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tv   Fox News Tonight  FOX News  June 29, 2023 5:00pm-6:00pm PDT

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i look like a liberal man that petra doesn't want to be interested in. also i will be off next week for holiday. i will see you guys later. let's due texts. rich from englewood ohio. who paid for the pizza? is that a campaign expense? i am waters and this is my world. good evening america. welcome to "fox news tonight". i am lawrence jones. after nearly five decades the supreme court today ruled 6-3 to end affirmative action in college admissions. races and skilled color can no longer be used as a factor when admitting students. as justice roberts noted in his opinion eliminating racial discrimination means elimination of all of it. most americans and those who believe america should be a meritocracy approve of this
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decision. just a few days ago cbs news ran a pole asking americans about this very issue. 70% responded that colleges should not be allowed to use race in college admissions. a new york times poll recently found 60% of democrats also oppose race as a factor in admissions. americans across the country have rejected affirmative action at the ballot box too, even in blue state california. in the 2020 election democratic leaders in the state put affirmative action on the ballot. the pro- affirmative action activist, the governor, u.s. senators and the golden state warriors pushed voters to support the initiative. they out bid opponents of affirmative action by 19-1. in the end, nearly 60% of californians voted to kill affirmative action. it didn't work. no matter how hard the democratic party tries, no matter how much money they spend, the american people have
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rejected the view that we should be judged on our skin color. so if anyone is trying to hold on to the past like the democratic party, they want to hold america back by keeping practices in this country what people are judged based on the color of their skin instead of acknowledging how far we have come. these democrats and allies in the media have to distort the reality of race relations in america. they have created what i like to call the systemically progressive country. what is that? it's the failed policies of the left. they refused to abandon it. systemic progressivism is when democrats let our kids language in schools learning to read and write. get they oppose school choice and they oppose it for one simple reason. the teachers unions. they hold minority community is back from economic growth and crippling regulation. can you imagine finally owning
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something in this country and the government telling you how to run it? making life worse? they want to take the black community back to a time where it was illegal for us to own firearms with policies like gun-control. the law may have not been made for us, but it is ours now. we don't plan on giving it back. this systemic progressivism starts at the top. here is the president of the united states earlier today. watch. >> colleges could use race not as a determining factor for admissions, but as one of the factors among many in deciding who to admit from a qualified, already qualified pool of applicants. today the court once again walked away from decades of precedent and make the dissent clear. the dissent states in todays decision, quote, roles back decades of precedent and momentous progress, and of
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quote. i agree with that statement from the dissent. the court has effectively ended affirmative action in college admissions. and i strongly, strongly disagree with the courts decision. >> joe biden says race is just one factor in a qualified pool of applicants. let's look at harvard defendant in this case. applicants with the highest test scores and gpas had different acceptance rates depending on what their race was. asian-american students had below a 13% acceptance rate. white americans were just about 15. but african-american students in the same group had over 50% acceptance rate. is that what the left is calling equality? in their eyes, equality is diversity. >> i have always believed that one of the greatest things about america is our diversity. but i believe that. if you have any doubt about this look at the united states military. the finest fighting force in the
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history of the world has been a model of diversity and has not only made our nation better, stronger, but safer. i believe the same is true for our schools. >> not the most qualified, but the most diverse. a statement from former first lady michelle obama said this. this is a quote. heartbreaks for any young person out there who is wondering what their future holds. michelle is telling young americans who have never lived through slavery or segregation that being judged on their merits will hurt their future? she is saying the quiet part out loud. it is the bigotry of low expectations. michelle obama is telling her followers that the only reason they could or would succeed is through affirmative action. she wasn't the only one. the supreme court decision today helped to reveal the real racists in this country. erika marsh, a ford and biden
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campaign staffer and volunteer for a barack obama tweeted this today in response to the decision. quote, direct attack on black people. she is not black, okay. no black person, still not black, would be able to succeed in a merit-based system. this ridiculous claims were echoed all over the media today too. >> let me pose this question to you, justice thomas. could your mother and father vote in this country? because had the 14th amendment actually had us on equal footing they would have been able to vote. and you know why that change? because people got out and made a change. so when you say you don't know what diversity is, i say you are full of it. >> we haven't been honest about where we are as a country in terms of race and the fact that as eddie talked about early on it is likely to occur that we are now going to see a very steep and significant divide in
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terms of access and now we are going to see that segregation become wider and wider. >> this is catamount to sticking a dagger in our back. let's not act like blacks are behind because there is something in our genes that made us behind. it was against the law for us to even read and write until 160 years ago. >> that he is supporting the teachers union, still. preventing our kids from reading and writing. in her dissent, justice catania browned and argued that we should focus on race more, not less, in america. ignoring race just makes it matter more. ignoring it. justice clarence thomas rejected the ruling. this is quite perfect, i might add. quote, this is what he said. almost all of life outcomes may
