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Transcripts For MSNBCW Hugh Hewitt 20170923 12:00:00


green light. that means go! oh, yeah. start saying yes to your company s best ideas. we re gonna hit our launch date! (scream) thank you! goodbye! let us help with money and know-how, so you can get business done. american express open. morning, glory, america. i m hugh hewitt. you hear me on the radio network 6:00 to 9:00. but saturday morning i am here on msnbc. i returned from the united kingdom late last night and have been following the news through the british media. to catch me up on the national news i have asked three of the belt waugh s best young reporters all rising stars in the craft of journalism to bring me and thus you on what mattered most in the past two weeks and
the week ahead. they are james hol mapp of the washington post annie lipsky, and politico playbook he every morning. welcome to all three of you. i have to begin the news of the day as president trump is tweeting this morning. let me bring people up to date with what he has had to tweet. john mccain never had any intention of voting for this graham/cassidy bill. he campaigned on repeal and replace. let arizona down. arizona had 116% increase last wbr id= wbr1008 /> year with deductibles very high. chuck schumer sold mccain a bill of goods sad. large block grants to states in is a good thing to do. better control and management. great for arizona. mccape let his best friend l.d. /b>
down. i know raupbd paul skpeuplg he m and i think wbr-id= wbr1251 /> he may come through. a lot of drama. let me start over here with you, ana. does it pass? no. it s not passing. no. it is barely on life support, if that. at this point basically donald trump is unaudible to convert on this, right? his problem is he is making phone calls to senators like john mccain who he has zero credibility with. personal animosity towards each other. he had no ability to close the deal. this is about reflecting blame. this likely isn t going to get through. i wouldn t say nephew. you could have rand in your back pocket as we saw trump alluding to. i would say don t say it s dead, but this i think is trump trying
to say i tried. any. the definition of insanity doing the same thing over and over again and expecting a different result. we have seen this twice already. nothing has really changed. the same players are making the same moves. and you re not going to see collins or murkowski turn around on this. i am the optimist. i think you can get murkowski and rand paul becomes a key. james, you followed this relationship. how much of this would a psychiatrist is john mccain unable to see his friend lindsey graham achieve the great legislative achievement in 20 years that eluded john mccain. that s a good question. obviously lindsey and john are so close. two of the three amigos. mccain doesn t like donald
the summer. and she was surprised by the conservatives who came up to her and said, thank you for supporting obamacare because my kid is sick and i need it. that hit her i think very hard. graham/cassidy is not the first to appeal. significantly different. we ll see. let me go to the underreported story of the week. i ve been gone. what did i miss? i think alabama senate debate was one of the most interesting things that i watched this week. judge moore. absolutely. it was fascinating to watch. luther strange essentially for one hour just said one thing. his message is donald trump is behind me. he said nothing else the entire time. and people in the audience were laughing. at some point he was saying it so often they were saying, gosh, he s going to go to that. the endless loop.
i think tom price private jets, politico story. if if was any other administration other than the donald trump administration, this would be wall to wall coverage. spending $300,000 of tax payer dollars. this is i think one of the most under reported stories. i saw it in london. they all take private jets. it s different because in particular he is a congressman railed against this issue. that s true. saying nobody in the members of congress, the white house should be doing it. none of his previous srb sebelius. they are paying for it out of their own pocket. i think this is one of the biggest stories that isn t going to get any prep because we re in
a time when everybody is onto the next thing. when we return, i ll ask the panel what breaking story they are working on for next week. a preview of coming attractions. stay tuned. switch to flonase allergy relief. flonase outperforms the #1 non-drowsy allergy pill. when we breathe in allergens, our bodies react by overproducing 6 key inflammatory substances that cause our symptoms. flonase helps block 6. most allergy pills only block one and 6 is greater than 1. with more complete relief you can enjoy every beautiful moment to the fullest. flonase. 6 is greater than 1 changes everything. he s on his way to work in alaska. this is john. he s on his way to work in new mexico. willie and john both work for us, a business that employs over 90,000 people in the u.s. alone. we are the coca-cola company, and we make much more than our name suggests.
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xfinity mobile. a new kind of network designed to save you money. call, visit or go to xfinitymobile.com. we are back with my panel james, anna and any. which numbers are driving the news this week and which are covered partly in the shade right now but moving soon to the center of attention. who is the person that matters the most not named trump? rocket man. why? explain. first of all, we all had to google dotard this week and what did it mean.
obviously this is very seriousment we keep going closer and closer to nuclear war with them. i think this is going to be the international issue. you said we are closer and closer to nuclear war with them, which i believe to be true. i don t think it penetrated the minds of america. i think it is very disturbing, very scary. it is something i don t think the vast majority of americans are paying attention to. bob mueller. significant developments while you were gone this week. they basically are on a phishing expedition. 13 different categories of things that mueller is interested in as part of his probe to potential obstruction to justice. we learned a lot of new developments about the way that mueller, how aggressively he is going after paul manafort. they did a no-knock search of his apartment in alexandria in the summer. we learned mueller was taking pictures of manafort s suits in
the closet. they were really going hard. they were going hard after michael flynn too. former national security adviser announcing a legal defense fund. lots of developments. special counsel mueller did not request surveillance. i asked to do those applications when i worked for the attorney general. they authorize the use of the most amazing material. stuff in the 80s that is classified. who knows what they can do now. they know everything about him if they had a fisa warrant on him. i m going to play off what anna said. jim mattis is the most important not named trump because of the threat from north korea that ana mentioned. how the united states will react to this threat of a hydrogen bomb being tested in the pacific, something that hasn t happened in 60 years will be sort of chilling to the entire world. on friday, hugh, i had coffee
with a former senior very, very senior person at the defense department who left quite recently. and i can tell you they are nervous over there. this kind of talk is something that strikes them to the core. it s a very serious story that has people secretary mattis is one of the best people to ever serve. he knows wars begin with muss calculation. if rocket man hits the wrong thing, stuff happens. my person is theresa may. probably because i have been in the uk. her government is falling apart. boris johnson was going to leave. pulled everyone on a plan to get out. she is presenting it in florence. it appears she pulled it off. i thought she was the walking dead. former chancellor on osbourne said about her. she is back to the grave and putting it together. tell me what you re working on? tax reform next week.
from administration, congress. it s a plan that from what we have heard will affect states like the one in new england. could be quite significantly. these are places that have very high real estate taxes. and so we re going to be looking at that really closely. state is and local tax deduction will destroy california and new york. massachusetts. and new hampshire. which relies quite heavily. it can t go away. the entire country. james, what are you working on? alabama senate race. we talked about it in the last block. what are the polls? internal polls that i have seen show the race tightening. recent show roy moore up nine points. but i think it will end up being close. they expect 20%, 25% of the elect rat will turn out. it is a close primary. it is a close primary in can you register on the day of? i don t think so. which makes it harder for some
of the traditional trump vote stories show up. but also there s a lot of we talk about this a little bit with virginia for 2018. bob corker, tennessee, chair map of the foreign relations committee, he said in recent weeks he is considering retirement because he doesn t want to have a nasty primary challenge from the trump populist part of the party. judge roy moore is like judge roy bean. he is like a hero. his people will not not come. ana, what are you working on? i think the big story is mitch mcconnell right now. what happens on tax reform. what happens on health care. what happens with this alabama senate race which he has gone in full force with his entire
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and we may not know much about medicine, but we know a lot about drama. we also know that you can avoid drama by getting an annual check-up. so go, know, and take control of your health. it could save your life. cigna. together, all the way. welcome back. we re back with my panel. believe it or not, people inside the beltway do read books.
reread a lot of books. we try and read books. the book that you are reading or ought to be reading and people ought to be reading. hillary clinton s memoir, what happened . it is the book to read on her. it is very honest, very real. when joy sits down with her in an hour, former secretary of state clinton in the hour, it will be raw. joy reed is a very, very good interviewer. secretary clinton has gotten more and more open about this. is she more expansive as she goes along? when you re not the candidate you can be a lot more honest about what happened, the problems on the campaign. she is very reflective. we often don t see that in candidates when they are elected and saying these are my problems. these are my warts and this is what happened. i will be joining you in
reading that soon. james, what are you reading? i recommended the hillary book. that was a good window into her. the new biography bunny mellon. she was most recent in the news with john edwards. she was funneling money to help him take care of his love child. they called it bunny money. she died a year ago, close to 100. big socialite. jackie kennedy s best friend. she kind of had a close relationship with lady bird johnson. she loved ronnie reagan, hated nancy reagan. it has great stories. there s so many things named after mellon. a window into 50 years of washington, a different era. what s the title again? bunny mellon. elizabeth warren s latest book this fight is our fight.
it has the word fight in it a few times. i ll be honest with you, it is just sitting on my bedside table because i can t get into it. it s just not that good. but if you do want to read a good book by elizabeth warren, i would recommend her first book she wrote with her daughter called the two-income trap. she wrote it before she was running for anything. it gets into her research about income equality. it is a bit academic but written for a general audience. her students loved her. i get the last word. the last minute. this is unbelievable. katy tur. for people like we are journalists. it s the real deal. ate many doughnuts for dinner is my favorite line. i have never been a road
warrior. you three have. if you are at syracuse, ma dill, stanford daily paper and you think, i want to do that. did you read it yet? no. i m going to steal it yet. you can t have it. i interview her on the radio tomorrow. it is really a remarkable book because it drives home. she was part of the campaign as well reporting on it. it s a great read. katy tur. tweet me @hughhewitt. we ll right back.
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Transcripts For FOXNEWSW FOX Friends 20180803 10:00:00


A morning show that highlights the latest headlines in news, weather, sports and entertainment, and is known for the cohosts casual and spontaneous.
steve: you mean reverse psychology? brian: right. steve: watch this. we re fighting a war. and we are fighting a war on drugs. they are bringing in drugs. they re bringing in lots of bad people. and we re going to start to get very nasty over the wall. you know, the democrats, anything i want, they want to oppose. you know, i just figured out how to do the wall i will say i don t want to build a wall and they will insist on building it. [laughter] i just figured that out right now. we will be taking some very tough actions. we need more republicans but they are friends of mine they say sir, we are better off until wait until after. it s better before. we are either getting it or we are closing down government. we need border security. steve: the president was very clear about that as he has been. that s one of the issues that got him the keys th to the 747. he said we need more like-minded republicans. keep in mind there are a lot of republicans that don t want the wall in washington, d.c. they have jobs. they have hatched out a deal, mitch and paul the
president, last week, where the president would not force a shutdown before the election. they are going to go ahead and they are going to fund as many programs in the government as they can before the election. and then they will pass a little patch that s going to have the homeland security money. that s the stuff that s really up for debate right now that would get the democrats blood pressure up high because that is where the 5 billion or 20 billion would come from to build the wall. brian: the strategy is this. the president goes my numbers are really good on the economy. republicans could feel good about running about that. and then you have got brett kavanaugh who wants to be the next supreme court justice and they want that. the president session listen, i don t want really want as much as i want the border security. i don t think we want to distract from the big two big trophies that i have leading up to november. ainsley: you mentioned jobs. unemployment has fallen, 18 year low. record number of job openings. the hourly rate rose at 2.7% yearly rate. that s unbelievable. that s what people are saying that they care about
most. steve: that s right. i m surprised lou barletta didn t work that into his little advertisement. anyway. we have a busy friday. thank you very much for joining us. we have lots more coming up regarding the breaking news of the day. we have the big thing. we have the barbecue. we have singers and we have got some headlines. jillian: that s right. we are following a number of stories this morning. fox news alert right now. five year veteran of the colorado springs police force is fighting for his life after being shot in the head. the suspect is due in court this morning. officer jim responding to a call when a suspect opened fire. he also was shot but will be okay. he was already out on bond for a weapons charge. the fbi issuing an amber alert for a girl who may have been abducted. investigators safe jing jing was taking at reagan international airport in washington, d.c. by this woman that you see on your screen in the surveillance video. the 12-year-old from china was traveling with a group
touring american disools. police say she is in extreme danger. we believe there is evidence to suggest that while the child was walking with the woman, the child may have put on another piece of clothing. we are attempting to get in touch with the chinese embassy. because of the age of the child, this is a very serious incident. political science think move left the airport in this white screen you see now with the woman and unknown man. a newcomer claims victory in the g.o.p. primary for tennessee governor. businessman bill lee beating out three republicans to get the nod. one of them congresswoman diane black was favored to win. lee will face democrat karl dean in november. current congresswoman marsha blackburn winning the g.o.p. nod for senate. she will face tennessee s former governor democrat phil bredesen who also won by a land slide. u.s. remains from north korea. jewels look, can you see
hell melts, canteens, buttons, boots, gloves, and socks all from the korean war. dog tag will be given to the fallen shoulders. in arlington, virginia. that s a look at your headline. too think that all all these years we have them now. steve: certainty. brian: sincerity. you didn t know what they were going to get. on the transfer they were sincere they were going to preserve the remains as best they could and information exchanged. the next thing is would you allow our people to scour the countryside because we know where these people were last seen. where the battles took place. where the planes crashed. where the people were shot. if you don t want us to do it, have the u.n. do it. steve: they are not going to do it. brian: no one thought we would see this. steve: no. absolutely. we do not know the identity of the name on the dog tag but that family has been notified and as jillian jewels said they are going to be at arlington very
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oh! oh! oh! ozempic®! (vo) ask your healthcare provider if ozempic® is right for you. steve: this is a fox news alert. a brand new clue in the search for mollie tints, a red shirt reportedly found near a hog farm. investigators has been combing through over the last couple of days. ainsley: i think she had to wear red shirts to work. that s why it s significant. this is the family of the missing iowa college student not giving up hope. they are pleading at a press conference yesterday for her safe return. brian: ted williams has been on the scene. he met with mollie s mom yesterday and he joins us right now with the latest. ted is a former homicide detective. fox news contributor. ted, we are moving along with this investigation. what do you think unfolds today? well, they are going to have a press conference and they are very well deep in the investigation. they are looking at various suspects. yesterday i got a chance to
interview mollie s mother. take a listen. i was quietly sitting in the grinnell public library and approximately 5:15 my youngest son scott called me and said mollie didn t go to work today. at that moment adrenaline shot through my body i thought something is terribly wrong. law enforcement has been essential, crucial. i can t even find the words to say what has happened. can you just tell us who is mollie? tell us something about mollie. she was vivacious. she loved life. was passionate. she was not afraid. how are you holding up? through some kind of internal strength that is just there. the other night i walked outside to a star lit sky and i saw a shooting star and i was like somehow, somewhere, she is remaining with me.
guys, you know, your heart just go out to that mother. you can tell that she is just dedicated to one proposition, and this bringing her child home. steve: right. just being able to hug her child again. this is so heart breaking. ainsley: have they given you any details we know the boyfriend got a snapchat from her 10:00 p.m. the night before she went missing. red shirt and has to wear a red shirt. are they thinking if something happened she was taken it was that morning on her way to work? well, law enforcement is holding that close to their vest. hopefully at the preference we wilpressconference we will be to get more of an idea. i can tell you they are now ainsley looking at suspects
in this case. and that s a good sign. ainsley: is that the big farmer? it may be close at the pig farm and other places. > steve: the police have not been forthcoming in telling us who the suspects are ted, yesterday, there was a press conference. we had it right here on the channel through crime stoppers of central iowa. they have announced a fine in bringing mollie tibbets home safely fund. in listening to the family members, it s very clear they believe she has been abducted and they believe she is alive. they think somebody knows something that could get her released. absolutely. there is $172,000 reward that was announced yesterday at a press conference. the family soling out hope. they are very optimistic that someone knows and has mollie somewhere. and they are hoping that that person or persons will
release mollie. and collect this reward. brian: thank you so much. ainsley: thanks, ted. steve: if smokes have information you can see the tip line at the bottom of the screen the phone number is 641-623-5679. ainsley: the reward $127,000. steve: and growing. brian: federal judge slamming prosecutors yesterday for focusing on paul manafort s wealth and expensive fashion choices instead of any possible crime. mark levin calls their case a total abomination. i talk to him about it next. steve: plus, what happens when a democratic socialist goes to hollywood? you are about to find out. hollywood nights [ engine rev] what s that, girl? [ engine revving ] flo needs help?!
