young as six months? have our health official stop to think what they are actually doing to our kids? but first, democrats for segregation. that's the focus of tonight's angle. public humiliation, public shaming and finally public shunning. tactics used by the hard left to advance their political agenda but sold by the media as the path toward personal growth and enlightenment. this twisted ideology is policed by members of the new purge party. critical race theory is a driving force behind all of this. we are seeing the fallout in ways both serious and absurd. what happened last night on abcs "the bachelor" is a little bit of both. the show is classic reality catnip. are rated for launch and romance. the bachelor gets his pick of dozens of gorgeous women who tried desperately to impress him. this season for the first time, mr. eligible was a black man named matt james. in an earlier episode, he ended up choosing rachel, who is white. he says he wasn't ready for marriage. he insisted he loved her and imagined raising children with her down the road. but that all changed after 2018 photo of her surfaced in an antebellum themed college party in georgia. she apologized but in 2021, this is the type of sin for which there is no real absolution. she needed to be put in today's equivalent of the stocks. >> and i knew that. i had to take a step back from you to put in that work that you outlined that you needed to do. that's something you've got to do on your own. that's why we can't be in a relationship. >> laura: and america, they want you to know that her wanting to marry this black man isn't enough to save her. she had to appear pathetic and helpless. >> you're the only reason that i decided to do the show. that includes every single part of you and that obviously includes you being a black man. i have never experienced a love like this. i don't see anyone else out there for me. >> matt, is the door slightly open? >> for? >> relationship, reconciliation? >> i don't want to be emotionally responsible for the tears. the work in the reconciliation that needs to be done is work that i can do for you. i want you to do this work because that's the best thing they could come out of it. that's something that you need to do on your own. speak to the humiliation of the work she had to do continues. >> i saint god for putting you in my life to begin with i will always be thankful for everything that we shared in the time that we had together. >> laura: that worked out well. love on the rocks, reputations destroyed, careers made. again, these are the spoils of the belief that america is systemically racist. it drives people apart and increases alienation and suspicion among people who would normally get along just fine. if you believe that individual experience, background, talent, character, family upbringing are all secondary to skin color and that america is at her core systemically racist, than most of society including whom you date is going to have to be refashioned to accommodate that. if the american founding is corrupt, the entire system has to come down and be radically restructured. always and forever it has to be changed which of course just as i'm driving us all apart. columbia university considers certain types of separation acceptable. after its main graduation, its holding ceremonies for native, asian, latin next and black students at the end of april. another graduation is for first-generation and/or low income communities. the school hosts a lavender ceremony for lgbtqia plus communities. they defend the celebrations is important, intimate and welcoming spaces. columbia isn't the only university to offer segregated graduations. more than 75 schools across the nation offer optional segregated ceremonies including harvard, california, san diego, irvine, arizona state, stanford, berkeley, ucla and yale. think about it. these are among the most prestigious institutions of higher learning on the face of the planet but they are still selling racial grievances to students enrolled there. squad member ayanna pressley spoke at harvard's black graduation a few years ago. >> it really gets me when pundits and analysts talk about how identity politics are ruining our nation. identity isn't ruining our country. white supremacy and hate are ruining our country. i am reclaiming my time. i am reclaiming our time! our truth. >> laura: not to be outdone by harvard, the princeton theological seminary has mandatory segregated antiracist training sessions for students and faculty. listen closely. >> the work of antiracism is to identify, describe, dismantle. two pandemics demand we reimagine our society and indeed our seminary. >> we recognize antiracism is a critical component of christian discipleship. >> is not a program. it's being embedded as a way of life. >> laura: critical race theory meets the great recent courtesy of the pandemic. it's a trifecta. at the university of kentucky, students hoping to be resident assistants enter something called a white accountability space. the common racist attitudes they are taught to avoid include believing they have earned