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>> the school district and teachers union middle and high schoolers will show up two days a week to complete classes online. >> what a complete fraud. the teachers union should be ashamed of themselves. ♪ ♪ ♪ ainsley: that's a beautiful shot of our capitol and i happened to be in chicago because k through 8 grade all back in school. last week k through 5 went back. the second week of this and the high schoolers are not back in school yet. we have a panel of business owners, some of them have lost their businesses, some are struggling to pay employees and we have a high schooler who plays sports and just want to be back in school. hey, bipartisan, hey, steve. >> it's going to be exciting because major cities have been slow to open up and the kids have been frustrated and some of them just want to save their senior year. i'm glad that you're up close and personal and i think it's great because we will be talking about getting up and going in california, not so much as well as up and going in texas, a lot better. steve: well, today the 11th day of march 2021, it was one year ago today that the world health organization declared coronavirus a global pandemic and it was one year ago today that president trump declared a national emergency. half a million people have died in this country and we told you over the last year now, we wouldn't be getting back to whatever normal would be until people started getting the shots and according to the cdc, 62 million americans have gotten their first shot and 32 million americans are fully vaccinated which means they are two weeks past their final shot. brian: meanwhile, ainsley, tell me what's going on in your room. let's meet some people. >> okay, we have a panel of business owners and you heard me say some of them had to close some restaurants or had to fire some people but this handsome young man on the front row sitting and this is willy the third. you're a sophomore? >> yes, i'm a sophomore. we've been stuck in the house for a year and a lot of people that i know that -- that whose parents are scared of covid-19 and they don't get to go outside a lot and it's a mental -- it's a mental phase that a lot of people want to -- >> ainsley: you said you never thought that you would say this but you miss going back to class. what about sports, how is it affecting your sports? >> sports, i haven't been able to play sports. i recently started playing baseball a few days ago. ainsley: a few days ago. what did it feel to get back out on the feel? >> i'm feeling very out of shape. [laughter] ainsley: he plays second base. brian, i know that you would love talking to him or hearing conversations about sports. brian is one of my anchors and he's been pushing for sports to come back and he's a big soccer player and soccer coach and steve spread the same message, they both want schools back in session, we worry about our kids. we will be chatting with this good-looking group the whole morning. steve: that's great. ainsley, speaking of children turning out in the southern border with griff jenkins join a group of migrants crossing into the yesterday, griff in mcallen of the journey that biden officials to house migrants. you talked to migrants heading our way and drone video that nobody has ever seen before, amazing. griff: that's right, steve, ainsley, brian, good morning. just real quick. at this very moment in mcallen. we will show you a transport bus. it's the fourth one eve seen since we got here a half an hour ago. this is what is removing the illegal crossers that have been taken into custody. they're coming through this gate right now and you'll be able to see even though it's dark here, that bus holding just 1 of scores of dozens of people coming out here in mcallen. now, let's talk about what we learned yesterday at fox news that they're going to need more space for the unaccompanied minors, of course, they already opened the carrizos springs facility now. so clearly that is a big problem here specifically in the rio grande valley we are told they are encountering 250 unaccompanied children. let's look at the february numbers we got from cbp yesterday. 100,441, 21% increase from january. 97% up from this time last year for context in 2019 when it was, quote, a crisis. in february they only had 66,000. i did spend 4 hours out here. we encountered 4 large groups. the largest of 75. upwards of 200 illegal crossers. i was with chris cabrera, border patrol agent in rgv sector, part of border patrol union and he took us out to show us what was going on. here is a little bit of what he had to say, listen. >> policy or directive put in place to curve the flow or, you know, there's a complete breakdown in the system but something needs to be dope because we are sinking over here. griff: i asked him, they are having debate in washington, is it a crisis, well, i'm not sure, is it a crisis, griff? he believes it was preventible and predictable. something should have been done about it. rgv is ground zero for the highest number of crossers and they are sinking according to cabrera. the capacity holding apparently is over 300% cbp officials holding a conference call with local reporters reporting that this morning here from mcallen. we will continue to show you a little bit of the wall behind us too when we get light, steve, because there's parts here where there's a whole where my greats just walk right through. brian: people in washington having trouble with this question. is it a crisis, you've been to the border on and off for 10, 15 years, is this a crisis? griff: well, it was a crisis in 2019 and these numbers are higher. it was a crisis in 2014 when then vice president was in charge but now with numbers that are larger than both of these crisis, it's for them to answer. brian: i think you just did but i appreciate you couching it and letting people put the puzzle together at home. meanwhile 7 minutes after the hour. let's expand on this conversation and talk about, okay, let's move democrats and republicans out of this. what does it look like from the mexican perspective. let's ask the president who got along so well with president trump even despite his socialist background that many predicted that they be and wasn't the case, they worked in the remain in mexico policy, they put mexican marines at the border, they began to solve this problem in substantial ways. this is what he told reuters. they see him as a migrant president, joe biden, so many feel they are going to reach the united states. the mexican officials that reuters report, another mexican official says with migration developments he spoke on condition and now exhibiting unprecedented levels of sophistication, migrants have become a commodity, get this. if you want to get to the u.s. border and secure passage, 3,250,000. asians pay double that. and migrants from outside the region. caribbean, asia, africa and the middle east. if that's not a crisis, i don't know what is, ainsley. steve: well, the mexican government is worried that joe biden is encouraging illegal immigration and making the drug cartels richer because they are using their drug routes to smuggle in people and here is what -- we talked a little bit about this yesterday. they are starting to see the plastic wrist bans, who paid to get and certain color of wrist ban and it's a rooter story, we won't kidnap you and if you don't have certain color, we won't kill you. apparently the drug cartels because these migrants are such a cash cow, they are keeping the migrants up to date on immigration rules so that, okay, when you get over to the border patrol, you need to say this and they're using technology to fort authorities. they are disguising operations as smuggling agencies. yesterday the ambassador for the white house, coordinator for the southern border, roberta johnson was at the white house and our correspondent peter doocy asked her is it a coincidence that the surge started after joe biden stopped president trump's immigration policy and she said this. >> surges tend to respond to hope. i don't know whether i would call that a coincidence but i certainly think that the idea that a more humane policy would be in place may have driven people to make that decision. >> if the change in the administration's hope from your perspective, is this surge good? >> i don't think that's what i just said. i think it's a reflection of how migrants feel at a particular time. i think what we are doing is making sure that we respond to that hope for people who need protection. we respond to that hope in a way that their cases can be adjudicated more quickly. but i don't think anybody would say that coming to the united states in an irregular fashion is a good thing. brian: ainsley. ainsley: senator josh hawley weighed in on this and he brings up a good point that's my biggest concern are the children. it breaks my heart. we saw the images of moms carrying their babies and those of us that are parents. i mean, i couldn't imagine being so desperate to leave a country because i wanted a better life for my child, but some of these kids are coming unaccompanied and imagine having to do that to your child and then yesterday to your point, steve, reuters had the image of a child getting a wristband and the color i believe was red, but what does that mean, does that mean we can't kill the child because they paid more money to have the child go to the u.s.? and josh hawley, he made this point, it's exploiting children. listen to this. >> there's been a big change from this year and last year and the change is joe biden and what we are seeing this administration's policies are acting as a magnet and they are creating a full-blown humanitarian crisis at the border. trafficking is through the roof. it is through the roof. the exploitation of children and this administration is doing nothing. they are looking the other way. the least he can do is actually send his administration chiefs to capitol hill and make them answer questions. what are they going to do about this crisis? just looking the other way is not a policy. ainsley: yeah, so the reuters story was talking about the smugglers that are putting the wristbands onto determine how much the kids paid, their parents paid to get them across the border and mexican president piggybacked on what he said. this incentivizes illegal immigration and organized crime. brian: nothing humanitarian of indicating to people and lacing up your shoes and going up a thousand miles through treacherous land across the border not legally but illegally and for them to skirt the issue, duck questions. the president and vice president is not acceptable in this country. you have to stand up for policies or try to explain them. he has a public address tonight. he has a few weeks. he will do a press conference where he will get a bunch of soft-ball questions. very frustrating. ainsley: brian, i wish they would speed up the immigration process and let them do it the right way. brian: but they're not eligible. ainsley: it took 5 years. if they would speed up the process and we would know who these individuals are and they would be -- they would be paying taxes in our country. brian: on top of that, first thing you have to do is they are coming from honduras, guatemala, el salvador, primarily, you have to fly down there and talk to those governments to tell them what's at stake and you have to aid aid is not coming your way unless you get ahold of the population. what are you telling them? watch television and saying one come all to the border. that will solve the problem and not put smiley face on a catastrophe. let's change gears on what many are calling for a victory for joe biden, the president of the united states because the unifier got his party solely only except for one congressman in the house, democrat, to both for a 1.9 trillion aid package which will put money in people's pockets but little do you know -- if you watch the other channels, 1 trillion is unspent and most of this money is going to be spent after this fiscal year. remember joe biden promised this when he started? >> we can do this if we come together. that's why ultimately our plan is based on unity. unity also is trying to reflect what the majority of the american people, democrat, republican and independent. no such thing of a red state or a blue state when it comes to covid. there's no such thing of democrat or republican when it comes to covid. i'm going to be a president for all america, no red or blue. it's all about commitment to the american people. we are going to stay in close contact with members of both sides of the aisle and keep advancing our shared goals. steve: okay, that's what he has said over the last number of weeks but that certainly is not what is happening. for the most part the leaders on the democratic side on the house and senate are running the agenda for the administration and joe biden essentially is just the front man for that. he will probably be signing the bill according to jen psaki tomorrow, watch. >> the president will sign it on friday. we, of course, are moving full speed ahead on the implementation of the bill because the american people need help and they need it as soon as possible. steve: great, we started the program talking about one year ago today when the world health organization declared it a global pandemic. of this gigantic amount of money, only 1% actually goes to vaccination. it's the vaccines that are getting us back to normal. by comparison, when you look at how much money is being spent in this, keep in mind, only 1% for vaccines. the u.s. spending on coronavirus in the last 12 totaling $1.5 million, world war ii cost $4.8 trillion. this cost more than all of the second world war, ainsley. ainsley: i know. only 9% is going to covid relief. i want all the money to go to vaccines and restaurants and for ppe -- or ppp and i want children to go back to schools. one of the ladies that we will help interview owns several businesses and talks about the cost the clean her facilities after clients come in. she has to clean them and that's very costful and so if all the money will just go to families, restaurant owners and it really went to covid relief, nobody would have a problem with this because we want to help peoplement we remember a year ago, we were all terrified so many people in our country have lost their moms and dads and their loved one and when you hear that only 9% is going to covid relief and we are trying to work our tails off every single day to put food on the table for our families, that's just really disheartening and not one republican voted for it and, you know, biden kept saying he's going to be the unifier in chief. so i really wish they had come together and not poured so much money into some of the other things that are important but just not right now like arts and humanities. we are -- this is our money, guys. brian: i do think it's a joke, they are saying senator schumer is a brilliale his own party to vote for this. congratulations. he has alienating susan colins. jillian mel hosting her own show wants to tell us what is happening in the news. jillian: that is right, we will have more at 7:00 o'clock hour. meantime andrew cuomo denies sexual harassment allegations against him brought forth by a sixth woman. in cuomo's private residence in second floor and closed the door and allegedly reached under her blouse and began to fondle her. cuomo responded, quote, i've never done any of this and it's gut wrenching. 