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they said. steve: caught telling something the fbi thought was a lie. brian: even though michael flynn s situation the fbi is saying we don t think he lied. yet they moved forward with the deal. steve: that s the peril. that s exactly how martha stewart wound up going to prison as well. she lied to an fbi agent. brian: remember how safe america was when she went to prison. steve: america stopped making marinade 18 months. ainsley: remember this video, the philadelphia mayor who was dancing when philly became a sanctuary city. watch this. that they had gotten a warrant. a sanctuary city, yeah! a sanctuary city, yeah! steve: all right. that is mayor jim kenny of philadelphia. and last week we were telling you how philadelphia has announced they are info sharing with ice this on the heels of the who are terrific story.
the warrant we would have turned the person over and nothing of this would have happened. if the city had held the detainer. against order. a child wouldn t have been raped. against the order of a common pleas court judge. you do see this though as a tragedy. yes. no way to look at it? absolute tragedy all they would have done to get a warrant and we would turn him over. no all they had to do is turn him over to ice as is the federal law. now this guy is in prison serving 8 to 20 years in state prison. also faces up to two years federal prison. brian: still paying for him after he commits these horrific crimes still our responsibility. ainsley: now you look at the video the mayor dancing, you realize how dangerous this really is what do you think that child s parents are thinking when they see the mayor right there dancing because now they don t have to comply with the law they don t have to call ice. brian: there it is. meanwhile the department of the secretary, the department of home land security kirstjen nielsen was on with sean hannity last night told about this case.
she was asked about this case. listen. it could have been prevented and it should have been prevented. we owe the american people better. this is a perfect example of when jurisdictions decide not to cooperate with federal law enforcement. we ve put our communities at risk. what that required was that the men and women of dhs go back into community at their own risk and the risk of the community where the criminal is to try to reinterdict and detain that person. brian: the mayor is in a slippery slope now. he has become a magnet. every illegal knows can i go there and don t have to worry because i have a city protecting me even though i don t belong there he will be sitting there knowing that maybe there is going to be criminals out there that are going to commit crimes. that dance is going to be on everybody s mind. ainsley: white house called that dance disgusting. steve: ultimately it, comes down to why did philadelphia drop the charges? we know why they don t want to cooperate with ice because they are now a sanctuary city. why did they drop those charges? that guy would not have been
on the street. brian: and saying to you i will do it again because he doesn t have any regrets. get a warrant then. ainsley: that guy is serving 8 to 20 years in a state prison. steve: all right. it is 6:11 now on this nurse. jillian joins us. good morning. jillian: good thursday morning. we are following a number of stories. let s start with this fox news alert. a florida police officer rushed to the hospital overnight after being shot outside a waffle house. police say the suspect opened fire at a moving cop car and then ran away. moments later that gunman was shot by police. is he expected to survive. the officer will also be okay. this as police in new jersey release these images of two people wanted for questioning in the ambush shoofingt two officers. a gunman firing as many as 25 rounds at the undercover detectives in unmarked car in camden. both officers are expected to survive. this place will burn down. that disturbing message emailed to a fire chief by a man suspected of starting a wildfire in southern california.
before his arrest, gordon clark was caught on camera in a bizarre exchange with firefighters. i have 16 [inaudible] stolen from me. by the fire department. he is now being held on $1 million bail and expected in court today. the holly fire has burned over 1,000 acres so far. florida s candidates for governor clashing in final debate. having the trump card you have. it s a big one. still means you are not playing with a full deck. this is inauthentic. this is a career politician trying to tell you what you want to see. he will say and do anything millions of dollars in ads to get elected. jillian: gives backed ron desantis over the putnam. the primary is august 28th. turns out kim jong un is quite the romantic. the north korean dictator
taking his wife on a tour of a fish pickling factory. state media releasing the photos to showcase what the rogue regime considers its economic strength. they did the same thing in 2014 when kim visited a lubricant factory and a plant that makes potato starch. that s a look at your headlines. send it back to you. very romantic. a fish factory. brian: last couple of times have you seen him it s been out with the people. steve: is he smiling. ainsley: and wearing a t-shirt and a belt. steve: on vacation. brian: those come in packs of three. haines. meanwhile, 13 minutes after the hour. a training camp for terrorists here on american soil. a muslim extremist father now accused of training kids to carry out school shootings. our next guest takes us inside what really happened at a compound in the state of new mexico. you are not going to believe it. ainsley: plus, this army master sergeant was lost in action nearly 70 years ago.
his dog tag just returned to his sons and they are going to join us live and i m proud to be an american where at least i know i m free not so cute when they re angry. and we covered it. talk to farmers. we know a thing or two because we ve seen a thing or two. we are farmers. bum-pa-dum, bum-bum-bum-bum it s the ford summer sales event and now is the best time to buy. you ready for this, junior? yeah, i think i can handle it. no pressure. .that s just my favorite boat. boom. (laughs) make summer go right with ford, america s best-selling brand. and get our best deal of the summer: zero percent financing
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mal-nourished children were rescued last weekend from the heavily armed new mexico compound built mostly out of trash. national security analyst ryan mauro has been assisting authorities on this case. we spoke to him earlier in the week. and now we are trying to unwind what happened here. how did they pick this location. and what was going on besides abuse? well, we now know that they were training the kids to carry out school shootings. and that s probably why they stopped practicing the shooting of their guns in recent weeks. they were doing it consistently but apparently they decided that they need to conservative ammunition at some point recently. either preparing for a raid, that s less likely or they were going to act on these plans. brian: what makes you think that? because if you are practicing and practicing and you stop and the only reason you would stop is because you are trying to conservative the ammo you are in the middle of nowhere don t have access to more. that s the only conclusion i can come up with. where did they get the skill and ideology if i look at the radical imam in brooklyn
and these are his family members. the guys he hangs out with believe in violent jihad. all sorts of radicals. history of acquiring weapons. paramilitary training and people in this organization have trained kids now. evidence that the imam is tied to this specific compound. where do you think these guys learned skills from. brian: they do say he was named by prosecutors in the world trade center he was unindicted coconspirator. there is some questions around that. what has your investigation revealed. the bottom line is that he was at least linked to the blind sheikh behind the world trade center bombing. that s all you need to know about that part. since the raid happened, i now can release. so i details of what i provided. specifically, we did trace, the team i worked with did trace some of the leaders of the compound to businesses that included one that is involved in security and investigations like businesses. the panel we have seen is extremists like setting up
front companies because it gives them an alibi for getting weapons legally, as well as getting training even at law enforcement facilities potentially. and to get the type of access that they need. and they can just say oh, look, it s part of my business. i also provide information about life lead financial fraud and identity fraud. brian: the fbi monitoring. it took a sheriff to act. has the fbi commented on what they were monitoring and what they were doing? they have not answered the questions that they need to answer. brian: and has the sheriff tried? the sheriff s press release basically said look, we just we are going in on our own. the fbi say didn t have probable cause which is crazy to me. brian: lost 70 years ago dog tag just returned with remains from north korea. his son receiving them during a moving ceremony. they join us live next.
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steve? steve: all right, ainsley. a special ceremony for the family of a korean war hero. master sergeant charles mcdaniel, army medic from the state of indiana was lost in action in november of 1950. he left behind two young sons and a wife. but just yesterday, his sons were presented with his military dog tags, included in that set of 55 caskets that north korea returned to the united states last week. both sons, charles and larry mcdaniel jr. join us live right now from our nation s capital. guys, thank you very much. what was it like a week ago when you got the phone call? well, i was just sitting there doing some reading and my wife was across the living room. and the phone rang. the number didn t really wasn t recognized but did say army survivor on it. steve: why. my wife picked it up and said it s for you. and paul, who is the case worker that i work with on
this, said we ve got some amazing news for you and he told me they had found one dog tag and it was my father s. and i was floored. it was a very, very moving moment for me. i had to take a little time for me to compose myself. we had seen the caskets coming back but, of course, this was something that we didn t expect. steve: indeed. larry, when you heard the news, what did you think? well, like everybody else, i was surprised and shocked that, you know, what are the odds that out of all these caskets that our father would be the one that had a dog tag in there. so i was surprised. steve: sure. all right. i watched the ceremony yesterday down in virginia. and i saw you pick up dog tag and hold it with your hand larry, what was that like your dad died when you
were 2 years old but you suddenly had a connection to him almost 70 years later? well, i guess i am less emotional about it. i mean, it sort of provides reality to something that you had already assumed. i don t think that any of us assumed he was still alive. but now we have more of a reality depends on what the tests tell us whether or not they actually find remains of him. steve: sure. just because they have found the dog tags does not mean that they have recovered any of his remains. and i know, i think, larry, you took the d.n.a. test yesterday. charles, you were 3 years old when your father died. what do you remember about him? well, again, i was very young. i was just a little over 3 when he left. i remember the only real remembrance that i have is of him coming home one day and as a little boy you run up to your dad and him
picking me up and, you know, bouncing you around a little bit as fathers tend to do. and that s a very warm feeling. steve: sure. then a few things that mom has shared. i think it was very painful time for her. she had two little boys and she lost her husband. and it was very as she has said, when he went off to war she said i just really never imagined, which is an interesting thing, but i think you don t particularly want to spend a lot of time worrying about those things. steve: sure. it was very difficult for her, i think, to ever talk about it as we were growing up. she never really brought it up very much. steve: there were 7700 missing in action from the korean conflict. and you two are lucky because you are the only ones with a name right now. i mean, we saw the 55 boxes taken off the transports last week in hawaii. you are the only ones who know there was a family connection there because the remains are unnamed at this
point. that s correct. and since we feel that there is somewhat of a burden, that s why we decided to make this a less private thing and to share with the rest of america. because of all these families. steve: indeed. did they share anything about the location in north korea where the dog tags were found? yes. they gave me a summary, which was somewhat of an update. he was in the first cavalry division, the 8th regiment. and his battalion was isolated. when the chinese first came into the war is really the first major battle after the north koreans had pretty well been disseminated. we had pushed them back and were moving forth very fast. well, they got overextended and all of a sudden the chinese came in massive numbers and isolated his battalion and they lost 600 and some people in one night. steve: right. and so it was up in north korea and they never the
american army never recovered the nato forces never recovered that area. steve: indeed. around unson in north korea. steve: what does it say about the united states of america. that was a battle in 1950. yet, these many decades later, people never stopped looking for the remains of your father. that s correct. in fact, still from world war ii, our pao that s working with us from the army travels constantly around the world, europe, indonesia and other places looking for remains even from world war ii. because it is such an important thing. as an army guy, i was a green beret. i tell you, you get real close to your team and you take care of each other. and you just don t want to leave anybody behind. that s the way it is. steve: we don t. nope, nope. steve: final question, what are you going to do with the dog tags?
we have joked a little bit about arm wrestling or something for it i think probably as the oldest son i will just keep that and maybe larry will take the meddles and keemedals. we have the picture. any time he wants it he is welcome to hold it and do whatever he wants with it. steve: guys, thank you very much. we have been wondering for the last week whose name was on the dog tags and now we know. yes. here is the dog tag by the way. steve: a little bit of it is missing at the bottom. what is that? what happened? they analyzed it they think it s corrosion. there is a little bit of rust and so forth. as you turn it around you can see some green and some other things rusty looking. these are pretty they made made to be very durable. what amazes me is the chain,ing which is pretty unimportant. but it looks like it s brand new. steve: it does indeed. you know, to hold it is something precious to us.
steve: have you waited your whole life to hold that thank you very much for telling us your story. thank you. thank you. steve: we ll be right back. geico. more than just car insurance. see how much you could save at geico.com. i m ok!
ainsley: good morning. it s been entertaining. brian: set us up. what made you do it? what brought you there? where did you get the lunch box? so, i have had a few friends that have, you know, taken pictures with their dog and allen miller, a friend of mine had done one last year getting ready for work. and this year i talked to some of our sros and told them it would be cute to put that one up and honestly that morning it kind of just happened really quick. and the lunch box belongs to my little boy. i had stolen it from him. steve: i wonder what he took on his first day of school. it s got to be a relief to know, sergeant, on your first day of school you didn t have to worry about any math that day. yes. that is always good for me. math is not my friend. brian: also, when it comes to the importance of keeping schools safe, that s a serious subject. especially the way we ended
last year. you are trying to bring some humanity to something very scary to parents and kids? we know the parents and kids out first day of school can be stressful and we wanted to do something light-hearted and positive and maybe try to alleviate some of that stress for them. the face in the picture certainly isn t sad because i m going to school. trying to capture the spirit of hey, mom is dragging out here to do my first day pic again. ainsley: i know you joined the sro units three years ago. have you fallen in love with the job. yes. it s the best kept secret in law enforcement. ainsley: why is that? law enforcement is a tough job. you see a lot of bad things. you know, you are dealing with sometimes the worse side of humanity. well, when you go into an elementary school wearing a police officer or deputy uniform and you are walking
by and knuckle bumping kindergartners and hanging out with them, you can t be sad when you leave that day. steve: absolutely. you are a great role model for all of them. final exit question and the obvious one as well. what time is it? you just looked at your watch. brian: the washington post just came through with a story on my watch. steve: sergeant you, what is in the lunch box on that first day of school? so, in the lunch box my daughter packed that we have got obviously the pb and j with the crust cut off. i hope you have a great day. steve: who wrote that? we have some fruit crisp because we want to be healthy. and gummies. and have you got to have the juice pouch. ainsley: how many kids do you have? you mentioned you have a son gray and your daughter? i do anna, kate and gray. anna is 10th grade. kate is seventh grade.
i hope. and gray is going into fifth. steve: it s hard to keep track. ainsley: i know they are proud of you. we are so proud of you. thank you so much for keeping our kids safe. it s extremely important as you know. we enjoy it and shelby county has been great to allow us to work in the schools. sheriff and superintendent dr. brooks really embraced the program. we re blessed here in shelby county to have it. brian: go get them, sheriff. good luck on second day of school. steve: sergeant hendrik joining us from shelby county. ainsley: brian just made you the sheriff. brian: it s a matter of time. [laughter] ainsley: jillian has headlines for us. jillian: big question creamy or crunchy peanut butter. ainsley: looked creamy. jillian: creamy all the way. search for mollie tibbets. her father is pleading with tech companies to help him find his daughter. 20-year-old was last heard
from three weeks ago on snapchat. she was 20 years old. she lived on those platforms. everybody knows she was constantly on her phone. and so, we really really need all of that information. jillian: investigators have not found her fit bit or cell phone. she disappeared on july 18th after leaving her boyfriend s house to go for a run. her boyfriend s brother now speaking out for the first time. if mollie something were to happen she is small but she would have done something. i don t care what it takes. honestly i don t care who it is whatever. we just need something. jillian: the reward for mollie s whereabouts is now $413,000. senator bill nelson telling a local newspaper, quote: they have already penetrated certain counties in the state and they now have free reign to move about. nell sooren said he wouldn t
elaborate since the information was classified. say they have no evidence to back up the claims. a look at your headlines. steve: we need further details on that. thank you very much. all right. we have a college associate who has been working this summer here on fox & friends. there s jacque out there with janice dean. janice: how are you jacque? i m great. janice: how has it been so far this summer. it s been amazing. i have loved it. janice: where are you from. i m from connecticut. janice: has everyone been very nice to you. yes. what school do did you go to. charleston. janice: i want to introduce our audience what your your names. alison and james. jeff from chicago. janice: are you ready to see jackie do her first weather update. yes. janice: take it away. much of the country seeing summertime heat today. we could see scattered showers for parts of the east while the west remains hot and dry which is not good news for firefighters battling historic wildfires across california. hurricane hector is south of
hawaii but it s bringing wind and rain to the island. back to you steve, ainsley and brian. [cheers] janice: nicely done. is anyone watching at home? i think. so i hope so. janice: i bet they are proud of you. whawhat did you guys think? great job. janice: i don t want to work at all today. bye. ainsley: go intern at channel 2 that s where i got my start at charleston, south carolina. brian: can you mention ainsley s name or fill out the application. ainsley: might not help you. probably won t. an evangelist forced to take down billboards showing him holding a bible all because people complained and even threatened him. that evangelist joins us live to respond coming up next. brian: nancy pelosi says there is only one way to help illegal immigrants, vote democrat. when we win in november, it gives leverage to every family, to every mom who courageously brought her child across the desert.
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ainsley: take a look at this billboard right there shows evangelist greg laurie holding a gible promote his upcoming southern california event. a company agreed to promote it large billboards including one in a upon larr orange county mall. the company later claims that they received some complaints, including a threat for the religious imagery the billboards ultimately had to be removed. is this a sign of the times of faith being under fire greg laurie. you know him pastor of the christian fellowship and author of jesus revolution joins us now. ainsley, thank you for having us on. ainsley: tell us the story. how did this unfold? basically we hold an event at the angel stadium in southern california. it s been going for 29 years. it s called the socal harvest.
i have been told it s the longest running large scale event in the country. take what billy graham did and we are doing a modern version of it if you will. so we proclaim the gospel and we take out ads on billboards and posters and bumper stickers and such. this year we decided to do a more overt image. and so it s a photo of me holding a bible. and so, you know, now, you can t tell it s a bible. i m not hiding the fact that it s a bible. but if you are real tech technical i m holding a black book um it do have been a blue book, a yellow book or a book about butterflies but it s a book. so the mall, fashion island said yeah they aimproved the art they installed it there it was very prominently displayed in a couple of their malls. there was complaints about this offensive image. they came back to us and asked if we would change the image and do something more generic, which we agreed. to say then they told us
they couldn t put any of it up because it was offensive. i thought why is it offensive now? you know, my bible. why is it all of the sudden offensive to even reference this book? i mean, you think of the lives that have been impacted by this book, how our country was impacted by this book. you know, universities like yale and harvard and the salvation army all started by people who believed the bible was the word of god. martin luther king influenced believed the bible is the word of god. those who advocated for the abolition of slavery were inspired by what they read in the word of god. maybe by being offended by it more people ought to read it and see what it has to say. that s what i talk about in our crusades. ainsley: why is everyone so offended by the bible. so much good that comes out of christianity? i think they don t understand it nine out of 10 american households have a bible. but the number one reason people don t read the bible that s given by the american
bible society is well, they don t prioritize it. and i think you prioritize it ainsley, when you find you need it. and the bible is filled with promises. it s sort of like gift cards. people give you gift cards and you know they remain unclaimed. at least i get gift cards for places i never want to go to. the bible is filled with promises that are like gift cards that we can lay hold to. most importantly the bible tells us how to know god and have a relationship with jesus christ. ainsley: i know that. i know that. i know you know. ainsley: i know that very well he changed my life. your book s amazing. jesus revolution. pick it up. pastor lauri thank you very much. i wish you all the best at the harvest. so much good coming out of this because we are talking on national television. we did reach out to the billboard company and we did the no hear back from them for a comment. we did try to get their side. i talked to them last night a representative of our organization did. they apologized for it but
the banner is the billboard is not back up just for the record. ainsley: doesn t look offensive to me it s you holding anyway. thank you so much for being here. god bless you. thank you. ainsley: plus, kerry underwood fans going wild after a big announcement. carley shimkus is here with the online reaction to that story a hotel can make or break a trip. and at expedia, we don t think you should be rushed into booking one.