[ engine revving ] take me to her! coming, flo! why aren t we taking roads?! flo. [ horn honking ] -oh. you made it. do you have change for a dollar? -this was the emergency? [ engine revving ] yes, i was busy! -24-hour roadside assistance. from america s number-one motorcycle insurer. -you know, i think you re my best friend. you don t have to say i m your best friend. that s okay. you don t have to say i m your best friend. ito take care of anyct messy situations.. and put irritation in its place. and if i can get comfortable keeping this tookus safe and protected. you can get comfortable doing the same with yours. preparation h. get comfortable with it.
ainsley: we have quick headlines for you. democratic darling alexandria ocasio-cortez hits hollywood. the socialist star may be too far left. the new york congressional candidate won t be meeting with any entertainment. she showed up to occupy ice lunch. another democrat wants to abolish ice. this one has an obama endorsement. new mexico congressional candidate debra holland says ice promotes terror and violence. one of 81 candidates the president formally endorsed this week. brian: thanks, ainsley. sarah huckabee sanders faced blistering attacks from the media yesterday but she was prepared for it yesterday. i sat down with mark levin
to get his reaction to the media vs. the administration if the press were respectful but tough. if the pretty objective and not partisan they would be treated with respect. their problem isn t donald trump. the problem is the american people, over 60 million of us who voted for donald trump they know what they are doing. we know what they are doing. brian: what is it about trump that stallworth regular conservatives numbers are high. they are irrelevant. what we are doing in this country now is very troublesome to me. this attempt to sabotage this president this coup taking place make no mistake it is. the democrats want the president out by hook or crook. i see this nation like this right now. i see the status progressives upset. they didn t control the left s next election. they thought they would get four more years of obama through hillary. and they thought they would
control the executive branch for the next 30 or 40 years. they failed and they have been resistant ever since. they have been on stucketting ever since. if you don t see that as a conservative you are blind. if you don t see many of the good things this president is doing as a conservative, you are also blind. brian: paul manafort had a trial. everyone should understanding unrelated to anything to do with donald trump he has a trial. the way this started with the 78-year-old judge coming out stop rolling your eyes. stop using the term oligarch. it s not a crime to be rich. the tone he is setting. i m wondering how nervous mueller should be his first high profile case could blow up in his face. if you have if you think you have manafort on tax evasion, on conspiracy for tax evasion. on branch fraud, on embezzlement and all the rest of it, why do you have to talk about the rich. why do you have to take pictures of his suits? the reason is. this he thinks this jury is stupid. what he wants to do is pile on. he wants them to be jealous.
he wants them to go after guys in the top 1%. this is exactly what a prosecutor shouldn t do. this prosecutor mueller and his banged of merry liberal democrats have been way over the top in the manafort case. here s the bottom line man ford case has nothing to do with trump. nothing to do with trump world. nothing to do with the campaign u nothing to do with anything that a regular united states attorney couldn t handle which is an abomination. if you are part of donald trump s legal team, does mark levin say sit down, keep negotiating, walk away? well, in my little dream world if i were leading the trump legal team and gave me the mind to do what i wanted to i do would walk in to mr. mueller and say let me tell you something, buddy. you have been violating the constitution for a year and a half. you know what the rules are at the department of justice and the two memos that they have. you can t indict a sitting president. we know you are trying to set up our president. you are trying to take down one branch of the federal government in violation of the constitution.
i will see you in court. brian: great close except i would like to find out what is going to be on life, liberty and levin. we will have rick harrison of the show pawn stars. is he quite a brill cents gentleman. he is a very successful businessman. there is a lot that he has beehasdone in his life very compelling for our viewers. brian: is he mark levin. very compelling on sundays. don t miss him on fox & friends. thank you very much. brian: radio talk show host. still ahead. want to get off food stamps? president trump has a message for you, get a job. mothers parenting in the age of fear. that according to a new op-ed criminal to leave your children alone even for one second. our panel of moms is here to discuss next. i m lying on the cold hard ground
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don t you ever leave me don t you ever go. i know how it goes even when you are angry don t you ever leave me don t leave me alone. ainsley: moms are parenting in the age of fear. that s according to a new op-ed that says, quote: we now live in a country where it is seen as abnormal or even criminal for children to be away from direct adult supervision for even a second. the author is kim brooks and she shares her own personal story of a legal fallout after leaving her 4-year-old child unattended in a car on a cool, cloudy day in march while she ran in to a store for a quicker rand. she was soon then, after notified that there was a warrant out for her arrest. we are getting reaction from our panel of moms. evangeline gomez is in the back on the top left, an attorney specializing in family and matrimonial law.
i will start with you. i think it s extreme. as some point as a parent, you have to rely on common sense. and if you see your child under a are just stepping a few steps away. i mean, how many of us have gone to drop mail in a mailbox and park the car. get out. the child is in there and you run right back to your car. this isn t a situation where it was 90 degrees, she was leaving her child out for a lock period oalong period of ti. instead of someone reporting and calling the police, why don t you just look after the child or ask the mother hey, do you need my help? i can spot you while you go on in and run yourer rand a will be here. weave need to have more communication that way instead of let s report this to the authorities. cathy barnett on the front row radio show host and a mother. cathy, you bring your children to work. yes. ainsley: you are a great mother. your children are so well-mannered and well behaved. thank you. this is a fear of yours.
big brother is watching. this is a person watching this mother. recorded the license plate. called the cops. and then the coming. she is in virginia visiting her parents. she lands in chicago and they say we need to talk to you there is a warrant out for your arrest. i posed this question to a group of my fellow home schooling mommas yesterday. and there were no clear answers from them. because i think we all recognize that parenting can be exhausting sometimes. sometimes we don t want to bundle all five kids up and rush over just to grab something out of the store real quickly. and, yet, at the same time, i think we can walk and chew gum at the same time on their. as a society, we have a vested interest in making sure we have certain societal norms, right, that allows to us create an environment that allows us to thrive in raising our children. no one wants to see a bunch of 4-year-olds walking up and down the street unattended. there is a reason why we
don t allow 4-year-olds or older to enter into some binding contracts or to get married or to drink, because we recognize that they are not ready for to deal with the consequences of their choices. and likewise, for 4-year-old sitting in a car unattended. can we really trust that if a stranger danger approaches them that they would have the wherewithal to know that they re being manipulated to know that they shouldn t go. i think it s a little bit of both and take that into consideration. ainsley: erin is sitting behind you and she wrote a book called being there why prioritizing motherhood in the first three years matters. erica, my child is two and a half. i read that title. my child is two and a half. i only have a few more months. when we were bureauing up, our parents did. this they wrengt in the grocery store. mom, we don t want to go in. we want to do our homework. three kids. roll the windows down a little bit. lock the doors, don t open the door for strangers.
we were all fine. i know things have changed. you wrote the book. what are the rules now? this mom said she was trying to avoid her child having what we are all very aware of, the meltdown. the problem we don t know the rules. we don t want to shame rules. most people don t know it s illegal to leave a child in a car unattended. ainsley: it s actually not in that state of virginia. we need to know what the rules are so we don t blame mothers. i m of two minds about it children do need adult supervision. and they don t just need adult supervision for environmental dangers. for a stranger coming up to the car or the heat which is sort of environmental. they need protection in other ways. meaning when you leave a child alone who is 4, they are frightened. so mothers are buffers to stress as i talk about in my book we deal with things like impulse control or poor judgment. these are things we help to regulate as mothers. when we leave a child
unattended, particularly a very young child, we are not regulating those emotions that they have. ainsley: darby sitting next to you is a child and adolescent therapist. what would you tell moms that come in and sit on your sofa. i would tend to agree with erika, while we don t want to shame any mom. it s irresponsible to leave a 4-year-old alone in a car. a 4-year-old doesn t have the cognitive ability to say, to make a sound decision and they are very much nut moment. so they could just get up and leave. they could do whatever. they are not really thinking about that we don t need to shame her. i think, i wish the mom had said you know what? i did kind of a dumb thing because we all do that i don t think we need to go as far as legality of how we treat people. but, you do need supervision. and the way to build a resilient kid is to say okay, i know you don t love to do errands but we have got to do it. i don t love doing them either. let s come back quickly. ainsley: can we bribe them get you a prize? probably not allowed to do
that, right? two i want to talk to quickly founder of accessories expert and mother of two. what did you think when you read this op-ed? thank you so much for having me. ainsley: you are welcome. as somebody who shares her life with such a big audience i m used to getting backlash and judgment. you feed your kids too much sugar. you are using the wrong car seat. i have realized that there is no winning when it comes to motherhood and other people s opinions. so, it s about looking in the mirror and asking yourself am i making a choice that i feel is safest for my child and not thinking so much about what other people are going to think. and, of course, there are societal norms that we have to subscribe to. i know my parents put me on an airplane by myself when i was 5 to go visit my bab sitter to texas to indiana. i don t think i would ever put my 5-year-old child on a plane by herself although she would definitely be fine
and even ask me why she can t go visit her grandparents by herself. it s just not done today. so, i think it s a question of maybe what has happened in the past 25, 30 years that has made us change and become so much more stringent with parenting. ainsley: right. right. i want to get to you dr. havese. neuropsychologist. thank you for having me. ainsley: where do you draw the line. times have changed but at the same time you wants to give your children freedom and autonomy. i m single mom of twins who are 3 years old. i think parent shaming has become a national past time. if you are not worried your doctor or teacher or neighbor or school mates. parents judging you, you are worried about social media judging you. so i think parents are awfully aware of this constants, you know, eye on them. but i think that, you know,
you should never leave your child unattended in a public situation. but i also think that parents don t always know the rules. that s a wi big support of it. two prong thing. parents should be made more aware of what the lays are in their state. education in schools, pediatrician offices. postings everywhere. you don t hear about what the laws are. i didn t know what the law was in virginia. ainsley: laws for kids in your state? there should be something. on the flip side there should be more education on the law enforcement and child protective side. treating a good parent like a criminal, i think, is actually harmful and counter productive. ainsley: that s what she said she felt so embarrassed and ashamed: all right, ladies, we will have you back another panel towards the end of the show. stick around. happy friday to awful you. thank you for your perspective. ainsley: we will hand it over to jillian now. jillian: good morning, ainsley. do you want food stamps? get a job.
president trump urging lawmakers to work together to put that rule in the new farm bill. the president tweeting, quote: when the house and senate meet on the very important farm bill, we love our farmers, hopefully they will be able to leave the work requirement for food stamp provision that the house approved. senate should go to 51 votes. the current farm bill ends next month. an illegal immigrant facing criminal gun charges thinks he should be protected by our constitution. police say javier perez from mexico fired shots into the air in new york city to scare off rival gang members. his lawyer claims he has the right to bear arms because the constitution doesn t specify that it only applies to citizens. perez faces up to 10 years in prison and deportation if he is convicted. political science and good samaritans, put their lives on the line to pull a man from a burning car. vehicle bursts into flames. pulling the unconscious driver out through the sun
roof. no word on his condition. that video is incredible. that s a look at your headlines. send it back to you guys. janice: hi, it s me, jillian. steve: hey, janice. brian: janice, that was so rude we were about to toss to you. you jumped the toss. how dare you. japan january so excited to be outside for summer concert series keurig king and country coming up. keep the rain out of the concert. take a look at the weather maps real quick it is humid. see my hair expand throughout the morning. 76 in new york city. feels warmer than that all of this moisture streaming in from the east coast upwards and i don t know why my maps are working. they should. stand by. you know what? i guess they are not working right now. i will tell you we are going to seat potential for rain up and down the east coast. and heat and dry conditions across the west. so the fire danger is going to be ongoing. all right. we have our summer concert
series coming up. the lineup by the way is down 48th street and down into sixth avenue. ainsley: they are so popular. janice: very exciting. ainsley: lots of friends texted me said they are coming to see it that s awesome. steve: the van duren kids are coming. ainsley: sounds very regel. brian: sounds like a game show. steve: children of todd the car guy. brian: what was that game show scandal again to tell the truth? steve: quiz show. brian: van durens? ainsley: why don t you think about that while we take a break. steve: welcome back to random. ainsley: random thoughts of brian. steve: thousands marching the streets of chicago demanding an end to violence and rahm emanuel s resignation. chicago native giano caldwell was there for it. he joins us live next. when my hot water heater failed,
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steve: chicago protesters taking to the streets in a peaceful antiviolence march demanding mayor rahm emanuel step down amid the city s escalating crime crisis. chicago native and fox news political analyst giano caldwell was at the protest. he joins us live now from the second city. good morning. good morning, steve. there was a lot of pain i saw on the ground in chicago. there was one surprising moment from a politician. please take a look. we put this march together because in chicago there is too much blood shed in the african-american community. do you think mayor rahm emanuel has failed chicago. rahm emanuel, first of all is, a con man. his whole job is to keep black folks divided. no, he doesn t care about anybody but the people in his neighborhood and his family. the city is in financial
calamity. you know, the organization in the city of chicago is in complete disarray no matter which angle you want to audit or look at. chicago is a meet mess. you say he cares more about the illegal immigrants that are in this. he cares more about non-citizens, african-americans with citizens tharlg ancestors who built this country. i think he going to step up and come to the people where the crime is you know what i m saying? the crime is on the south and west side. we have to make sure that president trump recognize that not everyone believes that chicago is a trump-free zone. if is he serious about helping the people in chicago, especially on the west side of chicago, i accept his help. we can t turny help away. we have to make sure that people understanding that criminals cannot have their way with our streets. we have to protect our youth. we have to protect our seniors. people have to have safe
places to walk. so, you know, one murder is too many. and so if chicago police department and all the other do it we should seek other help. giano, it sounds like chicagoens want president trump to do what rahm emanuel is not doing. that last person you just saw senior democrat in the illinois legislature: legislator in hard hit area in chicago. he told me would love for president trump to come in. he thinks that the national guard should be part of the solution as well as the state police. he believes that there is some economic benefits to having the president there to talk about programs and other things. for me, that was the story out of yesterday. there is a senior democrat within illinois who says this is chicago isn t a trump-free zone.