what they have rather than acknowledging white privilege. or asking people of color to repeat what they said. last august, nyu students were demanding lack only student housing. a group called black violence told fox news it's not about exclusion rather creating a space where black students can feel included. apparently north carolina's elon university set up oh white caucus that meets on zoom to talk about how racist america is in their own guilt and complicity in the bigotry. what's obvious at this point is this old-fashioned notion of fighting for equal opportunity, that's long gone. they want institutionalized segregation. it so far gone that the woke jokes have essentially purged moderates from the democrat party. charles of "the new york times" demand democrats atone for bill clinton. clinton's record perfectly with respective black and brown americans and the poor was marked by catastrophic miscalculations. well, perhaps mr. blow forgets democrats were wiped out in 1994 because they overreached and bill clinton misread his mandate. the crime bill and welfare reform, they're not perfect but helped them study the course and with the product of compromise with the new house majority. unlike today, the party at that time didn't self segregate on every issue. my question is will bill clinton know be accused of white privilege next? in those days the concept of critical race theory was really just confined to college campuses but now it's embraced by corporations, churches, obviously the entertainment industry. you watched the grammy awards. or you didn't. and government at all levels. actual racism is horrific. the first republican president i ever voted for understood this. back then, a republican president could actually be invited to speak at the naacp. >> to those individuals who persist in such hateful behavior, you are the ones who are out of step with our society. you are the ones who willfully violate the meaning of the dream that is america. in this country, it will not stand for your conduct. >> laura: that's what he had to say about racial bigots back in 1981. when i was growing up, liberals accuse conservatives routinely of being judgmental and uncaring. but now it's all reversed. it's the liberals who don't believe in free expression or forgiveness for that matter. they literally segregate people based on skin color in order to train them, trying them to think correctly. this is perverse. it's intolerant and it's its own kind of racism. in their brave new world, you have a right to feel oppressed and generously rewarded even if you're already rich and married to royalty. as long as you're the right race. but you have no right to utter one word out of line if you're sharon osborne. in that case, you have to be destroyed. just like that sad woman from "the bachelor." the left will continue to do this. to divide and demonize until it ends up costing them politically. but until then, we are going to continue to work toward developing a multiracial, multiethnic movement that believes in an agenda of freedom and economic nationalism. where no one's future should be restricted due to race or ethnic background, and that's "the angle." joining me now, carol swain, former professor at vanderbilt and princeton universities and author of "be the people." also jeremy hunt, west point grad an army veteran. carol, let's start with you. did you ever think given everything you seen in your lifetime that in the year 2021 we would have activities on campus segregated by race, including at ivy league schools and your old place of work, princeton university? >> they've been having segregated activities for minority students for a number of years. i never thought i would see a time when it would be so widely accepted that we would reject the integration model and the national motto e pluribus unum come out of many, one, that put a shock into me. the segregation that we see pushed the democrats and by the left's trickle leftists, and violates the entire civil rights vision as well as civil rights laws and in some cases the equal protection clause of the constitution. there are lawsuits waiting to happen. >> laura: jeremy, there was a very disturbing moment over the last few weeks for so many americans i think who believed our military -- our military leaders, they're not political. they are here to serve the country. leading a fighting force. but now we have seen that that's changing. the u.s. army sent out a tweet saying that extremism can tear apart cohesive teams. colonel timothy holman is the army's chief diversity officer and his aim is clear: do what he can to help open up a path for future army leaders and make the force as diverse as the nation it defense. i think a diverse military something we have, thank goodness. but a chief diversity officer? >> let me start by saying that the army has a long history of leading the way on issues of race. in 1948 while before the rest of the country, the army was the first to desegregate, the armed forces as a whole, desegregated. it's always been forward on that. i left my time in service and i can tell you