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tv   Outnumbered  FOX News  May 8, 2023 9:00am-10:00am PDT

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>> kayleigh: hello, everyone. this is "outnumbered." i'm kayleigh mcenany here along with harris faulkner and emily compagno. along with us, dr. nicole sapphire and bill hemmer, c co-anchor of america's newsroom. we begin with new and brutal
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polls for president biden, they are bad, saying that the majority of americans are losing trust in our president. a new poll shows his approval rating at 36%. that's a new low and all time low. and democrats have good reason to worry about the president's age and mental fitness heading into 2024. 63% of americans said they do not believe biden has the mental sharpness to effectively serve as president. even the left wing media couldn't ignore president biden's terrible numbers. >> this poll is just brutal for president biden. >> absolutely, george. and you talked earlier about that record low approval rating for president biden. it's actually six points down just since february. and the skepticism over his leadership extends deep inside his own party. >> i was told i could not send the poll around until after 12:00 midnight. i sent it out at 12:02 because it kept me up and i thought they should wake up and look at those numbers. the coalition that elected joe
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biden with the historic numbers that we saw in 2020, that coalition right now is od numbe president biden. 2/3 of the american people say he's not sharp enough to be president.t least one democrat with his head still in the sand. it's our commander in chief. take a listen to what he told msnbc. >> why do you think your polling is where it is? >> i don't think every person is on line right now. >> kayleigh: biden's approval rating is numerically the lowest on record for any first term president a year and a half from the next presidential rating in polling dating back to president truman. >> bill: i don't know how you get out of this poll. it's pretty deep. one possibility is to do a deal with republicans on the debt ceiling. i mean, maybe that's a possibility. but put that to the side for a moment, mark penn was a
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democratic pollster for bill clinton back in the day was with dana and me about two hours ago. i said when was the last time that the president was at this level? 36%. he said ronald reagan. when you're thinking about election or full campaign being a year out, reagan was at 36%. so that's rates were back then, you know how tough the country was economically. that's tough to match. here i think are the two numbers that deep in the poll are the most significant. on mental acuity. i think correspond abc talked about this. 69% of independents think the same thing. that's a stunner to me. among americans age 30 and under, his approval rating is at 26%. that's a big part of a democratic -- >> what's the age again? >> bill: under the age of 30. >> harris: what's happening in their lives right now? they can't afford anyone.
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>> bill: you have student loan forgiveness, fair point on the economy. you have a lot of policies, i think, that this administration is pushing to try and attract young voters, you know. stay on board. >> harris: try to buy a house, that will work against you. >> bill: right on that. but if you're at 26% of americans under the age of 30 a year from now, that is very difficult for a democratic president to win re-election. >> kayleigh: penn made an important put to you, reagan went on to win re-election. we saw the midterms. polling numbers were brutal for joe biden and had one of the best midterms in three decades. granted, he wasn't on the ballot. there's a difference here. he'll be on the ballot. negative for joe biden doesn't equal success for republicans unless they make it a policy choice. >> harris: so he just spent two weeks ago, 20 days on the road talking about the economy. and his numbers have hit the lowest in history. i mean, i think that says it all. and his emphasis on what his
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campaign calls a freedom agenda was an early indication of his determination to shift voters away from their reservations about him and instead, make the 2024 general election a choice, obviously, between him and republicans. a view that has been consistent in the polls since before the midterm elections is what they see. the freedom agenda, doesn't have anything to do with the economy although i argue that if you can't afford anything, you're not free. if the border is falling apart and it affects the entire country, you're not free. what part of the freedom agenda are they talking about? and does he know that? they better poster that around the walls in the basement. >> kayleigh: stephanie seems to be living in a different economy than we all are. i believe she's the same one that said 9% inflation is something americans can afford. she has some bright and rosie diagnosis for the economy. take a listen. >> you have a very strong economic recovery story to tell. so many of these economic wins could fall by the wayside. as i said, you have a very strong economic recovery story.
