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tv   Fox News Live  FOX News  May 4, 2024 9:00am-10:00am PDT

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everyday chaos. this mother's day, help mom take it in stride with thoughtful gifts from weathertech. from playing in the rain with muddy cleats on the floorliners. to dirty camping reminders in the cargo liner. spunky toddlers testing out the all-purpose mat. epic food fights contained by the seat protector. add a cupfone to secure her phone and just like that... you've made mom's life easier. order these american made products or a gift card at wt.com happy mother's day from weathertech. >> we're following a developing story across the country here as more arrests
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happened on college campuses and those demonstrations continue into this weekend as the embattled columbia university president breaks her silence, days after the n.y.p.d. had to move in on those violent protests happening on her campus. good afternoon to you, welcome to fox news live, i'm aishah hasnie. >> i'm mike emanuel, griff jenkins is off this weekend. and there was projecting genocide joe over a giant american flag that was unfurled by staff. and this comes in protests this weekend, including in new york. that's where matt finn is live for us on the campus of new york university. hello, matt. >> hi, mike, it's very calm here right now, a dark contrast to what this place looked like over the past couple of days. right now, the police officers outnumber any number of civilians at the site where the pro it ises have been taking place, but it was a much different scene just last
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night. hundreds of pro-palestinian protesters gathered outside of nyu and ultimately dismantled and removed the encampment at nyu and took 59 people into custody. 12 were quickly released with notices to appear. and a short while ago, a student at rutgers and he and his peers don't feel safe. >> just my own experience and my friend's experience, i've had friends being called slurs, and our house egged. and pointed and laughed at. it's definitely an issue and definitely on the rise of late. >> in d.c., at george washington university, yesterday, staff put up the large american flag above the anti-israel protesters. but later, the protesters
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projected a genocide joe over the flag. and they cleared up remnants of the calm after it was violent. countless pieces of debris, lawn furnitures, tents, plastic, put into dumpsters after protests turned violence in westwood, los angeles this week. back live in new york, we're keeping a n eye on potential protesters here and you could see all of them out here, and also keeping an eye on any protesters that might show up here and in rutgers, new jersey, and the new school and some other locations across the city. we'll be here throughout the day and we'll keep you updated, mike, aishah. >> thank you very much. aishah: as the number of anti-semitic attacks spiked since october 7th, one jewish-owned company in atlanta says it's not just a statistic for them, it's becoming a reality. madison scarpino has more.
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>> hello, emory university here in atlanta is one place where they shut down encampments. there's a cookie shop and has jewish owners, they've been having threatening e-mails and calls and people are vandalizing it and since the protests things of getting worse. >> and they opened the door, saw the flag, we won't shop here, you're murderers, support genocide and we're going to tell everyone. and pulled them away don't buy here, they're murderers. >> the husband and wife owners moved to the u.s. from israel a few years ago and ids. they started displaying an israeli flag since the start of the war and things went downhill from there. >> here is one incident from last month. you can see a man appears to be wearing a turban splattering paint on the back of the
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building. police caught the guy and they say that the threats and attacks like this happen two to three times a week and they're not alone. according to the latest data from the anti-defamation league, 60% of all anti-semitic attacks last year happened after the start of the israeli-hamas war. another example happened last week in texas. a synagogue got a bomb threat saying in part, quote, everything will blow up and blood will shatter everywhere. the rabbi there says it's not the first time this has happened. on college campuses, aishah, the number of jewish students who say they don't feel comfortable with other students knowing they're jewish has dropped dramatically, back to you. aishah: i can't believe this is happening in america. madison scarpino, thank you for the story. >> for more on securing college campuses during the protests, let's bring in a ucla professor and gentlemen, welcome.