the spirit as one team, one fight. you might be wondering why is the biden administration suddenly panicking about culture in the military? you have to wonder, do you think that may be the word diversity is a code word to usher in progressive policies? it kind of legitimizes whatever these washington bureaucrats want to enact in institutions, and the military is no different. we have to be aware of that and see with actually happening behind the curtain. >> laura: chief diversity officer in the military and carol, princeton university -- i'm not trying to pick on princeton. it's happening at corporations. obviously jeremy just said we see it now affecting the military. but at this theological seminary, there is mandatory and segregated training sessions. this really disturbing moment. watch. >> the white only space. >> it creates a space where we can grapple with our whiteness and how we been socialized in a way that does not harm our colleagues. >> this space open to people who identify as black, indigenous, or as a person of color. as people of color, we are not a monolith. we come with a wide range of experiences. >> laura: i like her last comment. we are not a monolith. that's pretty good. white spaces and bipoc spaces? >> theological seminary trained people for the ministry in the christian church should be leading the way on race. the very idea that they would turn to critical race theory and secular humanism which is the rejection of god, it's absurd. critical race theory and the agenda of diversity, equity and inclusion, it's also infected churches. many pastors have no idea what they're dealing with because they get blown away by the code words of social justice. >> laura: jeremy, i want to say what don lamented cnn said about americans on "the view" yesterday. >> we thought that we were in a post-racial era and we want. we were living a lie and donald trump i hate to say, he showed us the truth and he showed us who are neighbors, many of our neighbors are. >> laura: jeremy, if america is systemically racist, the whole thing has to come down or be radically altered, including the military. >> yeah, i mean, what we are seeing unfortunately today is yet another page out of jim crow's playbook. what we are seeing now is what's new injustice is a new segregation that you talked about a new racism and prejudice today, that somehow that can atone for the past. that is a lie. while it's important to acknowledge the past, you cannot atone for it by creating new inequalities today. unfortunately every civilization that ever bought that lie, it has ultimately destroyed them. we can't allow that hearing this country. we have to stand for truth. it's like -- i'll be talking to my daughter. two wrongs don't make a right. only light can drive out darkness. that's the important message we have to keep campaigning for the next generation. >> laura: fantastic conversation. carol and jeremy, thank you so much. so it turns out residents of a small texas town were not told that illegal immigrant teens were about to be dumped in their own backyard. texas lieutenant governor dan patrick is here on that. could the george floyd judge in that horrible of course murder case decide to conceal potentially critical evidence? were going to explain moments our retirement plan with voya, keeps us moving forward. hey, kevin! hey, guys! they have customized solutions to help our family's special needs... giving us confidence in our future... ...and in kevin's. voya. well planned. well invested. well protected. >> it's not just the message. it's also providing the legal and safe avenue for them to come, and we are rebuilding that with tremendous speed. this is what we do. we know how to secure the border. >> we are doing everything we can to make sure we have facilities that are appropriate for children so that they can be processed quickly and moved to sponsored families, foster homes. >> laura: by now it's obvious what the biden administration's real goals are this with this migrant surge. i think they knew exactly what they were doing when they ripped up trump's policies then they announced they would no longer be expelling illegal alien minors. they have created a massive crisis at our seven border. last week the ap warned of growing reports of parents sending their children across the border alone while they remain in mexico or central america. what does that mean? they are going to be invited to come in by the biden administration. you've got to reunite the family. 