fancn y. i ll see you tomorrow or thursday. i can t wait. all right. i ll be gonee by by wednesday or thursday. you ll see. fantastic. all right. t hurs i m laura ingraham.raham an this is thgle ingraham angle frm washington tonight. in moments you re going to seehe the cable exclusive with three sorority members from sor the university of wyoming s kappa kappa gamma chapter. they re allegingy member at the national chapter forced them to accept a man into their sisterhood and shattered their feeling of safety. scarebut first, scared and hel. that s the focus of tonight s angle. liv well, that s how powerful forces want you to feel.e they want you to live in fear, t so apprehensive that you re just hoping to survive depended on the government to tell you when it s safe . now, we saw this during covid with their constant fear mongering to keep the publicc co compliant. we see it.t on college campuses with attacks on free speech. we ve seen it with how they treat a man who
central television. it means that npfrr is not thate different from the tehran times ,with the exception, ofhappen course, being lessed accurate and more anti-american. yo so that happened on tuesday. why are we telling you. chan abt with all the momentous changes underway around the world, whyy would we open a showab with a story about twittergorizing categorizing npr as state media will ? because it s true. reaso that s the reason.n. finally, thankfully, somebodyd in authority has told the truth about something and that is thrilling to see on its own terms. in a world defined by lies froms our leaders. this seemedig like a rare sis of hope and progress. up telling the truth is the mostms revolutionary act of all, far more than taking up arms. and yet you rarely see it. human beings created language or to describe the world around them more precisely than they could with , say, grunting sign language. ng o beeurnn evly, we have national publi own creatioern ever since, b
people were killed and more than 300 others injured. they cite the interior ministry, the u.s. geological survey says the 6.8 magnitude quake was the strongest in the region in more than 120 years. rescues are under way in the country at this hour. the tremors brought down buildings throughout the region. officials say there is an urgent need for blood donations for the victims. and take a look at this. this is video that shows the moment that the quake shook a mosque in marrakech late friday night. it s incredible. and what appears to be dust rising off the building as people fled for safety on the streets. cnn s larry madowo joins me now live. sadly, larry, it seems this death toll has gone up. day has broken there. what more can you tell us about rescue efforts and what authorities are saying about where this earthquake struck. reporter: paula, the moroccan government says it has deployed all resources available to it to respond to this earthquake, the strongest that the
lawrence: all right. it s 7:00 a.m. on the east coast. it s monday, june 10th. and this is fox & friends. president biden is headed back to europe this week for the g-7 after another gaffe on the world stage and mixing up ukraine with iraq. i mean, the idea we had to wait all those months just to get the money for iraq. ainsley: plus, crime-riddled capital. three men tried rob one of collins staffers at gunpoint. why does this keep happening? brian: snubbed by team u.s.a. rookie sensation caitlin clark taking the high road after not making the olympic team. most competitive team of the world i knew it could be on the other wait a minute i was either going to be on the team or not on the team. i m excited for them. going to be rooting them on to win gold. steve: what were they thinking? we re going to discuss that. ainsley: she will make it eventually she just got to the wnba. steve: we want to watch her in four weeks. second hour of fox & friends starts