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we're talking about real practical solutions. how do you think you don't get more credit for it? >> kayleigh: really light, fluffy interview. emily, the american people don't feel like stephanie does. american people have spoken. 54% say trump did a better job handling the economy. 36% say biden. >> emily: we call that leading the witness. and the whole point is she's providing the specificity that the president fails to provide. we had instead him saying when asked in defense of, obviously the polls and large concerns that 2/3 of americans said about his mental acuity, he said he's required a lot of wisdom and no more than the majority of people. the daily mail says humble he ain't. what's lacking is any type of specific with any type of policy achievements. so he also, when he brings up the vice president says she's not getting the credit that she deserves nor is she getting the attention. i think she's getting more than enough attention. it's toward her failures as well. but to your point, kayleigh, and here's i think what the takeaway
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should be for the g.o.p. it frankly doesn't matter, i guess, if despite them giving kamala harris titles that are winnable that she keeps failing at, despite the president failing to accomplish narrative the apologyists media or people under 30 who are influenced by tiktok apparently put forth, none of that matters if the g.o.p. doesn't come out strong with a home run of an articulate, specific policy of here is why you need to vote red down the ballot, throughout the ballot, throughout the country because otherwise, we will be stuck with four more years of the same. so i'm not sure to your point that tribal allegiance is horrifying to me in the face of what devastation and destruction we are experiencing on a daily basis. but that's not going to matter if we don't provide the alternative clear solution. >> harris: very true. and i think quickly, bill hit the nail on the head. it's going to be debt ceiling fight and that's going to be already the republicans are winning because they've put a deal on the table. the president had to spend two
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weeks deciding he was going to sit with. and then it wasn't he's want going to negotiate and apparently now, he might. >> bill: my only point on that, if you want to attract independents back to your cause, you pay the bills and do this extension for a year which is what mccarthy is on record of supporting and 43 republican senators are supporting. so long as you cut spending. if he were to do that, honestly, joe biden would have done that deal in the 1990s. >> kayleigh: no doubt about it. tomorrow is a big moment. right now, polling shows they're blaming -- voters are blaming both parties for this and tomorrow, on how you frame this issue for republicans and democrats is key after that white house meeting. nicole, take a look at this. when undecideds are asked how they're leaning right now, here's what they say. 49% would vote trump. 42% biden. 48% desantis and 41% biden. this is a national poll. we are very far out. but those numbers would worry me if i'm sitting at 1600 pennsylvania.
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>> certainly. republicans need to get out of their own way if they want to win this election. president biden won the last election by hiding in his basement, and you know, lee carter on faulkner focus did a great job of laying out the poll situation. as the polling suggests, the president's physical health is declining. and this isn't just us speaking in hyperbole, you look at the physicals. in 2021, his gait was stiffening. he had stiffer hamstrings. he doesn't mention his mental acuity and full cognitive evaluation. they leave that out. any 80-year-old man is supposed to be having one in his physicals. we need to continue to have the full physical and mental examinations. again, on top of that, on top of that, with the bad policies that have left us into economic turmoil, you have a border with a lot of chaos. you have a running mate who polls less than joe biden does. they can still win.
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if you continue to have in fighting in the republican party and the republicans need to come forward, unify and have a solid message on what they're going to do. >> and coalesce around whoever the nominee is. everyone has to go out and vote. that's very basic. big challenge for the republicans. coming up, new developments in the efforts to secure our border. the texas governor announcing a new national guard unit to prepare for what could be an unprecedented surge of migrants this week. details next. together we provide nutrients to support immune, muscle, bone, and heart health. yaaay! woo hoo! ensure with 25 vitamins and minerals and ensure complete with 30 grams of protein. ♪
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>> harris: growing concerns that the biden administration is not prepared for what may be an unprecedented surge at our southern border. president biden is set to discuss migration with mexico's president tomorrow. title 42, as you know, that
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covid driven health restriction is set to expire on thursday. texas governor greg abbott now activating an additional 545 service members of the texas national guard in locations throughout the state, and announcing the creation of a new tactical border force unit. that's to protect the border. remember, he's already done that with 10,000 of those national guard. he got serious about this months ago. longer than that. fox's drone team, fox flight team, capturing the brand new video of brownsville, texas. this is yesterday. look at that line. those are people who are waiting to be processed after crossing the border. many of them illegally as what our people on the ground have told us. many of them single adults. and this may just be the calm before the storm. meanwhile, the d.h.s. secretary alejandro mayorkas still can't seem to explain what is behind the border rush? why is it happening? >> big surge in the last couple of weeks.