117,000 migrant kids excited to arrive so democrats are hoping that the delusion is going to create enough political pressure to force the g.o.p. to choose between the status quo or amnesty. put plainly: our country is at the tail end of a pandemic. we can have thousands of migrant children as desperate as their situation is, sent to a convention center while millions of our own kids still aren't even in school five days a week. joining us as texas lieutenant governor dan patrick. dan, is there anything texas can do to push back on these disastrous decisions by the biden administration? >> well, let me tell you the lay of the land. i'll tell you where we are position. first of all, they are opening up a facility in midland, texas. they didn't talk, to my knowledge, my report is they didn't talk to any local official. we have 250 yesterday and 250 stay. up to 1,000 kids in this facility. no one knew they were coming and no one knows who they are and no one knows how long they're going to be there, where they're going. laura, to my understanding, there is red cross and volunteers. that's it. no staff to handle it. the question in the community, who keeps these kids inside? who are these kids? do we want them roaming in our neighborhoods? 3,000 are going to dallas. they may be opening another camp in san antonio. laura, you just played a clip where they said this is the safe travel for these people, humane. let me tell you what. msnbc, cnn, biden administration and the president himself, they are doing something i think that's just as bad as what cuomo did when he sent people of covid to nursing homes. we are sending -- they are sending children into this country having no idea where they're going to end up. some of these children are going to end up in sex trafficking. when they take these kids and send them to uncle bob in new jersey or wherever they may be, they don't have the staff to watch them retract them. they don't know where they're going. we have children being brought over with the drug cartels in charge. not the families. the president of the united states is sending children from mexico and central america into sex trafficking operations in this country. we don't know how many but we know it's happening. we arrested 9,000 people on the border the first week of february. 22,000 and texas. the numbers are out of control. it's designed disaster. the president of the united states should be ashamed of himself to put children in harm's way and that's what happened. this is not humane, laura. this is putting not only america had wrist with these children at risk. to be due to yeah, well, as you mentioned the sinister aspect os bush. complete disregard not only for the kids put the well-being of local communities. the people in midland, totally blindsided. the mayor they are, patrick payton, spoke out. >> i don't think i'm exaggerating. by the thousands just walking across. and doing nothing. it's the strangest most backward, disrespecting thing. >> laura: you said it, outrages doesn't begin to describe it. crisis doesn't even begin to describe it. this is a concerted decision. they have made a decision, period. >> it's are designed disaster, a designed disaster, laura. if we are apprehending roughly 800,000 may be on the board of this year in texas alone and we get one out of every three, that's another 2.5 million getting in. they are letting the ones they apprehend, except a small amount of criminals, they're letting the rest of the country. two or 3 million, times three more years before the next presidential election where they can register them to vote. they are trying to take over the country on the backs of these poor kids. in our communities, what we do with these kids? if you take a 15-year-old kid from central america, to her three years behind the education system at a minimum. you can't put a 15-year-old in the fourth grade so you put a menace grade level. his self-esteem collapses bees he can't keep up. he barely speaks a language, three gates behind so he goes into the community and what does he do? maybe if he's a great kid and i'm assuming most of these kids are great, they try to work but the gangs recruit them. we are expanding the ms-13 gangs. this president is absolutely destroying this country, destroying their lives, destroying our communities no matter what state you live in, they are coming to a community near you. >> laura: yeah, well, they are being sent all across the country. all across the country. dan, thank you. we turn to the derek chauvin case which is already off the rails thanks to the city of minneapolis giving george floyd's family $27 million in a settlement in the middle of the selection of the jury. judge peter cahill is finally considering delaying or moving the trial to a different city due to this payout. in the message it sends. on top of that, the judge now says he will personally interview the seven jurors seated to see if they can still fairly adjudicate the case. here to break it all down is john hannah rocker, minnesota lawyer and president at the center for the american experiment. judge cahill denied the defense request for full sequestration of the jury during the trial. he won't allow jurors to hear about the 2019 arrest of floyd for drugs. that seems, both seem problematic. >> what you are talking about is the fact that about exactly a year before this confrontation last may in which george floyd died, almost exactly the same thing happened. it's amazing. he got arrested. he's in the back seat of the squad car ingesting drugs in the squad car. he is super excited. he is sobbing. he is emotional. he is so overwrought that a paramedic says you've got to settle down or you're going to have a stroke