50 days without a formal press conference. >> when will you do a press conference? >> is there a crisis at the border? jillian: queen elizabeth reportedly extended olive branch to prince harry and meghan markle, reports of peace talks coming out after the queen is heartbroken of bombshell interview. the source telling vanity fair in, quote, the queen is said to be privately devastated by the shocking revelations. so it continues and we will see what happens. brian: i thought the queen and harry were getting alike. it's crazy what's happening, the ripple effects. steve: ainsley, you said a couple of days i hope the family comes back together and maybe this is the first step. ainsley: yeah, i'm glad she's going to do that. steve: indeed. 6:20 in the east. it's 3:20 in seattle. seattle police could be facing budget cut but officers are sounding the alarm saying they are already dealing with shortages and long response times. the danger of more cuts are going to tell us about it coming up. ainsley: and i'm live in chicago as students, participants look back one year since we named the pandemic. these are real american stories as we work to get back to get back to normal soon we hope. use a single hr software? 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much more humane policy at the border? >> brian, thank you for having me. no. this is inhumane when you think about thousands of individuals entering the southern border and many of those being children, minors who are released to hhs, that's will go out and try to find a person or people that will be a caretaker or sponsor and my concern is that many young people are being released into our cities across our great nation to individuals that may not have the children's best interest at heart and that is a concern and then it's law enforcement's responsibility to go up there and clean up this mess when these kids are -- are being trafficked and i think this administration is almost aiding and abetting in human trafficking. brian: internal documents picked up by reuters that mexican gangs have been growing clientele and keeping tabs on american policy that encourage migration and they have developed new tracking systems tat border using little known trails to get through obviously logic will tell you increasing the danger. so bring us down there. if you're law enforcement and you are wearing a uniform and you're trying to control the border and washington is making it impossible. >> yes, i talked to the border patrol, former border patrol agents. you know they are stretched thin down there. the new policy about we are not going to build anymore wall and tear down the one that president trump built. we are addressing all the individual that is we know of that we are actually -- that are in southern border. what about the hundreds of thousands that are getting through our southern border that are not being identified and -- and those are the individual that is we really truly need to be concerned about because they are intentionally avoiding apprehension and it should be a concern to every one of us and it's reckless, truly, truly reckless. brian: congressman, you dial back, you tell ice, stop doing your job, stop building the wall. if kids come to the border, they get to stay. this is going to be a ghost town like we have never seen before for central and south america, can you sway in please. >> when you have a policy like this and you say, hey, the so you were border is open, come on in, we are opening up the flood gates, he's encouraging people to enter the southern border. this is a policy. i know that obama had some silly policies but i think this president has taken it a little bit too far and the american people will be holding the bag. law enforcement will have to deal with these individuals coming across our southern border and they want to still defund the police. so i think law enforcement will have to clean up the mess. all of our social services agencies throughout the state of texas and country are going to be left cleaning holding the bag and irresponsible and i hope he reverses course. brian: thanks so much. sheriff, outrage by what you're seeing in texas and border cities, appreciate it. >> thank you. brian: keep in mind kids, kept more than 72 hours is against the law and not being tested and also keep in mind that there's no end in sight. texas opened for business meanwhile, the state lifting covid-19 restrictions. will cain is still in texas, the lone star state talking to texans about their newfound freedom and we are live in madison square garden as the highlight from day one to have big east tournament, they had fans. to cosentyx. before starting, get checked for tuberculosis. an increased risk of infections and lowered ability to fight them may occur. tell your doctor about an infection or symptoms, if your inflammatory bowel disease symptoms develop or worsen, or if you've had a vaccine or plan to. serious allergic reactions may occur. i look and feel better. ask your dermatologist if cosentyx could help you move past the pain of psoriasis. keeping your oysters business growing if cosentyx could hhas you swamped. you need to hire. i need indeed indeed you do. the moment you sponsor a job on indeed you get a shortlist of quality candidates from a resume data base claim your seventy-five-dollar credit when you post your first job at indeed.com/promo ainsley: big east tournament continues with final quarter round. brian: live outside of madison square garden in new york city ahead of big tip-off. abby, everything seemed to go fine yesterday. >> that it did, brian, it was very exciting and, of course, we had a lot of action yesterday and more today, first tip-off at noon. why don't i give you recap first, georgetown versus markett, not much of a battle. georgetown sliding past the golden eagles in 68 to 69 victory. next game was the nail-biter to have day and guys the reason why we love the tournaments, butler crawled the way back after trailing by 14 at the half. chuck harris sent game at the half. here is the moment. >> harris. and we are going to overtime. for the win. too late. butler did it again. >> wow. reporter: final score there was 70 to 69 and they'll play number 2 at 6:00 p.m. at last, depaul handling providence with upset to advance number 3yukon at 9:00 p.m. you can watch number 4 st. john face off number 5 at 3:00 p.m. eastern all on fox sports. more to look forward to today, guys. we haven't seen top team plays yet but we will today starting at noon. brian: if you're one of the lucky 35% you can go indoors and maybe have a beer as long as you have something to eat while you're having the beer in the bar outside if you're one of the thousands that gets to go to madison square garden. steve: and if you are of age, of course. ainsley: which abby is not. steve: 25 minutes before the top of the hour. the state of texas is the first state to fully reopen allowing businesses at 100% capacity and they removed the mask mandate since last july. brian: my privilege to go to will cain now, according to reports and resume he's the cohost of "fox & friends" weekend and he loves texas and he's still there talking about texas freedom, right, will? will: that's right, brian. with freedom comes responsibility. so yesterday as we spoke to diners here in texas i made my way over to the star, home of facility, huge commercial residential development and i want to talk to texans about how they felt about their new freedom and responsibility. here is what they had to say. >> how do you feel about the governor as of today official i will saying businesses can open to 100% capacity and no more mandated mask wearing? >> i'm fully support of governor abbott's decision over there. i think it's smart for the state to get out of telling people why to do and give them the option to do what they feel is most appropriate. >> we should all be able to make our own choices, make choices about our own health care and how we are going to go about in public and how we want to be and tolerant of the people that want to wear a mask and people who don't want to wear a mask. >> if you don't want to wear a mask, i mean, it's your option, of course, but we always need to respect each other and show each other that we all love each other because we fight for the same thing. >> i'm okay with businesses opening 100%. i'm a business owner and it was a hard year. opening back up will help us. >> you're a healthcare worker, how do you feel about mask mandate being lifted and businesses opening at 100%? >> i'm totally against it. here in texas a lot of people are not vaccinated as of yet so that's why in texas we still need to be wearing a mask. notice i still have on two. >> i think that that as individuals we should have an opportunity to have a say and do we want to go to that establishment that's open 100% or would we prefer to socially distance. give us the choice. >> the main difference this feels like -- >> freedom. we are loving it. will: steve, brian and ainsley, i want to add a third word to what i observed yesterday, yes, freedom, responsibility and respect as well. i will tell you about 60% of the people that i talked to, annette dotal observation, 60% were ready for freedom and responsibility. 40% were concerned. but 100% of the people i talked to really respected the wishes of other people. they said i may not want to wear a mask be if it makes you comfortable and if your business requires it, i will wear a mask. that's what i felt from texans. one more stat, steve, ainsley, the more rural you are, the more ready for freedom and the more suburban, more concerns there were. the more urban, the higher level of concerns encountered and that makes sense when it comes to density and population. people are using common sense. brian: sitting on a split rail fence by yourself with your cows and somebody tells you have to put a mask on and you get ticked off. [laughter] will: i can see you and envision it. there's a cowboy at heart, brian. brian: i'm trying. thanks, will. appreciate it. [laughter] ainsley: i would pay money to see that, brian. wonderful to see texas coming -- texas opening up and we are talking to the wonderful people here and business owners and serving the chicago community and they would love to open up to full capacity too but i liked what the lady said, now that we have all the information, we know that the pandemic is out there, we do know it is deadly and can be deadly, but for americans to be able to use that information and make decisions for themselves now. it's been a year since this pandemic hit the united states. we all remember that day when we were really fearful and these chicago residents that we are about to talk to, we will talk to them about adjusting the lockdowns and how they've adjusted to lockdowns and how they plan to get back to normal. brian: download the fox bet super 6 app and play for a chance to win $10,000. all you have to do predict 6 outcomes in the fox bet super 6 quiz show. topics range from entertainment to sports. free to play. download the fox bet super 6 app right now. ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ breeze drifting on by you know how i feel. ♪ ♪ it's a new dawn... ♪ if you've been taking copd sitting down, it's time to make a stand. start a new day with trelegy. no once-daily copd medicine has the power to treat copd in as many ways as trelegy. with three medicines in one inhaler, trelegy helps people breathe easier and improves lung function. it also helps prevent future flare-ups. trelegy won't replace a rescue inhaler for sudden breathing problems. tell your doctor if you have a heart condition or high blood pressure before taking it. do not take trelegy more than prescribed. trelegy may increase your risk of thrush, pneumonia, and osteoporosis. call your doctor if worsened breathing, chest pain, mouth or tongue swelling, problems urinating, vision changes, or eye pain occur. take a stand and start a new day with trelegy. ask your doctor about once-daily trelegy. and save at trelegy.com. hi sabrina! >>hi jen! so this aveeno® moisturizer goes beyond just soothing sensitive skin? 