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media site is accused of shadow banning conservatives. ainsley: here with reaction lighting up social media fox news headlines 24/7 reporter carley shimkus. sean hannity spoke to jack dorsey on his radio show the political bias issue came um. jack dorsey says they do not censor users based on their political beliefs. steve: really. a report recently came out and it showed that the visibility of certain conservative politicians was being limited on twitter. jack dorsey says now that political belief doesn t come into play at all. and they make those decisions based on the behavior of a user. so if you do something bad on twitter, then people might not see your tweets as easily. i wonder what these politicians did that was bad. ainsley: how do they determine what s bad? steve: bad to whom? jack dorsey is going to testify before congress in september i m sure that
issue will come up a lot of people have questions. brian: a lot of employees have been battling back because they don t feel he has been as tough as facebook has been. they want to see alex jones type people banned. that s another thing he talked about with sean hannity yesterday. they have not banned alec jones the way other social media platforms have. let s say what some folks on social media have to say about this. jose on facebook says need a platform where the user can decide what to watch or listen to, not the platform owner. so he is talking freedom of speech there jeffrey says kudos to him, meaning jack dorsey, even though i disagree with the way they are being treated some conservatives because at least he is willing to listen and perhaps adjust his platform instead of hiding like the other whys guys do. another twitter user writes remove all algorithms let us have our voice back. there is no in contrived search results. steve: carrie underwood big
reveal. big news is having second baby. she is pregnant. announced this on social media yesterday. they have a 3-year-old son already. listen to her schedule. so she is going to release her album in september. steve: okay. then she is hosting the cma awards in november. then going on maternity leave. then she is going on tour in may. all of that. steve: does she have time to have a baby? i know, right? got to schedule that in somewhere. i m tired reading that list she suspect against. good for her. ainsley: good for her. steve: carley shimkus thank you very much. brian: xm channel 114. 4 minutes before the top of the hour coming up straight ahead these three people jason chaffetz, charlie kirk and dana loesch. later we will shuffle the faces and see if you remember. [laughter] steve: we told you about it yesterday he helped save lone survivor marcus luttrell in afghanistan. now he needs your help. a big update on that american hero top of the hour come out, come out, come
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trump administration will hit russia with new sanctions after the poisoning of a former russian spy and his daughter. he s ultimately signed off on much tougher actions against russia than the previous administration. president trump s legal team firing back at special counsel s bob mueller s term. i think if it isn t over by september then we have a violation of the justice department rule. if you line up 100 lawyers, 100 lawyers will say don t sit for an interview. republican congressman come up with a plan to fund the president s border wall. if we are giving u.s. aid and they are not helping us and we find these people crossing the border illegally or border stays we will charge them $2,000. it s terrible you are picking this regime over the people. you can t condone the practices coming out of iran. the dog tag of a fallen american hero killed in the
korean war is now back with his son. in one small sense, the most fortunate because we have the only ones that have a name now of some connection. know you re not alone because i m going to make this place your home settle down, you ll all be clear. steve: that s a great song. ainsley: it is a great song. showing the people s home down there in washington, d.c. brian: the president will be back there. they are actually changing the windows. doing some renovations on the white house. i thought we would have to be asked to do it. it s the people s home we are responsible to do the replacement. ainsley: after the show you might have to fly down and help out. brian: i might have to. it s good presidents have a place to go. ainsley: is he in bedminster and talk about prison reform and have a meeting with the experts on this and we ll be reporting what we know. steve: even though he is in bedminster, new jersey, he
is working. in the meantime, so is the administration. we start this hour with a fox news alert. the administration is holding russia accountable for some evil doing. ainsley: the u.s. issuing new sanctions after the attempted assassination of a former russian spy. that man right there and his daughter. brian: i just don t understand why now. we have already taken action. why additional action? rick lesson that you will is live in new jersey as russia responds. rick? good morning, brian, steve, ainsley. the president continuing his working vacation not far from us here in berkeley heights demonstrating that his administration is not afraid to get tough with moscow. despite what critics say were missed opportunities in helsinki to confront putin on this and other issues. the trump administration announcing what it calls enormously elaborate and extensive new sanctions against russia, banning a wide range of exports including gas, electronics and engines applying to all state owned or ernesto prizes affecting 70 perms of the russian economy. the punishment takes effect in two weeks and could slash
hundreds of millions of dollars in exports. results from the attempted assassination in march of sergei skripal and his daughter julia. he was a former russian spy living in england and numerous rus intelligence agencies have determined they were poisoned by an obscure strain of nerve agent kept under tight control by the russians. in a statement the state department determined that the government of the russian federation has used chemical or biological weapons in violation of international law or has used lethal chem or biological weapons against its own nationals. the russians responded with a statement of their own calling the sanctions draconian and far-fetched saying, quote we grew accustomed to not hearing any facts or evidence claiming the americans have refused to answer follow-up questions. by the way, the law requires that these sanctions will get tougher in 90 days if russia does not stop all use of chemical weapons.
guys? that s highly likely. three minutes after the hour. bring in former chairman of oversight chafin chaffetz, fox news contributor and author of the upcoming book the deep state. what about these sanctions now? we already threw out 60 diplomats and we have already did our expulsion. we have already condemned it. why now? because we have got clear evidence that the russians were going above and beyond and actually poisoning somebody. and, you know, we are working close. you have the ambassador johnson who is there in england and working with the uk. this is the right move by the president. the president has been far tougher and more consistent on russia than certainly what we saw during the obama administration. i m proud of the president. it s the right move. steve: i m confused because i have seen other pundits that said this president has given them a pass. what mike pompeo is doing and what the president is doing and putting pressure. have you ambassador huntsman there. they are trying to walk that fine line and make sure that
they are holding him accountable and putting sanctions in place when they know for certain that there has been wrongdoing. it s the right move. ainsley: what about congressman mark meadows saying that the dossier author christopher steele was working with the doj and fbi into the trump administration? the problem that you have is every time congressional investigators are able to look under the hood and look at what s going on at the department of justice and specifically the fbi, every time that happens, we find out that what they said wasn t really true. they started earlier than they said they started and they lasted longer than they said they had after they said they had stopped. brian: what we now find through the reporting on the hill is that it looks like christopher steele, who was sidelined after being caught talking to the press, is asking to get back in and not only help the investigators but help mueller. he goes i want to get back. in he is doing this with bruce ohr. the interaction is there. whennor gets demoted he is looking for another way back in to help.
wife would someone be so passionate to hurt a sitting president? well, we re know that the bias and animus is documented by the inspector general is happening. i know that michael horowitz is still doing an investigation. brian: so is john huber, right? into this very thing. yes, he is the u.s. attorney in utah, appointed by attorney general sessions who is also involved. if there is going to be any charges. the fbi, under its own rules said that they shouldn t have any of this interaction because the guy was leaking to the press, but, yet, they continue to do it. steve: and, speaking of the deep state, what you what we have discovered is apparently christopher steele after he was fired from the fbi for providing information through bruce ohr at the department of justice whose wife worked for fusion gps. he continued to funnel the information in. it was a that s the deep state. that s the problem. remember, fusion gps is an organization with like about 15 people. and it just so happens that the number three person at the fbi, his wife works
there? and there wasn t just one or two casual interactions here. i mean, we re talking more than a dozen that consistent interaction. steve: and nellio nellie ohr and bruce ohr the day before operation hurricane was alaunched. i m sure it s a coincidence. steve: we have lunch on the calendar. it s the guy s wife. and so this is why the inspector general john huber doing very important work behind the scenes. it s very quiet. but i know brian: they have a schedule? as soon as they get all the information. it s never fast enough. it s never fast enough. ainsley: let s go to philadelphia the mayor was doing a little jig, dancing when they became a sanctuary city. we is k. show you a video there a sanctuary city, yeah. ainsley: might be cute. lots of people saying they want to abolish ice until you hear the story, this next story. it happened again.
another horrific crime committed by an illegal his name is juan ramon vazquez. he was deported in 2000 89. immediately reenters the united states and arrested in philadelphia in 2014. decided not call ice. let him go he gets out and sexually assaults a child. a reporter asks the mayor how this could happen and the mayor blames ice. listen to this. if they would have gotten the warrant, we would have turned the person over and nothing of this would have happened. and if the city had held the detainer. against the order of a judge. a child wouldn t have been raped. against the order of a common pleas court judge. do you see this though as a tragedy. yes. no way to look at it? absolute tragedy. all they had to do was get a warrant and they would have turned them over. ainsley: they wouldn t even know about it they never contacted ice. this is disgusting. my 8 and a half years in congress i saw this time and time again. we had hearings about this. the obama administration released 80,000 criminal aliens back into the homeland instead of deporting them. and have you mayors like
this dancing around and this young woman was raped by somebody that we had in custody. and instead of adhearing to a detainer request. a notice from ice saying hey, if you have this person, let us know. the mayor is over there dancing releasing this person and he rapes a young girl. totally preventable. totally preventible. steve: dropped the charges back in 2014 when this happened they were dropping charges left and right. that s right. these sanctuary cities that they re dancing about. literally this is where the democrats are on this. they work hard and dance more for people that are here illegally than they do to protect their own citizens and there are consequences. there are rapes, there are murders, there are duis, there are people that are affected by. this and this guy says well, they shouldn t have gotten a warrant no. they didn t. they needed to communicate with ice so that the federal authorities could do what they needed to do which was expel this guy not incarcerated for a number of years. he was here illegally and got back home and got back
across the border. when the president fights for the border wall how dare the democrats say we don t need it. it s not working. so porous these young guys coming back and raping women coming across the border. brian: still 31,000 people flooding across the border. by the tens of thousands and real crimes committed by these people. steve: what do you make of congressman andy biggs suggestion that we essentially fine mexico $2,000 for every illegal who comes into the country to help pay for the wall? we are sending mexico foreign aid. why should we send them foreign aid if they are going send us people here illegally. they need to do their support on the other side of the border. and andy biggs has come up with a creative way to do this. now he has actually put pen to paper. brian: not asking write checks. deduct from the aid we are giving them. how about just cut off the foreign aid and say until you fix this, you know, we will withhold the
payments. steve: there you go. jason chaffetz his new book is called deep state. preorder it right now. jason, thank you very much. brian: and i will talk to you on radio. 10:15. brian: you don t have to dress up for that. [laughter] steve: it is exactly 7:11 in new york city you know what it s time for? news. jillian: good thursday morning. fired up today. my goodness. that gets me fired up. steve: we call that thursday. jillian: that s right. let s begin with a fox news alert right now. a florida police officer rushed to the hospital overnight after being shot outside a waffle house. police say the suspect opened fire at moving cop car and then ran away. moments later that gunman was shot by police. he is expected to survive. the officer will also be okay. this as police in new jersey release these images of two people wanted for questioning in the ambush shooting of two officers. a gunman firing as many as 25 rounds at undercover detectives in an unmarked car in camden. both officers are expected to survive. ohio s special how s election could be headed for
a recount. officials finding 588 unaccounted for votes. uncounted votes excuse me. the discovery giving danny o connor 190 more votes against republican troy balderson who has already declared victory. the candidates have separated by fewer than 1600 votes. this as republican kris kobach claims a tentative vicfully kansas gubernatorial primary. his opponent incumbent governor jeff colyer saying provisional votes need to be counted. kobach leads by 11 votes. and an update to a story we telling you about yesterday. a paralyzed green beret is all smiles as he learns he will finally get the help he needs. lone survivor author marcus luttrell says bo ramsey is humbled by family helping build wheelchair accessible home. ramsey led the team that pulled off the mountain that saved his life 13 years ago. he was paralyzed in horrific
motorcycle crash in may. the fund raiser just $1,000 short of its goal. you can donate. you can help. head to friends@foxnews.com. isn t that amazing $1,000 short. ainsley: $1,000 more that s probably done now our viewers are so awesome. brian: i heard yesterday he is extremely grateful for fox & friends viewers. that s what marcus luttrell does tries to find causes. this is someone who directly helped him out. steve: there is he on the phone talking to marcus at this time. if you would like to help put him over the top go to our website friends@foxnews.com and find a go fund me link. meanwhile 7:13 in new york city. ainsley: muslim extremist father now accused of training kids for school shootings. take you inside what is happening on the ground in that compound in new mexico. steve: nancy pelosi says there is only way to help illegal immigrants, vote for a democrat. we have leverage when we
win in november. gives leverage to every family, to every mom who courageously brought her child across the dessert. steve: and there is more where that came from. stick around see for yourself at the lexus golden opportunity sales event. experience amazing at your lexus dealer. your hair is so soft! did you use head and shoulders two in one? i did mom. wanna try it? yes. it intensely moisturizes your hair and scalp and keeps you flake free. manolo? look at my soft hair. i should be in the shot now too. try head and shoulders two in one. this is not a screensaver.game. this is the destruction of a cancer cell by the body s own immune system, thanks to medicine that didn t exist until now. and today can save your life.
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that is a mugshot of of the infamous brooklyn imam named coconspirator in the 1993 world trade center bombing the motor of his child called the authorities and said you know what? i haven t seen my son. can you go looking for him. they did in new mexico. what they uncovered was essentially a compound where he was training children, the authorities say, to be school shooters. ainsley: wow. 11 children in filthy conditions, authorities say. they were being taught how to use assault rifles so they could go out and commit school shootings and keep in mind school is about to begin in most places around the country. brian: get. this the fbi was surveying the place for days. the local authorities got tired of waiting. they went. in and they were certain they were going to get blown away because this was put in a place where which they could see the authorities move in but the authorities couldn t see them. and by some miracle they were able to penetrate, get inside and save these kids. the fbi cannot be reached
for comment. but, again, a mystery surrounding that investigation. and there is a belief among ryan mauro and others at his place clarion that there are other compounds throughout the country like this. listen. where did they get the skill for this? if you look at imam, a radical imam in brooklyn and these are his family members, the guys he hangs out with believe in violent jihad, all sorts of radicals, the history of acquiring weapons, paramilitary training and people in his organization have trained kids. no evidence that the imam is tied to this specific compound but where do you think these guys learned these skills from? steve: exactly. the new mexico sheriff described the group as heavily armed and considered extremist of the muslim belief. ultimately, they had gone in to try to find the little boy they believed they have located his body. they arrested this guy. they arrested his two sisters, who are believed to
be the parents of the mothers of a lot of the children ranging up to 15 years old. ainsley: that mother in atlanta who called authorities originally looking for her son they did find remains. they have not been positively identified as that little boy. the dad apparently took the child from the mother. said he was taking the child to the park and never returned the child. told authorities or authorities were saying that he wanted to perform an exorcism on his child. we will continue to keep you posted on this story. this is happening on american soil. thank goodness our authorities have caught those individuals. steve: in the nick of time. meanwhile 7:20 in new york. new york is one step away from approving three months of paid pe bereavement leave. john tapper knows a thing or two about saving businesses. the host of bar rescue is here next. brian: urge people to vote for hillary clinton and that agent just got burned.
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in mexico. ainsley: yeah a lot of people involved in that you know john tapper as the tough talking host of bar rescue. i have two owners in this building and neither of them are doing a damn thing as this business is going down, they re having a party. susan. hi. you are really here? i m really here how much are you been drinking. a lot. i m off the clock. owners are never off the clock. steve: a new law in new york state could change that a bill proposing three months bereevement leave has been approved and now awaiting the signature of governor cuomo. and john tapper joins us live. have you seen small businesses teetering on the edge. if this goes through what will happen to small businesses in the food industry in particular. this entitles an employee
who loses a parent or grandparent even to have 90 days off as 60 to 50% of their full pay. if you look a look at millennial in essence they are saying i have four automatic 90 day breaks coming up in my life at some point. imagine a layer of a higher wage scale insurance cost, workers compensation cost now an additional layer of expense. i have to replace that worker so i still have to cover the function and the task paying for three months and paying for three months. times that by a few employees and times it by a few bereevement in a year. what happens if you lose two family members in a year. six months of 50 to 60% pay that s powerful. brian: you are calloused. what s your answer? well, when people have to reduce their work schedules because of, this people lose jobs, that s not good.
when businesses close because people lose jobs, that isn t good either. the wage increases in other cities have closed thousands of restaurants. this is cause and effect. you raise the numbers, one of two things happen. either we pass it onto the consumer. that s not a great effect on the economy or the businesses close. steve: this is one of those big government things where it s part of the nanny state. it s new york state. i wonder if we have to give them safe zones in which to bereeve for 90 days that will probably be the next step. ainsley: some people need to get back to work because you have to get your mind off of it sometimes it doesn t hit you until 12 months down the road at christmas time how do you fix this entitlement mentality that our country is heading toward. it s difficult. it seems no matter how many more we add there are people in washington who wake up every day with a purpose of creating more. so, obviously, these get votes and elements to our society that will vote for
candidates that act in this way. so, this is really a very selfish act when you think about it very self-serving for the politician into getting votes. it s not self-serving to the state. and i travel around america, and i see new york state ads all the time. new infrastructure. lower taxes and it sounds terrific but then when i look at these types of layers of costs in new york, those ads don t mean anything anymore. brian: for john afte taffer you used to live here and now you don t. derek jeter is a multimillionaire i am going to live in florida i don t need to give my money away for no apparent reasons and also he owns the marlins. do small businesses have a voice? time for them to combine so it isn t john taffer the calloused owner it is a group of people that want to survive. i m involved in a lot of restaurant associations and disdistilled spirits
associations. shows associations are typically funded by the big player. small businesses lose their voice. groups have spoken up but nobody hears it. steve: we have a business leader now in the white house. have yous inned a difference having a businessman running things? completely. you know, four steps to business. capitalizing it, building it, running it and selling it he has done them all. and when you understand all steps of a business, you help business people do those four steps. we capitalize and help them open, operate and sell. steve: you sound like you are excited about him being president. there are some people in the country who can t wait to get him out of office. i don t understand the lowest unemployment numbers they object to? the fact we don t have any north korean missiles flying by? do they object to that? do they object to the stock market? do they object to the de regulation and the fact that businesses are opening. do they object to the fact that we have factories and manufacturing coming back. i m struggling to find what
they object, to honestly. and when i ask i m told well he tweets, he says. i get it sometimes he says things that make us cringe. but he does things that are having a positive impact on our society. we don t always have to love the messenger to love the message. brian: we do watch you and your show and we love your show. it s family viewing except for the topless episode that you tried to explain turn around a topless place. that was a rough few days. living it was unbelievable. brian: they are turning a profit now. you have got to watch the episode. check out his podcast it s called no excuses and check out his book. it s called don t b.s. yourself. ainsley: great titles. steve: i love that we will check it out wherever you download podcast one. yep or apple podcast. steve: mr. taffer thanks so much. brian: what do people in chicago want done about violence. charlie kirk hit the streets to find out.
what do you make of rahm emanuel? we want someone else. take care of downtown. take care of the north side. brian: charlie kirk joins us live with more on that next. ainsley: plus a skier gets a front row seat to an erupting volcano. the incredible video coming up next. it s the final countdown d now is the best time to buy. you ready for this, junior? yeah, i think i can handle it. no pressure. .that s just my favorite boat. boom. (laughs) make summer go right with ford, america s best-selling brand. and get our best deal of the summer: zero percent financing for sixty months on f-150. right now, get this special offer on f-150: zero percent financing for 60 months - during the ford summer sales event.