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be hesitantly ascribed to race even in the segregated south where i grew up, thomas wrote. individuals were not the sum of their skin color. as now not all are based on race. not all people are racist. the president of the color as united is on the board for students of fair mission and brought this case against affirmative action. he joins us now. kenny, i have seen some of your appearances and seen some of the people attack you. did this have anything to do with you not liking black students are not liking hispanic students? or did you just want a fair chance to get into school? >> on the contrary, lawrence. this has to do with me standing up for the dignity of all people. do know what affirmative action does? at the unc school of medicine the allied health sciences, they said that black students can't
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sit through lectures. that is why we need to get rid of lectures. that is how far they are willing to lowered the standards just to admit the ratio. do you think that these people at unc and harvard really care about the interests of black americans? no. they want someone on their booklet. they want a face. they don't want a person. i care about a person. and you know what people are? people are so much more than just their race. they are the sum total of all their life backgrounds, accomplishments, experiences, ambitions. that is who they should be and how they should be judged on, not their race. that's why i support this decision. >> when you talk to your fellow classmates of all different backgrounds, what do they say about this decision? >> they say the way that most americans do. 75% of americans don't support
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race preferences in colleges and universities. many americans want to help the genuinely underprivileged. but let me tell you if you want to help the genuinely underprivileged, you don't help them lowering standards for them. that is not what the army did. that is not what america has done. that is not what we should do. to matt kenny, thank you so much for joining the program tonight. >> thank you. the left is using the affirmative-action decision to tell young people they should be terrified for their future. in other words, they think these americans cannot succeed on merit. is that the right message to be sending? cornell west is a 2024 presidential candidate and a former harvard professor. he has been kind enough to join us. thank you so much for joining the program, professor. i commend you for everything you did paving the way during the civil rights movement. but i am just curious, how do you feel about the left
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sprinkling this sense of doubt to the next generation of young black americans? >> my brother, i have never doubted the tremendous capacity of black people for genius, creativity, imagination and intellect. the problem is that the history of the country has attacked to that. you know the legacy of white supremacy? you are from texas. my mother is from texas. that was american terrorism. that was lynching. during that period they were trying to convince black people they were less beautiful, less moral, less intelligent. those were lies. those were white supremacist lies. you come to the 1960s and say finally you have affirmative action for whites for all that time. how do you open things up? that is why this moment for me my dear brother as an older black brother. >> let's tackle some of that. you are right. i am from texas and still live
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in texas. so, when i talk with the barbershop and talk with the brothers and we are having conversations, you know what they tell me? how do we improve the schools for our kids? we know it's not just because they are poor. we have seen the poor black and brown kids be able to be educated. but the teachers unions won't allow that to happen. when i talk to the brothers that are trying to start a business they say it's the crushing regulation. i have to get this permit and this permit. before it's all said and done the business goes away. those are issues on the day-to-day basis. they are not anti, but they would love to protect their own communities. allow me to have the second amendment so i can protect me and my family. it seems like one side is totally against it. how do we address those issues? >> the challenges this, my brother. it is not monolithic on either side. that is to say you can believe
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in self-determination. you can believe in setting up your own business. you can sustain your church or synagogue and so forth without necessarily viewing yourself as either a democrat or republican. this is a human thing we are talking about. the problem has been historically that the structures and institutions that come from slavery in the afterlife of slavery did not open up and provide opportunities. it's only since the 1960s and 70s that that is the case. i think we can agree on that. the question is now in 2023 how do you keep track of the self-determination of anybody that has little to do with whether you are democrat, republican or so forth? but understand there are still racist practices going on in various sites in our society. once you say, what does brother robert say? we have to be indifferent to a race. you can be indifferent to
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something that has been not fully exclusively but still having significant. >> the first lady has stated and other people say that these young people can't make it as a result of affirmative action. >> i don't agree with her in that regard. but i do agree that there are forms of racist discrimination still taking place in our society. >> i condemn all of that when it happens in society. what i am saying is, brother, if we can address the things that are not in direct control right there and then. when you see education, i know we are talking about college, but how do we get these young brothers and sisters to college? why are there so many of them going to college that can't even red properly? that is a real crisis. that's the real question. we can deal with that question
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and also make sure that we curtail any kind of racist discrimination. and by race discrimination i am not talking about just black folk. i am talking across the board. the only way you come to terms with targeting black people, ask brother kenny. i think kenny is essentially a brother. asked him who edward bloom is. do think edward blum who is behind this and brought kenny and the others as asian students are fundamentally against discrimination? do think edward blum would support black folk in texas in 1945 when they were being discriminated against? >> i cannot speak to that, but i can speak for the young man that was just on the program that was right here and said i just want simple fairness. i don't hate my black brothers or brown brothers. i just want a fair shot. i think all of us should be able to agree on that point. >> i do agree with that. >> i wish i had more time with
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you, professor professor. come back soon. >> god bless you and bless your loved ones. >> we have new developments in the hv corruption scandal. he has been seen arriving with his laptop plus a new sentiment in his out of wedlock child support case. that is straight ahead. don't go anywhere.