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>> well, it's been very difficult as it has been for everyone. on top of all of the challenges from the pandemic, in may i lost both of my in-laws within hours of one another. i have two children with special needs that identified are diversed learners and have high anxiety so i just left the workplace altogether to be at home to support my family. it's just been a very difficult time and the anxiety on my wife and my children, myself has been very high and we are just looking forward to getting through this and returning to a sense of normalcy because things have been not normal for such a long time. ainsley: living on your savings? >> yes, i am. you were in education and administrator for 15 years? >> yes, i was. ainsley: thank you for what you do for the children and i'm sorry that you had to leave and i'm sorry for your in-laws loss. you have been through a lot in your family. you had to close one of your restaurants, right? >> we had restaurants before the pandemic and with the limitations and restrictions it wasn't viable to keep one of them open so we had to turn in the keys to the landlord and -- >> ainsley: what was that like for you? >> you put so much time and effort into opening a restaurant and keeping it open and i know that we didn't fail because of anything we did wrong so that makes it a little easier to take but it's freed us up to focus on other location that is we have which we are hoping every day with more increased occupancy that we will be able to get our business and keep people employeed. it's limited to 50. we have place that seats 350. to turn on the lights and stove, you have to have enough people in there to make it worth with the expense. with 3 vaccines we are hoping that they are allowing -- safety protocols or whatever they deem necessary but we would love to be at 100% and maybe with some safety protocols in place if that makes them willing to allow us to open but we need to be at 100%. ainsley: sam, you can relate to her story, right? >> definitely. it's been emotional for a whole year. nobody expected to be a year shutdown and our employees out of work. ainsley: tell the folks at home how many restaurants you have? >> 7 restaurants and couple delivery services and now down to 5. we are still liable for -- ppp helps out a lot but it came too late. we are still devastated. i mean, right now with the 50 people per room and dividers, that helps out a lot but we are still devastated. no restaurant operates at 25% or 50%. we have to be at 100% in the few hours that we are busy. ainsley: you're a business owner, you're a parent, how many children do you have? >> six children. ainsley: how many are in school and how many are at home? >> so we have starting this past monday actually our seventh grader approached during phase-in approach and four of our children back in school and we have two high schoolers that are fighting their way out of our house hopefully to get back to school. ainsley: yes, this is lily hill preston the third. how has it affected you? >> mentally and physically because you weren't able to get out of the house a lot. ainsley: what have you been throw emotionally? >> not having to see people. ainsley: that's what you miss most? >> that's what i miss most on high school. ainsley: looking forward what's to come? >> yeah. ainsley: do you think you will go back to school this school year? >> i hope so. i don't know, i don't know. i hope so. ainsley: they have opened up k through eighth grade? >> yes. >> sarah, you in the back in the red shirt, tell me how this has affected you? >> the schooling, mainly stay home mom at 4 and my life is my kids and to watch them disassociate with the remote learning one has autism and the other has a learning disability, you can't reach reading to a learning disabled child over a computer screen and it's challenging for her and we gave up and we did our own pencil and paper and i taught her myself and i'm doing the best i can. ainsley: sarah, we haven't talked to you yet. we will be talking to you all morning. we are almost out of job. >> i'm a mom of 3, i have a high schooler, middle schooler children and no one can be prepared for. there's not -- there's not a playbook on this, if you will. there's not a business model. you can't go to business school and prepare for a pandemic and a shutdown and lockdown and the -- the true fear of going out and what that does. ainsley: all right, well, thank you for sharing your stories. hopefully we will get back to normal soon. we will be hearing from them all morning long. seattle police on the verge of a staffing crisis and the city council might chop their budget even further. our next guest says it's worst than what's being reported and what his sources are telling him next. is a pill that directly blocks cgrp protein, believed to be a cause of migraine. do not take with strong cyp3a4 inhibitors. most common side effects were nausea and tiredness. serena: ask about ubrelvy. the anytime, anywhere migraine medicine. out here, you're a landowner, serena: ask about ubrelvy. a gardener, a landscaper and a hunter. that's why you need versatile, durable kubota equipment. how great is it that we get to tell everybody how liberty mutual customizes your car insurance so you only pay for what you need? i mean it... uh-oh, sorry... oh... what? i'm an emu! no, buddy! only pay for what you need. ♪ liberty, liberty, liberty, liberty. ♪ jillian: good morning, we are back with headlines, two urgent manhunts for murder suspects who. >> accidentally released in new york and california. christopher was set free from ricers island due an error on paperwork. meanwhile in southern california steven manso mistakenly released from jail after computer error. both suspects are considered armed and dangerous. a sheriff's deputy recalls moment he embraced a young girl in the backseat of a car during hour's chase. >> i didn't concern much for the threat of -- from the vehicle. it was grabbing a hold of the little girl and getting her out of harm's way. jillian: the 9-year-old was in the car when deputies took on wild chase. the mother was arrested after crashing into several cars. the judge ruling the state had given organization enough notice of upcoming removal that's required by law. the decision prevents people from using medicaid to get nonabortion services at planned parenthood. new york city private school banned students from saying words like mom and dad. telling kids to use terms like grown-ups, folks or family instead. merry christmas or happy holidays also banned in favor of have a great break and instead of boys and girls kids must say people, folks or friends. all part of the school's new inclusive language directory. i will send it back to my friend, steve. steve: thank you to the folks on the level. jillian, thank you. mean while as the seattle washington city council considers lashing the police budget about 5 and a half million dollars the acting police chief warns this can be devastating for short-staffed department. >> the best way to stop the losses and to drive hiring is to stop the ad hoc cutting to have budget, but my concern is if we don't change course, staffing losses will continue and we will have a staffing crisis beyond mitigation. the work has not changed and i have over 200 fewer officers deployed to work. steve: 200 fewer officers. here to react radio talk show host. what could possibly go wrong? >> well, given how much crime has spiked already, we already know what can go wrong. last time they cut the budget by $46 million they lost over 186 officers last year. they are the lowest deployable levels they've been for seattle police since 1990's and the city has doubled in size. they don't have police to keep up so when you call 9-1-1, there's literally nobody coming to help you. steve: exactly. you mentioned a number. officially the seattle police department says that 186 officers have left the department in the past year offset by 51 new officers but your sources are giving you a different number, aren't they? >> they are telling me it's over 200. in fact, they tell me it's so bad that when they say they are transferring or quitting, they have to make appointments with the quarter master long in advance so they can turn back their gear and all the departments surrounding seattle are fully staffed because they've transferred to those departments out of seattle. so it's not like they don't want to be cops anymore, they just don't want to be cops here anymore. steve: exactly. in a lot of cities across america you pick up the phone and you dial 911, some cities have really good reaction time, one time our carbon monoxide detector went off and we called the fire department and they were there in 90 seconds. you pick up 911 and you call them in seattle, how long does it take to get somebody to your house? >> according to their numbers you're looking for priority one call. you're looking over 17 minutes. now police departments -- >> steve: 17 minutes? >> oh, yeah, 17 minutes if they show up at all. this summer they were saying they couldn't necessarily come because they were dealing with riots in the autonomous zone. police have told them they are just not coming. sometimes you are waiting hours for them to show up and now you're looking at the seattle police said that if you defund them you have less officers and 20 minutes for priority one call. steve: well, if it's going to take somebody so long, get somebody in your house -- you have a burglar or a break-in, are gun sales going up, are people trying to protect themselves? >> they are skyrocketing. they told us in washington state because we didn't need guns and they let activists take control of seattle this summer but gun sales particularly going to women and women are the number 1 buyers and new buyers of guns in washington state. steve steve i also understand apparently to offset the fact that police don't show up in many cases, the city wants to decriminalize a bunch of crimes so they don't have to charge anymore. >> well, also statistics looks so much better. they want to decriminalize misdemeanors. already supreme court had ruling last week, felony drug possession is no longer a crime and cities across the state have to rewrite their own drug laws. meanwhile seattle is thinking of getting rid of felony drug possessions anyway. steve: if you can address the mayor directly, what would you say to him? >> to major durkin, the summer of love is over, it was never really here and we need to get the act together. it's not so much the mayor. the mayor was saying we need to do something to change it and the city council walked out on her and they didn't have a quorum by the end of the meeting because they didn't stay to hear the arguments. steve: what a steve: we did reach out to seattle city council but we have not heard back from them. that will wrap up the first hour of "fox and friends". >> reporter: and mccallum, the have been taken into custody. >> those are the individuals we truly need to be concerned about. >> president biden will address the nation. >> they use the pandemic as an excuse once again to push their agenda and that is why you have a republican support. >> the most serious allegations yet. >> she was groped inside the governor's mention. >> pierce morgan facing serious backlash. launching an investigation. >> he has the right to his opinion. >> business owners, parents and students watch back after one year. >> ♪♪ jillian: trying to get a sense of normalcy is the vaccines are circulating and getting people back to work. and everyone went to the corner and stood in place and ready to get out of the corner. and the president said it is national emergency, they admitted there had been 1000 coronavirus infections in the united states. a nightmare year. >> it is spreading fast in new york and i remember so many of us if we had the opportunity that we picked up our children and got the heck out of dodge and remote from home. you live on long island. you were in new jersey and our lives just changed in an instant. you have no idea we would be talking about this a year later. some of them are facing a lot of challenges. sarah is in the back, this has affected you because you want to go back to work, your kids are at home and you are a single mom. what have you been going through? >> robbing peter to pay paul. i'm freshly divorced which i have all the bills and the children and the kids aren't in school. despite the science that says they -- we are back two weeks but my children go back four days and are lucky to receive that. ainsley: you are a paralegal who wants to go back to work and you thought you would. >> i would. i would love to. just waiting for the high school to open up so i can get my daughter, my junior back in high school. ainsley: we will hear more from the panel coming up. great conversations during the break. i want you to hear the story, real american stories, people we love and care about. >> maybe we've got to extend to the summer to get these kids caught up. they are not learning on the laptops. today marks the 1-year mark since the pandemic started. just could not let go to waste. our next guest explores the topic in a brand-new op-ed arguing to gain power under the guise of science. we have been consulting with doctor nicole saphier, panic attack, playing politics with science in the fight against covid-19. and jason chaffetz, author of never let a crisis go to waste. they join us this morning on march 11th, 2021. you know, let's start with you. a year ago there was so much unknown. they kept saying follow the science. it became political. >> the misinterpretation and misrepresentation of science created a lot of hypocrisy and hysteria and fueled skepticism with roadblocks along the way. the politicization of science defined the last year of the pandemic but is it rearing its ugly head into the quest to fight it right now. getting schools reopened to get businesses back to work. >> why did you want to write this op-ed? >> doctor saphier's is focused on the science, minds on how they manipulate the science, the misuse the science was whether a crisis is legitimate or fabricated this is disaster liberalism, they take that and use it as an excuse to go past pieces of legislation and do things they would never be able to do otherwise. you need to expose that and see how the left uses these tricks and schemes and misdirection in order to achieve their agenda that they would never be able to do otherwise. and it play out for the next four years. steve: so many doctors said, people accuse me of playing politics. not playing politics, just trying to tell people what is happening, what is coming at us. case in point, we heard from the governor in new york, don't worry about it. what is happening in china doesn't happen here, we have the best health care system and ready for anything. then we hear doctor fauci say just mark the thought of wearing a mask and then they start wearing masks, why are you overreacting and then started getting on people for not wearing a mask, this guy is still trying to figure it out. it was very confusing and politics didn't help. >> aside from being together, we are friends outside all of this. we've