night but a short time ago he said he is going to release possibly 84 political prisoners and set up a committee to look into ending emergency rule and also to look into the deaths of the protesters there, shep. shepard: now, this in a country where they don t have any rights. no freedom of speech. no freedom of religion. they can t congregate and talk about politics and he is going to release 84 political prisoners and thinks that will do the trick. good luck, sir. you are in jordan today. what are you you expecting there after tomorrow s friday prayers? i spoke to the head of the muslim brotherhood and he said that people have gotten a taste of freedom that they are willing to die for. they are calling for a silent sitin. there are two camps here. we are going to be live starting from fox and friends tomorrow morn to see exactly how the clash goes down and how the silent protests manifests itself in a country that has seen the other arab nations
shepard: at least the yankees are winning, 5-3. while we were speaking they got a homerun. no, it is 5-3 now. who is the most recent one? jeter sac fly. all right. he is a good man. shepard: good to see you, judge. good to see you, shep. shepard: 8:00 eastern time and 7:00 at the library there in oxford, on right over on the fox business network. fox business giving you the power to prosper. it is the fastist growing business news in all of cable. if you don t get the fox business network then ask for it! we have a bigger crew than usual. great voices. shepard: they came in to watch you today, judge, and the yankees. thank you. wisconsin s union battle is still going on after a judge today blocked the controversial law that would have really taken away almost all of collective bargaining rights of the union, actually a lot of their rights period. the governor scott walker signed the bill earlier this
people without anybody doing anything and then the difficulty is again about getting a regime there, a government there that isn t going to descend into civil war. you have 11% of the country governing the other 89%. if they go and they run the army, then civil war is the name of the game and then what outsiders do, frankly, that is not an issue i would want to have to face. shepard: not an issue any of us would want to have to face. great for you to be here. thank you so much. pleasure. shepard: continuing coverage on syria now. reena ninan is here with us from amman, jordan. how are the syrian people responding to all this? shep, the syrian people are still taking to the streets. what is interesting is he didn t want to throw them any bones and he will do this on his own time. he didn t announce any new measures in his speech last
what is interesting in what amounts to the dee dear abby section of the magazine, individuals like nadal and others have been successful. the fact that they were able to pull off operations without being halted by authorities is a great success. you have awaki signaling to people to try to engage in the lone wolf style attacks. in the magazine, he is promising some type of open video conference and questions and they see this as a sign that he is feeling very bold given the conditions in yemen right now, shep. shepard: just for a point of emphasis a sort of martha stewart living for english speaking radicals. it is a lifestyle magazine and something you would almost pick up in a dentist s office. it has articles about how to live your life and dee dear aby
stumble from the lack of democracy and freedoms and they are calling for their own, shep. shepard: we ll be watching, thank you. italy has begun shipping off thousands of north african migrants. it is home to about 5,000 residents but recently migrants have flooded the town, outnumbering the locals and they didn t like it. many spent weeks without access to food and water and some don t have shelter. the prime minister there has promised to ship some of the migrants back to tunisia. reports indicate he has promised to compensate residents with money, a new golf course and to nominate them for the noble peace prize. when the financial crisis was at its worse point big banks were borrowing tens of billions, now we know trillions of dollars from the united states government but we never knew which banks or how much they got.