he wants to speak with the president about his people u. steve: let s see if the president picks up the phone. giano, thanks for going out on the streets and reporting that story. that s terrific. thank you. steve: we did reach out to the mayor immanuel for a statement. he has not called back. can trumpism beat socialism in a op-ed buckley says yes. he joins us next however. new method to win over voters mid terms. text messages. is that going to bother you or are you going to read it we will talk with kurt the cyberguy coming up next. trout. alright. you don t think i need both? why does he have that axe? make summer go right with ford, america s best-selling brand. now get 0% financing for 72 months plus $1,000 ford credit bonus cash
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steve: ahead of the mid terms candidates are hoping to send out text messages. ainsley: number of messages you are going to get this year. brian: i will take it from here steve and ainsley. here with details is kurt the cyber guy. every time you have that tickle moment where you catch us off guard. brian: right. good morning to you. you are talking about your phone is about to just fire up with a bunch of text messages coming at you. already happening around the country? now up until november elections. all using very sophisticated text message campaigns to reach us because they found out that it s highly, highly effective. steve: because we always read our texts. where are they getting our phone numbers? well, there are a couple big source us one is a data house that can you buy this information from that essentially says that ainsley is wearing a green dress today and i mean, really just keeps so much information on us. steve: specific. very specific. name, location and our phone number. you will get a message and
be like hey, steve. you will be like who is this. the fact is they bought that other source would be you have already provided information to a political campaign in the past. they will use that again. ainsley: can you opt out of it if you don t want these messages? there you go? how do you not get these very effective for the campaigns. people say it s less annoying than getting a phone call nobody really wants to receive these calls so yes, there is i just posted an article two things you can do. one, if have you iphone or android phone when you get that message tap the i android three little dots. steve: block this caller. forward the message to spam. which is 7726. it alerts the carriers that hey, this is somebody spamming and that person is eventually going to end up on blocked list. brian: we backed off email because so much of it we don t need, want, or subscribe to.
text messages are things where people who know us. yes. brian: now getting more strangers text us. they act like they are very familiar. they act like they know you. and you get fooled. it s very brilliant. get trapped right into it. ainsley: this might be an old friend that is trying to get in touch with me. they are honest about it way getting around loopholes in the law prevents campaigns from sending giant spam messages from machines. instead of volunteers getting on the phone banks to call individually, they have volunteers in a room that are sending individual text messages which are permitted. steve: if you would like more information on how to stop it, go to cyberguy.com. kurt just posted that. thank you. ainsley: hey, brian. brian: goodbye, get rid of her. steve: straight ahead on this friday, the economy is booming under president trump. just how bad is that for democrats in the mid terms? a debate is coming up in the next hour. brian: plus, geraldo rivera will be here. and then we will bring in stuart varney separately
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we are fixing walls all over the border. we will start to get very nasty over the wall. steve: brand new clue for the search of mollie tibbets. a red shirt found near a hog farm investigators have been combing through. ainsley: family of the missing iowa college student not giving up hope. we believe mollie is still alive. if someone has abducted her, we are pleading with her to please release her. illegal immigrants, should theyable allowed to vote? i don t believe that people are illegal. everyone has a right to vote, illegal or not. the jobs numbers are going to come out. they are expecting a good one. if you don t see many of the good things this president is doing as a conservative. you are blind. we are going to keep on winning. we are going to win so much, perhaps some of you, but not
all will get tired of winning anybody going to get tired of winning? no. no turning back. steve: no turning back. look at that line. ainsley: you cannot go back. steve: folks are heading. in sixth avenue. feature performer at the all-american summer concert series for king and country. we have barbecue as well. all being brought to you by our friends from kissinger. the k-cup pod folk. ainsley: this band is so awesome. thank you for doing that for us. barbecue is so good. this band is so good. the line is around the corner for king and country they sing wonderful songs. their sister is rebecca saint james. steve: they were her back up
singers. ainsley: were they is that how they became famous? steve: i think. so they moved from down south. ainsley: from nashville. they were australian and moved to nashville. steve: exactly. ainsley: rebecca saint james i used to see her all the time when i was working on sean hannity s show. we were eating lunch here in new york. she said my husband is going to be on saturday night live tonight when they had that famous big hit. really neat. such a neat family. i think you will enjoy getting to know them. steve: for king and country. brian: we will be talking to them shortly in about 30 minutes. ainsley: looking forward to that. brian: meanwhile we have a lot to discuss today. i think there is going to be good news for the country in 90 minutes where we will get the jobs report for july. ainsley: we got it last friday 4.1. what are they expecting? are we heard any numbers? it s going to probably the unemployment rate will probably right now it s a 4. sounds like it s going to go down to 3.9.
the question is how many jobs are being created. rick lesson that you will is not far from where the president lives on the weekends. and he joins us live from jersey. ainsley: hey, rick. rick: not tired of winning, either. not tired of winning. brian: no, we re not. rick: good morning, steve, ainsley and brian. the president begins 10-day vacation ought bedminster golf club. you remember last night he was stumping for lou bar let attachment he hit a lot of points but did focus on the economy. the economy is soaring. our jobs are booming. factories are pouring back into our country. they are coming from all over the world. we re defending our workers. the president blasted what he called fake news for criticizing his helsinki summit with putin and his meeting with the queen of england. he talked about winning pennsylvania and how the
polls were wrong. he called them suppression polls designed to keep people from voting. he talked about border security. building a wall. upcoming mid terms and those who might challenge him. he called bob casey overrated and sleeping bob. elizabeth warren he called her pocahontas and maxine waters low iq. biggest cheers again for the state of the american worker. since out election we have added a number that nobody would have believed 3.7 million new jobs. [cheers] including close to 400,000 jobs in the manufacturing world. in june, the u.s. economy added 213,000 jobs and unemployment was right at 4% even. we are expecting new numbers to come out sometime in the next 90 minutes or so, guys. brian: all right. the economic story is a good story for the president so far. and that s what h what he wantse
to build on. i have never seen so you dressed up. are you going to dress down for other shows. know will keep the suit on all day long. brian: i like it steve and ainsley doesn t want to talk about it on camera. steve: unusual to talk about that. talk about the outfit. we like it allot. meanwhile, it does sound like the jobs number will be good for the administration. meanwhile, a lot of conversation has been about wages and over the last couple of quarters, the wage growth has gone up. a little north of 2.5%. they would like a little more than that, nonetheless, it s not flat it is going in the right direction. it needs a little more liftoff. brian: on top of that the reason why more competition for workers. more competition you need to make the people happier. to do that you usually give more money and benefits. the thing is they are looking for 190,000 jobs
happy with. unemployment dropping to 3.9. atlanta fed projects next quarter we could have even greater growth with the g.d.p. which would be unbelievable because 4.1 was thought to be unattainable. ainsley: unemployment down so much. it s wonderful. 18-year low. pretty phenomenal. brian: meanwhile, mark levin does an interview with us every thursday. one of the things that we had a chance to talk about is the high number of republicans that support the president. yet, high profile republicans never will. the bill kristols of the world. the george wills of the world. senator jeff flake. what is it about some republicans can t get on board for mark levin he thinks it all makes sense. they are irrelevant. what we re doing in this country now is very troublesome to me. this attempt to sabotage this president. this coup that is taking place and make no mistake it is. the democrats want the president out by hook or by crook. i see this nation like this right now.
i see the status progressives who are upset. they didn t control the left next election. they thought they would get four more years of obama through hillary and thought they would control the executive branch for the next 30 or 40 years and run the tables with their agenda and they failed. and they have been resistant ever since. they have been obstructing ever since. and if you don t see that as a conservative, then you are blind. and if you don t see many of the good things this president is doing as a conservative, you are also blind. brian: mark levin i don t think he looked at that stage and said i want donald trump as a huge impactful conservative voice he, sean and rush just can really control the dialogue. he watched to see who emerged. and when trump emerged he looked, he listened and he evaluated. is he pretty much on board evident he is wondering why victor davis is hanson.
steve: a number of high profile republicans say we want immigration and build the wall. behind the scenes they say that s not a good idea. poor investment. the president last night big rally in wicks burry, pennsylvania. he made it very clear. is he out to get more republicans. that would help him in the senate and in the congress as well. but, he is willing to use immigration as a campaign issue. people in that room were fired up about it. take a poll, probably 99% want a wall built. but, nonetheless, the president said you know, they have talked me in to waiting. i m not going to shut down the government over it before the mid terms but he could. we re fighting a war. and we are fighting a war on drugs. they are bringing in drugs. they are bringing in lots of bad people. we are going to start to get very nasty over the wall. the democrats, anything i want, they want to oppose.
you know, i just figured out how to do the wall. i sal i don t want to build a wall and they will insist on building it. [laughter] we will be taking some very tough action. we need more republicans but friends of mine they say president, you know, and some of them are really tough guys and they said, sir, we are better off if we wait until after. i say it s better before. we are either getting it or we are closing down government. we need border security. steve: that s why it s going to be an issue. ainsley: i think the people agree with him. a lot of people went to vote for that very issue. for the economy. he is not a typical politician. he said he wanted to drain the swamp. the swamp is not allowing him to build that wall. brian: people want to know the future of the democratic party. is it socialist? is it abolish ice like gillibrand wants. this candidate from new york? former president obama released a list of 80 plus candidates that he is going to support. one of which anti-ice, abolish ice candidate.
steve: that s right. debra haaland. she is from new mexico. there is her image right there. she did email a quote to us regarding this. she said i have called for abolishing ice because it s not living up to its mission. the violence and terror ice promotes must stop. we need to hold this out of control agency accountable. ainsley: not holding up to its mission they are doing what the law says. if you don t like what they are doing change the law. it s up to washington. steve: up to corning indeed. brian: a number of socialists in their 20 s suspect 280%. you have the abolish ice crowd from some very prominent democrats. and you have even eric holder comes out and says, excuse me, jeh johnson came out a couple weeks ago and says you don t abolish ice. former homeland security secretary under president obama. we need ice. for former president obama to be part of that anti-ice
movement, i can t believe that someone briefed him on that and he still got behind this candidate. steve: former president put out this list of a couple of dozen names cortez not on the list. she is being promoted as the future of the democratic party. that s kind of curious. brian: company line is i only put people on the list in tough races. she will waltz right to that spot that joe crowley had. ainsley: hand it over to jillian who has headlines for us. jillian: good friday morning and following a story captivate you had the nation. brand new information, a new clue in the desperate search for missing college student mollie tibbets. combing through a pig farm in iowa after a red shirt was reportedly found nearby. that s the same color shirt that mollie wears to work. the fbi questioned the owner of the farm who has a history of stalking. earlier we spoke to former homicide detective ted williams who is in iowa
following the case. the family is holding out hope. they are very optimistic that someone knows mollie is somewhere and they are hoping that that person or persons will release mollie. this is just so heart breaking. jillian: there is now $170,000 reward for information. to another fox news alert swat teams searched the home oof a neighbor thought they saw him there is he charged with shooting and killing cardiologist on his bike two weeks ago. he may have been seeking revenge after his mom died on the doctor s operating table in 1997. he is believed to be armed and dangerous. secretary of state mike pompeo meeting with his turkish counterpart overnight demanding an american pastor held captive be set free. the two speaking privately at the forum in singapore. while new deal is set.
pompeo says he is hopeful something will get done. pastor andrew brunson is under house arrest and facing terror relate you had charges. the white house is thought budges on economic sanctions placed on turningy after the tue government refused to release him. louisiana supermarket offering job to autistic teen to went viral after he helped him stock the shelves. he noticed jack edwards interested in his job. he guided him refilling the coolers. mark s family recorded the action. the go fund me set up by his family now raising over $90,000 to help send jordan to college. isn t that incredible? steve: got to decide do i go to college or i do take the job? ains. jillian: you know what? good decisions though. steve: no kidding. jillian: proves how great people can be. brian: let s stay in touch. jillian: let s do that. brian: video is crazy you have a tourist hunt ago by son at national park.
how did that work out? buy son could not be reached for comment. steve: bernie sanders to the rise of alexandria ocasio-cortez is socialism really our future? no. why next guest says trump the nerves in your colon. miralax is different. it works with the water in your body. unblocking your system naturally. miralax. now available in convenient single-serve mix-in pax. my mom washes the dishes. .before she puts them in the dishwasher. so what does the dishwasher do? new cascade platinum does the work for you, prewashing and removing stuck-on foods, the first time. wow, that s clean! new cascade platinum. when you barely clip a tpassing car. minor accident - no big deal, right? wrong. your insurance company is gonna raise your rate after the other car got a scratch so small you coulda fixed it with a pen. maybe you should take that pen and use it to sign up with a different insurance company. for drivers with accident forgiveness
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achings ainsley new democratic darling alexandria ocasio-cortez s primary victory has been seen as a revolution in american politics but, before cortez there was another political revolution from president donald trump. in a new op-ed our next guest says there are some similarities between the two, believe it or not, like being to the left of their parties. one major difference trump s nationalism is and sense of fraternity with all americans. here to explain this is frank buckley. he also is the author of the new book the republican workers party thank you for being with us. thank you for having me. ainsley: you are welcome. i remember when bernie sanders said he was a socialist everyone was just does he wonder what socialism is? now have you dozens of them running on this ticket. ocasio-cortez will disappear in 15 seconds. she is not bright enough. the point i was making was well, they are not the same people but both are to the left of their parties
and the key to all of that for trump is nationalism trump is a nationalist. that s how you understand his wall. he wants to make a distinction between americans and non-americans. what that means is got to take what you from people who aren t americans to americans. that will put him to the libertarian right. other people want to talk about getting rid of entitlements. that wasn t trump. so, you know, trump s nationalism say something about healthcare and the like, but the difference between him and ocasio-cortez he actually cares about americans. the democrats used to be like that. way back when they were the honorable people tipp o neal and so on. then they invested in identity politics. that s by way of saying we really don t like about half of you americans, right? i mean, it was sort of a
reverse sally fields. they don t like us, they really don t like us. ainsley: frank, what s wrong with that? what s wrong with him because they will make you feel guilty with supporting him. what s wrong with loving america? exactly right. well,s that the point. that s the dividing line of the identity politics of left and donald trump. you look at what trump is saying, he does not distinguish between different types of people between races or anything like that. is he solidly pro-american all the way through that s how you understand his idea about healthcare. he said i want row peel it and replace iting with beautiful. and then congress got in the way. frank, thank you so much for being with us great op-ed. thank you. ainsley: you are welcome. the economy is booming under president trump. our next guest says is he not worried it will help democrats. really? stick around for that plus, for king and country, hanging out in the kissinger corner.
