Live Breaking News & Updates on Self employment beautiful

Transcripts For DW Business - News 20180201 05:02:00


can you be trusted in the future it s a legacy that they don t want to follow that this is why difficult there s going to have responsibilities if agreements instantly splits in the trolls troll and your list this is your. national gauge. the good part of it that we are in good communication with montenegro it s unfortunate but this is related to views on the realisation we would have much more room if it wouldn t be a condition for visually varies ation for kosovo to operate as m.p. s and as politicians on fortunate now we are between the choice ratify this agreement that many of ph thinks it s wrong. and receive easily where is asian so this is not a good criteria and a moderate in their midst that as far as the as a whole community is concerned you re playing games with the terms of the court which we ve already discussed you threaten to turn your back on the demarcation deal. and yet you won t be too to help you you complain that five
members of the e.u. still don t recognize you as an independent state you said this is a big handicap and i hope that even institutions will help us to change the positioning of these coaches which of not recognize that if you don t abide by agreements that you ve already made why should the e.u. help you or write anything what s construct in votes comes first you have a thing for the fire not recognizes for some years. our challenges are only becoming bigger and bigger because of that situation you cannot deal with us as a partner when i am in brush of course or flag is not there being in such a reality all the issues then multiple is why in this difficulty is to be resolved this is just you if you go back. but this is no new the fact that this is what s happening with boredom occasion a little special chambres what you call the core so is new or reality or relations
with you dates earlier than this or unfortunate i think you hasn t paid enough attention in your corner in our region and took us over self i don t blame you for what is our home war but what i ask is that all nations of you have a say united approach towards kosovo. but there are rules to this club if you want your. rules to be and if you don t want to accept that was why i wager with the we are except in the rules the logic of the principles of the u. we are working hard on our internal cohesion or living together of all our ethnic communities including work of course a war sharp s we are working on rule of law we are working the economy and in sustainable peace my role as a former leader of the charolais as as well to have the peace of
a sustainable peace because of all the arguments that i have with me sustainable peace is not only a photo opportunity of leaders is to make sure and to allow population of both countries to believe in peace and the same criticisms you will govern will keep coming here the government corruption lack of accountability for corruption and. media which is still a big problem. i had to come back i was far fierce in opposition i am. one hundred days in office i take responsibility for what i am in charge we are working on a very transparent way as a government every activity of our government is transparent we are fully open and transparent to the media everything of our more it s an access of knowledge in cases of threats against us between january. who killed in one physical attack two cases i strongly condemn that no one is being held responsible
very r. and they like your minister to european integration want you to respect international obligations to respect the ip you are. the are responsible member of the family of nations in europe and for their only prove respect prove to be responsible you who go through our challenges in part of the world are challenged in our own democracy but our destiny is your atlantic so we are committed to that. it is for us to be thankful to. glow. glad. glad. glad.

It , Part , Agreements , Legacy , Responsibilities , List , Trolls-troll , National-gauge , Realisation , Communication , Room , Views

Transcripts For DW Focus On Europe - Spotlight On People 20180210 08:30:00


begun to arrive and one record has already been broken with ninety two nations competing bouts more than ever before but the games are overshadowed by the problem of doping with the whole russian team banned and china has for many years also been suspected of engaging in systematic doping but people have been reluctant to speak out fearing tough reprisals now those who are in jin once a leading a lympics sports doctor in china has been talking to our reporters the eighty year old has recently been granted refugee status here in germany but still she lives in fear of the chinese authorities. at the age of eighty julian jin has had to begin a whole new life. she fled to germany a few months ago together with her son young way dong and his wife the move from
china to the shores of lake constance has meant a huge change for her but even here she lives in fear of the communist regime in beijing and yet she used to be part of that regime herself. as a sports doctor she was responsible for china s top athletes during the one nine hundred eighty s. . and israel in this back during the one thousand nine hundred eighty limping games i take it wherever i go it s my last momento of that time or the only when. it was the pinnacle of her career but she was soon to fall from grace. none of our friends dared to contact us anymore and our telephone bust out the police were always outside her house. she made herself unpopular by consistently opposing the doping of athletes even when she was the head doctor for the chinese olympic team at the south korea games in one nine hundred eighty eight she refused
was brought in for a high wire act during the opening ceremony in beijing. young way don says his mother was ostracised because she refused to take part in the doping in the one nine hundred eighty s. . many of those who were athletes at that time are now themselves sports officials in china that didn t you have to ask yourself whether those athletes now regret what happened back down if not then it s obvious that the next olympic games will also be dealt with when you go to the heart for g.e. engine is convinced she did the right thing even if her fight against doping now means of life in exile in germany. now she was murdered by her husband because she no longer wanted to face regular beatings burgle is her name and she s one of hundreds of turkish women who are killed each year many by their husbands and other family members women s organizations blame
fifteen years. one night the situation escalated dramatically her son tells us she left the house in a panic after her husband became violent. my father pulled a gun from the cabinet and loaded it i stood in his way and said please father don t do this don t ruin our lives rita hit me and use the weapon to push me aside and then he left the house. so to get this sort of kicked. outside on the streets of an instant poll suburb he shot and killed his wife later he told the police that she had defended his honor. those in effect most current is a lawyer representing pyrgos family she says violence against women is on the rise in turkey. if a man knows that he could get away with. killing
a woman or. hurting it well it could get away with getting a very last sentence it just it just more to a gender based discrimination by itself past set limits to increasing off while it s against all of. this video garnered a lot of attention and the turkish press a man hits a woman riding the bus because of her outfit which in his opinion was not modest enough such incidents are becoming increasingly common in turkey according to these women which is why they ve set up what they re calling a women s parliament the aim is to provide support and also to draw attention to the growing violence has to be carried to the rebound like almost every woman in turkey i ve been harris to on the way to the bus or the train to the summit like you guys the men who do this drill strength from the government and sadly tragically tells them they go ahead you have a right to do this in the world to put in this thing and. the
organization is called a protest rally in the evening they re angry about government plans to water down a law that offers women some protection from violence. women here fear that the governing parties focus on religion will come at the cost of women s rights. dubious cousin steve has joined the demonstration before her cousin was murdered she probably wouldn t. have taken to the streets to make herself heard in this way. he she i wish we didn t have a reason to demonstrate i wish i didn t have to be here today but our loss is so great and the trial hasn t even begun yet here are some of the. beer goes husband is in custody but six months after the crime there s been no date set for a trial turkey s justice system is overwhelmed her family continues to hope that
justice will be served. and that justice will surely remain elusive as long as president continues to insist that equality between men and women is as he sees it against creation well more than fifty percent of all russians it seems believe in supernatural powers like black magic and religious miracles what appears to have happened is that magicians astrologists and fortunetellers have stepped into the huge spiritual vacuum that followed the collapse of the soviet union indeed it said that russia now has fewer doctors than faith healers go it out attai has been exploring this world of superstition and mysticism. the time mountains this is where russia borders mongolia cousin stan and china. it s a destination for generations of pilgrims who come from miles around seeking spiritual
guidance. legend has it that this is a place to embark on a path of inner change. by the within that go i doubt me the locals always say that if you think out loud then your thoughts come true it s important to remind yourself of that in spiritual places like these. i miss the sea with the stars i don t have those who come here call themselves modern pilgrims they re interested in yoga healing rituals and self discovery yelena go mind you and says their spiritual guide she regularly leads groups of stressed city dwellers to the time mountains you know that s not bad i was here a year ago. and all my wishes were fulfilled the lady in the finished of the dislike came to relax but also to find miracles out over. my own directs the visitors to the healing icons of the village monastery.
and the confluence of the two rivers is the place to wish for a spouse. you got a thank you here when i see i think we russians in particular were always on a quest for meaning and i think that s the way we are with i remember being a small child in the soviet union and one of my relatives went to a healer that kind of thing was normal i knew those who needed markets. we ve come to a village in southwestern russia to visit the home of niger of allah. she says women like her used to be burned at the stake nowadays doctors refer their patients to or she s known as the bob bashara the village matriarch not just offers treatments with water wax and prayers but she only treats people who ve been baptized. more can you give us what if what you can barely get you were
really scared but now the fear has almost gone. the second. everyone comes to me rich poor even healthy people. at the school people are afraid i can heal him he will be killed i can help fight against the evil eye sore throats bad skin inflammation not the things you have who. hundreds of kilometers away from knowledge as village is another place where people arrive from moscow and beyond hoping for miracles. when you do and i was diagnosed with cancer i want to be treated here maybe i ll be cured. meaning get some to be honest i came because i was interested in how to deal with my husband s alcohol problems. i think alcohol is the number one problem
in russia. in the former soviet union belief in the supernatural was widespread. who claimed to have psychic powers conducted psychokinetic experiments in the one nine hundred sixty s. under the watchful eye of government intelligence agencies. i was shortly before the soviet union collapsed a self professed psychic named anatoly kushti roski appeared on t.v. to conduct mass faith healing sessions to millions throughout the soviet bloc. and the faith healer journal davi tash really the said to have helped soviet leader leonid brezhnev and later president boris yeltsin. nearly thirty years later countless healing services are now available online the patriarch of the russian orthodox church considers president vladimir putin s rise to power a miracle of god he also foresees an impending apocalypse. it s not unusual
for a police officer to ask a priest to bless a location where numerous car accidents have occurred christ has become an antidote for misfortune. sociologists point to depression anxiety and a disoriented society as an explanation for the rising belief in the supernatural. but it s the libby to go have no idea what s going to happen in the near future and that was they plan their lives for one paycheck to the next of the maybe a few months at most work from them when you re for komisarek back in the timezone tens yelena go my who insists healers are more than a rural phenomenon she says. her clients from moscow couldn t get by without people like her. i think that s fair think my clients work with psychics energy therapists fortune tellers maybe a good psychologist or me young. women are part of. this
the so-called islamic state. this woman s son abis was one of them her family blames the man who persuaded him to go. wormwood he called me from syria and told me airbus was killed by a bomb ready from don t mention his name in this house he was a criminal and a murderer. or they are a son got mixed up in this interim or they destroyed my son they were to muskets three or four days he became a fanatic. abas went to syria in two thousand and twelve a local imaam named near death he persuaded him to go he recruited young men from the village to join i.a.s. many of those men died in syria he was also killed it was in this mosque that he first preached to the young men since then many believe the mosque is cursed this man tells us the jihadists polluted islam with their propaganda you can visit there
on the basis people don t come to the mosque anymore this is a large mosque with space for up to one hundred people. to do even for friday prayers the most important day only two or three people come and the others i actually just. all together this area around lake ohrid saw over one hundred young men leave to join islamic state nine of the self appointed in mom s who persuaded them to go are now in a high security prison in full. they were convicted of recruiting for a terrorist organization. after months of trying were finally able to speak to one of them he still believes he did the right thing he only has one regret. being where i made a mistake back then i should have been the first to go and save our muslim sisters from being raped. but instead i was busy advising my brothers to go and save the
people. that was from twenty twelve to twenty fourteen. back then it wasn t illegal to go to syria you could get a flight directly from tirana. carried in rehab. he and eight other i as recruiters went on trial in twenty sixteen altogether they were sentenced to one hundred and twenty six years in prison of the young albanians that they persuaded to go to syria and iraq over half are now dead or missing. at the local pub unless nitsa the subject of islamic state is taboo the men get upset when we try to ask questions they say they have more important things to worry about. our biggest problem is that we don t have jobs very much the local mayor admits the economy is a problem but he doesn t believe that was what persuaded so many to join i asked.
and usually they were good young man we were all shocked when we heard they d gone to syria or city of course it s true that the economic situation is very bad here but that wasn t just the case for them but for everyone who lives here yes but you are. one albanian analyst who has studied this phenomenon tells us the young muslims were specifically targeted to be radicalized he says the trail leads back to saudi arabia and other countries in the region so what happened was that most of the months of the car used to pursue their studies those coffers and they can better not be obeying your old tradition. only point of view they came back with you political. religious ideology. for the farmers of less nitsa it s had devastating consequences not only are they mourning their dead they still live in fear of the radical
a mom is now in prison they say they re continuing to sow hatred in albania even from behind bars. dogs are great i love them there is one little problem though the dog dirties pavements pathways and parks in many european cities and towns but now the spanish city of melaka has introduced a scheme that uses a doggie d.n.a. database to crack down on dog owners who don t remove their pets canine excrement is it working is the question let s find out. these don t get in is have no idea whether they were about to get a visit from the police environmental offices or carrying out a new and previously unheard of to ask to make sure these dogs have been d.n.a. tested. from january fifteenth there s been a fine right now we re just passing on the information but next time it ll be an
actual fine. before and i won t. say terry and jackie deposited one of these on the ground how can you know who it was in parks and residential areas there are untold numbers of unpleasant surprises like this but not any longer owners who fail to scoop the poop will now face a five hundred your a fine and that s reasonable say many residents. i agree with that but the fines have to be a deterrent so the owners clean up the. the fines have to be really high. that maybe the. d.n.a. testing of don t pay to find the owners who are flouting the law that s what the malaga city council decided a year and a half ago. and it really counts as pleased that the project is now finally getting off the ground. if you know what. there s broad consensus on this course of action within local government.
the city gave the green light to be ambitious project one that s never been implemented on such a large scale. but how do all the docs get registered. veterinarian amelio takes blood samples and sends them off for testing of. the dogs get a tag on that color so the police know that they ve had their d.n.a. samples collected. in this way you can register all the dogs in the city. but the reality is a little different to the authorities and likelihood of catching anyone in the act is still quite. only around twenty thousand don t out of a population of one hundred thousand to monica have had bad d.n.a.
register. and it seems like to me that it s the norm by the onus the ones who are more likely to keen up anyway and not the miscreants who take them in for testing. most of the fecal samples that end up in the lab come from unregistered dogs. fine l had his mixed breed dogs d.n.a. register but he says with the new regime in place he s feeling the pressure. some viber hundred euros for a repeat offender seems reasonable. but for the first offense. but because what if you always do the right thing but then it just happens that you forget to bring a plastic bag. and what about dogs belonging to tourists and find for them the no tests still the city sees itself as a trailblazer. well they ll be
a high price to pay. around without sniffing a story that s all for today if you d like to see any of our reports again just visit our home page d w dot com or a facebook page d w stories but until next time it s bye bye . the be. the be . the be. the be.
the be the be . cut the but. the be. the be. european stars deliver rousing performance of the law please the soul music straight from the lips above salman khan above germany s most successful singers the be.
strong the bullies at full speed the lead. the but always on the move the band to the future. dr richard. on g.w. . unimpeded access to education and knowledge and the same opportunities for everyone. a central goal of the global community but what s the reality on the ground into question for all w. s multimedia special rates personal stories and highlights extraordinary
projects world o. bird find out more on the internet d w dot com education for all. the rooms. the scars on. the pain still tangible. the suffering for god. for city and. they have survived but do they also have a future. i really understand people who say they don t want to stay here. but i also admire people who want to stay here and who decided to create something . a new beginning in peace time who are the people making it possible what needs to happen if tolerance and reconciliation are to stand a chance. out of darkness city s after war.
starting march tenth on d w. this date of you news life from berlin an invitation from pyongyang can join sister korea s president he s invited to eat so much in the military capital region and says he d be willing to go we have more from our correspondent in tuscaloosa. and syria says it shot down an israeli fighter jet this as israel carries as air strikes in syria in the city of jerusalem for the exits to. pose only elves and own

Games , Problem , Bouts , Nations , Ninety-two , Doping , China , People , Leadinga-lympics-sports-doctor , Team , Reprisals , Fear

