Transcripts For FOXNEWSW The Five 20180703 : comparemela.com

Transcripts For FOXNEWSW The Five 20180703



dive equipment. but they would each be guided by two professional divers. even the elite divers, the navy divers, found it difficult to move through the muddy waters and the passageways. in fact, some of the channels in those caverns are so narrow that only one person at a time can fit through. that means that for portions of the trip out, the boys would be on their own. watch this. >> is almost zero visibility. there is currents to battle against. it is really quite a strenuous environment to be in. >> the question then becomes how these boys handle stress because experts say that if any of them get into the small passageways and they panic, that could be life-threatening. and now if they decide to stay inside the cave and sit tight, stay there for the rainy season, that means not getting out until october. they would certainly have supplies and a light and communication, but more rain might mean moving to higher ground, and right now, they are about to end a half miles an end a half mile down. a third option is to find another entrance into the cave or drill a brand-new entrance, but the area out there is solid rock, and that in itself would take substantial time. now, some of the boys have suffered minor injuries, but for the most part, they are all healthy and are now be given a high protein liquid diet along with pain medication and antibiotics. they have also brought in a phone line so the boys can talk to their families. the boys, as you might imagine, are aware that the eyes of the world are now on them, and as you have seen from the video, they are all still in their soccer uniforms. they are scared in many instances, but we are told they are in good spirits, and we expect a decision on a rescue plan to happen sometime in the next 12-24 hours. at dana. >> dana: thank you for that update. we will take around the table here. jason, it is remarkable that so they are all okay, but staying there is difficult. leaving might be even worse, and they might have to wait until october to get out. >> jason: this is one of those heart-wrenching stories. there are parents and families, they just want to play soccer, they go dive into this cave, and the next thing you know, they are fighting for their lives. there are two doctors, i heard, that are going to volunteer to go in and be with them. offer comfort, but this is one of those moments where the whole world is watching and praying and hoping that they somehow figure out a way because this is not an easy one. they have something like 1.6 million liters of water, and it only one went down 1 centim. so they are trying to pump it out, it is a scary situation. >> dana: these boys are the same age as your son, kimberly. they have some resilience, and they also have a pretty good attitude, it sounds like by all accounts. you can relate. >> kimberly: yes, i really can. i just think it is so sad for them and their families, that they are trapped like this. i mean, the only thing i can say is thank god they have each other. it is not just like one or two little boys at that age. you are at that age where you are about to go into your adolescence, et cetera. they are still children. and you can imagine if it was like little girls in there, et cetera. so i am really happy that the u.s. is putting forth such a concerted effort to be able to help. and a rescue effort like this. this is a very good example of what we do best. reaching out. to others in need, and using our resources. so i think people should pray for them, and hopefully this is going to work out really well. obviously, a lot of people trying to work together for this operation to do a very favorable result here. so hopefully that is going to happen very soon. >> dana: it is amazing what they can do, what they can figure out. >> juan: first and foremost to me is the fact on the ground, the idea is these young men, 11-16, they had no food for ten days. no food. so the expectation was that some of them may have died. we know that they are suffering from muscle atrophy. some of them can't stand for lack of food. now they are starting to put food in. and of the doctors, as they were saying, they are there to try to help them. not only to get them accustomed to consuming solid food, but to instruct them about how to get their bodies working again. the second thing that amazes me is that in this age of political polarization, you have the english, the american, the chinese, the australian as well as the thai all working together. nobody is finger-pointing. everybody says hey, that is a group of children. as kimberly was saying, we are going to help them. we are going to get involved and to do what's right. nobody knew the kids were missing until one mom said hey, my son didn't come home. and then everyone said hey, where are those boys? so they have walked 1.2 miles into the cave, right? so they walk into the cave before the flooding prevents them from coming out. now, i read a book once. it was a novel about a spelunking situation. people go into a cave. for me, i would be like freaked out. but if it was daytime, apparently, they walk in, and they don't realize how far they've gone or how narrow the exit is. and it's the exit then that floods and prevents them from getting out. and now, even the professional divers are saying you have mud in the water. so even if you are a tough, professional diver, you can't see. you don't know where you are going. >> dana: right. there is a guy who was a cave diver who says that it is roughly 1.5 miles to get there, but