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>> good morning. >> good to be with you, mike. >> let's start by the letter sent by education secretary miguel cardona, environments where students feel unsafe and experience discrimination on college campuses cannot be tolerated. how safe do students and faculty feel at ucla? >> not safe at all. not safe because when anti-semitism, when anti-jew hate rears its ugly head, the jews are the canary in the coal mine, the jews are the early scapegoats, but it's an early sign of implosion in our society and i can tell you that for weeks now, we've been warning that this would turn violent and it just shows you that what starts with the jews ends with everybody. >> how has the culture changed during your years at ucla? >> well, it's been a slow creep, but there's been an education of concept that might
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seem very alien, but they've been trickling in. for instance, in our medical school, environmental racism and justice, that's a class. immigration and imperialism, that's a class. there's a class being taught on anti-settler colonialism and indigenous health. if this is what you're teaching in your curriculum, don't be surprised when you get physicians of the future that engage in belief systems that are contrary to the american way. >> more than 2300 arrests made on college campuses since april the 18th. we've got a map showing the campuses across the country where arrests have been made. big picture, what are your takeaways, charles? >> i can tell you in many of the cities and states, it's no surprise that many of these school and university administrators delayed law enforcement intervention because they followed the suit
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of the policies of the cities and states in which they reside. and we see the drastic and consequential results because of their poor decisions. what i can tell you is, it doesn't work when you do not support employees and students and others that are law abiding and you coddle the criminals and those that are outwardly supporting terrorist organizations. what we have on full display here, mike, we've got a significant home-grown violent extremism and radicalization problem in this country. some of it is being put out by the schools. some of it is being supported by outside groups. we need to follow the money and identify who that is, but we've got a very dangerous collision course here right now. we've got tense world events. we've got the radicalization i spoke about and we have an immigration system that's been allowed to collapse under this administration and we have no idea who is in the country.
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>> i want to play for you a clip from a senior official with the n.y.p.d. and i want to get to you react to it. >> there is somebody behind this movement. some organization behind this movement. the level of organization that we're seeing in both of these campus here and at columbia, there is somebody funding this. there is somebody radicalizing our students. >> i get that question all the time, who is funding it. could it be a foreign adversary, charles? >> it absolutely could be. and, look, it could be multiple groups that hate america. we've heard a lot of this rhetoric coming out of students that are both american-born, some that are here likely on student visas, and those that likely were outside of the school population, and showed up where they could have been in the country illegally. we don't know who they are. but law enforcement officials, it's time. enough is enough. we've got to follow the money
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because this is, as the n.y.p.d. commissioner said, very well-organized, very well-coordinated and very well-funded and those three are very dangerous things. that's why we're 10% higher in our threat level here in the united states than we were pre-9/11 and this is very concerning. it's not a matter of if, but when. >> from the new york times ucla, none of the videos analyzed of the times show any incidents of encampment protesters initiating with counter-protesters beyond defending the barricades. blaming the jewish camp? >> nothing could be further from the truth. when that encampment was set up, four buses showed up and hoodlums, and i went there and saw with my own eyes and i had
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a film crew with me, these people were blocking entrances not allowing students to go to class, to go to the library, assaulting people that got near the encampment. as the days went on the encampment grew and got bolder and blocked people from get around and i got assaulted getting close to the encampment. they came and tried to disrupt our counter protest that had a legal permit. it was total chaos and disorder. i went to the police station not once, but twice on ucla and told them it's going to explode. the police said we know it's dangerous and told me that one of the security officers got kidnapped into the quad there and barely got him out. and they hadd directives from michael beck and leadership not to go up there. it's not a police state. when you don't allow the police to do what they've got to do.
