gearing up for an historic trip to europe meant to strengthen american leadership overseas. after a week spend touting the administration s command of the economic situation here at home. yesterday the labor department announced 209,000 jobs were added in july. the white house touted he number as a sign of bidenomics inaction. alongside consumer-focused efforts to reduce jump fees and health care costs. and democrats and their allies are mobilizing in the wake of last week s rulings from the conservative dominated supreme court. with race based affirmative action band, legislators and lawyers are taking aim at so-called legacy admissions. we talk to one group suing harvard university for what some call affirmative action for the rich. in the meantime, it was a bloody-long independence weekend, as mass shootings rocked cities from coast to coast. kansas city mayor quentin once better law enforcement, but also tighter gun restrictions. he will join us shortly. and later you a
sins away. todd: a lot of sins in new orleans, who knows about nashville. maybe tom brady will end up there. looking at sin city, looking at tennessee titans, and looking at the 49ers, we ll see what happens with that. that is carley, i m todd, we have news. carley: absolutely, good morning, happy friday, best day of the week, we have crime news starting with this. audience of anti-crime summit bursting into applause when a top police officer pushes back against a lawmaker, this clip was obtained by new york post. respectfully mr. dean read statistics about repeat oafeders, they would not be repeat offenders if police were not constantly rearrested them. todd: a shocking report from the manhattan institute, another social justice crime policy, tossing 69% of criminal cases due to new york s discovery law, no shock here, that was changed in 2019. up from 44% of cases dismissed in 2019 prior to the law being updated. carley: this whole thing, he was saying crime is