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and if you're seeing this big of a surge ahead of may 11th or may 12th, what are you expecting come may 12th? >> it's very difficult to identify the cause. you know, the challenge of migration is in one aspect, it's dynaism, a very complex phenomenon. >> harris: bill hemmer, the root cause, i don't know. watergate like. what is going on? >> bill: back we go. >> harris: we can solve this already. >> bill: they said 55,000 have crossed the border over the last seven days. 7,000, 8,000 a day. >> harris: largest number he's seen. >> bill: the numbers are going to go higher. i heard what governor abbott said yesterday. we don't need 1500. we need 15,000 or 150,000, probably right about that. as we're going to see that stuff from our drone cameras down there on thursday, on friday, and into the weekend and into next week.
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i don't know when you turn the faucet off. i'm not sure. but look, i didn't think it would go on for 2 1/2 years and it has. i'm asking the question, what are you doing to dissuade those that are willing to make this trip? what's today? may 8th, thank you very much. yesterday this is. it says "they have built temporary facilities to house thousands more migrants, hired contractors and cut processing time for people in custody. they have taken steps to encourage a more orderly flow of migration." none this says don't come. all of this says, we'll do it faster for you and there are a lot of people, you know, that one of your former bosses, kayleigh, mike pence was on with us last week. you know, he just thinks the administration is filled with a lot of open borders policy, sorry, open border society people. and you pretty much are seeing that right now. they are entitled to come to our
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country is what a lot of folks apparently think. go ahead. >> kayleigh: i think that's exactly right and the former vice president is exactly right. 11:59 p.m. on thursday, title 42 expires. there will be a solution on the table. house republicans think they have the votes to put in place a codification of trump's border policies. that will happen thursday. as we see these images you are going to have a proposal that, according to the associated press, they have a source that says president biden would veto it, if it got to his desk. i don't think it will make it through the senate. point is republicans will say we have a solution here. you're vetoing it and even the one with the bipartisan solution, that will be voted on this week. >> harris: you have senator cinema and tom tillis as well, they're working on that bipartisan solution that would just extend the expulsion portion of title 42 which you're going to need because a huge amount of those people are not coming here so that they can qualify for asylum. they're coming here so that they can in quotes qualify because
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they want better jobs and that's actually not on the list. emily? >> emily: that's right. and they are coming here because they are engaging in illicit massively lucrative industries. let's dig in a little deeper to the excellent reporting. we have chief ortiz of the u.s. border patrol in the past 72 hours, we had the staggering numbers that bill broke down. an average of just under 8,800 per day. he's never seen that volume. none of us have in terms of the daily reportings. within those apprehensions, almost 7400 getaways, by the way, 165 pounds of marijuana. 83 pounds of meth. 66 pounds of cocaine. 11 pounds of fentanyl. five pounds of heroin. thousands of dollars worth of cash, three sex offenders, one wanted felon and one gang member. that's just the tip of the iceberg. for some reason, mayorkas whose salary our tax dollars pays continues to fail at articulating again with specificity the push factors and
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the pull factors that bring the illegal immigrants here. why can't he say that in one sentence? they are being incentivized to come here illegally as the cartels are being to engage in human smuggleing and inially isity drug smuggling. everybody is being rewarded who engages in crossing the border illegally and in engaging in the drug and human smuggling. only people not being blessed a million times over are american citizens that are seeing their resources be depleted and farmed out to people who have gotten here across the border. >> harris: it's happening on mayorkas' watch, when i interviewed the former acting ice director on my focus, my question is to why does he have a job? he talked about the move to send our military to the border. here it is. >> he's sending 1500 troops down there for one reason. to do administrative duties like transportation and food catering and stuff that some agents have to do.
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1500 aren't doing anything for border security. this is simply to release more agents to process quicker and release quicker. this administration is the only thing they've done on this border, harris, is send more people to the border to process quickly, release quickly, because they care about the optics. if there's no overcrowding, then there's no crisis. this is all they've done from day one! >> harris: remember, when i went down to the border last september, couple of days before the end of the fiscal year, the head of the rio sector b.p., border patrol, talked on the record for the first time of the fact that when all the migrants from haiti were under the bridge, that was an optic difficulty for this white house. his office called and said can we say that's not real? is that made up? got it on tape. look, emily mentioned 7,400 got aways. that's a problem. some of them potentially are cartel members.
