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tv   Outnumbered  FOX News  April 24, 2024 9:00am-10:00am PDT

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>> kayleigh: we're awaiting remarks from president biden at a trade union event later this hour. he's facing growing pressure to an on the anti-semitism protests sweeping universities across america. last hour, biden was asked if he had a message for the protesters. watch how he responded. >> mr. president, do you have a message for the protesters on campus? >> kayleigh: he walked away. another former president that might have been treated that way. i'm kayleigh mcenany here with harris faulkner and emily compagno. also joining us, leslie marshall, fox news contributor and host of "making money" charles payne. many people are begging the question, why hasn't president biden acted to stop the protests? biden himself is speaking out of
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both sides of his mouth. watch. >> do you condemn the anti-semitic protests on campus? >> i condemn them. that's why i set up a program to deal with that. i set up a program to help people that don't understand what's going on with the palestinians. >> christopher wray admitted they're not keeping an eye on the protests. >> well, of course demonstrations themselves are not something that we at the fbi get involved in. >> are you actively monitoring protests? >> we don't monitor protests. >> kayleigh: one jewish professor is blasting the lack of effort to stop the anti-semitism. >> if i went into the nyu square with a white hood on and said lynch the blacks, burn the gays, my idea would be shut off by that night. i would never work in academia again. there would be no need for the words context or nuance.
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i wouldn't be protected by first amendment or free speech. i would be out of the world of academia. seems like we have a double standard when it comes to hate speech as long as it's against jews. >> kayleigh: i don't understand this. i don't understand why you don't clearly condemn anti-semitism. leave it there and move on. why you have to say both things. in politco, they say that administration, leslie, is not stressing out about what is rolling out, viewing it as an obsession of a subset of the elec electorate. people are chanting that want october 7th many times. they're pointing to reporters to a poll showing that just 2% of young people we have, if we pull it up, consider this to be an issue that will cast their vote upon. really? they're viewing this flu the lens of politician? this is anti-semitism, point blank. >> i know harris, her children are like me, they're half jewish. i have a christian parent,
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married to a muslim. i feel strongly about issues in the middle east and feel strongly on both sides. when i say both sides, i'm concerned about the fourth coming famine in gaza. i'm concerned about the hostages not being released and i'm concerned about anti-semitism anywhere in the world. here's the thing that i see. if we look at columbia as an example. right now they have met with the leading organization that is going on with these -- they reached certain deals. when they talked about national guard, the talks came to an abrupt halt. they extended the 24 hour get your tents out to 48 hours to clear out. they said no more nonstudents. in addition to that, no more slogans -- if the national guard is called in, that would be called by the governor of the state of new york. columbia made it clear that's not where they want to go -- >> kayleigh: the doj, the
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department of education, you have all of these agencies at your disposal. >> the doj wouldn't get involved until it's a criminal matter after the police have handled. the police have handled it. >> emily: they arrested over 100 kids at columbia. columbia has suspended until further notice and some expelled students. those aren't all muslim students or foreign students. there were 200 arrested on the brooklyn bridge. >> kayleigh: a lot of people are hearing this, harris. what do the catholics do to get a memo? what did the pro life community do? these are violent threats we're hearing, a jewish woman that had her eye hit with a pole. there's been assaults. doj should be involved. >> harris: you give a 48 hour time to take down the tents. what do you do for the israel students that have now -- the jewish students that have been and some of them are duel
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citizenship, forced off campus to learn online for their safety? i don't see equal justice here for both sides. so if the goal is to be fair, the university is failing of that. as far as the justice department, oh, good gosh. you could just poke a nose in that out of curiosity. are these hate crimes? we know crimes are being committed. the police say they could have never gone on campus. you have trespassing and other crimes. that's a call already for the doj to at least turn an ear to what's doing on. i'm curious about what biden says. i set up a program for those that don't understand what is going on with the palestinians. what groups of people is he talking about? you have anti-israel protesters spewing hate. jewish americans in fear and then you have this new third group, i guess. these people that don't understand what's going on with the palestinians. if he thinks those are the anti-israel protests, we have real problems. he can't identify hate in this