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emanuel. we want someone else. take care of downtown. they take care of the north side. south and west side is left behind. anything want us to pray for. for peace in chicago. definitely. that we need. steve: on monday morning we told you about the shootings, the number of shootings in chicago over the past weekend. something like 70 people were shot. a dozen were murdered. charlie kirk, the founder and president of turning point u.s.a. is actually from chicago. he is joining us right now from phoenix. charlie hit the streets in chicago yesterday to figure out what people how they are getting their heads around it charlie, it s hard to figure out why, right? you know, it s a real tragedy going on in chicago right now. what i was really struck by is there was not this huge call for gun control even from the citizens of chicago. being from chicago we have seen the carnage increase over the last couple of years. it really is a broken culture problem. and the common theme after talking to, you know, my
fellow chicagoens is that we have a lack of father problem in the black community, especially in chicago. and just one quick statistic. in the 1960 s, the single motherhood rate in chicago and across the country is 18%. in the black community. now it s over 75%. think about that. in chicago, only 25% of young black youth will even have a father in the household. and that is contributed to this endless cycle of gang violence and gun violence. and there is a lot of frustration amongst us chicagoens about the lack of action from the mayor s office to address this problem correctly. but the bottom line is a broken culture problem. brian: charlie, do you believe that it s okay in illinois to let black people shoot black people and there is not enough outrage from the people in power and people of wealth? is that the sense? just contain the violence in one region? it sure feels that wait a minute feels as if we have become desensitized to this pattern of violence in certain parts of chicago. these are our fellow
americans. this should be deemed absolutely unacceptable. here s probably the most startling statistic. zero, that s how many arrests have been made all these shootings over the weekend. zero that means these criminals that over 70 people shot. over a dozen people killed. no one has been arrested. and so it s the same people committing the same crimes. and i want to make this perfectly clear. most chicagoens are law abiding, hard-working, gritty, forward-thinking, creative people. most chicagoens are not criminals. it is clustered to a couple hundred very, very bad people. by the way this war on police will not help us go after the criminals. i m disgusted by the lack of action from the mayor s office. brian: what do you mean the police? you think the police has been pushed back they know no one has their back and why risk their careers in a region that noun cares about? that s right. it s the rule of law. whether it s divirve antipolice rhetoric, the police are less likely to actually go do their job.
and they if you go into these neighborhoods and you start to forge positive relationships with the pastors and the elderman and decisionmakers on the ground with law enforcement, that will bring down crime. you look at what mayor giuliani did in new york, that s how he cleaned up the streets. he didn t divide people, he built strong partnerships and cleaned up the streets. chicago is doing the exact opposite. ainsley: is this the first time have you heard that area not happy with the mayor? people have wondered why in other parts of the country why this mayor continues to get reelected when you see crime numbers. there was unbelievable anger and disgust against mayor rahm emanuel. he was chief of staff under obama in the first couple of years. this is almost the obama policies in action on a very micro level. have you seen murders go up. you have seen homelessness go up and schools closing and education go down. this is the obama national platform centralized in one city and there is broad
disgust behind the lack of action from mayor rahm emanuel. and the mayors before rahm emanuel, mostly the daily family pragmatic, pro-business and pro-police. rahm emanuel has brought in a radical leftist agenda and made chicago a more dangerous city it should be one of the nation s greatest city for his location and people. steve: charlie kirk hit the streets to interview those people for us. charlie, thank you very much. you bet, thank you. steve: what do you think about that? email us at friends@foxnews.com. 20 minutes before the top of the hour. ainsley: hand it over to jillian for more headlines. jillian: an ice employee resigns after admitting to potussing pro-hillary posting pro-hillary clinton messages at work. the unidentified employee posted more than 100 times either on the clock or on government property. they say she was warned by ethics watchdogs but did not stop. her messages violated the hatch act which bans most government employees from engaging in politics on duty. she can t work for the feds
for five years. nancy pelosi says voting for democrats is the only way to give leverage to illegal immigrants. we are not going to be able to get it done under the republican leadership in congress. we believe that we will have leverage when we win in november. and why that s important? because it gist leverage to every family, to every mom who courageously brought her child across the dessert to escape. jillian: the house minority leader making the comments in el paso, texas. pelosi discussing her opposition to president trump s zero tolerance immigration policy. take a look at this. a deer gets a front row seat to volcanic eruption. same video showing the volcano spewing smoke and ash into the air as a ski chair lift carries the man closer and closer. the area near a popular ski resort mountains in chili is expected to be the most in the world. officials have not ordered
any evacuations. and, this the dog tag of a fallen american hero killed in the korean war is now back with his sons. charles and larry mcdaniel joined us earlier. i was floored. i was very, very moving moment for me. i had to take a little time to compose myself. what are the odds that out of all these cass detectives that our father would be the one that had a dog tag in there. i was surprised. jillian: mcdaniel brothers given their dad s tag at ceremony in virginia. dad went missing decades ago. his tag was only one returned with the unidentified 55 remains handed over by north korea. incredible moment there. steve: yeah, they never expected to see anything like that. they were the one family who got the closure immediately because that was the only name. brian: we need 7,000 more. that would be great. ainsley: such a great interview. we all wondered who that dog tag belonged.
to say good interview, steve. steve: thank you very much, jillian. thank you, ainsley. let s go outside the streets of new york city. janice has a whole bunch of friends. janice: yes, my friends are here. tell me what were your names and where are you from. i m from new zealand. janice: and. pop from new zealand. janice: you watch fox news. yes we love it. janice: is this your first trip. yes. first time on television. yes. janice: good way to start your trip. take a look at the maps. we have fans all over the world. here are your current temperatures. in new york it is hot and sticky. it s not raining out so we ll take that because the rain is going to unfortunately return this weekend across the northeast. so keep that in mind. it s just been one of those summers where we have seen a lot of rain. not enough rain across the west. we still have heat advisories. hot heat warnings for the northwest and parts of california. they are not getting the relief that they really need for firefighters unfortunately. are you going to stick around bowers we have fun in a bio bus and we have hot
cars. right? muscle cars. janice: waive twave to everybodt home you are on tv. they are out in front of bio bus. steve: ride shift uber and lyft putting first of its limits on the ride sharing companies to ease traffic they say. stuart varney says this will only make things worse. he is next. ainsley: parents, look at this. it is science for your kids on the go. the biobus is making a stop out on our plaza
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he tried to fly to the middle east to fight isis. the south carolina teenager could spend the next two decades behind bars. 19-year-old zachariah abedin pleading guilty to supporting the terror group. he told an undercover agent that he wanted to carry out an athaksin larr to the pulse club massacre. the top u.s. general in afghanistan says captured terrorists are being treated as prisoners of war. general joseph votel responding to a report dozens of isis fighters were being treated as honored guest in afghanistan. they were reportedly put up in guest houses and allowed to you keep their cell phones. steve? steve: all right, jillian, thank you very much. here is some news from yesterday. new york city putting the brakes on uber and lyft. these first of its kind rules include a minimum wage for drivers and minimum fare. ainsley: bill de blasio claims if will limit congestion. next guest argues this big government grab will only increase your cost and your wait time. brian: stuart varney, a lot of cabs got screwed and so
did black cars get screwed and now new york city is trying to put their hand on the scale. this is new york s push back to a disruptive technology. clearly ride hagel companies like uber and lyft they are disrupting the taxi industry. the taxi industry gets into the ear of mayor de blasio and says come up with some kind of restriction on uber and lyft because we re losing our shirts. and that s what they have done. they are going to put a cap on the number of uber and lyft cars allowed in the city at given times of day. a cap on the supply of ride rides. steve: here in new york city you could only hail a cab or taxi. had to have the thing on the hood of your car. selling for over a million dollars. 2013 medallions operate them taxi or yellow cab $1.3 million selling for in 2013. today about 160 to $250,000. steve: because of uber? because of uber, ride sharing. the taxi lobby gets together
and says hey, come on, your honor, we are losing our shirts here. do something for us. so the mayor turns and and says well we have got a lot of congestion in new york city. let s cut down the number of cars. we want to raise the wages of these uber and lyft drivers let s mandate that. brian: who gets hurt by that? a lot of customers. it s cheaper. the people of new york city get hurt by that. have you tried the buses and the subways in new york? that s your alternative to a ride hailing company. the buses are overcrowded and they are late. the trains, the subways, this is mid summer. it s 90 degrees. they are not air conditioned most of the time. not good news. ainsley: what it looks like with big government? a lot of our viewers don t live in new york. how does this affect them? it may spread to other cities around the country, indeed around the world. taxi industries in cities are established. they get disseminated. they, too, are going to say give us some relief from uber and lyft. come on, help us out here. and they will. steve: let s see what happens. stuart varney is going to be on fox business an hour and
10 minutes from now. stuart, thank you. thank you. ainsley: coming up, alexandria ocasio-cortez says americans should want universal healthcare because it will save them money on other things. people talk about the sticker shock of medicare for all. why aren t we incorporating the cost of all the funeral expenses of those who die because they can t afford access to healthcare. ainsley: she was just getting warmed up, guys. brian: stuart is holding hills head and his ears. parents, look at this. science for kids on the go. the bio bus is making a stop on our plaza. there is janice. janice: what do you think? is that fantastic?
janice: how do we get students excited about the wonders of the world and future of science. we have bring science adventures to new york city. we have scientist david and interns. they rolled into new york city biobus onto the plaza right here. david, you are a community scientist. that s right. janice: how did this all come about? well, a collection of scientists recognized that there was a need and a demand from business leaders, from leaders in education, in the communities for my science. get more students involved in science. what better way to do that than to literally drive this experience to the doorstep of schools and invite students to come on board and have them use our fabulous equipment. janice: let s take a look. we have students on board the biobus. this is the 10th anniversary, too. that s right. we have been doing this 10 years. janice: show me what we can expect on the biobus. a lot of microscopes. at love microscopes. janice: these are the type of mike scopes that you can t necessarily see in schools. that s why you bring them.
that s right. these are research grade mike scopes. very powerful but very easy to use. janice: what is that? it s a daphne. janice: how do you know that? because they told us. janice: tell me about this particular creature. it lives in fresh water. janice: to me it looks like it might have a little baby in. there is that true? no. there is a girl over here that has a baby. oh my gosh. that s fantastic. david, tell us what is this. this is called a daphnea fresh water creature. find them all over new york city and central park. they are in ponds everywhere. because they sore small people just don t notice them but they are everywhere. janice: do you think this is awesome, this biobus? yes. janice: you do. fantastic. david, how can people find out more? i know this is just in new
york but you are going to expand across the country. the demand is out there. can you find out more at our website www.biobus.org. please go there and support us and help us out. janice: was this awesome? yeah. january january we love it. we love this biobus. thank you. i hope she has a good delivery. she will. [laughter] janice: all right. back inside. we are out in the biobus. you guys will have to check it out steve, ainsley and brian. steve: next commercial. thank you very much. ainsley: biobus stop.org if you are interested. steve: president trump hitting vladimir putin over new sanctions over the poisoning of a former russian spy and his daughter. county critics say that donald trump is not tough on putin? brian: and we have seen dooce on the loose now you get a look at that massive moose on the loose. hit the road, jack don t you come back no more no more no more hit the road, jack and
don t you come back no more not so cute when they re angry. and we covered it. talk to farmers. we know a thing or two because we ve seen a thing or two. we are farmers. bum-pa-dum, bum-bum-bum-bum . .
. brian: the u.s. issuing brand n.o.w. sanctions and this after the attempted assassination of former russian spy and his daughter. he signed off on much tougher actions against russia than the previous administration. president trump s legal team firing back at special counsel bob mueller s terms. if you lined up 100 lawyers, 100 lawyers will say don t sit for an interview. ainsley: another horrific crime committed by an illegal. philadelphia mayor blaming i.c.e. if they got the warrant and we would turned them over. they work and dance more people here illegally than they do to protect their own citizens. steve: muslim extremist father accused training kids to carry out school shootings. where do they get the skill for this? the guys he hangs out with believe in violent jihad. dog tags from a korean hero
killed during the war are back with his son. now that we have some connection. . steve: take a look. those are ford mustangs. they have hit a milestone. they have now manufactured 10 million of them over the last number of decades. once upon a time brian kilmeade had one in his driveway. brian: not that. but at the end of the hour we ll see all the cars we can t afford. ainsley: when did you drive a mustang? in high school? brian: my cousin gave me a mustang in ninth grade. you have two years to stair at the car. i don t have a license. i learned how to do bodywork and with a sander. and when the war was finally
ready to go, ride a little. when you have a chance bring it down to the mechanic. i said, when i have a chance. so i drove it for like a year. finally they put it up on the lift, you were one pothole away from your chassis cracking. it had rusted to the end. that was my did you ever get to drive it? brian: i drove it for a year. put rug on steering wheel, on dashboard and steering wheel. horrified my cousin in florida. ainsley: did you have the dice too? brian: couldn t afford the dice. steve: shag carpet. ainsley: you had the carpet around the steering wheel. brian: for some reason my instinct was i had a car i need to put carpet in. ainsley: we need more information? a cousin gave you a car? brian: she was very nice. cousin patty, weather watcher on the local news. reports the weather. she said take this car. i didn t know it was a rookket ship. it had a 369 engine.
steve: i remember those. brian: we have no more time. let s go to break. we have a fox news alert. the trump administration holding russia accountable. the sanctions are all about official. issuing new sanction after attempted assassination after russia spy and his daughter. ainsley: rick leventhal in new jersey as russia responds. reporter: good morning, ainsley, brian and steve. britain prime minister theresa may says russia s provocative reckless behavior will not go unchallenged. the trump administration announcing new penalties after multiple intelligence agencies confirmed that russia was responsible for the attempted assassination of sergey skripol and his daughter. this knife agent was controlled by moscow. they called expensive, enormously, elaborate new sanctions banning a white wage
of exports, gas, engines, electronics, affecting 70% of the russian economy. it takes enext in two weeks t could slash hundreds of millions of dollars experts hit putin where it hurts the most. they used weapons in violation of international law or used lethal chemical or biological weapons against its own nationals. in a phone call with reporters a kremlin spokesman called the sanctions absolutely unfriendly. quote, such restrictions like those passed by the american side earlier are absolutely illegal and do not correspond to international law. in fact, the sanction could get worse in 90 days by law if russia doesn t agree to top all use of chemical weapons. twice? steve: rick leventhal live in berkeley heights, new jersey, knot far from the president s golf course. the russians say it is unfriendly? stop trying to kill people.
brian: wondering why now. this was done in may. we responded harshly. the british are the ones who should be responding the harshest. eu should be responding as well. they did not respond harshly. seems as though we re overcompensating. ainsley: i was wondering that why now? we expelled 60 russian diplomats after this happened in march. congress was calling for the administration to do this now the administration is. they say more sanctions will be to come. steve: critics say the president has not been tough enough on the former soviet union. you look, okay, he is being tough on them. all right. talk a little bit about this. we have talked a lot about alexandria ocasio-cortez. she is the darling of the left after she beat long-time incumbent here in new york city and won that district. she is now headed to the general election. she is a socialist and there is one thing we ve noticed over the
last month, sometimes the math doesn t add up. last night she was asked on another cable channel about how she is going to come up with $42 trillion essentially to pay for free health care, free college and stuff like that and she brought out some new idea that we had not heard before and we wanted to play it for you. watch this. we need to realize people talk about the sticker shock of medicare for all. they do not talk about the sticker shock of the cost of our existing system. americans have the sticker shock of health care as it is. we re also not talking about it, why aren t we incorporating cost of all the funeral expenses of those who die because they can t afford access to health care? that is part of the cost of our system. just gets more astonishing by the day. we can t afford medicare for all, $31 trillion. ainsley: trillion with a t. brian: why does she not understand that? why the head of the dnc says she is the future of the party, yet every candidate she backed lost.
people are rejecting the party. people in the democratic party don t have the courage to stand up to her. steve: she quoted the koch brothers, they had done a study that found that medicare for all would actually be cheaper than our current system. then she started talking about funeral expenses. ainsley: incorporating the funeral costs as well. steve: that s a new one. we asked you what you thought. paul said this on facebook, nothing in this world should be free. people need to get out and contribute. my social security has been reduced to nothing because the government keeps giving away our tax money. ainsley: melvin on facebook says she is socialist economic genius, perhaps she should travel to venezuela to fix their economy. forgot to first the cost of funerals under socialized health care who dice through hospital overcrowding, lack of available equipment, medicines, decreased survival rates for post-op and cancer. we can play this game too. it is incredible. she does break a lot of ground
on interviews, right? steve: on all the channels. brian: you see what ben jealous said. wants to be governor from maryland. a reporter asked are you a socialist because a lot of people in your party are. she says, he said, are you blanking kidding me? is that a finer point. steve: i did apologize i should not used that inappropriate brian: he is saying as democrat. are you kidding me, i m not a socialist, i m an american, i m a capitalist. don t lump me in there. why doesn t the party stand up, i m glad you re involved you re not speaking for us. she would not endorse nancy pelosi. ainsley: what next? what more does everyone need to pay for? what is next on the list? brian: ask bernie sanders. steve: she son all the channels. i saw on twitter, ben shapiro offered $10,000 to her if she would debate him. we don t know whether or not she will take him up. ainsley: i will definitely watch
it. you remember reporting the 55 boxes came came back from north korea last week, two weeks ago, there was a dog tag, everyone wanted to know who did they belong to, one dog tag, especially knowing thousands of people are still missing in action and didn t come home. steve did a great interview with charles mcdaniel, jr., there is the dog tag. he is at home. his wife hands him the phone. he gets the surprise of a lifetime. he learned those dog tags belonged to his father. listen to this. i was floored. it was very moving moment to me. i had to take a little time to comb pose myself. we have seen the caskets coming back. this is something we didn t expect. i was a green beret. you get real close with your team. you take care of each other. and, you just don t want to leave anybody behind. steve: and we don t. that is the way it is.
steve: so the brothers, larry on the left, charles on the right, larry was two when his father went missing. so he never really knew his dad. charles had a now remembrances. there he is, actually picking up the dog tag that had hung around his father s neck. just because they had the dog tag does not mean any of his human remains are in any of the caskets. larry yesterday did a dna test. they will submit that to the lab, to try to figure out whether or not their father s bones are with anything in those 55 boxes. but as he said, one great thing about america, we never forget. brian: would be great if north korea would let us walk the country. we know where other remands are. we could have more moments like that but right now that is not possible. ainsley: hand it over to jillian who has more headlines for us. jillian: still following the story for the search for mollie tibbetts. let s get right to the
fox news alert. a man who believes he saw mollie tibbetts on the night she vanished is speaking out for the first time. devin riley says he may have been the last person to see her on july 18th. she jogged down the street, up the hill. just nothing of it until i heard somebody was missing. then, like really hit me. like i haven t seen that runner since then. jillian: he was questioned by investigators who searched his home. the reward for mollie s whereabouts is over $300,000. breaking overnight a in police officer rushed to the hospital after being shot outside after waffle house. the suspect opened fire at a moving cop car, then ran away. moments later that gunman was shot by police. he is expected to survive and the officer will be okay. this as police in new jersey released these images, take a look at your screen, of two poem wanted for questioning in the ambush shooting of two officers. a gunman firing as many as 25
rounds as the undercover detectives in unmarked car in camden. both officers are expected to survive. today the vice president will make the case for a so-called space force of the second-in-command speakingly directly to the pentagon in june. he asked the pentagon to establish a space force as the sixth branch of the military. if it happens it would be the first new military branch in more than 70 years. imagine driving down the road seeing this. take a look. he is huge. hey there, bud. jillian: that s a moose just taking a stroll down a road in alaska. drivers captivated by the massive animal. the moose appears to be unbothered by the attention. if i can though, i lived up state maine way back early in my career. you have to be careful with those things, at night because they re so tall, your lights are under their eyes. they won t reflect. you won t see them. it is scary.
steve: could be eight, nine, 10 feet tall. ainsley: you see them a lot in maine? jillian: saw them all the time. my first job out of college, we covered moose accidents because of that. brian: who causes them? jillian: questionable. depends on the scenario. brian: they are angry at something. jillian: i don t know what they re angry at. but they re big. steve: a little northern exposure. they are big and stand wherever they want to. jillian: crazy to see them in person. ainsley: brian used appropriate plural moose. it is not meese. brian: tomorrow we introduced oxen. ainsley: let s do that. brian: straight ahead, can critics still say president trump is not tough on russia after the new sanctions? the next guest says the president is pulling a page from the reagan playbook. ainsley: texas made a move to end the daca debate once and for all. details coming up. why i got you on my mind.
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president trump is not tough on russia and when these sanctions come to pass? we have the director of national defense studies for the american interest. harry, we have added sanctions, with the measures handed down, what is the most significant? brian, we ll ban russia from bringing in advanced technologies, supercomputers, things that allow any modern economy to essentially flourish and i think it is something we have to do. we have to keep in mind, brian, what russia did a few months ago. when you attack another country with a weapon of mass destruction, that is act of war. brian: eu, britain who was outraged haven t done anything else. what you told me in the break, the investigation never stopped and now we re for certain they did this attack, this chemical attack. that is why the additional sanctions ramped up. next, iran. we move out, technically in may.
officially this week of the iranian deal and we asked the eu to do the same thing. they say no and they said to their companies that are in their countries that invested in iran, if you pull out you will be sanctioned. my head can t wrap myself around that, but it is a hit on us, that is the theme, isn t it? yeah. brian, and this doesn t make any sense to me for very logical reason. the iran nuclear deal had to die for one specific reason. it had a huge loop hoe, it allowed iranians to build more advanced missiles. the european union would be the first one on the firing lines if they continue to build missiles like that. when the deal expired in 10 to 12 years, iranians would i m sure start building nuclear weapons and take the nuclear weapons on the advanced missiles. it would not make any sense why the eu would not back us getting rid of this bad deal, going to the iranians, reconstitutes some sort of a agreement that everybody can live with.
i don t understand why the eu would try to harm its own companies. it makes no logical sense. brian: 40 seconds. we found out mike pompeo asked north korea to get rid to 60, 70% of their nuclear arsenal. they didn t budge. he kept asking, the meeting came to a close. there might be a third one. we were promised he would get a one-on-one with kim jong-un. that never happened. where are we at? basically a crossroads. i think it is pretty clear the north koreans, short of some sort of miracle are probably never going to give up nuclear weapons. i think what the administration is going to do, they will take the next couple months, see what negotiations bear some fruit. but i think after the midterms. this administration is going to take the gloves off when it comes to north korea. kim jong-un should be ready, because max pressure 2.0 could happen. brian: without china on board, russia on boyd, it won t. they are obviously at odds with us, one over trade and all their other actions.
harry, thank you very much. thanks, brian. brian: some hillary clinton supporters still in tears over the last election. our next guest says it is time to move on. comedian jimmy walker here with a reality check for the elites next. and all from a gentle mist you can barely feel. flonase sensimist. you can barely feel. too hot to work? nah. this is the gator xuv835. with game-changing heat and air, it s never too anything for anything. you always get the lowest price on our rooms, guaranteed? let s say it in a really low voice. carl? lowest price, guaranteed. just stick with badda book. badda boom. book now at choicehotels.com bring you the fall hunting classic with huge savings.