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>> emily: right. there are no disincentives for people to come across the bo. not deincentivized and the border, s say you can have free health care, free shelter, a cell phone and we have government funded nonprofits to help you make that transition push for you. for republicans to win this next election, they need to be strong when it comes to immigration. president biden's rule was to roll back all of president trump's policies and that's what has resulted in chaos at the border and boils down to something simple as what we do with research in mice. to teach mice to have different behaviors, you give them negative things so if they go a certain way, they beep the little thing and get electrocuted or get a buzzer noise. eventually they change their behavior. if the same thing happened when people were coming to the border and they were getting shipped back or they were getting court papers or something in the sense it was a negative, something negative was happening, eventually they would stop coming back. we have to change the behavior. and we can't just keep making it
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easy for them to come across the border. >> harris: maybe surreptitiously, that's why the app that biden put out isn't working for them because they're angry about the fact they can't make the asylum app work. maybe that's the kind of negativity that's happening. meanwhile, though, 7400 got aways coming across our border illegally. that is dangerous for everybody in this country. that's a number we haven't seen for that delineation of time. that's a problem. coming up, growing questions about the shooting death of a chicago police officer as she was returning home from duty over the weekend. no protests. barely any media coverage. leaving some people to ask, did her life matter? next. age is just a number, and mine's unlisted. try boost® high protein with 20 grams of protein for muscle health versus 16 grams in ensure® high protein. boost® high protein. now available in cinnabon® bakery-inspired flavor. learn more at boost.com/tv
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>> emily: the tragic shooting death of a police officer in chicago is getting virtually no attention from the national media. the victim areanah preston was a
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police officer who worked on the city's south side. she was just 24 years old and had only spent three years on the force. she was about to graduate just days from now from loyola university with a master's degree from the school of law in criminology. now her family is planning her funeral. as she returned home from her night shift, she was shot on her front lawn. they don't know if she was targeted or was the victim a random robbery. but sources say her weapon and her badge are both missing. her fellow officers who arrived on scene put her body into the back of a police car and rushed her to the hospital. >> officers responded and found one of our own suffering gunshot wounds. the officer picked the officer up and put her in the back of the squad car and immediately bought to the university of chicago hospital where she succumbed to her wounds. >> emily: you were just in chicago this friday.
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what an absolute tragedy that unfolded this weekend. and i must say and appreciate the outgoing mayor's comments who said when i got the call this morning, i wasn't just a mayor. i was a mom thinking about what the parents of this young officer are feeling today. and the mayor identify elect brandon johnson saying i'm outraged and devastated by this horrific violence against a public servant. i will do everything to support the family and c.p.d. during this traumatic time. other than that, crickets. where are the protests? where are shutting down the subways? where are the democratic lawmakers? where is the national outpouring of support for her family and mourning the loss of this young life who mattered. >> kayleigh: all good questions. where are the policy changes? this crime wave is not happening in a vacuum. it's happening because of things like cashless bail and weak policies letting criminals back on the street. we talk about it every day. but areanah preston, what a beautiful young girl, 24 years old. about to graduate, as you mentioned i was in chicago friday night. you know, i had the honor of meeting five or six police officers and to think they would go on in that very weekend and
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lose a colleague. i mean, they are on the front lines of a violent crime wave. and we've got to get back to the place in this country where we appreciate officers. i was so troubled by the harvard harris poll last week of young people. and they found that only 43% say having officers in their community makes them feel safer. officers like this make us safer. and thank you, areanah preston and your family for your sacrifice. we would hold you in our hearts. >> emily: we are all fearfully and wonderfully made in the image by christ, why is it that the national media, the far left, democratic lawmakers, why do they not see every soul as equally precious? why are some lives meant to matter more in their protests, in their policies, in the lack of coverage. why? why? >> harris: well, you asked previously where are their voices right now? they're waiting to be told what to think and what to say. depending on where the politics fall. and where they fall right now is exactly what kayleigh was talking about. they fall with the prosecutorial
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groups of people around the country that have been incentivized by big george soros money, for instance, and soft on crime policy and vision and all of that, again, by big george soros money. $40 million that we know of at least. with d.a.'s across the country, some of them bounced and some are thriving and well like alvin bragg right here in new york city. and why does all of that matter? because black lives were supposed to matter particularly where there were a lot of black lives. and chicago has a concentration of us, of those lives who die weekend or shot weekend after weekend, die weekend after weekend. no one pipes up. this is a collision of narratives here. she's african-american. b.l.m. and the rest have already proven they're not going to bother protesting in the streets unless someone white killed them. and that is the truth. and the other thing is, well, she was a cop. so what do we do that narrative? the group that would be silent right now. that's why they're silent.