Transcripts For FOXNEWSW FOX Friends 20180227 11:00:00


paramedics from imerg to treat victims. florida speaker of the house is now weighing in. what we have here is a poorly run agency. he has got every single person under investigation but he doesn t want to hold himself accountable for all these people that he has to investigate for their wrongdoing but he has done none. the height of arrogance. and the attorney for scott peterson, the deputy who failed to run in to stop the shooter says in his statement quote the allegations that mr. pertson is a coward and his performance under the circumstances failed to meet the standards of police officers are patently untrue. finally guys, several agencies are also taking heat for missing warning signs about the shooter s mental health. nikolas cruz is due back in court for a hearing on obtaining evidence. steve: thank you very much. of the florida senate did act yesterday. they passed legislation that would raise the legal age in that state for buying a handgun and any gun to 21. also, they authorized teachers to be able to go ahead and carry guns in
president wanted to build that wall. he ran on that. many of you went to the polls to vote on him because you were in favor of that he is heading to california in march to go look at eight prototypes to look at the them along the border area. see through they bottom. if the drug guys on the other side are throwing their drugs over the wall. he wants our border agents to be able to see that s happening and not get hit with 60 pounds of drugs. steve: that s what the border patrol agents have told him as well we have got to be able to see through it will be interesting for him to go to southern california it was just last week how the president was talking sanctuary state with sanctuary cities, maybe he should pull the ice officers out of there. regarding immigration. he was talking yesterday to the nation s governors about the daca ruling. yesterday, the supreme court said okay, department of justice, we understand you want us to fast track this. we re not going to do that. go ahead and let it continue to go through the legal
we tried to get it moved quickly. we would like to help daca. i think everybody in this room wants to help with daca. but the supreme court just ruled that it has to go through the normal channels. so it s going back in. steve: what that does is takes the pressure off of congress. he had given them six month deadline, which is going to, you know, expire in a couple of weeks. in no time. so now it looks like they will be able to do something. they are talking up on capitol hill about perhaps having something in the big omnibus funding bill but, of course, that would be probably an extension. there are three different paths they could go from there. brian: one of the hottest things in this country right now and almost every phase especially sports is analytics. my son is minoring in it fascinating to see how numbers can help with you elections and help new sports to find out if there is maybe a magic formula. steve: money ball. brian: boston had this major analytics conference sold out in nine seconds. took place at mit. found out there was going to
be a headliner that only enhanced the attraction for many people. ainsley: president obama was there speaking. they said don t record the speech. you re not allowed to you have your cell phones. turns out of someone did record it and he used that opportunity to take a swipe at the current administration. president trump, listen. we do have a scandal that embarrassed us. i know that seems like a low bar. you didn t hear about a lot of drama inside our white house. steve: wait a minute, there were no scandals in the obama white house? well, i think our graphics guy would disagree because i think we have got a graphic that shows just there have been a number of big scandals in this particular white house. there were the targeting of conservative groups by the irs. there is the benghazi attack. there was fast and furious. that doesn t even count the v.a. scandal that hillary rodham clinton email scandal and, of course, it does appear that the obama administration and the department of justice and the fbi spied on the trump
campaign. maybe he forgot about that. ainsley: just a few of them. second us your comments if you remember more. brian: listen. there was no doubt about it and less drama and no drama obama applied. a lot of that has to do with temperament of the press. they gave him a pass. washington correspondence dinner he said good to be here in front of of my base. everyone laughed. for the most part the press was his base. i give you an example. ben rhodes actually revealed in a magazine his approach. whatever he says one of his chief advisors the press would parrot. in fact he called it echo chamber. we created we and the administration an echo chamber. the onslaught of freshly mingted experts the. they were saying things validated what we were giving them to say. when you have that type of complicity no doubt about it easy to avoid a lot of scrutiny easy to say that
president trump has not been able to avoid. ainsley: even the questions they ask people within the administration or their family members, look at the questions they asked chelsea clinton versus what they re asking ivanka right now. steve: true. look at the stuff that we have heard about the fusion gps people at the conclusion of the obama administration where they were leaking stuff to the press to make donald trump look bad. there was collusion right interest. anyway, the former president said no scandals on his watch to embarrass him. is that accurate? email us friends@foxnews.com. ainsley: i don t like it when the president leaves the administration and talks badly about another pit. isn t that supposed to be part of a no-no. steve: used to be part of the president s club but no more. brian: here is jillian. we have been googling you all morning got nothing. jillian: check this out. the engine of a plane packed with people actually exploding into flames over the sky in utah. this all going down minutes after the southwest jet took off from salt lake city over 100 people on board heading
to los angeles. i thought this is it. my family is all going down right here. the plane turning around, making an emergency landing. southwest calling this a performance issue. a u.s. marshal shot serving an arrest warrant in missouri leading to a police standoff that agent, a full-time sheriff s deputy now recovering saved by his bullet-proof vest. the suspect fired at officers as soon as they arrived at his home. he was later shot and killed. president trump s first state dinner is now set. the commander-in-chief will host french president emmanuel macron and first lady brigitte macron on april 24th. several leaders have visited the white house since trump took office. but this will be the first ceremonial welcome. former president bill clinton and thousands more expected today at day 2 of billy graham s public viewing. at childhood home in charlotte. george w. bush among 5,000 already come to pay their
respects. if there is such a thing as a humble shep herd of the lord, billy graham is that person. i am unbelievably blessed to have met him. jillian: tomorrow graham s body moves to washington to lie in honor in the capitol rotunda. that s a look at your headlines. second it back to you. steve: thank you very much. president trump has issued ultimatum to north korea. will it work? we will talk about that next. ainsley: plus, they aren t even supposed to be here. now democrats want illegals to have the same rights as you do. do you think that s fair? we ll debate it. steve: that wall is not working round, round you make me we ll do
or where we ll go next. we the people who are better together than we are alone. are unstoppable. welcome to the entirely new expedition. you wouldn t feel good not knowing the price here. don t let it happen when you buy your diabetes test strips. with the accu-chek® guide simplepay program, you pay the same low price. all without having to go through insurance. plus, they come in a spill-resistant vial along with a free meter. skip the guessing game and focus on your health. not the cost. make saving simple today at simplepaysaves.com.
it may be time for a change. ask your doctor about entyvio, the only biologic developed and approved just for uc and crohn s. entyvio works at the site of inflammation in the gi tract and is clinically proven to help many patients achieve both symptom relief and remission. infusion and serious allergic reactions can happen during or after treatment. entyvio may increase risk of infection, which can be serious. pml, a rare, serious, potentially fatal brain infection caused by a virus may be possible. this condition has not been reported with entyvio. tell your doctor if you have an infection, experience frequent infections or have flu-like symptoms or sores. liver problems can occur with entyvio. if your uc or crohn s treatment isn t working for you, ask your gastroenterologist about entyvio. entyvio. relief and remission within reach.
but prevagen helps your brain with an ingredient originally discovered. in jellyfish. in clinical trials, prevagen has been shown to improve short-term memory. prevagen. the name to remember. north korea who by the way wants to talk. we want to talk also only the right conditions. otherwise we are not talking. we will see what happens. that s my attitude. we will see what happens. but something has to be done. brian brian president trump giving north korea ultimatum of ending nuclear program before any talks between the u.s. and the rogue nation happens. at the very least put them on the table. will north korea ever comply with those circumstances and conditions. we re asking hudson institute senior fellow rebecca hendrix.
what do you think happened that north korea telling south korea tell the u.s. we are willing to talk. pressure campaign there are 450 sanctions that the united states has leyyed with north korea. not all are cooperating with this pressure campaign. they are feeling the squeeze. it s gotten to the point now where north korea is saying all right, fine, let s talk of course north korea isn t willing to say we are going to talk about nuclear missile program. that s why it s so important that president trump made that ultimatum. there is nothing to talk about if they are not willing to talk about the nuclear missile program. brian: do you know who is not helping in my hummable opinion? south korea. they told us during diplomatic channels to lower our stands and conditions before we take i m thinking to myself do you understand what we are trying to do here? i think they understanding it s just a that they are so desperate for some sort of diplomatic break through. they need to really feel their resolve. let the united states lead on this because south korea is not going to solve the problem. nobody is going to solve the problem. it s got to be between the
united states and north korea. the only thing we care about for our national security is that nuclear missile program. and because the north koreans have not successfully demonstrated interkant negligent ballistic missile that can carry a missile to the united states that is what the trump administration is rightly focused on. now we talk about the next phase which would be additional sanctions, the tightest ever but not as tight as they could be because more chinese companies could be sanctioned. we are talking about interdiction. we have talked about that before. we have done it a couple of times. do you think we are willing to do it on major powers, let s say like russia if they are delivering maybe illicitly delivering some type of energy or packages? i think if we re going to avoid war, we have to be willing to do everything short of that and absolutely includes inciden interdiction. it does clue secondary sanctions going after chinese barn. big bad actors continuing to enable north korea. a lot of that is stopped. but some of it is still going on.
we still need china s cooperation. china doesn t want war in north korea. we do think have to be willing to implement a naval blockade before we go to the worst option and might be the last option and that is war. brian: do you know what scares south korea and people in the region bloodiness option. there is a plan on the take to do just that how valuable is that in getting these talks to be productive if, indeed, they happen? well, i don t think that north korea would be willing to talk at all if it weants feeling the squeeze and if it didn t believe that the united states had a credible, military option in its back pocket. so i think it s crucial. you know, president obama mailed these veiled threats towards north korea. nobody remembers that nobody even knew he was doing that because nobody believed him. so i think the fact that president trump, given his personality, i think that that really does it is really having the effect of convincing north korea that talks might be its best option and it s going to have to put its nuclear weapons on the table.
brian: i keep going back to the conversation, president obama, president-elect trump had when he said your number one priority is going to be north korea? and i am thinking to myself we haven t talked about north korea for seven and three quarters years. he basically handed north korea a grenade and pulled the pin and said you deal with it we are dealing with it so north korea showing signs they want to come to the table shows we are making progress. thanks for joining us, rebecca. thank you. bine brian some things went wrong with the florida school shooting we don t know where to start. what needs to change? and is this just about politics? ed davis led the manhunt for the boston bombers, former police chief himself joins us live. shear a way to nail the youth vote. smoke a joints in a campaign ad? nice. sarcastically. smoking in the boys room i was smoking in the boys room it s all pop-culture trivia, but it gets pretty intense.
steve. ainsley: you got that right. tactical failures continuing to add up for florida law enforcement as three officials telling fox news that in the critical moments after the accused shooter opens fire emergency medical services were blocked from actually entering the school. steve: oh boy. this as bradford county sheriff scott israel facing growing calls to resign. we are getting reaction from former top cop in boston. former police commissioner ed davis who led that city during the boston marathon bombing. evidence is also a fox news contributor. ed, good morning to you. ainsley: good morning. good morning steve and ainsley. steve: as someone who has devoted their life law enforcement, when you look at the failures of what happened down there on the 14th day of february, you ve got to scratch your head thinking what went wrong? right. i mean, the sheriff came out very quickly after this incident and said that he was disgusted by the inaction of one of his deputies. and he took immediate action
to have him dismissed. but in the last few days, we have seen a number of things. i have to caution things like holding medical personnel back is not an unusual thing to have happen in a case like this. so i think it s really important that we take time out to do a thorough and objective investigation and then move forward with our findings on it. that being said, i don t think the sheriff has helped himself with some of his public comments. and so it s difficult to understand that. ainsley: yeah. at first when we read that the school resource officer and we heard those reports what he had done, we were all fla grabber gassed. three other deputies on the property. that is yet to be confirmed by the sheriff in the department. he went on air and said. this listen. do you think that if the broward sheriff s office had done things differently,
this shooting might not have happened? listen, if ifs and buts buts were candy and nuts, o.j. simpson would still be in the record books. i can only take responsibility for what i knew about. i exercised my due diligence. i have given amazing leadership. ainsley: he was blaming that one guy, not blaming himself, that he is just the top guy, he can t control what his guys do on the grouped and then we learned about those three other deputy that s were possibly there, too. what are your thoughts? what s going on there? why is he blaming one person when there could be other people there and he is the guy in charge? right. i mean, this is a political tight rope that any police leader walks after an incident like this. i will tell you that in this particular case, some of these comments i don t even understand them. but, one of the things that you have to remember is, a sheriff is an elected official. inherently makes him a politician. and he may respond a little differently than what i are used to seeing with the new
york city police commissioner. there is a lot going on here. this really have disturbing and i think that the calls for resignation are not, you know, are not surprising. considering what s happened. the only other thing i want to say is, on the other three deputies that arrived at the scene. i have been to situations not this bad but active shooter situations. and when the police first arrive on the scene, if there is a senior officer there that s done something, taken up a position, for instance, there is going to be some confusion. you tend to follow the example set by the first officer. so, it remains to be seen how long those other deputies were there what they did afterwards did. they ever go again, we need to get there is video of this. we are going to be able to get to the bottom of it but it takes some time. steve: ed, exit question. yesterday, the florida senate approved raising the
age to buy a gun, including a long gun down in florida to 21. and they also okayed teachers to carry guns in the classroom. what do you feel about that? teachers with guns in school? well, steve, i have had a gun permit since i was 16 years old. i understanding the second amendment issues here. and i m supportive of keeping, you know, the gun rights for people who should own guns. but this particular guy had a terrible background. and he legally bought the gun. so there is something wrong there. i guess my point is that we have to come to the middle for effective solutions here. we can t all get in extreme positions, so, i agree with what the florida legislature did on raising the age, but the other thing is, if they want to put guns in the hands of teachers that want to hold them. just like with pilots. a lot of pilots do that. that s fine.
when we re talking about arming all the teachers, that s a logistical nightmare and very expensive. steve: i don t know of somebody is saying that. if somebody is qualified go ahead and do it. thank you for joining us. thank you, folks. ainsley: ben shapiro takes the university of minnesota by storm with a powerful message by why social schism a failed form of government. steve: plus, have you never seen a police chase like this before. white dude naked as a jay bird on an atv running against traffic on i-29. steve: i don t know what part of that is the scariest part. more after that. ainsley: first, happy birthday to former nfl tight end and fox sports analyst tony gonzalez. he turns 42 years old today. happy birthday. i u.s. want to celebrate i just want to celebrate
another day of living i just want to celebrate another day .stuffy head, no sick days medicine. here s the story of green mountain coffee roasters sumatra reserve. let s go to sumatra. the coffee here is amazing. because the volcanic soil is amazing. so we give farmers like win more plants. to grow more delicious coffee. which helps provide for win s family. all, for a smoother tasting cup of coffee. green mountain coffee roasters.
searching for answers like where to treat, can feel overwhelming. so start your search with a specialist at cancer treatment centers of america. start with teams of cancer treatment experts under one roof focused on the delivery of precision cancer treatment. start at one of the cancer treatment centers of america hospitals near you. the evolution of cancer care is here. learn more at cancercenter.com/experts appointments available now. bp is taking safety to new heights. using drones and robots offshore
so engineers can stop potential problems before they start. because safety is never being satisfied and always working to be better. hear the applause i live for the applause applause. brian: never seen the back of head like that. steve: can you turn around so people can see what you look like? ainsley: turn around ian. steve: that s more like it. brian: there he is. ainsley: ian s dry sense of humor, right? we love ian. every know and then he will say one zinger funniest thing you ever heard. brian: also angry and sarcastic. best combination possible. [laughter] steve: we have been telling you about how ben shapiro,
he goes to college campuses and gets great big crowds. he was invited by yaf to appear at the minnesota of minnesota. the university said you know what? we have had such big protests at different places like berkeley where security was $600,000, we don t think we can accommodate him on the main campus. let s move him six or seven miles away over in saint paul. ainsley: hundred poem were able to fit in there standing room only. thousands of people at least in the articles i read that wanted to attend and they couldn t because they moved it to smaller locations for safety pursuances. brian: we always tell you how dangerous is he. you don t believe us. here is an example of how dangerous ben shapiro is. in a free country, wealth and the capacity to gain it is largely co contingent on the decisions that you make. it doesn t just fall upon you. most of wealth in the united states is not inherited. most wealth in the united states is created over the course of lifetime who
engage in activity and commerce. capitalism is good. it is freedom. socialism is bad because social schism tyranny. not as aspect of tyranny. socialism itself is tyranny. statement of socialism is your labor is owed to society. do you not own your own freedom. you do not own your own time. do you not own your own time, you do not own your own work and product of own work. basic notion of capitalism you own all those things and you have to engage with someone else who does not owe you something else. brian: case in point. i feel that is very risky for society. capitalist society. steve: brian, you belong in university administration. that essentially because he is a conservative. it was viewed they have liberal speak. conservative comes move him way over there. he had 400 or 500 people in attendance. 4 or 500 on the wait list as well. what he said was they moved