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texas is suing to end daca. attorney general ken paxton want as federal judge to block the government from issuing or renewing dreamer applications. he says the suit is quote, vital to restoring the rule of law to our immigration system. ainsley? ainsley: all right. thank you, jillian. good times actor and comedian jimmy walker giving coastal elites who are still upset over hillary clinton s election loss some advice. steve: the star says it is time to let the election go. people in america love trump. those in big cities hate him and haven t gotten over the fact that donald trump is the president. jimmy walker launched a new stand-up special with michael winslow, called, we are still here. download it everywhere where it is streamhe joins us from his hometown of las vegas. jimmy, good morning to you. it is always fun to be on with you guys, thank you very much for having me. steve: you bet. why can t the coastal elites get over the fact that hillary clinton lost and donald trump
won? i have no idea. it is beyond my comprehension. i think what we ve done though, we lost the civil behavior that we need. people have, they are not civil to each other anymore now. i mean if you look at what happened with sarah huckabee sanders, unable to go out and eat. these things are ridiculous and people are going with it. they re saying okay, it is okay. but see, if that happened to a minority, they said we don t want minorities here, anybody would be upset. we must be more civil. we must be more understanding. we must understand that this is not the divided states of america, this is the united states of america. this is where we need to start getting more to where we belong. i was at the borgata hotel in atlantic city, and i do trump jokes. there is no problem with that. they re not mean. they re not angry. and after every show, people
both sides of ledger, trump supporters, people don t like trump, golly, we love the fact you re so civil to our president. i respect presidency. when i was at the borgata, standing ovations every night. you want me to come back to bore gaat tax call chris at the gotham comedy club of new york, bring me back. these are the kind of things we need to get to in our society where people treat each other with respect. i m noticing daily, daily, people are attacking everybody. everybody is against everybody. there is no love in our sew sheet, no warmth in our society. comedy has to be for everyone. steve: yeah. when i started in the 60s, it was for everybody, with alan king and flip wilson. now comedy is so divided you can not get a nice common ground. we need to start laughing, start laughing, start respecting each other. i respect my crowds. anybody comes to see me will
never see anti-trump joke or anti-hillary joke or a anti-obama joke because i feel respect needs to be there for us as people. we need to realize that this is not a country where you have to get out, we have to bring in. that is what we want to do. ainsley: people need to lighten up, not take everything so seriously. there is so much anger and vitriol, and people going up to sarah huckabee sanders, all the republicans that work for the administration just because they disagree their politics. what do you say about the late-night comics? i think the late-night commission, we have so many good late-night comics that write well. they need to take it up a level, write a better joke rather than saying trump is horrible, terrible, make a better joke. we have been do it. we have so much talent from wanda sykes, michelle wolf, these people are great talent. they may take the easy way out.
they can do better. i love them all. i want them to be more successful than they ever thought. when you come to see me, i will be in lowell, arkansas. you will not see any hostility. when you see me at the borgata you will not see any hostility. there will be nothing but fun. we need not attack sarah huckabee sanders. we need not attack anybody. start getting to the point where we sit down to other people. i would sit down with trump anytime. i would sit down with maxine waters. we need to start communicating. we need to start loving and respecting each other much more. steve: jimmy, show the late-night comics how to do a trump joke. i m not going to do one right now, i have to save it for my people in lowell, arkansas. i want them to come and see me. i want people to start loving and respecting each other. you have a new show called, we re still here. me and michael winslow, streaming on all the forums that we have. you don t see any dirt on there.
you won t see any hostile trump jokes on there. you can bring your kids, 16 and over. please come and watch us. come see me at the borgata. chris at gotham, bring me back. that will be great. i want to get the country back to. steve: good times. jimmy walker, thank you very much for joining us live. ainsley: thank you very much. make america the way it should be. remember this is not divided states of america. this is the united states of america. steve: there you go. ainsley: so grateful to have this job. i get to talk to you. i grew up with that voice. loved your show. still comes on. steve: thank you, sir. ainsley: god bless you. thank you. steve: 8:30 in new york city. we ll tell you shortly about a terror training camp in new mexico. a muslim extremist father accused of training children to carry out school shootings. dana loesch says that father was preparing for war. she s next. ainsley: plus here face says it
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compound. look how exposed you are in the middle of nowhere. think if you re law enforcement, think if you re a police officer, you take down what is a mini fort. ainsley: it looks filthy. that is what the authorities said. they went in and took 11 children that were there. this all, kind of unfolded because the mom in atlanta reports to authorities that the dad comes to pick up the son, take him to the park, allegedly, and he never brought the child back. they did find the remains of a child. they have not yet told us whether or not they re connected to that child that was missing from atlanta. steve: just the fact that he was, he had a terror camp right there in the middle of the united states. ainsley: in the middle of the united states. steve: in new mexico. dana loesch down in texas, nationally syndicated radio talk show host. what do you make of the shocking discovery? this guy was trying to raise these kids to be school shooters? he was training, and good morning to you all.
he was training starving children, 11 starving children along with his sisters to be school shooters. there is another twist to the story that is just as insane. his name might sound familiar. he is 39-year-old who was arrested, seems as though law enforcement-eyed i him as the ringleader. he is the son of the same named. siraj, controversial new york imam, unindicted co-conspirators in the 1993 world trade center bombing and character witness for the blind sheikh in that trial as well. that is the same imam, weeks before 9/11, advertised in some graphics still circulating online, he was speaker at quote, unquote, jihadi camp, has some very, very extremist views. it is not really surprising here is his son and his sisters and two other men with 11 children, the children of the sisters kids, they re starving. they were wearing dearthty rags. they had no shoes.
the only food on the premises was some potatoes and a box of rice that were in a dirty trailer, according to law enforcement. you made mention of the 4-year-old, 3-year-old, i ve seen identified some reports boy, that watts younger son who was kidnapped from georgia. now initially they didn t have a warrant out. they didn t go after rajah he was still married to woman with joint custody. the mother said i haven t seen my child since december. i can t find him. he needs medication. he is sick. that is when it came out he would apparently exercise whatever was afflicting the boy out of him. they can t find him although law enforcement did find remains of what they said was a 3-year-old child on the compound. i hope it is not that child. we will see. horrible, insane story. guys, it happened on american soil, on united states soil. these people who, cops identify as having extremist beliefs and in court documents they were
training children, their children to go and shoot everyone s children at school this fall. brian: right. keep in mind too, there is a strong belief there are other come compounds like this. if you travel the country there are a ton of places to hide. talk about the sanctuary city in philadelphia. ainsley: we saw the video of the mayor dancing when they became a sanctuary city. hard to watch now, you know the latest news, another horrific crime committed by an illegal. ramon vasquez. he was deported 2009. illegally reentered the united states. arrested in philadelphia in 2014. there is his picture. authorities didn t call i.c.e. they let him go. he gets out an sexually assaults a child. he is behind bars serving eight to 20 years in state prison. how do you think those parents feel about an assaulted child when they see the mayor dancing because the mayor and his policies are protecting people like that and not their child?
yeah, their child has to put their life back together now and endure something no child should ever have to endure. the fact that this mayor is on video dancing, here is what a lot of these elected officials don t realize. brian: he is given excuses why he refused to comply with i.c.e. detainers previously. they have stopped an information-sharing program that they previously had on going with i.c.e. these individuals protect criminal actions of individuals entering the country illegally, you have to accept the responsibility and accept that you re defending the reentry of serious criminals like this. first off, it is a crime to enter illegally. you can say that you re not a criminal but you re breaking the law when you enter the country illegally. thereby that makes you a criminal. a lot of individuals they are thriving on indulgence, reckless, lawless mayors like this, and these individuals are living on that. they re thriving on it. they re going out and hurting and destroying the lives of
law-abiding members of our community. brian: by the way, the u.s. attorney, william mcshane, mcswain says the facts of this case highlight the dangers posed by the city of philadelphia s decision to disregard i.c.e. detainers around release previously deported aliens in local custody. there are plenty there in philadelphia right now. basically the mayor saying you re on your own. best of luck people. that is how i watch your back. that s not why the people invest their authority in these lawmakers to represent them. they need better representation. they deserve it. can you imagine if you all got to pick ands choose which laws you followed? how would that work out for you? why do our elected leaders get to do it. brian: that is what the house would have done. nancy pelosi basically said it yesterday. if you want to protect people crossing the desert coming into the country, put majority democrats in the house. steve: turns out, philly dropped charges. i.c.e. was never called even
though they had the detainer. one little girl s life destroyed. ainsley: changing forever. was it worth it? i hope somebody asks the mayor if that little girl s life being destroyed was it worth his happy dance. he was a little out of breath because he was still dancing. we don t know. 20 minutes after the top of the hour. dana loesch. good luck on your show. ainsley: thanks, dana. brian: health care is one of the top issues in the midterms. our next guest says there are things president trump can do right now to win the debate. ned ryun is here. we ll discuss it. steve: one of the most iconic american cars ever. the 10 millionth ford mustang rolled off the assembly line. we re celebrating five decades of mustangs on the plaza. wave to fox & friends. free ride.
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boy, that one s gone. that could be over the scoreboard. it is! steve: quick headlines from the baseball world. that is 12-year-old hitting a home run out of the ballpark at the little league world series. massachusetts player evan blake s hit was so good, he got high fives from the other team. awesome. this little girl as all of us realizing that summer pretty much over right now. [inaudible conversations]. hi. steve: that is brial waiting to be dismissed from the first day of kin garthen in the first day of school, perhaps not happy to be in school. brian: with health care being a big issue in the midterms, outlines the way the president could cut costs in his op-ed.
to change the charity regulations to require tax-exempt hospitals to post their prices for care. and with that is just one of his ideas. ned ryun founder of american majoritys and former presidential writer for president george w. bush. no one talks about it but health care is one of the major issues, almost everybody, democrat and republican, this election cycle. what can the president do to address it? i think one of the things really surprising in all this debate, brian, one of the thing is costs and real driver of costs is the health facilities. i don t think most american understand that the majority of our hospitals are non-profits and they make billions and billions of revenues every year. most of the hospitals and charities are begging for health care price inflation. think about this, when our health care industry is a charity and insurance companies are making record profits there is one way to address this, it is pricing transparency. one of the things trump can do
literally today, brian, talk with secretary of the treasury, steve mnuchin, tell you what we re going to do, those non-profits hospitals, offering services anytime they break 20 million in revenues for services offered they will have to post prices, it results in pricing transparency. the thing that this will do, brian, he will unleash free market forces on the health care industry because guess what? if the for-profit businesses which are one of the largest consumers of health care products in this country, if they unleashes them, he puts the best negotiators at the table, american businesses who are the benefactors are, are the american people. only way we get to a consumer centric policy on health care is to have pricing transparency. brian: you pointed out too, when it comes to ininsurance, cigna s stock went up 866%. you also point out too, that senator grassley, you found out, the not-for-profit hospitals are raising their rates. they were asked why do you keep raising your rates?
because we do a lot of charitable work. that is not a good explanation. the president should call them out on that. some of the chairable work they re claiming, brian, putting very well-compensated ceos on local boards. that is part of the charitable works. you re seeing trend in the nonprofit hospitals, the reason they have to the non-profit status, increase benefits to communities, low-income communities around the hospitals. they re cutting services as they made in record profits. i made a point in the op-ed, 84 largest hospital systems in the country, nonprofits made 530 billion in 2017. guess what they don t want? health care providers and insurance companies don t want pricing transparency. he can talk to it today saying it to mnuchin. he doesn t need to ask congress because it is in the tax code. brian: low income patients are not getting away with murder. the money spent on low income
people gone from 414 million in 2013. to 770 million. don t blame the poor. hope the president will do that. appreciate it. brian: one of the most iconic american cars ever. the 10 millionth ford mustang just rolled off the assembly line. we re celebrating five decade of history on our plaza. the first the man that wants to drive away, excuse me, sandra smith. i was going to say. brian: i thought it would be hemmer. great job with martha. you have to live up to the standards you set last night. are you ready? thank you very much, brian kilmeade, good morning to you, good morning to everyone out there, we have couple live events we re looking for. mike pence about to speak at pentagon been the space force of the you heard a lot from the president. after deadly weekend in chicago, president of chicago s fraternal order of police is here to weigh in. we re watching a close race in
kansas, kris kobach leads 191 votes. alan dershowitz, anthony scaramucci join us with more. live in studio j. happy thursday. automatically adjusts. so you wake up ready to train for that marathon. and now, save up to $500 on select sleep number 360 smart beds. ends wednesday. they work togetherf doing important stuff. the hitch? like you, your cells get hungry. feed them. with centrum micronutrients. restoring your awesome, daily. centrum. feed your cells.
bullitt. mary tyler moore drove one in the mary tyler moore show. brian: what am i looking. shelby gt 500. he worked with ford. this thing goes for about $150,000. brian: what did it launch, do you remember? they or four, could have bought one of these for couch money in the 70s. i i have a soft spot in the r lx. my first vehicle when i was 16. 1993 version. what is so great about the this version? this was fox body mustang. this is 90? this is 1990. this was the 7-up edition, with quotes around 7 up. they designed it for a contest given away with 7-up. canceled it. we ll make it the 25th anniversary car instead. comes with a 7-up. the uncle la of cars. exactly. 2004 shelby, sorry, 2004
cobra ainsley: nice to see you. this is beautiful. this was very hot sports car this shows you what mustang owners do. this is a little bit modified. they like to take the cars, change them a little bit. have a lot of fun, make them personal. ainsley: what did they do to modify? can we open up the hood? i don t think we have time. did a lot of work on it. loud as anything if they start it up. this is makes it fun. kind of car you can turn into a very personal sort of thing. look how much work. ainsley: people i feel modify the mustang more than any other car, is that true? among cars, it es popular platform. this 2006 ouch mustang. too superchargeed is my nickname. rouskch run as nascar team. ford will unveil the nascar spent version. it s a beauty. it s a beauty.

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Transcripts For FOXNEWSW Fox And Friends First 20180810 09:00:00


A precursor to Fox News s morning show, featuring the news and first looks at the other stories of the day.
zone. what is the solution? rob: horace cooper says the city needs more law enforcement on the ground. these people are living in war zones. it is unbelievable the conversation is being held. if grandma can t get her prescription filled, her granddaughter can t get to school without a drive-by shooting, jobs won t located in those communities, perpetuating poverty because investors will not go where there is this elevated level of crime. what you need is a common sense idea. when the officer puts his car prominently on the side of the road, all of the sudden everybody slows down. what we need to do is have an elevated presence of law enforcement in these
police believe his father kidnapped him in georgia and brought him to new mexico for an exorcism. he is under arrest for child abuse with four other adults believed to be muslim extremists. police believe they were training those kids to become school shooters. we are going to have the air force and we are going to have the space force. jillian: boldly going where no administration has gone before, plans for a space force now revealed. rob: what can we expect from this do military branch and will congress approved it? kristin fisher has more. the time has come to write the next great chapter in the history of our armed forces, to prepare for the next battlefield. jillian: mike pence stood before mystery brass and told them donald trump want his space force up and running in two years. the space environment has changed. what was once peaceful and
uncontested is now crowded and adversarial. reporter: he blames china and russia for developing and testing weapons to destroy american satellites which the us military and economy depend on for communicating, navigating and intelligence. our adversaries have been weapon rising space, we have bureaucrats eyes did. reporter: the move to militarize space has remains concerns about an arms race but experts agree space force orforce the us conference strategic threats. the trump administration is calling on congress to allocate $8 billion over the next five years. the trump campaign center and email to supporters asking them to vote on a space force logo. they can buy the winning designs on space force gear sold on the campaign s website so this idea has become hugely popular among the president s supporters, they see it as making america great again this time in space.
in washington kristin fisher, fox news. jillian: it is hot out there. rob: breaking news. reporter: the humidity has cut back. a beautiful morning, it is hot but not as humid today. this weekend we will see a little bit of wet weather across the northeast. we have a summer concert series happening here. it is friday so sponsoring the summer concert series, cody johnson and we have a spectacular forecast. low 70s, 7:00 and 8:00, 48 in the neighborhood for good times and good food. current temperatures 73 in new york and not as humid as it has been, we have showers across texas and the southwest because of tropical moisture streaming in from the pacific.
in california, and the northwest where they need the elevated fire danger. we see scattered showers in the tennessee river valley. it is going to be a spectacular forecast for the summer concert series. you are chowing down on some bbq. happy friday. i wish you had half of that. passing prison reform donald trump, and the criminal justice system. those who have taken the
wrong path seeking redemption. new york city councilman joe borelli says it won t matter what the president says, democrats will continue to fight it, he is here live. jillian: vladimir putin has his own coffee. the menacing new motorcycle.