been talking in parallel for the last year and diving into what happened with the science. whether you want to wear masks or not, you are picking political sides and that is what is happening and it is not uncommon for doctors and scientists to disagree especially when there is something new and data every single day. what is not normal is when people take that they take disagreements and say this has to be anti-science and all of us and it is partisan warfare and everyone has to choose sides and that defined this pandemic and it is heartbreaking that it continues to play out. steve: the perfect example of that, they pass in the house, the senate's $1.9 trillion coronavirus rescue plan. only one% goes to vaccinations and the rest, in states and cities, they have said we lost so much money. according to something i read in the wall street journal, federal-aid is 116 times states actual declining revenue and even here in new york talking about rates and taxes next year. they were using to your point this crisis to get this bail out, got the money regarding coronavirus. >> the previous appropriation isn't used, the single largest bill in the history of the united states, $1.9 trillion, not a single republican signed on to that despite these promises they would do so in a unified front and we have 90%, $1.9 trillion to things that had nothing to do with the crisis, case in point and back to what they previously passed which is house revolution one which was how to manipulate elections and change the election framework, and the left and the liberals prepare for this for a very long time. they were waiting for the crisis and this is the best one they see and started passing these bills and they are spending money. >> you wrote that if you favor big government, higher taxes, fewer liberties and government spending at this point in our country you have the power. and inappropriately claiming science as their motivation. if you want to read it at home go to foxnews.com. thank you, congratulations on your book. now to the southern border were griff jenkins joined a group of migrants coming into the united states, in mcallen, texas, biden officials are set to tour a facility to house migrant children. what is the latest? >> reporter: good morning. we will get to that in a moment, hhs is looking at a second major site, in mountain view, california they have that for unaccompanied minors. they will need more states here in this sector where mcallen got 1800 unaccompanied minors but let's look at the number the cvp released yesterday. the overall encounters in the month of february, 100,441 of 28%, and an agent in this sector, chris cabrera, vice president for this area as well as going out -- for centuries, i asked them what they think about this being a crisis. here is what they had to say. >> as far as us on the ground and folks that work here if it is expected, we expected it. >> are you frustrated they don't call it a crisis? >> they think we are all idiots. >> as you saw when i was out there, we have four groups, 150, that is a little sampling in the rgb sector, hardest it anywhere on the border, they've seen 250 unaccompanied minors a day in our group. steve: you are seeing it up close and personal as they debate it in washington. thanks so much but it is important to point out mexico is saying it is the biden policies that are causing this and mexican gangs growing their clientele because of this and migration -- a new method since biden took office we are seeing unprecedented levels of sophistication from the human traffickers that they are now as valuable, to take somebody from honduras, el salvador, guatemala, if you are from out of the country off of the peninsula or the continent you can get as much as 40,$000, more valuable and drugs to the border. congressman troy is a former sheriff and enraged and incensed about a new hands-off approach thanks to the biden administration. >> when you have a policy like this and you say the southern border is open, come on in, he's encouraging people in the southern border. he is taking a too far. law enforcement will deal with it, with individuals, the across the southern border, law enforcement cleans up the mess. and social service agencies throughout texas left holding the bag, and i hope he reverses course. >> people are not getting the message. the messaging problem with joe biden he needs to come out, jen psaki -- he needs to come out to the american people and say to the whole world, now is not the time. they are not turning away unaccompanied minors. 8500 kids are housed in dhs shelters not counting 3500 stuck in facilities on the southern border. the new york times calls these facilities jail like. kids in cages during the trump years. the border patrol warehouse with chain-link cages in 2018 are closed for renovation, where they are holding the kids right now are not much better. what is the administration doing? they are stonewalling, not allowing the american press to go in and take a look at the facilities these kids are being held in. it is a double standard and during the trump administration, they showed the press, with joe biden opposed to letting us see. ainsley: the message is different from last year. this is our chance. let's try to get in while joe biden is in office and they are calling him the migrant president. that is what the mexican president is saying. joe biden is incentivizing illegal immigration and organized crime. when you look at the numbers it has to be a crisis, there were 9000 encounters. and we are only in march. a 20% increase in february and just from january alone. biden is sending a message that we welcome you here. mike: who is handing out those t-shirts? steve: they are working. ainsley: left-handed to jillian with more headlines. steve: andrew cuomo denies the latest allegations against him. the times union of albany reports the unidentified woman, quote, in cuomo's private residence on the second floor of the mansion when he closed the door and reached under her blouse and began to follow her. cuomo responded in part, quote, i have never done anything like this, the details of this report are gutwrenching. vice president kamala harris, a supporter of the me too movement remains tightlipped. 85 new york lawmakers are calling for cuomo to resign or be impeached. the homeless man accused of punching rick moraitis appears during the hearing, refused to take two mental health exams for trial. the court order taking the psychiatric evaluation. the assault charge after surveillance video allegedly showed him hitting him on a new york city street in october. overnight the effort to recall governor gavin newsom surpassed the goal of 2 million signatures. 1.5 million verified signatures are needed. 1.8 million have already been pre-verified by an outside vendor. the recall gavin campaign releasing a statement saying, quote, the people of california are speaking loud and clear, we cleared another milestone. politics as usual in california are over. it is official nfl star rob grahn kautsky gronkowski is coming back next season. >> it took a couple weeks of training, feels great, don't feel like i played this season. ainsley: he had retired before joining tom brady last year on the super bowl winning tampa bay buccaneers so we will see if it will happen again. brian: they will try to put it together again. 18 minutes now. one year later a tale of two states, how drastically different leaders have handled the pandemic. jillian traveled to florida and california to talk to restaurant owners who share their real life stories. ainsley: live in chicago as business owners, parents at a student look back one year after covid 19 was declared a pandemic. how they have adjusted their lives. that is straight ahead. ♪♪ ♪ limu emu & doug ♪ .. how great is it that we get to tell everybody how liberty mutual customizes your car insurance so you only pay for what you need? 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and others coming in the next few days but when we landed in california, a restaurant near our tell -- not open for business, it was pretty much quiet out there at 8:00 last night, that was the situation in california. florida entirely different and the real focus are business owners who are trying to make a living and survive. take a look. >> in the process of going to 97 employees to 3, i had to place my own wife on furlough, that hits hard. we looked at our business, in this part of the community. -- >> is it frustrating for you. >> spectacularly frustrating when you look at the data and realize we are no better off than they are even though the restrictions are so different. it has been challenging and trying for small businesses. fastest way to open businesses permanently is to eliminate and end is pandemic. >> we are sitting inside but there is a whole wall of windows, you're able to have circulation and open air. >> florida is an example how to reopen safely, places in california -- >> in the last year it is challenging times. >> since september it has been fantastic. we have 1600 reservations already booked for opening day and has only risen since then. >> so many states kept blocking people down over these months. florida lifted people up. >> covid-19 hit new york and florida primarily and to see what is going on in new york and you say i am done and fully moved on here. >> at one point at a restaurant, i thought they would never open. very happy about that. steve: has your business been able to survive in another state? >> probably not. i have friends in new york who haven't worked in over a year. steve: coming back here it seems like life is normal. what are people saying? >> it supports small business and understand the importance of keeping families employee and businesses open. >> florida -- we are still practicing mask wearing areas and social distancing where we need to. people are happy to be back to life. >> we are sitting on a 70 degree beautiful napa valley afternoon and sitting under a tent. any other year we would be packed truly. steve: in january your business partner cynthia was on our show. >> having a problem with our workforce. other states, they can still work in hospitality or finding other sectors to work in. >> that is the biggest test in my life. they are not shackled as we are. steve: what is the hardest part of philip? >> we are at the whim of government in terms of opening and closing and opening percentages. the hardest part is the unknown. we don't know what is around the corner. jillian: part of the reason is the extreme differences and restrictions but also the weather because in california and parts of the state get chillier than others but you have a state like california where you can be open for outdoor dining, open for outdoor dining until the end of january. these business owners felt they didn't have a voice. we want to talk to them they were so grateful to have people listen to their story and really humbling to hear what they had to say. steve: in california are they covering it as a local news story? jillian: we were in and out in a day. there are people talking about it. they don't feel it is talked about enough. steve: what i find amazing is cities that locked down, the higher unemployment get more of a bailout that will go to the coffers of the states, not into the pockets of the business people, a separate ppp program. they get a reward for their bad behavior which they never felt compelled to explain and it was counter to science much of the time. steve: you saw that video of a sunny day in california. steve: ainsley: that is so heartbreaking because the numbers are similar in both states but yet the restrictions are drastically different and these are people's livelihoods. we have the information and we can make up our own minds, these people have got to get their businesses back. steve: we will have that next week. brian: those people that can't eat outside on the patio, go to costco and walmart, it makes no sense. that is the story that is written for years to come. how they went with the corporations and told everybody else to jump in a lake. brian: thank you for traveling all over the country. coming up, we are going back to florida. a tampa police officer gave his life to protect others from a wrong way driver, the city their lighting up to honor the fallen hero. we will talk to first responders to pay tribute shortly on "fox and friends". ce for members like kate. a former army medic, made of the flexibility to handle whatever monday has in store and tackle four things at once. so when her car got hit, she didn't worry. she simply filed a claim on her usaa app and said... i got this. usaa insurance is made the way kate needs it - easy. she can even pick her payment plan so it's easy on her budget and her life. usaa. what you're made of, we're made for. usaa. bipolar depression. it's a dark, lonely place. this is art inspired by real 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starts with an invitation... ...to experience lexus. the invitation to lexus sales event. lease the 2021 is 300 for $359 a month for 36 month's, and we'll make you're first month's payment. experience amazing. my name is austin james. as a musician living with diabetes, fingersticks can be a real challenge. that's why i use the freestyle libre 14 day system. with a painless, onesecond scan i can check my glucose without fingersticks. now i'm managing my diabetes better and i've lowered my a1c from 8.2 to 6.7. you can do it without fingersticks, too. ask your doctor for a prescription for the freestyle libre 14 day system. and visit freestyle libre.us to try it for free. if these beautiful idaho potato recipes are just side dishes, for the freestyle libre 14 day system. then i'm not a real idaho potato farmer. genuine idaho potatoes not just a side dish anymore. always look for the grown in idaho seal. brian: the tampa police department mourning the death of one of their own after what appears to be a heroic sacrifice in the line of duty. retired marine and 6 your department that jesse madsen is killed tuesday after apparently swerving on purpose into the path of a wrong way driver to prevent the wrong way driver from hitting anyone else on the road. the cars collided the officer died. officer madsen, tampa police chief brian