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FOX and Friends Saturday

much more concerned with our studies than we should be with the prospect of somebody harming us. will: let me just get this straight, catherine, you're in phoenix for a wedding, and you're up at 4:4 3w mountain time to talk to men on "fox & friends" -- [laughter] i don't know what the rehearsal dinner was like, but let's get after it a little bit. these berkeley students have a better reputation than this about what it is to have a good time. cage knows how to have a good time, and look at that, texas under his picture there, a place where i used to own the newspaper. cage, you know about texas and you know about texas a&m, you know about fort worth, you went to tcu as well. you see this rising crime across campuses? >> i'll tell you, will -- first of all, thanks for having me and good to talk to you. i'll tell you, these statistics are political ping-pong. one side's going to say one thing with them, the other side's going to say the other thing. the one thing that's not

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Velshi

that is why we are seeing the chaos on capitol hill going on right now as well. joining me to discuss is the special correspondents at vanity fair. and an msnbc political analyst, and historian and professor of history and american studies at yale university and author of "the field of blood." good morning. joanna, you are a student and an academic of violence in politics and particularly in congress. is there a flavor difference between what we have seen historically in this country and what is going on now? the reason i ask, there is a casting nature to the violence we are hearing about, not donald trump doing it or carry lake doing it, references, take care of things with the gun to clear them out. >> writes, and a lot of the violence i have studied involves politicians largely talking to each other.

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CNN Newsroom

carbon out of the atmosphere and the ocean and then burying it in the soil below them as we saw in that clip there that black mud, muddy. the. mud that we think of when we think of coastal swamps, is this amazing long term storage of carbon and it's kept there for millennia we beginning to appreciate now, we're beginning to see countries really understand how important their coastal wetlands systems, these salt marshes, seagrasses, mangroves, as part of their full climate solution dr. pigeons, there's no shortage of incredibly alarming studies, reports documentaries on this earth, de, on monday, what's your message? my message is that the solution to climate change needs all of us. it needs everybody from government to corporations to communities, to every single individual.

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Talking Business

down? it is enormous. you are replacing _ down? it is enormous. you are replacing potentially _ down? it is enormous. you are replacing potentially 2 - down? it is enormous. you are replacing potentially 2 billion l replacing potentially 2 billion vehicles on the road so what we will see is by 2035, you are going to need 300 new mines of the projected demand by then and we are seeing lithium demand double as well as nickel, cobalt so there is huge demand by the end of the decade to meet production of new batteries but eventually the big difference with fossil fuels is that we can recycle minerals and we use them in batteries. 0nce minerals and we use them in batteries. once we produce all these batteries, they can be recycled in those materials reused so that will help cut down the carbon footprint. henry, at what point does driving an ev pay off, where the savings on carbon emissions outweigh the emissions created in making the car and the batteries? studies show that, you know, as soon as less than two years of driving, you can pay back the carbon debt, if you like, or the carbon emissions caused by manufacturing the battery.

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Fox News Live

schools have to deal with it and as a student i'm disappointed to. that being said. i'm not supershocked. i'm very much a glass half full kind of person. i'm not letting it ruin my studies all ruin my life but it's disappointing. something that has been growing for a long time. it will take a long time to undo but thank god i think in the next few years especially with all these schools taking action or starting to take action, i'm a glass half full kind of person. allysia: there is news that the commencement speaker, the valedictorian was scheduled to speak and the school pulled her and said she won't speaker they canceled it saying it was out of security reasons, let's take a listen to what she had to

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The Lead With Jake Tapper

israel, which is in keeping with what we saw from a ram, the direct territory to territory attack. so potentially, it wasn't it wasn't too destroy something. we had a us official telling cnn as well that they thought it was possible that israel would try and carry out an attack and make sure they were no casualties but just more fought for show to show that they can re-establish the sense of the text hello, thank you. pull the hancocks life for us in beirut and also nic robertson lifers in jerusalem. this out, thanks to you both could now lot to tehran and abbas has lani, a journalist and senior research fellow at the center for middle east strategic studies. as i think he's being with us thank you, john, for having me. >> it's a pleasure now how i just from your point of view, how's this story being reported then given the government's tight control over the media, is that indicative of where the government actually stands right now in trying to play

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Gutfeld

have been pushing advanced programs and studies specifically when it comes to uranium enrichment it to get the country closer to a nuclear weapon also at this hour iran state media reporting that the tehran international airport is closed for the next several hours as we told you earlier at this hour there were a number of civilian aircraft coming from the gulf inside of iranian airspace when these strikes began they made you turns and headed back toward the gulf understanding this is an incredibly unpredictable situation if these reports from the iran state media are accurate of air defence systems activated across the territory they certainly don't want any cilia aircraft in this airspace it is of note here that while these are likely strikes carried out by israelis we have not yet received independent confirmation that the states was alerted ahead of time that we can use the response from the israelis just last weekend as a point of reference in all of this because we saw for the

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Alex Wagner Tonight

welfare system doesn't over medicalize the challenges of life especially because i believe in the evidence of support and we saw a range of different studies actually people being in work see huge improvements in overall health and especially mental health so we're letting those people down if we persist with a system which at the moment is writing far too many of them off when we know work will be very good for them. and you've seen this massive increase since the pandemic. most weringly for all of us amongst young people, and that can't be right. that's an enormous loss of potential, and we don't want to lose all those peoples potential. we want to support them so they can have as i describe the purpose, the meaning, the hope that comes from good work. and that's why i think it is right to look again how the work capability assessment works, and that's why we're going to tighten up the conditions there but also help pips support those

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The Story With Martha MacCallum

to keep us all safe, including then, they have protected them every day. >> martha: i and they're yelling's common their faces, i do not that was a student or not but part of that protest in the area. >> they called them the kkk all the time and refer to them as the same as the israel defence forces who are known, along with america, to be a wonderful defensive force that takes so many precautions and the fact that they take this so far as to call them israeli occupation forces and to say death to the jews and death to zionist on this campus it's offensive not only to me and jewish students but it should be offensive to all americans who have any sense of morality and values. >> martha: i want to thank you for coming in and for sharing my thoughts i know you have been through a lot and this is a very painful experience for you we wish you well in your studies and as you finish and graduate thank you very much for being here today.

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Breakfast

launched at israel from who fees in yemen, from syria also and from iraq, so this has already been actually dangerous a few months, there was so much effort to try to keep things have a calibrated reaction after israel insisted that for the purposes of its own deterrence in the region, it had to respond that very dramatic and unprecedented attack by iran last weekend. . ., unprecedented attack by iran last weekend. ., ,, , ., ., unprecedented attack by iran last weekend. . ~' , ., ., , weekend. thank you, that is the bbc's yolande _ weekend. thank you, that is the bbc's yolande knell _ weekend. thank you, that is the bbc's yolande knell in - weekend. thank you, that is the i bbc's yolande knell in jerusalem. we bbc's yolande knell injerusalem. we will have more reports and analysis from our correspondent in the region. let's get some analysis now from meehran kamrava, professor of government at georgetown university in qatar. he's also head of the iranian studies unit at the arab center for research and policy studies. thank you forjoining us on the programme. first of all, i would like to talk about isfahan, the city

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