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it gives you super fast speeds for all your devices, provides the most wifi coverage for your home, and lets you control your network with the xfi app. it s the ultimate wifi experience. xfinity xfi, simple, easy, awesome. brian: now time for news by the numbers. please wake the kids. 280% increase of young democrat socialist of america chapters at america colleges over the last two years. 250 new campuses have registered for chapters this fall. all right. let s move. next, up to $500. that s how much you get fined for texting and crossing the street in monclaire, california. the new rule is meant to keep people alert so they don t get hit by cars because if you get hit by a car a lot of times according to reports it hurts.
finally, $1,000. that s the tip a couple left for a waitress on their $32 bill. the woman is a single mom working three jobs to make ends meet in indiana. she donated the money so her community can bailed skate park for kids. here s steve who cannot skate but talk. steve: i can skate. brian: can you skate? steve: absolutely. brian: i want to see the video. steve: thanks so much, brian. president trump taking message to voters in wicks barry, pennsylvania. america is winning again. last week we announced that the u.s. economy grew at 4.1% last quarter. nobody thought that was possible. and if the democrats got in, that number would be 1.2, it would even turn negative it was going to go down job report being released 65 minutes from now. could trump s economy be bad news for democrats in the midterm election.
here to weigh in strategist advising missouri attorney general josh howie s campaign for senate gail and antwon seawright a democratic strategist and founder and ceo of blueprint strategy. good morning to both of you. good morning. good morning. steve: gail, let s start with you up in boston today. this is good news for republicans and you think that s going to help you in the mid terms. yeah. this is good news for republicans. it s great news for president trump. it gives him a really good story to tell. the g rpsd numbers from last friday combined with a series of good jobs numbers that we have seen over the last couple of months and maybe another one today it, gives the president an opportunity to take his message on the road and go campaign just like we saw last night in pennsylvania. go campaign in these competitive states in districts and talk about these positive economic achievements. steve: okay. it s not just good for the president. it s also good for these republicans running in these competitive states and districts. especially those republicans who are running against
democrats who are opposed to these positive economic accomplishments like the tax cuts. steve: sure. antwon, you know, i can t tell you how many ads i have heard about where nancy pelosi is in the ad and she is talking about the thousands of dollars that the family is going to wind up through the years through this tax cut as crumbs. that s not helpful. you know, of course that s what the republican also use as a distraction away from their failures over the past several months. especially during this presidency. the bottom line is while the economy is good for some. it s not add as good for others. ask the worker bmw factory no long have jobs because of tariffs by this president. farmers who now will receive a bailout for no fault of their own because of this president and his reckless policies implemented in this country. just because g.d.p. numbers are high, that does not translate or trickle down to middle class working families. you made a reference, i think, steve, to the tax scam that was passed several
months. steve: tax scam? [laughter] what we do know is majority of americans by many polls i have seen that middle class families have not benefited from the tax scam. and while corporations were handing out one-time bonuses wages were stag nantz in a lot of places and in fact companies laying off at the same time. steve: we were talking a little earlier at the top of the program about how wages are growing slowly, just a little south of 3% they would like a higher number. but, gail, when you look at the jobs number, when comes out in an hour. one of the things we have been talking about is the fact that right now because the economy is, according to the administration, booming, there are actually more jobs than there are people to take them. so, if you want a job, it s out there for you. yeah. you know, i think the democrats have to be savvy enough to know two things. number one, they are not going to say anything good or positive about the president s accomplishments when it comes to the economy because they know that there they are going to be creeing ground on one of the most
important issues to voters and that s the economy. number two they can t say anything derogatory because voters in these states are actually feeling the economic progress. this message of a powerful economy is powerfully unifying and really good for republicans. gail, i would just tell you this. 4.1 g.d.p. that we saw a few days ago from the president, that ranks fifth highest as obama presidency. keep in mind we had 5.1% g.d.p. during the obama presidency. but the economy would not be the only issue on the ballot. what america knows that we are in a battle for america s soul and what most americans know we can t afford to lose. there will be things on the ballot that may not be measured from a policy standpoint like how do we protect our democracy? how do we make sure our children can effectively compete in ever changing global society simple things like affordable housing. access to this thing called the american experiment. in a lot of cases this president and this congress have failed the american people. steve: okay ladies and
gentlemen, i think we have just seen a preview of the campaign for mid terms 2018. we thank you both for joining us live u. thank you. thank you. steve: all right. 7:30 here in new york city. now that jobs number comes out one hour from right now. meanwhile a police officer now fighting for his life after being shot in the head. the latest in the attack on war the latest attack on the war on cops coming up. how do you end the violence? that s a big question. and the show last man standing perhaps booted over its conservative voice but tim allen is coming back. and his character will not be silenced. he is still standing i m still standing after all this time picking up the pieces of my life without you on my mind i m still standing
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i fought the law and the law won ainsley: oh, that s awesome. that s your shot of the morning. you have the right to remain cute. steve: ing. ainsley: that 1-year-old pulled over for driving without a license. the massachusetts officer let him off with a cuteness warning. brian: it s grace you know him spot driving a red mercedes toy car when police stopped him. steve: must have been bad because the cop jumped the curb there. toddler wearing a t-shirt that read i have literal no idea what you are saying. congratulations. ainsley: that s great. brian: let s go up to jillian now. she has never been pulled over in a toy car. jillian: not a toy car. brian: right. but other cars. jillian: yes. guilty as charged. multiple times. get you caught up on headlines starting with this
a as anti-trump rhetoric. eric trump is shining a light on how his family has been targeted. don maybe threatened. august of us. we have had white powder show up at our house. there is no moral outrage about that. when it happens to them. when they are offended by a message all of a sudden. jillian: back in february vanessa trump was hospitalized in new york after opening a suspicious letter with a white powdery substance addressed to now ex-husband donald trump jr. hand sanitizer could be back firing. particular species is becoming resistant to the alcohols in the sanitizers. that bacteria is linked to sepsis a potentially deadly blood infection. every day use of the sanitizers outside of hospital settings shouldn t be an issue. a tourist taunts a wild by son at yellow stone national park. as you can imagine it doesn t go well. no, no, no. no. oh no.
oh no. oh, god. oh, god, no. no. i can t watch. oh, no, no. jillian: the by son charging at the men after he beats his chest as you can see there. take a look at this video here. bile standers obviously surprised at what s going on. the guy doesn t learn his lesson and confronts the by son again, by the way by son injure people more than any other animal at yellow stone. don t do that anywhere. that s a look at your headlines. time to go outside hot, humid and sticky, who cirs, janice with our college associate isabel. good morning. janice: hello, good morning. are you guys excited? for king and country coming up. we have great summer concert series this is isabel our college associate. isabel, where are you from? philly. janice: tell me your school. nyu. janice: what do you want to do? this. janice: are you ready to do the weather. i am ready. janice: are you ready to
hear isabel do the weather? oh my gosh, take it away. all right. another wet day for much of the east coast. flood advisories are posted from the southeast to the northeast west coast it is still warm and dry with more hot temperatures for the forecast next week. and we have a chance of rain for this morning. now back to you in the studio. [cheers and applause] janice: how was she guys? good job. janice: what about the teacher? the best teacher. brian: in front of a live audience. janice: she is beautiful. ainsley: we will miss you will be back, right? how many interns have done here. three. brian: play the drums with the band. i m ready. steve: speak of the band. this grammy award-winning duo took the industry by storm with to chart topping christian hits. brian: new album joy instand
hit. passing 1 million views in just days. they are brothers joel and luke of for king and country. [cheers and applause] congratulations on all your success. [cheers and applause] brian. steve: hey, guys, congratulations this is one of the biggest crowds we have have to date? did you tell people you were coming? we would never do that of course we did. for king and country going to come and do fox & friends. we want to bring a party. it s good. ainsley: tell us about your family. i know rebecca saint james she is a friend of fox news. your dad. tell us how you ended up. two of seven kids, five boys, two girls. our eldest sister rebecca james was a gospel singer for many years. the joke was dad manages her, manages us. needed cheap labor. looked around five sons put together a road crew. we learned the art of shomanship and here we are.
steve: what did you do on the road crew. i was the lighting director. blifnt. joel the stage manager. the funny thing was we were promoted at the age of 15. we couldn t afford to have real people. steve: when you were traveling do you tell the lighting director listen, buddy. i will tell you i do enjoy the fact we get to do this. and i have done every win of the jobs of any any of the crew we have. you can sympathize with everybody. that s a cool thing. brian: how did your christian theme fit n nashville? stay one more time? brian: how does the christian theme fit in nashville. nashville is a story town. it s about us writing. we love jesus. we love our wives and love our families. all of that into music. and man, it s been a real great place for us to land. ainsley: such a role model and not easy to be an easy christian role model in this society today. you didn t kiss your wife until your wedding night. that was her choice not mine. ainsley: pretty amazing. what s your advice for kids that are watching.
brian: don t kiss your wife. don t kiss my wife that s a good one. we speak about a woman s worth a lot. about men being chivalrous in how they love. i would say this. i would say it s easy to kind of go with the flow. it s easy to fit in. the courageous thing is to step out and take a stand. the courageous thing is to say i m going to honor a woman. i m going to respect a woman. and so that s what we have tried to muddled as men, husbands musicians. ainsley: any of the boys single for all of those single ladies? you have a remarkable family. steve: you do, indeed. it s just about 20 minutes until they take the stage for the all-american summer concert series. [cheers] brian: you are going to be performing at the top of the hour for a full hour. be catching that on the stream. also, you don t have to wait. download your music right now. am i right, guys? just launched the new tour. new album coming out october 1st. that s why we get to be with you here today.
ainsley: download shoulders great song. steve: and joy. brian: guys, stick around because they haven t played yet. coming up straight ahead. san francisco wants to let non-citizens vote in elections. what could be wrong with that? how do people feel about it. do you want to ask me another question? i don t know to exact the topic. i haven t paid taxes since 2014 and i still vote. brian: fantastic. the men behind those videos. ainsley: geraldo is here at the top of the hour. happy friday. [cheers and applause] but meningitis b progresses quickly and can be fatal, sometimes within 24 hours. while meningitis b is uncommon, about 1 in 10 infected will die. like millions of others, your teen may not be vaccinated against meningitis b.
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and try new metamucil fiber thins, made with 100% natural psyllium fiber. a great-tasting and easy way to start your day. 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? (vo) and you may lose weight. in the same one-year study, adults lost on average up to 12 pounds. oh! up to 12 pounds? (vo) a two-year study showed that ozempic® does not increase the risk of major cardiovascular events like heart attack, stroke, or death. oh! no increased risk? ozempic®! ozempic® should not be the first medicine for treating diabetes, or for people with type 1 diabetes or diabetic ketoacidosis. do not share needles or pens. don t reuse needles. do not take ozempic® if you have a personal or family history of medullary thyroid cancer, multiple endocrine neoplasia syndrome type 2,
or if you are allergic to ozempic®. stop taking ozempic® and get medical help right away if you get a lump or swelling in your neck, severe stomach pain, itching, rash, or trouble breathing. serious side effects may happen, including pancreatitis. tell your doctor if you have diabetic retinopathy or vision changes. taking ozempic® with a sulfonylurea or insulin may increase the risk for low blood sugar. common side effects are nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, stomach pain, and constipation. some side effects can lead to dehydration, which may worsen kidney problems. i discovered the potential with ozempic®. oh! oh! oh! ozempic®! (vo) ask your healthcare provider if ozempic® is right for you. jillian: good morning, welcome back. time for quick business headlines. fiat chrysler recalling ram pickup trucks in the u.s. tail gates with power locks can open while moving.
pickup trucks from model years 2015 through 20156789 brook stone closing all of its mall locations after filing for chapter 11 bankruptcy. blaming customers going online instead of the mall. no bank card? no problem. chase is expanding cardless access to all 16,000 atms nationwide u customers will be able to get cash through their phone s mobile wallet without actually needing a physical debit card or access code. brian? brian: all right. thanks, jillian. police across the country under fire. this time a colorado springs officer critically injured after being shot this time in the head and now fighting for his life. this year has been one of the most violent on record for police officers with 34 officers shot and killed in the line of duty. so far this year. it is just august. surpassing the number at this point from the last two years. so why the increase in violence in the escalation of the war? here to weigh in is nassau
county police commissioner who has been studying patrick rider. commissioner, again, we are talking about this. any common denominator from colorado to california to new york that transcends all of these incidents? the biggest problem that we see is the violence, that s the common denominator. we are the face of those that want to act out. it s an easy target and they have come after law enforcement around the country. brian: why now? 2016 we had one of the highest records for line of duty shootings against police officers. i think it was 67. we re on pace now to get to that number and break it hopefully we don t get there. it s just the rhetoric that goes on in social media. and, you know, again, we become that easy target to take it out against. brian: do you think there is a hesitancy among officers to take action because they don t want to be the next they don t want to be on trial themselves. they don t want to be the cause of any type of riot we saw in ferguson or other places? law enforcement gets seven month academy.