dugan and have a firefighter, thank you for joining us. let's start with you, why do you think he veered into the path of this car to stop them from hitting anybody as he was driving the wrong way. >> it will confirm that fact, based upon damage to the vehicle. steve: a lot of people before this happened were calling 9 one one saying somebody's going the wrong way on this street. >> we did receive 911 calls but this happened very quickly, he put his life on the line and was able to stop it in the process. steve: he was a hero. this is a marine, someone who earned 7 life-saving awards, served his country, served his city and to put it bluntly he was a badass. steve: i know you were personal friends with him. tell us about this. >> working at the front of the department responded to different calls. we were both infantry men, i was a paratrooper in the army and we had an instant bond and started to grow, he would pass by the station when he was in the area to check on his buddies. if i could describe him, he was a very proud marine. and serving his nation as a marine and he won my heart through his actions with that. great law enforcement officer, down to earth man, a great father, great husband, great individual. when we heard the unfortunate news, when his photo came on it was a big shock but something came over me, sounds like something jesse would do. his personality, his characteristics. he has always been a person, live the life of virtues, risked his life for his country, risked his life for his city and gave his life for it. that is what jesse was. if i could share something with the nation, the country lost a great son, our city lost a great son, he is the son of tampa. we love him very much but they were great individuals and he is an exceptional individual and we lost somebody very great. steve: to hear you say it does not surprise you that he sacrificed his life to prevent other people from getting killed by this guy who was going the wrong way on this road. >> it does not surprise me at all and i'm sure chief dugan himself knows his van and when he knows someone he knows someone. you know how real he was and this is something he would do. it has to be the most courageous thing, the hardest decision you make when you have a wife and kid, his sense of duty kicked in and that was jesse. steve: sounds like an amazing officer. >> the service in the marine corps in the city, the safest place to live, no doubt. steve: couldn't save some lives. thank you for joining us live. >> his wife told me yesterday that she is very thankful for the support she received. steve: that is good to know because we would like to help as well. people would like to help their family, go to foxandfriends.com to donate to his wife and 3 children. thank you. officer jesse madsen was 45 years old. before nexium 24hr, anna could only imagine a comfortable night's sleep without frequent heartburn waking her up. now, that dream... . ...is her reality. nexium 24hr stops acid before it starts, for all-day, all-night protection. can you imagine 24 hours without heartburn? ♪ ♪ for all-day, all-night♪ ♪otection. (quiet piano music) ♪ ♪ comfort in the extreme. the lincoln family of luxury suvs. 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. before we are continuing our conversation about the impact of the covid pandemic one year later with chicago business owners, parents on this panel, and this wonderful panel in chicago, restaurant owners, you own a therapy business, single mom with four kids, highschooler out of school. this is your son and you are concerned, we talked to you for the last few hours, one of your concerns, all the kids that are out of school getting into trouble. what have you seen? >> we have 100,000 ice coolers not going to school. what we are experiencing is an astronomical jumping carjackings and other crimes. the chicago police department just came out and said 374 arrests this year alone, 44% of those are juveniles. and it is joyriding. our kids are screaming to have us in a position with some activity in the opportunity to do negative activity and i hope we have the discussion about reopening schools in chicago. with a positive outlet, the opportunity to grow up. i am going to save myself but i wasn't forced to stay in solitary confinement. steve: your internet costs have gone up. >> 5 of us at home on google meets with their teachers, running small business, my husband and his work, we have to increase and be conscious of that. and they are panicking, did they miss something or call attendance wise and that is a tricky thing. we are a family of five that by 6 gallons of weekend 5 dozen eggs at a time. it is constant and everyone is at home. utilities in general. electric has gone up. lights are on everywhere. we are not even half -- and there's no way to plan for this. >> how are you doing it? >> i have good days and bad days. being honest with myself. and not just trying to be okay, be okay and it is okay to not be okay and let ourselves feel that. we have all been affected. if you don't have children you've still been affected, nieces and nephews, that is something that is so different than the oil crisis in the 80s. and this is not one sector, one business. we have all been affected. how does that affect us. we don't understand the fallout from this. jillian: tell the folks at home, the achievement gap. >> i'm concerned about the achievement gap of my own children and former educator. i'm worry about the achievement gap for all children. e-learning has been very successful for some students. i strongly believe the majority cannot replace the social, emotional opportunities in the school environment. we love and value our teachers. moms and dads are not there. with these achievement gaps increasing, makes jobs more difficult. they need more support. >> standardized test scores, a lot of pressure. you talked to the governor. the illinois restaurant association chairman, 25,000 restaurants in the state and the chairman, your husband is fisa chair but you've known each other for a long time. both of you are restaurant owners, you had conversations with the governors. what did you say? >> we keep everything for our employees and businesses. not everyone is able to collect unemployment, we want to open a restaurant and want to go back to work and not looking for handouts. we want to work. we want to go back to work. and the gathering of 50 people. move forward to 150 people gathering. there are 3.5 million people vaccinated. jillian: we will continue this conversation. we are out of time and we will get to all of you, what is the governor's name q take this message to heart. the big east tournament continues with the final round to look at day 2 coming up next. things differently o and other money managers don't understand why. (money manager) because our way works great for us! (naj) but not for your clients. that's why we're a fiduciary, obligated to put clients first. (money manager) so, what do you provide? cookie cutter portfolios? (naj) nope, we tailor portfolios to our client's needs. (money manager) but you do sell investments that earn you high commissions, right? (naj) we don't have those. (money manager) so what's in it for you? (naj) our fees are structured so we do better when you do better. at fisher investments we're clearly different. 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. ainsley: pioneer woman's nephew in critical condition following the head on collision near her oklahoma ranch. her husband on the left of the photo you see in 21-year-old caleb were both driving tire tracks. high winds made it difficult to see. caleb was thrown 70 feet. the latter refused treatment. they were responding to one of several fires in the area. we will keep you updated. families will learn how to file criminal complaints over covid nursing home death in michigan. prosecutor will walk through the steps of wrongful complaints and governor gretchen witmer, trying to build a case against her policy placing covid positive patients in the same facility with patients who did not have covid. the policy ended after the first 6 months of the pandemic. a phoenix police officer save the family from their burning home, the heroic rescue caught on police body cam. >> come over here. >> we are going to take care of it okay? ainsley: the officer busting down the side gate to get to the backyard. no one was injured and the cause of the fire is under investigation. all right all right all right, matthew mcconaughey says he is considering a texas gubernatorial run. >> your next leadership role ever include you running for governor? >> i hear you. it is consideration. ainsley: the question comes after november interview when the actor said he could be interested in politics. don't know about you guys but it would surprise me. brian: extremely well done. let's talk sports. the first games of the big east tournament in the books what can the advancing teams expect later in the quarterfinal round? let's bring in fox sports college analyst in st. john's stand out to wreak turner. let's talk about your firm or -- your former team starter. if i thought anyone would bring st. john's back to prominence it would be chris mullins but the coaching change, this team is surprising everyone. are you surprised? >> know. we were lucky to get him when we did. one of just four coaches to do that currently. he's a guy who can play the style when he feeds off energy up-tempo, and flying around, and it makes of guys and older experienced guys, and play well especially in his last 8 or 9 games and coach of the year, a phenomenal year for the program, they finished fourth and a lot to be proud of but they still have work to do. humbly they can keep things going. brian: the best prospect in new york. let's look at what is on tap today. the quarterfinals on fox. st. john's against seton hall, villanova starts at noon and you against the fall. if i can get your reflection i am glad you are playing and there is a degree of fans there. how special is it if you think players and fans and press appreciate each other more. >> you hit it right on the dot. it has been a crazy season but the fact we are playing games and made it this far, we were able to withstand that and get all these teams to this point in march, march madness, we are at the big east tournament. the things that have gone on between logistics players, administration, coaching, disruption to get to where we are in the big east tournament, really excited and that is very strange for me but looking forward to watching some games, a big east tournament. brian: 3000, sounds like it is packed, it really sounds loud in there? >> the thing about the garden, the crowd is part of it but it is the stage, the aura of the arena, the expectation, pressure, 3000 fans may not sound like a lot, but the energy in the big east tournament, can't duplicate it. it will be another awesome tournament and there's a lot to be excited about. brian: you should be excited about that too. we will watch fox sports one all day and it begins at 12:00, we tapped yukon against the fall at 9. that is it for this hour. >> surges tend to respond to hope. >> they believe that if they come within a certain amount of time, that they are going to be led go. >> he's encouraging people to enter our southern border and the american people are left holding the bag. >> after 50 days without a press conference president biden will address the nation about what comes next. >> mr. president, when will you do a press conference? >> is there a crisis at the border, sir? >> the motion is adopted. >> the house has passed a massive coronavirus stimulus package. >> the president will sign the bill on friday afternoon. >> 90% of the $1.9 trillion is going to things that have nothing to do with the crisis. this is disaster liberalism. >> new allegations by an aid of democratic governor andrew cuomo that he aggressively groped her. ainsley: i've live in chicago as business owners and parents look back one year. >> this past year has been something that no one could be prepared for. not a playbook on this. >> ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ steve: live from avenue of the americas it's hour three of fox & friends for this very very busy thursday. welcome aboard folks it's march 11, 2021. brian and i are here in the big studio in new york city and ainsley has traveled out to chicago. ainsley: that's right because its been a year since it was declared a pandemic. we all remember where we were in new york was hit so hard back in march, and then it started to infiltrate throughout our country. we saw california hit, new york hit, and i know some folks, my family down in south carolina didn't realize how serious it was, and i kept telling them, people are dying here in new york, you need to take this seriously and then, we saw it spread throughout the country , and everyone took it seriously. restaurants closed, businesses closed, kids out of school we'll be talking to this great panel all morning long. brian: at some point we'll drill down and find out what china did and how they spread it , and what exactly the disease emanated from and we're still investigating and not getting much cooperation. maybe that'll come up with the big meeting with the secretary of state and the chinese official in alaska tomorrow. ainsley: so we have a very special announce am today someone near and dear to our hearts we want to wish a very happy birthday not chairman of fox corporation and executive chairman of newscorp. rupert mu rdoch, he turns 90 years old. brian: he recently weighed in on the cancel culture and the threat it poses. let's listen. >> there's a real challenge to confront, a wave of censorship, to stifle them and ultimately stop individuals and societies from realizing their potential. this enforced conformity, and i circled social media, it is a straight jacket, and too many people have fought too hard in too many places for freedom of speech to be suppressed by this awful work orthodoxy. steve: you know, the boss, as a lot of us are, very concerned about where this cancel culture is going and ultimately, freedom of this press. ainsley and brian. brian: yeah, ainsley just to chime in for a second. we have two examples today. one of the members of mumford and