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inmates. will democrats continue to play politics and miss the opportunity to pass common sense legislation. joe borelli. how necessary is it? it doesn t help anyone incarcerated in this country. when you are sentencing someone to a lifetime of dependency without prospect of any future employment it doesn t benefit us at all. most people into the prison system and come out. when talking about reentry programs that is priority number one. they are facing an opioid epidemic in this country. we have a huge drug problem and the president saying he wants softer penalties on drug felonies has to be met with criticism i would assume.
before we talk about problems with democrats, it only deals with the reentry program introduction of sentences. and demanding a package on prison reform as sentence reductions and safety valves so judges make do with extenuating circumstances. it is difficult, if you midterm primaries and the general election. what would your message be to the democrats right now? don t treated the same way you did daca and trade reform. and doing something positive, don t think the public wins. there are moments the
president of democrats get along quite well. actions with china and other things, this is one of those moments. on a grander scale what do you think of this country? where would the incarceration problem come from? we don t see this in other countries in the world. there have been a ton of studies reducing incarceration bringing recidivism back and a lot of stuff dealing with drugs and in many cases people getting sentenced to 25 years when you have the president pardoning many people, for a low-level offense. these things are not helping anyone. the cost of incarcerating an individual is astounding and having people get out of prison in a timely fashion and reentered into society is not a bad thing. republicans jillian: reentering society as part of this. you don t want them to be repeat offenders and then go back into the street and commit dangerous crimes. especially when you have crimes like drugs where the recidivism rate is not the same,
sex crimes were a high recidivism rate. these are the people who should be eligible for the programs that will prepare them to be back on a successful track when they get out. rob: that is the other side of it. we appreciate it. jillian: the philadelphia mayor danced when his city was declared a sanctuary city and this illegal immigrant just committed a heinous crime against a child. how the doj is giving him a free pass. jillian: a warning for the resistance, mess with donald trump s walk of fame star and even more will pop up. street artist sending a message to trump star smashers. are you ready to take your wifi to the next level?
in west hollywood city council voted to remove it, the artist tells the hollywood reporter if anyone rips up or destroys his stars, 30 more will pop up. rob: a foxbusiness alert, sports betting could be on the menu of buffalo wild wings. jillian: tracy carrasco with what it could look like. reporter: buffalo wild wings is considering getting into the sports betting business now that it is legal, looking for ways to attract new customers and reverse years of slumping sales. here is what buffalo wild wings said in a statement, buffalo wild wings is uniquely positioned to leverage sports gaming to enhance the restaurant experience, actively exploring opportunities including potential partners as we evaluate the next step to the brand. it does follow the supreme court vote in may that repealed the
1992 decision that made sports gambling illegal. rob: a great story, tom brady was really struggling to get by. we are glad to hear the patriots will take care of him. reporter: a little extra incentive to play well. new england patriots set to add $5 million to tom brady s contract, performance-based incentives. the statistical benchmark to get the extra money is on top of his annual salary of $15 million and he is probably hurting for some money. he can make of the $20 list if he plays well. rob: i would do it for $2 million, saving a dramatic amount of money. jillian: can you play football? rob: know. the amount of money you save is probably a long shot. vladimir putin and donald trump known for rolling in style but the russian leader is kicking
into high gear. jillian: he will be escorted on the treasures to wheel course, the bikes can reach 150 mph and are made by the same company. rob: look like a weapon. a civilian version could come out next year. jillian: 25 after the hour. leverage for illegals, nancy pelosi s new reason to vote for democrats. leverage to every family, every agency. jillian: is this the new platform the left is planning to run on? that debate next. rob: country music star cody johnson getting ready to rock the summer concert series. your allergy pills? flonase sensimist relieves all your worst symptoms, including nasal congestion, which most pills don t. and all from a gentle mist
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slamming the adelphia s liberal mayor for giving a previously deported illegal immigrants a free pass. sanctuary laws allow the man to walk free from prison avoiding immigration the customs enforcement and then this man raped a child. jillian: jackie ibanez live with reaction from the mayor and those holding him accountable. reporter: philadelphia under fire, the justice department taking aim at mayor jim kenney and highlighting this video from june which you may remember. a sanctuary city, a sanctuary city. reporter: kenny doing a victory dance after the judge ruled in favor of sanctuary policies. the doj highlighted the case of raymond vasquez who pleaded guilty to illegal reentry from honduras. he was arrested and locked up. ice asked the city to hold him on a detainer and hand him over for deportation but the city
ignored them and released him. two years later he was arrested and convicted for raping a child. he is serving 8-20 years in prison. mayor kenny says the solution is not complicated. we would have turned the person over and nothing like this would have happened. of the city held a detainer a child wouldn t had been raped. you do see this, it is a tragedy. all they had to do would get a warrant and we would have turned him over. reporter: us attorney william mcshane says this defendant received a free pass from the city of philadelphia and the department of prisons. the secretary of homeland security, kirstjen neilsen. it could have been prevented and should have been prevented. we owe the american people better. jillian: thank you very much.
the farmer questions on the disappearance of mollie tibbetts admits to taking a polygraph test telling fox news fbi agent asked if he had anything to do with the 20-year-old s disappearance. he says he doesn t know the results of the tests. cheney denied knowing anything about mollie tibbetts and repeatedly said he thinks some guy probably has her. mollie tibbetts went missing three weeks ago on a running i will. the reward leading to her whereabouts is $316,000. a highway shootout nearly killed a state trooper, the heart staffing - cam video just released. the incident started as a routine traffic stop in pennsylvania but escalated into a fiery done battle last november.
the suspect is unstable during a sobriety test, when troopers try to arrest him he breaks away, grabbed the gun from his car and starts shooting. he is convicted of attempted murder. one of the troopers was so badly injured his heart stopped for five minutes on his way to the hospital. product his accusers prosecutors will rest their case in the paul manafort trial, it began with the judge apologizing to prosecutors. they filed a motion against the judge after he scolded them in front of a jury after allowing a witness to watch the trial. manafort s defense, no long no telling how long it will take. milania trump s parents are america s newest citizens. her slovenian parents sworn in in federal court in new york, their lawyer says the couple has been living on green cards sponsored by the first lady. critics are slamming her for using chain migration to help get her parents citizenship.
rob: leverage for illegal immigrants, house minority leader nancy pelosi has a new reason to vote democrat. we will have leverage in november. why that is important, it gives leverage to every family, every mom who brings her child across the desert to escape. rob: is this a winning strategy for the democrats? executive director for accuracy in media and liberal analyst kathy, thanks for coming on this morning. rob: this rhetoric from nancy pelosi and others is a grand departure from a couple years ago when president obama was fighting issues like sanctuary cities, him and beretta lynch trying to get rid of sanctuary cities.
it seems times have changed. both parties, americans feeling immigration is the number one issue. it is not the economy or race relations, nothing more important than immigration. looks like democrats have their fingers on the pulse of america and nancy pelosi is saying this party is going to support immigrants. rob: the number one issue in this country, that doesn t necessarily mean the country thinks we should just let everybody into the country. correct. it shows how out of touch leaders like nancy pelosi and keith ellison are who think they can run on open borders when in reality it was that very issue that put someone like donald trump in the white house and helped whenever working-class voters who once voted
democratic, in wisconsin, that is truly interesting to see the democrats are as my friend said getting with the times but the reality is they are so out of touch and desperate they are turning to this. rob: they don t have the majority when you talk about opening up borders, they won t have a majority when they do that kind of talk. they are trying to get support from voters, the youngest voters in the country and one of the biggest blocks, as they are entering voting booths. and african americans who 90% vote democrat. no sign where latinos will go, looks like it might be the democratic party. in the bush days it was 50/50. it is shifting and it might be african-american voters. rob: are they pandering to a
voting block we know they will need to win elections? is that what this is about? they are pandering but they had almost 10 years as majorities and senate and house in eight years under president obama to get something done and they didn t. they don t have a good voting record with hispanics in general and they will see that. rob: a lot of people say neither party wants to fix immigration because it is such a great motivator to get people to the polls on either side. what do you think of that? everyone wants immigration reform. that is what is going on. it is the number one issue because everyone wants immigration reform. rob: do politicians really want to fix it? they have a talking point. it is so different. a politician from new york is so different from a politician from
miami and mexicans. everyone has different issues, not just one answer. that is where the problems are. rob: obama sanctuary cities, democrats risk losing their pragmatic base with this talk? definitely. you have a president just to go back a little bit on illegal immigration, a president willing to do something no other president has done it isn t afraid to. he is coming at it as a passionate citizen, a good reform put in place. thanks for coming on this morning. appreciate your time. 37 after the hour. a warning about global warming,
youtube fighting back against climate change deniers using wikipedia. gridiron defined, the and some outrage that another nfl season. carly shimkus with reaction to that coming up. welcome back. here. or, here. kick your antacid habit with prilosec otc. one pill a day, 24 hours, zero heartburn.
malcolm jenkins put the prevent several players from the seattle seahawks and jacksonville jaguars, the nfl said in a statement, they decided to suspend punishment while their discussion with nfl players association continues but their policy still remains the same. the and some will continue to be played before every game and all players and nonplayer personnel in the field are expected to stand. personnel who do not wish to do so choose to remain in the locker room. fans left outraged by yesterday s and 6. david said this is the most ridiculous thing i have ever seen. time to protest the nfl, totally disrespects the people who died for this country. robert on twitter chiming in says i guess i won t be watching, too bad we can t keep politics out of sports or entertainment. others on social media applauded the players, depends where you
fall on this great debate. jillian: youtube is fact checking. adding fact checkers to videos who call climate change in question. the first report this one saying the text from those fact checking videos comes from wikipedia entries for global warming. in march the company announced they would be fighting fake news by adding fact checkers to certain conspiracy theory videos. scientists are applauding this change but some people are concerned about the source. jillian: you can change wikipedia your self. who fact checks wikipedia? another on twitter says what a joke, wikipedia can be written and edited by anyone. they say if this happens there is going to be a lag in the change of fact checking blurbs so they might fact check it
before changes within the youtube video. those that are a little skeptical of the climate change thing won t care about the wikipedia thing and wondering why youtube is doing this. rob: alexandria ocasio-cortez is mortified at the thought of debating ben shapiro. ben shapiro conservative commentator, he challenged democratic socialist alexandria ocasio-cortez to a debate yesterday and even said he would donate $10,000 to her campaign if she accepted. take a listen. you think republicans are afraid to debate you are talk to your discuss the issues. not only am i eager to discuss the issues that i will offer $10,000 to your campaign today for you to come on sunday special. this sparked a big debate.
ocasio-cortez says just like cats calling i don t owe a response to unsolicited requests from men with bad intentions. also calling for some reason they feel entitled to one. schapiro responded discussion and debate are not bad intentions, slandering someone as a caller without reason or evidence does demonstrate cowardice and bad intent. candace owens, female conservative commentator chimed in what exactly is your excuse for having turned down the debate with me? can t wrap that up, as fake feminism, i will double the author to a charity of your choice, capitalism versus socialism debate. how crazy is that. rob: what a ridiculous excuse. jillian: wireless charging and longer battery life but is the galaxy note 9 worth all your
money? rob: we are going to talk about the phone anyway. brian kill need with what is coming up on fox and friends . if it is okay with you, cody johnson will be sitting there, featured artist on the concert series, natural grass this week with tablecloths, a brand-new week and this man over here wilson like i have never seen before. you see that guy q and the crane camera, the hardest job today, he has to pretend this is difficult.
and a lot of people think ms 13 is not a bad gang. we are overhyping it, they ride bikes and have a lot of tattoos, what is the big deal? greg abbott will be here talking about illegal immigration. guess what happened yesterday at the beginning of preseason football with dolphins, jaguars and giants? players taking a knee, walking out in the middle of the song. we will talk about that as well as new revelations in the trump investigation. what happened the fbi just told us about, we will talk about that and more. and two lovely people i never met in person. rob: he is wide awake. jillian: we are coming right back.
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rob: a man is turned away from the ballot box because of his make america great again hat. he was told it was against state law to cast a ballot while wearing donald trump s campaign slogan. he became so upset police had to escort him out of the building but it turns out the man was right. the hat did not promote a candidate on the primary ballot, county board of elections did apologize to that man. following major back lash, a school backing out of a plan to ditch the pledge of allegiance in the morning. atlanta neighborhood charter school plan to have kids recite a chance written by students and teachers in an effort to be more inclusive. the school says we will return to our original format and provide an opportunity to recite the pledge during the all school morning meeting. jillian: the most expensive phone ever and it has just been
put on free sale for 6 hours now and the new samsung galaxy 9. is it worth your money? want to go broke over the phone? let s ask kurt the cyber guy. you let somebody hold this phone and it is worth it, talking about a price tag on the high end of this which holds 512 gb and at $1249, is it worth it? it has a lot of unique qualities. for example the f 10 comes out of the bottom of the phone, the galaxy node 9, as a button on this. i can hold the button and turn it into a hammer. you can take pictures with this by flipping the pen again and it tells you it has artificial intelligence inside of it, tell you if one of us blinked. jillian: we need all of that.
need and once, there is a fine line. jillian: what else can it do? the size of my iphone 8. this is the iphone tenant galaxy node 9 and jillian: you can clearly ci can t back up my phone. these phones are spectacular, the high end of each company s position. this one now has been a to force apple to think about the screen because there is that war that happens between the two companies. jillian: the screen goes around. 6.4 inches, the largest screen so far. amazing battery life, a full day out of it to increase battery size and the camera has the artificial intelligence that is so 6 rectangular spectacular. jillian: the iphone battery lasts a wildland starts to
dwindle. that isn t about the phone maker. that is about battery technology. my fault? not your fault but the battery only has so many cycles. todd: will that happen? it happens to know batteries no battery lasts forever. jillian: any procedures we need to know about? in terms of once you pull the trigger on this you have to say to yourself if you re a superpower user and have a lot of information on the phone this is the phone that has a micro sd slot and you can add another 512 gb to this phone meaning you would have one terabyte of storage in a phone. if you think about how we use our phones today and you have a pen you can write with and send a note to somebody, the values
start to add up, first number one. it is not shadow proof but it is much stronger, the strongest phone yet with glass on it. we do a drop tests later. jillian: i won t be involved in that. we will be right back. . . [stomach gurgles] when you have nausea, heartburn, indigestion, upset stomach, diarrhea. girl, pepto ultra coating will treat your stomach right. nausea, heartburn, indigestion, upset stomach, diarrhea.
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kiss he ll want more he will give you a twist out on that hardwood floor. rob: i don t know if anybody can see it. cody johnson country music star. jillian: be here all morning long. stop by if you are in new york. mcdonald s offering free food for life, kind of anyway. order from mcdonald s app. today through august 24th for a chance to win a mcgold card. what does that get you three free feels per week for 50 years. rob: sinking teeth into the 42-year-old s side. near gravels stolen texas. telling paramedics first the shark bumped into me and then wanted to taste me. rob, do you ever go home and do this after a heavy night of drinking? rob: i don t drink. i don t care, i love it.

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Transcripts For MSNBCW AM Joy 20180811 14:00:00


thing. the nfl players are at it again taking a knee when they should be standing proudly for the national anthem. numerous players wanted to show outrage something most of them are unable to define. they make a fortune doing what they love. that was friday. they know exactly why they re taking a knee. colin kaepernick hasn t worked since he s been black baballed the nfl. it would do the country a great service one if he would stop tweeting about that and two truly find out what the players are protesting and again, the last part of that tweet, be happy, be cool. a football game that fans are paying so much money to watch and enjoy is no place to protest. you can read the rest of that yourself, but i want to make one thing clear. i don t know if many people realize or understand. when colin kaepernick started protesting at the nfl games, he originally sat on the bench out. sat out the national anthem until another then nfl player
who was also a veteran wrote an open letter to him. he and colin kaepernick met and it was because of that meeting with that veteran that colin kaepernick learn thad ted that the members of the armed forces honor their fallen brothers and sisters is to take a knee. that is why colin kaepernick is taking a knee. something the president either doesn t know or doesn t care to understand. joining me anyway is tim wise, author of white like me. care . new documentary stone ghost, a journey through the confederate south to charlottesville to selma. let me fete your general impression of ten tweets that ten racist statements from the president which i must say are all the statements made since charlottesville and are only some of the things attributed to
the president. that s literally the tip of the iceberg in an over 40 year process of doing or saying racist things on the part of this man. you ve clearly demonstrated the recede. for people to continue denying this man is either himself a racist or at the very least is happy to empower racist is absurd. member, barack obama was called racist by right wing talk show host for having a tax on tanning salon visits. arrest professor gates. that was evidence he hated white people. the very same folks who will talk about taxes on tanning beds will look at all of those things you said and say, well, i m not really sure if he s racist. the reality is whether he in his heart is a david duke level racist or white spremi isspremi
the point. when you spend more time condemning blackball players taking a knee than you spend condemning nazis gathering outside your house tomorrow, you are either a white spremist or someone incredible comfortable with the presence of white nationalist on your doorstep. tells us a lot about you. since you are in washington, let me have you jump off what tim was just saying, the so-called unite the right rally going to be happening tomorrow in washington within a stone s throw of the white house. the president isn t there. he has tweeted about charlottesville. he tweeted moments ago the riots in charlottesville result instead senseless death and division. come together as a nation and condemn all types of racism and acts of violence. peace to all americans.
i want to go back to a tweet that you mentioned jonathan just now from 24 hours ago on the eve of charlottesville. that tweet where he attacks nfl players. the thing about that tweet is if you really dig into it and look at when he s saying, be cool. you re being paid a lot of money to do this. it is what it tells me is that he sees black athletes in general as entertainers. not as american citizens. not as, hey, these are people who are american citizens who really care about what is going on what racial inequality in this country. that is what they re talking about. what does he do? he says be quiet and play. you re getting paid a lot of money to do that. that is the problem with the president. not just entertainers and black
players. it is also black figures just in general. he uses it by saying things like attacking iqs. attacking what is it that you re upset about. you have everything that you can possibly need. and the last thing i ll say on this point, jonathan, is that this week we remembered the birthdays of michael brown, who would have been 22 years old this week. and also stephen clark who would have been 24 years old this week. both killed by police officers. and never have gotten their families haven t gotten any type of, you know, satisfaction or anything for their deaths. and this is what nfl players, black players, black people who are speaking up against this racial inquality are talking about. their lives. let s keep in mind, it was the death of philandro kas fee owe in minnesota thin minnesota
the statute. i wanted to go down and see what the connection was about. we knew it was about more than just a monument. i went to virginia and kentucky and alabama and mississippi and spent time with the descendents of veterans and what these idols, these monuments mean to them, but on the other side black folks that have to walk in the shadows of the statutes. talk about complicated disturbing history. how it resinates today. they ll give you every other reason besides slavery for the civil war. talk about the pinpoints of the lost cause. it wasn t about slavery. slaves were kind of happy. about defending virtue of this antebellum south. there s a lot of mythology and romance. every turn, people are engulf instead this sense of history. heather hieyer i have to go to
old car dealership to get it repaired. since you mentioned the number of confederate monuments that are there. we have graphic today more than 1700 confederate monuments that remain in public spaces since charlottesville, 113 of those confederate symbols have been renamed or removed across the united states. i want to since you brought up heather heyer. her mother, susan, understandably has been more public this week because it s the anniversary of charlottesville. she gave an interview to msnbc on friday. let s take a look at that. can you talk at all whether the president has helped or hurt since charlottesville. i personally couldn t say one way or the other. i can tell you what dade duke and richard spencer and matthew
have said. the current administration has given them the go ahead. given them a thumbs up. given them a wink and nod. that s their words. not mine. tim, i mean, isn t that the issue here? i mean, i spent the opening five minutes of this show flat out calling the president a racist, but there are people who were using his using of the presidency to be open about their bigotry. this is the thing. if donald trump were a remotedly decedent human being and felt as though he were being misunderstood by david duke, misunderstood by richard spencer. what he would do is go before the american people and go, oh, i m so sorry. this is not what i mean at all. and i absolutely reject every aspect of what you re saying, but the reality is he is slowly at the public rhetoric around immigration and crime and the
very issues neo nazis have been talking about for years, he s capping their rhetoric. that s why they feel emboldened. not only is he not condemning them and saying oh, my god you totally are misunderstanding me. let me clarify. he s giving them aide and comfort. and, you know, i much prefer. it s funny. here s a guy whose motto was make america great again. america was never great for people of color. one of the things that made us a little greater was one upon a time a few generations back, we knew how to deal with nazis. we didn t say there were some fine people among them. we realize ds they gd they got . in this era, we forgotten that wisdom. if make america means let s get back to a time when we did not coddle nazis. let s go back to nostalgic time of white male domination. that is what they are talking about. that is what the president is playing too and that s what is so incredibly dangerous in this moment of our history.
welcome to the show. shawn sekulow and mayor rudy giuliani. how about that. giuliani and sekulow. for purposes of right now, my colleague and cocounsel in a case involving all russia inquiry that we re engaged in. the may have red something about it. also going to be taking your calls. they re lawyers. didn t have routine guest appearance on a radio show. instead for three hours, the members of legal team guest hosted sean hannity syndicated radio show giving them unfettered access to spout off opinion while slamming special counsel robert mueller russia investigation. i think if i were the
attorney general, i would appoint an independent counsel. two purposes, to appropriately p prosecute the people who violated these laws. comey clearly leaked a document that he wasn t supposed to leak. if you look at scope and nature of the inquiry t way it started. the corruption at the outset. looks like ill legitimate investigation. said this a long time back. it s a witch hunt. i want to play one more sound bite from the tour defours that was sekulow, giuliani. i think what we have to get clear is a lot of people are telling it this way. if he s telling the truth, just go in and testify. welcome to the real world. the fact is he is telling the
truth. they re walking him in a possible perjury trap. not because he isn t telling the truth, but because somebody else isn t telling the truth who they would credit. namely comey. paul, i m not a lawyer, but if someone isn t telling the truth well, i mean, comey is the one who is under oath having said something. wouldn t comey be somebody who would be liable or subject to perjury if he didn t tell the truth? of course and no problem you re not a lawyer. rudy giuliani the not an effective lawyer. he s a hype man. entertainer, and doesn t understand basic things about how perjury works. how his client has the obligation to tell the truth. he did you want think trump is capable of going into a grand
jury. that s why all the hype. the great congressman former congressman from michigan john dingle had one of the best twitter feeds on twitter. he had a tweet yesterday quote. it s only a prerjury trap if you re a dam liar. as many people said, your client s inability to tell the truth does not make it at perjury trap. that s your client s problem. another thing going on i want people to understand. giuliani, sekulow, most of trump supporters want to elevate him to the point he s above the law. if he was simply, if donald trump simply acted like a normal
american citizen, then we have normal american laws that can protect him. if he s afraid he goes into a situation and incriminate himself, we have a law for that. it s called the fifth amendment. he can say i have a right against self incrimination and this part of the this part is done. why can t he do that. why can t he subject himself to the laws that protect us and him. that s a rhetorical question, right? i think we know why. i do not know why taking the fifth is off the table for him. i get in a normal political world. in a normal presidency, we know that a president taking the fifth, that is like a political nuclear bomb for a presidency, but not this guy. this hasn t been normal since access hollywood. if access hollywood isn t going
to stop him and good people on both sides aren t going to stop him, i don t see how the fifth stops him in any way. it s a legitimate legal strategy as opposed to whatever the heck giuliani and sekulow are doing right now. what they are doing, they are lawyers, but they re playing tv lawyers because this is they are playing in the court of public opinion. we talked about this a lot. all the time that they probably view what is this is going to end up in congress and some sort of kbuchimpeachment process whi a pretty process. they ve always been communicating to everyone what they say the president will or won t do. one of those things is talking about the interview topics that president trump would allow himself to be asked about. so associates contact with russia. possibly coordination with trump s campaign and election
interference. these aren t the things they want to talk about. these are the things they don t want to talk about. obstruction of justice, that s the whole special counsel investigation. yes, that and collusion, the national security issue, but look. president trump is never, ever going to sit in a room with a grand jury and bob mueller and answer questions. it ain t going to happen. mueller is being played by giuliani thinks that s what he is doing. the thing is, president trump really needs a lawyer at this point. we see him running scared. he s issued 400 tweets about mueller and the russian investigation. so some of his real lawyers are apparently talking to mueller as lawyers do about the status of the investigation about what might happen. and trump seems to think something is coming.
we have this indictment of the russians for hacking. and then it looks like next down the line is roger stone who was the go between the russians and the trump campaign. the third, the next act. it looks like it might be somebody really high up in the trump campaign. we should point out the trump has already tweeted twice this morning about the investigation. more tape troubles for the white house. that s next. oh! oh! ozempic®! (vo) people with type 2 diabetes are excited about the potential of once-weekly ozempic®. in a study with ozempic®, a majority of adults lowered their blood sugar and reached an a1c of less than seven and maintained it. oh! under seven?