after seven months 80 hours on deescalation. we teach them to deescalate and not use the deadly physical force. use the taser before you use the gun. those officers are trained and then professionals, they are not reluck tantaros to use that force but they always in the back of their mind they think of their families. they think of their kids at home that if they are that cop that gets dragged into the court next. and you see what the outcite from the public is. brian: how does it change? how can you change quickly because you certainly have somebody from the oval office who is in support of law enforcement. so you can t say well, we are getting the wrong message from the top. no, we need to keep the dialogue alive. we need to speak to our communities. we need to speak to our community leaders to bring the rhetoric down. again, it becomes an easy target for those that want to act out. we re the ones that go out we are delivering babies, we are being the psychologist. we re the marriage counselor. we do a lot of different functions as a cop.
to be targeted against the public, the public that we re entrusted to protect and serve, it s kind of disheartening. brian: do you need the death penalty for shooting and killing an officer? would that be the deterrent? without a doubt the deterrent should be the fact that if you shoot and kill the officer there should be a death penalty for that. brian: seems overall a fearlessness to doing it so did i it and what? it s becoming too wrote for people to act out like. this we see a lot of violence coming from our gang members. a lot of violence from the lone wolves that want to act out. it s got to stop and bring the rhetoric down. we have got to have the conversation. we have got to keep the dialogue alive. brian: i guess officers have to start being looked up to on a massive schedule the way they used to be and that would certainly help. we deserving the respect. we give the respect we deserve the respect back. brian: commissioner good to see you. thank you very much. mollie tibbets family not giving up hope as they
search for new clue missing student. we re in iowa next. want to let non-citizens vote in elections how stupid is that? the man behind this video joins us next. do you want to ask me another question. i don t know exact the top ping. i haven t paid taxes since 2014 and i still vote so yes. because he hid his customers gold in a different box. and the bandits, well, they got rocks. we protected your money then and we re dedicated to helping protect it today. like alerting you to certain card activity we find suspicious. if it s not your purchase, we ll help you resolve it. it s a new day at wells fargo. but it s a lot like our first day.
are you ready to take your then you need xfinity xfi.? a more powerful way to stay connected. it gives you super fast speeds for all your devices, provides the most wifi coverage for your home, and lets you control your network with the xfi app. it s the ultimate wifi experience. xfinity xfi, simple, easy, awesome. steve: the city of san francisco will now be allowing non-citizens, including illegal immigrants, to register to vote for the city s school board election. ainsley: but what do residents think about that? our next guest hit the streets to find out. do you think that people who aren t citizens of this country should be allowed to vote?
hold on. do you want to ask me another question? i don t know to exact the topic, but i do feel like everyone has the right to vote. you think it s fair even if they don t pay into the system, the tax system, they should be allowed to vote. i haven t paid taxes since 2014 and i still vote so, yes. steve: there you go. wit created that video for bragger u and joins us with the latest. will, are you surprised at the responses? i m not surprised at all, actually if you go to prager u.com and see my responses the people in california are destroying this state, homelessness, infrastructure is bad keep voting for liberal policies start with the school board elections allowing illegals to vote and only goes up from there. ainsley: are they misinformed? do you do they say why people who are in this country illegally should be able to weigh in on this election? i think they are completely misinformed. the one girl talking about
illegals says she doesn t think that anybody is illegal which is so funny to me. i wish if people were to go to mexico illegally they don t treat their immigrants as well as we treat them in america. mainstream media has totally blown these people s minds. steve: the way this story has evolved they announced out in san francisco area that if you live in the country, you can be in the country legally or illegally. as long as you are a resident of the san francisco area, you can be able to register to vote in local elections and the theory is you are paying in local taxes, but at the same time, they should have the ability to weigh in on their children s education because it s for school board and things like that. what do you think of that? yeah. it s still unconstitutional, you know, to be able to have a legal to be able to vote in this country. in terms of paying into a lot of federal taxes, they just haven t done that. they use public services as
well. ainsley: do you think a lot of illegals will actually vote? do they have to sign up? do they have to sign their name and addresses and where does that information go? i guess it doesn t go to ice because sanctuary state. are they worried about that? do they fear putting all that pen to paper and giving out their personal information? part-time in san francisco are not afraid at all. california has become a sanctuary state for illegals to go. in california half of the illegal immigrants are there. i don t think people are worried about that at all. steve: right now this only impacts people in the san francisco area for local elections. it does not involve federal elections and that would be against the law. so, is your worry that if they allow people to vote local loy eventually it would be federally? yes. i think it starts out small and then it goes up. it s a slippery slope. you know, you let one thing happen and then it keeps on going from there. steve: they would have to change the law then.
ainsley: what s the next video? do you have another one lined up? the next one we are working on is actually going to santa barbara and talking to the people about the plastic straw ban here in california as well. government overreach. steve: that s going on here. people would like to keep the plastic straw. just saying. the paper one dissolves. i know they chap my lips. steve: okay. good to know will witt from prager university. ainsley: president trump says he is going to shut down the president to get his border wall. steve: geraldo rivera says the president is absolutely correct. geraldo joins us next. all you can eat is back, baby. applebee s.
a red shirt reportedly found near a hog farm. investigators are combing through it. ainsley: family is not giving up hope. we believe mollie is still alive. if someone abducted her, we are pleading with you to please release her. brian: former president obama releases a list of 80 candidates he will support, one a is a anti-i.c.e. candidate. steve: she said she calls to abolish i.c.e. because they are not living up to its mission. job numbers are coming out. good news for president to take his message on the road. we are going to keep on winning. we are going to win so much, perhaps some of you, but not all of you will get tired of winning. anybody going to get tired of winning?
always searching home sick, but nobody heading home soon so keep on moving on, keeping on almost felt right, love sick but no one to go home to so keep on, keeping on, sing along, sing along
keep on keeping on, once you feel it brian: finally playing, king and country. their playing the song, dreamers. they bought two drums. if that isn t enough we had them show up on the pod. ainsley: king and country, vocal about their faith. they clearly have great vocals. their sister is rebecca st. james. that s right. they are featured performers at all american summer concert series from our friends at keurig, with the k-cup pod. they are performing, dreamers, and one of our famous dreamers. looking to get citizenship. i was hoping that is not just coincidence. i am for the dreamers. i am for the dreamers. steve: president of the united states was out in pennsylvania. he made it clear he wants immigration. he wants the wall. you know how washington works. it doesn t.
listen. we re fighting a war, we re fighting a war on drugs. they re bringing in drugs. the everything i want they want to oppose. i figured out how to do the wall. i say i don t want to build the wall, and they will insist on building it. [cheering] i just figured that out right now. so we re going to be taking some very tough actions. we need more republicans but they are trends of mine, they say, president, you know, some of them are really tough guys, they said, sir, we re better off if we wait after. better before. we re either getting it or we re closing down government. we need border security. brian: that is the president last night talking about immigration, getting a huge round of applause. his numbers, hispanic support has grown for this president.
usually that is the third rail, people misinterpret what immigration enforcement is. let me take a bigger approach to that. president is correct anything he proposes opposed by the democrats. even the wall. even the wall the most incendiary of the president s proposals. in parentheses, he undermined his position with separation of families six weeks ago. that really hurt the president s moral high ground on the issue of undocumented immigrants. the bigger picture is, that anything the president is for, the democrats are against. that is true. the wall is a classic example. i know for a fact that schumer, the minority leader of the senate, luis gutierrez, most articulate fiery, latino congressman, will be retiring. both said in exchange for the dreamers, going back to the dreamers being given some kind of a normalization and
protection, that the $25 billion to build the president s wall would be forthcoming. it would be a compromise. both sides not really happy with it, but compromises are by their very nature painful to both sides. what happened though going forward i think the positions have hardened. now the president is very frustrated. the democrats are militant in their opposition to the wall. any chance for a compromise to explode. brian: they have already given money to border security for bush. steve: the thing between schumer and president was, schumer is offering the 25 billion, the president thought he could get more. president fast forwarded now, he made it very clear, if they were to try to shut down the government before the my terms, that would inflict maximum leverage, but at the same time maximum damage perhaps on the republican. i have never, maybe someone can give me an example, maybe i haven t studied issue deeply enough i can not remember a
single instance where the person who was the shut downer, the shut earlier, receive a political boost as a result of the shutting down. everybody who has shut down the government, led the evident to shut down the government, ted cruz, during the run-up, destroyed his candidacy. i don t think the american people want the government to be shut down. they want as much as there is opposition and as much that conflict is necessary for a constitutional government, they want the two side to peaceally get along. steve: you re in a dream world. that is not possible right now. people say that about me, it may very well be true, i still believe, i remember our late great boss roger ailes used to say only thing in the middle of the road is road kill. maybe i am vulnerable to being road kill i maintain there is plenty of room for compromise. look what ivanka said today, he said it last night, ivanka
talking about her dad. there is no firmer supporter of president trump than ivanka trump. she said that the president wept too far with the separation of families. he did, it caused him endless heartache and heart burn, undermined moral high ground on the issue. now as a result of this and other things, we can find a common ground. in terms of undocumented immigrants, let s, you can not see the pictures of i.c.e. going to the homes of otherwise law-abiding, undocumented immigrants, many of whom who have been here for decades, many of whom have citizen children in the middle of night, ramming in the door and taking the person out to be deported. steve: if they re criminals. if they re criminals, that s different. i think i.c.e. has to be reformulated. brian: no. ainsley: they said the only reason they go to these houses they re not allowed to talk to them at detention centers. they don t like to go to the houses because it puts them at
risk too. they changed laws. don t want to come face-to-face with the illegal criminals locked up behind bars it, would be much easier, so many i.c.e. directors on recently, they say so much easier for us to fill out paperwork at detention center. we re forced to go to their houses because they changed the law. i think what has to happen is absolute separation of the two functions. i.c.e. is an honorable, honored law enforcement agency that is, that is given the job, the very difficult job of blowing up transnational criminal organizations, gangbangers, drug dealers, drug cartels, i.c.e. investigations they are heroes in the ice of fellow law enforcement and the people. ones, enforce mane and removal people, that is very, very difficult not fair to them. brian: is it okay to overstay a visa? is it okay to not show up in court?
is it okay to come here illegally? should we forget about it? no. brian: how does anybody enforce this? you do it, first of all you do it a lot smarter, if you want the wall, the wall i think will cut down on the juan and maria, the fruit picker, the babysitter, the lawn nower, the dishwasher, those immigrants will be, i think, kept out by the wall. but the transnational dopers won t be. i mean you see, i made this joke, in madison square garden, when they shoot the t-shirts into the crowd, man that was just 10-pounds of cocaine. you could shoot it over a 30-foot wall. catapult. united states, psychologically we need the wall on the southern border, it was squared that the demographic makeup the country is changing. brian: one thing about you, you go to the story. you ve been to the border. tell me, i don t know your answer to this, when we go there
and talk to these people, on or off-camara, they want a barrier. sometimes there is cliffs, sometimes there is rivers. other times a solid wall, other times a fence. they want the barrier, helps funnel people. i have no problem with it. brian: but poem do this for a living want it. lots of people want it, brian. other people think it is a big, screw you, to all of latin america. my problem is with the humanity, the compassion and the tone. i think just like the president now is fighting with all the media, and the tone has become so harsh, all of us are horrified by it. ainsley: what about the tone on the left, abolish i.c.e., abolish i.c.e. brian: you like that tone? i do not like it. where did abolish i.c.e., come from, ainsley? you have to be fair. it didn t really get the momentum until you started seeing 6-year-olds and 4-year-olds separated from the parents. when you saw the church leaders. you saw democrats seizing this as a potential weakness in president trump.
look at this bad man. he is is taking children from their parents. i think that we have to be smart about it. we have to be compassionate about it. we have to be sensible about it. i want ms-13 out. i don t care about juan and maria, 10 years 20 years. brian: they would tell you they re not focusing on juan and maria. i see so much of it, brian. they go for the low-hanging fruit. their job is enforcement and removal. that is their job. just imagine someone been your neighbor. get a knock on the door. 2:00 in the morning. come on, pop, you re going, the kids are crying. the mother is bereft. i think there is compassionate way to do it. donald trump knows how to do it. the more he puts onus on schuler and democrats for their intransigence, their inability to to do anything, the absolute pledge they have made to do nothing to cooperate with this president, the more you put own
us on them being inflexible. brian: we have video of harry reid saying lottery is bad. they are bad. brian: but they have, schumer is saying the law enforcement during the bush era. now all of sudden he doesn t want the wall. he doesn t care about the lottery. steve: geraldo, we look in the passion, last 12 minutes and seven seconds, this is why a campaign issue in the run-up to the midterms. thank you very much. brian: pick up the geraldo show. pick up the book for sale, why it is selling so well. steve: mollie tibbetts family in iowa not giving up hope. fox news alert fine a new clue in the search for a the missing student. we re live in iowa next. brian: the look on this guy s face says he it is all busted, he is busted. caught on camera robbing a house. ainsley: a look down in the
plaza, where our friend greg gutfeld signing copies after new book. gutfeld monologues. that is very nice of him. steve: don t get barbecue on it. learn more at theexplorercard.com 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. a hotel can make or break a trip. and at expedia, we don t think you should be rushed into booking one. that s why we created expedia s add-on advantage. now after booking your flight, you unlock discounts on select hotels right until the day you leave.
