to spotify. every week bob export publishes a new playlist on spotify with twenty songs all made in germany. you ll also find a chart toppers new releases and classic hits follow pop export on spotify. one of germany s most successful electronic dance music artists is alexander aka boyz noise and rolling stone magazine voted him one of the ten best d.j. s in the world and he s also in demand as a producer. he
. still child the single by boyz noise features the dreamy vocals of jan. sing it with american in the pub then police. it s one of a growing number of collaboration s for electricity boys noise with personal contact is essential. for me it was very important to me instead of this impersonal method of sending files back and forth. we had a moment in the studio that we captured. and which you can hear on the album you know. may day is boys noise is pulled studio album he launched it at a club in mannheim to kick off a grand will to live now in his mid thirty s has been called one of the most
among other collaboration s and twenty twelve boys really started the project dol flooded with popular us d.j. s critics. in ten to fifteen he produced the title track for the album time machine by french electronic pioneer. he also contributed to the soundtrack of snowden a political thriller telling the story of the american whistleblower. boys noise always has a lot of ions in the flyin. technology never did pure techno never did pure house and the purists turned their noses up at my sound. at the same time my music wasn t mainstream enough to get radio airplay for example or to produce any chart hits so i ve always been working in my own little world. i know that.
just as the original was the publicity for the new album if you re going to appearance at a street festival in berlin on you guessed it play day. the police eventually broke up the end all through ised gig. i just wanted to do a couple less conventional things to promote my new album. things that were a bit more exciting for me than just sitting in front of the camera and talking about it while they come up. with the plot so it. stands predictable and original that s boys noise. starts. electro with the berlin based d.j. has racked up an award and numerous certified gold singles one of which is the feel
good track bad idea. green. this morning. i m sure it s. just. so i m.
told. and now we ve got more stories about germany s d.j. stars. details from the world over has been heading to the german
capital for a good three decades now after the berlin wall fell in one nine hundred eighty nine the fledgling electronic music scene found homes in east berlin is many empty buildings. and nine hundred ninety one to saw opened and quickly became synonymous with brilliance club life. more than one d.j. to korea there. in the two hundred eighty nine the first love parade lifts through germany s capital within ten years it was putting in a million and to help brave it is. at the turn of the millennium details like billions pala cut plan are with beating the hype he was the lead in the movie calling a cinema tribute to the techno scene. today electronic music has conquered the world stands flows but clubs like baton and prince charles us to talk of patience the countless d.j. s and a hard partying public in the old and new party town. hall
of fame dick has repeatedly been named the world s best d.j. booked for gigs around the world he s often circled the globe up to sixteen times over the course of a year. but in favorite twenty sixteen paul van dyk fell from a stage in the netherlands six meters down suffering severe head injuries. he had to then to tool all over again his fiance design american peter morello s stuck by his side in the clinic he later credited her with saving his life in march twenty seventeen the couple married in their home country of colombia and today child specialist paul van dyk is back with his magic around the world. record is still a eighty three a case of us to encourage from tristen is the turntable champion. ace national d.j.
battles and in twenty fourteen the world championship in azerbaijan to him deejaying is an article but he got his start as a producer. trying to get to the root of all of. those and i started by making my own hip hop. music on my own home computer and i wanted to incorporate scratch out old records of my productions. so i bought a record player and a little too and it wasn t like i definitely wanted to become a d.j. it was just that i wanted to record these tickets for treachery noises as part of my beats live on the sleeve long live the let s get along the fans of his scratching with veteran german rep is different us titian fia in twenty sixteen they hired escape three as a permanent member act. of making it seem as if that might be a little to come but. it s nice to see.
everything from the vibrant world of pop music on facebook at d w music story stars and the latest from the music scene. join us in the universe of pop on facebook and send us a message we love hearing from you. for the past twenty years has been filling dance floors worldwide he also storms the charts his ten studio album next did it again the single release message out to you is our third hit video. live.
live. the eat. it was me and told. me. in the interests. to be able. to. deal.
with. me. into something. that. is the youngster on exports special about d.j. s. in germany only in his early twenty s he s already had a number one hit in the united states and he s produced a track for germany s national soccer team. when felix yen says to his crowds. to the sound of his house tracks. as a boy in hamburg he played violin for years before discovering his true calling. i mean everybody always dreamt of becoming a famous d.j.
i know it only works using your own tracks not just spinning discs so i started getting more into the material materials and the notes of. interest to fifteen. million people on the day of jim and. his popularity sprang from his remakes of the hits. the cancellation of the record. topped the charts in twenty countries including the us britain and germany. also some imagine a big studio on a thousand co-producers but i just put everything into my computer and mix it myself with the trackpad and faders fade and then i went to the recording company for mastering and it was a great honor for me to do the remake. we hadn t planned for it to become such
a breakthrough hit. the next single became another global hit guinness cover of nine hundred eighty three a nobody by rufus and chuck. racked up over one million sales. he credits social media with much of his success that it has any tracks to platforms like sound cloud and facebook but. if you make smart use of the internet and its tools you can produce something completely by yourself long as long as you make good music you can present it well if you put in some effort write lots of emails to bloggers and put time into your facebook page twitter and snap chat i wonder if you can build a little community and people from the industry listen to it and you know that s a great opportunity for young artists. to. this d.j.
also likes to collaborate with other musicians. on the f. project that any single today topped the charts in germany. he joined forces with german rock star. on the official german soccer team anthem for the twenty sixteen european championships. school. does phoenix un ever feel pressure to succeed. i m not worried about being a one hit wonder don t know if i ll make number one in america again and. maybe make a cool especially with a song that s all my own but will say. it. has done very well for himself. but his fans are still watching and placing. full albums.
you. believe role in berlin calling made. famous as did his soundtrack to the film his brother fritz also intellect. just sang vocals on the track sky and sand from that soundtrack. we close out our pub exports special with the video to that head see you soon. to have. the money. to.
be coming. our. way in our money our lives. the hour. our morning our.
from. the food. from. the from the from. the from the food. from the. graphical representation. a loving portrait. horrific scene of the time. children.
in the middle ages to the point you subtree. masterpiece of to. tell us about. the child. sixty minutes. only at full speed. always shining. but always on the move. mobility today and in the future. drive it on t w. what does a football loving country need to reach its goals. we ll tell you how german soccer made it back to the top. in our web special w dot com.