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country. how in the world is he going to knock down anti-semitism? it's a political year. if you didn't know it, you know it now. >> kayleigh: you know it now. emily, this was lost in monday's cov coverage. aoc made the statement, condoning the protests with these violent calls and anti-semitic works. this is what biden said after. listen to this. >> it's important that we remember the power of young people shaping this country today of all days as we once again witness the leadership of those peaceful student-led protests on campus. like columbia, yale, berkeley and many others. >> and representative ocasio-cortez in new york, you know, i learned a long time ago, listening to that lady, listen to that lady. >> kayleigh: how could the media react if there was a republican congresswoman got up, condoned
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anti-semitic protests and president trump praised that congress woman and said i learned to listen to her? would he be given the same grace and ignoring of the media? of course not. >> emily: of course not. i fined the silence is deafening from barack obama that graduated from columbia in 1983. he took time out monday to post about passover. no mention of the hideous appalling display occurring on his alma mater's campus. i think we've seen -- clearly is not a democrat and republican issue. there's plenty of people that have a d next to their name that stood up and stood against this anti-semitism. chuck schumer, if i'm praising him you know it's a good day. he said everyone has a right to protest. when they shift to anti-semitism, verbal abuse, glorification of the terrorist activity on october 7, of course that crosses the line. democrat gillibrand call it
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appalling. she says there's no place for it in new york city. there's a way to say yes, i feel for humans in this capacity. there's a zero tolerance for anti-semitism. i know all of these agencies are quick to be quite firm about for example lifting up transgender rights and drawing that line. you can never say anything bad about this or anything do this. there's crickets when it comes to anti-semitism. why is it so hard for them to condemn this blatant hate? >> kayleigh: charles, you know, there's nothing the administration can do we're told while a former aide of mine sent me a brilliant idea. here's something that president biden could do. he must answer, will his administration cancel the student loans of any student disciplined for harassing-threatening a jewish student? fantastic idea. >> the answer is no. we came in with the sound bite of scott galloway, professor
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galloway. i've had many battles with him. he's a progressive. he's got progressive economic ideas. what he did, he laid it out there so amazingly. not only this, but this equivocation of, you know, israel has gone too far. he reminded americans, hey, you know, how far we went in world war ii. you know how many japanese died to bring that war to an end. there was no equivocation. they lost more people than we did after we were attacked. so the moral high ground of telling israel when they can stop going after the leadership of who slaughtered those people in october 7th. what president biden is doing is unbelievable. stop talking on both sides of your mouth. there's one issue. anti-semitism. address that bottom line. >> kayleigh: a great point. the civilian combatant ratio is
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lower than in japan and germany. those are facts. president biden's trip to florida leading to more tall tales and gaffes. a new polls in key swing states shows him falling behind former president trump. what if there is an investment strategy, a product, where your retirement money and investment portfolio could go up with the stock market lock in your gains? and when the market goes down, you don't lose anything. forward with your money. never backwards would have that investment strategy, that product actually existed? good news! it does! if you have at least $100,000 to invest, get your investor's guide and see if it's right for you. ( ♪ ) my back got injured very bad.
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>> emily: president biden appears to be losing steam in the polls. former president trump has a significant lead in six of the seven key battleground states. the president's gaffes are not helping. watch. >> we come back here to the state of florida.