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brian: fox news alert. brand new clues in the search for mollie tibbetts. a red shirt reportedly found near a pig farm. investigators are combing through the pig farm. ainsley: this as the family of the missing iowa college student, they are not giving up, pleading for their safe return. ted williams met with mollie s mother yesterday. he joins us with the latest. ted is a former homicide detective and fox news contributor. ted, thanks for being with us. yeah, my pleasure. ainsley: tell us about the red shirt and the pig farmer. well, the pig farmer was someone whose property they had searched early on. they went back. it is my understanding they found a red shirt and trying to show a nexus between the red shirt and mollie. brian: that will be good. any type of clue. meanwhile you talked to mollie s mom and here s how, here is a bit of that interview. i was quietly sitting in the
public library. my youngest son scott called me and said mollie didn t go to work today. at that moment adrenaline shot through my body. something is terribly wrong. law enforcement is essential, crucial. i can t even find the words to say what has happened. just tell us who is mollie. tell us something about mollie. she was vivacious. she loves life. she was passionate. she was not afraid. how are you holding up? like i said through, through some kind of internal strength that is just there. the other night i walked outside to star lit sky i saw a shooting star. that was a, somehow, somewhere she is remaining with me. that mother is dedicated as well as the rest of the family and as well as the whole town of
brooklyn, iowa. they are dedicated on bringing molly home. ainsley: will they have another press conference today? is there any new information they re sharing with us? because we re all so anxious to find her. we re certainly hopeful. they are having a press conference this morning. as you know there was reward out. the reward was for $172,000 for mollie to be returned, no questions answered, they re willing to give the person, the abductor, who knows where mollie is, that reward. brian: they are using that term abduction though, right? yeah. they have used that on several occasions, the word abduction. they are certainly open-minded though, clearly they don t know where or what has happened to mollie. ainsley: is there reason to believe, i heard reports earlier, they do believe she is alive, and maybe being held
hostage somewhere? the family is optimistic. the family clearly believes, and rightfully so, that she is a live. they are going on that premise. that she is being held somewhere. that is the reason they offered this reward that was announced yesterday. brian: ted williams, thanks, stay on it. if you know anything, call the sheriff s office, 641-623-5679. ainsley: with any tips. protests erupted nationwide since president trump s election. how do you discuss politics with your kids, and teach them to be respectful? brian: don t do what they re doing. ainsley: a panel of mothers coming up next. brian: here is king&country. the song, not over yet. i need to take a selfie with this young lady here. carry on, little brother.
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republican baseball practice. he was shot in the hip. amber alert issued for a girl who may have been abducted. look at this. she was taken at reagan national airport in d.c. by the woman in the surveillance photo. the 12-year-old was traveling with a group touring american schools. they think she is in extreme danger. think she left the airport in this car. if you see anything, call police. ainsley: thank you, jillian. since president trump s election the left has not let up on the angry protests. [shouting] abolish i.c.e. abolish i.c.e. [shouting] ainsley: how do you calmly discuss politics with your children, being respectful of other s views?
elizabeth in the front. she is founder of accessories expert.com, mother of two. you were telling me during the break he recently had to have a conversation with your children. tell your folks at home about that? i try to find ways to talk to my two daughters four and five years old what is going on in the world, what is important with our family. i grew up in fort worth, texas, where the politics could not be more different than they are here in new york city. it is important for me to expose my daughters to both worlds i want them to know not everyone in our great country of america believes the same things. and we can have different viewpoints and be respectful of each other. when they encounter situations of controversy. recently we were at the israel day parade, saw protesters, i explained to them not everyone has the same perspective. we don t have to. but it is our job to do our homework and do our research and find out the truth for ourselves. and then take a stance. at the end of the day i just want my children to care and not
be passive. that would be a victory for me. ainsley: that sounds great. darby fox, is behind you, adolescent and family therapist. do you give melissa an a? did she handle that well? yes, she did. ainsley: how do we have conversations with our children? it is important to have conversations around politics and topics, what might their opinion be, explain the issue is, let them develop their own ideas. that is a more important way especially with younger kids to start talk about politics. ainsley: cathy on the front row, radio show host, fox news contributor, how do you talk about it with your children? we talk about regularly. we talk about topics, hot potato topics, kneeling during the national anthem. why people are saying they re kneeling and what the real reasons are. we talk about politics. talking about the birds and bees to your children. we want them to get the facts at
home, versus going out into the culture which they can get a lot of misleading, salacious, hyper billionic kind of information we have the black community voting in a large, blind bloc, for failed democratic policies, from my perspective almost decimated the black community. i think as a black mother i have an obligation to talk to my children specifically about policies of abolishing i.c.e., rushing to the border, trying to take in more illegals, things such of that nature. being very intentional about them. ainsley: erica is behind you, author of the book, book there, why prioritizing motherhood in the first three years matters. if you have a one-year-old, two-year-old, three-year-old, in the book, probably too early to talk specifically about politics. a little bit early. ainsley: what age? what age do we start talking about the specifics? by school age they re starting to ask questions.
you always want to answer the questions the children have. the children are exposed to a great deal because of tv, what they see, what they hear from other adults. talking politics with your children that are school-age and above is a great way to teach things like critical thinking and to teach your value system, as long as you do it in a non-judgmental open-minded way to allow them to have their open views. it is an interesting way to develop their minds. ainsley: in the back row, dr. aziz, schneur row psychologist, mother of twins, three-year-old boys, what are your feelings, your thoughts about this experience? if you keep the developmental and cognitive state of a child in mind having political and social discussions can be very enlighten and important for children to develop viewpoints, problem-solving skills, challenge them to see a the world from a different point of
view. for the election, even from adults, it was eye-opening in new york, we live in a bubble, we had no idea in new york, i had no idea how the rest of the country felt very differently. people i knew felt very differently. people it is important to have these discussions and your children to be compassionate with the strife of the people who feel differently than you. i think, i think, from a developmental standpoint i think the social developmental discussions are very important to developing your viewpoint and just growing. ainsley: if you live in new york, you have to realize there is a whole other country out there. elizabeth and i know that growing up in the south. the views are very different. it is nice to have an open mind. listen to other people and not be so angry. ladies, thank y all so much. have a great weekend. fox news alert, the july numbers report. it is out now. we ll bring you the numbers. stuart varney standing by for all the analysis coming up next. here is king&country with a
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157,000 jobs were added last month. that is less than economists were predicting earlier. unemployment rate dropped to 3.9%. that is down from last month s 4%. steve: stuart varney joins us. good news, bad news, right? i wouldn t say that the 157,000 new jobs is bad news. i think it s a little disappointing. we wanted to keep up a pace of 200,000 new jobs created each month but we ve fallen short of that. the other side of the coin is, you have a return to 3.9% unemployment. that is the rate. that is very close to a generational low. a couple much months ago it was 3.8%. now we re at 3.9. that is still extremely low. one other piece of good news, if you look the revision to previous jobs report, it has gone up, up 59,000 new jobs, more new jobs created the previous month. brian: wanted 195 we thought we projected. i frankly wanted more than 200,000.
brian: the experts were projecting just under 200. second quarter of the year, april through june, in that quarter we achieved a 4.1% annual growth rate for the overall economy. we got july s employment numbers. economy s performance in the third quarter. a little disappointing. i was hoping for better. ainsley: what are the factors here. people are not really hiring around christmastimes in christmas shopping. is it the same for summer? that is very hard one to go after, actually. travel and tourism does well in the summer. brian: sorry about ainsley s question if it was too hard. i want to sounds like you re bailing on the question. i never saw anything like it. ainsley: i just wonder what the factors are. is that normal for jobs numbers? wait a minute. you re interjection. brian: you re right, i should have stayed out of it. steve: good news, unemployment rate went to 3.9%.
the reason it went up to 4% because of all new people coming in looking for a job. that is correct. right now you have more jobs open and available than you ve got open and available than people to fill them. there is a skills gap. a lot of jobs on offer, can t be met by employees who have the skills for that job. you are climbing a little bit after wall. brian: not talking about people that are hurt. people that can work. people on the sideline are getting out. 600,000 got back into the workforce. we need people back in the workforce. for a while it didn t pay to work. they were getting food stamps and welfare, unemployment that lasted forever. what you have now a record number of people quitting the job that they have, because it is a great labor market can, they feel that they can quit what they got, move up to the food chain to something better. steve: trait up. ainsley: don t ever quit without another job, right? no, i wouldn t do that. i have long experience of not
doing that. steve: we know you will get nor data in, analyze it and talk about it 9:00 at fox business. you got it. brian: that is what you are wearing, right? i promise, brian. brian: good. you don t have jillian, do you. shall i toss to jillian? brian: go ahead. give us the news. jillian: wow. brian: right to the point. jillian: good morning to you. we do have serious news we re following. get right to the fox news alert. the police officer is fighting for his life after being shot in the head. officer jim duzel was responding to a call in colorado springs, when police say a man opened fire. he is due in court today. we spoke to nassau county police commissioner, patrick ryder about the dangers facing officers. we do a lot of different functions as a cop. to be targeted against the public, the public that we re entrusted.
[no audio. jillian: a christian pastor, james mccdonald s walk in the word, makes apple s top 25 list. it vanished from apple s itune charts. the drop happening within the 24 hours after pastor encouraging listeners to pay for the president on. cops say he swiped 1hundred dollars worth of stuff from a i recall childhood education. program they are still looking for him but with a face look that, and a clear image like that, chances are, they won t be looking for him that long. tim allen s character keeps his conservative viewpoint when his sitcom, last manned standing returns. i know what microaggressions is, ebb latest liberal attack on free speech. funny in you do them right.
the executive producer said i don t think we ll comment specifically on trump. mike backser is conservative, a republican, he holds those ideals. last manned standing was canceled by abc after six seasons. the reboot premiers september 2th on fox. a lot of people are looking forward to that. brian: very funny show. don t be surprised if tim allen turns up on our couch. steve: earlier this week we had greg gutfeld on the couch. he is with janice. what are you doing here. raining books and raining greg. you have a new book out. yes, called the gutfeld monologues. why would i be out here. i don t even know where i am. are you guys excited greg is here? you better be. are you doing weather? 70% of you a someness and 30% chance of more awesomeness. why don t you do this every
morning? i will stay up all night. a lot of drinking. buy this book, fantastic. the best book you will ever read since the last book you read. fantastic. greg gutfeld, everybody. back inside. steve: absolutely right, 70% chance of you a someness today. brian: he just walked off camera. i thought i was a professional. ainsley: he thought he was finished. brian: unbelievable. what comes up next, thousands in the streets in chicago. demanding an end to the violence. the mayor was not welcome to attend. rahm emanuel is a con man. he does not care about anybody but people in his neighborhood and his family. brian: gianno caldwell was there. he is there next. steve: here is king and country with, priceless.
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good morning, welcome back for quick headlines. do you remember when madonna said this? yes. i have thought an awful lot about blowing up the white house jillian: well she is not doing that, but she just moved her family to portugal to escape president trump. in an interview with italian vogue, she says in part, quote, i wanted to get out of america for a minute. as you know this is not america s finest hour. he is famous for being the wwe wrestler kane. glen jacobs has a new job. the republican winning mayoral bid in knox county, tennessee, beating list opponent by double the votes. steve: steve chicago protesters taking to the streets demanding mayor rahm emanuel quit because of escalating crime in that city. chicago native, fox news political analyst gianno
caldwell was at the protest. he joins us live from the second city. good morning. steve: why was everybody called out to take to the streets to get some attention? honestly the residents of chicago are fed up with rahm emanuel s inaction. in addition they re fed up with the violence. they don t see any change. there was a surprise mess on it of that march yesterday from senior illinois legislator who is democrat. let s take a look. when we put this march together because in chicago there is too much blood shed in the african-american community. do you think mayor rahm emanuel failed chicago? rahm emanuel, first of all, is a con man. his whole job is to keep black folks divided. no, he doesn t care about anybody. but the people in his neighborhood and his family. city is in financial calamity. the organization, city of chicago, complete disarray, no matter which angle you want to audit or look at. chicago is a complete mess. you say he cares more about
the illegal immigrants than african-americans? i said exactly that. he cares more about non-citizens, african-americans than citizens, us that built this country. has done some good things, if don t step up and come to the people where the crime is. you know what i m saying? the crime is on the south side and the west side. we have to make sure that president trump recognized that not everyone believes that chicago is a trump-free zone. if he is serious about helping the people in chicago, especially on the west side of chicago, i accept his help. we can t turn any help away. we have to make sure that people understand that criminals can not have their way with our streets. we have to protect our youth. we have to protect the seniors. people have to have safe places to walk. so you know, one murder is too many. and so if chicago police department and all the other law enforsments can t do it, we
should seek other help. steve: very damning to hear the people on streets of chicago saying our mayor cares more about people who are in this country illegally than them. yes. absolutely is, and i think that s a concern they share throughout the black community here in chicago. i found it to be particularly interesting that that there are leaders within the democratic party in illinois who are seeking the help of outside resources such as president trump. as you saw in that last interview with lashown ford, famously in 2010 requested the national guard come in. with that being the case, i think there are changes that can be made. i think there are outside resources that are necessities. so i m hopeful there will be changes here very soon. steve: we ll see if the feds get involved. it s a desperate situation. gianno. we reached out to the mayor for
a statement, rahm emanuel. have not heard back. up next for king&country take the concert stage. that is coming up next. first sandra smith with a preview what happens on the channel 9:00 eastern. steve, good morning a news conference we re waiting that could reveal new information about the case of mollie tibbetts. the unemployment rate from july is out. reaction from the white house in moments. protesters filling the streets of chicago, calling for rahm emanuel the mayor, to resign. his challenger, former superintendent of police gary mccarthy will join us this morning. join us for america s newsroom, top of the hour. keeping this tookus safe and protected. you can get comfortable doing the same with yours. preparation h. get comfortable with it. capital one and hotels.com are giving venture cardholders 10 miles on every dollar they spend at thousands of hotels. brrrr! i have the chills. because of all those miles?