football made in germany. it s all about the moments that lie before. it s all about the stories inside. it s all about george chance to discover the world from different perspectives. join us in the inspired by distinctive instagram or others at g.w. stories the two topics each week on instagram. but on what it. is and i mean in your minute as he. goes over one of those cynical media. us all up with out about a. vision of getting. it on what it. this you know i mean in your mind

Stardj- , Producer , Us- , Hometown , Label-manager , Di , Saxony , Love , Excitement , Choice , Video , Single

Transcripts For CNNW CNN Tonight With Don Lemon 20180609 02:00:00


because people care enough to engage. that s another thing that is revealed by suicide, another dirty secret. we need to care, caring counts. it can literally be medicine for someone in mental or emotional suffering. so, reach out. don t wonder what s going on with someone, ask them. we are all in this together and we need to show it. if you do, it can literally be a life save. i m chris cuomo. thank you so much for being with me this week. please stay tuned for a special cnn contribute remembering anthony bowurdain. i think everybody who listens to the parts unknown are elect tied and peers through
this. anthony bourdain is dead. i was shocked. i think i actually screamed, oh, no. this is cnn breaking news. we have some terribly sad news to report this morning, heart breaking and devastation. once we were sure all of us gotten the numbers had been notified that s when we wen on the air with the news. host of parts unknown and our friend anthony bourdain was found dead. anthony hung himself in his hotel room. the idea he was suffering somehow was heart breaking. honestly, talking about him in the past tense it s, it s really yeah, it s really hard to hard to imagine. i mean, you never know what goes on in anybody s head or heart.
but certainly, you know, the pain he must have been feeling, at least in that moment or in those moments, and the loneliness he must be feeling it s just terribly sad to think about. and makes me very sad for him to have to have a custom to that. somebody as passionate, alive, warm and humid as tone any bourdain, i couldn t imagine, a, that he was gone, and b, that he was gone in this matter. he took his own life and our history. itself left a massive hole in our world. i lost a brother to suicide, so, i know the shock that loved ones feel. it s something that i thought
about for 30 years and i don t have any answers about why somebody does it. anthony s life changed in 1999, that s when he wrote his famous article in the new yorker. don t eat before eating this. he was letting us all inside the kitchen, revealing the secrets of the chef world. it quickly became a book, kitchen confidential that came out years earlier and we re still talking about it now. parts unknown started on cnn in 2013 and it was like a bolt of lightning. the give of life, sticky rice. i said, anthony bourdain on cnn, what the hell is that about, right. i didn t quite get it at first. i was like, we don t do, that s not what kwn does.
and he did it, and i got it. the guy is genius. it s brilliant. have you eaten yet or have you had rice? both. really means have you seenen rice yet, but really means, how s it going. i feel he was a better journ journalist than any of us could ever be. because it came to him naturally. it was just curiosity. and, isn t that really what being a journalist is all about, being curious? when he brought parts unknown to cnn and i interviewed hip about his mission was. he basically says, i want to go to familiar and less familiar places to tell the american people about all these places but through the medium they ll be able to relate to. so, food. everyone can relate to food,
right? so he was also telling about culture and politics, and history, and the geography, but through food. welcome to shanghi profenc d he understand. that episode that i love was the episode about pittsburgh, just because he s saying, anthony bourdain parts downknown travels the world. he s going to paurg, right? how do you do? 103 years old. looking good. he talk about the filibuster and how the organization is left sitting behind. the money is definitely coming in. no, it is not. the episode in talking about
the reemerging food scene in pittsburgh was little about the food and more about society and people, and people down on their luck and how they fight their way back up. what did you decide to say? i wanted to cook. and the committee that leads to government policy and everything in between. a lot of people in this country are angry, they feel that their anger is not being acknowledged in any way, and frankly i think they re right. yep. and, that s all encompassed of just an episode of parts unknown. it s a rare talent to be able to put it all together. for me, the word that best describes tony is passion. he just felt so mush passion for what he did and what he saw. i don t think he ever had no opinion on something.
it wasn t like, whatever. it s a salute. i think that was the darkest scene man. he was actually as you see on television. he was funny, sarcastic, he had a dark sense of humor. he loved nothing more if i went out to meals with him he enjoyed getting me to eat bizarre foods i would never in a million years eat. this is tripe. what is tripe? it means good. is it brains or the penis of a shark or? no, no not that good. it is the stomach lining of the cow. he loved cinema, the music, all that was incorporated in these travel journeys that he
would produce. i actually end up taking trips to places he had been because i went tanjeera after he took a trip there, i thought, wow that was interesting because i wanted to see what he saw. one day, tony and i were sitting off stage waiting for something to happen. he looked at me and asked, what are you about, what is your passion? and i said, fighting. i love to fight. and his eyes i remember he had these hooded eyes and he recently found gjj. and he loved it so much. every morning, 7:00 a.m. i m here. for the next hour or two hours or sometimes more, i m just getting crushed. the most recent conversation i had with him was not too long ago. he had said, you know what i love about it, the struggle.
i love the struggle. i love trying to figure out how to get out of this and what to do next. and that struggle, no matter how much you think that s it, i m going to have to tap out, i find a way out of it, i love it. anthony earned practically every award you can earn in the t.v. industry. five emmy awards just for parts unknown. the p-body in 2013 was presented his first year on cnn. we asked specific questions, what makes you happy wharks do you eat wharks do you like to cook. and everywhere in the world we go and ask these simple questions he get astoning answer. viewers felt like they ve lost a friend, pause they found a friend in him through
television. i d always yell back at him, in my next life i m coming back as anthony bourdain. and he d look at me and be like, okay, good luck with that one. i think that s why that is not unique to me, right, everybody wanted to be a little bit of anthony bourdain. overliquored overfed, traveling the world having fun connecting with people and getting paid to do it. oh, enchanted land of my childhood. a cutlery dish from which regularry issued forth greatness. new jersey in case you didn t know it, has beautiful beaches. they re not all crawling with raging trolls with reality shows. i grew up summering on these beaches and they were awesome. he just was a regular person, you know in his regular jeans and regular shirt.