him to saint paul because of possible protest there were about 50 which is an example of the heckler s veto. it s a dangerous thing he says. it all went off without a hitch. brian: he talks about what makes up our country capitalism and freedom. that s as much democrat as republican. i don t even look at it as conservatism. he is reaffirming the principles that we all need by the time we are 21, 22 to know you have to cut your own weight in life. ainsley: put a picture up and put a tweet out and reminded everyone that he is going to be speaking at georgetown on the 21st of march. so get your tickets if you are interested. brian: right. steve: good for him. brian: he is a busy guy. steve: and he stops by here every once in a while. let s go to jillian who has a story about someone down in florida. jillian: absolutely. a florida shooting survivor speaking out. 17-year-old maddy wolford
was shot three times and during a powerful press conference calling her survival a miracle. i would just like to say that i m so grateful to be here and it wouldn t have been possible without the officers and first responders and these amazing doctors and especially all the love that everyone has sent. i was sitting on my couch today just thinking about all the letters and gifts everyone has given. just like all the love that s been passed around. i definitely wouldn t be here without it. ainsley: doctors say off with ford could be ready to go back to school next week. scalise shared his story about surviving the ambush attack at congressional baseball practice last year. a convicted felon set to receive an award for good behavior now charged with murder. justin turner s halfway house planning the honor after the 2015 parolee made
progress with his job. the plan though scrapped after police arrested him in connection with to a shooting death in chicago. faith under fire. this time over an eagle mural on the city hall building bible verse under his wings shall you find refuge. demanded the city remove it or they will sue. the artist who create you had it says it was meant to inspire team work not division. the city vowing the mural mural will remain. a wild chase down an interstate. the bear bandi bare bandit racin as drivers watch in awe. white dude naked as a jay bird on an atv running against traffic on i-29. jillian: you can t make this up. the man finally caught after about an hour. police say he was high on drugs. he has been ordered not to go out in public unless is he fully dressed.
he would know that if he listened to brian. brian: thank you, jillian. ainsley: he must not watch our show. brian: i try to watch people. also if you are driving naked at least wear a helmet. steve: good idea. meanwhile, janice, it is a special day. janice: oh yeah. brian: what day is it. steve: it s national pancake day. janice: i hop was brought wonderful pancakes free 7 to 7 today at i hop. all they wants you to do is make a donation to children s charities. i m so excited. all sorts of different flavors of syrup here. is anyone going to help me? good because i m going to eat them myself. brian: international. get to pete people from all different countries. janice: i didn t know that brian. janice: i m so happy right now. steve: each year when they do this, they raise millions and millions of dollars. janice: which is very important. but free pancakes. come on, what are we talking
about here? jillian: i m with you with old fashioned. good choice. janice: do you like jian jiang o pancake. brian: i know the secret. there is a post up the middle. brian: i m telling you. jillian: there is not a post up the middle. jillian: there is. brian: i watched it being constructed. i got here at 2:00 in the morning when they started it. janice: thank you i hop for the pancake. brian: we re pro-children here so children will benefit. ainsley: if you go there try the harvest grain and oat pancakes better for you and so good. delicious. all right, brian. janice is bringing them over. ainsley: while you eat your pancakes i m going to read. this.
they aren t supposed to be here brian, now they want the same rights as do you. do you think that s fair? we will debate it coming up next. brian: would you buy what this ad is selling? for heroes proved in liberating stripes brian: meet the veteran behind the commercial taking the internet by storm
there you go. a trip back to the dthe doctor s office, mean just for a shot. but why go back there, when you can stay home, with neulasta onpro? strong chemo can put you at risk of serious infection, which could lead to hospitalizations. in a key study, neulasta reduced the risk of infection from 17% to 1%, a 94% decrease. applied the day of chemo, neulasta onpro is designed to deliver neulasta the next day, so you can stay home. neulasta is for certain cancer patients receiving strong chemotherapy. do not take neulasta if you re allergic to neulasta or neupogen (filgrastim). ruptured spleen, sometimes fatal as well as serious lung problems, allergic reactions, kidney injuries, and capillary leak syndrome have occurred. report abdominal or shoulder tip pain, trouble breathing or allergic reactions to your doctor right away. in patients with sickle cell disorders, serious, sometimes fatal crises can occur. the most common side effect is bone and muscle ache. so why go back there? if you d rather be home, ask your doctor about neulasta onpro.
everyone in new york and all their diversity. the bill claiming right shouldn t be denied based on national origin or citizenship. here to debate is g.o.p. councilman for new york city joe borelli on the end and keith powers. you are shaking your head yes, keith. you love this bill. i think it s great. ainsley: why? how could you not read the language and not support it. ainsley: a lot of taxpayers paying for illegals to be here. a lot of people on the list done it the right way and upset about it. sure. this censuring everybody has the right to not be discriminated against in fact we already have this in new york city and new york state law. human rights that protects people from discrimination. this is only adding it in to the constitution of new york state which is by opinion. age and gender aren t protected either in new york state constitution. we all would agree the constitution should be updated and this is actually only putting though protections that already exist for new yorkers into
the state constitution. you don t need age and gender protected in our state constitution because thankfully we already have a federal constitution that protects people of all protected classes. age, gender, sex, orientation, anything like that, why already have federal and city and state laws. ainsley: why waste time. this is fundamentally about giving citizenship rights to people who are not citizens. this is everything from instate tuition benefits to whether even private companies have the ability or local town police department has the ability to not hire someone based on citizenship status. this is fundamentally what happens when the resist trump agenda gets mac kin nateed at state and local levels. ainsley: what about military status. question whether we should include the military status as a protected class. new york city has that because we have seen cases of housing and employment descrintle in thdiscrimination e city that was left out theft bill because it is not a priority. ainsley: we hear joe bring
up the idea of paying for tuition for illegal immigrants and pay for room and board. people who are not tax paying citizens get that why give more rights. the fact not doing that that s stretching the law to. ainsley: so you say that s not happening and you stay. you have a constitutional provision the obvious next step is people will file lawsuits and say i many protected under this plan. that s exactly the point. i m proud to carry and carry support of this bill and equal rights to everybody to make sure that nobody gets discriminated against. let me take you in a different direction. we can walk to times square right now and tell anybody who is visiting new york city that they can be discriminated against. that is i represent times square. i represent the united nations. i represent big parts of new york city when people come to visit every single day. we are telling them that they can t rent a hotel or can t get a cup of coffee. they can t enjoy new york city. ainsley: if you look at the facts if you have done it the right way. if you are a legal citizen,
the constitution, the federal laws protect you. if you are here illegally they don t. why should have you. we are not changing the law and creating a path to citizenship. we don t have the ability to do that. we are telling people back to the points i was just making who are even here visiting, every single day we have 50 million visitors a year. we are telling people just blocks away in times square that they can be discriminate against and have no protection. i totally disagree with that we should be standing um for every single person in this state. ainsley: joe, last word. again, this is not exclusively for undocumented immigrants. this would cover every overarching person that s here from british expats to tourists to everyone. this is extending something sacred our citizenship rights which including could be voting at some point in municipal elections. this sex tending those rights to people who have not gone about the process in the right way to earn and become legal citizens. ainsley: all right. thank you, guys. good debate. thanks for having us. ainsley: should government employees be forced to pay union dues. of the supreme court is
taking up the case. the man who brought it there is going to join us next. oakland s mayor is warning that ice is coming for them. isn t that obstructions of justice? judge napolitano is on the case just ahead you ll get a free checked bag. two united club passes. priority boarding. and earn fifty thousand bonus miles after you spend three thousand dollars on purchases in the first three months from account opening plus, zero-dollar intro annual fee for the first year, then ninety-five dollars. learn more at theexplorercard.com
good morning. steve: mark, why did you decide you had to sue the union? well, because in my first paycheck had a line item deduction that said union dues, and i never signed up for the union, never signed a pledge card and here was this deduction. no one asked me if i wanted to join. no one told me anything about it. yet, i was being charged this fee. steve: so really what you are looking for is you want the choice. exactly. that s the whole crux of this case is freedom under my first amendment rights freedom of speech and freedom of association and the fact i was not given a choice. steve: the union did put out a statement. they said in the face of ruthless dishonest attacks against their freedom to come together in strong yiewnsunions, working people. fighting a rigged system that rewards the super wealthy at everyone else s
expense. i don t know exactly what that means jacob but clearly you regard this as a first amendment case. that s exactly what this is about. under the first amendment, we all have the right to choose what is political speech. we will and won t support in our money. with our money. and what groups we will and won t associate with. yet, the government in 22 states is forcing people to give part of every paycheck to a union, which is a political advocacy group just to keep their jobs. steve: mark, if the supreme court rules in your favor, what s that going to do to our government unions? well, i think the government unions is going to level the playing field. i also think that the unions are going to have to connect with their membership much more which was basically said by combine garten american federation of teachers she made that imlengts herself. steve: jacob, how did it go
yesterday with the supreme court. it went well. we made our case, we had justices who expressed understanding of our position it seems. and we re hopeful. we are optimistic that the supreme court is going to restore workers right to choose and say clearly when you take a government job you don t have to check your first amendment rights at the door. steve: all right. mark, i know it s been a long arduous task. has it been worth it. i think so, yeah. even though my cas my name is on the case and i m the lead plaintiff. someone has to do it. you know, standing um for my principles but also standing up for the other 5 million plus government workers out there in all these other states and trying to give them that choice and give them that freedom. that s all this case is about is choice. steve: thank you very much. i know you had a big day yesterday. thanks for joining us today on fox & friends. thank you. steve big program ahead on
this tuesday, kentucky governor matt bevin, judge andrew napolitano. texas governor greg abbott and you. we ll be right back. feels like the first time who wouldn t want a chance for another.? who d say no to a.? who wouldn t want a chance to live longer. opdivo (nivolumab). over 40,000 patients have been prescribed opdivo immunotherapy. opdivo can cause your immune system to attack normal organs and tissues in your body and affect how they work. this may happen during or after treatment has ended, and may become serious and lead to death. see your doctor right away if you experience new or worsening cough; chest pain; shortness of breath; diarrhea; severe stomach pain or tenderness; severe nausea or vomiting; extreme fatigue; constipation; excessive thirst or urine; swollen ankles; loss of appetite; rash; itching; headache; confusion; hallucinations; muscle or joint pain; flushing;
fever; or weakness, as this may keep these problems from becoming more serious. these are not all the possible side effect of opdivo. tell your doctor about all your medical conditions, including immune system problems, or if you ve had an organ transplant, or lung, breathing, or liver problems. a chance to live longer. because who wouldn t want.that? ask your doctor about opdivo. thank you to all involved in opdivo clinical trials. why is dark magic so spell-bindingly good? it s a bold blend of coffee with rich flavors of uganda, sumatra, colombia and other parts of south america. like these mountains, each amazing on their own. but together? magical. all, for a smoother tasting cup of coffee. green mountain coffee roasters.
schiff on a regular basis? this is why when i say the media is dead, maybe they are embarrassed. so many were briefed on this dossier way back when and now knowing that it s totally false. steve: it s national pancake day. janice: national pancake day and pancakes from free 7 to 7 today. all they want you to do is make a donation to children s charities. working for a living working working for a living working. brian: we had him as a guest huey lewis and the news. steve: it seems appropriate because we are a news channel. brian: he had one of his kids at nyu. i assume they graduated by now. steve: yeah that was about 10 years ago. ainsley: you never know though. if they re on the brian kilmeade plan might still be there. brian: $62,000 a year you get the kid out in three and a half years. it s one of the most expensive schools in the country outside of george
washington. steve: they are awful expensive these days. brian: do you know what s worth it? i m only kidding. get back to what happened in florida. covering the story since the shooting took place on the 14th of february. president trump blasting out response of the florida school shooting saying he would have run in even without a gun. ainsley: his bold claim coming as calls mount for the broward county sheriff now to resign. steve: to connect all the pieces, griff jenkins joins us now from d.c. with the scrutiny about the first responders, griff? good morning, guys. disgusting you and a disgrace is how the president describes the actions of broward county sheriff s office saying he would not have sat idol while a killer murdered 17 students and teachers. you know, i really believe. you don t know until you are tested. i really believe i would run in there even if i didn t have a weapon. and i think most of the people in this room would have done that, too. the attorney for scott peterson the deposit deputy
assigned to protect the school. the allegations that mr. pertson was a coward and that his performance, under the circumstances, failed to meet the standards of police officers are patently untrue. peterson has resigned. in the calls for scott israel to resign are growing louder as florida lawmakers investigate all the agencies that responded. accused of blocking mayor midwest dicks from entering to treat victims as florida speaker of the house weighs in. what we have here is a poorly run agency. he has got every single person under investigation but he just want doesn t want to involved himself accountable. he has done none. the height of arrogance. shooter nic lazarus cruz is due back in court today, guys. according to the new york post we are now learning that just prior 209 shooting he tried to access his mother s $800,000 inheritance. ainsley: of course he did. of course he did. steve: thank you very much. laura ingraham had last night on her program, she had a story how she has got
sources in law enforcement down there and they said apparently the deputies were told not to enter the school unless they had their body cameras on. but they didn t have body cameras. so they didn t go. in also apparently they lost radio communication during the shooting. ainsley: this kid had everything ahead for him. he had parents that adopted him, that loved him. his mom was worth $800,000? he could have gotten that money and used it for so much good. look what he has done with his life and others. brian: obviously delayed learning. degree of ewe tim by the age of 5. watched his father die in front of him by the age of 6. then he comes over to florida. i know some people actually on long island that went to the parents wedding got to know him. when he moved away they didn t obviously keep in touch. ainsley: he needed more help. brian: when the cops come to the house and already pointed gun mom s head and threw her in the wall when she took your x box away. steve: different standard for juveniles. they are examining that in florida. the president did talk about
that yesterday. also we are learning apparently in mid march the president of the united states is going to go out to a big rnc fund raiser in los angeles. he is also going to make a trip to visit those proto types of the wall which the department of homeland security has tested and then he said, you know what? it s pretty much impossible to get through or go over. ainsley: eight different protestor types all down there prototypes down there. some have spikes on them to keep from jumping over. some have posts to see through them at the base. the president says he really likes those. see that one right there that has the grids at the bottom, the see through. the president says he likes those because border agents have told them that you will get guys on the mexican side and they will throw the drugs, 60 pounds worth of drugs over the wall to throw them whoever is on the other side in america. he wants the agents to be
able to see what s coming over so they are not hit in the head. brian: a bunch of guys the size of aaron judge. ainsley: probably have devices. brian: 1.8. by the border area. how tempting must it be for the president know he has 25 billion out there in a deal that can be worked out if they can get some reasonable people on both sides over the next three weeks to reinvigorate. i know traditionally immigration phase one is dead. there is nothing traditional about this administration. go back, you got some republicans there work for you. maybe there is something that can be done. steve: administration is one thing. congress is the problem in this case. also, yesterday, the supreme court brain brian should also say he got 54 votes on the one plan. if the president wanted that plan he would have got 60. if he goes back and says do you these things and i will accept your plan. he probably would have got it to the senate. steve: to my point the senate has that 60 vote rule that s the problem.
meanwhile, yesterday, the supreme court handed the department of justice essentially a defeat because the doj had asked supreme court go ahead and figure out what to do about daca. and the supreme court said you know what? it has not even gone through all the lower courts so we re going to take a pass. here is the president yesterday in front of the nation s governors responding to the daca ruling at scotus. daca is going to be put back into the ninth circuit. you know, we tried to get it moved quickly because we would like to help daca. i think everybody in this room wants to help with daca. but the supreme court just ruled that it has to go through the normal channels. so it s going back. in. brian: one of the stories that s underappreciated is the problems with the judges. a lack of logic and adherence to the law. agenda. look at this. president obama knew when he did the order on daca it would be temporary and open to execute any. he was able to issue an executive order extending the stay of the daca kids and protecting them. the next president is not
allowed to rescind that? how does that make sense? i bet you the supreme court going to look at this and logic tells you by 5-4. hopefully more, the president will get his way. hopefully there will be a deal done before that. steve: once again, it goes back to congress. now the heat is off them. and the way the courts do work this could wind up taking at least another year. all right. meanwhile, let s talk a little bit about memos. ainsley: with the dueling memos you have the republican one out couple weeks ago and then the democratic one. the one thing clear in this whole fiasco the media is dead. listen to. this look, you have to assume, i mean, you know that glenn simpson and steele were meeting with numerous reporters. and maybe this is why when i say the media is dead. maybe they re embarrassed, right? because so many of them were briefed. maybe they can t actually write about it because the emperor would have no clothes, right? it would be the height of hypocrisy if some of these reporters would come out and