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[cheering] watching the nightly news, don t seem to find the rhythm. brian: just wanna sing the blues. feels like a song that never stops, feels like it s never gonna got to get that fire, fire back in my bones, before my heart, heart turns into stone, so somebody please pass the megaknown. i ll shout it on the count of three. one, two three. oh hear my prayer tonight, cause this is do-or-die, the time has come to make a choice. and i choose joy
and i choose joy yeah, back when i was young, my eyes were full of life, but now that i am older i live at speed of light feels like the cycle never, stops feels like it s never gonna got to get that fire, fire, back in my bones, before my heart, heart turns into stone so somebody please pass the megaphone, i ll shut it on the count of three one, two, three. oh hear my prayer tonight, cause this is do-or-die, the time hastom to make a choice, and i choose joy
yeah, i choose joy i need that joy, joy, joy, joy, down in my heart, down in my heart toasty i need that joy, joy, joy, joy, down in my heart down in my heart to stay i need that joy, joy, joy, down in my heart, down in my heart to stay i need the joy, joy, joy, down
in my heart, down in my heart to stay fox & friends, i want to see everybody go crazy out in the audience. i want to see some dancing in new york city. can you do that for me? joy joy joy, joy, joy, down in my heart, down in my heart
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Transcripts For DW DW News 20190407 21:00:00


w. . this is a deed of unionists live from berlin a last minute campaign promise from israel s prime minister benjamin netanyahu says hill and an express bank settlements if voters return to office on she just right now he s running neck and neck with former former army chief of staff benny gantz will a surprise pledge put him ahead also coming out. wrong remembers the genocide and honors its victims is a quarter century since nearly a million tutsis and moderate hutus were killed one hundred days. correspondent was
at the ceremony. and are signs of peace afoot in the koreas foreigners flock in record numbers to north korea s premier tourist event the pyongyang marathon. i m nick spicer welcome to the program. israeli prime minister benjamin netanyahu has promised to an extent settlements in the occupied west bank if he s reelected next week then yeah who promoted jewish settlement expansion during his four terms as prime minister but until now he s refused to talk about the future of the settlements which are considered illegal under international law netanyahu is in a tight race for the premiership with former army general benny gantz. there is
only b.b. they shout for binyamin netanyahu is followers he s the greatest unique and irreplaceable even if he s not alongside his followers on the streets of israel he s been campaigning nonstop alongside his supporters in washington d.c. online and on t.v. his latest campaign promise. i will extend the solvency of israel to the settlements i won t hand this land over to the palestinian authority. he s talking about a partial an extension of the west bank music to the ears of right wing voters and netanyahu is coalition partners the opposition calls the pledge irresponsible they say netanyahu is desperate he s been dogged by scandals and accusations of corruption and now on security the most important issue in israel netanyahu is facing stiff competition. benny gantz a former army chief of staff has
a chance of replacing him as prime minister. maybe the citizens of israel will have a prime minister who cares about their interests. not his own personal business. but in the name. clean handed yet tough on security that s how cancer presents himself and people listening. to him really need to change for a new future for israel. and the polls predict a close result and i m joined now by correspondent correspondent benjamin hammer in tel aviv so this is a neck and neck race as we ve heard how does mr netanyahu announcement influence the campaign over all. well one thing is for sure this is raising the tension in an already tense situation and almost everybody in israel agrees that this is a tactical move when he was so close to the elections he s done this before he s
doing it now and he s clearly aiming for right being voters who could vote otherwise for other right wing parties polls show that the center right parties are probably going to be able to form a government but the polls at the same time show that netanyahu is likud might not be the strongest party the strongest party according to polls could be any guns. lou why this worries me to yahoo because this could mean that israel s president will task any guns with forming a government and not on yahoo he wants not he wants that not to happen and this could explain his move if we look at any guns is definitely putting him into an uncomfortable position because the benny gantz is aiming for both right wing center voters and on the center left so he needs to really be careful what he says there are people who support the settlements there are people who oppose the circumvents
there is a poll that forty one percent of israelis are in favor of a partial and exhaustion of the west bank but it also means that some people are really worried some people that might vote for guns about what s currently happening with netanyahu if you can just rewind a nine hundred ninety three the oslo accords and the idea of land for peace which is animated the peace process which is perhaps not a dynamic right now how does this announcement if it comes to be affect that idea. well if an attorney who would do what is so far a non-story would of course make a so-called two state solution with a known palestinian state even harder if not impossible the whole climate is is not there at the moment in this region you cannot you can hardly talk of a peace process israelis and palestinians have not negotiated for years and if we
look at the overall political climate we see definitely a right wing shift in israeli politics they need guns for example has made it clear that israel would keep major settlement blocks and the jordan valley in any case and if you look at parties that in the spirit of oslo are for clear two state solution of the international alliance on the united nations lines we see that their electoral support is very low if you look at a party like minutes they would hardly go and keep the threshold to get into parliament so who knows that the climate in israel has shifted to the right in recent years and this probably explains why he s trying their tactical move so close to the elections ok benjamin hammer in tel aviv thanks for that. rwanda has
begun one hundred days of mourning for the more than eight hundred thousand people slaughtered in the genocide that begat it twenty five years ago today that country president paul kagame led a ceremony in the capital kigali commemorating the lives of the ethnic tutsis and moderate hutus who were killed in a span of just one hundred days. pledge that rwandans would never again turn against one another. remembering run this dead on the day the brutal killing began twenty five years ago president could go home and ten heads of state and reads at the kigali genocide memorial the burial place of over two hundred fifty thousand victims of the genocide which wiped out close to a million rand and. he had to quit because flame the flame of remembrance well done for one hundred days that s how long the fastest and so if the twentieth century lost it. in the can god he can mention center right behind me the main commemoration event is taking place we just watched all across the country this is
where artists are performing songs in honor of the victims and survivors of the haunting testimony here president paul kagame and talks about remembering uniting and renewing all borders under minds. but none of us. together we. will run the threads over units. into. in new tapas. thousands of runners have embarked on a somber walk to remember it s a month to mourn those who lost their lives during the genocide but it s also symbolic walk the perpetrators and survivors walk side by side on this dark and violent past to have these people want to be as
a country and it s not just those who witnessed the atrocities committed during the genocide but also the youth the future of this country which is here to highlight their role and responsibility in making sure history is never repeated. to the mrs we have to love each other so the things that happened i mean. in the. gulf too in the future there. will be united to. our marching for my family. my relatives who during this period of the four let us first together and future especially remembering what happened before and it s never happened again twenty five thousand london s have come together and omaha national stadium the final emotional performance the day draws to a close but handles lighting up the night john of the memory of the genocide victims and some living hope for elective gesture by the wounds of many running
campaigns and might never really heal. and now to some of the other stories making news around the world. in libya fighting around the capital tripoli is intensifying with at least thirty five people killed in recent days a militia led by general kelly for have to are aims to take the capital where the united nations backed government is based militias loyal to the government are mobilizing to defend the city. police in romania have mounted a massive search operation along the country s black sea coast after one hundred thirty kilograms of cocaine washed ashore authorities are urging residents not to open the packets which began appearing on the beach on friday mania is a key transit point for drugs from latin america destined for western europe. authorities in sudan say the country has suffered
a total power blackout the power outage comes as thousands again took to the streets of the capital khartoum and elsewhere demanding the resignation of president omar al bashir. then shouting freedom whilst they march to the city center. the sudanese opposition has been growing and protesters say they continue to gain allies. and i mean here in front of the sudanese army s headquarters. even the army is on the side of the revolution because it s peaceful. so far the military has not intervened. whether that s a sign of approval remains unclear but soldiers do not seem to consider the protesters a threat for a second day crowds called for president omar al bashir to resign they say his nearly three decades in power have brought sudan to the brink of ruin. the corrupt
have said they will rule this country forever and that they will scare us with bullets but look what s happening. protests also erupted elsewhere in the country despite police attempts to stop them activists groups say that at least sixty people have been killed since the demonstrations began in december. could this be a step towards a new opening up in north korea the annual pyongyang marathon was held today twice as many foreigners registered to compete in the north korean capital as did last year so what s a marathon like in one of the world s most reclusive countries let s take a look. and there off is the highlight of north korea s tourism calendar the annual kyung young international marathon but what sets this race apart i hope it does and we ll say that it was a great atmosphere as you can see. that so and there were many people in the
stadium as well as along the streets. from young to old the locals wait and shoot for us i managed to take a lot of photos as i was moved to king them running to see the. runners can see the sides of a tightly controlled city and for most of them the journey itself is the reward. bad. more than one hundred westerners enter the race over twice as many as last year from today who wanted to get this to the thirtieth event and there are more runners an effort to make the event more significant they had billions to the day of the sun when the great president kim il sung was born. tourism slowed to a trickle after north korea carried out a serious of missile tests in two thousand and eighteen but with tensions now
easing between the u.s. and north korea more western tourists have signed up for the marathon but there were still no americans because a u.s. travel ban remains in place but north koreans are happy with the turnout. the event will generate revenue for an economy that s long felt the burden of international sanctions. and you re up to date now with details. the under slate the show follows after the break when our guest is fortunate distal door sporting director lets on and still he will be giving his views on byron malling dortmund this weekend we will also bring you the goals from sunday s games find out if both mention could reignite their push for a top four spot when they hosted where to bremen the visitors also have aspirations of a spot in european competition next season. that s all coming up in just a minute on behalf of the whole team here in berlin thanks for watching.

Correspondent , North-korea , Peace , Foreigners , Pyongyang-marathon , Ceremony , Numbers , Koreas , Signs , Benjamin-netanyahu , Israel , Program

Transcripts For DW World Stories 20190413 20:15:00


you re watching news from berlin and more coming up at the top of the hour don t forget you can always get all the latest news and information around the clock on our website at c.w. dot com and you can always download our app probably against breaking news and push notifications thank you for joining us and stay tuned. where i come from we have to fight for a free press i was born and raised in a military dictatorship but just want to be shadow and if your newspapers when official information as a journalist i have work off the streets of many can trust and their problems are
always the same core to social inequality a lack of the freedom of the press and corruption who can afford to stay silent when it comes to the fans the children see the my little souls who have decided to put their trust in us. my name is jenny harrison i work d.w. . coming up this time on world stories. rounding up criminal clans in germany. breaking conventions in iran with body ought. to start off in the under twenty five
years have passed since nearly one million people mostly twenty s were murdered the legacy of this genocide is a heavy burden for the younger generation to bear. we want to hard and this is where our house used to be before the genocide nothing is left of it now the killers bent it all down after looting it gas prices. everything when he was just three months old when his parents and four siblings were killed by hutu militias he s a survivor of the one nine hundred ninety four genocide in rwanda the fastest of the twentieth century during which close to a million randoms mostly tutsi were wiped out in just one hundred days. eric was too young to remember his family dying but he says he will never forget the day his aunt told him what happened while. you were talking as if you were younger she carried me on had back during the genocide right up
until that killing stopped she told me how horrific it was she witnessed it all that rain was pouring down on us those were hard times for me lisa would flee from the killer you know while we were fleeing we would jump over dead bodies. eric stock family history is one she had by many his relatives like countless persecuted to across the country had sought refuge in a charge when they were killed and chads just like this one in yemen to an estimated fifty thousand people died during the genocide today this side stands as one of run this most poignant memorials i just remind of what happened and physical evidence of crimes that should never be forgotten. doris you can t imagine how it feels like growing up knowing that you re all alone with no parents and no siblings while about children you know each of them. eric says his
generation s identity is deeply entrenched in the trauma of one thousand nine hundred so any survivors who lost their families who are still processing the past but also children of perpetrators who participated in the killings nichiren name is adam. it s very hard to find yourself all alone either because your family members were killed for being too see or as in my case with parents who are in prison because they were convicted of participating in the genocide with before you are still there and we have to take on a lot of responsibility from a young age to. the genocide could cost a long dog shadow over the lives of future generations yet i believe in the power of reconciliation is offering a new chapter and around us history. as the youth we have
to live in a way that brings us together to keep our country moving forward. to use the future of the country. totally but of residual. law enforcement has long underestimated the power of criminal clans in germany now some high profile crimes have prompted course i m police to crack down on these largely arab clans. a large scale raid in berlin s not come under strict investigators are mainly targeting shisha bars where they suspect organized crime plans are laundering money customs investigators auditors and federal and state crime authorities accompanied by hundreds of police officers are searching the bars it s the biggest operation of its kind in berlin. now i can district mayor martin he has come along he wants to know how the mission is going. to work. this
time the improprieties are minor offenses tobacco without tax stamps and violations of trading and child protection laws but the district mayor says he won t turn a blind eye. or do. we can publish everything with these checks from you know to major offenses we are implementing a zero tolerance strategy here large scale raids like this are part of a new campaign against organized arab crime clans suspected of committing major offenses including the breaking of a luxury department store in broad daylight or the theft of a one hundred kilogram gold coin worth millions but convicting clan members is difficult not least because few are willing to testify about two hundred thousand individuals are reportedly members of arab clan families in germany the government is increasing the pressure by seizing luxury cars and real estate but organized
crime researcher ralph gadahn says that s not enough to break the clan solidarity fifty three they re all sworn to secrecy and that s what makes the investigators work so difficult there are unable to break through these structures. there would need to be a support program for people who want to leave the classrooms. but there are no such programs yet how delusions came from syria ten years ago almost every day she sees the klan s at work along zonen ali one of nikon s main streets but she s afraid their crimes will strengthen prejudices against innocent migrants and muslims is on the one and only. the mafia s here concentrated here on those on the highway my friends on the you know well in this and i think sooner or later something is going to happen here. mr stone she said she s most afraid of a xena phobic attack. germans should get used to huge police actions like this one
authorities say they know these are not enough but that they lack better resources in the fight against organized clan crimes. the people have a hunger of skin rashes far north have no taste for trash landfills planned never city for trash from moscow the protests go beyond the garbage dump on talk of the federal government in the faraway capital. do you think you know that you can get the police of all can get citizens not to take part in the protest. the federal security service the f.s.b. and the police are trying to prevent the demonstrations in all can get asc david arrested one of the organizers their goal is intimidation but to no avail thousands show up. there protesting against moscow building a landfill in the region for its waste this footage was shot by activists.
locals fear that the trash of the capital will destroy the local environment one of the organizers of the demonstration is twenty three year old alexander prescott. well it s just the disappearance if the demonstration will end at lenin square where protesters will show their frustration over into the sleeping business when the with the democrats communists and conservatives are demonstrating together i mean putin supporters hard to find. i was. law enforcement agencies trying to stop the march but there overrun by process this year the body be i m ready to go to war do you understand and everyone in akron galton feels the same as i do. with it we need food we demanded a referendum but they ignore us they don t want to find a solution together in the u.k. they bring trash from another region to us but we re already swamp with our own
garbage with them with the water was about something you could do i don t want them to poison our water our richard rena and our white see. it took the demonstrators an hour to reach lenin square activists demand that the government invest in environmentally sustainable waste management organizes a blown away by the support they didn t expect so many people to show up. they are the winners school their school i m happy that fifteen to twenty thousand locals have come into the group to do to people here are seriously worried was the reason why they didn t go to. everyone here hopes that this time the government listens. more and more young iranians especially women are getting tattoos it isn t illegal but authorities say it doesn t conform to islamic values body art to break through conventions. this
is how ass and they had east bends most of her time perfecting the contour africa s tamar s eyebrows her beauty salon is tucked away in the first floor of an apartment building in eastern tehran. but the thirty year old artist also offers a different service to women who know what to ask for one that is not openly advertised and can be only performed behind closed doors here in iran. for absenting a tattoo ing is the job she s most passionate about and her preferred form of art i think it s much more beautiful to me than drawing or painting on paper which i used to do when i have a sketch and then i took to it on someone s body it s amazing the fact that i change someone s appearance of my art gives me a good feeling a good feeling that s shared by the women she tattoos but none of them want to talk about it on camera or even show their faces that s because having
a tattoo is widely considered taboo in iran. in public body art mostly remains hidden beneath the moderate dress code that s mandatory here but inside coffee shops where to rand s hipsters gather tattoos are openly displayed. so hayloft lackey is one of the scenes most famous artists he considers tattooing to be a symbolic form of medical treatment for his generation a way for people to heal what he sees as spiritual wounds well living in a culture in crisis madama flaws the more know that i m getting more and more hollow. for this survey used to use and also expensive clothes as a beautiful cloak to hide what s missing inside. of there which is more so as a business the tuning is getting more and more successful. but for customers or it s hard to make an educated choice. because when something is kind of illegal in a society then it s hard to find out information about it and.