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they're waiting to be told. they want to cancel the rest of us, but wait for their marching orders. they are the weakest of the weak. >> emily: it proves it's all performative. >> bill: lori lightfoot leaves office a week from today. we can debate how successful or not her term was. the new mayor is brandon johnson. and he's got his work cut out for him. how is he going to do? i really don't know because what he's mostly talked about is giving more money to social programs for those in chicago. the last time chicago had a republican mayor? >> emily: i looked this up recently. long time ago. >> bill: 1931. >> emily: wow. >> bill: bill thompson was the last republican mayor in the windy city. >> emily: officer's family described her as a beautiful soul trying to make a change on earth. to harris' point earlier, where, then, are all of these groups dedicated to amplifying the lives of african-americans, the lives that all matter here?
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where, then, is the tribute and the acknowledgment that her life was taken unjustly and prematurely this weekend? >> the silence is deafening. and in the quest for racial equity, in the criminal justice system, all this is done is hurt the black community even more as black victims tend to be the majority of violent crime victims. we need to get back to a place of law and order where you convict, you arrest, convict and incarcerate without the thought of race and brad johnson has a lot ahead of him. that's what they need to do. you need to support these social programs because undoubtedly you need them. you need to get back to law and order in chicago because it is completely out of control and we continue to lose these innocent lives. >> officer preston, we mourn the loss of your life and praying for your family. a california panel has called for billions in reparations for descendents of slaves. but for some activists, that still isn't enough. more on that soon. your heart is the beat of life. if you have heart failure, entrust your heart to entresto.
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>> harris: one op ed i read this morning called it "california leaving." california's reparations task force has approved a plan to make cash payments to certain black residents and issue a formal state apology for slavery. and california taxpayers are set to inherit a massive bill. i know what you're saying. i know what you're saying, slavery, california, i know what you're thinking. we'll get to it. under the proposal, eligible black residents would receive compensation of up to $1.2 million. in total, that could cost an estimated $800 billion. that's more than 2 1/2 times the state's annual budget. some activists don't even think that's enough.
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>> we must repair this damage. we must repair it. reparations are not only morally justifiable but they have the potential to address long standing racial disparities and inequality. >> say nothing about slavery! nothing! so the equivocal number from the 1860s for 40 acres today is $200 million for each and every african-american! >> harris: bill? >> bill: slavery was abolished in california in 1850. i don't know, i think based on the soundbites you just heard that doesn't matter to the folks at that event. we've covered this story earlier today and told me a couple of things i wasn't aware of. this task force was created
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after the death of george floyd. so it's been going on for a while right now. it comprises of one japanese-american, remember, world war ii, japanese-americans, camps during the second world war and everyone else is black on this board. and you don't need to be a descendent of a slave, and you don't need to show harm. but i don't know where this goes. i don't know where you get the money. i don't know what hispanics say in california. but the rubber is going to meet the road whether it comes to the state to go ahead and say time to pony up money. >> harris: wait a minute. the reparations that that man at that city council meeting was talking about and reparations, i think so, as most people understand it, somebody in your family had to be a slave. >> bill: as i recall, when the original proposal was put out there, you have to prove that you lived in california prior to 1939, i think. let me check that. but it's not just california,
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this is spreading to other cities. and your hometown of kansas city is talking about an idea, too. the city council granted a board to look into this as well. i think you're going to see there more and more frequently. >> harris: do you think other diverse lanes, minorities, will get involved like the one japanese participant in the one in california? are they open to do that? >> bill: i don't know. i think california, anything is possible. whether it's $1.2 million. >> harris: or $200 million. >> bill: or even $100,000. >> harris: talk to me about the legality of this. >> i want to make sure viewers understand that's left unresolved yet. your under the plan this group has put forth, this board was created by governor gavin newsom. it's unclear, unresolved of who of the 2.5 million