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new developments in the scandal swirling around hunter biden, the president's corrupt son was deposed today in a defamation lawsuit filed by laptop repair shop owner john paul mac isaac. this after the whistleblower gary shapley told investigators weren't allowed to ask about the president. >> that's kind of the crux of one of the issues here is that we weren't allowed to ask questions about dad. we weren't allowed to ask about the big guy. we weren't allowed to include certain names and document requests and search warrants. so we were precluded from following that line of questioning. >> meanwhile fox news digital reports that hunter biden's x business associate tony bobulinski reached out to u.s. attorney david wise offering to testify and never heard back
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from the office. interesting. kayleigh mcenany is the host of outnumbered and is here to break it all down as she joins us now. kayleigh, it just seems like not only a two-tiered justice system, but proper investigation procedures simply weren't followed at all. >> no, there were two search warrants that the prosecutor said yes, there is probable cause. you have met the legal standard. they just toss them out the window. in one case there was a warehouse, they believed there were documents in their pertinent to the crime. they were approaching the election and said give us 30 days and then they don't conduct the search. they were stopped from doing their job. what's interesting to me is the credibility of this whistleblower shapley who seemed even keeled and very apolitical. another whistleblower comes forward totally separate track. six other people in the room who
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we hope to hear from before congress and then an e-mail. he took contemporaneous notes. we heard all about contemporaneous notes from jim call me. he told that and his boss confirmed it. crazy. >> i guess when you look at all the scandals and it seems like a drip. every day we find something new. do think the american people will get fatigued by it or do you think eventually the walls are going to actually fall on this? >> it's a great question. our fox news poll shows 55% think that the hunter biden decision that the doj was political and he was given preferential treatment. you asked the key question. is it going to resonate? i think most people when they go to the polls will be voting on the issues you were talking are talking about. inflation economy and education. it couldn't a little bit. one point i will make his kevin mccarthy said the ben ghazi hearings with hillary clinton are making a difference and people laughed him out of the room.
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the way people are laughing at the republican investigations may stick with just enough people. >> good point. i want to get your thoughts on this. president biden sat down with nicolle wallace this afternoon and the gaffes just continue. when commenting on the supreme court of affirmative action decision he confuse the constitution with the declaration of independence. watch. >> it's not as embracing of all what i think the constitution says we hold these truths to be self-evident and endowed by their creator. we never lived up or walked away from it. this court seems to say that it's not always the case. the idea that there is no right of privacy in the constitution, giving states power that we fought a war over in 1960. >> oh boy. he went on a bizarre tangent claiming that reporters told him they don't have any editors anymore. >> talking to a lot of reporters, they tell me.
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i have to be careful with what i say here. a number of reporters have indicated that there is no editors anymore. on what they do. i had one reporter tell me that i am a reporter, what i got one of my editors at the newspaper saying we don't have a brand yet. you need a major newspaper. i am not an editorial writer. we need a brand so people will watch or listen to you because of what they think you are going to say. >> and to wrap it up he drifted offset like a ghost while wallace was still speaking. >> mr. president, thank you very much. great to have you. >> thank you. >> don't go anywhere. it's an exciting day around here. we will have reaction. >> kayleigh, you were on the campaign trail. you were still press secretary. is this why they kept him in the basement the whole election?