sons comes out and praises a book about antifa a domestic and international terrorist organization, has to apologize and step away from the band and piers morgan is critical of meghan and harry, now they are investigating him and this is a huge problem and if anyone thinks it's just celebrities or high profile positions they're not paying attention. ainsley: yeah, i mean, they've even canceled mr. potato head. i mean, this whole panel's laugh ing at it and shaking their heads like oh, my goodness, enough is enough. we've gone so far, but we do want to wish mr. murdoch a very happy birthday. thank you so much for what you've done for fox news, your entire world and for all of our lives and putting food on our tables we really appreciate it, sir. steve: if we had a champaign we would do that but we'll wait until noon before we start hitting the sauce. brian: yeah, i think from what i saw, i think one of the great things, rupert murdoch always had his hand on the channel but when things were going crazy in 2016 he would come back and walk in the studio and watch shows and talk to people with everything that he's running around the world, and to see hes a regular guy who happens to be unbelievably successful was really fascinating to see. steve: happy birthday. brian: happy birthday. meanwhile, four minutes after the hour let's do what he pays us to do, the news. to the southern border where our own griff jenkins joined a group of migrants crossing into the u.s.. griff joins us live from mccallu m, texas with a firsthand look at a hole in the border wall causing problems with the community. that fence will keep people out. griff: yeah, hey, brian, ainsley and steve, good morning. remember president trump was building that wall and we're in mcallen, the ground zero for biden's border crisis and behind me this is the fence that is built and the border patrol there manning it and that's a gate where they come and go but look over here. you look about 200-yards and there is a gaping hole of about 400 meters here where it's wide open and that was under construction. it would have been completed within weeks of the new administration taking over, but it was halted. they thought, actually with the contractors it was going to get finished but here is the problem. the migrants who get passed border patrol and the border which is a half a mile that way the river in the distance, they come when they get past the border patrol and this border here is owned by a gentleman named lupe cabrera, and every morning he finds migrants sleeping in that open area in the patio, using the restrooms, and he said that about two months ago, he actually got a call from police because a woman, a pregnant woman had given birth. a baby was born right here about two months ago. now, we spent about four hours yesterday out here. we encountered four groups. there's about 200 migrants we encountered, some were pregnant and a lot of unaccompanied children, and i talked with chris crabrera a border patrol agent here, and he said do you know what? you've got to factor in the danger of whose behind this , and you know who that is? that's the cartels. listen. >> the cartels, nothing crosses that river without the blessing of the cartels. the cartel tells these people when to cross, where to cross, how many are crossing. everything is done a certain way to maximize their efficiency on their side. griff: this , as we get the new national numbers in the southwest border from cbp 100,000 of 28% from january, up 97% from fiscal year 2020. another indication we have a serious problem with the un accompanied minors. we find out that hhs is now looking at nasa's moffet field in mountainview, california for more space and they already opened up one, and now it looks like they have to get more and i can tell you, brian, ainsley, and steve here in the rgb sector over the past 10 days local officials say they are encountering about 250 un accompanied minors a day, and they have some 1,800 in custody. steve: griff, real quick if the migrants came up behind you to walk from mexico into the united states, anybody there to stop them? griff: so they pretty much have this down pat. they come across the river and the border patrol has setup a temporary processing site, just on the ridge in the distance beyond me and the migrants come out of the water, across the river, rather, and they walk right up to the border patrol agents and peacefully surrender themselves, claim asylum and they come out by the busloads and in the last 24 hours, steve there was 1,790 in this sector. steve: unbelievable. ainsley? ainsley: wow. that is unbelievable. thank you so much, griff. all right, let's bring in newt gingrich, fox news contributor and former house speaker. good morning to you, mr. gingrich. >> good morning. ainsley: good morning. what's your reaction when you hear those words that griff is talking about and those images? >> well, look. i think you're getting exactly what the policy suggests you'll get. president biden has sent a clear signal to the world that the united states is open for illegal immigration. gallup estimated there's 65 million people that would like to come to the united states. the numbers will keep going up, the system will become un sustainable by some time this summer and we'll be back where we were under president obama, we'll have tens of thousands of children wandering around, you'll have the cartels getting paid and there are at least two cartels that have basically given up drugs for people, because they make more money moving people into the u.s. than they make moving drugs into the u.s. , so i think this is a track. if you want to make sure that the american system breaks down, and that we are ultimately faced with so many people you can't possibly manage it, this is a terrific strategy, but we shouldn't be surprised, we are getting exactly what this kind of policy delivers. brian: you talk about what the mexican cartels are getting. we even have rates. maybe there's a rate card out there. u.s. border patrol says that if you bring one person across, at $3,250, african travelers, $20,000, asians will pay more, the evaluation said there will be significant influx of migrants, they expect caribbeans , asians and middle easters to be there in the spring and the summer and it's not just about joe biden and president obama. how about who said this to reuters they see him, meaning biden, as the migrant president so many feel they are going to reach the united states, mexico says this is a crisis. they want it addressed. how can he walk away from this and pretend that it's not a five alarm fire? >> well, when you're dealing with the president who forgets the name of his secretary of defense and forgets the name of the pentagon, he could probably, i don't know that he walks away but probably sit away forever. why would any of this affect him he will say oh, i guess that's probably the problem, and i think that we really underestimate the degree to which he's detached from reality and the degree to which people will later on look back and say gosh, there were terrible consequences, why didn't we know better? well we did know better but we adopted a policy deliberately that sends a signal. you know, everywhere in the world, whether they're watching fox & friends, whether they're just talking to themself , people gossip, and they learn and everywhere in the world right now the signals out that the u.s. is a welcome matt, that president biden would love for you to come stay, and the economic opportunities in america, despite everything, are still so much better than in most of the world. you can't blame a father or a mother who wants their child to grow up here, rather than in poverty, but you can blame the american government for not being honest about the cost. this is going to be extraordinarily expensive and it's going to shake i think the fabric of americal society, and i guess, my guess is that in four years of the harris-biden administration you're going to actually see enormous influx, probably in the neighborhood of six to 15 million people. strategist speaking steve: speaking of costly yesterday the house passed the $1.9 trillion relief bill and it sounds like joe biden is going to be signing it tomorrow, there will be a big celebration, and things like that, but you know, what happened to the unity we heard joe biden talk about i want everybody to be together, we're going to go forward, we're not going to do all that party line stuff. so far, everything they've done, mr. speaker, is party line, and it's not like joe biden is running the party. it's nancy and chuck are telling joe what to do. >> well and then i think kamala harris. i really do think this is becoming the harris-biden administration and you can tell that every time you see him in public. why would you think that he's dramatically better in private than he is when he can't take any questions in public? he can't remember what he's talking about. he can't remember his own nominees. my assumption is that he's a very minor force inside that building and that the white house is increasingly run by harris, pelosi, and schumer, and of course, look, these are hard line liberals. these are people that think that it's fine that walmart or rather, that a major drug store company is closing every single drug store in san francisco because they will no longer prosecute petty theft and people have learned you can steal up to $950 and come back a couple hours later and steal another $950, so you literally are watching the collapse of what you and i thought of as civilization. that's the world of pelosi and schumer and harris, and they're happy to give it to the rest of us. ainsley: so there is a headline this morning about a new york city school. it's downtown, it's in noho, which is nolita and soho area and it's called grace church school and parents spend $57,000 a year year to send their kids here. steve: what? ainsley: they sent out a 12-page memo to all of the students and to the parents saying you don't need to say certain words at home, including mom and dad, they now want you to say grown- ups, folks, family, or guardians. they say don't ask anyone where you're from. you need to say watt is your cultural or ethnic background. they don't want you to say merry christmas. they want you to say happy holidays or have a great break instead of boys and girls, guys, lady, and gentlemen, you need to say people, folks, friends, readers, or mathematicians. what's your reaction? >> well, look. nobody has noticed it yet but the house democrats unanimously voted in the rules to eliminate mother, father, brother, sister, they took out 29 gender-specific names. when you look at these things you have to realize you're dealing, for example, with a bill which is essentially the gay and transexual supremacy act which basically says you can practice your religion as long as you don't offend anybody but it'll be illegal if you offend anybody, and i think we are see ing a tremendous assault on the whole notion of whether there are males and females. you had the president sign an executive order that allows tran sexual males to compete as though they're females which we know guarantees the end of women's sports, because if you grow up through your teenage years males simply are going to win most of the contests. we're in a period where the weiderest people, and i'll get in trouble for saying it but i'm old enough that i grew up in a different world. i grew up in a world where we recognize there really were mother and father and we thought it was a good idea to have a mother and a father. we thought it was a good idea to recognize boys and girls. you know, in california, there's a bill in the legislature that would make it illegal for a department store to have a boys section and a girl's section. this is a madness, i recently did a podcast with sad gad and he's amazing because he says basically, we now have parasites in our brain that are cultural parasites, and that people just literally are crazy and i think you're seeing an example of the craziness brian: let's move on. we can go on this forever but sadly it's coming from america and it's infecting the world. it's usually the opposite and i'm embarrassed by it. meanwhile, i'm not embarrassed about this. a four-part look on fox nation about rush limbaugh. where he came from, the impact he made and while he'll continue to resonate in the future. you saw it up close and personal your rise mimicked his rise. here you are, commenting on the rush limbaugh you knew. >> let me track my knowledge. i'm becoming aware of newt gingrich for you. it's your early 80s and the democrats and the media are just creaming reagan, every day. personally, his ideas, his policies, and i'd go home when i had a night free and watch cspan , and there was this guy doing special orders. he and a couple of his associates were speaking to an empty house chamber but as long as somebody was in there speaking, cspan had to cover it and this guy was ronald reagan jr.. brian: it was newt gingrich, i had it backwards, newt. did you know that rush was out there and supporting you? >> well, look, rush went national in 1988. he was a strong allie of ours, he was a big factor in our victory in 1994 with the contract with america. he and reagan had an ability to use common language so the average person could understand it to describe things that were so blatantly true that they just, they both sort of ran over their opponents with the shear logic of their language, and rush was a major force. i'd say prior to the rise of fox news, he was probably the most important populous conservative force in the country, and we are a different country, a better country, because of rush limbaugh. steve: you know he was such a good explainer. he was a great entertainer and a broadcaster but he would go into what other broadcasters would never in a million years talk about on the radio, and he'd talk about it for an hour and by the end it's like oh, that makes perfect sense. well i got a question for you, newt. who takes over for him? because he is leaving a gigantic void in the world of broadcasting. >> well i think mark stein probably has the inside track as a really interesting intelectual whose also very funny and very capable of doing it and he's been doing