it took them four hours to get through the water. >> they have their equipment on, but they can't see. shadow divers. it is a great book. these guys are superheroes, these divers. people who do this kind of rescue. it's an amazing story. i love looking at all of the details. they are in danger, but i think these kids are going to be okay. if you want to read a great book over the summer "shadow divers. it's about people, these divers who do this life risking kind of dives. >> kimberly: because they're trying to save people or for fun? >> tom: it covers all of the diving world. guys injures a who do it recreationally. they do recreational dives, and they go down looking for treasure, but in their spare time, they are always ready to help in situations like this. >> juan: one of the interesting to moments that has come out of the scum the international response and the use of social media to talk about this, that there is great awareness that other children are going to be interested in the fact that these children are trapped. so people are being told to be careful what you say about these young people. this is not a time to go after the young man. it is not a time to belittle them for being in the cave. we wonder why they were there. why their coach took them in there. you know what? we don't need to know. >> dana: you are from utah, i am from colorado, wyoming. and a lot of those areas there, you could get yourself into a situation, especially in utah, like the zion canyon, where you might go down a little trail, and all of a sudden, next thing you know, there is water up to your chin. >> jason: out west, we've got a lot of abandoned places. we do have a lot of caves and cave networks there between nevada and utah and colorado and wyoming. one of the things i can't get over is how dark it is. i go into my closet, turn on a light, truly can't imagine how dark it was. they went nine days and there before they figured out that they were alive. if they even had much with them. and now, they've got this hard decision, right? what do you do? do you swim? do you put a mask on them? do you wait it out and hope that mother nature doesn't pour more water onto them? >> dana: we hope that everything turns out okay. we hope that they have what they need to get there it, i am sure that they are very serene at the moment. they seem like it's in the pictures. they have been raised very well. we will keep you updated on that. but now, coming up, the latest on the supreme court showdown over resin trumps a pick for the highest court in the land. we will be right back. ♪ for drivers with accident forgiveness, liberty mutual won't raise their rates because of their first accident. ♪ liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty. ♪ it was always our singular focus, a distinct determination. to do whatever it takes, use every possible resource. to fight cancer. and never lose sight of the patients we're fighting for. our cancer treatment specialists share the same vision. experts from all over the world, working closely together to deliver truly personalized cancer care. specialists focused on treating cancer. using advanced technologies. and more precise treatments than before. working as hard as we can- doing all that we can- for everyone who walks through our doors. this is cancer treatment centers of america. and these are the specialists we're proud to call our own. treating cancer isn't one thing we do. it's the only thing we do. expert medicine works here. learn more at cancercenter.com cancer treatment centers of america. appointments available now. you might or joints.hing for your heart... but do you take something for your brain. with an ingredient originally found in jellyfish, prevagen is the number one selling brain-health supplement in drug stores nationwide. prevagen. the name to remember. ♪ >> tom: the clock is ticking. we are less than a month away from the president picking his pick for the supreme court. considering and interviewing people for the job. the white house is pushing back against mounting pressure from democrats who have vowed to oppose the president's pick. >> dana: look, i think that is the democrats message right now, which is oppose everything and to do nothing. it has frankly gotten really sad that the party has no message, no leadership, no solution. and they want to fight a president who is doing amazing things for our country. the things that are really hard to argue with. >> juan: the biggest concern is that roe v. wade could be reversed. but "the wall street journal" op-ed argues that the abortion ruling will stand. here's the expo nation. am quoting for you. "of the liberal mind is always that it hangs by a traditional thread, and about conservative justice will doom it, yet it still stands after nearly five decades, no one on his list of nominees will claim to want to overturn it, and that is not because they are lying. they will be showing proper conservative respect for the law and the reputation of the court court." dana, what do you think of that? that wasn't an op-ed, it was an editorial. >> dana: i thought it was fantastic. i am a big fan. they lay things out very calmly and logically, and they don't let emotion run away with the dish it. the dish that runs away with the spoon? i think that even if they are correct, that doesn't mean that the democrats won't use it. so for example, in the nomination, that was the immediate accusation that either one of them was going to be the deciding vote that would overturn roe v. wade. and as "the wall street journal" pointed out, that is not true. it doesn't nest necessarily