well, yeah, we were actually briefed on this dossier way back when and now knowing that it s totally false and totally disproven, salacious and up verified. steve: keep in mind as well. remember when he says the media is dead, back then in the summer before the election, the g.p.s. people were actually talking to reporters and then one of them wrote a story and then the fbi and the department of justice used that story that was fed to the news outfit by g.p.s. as rationalization for why they should get the fisa warrant. and, of course now we know, thanks to the democrat memo, that pretty much supports everything in the republican. brian: what they want you to do at home because have you 90 things going on in your life. you are not focusing on this. not your main focus. very hard to follow these story lines. just know. this they say oh, yeah, they put the story, yahoo news covered it mother jones wrote about it that wasn t the owning thing we gave them. have you fusion gps and the dossier was a role but it wasn t the only thing that was there andy mccabe
vindicated. the dossier was key. didn t say it was vital. so they re splitting hairs. bottom line is by doing and this acknowledging this, the democratic memo is affirming everything that was in the republican memo. ainsley: we still have the same questions as we did when the republican memo was released. and that is what did the fisa courts know? did they know how political this was? did they know who was pay for this? if that s the case why in the world would they give them perms to go and spy on opponent. brian: push back like this. ainsley: they never asked. steve: president obama when he was at mit no scandals on his watch. meanwhile, 7/11 in new york city. ainsley: get you caught up on other headlines this morning. check this out. the engine of a plane packed with people exploding into flames over the sky in utah. yeah, isn t that frightening? all going down minutes after the southwest jet took off from salt lake city. over 100 people on board heading to los angeles and it was totally packed. i thought this is it.
my family is all going down right here. jillian: the plane turning around making annual emergency landing. southwest calling this a performance issue. now to extreme weather. the south and central u.s. bracing for more storms this week as areas recover from strong tornadoes and drenching rain. at least 70 rivers across the heartland are already at or above flood stage. and heavy rainfall blamed for this massive rock slide in ohio. giant bolders blocking a highway in the southern part of the state. and brand new video out of tennessee of a family findings their pet dog under debris after a powerful tornadoes. after month long delay. white house communications director hope hicks testifying on the hill today. the house intelligence committee will likely ask her about any contact that trump campaign officials may have had with the russians. this comes as committee chair devin nunes warns of a slew of subpoenas over the anti-trump dossier s connection dnc and clinton campaign. first responders go above and beyond to welcome a
little boy to school for his first day back since beating leukemia. cops, firefighters, students escorting him to his classroom outside boston. the 9-year-old even got to sit on a police motorcycle. he had been out of class since november of 2016 when he was diagnosed. he is now cancer-free. amazing day for him. ainsley: wonderful. steve: happy day for him. jillian: absolutely. brian: all right, jillian, 12 minutes after the hour. president trump vowing to turn grief into action when it comes to school safety. we must pursue common sense measures that protect the constitutional rights of law abiding americans while keeping guns out of the hands of those who pose a threat. brian: okay. how does that resonate with the governors? how about this governor? matt bevin was in the room for that powerful message. he joining us live next. steve: plus, would you buy what this ad is selling? meet the veterans behind this patriotic commercial that is taking the internet
by storm in liberating stripes claritin-d relieves eight, including sinus congestion and pressure. claritin-d relieves more.
call for a free quote today. liberty stands with you™. liberty mutual insurance. if you have moderate to severe or psoriatic arthritis, little things can be a big deal. that s why there s otezla. otezla is not an injection or a cream. it s a pill that treats differently. for psoriasis, 75% clearer skin is achievable with reduced redness, thickness, and scaliness of plaques.
and for psoriatic arthritis, otezla is proven to reduce joint swelling, tenderness, and pain. and the otezla prescribing information has no requirement for routine lab monitoring. don t use if you re allergic to otezla. otezla may cause severe diarrhea, nausea, or vomiting. tell your doctor if these occur. otezla is associated with an increased risk of depression. tell your doctor if you have a history of depression or suicidal thoughts, or if these feelings develop. some people taking otezla reported weight loss. your doctor should monitor your weight and may stop treatment. other side effects include upper respiratory tract infection and headache. tell your doctor about all the medicines you take and if you re pregnant or planning to be. otezla. show more of you.
must pursue common sense measures that protect the constitutional rights of law abiding americans while keeping guns out of the hands of those who pose a threat to themselves and to others. we must strive to create a culture in our country that cherishes life and condemns violence and embraces dignity. steve: president trump there yesterday meeting with the u.s. governors vowing to turn grief into action when it comes to school safety in the wake of what happened in florida. republican kentucky governor matt bevin was at that meeting. he joins us right now from our nation s capital. good morning. good morning. good to be with you. steve: what did you think of the president. i was impressed in his willingness to listen. is he very good at opening his ear to the governors of this country and looking to us for guidance on things that affect us at the state level. steve: now, you don t see this as just a gun issue as many do. you see this as a total
package, right? to me, again, we have to look at what are the underlying causes. this would be like finding a person lying in the street dead, we can identify the fact that that is their current condition. but what led to this? what is the back story? what has created this instance? and here we have young people being killed in schools. yes we understand a gun was used in certain instances. the most recent in particular. what is the cultural reason for this. what are we doing or not doing as a society individually and collectively to protect and arm our young people literally and figuratively in this sense with the skills they need to handle the pressures of being young? steve: yeah. what about the president s suggestion that some qualified teachers be armed in the schools? i think on a voluntary basis, purely volitional, it s a very good idea and worthy of being considered. i think teachers who are willing should go through an
extensive training far above and beyond what it takes to be a conceal carry gun owner. should go through a battery of psychiatric i can tests to ensure they are mentally able. not just carrying concealed. not just hand ling pressure doing it in a situation with students in a school take as special degree of training. but it shouldn t just be teachers, it should be available to administrators. custodians, coaches, anyone inside that school on a voluntary basis, i think we would be foolish not to consider that as a possibility. steve: governor, i saw one governor, i believe, from washington state yesterday stand up. i think he was going to ask a question but ultimately he was making a point to the president and that was he had spoken to a number of teachers. they didn t want to be armed. he didn t want that responsibility. he also told the president to stop tweeting so much. yeah, again. that s gracious of him to give advice. i will reserve my thoughts as to what i thought of that particular show boating. but i will say. this there are many teachers
in that state, i know where he is from. and i will tell you straight up, i have a brother who lives in that state. there are plenty of teachers who volition all volition. steve: is he a governor of the great state of kentucky, matt bevin, thank you for joining us today from our nation s capital. thank you. steve: 7:20 now in new york city. would you buy what this ad is selling you? are about to meet the veteran behind this patriotic commercial taking the internet by storm. he s next. in liberating stripes you know what s awesome? gig-speed internet.
so it s just for them. steve: i found my wife s. i know where it s at. meanwhile a veteran described as america s greedest entrepreneur makes patriotic commercial that s taking the internet by storm. watch this. o beautiful for heroes proof in liberating stripes who themselves their country loved and more than life ainsley: joining us now is the man behind that ad. the ceo and founder of the clothing country called grunt style former army drill sergeant dan. thank you first of all for serving our country. thank you. ainsley: tell us about that
ad. why did you make that. the whole purpose of the ad is we wanted to show people one who we are as a brand. we wanted to be okay withdraw ago line in the sand. you know, it s so easy as you grow. our company is getting bigger and bigger that you become very vanilla and very politically correct. steve: play it safe. we got it you know that s not okay. you should be who you are from day zero 10 years from now and 20 years years from now. steve: that ad was a salute to law enforcement while at the same time honoring protesters right to burn the flag. peaceful assembly. freedom of speech. everything, of course. and that police officer is protecting it as soon as you cross that line, he has to defend that he is not just defending the people there he is defending everything that the constitution, the bill of rights, everything that has been added up the last hundreds of years to where we are in america. is he defending that. brian: you start your company with $100. you say a brand new wife and baby on the way. but what is the approach of this company? what do you sell?
what do you do? i started it because when i was getting out of the army. i didn t want to leave. but i didn t want to leave that culture of pride and patriotism. i made it my mission of what if i could make every home in america a patriotic one? set politics aside. i you wanted everyone to understand the same pride and patriotism that we had the in military. threw a bunch of t-shirts in my car and slept in it and here we are today. brian: you sell t-shirts. steve: all sorts of stuff. opened up a factory. steve: brian, whiskey. american bourbon. steve: when you go to his website. this is the quote about who we are. to us, what you wear is more than just a necessity to be clothed. it s an attitude. we have taken the american fighting spirit and instilled it in everything we do. you don t have to be a veteran to wear grunt style but you have to love freedom, bacon, and whiskey. we provide more than apparel. we instill pride. pride in self, in military,
and in country. you put the ad together. you thought about putting it on the super bowl. we did we worked your partners down in l.a. they are a bunch of vets as well. it was supposed to be on the super bowl. that s what it was geared towards. we couldn t get the numbers to work. and, you know, i m not going to bet the farm. i had 500 families to worry about at grunt style. that s my priority. we. ainsley: guess what? we will put you on fox & friends. our viewers are amazing. dan, let me ask you this, when did you get to this point in your life. we all have that turning point where you realize you have to be yourself. that s what you were from the get-go. right out of the gate when you stuarted this company. what instilled that in you? was it the military? that turning point where you thought i have got to be true myself. military is a big part of it family is a big part of it everything, every experience you have in your life is another building bring to that pyramid you call yourself. keeps adding up to the sum you are today. brian: what kind of drill sergeant are you? very happy and compliant. i m happy. maybe my recruits aren t.
steve: you brought a shirt along with you along with america whiskey. what did you bring the shirt for. something that is brand new. we just launched a new factory in san antonio, texas. cut and sew. we make this from fabric, u.s. fabric. steve: is that the shirt you are wearing. i am wearing it. ainsley: very pretty. i stole the hanger from the hotel, sorry, guys. ainsley: you better put that back, mr. sergeant. brian: he wasn t going for pretty. ainsley: i know. brian: good-looking though. ainsley: he just got married. it s working for him. it looks good. i like it. steve: great website. go to grunt style.com and you can buy some of their stuff and support a veteran owned organization. very nilesly done. ainsley: god bless you. thank you. steve: can we keep the america whiskey? yes, absolutely u. ainsley: do you remember when joy behar slammed the vice president because of his faith? think she couldn t go any lower? well, a lot of people say she just did.
brian: yep, and the supreme court ruling against president trump deciding it won t hear against the daca case yet. what happens next? judge napolitano is always walking somewhere and he comes our direction. you can t
today we re bringing you america s number one shave at lower prices every day. putting money back in the pockets of millions of americans. as one of those workers, i m proud to bring you gillette quality for less, because nobody can beat the men and women of gillette. gillette - the best a man can get.
ainsley: father leahy replicating his viral hook shot right here on fox & friends yesterday. brian: first time i ever chest bumped a member of the clergy. ainsley: its would good. steve: final attempt before the end of the show. did he it right at the. [buzzer] congratulations. it is the shot of the day. now we have a new shot with judge andrew napolitano. good morning, guys, don t ask me to throw a basketball like that. brian: let s talk about this. the president and the administration wanted to fast track this daca decision. get it up to the supreme court. because he thought it was obviously a poor decision by a judge to uphold the president obama s executive decision to have these daca kids shielded from deportation. everybody knew the case was going to get to the supreme court anyway. the administration decided to bypass the appellate court and file the appeal in the supreme court. guess what the supreme court said send it to the aintermediary appellate
court. they don t like to get into the hackett of bypassing the appeals court. the appeals court might do the right thing and might not be necessary for the supreme court to rule. we are talking about two cases. one in san francisco, one in brooklyn. both judges did the same thing. the people that are on daca are allowed to stay and reapply. if the president doesn t want new people on daca, he has the right to prevent the new people from entering. part of the problem here owcht the goodness of his heart. no good dealed goes unpunished. the president extended daca for a year. steve: he did. by doing that he undercut the argument that daca is illegal and we want to stop it. ainsley: who makes the decision? these judges in the federal courts will make the ultimate decision? actually, the judges, in my opinion did the right thing, basically saying congress should make the decision. and it shouldn t make the decision under the gun. the courts will rule but the courts will defer to what congress says. because congress has the
rose the boat. ainsley: congress represents more of the people than just one judge making this decision, right? judge: congress represents everybody in the united states. now, we know the president is pulling his hair out over daca trying to get a compromise. the democrats want one saying he wants a. ainsley: a wall. a larger pang. up to him to put together something congress can live with and can he live with. steve: not unusual for the high court to deny such requests. don t do that etch have. they like things to go their normal route. let s talk about, this judge. this is not the normal route. it s the mayor from oakland, california essentially warning people who are in her community illegally that ice might be making a raid. some have suggested yesterday we had the father of a young man who was killed by an illegal suggested it was obstruction of justice. my heart went out to the father. i watched the interview that you guys did. steve: john rosenberg. very touching and
profound. i think the mayor wants behavior is wild and reckless. i don t think it s illegal. the reason suspects not illegal is because the money that the city is receiving from the federal government is still coming from the obama budget. that budget does not have the string attached which says you wants our money you will comply with ice. the president is going to continue to lose the sanctuary cities argument until his budget is adopted. and until the budget says if you want our money, you will comply with all federal. steve: up to congress? correct. it s up to a republican controlled congress. this should happen within months. brian: judge, i could argue this is the biggest story not getting nearly enough attention. the supreme court heard arguments on whether a union can automatically demand fees from an employee that they represent. steve: government union. a government union no less. so you go to work for the government of the state of illinois. you re a social worker. they force you to join a union. you don t want to join. they force you to pay dues,
you don t want to pay dues. they use your dues for political causes you don t believe. in how many rights have been violated? your freedom of association has been violated because the freedom of association means you have the freedom not to associate. and your freedom of speech has been violated because they have taken your money and spent it on a political cause. brian: all democratic causes. correct. if the unions lose. and i think they will, this will radically shrink manipulate in government union membershipin governmen. shrink pool of money to give to democratic candidates. ainsley: looking at his paycheck and he said union dues, i don t want to be a part of this union. i m not in the union. why am i paying for it. i will make the union argument for you. the union argument is we do the collective bargaining. we do provide them a service. ainsley: with a political spin. a lot of the benefits they get are because of what we have negotiated. i think the fundamental right not to associate with a group trumps that union
argument. ainsley: you should be able to have a choice. steve interviewed the guy who brought this to court. listen to this. my first paycheck had a line item deduction that said union dues. and i never signed up for the union. never signed a pledge card. i was not given a choice. under the first amendment we all have the right to choose what political speech we will and won t support your money. yet, the government in 22 states is forcing people to give part of every paycheck to a union which is a political advocacy group just to keep their jobs. steve: all about choice. justice scalia just died. want to join a union, join. you don t want to join a union, you don t have to. of the government shouldn t force you to make that decision. steve: landmark. ainsley: what s going to happen? 5-4 in favor of the plaintiff and against the union. brian: supreme court justice merrick garland, how would it have gone?
the other way. the impact is profound. if the decision comes down in june, the impact will be felt in november. steve: all right. thank you, sir. brian: you will answer almost any question we give you. you ask me almost any questions you want. steve: is he on retainer. ainsley: jillian is behind you, what is she doing? beautiful jillian. ainsley: what is she doing? headlines. headlines. brian: do whatever she wanted. she can t do whatever she wants. she has to do her job. you go, girl. jillian: let s stick with the headlines. you go, judge. good morning to you at home. let s start with stoffer. i don t know if you heard about this actress heather loclocklear. arrested at her california home after fighting with her boyfriend. according to tmz her brother called 911. police say she became violent. kicking and pushing deputies when they moved in to arrest her. less than an hour later her
boyfriend was arrested for dui. firefighters save a woman and three young children from a raging apartment fire. the incredible and terrifying moments caught on camera. go. go. [bleep] as you can see that mom handing her kids over a balcony to firefighters before climbing over to escape their home in houston. the roof collapsing shortly after. miraculously, nobody was hurt. hillary clinton has come up with a lot of excuses for what happened in 2016. netflix, new york times, 1,000 russian agents, trump s twitter account. the democratic party. polling, misogyny. ainsley: now she is adding facebook to that list. clinton responding to a new report that the social media site charged her campaign more than the trump campaign for ads. she tweets in part quote we should all care about how social media platforms play a part in our democratic process.