he had no pretension or interest in pretension, it was one of the most compelling and enduring things about him. he was somebody who was introverted and just happened to have this very public job of being on television and being in the public eye. it was interesting, he was this buckling larger than life character who was very good looking, women loved and men wanted to be, and and yet he was always kind of to me it always seemed like even though he was very confident or seemed very confident, he was always i think he was always kind of just winking at it all. he was kind of all in on the joke, that it didn t really mean anything, that we re all humble, we re all fragile. jersey s got farmland, beautiful community, that woman from kws housewives does not
live, anyolike anyone like her. the refineries, the wetlands, to me, somehow beautiful. to know jersey is to love her. i m a jersey girl, so i watch that had with wrapped attention of what he was going to bring to life in new jersey from his hometown. he had humble beginnings, he came from the jersey shore. i think it was the fact he had a rough life in his 20s, and in retrospect was amazed he survived his 20s and didn t die then. i think must have gotten him in touch with humanity, not just himself put everyone. there s nothing like the north atlantic. it s majestic. i love the beach. pretty much had my first everything on the beach. you name it, first time i did it, beach. i was miserable in love, happy
in love as only a 17-year-old could be. this is where i lived, very happy summer in the early 70s. he drops out of vasser, guess to the culinary institute. he had vivid stories about working in these kitchens at prof venues town. it was here. provision, massachusetts where the first landed. it was where i first landed. 1972 washed into town with a head full of sunshine and a few friends. long time tradition of accepted artists, writer, the badly behaved, gay, it was different. it was paradise. we all did drugs, acted young and crazy. and tony he was probably wild and some not as wild as others. he was willing to show us all
sides of his amazing life, the good, bad and ugly. tony came raw to the picture. he came with his history of his own demons. he didn t hide that he had these terrible problems with alcohol, with heroin, and yet, that s what made him so relatable. tony always owned his strug us and one of them was drugs and heroin. it was a 1980s thing for him and he worked through. i know what the life of somebody who wakes up in the morning and the first odd of business is get heroin. having been through it myself, going to a meeting, addicts. you know, they said something to say to me and i had something to say to them. there was a vulnerability to him as cool as he was, that he would expose. i ll tell you something really shameful. the first time i shout out i
looked at myself in the mirror with a big grin. you know, something was missing in me, whether it was a self-image situation, whether it was a character flaw. that stable family in the suburbs, i had a lot of advantages. there was some dark jennie inside me that led me to dope, i didn t have anyone else who could have talked me out of what i was doing. intervention wouldn t have worked. i didn t have a child. i have a 7-year-old daughter now, who i never would have had, i never would have thought. i looked in the mirror, i saw somebody worth saving, or that i wanted to at least try real hard and save. anybody could find themselves very easily in this situation. and, you know i look back and i think about, you know, i think about what i ll tell my daughter. you know, that was daddy.
no doubt about it that i hope i ll be able to say that was daddy then and this is daddy now, that i m alive, living and healthy. he brought to cnn something that very few others had brought and that was a sense of knowing who he was, not being afraid of saying who he was. of not being afraid to relate his weaknesses as well as his strengths and unique ability to tell stories. he brought all that to people. he was really exploring the human condition. he was talking about what it means to be human and what we all share all around the world. obviously, we all share a need to eat, but he was going so much further talking opinion what we have in common and what connect us. i come to a fact that in an earlier life i m probably responsible for one dead colombia, due to my lifestyle in
the 80s there was a real effective on the ground. how does that i question i came back with questioning, it would be the drug war. i asked him about his own life and his own drug use, which he s talked about, he s been so candid about it for years. i almost caught him off guard. i just remember his response was something to the fact of, he wondered if his own drug use from years ago, really heavy drug use contributed to the death of someone in the drug trade in colombia or beyond. and he was so serious about it. i don t want to say it almost felt like it still haunted him but it was something he was aware of as one of his past demons. my drug addiction i hope, it s in fact the most interesting part of my life. there is it is part of my
life, it changed me and it allowed me to, i think better understand some things about life, about myself and what i m capable of doing, and its given me a certain, on one end, empathy for some people, and a complete lack of empathy for others. that s something i felt i should talk about. i see this particular moment as as a clear example of how we might change our drug policies, and i thought you should know why it matters to me. it s that simple. i think he did everybody a real service by talking about his observe addiction and how much he struggled with heroin and cocaine. i think that again, the more we can talk about these hard subjects the more it removes the
stigma. to know he had overcome those things i think is inspirational. i think it gives everybody hope to know they can overcome something really hard. and that is why the pain of this, i think is doubly compounded, because he had overcome, it seemed, some demons in the past. and i guess that doesn t make you bullet proof. you know, i didn t know him well enough to know to know if he was still haunted by it put i m sure it never leaves you. when you go through that kind of experience it s always going to be there. you might it, deal with it, and move on. i always thought he did an amazing job in moving on. and in the process, helping all of us move on. he was so real and so authentic, in the end, maybe he was too real for his own self. i think the real thing the know
he was a deeply deeply human being, he was a devine talent, a unique voice and deeply human.
his stories wasn t about food. food was a conduit it drew you in. once it drew you in it was about the experience, connection and interactions with people. it was the obama white house who reached out to cnn, and i put them in touch with bourdain. they wanted that s who anthony bourdain was, obama wanted to go have food with him, not the other way around. anthony s point was, i didn t want some fancy state dinner, it s got to be the scooter and the whole thing. and he got it his way. how you liking vietnam? love it. anthony said for him, while the secret service were, you know, apparently very cool, they were freaking out because they can t taste test the food or
anything, but obama had no problem coming in eating the local food and having a local beer. first of all, i don t get to sneak out period, but once in a while, i ll take michelle out on a date night. the problem is, part of enjoying a restaurant is sitting with other patrons and enjoying the atmosphere, and too often we get shut into one of those private rooms. i m glad i can help. absolutely. toneny asked the president, do you ever just get to sort of do this? to sit down and chill and have a beer? which was a great question to ask. seemed to be turning endless. i mean, we re actually talking about building a wall around our country, and yet you have been reaching out to people who don t necessarily agree with this. gaza, iran, cuba, i mean i just wish more americans had
pass ports. you can see how other people lives, seems useful but incredible at best. it confirms the basic truth that people everywhere are pretty much the same, same hopes and dreams. when you come to people like vietnam and you see former vietnam americans coming back. when you see somebody like john mccain who were able to bond in their experience, you don t make peace with your friends, you make peace with your enemies. as the father of a young girl, is it all going to be okay, is it all going to wake up, my daughter will come here and be able to have a bowl of food and the world would be a better place? i think progress is not a straight line. you know, there are going to be moments at any given part of the
world where things are terrible. but, having said all that, i think there s no thank you so much. cheers. cheers. there isn t a lot of chefs who get to sit down and interview the president of the united states. the reason i think president obama wanted to sit down with tony in vietnam had nothing to do with the food, it was the talk again about life. anthony interviewing a russian and who was a credit tick of the regime, he was good at peekiick people who were in the cross hairs of bad guys. so, we were supposed to be dining at another restaurant this evening, when they heard you would be joining me, we were uninvited. should i be concerned about having dinner with you? either you have business you are in a very unsafe situation. everybody can press you and
destroy your business. this is a system. meet boris, he was a depth prime minister and today he s one of putin s vocal visit critics. this restaurant was kind enough to take us in. this chef is a britt so maybe he has less reason to worry. the government, putin, bad things seem to happen to them. known even enemy of putin, are you concerned? me, myself? yeah. pain in the ass. i was born here 54 years old, this is my country. russian education decline every year, i believe russia has a
chance to be free. he i think up getting assassinated shortly after. anthony was not shying away in any way from serious political issues in the place. he embraced all those issues. the idea that bourdain would have met with boris in russia before he was killed, that s what bourdain was doing, was looking to tell stories of humanity and oppression. i remember asking tony bourdain what would be the buck list location to a guy whose been around the world five times. he said iran. low and behold several seasons later, there he was. he was interviewing the washington post at the time, jason and his wife. is fun even a good idea? there s a lot of security, lots of rules, there are a lot of people in place to make sure
you do the right thick, not do the wrong thing. but a lot of push and pull, lot of give and take. do you like it, are you happy here? look, i m in a point now after five years where i miss certain things about home. i miss my buddies, i miss burritos, i miss having certain beverages with my buddies and burritos at certain type of establishments. but i love it. i love it and i hate it. it s home. its become home. our optimistic about the future? yeah, especially if there s no finally happens, yeah. very much actually. shortly after, jason was arrested by the regime and held. i remember interviewing anthony actually about jason. anthony was trying to speak out forcefully on jason behalf.