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ron desantis felt like he needed to run for president. we had to go to six weeks. >> anyway, besides, i used to drive a 18-wheeler. you know what i did? one of the things that -- for me, i got involved when i was a kid out of the civil rights movement. couple things i want to say. earlier today i spoke in washington and -- >> emily: just for the record, president biden did not speak in washington yesterday. charles, the lies keep coming. >> did he drive a 18-wheeler? it's interesting. i saw someone complaining about donald trump exaggerating. there's a big difference between exaggerating and just lying. maybe his memory. but it's one after another. from the obama administration, i used to have this dvd with all
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of biden gaffes. it was amazing. the next one will be like forget about it. but it is frustrating in a sense that he just does it. the crowd claps. it's never reported on. it's never pounced on. not by the mainstream media. nobody knows about this unless they watch fox or a couple of other smaller networks. he's reading this stuff and still getting it wrong. forgetting about politics. do you want your commander-in-chief to be someone that can't read off of an index card a few lines in front of a small crowd, like a little community v.f. office. it doesn't -- seems surreal, like a comedy plot that you would submit to a major network. hey, i have an idea for a show because it's a president, yada, yada. it seems almost surreal at this point. >> kayleigh: i'll let you answer. >> when you said a difference between exaggeration and a lie, i had to say, i won the
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election, it was rigged. those are some lies. i can go on and on. from my perspective, when joe biden messes up a word, i hear about it across the board. i don't hear about it with former president trump. >> harris: he's under gag order under gag order. you want hear much. >> a full confession. i said the people of pakistan. i didn't say the palestinian territory. i did not finish my first cup of coffee. at the same time, do i need -- >> kayleigh: this happens -- >> it offends me when people talk to us like we're dumb. what you're making is a dumb example. we're not talking about you or me or her making a gaffe. we're talking about gaffe after gaffe after gaffe -- you're insulting. gaffe after gaffe after gaffe -- >> i'm giving an example of i
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made an error. >> kayleigh: it's not just a word. imagine him on the phone with a a foreign leader and he confuses raffah and hyffah. he does it each and every speech. this is why leslie, each and every poll shows the american voters, a majority, don't think he has the mental acutie. democratic voters show this. this is a one off and he's the same as donald trump -- >> i never said it was a one off. what i said i think it's normal for people to make gaffes. i use notes -- >> oh, golly. >> i'm not running for president but -- >> harris: i've known leslie for a decade and we still look the same, by the way. you do a radio show for hours. it's rare for you to mix things up. i would hope that that would be the case because you're good at what you do. your mind is sharp. i'm not so certain that he's good at what he does or his mind is sharp. there's two words that are really, really wish he hadn't
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said. "minor incursion." i don't know if that was on a card or a gaffe or if that was a lie. that was his fantasy about what foreign policy would work. that was the biggest gaffe that i think he will ever regret. now, the other thing he department say looking at his watch when the caskets were on the tarmac that had just come back from afghanistan with those families, the flag-draped caskets of the 13 that died on his watch because he chose not to listen to the generals and pull out after 20 years of war. there's things that he's done and words that he's said. they're gaffy and huge mistakes. big ramifications for the rest of the world. i understand what you're saying. we all make mistakes. i've made that similar mistake that you said. i've called palistino higher palestine. i know the difference.
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i'm not dumb. we make the mistakes. we correct them and move on. this is something different. this is the leader of the free world. he's losing credibility even on his own side of the aisle as kayleigh pointed out. this is serious business. it's not age and acutie only. it's who he is. >> kayleigh: yes. >> emily: who he is reflecting -- like genuflecting when talking about abortion. a growing number of americans believe that they will never be act to own a home. we'll discuss that next. lord, you know what's on our hearts. you know where we struggle. you know where we need to be pushed. help us give it all to you. the good, the bad. help us turn to you in everything. amen.