because, unless it s addressed it will happen again. joy behar is at it again. this time accusing conservatives of having a penchant for nazis. holocaust denier and total fascist and nazi and marie le pen the daughter thinks her daughter was very good and right and everything else. they invited her. this is like penchant for nazis now. you know, with charlottesville and the neos. good guys on both sides and now marie le pen, it s like a lot of people in the republican party that i remember bill buckley who fought in world war ii. you know, bill kristol. those people who are so anti-nazi are appalled by what s going on right now. ainsley: co-host of the view referring to marion le pen who told last week s cpac crowd that she is not offended when trump says america first. brian: she distanced herself from her father. when her father was running for office. is he nowhere to be found. steve: joy behar s father?
brian: marie le pen. big difference. receive steve georgia s lieutenant governor putting foot down as more companies cut ties to the nra. how is he calling out one of the big ones next. brian: president trump promising to revive steel jobs no matter the cost let them pay tariffs, okay? maybe it will cost a little bit more but we will have jobs. brian: what does it mean for the industry? we will ask steel workers industry leader just ahead. i do it for the money we the people. are defined by the things we share. and the ones we love. who never stop wondering what we ll do or where we ll go next.
we the people who are better together than we are alone. are unstoppable. welcome to the entirely new expedition. it can power your apps with public services without starting from scratch. it brings your business up to speed, doing more with systems you have in place. it can bring all your apps to life and run them within your data center. it is. the new ibm cloud private. the cloud that s designed for your data. ai ready. secure to the core. the ibm cloud is the cloud for smarter business.
party sellers online. 20 were counterfeit but real deal. ranged from electronics like yety brand mugs and makeup. some made with hazardous materials. and fixer-upper stars chip and joanna gains revealing their latest project. high five. be careful. hello. watch out. next time use the horn when it s falling down. ainsley: the hgtv stars officially opening new restaurant magnolia table. it s in waco texas if you are going to visit. farm to table lunch and brunch. that includes my friends avocado toast. steve: i love that. ever since what happened down in parkland, florida on february 14th, there has been a lot of criticism of the nra. social media group started to suggest that people, you
know, boycott organizations and companies that support the nra. and a bunch of organizations did say, you know what? we re cutting ties with them. for instance, delta apparently offered some sort of a discount. and now the lieutenant governor in georgia where atlanta is the big hub for delta casey killin calg wants to crack down on delta for caving. brian: georgia says yeah, if you are going to actually hurt the nra then we are going to cut out your tax break when it comes to what we re doing here in georgia for delta airlines. and they said. this i will kill any tax legislation that benefits delta unless the company changes its position and fully reinstates its relationship with the nra corporations cannot attack conservatives and expect us not to fight back. there is another major corporation that is also not buying in to the boycott mania. ainsley: that s fedex and they released this statement. fedex is a common carrier
under federal law and therefore does not and will not deny service or discriminate against any legal entity regardless of their policy positions or political views. brian: meanwhile the parkland survivor david haag he heard about this and called on fedex stockholders to sell like some investment firms have sold gun stock or investment in different major gun manufacturers around the world. we will see how that goes because fedex has got some resources, too. steve: well, they do. essentially what they say is we do business with a lot of different organizations. we don t care about their politics. and policies. we re just going to continue the discount. ainsley: that s the thing. if you are going to do business, your customers are all over the map. they represent all different walks of life. and not everyone is going to be happy. this is the risk that they take. they are between a rock and hard place. if they pull out if they pull out of the nra, then they are going to offend so many people. if they stay in they are offending another group of people. i think the american public, we re smart enough to know these companies are trying
to play to their base, try play to the people that are buying their product and you are not going to agree with everything they support. brian: a lot of these classmates and survivors from that school are calling on the seniors in college or high school not to go to florida for spring break. don t come here because we got to change the gun laws in florida because in tallahassee the lawmakers didn t change some of the laws that they wanted them to. so we will see where the boycott stops. we know it stops with fedex. ainsley: all right. president trump promising to revive steel jobs no matter the cost. listen. okay, maybe it will cost a little bit more, but we have jobs. ainsley: so what does it mean for the industry? we will ask a steel worker. we will ask the steel workers union leader coming up next. steve: greg abbott just met with president trump yesterday. he is here to tell us about that in the next hour. brian: first, on this day in 1827, a group of costumed students danced through the streets of new orleans marking the first mardy gras and i think we pick it up
from there. 1991 president h.w. bush announced that the allies would suspend war in the pershing war. and this song top of the charts seasons in the sun.
west virginia mark. thank you for being with us. it s good to be here. ainsley: what do you think about the president saying maybe we will just tack on a tariff if that s what it takes. well, i totally agree with him. when he ran for office, he promised to strictly enforce our trade laws. he wanted fair trade instead of free trade. he is just honoring his campaign promise. i think it s the right thing to too. it s been 40 years since this country has imposed proper tariffs on the steel industry. you could go back literally 40 years and the same rhetoric that the government has not enforced our trade laws and have allowed foreign countries to dump their steel into our country, taking away our jobs. steve: because, mark, what foreign countries are able to do is they are able to sell the steel so cheaply, dump it, as you said, and that undercuts your industry, right? absolutely. it s been proven beyond any doubt that these countries have dumped their steel.
they are producing capacity way beyond what they need in their markets and they are selling different markets, not necessarily to the united states, lowering the prices, essentially taking away the american steel workers jobs. we have lost hundreds of thousands of jobs due to illegal dumping. ainsley: how do we avoid that then, mark. the president ran on jobs, so important. how do we avoid dumping these shipping these jobs overseas? part of it is our country needs to strictly enforce the existing trade laws. our government, our president, you could go go back to clinton. you could go back to bush. you could go back 40 years and simply change the date and the same thing happens. steve: yep. they are allowing illegal activity to occur, allowing illegal dumping by definition, these countries are producing the product cheaper than they can manufacture it for. they are producing capacity way beyond their markets and
we need to enforce the laws and we need to impose tariffs. steve: there you go. we will see what happens next. thank you, s next hour, texas governor greg abbott joins us live. liberty mutual stood with me when this guy got a flat tire in the middle of the night, so he got home safe. yeah, my dad says our insurance doesn t have that. what?! you can leave worry behind when liberty stands with you™. liberty mutual insurance. . . . . .
storm. beautiful for heroes proofed i want everyone to understand the same pried and patriotism we had in the military. threw a bunch of. shirts in my car, slept in it. traveled around the country. brian: they remixed it. i hated the first version. ainsley: brian made it famous. not you, sean hannity. steve: this is the whiskey they sell. i didn t really like whiskey before. but they worked on blending for six months, came up with this. america s finest bourbon, whiskey made with pure american grain. ainsley: he is an army drill sergeant the guy who started the company. brian: i saw proof he liked whiskey this morning. ainsley: did you already, 5:00 a.m.?
open bottle in the green room? brian: there was a lot of suspects. steve: check out the website. great company started by the drill sergeant, grunt-style.com. brian: opened a brand new manufacturing plant in texas. they re trying to make things in america. they get the material here and sell it here. steve: i understand the website crashed but they re working getting it back up. ainsley: they were going to run ads in the super bowl. great patriotic ad, he had so many mouths to feed to work for him, ran the numbers, didn t make sense. brian asked if you are a nice drill sergeant. i think i am. the vets may not think so. brian: talk about illegal immigration and building a wall. i don t know if you heard but the president wants to build a wall. they built eight prototypes in san diego. for a long time we thought president would visit there. date sometime in the middle of
march. he will go down there, decide what is best for what part of the border. he needs more than 1.8 billion, all he has to build the wall. he needs 25 billion. steve: he needs congress to help him out. ainsley: the walls are 30 feet tall. some are steel, some are concrete. some are made with spikes. i read that, i thought, ouch. steve: that is not a good reason to go over. department of homeland security working withs u.s. military and tested sections, and for most part are impoll to go through or go under or go over. ainsley: even our military guys couldn t get over it. steve: president s trip to california should be great, great in what is going to happen. remember last week the president said of the sanctuary state which california is now, the sanctuary cities there, he is thinking about pulling out i.c.e. agents because of, they have done a lousy management job, is what he said regarding that because they re not helping federal government. ainsley: no secret california
doesn t love president trump. four million people more voted for hillary clinton. it is known as a very liberal state but kevin mccarthy is in the state. is a good friend of the president. he is going with the president to help with republican fund-raiser. brian: 2/3 of calfornian voters disapprove of the job president trump is doing. ainsley: which is why he might not have visited the state. going first time since being president. brian: yesterday there was a decision, lack thereof, the administration wanted to move forward, go rapid-fire, skip a few prongs on the ladder, go right to the supreme court on the daca ruling. that would shield these kids that came here at a young age, from getting deported, because they were not born here. they re now mostly for the most part in their 20s. supreme court said we re not going to expedite. it will go to the ninth district and get rejected.
bottom line the daca kids can stay for now. steve: department of the justice said to the supreme court, we know we re not to your stage yet but because it is unconstitutional, clearly, you got to do something about it. they said no. here is the president yesterday, in the state dining room responding to the supreme court. daca is going to be put back into the ninth circuit. we tried to get it moved quickly because we would like to help daca. i think everybody in this room wants to help with duckca. but the supreme court ruled it has to go through the normal channels. so it is going back in. steve: so is that the right thing to do? ainsley: judge napolitano says yes. watch this. actually the judges, in my opinion did the right thing, basically saying congress should make the decision. it shouldn t make the decision under the gun. the courts will rule but the courts will defer to what congress says. congress represents everybody in the united states. we know the president s pulling
his hair out over daca, trying to get a compromise. democrats one thing. he wants a larger package. up to put together something he can live with. ainsley: he agrees with the supreme court. brian: last spring he renewed the law for a year. the courts look at that as verification, so hurting president s case. we ll see what the supreme court says when it gets there, or how about this, congress gets together on bipartisan deal. they keep it out of the courts for a change? is. steve: that is the way it should have been. clearly when barack obama did it back in the day, it was executive order. government we ll do what the kids in the country illegally. it was never a law. ainsley: how can he do it in executive order but yet now it has to go to the courts? steve: that is the way it works with a phone and a pen you can only do certain things up to a line. if you want to make a law, congress has to do it. if congress is serious, particularly democrats and
republicans get together, to get something done. you know what the president wants. he will not sign. brian: on that note the house has to pass a version of the goodlatte bill. they can t even do that now. they re trying to get something to move forward that the senate will ultimately reject unless something changes. ainsley: i love it when you guys write in. you have written so many emails we talked about in the first hour, zick hour. let s tell you what is happening if you just woke up. president obama said mit, no cell phones, don t record the speech. someone did, he took a swipe at current administration that used to be a no-no. here is what he said. we did have a scandal that embarrassed us. i know that seems like a low bar but thinking you didn t hear a lot about drama about the last. ainsley: there were no scandals he said. steve: he didn t have a scandal that embarrassed us. they were not embarrassed about the fact that the administration
targeted conservative groups with the irs. they were not embarrassed about the benghazi attack, saying result of a video. not embarrassed by fast & furious. not embarrassed by great american bowe bergdahl and trade deal. we asked you what you thought, and as ainsley said the email machine melted. ainsley: david said what, brian? david says, benghazi, irs, targeting conservative groups, fast & furious, hillary email mess if you ever covered. deleting emails. smashing hard drifts. dot, dot, dot, we need recall anymore? ainsley: not an embarassment? not a scandal, okay. steve: then you got rich, don t forget the va. remember that story when it came out, how many veterans had died waiting for service? ainsley: yeah. steve: is that not a scandal? ainsley: that is an embarassment. that is a tragedy, is what that is. on twitter, acorn,
fast & furious, clinton email, irs, doj, fbi, uranium one, nope, no scandals in the obama administration. brian: problem for this, for the administration, you re right, much limited drama cared to this one. a lot has to do with very compliant press with the press had fun with the at cordoneddent s dinner, fun to be here in front of my base. they should have been embarrassed. they laughed. when we remember ben rhodes came out, it is amazing, had the great quote where he told the magazine, i don t know what he was thinking saying this, everyone knew this was case, everything we put out in a press release comes back from echo chamber. whatever message from the white house the press was so compliant and play it as fact and write it up. there was john podesta of course was getting okayed on hillary clinton side when he was running. we found out looking at john podesta email s they were having columnists okay, glenn thrush
having his columns okayed before they send them. steve: press is very critical of donald trump. brian: i hadn t noticed. steve: looking into the russia thing. that came back to bite the obama administration. pull the various layers of the onion back, wait a minute, looks like the obama administration s department of justice and fbi broke the law in surveilling the trump organization. ainsley: didn t think that comment was getting out. said in front of a group at mit in boston. didn t want those opinions out so. steve: keep the list coming. we ll share some online and what not. 8:10, jillian. jillian: get caught up to other stories we re following. check out the video. engine of a plane facted with people exploding into place in utah. going down minutes after the southwest jet took off from salt lake city. over 100 people heading to los angeles, totally packed. i thought this is it.
my family is all going down right here. jillian: they were panicking that s for sure. the plane turning around, making emergency landing. south which is calling this a performance issue. talk about extreme weather, south and central u.s. bracing for more storms this week as areas recover from tornadoes and drenching rains. 70 rivers across the heartland are already at or above flood stage. heavy rainfall blamed for massive rockslide in ohio. guy and boulders blocking a highway in southern part of the state. this isn t snow. it is hail. parts of sacramento, california, blanketed in three inches of ice after a thunderstorm. crazy. president trump s if first state dinner is set. commander-in-chief will host first emannuel macron and first lady. this will be the first ceremonial welcome. president trump traveled to france last year to meet macron.
look at headlines. back to you. steve: big party coming to the white house. dozens of florida lawmakers calling for the broward county s sheriff s suspension for what appears to be mishandling of the school shooting. our next guest is one of those. brian: impeach trump 101. a university offering a course in just that and i m not kidding. ainsley: is maxine running it?
prudential. bring your challenges. deputies make mistakes, police officers make mistakes. we all make mistakes. it is not responsibility of the general or president if you have a desserter. i can only take responsibility what i knew b i exercised my due diligence. i ve given amazing leadership. brian: wow, calls now growing for broward county sheriff scott israel to step down despite his self-proclaimed amazing leadership. 74 lawmakers calling for the sheriff to suspend him because of lack of leadership following the parkland shooting.
we have state republican matt caldwell. first off you called for him to resign. do you know enough yet? yeah, i think we absolutely do know enough. not only should he resign, but if he refuses to the governor should remove him. you look what happened in this incident where the deputies failed to respond, failed to go inside. we re hearing news reports this morning that may have been because they didn t have body cameras. they were told not to go inside. a lot of questions in that regard. even worse, you look at the, incidents that happened before the shooting. all of the times which somebody called, said, hey, this guy has problems, hey, this guy is doing something criminal. we have stories and reports coming out of broward and dade county, this might be coordinated. that the sheriff office and school district in order to game their numbers look like doing better than they are, were not actually arresting kids committing real crimes. makes me worry more not just about this incident, this individual. who knows, did he commit crimes
that he should have been arrested for long before this happened? maybe other kids have serious issues, because maybe they re not taken serious enough because of policies, sheriff put in place. brian: i would like toe know if deputies were told by the sheriff to stand down, to wait? if deputy tanking the fall. he had no problem falling deputy under the bus, maybe justify bly, we don t know. he was gone in 24 hours, he said i m not a coward. according to one report he said he thought the shooting was coming from the outside. we also have a report, according to fox s sources that there was a delay in ems getting inside because they were told to wait on the outside which was against policy, does that bother you? absolutely it bothers me. you know you heard the quote from the sheriff earlier when we came into the segment about how the general doesn t get held accountable. absolutely the general gets held accountable, if the general s
troops fail, they fail to do the job he is responsible for, the general will get removed. that is exactly who the person who has to be responsible for policies and decisions that didn t prevent kids from being killed. absolutely out rage just to defend the action. if this is systemic, if this is something going on for years where there is coordination in an effort to hide the statistics and keep people from knowing and arresting kids who should have been on the record, again if this, if this person, we don t know. that is it why yesterday the house issued, or took a vote to issue subpoenas. we ve got an ethics committee that said, yes, we should issue subpoenas, bring people in, make them answer these questions because there are serious, serious allegations. brian: matt, lawmakers, but no democrats. he is a democrat that got elected. a lot of people looking at this, hey, why don t we wait, this seems like a partisan issue? yeah. again the governor has the power to remove people for incompetence. you don t even have to commit a crime. the florida constitution gives
the governor very wide discretion to evaluate county and city officials and if they re just simply incompetent at their job, he can suspend them and remove them. that is why again the house is saying he should be removed he should step down. we also need answers. why we re going to issue subpoenas and we ll look for the answers to find out what really happened in the situation. brian: thanks so much. state representative matt calledwell, saying sheriff israel we ve seen enough. thank you very much. thank you very much. brian: president trump, talking about the border and so much more. terry mcauliffe says who better to take on trump than he is, one-term governor from virginia, long-time money maker from virginia, what does that say about the democrats? is he their best bet? we ll debate it.