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the charges that have been levied against me are meritless. i will mount a vigorous defense in court to clear my name. i look forward to being fully vindicated and exonerated. of any and all questions relating to my affiliation. we have breaking news about chris collins. first member of congress to endorse president trump s presidential campaign. thursday of inside trader. collins has denied the charges. announced he s spending re-election campaign and will attempt to remove his name from the ballot. joining me now is evan siegfried, republican strategist. host of series xm.
and back with me from washington start with evan. what do you make of this news? in the clip we showed, he was defiant. even out of camera range, he was absolutely going to run for re-election. now here we are. somebody within the party tapped him on the shoulder and said you can be defiant, you can also lose us the seat and give democrats the narrative of culture of corruption. if we put your case on scott pruitt and ryan zinke. he is i mean, he s saying he s completely innocent and be proven. as is every american s right. right. i do want to point out the southern district, when it comes to political leader, they go through this and dot every i and
cross every t seven times before this. he s in serious trouble. when you re charged with 11 felonies. this is classic insider trading. got the information from inside sources. family sold the stock and information goes public. couldn t make a better caser tr. local leaders were saying they were not publically backing him. he felt he has to get out. this is a district he won by 67% last time and the time before and cycle before in 2014. it s a solid red district. chris collins became district in play and they can t lose, they can t afford to lows any seasoned republicans because a blue waive might come. they need to see. i total le agree with what dean and evan said. this is district r plus 22. safe republican district. the moment this announcement happened, not today s announcement, but him getting arrested. it was changed to a competitive
seed and right now democrats have the enthusiasenthusiasm. and i agree, i think republicans were looking at this and saying, hey, you re just we can t have you sticking around. what you saw the other day during the press conference when they were laying out what he was arrested for, it seemed pretty airtight. he seems very corrupt. and just a long list of very best people of donald trump. some of the only hire the best people. birds of a feather. the prosecutors had what was it, sir, phone calls that the congressman made to his son. one which is already spectacular, but the congressman was at the congressional picnic at the white house. there s a picture from a disstance of him on the phones presumably calling his son.
i mean, in republicans ran on culture of corruption.tance of presumably calling his son. i mean, in republicans ran on culture of corruption. here we are 12 years later. this is really corrupt from manafort to collins to pruitt. there is a culture of corruption from the guy who said he was going to drain the swamp. i think there s corruption in every administration and every congress. never on the level. do you remember not like this in obama. no, no. no evidence. don t go there evan. come on now. clean that up, evan. let me finish. you guys were premature with the reaction. that s why i threw in congress. members of congress that are corrupt. this administration as well as those around it because chris collins was in the trump orbit or first member of congress. it s incompetent corruption. they re not even good at that. it s just surprising. is it incompetent or. do you remember when
president obama s campaign manager on federal trial. no, i don t. remember when national security adviser pled to a felony or deputy campaign manager pled guilty to the felony. i do remember the irs scandal. i know you re not defending trump. it s not about that. this culture of corruption is a whole different level. campaign manager literally on trial as we sit here. deputy campaign manager. and the idea trump didn t know manafort is a joke. he knew him from the days he had a lobbying firm and donald trump was a client and in 2006, donald trump sold a condo for $3.7 million in cash to paul manafort and that didn t raise any flags. that s when the whole window of accusations began. he knew paul manafort. surrounded himself with criminals. he s comfortable with people who bend the law or break the law. evan said something in his
initial answer that hi want to flesh out more. that is the fact that after being defiant and saying he was going to run for re-election and now the congressman collins said he is not going to run for re-election, take his try to get name removed from the ballot. evan, in a normal world, i think you re right. leaders in congress would go to collins and say, brother, you can t run. get out of this race, but that s a political calculation. where is the moral calculation with the republican caucus. not just the corruption. this is about family and the party of family value. his right of patriotism. look at who they have at the head head of the republican party. donald trump who literally steps on all of these things. they have given away the party
to donald trump. and the republican party is the trump party. and when you look at the administration it is reex of corruption from secretaries to donald trump to secretaries and now people who supported donald trump from the beginning. you have devin nunez. you can go on. you have the conservative group of the house. the freedom caucus. exactly. who do his bidding at the drop of the hat. you have the leadership, mitch mcconnell, paul ryan who don t say anything. not protecting this country. protecting the party. right. let me get evan in here on this. why the party of family values. party of strong defense. party of be weary of russia. this party of no deficits no debt. fiscal probe ity.
i don t think we gave it away. what happened was the people were upset left. in 2016, 31% of the country were republicans. now in 2018, it s 28%. that s 10 million less republicans. those are the people who care about that and say i m not going to be a part of this personality. in addition to that, bleeding young republicans from the party between december 2015 and march 2017. we lost republicans. republicans like to talk about how president trump s approval rating are higher than any president. that s true. the only people who are staying are the ones cheering as he completely flips us on moral values. doesn t speak up against racial violence and intolerance. says there should be penalties for kneeling before the national anthem. i think there should be penalties for kneeling before putin in helsinki, but that s me. trump is the gop and the gop
is trump. that s who it is. the democratic party has to run against in 2018. make it clear, if you opposed to bigotry and sexism and racism. the way to do is cast a vote in 87 days on november 6. the gap has gotten smaller. give people a reason to vote for us more so than we re doing. not sure at a national level of local race by lace level right now. give people a reason to come out and vote for democrats to win big. i agree with you. love to have you jump in. what we ve seen with special elections is cookie cutter democratic. you cannot ask a democratic in
alabama to run on the same issues that you ask a democratic in california to run on to separate parts of the country. two separate constituencies. by and large, concerns. i would say the democrats run your race. i agree with you on that, jonathan. there are issues that are moving democrats just across the board. doesn t matter if you re in a red state or d state. which is health care. right. which is a family separation. that is an immigration. that is actually moving people and we see that. which is the tax cuts. just incredibly popular and our base is reacting to all of those things. there is some anti-trump sentiment as well. moving the base. we have issues. we are on the right side of history. we have real issues to one. i do want to get back to republicans for a second. when evan said they didn t they didn t give it away.
they lost republicans, but my argument to evan is this, where is mitch mcconnell? where is paul ryan. ? why are they not fighting and doing their job and holding the president accountable. they re not. they re silent. they say a couple of words, but don t take action. their words are weak. that s the point i don t understand. yes. very quickly. the big problem is you do that and have the gop base go crazy and start primarying every republican out there and wind up with trump like figures in congress, which we don t want. my advice for democrats, well, yes, each race is local. the two things really need to hammer down on health care. i wrote on nbc news thinking. on the academy, democrats can see the point. it s agreed upon. is it a great economy for you.
don t get in immigration. it s a trap. and i can see that. a real trap. we ll be back with us in next hour. coming up in our next hour, nazis are coming to washington and the latest on omarosa s blockbuster book. (vo) there s so much we want to show her. we needed a car that would last long enough to see it all. (avo) subaru outback. 98% are still on the road after 10 years. come on mom, let s go! (avo) right now, get 0% apr financing on the 2018 subaru outback. you wouldn t accept an incomplete job from any one else. why accept it from your allergy pills? flonase sensimist relieves all your worst symptoms, including nasal congestion, which most pills don t. and all from a gentle mist you can barely feel. flonase sensimist.
no experience, no job. i could do that job, but who would give me the chance? army, navy, air force, marines. and now you can add space force. vice president mike pence announced on thursday plans to establish space force as soon as 2020 as the first new branch added to the military since world war ii. donald trump has been advocating for a space force for months. and proudly tweeted after pence s announcement, space force all the way. pence says it s necessary for dominance over foreign adversaries. president trump has said in his words, it is not enough to merely have an american presence in space. we must have american dominance in space. our adversaries have transformed space into a war-fighting domain
already. and the united states will not shrink from this challenge. okay, we got to talk about this. joining me now is physicist and author of the future of humanity. michio, i didn t realize space was already some sort of battle domain. where have i been? first of all, space is where the economy is, gps, weather satellites. all of it is done in outer space. let s not fool ourselves. the russians, the chinese and the united states have been working on killer satellite technology. what does that mean? satellites that go up there and they shoot things? we re talking about hydrogen bam over north korea. the pulse would knock out half of our weather satellites, blinding us and knock out most of our power stations so we
would have blackouts through north america. a single hydrogen warhead could create havoc. we re the most vulnerable because we have over 50% of the commercial operating satellites are u.s. satellites. so, the chinese have an expression. never pick up a boulder only to drop it on your own feet. we have to be very careful this doesn t backfire on us because we re sitting ducks. our satellites are not reinforced. they have no anti-missile capabilities. is anybody s satellite reinforced? pretty much no. okay. so, all the satellites could easily be wiped out in case of a nuclear war. that s why i personally believe we should renegotiate the outer space treaty of 1967 to beef it up. the outer space treaty is 50 years old. it s way out of date. what does it say? it says two things. first, no nuclear weapons in space and, two, no one can put a flag on the moon and say i own the moon.
however, now we have nonnuclear satellite killer tech none, laser cannon, kinetic energy weapons that can blind, blind the enemy in the opening seconds of technologically blind? that s right. that s why we think there should be a new outer space treaty of 1967 to regulate warfare which may break out in outer space and could eisley spiral out of control. is anybody talking about war breaking out in outer space? that s on the agenda of every nation reading the words of the president is how far will this go with this space force? now, if it s just a cop on the block regulating traffic in space, that s one thing. but if it goes to war, think about it, all nations rely upon outer space for their economy, for communications. it would create havoc if war were to break out in space. we re talking about war breaking out in outer space
because the president of the united states is talking about a space force to guard against a war breaking out in outer space? so, we ve been talking about this war breaking out in outer space if the united states under president trump weren t talking about building a space force. first, let s not be naive. the chinese, the russians, they ve all been working on killer satellite technology secretly. 11 years ago the chinese had blew one of their own satellites out just to prove they can do it. the russians even announced just recently that they are working on laser cannons, that in principle could knock out a satellite. you were saying before we went on that there are laser cannons, but they re not really they re not really effective. we re working on lasers that go ship-to-ship, for example, in ship-to-ship warfare. close range contact with the enemy. however, to knock out a satellite in outer space takes a whole other range of technologies. let s face it, the super powers
are working on these kind of technologies. i wish we had more time because i ve got all sorts of questions. we re talking lasers. i was wondering, what happens if you shoot a gun in space? what happens to the bullet? first of all, the bullet does fire. it depends if you have enough oxidizer to get the chemical reaction going. if you fire a gun inside a rocket ship, you can kiss your butt good-bye. good-bye, michio. thank you, michio, for being here. this was great. drive safely. but allstate actually helps you drive safely. with drivewise. it lets you know when you go too fast. .and brake too hard. with feedback to help you drive safer. giving you the power to actually lower your cost. unfortunately, it can t do anything about that. now that you know the truth. are you in good hands?
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[ crowd chanting ] welcome back. i m jonathan capehart in for joy reid. it was a year ago today we saw white nationalists carrying tiki toe torches and chanting hate messages on the streets of charlottesville, and the next day a rally against the removal of confederates ended in violence. heather heyer was killed when a man drove his car into the crowd. on this anniversary, charlottesville is taking no chances. organizers of the unite the right rally are taking to the streets again, but this time they re planning to demonstrate in washington, d.c., right
across from the white house with former kkk leader among the invitees. once again, they ll be met by counterdemonstrations. muirial bowser, the mayor of washington, d.c., says the city is on high alert. on sunday we know that we have people coming to our city for the sole purpose of spewing hate. it didn t make sense last year and it doesn t make sense now. we, the people of washington, d.c., say unequivocally that we denounce hate, we denounce anti-semitism and we denounce the rhetoric that we expect to hear this sunday. joining me now, msnbc national reporter trymaine lee who has a new documentary called stone ghosts and jason johnson, who s in charlottesville, richard cohen, and senior adviser for
moveon.org. we just heard coming into this segment from washington, d.c., mayor muirial bowser. let s hear from the charlottesville mayor walker. the deep-seeded racism has been a major problem and still remains a problem in charlottesville. the notion that we were talking about outsiders invading and not talking about, you know, two uva alum who called people into our town to reek havoc and were joined by some people who live here. that s the message that i hope people are well aware of. charlottesville is a really harmful place if you are black, hispanic and low income and white. richard, let me come to you first, being at the southern poverty law center. what kind of changes have we seen in america when it comes to
hate in the year since charlottesville. we ve seen a lot of the members of the unite the right fallen on hard times, taken off the internet, facing lawsuits, arrests. we ve seen a lot of energy from the far right move to the northwest with groups like the proud boys. so, you know, today i don t expect there to be anything like we saw in charlottesville a year ago and i m less concerned with what happens outside of the white house, quite frankly, than i am concerned with what happens inside when it comes to white nationalism. jason, you re in charlottesville. can you give me a sense of there s a state of emergency that s been declared through monday. what s the mood, the sense you get on the streets there? there are police everywhere, jonathan. it reminds me of going to the funeral for clemente pinkney several years ago in charleston,
south carolina. there are police on every corner, volunteers at every corner. i can tell you as a black man, this is the nicest i ve seen police treat me and i m a uva alum. the sense, if you just talk to the people who are here, it s one of sorrow. and i ve talked to lots of people who are faculty and students and people who have been a part of the charlottesville community and they re saying even after a year, even with the discussions we re having, we don t know how to tell people to come back to this city. there s a huge contrast in the sort of self-reflection i m seeing for many white people in charlottesville compared to the object s fury i saw in ferguson. that s a good point. a poll out by quinnipiac from june 27th to july 1st asked people whether they thought president trump emboldens racist people to express their beliefs. you see there well, i think it just flipped. it s 55% believed president
trump emboldens racism. you see there 49% of people from that same poll believe president trump is racist. i wrote a piece last week saying, yes, donald trump, you are racist. what does it say about america a year after charlottesville that we have a president, despite the tweet he sent out this morning saying acknowledging the anniversary that we have a president who gives license to white supremacists to not only express their beliefs openly but to march on the streets of an american city? yeah, it means we have a dangerous president in the white house right now, who is, indeed, a white supremacist, a white nationalist, whatever word/phrase you want to use to call him. there s also vox had an article that just came out recently about a report that shows that 11 million white americans think like alt-right. those are numbers that s a big number. that s incredibly concerning for where we are as a country.
i also, jonathan, went to charlottesville this past week. one of the things that stuck out to me as i was listening to the mayor of charlottesville speak when she says charlottesville is dangerous for essentially people of color, brown and black people, is that right next to the courthouse there, there s a prominent statue of stonewall jackson. i went down there to talk to activists to see how things were going down there. just think about it, if you are a person of color and you re going to the courthouse to get justice, you know, to figure out how to fix a problem ordeal with an issue, a legal issue, you have to pass by stonewall jackson. and that is the message that that s been given to the people of charlottesville. and i think that plays nationally as well as how people of color feel in this country. trymaine, i want to show a piece from your documentary,
stone ghost. you talked to someone about this auction block that monument that is in town. let s take a look at that and i ll talk to you about it on the other side. reporter: what was it like growing up with that auction block right there on the corner? it was like an embarrassment. i don t need to see that block to know what the past was. it makes you mad because i can say that was my great grandpa, grandma, you bring them out on the boat and sell them. how do you moralize something like that? it s totally unfair and unreal that people can actually sit there and say that, we re just saving history? no, what you re doing is spitting in our faces. that s what you re doing. that s really interesting because that s i had never heard of this slave rock, this monument. we re always talking about robert e. lee, stonewall jackson, jefferson davis and these monuments and yet here s
something that s supposedly supposed to acknowledge a horror, but it doesn t really. here s the thing. what we saw in charlottesville was sparked in defense of robert e. lee, a statue, but we knew it was more than a statue or monument. it s a proxy for white power, white the supremacy. there are artifacts all across the country, like that auction block, which is an actual auction block where human beings were bought and sold in this community by people in this community for 100 years. people walk down that street and it s a reminder of how they were dehumanized by people in this community. there was a debate on city council. they voted 6-1 to keep the block there for educational purposes. the lone black dissenting vote was the only black city councilman on the council. beyond the big statues, in fair view, kentucky, where jefferson davis was born, you have the statues of robert e. lee and jefferson davis and then things baked into the fabric of our communities that are sheer
reminders of just what happened to so many of us in this country. did you mitch landrieu, when he was the mayor of new orleans and caught all sorts of hell when he removed, i think, three statues and one monument there in the crescent city gave an incredible speech about history and the myth of the lost cause and how this reverence for this lost cause has blinded people to history. you re going down into southern states are people from from what you saw, are people still blinded by history? their understanding of history and the civil war and by large measure race relations is shaped by that lost cause propaganda. early on the doors of the confederate veterans and other groups sympathetic to the confederacy took control of local school boards to make sure when their children were taught
would set the stage for generations. you get a whole generation of politicians supporting segregation and other racist policies. the people on the ground in rural areas and in the cities still believe the civil war was more about sovereignty and states rights than slavery. they ll continue almost to a person. they say black own slaves too. there were white slaves. they don t understand servitude to indentured slavery. if you talk to them or visit local museums, the framing of the entire civil war, the black confederates who fought for the confederates, the mythology that s been shaped by early propaganda pervades today. richard, you re in montgomery, alabama, you re right there in the cradle of the confederacy. talk more about that. i think the phenomenon that your prior guest spoke to is very, very real. i d also point out something else. after nikki haley took down the
confederate flag in the capitol in south carolina, we saw 300 confederate pro-confederate frag rallies around the country. they were concentrated but not limited to the south. we saw rallies in oregon, the state of washington, pennsylvania. those rallies were expression of white pride. right now we have about 1700 monuments, street names and even the names of military bases after so-called confederate war heroes. so, the problem, i think, is concentrated in the south but not limited to it by any means. right. jason, give me your yeah. go ahead. i was going to say, in all of this, as we re going through what i think is an important history lesson about where these monuments are and how they affect us today, all of this has to be placed directly in the lap of the president of the united states. donald trump is a terrorist sympathizer. you cannot be a white nationalist and not you can t
accomplish white national ichl in america without violence. the president has increasingly coddled and supported verbally and in policy terrorists. i think to the degree we talk about racism, that s fine, right? racism can go over people s heads. this is terror. there was a terror attack in charlottesville. it s 2018 and we ve got nazis marching on the capitol of our country and our president doesn t do anything about it. so, until we start viewing this as a terror attack, a slow-moving terror attack encouraged by the president of the united states, i think we ll be missing the boat on how dangerous this behavior is. karine, i asked you this question in an unrelated block last hour, but again, it comes back to if the president of the united states is not going to speak out against terror, is the way i think jason accurately puts it, that puts the onus on the co-equal branch of government, congress, which is controlled by the president s party. yet we have heard nothing from the speaker of the house, paul
ryan, or from the senate majority leader, mitch mcconnell. right. that s exactly what we re talking about. earlier you have a party who is supposed to be about family values and patriotism, who are doing everything that they can to seemingly, at least on the house side, not get to the bottom of what happened with russia attacking our elections or not stopping or taking real action or even try to censure the president after his comments a year ago. it s really appalling. and so that s why november is incredibly important. this is why people need to come out and vote. this is why democrats need to take back the house. that s the only way we ll see a guardrail, you know, stopgap to this runaway train that is the trump administration. i know we re running out of time but i want to play one more piece from trymaine s documentary stone ghost . if you don t have some type
of proof, being a generation from now, you ll have people arguing it and it may just vanish. but considering that for a great number of people in this country, those things represent deep trauma and great violence against people. but haven t we got beyond that. well all right. how many people living in america today were slaves? how many people live in america today own slaves? it s roughly zero. so, we should have got beyond that. but we don t have i think myself as an example, we don t have our last names, our religion, this tongue we re speaking with this is not my native language either. but you have great benefit. everybody in america has a benefit. it s the greatest country in the world. but not everyone has the benefit of slavery,y e correct? everybody living in america today has a great opportunity the people of african descent, descend ants of
afternoafrican slaves, what benefit did they get? they re here. thank you for that. to hear him say, they re here the idea, this is the mythology and romance around the lost cause and what these symbols represent, that we were better off under slavery. that america is the greatest because of those virtues sewn in the early days. it s incredible that in 2018 that we re still having this conversation, still having to educate people, still having to remind people that even though there aren t slaves here or people who own slaves who are still alive, that the vestiges of slavery, the vestiges of stealing people from their native land, forcing them to create a country and then shunting them aside once they were emancipated, that there is something morally wrong with that and that has to be reckoned with. i have to leave my little sermon
there. thank you. karine will be back with us. triesmaine s documentary stone ghosts in the south is online right now at msnbc.com/stoneghosts. up next, suing nazis. whoooo. tripadvisor makes finding your perfect hotel. relaxing. just enter your destination and dates.