mean that even if there is a case tht makes its way up through the supreme court, it doesn't mean that all of a sudden, there is no right to have an abortion in the united states. it means that the states will then talk to the people and to decide what they would want to do. some states are very liberal in their abortion laws, where they can be outside of roe v. wade. some states are conservative, and there will be a debate on the merits. the concern about roe v. wade is not the argument was made that it wasn't decided by the people. it was the judges making laws. and that's why you see conservative so frustrated about this idea that judges come in and interpret the constitution in a way that the founding fathers didn't intend. that's where it will be. i'm not saying we won't have a big argument and a debate about roe v. wade. we will. but i do think that people are being needlessly emotional about it, and if you think about the simple fact and the logic, it is not as dire as they think. >> juan: i would think that the counter from the democrats would be against the editorial, which is terrific it, but clearly, they want to take this issue off the table. and in fact, president trump has said that he intends to appoint judges who will overturn roe v. wade. >> jason: well, obviously they are probably correct. however, i'm not sure -- i'm not a lawyer, but i have a lot of country common sense. and i don't think -- i don't know what the deal is with it, if the judicial decision is wrong, they should overturn it. so i don't know why we have the reputation of the court to worry about. i am worried about the reputation of the country. if the law has been, if there is an unjust law, it doesn't mean how long it has been on the books, we are going to vote to overturn it. we should overturn unjust laws. if there is an unjust judicial decision, i don't care about the precedent. >> juan: if you look back at something like plessy v ferguson, something that had to be overturned by brown, the alternate explanation that we are facing is that americans pride stability and the law. and it is not a function of politics, what is popular one moment and not popular the next, but we are a nation based on law. when there is a law, leave it alone. >> tom: but the court has discretion to what they have before them. so there needs to be a case that actually piques their interest where they actually decide to hear that case and make a landmark decision. and it has been good for 40, 50, 60 years, that they have overturn. most recently, you have to pay union dues and one not. my preference, i really like the senator. the number one question for the president is who can get 51 votes in the united states senate? and one of the senators who probably has the best chance of doing that. i also think that this judge, amy barrett, of the seventh circuit. she has already been through this. she was already confirmed by the senate. she has already heard those questions. we know what her answers are. and she has got a great reputation on the seventh circuit. so democrats have already made up their mind. they have already said it we are going to vote no no matter what. so okay, let's play that game and just put it up for a vote. who can get 51? >> juan: kimberly, i was very interested to read in several papers, the democratic strategy. clearly, they don't have the vote. so the alternative strategy would be that if democrats ever regain power, expands the course. so that there are more people on the court. another possibility would be to say we are not going to have a vote. in the way that senator mcconnell, the majority leader said we are not having a vote on this. we are not having a vote if the democrats ever regain, or we can install this for the moment. what do you think of that? >> kimberly: i think they should put it up for a vote, fair and square, for the presidential term, this is -- you know, he won the election fair and square. one of the things he campaigned on was that he was going to select conservative justices to be able to serve on the supreme court. he has done that with neil gorsuch. he intends to do it again. i think that a lot of times, we have some hyperbole about roe v. wade. people saying oh, this is going to be overturned. and the fact of the matter is in the interview, that is not one of the questions that he is going to ask as a prerequisite. but i think common sense would tell you that if he picks a conservative judge, that's they are are going to be someone who follows the law. and not worry about popularity, political popularity on the court. >> juan: michael moore getting in the conversation about the supreme court pick. he says he's going to have 1 million people surrounded the u.s. capital to prevent confirmation of any trump pick. >> dana: that's preposterous. >> jason: it would probably take 1 million people to get all the way around michael moore. >> oh! >> kimberly: . >> jason: what are they going to do? link hands and make a big game of red river? >> kimberly: red rover, send it michael moore right over. >> juan: wow. details next. ♪ and this is laura's mobile dog grooming palace. laura can clean up a retriever that rolled in foxtails, but she's not much on "articles of organization." articles of what? so, she turned to legalzoom. they helped me out. she means we helped with her llc, trademark, and a lot of other legal stuff that's a part of running a business. so laura can get back to the dogs. would you sit still? this is laura's mobile dog grooming palace and this is where life meets legal. ...to give you the protein you need with less of the sugar you don't. i'll take that. 