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fin shows that 38% of representers, nearly 4 in 10, say they will never own a home. now, you know they're dreaming about it. it's a dream that won't be realized. that's up from 27% in just the past year. when they were asked why they felt that way, 44% said homes are just too expensive. other deterring factors were the inability to save for a down payment, mortgage payments now are very high because of the interest rates. and the interest rates across the board for mortgages. charles, even the ones that got people in trouble, those adjustable rate mortgages, nothing is palatable out there in the loan industry right now. everything is high. >> charles: yeah. every one of those are valid. we're in a real awkward dilemma. we have 40-year inflation. interest rates are at a high level. mortgage rates are at a high level. the biggest gap with people that have mortgages now. let's say you have a mortgage at
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3.5%. if you sell your house, buy a new house with a mortgage for almost 8%, which would eat away all of the profit and probably more. no one is selling. right? limited supply, supply and demand, prices keep going up. prices keep going up. meantime, you've got to rented. rents are going up. the more you pay for rent, the less you can say for a down payment. one hell of a dilemma. we'll have some economic reckoning with interest to the interest rates and things like that. as long as we have run-away inflation and the fell reserve is forced to keep rates where they are, don't give up. if it's something you want to do, take longer. your parents got a house at 29, it may with 39 for you. >> harris: before we go around the couch, what about the prices of homes? are they sustainable with the fact that people can't afford to pay that flus the high interest? >> charles: periodically pleases
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get overbuilt. in florida, they're coming down. we saw this in phoenix. the problem is, nobody builds houses for less than $300,000. >> harris: so your baseline is high. >> charles: yeah. >> harris: everybody loves florida. that's my only thing to say. >> kayleigh: how can you not? florida is the best. that's why people are moving there. glad to hear they're building more. there's high demands. gen z, i feel for them. you face a trifecta. you mentioned it. the 30-year fixed rate is 6.88%. i've had older people tell me, oh, kayleigh, when we were young, it was 13 or 15%. the median housing price is $417,000 for the last quarter of 2023. high prices. on top of that, you go to the grocery store and you bill for a family is $200, sometimes $300. >> charles: adjusted for inflation -- let's say you bought a house in 1980.
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there's no comparison. the interest rates were huge. you adjust for inflation, the price of the house is less. there's a difference there. >> harris: leslie, couldn't the president do a bill clinton now? i feel your pain? and i feel like i said that a lot. now i'm going to apply it differently. i feel your pain because the american dream should not be in jeopardy. prices should not affect your dreams. but they are now. when you look at the polling, you realize that that will be legacy. the children in the households of these moms and dads now that are demoralized. it's not as good as it was for grandparents. >> leslie: i think words are one thing, action is another. he's not bill clinton. i'm sorry. there's one bill clinton. >> harris: truth there. >> leslie: if he were to say that, it won't change people's perception versus reality. as we see the economy improving, what do people say on both sides?
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i don't feel it yet. there's polls that show they fear it will be worse. some say the economy will improve and eventually you'll feel it. here's the problem. charles knows this better than i do. the economic side. one, that's one of the reasons that joe biden is not leading donald trump on the economy. because people aren't happy with that. the housing market is another. i live in southern california. i was at a friend's house yesterday in virginia. they have a garden shed. i said at home that could be a guest house. part of this is the private sector. they're building things and renting them for higher prices. somebody is paying them. at least in southern california. >> charles: i will say -- listen, it's a dangerous slope to blame the private sector for higher cereal, higher houses. the private sector has to buy wood. this inflationary spike came
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through when the $1 trillion was pushed through. we haven't come back down. >> emily: remember that million dollar garage in palo alto? i see this every day. the frozen inventory of those unable to move. those of us that are hemorrhaging money because of renting costs and taxes. for example, in an urban m metropolis like here -- >> charles: they're trying to make tiny hip though. i have a little tiny house. it's so cool. >> emily: yeah, breaks my heart. i would hope that people like president biden that owns multiple million dollar homes or bernie sanders could weigh-in with economic sense. not only say i feel your pain but say here's how we're going to fix it. >> harris: bernie sanders would suggest the rest of us give all
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of -- >> emily: give it away. >> harris: democratic socialingism. charles payne has a special edition of "making money." this is exciting. dancing going on in this one? >> charles: one upping that. >> harris: if you have seen his specials, you know what i'm talking about. i have the mug from this one. the unbreakable investor town hall begins at 2:00 p.m. later today on fox business. charles, tell us about it. >> charles: again, you've never seen anything like this on business tv. it's so exciting. i'm talking about the next 100 years. i think it's going to be so amazing up and down. i also will parallel it to 1800s. think about it. we had four great depressions, a civil war. we had ups and downs and we came down to it to the number 1 country in the world. i want americans to be invested in that. we talk about how do you overcome? watch this special. it will inspire anyone no matter who you are, no matter what side
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of the political aisle you're on. watch this special. >> harris: does everybody get a coffee mug? >> emily: i'll be there. >> charles: the live audience gets a signed book. >> harris: the mugs are awesome. a new study claims that artificial intelligence could predict a person's political views. most people will tell you. it looks at your face and tells you how you'll vote. okay. that's next.