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when we were on fourth street where the car rammed into the protesters, we automatically knew it was intentional. we knew when we went to the rally that people were saying, violence it going to happen, it might be dangerous. we knew that on the face. but for someone to ram a car through a crowd of peaceful protesters, we didn t expect it. finding out all the evidence and everything like that, it s like we were in a war zone. in the year since that deadly rally in charlottesville, virginia, some victims have fought back, filing a lawsuit against the organizers of the rally. just last month, a federal judge ruled the case can move forward against rally organizer jason kessler and several others. among the plaintiffs are some of the people who are injured in this iconic photo, as the driver james fields allegedly drove into a crowd of counterprotesters killing 32-year-old heather heyer. joining me now, robby caplan, the attorney representing the plaintiffs in the lawsuit against unite the right rally. if she looks familiar, it s
because she alwayss also represented edy windsor in the supreme court case that led to all the state and federal laws for same-sex marriage. thank you for coming in and talking about this. a year later we re all talking about charlottesville. judge norman moon s conclusion was plaintiffs have for the most part adequately alleged that the defendants formed a conspiracy to hurt black and jewish individuals and their supporters because of their race at the august 11th and 12th events. you weren t surprised that the plaintiff that by this result or that the plaintiffs had standing? no, i wasn t surprised. i think i was we were all very pleased by how incredibly comprehensive and careful a job judge moon did. we were very pleased by the fact that he effectively rebutted their two biggest defenses of
people like jason kessler and others. jason kessler is organizing the rally in d.c. today. one, we have an absolute right to do this. it s complete free speech, we re protected by the first amendment. judge moon said to that, that s silly. you have a free speech right but you don t have a free speech right to plan a violent conspiracy, to plan a mob, committing violence, to plan a bank robbery. it s no different than planning a bank robbery. so, he took care of that. their second defense was or second argument was, well, even if we really did say that stuff and even if we really didn t mean it, your honor, we didn t intend for anyone to run over people, to drive into a crowd and hurt anyone with a car. we were talking about sticks and clubs and guns, but not cars. he said, it doesn t matter. if you intended to hurt people, which they did with guns and clubs, and tiki torches, the fact that someone used a car to
do it, you re still liable for it. let s take a listen is is it a listen? no, full screen, this is from vox. the alt-right is going you have a week, bros, best spend it having four or five of your friends simulate jumping you. go light, don t get injured before the event. there s another one, i m ready to crack skulls. another one, let s make this channel great again. the carolinas kind of started the revolutionary war and the civil war, so why not add the race war/second civil war to the list? this is happening on a gamer app where they re having these conversations. they re planning planning violence. absolutely. it s scary stuff. we just won another motion last week, which is crucial to the case.
we subpoenaed discord. we have a bunch of these chats because some of them were released online. but we don t have all of them. we served a subpoenaed to get all of them. a woman by the name or handle, i don t know who she is, by the handle of crystalknight, which is based on german pilgrim that happened against jews in nazi germany in 1938. using that handle she used that to quash the subpoena, saying she didn t want her identity to be known. the judge denied that so we ll get a bunch of stuff very soon. let s show that full screen. this comes from the ap, the judge, u.s. magistrate judge sparrows. le 28-page order says the woman s first amendment rights to free speech don t outweigh the importance of disclosing her identity to plaintiffs attorneys suing over the rally s violence. that s once again making it clear that the right to free
speech in the first amendment is not absolutely you re not shielded from any kind of protection or prosecution. right. obviously, when people commit crimes, they talk about crimes before they do it. all that speech preparing and planning for the crime, none of that is protected. judges and juries and prosecutors admit that in court every single day in this country. it s a very simple proposition and that s what the court held here. how hard was it for you to get some of the victims of the charlottesville onto this lawsuit? i have to say, the courage of the peoples, marcus, you saw in the picture, and marissa, who you saw, who got married in the spring, really continues to astound me. they not only had the bravery to show up on august 11th and 12th and get hurt and continue to be in the picture and be the target of really horrible, horrible
stuff on the dark web every day. they all said to a person that they wanted to fight back the right way. the right way to fight back in this country is not with sticks and stones and guns and cars, speeding cars, it s to do so in court under the law, with judges and juries. to a person, every single one of them wanted to do that to get justice. robbie, thank you for the work you re doing. thank you. up next, omarosa spills all the tea. ooh, heaven is a place on earth uhp. i didn t believe it. again. ooh, baby, do you know what that s worth? i want to believe it. [ claps hands ] ooh i m not hearing the confidence. okay, hold the name your price tool.
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he was simply spouting fake sports. i know all about sports. up next, omarosa tells all. alice is living with metastatic breast cancer, which is breast cancer that has spread to other parts of her body. she s also taking prescription ibrance with an aromatase inhibitor, which is for postmenopausal women with hormone receptor-positive her2- metastatic breast cancer as the first hormonal based therapy. ibrance plus letrozole was significantly more effective at delaying disease progression versus letrozole. patients taking ibrance can develop low white blood cell counts, which may cause serious infections that can lead to death. before taking ibrance, tell your doctor if you have fever, chills, or other signs of infection, liver or kidney problems, are pregnant, breastfeeding, or plan to become pregnant. common side effects include low red blood cell and low platelet counts, infections, tiredness, nausea,
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from behind the closed doors of the trump white house. the former white house aide who initially said she voluntarily vacated her position, but the white house said she was fired, has laid out details in her new memorial unhinged. she spills the tea on everything from what she calls trump s racist language to the hush money she says she was offered to keep quiet. back with me is republican strategist evan siegfried, and karine juan-pierre. i m coming to you after we play this epic clip of an interview that omarosa gave to npr about the controversy over the existence of tapes where then private citizen donald trump dropped the n word during celebrity apprentice. let s take a listen to this. and once i heard it you have heard this tape? i have heard this tape. you heard the president of
the united states i heard the president of the united states use not only the n-word but as bill pruitt described during that interview, other horrible things during the production of the apprentice . you don t mention that in the book, that you ve actually heard the tape. is that new? no. forgive me, though. that sounds like you just heard the account of the tape. did you actually hear the tape? did you miss the whole girl, did you read my book? i m sorry. it wasn t michelle martin, it was rachel martin. karine, come on, now. well, here s the thing. let s be really clear of what s happening here. omarosa is trying to sell her book. i mean, she basically says it in that back and forth. girl, did you read my book? please, read my book. it s in the book. i mention it in the book. i mean, here s the thing about
this. omarosa has known donald trump now for, what, 14 years? she knew him when he jumped into the political arena in 2011 and was the grand wizard of the birther movement. she knew him and stood by him during the election when he actually kicked off his election going after mexicans, calling them rapist and drug dealers. then she went into the white house and stood by him for a year after he repealed daca, he repealed tps and also and also just tried to ban an entire religion. so, now the surprise of hearing the n word on a tape and letting us know, oh, by the way, he s a racist and bigot, which we already knew, it s just a little bit kind of amazing. like i said, she s trying to sell a book. so, you know, in august of 2015, in this very studio, the
saturday after trump appeared in his first presidential debate during the republican primary, we brought in our own trump whisperer, omarosa. we flew her in from california and she had this to say. are you surprised by anything that happened on that debate stage thursday? i m not surprised at all. that first moment set the tone that he was a true leader that could not be controlled, manipulated or bought. do you think it s a good thing or a bad thing that reality television and the ethos there is bleeding into presidential politics? bleeding into it? when you have a big reality tv star, as the front-runner for the republican nomination, there s no way to separate it. this is the new reality. she s not lying. she s not. she didn t lie then. for me, that was the single most important interview i did in terms of understanding donald trump. and that host was great, whoever that interviewer was.
first of all, sarah huckabee sanders said the book is filled with lies and false accusations. i don t know where the bombshell comes from the fact that he s racist and he s sexist. she d have to write a book. they would have to put his campaign rally speeches in a book and we could have read it. what s stunning is in private he s thoughtful and compassionate. the man telling us that the reality of what we ve been seeing through the media is the reality of donald trump is nothing new. he might have mental issues, he might be a racist, he might be a bigot. we know this. it s remarkable. it s remarkable, people are like, the book s not being fact-checked. i don t care about a book being fact-checked by omarosa. this man lying daily is more important. now karine said she would say anything to sell her book. that s what it s about. let s talk about her credibility, evan. i mean, she did she said in this space, she had hillary
clinton tattooed on her left arm. months later she s on the campaign trail. months after that she s in the white house with some nebulous job as a white house official. will people rally around omarosa? of course not. it s probably the most republicans and democrats will agree all year, she s a grifter and a fraud star fraudster, excuse me. fraud star is good, too. remember, she s defending president trump during the campaign and then during the white house. and everybody who is listening to her then said, she s lying. she s doing it now. but there are some people who are saying, oh, clearly she s telling the truth because she like what she s saying. she was a liar then and liar now trying to salvage her career because she knows her job prospects are terrible. remember when she decided to have a bridal party photo shoot in the white house south lawn. the taxpayers paid for that because she was so all high
and mighty. she didn t do anything running the office much the public liaison. she was an incompetent aide and now she s trying to cash in. she can t even get her facts straight in the npr interview where she says, oh, yeah, i wrote about it in my book but the book says she never heard the tapes directly. why should we trust her? i wouldn t trust her to walk across the street. that s why donald trump hired her. it s the combination of last year. he surrounds himself with people he likes, the culture of corruption, lies of omarosa, ethical violations. this is donald trump, why not have omarosa around you, michael flynn, paul manafort, rick gates, the whole crew there. this is where we are. i don t care if she has no credibility. this is fodder, this is fun. look at the money michael wolf made, millions of dollars. millions of dollars in writing his book. in is just a payday for keeping her in the media. one important point that came out of this entire story that i think people are missing. the washington post reported yesterday that omarosa was offered by layer raleigh trump a
$15,000 a month contract by the trump campaign to keep silent. this the same amount of money keith schiller, oval office operations, was offered. what s going on here? is this shady hush money? is the rnc and campaign being used for that? i don t know. i think you re asking a rhetorical question. omarosa famously said this on front line on pbs that set the world afire at that time. i m wondering, what does she think about it now? let s take a look at that. every critic, every detractor will have to bow down to president trump. it s everyone who s ever doubted donald, whoever disagreed, whoever challenged him. it is the ultimate revenge to become the most powerful man in the universe. i mean, i didn t know she was talking about putin, but, karine, she s going to have to
live down those words, or maybe bow down to those words. i don t think it really matters to her. she knows exactly what she signed up for. it s reality tv. she knew that she was a character. she was kind of reliving the villain role in the apprentice and now in the presidency. she knew what she needed to do to get to stay close to tth trump and she did it. i think the thing i want to see, and let s see if it happens, the omarosa tweets from the trump twitter feed. like, are they coming? i m looking to see what he s going to say about this book. i like i don t know. one of the best parts of the book is she walked in and donald trump was eating paper off his desk. i m not exaggerating. literally eating paper off his desk. they denied that. when the white house has to deny that the president is eating paper off his desk, this is where we are in 2018. i think the book has caught white house to put out a factual statement saying, omarosa is lying. keep talking i was going to say also, i mean, we saw her in her time in
addition to that bridal party photo shoot in the white house, she sent a letter in august of last year to the congressional black caucus where she referred to herself as the honorable omarosa. she s all about the celebrity. when everybody looks at her and laugh because she s a rather pathetic human being and it s showing right now. don t forget about the big dust-up she had with urban radio and that whole row. the white house statement says, instead of telling the truth about all the good president trump and his administration are doing to make america safe and prospero prosperous, this oh, it says, a disgruntled former white house employee is trying to profit off these false attacks and what s worse is the media would give her a platform after not taking her seriously when she had only
positive things to say about the president during her time in the administration, sarah huckabee sanders. if the book is filled with lies and false accusations, it s true. she captured the white house kregt. about profiting off the white house, what donald trump has done. omarosa, the one thing she did say about the apprentice tapes, tom arnold, after the election before trump was sworn in, said there were apprentice tapes where trump used the n word. maybe through all maybe they actually exist. maybe they do come out at some point. i mean, this is a shiny object moment. we re talking about a reality tv star who no one took seriously during the campaign. no one really took seriously when she was in the white house. no one took seriously when she was personally escorted off white house grounds after trying to get into the private residence. let s talk about what kind of
hub huberous that takes to march up to the president s personal quarters, to put out a book who has credibility issues. i mean go ahead. i m giving you the last word since you re remote. i was going to say, welcome to the trump presidency. i have is to say something about the statement of sarah sanders and the irony of it all, that it s coming from sarah sanders who lies constantly behind the podium. every day that she does a press briefing. it s just remarkable. this really just encapsulates the trump administration as we know it to be. i read that statement and i thought, child, please. yeah, exactly, child, please. that s it exactly. on that note, thank you. omarosa, however, is going to be doing the rounds to promote her new book. you can catch her on nbc tomorrow on meet the press and then on monday she will be right here on msnbc on hardball at
7:00 p.m. eastern. tomorrow, don t miss our special one-on-one interview with house democratic leader nancy pelosi. i ll ask her about the upcoming elections, how she feels about some democrats distancing themselves from her and a lot of other things. coming up next, another democratic star. at ally, we created a savings account with a great rate. but if that s not enough, our app helps monitor your spending too. and if that s not enough to help you save, we could start a carpool. look at this traffic. don t worry. ok, if that s not enough we ll start a trainpool. oh i have a meeting in five minutes. and if that s still not enough. i got it. we ll just create a shortcut. we ll do anything, seriously anything to help you save. ally. do it right. talking 4th quarter? yes. i needthat s whenvice foi remembered that my ex-ex- ex-boyfriend actually went to law school, so i called him. he didn t call me back! if your ex-ex- ex-boyfriend isn t a lawyer,
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it seems unlikely, raised by a single mom. from community college to the ivy league. from a waitress to the white house. i m sharice davids and it s my story. because even when i didn t have much, i had opportunity. but today, too many don t. and washington won t change that, that s why i m running for congress. i m sharice davids, i approve this message because opportunity starts with good schools, affordable health care and safety communities. shrice davids just won a crowded democratic primary. if she wins in november she ll also be the openly gay native-american woman to be elected to congress. while her district may be small it contains kansas city and its
suburbs. the cook political report is now calling it a toss-up district. hillary clinton squeaked out a victory here in 2016 with a margin of just one point. and sharice davids joins us now. thanks for being on the show. thanks for having me. i m excited. president trump has already endorsed your opponent. i want to read it here. thank you to congressman kevin yoder, he secured $5 billion for border security. now we need congress to support. kevin has been strong on crime, the board and loves the mill vary and vets. he has my full and total endorsement. how helpful or hurtful is it to have president trump injectsing himself into your race for your campaign? you know, honestly, i think that one of the things we need in the third district and what we haven t had up to this point
with kevin yoder is a representative who is fighting for the agenda of the third district. and i don t think it s helpful to have the president, or anyone else from outside this district saying that kevin yoder is fighting for his agenda. or anyone else s agenda. he needs to be fighting for the agenda of the third district. as you re campaigning, are you hearing from people who might say i like what you re saying, but i want somebody who s going to be in washington who supports the president. is president front of mind for people? or is it other things? yeah, the president is not a primary topic that i m hearing from people, you know. as i go around and i have meet and greets. and we re talking on doors and talking to folks. but the primary thing i m hearing is health care. there s too many people concerned what they re going to do if they get sick. or they don t have health
insurance or struggling with health premiums. the things that people are concerned about are not president of the united states, it s how are we going to improve opportunity for folks here. again, the president sent out that tweet injecting himself into your race. i m sure between now and election day he s going to do it again in that tweet, he talked about border security. when you have constituents future constituents, potential constituents, who might say, well, what are you going to do about the borders? what are you going to do about immigration? what answer do you have for them? you know, really, i think one of the things that so many people have expressed to me in my conversations with folks here is that, what is happening right now at the border and what has happened with family separation is appalling. and i have not met anyone in the third district that i talked to who is not completely appalled by what s been going on. and i don t think that they re
satisfied with the way kevin yoder has failed to act. you know, he hasn t done anything. he sits as the chair of the subcommittee of homeland security. and he hasn t done anything except send a letter to the attorney general. and that is action. we need action and kevin yoder isn t doing that. you know, he attacked you on the tuesday before you won the primary saying you lacked kansas values kansas city star editorial board responded saying, we hope he wasn t talking about the fact that she d be the first native-american woman elected to congress and the first lgbt person to represent kansas. you lack kansas values that s the way i heard the editorial s board s response, was my response. is that what you heard from him when he said you lacked kansas values? i guess the thing i was hoping he wasn t talking about was the fact that i m trying to
make sure ithat as many people have opportunity like i have. with education or health care, if that s not kansas value, then i think kevin yoder is clearly misguided and doesn t understand kansas values himself. we re going to have you back when we ve got a lot more time. thank you, sharice davids, for coming on the show. thank you so much. more am joy after the break. are you ready to take your wifi to the next level?