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>> what's the impact on the country for all of this. we better keep our eye on the ball here because the threat level is exploding and we've seen a demonstration of that and continue to see that. we're at a very dangerous tipping point here in this country and it's time that law enforcement is allowed to do their jobs, and i think we see that from mayor adams now where he's sick and tired of it and enough is enough. and he's starting to take the right position and buck the political talking points. >> charles more reno, professor hoffman from ucla, thank you very much. >> thanks, mike. aishah: president biden is spending the weekend this delaware as concerns mount over his handling of the israel-hamas war and campuses across the country. lucas tomlinson has the latest from the white house. lucas, what is the administration doing about it this weekend? >> well, aishah, 10 days passed between president biden's
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exchange in the virginia country side at the earth day event and his formal remarks here at the thursday, condemning anti-semitic protests. >> there's no place for hate speech or violence of any kind, whether it's anti-semitism, islamophobia, discrimination against arab americans or palestinian americans, it's simply wrong. >> our own peter doocy followed up yesterday at the white house press briefing and asked a question about the fraternity brothers at chapel hill who saved the american flag. >> does he think that islamophobia is just as big of a problem on campus than anti-semitism? >> the president is going to call out all forms of hate, always. look, protecting the american flag is admirable. i'll leave it there. >> here is the scene at george washington university as you showed off the top of the program, just five blocks away from here.
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the statue of george washington has been defaced and is now ca caped. and no sign of the biography. and the giant american flag unfurled by the george washington staff there. and last night took an ominous concerns as there was this image on the american flag, genocide joe. and some think they bear the hall mark of 1968. and neil cavuto spoke with douglas brinkley about that. >> the democrats are meeting in chicago this august, which was a symbol of the battle of michigan avenue where police rioters and anti-war people clashed. so, it is ringing a lot of nixon, 1968 bells this year. >> former biden press secretary
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jen psaki will give an address to students in the mall two weeks from now and james comer wants to know why the police have not cleared the encampment, as requested by the george washington president herself. the house oversight committee wants to hear from the chief of police and muriel bowser. >> interesting to come on capitol hill. thank you, lucas, to are that report. let's bring in a from south carolina, a member of the house oversight committee, williams timmins and he attended george washington university so very familiar with that campus and you just visited that co campus with a bunch of your colleagues this week. there's a back and forth between the university officials, the president and the mayor, who refuses to send in d.c. police to break up this encampment because they say it's not violent.
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>> what i saw was lawlessness. the president of the university and the chief of police have requested the marin force the rule of law. these people are protesting-- they're not pro-palestinian, they're pro-hamas. if they were pro-palestinian they would ask hamas to accept the peace treaties that the u.s. and israel have tried to broker. they're breaking the law, the law must be enforced and the mayor needs to do just that. it's completely unreasonable. these protesters have signs like exterminate jews. there's thousands and thousands of jewish students on campus at gw. it's completely unacceptable and unreasonable to allow them to continue this, defacing george washington's statue, just the lawlessness must stop and the mayor needs to act. >> well, i think you just nailed it there, congressman because they talk about it becoming violent, but here is the thing, the education secretary, right, miguel
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cardona, sent a letter to his colleagues this week, listing out every single thing he saw at these campuses, that he called abhorrent and i want to just read a couple of these things for you and our viewers because this is what we don't see because we're not in the middle of it. this is what the education secretary is talking about. jewish kids being physically assaulted or harassed while walking on campus, simply for being jewish, congressman. being subjected to virulently anti-semitic statements such as go back to poland. being subjected to verbal abuse, and then coming back to their dorms to find swastikas on their doors. so, you're going to have muriel bowser in front of you this week. what are you going to say to her to kind of hopefully push her to do something about this? >> i'm going to be shocked if she doesn't do something between now and wednesday. it's completely unacceptable.
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i was standing between byron donalds, and a gw professor, an american, and he screamed race traitor as loud as he could and uncle tom as loud as he could. and this man has no place in teaching children. he did this in front of students. so, look our entire education system is upsidedown and the fact that this man still has a job is unacceptable. look, the president of george washington, president grandburg says they're holding students economy, but most the people in the quad right now are not students. you have 200 people who are-- >> trespassing. >> this is not allowed. this is not acceptable. aishah: yeah, let me ask you about someone else trying to keep his job right now. i have to ask you about this motion to vacate that's going to come up this week, marjorie taylor greene says she's going to trigger it, she's got congressman massie and gosar as well supporting her.