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>> jason: i just want the best of students and of the best kids who are working the hardest, doing the best in school, they are well-rounded -- the idea that you are selecting people on race, it has never rang true to me. there is a consequence of who doesn't get selected. in the case of harvard, it's tough. it is so different in the world. i read 40,000 applicants, and only 1600 kids get in. there were a number of asian students that scored lower because they thought that they had certain attributes just because they were asians. i mean, i hate the direction of that. but i hope that at some point as a country, we get past of this idea that that is going to be a determining factor. let the best kids rise up, diversify geographically, i think is a good way to partially do it. but i just don't like the direction. i think that what trump is doing is the right thing. >> kimberly: dana? >> dana: this would restore the george w. bush era regulation, and president obama had a different point of view. he took action through executive and administrative action, which is allowed. but it is also allowed for the next administration, if it disagrees, stomach, to resend i. i think that the case against harvard that they are looking at is very interesting. it is not just having to mike happening at harvard. in california, there are many asian families who are saying we are being penalized, and it's unfair. it should be based on merit. and i understand the idea behind encouraging the diversity, but i don't think that the policies have been working, so it probably won't be. i don't know what is going to happen with it, and i think that the asian-american students pushing back against this i think has opened up a different angle on it. >> kimberly: it certainly has. okay, juan, you are interested in education policy and school choice and all of the above. so this is a really fascinating area. seeing the evolution over time. three. obviously, over time, you have a situation in this country where you have a disproportionate representation of who gets into colleges and universities. it is still over half of why people are able to graduate from the schools. i think like 20% of blacks. and it has been climbing on the basis of affirmative action efforts. now, we can go all the way back to the saying that race was a legitimate issue and a thing to consider, given that you could say that there was a community of interest in having a diverse body of students, where it gave you a good education. we see the courts then come back and say you've got to narrowly tailor any consideration of race because under the 14th amendment, you can't discriminate on the basis of race in america. so anytime the consider deming to make you consider race, you have to be very careful. one that comes out of texas. if you are in the top 10% of your high school class, you can automatically go to the university of texas. we had a white student complain about that. then we had the university -- i'm sorry, we had the university of michigan. again, there is a compelling interest to have diversity. >> kimberly: and that's the standard. >> juan: yes, that you have a compelling interest. what we are seeing here, ritual to mike racial politics. you can get into yale or princeton or brown. at that point, you are playing the game. but to get in and say it i did not get in because that black man or that woman, or the asian kid came in, i think that is a lot of fooey. it right now, there is a lot of resentment out there on just that basis. this is what i would want conservatives to do who want to argue against programs like thi this. there was a story that i covered in canada last week, but it applies to the united states. there was something called the blacklist. the principal was found putting students of color on a list and attracting their achievements. speak to the were mortified. you know that he did this out of some sort of liberal idea of i want to make sure that these students are doing well in school. the thing is they didn't like being on the list. if they were humiliated by it. how am i going to tell people -- i want to be judged not on my skin color, but my grades. i think conservatives have to argue that point. white people are being hurt here, or asians. if you want to be on a list and to be given preferential treatment, i think in many cases, no. >> juan: the issue then is what is merit? a lot of people will say let's just have a meritocracy? if you are juan williams kid, you are going to go to the best school. you are going to get s.a.t. prep courses, the summer expenses that allow you to write on your resume we went on a trip to a foreign country, and i had this experience. the question then becomes, without regard for race, are we simply cementing that the upper class gets everything? >> dana: 60 minutes did that piece on princeton. the translator has said that that is probably something different. and rather than envy about race, it is about income. the diversity there is about income, and that has been a very substantial. >> kimberly: you are saying in terms of the socioeconomic background of someone to say that they have more advantages. i mean, that makes common sense. >> dana: wright, because they can't do all those extracurricular activities, not do all of those things. >> kimberly: or have the resources to travel somewhere. all right, left-wing politicians or on plastic. the latest big brother crackdown. that's next. ♪ he's less confident. here, yogi. fortunately, there's rocket mortgage by quicken loans. apply