marijuana. he is sitting in front of a american flag and holding a joint. he calls marijuana a wonderful recreational substance. steve: thank you, ainsley. former commonwealth of virginia governor terry mcauliffe, saying quote, who better to take on trump than me, reportedly asked about a potential 2020 run, as one of the senate s longest serving democrats, dianne feinstein can t get her party s endorsement in the state of california. what does it say about the democratic party? we have republican spokesperson kayleigh mack men any and democrat jessica tarlov. when he says who is better taking on president trump than me, mcauliffe was a successful
businessman, turned politicians, maybe that is what he is talking about? that is part of it. terry mcauliffe had successful record in virginia. unemployment was 3.6%. added hundreds of thousands of jobs. making sure felons serving time that were able to vote, something important to him. successful businessman, like the guy sitting at 1600 pennsylvania avenue, hello, mr. president. i think he has a case. also very outspoken. that will help us a lot going up against donald trump. someone will go toe-to-toe to him. not be afraid. i understand what terry mcauliffe is saying. kayleigh, how about you? absolutely not. represents the same old, tired, democratic establishment that rigged election for hillary clinton. rigged it? she lost. terry america call live is clinton fund-raiser, a clinton lackey. a clinton wannabe. represents everything wrong with the clintons. we welcome his run because the
establishment is the era of yesterday. we need new blood. we need new ideas. outsider like president trump in the white house. that is what the american people want. steve: jessica, out of curiosity as a democrat, who do you like on the democratic side in 2020? i m a big fan of sherrod of ohio. he was for hillary clinton but certainly big obama fan. obama was a very big fan of his. i think he is wonderful. hugely possible in ohio. i believe that is where working class folk are in a state that we definitely need. so, i am not saying it is going to happen you by love him. is steve we love the fact he came on our show not too long ago. please come back. steve: kayleigh, what is going on out in california? dianne feinstein who has been a u.s. senator for decades could not get endorsement of her own party. why not? that s right. this tells you all you need to know about the democratic party. senator feinstein got that endorsement going back to 1994, every time she has run.
now the democratic party is endorsing or majority support was given to a sanctuary city-loving, socialized medicine-loving liberal that is the state of the democratic party. let s remember. this is the party that bernie sanders got 43% support. bernie sanders i double chicked this quote, it is so astonishing the american dream is more apt to be realized in venezuela where people are fleeing and dying this is the democratic party. it is leftist radicalism. steve: jessica, appears people on the outside looking in the democratic party is being tugged so far to the left if you want to run for president and high office. absolutely. medicare for all is how many moderate senators signed on for that knowing full well they were this states that would not be supportive of that when it came to the ballot just to please the progressive base that goes out challenges from the left. what happened to dianne feinstein is awful when you look at her record and service this country.
talking about a time of gun control, authored the assault weapons ban in 1994. i don t like it. kayleigh knows well. i m moderate variety. hillary clinton was supporter. i was never much for venezuela or bernie sanders. that doesn t speak for me. i hope we get it uncontrol by the time 2018 comes. if we re infit fighting and fighting the other side it will be tough. steve: kayleigh, one final word, democrats another problem, the fact that american public according to polls apparently likes the president s middle class tax cut a lot and democrats don t have a good answer for that aside from the fact everyone of them in congress voted against it. that s right. every single one of them. steve, our internal polling at rnc shows overwhelming support for tax cuts in all of the battle ground states. this is huge. trump tax cuts are succeeding. they re working. people see it in their paychecks. feel it in their lives. and democrats, weren t on the side of the american people. gone are the days of jfk when
they supported giving american people more of their money. now according to pelosi it is unpatriotic and it is crumbs. around it is wrong. steve: great conversation early on the tuesday morning. thanks kayleigh. and jessica. thanks,. steve: steve 8:30 here in new york city. texas governor greg abbott met with the president in new york city. he is here to tell us about that. plus, impeachment of the president 101. impeach trump 101. a university offering that as a actual class for actual credit. -i ve seen lots of homes helping new customers bundle and save big, but now it s time to find my dream abode. -right away, i could tell his priorities were a little unorthodox. -keep going. stop. a little bit down. stop. back up again. is this adequate sunlight for a komodo dragon?
-yeah. -sure, i want that discount on car insurance just for owning a home, but i m not compromising. -you re taking a shower? -water pressure s crucial, scott! it s like they say location, location, koi pond. -they don t say that. it s like they say location, location, koi pond. don t we need that cable box to watch tv?
nope. don t we need to run? nope. it just explodes in a high pitched yeahhh. yeahhh! try directv now for $10 a month for 3 months. no satellite needed. discounts on thousands of hotels, cars and things to do. like the bicycle hotel & casino for 30% off. everything you need to go. expedia why is dark magic so spell-bindingly good? it s a bold blend of coffee with rich flavors of uganda, sumatra, colombia and other parts of south america. like these mountains, each amazing on their own. but together? magical. all, for a smoother tasting cup of coffee. green mountain coffee roasters.
brian: that when president played host to all the governors yesterday, took heated questions. some questions from democratic governor as well as republican governors about mostly gun control. that wasn t all, they spoke about. president is all ears what they want to talk about. ainsley: talk about someone that was there. governor greg abbott, governor of texas, he was there the in room. good morning to you, governor. good morning ainsley. good to be back with you all again. ainsley: tell us what happened in the meeting yesterday? brian: television. several things happened. other than what you saw on television. very robust meetings, talking about the economy and job growth. listen, job growth is something that every state is concerned about. the president is focused delivering more job growth. he gave us a great prognostication what to expect in the coming year. importantly we talked about
something all americans are very, very concerned about, that is trying to bend the cost curve of the spiraling cost of health care. we have to deliver better access to health care at a lower cost. and of course we talked about the very robust infrastructure program that the president is going to be unveiling with congress here really soon. talking about ways that the states can get plugged into this, to improve our infrastructures across the entire country. steve: i know school safety also came up because there was a clip that has been played a lot where the governor of the great state of washington said to the president, that he didn t like the president s plan to arm certain teachers. said he talked to some teachers. they didn t want essentially to be security guards. he also told him to stop tweeting as well. that is one of the things about donald trump, if he will be in a room full of people from both parties he will talk to people from both parties. exactly right but also as i think you noticed earlier, that the president then pivoted and
asked about contrasting point of view what we do in texas. it is important to understand that not one size fits all when it comes to the approach to addressing this issue. texas is maybe different than washington state. even parts of texas are different than other parts of texas but in texas we do have a robust program of allowing but not requiring teachers to be authorized to carry guns in schools. not just teachers t could be coaches or administrators or others. that is called our school marshall program. where people, persons who work in schools, will be authorized to carry sometimes. it will be notified in front of a school, when a school puts up a billboard saying that teachers are armed. don t harm any kid on this campus. other times more concealed. steve: governor, can i ask a quick question. how does it work with the actual guns? do they carry them on them? do they keep them in a locked vault somewhere?
how does it work? they keep them locked up. they do not openly carry or conceal carry under the marshall program. we want to make sure teachers have access to the tools to be able to respond, as one administrator put it, these teachers care so much about their students, and they will use a pencil to try to protect their students. if they re going to be using pencils, they might as well be using pistols. understand that, they go through extensive training, dealing with active shooter type situation. these are not just casual people may be shooting a gun in country side some weekend. they go through the necessary training to respond to active shooter type event. ainsley: times have changed, governor. we don t like taking our shoes off. we don t like ziploc bags. we like to jump to the plane. walk your kid or loved one to the plane. you can t do that anymore because of the terrorists. we don t want teachers necessarily to have guns. things have changed.
we want innocent victims to be able to defend themselves against crazy people walking into schools doing this i was reading an article what you re doing in texas. you call it the marshall program, similar to marshals on airlines of the we don t know who they are. we don t know where they re sitting. these teachers, you re not identifying who they are? the kid don t know. the parents don t know. obviously active shooter will not know which teach remembers armed, right? you are precisely right. it was patterned in part of a the federal marshall program of what is used on airplanes like that. also as you pointed out, this is not a perfect solution for all of these potential dangers. a tool in the tool box but there are some things we must today understanding this. our top goal as leaders in this country, from the president, on down to do everything we can to make sure teachers and students are safe in school. brian: governor, you also said caution to the gop. be strong on immigration but make it clear you re not
anti-hispanic. how do you do both? what is your message to the republicans that maybe not showing the nuance between the two? well, this may be easier in texas because, texas was part of mexico before it was texas. so this is a natural part of our culture. and so we are multicultural. we embrace legal immigration but it doesn t matter what background you come from. people in texas are against illegal immigration. so they want to make sure that the laws are enforced and dangerous people who pose a challenge to our society are going to be put behind bars and hence we re able to pass this ban on sanctuary cities. because what it really does, is to arrest those who not only are here illegally, who pose a danger to people in our society. so the way we talk to the hispanic community is the way we talk to any community, that is, we want you to succeed, we want you to be able to achieve your
dreams. part of the way we do that is by creating safe communities for you to live in. brian: make that effort to disseminate between the two because it is easy to blend them in today s polarized world, right? well, listen, everybody, i don t care what your background is, everybody agrees on certain core principles, that is safety. if you look at hispanic community in texas, so many connection with the republican party, such as deep commitment to faith. a deep commitment to national defense. a deep commitment to family. a deep commitment to education. so there is a deep connection between the hispanic community and republican party. our goal is to make that connection but also one way we do that is because i repeatedly go to the areas of the state of texas that are heavy hispanic communities. later on i will return to the rio grande valley where i ve been more than any sitting governor in the history of the state of texas. i continue to outreach, not just to the hispanic community but african-american community, the
growing asian community because i serve all texans. steve: you re headed back to texas now. have a safe trip back to austin. governor abbott. thank you very much. thank you, sure. ainsley: hand it over to jillian for headlines. jillian: florida depthty and it his canine taking down two suspects who crash ad stolen truck. the incredible moments caught on body a in florida. get him, shep! get him! jillian: deputy nick carmac, happened cuffing one suspect on the ground and have him go through the woods, to find shep and the driver who got away. i m chasing him. shep didn t let go of the suspect s arm until he told him too. san diego state university offering a course dedicated to strictly removing president trump from the white house. they will get one credit for
trump impeachment removal or conviction. the only required read something a book called the case for impeachment. one of highest paid actresses in hollywood but jennifer lawrence never made to it high school. listen. i dropped out of middle school. i don t technically have a fed or a diploma. i am self-educated. jillian: telling cbs s 60 minutes. doesn t regret leaving school at 14 to pursue acting career. she wanted to forge her own path to success. that is look at headlines. brian: she drives her family crazy. from kentucky and conservative every time she speaks out. she said in the past she would flow a martini in the face of the president. she is good actress. ainsley: dropping out of middle school, middle school. brian: rest of this stuff is
easy. middle school is the hard stuff. nine to 12 pretty much ainsley: doing just fine. steve: making $20 million a movie. brian: but the stuff she doesn t know, she doesn t know. steve: so she doesn t know. ainsley: very profound. steve: she knows she s rich. should federal or sate government employees forced to pay state union dues? the supreme court has taken up that case. we ll break it down. explain what happened yesterday coming up next. ainsley: first they praised kim jong-un s sister. now the mainstream media comparing her to ivanka trump. why can t they decide? we ll discuss that next.
even on the escalator. that can be hard on her lower body, so now she does it with dr. scholl s orthotics, clinically proven to relieve and prevent foot, knee or lower back pain by reducing the shock and stress that travel up her body with every step she takes. so keep on climbing, sarah, you re killing it. dr. scholl s. born to move. on a perfect car, then smash it into a tree. your insurance company raises your rates. maybe you should ve done more research on them. for drivers with accident forgiveness, liberty mutual won t raise your rates due to your first accident. switch and you could save $782 on home and auto insurance. call for a free quote today. liberty stands with you™. liberty mutual insurance.
steve: let s talk a little bit about what arguments the supreme court justices heard yesterday at the u.s. supreme court. a fellow who works for the illinois state department of health and human services. his name is mark janus. he does not belong to the union that many of his coworkers do and yet they were taking union dues out of his paycheck every week. you know what he did? he said that is not right and he sued. listen. my first paycheck had a line item, deduction that said union dues. and i never signed up for the union. never signed a pledge card. i was not given a choice. under the first amendment we all have the right to choose what s political speech we will and won t support with our money. yet the government in 22 states is forcing people to give part of every paycheck to a union which is a political advocacy group just to keep their jobs. ainsley: when i heard about though, buy and steve, did you
think, oh be my word they re actually taking money out of people s paychecks that are not part i m surprised someone hasn t brought this to the court before. steve: doing it for years. brian: second time it has gone this far. last time it got to the supreme court, they tied 4-4 because they did not have substitute for antonin scalia. now they have nine judges this might be a example for conservative judge, it will be at least a 5-4 decision in janus favor. they thought it was significant, i was watching shannon bream s great show last night, for first time she has been witnessing judge gorsuch in that spot, he didn t say a word. he is usually very chatty and very talkative. knows the pressure on his shoulders. was quiet, didn t ask a single question. ainsley: judge napolitano, says janus, the guy who is suing will win. listen. force you to join a union, you don t want to join. they force you to pay dues, you
don t want to pay dues. they use your dues for political causes you don t believe in? how many rights have been violated? freedom of association has been violated. freedom to associate has freedom not to associate. freedom of speech is violated. they taken your money and spent on political cause. if the unions lose, i think they will, this will radically shrink membership in government unions which will radically shrink the pool of cash available for the unions to give to their favorite democratic candidate. steve: the man who brought the suit, mark janus, he doesn t think a decision in his favor would weaken the unions. he says the unions are already surviving in places where people don t have to pay dues. brian: surviving and thriving are different. they won t be thriving if people can make their choice. just logic tells you. ainsley: americans like choices. you should have the choice to determine where your money is going to go. shouldn t have to go to a union who will give money to democrats. brian: we don t have a choice
who reads tease. our name is above them. that is part of freedom has to stop because we re not in union. first they praise i am kim jong-un s sister. now the mainstream media is comparing her to ivanka trump. our next guest says the comparison is sickening and i agree. steve: we have a choice to watch bill hemmer at 9:00 eastern time. my prompter says sandra. ainsley: can you do it in her voice? we ll get there. morning, guys. another alarming report on warning signs before the florida massacre. some want the sheriff out. we ll talk about that. hope hicks on the hill in an hour. what questions will she answer? the president making plans to inspect the prototype for a future wall. which one will he choose? and is north korea now the source for syrian chemical weapons? join sandra and me. we ll see you in ten minutes. top of the hour in america s newsroom.
i can breathe again! vicks sinex. breathe on.
ainsley: some in the media are fawning, literally fawning over north korean dictator kim jong-un s sister throughout the winter olympics. cnn headlines saying she stole the show. new york times says she turned on the charm. when ivanka trump was there and they compared the two. joining me new york post columnist carol mark wits. thanks for being with us. thanks. ainsley: i raid your op-ed. you go through a list of headlines. we read a few of them. you do call it sickening. you say the fawning is just disgusting. why? they have nothing in common other than being relatives of powerful men. ivanka is free woman leaving in the free world among free people. the comparison of her to a dictator s sister which we know
almost nothing about. the reason they focus on our smile or lang of bling or the way she was so charming we know literally zero about her. she has never done profiles. our allowed is not interview her. her media is not allowed to interview here. she lives in a world we can t understand. the our media treats it as equal which is absurd. ainsley: she works with her brother. her job responsibility is propaganda for this lunatic, this man that starves people. if you run against him, you could be killed or imprisoned for rest of your life. killing his own sibling or stepbrother. how can you make a comparison? yeah. the fact is that we, they, her, whether she is complicit in what her brother is doing is, not obvious to us but obviously she is because he is sending her as representative of their country to the olympics and just like ivanka gets criticism for not standing up to her father, kim
jong-un s sister can t stand up to him. there is no universe which ainsley: she doesn t have a choice. she can t say she is wrong. ainsley: you can t compare. she does not have a choice. we can t feel sorry where she sunday rule of dictator. we have no idea. ainsley: but can t compare her to ivanka trump. absolutely. smart, accomplished woman like ivanka is not the prisoner that kim jong-un s sister is. ainsley: mainstream media is not treating fairly as melania night is not fair to compare her to a dictator s sister. ainsley: we have more fox & friends just moments away.n comfort inn with a glow around them, so people watching will be like, wow, maybe i ll glow too if i book direct at choicehotels.com .
who glows? just say, badda book. badda boom. nobody glows. he gets it. always the lowest price, guaranteed. book now at choicehotels.com
when did you see the sign? when i needed to jumpstart sales. build attendance for an event. help people find their way. fastsigns designed new directional signage. and got them back on track. get started at fastsigns.com. i hope everyone joins me thursday in my only new jersey appearance. books and greetings on march 1 on thursday and then at barnes & noble on friday in georgia at