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delivered in packs portioned for your dog. it's amazing what real food can do. >> emily: we're awaiting a decision from the judge in trump's manhattan criminal
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trial. the prosecution is asking that he face the maximum $1,000 fine for each violation. nate foy is live with more. nate? >> hey, emily. that ruling could come at any moment action former president donald trump waits to learn in the judge will hold hem in contempt for ten perceived gag order violations. take a look at this video just before 9:00 a.m. former president trump left trump tower. he posted on truth social soon after this writing "the gag order imposed on me a political candidate running for the highest office in the land is totally unconstitutional. nothing like this has ever happened before." the da's office right now is not asking to jail trump for a gag order violation, but prosecutor chris conroy said yesterday "the defendant seems to be angling towards that." the da's office is asking for a
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$1,000 fine per violation. in order to remove all posts in questions from his social media and campaign website. prosecutors also accuse trump of violating the gag order again monday while speaking outside the courtroom about his former lawyer, michael cohen. trump maintains that he's responding to attacks from others. when his lawyer, todd blanche could not provide an example for the judge, the judge said mr. blanche, you are losing all credibility with the court." blanche said in court that trump's position is that he never violated the gag order in part because many of the posts in question were simply him sharing articles written by other people on social media rather than an original post. we'll see what the judge decides as court is set to resume tomorrow morning at 9:30. back to you. >> emily: thanks, nate for that. let's bring it back to the couch. kayleigh, what are your expectations moving forward? >> kayleigh: i feel there's deep issues with this gag order.
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this is someone running for president that cannot address a live political issue? it's certainly going to affect the campaign. so you can't speak on it. there's an injustice there. the american people recognize it. the media is living out their wildest dream. i saw this leadline last night. secret service from abc prepares for if trump is jailed for contempt in hush money case. they have a source in the service saying that they're preparing for this. buried behind the headline of abc's article is this. you heard this from nate foy. it's an assistant district attorney chris conroy that said we're not yet seeking an incarsatory penalty. the d.a. is not asking for this but abc is running with that headline. if you hop on cnn, secret service new york city corrections department discussing what to do if trump jailed. the media is going crazy. this is a glimpse of what you'll see the coming weeks. >> it's hard, leslie as not only
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a tax payer in this city but as a tax payer in general, there's so many bigger issues that eclipse the trump dearrangement syndrome, the obsession that the mainstream media has. this is a disservice focusing on what if thes instead of the what nows for all of us. >> leslie: i think there's reporting and speculation sadly. we've gotten in to people doing both. with respect to the gag order, i have to say i somewhat agree with you that he should be able to post certain things. really you're not supposed to when you have a gag order speak about what is going on in the courtroom or any potential jurors dismissed or otherwise. the fact they're fining him $1,000 every time there's a violation, he will take out his checkbook and keep doing it. i don't know where this is going to go. i've said it before. i don't think he will be incarcerated for the gag order or incarcerated if he's found