these are two lovely blameless people who are not deserving of this faith. it was interesting to see anthony often winding up kind of in the epicenter of serious melissa situations. i also loved the episode where he wen to jerusalem, wen to israel, met with palestinians and israeli and brought us a unique point of view on that situation. that was powerful. any story that we sit on television and argue about and have these heated discussions about, how you have to do is interject some food and wine or whatever into it and a table it and becomes much more civilized. squish suzuki any with mint.
this food is delicious. are you hopeful? of course i have my children, i need to see them. together we can build something for our kids, our future country, that s what we think and that s what we give the message for our customers. par of the attraction of this restaurant, it manages to do what not so many chefs try to do here and that is kind of mix your ethnicity or background with our food. what he did, even better than people who went to school for journalism, was that he educated you and took you on a journey with him, and we all went along for the ride.
structure is guy go someplace, eat a bunch of food and come back. that s what i do every time. this is not a food show, but there s food. this is not a travel show, but there s travel. i don t know what it is. anthony using food, it was a way to start a conversation. but his show, his life, he was really exploring the human condition.
it s not going to be you. i mean, that s a bowl of food, at any french restaurant. it really is to top of the mountain. down to the residue with the bottom, nice burning feeling over my lips. flop sweat. so we can pretty much cancel the rest of the show. i have a sheep to eat. it s really fall down to three here. any story that we sit on television and argue about and
have these heated discussions about, all you have to do is interject of food, wine or whatever into it and a table, and it becomes much more civilized. korea, land of the champion, land of the contrast, land of drinking a lot. you can drink well and recover. what we re going to find out, aren t we? i did not love myself this morning. dried squid and m & ms mixing your alcohol? yeah. problem is i m generally older than everybody in this country, my glass is always full. if i went out to meals with him he enjoyed getting me to eat bizarre foods i would never in a
year eat, because i have the palette of a 5-year-old. tripe. tripe, is it something like the brain or shark? it s the stomach lining of the crow. the cow? yeah. there s plenty of things on a cow to eat, why eat the stomach lining? because you got to work for the good stuff. when you cook it it smells like wet dog. you ever stood in an elevator with a golden retriever? it s got that same kind of funk. he once came to cook at my house, that s the only time my kitchen has been used. he ended up cooking i think some cuisine from south korea specifically. so, you got pork, hot dogs now you re adding spam? wow. oh yeah. i can honestly say this is
the last thing in the world i want to eat. you say that now, but just wait. behold. so this looks great, i got to say. it s very good. i m glad i done good in this world. i know people loved him because of the food and drink, but like, there are also a lot of us who are like, that was almost beside the point. it really was just about him and his way of looking at the world. i come out 30 years of preparing food for other people in a restaurant situation. most of those places had table cloths, and i enjoy from time to time, of course very much eating in fancy restaurants. that said, i m happy experiencing tru experiencing food in a purely emotional way. i loved watching hip going into a restaurant or home and sort of becoming accepted in the
process. we re here for supra. a supra is like a feast, super traditional. a pig is dispatched and broken into constituent parts. the neighbors pitch in helping to make a variety of traditionally cheese-filled bread. while i m always interested in what s cooking, i m always interested in whose cooking, why they re cooking and what they re cooking and what they have to say. one of the things i remember in sicily when thai going to be making some sort of octopus. these fishermen said, okay wie e going to take you out and you can catch your own. i am famous for my optimism.