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>> yes, yes, 100%. i would get the e-mails. 10:30 a.m. this is so bizarre. he came off as an amateur left-wing commentator who doesn't know that you sit there until the end of the interview. the questions, my gosh. he picked the softest of soft places he could go and asked about the craziest of things. i heard her say doj and my ears perked up. she made it all about trump. it just doesn't serve anyone. i loved your interview with chris cristi last night. it was substantive and you've got new information. it was great to watch. i wish he would interview with you instead of going over across the seat to nbc. >> i think you touched on something with the press. it seems like they want politicians to be their friends. politician politicians should not be your friends and you get in the role of serving the american people as far as getting information. it is one thing when you work for the guy.
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but when you don't you work for your audience. it doesn't seem like these people want to do that, kayleigh. >> for sure. when i stood at the podium it was no secret that i was having not softballs lobbed at me, but very hard balls. 100-mile per hours from jim acosta. then i watched the briefings when jen psaki got their nkjv. this is a conversation among friends. what i watched on msnbc with nicolle wallace, she was giggling throughout the interview. we are so excited to have you. completing his sentences. it just didn't serve anyone. the press serves an important role and they are not doing it now. >> i have to commend you. you have adjusted to your new role of being a host and analyst as well and given every candidate a fair shake. thank you so much for joining the program tonight. >> thanks, lawrence. today monumental affirmative action ruling is provoking quite the reaction in the media. more on the hysterical reaction
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after a quick break.
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the liberal media is not taking the affirmative action ruling very well. but you can rely on joy behar for a balanced take. watch. >> they are talking on the right about post- racial society that we are living in, you know? they elected a black president and think that racism is over. it's not. that is what bothers me about this rolling back and also what bothers me also is that what is next? gay marriage? >> raymond arroyo is a fox news analyst and joins us now. can i tell you what bothers me? >> what bothers you? >> i cannot stand white progressive women that seems like they want to be black so bad. so bad. every single item they have to be out raged.
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>> it is because of the bubble in which they occupy. and they feel. it's almost a burst reverse racism. it is what alluded to in this ruling today where we had enshrined a system of federal racial discrimination. in some parts of america whether its academia or the media there is another form of enshrined racial discrimination. and if you are not on that side, on the side where the finger is on the scale, you somehow don't count. here you have this very white successful woman trying to hustled over to the other side. stop it. you are not a minority sister. that goes for a lot of the people on the view. a kind of stepped out of line and try to pretend they are something they are not. i guess they identify as an african-american man.
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>> something like that. do you think this will be using in this next election like the endorsement issue that we use to rally democrats? >> lawrence, this is a very narrow ruling by the supreme court. john roberts doesn't do broad things. this only affects affirmative action in the admissions process at universities. it doesn't apply to workplace or sports or anything else. just that. i think that when you pull the american view people, 63% of americans of all races thought reese should not be used for college admission. your character, your courage, your academic achievement should be the criteria by which you are judged. not the color of our skin or the vowel at the end of our names. i say that as a spanish man. i think you would agree as an african-american men. >> they threw him a bone at the end. i thought it was very crafty to say i am not saying that you
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cannot write an essay about your lived experience. i think that is what it's about, the overcoming. that is the candidate i want that went through this, this and this, and yet they are here today. >> how did it shape your story? race does shape your story and where you live does have a bearing. so these are important considerations, but you can't just say what is your race? all right. look at the breakdown at harvard. 5.1% of asians. these are people that have the same achievement. 5.1% chance of an asian getting in. 22% of a hispanic getting in. 44% of an african-american getting in. these are people at the same achievement level. we cannot create a reverse racial discrimination to balance out racial discrimination. >> i am 30 now and have been on fox news since i was 20 years old. my sophomore year in college. the network always gave me a platform despite all my background and all of that.