simply. understand fully. mortgage confidently. get approved in as few as 8 minutes. the wonderful thing about polident is the fact that it's very, very tough on bacteria, yet it's very gentle on the denture itself. polident's 4 in 1 cleaning system consists of 4 powerful ingredients that work together to deep clean your denture in hard to reach places. it kills 99.99% of odor causing bacteria and it helps to remove stains. polident should be the first choice of every person that wears a denture, to clean their denture. of every person that wears a denture, with tripadvisor, finding your perfect hotel at the lowest price... is as easy as dates, deals, done! simply enter your destination and dates... and see all the hotels for your stay! tripadvisor searches over 200 booking sites... to show you the lowest prices... so you can get the best deal on the right hotel for you. dates, deals, done! tripadvisor. visit tripadvisor.com ♪ ♪ ♪ raindrops on roses and whiskers on kittens ♪ ♪ bright copper kettles and warm woolen mittens ♪ ♪ brown paper packages tied up with strings ♪ ♪ these are a few of my favorite things ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ these are a few of my favorite things ♪ no mathere are over 10,000 allstate agents riding sweep. call one today. are you in good hands? ♪ >> tom: looking for plastic straw to sip your soda? if you are in seattle, you're out of luck. it is the first major city to ban restaurants from giving plastic straws and utensils to customers unless somebody specifically request one. liberals claim the move will reduce waste and -- but i tell you, when i go to kentucky fried chicken and i don't have a spork to ease my mash potatoes, i am not going to be happy. it is a great invention. >> kimberly: i just used a spork at kentucky fried chicken. >> jason: can you imagine? >> dana: you don't know kimberly guilfoyle. see one what are you talking about? >> kimberly: it is not just a straw. >> jason: 500 million straws are used on a daily basis. there is a lot of straws going out the door. what do you think of this? >> kimberly: it all depends, you get the different utensils on hospitals, kentucky fried chicken. but apparently, it's a problem with the plastic. if they are not disposed of properly, it can be an issue when it is dumped in water and with marine life or birds. you get a lot of that type of thing. >> jason: find them for littering. >> kimberly: you can do that too. >> juan: is not biodegradable. i mean, i was astounded to realize, there is more plastic in the ocean then fish. that's absurd. >> tom: there are paper straws. you just have to drink it fast. you can't leave it in there the whole time. i was poking fun at this issue, but then i had someone call in on my radio show, and they said tom, disabled people need straws. so the restaurants and bars have to keep them in there anyway. i said oh, that's a good point. but do you think that the government should have to mandate this. it is in sort of micromanaging it? >> dana: well, i am for innovation. and i think that this problem that we have of the pollution. i know that it is real. you see these things floating in the ocean. remember, i did the "one more thing" that he would be loved by everyone in the world if they cleaned up that huge it -- it's like an island of plastic trash in the ocean. but i think that this is great for innovation. so imagine some young enterprising person finding a way to make a paper straw that will last a little bit longer, so that it won't get all soggy and there. or spork, it is not a wooden one, but something that is biodegradable. still usable. we are making great innovations. this is an amazing time to be alive with all of this technology and the way that we can make good new products that can help sustain us going forward. so i am -- i would encourage and restaurants not to do that. i don't think that the government doing it is going to hell. it makes me want to go get plastic straw. >> jason: i don't want to have to bring one with me. a >> dana: you can put a metal one in your pocket, like he would upend. >> jason: then you go through the tsa line, they are not going to like that. >> dana: it is the least you can do for the plaintiff. >> jason: with all the things that are going on in the world, this is what we have to do? >> juan: i wish we could do it it. i do have some other priorities, i think that humans are really important. we want to make sure that humans have a chance. part of that is if we are mucking up the planet to the point where you can't go swimming, no place is pretty. >> dana: also, america has a problem. but you know where this is a huge problem? china. so that's why i'm saying if there could be a free market alternative, were somebody invents a product that works, then we should do that and sell a whole bunch of them to china without tariffs. >> tom: the paper straw, you can't leave it into long. but most people don't need straws. they put them into much. i don't want the cities to ban them, but i think maybe there are too many straws. i don't use straws. i don't need them. i think most adults don't. maybe kids do. >> dana: i like a straw. i do. i like a good straw. mcdonald's is working on a new paper type one that won't get all soggy. >> tom: i like the crazy straws. you go and you get a crazy straw. >> dana: i have used one of those. >> kimberly: did you really? >> tom: you are really fascinated by this. >> tom: no, no. crazy straw in the cloak room. >> dana: sounds believable. >> jason: we have to hear from professor tom. before you hit the road for your fourth of july cut; day, we are going to take