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the democrats say they're going to save him. does that back fire, in your opinion, you know, you're rank and file. i don't know how you feel about the speaker, but does that backfire if democrats have to come in and save him? >> look, it's definitely not a good situation, but at the end of the day, mike johnson is the most conservative speaker in the history of the united states of america and while i do think there will be a very small handful of republicans that try to remove him, we've got to get our country back on track. the only way to do that winning the election in november and if they want to have a fight in december about this, we can. but right now we've got to focus our fire on the white house and the terrible job joe biden is doing. aishah: and the comments about congressman henry cuellar, one of the loudest critics on president biden on the border and the white house, and now he's indicted, he and his wife, for bribery. where do you see this going and your final thought on this? >> look, the department of
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justice has lost the faith of the american people. they've politicized prosecution. president trump leading republican candidate has dozens and dozens of federal indictments. cuellar has been indicted one of the leading critics of biden. eric adams under investigation for a number of things while hunter and jim biden get off scott free and the cherry on top the president of the united states, commander-in-chief of the united states military lacks of mental capacity to form the criminal intent necessary to be guilty of a crime. so, look, the department of justice needs to prove its case against everyone and, cuellar is no different. aishah: do you think that cuellar is innocent? >> i have no information about the case, but i can tell you this, that if he was supporting everything that joe biden did, i have a feeling that the department of justice would have at the very least moved a little slower. aishah: okay. congressman timmins from south carolina, thank you so much for joining us. we appreciate it. have you back on soon.
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>> multiple tornados battered texas this week and damaged several homes. the national weather center said two people were injured when their home suffered storm damage. texas officials are cautioning against flash flood risk as the state faces heavy showers and thunderstorms and adding more water to swollen rivers that prompted mandatory evacuations. this as water levels rise in some towns to levels rivalling hurricane harvey's devastating floods of 2017. as bad as the flash flooding was on friday. officials say the worst is to come. aishah: crews are demolishing a bridge that was damaged, it was closed after a three vehicle wreck where a gasoline tanker burst into flames at an overpass. connecticut's governor say they hoped to reopen the highway by
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monday. >> three bodies have been found near the u.s.-mexico border after a group of surfers had gone missing in the area. that story is next. for streng. yay - woo hoo! ensure, with 27 vitamins and minerals, nutrients for immune health. and ensure complete with 30 grams of protein. (♪) businesses go further with 5g solutions. that's why they choose t-mobile for business. pga of america and t-mobile are partnering on 5g-powered analytics to help improve player performance. t-mobile's network helps aaa stay connected nationwide... to get their members back on the road. and las vegas grand prix chose t-mobile to help fuel operations for one of the world's largest racing events.
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every day millions of people ask, "what is scientology?" here's an idea, what if you just take a look?
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what if you see for yourself who we are, what we believe and what we stand for? our doors are open to all people, of all faiths, in every corner of the world. so what is scientology? maybe it's time to look and decide for yourself. >> a 3-year-old tragically killed here in washington d.c.
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last night. the little girl was sitting inside a vehicle when the bullet struck her. she was unconscious when officers arrived and taken to the hospital. and investigators say the toddler was not the intended target and was caught in the cross fire. aishah: listen to this. mexican authorities say they've located three bodies in the state of baja california where three went missing last week. mysterious, indeed. the bodies were found about 130 miles south of san diego in an isolated area in mexico. the surfers went missing in that area. state prosecutors haven't confirmed whether the bodies found there belonged to the missing men. their disappearance is still under investigation. during the search, family members of the missing surfers identified them as jack carter
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rhoad from san diego, and jack and callum robinson, two brothers from australia. their disappearance is raising all kinds of concern. the pickup truck belonging to the american surfer was found burned near a remote area and believe it was set on fire. two men and a woman are considered people are interest in this case. they were taken into custody by mexican authorities. they say the woman was found with a bag of drugs and a phone that belonged to one of the australian surfers. local residents say they fear for their safety. >> i feel angry, fed up and sad at the same time that you can't have these beautiful places anymore because you don't feel safe. i have a family and part of what i like to do is to take my children to these places to camp, to have a good time, to fish. >> the families of the victims say they notified police that their loved ones were missing after they didn't show up to an air bnb as expected earlier this week. in another surfing area close
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to the border. the family members say the last time they heard from the missing surfers was last saturday. now, the fbi is in contact with the family of jack rhoad and officials within the u.s. and australian consulates are working together on this case. aishah. aishah: all right, stay on top of us for us. christina coleman live for us in los angeles. thanks. mike: custom and border protection forces tell fox news more than 200 chinese nationals were apprehended in the san diego sector. on wednesday, may 1st, 262 chinese nationals were apprehended and the next day 223 were detained and those two days total more than 342 apprehended in all of fiscal year 2021. aishah: how the testimony from former president trump's aide, hope hicks, will affect the new york hush money trial. we're going to dig into it next.
