emily: texas is who brought this lawsuit along with missouri. your point, they are doing every thing they can legally but they are being absolutely flooded so what other choices do they have? we know that states are sending resources. everything but the commander in chief. kayleigh: exactly right. miranda, it s interesting. biden cares so much about asylum-seekers and illegal immigrants, he said. with the remain in mexico policy data isn t recognized that only 14% of credible fear claims are granted. there was a huge influx of asylum claims into the system. those with legitimate asylum claims were not being processed. they are hurting the very people they want to help by not following the trump arrow policies. why are they doing this? miranda: this is what always happens when you have these ideologues from the left you want open borders for their own purposes. the suite of border protection measures that the trump administration put in place were
before i would start putatively attacking outward and say what can we do to get citizens to feel comfortable and trust us with the vaccine? maybe not have such a corrupt governor. maybe have a mirror that isn t there is one thing and does another. maybe not have a long list of hypocrisy. maybe that s the action that should be taken. kayleigh: mayor de blasio, he said it s time to shake people, the voluntary phase is over. no, sir. your personal choice in this country. by the way, sorry, border ideas and how racist and jim crow but a vaccine passport is just fine? don t believe these facts. emily: more outnumbered and just a moment.
spreading it. so, all the data isn t in yet, but the data so far suggests these vaccines really do reduce transmission. all right, dr. ashish jha back with us again tonight. thank you, doctor. we do move on with the other news this evening and now to the passing of conservative radio host rush limbaugh, losing his battle with lung cancer. he launched an industry of voices on radio and cable. a champion to conservatives, but drawing outrage over many years over his comments on women, race and politics. here s our chief washington correspondent jonathan karl tonight. here we are in new york city, it s the rush limbaugh radio program. reporter: as wildly successful and influential as he was divisive and controversial, rush limbaugh was the godfather of the offend anyone, apologize to no one politics that got donald trump elected president. limbaugh had been suffering from lung cancer. his wife announced his death at the start of his radio show today. i, like you, very much wish
something that is particular to the trump administration. there isn t an administration in history that hasn t wanted lower rates to continue of course. but the president will see it that way? we don t know. he might say he got his way but fed is looking at growth and inflation and if they see growth and inflation falter for whatever reason, be that tariffs or a slow down in the global economy, i do think they ll take action but they have been clear they re digging in their heels, they want to make sure the data isn t a one-off decline. so this morning s employment report was not enough to force the fed s hand. they ll open the conversation to it but it is unlikely they act in june. maybe september, more likely december. what do you think? same question. i think the fed is in a very difficult position right now. because they re congressional mandate and legislative mandate is maximum employment and stable prices. it is not to bother with trade policy. it is not to bother with
think about snapchat. in a period of three or four years, it went from a new start up to being the primary way in which millennials communicated with each other. technology is going to keep doing that. first, facebook is trying to solve this problem, get ahead of it by saying, we will allow users to define what personal information other people can t have access to. because it s built into their business model, there will be a tendency to bend that process towards let more people have more access to more data. bret: this was supposed to happen the first time and then it was the friends and the friends of friends and i kept on going. every facebook user already has their data scrapped already. that data isn t coming back. bret: does regulation happen? i think facebook actually now knows that it s coming. they are trying to shape it, get ahead of it. i think it s coming in one shape or form. the other thing we haven t talked about his fines. there could be really big fines, milli