there s a dead sea creature sinking slowly to the seabed before me. are they kidding me? i m thinking can this happen? it goes on, one dead cuttlefish, deceased octob decease octopus drops along the rocks. probably discovered and probably show off to camera. i m not actually watching as this confederate boat over rolls up from the water one minute to the other. and my memory when that dead octopus started hitting the water around me, my sense of rage. it showed how passionate he was. he truly had this passion and care, in that particular moment it was very clear to me. and just when my brain threatens to short circuit with pleasure, descending as if from
heaven itself. cheese, god, the cheese. i got to tell you, i don t care how many naked breasts are on that beach right now, that is much more exciting. look at it, its beautiful. he was a great chef, then he had the this unique ability to obviously eat very obscure remote different kinds of food, but he also liked all the foods that all of us loved. he could have a hot dog and speak about that for half an hour. as i ve gotten older i m moving more and more away from fine dining, let s put it that way, and towards those foods and meal that is make me happy. food that i can maeat with my hands. home cooking, very passionate businesses. there are also going to be aspects of the fine dining world, but i like to experience
food emotionally when ever possible. as i ve gotten older it s going to be a bowl of noodles that makes me happy as oppose to large tongues. he made a point to me, food doesn t have to be expensive to be good. sometimes the best tasting foods are these joints food is good, it s only part of a larger spectrum of human experience without good conversation, without love, without company. it s worthless basically. bourdain was a defining hire for cnn, it was announced back in 2012. it was a strange move, people were wondering why is cnn hiring this chef and author. it was because cnn executives decided to broaden out beyond
news and headlines and bring in new ways to tell stories. for me travel isn t about taking a vacation, sitting on a beach or listening to some tour guide as we travel if packs from a day spa. traveling is going parts unknown. sharing a hype or sha men as the sun comes up. only then realizing you forgot to pack your toothbrush. i would describe myself as a lucky cook who gets to tell stories. i m certainly not a journalist, not a chef anymore. i d like to flatter myself by saying i m an s aist but i m a story teller. this was a risk for cnn and anthony. myanmar, after 50 years of nightmare, something unexpected is happening here, and it s pretty incredible. not too long ago, even filming here officially as an open
professional western film crew would have been unthinkable. in 2007 a japanese journalist was shot point blank and killed filming a street demonstration. you re seen talking to anybody with a camera and it will be a knock on your door in the middle of the night. if so far confronted with our cameras a few smiles and mostly in difference at worst. shocking to see how the government is starting to relax its grip. i haven t been there to official myanmar. i ve been to a lot of places after the soviets left 20 years and people still shy away from the cameras. they close up if you approach them. an outsider here, myanmar, a place about a year ago you re tossed in jail for consorting the part, everybody was
incredibly each. it amaze z me how friendy people are open. it s easy for me to sit here and say whatever i want about the government, right, we can go home. our lives would go on. we don t pay the everybody who helped us could pay the price. a lot of people who helped us have said, look, i ve already been in jail, i really don t want to go back. it s a very real concern. what happen tuesday the people we leave behind? but for the moment at least things seem to be moving in the right direction. a country closed off to most for so long. sleeping, a 50-year nightmare for many of its citizens, finally may be weighing up. to what? time will tell. he d been to myanmar, which at the time was a full-blown
military dictatorship. and he went there and he said to me. here s what i can do with this program. when something big happens in a libya or a myanmar or an afghanistan or iraq or wherever it might be, american viewers and viewers around the world will also be able to know about the people there, not just about the dictators, not just about the politics. but they will be able to get to the know the people. and i really think that s important. because i know toor often americans have just a one-dimensional view of a foreign country. i thought she was a better journalist than many of us ever could be because it came to him naturally. it was just curiosity. and isn t that really what being
a journalist is all about, being curious? and he brought something to cnn that had never been there before and thus to the entire broadcast news industry. it was really like a breath of fresh air and viewers loved it. the ratings on sunday night doubled. there were new viewers anything to cnn for the first time including younger viewers who normally didn t want to watch the news. but they did want to watch this larger than life man, this handsome striking figure explore the world and take them with him. this is tripoli after 42 years of nightmare. how to build a whole society overnight and make it work in one of the most contentious and difficult areas of the world is what people are trying to figure
out. outside tripoli s center there s this, one time axis of all power and untold evil, a huge complex of sinister offices, barracks, residences on top of secret tunnels and underground facilities. gaddafi s enormous compound. and on august 23, 2011 it fell to the rebels. gaddafi and his family having fled.
this is what s left of gaddafi s palace. so when s the last time you were here? the last time the revolution was finishing. a lot of people, normal people something expensive here like the salt and like the gold. while talking we didn t notice several pickup trucks of local militia had closed in on us. stop. just relax. this is their turf or their
area of operation or somehow under their control. whatever the case they re the group in charge today. an argument ensues between our guys and their guys. all of whom fought against the same forces on this ground a year ago. he wasn t afraid of going to a place like libya which is a very complex, you know, all these different kind of political parties and competing groups. and he was always very good at sort of being aware of the complexity of a place and not dumbing it down or not even
trying to give a dissertation on it. another morning in tripoli and life goes on. vendors are out, people go about their daily routines. this is our traditional breakfast. what is this dish called? which is an overstretched doughnut i suppose. with an egg on top. you can get them with cheese, with chicken paste, with honey. how do you like yours? i like mine cooked. this was the first neighborhood to rise up. yes, this was the first. why do you think this neighborhood? it was an impoverished neighborhood. many of them feel like they re not from this country to be
honest. anthony bourdain really changed what cnn is. he brought this other way to learn about the world, this other way of asking questions. not through an interview, not through an interrogation but sitting down and having a meal. what he was doing was journalistic but so human. bringing people on a journey with him while he met people in their place, with their food, with their meals, with their culture. i think tony was trying to make the world a little bit more hospitable, a little bit more understandable, a bit more friendly. he was trying to show, yes, we come from different religions, but we re all people. he would make the story smaller, a bit more personal. and i m sure his hope was maybe we can eliminate some of the
abuses, the wars, the hatred. and in the process i think that was his goal. a few years back i got the words, i am certain of nothing tattooed on my arm. it s what makes travel what it is, an endless learning curve, the joy of being wrong, of being confused. africa more than any other continent needs to be seen by the world as both the place we all came from and where we are going. one of his friends described him to me as a freak of nature,
a force of nature, unexplainable and the world is lucky to have had him. he was a mauodern day adventurer and someone with a unique voice in the world. and there s not enough of that to be honest. i was personally, professionally, everything in my life was changing. i was in this sort of nowhere land between previous life and whatever came next. i m retracing my steps in a lot of ways to see if it still hurts. just because somebody is open about their illness in the past doesn t mean that they re going to be as open about what is happening in their present. and we re going to have to learn more because i would not be surprised if the demons that he had battled for so, so long wound up being part of wound up taking him from this world. there is a real danger of

Everybody , The-parts-unknown , Peers , Tony-bourdain , Cnn , News , Breaking-news , Us , All , Heart-breaking , We-wen-on-the-air , Devastation

Transcripts For CNNW CNN Newsroom With Victor Blackwell And Christi Paul 20180728 14:00:00


The latest news from around the world with Victor Blackwell and Christi Paul.