People , Person , Investigation , Florida , Speaker-of-the-house , Run-agency , Victims , Imerg , Paramedics , Shooter , Statement , Scott-peterson

Transcripts For DW Made In Germany - Going Cashless 20180125 02:30:00


a global problem this is made in germany welcome in indonesia you can already see where we are heading the country s population is growing and so is the gap between those account afford food and those who can t sign fully an increasing number of entrepreneurs are now trying to tackle this issue. people come to jakarta in search of work and a better life. what is the future of mega cities like this one the german internet entrepreneur three just detzner is in asia to explore such questions what will people eat if farmers continue to abandon the land for the city and the population continues to grow. out and about with emmanuelle lawman he who has declared war on hunger with his food rescue program if you hear the predictions of so many people living on one planet and there s no more space what do you think that s going to
happen if i m not mistaken the food we saw in the u.s. alone can feed the whole world was all right so what we re doing with this program is more like a band-aid. right there so we re helping people obviously we re making a difference yes but it s more like a bad made it s not going to the root of the problem right there the problem is the waste the root of the problem is the awareness it s the sense of urgency is then the feel that we need to do something about it which all of that doesn t exist. in the basements of upscale restaurants and hotels collects waste food on. this day old bread would otherwise be destined for the dumpster for jakarta s urban poor such leftovers can make all the difference if. i caught
myself fresh on beggar. and that s really bad that s what i that s what i want a description my own professional background spend my time begging for leftover food begging for a bit of money or you re begging for other people yes absolutely. and it s depressing sometimes to be a professional beggar. the two still have to collect leftovers from ten more hotels. indonesia needs to import food to feed its rapidly growing population which currently total some two hundred sixty million people it can t produce enough to cover their needs. even staples like rice that brought in from neighboring countries. indonesia desperately needs to come up with solutions to deal with the growing demand. what if people grew their own food at home. founder and food lover albert primeau no has
developed a vertical farming system it s still in the pilot phase fisher farmed in the bottom of the food station their waste is broken down by bacteria and becomes fertilizer that supplies the lettuces herbs and vegetables growing up above with the nutrients they need. the plants in turn oxygenate the fishes water everything s organic. how many of the. one hundred plants they become safe like family household you think it s realistic but everybody gets one of these at home i think it s realistic in a way when the price is going down and it becomes the same unless you don t even need to think how to grow plants. i think it s possible. for a mono has invested eight hundred thousand euros in the development of the cultivation system to help get the word out he creates special menus made with the
self grown produce for food bloggers and restaurant owners. here undernourishment and famine seem a world away while. living in. the reasoning here on the most. having great food and that s that s a great thing right. we do have this growing population and the question is how can we feed them all like what we have to do in order to get is like a starting point to everyone because like you i think fifty maybe more people so we need to research on like how people do things more effectively and what s interesting about this area is that there s an air of sustainability so basically we need to find it is nothing but if i can call this in a long. way. as well i do agree with you i think i would assume real living in the bubble of like minded people who are thinking that. if you look at
the population the whole people behave and what they eat. this way it s not something i. go for a lower price and like i don t know i m not always like i like to be optimistic but actually sometimes i m not because i think how most people behave is very different very different from. the left of the food has now arrived at its destination the founder of food rescue comes here once a week. so we re in south jakarta right now. and this is a community in july and uk there s about five hundred families here and there are scavengers so they collect and they recycle the trash for the car that without them there is no recycling five hundred families but on average we have about one hundred families coming each time. there are dozens of districts like this one in the center of the city. that people here only make a day at most recycling trash that s just enough to buy some rice.
in places in communities in locations where there is an obvious increase in density of people and at the same time a decrease or the same level amount of food being produced you ll create situations that are like a time bomb so. when people are desperate when they see their children cannot eat they will either have to move to look for the food or they will have to fight for their food. each year limo need to students about thirty seven tons of food among the city s needy. and. i started helping people when i was fifteen and when i was twenty i took the decision after i finish university to do this for time with my life. and i ve been in this for the last seventeen years i feel to necessity and i feel i have to do something and so i
really would like to do just a small something to help other people but i really had a few crises moment where i was and i was like enough of this and not enough enough it s a constant struggle but i realise that this is like in my d.n.a. now it s part of me and i realise that i will continue to do this for the rest of my life. people like emmanuelle low need a helping to make a difference but they can t keep pace with the rapid changes underway the gap between rich and poor between those who have enough money to eat well and those who have to eke out a living by collecting trash is growing and not just in jakarta. with so many it worried about how to feed the planet an increasing number of people in the west are choosing a vegetarian lifestyle and veganism seems to be a growing trend to restaurants that cater to them are sprouting up all over europe for example barcelona rome vienna or paris but the city with the largest number of
vigen restaurants is berlin there are at least three hundred seventy one so here in germany at least there s a lot of money to be made on vegetarian and vegan products and they now come in many shapes and sizes. tofu instead of beef there s not a scrap of meat to be found and it s. a completely vegan fast food restaurant set up by the fashion bloggers. and. they refer to themselves as for trend reasons if you express yourself through your clothes on the brands you wear but also through what you eat and what you don t eat them is huge these days we recognize this early on now with a beacon fast food kings because. the two have been detecting new trends in men s fashion for years and writing about them on their website and after opening their own diner they re at the height of fashion themselves and they practice what they
preach there both. begin ism is booming. cafes serving. cakes can now be found on every block in berlin. and there s also a lot of demand for animal friendly shoes and belts microfiber material replaces leather and has a pretty good imitation. and even the service sector is going. to hair salon which uses products that are guaranteed. is one of the founders. and in many other salons when begins ask what s in the shop who most hairdressers have no idea so the customers turn up with washed wet hair have their hair cut and leave again here we give customers of a good drink they know all their products are vegan and they don t have to worry about anything. nowadays it s much easier to lead
a vegan lifestyle. that s partly thanks to begins the first vegan supermarket chain in the world here you can get all the soil yogurt and tofu sausages you can dream up. the first store opened in twenty eleven c.e.o. young says begin as m has entered the mainstream. i m trying. to begin with it was a shop just for beagles for a nice market people soon realized that our vision was to make everybody happy. we ve managed to attract many people to be going to some more skeptical before you need a bit turned off by originally a very small target group. so the regular customers are not all the blue dogs says that vegan food now is what organic food used to be people are prepared to pay a lot for high quality products whether in the supermarket itself or in the chains
adjacent restaurants it goes without saying here that there are no meat or dairy products on the menu. the business prospects are so good that even the meat industry is jumping on the bandwagon. sometimes of the. margins are higher for reagan food because it s not yet so industrialized and rationalized. because it s a niche market that only makes up about one percent of the whole market so the potential for growth is huge like up to ten or twenty percent. back at the j.n.t. diner to begin to resolve burger is their best seller so far but everything seems to be pretty popular and the two bloggers are already plotting their expansion. before opening we met a franchise consultant who flew in specially he really wanted to meet us because he thinks it s so exciting we ve had loads of offers from people wanting to work with
us but interest is there now it s all about the row now. even revolution is here and even in fast food form someone s certain to be tickled pink about it. who won t end up squealing on the grill. no matter whether you choose a salad or a steak off the menu at the end the way to it will present you the bill and you might have become used to whipping out your credit card or smartphone to settle it must try that in germany europe s biggest economy still has a widespread allergy against plastic money it s a serious case of german ants fear of fraud in this case some sixty years after they were introduced here german still mistrust cashless payment systems and not entirely without reason as our reporter found out. i have to pay in cash at the local market. traders don t accept anything else.
but i get my cash from an a.t.m. and that can be a risky business a.t.m. fraud is rampant as are many other kinds of digital and cybercrime. recently somebody somehow got my credit card details and access data and used them to withdraw cash in malaysia this kind of credit card fraud is on the rise. under free and is a technology group based in munich that provides services and products in global payment transactions communications digital identities and data security it s a leading printer of banknotes and it makes chips for credit and debit cards and sim cards for smartphones. i m not allowed to film in one of their factories but
i don t have one but it works with my smartphone to i log into my bank to initiate a transaction the bank then generates a number. and sends it to my phone here to then generates another number which i have to enter on my computer to complete the transaction. it sounds complicated but such a system could offer protection from certain kinds of hacking. but what about paying with a card at a shop doesn t that allow anybody to find out what i buy and where. even if. your company providing the technology that is actually undermining data privacy . i would not say that we re working to enhance security and confidence in the digital world and in the real physical world. as well we prakash we make id systems and we make sim cards for phones ships use and
they provide some degree of security as regards the transmission and structuring of data. our goal is security but we re not creating the conditions for a data free for all. it s estimated that about two hundred thousand cyber attacks occur every day around the world. companies like music and unlocked in a very high stakes struggle with hackers and cyber criminals. one of the most popular buzzwords in the tech world is disruption describing the radical change that all sectors of the economy we have banking or hospitality are going through right now but how to react what is a good strategy where are the pitfalls made in germany met up with an executive coach explains how businesses big and small will need to adapt. it s second nature to good surfers and something most of us would love to master
the ability to respond quickly to changing circumstances their agility ensures they stay on top. for management coach sabina asco dom adapting to change is key. is looking for what is the chinese word for crisis is made up of two characters one signifies danger the other opportunity doesn t understand first goals. digital change and compass as both these aspects. of things aren t just changing on the factory floor either. but also higher up the chain. lots of managers feel overwhelmed. or used to say decision makers don t suffer from stress their staff do but that s all changing the stress levels amongst managers a soaring as well thought of so many are out of their depth and afraid of what s happening they re afraid to make the wrong decisions frightened of making mistakes
i think we live in a fear driven age. in the banking sector fear is rife and not only because of the impact of low interest rates bankers are also under fire for taking too many risks corruption poses another problem. the entire sectors management culture is under scrutiny and needs to change but how. managers often ask me do i also have to double as an entertainer now i tell them yes you do you have to arouse the enthusiasm of your staff you need to have a vision and we know this sometimes costs blood sweat and tears don t pretend it doesn t hurt because generally it does is told in the. countless people are worried by the seismic shifts currently underway that sabina as go down is a much sought after. public speaker. first of all let s look at our fears are they
real or are they imagined can i do something about them and sometimes more distance is helpful between myself as an individual and the position i m in this is where the word identity comes into play teet it s. because the right path is of course different for each and every one of us the coach advises or clients to identify their own goals and their not to lose sight of them and to steer clear of short term fads. but. if we all swim with the tide we always do what the others do and often we lose the sense of what we really want and that s why i love the image of swimming against the tide that may be far better to get. back to the white water and what it can teachers about falling down and getting back up again come against you you can really learn a lot here you just have to watch the surfers they paddled keep moving to stay afloat to avoid going under and to keep their spirits up paddling trying to keep up
with the waves and then trying to find a quiet spot to get out of the water then to get back in and try to get a thoughtful. so it s all about fighting fear keeping on the move and not freezing up. when everything is in flux around you. gentlemen listen up have you looked into a mirror recently i you show you a business outfits are really up today of course you aren t you re in secure you just don t know for sure do you whether that bart simpson novel to die you got a christmas party in one thousand nine hundred nine is still up to date well help is it and challenge volved your sister or the woman at the opposite desk a let me explain. everyone has doubts sometimes you look at the mirror and see this guy in
all these reasons to not trust the sales guy in the store always tells you this suit was made for you. and as much as it pains me to say this do not trust your mom. i know she loves you but she may want you to look like a more dapper version of your data twenty five. and you trust any man whose style you admire just are we love giving advice do trust your female colleagues at work especially if they re over the age of forty in their working lives they have seen so many badly dressed men they appreciate if you make an effort. because they make an effort every day listen to them you know what conscious self and. if you re like me i have an older sister wrote like mom lady love you unconditionally but that text might be
a bit more also they keep you from making a fool out of yourself. if only to protect the family. so now you know that s it for this episode of made in germany many thanks for watching enjoy the show why don t follow us on twitter or on facebook you can also find more information on all stories in previous episodes a much more on our website that s d w dot com.
football shared experience every match that the pundits league dream weekend here on told you. learn german with w anytime anyplace. but whether with joe joe and her friends. it s tough to connect. with friends all over the world. online and interactive. german to go. learn german for free with d w. circle of fear. correspondent your english is in chechnya. islamic state has recruited more young people here than anywhere else. and more and more to. tension fighters are now returning home they are both respected and feared. how will this affect chechen
society. circle the fear today and detail the unions. are you up to speed on the latest technology. know when it may be time for an upgrade become part of the future. become a cyborg i must say works so i have created a new sense and new organ and design my perception of reality implants that make every day life easier. i use my camps on a daily basis that optimize the human body and connect people more effectively. i hope that this will make us more ethical persons what would life be like as a cyborg. at the end of the day these technologies can be used against us and what effect will it have been society does this human race really need to upgrade i

Food , Number , Population , Problem , Indonesia , Gap , Germany , Account , Country , People , Life , Jakarta-in-search-of-work