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>> so it's a pretty emotional day in the courtroom during day 11 of trump's new york trial. and hope hicks recalls his concerns over damaging allegations. madeline rivera has this. >> hope hicks broke down in tears as she testified before her former boss. she worked for fox for a time. and she remembers the tape in 2016 and scrambled the contents which she say were a damaging development. and this was key for prosecutors trying to make the case as the fallout from the tape and the team was trying to squash more stories about his alleged affairs. >> i think the prosecution made headways in all of these
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witnesses by showing that president trump was wanted to make sure that these stories didn't get out. that's the facts that they want to get out. >> but hicks mentioned trump was concerned what his family would think and hicks testified he even asked for newspapers not to be delivered to their home, saying, trump didn't want anyone to be hurt or embarrassed by anything that was happening on the campaign. and she criticized michael cohen who she says would go rogue and do things that were frustrating to campaign staff. she says he used to like to fall himself mr. fix-it, but it was only because he first broke it. and cohen is expected to be a key witness in the case. today, trump is back in palm beach florida and highlighting the donor retreat, mingling with wealthy donors and possible running mates as he once again slammed the trial for keeping him off the campaign trail. >> and in georgia, and in a courthouse instead of being in any one of 10 states where i'd
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like to be right now. >> he says that he won't make a decision about a vp until closer to the republican convention in july. aishah: a little different from what he said not too long ago. madeline rivera. thank you very much. >> you've got it, of course. mike: and for more on the new york trial bring in former prosecutor and former attorney for president trump, james, welcome. >> thank you, mike. mike: i guess the question that everyone is asking, what's the impact of hope hicks, a former trump insensider. >> he used to try rico cases and it was smart to have an impactful witness on friday afternoon. you want to leave the jury something to think about and this was emotionally. she kind of helped both sides and hurt both sides. she talked about the issue of motivation for why they would do these lawful, nondisclosure agreements, and part of the motivation was clearly political from her perspective and part of it was, he didn't
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want his wife to have to read these types of stories. each side gets something to play with. ultimately, big picture, she's a helpful moment for the prosecution, but still is pointing all arrows, in terms of the substance of her testimony toward michael cohen and she even had a few pot shots at cohen. if you are the defense, you want this whole case for cohen. mike: and hicks testified that michael cohen making payments. >> that's tawdry, but no real fight about nondisclosures agreements. if so, congress with be locked up by now. and they're act being like it's criminal, but it's common. and celebrities nda he is, the doorman who falsely accused of
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trump having a kid out of wedlock. and money out of that. and the felony and misdemeanors probably comes at the hands of michael cohen. i think that's tough sledding. mike: let's show our audience the timeline of this new york case. fall 2019-- excuse me, 2019 manhatten d.a. completes the probe, no charges. 2022, alvin bragg declines to move forward with the case. january of 2023, bragg's office cone convenience grand jury, march of 2023, trump indicted on 34 felony counties. based on that, how surprising is that series of events? >> it's very surprising. michael cohen is a failed cooperator. the southern district of new york not being known to be
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timid for prosecutions, set him up with the plea to be a guy to testify against donald trump and they had co-conspirator number one. and to add to the timeline, it's not necessarily a smoking gun gun, a guy number three ranked at the department of justice. bragg said we're not going to do this case and suddenly colangelo, he gets home sick and goes with bragg and all of a sudden indict on this case. and this case and others popping up. >> and you've mentioned michael cohen, but he's been convicted for perjury and disbarred. how does he have credibility in this case.