remains of americans killed in the korean war, none of it is gaining tracks trump thinks it deserves because he is back in the position of being on defense when it comes to russia, and his legal team is going after michael cohen now, a man trump recently was defending because the narrative surrounding the infamous trump tower meeting with donald trump jr. are now being shifted. lynn, let s talk about the economy. there are some numbers coming in this week from some of the states, one michigan, one, minnesota talking about how much support he does or does not have. michigan, 36% approval, 56 disapproval. minnesota the same, mid to upper 30s for approval, disapproval at 50 or below or above i should say. when you look at the numbers, you look at the midwest and then look at the numbers that came in for the economy, there s no way
i should say anything i say here is not testimony. i used to represent mr. gates. looking at the witnesses, you can tell they re day-to-day operational people for the most part. those kinds of witnesses are very much crucial to showing exactly how the transactions worked. for the productisecution there lot of transactions, they need to put on day to day people to show how the operation worked, to show how the transactions occurred. so this kind of detail, you pointed out this is a very complicated case, this would indicate then you re not going to have some ta-da moment, some grand reveal or could there be some? for the most part this is going to be a series of small
reveals. the prosecution wants to show generally how things worked. i think there are two exceptions to that. the first is rick gates himself because he was a higher level person and partner of manafort s, and the other exception would be all the immunized witnesses. presumably the government is not going to offer immunity unless they think they have admissions of wrongdoing or guilt. that s why they got the immunity. similarly for rick, he was given a plea offer, already pled guilty, admitted to guilt. with those sorts of folks, you would expect more big reveal moments and possibly drama in the courtroom as well. it has been so long since this whole thing began. the outcome of the trial, does it have, could it impact the on-going investigation looking at russia and the president s problems? i think it will impact the president s problems and the overall probe in this way.
it s a really, really important case for mueller s team. the first one out of the box. they really have to win it. if they don t, it will be a big problem for them. will certainly add ammunition for the president s team. this is one of two cases. it is a must win. if he loses the first one, almost no point going forward with the second one. i can t resist the opportunity to talk about michael cohen. wanted to try to get your insights into what exactly he is doing and the way he seems to be publicly retaliating against the man he said he would take a bullet for. he certainly seems to be sending a loud cry for attention and help. i think he does pose a great danger to trump because of the inside information. i think the latest tape we heard about is problematic in terms of the president s honesty, even
more problematic is cohen s new claim that the president was aware of the trump tower meeting previously and certainly the person with the bulls eye on them is don jr., he testified under oath contrary to that. right. he is the one that very much could be caught up for a lie if that s in fact what it turns out to be. sham shan wu, thank you. no details have been shared how to improve election security, but politics reporter is with us and cnn national security analyst. thank you for being here. jeremy, i understand you would not want to give too much into a strategy because you toent wado to compromise information. do we know if there s in fact a
solid plan to try to combat this? the concern we have been hearing from lawmakers for months is that there isn t one from the administration and that there s no one in charge of combatting russia s election hacking, whatever they re planning to do for 2018. intelligence officials testified they expect russia and have seen russia undergoing measures we saw in 2016. we learned senator claire mccaskill was the victim of attempted phishing attempts. the question is who is in charge. the meeting was the first time we saw the white house bringing people together. for lawmakers, it is not enough, not soon enough. do we know if there s an end date for which they hope to have something solidified, something crafted, and what might be the obstacles keeping them from doing so? it is a fair question. we haven t heard they re going to produce anything this concrete. it is democrats but also republicans that say this is an on-going threat, that the time
to address this was already several months ago, that it is on-going. there was a report in new york times that russian hacker and election issues have been probing around with u.s. power grids. it shows that despite what we heard from the president about how he doesn t necessarily believe russia was behind election hacking is that they still, russian hackers are still targeting the u.s. and will continue to do so. sam, i wanted to ask you about a story on the front page of new york times, really interesting, about russian hackers that are more interested they say in disrupting the american electricity utility grid than addressing midterms. what does the u.s. know, is there a sense of the capabilities russia has to infiltrate and disrupt a u.s. grid system? christi, we have historical precedent as you know. russia hacked into ukraine s
electricity grid several years ago and literally shut off the lights in the middle of winter. we know russia has the intent, they have the capability, and there s nothing off limits to the government of russia when it comes to u.s. infrastructure. we have reporting from the u.s. government and private companies like microsoft indicating that russia is targeting election infrastructure, electricity grids, hospitals, and private routers. russia is not only in public infrastructure, they re also in our homes. what this tells me is that vladimir putin has rightfully identified that cyber hackers are really efficient and cost effective way to create insecurity in the united states. i read something that said his entire cyber security budget is less than the cost of an f-35 jet. it doesn t cost him a lot of money to penetrate all of our systems and there s not much cost associated with him doing so in the sense that when you look at how we responded, we responded with targeted
sanctions against the government of russia that really haven t caused him a lot of pain, so i don t really see how he has been deterred. while we work on defense and shoring up the defenses of our infrastructure, educating the public on how russia is hacking us, vladimir putin is finding work arounds, and until the administration deters him from this action, i am not confident the attacks will stop. how do you deter him? you deter him hitting him where it hurts, through sanctions but not ones as targeted as the ones to date. you look at how he reacted when president trump met with him in helsinki, he brought up michael mcfall, bill browder because he is so upset about the sanctions issued a few years ago that hit him where it hurts. i think we have to multi lateralize, have to raise the cost of him doing business around the world in places that matter to him like in europe, but that s going to be very difficult and will take
concerted effort by the state department and treasury department to go to the uk, go to germany, say we know you liked doing business with russia, but he is wreaking havoc all around the world. thank you both so much for taking time for us today. thank you. migrant children in government custody have a new set of eyes watching out for their well-being. coming up, what we are learning about an independent monitor headed to the southern border. and a powerful figure in the catholic church stepped down. why the pope is accepting a prominent cardinal s resignation. and the family of a houston doctor say good-bye as police try to track down his killer. with amazing amenities like movie theaters, exercise rooms and swimming pools, public cafes, bars and bistros even pet care services. and there s never been an easier way to get great advice. a place for mom is a free service that pairs you with a local advisor
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against him. he says he is innocent. the 88-year-old is one of the highest ranking american leaders to be removed because of sex abuse charges. hundreds of children separated from families at the southern border are still in government custody. this of course is days after a court order deadline to reunite the families has come and gone. a federal judge is appointing an independent monitor to watch over the children while they remain in government facilities. kaylee hartung joins us live from texas. so far no indication of when these children will be released, correct? reporter: no, there s not, martin, christi. 711. that s the number of immigrant children still in u.s. government custody, unsure when they ll be released. these children and their families have been deemed ineligible for reunification by the u.s. government for one reason or another. one of the reasons could be that