Thing , Something , Players , Knee , Nfl , Anthem , Outrage , Country , One , Doing , Colin-kaepernick , Doesn-t

Transcripts For DW Euromaxx - Lifestyle Europe 20180821 10:30:00


topics: The giants of Royal de Luxe; Kat Frankie s latest album; Eco cuisine at Volvo s canteen; Exploring the island of Elba
following him to napoleon s of footsteps on the island of elba. the dutch city of a was overrun by giants last weekend now they were part of a production by the french street theatre group royal de luxe the event was a three day interactive experience involving a pub a girl in search of her father or participants on the streets helped her in her search in a way of course were also on hand for the action and to see if the story had a happy ending. a little girl looking for half father. he s not really hard to miss standing and eleven meters tall and wearing a diving suit. still she wanders through the streets of new arden.
i think it s magic yes yes it s a great mystery and that s it show huge it s amazing how yeah they get the mold to sing out in syria i love to see if it makes me feel like a little child again i think it s really a fairy tale. why is she looking for her father. and what does that have to do with this. morning and the father was to the sleep with a busy day ahead. as one of europe s capitals of culture this year. invited to ride out in the street feels a treat to come and perform. the produce that she has to make sure everything goes off smoothly local volunteer stewards will help keep the public safe. crew in the costumes half of them of rosa luxemburg half of the local people who ve been staying over the last two weeks to learn how to make that movement and then up in
own patrick meyer is one of germany s leading wheelchair skaters but today he s struggling to reach the top of the half pipe. i can t get as high as i want to. wheelchair skating is a relatively new discipline it began at the start of the millennium in the us the thirty three year old has been a serious wheelchair skater for four years and is passionate about the sport skating skating is a very free thing you don t go by rules but my feeling is. it s true to life it s fun and liberating five. that some things young patrick particularly treasures at the age of nineteen he was involved in a serious car accident he spent months in a coma his right leg was amputated above the knee but he refused to give up watching videos of wheelchair skaters inspired him as he fought to rebuild his life
. does s. are you always does and when i saw the first video i was still in the hospital. i knew that walking and running wouldn t be possible anymore but us and then i thought this is a goal i can pursue i want to do this whether for. patrick meyer competes regularly in tournaments for wheelchair motocross known as w.c. m.x. . two years ago he came in sixth at the world championships in texas points are awarded for each track of according to the level of difficulty and the standard of performance. just like regular skateboarding wheelchair skating is not without its risks i want. to understand that sure it hurts a bit it always hurts when you fall but you know immediately what mistakes you made so you don t say annoyed for a long fight the best thing to do is get right back up and carry on which is what
i d better do now. you know that might get them to feel. once a month patrick meyer gives courses in wheelchair skating even those who don t want to enter competitive sport find the wheelchair training helps increase their independence. it s a form of self determination because it s what makes a real difference if you can get up onto a sidewalk yourself without help from others. that s something that skating does for you it gives you confidence. everybody needs to be able to move around movement is everything. in the lead up to a tournament you re in patrick meyer is out on the halfpipe every day he trains for up to six hours a day skating is clearly much more than a hobby for him. to skate me. but if i didn t have skating i wouldn t be able to get out of bed it inspires me to keep going. and that doesn t only apply to skating but also two other day to day problems i have to face i take the same approach
there as in skating i might not make it tomorrow but eventually i ll get there over the phone. and eventually he makes it to the top of the half pipe. the singer and songwriter can t frank is actually known for melancholy slow beach too but on your latest album called bad behavior she speeds up the tempo notch and has created music that fits more into the pop and dance of well frank is all strongly and but she relocated to berlin about fourteen years ago and our next report she tells us about the change she s made in her musical direction. frankie first made a name for herself with melancholy songs in the manner of folk music now she s reengineered herself. was. a response.
living here in germany you played some part in the cat frankie begin branding yourself. a stallion i come from sydney and australia is this life is good. people don t go out and demonstrate so well not often only sophie it was in berlin that i encountered protests i lived in quotes back to six year old in that neighborhood i felt there was a demo just about every weekend. i was. she came to berlin for a year abroad in two thousand and four rent was cheap when people were refreshingly different she got her first recording contract here when she went home to sydney she says she found a conservative and dowdy. this
is cat frankie version one sad way to clooney her music is rarely political but always has presence. kid did she feel she had to turn to pot to awaken her inner rebel. i really do wish i were a total rebel unfortunately i m not. i am a bit defiant and i have strong opinions. that i m not a rebel i know it s sad but i am trying. i was was a. can t frank you know works with loops songs and fragments of song she combines and layers them. it s six.
six six. six. like this with only her voice. she had times does sound like the ballad singers of your . email the end broaching dread but her bad behavior once more it s not an invitation to past seventy and resignation there s too much drama energy for that. there s all of us in this bit wanting it and we all know we re living in comic at a time like many people voice their opinions at very high volume on the internet there s lots of outrage perhaps we need to see a bit more action. acting on t.v. . talking about
action the energy proved infectious and you know the audience abandoned their seats and started to jump around. frankie has come a long way. when thinking about our carbon footprint you probably don t consider that the food you eat also contributes greatly to it in fact by some estimates food production including growing farming processing transporting cooking and so on accounts for at least one fifth of global carbon emissions so how can we reduce our so called food print one company cafeteria in sweden has an interesting idea.
from a hearty meal to deep fried foods to a healthy salad most campaigns offer a range of dishes but here in golf and or every meal comes with information on its carbon footprint head chef care law says it s more appetising than it might sound i mean we don t change so much but we try to when we were buying our meat to try to buy meat and food it makes motive for a minute like. beef and more fish more shrieking and more small these are. the production of food generates a considerable amount of c o two. dogs would bring those on advises campaigns in restaurants on how to make their menu more climate friendly. but it s that you should be able to find private information where you find food basically and to make a dent in the climate so a mission to cross your hopefully the one. just opting for more fruit and
vegetables and occasionally for going meat can help but does the extra information really change diners eating habits and usually take this favorite dish i think you can. be said to show you from a same time how can you. help me to shoot. for something basically. i tend to go for the vegetarian option anyway and knowing that it s better for the environment as well means it makes sense to choose that more off as i take my notes are you seeing this it will probably give me remind me one more time. it s about the numbers and sometimes he would effect. so these small reminders could help consumers lean towards a healthier and more climate friendly choice. and finally it s time to take a trip and today we re going to explore the italian island of elba thanks to a viewer request from guatemala daniel wrote in to us wanting to know more about
this part of the tuscan archipelago now it s no secret that italians are generally proud of their country but the people around this region love to talk about their traditions and heritage. summertime is high season for tourism on the island but that didn t stop us from packing our bags and exploring the sights. the ferry to alba takes an hour. time enough to look forward to the beautiful beaches and crystal clear water. when you stroll through capital port affair iow you will find plenty to remind you that the island s most famous resident was napoleon bonaparte. riparian lived in exile in the. ten months in eight hundred fourteen and eight hundred fifteen. a group of local history enthusiastic liked to dress up in the polling. for special occasions they re proud that the former french
temperatures this island for his exile. as ruler of the tiny principality napoleon had ten thousand subjects and an army of one thousand men. in the few months that he was here and managed to give the capital city porto for io an administrative structure night the island as his little empire. turned porter for io into a miniature. life here. in eight hundred fifteen napoleon return to france and try to reestablish himself that ended at waterloo. today most visitors to the island of vacationers elba has large beaches but also many small coves accessible only by boat or long hikes
the island has about two hundred beaches no two of them alike if you are lucky you might find one just feel selfish. if you arrive after a long hike you have the feeling of having truly accomplished something. like climbing a mountain peak but of course it s very nice in a canoe or on a ship. if you are looking for a comfortable but nevertheless thrilling way to reach the top of the elvis highest mountains take the cable car in mary qana in the northwest of the island in just twenty minutes it will take you to the peak of money take up on e one thousand nine hundred meters the highest point on alba. it has a view over the entire twenty seven kilometer long island. from here you can see the italian mainland to raney or coast with. the town closest to elba. where the ferry set off for puerto rico i continue on from here. from
there you can see corsica. marciano marina a perfume are in the harbor town has made it his goal to capture the sense of the islands with the perfect. several shops on al the senate as a souvenir. tourists like the idea that they re taking a bit of a sea fact home with them and not just because of its color. sense we use only plants from the mediterranean region like curry plant. also known as madonna or strawberry tree of rosemary lavender and many other indigenous plants but. when we want to watch the scent of the sea there was the doctor bill and seaweed and then of course the sea breeze that transports the salty scent.
the town of cap only very on the south of the island is great for an evening stroll . ciano cassini has operated his restaurants here for more than forty is. he specializes in fish and seafood. surprising on an island. there s a little bit of everything you find here is a traditional mine and you keeps its feet firmly on the ground but mostly i bake fish in the oven or barbecue it that s what people line. up to the heat of a summer day the cool evening hours are a pleasure on elba. and you can count on the sun shining again and again throughout the high season in july and august. and with that it is time to say goodbye but before we go i want to let you in on
this week s draw now since most of europe is experiencing some of the hottest temperatures on record we would like to know if you have any tips on how to survive the heat northern europe isn t really used to these summer days so maybe you have some tips for us from your part of the world which could help us just go to our website for all the details and by doing so you qualify to win a year old max watch all right well for me and the rest of the crew here at your max as always thanks for tuning in. the next time your remarks the fashion accessory could just keep scaring sandals of the star on and to greece remain in during the popular. should make reforms and this mr nelson ifans specializes in historical designs drawing inspiration from the moment a famous figure legendary some of sandals takes time on your remarks.
blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah. blah blah blah blah blah blah blah. blah blah blah blah blah. blah blah. blah blah. blah blah. because. just me getting some stuff this week becomes gearing up the bulk buying the phone with a new coach nicole much. more good season for the dog show the book using her commitment to good. to tell me. more of.
the i m a mom to sixty eight and i m crying i go to the. while. young people are billed against their current generation the field if it wasn t on sleep tonight dusty full of stupidity implicitly. they demanded nothing less than a whole society full blown blind maelstrom of conflict reality collins plugged those who loved her remember them to stand for the first time i had a feeling of being a part of some butlers seeds of civil rights to the feast movement and limbs klux klan history. nine hundred sixty eight. the global revolt starts september first on the double.
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Everybody , Bjorn-kind , Speed , Group , Company , Minor , Wheelchair-stunt , Topics , Long-island , Footsteps , Elba , Napoleon-s

Transcripts For DW Kick Off - More Than Football 20180907 11:30:00


there s nothing to separate these friends from the fans of any other club. but when it comes to the numbers though it s a different story especially today it s not going to be a huge crowd i think maybe because of the make up the match here that s sunday on the six o clock pm everybody has to be back at work tomorrow morning. ideal timing . to drop them off maybe two and a half thousand i mean it s tough on a sunday but to thousands at this is not very many it s probably got so it s probably simple is. something quite specially because they went. away game in romania with. a travelling fans two thousand.
actually fairly good numbers in but it s. still one you can t make any jokes about travelling support to the travelling support its two thousand is still two thousand and everyone in this bus is making the effort not in considerable effort considering that dortmund is such a trick four hundred twenty even to my ears but that means everybody in this box as it is doing on the floor you can almost say it s going to get out hamas you re going to get the next tough sunday. still that ships to do and have been tougher in the parks. in two thousand and seventeen the first time the lights he ever visited the best spot in the study and their friends were attacked by hooligans angry at the presence of red is marked and gagged in the midst pushed arguing not pushed i do not wish this line but come on into your mail from this line and i wanted to go into months on connecticut and
a lot of indian security that i m going to mention not me up on c r i the experience of that day surprisingly has made many unwilling to return to dortmund did not see color as. the to the speech or to mislead by the one fought over his job if it is but you see me feel it is the funniest medical. treatment given that from almost the sea titles and calm them down was. absent of as low as this almost caught the it does is that it was a stand off white you had stood at the forefront of the bust up a common listen when the hundred. dollars us had not told us and i was vocal of the decision when i. didn t go to see the how come the full effect is no everyone here seems to agree that things have calmed down and some doesn t feel that this might be a bit of it i doubt that s what the chinese makes one is good for. he saw the steel
building up put up or put it all down on the that s what that s about as possible if you took one look just imagine it s not called as it gets closer to the social good rock was there in could see the xhosa cottons until it took him by the fans at woodstock. but the question remains why he did it. why put yourself through all of that could be expected. the first game against go for it wasn t just live there was no blasts of monism part of the ground it was also my little thing about the promise of the cancer treatment that liberation of him and let me finish it all about how the stuff just doesn t make it spring it doesn t ruin your enjoyment if it is annoying isn t like that is i think that things have settled down since that little bit of i don t get i don t mind people being against the good against the club and the project and the way it s i that is the voice
their opinions as long as they want but if i think violence is the parts of the civil service when it isn t feel to them a couple i think most of the contestants. now if it s all the lights it is just a market. i m not saying back is and i don t understand why these people put themselves through so much trouble for one must have just shown up give this one hundred and find another good nutrition at least and there s a song called interested by you to see how much actual sculptural from the right i m going to find you got looking just for fun i want them to see them i listen and you know i look untrue highest to ones problems and even like to change up the fans to speed it up as they were gunshots must be the mice we re going to see in here because the spooky tricky to look for was with us on the stoop. mukesh trying to be like fish on a cookie you can ask the office but you see in movies i went to be like figure. in
money to pay for that i m not worried that anyone ever has to have be i go to the. home matches i go with my son to school to get self a different band if that was if that was awful lot of fun and i think i probably have taken that. well suddenly i m starting to feel a bit of a fool. off my history lesson from for machine me. and given that anyone obviously ought to be able to watch football in peace my little ideas about which teams people should and shouldn t support often it s a secret stupid. being taken away after seven hours in the bus he s done it and there s a big game about to start. for those of us values who tends to remember who s playing. now we ll get
a chance to stretch out legs get a bit of fresh air down. and go about an hour watch a pest of mine you make christophe firstly by reminding him that only twelve off the fans attended the club s last two european away fixtures run by the spill. in the gulf. war and these moves. titled what i ve been able to do sort of on the in front wondered how this could top. posters. think it s. the time i think it s all songs i had. good spirits always move the. lindsays. he s been in films i don t fight it s not. the same with that topic for him to. push harder for you than that mr struggle to find it this is for the fish dish this good so with a high. she always tells me that. i will because i was not all home with all of
those movies books in the know i defend based effects how about where the passion comes from without the history. i was just going on they say oh. he s a cop that s one of the ball and. the fruit is on in the food in the field and that s why it went up in this new guy. if i were christoph now are starting to get a little bit annoyed with all of the smack but he s patients bounders kidney at the top. and does this all the vendors you know lots of quotes. all the stevenson and it s just a this image of being kind of blame it all down all the lies about. you that. happily today here is where the marcy friends were attacked two years ago it s. a peaceful festival of football where. as it happens
slightly more the festival should dortmund back to back it. was horrible thoughts of the season all the way here seven hours six o clock kickoff on a sunday market price for one. hour i think you could say. at least you should be if you have. no history no point seven our coach journey home and a massive ring on my face is my message. to transfer appearing its high stakes poker match is over here s the latest on the league s fresh faces. goldman s new man up front.
has signed on a year s learn from barcelona he s the ideal striker for coach knows how fast. your are a very big club. and they re dedicated to trying to play great. are full i m really impressed by the dortmund project that also made coming here an easy decision for me. back in barcelona i was lining up with leo messi and even rocketed. now he ll be suited up in black and yellow. minds also made a shrewd signing jump from fire north for three point five million euros the twenty four year old winger hopes to reinvigorate the left side of the attack he s got plenty of experience despite his young age having lined up with fine old in the champions league. strengths all of us on creative strongly and one on ones and
on quick. look all of. us must generally swap from buy into shock up to sixteen million euros after just one season with the champions the midfield maestro hopes to finally look down our starting spot actual. sense right away they run it all to decide our mind that runs for the club and i was hoax and i m delighted to join shall get out of. the twenty eight year old central midfielder should be a perfect fit for coach to manage go to desk system he s certainly got the right attitude. but i was also everything at it for the club and the fans will all be going flat out but i ll see if. i can say thirty years and really three signings that should fit their new clubs well. what marks out he s won the world cup in the euros the champions league and countless other titles the spaniard has played the last seven years in the world s most expensive.
sibly the premier league. i m here today in manchester united s training ground to speak to a flyer who s not just one of the most decorated in the game but also a man with a grand plan to change the way. millions of you much are referred to the enormous football salaries in the modern game as lawful and indecent football is pure business from outside it s the wrong direction. these people has no passion anymore for food then it s something we live in. much like co-founded the common goal initiative through which part of football is donate one percent of their wages to the organization street football world. we pledge one percent of our salary we re going to get from uncle move a locates this from the frugal destroyers that make a real difference. once the sense of a millionaire football is white used toward social football projects worldwide roughly fifty pros have joined common goal so far it s taken plenty of persuading
but matson is happy to help as he really believes in the project. he s going to be a long road ahead. for it and i m fully committed but he could change the world for the better. so his common goal really is something different and what can it it chief. daybreak in manchester this is when mark phillips and what s. the matter has now played more games for manchester united this than any of his other clubs so his team found his footballing home here in the northwest of england i feel i feel at home here i feel happy here and i feel. grateful to the fans and i feel the love for. most of what i say the crowd of belonging to this club must unite i wake up every day i should read that and see why. every day richer than the
day before in manchester the cradle of industrial capital. manchester is a true working class system built on the industrial revolution from the capitalist background has also seen a history of exploitation of the working classes. manchester was once the most important industrial center in the world profit at any price was the name of the game. historically this period is still known as manchester capitalism. those days are long gone but something new has recently developed within today s financial lives capitalism the billion dollar football industry manchester has always been a city of progress and success especially when it comes to football today is behind a two giants of the modern guy but the industry is taking france for granted. manchester united are a financial powerhouse valued at three point two billion euros the most valuable
club in world football. in the twenty sixteen seventeen season alone man united make six hundred and seventy six point three million euros. the ten most profitable clubs in europe took in the combined five point three billion euros in the same period and nothing is part of it all. spending seems to multiply every season fans are expected to shell out more than ever to watch teams of millionaires and it s alienating football from the average supporter. of the big question for us is can one month his work with common goal help bridge the widening gap between footballers and fans. we sat down with matter whose thoughtful and relaxed demeanor flies in the face it s a nice star footballer clichés. the thirty year old from northern spain one time for us and his project. in
a way so many people see food bowl provision of food bowl very far and very disconnected with the real world and common what i thing he brings stuff together you know brings professional football with football as a social tool for for change together when you realize about how so many people is living in not just like with themselves as we are in this part of the world and how football can you know bring people together and help them somehow and honestly not just by football but by a location and by many other things we can try to you know to try to leave this world in a better shape than we found it when it was. going to be. in summer twenty seventeen on the same day nine months two hundred
twenty million euro deal to p.s.g. was announced a matter of common goal. he wants as many people as possible to benefit from the massive mobile industry football has become african elaborates but the organization st well developed its vision. we started speaking about coming more than one percent on all the different. persons that we belong to professional football world that could join. the conversation with a million if everyone every single. organization from football world professional football world community to the to the movement. and i would have a dream. if you ask me about the goal of common wall and i don t know where it s going to. go until i don t know how it s going to be the limit i don t think there is any limit to be honest but he would be amazing that yeah if the whole provisional world organization commits to something like this there will be.
great. as i have been so much money should be should be something from the heart. to donate something one percent idea thing is brilliant because i don t thing gives anyone an excuse because one percent isn t a percent or one for everyone everyone could do the common goals target of making a one percent donation standard across all football business things wildly optimistic there s not a really believe it s possible there s not a figure for me there s no the number of players of money or or money that we want to reach now is about setting up a nice movement do we need to write a rule no one to your in is more than welcome and hopefully in some time everyone will join. more and more rows are joining the project is growing
slowly but steadily. enough there still aren t any other manchester united players on board. we are players we could approach loads from so many people trying to ask or see into trade to offer seeings and we try to tend to put every year you know to push a shield. so in a way it is difficult to make that connection straight and direct with the player. we are surrounded as well by agents or clubs or press officer is not easy ward to get through but latterly. because of i can play in long and i have so many friends i can go straight to the people and the people the people on and explain what comalies face to face and that that makes things easier to connect i
think being part of common goal. is a chance for me to be part of a different scene. using our influence on the pitch trumpets of the of the work myself into a position now that you know i can maybe make a difference for some people you know and that s something i ve always wanted to do try and try and use the position of work for to try and help as many people as possible but here one of the biggest let s say problems or struggles that we have found nowadays you know that that connection you know to the players because when you call a player when a player says it and they say then speak with my agent and then it everything gets a bit slower and fades in in a way so that s the main thing that time. magazine is taking his time he recently visited the oscar foundation in mumbai india it s a nonprofit supported by common goal that helps disadvantaged children. people
there were great to us and it was a nice experience difficult because he was you know you could see the two extremes of you know it was there any quality. system in the world and in there especially. so it was sometimes difficult to digest and to see what s going on but some things are happening in this. century in the world that s unbelievable and in the other hand to see how to reach these people was. spiritually you know not not maybe money wise or materialistic wise but as peter early on in their grace and analyse. submitting to formosa has convinced me beyond any doubt that he truly believes in what they hear and go to listening to him talk and such they tell him with song of caution it s
hard not to get caught up in it and you do start believing that they really could change the way the be . the be. the be. the be. the be. the be. the
be. the be. the be. more intrigued the international talk show for journalists discuss the topic of the week a series of angry sometimes violent demonstrations by far right protestors has prompted soul searching here in germany how should politicians and civil society respond to conjure. defeatists demons that s the topic uncut we ve got china. quadriga thirty minutes d.w. .
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