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guilty. >> emily: the issue is the disparity. his attorneys did try to say we're following this very specifically to which the judge replied, you're losing all credibility with me. sounds like trump not only has a specific directive from the court but surrounded by a hazy cloud of and also don't do anything near it. michael cohen gets to run his mouth up and down and stormy daniel. there's a lack of equity here. that is troubling. >> harris: i don't know if i'm thirsting for equity with a former or current sex film worker, stormy daniels. i will tell you this. for michael cohen and david pecker that testified in this trial, michael cohen went to prison for lying. david pecker's statement have not been consistent. so if you have two liars that are getting a platform and can go on the alphabet soup networks at night, those that don't spell anything, only fox does, and you
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can't defend yourself against the lies, that a convicted liar, michael cohen is saying against you, that is the unfairness that i see here. you know, i don't know where stormy daniels falls in telling the truth or not. certainly somebody that went to prison that is your former attorney can do some real damage if you can't at least say no, this is what the truth is. you can't defend yourself. that's not just only fairness. it's an injustice and it's a reason to let this go and move on to the next. if they want to reset and say, okay, we're going to start the table all over again and from here on out, $1,000 for a thing, trump has enough to talk about. he's back on the campaign trail when he can be. he's talking american people's troubles and woes under this current administration, which is a silver lining with a gag order. >> emily: i want to talk about this, charles. it tends to get lost on the focus on the micro. this is the first time a former president has been criminal
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prosecuted and paraded around as if he's a beast. i neat that you'd think the impresentation of, the appearance of pure objectivity of steadfast commitment to impartiality would be so much higher. seems the opposite here. the neutral is the appearance of partiality and that lying between the legal standard and the daytime standard seems to have been just widely disproportionate now. would the judge say it's fine i donated. it's not fine. this is quite possibly the most important trial we've seen in quite some time. why not give this the most highest reverence possible so that ensures partiality in our faith? >> charles: the fact is, there's no impartiality. that's why those things exist that you describe. people say no, it's not a big deal. what his daughter does, who he voted for, who he donates to. i think harris -- i want to piggyback on this. you have two cases going on. there's the courtroom and the
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court of public opinion. if the court of public opinion can be swayed for someone running for the highest office in the land without the inability to be able to respond to that, that is so up fair, particularly considering the merits or lack of merits in this particular case. it's absolutely ridiculous that this is happening during this campaign season. many say it's ridiculous it's happening at all. >> kayleigh: that's right. >> emily: the harrowing story of how a 17-year-old girl escaped a serial killer is now being examined in harris' new show on fox nation. we'll discuss that next. >> screamed just don't kill me. >> she knew she was in trouble. she could sense the violence that many man was capable of. >> i'm 17 years old in the fight for my life.
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not flossing well? then add the whoa! of listerine to your routine. new science shows listerine is 5x more effective than floss at reducing plaque above the gumline. for a cleaner, healthier mouth. ahhhhh. listerine. feel the whoa! i would like to take a moment to address my fellow veterans, because i know there are so many of you who have served your country honorably, whether it's two years, four years, or thirty-two years, like myself. one of the benefits that we as a country give you as a veteran is your eligibility for a va loan. not 80 percent but 100 percent the value of your home and that's what you can get at newday usa.