the u.s. governent can t locate their parents, that their parents have already been released from i.c.e. custody. if that were the case in the rio grande valley, it is likely they would have passed through this bus terminal behind me onto the next destination. as more people are released from detention, we re hearing stories not just of the trauma these children and adults have speernls speern experienced due to the separation, but conditions and abuse suffered by some children. it is documented in police logs and calls and it was uncovered in a report friday saying police responded to at least 125 calls in the past five years alleging sex offenses. this happening in 70 of the 100 hhs, that s federal government run facilities that are housing the migrant children. it is important to note calls and logs they looked at date back to the obama
administration, to 2014, very much predating president trump s administration and zero tolerance policy, but nevertheless disturbing to hear. at least 125 calls fielded alleging sex offenses. there were also allegations of fighting and missing children in the u.s. run government run facilities. now, hhs has responded to the claim saying, quote, our focus is always on safety and the best interest of each child. these are vulnerable children in difficult circumstances, hhs treats its responsibility for each child with the utmost care. the federal government saying they have a zero tolerance policy for sex abuse of children. that being said in the statement, hhs wasn t saying what they did to prevent any such thing from happening, but that they have zero tolerance for it. as i said, this documented police logs and calls, we re hearing about it from people released from the facilities, and a federal judge has heard about it, too, authorizing an
independent monitor to report back to her conditions. there seems to be a disconnect, martin, christi, what the government says is happening in the facilities and what the immigrants that have come to this country are saying is happening as well. thanks to you, we ll stay on top of it, appreciate it greatly. thanks. immigration has been quite a focus for our next guest. joining us on the phone, new york governor cuomo, thank you for being with us. want to get your reaction to what you heard about this reporting from propublica, calls have come in in reports and logs of alleged sexual abuse of the children. well, it is obviously very, very disturbing and going back five years i would like to see the information, but i have no doubt that whatever terrible conditions existed, they ve only
gotten worse because this was a mad scramble what this federal government did on the border. it was either gross incompetence or malicious. it was gross incompetence and the attorney general didn t tell the president of the united states that when you go to zero tolerance policy and you arrest parents, by federal law you have to separate the children. if the attorney general didn t tell the president that, then the attorney general should be fired frankly. if hhs secretary did not tell the president we don t have the capacity to take thousands of children in just a mere matter of days, we have no place to place them, we can t do it responsibly. if the hhs secretary didn t say that, then the hhs secretary should be fired. so it was either gross incompetence, or, and i m afraid
this is the case, it was a purposeful manipulation that would make mack i don t see develop ee blush. the president said i want the wall at the border. when he didn t get the wall, he said fine, i will set up a gauntlet, put out a message to people if you come into this country, you re going to be subjected to all sorts of inhumane treatment. we re going to separate you from your children, we re going to send the children all over the country. we won t even be in a position to relocate them. this position that they have 700 children that they now can t reunify either because they deported the parents without reunifying the child first or the federal government made a decision that the parents are not good custodians of their children. on what basis did you take children from their parents?
and that s why new york has a lawsuit. you can t just take the child from a parent and declare the parent is not a good custodian. they have due process rights, the children who are in new york are protected by new york law. you have to prove before a judge that a child is being abused or neglected before you can rip them from their mother s arms. so it is illegal, it is unconstitutional and unconscionable. governor cuomo, according to this report it goes back five years. you re right, there s a lot to see in terms of validity of all of it, with that said, we can t change the past. what is the remedy moving forward? what specifically is the state of new york doing to make sure this doesn t happen there? well, the way this has worked is the federal government has taken control of these children,
placed them in a haphazard, chaotic way in care facilities across the country. some of the foster care facilities are in new york. they re then put under a gag order where the foster care facility can t even tell the state which regulates the foster care facility how many children they have or what the circumstances are. i said to the secretary of hhs let us help. let us help with the reunification, let us help getting services to these children. how can new york help? well, they have foster care facilities in this state. i could be providing services, counseling, et cetera. these are children traumatized. i could help with reunification. why wouldn t you let the states help if you actually cared about the children? why would you put these foster care facilities under a gag
order? that s why i say it is either gross incompetence and the president should fire the lot of them or it is purposeful and they re trying to send a signal don t even think of crossing the border. there s no wall but there may as well be a wall because it is worse. if you come in here, you re going to be subjected to all sorts of inhumane abuse. i want to ask you about the news of the day. president trump s former fixer, michael cohen, has gone very public on his campaign to distance himself from the president. we know that cohen has some legal issues of his own in your state of course in the southern district court there, any concerns that what happens with cohen now with the mueller investigation will impact the case there in new york for him? well, i think mr. cohen is worried about mr. cohen right now, and what he s doing is saying to the prosecutors i want
to play ball, whatever game of ball they want to play. i think the white house is losing sleep because when you have a person like mr. cohen who has been so close to the president for so long and who has made it clear that he is willing to allege anything, basically alleging perjury against don trump jr., they have to be going back and now wonder how many e-mails are there, how many pieces of paper does mr. cohen have, how many situations can he corroborate because it s not going to be just about the check or the cash, and that discussion on the tape. there are years of na fair yus acts that he performed for the president. they re saying he is hostile to the white house and pro-michael cohen, and looking to make a
deal with prosecutors. let me ask you this. we had rudy guiliani on abc may 6th talking about mr. cohen saying the man is an honest, honorable lawyer. this past week on cnn he said i expected something like this from cohen, he has been lying all week or has been lying for years. who has more credence, guiliani or cohen? look, cohen, it may be very possible that cohen has been lying, yes. we know the president has been lying. what their fear has to be is not just credibility versus credibility but what does cohen have that is evidentiary, what e-mail does he have, what contract did he execute, what meeting can he corroborate with another witness. and these are years and years of
transactions. and everyone believes that mr. cohen was the dirty deed player for the president. and who knows what he has that can be corroborated. it is not just going tobac b be cohen s credibility versus the president s, it is what evidence can cohen produce or corroborate, and i think it is a very, very bad sign for the white house. all right. governor andrew cuomo, appreciate you taking time to talk with us today. thank you so much. thank you for having me on your show. i m still waiting for invitation from one of your other shows. who might that be. we ll see what we can do. thank you so much, governor. thank you. sure. we ll be back in a moment. chicken?! chicken. chicken! that s right, candace new chicken creations from starkist. buffalo style chicken in a pouch bold choice, charlie! just tear, eat.