or a heart attack. the defense wants to get that story in front of the jury because they think it bolsters their defense that the police officers didn't kill george floyd at all but rather he died of natural causes. the principal being an overdose of fentanyl which we know he had taken. laura, you can't make this stuff up. the city of minneapolis smack in the middle of jury selection, page one above the fold, press conference at city hall, they are paying george floyd's family $27 million to settle a wrongful death case. if that doesn't poison the jury pool, i don't know what will. >> laura: alan dershowitz out a couple weeks ago on the show that -- i mean, the fact that there wasn't a change of venue already was a joke. i don't know. look, everyone should get a fair trial. there should be a fair trial here but one attorney described the jury selection process this way. >> you need at least two black jurors to have a likelihood of success. the advantage you have with black jurors in a case like this is you don't have to orient their point of view. they already have a visceral response to seeing that video and it make some fear for their own personal safety if the right outcome is not achieved in the trial. >> laura: the quote "right outcome," who we've already determined that before a single witness has been heard. >> i live in minnesota, as you know and everybody knows what the right outcome is. our governor has already declared derek chauvin to be a murderer. it's reported in the newspapers here several times every day that these police officers killed george floyd. businesses in downtown minneapolis have been told to get there important papers off site for fear they might be burned down if the wrong verdict comes through. everybody knows that what people want this jury to do is to convict derek chauvin. i don't think the facts are going to warrant that but that is what people are expected to happen. >> laura: that's why they are adding late charges. i think they're worried, they're getting worried about this case for a whole bunch of reasons. john, invaluable, thank you so much. why has cdc director rochelle walensky escaped criticism for harmful and incorrect guidance? is it really a good idea to start vaccine trials and kids as young as six months? we weigh in. i've been involved in communications in the media for 45 years. i've been taking prevagen on a regular basis for at least eight years. for me, the greatest benefit over the years has been that prevagen seems to help me recall things and also think more clearly. and i enthusiastically recommend prevagen. it has helped me an awful lot. prevagen. healthier brain. better life. >> laura: when it comes to advancing the principles of pseudoscience, biden's cdc director rachel wilensky wins all the top awards. >> one of the things that's really been emphasized in the school reopening is how unsafe some of our school ventilation systems are. that's a problem not just for sars-cov-2 but for other respiratory viruses, for children with asthma, exposure to mold. i think there's a lot of work that we need to do. >> laura: the mold pandemic is upon us. any excuse to keep schools close does good enough for her. if that's not all, despite covid waning for weeks, earlier this month walensky with fearmongering over, wait for it, the variants. >> i remain deeply concerned about the potential shift in the trajectory of the pandemic. the latest cdc data continues to suggest that recent declines in cases have leveled off. these variants are a real threat to our people. >> laura: since she predicted that leveling off, cases have come down another 18%. hospitalizations, deaths also falling 27%, 32% respectively. don't worry. it gets worse. last friday her cdc cronies issued guidance that 2-year-olds should be masked. >> this up dated guidance is intended for all child care providers. emphasizes the importance of mask wearing for all children older than 2 years old. >> laura: she's also reading. as if child abuse wasn't enough, the drug company moderna testing in kids at six months. joining us now, phil kerpen. alex berenson, reported of "unreported truths of covid-19." alex. is it necessary to test a brand-new vaccine, as you called it, and experiment drug, on babies for a virus that poses almost no risk to them? >> look, there's a concept in medicine called clinical equipoise. if you have a question that needs to be answered, you should test it in a clinical trial before you introduce it willy-nilly. the question that you're asking is a really good one which is do we even get to clinical equipoise here given how weak the evidence that sars-cov-2 is dangerous to small children? so if moderna is going to do this, shouldn't they have done more preclinical work to demonstrate that the vaccine is not going to be dangerous to little kids before even testing it in them? i think the answer that question is yes and we know they did very, very little preclinical work before the big trial. they did such poor work that european regulators criticize them for their preclinical work. i don't know if they did better work