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>> the white house proofing action colleges cut deals with anti-semitic protesters. is it time for the government to get involved? karl rove and juan williams are here. tik tok in the cross hairs. we'll see what is next. and the government promising the airlines will give you cash money if they cancel your
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flight. transportation secretary pete buttigieg joins us. join us at the top of the hour for "america reports." see you then. >> harris: john roberts with his cash money. anyway, this guy is talking cash money. president biden is speaking right now to trade unions in washington d.c. we'll monitor his remarks. it's supposed to be about the economy and the things he's trying to do policy-wise, so on and so forth. we'll break you breaking news from what he says. we're on it. i want to show you this. a powerful limited series on fox nation. it's called "surviving a serial killer." the series explores the kidnapping and escape by 17-year-old lisa mcvay. a teenager that was not believed by police. she was taken by a florida serial killer. some of you will remember the name, bobby joe long. >> i screamed, god, whatever you
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do, just don't kill me. >> she knew she was in trouble. she could sense the violence this man was capable of. >> drug me from behind. the gun to the left temple. >> she was in the wrong place at the wrong time. >> i was 17 years old, in the fight for my life. >> harris: this drops next tuesday, april 30th on fox nation. >> i need somebody else to believe me. you got to find this guy. you have to find him. he's out there. he's going to hurt all the girls. >> lisa was desperate for someone, anyone, to believe her story. >> so a couple more times, i go
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down to the police station. feel like nobody is believing me. they summoned for sergeant pi pickerton. >> harris: she finally found the one person that believed her. it's a good thing. investigators realized her story is something bigger a deadlier puzzle. >> harris: i want to tell you about lisa mcvey. she was a victim of child abuse. raped by her grandmother's boyfriend when she moved in out of foster care from where her mother had eventually landed her. so police department believe her. she had been in and out of the system. the grandmother wasn't fighting for her cause. 17 years old. she worked at the local krispy kreme in tampa. she worked a double shift. she got off late that night on her bicycle. when this man grabbed her, the wheels on the bike were still moving.
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he tortured, raped this child for 26 hours. she did not know -- she could never really see him but under a peek on her blind fold, she sneaked in to the bathroom. she would leave a lock of her own hair in the bathroom and fingerprints under the sink. she was certain she was going to die. but she was going to fight to try to survive. she did. when they finally believed her story, they realized that this guy had killed women before her. she was the only one that survived. he killed two women after her. so we fast forward. we tell that whole story in two parts. it's a limited series. you know online what is great, less than 30 minutes no commercials. you watch that i went to tampa bay a couple weeks ago. she's a sheriff's deputy now. she's in law enforcement.
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i knew you'd love that. everybody would love that. i go for a ride-along with her. it's gripping. it's just gripping to get to know this person where she is in her faith. that segment is none as lisa mcvey, divine assignment. so it takes you to a new place. i feel mightily blessed to have gotten to know her, to call her friend. she calls us friends in christ together. please watch this series. next tuesday it drops. you know what i love about the fox nation app, you can watch it any time, any time. tune in for that. "outnumbered," more of it in just a moment. , balanced nutrition for strength and energy. yay - woo hoo! ensure, with 27 vitamins and minerals, nutrients for immune health. and ensure complete with 30 grams of protein. (♪)
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>> breaking news fox news confirmed representative donald payne jr. has died from heart problems. he was 65 years old. he served in congress since 2016 representing new jersey's tenth congressional district.
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those who don't know that covers essex county, hudson, and governor healey murphy out with the statement "tammy and i are deeply saddened by the tragic passing of our friend and steadfast champion for the people of new jersey congressman donald payne jr." he is dead at 65 we hold him and his family and our prayer a sour. "out of the anti-semitic protests sweeping across college campuses, university of the epicenter, if you will, has been the center of all of this and speaker mike johnson house speaker mike johnson is said to speak on anti-semitism this afternoon and a powerful display of support for the people there who are innocent jewish students wanting to go to class having to learn virtually. >> you know what you need voices who are going to say i believe you. to those jewish students locked in their apartments online learning. with the hate all of that campus, i mean it is inside, it
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is outside, the police are roaming just outside the university but those people inside have been given in their tent increment 48 more hours. this goes on. who knows how the university will handle this. they have done nothing we expected them to do. in the face of this. and much of a dangerous at times too. the students on campus fearing not just jewish students but everybody because you are caught in the middle of this. >> johnson has a opportunity here to make people feel and know in this country we know the difference between free speech and that which is not protected speech. we know the difference between love and hate. >> these students need leaders on behalf of them and their freedom to go to class it would be nice to hear from former president barack obama a alumni. here is "america reports." [chanting]

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