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i don't talk the best either. i am very country. but that is what this country is about. it's part of my twang. >> as an almost to the president, i am just going to. >> almost immediately after the supreme court ruled against harvard race to base admission process, the school put out a statement that was clearly meant to coddle the campus community. quote, today is a hard day. i want you to know you are not alone harvard president wrote. it's a hard day because they cannot racially discriminate anymore. despite the ruling harvard also announced they would continue to consider race by asking applicants how it has affected their life. this comes with backlash from the biden administration which announced plans to push more diversity on campus earlier today. here is the education secretary neil cardona. >> we have a plan on how to make sure we continue to promote a
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rich diversity on our campus. this decision today is giving us the opportunity to really come together in a different way, to find ways to make sure we are promoting diversity lawfully following the supreme court decision. we remain undeterred around the efforts of diversity on our campus. >> horace cooper is a project 21 member who joins us now. horace, they will not be deterred to. >> okay, so i guess we've got to go through a little bit of history, lawrence. 1954 the supreme court ruled that it was no longer lawful for states to limit the ability of black students to attend schools. do you know what we saw in response? mostly democrats, resistance, refusal. we are going to come up with alternative ways. we are not going to accept this.
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we actually had to have the national guard escort students because there were those who said we know better. let's remember when this push for racial separation was occurring, we did not here, you and i, history says, we did not here, we don't like black people. they said, we need separation because it's good for blacks and for whites. we are hearing from harvard and we are hearing from other progressives, we have got to keep separating on the grounds of race because it's good for blacks and it's good for america. its resistance for the 21st century. shame on our president for not being like eisenhower, to stand with the court.
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instead, instructing his party and his followers to obstruct and delay. >> horace, why aren't any of these folks going on the ground to help create better candidates for admission? that is where the work starts. not at the end, but at the start of the line. >> that's absolutely correct. what you outlined is insightful. if you were sitting in my law class you would get the goldstar. but it is hard work. it's a lot easier to wait until the end and get a guaranteed number and then pat yourself on the back and go out for your coffee or gather with your friends out in aspen. it is hard work to make sure that fifth-graders can do fifth-grade math and can do fifth grade reading. but that is what we need to do. >> i cannot get with this new
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way of doing stuff. every single day i tried to work as hard as i can to do my job. but not only that and go back to my community where i grew up and find the next person that wants to do this exact thing and help them get all the tools they need to do that. that's how we do it. horace cooper, thanks so much, brother. >> thank you. one of the richest men in the world was just exposed for a very creepy job application process. we will tell you who is behind this, next.
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hi, i'm sharon, and i lost 52 pounds on golo. on other diets, i could barely lose 10-15 pounds. thanks to golo, i've lost 27% of my body weight, and it was easy. (soft music)
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so, a stunning wall street journal reporter reveals shocking details about bill gates. we have the story. >> these are about jobs, lawrence. for contents these were job applicants at gaetz ventures which is bill gates private office. the unusual and potentially illegal questions might have been asked of both men and women, but so far only women candidates have come forward
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saying that during their job interviews they were asked things like if they had extramarital affairs, what kinds of pornography they prefer or if they ever contracted a sexually transmitted disease. the people at gaetz ventures claimed they were unaware of the questions which they call unacceptable. gaetz ventures also points out that job screening was done by a private security company called concentric advisors. here is where it gets interesting. concentric advisors says it didn't directly ask questions about sexual or medical history but also acknowledges that information can be volunteered by the candidates during the follow-up interviews. concentric security was quick to say that its goal during the job screening is to find information that could be used to blackmail or compromise the potential employees and says its protocols comply with the law. but employment lawyers beg to differ with one lawyer saying the questions about sex are not automatically illegal, but that
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any questions about candidates health or psychiatric history is, quote, flat out prohibited by the federal americans with disabilities act. for now it remains unclear if any of these job candidates plan to take legal action. it is also notable that bill gates himself reportedly had a number of extramarital affairs including with microsoft employees and had several meetings with convicted sex offender jeffrey epstein. gates by the way says it was a mistake to associate with epstein. you think? >> bill gates, you nasty man. thank you. it's a psychedelic summer according to a recent wall street journal report. silicone valley tycoons like twitter elon musk are self-medicating with psychedelic drugs. report says that elon musk micro doses a drug once used as a horse tranquilizer to treat depression. according to joe biden's brother the president is quote, very open-minded about normalizing
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cycle to delicate drugs for medical treatment. watch. >> he is very open-minded. put it that way. >> i understand. brother to brother. >> the question is, is the world, the u.s. ready for this? >> this after the journal of addiction published a report claiming that magic mushroom use has tripled in the past few years among young adults. dr. marc siegel is a fox news correspondent and joins us. i am all for any type of medical use that could improve peoples mental health. is the science they are yet? >> no, lawrence. it is not there in terms of micro- dosing at all. i spoke to the deputy director of national institute of drug abuse and said very little. very little studies at all have been done on micro- dosing. we know that there is a great
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promise to psychedelics in terms of treating depression and anxiety and posttraumatic stress and substance abuse. a lot of people are hurting and they may not think that the regular treatments, antidepressants are working. they are reaching for something. i've got a lot of compassion for that. but self-medication isn't the answer. look, elon musk has a self driving car in tesla. maybe he thanks he can have a self driving drug. the president, i mean, i would caution the president about cognition. there is some evidence that psychedelics, though they increase productivity and creativity in the short-term, longer-term there is an issue with cognitive function and testing. you cannot self medicate with this stuff. i understand we use it medically. ketamine has a growing indication for severe depression. instead of shock therapy it is way more humane to consider a drug that takes you into a different realm of thinking. people should not be doing this on their own.