in the last couple months. we know there's not an emergency in terms of children getting sick and dying from sars-cov-2. we know it's very, very rare. so i think we should know what the evidence of that -- with the evidence is moving forward. >> laura: i don't know what you're saying. you're saying that it's unclear whether it's dangerous to children? of course some children have died but we know the percentages. the percentages are incredibly low. we'll get back to this. very low. the question is is it more dangerous to give a vaccine to a baby than it is for a baby to get covid or be exposed to covert? >> we are in agreement. what i am saying is that they should be forced to show that the vaccine is not going to be very dangerous to children before they can even put it into a clinical trial. >> laura: i get it. i get it. okay. at cnn, one doctor was promoting this idea. >> we do need a vaccine for children. i think if we're going to get to 80% of the population, children are going to need to be vaccinated. children can die from this disease. we see this multisystem inflammatory disease which can be pretty upsetting and devastating. there are many reasons to vaccinate children. >> laura: phil, your reaction. >> it's nonsense. this respiratory disease season we've got last time i checked 99 total pediatric covid deaths and that's using the very broad definition of any death from any cause within however many days in a positive test. it's a fraction of what we have in a normal flu season with influenza and that's even with the flu vaccine and so as we've been told repeatedly, it's a far less dangerous virus for children than influenza even though we have a vaccine already for influenza. my preference in terms of doing a vaccine trial and children will be to wait until we have full approval for adults, not just move forward with a new trial when we are still in this emergency use authorization. let's get full approval, get a couple of years of data before we do anything with children. if they do get the virus, they're going to be better in a few days. multi-inflammatory syndrome is essentially code for kawasaki if you also tested positive at some point for sars-cov-2. it's not clear at all that there's any clinical difference or difference in outcomes from kawasaki. >> laura: msnbc is very, very scared about spring break. >> you have people flocking down here, flooding the streets. it's almost a level of criminality. >> there's a lot of people on the beach without masks on congregating. we have kind of been distancing ourselves from that because it makes us feel uncomfortable. >> the idea of that many people not wearing masks all over the streets is frankly terrifying. >> laura: alex, is it terrifying? >> it's terrifying to me that we are hearing this a year after this started. we know that this disease doesn't spread very widely outdoors. we know that kids, teenagers and young adults are in very, very low risk from this. why are we subjecting ourselves to this panic porn for a second straight spring break? can't we let them go and have a good time. if they get covid they are likely to not even know it. >> laura: no fun allowed at all. >> i want to congratulate our cdc director, to get back to your original question. she actually made me miss "the mask is better than the vaccine" guy. i thought that was impossible to do. she has reached the level of shocking, astonishing incompetence and/or corruption throwing all the science out to do the bidding of the teachers unions. very well done for her. i miss the "mask is better than a vaccine guy. >> laura: now she has me checking my vents for mold. thank you so much. a singular fake washington post story about trump on a phone call with a georgia official. it is stunning. head of the georgia republican party is here next. don't go away. out here, you're more than just a landowner. you're a gardener. a landscaper. a hunter. because you didn't settle for ordinary. same goes for your equipment. versatile, powerful, durable kubota equipment. more goes into it. so you get more out of it. now, simparica trio simplifies protection. ticks and fleas? see ya! heartworm disease? no way! simparica trio is the first chewable that delivers all this protection. and simparica trio is demonstrated safe for puppies. it's simple: go with simparica trio. this drug class has been associated with neurologic adverse reactions, including seizures; use with caution in dogs with a history of these disorders. protect him with all your heart. simparica trio. >> laura: remember when "the washington post" drop this report? this was back in january. president trump urged georgia's g.o.p. head. the post had to admit none of what i just read is true. trump urged the investigator to scrutinize ballots in full county georgia asserting she would find would find dishonesty. that was wrong why were others able to corroborate so quickly? >> first reported by "the washington post" and confirmed by jason morris that the president called one of these investigators in the state of georgia investigating election fraud and urged him to "find the