rush's show for a good bit and as rush was taking chemotherapy and i certainly think he's a possibility. nobody is going to replace rush. i mean, rush was a unique person , probably the person whose come closest to replace him, is shawn hannity. if you look, he does three hours of radio a day and then an hour of television at night. he has a huge audience, but even shawn would say that rush had a, he had a unique set of abilities you were exactly right. he understood he had to entertain you to get you to stay listening long enough that he co-ed you indicate you, and as a result, he had a huge audience, and he was genuinely funny. there aren't many people that have as good a sense of humor as rush did. reagan was another one, but rush was probably funnier than reagan and worked at being funny. understood that his real power was you liked listening to him, not just you learned, but you liked, you had a personal relationship and he had a personal relationship with about 23 million people, so it's a remarkable achievement. ainsley: yeah, they were all so sad, it was a sad day when he passed away. many of them listened to him for 32 years thank you so much, newt. the age of rush is available now on fox nation, fox nation is a members-only streaming service with exclusive access to original content, events and your favorite personalities so head to foxnation.com to sign up today. still ahead, louisiana senator john kennedy is going to join us live, but first, as the lone star state fully reopens for business, will cain is in texas, he's finding out what the people think what they really think about freedom. >> ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ (quiet piano music) ♪ ♪ comfort in the extreme. the lincoln family of luxury suvs. ♪ ♪i've got the brains you've got the looks♪ ♪let's make lots of money♪ ♪you've got the brawn♪ ♪i've got the brains♪ ♪let's make lots of♪ ♪uh uh uh♪ ♪oohhh there's a lot of opportunities♪ with allstate, drivers who switched saved over $700. saving is easy when you're in good hands. allstate click or call to switch today. four, five, turn, kick. allstate we got chased by these wild coyotes! they were following her because she had beef jerky in her pocket. (laughing) (trumpet playing) someone behind me, come on. pick that up, pick that up, right there, right there. as long as you keep making the internet an amazing place to be, we'll keep bringing you a faster, more secure, and more amazing internet. xfinity. the future of awesome. steve: well the state of texas is fully reopened and as the state allows businesses to operate at 100% capacity and of course it removes that mask mandate. fox & friends weekend co-host will cain joins us from friscoe, texas, not far from the ikea where i bought all of my daughter sally's furniture where she went she went to smu in dallas. will: the dallas cowboys practice facility and a huge commercial and real estate retail development as well where people are walking around having lunch and yesterday i wanted to ask them how they felt about their new-found freedom and the responsibility that goes along with it. here is what they had to say. how do you feel about the governor, as of today, officially saying businesses can open to 100% capacity, and no more mandated mask-wearing? >> i'm fully supportive of governor abbott's decision over there. i think it's smart for the state to get out of telling people what to do, give them the option to do what they feel is most appropriate. >> we should all be able to make our own choices. make choices about our own healthcare, how we're going to go about in public and how we want to be and be tolerant of the people that do want to wear masks and the people that don't want to wear a mask. i don't think anybody should have to do one thing one way or the other. if you don't want to wear a mask , it's your option of course , but we always need to respect each other and show each other that we all love each other because we fight for the same thing. >> i'm okay with the businesses opening 100%. i'm a business owner and it was a hard year for all of us so opening that backup is going to help us. will: you're a healthcare worker how do you feel about the make mandate being lifted and businesses being allowed to open at 100% capacity. >> i'm totally against it. here in texas, a lot of people are not vaccinated, as of yet, so that's why in texas, we still need to be wearing our masks. notice i still have on two. >> i think that as individuals, we should have an opportunity to have a say and do we want to go to that establishment that's open 100% or would we still prefer to socially distance? give us a choice. will: you said the main difference this feels like? >> freedom. >> we're loving it. will: so steve, here in the suburbs of dallas i put the number at 60/40. 60% total embrace of the freedom ready for the responsibility, ready for politics to reflect the culture of texas of freedom, 40% retaining some concerns, a little concerned that the mandate is gone, but i told you this earlier, steve i think you heard it in some of the responses. 100% of the people were respectful of other's choices, and in large part, accommodate their own behavior to other's desires, so i think texans are ready to accept that responsibility and respect other people's desires, steve. steve: you know, i loved hearing all of those different points of view, and the choice is what did jump out at me as well, because you wonder where we would have been a year ago, had they said okay, these are the things to protect yourselves but they had not closed down the whole planet , and then just giving people the choice, where would we be one year later because today marks the one year anniversary of the pandemic. will: no, can you imagine where our economy be today, where our healthcare sector be today? human beings are made capable of good decisions if you provide them with the right information. it's a thought experiment, unfortunately, we don't get to do in reverse. steve: exactly right. all right, will, great reporting from down there in friscoe, texas, north of dallas. thank you, sir. will: thank you. steve: meanwhile president biden getting ready to sign that $1.9 trillion covid relief bill not one single republican supporting it, including senator john kennedy, where he's going to join us next. meanwhile, you need something to do today? well from our friends at fox bet , download the fox bet super 6 app today and you could win $10,000 by the weekend all you got to do is predict the outcome s of six different questions in the fox bet super 6 quiz show. you've seen us play it topics range from entertainment to sports to weather, absolutely free to play, it's so easy, so if you like to try it download the fox bet super 6 app right now and we will be right back. it all starts with an invitation... ...to experience lexus. the invitation to lexus sales event. get 0% apr financing on the 2021 rx 350. experience amazing at your lexus dealer. not everybody wants the same thing. get 0% apr financing on the 2021 rx 350. that's why i go with liberty mutual — they customize my car insurance so i only pay for what i need. 'cause i do things a bit differently. wet teddy bears! wet teddy bears here! only pay for what you need. ♪ liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty. ♪ opportunities are all about timing. so if you're turning 65 or retiring soon, it's time to take advantage of a plan that gives you more for your medicare dollar: an aarp medicare advantage plan from unitedhealthcare. call unitedhealthcare today to get $0 copays for all primary care doctor visits, $0 copays on preventive dental, and $0 copays on hundreds of prescriptions. in 2019, members saved an average of $7,200 on prescriptions. you'll even get free annual eye exams, and free designer frames. don't miss your shot. if you're turning 65 or retiring soon, learn about our wide choice of plans, including ppo options, call unitedhealthcare today. we'll walk you through your choices and find the right plan for you. catching a good opportunity is all about timing. so, enroll today, before the moment slips away. it's time to take advantage. steve: sports right now, big east tournament continues today with the quarter final round, abbey hornasek is live outside madison square garden in new york city and she's 14 blocks directly south of where i'm sitting. reporter: very specific, steve, very specific. yeah, you know, we have a lot to look forward to today, that first game that you're mentioning is going to kickoff at noon, as we have the train go underneath us giving that beyonce hair but i want to get to highlights first from yesterday starting with georgetown versus marquette georgetown glided past the golden eagles to notch a win , the hoyas will be taking on number one ranked villanova at noon, next game was the nail biter and the reason why we just love these tournaments, steve butler clawed their way back from behind after trailing by 14 at the half, chuck harris sent the game into overtime after knocking down two free throws in a tense moment at the end of regulation and final score was 70-69 and they will play number two creighton at 6:00 p.m. and finally depaul handling providence to advance on to the quarterfinals jevon freedom liberty and charlie moore led the team in scoring and freeman liberty frustrating the defense left and right like this moment right here. >> rebound, and up again. where was the defense? you got to get a hand up. reporter: they'll face number three you con at 9:00 p.m. eastern and along with the games i mentioned as before you can watch number 4 st. john's faceoff number five seaton hall at 3:00 p.m. eastern all on fox sports and steve, we finally get to see some of the top teams play today, i know you're looking forward to villanova is grab your beer, popcorn, grab your kids who both went to villanova and have a good day. steve: thank you very much indeed we'll be watching at noon today. thank you very much, abby, from march madness here in new york city to march madness in our nation's capitol. brian: absolutely president biden set to sign that massive $1.9 trillion relief bill bassed by the house without support from any republican. >> we're about to pass a historic most progressive bill in the american history. >> the president will sign it on friday and we of course are moving full speed ahead on the implementation of the bill because we know the american people need help, and need it as soon as possible. brian: even though we have not spent a trillion dollars of the help we already gave them in december, all right here to react louisiana gop senator budget committee senator john kennedy. are you celebrating the greatest progressive bill in the history of our country? >> well i voted against it, brian. president biden says it's a coronavirus bill and my response is right. i said the other day that calling this a coronavirus bill is like calling harvey weinstein a femininist. it's just the spending and of course i like, i like trying to help people. brian: absolutely. >> who are unemployed and i like trying to help our small business people, especially our restaurants, but i don't understand why we have to give bucket loads of money to prisoners. why do they need help? i don't understand why we have to give money to people who are in our country illegally. i don't understand why we have to give money to states whose revenues have gone up. brian: california. >> i don't understand why we have to give $130 billion to schools that refuse to open. i don't know why we have to pay repirations. this bill has a repirations provision and if you add up all of the coronavirus spending and then all of the spending porn there's no comparison and to me, using a coronavirus bill to effectuate spending porn is like looting after a natural disaster and that's why i voted against it. we tried with president biden. he said look, i'll meet you half way. we said okay. well then he just ignored us. brian: i know. >> if he was meeting us half way, hings a damn poor judge of distance. brian: it's comical to see these news outlets report that senator assume an and joe biden are mass negotiators because they came to a deal with mancin. i'll just bring this up to you though. we have an election in a year and a half and at that time people might be saying to themselves well one party gave me $1,400 and one person gave me $300 per child under 17 for a tax cut. are they, are you concerned that this money will get them election victory? >> no, because i don't think the american people are morons, unlike some of my colleagues. the american people don't read aristotle everyday, they don't have time, they are earning a living but many of them, most of them, will be happy to get the money, but they understand that we're borrowing all this money. we don't even have time for some of it and what i would like to see is president biden call a press conference and answer these kinds of questions but i think that it's just a shame that i've got to put the secret service jumps in front of president biden if a reporter tries to ask him a question. brian: it's unbelievable. sometimes you don't hear it and he could walk away but this time he stared at the press and walked away. real quick you're doing something i think is great. you are sponsoring bipartisan legislation that are allowed digital publishers and newspaper s to collectively negotiate with google and facebook and others, that are taking the content for free, and refusing to negotiate with the outlets that are actually driving the content. australia stood up to them and seemed to have gotten money. what you go plan on doing? >> well these social media platforms are trying to swad el the world. they aren't companies, they're countries. they're taking the original content produced by newspapers and by television broadcasters. they're not paying the broadcast ers and the newspapers for it and they, meaning the social media platforms, are putting it on their sites to draw viewers, and my bill would say is look, you can share the content. it's not yours, you can share it , but you got to pay for it. brian: absolutely. it's about time, and amy klobuchar is with this , it's up to you guys to stand up for the outlets, individually they don't have the power, collectively