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african-americans would be eligible. some argue including at that meeting you would have to be a direct descendent of slaves. other argues those californians affected by decades of racist policies should qualify. exact dollar amounts would be left to lawmakers to decide after the commission makes its final report to the state legislature at the end of june. economists working with this, we know the total cost could exceed $800 billion when is 2 1/2 times more than california's budget. it raises a lot of questions more than it answers. the determination and who and how this would be paid for. >> harris: how do we prove that people have been wrong by decades of policies if you're like, as that gentleman said, in the hole for $200 million is what he thinks each person of color is. particularly blacks. >> kayleigh: i don't know you you prove it and how you pay for it. there was no cost estimate in this. it's given to the legislature on
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july 1st. they will decide what to do with it. governor newsom has been pretty silent on this. he could take executive action to override the legislature if they don't adopt it. >> harris: he needs those folks if he's going to run for president. >> kayleigh: i would quickly say there's a $22 billion deficit in california. that was underestimated by newsom by $7 billion. how do you pay for it? >> harris: wow. ok, i was going to ask you about d.n.a. but as bill and emily have pointed out, apparently you don't have to be the descendent of a slave. so wouldn't that mean that everybody can get this money? >> even if you did have to be, d.n.a. would be difficult at this point seeing they didn't have records back then. the paternalism of white liberalism is astounding here. all you have to do is look at the policies. look at what happened under president trump. you had president trump's first act where he released thousands of non-violent black men from prisons. under president trump, you had the historic lowest unemployment for black americans. president biden's policies, unfortunately, the soft on crime. you've had larger crime waves in
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specifically democratic areas with black victims. and you also are favoring illegal immigration which are taking away from resources from poor black communities. so, you know, they can talk the talk. but truly, when it comes down to it, the democratic policies are hurting black americans and these reparations are really just a means for optics and not actually doing anything to help black americans. >> harris: wow. what you said is still ringing around in my head, bill, and that is the fact that no, don't have to be a descendent of a slave. i think everybody will come out in the streets and say where's mine? >> bill: i think under the setup they have a different state agency will then determine lineage and genealogy. so how that works, i do not know. >> harris: dr. sapphire just told us that it's not going to be easy. >> not going to happen. >> harris: coming up, the crime in homeless camps are so rampant in los angeles, we'll just stay with california because it's a hot, dangerous mess. they're now even driving out celebrities. next.
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>> coming up, president biden will be delivering remarks live from the white house on how he plans to protect consumers from flight delays and cancellations. we will take those remarks live. plus, press secretary briefs live from the white house at
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2:30 p.m. eastern time. a lot to listen for there including the lifting of title 42, the economy and more. we'll be listening for that. we'll also have the very latest in the shooting in texas that left eight people killed and many others injured. coming up live as "america reports" top of the hour. >> scott baio is the latest celebrity leaving california. he put his nearly $4 million mansion up for sale and he cites "violent crime and homelessness" as a major factor in his decision with him tweeting after 45 years, i'm making my way to finally exit stage right from california. also tweeting homelessness brings down property value. also, no consequences for crime that is rampant making things higher in price and it's just not a safe place anymore. so bill, essentially he's articulating what people have been articulating for years now. i'm one of them that left california right on the heels of mark wahlberg. there's so many other people that say yeah, we're just done.