fraud." >> nbc news confirmed reporting trump made another call to georgia election officials pressuring one to "find the frog." >> laura: jeremy diamond in the rough. we are the on-air apologies from these guys? too much later those networks have only offered a pathetic editor's note. this lie had ramifications far worse than a malicious narrative. it became a key point of the democrats impeachment of former president trump. >> on december 23rd, trump called the chief investigator for the georgia bureau of investigations who was conducting an audit. trump urged him to find the fraud and claimed the official would be a national hero if he did. >> laura: a story this defamatory, one that found its way to the democrats impeachment article against a sitting president, shouldn't the american people expect more than a scanned editor's note? joining me now is david shafer, georgia republican party chair. there is an incredible back story to how this story came to be. explain it for our viewers. >> apparently the investigator made a tape recording of this telephone call and they made a decision in the secretary of state's office to mischaracterize the contents of the call and then attempted to destroy the recording. it was discovered i guess a week ago in the trash folder of the investigators laptop during an open records search. ultimately revealed. >> laura: i have a question. i have never understood what's gone on in georgia. what's wrong with the georgia secretary of state? is there something wrong with him? he doesn't seem to be able to report things like this in a timely fashion. apparently he knew what the truth was about this or the investigator did, correct? >> there's a broader issue. the incident when joe biden pulled ahead in the poll counting, they treated every violation like it was a bigfoot sighting and none of the complaints have been seriously investigated. none of the evidence has been objectively examined. i think the secretary of state has failed on many levels. the secretary of state has acknowledged that vote fraud is endemic in georgia. he says it occurs in every election but he refused to quantify. that's what frustrated the president. the president was behind 11,700 votes in the final count and the secretary of state acknowledged that there was voter fraud but refused to quantify it in a way to let us know whether or not. >> laura: the consent decree entered into. we don't need to get into the weeds. complete disaster. your fellow georgian stacey abrams is attacking georgia g.o.p. bills that will require voting i.d. and limit absentee ballots. she said on cnn the following. watch. >> first of all i do absolutely agree that it's racist. it's a redux of jim crow. in a suit and tie. we know that the only thing that precipitated these changes, it's not that there was a question of security. the only connection that we can find is that more people of color voted. >> laura: your response. >> it's ridiculous. there is nothing racist about acquiring people to show voter identification. it's surprising to me that stacey would practice the racism of low expectations, suggesting somehow the people of color are not capable of obtaining photo identification. >> laura: thank you so much. coming up, a clip, a new one from biden's first one-on-one sit down with abc just released. we have it.ou the last bite next. ♪ and so are lost for good ♪ ♪ and some of them are pretty flawed ♪ ♪ and some of them are slightly odd ♪ ♪ but many are small businesses that simply lack the tool ♪ ♪ to find excited people who will stop and say 'that's cool'♪ ♪ and these two, they like this idea ♪ ♪ and those three like that one.♪ ♪ and that's 'cause personalized ads ♪ ♪ find good ideas for everyone ♪ this isn't just freight. these aren't just shipments. they're promises. big promises. small promises. cuddly shaped promises. each with a time and a place they've been promised to be. and the people of old dominion never turn away a promise. or over promise. or make an empty promise. we keep them. a promise is everything to old dominion, because it means everything to you. [crunch] >> laura: joe biden's first solo sit down to air tomorrow and we have a preview. he granted it to all around friend, the democrats love him, george stephanopoulos. joe doesn't need to face tough questions to make things hard on himself. >> the idea that joe biden said come because i heard the other day that they are coming because -- i'm a nice guy enable -- here's the deal. they're not. >> don't you have to say quite clearly don't come. >> yes i can say quite clearly don't come. we are in the process of getting set up. >> laura: getting set up? translation we are working toward accommodating all of you migrants. he says they're going to have enough beds soon. shannon bream and the "fox news @ night" team take it from here. >> shannon: laura we are picking up right where you left off. great to see you. here's where we start. the numbers are staggering. as of sunday, 565 unaccompanied children reportedly crossing the border on average per day. up from three to 13 last month. 4200 children in custody.