they do, especially with washington behind them. good job, senator kennedy. thanks so much for joining us appreciate it. that was it, series of great analogies which i'll be jotting down using throughout the day. up next, we're going to check back with ainsley whose talking with a group of chicago residents about how they've adjusted to the pandemic one year later, and their plans when life returns to normal. >> ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ trelegy for copd. ♪ birds flyin' high, you know how i feel. ♪ ♪ breeze drifting on by you know how i feel. ♪ ♪ it's a new dawn... ♪ if you've been taking copd sitting down, it's time to make a stand. start a new day with trelegy. no once-daily copd medicine has the power to treat copd in as many ways as trelegy. with three medicines in one inhaler, trelegy helps people breathe easier and improves lung function. it also helps prevent future flare-ups. trelegy won't replace a rescue inhaler for sudden breathing problems. tell your doctor if you have a heart condition or high blood pressure before taking it. do not take trelegy more than prescribed. trelegy may increase your risk of thrush, pneumonia, and osteoporosis. call your doctor if worsened breathing, chest pain, mouth or tongue swelling, problems urinating, vision changes, or eye pain occur. take a stand and start a new day with trelegy. ask your doctor about once-daily trelegy. and save at trelegy.com. new projects means new project managers. ask your doctor about once-daily trelegy. you need to hire. i need indeed. indeed you do. the moment you sponsor a job on indeed you get a short list of quality candidates from our resume database. claim your seventy five dollar credit, when you post your first job at indeed.com/home. some companies still have hr stuck between employees and their data. entering data. changing data. more and more sensitive, personal data. and it doesn't just drag hr down. it drags the entire business down -- with inefficiency, errors and waste. it's ridiculous. so ridiculous. with paycom, employees enter and manage their own data in a single, easy to use software. visit paycom.com, and schedule your demo today. ainsley: turning back now to our conversation with chicago business owners, parents, and a high school student on how this pandemic has impacted every day lives over this past year, we have this wonderful panel we've been talking to all morning and kristin, i'll start with you this time, because you own seven restaurants you had to close one, right? you have six now, and what are your concerns when it comes to the vaccinations? what's young protesters r plea to the governor? >> i'd like to see the hospitality industry where you're actually face to face with customers, get the vaccine. the politicians put themselves ahead of people that are actually in the general public and that's disappointing so i'd like to see our staff and anyone that happens to be in the service industry vaccinated ahead of others. ainsley: it make sense because now the governor is saying only 50 people in your restaurant at a time because that's how many can gather as a group and you all want that to change and more people obviously in your restaurants, but once everyone is vaccinated then that number goes away, right? >> before that number, before when vaccinated we're able to get a little bit more open but obviously once everyone is vaccinated there's no reason to keep us shutdown because i don't feel that we were ever the main cause of any of the spread. it was mostly nursing homes and private gatherings and so by having restaurants with capacity we're able to have the security to make sure people are following protocols, but if we get the vaccinations to our service employees then i'd like to see us open even that much faster. ainsley: okay and sam, you agree with her because you're a restaurants owner? >> oh, yeah definitely. we want our employees together vaccinated. one server to be in front of 50- 70 customers, and one chef, and then i want to clarify that abby: 50 people per restaurant is for room and gathering the city will not increase the 50 unless the governor goes to 150 we will see our numbers increase. ainsley: how many do you normal ly have in your restaurant >> you can have 50. ainsley: if you were open at full capacity? >> 800. ainsley: what? >> we have three restaurantses, one 700 and one 900 so we're operating at 25%, i mean, you don't even open your doors. at 50% we're losing money, so it really is a ppp was used to pay the employees and created a bigger debt for ourselves. ainsley: now, willie i know you said there has been silver lines for your business and for your family. >> well, yeah, one of the things that we've benefited from as a construction firm is that people are finding out what's important. they are building decks, they are building fencing, and we also recognize that the price of lumber has jumped through the roof even sometimes twice as high, but one of the things that he mentioned that i'd like to add value to there, we also have to appreciate the black markets that are popping up, that are the things that are not being regulated where people are still partying inside chicago and illinois but there's no regulation because people are still going to crave to do those social events that they've been doing, and have you to watch out for that but i'm happy about the positive things we can't forget those. ainsley: your son is sitting beside you and he hasn't been in school, in how long? the entire year and a little bit of last year? >> yes. ainsley: since last march? >> yes. ainsley: how is that effecting you? >> it's upsetting. i miss going inside the school building. ainsley: do you even mistaking tests in classrooms? >> no. ainsley: you never thought you'd say that. >> yeah. i miss school. ainsley: what about your friends are there parents letting them hang out with you? >> now they are, because i think people are starting to get like kind of over covid-19 a little bit because it's like taking too long or something. they kind of is more and more. ainsley: and you were telling us we were talking about the silver lines. you said your family is spending so much time together and you realize you were overprogramming your kids before. >> we do, and we now that things are opening backup and some sports they're allowed to do, just this week it was like you know what? we don't need to have something everyday after remote learning or , you know, the two hybrid days they are doing, and we enjoy eating dinner together, and we enjoy playing board games we were laughing earlier, sometimes really long monopoly game during quarantine was the best thing ever. so it has brought a lot of that together. my teenage boys get along better than they ever have. ainsley: really? >> because they had each other and that was who they, you know, went to, and so those things have been blessings. ainsley: that's wonderful. we're going to take a break and after the break, we're going to be talking to you all and we're going to also ask dr. nicole saphier some questions, we had some questions about medical care, and nicole saphier was on our show earlier and she's coming back but just stay with us first we'll check in with bill hemmer. >> bill: nice to see you good show there in chicago, ainsley. always great to get out from the big city, right? ainsley: thank you. >> bill: we have to hear from the people in the middle part of the country. nice to see , big show coming up dana is live in dallas, thinking about getting out in the country she's coming up live in a moment mike pompeo on the china virus one year later. we'll also talk to the white house advisor about vaccinations today, karl rove, dr. marc siegel responds to a musician who made a mistake of reading the book see you in a couple minutes top of the hour right here. 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. for nearly a decade, comcast has been helping students get ready. we've connected 4 million low-income students to low- cost, high-speed xfinity internet. we're working with hundreds of school districts across the country to sponsor free internet and laptops. and parents are seeing an impact. and now we're turning 1,000 community centers into lift zones - wifi enabled safe spaces to study. so more students can be ready for anything. i'm trying to do some homework here. it's moving day. and while her friends are doing the heavy lifting, jess is busy moving her xfinity internet and tv services. it only takes about a minute. wait, a minute? but what have you been doing for the last two hours? ...delegating? oh, good one. move your xfinity services without breaking a sweat. xfinity makes moving easy. go online to transfer your services in about a minute. get started today. ainsley: we are back with our panel of chicago business owners , parents and a high school student let's bring in fox news medical contributor dr. nicole saphier to answer some of their questions good morning to everyone. >> good morning. ainsley: you have a question? >> good morning, doctor. a lot of the parents in the city were wondering about vaccinations and their teachers being vaccinated and one of the sticking points was rolling out the vaccinations they need to be prioritized, parents want to know if their teacher has or has not been vaccinated so they can make an educated decision on returning to school for their children. >> well the cdc says that actually teachers do not need to be vaccinated for children to safely return to school so that's one big thing to remember and when it comes to whether your teacher has been vaccinated there is medical privacy laws so while there's not published record, i'm sure that if you ask the school, ask the teacher, they will be forthcoming with their information. ainsley: okay and next is alberto. you go by al. do you have a question? >> yes. obviously, we want to keep everyone safe, and we're here to talk partly about schools. can you please tell us for children, adolescents and young adults that are generally healthy, if they contracted covid, how serious is it? i know people are worried about death. how serious is it for kids that are generally healthy? >> well, that is a great question, and as a mother o of three something that weighs on me very heavily but i'm extreme ly happy to report that covid-19 severity and death is exceedingly rare in children and young adults, especially in those healthy, a big study from john hopkins looked at the data and nearly all of children who have died from covid-19 had some co morbidity so when it comes to getting them back-to-school the important thing is if you look at the data there's a huge study of 90,000 children and 30 cases of in-school transmission and a majority of them were adult-to-adult so getting the children back-to-school is the best thing for them if they have a condition such as diabetes or they are obese talk to the pediatrician about ways you can ensure safety and health of your child. ainsley: great advice. yeah, thank you, doctor, we have another question for you willie in the front. >> yeah, hi, dr. saphier. i noted in my community in the black community there's a lot of vaccination -phobia where people are afraid to take it because of historical incidents that have made people in our community weary of taking the vaccine. could you speak to those folks in my community who are terrified of taking the vaccine and maybe reassure them that the vaccination is safe and what are the results of people who have taken it so far? >> well, willie, this is one of the most important questions that i can answer, and while there is historic trepidation with vaccination in the black community i can tell you that covid-19 in the black community is far worse than any concern for the vaccine. you have to look at this. black deaths account for about 34% of all covid-19 deaths, yet the black community is only 12% of the u.s. population, of all of the children who have died from covid-19, 75% of them are of color, so people of color are disproportionately affected by covid-19 for various social and health reasons. these vaccines have proven extremely safe, extremely efficacious and i explore everyone of the black communities, any community of color that is highly susceptible to covid-19, please get this vaccine. it is safe. it is what we need to get through this pandemic and it can save your life. ainsley: okay. we have one last question for you, sarah right here on the front. >> hi, dr. saphier. my question is regarding the mental health of all of our children. what are the long term effects that you see and feel from that? just having three children of my own and at various ages, high school, middle school and elementary i've seen what they've experienced at home. what are your feelings for the long term effect versus just getting sick and there's the mental health side of it. >> well, sarah, i can already tell you the long term mental health effects are going to far out weigh that of the virus itself when it comes from children, ainsley and i discussed this exact thing a year ago on this program, and we , as parents and the educators need to make sure we do everything as possible to get our children through the next few years. ainsley: yeah, dr. saphier, we had a mom panel a year ago was it a year ago today, dr. saphier , you and i were just texting about it and you predicted all of this. >> well, i mean, unfortunately it is coming true and about half of america's children are still out of school, despite all of the evidence showing how important it is for them to get back. ainsley: okay, dr. saphier, thank you so much and make sure you download the fox news app, open up your camera, scan the q r code, and also, join fox nation. panel, i love you all. i appreciate everything you all have done, and thanks for getting the worst out and i hope your governor is us had en ing you all were wonderful terrific job and cute little willie, i wish you all the best with your life, brian and steve? steve: great job from chicago tomorrow while be talking about joe biden's address to the nation, tonight, as he addresses the half a million americans who we've lost in the last year, of the coronavirus pandemic. brian: get on that plane, ainsley, see you tomorrow.

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