Transcripts For CNNW Erin Burnett OutFront 20180222 00:00:00


republicans. there will be survivors of the parkland massacre, meaning the kids who hid in a closet and watched their best friends die. and there will be the national rife a rifle association all in one room. you ve covered these after a horrible tragedy, they retreat and dig in and don t engage with each other. but tonight that s not going to be possible. everybody is going to be on this one stage together. they have to confront the students who are demanding answers. they are coming with suggestions and demands. and the politicians both democrat and republican have to hear them. so that starts again at 9:00 tonight here. alison, it s going to be emotional night. as you noted you were there one week ago tonight following the shooting. what s the one moment you ll be looking for? reporter: well, i just spoke to these three young women,
juniors at douglas high school, part of a drama troop, and they came here not actually with any sort of political message or any sort of demands. they came here because in their grief on monday one of them named sawer garrity wrote a song. that s what she did to channel her grief she wrote a song called shine. and tonight she and her friends in the drama troop will perform it for the 7,000 people here and for everyone around the world watching. i ve read the lyrics. it s about their deep grief and the strength that they feel in coming together and in the solidarity of students across the country supporting them. it is going to be a must see moment. it s at the end of the town hall so they are feeling good and want to get their message of unity out. so everybody should stick around to watch that. we ll all be listening for that moment. sounds amazing. alison in florida, thanks so much. prum tonight hearing from
students families and teachers about the issues of the school shootings. jeff zeleny outfront live at the white house. it was emotional gathering inside the white house and president trump right in the middle of it. john, it was indeed. and stories of those six students from marjory stoneman douglas high school who one week ago walking the hallways of that school, hiding from the shooter. today they were in the state dining room of the white house telling the president their stories directly, of course sitting next to columbine, and they were not born two decades ago, and that under scores how long this has been an american problem. the president said it has been a problem for too long. now is the time for action. of course that is where the difficulty begins. you heard variety of different stories of what should be done. should school teachers and officials be armed? the president spoke out in favor of that. mother from sandy hook said, no, that is not what should be done.
the problem should be addressed before a shooter gets to the school. but in a very emotional moment, a student who was in the school at the time said, mr. president, why should i be able to buy an ar-15? now we do know the president has been talking behind the scenes here about potentially supporting raising the age limit for purchasing this type of a weapon. but the nra tonight said it is not in favor of that. so, john, that speaks to the question. what will the president do here? will he confront the nra? will he lead his own party? what specific solutions will be done? we also got a sense, this was the president unlike we have seen, setting unlike we have seen him, john, and a photographer in that state dining room captured a photograph i d like you to look at of the president holding that piece of paper there. he said what would you most want me to know about your experience? and at the bottom, i hear you. so a bit of a coaching moment for this president doing the act
in the room. she brought beauty and joy to everyone she was around. and she was hunted in school. i am enraged to hear our politicians, including in that little circular sit down session in the president s office today, not be able to use the phrase that guns are a problem. i am enraged. i want to hear our elected officials, i want them to look me in the eye and acknowledge the role that guns played in the hunting of my daughter. i started my day today with my wife visiting her at her cemetery. the idea that these politicians can t come to grips with reality and start talking facts as to what it was that brought my daughter down and killed her. my daughter was hunted in school. running to save her life. and what i heard today is that we need to arm students and teachers so that we ll have
shootouts in the hallways? i mean, come on. there was pandemonium. my daughter and others kids were running for their lives. so what are we supposed to have, more casualties? enenraged. i want to hear about real solutions but you can t until you say what the problem s and the problem is guns. it s not and i don t diminish anything else with regards to mental health or all the other factors, because they are all critically important. okay. but guns are the issue. and i ll tell you i support the second amendment. my son was shooting with his grandfather just a couple of months ago. this is not what it is for me. however, okay, we have to get real about this. the mayor of parkland delivered your message to the president in that room. told the president that you, sir, want the issue of guns addressed. you must address the issue of guns you asked. and as you mention, one of the ways the president has done that
is to suggest arming teachers. listen to what he said for a moment here. an attack has lasted on average about three minutes. it takes five to eight minutes for responders, for the police to come in. so the attack is over. if you had a teacher who was adept at firearms, they could very well end the attack very quickly. this is a nonstarter for you? listen, i want every elected leader to stand with me and these kids. because these kids have been unbelievable. however, okay, that statement, and i hate to say it, he s intentionally making himself purposely useless, okay. that is a nonstarter. that is a way to create a conversation around something that is not going to save lives. okay. and as long as we can t talk
about the real problems and the real solutions, that is making our self purposely useless. the president does seem open, if you read his body language, and listen to white house aides, open to the notion of raising the minimum age to buy ar-15, assault style weapons. right now it s 18. any 18-year-old can walk in and buy an ar-15. president seems open to raising that to 21. yet the nra came out tonight and said no they are not in favor of it. i heard. do you think the president will stand up to the nra on this issue? i ll say i hope so. i think his language and the way he is speaking through lt hunting last week of these kids through today suggests not. but i m an ultimate optimist. i believe we are going to get something done here. i hope he will be part of it.
i i am thrilled by these kids and what they have done and movement they started. and i want them to come on my back while we do this. because we are going to get this done. all i did was send i sent my daughter to school. it s all that i did that day. on valentine s day. and today i m visiting her in her cemetery. i m sorry, we have to talk truth and real solutions. you, sir, owe no one apology. you say you ll lead them in this discussion. i think a the lo of these students are telling us to jump on their backs and they will lead us in this discussion. they are amazing and unbelievable. your daughter was a dancer. and we have seen these images orange ribbons for jamie. yes. what does this mean to you? does this bring you any comfort?
my listen, a week ago my faith was shattered. what people have done this week to honor my baby, what people have done this week has restored my faith. what it also tells me is that people are demanding real solutions. they are wrapping their arms around my daughter, turns out orange is her favorite color, but i also just learned today that it s also the unstrersal color of gun safety in this country. what an amazing just connection h but you are right, this orange ribbon started at a little dance theater, parkland dance theater in parkland where my daughter danced and it went worldwide. you have broadway shows dedicating their performances to my daughter and putting these on. it says to me that people want change. it doesn t matter how much money the nra has and how much money they are willing to spend. citizens vote.
citizens will demand these kids are powerful. my faith in our students, in our youth is so strong after what happened this week. you are 100% right what you said. they have taken this country on their back and not given up. they want to do one thing. they want to go to school that s it. this is so common sense and simple. and that s what this discussion will be. i m sorry. no, as i said, you, sir, have to apologize for nothing. thank you for being here. thank you. thank you for taking part in this cnn town hall discussion. discussion is so important and we value your input. so thank you. appreciate your time. outfront next, shooting survivors confront the president begging him to do something about guns. i don t understand why i can still go in a store and buy a weapon of war.
an ar. that student is my guest next. plus breaking news the white house says tonight the u.s. is taking direct action against russia to address election meddling. what exactly does that mean? erin burnett outfront brought to you by taltz. but when your psoriasis is bad, does it ever get in the way? embrace the chance of 100% clear skin with taltz. taltz is proven to help people with moderate to severe psoriasis achieve completely clear skin. with taltz, up to 90% of patients had a significant improvement of their psoriasis plaques. in fact, 4 out of 10 even achieved completely clear skin. don t use if you re allergic to taltz. before starting, you should be checked for tuberculosis. taltz may increase risk of infections
and lower your ability to fight them. tell your doctor if you have an infection or have symptoms, or if you ve received a vaccine or plan to. inflammatory bowel disease can happen with taltz, including worsening of symptoms. serious allergic reactions can occur. ready for a chance at 100% clear skin? ask your doctor about taltz today. and go to taltz.com to learn how to pay as little as $5 a month. (vo) do not go gentle into that good night, old age should burn and rave at close of day; rage, rage against the dying of the light. do not go gentle into that good night.
things are just clearer. you wouldn t accept from any one else. why accept it from your allergy pills? flonase relieves your worst symptoms including nasal congestion, which most pills don t. flonase helps block 6 key inflammatory substances. most pills only block one. flonase. breaking news president trump at the white house today hearing from survivors of the high school shooting in parkland l.a., one week ago today, as well as parents who lost students in previous school shootings. it was a conversation that was frank and at times emotional. no one wants to see a shootout at a school. and deranged sociopath on his way to commit an act of murder in a school with the outcome knowing the outcome is going to be suicide is not going to care
if there is someone there with the gun. that s their plan anyway. how is it that teaseeasy to this type of weapon? how can we not stop this at columbine and sandy hook? i m sitting with a mother who lost her son. it s still happening. those two men join me now. samuel student who survived last week. and mark dozlost his son daniel. it takes courage to do what you did, not only texting with your brother, but today speaking your mind and showing your heart to the country, face-to-face, with the president of the united states. what did you takeaway from this session today? it s just a start, really. there is going to be a lot more to come, and it s going to coma lot more. and, you know, this was us
ago ringing our hands, begging our congress to try to do something. this is my little daniel. he was shot to death in sandy hook el rementary school just or five years ago and here we are trying to discuss this hand get solutions. we decided to do something at the community level. that s what we are doing with sandy hook. we are proud of the work you are doing. i m so glad you are showing pictures of your son daniel knowing this is what it s about. people need to remember. issue of solutions, president trump talked about arming teachers. this is a solution that he sees and others do as well. this is what the president said. okay. this would only be obviously for people that are very adept at handling a gun. and it would be, it s called concealed carry, where a teacher would have a concealed gun on
them. they would go for special training. and they would be there. and you would no longer have a gun freeze zone. gun free zone to a manic, because they are all cowards, a gun free zone is let s go in and let s attack. because bullets aren t coming back at us. how would you feel about teachers carrying guns at your school? when you go back next week? i don t know if i m going to be going back next week. but on that topic, teachers get get emotional too. and to arm every like to arm any teacher, they are there to teach. they are not they are not supposed to be there to protect us and have to worry about if they are going to have to shoot a kid that day. there should be people there for that. i spoke with a teacher who was there in that room with me. and she s been teaching for 19 years. and she said if one day she came
to work and they said, all right, we ll start arming you guys with firearms, she would quit. teachers and 19-year-olds are still people. and everyone is different. there is no way to you just can t. you just can t arm every single teacher. the president suggested that it would be only teachers who go through certain training. and i want to ask mark about the same issue but i don t want to let something pass. you are not going to go back to school next week. why not? i don t know how they expect me, my classmates and i, to step back on a campus where people we know were murdered. like they are going to fence off the freshman building or tear it down or whatever. it s just like a horror movie
that never ends. and i don t know how i m going to go back on set. mark, yeah, again, you mentioned i think your wife is a teacher. and you thought a lot about this issue of arming teachers. and you suggested that you don t think arming teachers with weapons is the right idea. but instead arming them with what? arming them with the tools to recognize somebody who is at risk of hurting them self or somebody else. and then intervening and getting them to the help that they need before they pick up a gun or any weapon to hurt themselves or hurt somebody else. that s a solution that works that we know we have available right now. we can start doing that immediately. we know that it works. we have already stopped school shootings with students who have been trained who have followed that model and prevented a shooting before it happened. so it s absolutely doable. we are ready to go. sam, one of the things you seem to suggest is that 18-year-old shouldn t be able to buy an ar-15.
and in fact, listen, if you listen to the president he may be receptive raising the age to 21. the president might be willing to go there. the nra said no they are not in favor of it. is this something you ll push the president on it? when i say 18-year-old shouldn t be able to. that was direct reference to myself. nobody should be able to. nobody. mark, you ve been listening to sam next to you. i think work through a lot of these things that you worked through five years ago. any advise you can give him as you are with him right now? work in progress. still working through it as we were just discussing. i ll say i have so much admiration for incredible voice of these high school young people. they are making a huge impact in
this country. they are not going to put up with this. and they are going to get results. and i m going to it be here to support you. and i m going to offer you the same advice that my dear friend vice president joe biden offered to us, which is go home, take care of yourself. this is a long hard rode. and please, please don t just take care of yourself. thank you. more important, sam, thanks so much for being with us. sam, please lean on the man beside you. i think he is a font of wisdom that he has. i ll. lucky for all of us that he s there. so thanks very much. thank you. thank you. outfront next, breaking news, russia warned the trump administration saying tonight they have taken direct action to address meddling in the 2018 election. so what is it? and the president pledges to, quoted, get things done. when is he going to get more specific?
welcome back to special edition of outfront looking at live pictures outside sunrise, florida, less than 90 minutes away from special cnn town hall students demand action. also breaking news from washington, trump administration has warned russia personal to vladimir putin himself according to firmofficials. pamela brown is outfront now. highest level officials in moscow, including vladimir putin the president of russia to not medal in the 2018 election. one of the officials i spoke to says he has been warned. we have sent a clear message to russia not to do it. and this official also says that
part of the warning to russia is that it will have severe consequences, severe negative consequences. and could do a lot of damage to the relationship if it does meddle in the 2016 elections as it has before. now, of course john, you can ask the question, under the obama administration there were at least three warnings directly to russia, john brennan and his counterpart and between president obama and president putin and they continued to meddle in the 2016 election. but when i pressed on that there were other measures direct action the administration is taking it cannot discuss because it is classified. i also asked if president trump has spoken directly to president putin about this matter. and the official wouldn t say, but said that it is using other channels with other professionals that are, quote, more effective to get the message across to moscow. but of course all of this is against this back drop, john, of the president tweeting recently
that his administration has been tougher on russia than the obama administration. and his top aides have had to back down stories they feel are unfair that have been skeptical of that claim considering the fact that other sanctions have not been imposed since january 29th, the administration is saying that it s going through a punitive review that is ongoing and that more action could be taken. john. pamela brown at the white house for us tonight. pamela, thanks so much. outfront now, former cia and nsa director michael haden. thanks for being with us. president trump has been reluctant in the past to admit russia has admitted in the election. barely done it at all. now the administration claiming they have warned russians including vladimir putin not to interfere in the 2018 election. how significant is this? first of all, to the degree that is true, that is really good news. but frankly i don t think the administration, here i don t think i m being hyper critical,
i don t think the administration has earned the benefit of the doubt in terms of russian meddling in american response to it. so i d like to learn an awful lot more about this. fran frankly, john, within the last week, both the president and vice president russian meddling had absolutely no effect on the american election of that year. which is not i think a good premise to begin with. if you want to go back now and threaten the russians about future intervention. also not the findings of the intelligence community. they say it s not the finding in the indictments handed up last week. rod rosenstein said there is no allegation in this indictment but he limited it to that. also, pamela brown reporting, she didn t get a direct answer whether president trump had directed this message directly to vladimir putin but the body language was no, it wasn t president trump it was from other chan elgs. does it need to be from the president himself? i think so.
either directly through vladimir putin or can speak through the international news media to the russian president. let s keep in mind i don t want to be skeptical here but not willing to grant the benefit of the doubt here. john, the last time the two presidents met, our president said i believe him. when he says they didn t do it. again, one reason to be skeptical is it because of what we heard from the intelligence cleaves. what was it just last week when they said they hadn t received direct instructions from the president yet to stop russian interference. listen to this. we are taking a lot of specific efforts to blunt direction. by the president? not specifically directed by the president. director pompeo, have you received a presidential direction to take steps to disrupt these activities? i m not sure how specific. for us, i can t say i ve been explicitly directed to, quote, blunt or actively stop. right. so that moment definitely
happened. let s look at it from the other side. what would it take for the russians to get the message u.s. is serious here? well, i think we would have to act in extraordinary way, john. so what you had was five intelligence chiefs here so i think if you were able to talk to them in classified environment could list the things they are doing individually within their own lane to blunt the russian effort. but what we need here is a synchronized whole of government many and dare i say, john, whole of society response to what the russians did to effect american thinking in electoral processes in 2016. that has extraordinary structure none of what we get in the system without the president. let me ask you about the shooting last week. we ll hear from the town hall tonight. she said this is a homeland security issue.
so it does dove tail to some of the areas you are so notched in right now. one of the remarkable things we have seen over the last few days is conspiracy theories about the survivors of this shooting. people saying that these students are actors who are speaking out. other folks saying they are marching because george sore ross is paying for them to march. you know, from where you sit as someone deeply concerned about u.s. security intelligence, what role do these conspiracy theories play and what should we think about them? actually, john, your second question relates to the first topic that we discussed. russian bots, out right media here, some major news organizations and occasionally the president them self try to delegitimate opposition. by saying they are fronts for someone else. now we have these very genuine
young people, rather than arguing the point they are raising, we are seeing an effort to invalidate them by saying they are front from someone else. it s a suggestion of one, fractures in our society, and, two, john, fractures that russian effort is trying to exploit. general, sobering warning. thanks for being with us. thank you. outfront next, what will president trump do now that he s heard employepleas like this? i didn t think it would happen to me. if i knew that i would be at the school every day if i knew it was that dangerous. that s enough. and breaking news, deputies in broward county schools ordered to carry heavy gun power on school grounds. up next my guest.
looking for a hotel that fits. whoooo. .your budget? tripadvisor now searches over. .200 sites to find you the. .hotel you want at the lowest price. grazi, gino! find a price that fits. tripadvisor. ohhhhhh, ou! guess what i just got? uh! i used to be spellbound hello again. i used to be spellbound hi. i used to be spellbound that s a big phone. in your arms. [screams] ah, my phone. you built the flame that warms my heart, but lying and cheating has torn us apart and i m moving on. a farmer s market.ve what s in this kiester. a fire truck. even a marching band. and if i can get comfortable talking about this kiester, then you can get comfortable using preparation h. for any sort of discomfort in yours. preparation h. get comfortable with it.
alright, i brought in high protein to help get us moving. .and help you feel more strength and energy in just two weeks! i ll take that. -yeeeeeah! ensure high protein. with 16 grams of protein and 4 grams of sugar. ensure. always be you.
president trump note card. five points we can see three of them. the first two is what would you want me to know about your experience. what can we do to make you feel safe. and finally i hear you. outfront senior political analyst, chief political gloria borger. first to you, we are looking at the note card. i think i hear you. as the president had to be reminded to empathize. but the first two questions are spot on or what i think the people in the room wanted asked and people in this town hall want asked tonight as well. i think so. in that regard i think the president went out of his way to just be a listener. he did sort of talk about the question of whether concealed carry might be something people oul ought to think about for teachers. but generally the president is
in listening mode. i don t think you have to remind yourself to be em pa thitic, not one of the president s great skills as we know. but i do think the people walked away today thinking they were heard and there was no vit real which we are so used to in the debate inside the room at least. and the president was hearing them out. david gur begin, we have seen presidents acted before in these times, president obama, comforter in chief. how did president trump do today? there were divergent views in that room. sure. i think we should cut him some slack on the note cards. presidents go into rooms like this and emotional, and they may they d need themselves, they need those and bring those in. and in this case he deserves credit for bringing people in and listening. but the real test is what action he takes. so far what we are hearing from the white house are mostly half
measures. even the controversial measure about lifting the age to 21 before you can buy an assault weapon. if you look back at the 14 deadliest mass shootings, 11 of them were committed by people over 21. the problem is not the age particularly. that s a piece of it. but if you really want to get action, what about the other 11 who got their hands on big guns and shot down a lot of people. you saw cut the president slack over the card. this event was not about the president. so many events the president attends seem to revolve around him. this wasn t about him. i agree. he seated there and listened but didn t make it about him. mark preston, david brought up this fascinating issue whether or not the age limit to purchase an ar-a 15 rivfle raised from 1
to 21. the nra comes out with a statement that they are opposed to this. they are opposed to raising the age limit to buy an ar-15 to 21. where does this debate go now? will the president take a stand on this? well, there is going to be several fronts about this debate right now. of course you have liberals and democrats that are clearly on one side. you have the nra on the other side. part of the republican party that s in the middle that want to see some sensible gun solutions that perhaps the nra doesn t care about. but you also have a lot of republicans, and quite frankly democrats who are from states in the midwest and down in the south who agree with the nra. now the president himself we never know which way he s going when it comes to specific policy issues. what he said today, though, i think caught the national rifle association off-guard. i think it caught conservatives off-guard. but i don t think they are too surprised by it. this has happened on the past on
other pieces of legislation in the year plus that he s been in office. but i do have to say this, john, tonight is going to be amazing moment. they ll be more than 7,000 people in this arena behind me. think about that. a town hall with 7,000 people. there is going to be high emotions. but we are going to hear from the nra. they did anthropology your invitation and that does say something for them to come here. as well as senator marco rubio who has come under criticism support of gun measures that many in this hall do not favor. we ll talk about marco rubio in this. age limits, this isn t a giant thing, necessarily. no. this feels like a very narrow thing that, jeff, flake, republican from arizona measure with diane feinstein democrat on this, there are republicans for it. it seems like there is an area there could be agreement. but even on this the nra is
saying no. sure. and what you are doing is anybody link around the edges. doing a little bit of this and that. and maybe you ll change background checks. who knows if you can even get that done. that couldn t get done aven aftafte after knew nowtown. i think the president says he is not bought bit nra who contributed millions of dollars to elect him, i think this is a fomt for him when he says i am going to do this and i don t care if the nra support me or not. and the question is whether he can bring along conservative republicans who are afraid of being primary in their home districts by more conservative republicans who are pro second amendment and say i m going to do whatever the nra says no matter what. seems he can do this. the president could get this much done if he wanted to.
absolutely. this is a test presidential courage. it s one of the moments you can line it up and say, he acted presidential today. is he going to have the guts. is he going to stand up to special interests groups. great presidents have done this in moments like this t they have recognized needs of the country and acted appropriately. you cannot listen to those kids and not think he ought to do something bold and courageous. i m interested to see what the nra says about this tonight. you brought up marco rubio who has complicated relationship with guns going back far weigh. after the orlando shooting he got back because he felt the issues were important right now. do you think he ll move on sing everyone is going to have to remove. will it go as far as people in this building want him to go?
we have never seen this political action certainly not in reseent timnt times. thanks so much for being with us. outfront next. a mayor who asks this question, when did we decide that we love our childr our guns more than our children. we understand the violence that comes through certain guns. the morning walk was so peaceful.
it provides four-in-one symptom defense. it s your daily probiotic. it s a lot easier to make decisions when you know what comes next. if you move your old 401(k) to a fidelity ira, we make sure you re in the loop at every step from the moment you decide to move your money to the instant your new retirement account is funded. oh and at fidelity, you ll see how all your investments are working together. because when you know where you stand, things are just clearer. just remember what i said about a little bit o soul excuse me, are you aware of what s happening right now? we re facing 20 billion security events every day. ddos campaigns, ransomware, malware attacks. actually, we just handled all the priority threats. you did that? we did that. really. we analyzed millions of articles and reports. we can identify threats 50% faster. you can do that? we can do that. then do that.
can we do that? we can do that. but he hasoke up wwork to do.in. can we do that? so he took aleve. if he d taken tylenol, he d be stopping for more pills right now. only aleve has the strength to stop tough pain
for up to 12 hours with just one pill. aleve. all day strong. at holiday inn express, we can t guarantee that you ll be able to contain yourself at our breakfast bar. morning, egg white omelet. sup lady bacon! fruit, there it is! but we can guarantee that you ll get the best price when you book with us. holiday inn express. be the readiest. the breaking news coming up in just one hour. cnn s town hall. the high school there will be in attendance. the students of stoneman douglas high school leading this. forcing lawmakers to hear their voices. they were set to meet with governor rick scott and other officials. broward county mayor.
if i can ask you we just heard deputies will be at local school grounds throughout the county carrying rifles. do you believe that is the right solution here? i m not going to second-guess the sheriff, but as a teacher for a long time, i hate to think that it has come to that, i ll be honest, but i can understand for the time being if it is going to make some of the students feel a little safer, maybe it s a short-term thing to do. you re sitting in the hall tonight where there is going to be a massive cnn town hall, what do you want to hear tonight? first of all, i am extremely proud of the students of broward county. they don t have a filter and they are willing to ask and question the lawmakers as to
what their thoughts are and i think they are going to demand explanations so i am very much looking forward to hearing what they have to say and hearing the dialogue. we looked at remarkable pictures today all day of students from across florida and across the country walking out of their classroom to show solidarity. what did you think when those kids walked out of class today? well, i think these kids have absolutely sparked a fire not only here, but throughout the united states. we re hearing from kids from all over the place and these kids have really, are saying what they want i m sorry, the anthem is about to go on. excuse me, just a moment. mr. mayor, we are going to let you listen to that. i don t think it is appropriate
to be talking over it. thank you for being with us. this movement, this call for action might not be growing at all had some teenagers remained silent. instead these students armed with passion and voice decided to speak out and take a stand. i do not know exactly what needs to be done. i just know what we are doing now is nowhere near enough yeah, the time for change wasn t now. the time for change was years ago. my innocence, our innocence has been taken from us. for the politicians if you are not with us, you are against us. how dare you tell us we don t know what we are talking about. a 19-year-old who can t purchase an alcoholic beverage should not be allowed to
purchase an ar-15. we are not letting the united states be run by that terrorist organization. our blood. your hands! knowing that you had the opportunity to ban assault weapons and you didn t, like are you proud of that now? are you kidding me? now is the time to focus on the past and not the future? our blood is on your hands. if donald trump wanted to listen to us, he should have taken the first invitation. they say that tougher gun laws we call b.s. we call b.s. we are not puppets. we are very astute and capable individuals who want to see change in our country because we
know we are the leaders of the future. the voices of the students from the marjory stoneman douglas high school. students who are leaders of this discussion and who will be at the center of the cnn town hall. there has been movement in this front. president trump hinting that he is open to raising the age limit. the nra say they oppose it. what will they say about it tonight? as you just heard moments ago, broward county has announced that deputies with rifles will be at the school when they return to school next week in parkland, florida. thank you for joining us.

Kids , Republicans , Survivors , Friends , Closet , Parkland-massacre , Room , Everybody , Don-t , Tragedy , Each-other , Rifea-rifle-association-all-in-one