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>> bill: i was thinking he's 45. so he's still of working age and probably going to work for a long time. but he can take his job and leave. i think about the people who can't. and they get socked with those taxes. i've been to idaho a lot. once a year. and i'm just always amazed how many people have moved there from seattle or eastern washington or somewhere in oregon, namely portland. and everywhere, all over california they've moved there. i mean, they've gotten the message. they've made the decision to leave. i think it's bad p.r. if i was the governor, i wouldn't want that to happen. i want to keep my people here and let you know why california is still great. they can't stand it anymore. one thing about the subway incident that's being overlooked, it's bad on all sides, ok, i don't know how it's going to work out. i saw the protesters over the weekend, what i think is missing in this conversation is the talk about how great american cities
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since covid have gone in decline in california and san francisco are good examples. >> emily: we frequently talk, harris, about the massive exodus of the tax base and how small group of people from new york and california have taken their taxes with them and to bill's point, someone tweeted back at scott baio saying we're not going to miss you. good riddance. you may not miss me but california is going to miss my tax dollars from his fixed salary to bill's point. certainly every loss there is a big deal. >> harris: absolutely. and, you know, i don't think it's any badge of honor to have people -- we're not talking about a few people. we're talking an exodus of people. just fleeing the lifestyle, the taxes, you know, so when that happens, there comes with it the sort of portability also of culture. and society. california starts to change. and if it's crime, whatever it is that fills in what it used to be is going to be really hard to
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change. going forward to get people to come back. i don't know. we didn't say this last segment. but maybe there's reparations are at least floating that word out because it hasn't gone anywhere yet but maybe. maybe it's about incentiveizing people not to leave. those who would want to take their high-tech jobs and put them some place else. you can work from home, that beautiful place in idaho. >> bill: you could do that. i prefer sun valley. that's good, too. >> emily: and to that converse point, incentivization is happening, for example, in florida where, yes, people are coming for the low taxes, value of the dollar, the low crime, the accountability and they are not taking that politics with them because the red is growing there. >> kayleigh: absolutely. so glad that bill mentioned covid because a lot of times we think people are fleeing because of crime. yes. that's certainly true. but i think you can't leave covid out of this because in april 2020 to now, you've had half a million people leave california. april 2020, what happened? covid-19, i'll never forget going to d.c. and landing and
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feeling like i'm in some zombie episode. everybody is locked down. people scurrying outside and i go to florida and it's open and beautiful and sunny. and i ate at a restaurant a few minutes after the covid epidemic began. so you can't leave covid out of this. people want freedom. >> emily: tale of two cities. it was really a tale of two countries and now there is the repercussion of that. >> certainly is. we see the drone footage of el paso and talk about the inhumane conditions at the border. those are happening in the united states. specifically san francisco and many places across california. no shock that people are leaving. as we're seeing a lot of people fleeing california are going to texas. they are bringing their politics with them which is why texas is turning purple and so if you want to maintain these wonderful places to live. you have to make sure that the politics aren't flipping as well. and unfortunately, that's the dichotomy. >> emily: more in a moment. we start with sustainably grown cotton from the rich red soul of north alabama, here on our family farm.
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: ♪♪ >> last but not least, tonight's episode of fox business's american built, hosted by stewart varny, looks at the construction of, wait for it, allegiant stadium, the home of the las vegas raiders and of course, the raiderettes too. a sneak peek. >> anything goes. >> major gamble in the desert. >> scientific marvel. >> unprecedented problems. >> physics of this is challenging. >> domed stadium in an oval on a cant. >> unusual solutions. >> how do i pull a field tray from the outside to the inside. >> swiss watch precision. >> great expectations. >> next year the super bowl is in vegas. >> the excitement, it is electric. >> how they built the most
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expensive stadium in football. >> you are not in kansas anymore. >> allegiant stadium. >> i had the honor of cheering on that field at the 60th anniversary of the raideretes there, nothing like the stadium. so don't miss "american built" airing tonight at 9:00 p.m. eastern on fox business. >> looks great. >> and also tonight, kayleigh is hosting fox news tonight all this week. tune in at 8:00 p.m. eastern. what is in store for tonight's amazing show? >> a lot. 2024 with tim scott, live at a town hall new hampshire, excited about that. fact checking, the fact checkers seem to have gone to sleep, don't watch the press briefings anymore. we are going to fact check the press secretary and we live in a dark time. i was in the mall yesterday and had someone cry to me over the state of our country, and we are going to bring you hope and optimism with some segments on
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faith and i have a surprise guest this week who i'm very excited about, i cannot reveal, you'll be pumped when you hear. >> great night. i hope you'll watch. 8:00 p.m. eastern time and set your dvr. >> absolutely. we will, we will all be watching you tonight, kayleigh, and cheering you on. so excited for you. and everyone, thank you for watching this show. don't forget to set your dvrs when you can't make it and here is "america reports." >> sandra: fox news alert, lawmakers on both sides of the aisle demanding president biden join republicans to try and fix the growing migrant crisis, but his administration has been quick to slam a new senate proposal that would and could do just that. >> john: how serious is the president about addressing the crisis at the border? react from chad wolf and former border patrol chief coming up. >> next thing you know all you hear is 50, 60 gunshots. >> pop pop pop

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