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well, 12 people are going to tell you whether he has credibility. and the defense is best serve by not attacking every witness full bore, but saving it and reining it in. you've got a wealth-- i teach a criminal case in college, cohen on this one, this went, to have a guy convicted of perjury is a gold standard. to have a guy going to the media every year and blasting and showing bias against the defendant, that's another piece, a gem for them to play with in cross examination, that he's frustrated about not having a white house position, can you imagine attorney general cohen? so, we've got all of this tough to cross examine him on, inconsistencies, the best government will be able to do we've got corroboration every here and there that he was a bad guy, but he's trump's bad guy and the question is whether 12 new yorkers feels like this case rises and falls on cohen's
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credibility. if you make it feel like it does, even if they didn't have a predilection to acquit, they might move in that direction. mike: thank you for your time and analysis today. aishah: mike, a u.s. district judge will decide whether a prominent search engine is an illegal monopoly. we're talking about google and in the case they're bringing against the tech giant. doj lawyers are arguing the company spent more than $20 million each year to lock out competition. google says they're just delivering results that their customers are looking for, saying, quote, it would be an unprecedented decision to punish a company for winning on the merits. mike: a jury in new hampshire awarding $38 million to a man who was beaten, raped and held in solitary confinement as a teenager in the youth detention center. the amount awarded will be 475,000, under state law that caps damaging. and the jury found negligence it allowed the abuse to occur
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in more than 1,000 others have filed lawsuits against the detention center who alleged abuse. aishah: and we're following some possibly big breaking news out of the middle east today. new reports that a cease-fire deal between israel and hamas may have been reached. is hamas really playing ball this time? the details next. it's time. yes, the time has come for a fresh approach to dog food. everyday, more dog people are deciding it's time to quit the kibble and feed their dogs fresh food from the farmer's dog. made by vets and delivered right to your door precisely portioned for your dog's needs. it's an idea whose time has come. ♪ we are people living with afib. ♪ and over 400,000 of us have left blood thinners behind... ...for life.
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>> an experimental f-16 fighter jet has taken air force secretary frank kendall on a history-making flight controlled by artificial intelligence and not a human pilot. kendall says he came out of thursday's flight in california confident enough in ai's capabilities that he would trust it to fire weapons. the military's planning to use the technology to operate an unmanned fleet of 1,000 aircraft. aishah: aishah. aishah: china has launched a probe to land on the far side of the moon and return with
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samples that could provide insight into the differences between the less explored region and the better known near side, the one that we see all the time. three chinese lunar probes are planned in three years and a three-member crew on its own orbiting space station and wants to put astronauts on the moon by 2030. mike: we have an in depth look at what one republican congressman is calling a cuban missile crisis in space. russia's developing anti-satellite nuclear capability in what was previously an off-limits location. here is chief national security correspondent jennifer griffin. >> the command to abort the launch is issued. for the first time in a year, russia's space agency failed to launch a heavy lift rocket from the space conference part of an effort in beating the u.s. in colonizing the moon. a third launch failed thursday, the same day that lloyd austin
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faced questions on capitol hill from lawmakers concerning a more menacing aspect of the space race. new intelligence suggesting that russia a developing an anti-satellite nuclear capability that would threaten u.s. space assets. if used in combat it could blind the u.s. military. >> it would have devastating consequences. >> concerns about anti-satellite weapons in space go back to 2007 when china first fired a ballistic missile at one of its satellites to demonstrate this new capability and threat. house intelligence committee chairman mike turner raised alarm bells after seeing classified intelligence that suggested russia planned to launch a nuclear anti-satellite weapon in space. >> i believe that this is a-- the cuban missile crisis in space and this administration is sleepwalking itself into an international crisis. >> last week, russia vote vetoed a u.s. and japan sponsored u.n. resolution