that s something absent a heidi would like to change as well instead of creating her art secretly inside a beauty salon she would like to bring it out of the shadows. i guess the more you carry laws that nobody else had enough money i would open my own tattoo studio. time that i began then i could work along with many other tattoo artists i don t want to call expand the business and get better at what i see and stuff about me that are the most i develop. a passion that s not without risks here in the islamic republic but for ason a being able to pursue her art is worth it. for
the twenty first century. any interest on our. unique interpretation of. a tesla in concert and the world of a young piano genius. parts twenty one presents dunny in a tree for nothing new show kevin or. next on t.w. . africa. guys here or anything. look at that. and didn t hear it let s keep going. to the can guide scotty makes a sound and environmental projects with sustainable energy. and mark

Streets , Many , Journalist , Problems , Souls , Fans , Children , Lack , Corruption , Core , Freedom-of-the-press , Trust

Transcripts For DW Global 3000 20190722 15:30:00


is this the beginning of a good in the digital age. will we be subjected to continuous state surveillance. they are the experts be able to agree on technical guidelines or will this technology create deadly more thomas what systems. stores august 14th on t w. live. below the welcome to global 3000 this week we re off to jakarta could the indonesian capital soon be underwater.
strengths in the ring and out of it women in egypt have discovered the power of books sing. and we meet online activist mousy alina jet and hereabouts her campaign the to ordinary women to experience a little freedom. women in iran are expected to cover their heads in public and if they want to apply for a passport or travel abroad they need male permission and wives have little chance of obtaining a divorce nonetheless women have been campaigning for equal rights in that country since the turn of the millennium. social media has given the movement to boost it s used by more than half of the iranian population and women in particular are discovering there really is strength in numbers regardless of where they are in the world. it s a punishable crime to be on veiled in public according to the laws sharia laws in
iran you get lashes you get jailed and fined but more important than this you won t be allowed to get an education from the age of 7 if you take off your headscarf you won t be allowed to get a job you want to be allowed to live in your own country. my campaign was born on a simple picture. it was a picture of me rolling in a beauty food street in london it was a spring may the trees were full of blossoms and i wrote a caption on my picture that every time one iran in a free country and i feel the wind through my hair it just reminds me of the time
when my hair was like a hostage in the hands of the reigning government. i ask women whether they want to share their pictures with me so the moment of freedom with me. i was bombarded by pictures from women inside iran being unveiled . so i created my stealthy freedom page on facebook bush now has more than a 1000000 followers on instagram more than a 1000000 followers and it s all about freedom it s all about dignity it s all about choice. i grow up and i m small for less which is close to custom and see. what i get homesick. the only thing that makes me feel home and happy is just going to nature climbing
the tree going to mile an hour walking the seaside just reminds me of home. our kitchen in the village are designed for women it s shorter because women are shorter than men so. i remember i used to say to my brother i know this is short for you but there is a chair said 1000 and wash the dishes so that shows that i have started my feminist movement my feminist revolution from my kitchen. that is important for women we have to start. being a rubble. in our house. my mother never had the chance to go to school university never she s not even able to read
and write but to me she s the true feminist. my father has stopped talking to me he doesn t support me the things that i m against islam i m against my own country and big chain my country but i think the. they re all happening just because you know the governor really brainwashed. people like my father otherwise my father loves me. when i was a student i got kicked out from high school just because of my opinion and then i became a journalist part of entry journalist i got kicked out from the m.p. s just because i exposed a crush and i became a call of this then again because i criticized the president of iran it was just a week before the controversial election 2009 my car got the one that lies in iran and 2 of my journalistic car was on there my vehicle real so that was
a message for me that you know it s going to happen to you so i decided you know leave the country. i launched myself a freedom but after 3 years it was everywhere so like the president of iran knew about it talked about it of all the media around the war of the media inside iran the rain in the state t.v. clerics and i thought oh my god now this is the time we have to shift the online movement to something offline these people need to identify each other so in 2017 i decided to actually you know pick a day pick a color and help these people to identify each other in public.
these women in white ones they say they are the only civil justice only warrior i called it a one person demonstration because they never have. permission to take this. they will be shot they will be you know into prison they. be torture but they are brave they found a way to protest against oppression. this is the time man should get involved in women s movement so i created another campaign called the men in hitch all. the government on don t want to control the society because they know that this generation is not going to keep silent and they found that social media as an alternative media chooks frustum selves to be loud and to break the censorship that is what the social media itself is is
a threat for islamic republic of iran so they try to block that because they see this is the main battleground and they don t want to lose control. i have so many chain bad the biggest one is one day while many are wrong have the power to run the country. my dream is just to see. our as. sports is another activity that gender roles in muslim communities make difficult for women to fully participate in yet playing basketball or football can be deeply liberating. not only is it healthy and physically strengthening spool it can
also help build self-confidence. had to really packs a punch and that s what saves her from past sorts of unwanted male attention. here . in the streets of cairo sexual harassment is a common experience. back to her training partner while law is just as fierce she s egypt s heavyweight boxing champion. outside the ring the 2 boxers usually have to dial it down a notch to refrain from striking anyone with full force of pastor but on the streets they re never afraid. and i don t want to boast but in fact i m a heavyweight boxing champion. and that s an honor for my family so i m the man of the house and also out in the world. and these women do wear headscarves even while
training but it causes some frustration and for competitions they like to take off the his job although this bothers a lot of men. and i m sure he got a good job limits me and gets in the way and makes it harder for me to breathe when my hair is uncovered i feel better and perform better for the. women s boxing in egypt is still only a fringe sport but according to the coach there s no shortage of talented women the challenge is finding them and supporting them. listen it s not as though this is only a sport for men there are many women who become world champions and in egypt there s a lot of potential for that we have many strong and talented women. but they don t have it easy in egypt there s a deep seated prejudice and many clichés that endure. boxing is a brutal sport i think it s better for women to avoid it it s very difficult for
women to bear and i mean that they love the stuff. right this is all those muscles look disgusting in my fashion of snow i feel ill when i see all of that. by a whore it is emotional. not your. meade has had to contend with stereotypes like those for years but that hasn t stopped her quite the contrary she became world champion in 2008 and today she coaches egypt s national team the men s team it should be noted. she s had a sensational career but it hasn t all been easy. i thought it was very hard for my family to accept this but they said how can you do something like this you could break your nose blood get spilled an eyebrow split it. at home she never received much direct support and that hurt even though she understood her parents sensitivities. but. my parents have never seen me
they never attended the championships only why siblings came back and my mother was even too afraid to watch videos of the matches and she only ever wanted to know if i had one of the. last has also earned numerous gold medals to the delight of her nephews her biggest fans they also want to become boxers like their arms but the road there is long while law has been fighting in the ring for 7 years that much. her mother is proud of her youngest child and of her powerful punch. i also learned that my boxing is actually self-defense that she s had to defend herself so many times i remember how she beat up 3 boys at school who harassed her with one of them had attacked her with a pencil and almost killed her but we did. and hollyer can do more
than just box they re also quite capable cooks and that s at least one stereotype they fulfill but while a is in no hurry to get married she says finding the right partners even trickier in her case. one family lawyers tend not to like it when a girl is stronger than they are and. that s why i would like to find someone who understands me and also practices the sport and loves it be who she is i have to be close. living life with a sense of confidence that s something that these young women demonstrate every day they re fortunate to have the support of their families and they can t imagine a life without boxing. and i might have had in the us have been my boxing friends are the most important thing to me the way other people wake up in the morning and go to work and i go to the gym it s my life. by doing what they
love these female boxers are also fighting for women s rights in the arab world and for the right of everyone to follow his or her own path with no holds barred. if. you choose. to today s global team comes from madagascar i. don t think it s narrow minded you know my name is the only 210 tiana and i ve just turned 15. can. i m not a cool 10 people live in my has among them my sister and brother we live in tampa.
all of their. parents fish for a living and spend most of the time actually on the lagoon which is on. his on the boat i like chinese jump rope most of all and i love playing soccer unfortunately the boys play better than off girls it. might come with them trying to listen to i definitely want to improve my english because i want to be a teacher one day the moment on dateline from rafa can meet so that they re going on monday. and
a lot of tourists come to town. and i d like to be able to talk to them i root in the face of. them awful funday my best friend makes me happy her name is christopher we talk about everything and we laugh a lot together going to church also makes me happy. if you dispute that climate change is taking its toll on our planet and in the not too distant future 8 major cities could be underwater. bangkok lagos manila shanghai
london houston the one sinking at the fastest rate jakarta parts of the indonesian capital have already dropped 4 metres. the reason rising sea levels for one but that s not the only culprit local residents are steadily depleting the ground water supply below the city that basically creates an air pocket into which the earth above it sinks attempts to curtail this development have proven difficult because almost whole 50 cartons rely on groundwater for their day to day needs. our reporter michelle that so went to jakarta to find out more. it s been a while since anyone prayed in this mosque in north cut the c.e.o. s nonsense claim to it. it makes. it every time he sees the
building. thinking of this city is increasing. in last few years but. you can. say their prayers here before they cannot. anymore. the indonesian capital of jakarta is home to over 30000000 people it s one of the most densely populated cities in the world and to test a problem. the strength isn t obvious here in the heart of the city but it s severe . in the north s home to many fishing communities there s no ignoring the rising sea water this brick wall was built into sounds and then 2 in the more borrowed district as protection against flooding the seawall is
continuously being reinforced and released but that doesn t help after a spell of heavy rainfall the water begins pouring over again. sinking. they ll go on what is being extra very much and we lost our. sufferance and the soil it s become thinking we have what extract here and then come along in this. climate. impact doubling. of the c.p. because it s already below our what our natural. rising sea levels and sinking soil the city needs more long term solutions. put on gun use to be an environmental activist to campaign for the rights of fishermen nowadays sea advises the governor of jakarta and this part of
a team working to stop the city from disappearing into the ground he s well aware that anything he plans would have an impact on fishing. there are some 22000 fisherman in jakarta. but these people harvest green mussels from the bait the local speciality they re cooked right on the beach. 4 years ago the city or sorry to use began building a chain of artificial islands off the north and caused to slow down lin subsequence it s had a serious impact on deck access. how many kilos do you catch a day about 50 kilos. and what about before the islands were built.
back then we ve got about 200 kilos. now a new part is planned along with a break wall that s actually in the sea 50 meters off shore the fishermen are worried they soon won t be able to catch anything at all. they ve learned to live with regular flooding but the new coastal wall would mean the end of their livelihoods. as you want to know whether the coastal wall will disturb our access to the sea i say that even if it has benefits for the community the development plan has to be discussed with the affected community. once the fishermen to be part of the decision making.
the covered market where they sell their catch is nearby. here too it s impossible to overlook the city s plight the market was only built 5 years ago but huge cracks are already showing. the buildings in some parts of jakarta are sinking into the ground at the rate of up to $25.00 centimeters a year. this major fountain in the heart of jakarta belies the fact that clean water isn t desperately short supply half the capital s population draws its water from illegal wells and vast amounts of groundwater are used by the new high rises springing up across town that needs more regulation cesspool on. what. their waste management.
the city is searching for ways to conserve the precious resource. preventing groundwater levels from further declining is essential otherwise jakarta will sink even faster and. flooding will pose an even bigger threat. waste as another problem in the monsoon season especially trash clocks up rivers and canals so waterways can t drain into the sea these days an army of about 12000 trash collectors work around the clock bettering the garbage emergency. a number of components or settlements have already been evacuated and torn down in the name or flood protection. the company of tom cole was slated for demolition in 2015 the hearts
were directly on the river and the inhabitants were supposed to be evicted and then they took matters into their own hands they ve torn down parts of their homes themselves removing sections on the water satch 3 years ago the house and before we cleaning it for activities and before we planned. it that was our flower and anything here this is not really prefer. the result is striving peaceful community and to residents who take pride in keeping the neighborhood trash really. and there s now a riverside walkway that s a comfortable distance from the water. the community also has the support of a team of architects who developed a sustainable model home for. it s made of stone and ward rather than plastic and
sheet metal 7 families live here this is more like it involves among them are google more met his wife and their 2 children. then before and i have window this is important because. pinning their hopes on sustainable living. change well i m not saying. it s not important but. there. is. social responsibility sustainable water management the people often call have shown what s possible the community has become a model of clean and green living now the neighborhood enjoys state support. hopes. starting to understand that when it comes to ensuring the.
urban poor. are part of the solution not the problem. that s all from us this time we re back next week and we d love to hear from you in the meantime check us out on facebook d w global society the message that oh you can write to us via e-mail global 3000 d.w. dot com see an extra week.
to eat. whatever we begin to do the day will get out of sewer to an atmosphere of the increase of temperature. 21st to have to start down by starting to decrease the
amount of c o 2 programs we have this is actually not a hard problem that just takes will power over there are very important economic interests to all involved a lot of coal all over a lot of oil that are doing everything possible to make sure this doesn t happen we have to fight them by 2050 will be well on the way to reliable or adorable saul or rand i m optimistic that. we re not totally such a species. burning the global tourist guide centuries booming capital i love berlin the scope of the multicultural metropolis in our during next series dependent on the planet seems like tracy to me i love feet of emotion once again so it s
a mix of the toughest race like me despite sr 50 nations 50 stories and 50 very personal tips on berlin s very best features. books now in atlanta every week on g.w. . our consumers of these firms you know radical depletion of forests flow for 25. 00 s. of. the forests and among. the tragic reality behind the exploitation. starts july 24th on. play.
play. play play play play play play. play. play this is news live from berlin and britain is poised to punish iran for seizing one of its oil tankers after friday s seizure of the senate imperial in the strait of hormuz to pay leaders could shortly announce fresh sanctions against tehran we will go live to london where leaders have been holding crisis talks. also coming up another weekend of anti-government

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