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a book that you re ready to share with the world? get published now, call for your free publisher kit today! the news that dominated much of the week, the president denying knowledge of the 2016 trump tower meeting that promised dirt on hillary clinton. but sources say the former fixer michael cohen now says that trump is lying. a major flip for one of his biggest supporters. he is hanging on to economy to keep people preoccupied for the polls this fall. will it work for the republicans? will it work for democrats? we have two excellent guests to talk about that. brian robinson, strategist, and scott bolden, chair of national
bar association. former dnc chairman. good morning. i don t know where to start. let me ask both of you what you think the prominence and impact is. scott, i ll start with you. cohen himself hasn t said it, we have information that tells us he is ready to tell the mueller probe that trump knew about the meeting in 2016. how big a deal? huge deal. as former prosecutor. i expect you to say that. despite my experience, right? i think it is a huge deal. he is an insider. he is a firsthand witness. prosecutors look for those people when they re prosecuting the mafia or anyone else. that s the first thing. second thing is, he has a ton of credibility because he is a firsthand witness, despite what rudy guiliani says. a week or two before the tape came out and cohen started to publicly say the president knew about this meeting and that meeting and the russian meeting, called him truthful and honorable.
now he is a pathological liar. one thing i thought when i watched it on tv, said takes one to know one. corroboration is a big issue in regard to credibility with the government with mueller. we have to see. i expect democrats think it is a huge deal. i would think republicans don t. right. look, cohen had a tape before, that was explosive news last week, showed there was a difference between the public story and what was on the tape. you could hear the president s voice. you could hear the voice. this is different. there is no tape of him talking to michael cohen about any meeting with a russian representative. so i think they re going to have to if that s where the bar is, republicans didn t react too negatively to what they heard on the tape. the idea being that this lawyer who has gone rogue and is publicly saying he is going to defend himself, protect his own family, watch out for his own skin, his opinions, his story is
going to be discounted by republican voters. let me tell you this real quick. before you do, i want to show you a poll. plays into clearly there s a difference of opinion, not just you two, we have seen it in how people are thinking about voting. here s a poll that shows you approval of the mueller probe has gone from 48% in march to 41% last month. so essentially it looks like a lot of people are saying they want this probe done or they re just over it themselves, and there s a danger here, especially for democrats if they keep forcing the issue because people just may get turned off, and that includes when they go to the polls. i don t think the democrats are forcing the issue, mueller is run by republicans. the republican doj, white house is cooperating, house and senate investigated this issue, several of these issues already. it is not that the dems are pushing the mueller investigation, they re pushing for it to be done and to not be
attacked. the numbers reflect that donald trump and his followers in the gop continue to attack an investigation that has not been completed. but we have 30 some indictments that have come down the pike from the mueller investigation. this is no witch hunt. those numbers reflect what donald trump and the gop has been saying, and that s not credible. when you say that, what do you mean, the president has been criticized and the general public is buying into it? the general public bought into some of it. the gop has driven the narrative. they re driving the investigation. they had to approve it and the doj is a republican administration, driving the attack as a witch hunt. let s not forget. what is the mueller probe about? it is about proving collusion with russia. yet there s and protecting our elections. there s a steady drip drip drip of unsavory tidbits coming
out of it. what has happened, paul manafort being indicted, has nothing to do with russia collusion, michael cohen talking about payments to a porn star, nothing to do with russian collusion. it is a slow, steady drip drip drip, but not backing up the original argument that the trump campaign colluded with the russians. this ties in a little more closely, talking about whether or not trump knew about the meeting. all of this is becoming noise because it has nothing to do with what started it. back to the witch hunt argument. no, it doesn t. let me tell you what the real deal is. it is not about collusion, it is about our being attacked by russia in regard to elections. and 30 indictments i m talking about are against russian oligarchs, 17 cia agents that said they attacked our demonstration, and another 12 or 13 of government russian officials who attacked our system and indicted as well.
the gop rather or donald trump and his people, they have something like 50 plus, and many of them have lied which is why you have other pleas of guilty. there s a lot of smoke here. if there is a witch hunt, we caught a lot. the fire was during obama and they did nothing. thank you both for joining us this morning. good to see you again. thank you. also i should say police are looking for a man they believe murdered a houston doctor. now they re asking local construction workers for help. we ll explain why after this.
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this. by all accounts, he was an all around good guy. friends and family call him an active member of the boy scouts when his sons were younger, even as scout master. friends say he loved the environment. his wife described he loves hauling scrap metal to get it recycled, said he spent hours in his garden, grew his own fruits and vegetables, loved to cook. this is something that mystified the community, not just because he was so beloved but because of where this happened. it happened just about a mile from where we are at this church where his memorial service will be, sorry, a mile and a half. it is a busy area of houston, called texas medical center. there are a lot of hospitals nearby and lots of people just like dr. mark hausknecht that commute to work on their bikes. police had some surveillance video showing that possible gunman right behind him and then
coming up in front of him, they say shooting him three times killing him right next to a construction site. i actually went to the construction site yesterday, spoke to the manager. he said about 500 people were working on that site at the time of his death and had no idea that he had been killed. oh my goodness. one of the reasons for that they say was so much noise, the construction site. thank you so much for that. one nfl player has become this inspiring leader for the atlanta falcons. coy wire has more on him in a moment. chicken?! chicken.
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welcome back. i am coy wire. this difference maker is brought to you by ford going further so you can. after two years of active duty, ben garlin has become an inspiring force ahead of training camp. ben and fellow falcons visited iraq to show respect for those in uniform. we give up a little of our time to thank these guys, they give up years for us. they give up so much more, they give up family members and just come out here, say thank you, maybe bring a morale boost for what is a tough time in their
life, that s absolutely worth it for me. ben garland isn t just an offensive lineman for the falcons. the u.s. air force academy graduate is currently serving with air national guard 140th security forces squadron in colorado. got a warm reception. it is inspiring for those guys to see somebody who is living the nfl dream, but still really cares about them. so he s had a powerful impact on these people. it has been really cool to witness that. the impact is almost unmeasurable. the soldiers believe that you believe in them. they believe that you believe in their mission, you believe in what it is that makes them tick and more importantly, you believe in our mission here. it is one of the things, these guys are away from their families, doing so much for us. you get to brighten their day, see their faces light up, see a piece of home in me. we appreciate that, to go
back home, tell people what they do to support them is impactful. now these guys are falcons fans, they re nfl fans. it means a lot. cool to be part of it. an emergency room physician that does anti-violence work in brooklyn, meet the woman that turned him into a cnn hero. dr. gore became a cnn hero, we grew up together. i saw him doing this wonderful community work. i am very familiar with cnn heroes, i am a fan of the show. as i was volunteering here, i said wait a second, cnn heroes, dr. gore, perfect match. here we are. i m so proud of my friend to see him excel in this way and show the world what he does. so surreal, so exciting, so rewarding. such an inspiration. we hope you make great memories today. thank you for spending time with
us. there s a lot more ahead in the next hour of cnn newsroom after this short break. have a great day. so you just walk around telling people geico could help them save money on car insurance? yea,that and homeowners, renters, motorcycle and boat insurance. huh.that s nice. what happens when you catch a fish? gecko: whoa. geico. more than just car insurance. see how much you could save at geico.com. i m ok!
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