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reaffirming 1967 outer space treaties to prevent a nuclear arms race in space. china abstained. >> national security advisor jake sullivan called out russian president vladimir putin who said publicly russia has no intention of deploying nuclear weapons in space. if so, he asked, why did russia veto the resolution? at the pentagon, jennifer griffin, fox news. aishah: egyptian officials tell the wall street journal that israel has given hamas one w week, or the invasion of southern gaza will begin. >> a delegation from hamas is in the egyptian capital in cairo right now where they're considering that cease-fire proposal, that they have received from the israelis, and egyptian media is reporting that there has been, quote,
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noticeable progress. the egyptians are in a position to know. egypt along with the united states, qatar and saudi arabia and a number of countries in the region have been negotiating this deal, working on this deal, together with the israelis. at stake or should say, immediately at stake, rafah, in the gaza strip where a million and a half palestinians are holed up. and that israel has given them one week to accept their proposal, a do or die ultimatum or an assault on rafah, and israel says is the safe haven for the last remnants of hamas fighters and they've said to destroy prime minister netanyahu. whether there's a cease-fire or question whether the position has shifted. the prospect that we could be getting closer to the beginning of the end of this seven-month
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war. the deal, if it's done, would see hamas release another 33 homes, not all of them, in exchange for a 40-day lull in the fighting and that could be the beginning of more longer cease fireses. so the talks are underway, we appear to be making progress, but we're not there yet. aishah. aishah: ryan, adding to your excellent reporting. barack with axios is reporting that senior israeli officials are saying there are early indications that hamas will agree to carry out the first phase of the deal which is to release those hostages. so, stay on top of this for us. we appreciate your reporting. thanks, ryan. mike: the 150th running of the kentucky derby will take place later today. a look at the latest odds and of course, all the eye-catching hats. that's next.
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to all people, of all faiths, in every corner of the world. so what is scientology? maybe it's time to look and decide for yourself. >> okay. it is derby day. thousands of people are gathering at churchill downs right now for the 150th running of the kentucky derby. the derby marks the first leg of the triple crown with 20 horses competing for a $5 million purse. a lot of money.
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and live in louisville, kentucky right now with all the fun, juicy details. hi, kelly. your hat is gorgeous. >> thank you, i can't see you there because it's blocking my eyes, but who needs sunscreen when we can protect ourselves looking fabulous. let's talk about what makes this race unique. all of these 20 horses are just three years old, which means that they'll only have the one chance to compete, aishah. again, you said that this is the first leg of the triple crown so 150,000 people will be on site to watch these festivities and we can feel the energy radiating throughout churchill downs for this special anniversary. now, outside of the track, millions more people will be watching at home and this was the second post watched sporting event outside of the super bowl last year. and we spoke to one of the co-owners of a horse, dornoch who is a brother 0 to last
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year's, and winning a race is something he can't imagine the feeling of. and he gets pulled back in because it's a thrill that he doesn't get from playing golf. one american not in attendance, a record tying six victories, but his extension is a sixth year on the sideline. you can't talk about the derby without talking about gambling. we're expecting another record near in terms of the handle at the derby, i believe $280 million last year, aishah, so, a lot of money going down here at churchill downs. aishah: we'll see if we've got some big winners this year. kelly, thank you very much. kelly in her beautiful derby outfit. i've wanted to go to the derby so many times. my cousin works down there and
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her pick is sierra leone. mike: very good. aishah: although the popular pick is a different horse. mike: right. aishah: fierceness. mike: and i think dornach owned by a former major league baseball player from the nationals, jason worth. you heard it here. aishah: would you put all of our money on it? [laughter]. mike: why president biden is losing popularity among young voters as fox news rolls on in the next hour. -ugh. -here, i'll take that. woo hoo! ensure max protein, 30 grams protein, 1 gram sugar, 25 vitamins and minerals. and a new fiber blend with a prebiotic. (♪)
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