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it is not for self-medication. it is still being studied, lawrence. >> recently it has gained the support of former texas governor rick perry. i never thought i would see him support something like that. i am still looking at all the research. thanks for joining the program. >> we are not there yet. they great to see you. >> us a raksha shortage has caused a panic. that and more next. i am panicking. give them the nutrients they need with lipo. it's formulated with ingredients clinically shown to protect your ears from dizziness, ear ringing, and even hearing loss. never miss a moment with lipo flavonoid.
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the liberals in california continue to wage war on fun. environmental regulations have forced redondo beach to cancel the annual firework show. the goal is because of plastics and pollution that could fall into the ocean from the fireworks display. abbey is the host of fox news. tom is a fox news contributor. he joins us right now. abby, you love the environment?
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you love fireworks? >> you can have them both. i truly think this is a conversation every single year. they try to cancel the fireworks. i get it. you don't want stuff going into the water. but at the same time you can't kill the fun. it's one day out of the year. you can't take away from the american people. people were all up in arms about this. the fact of the matter not many of them are getting canceled. there will still be firework shows. no need to drive to indiana to get fireworks. it will be okay. i'm curious to know if people in la are reacting the same way people in new york did when they took away pizza ovens. all hell will break loose if that is the case. >> tom, i feel kind of hypocritical on the matter. i am all for the firework show. now that i moved back to texas, they are everywhere. you can pick up fireworks if you want to do it with the kids. but in new york i like the show. i just don't like the kids that do it for a week after the fireworks. >> it's a little much and a little noisy.
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this is un-american, canceling fireworks. i will prove it to you. it is in the national anthem. rockets red glare, bombs bursting in air. it says it in the national anthem. it clears in the morning. there is clear skies the next day. all right? then if there is stuff in the water. >> i never heard anybody put it that way. that works for me. >> that is what he was saying. he said have your fireworks in the morning. >> if there is anything in the water you get the volunteers and boy scouts to go clear out the water. scoop it out and you have a fun day as well. >> it doesn't look like they are getting any support for this. >> it's because it all started with the federal lawsuit that the judge actually struck down and said there is not enough evidence. the reason why it is happening now is because they did find some things in the water. at violated the clean water act which was not true. they still found stuff in there. who knows? we could be on cleanup duty.
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>> i will do it. >> there is a shortage of the popular hot sauce sriracha. prices jumped online more than $120 per bottle. because of the chilly supply issue. tom and abby? >> i don't eat the stuff. i wouldn't pay for it. >> what is wrong with you? >> it gives me rosacea in the face. spicy foods. >> it is like fireworks in your mouth. >> catch up is spicy to me. are you kidding me? i don't trust anything. sriracha. i don't like the extra are. >> it sounds like a valid reasoning. >> i disagree with him. i put sriracha in my catch up so i can have spicy. and then you put it on your eggs. >> no. not on eggs. fries and everything else. >> i think this is karma. you know the story of sriracha? it started with this woman in the 30s and she made it popular
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across thailand. she sold the company in the 80s. david tran came in and made sriracha his own and did not trade market. all these companies started using sriracha. >> it's one of the most important thanks i learned in college. >> 10:00 p.m. you won't be disappointed. thank you all so much for being with me and thanks for watching me. the great sean hannity is up next. welcome to hannity. we are back with our rowdy new york city studio audience. good to see everybody. thanks for coming. glad you are here. today the u.s. supreme court delivered what is a major victory for fairness in college admissions. the in the entire process six like a three decision. they struck down affirmative action ruling that the use of race as a factor in college admissions is unconstitutional

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