some notes. it tom is up next. when we were dating, we used to get excited about things like concert tickets or a new snowboard. ♪ma ♪ >> jason: is the eve of the fourth of july, and that probably means your celebrations are about to begin or have already started. no judgment. but i want to make sure your festivities are safe. so i am offering some unsolicited advice on how to have the best summer possible. number one, get out there and experience nature. there is nothing more sublime than seeing a wild animal of close, but don't get too close. [screaming] shark. >> dana: oh, my gosh. yeah, i would not do that. >> kimberly: no thank you. >> tom: that was described as a shocking video. not too surprising. cool off. spend some quality time at the lake or pool, but don't make any grand entrances. >> holy [bleep]! >> dana: that looks like fun. that looks like fun. >> tom: enjoy a firework from a safe distance, but don't do this. yeah, i'm serious. basically, don't be an idiot. it's a present, i say it, but every year, people find new and exciting ways to injure themselves. what do you think, america? the less time you spend in the hospital, the less time coming to mic the more time you will have for barbecue. i didn't think that they would actually deliver the goods. >> dana: i didn't either, but i am very happy with my shredded chicken. >> tom: jason, were you poking fun at her? what does your favorite barbecue? >> dana: no, he was on my side side. >> tom: it was megan who was making fun. >> dana: she took it back. obviously, it's delicious. i'm really hungry. >> tom: she broke her finger, she thought she lost her finger, but she didn't. >> dana: she just stabbed it? now i'm just going to pick this up. >> kimberly: i'm getting very exhausted doing this with a fork. >> tom: these are plastic forks. i hope that we will not get fined for having a plastic fork. >> jason: so, ribs, is that definitive? i said brisket. >> kimberly: don't you think it is the most traditional? >> jason: am i wrong? is it a finer cut? >> dana: i like a brisket. maybe you are just fancy. virgil says it is pretty nice barbecue. i haven't eaten lunch and a long time. it is delicious. >> tom: i do have a summertime suggestion. if anyone wants to make their summer a little more fun, i think every year, no matter your age, wherever, you should get on slip and slide. you can't get on a slip and slide without laughing. yeah. it would be better, actually. put a little barbecue sauce on, just let her rip. >> dana: this is your granddaughter's first fourth of july. are you excited? >> jason: yes. i have the honor of taking her on her very first swing. and she liked it. it helps that the pool is like a 90 degrees. we got the special diapers, so that there was no added excitement. took her on a little swim. >> dana: it's kind of crazy out there. >> tom: i have always found that slip and slides, you really have to clean the ground before you do it. or else -- -- >> dana: it will hurt? >> tom: kind of takes the fun out of it. before we had to make our own slip and slide out of garbage bags. >> juan: i find eating on television not the best. >> dana: sorry. we are probably not related. >> juan: i am interested in a few aspects of your story. as a kid growing up, i love fireworks. i would see people get injured with fireworks all the time, so when reading about this topic, the one thing asked of me, how often people get injured, and not only injured, but sometimes killed by fireworks. they blow off their hand, their head, all kinds of things. even sparklers, which people give to little kids, you know, to hold. it can be dangerous. it's like 2,000 degrees, so if you touch it to somebody's jacket or dress, it will go up in flames. >> tom: i will say that they have one of the best freedom festivals on the face of the planet. when you're, i think it was back in the '90s, they are going to explode 1 million firecrackers. the problem is, they all went off at the same time. it was a major incident. >> dana: did anybody get hurt? >> jason: yes, people got hurt. it tens of thousands of people in the stadium this year, and it will be a good one. but back in the '90s, you thought it was one at a time? no, 1 million firecrackers at one time. >> dana: you know what is a good place to spend the fourth of july? mount rushmore. the fireworks behind the faces. beautiful. >> tom: obviously, you want to stay safe around the holidays. the problem usually has to do with combining alcohol and whatever fun you are having. you shouldn't drink before you barbecue. [laughs] no hair spray and fireworks, of course. >> juan: by the way, what you just said is a really good point. >> kimberly: i could let my hair on fire. >> juan: the number one cause of injury on the fourth of july, people drinking and driving. >> tom: a serious issue. no drinking and driving. unfortunately, people who get hit by a drunk driver. so don't do it. okay, "one more thing" is up next. ♪ you always pay your insurance on time. tap one little bumper and up go your rates. what good is your insurance if you get punished for using it? news flash: nobody's perfect. for drivers with accident forgiveness, liberty mutual won't raise your rates due to your first accident. switch and you could save $782 on home and auto insurance. call for a free quote today. liberty mutual insurance. ♪ liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty. ♪ parts a and b and want more coverage, guess what? you could apply for a medicare supplement insurance plan whenever you want. no enrollment window. no waiting to apply. that means now may be a great time to shop for an aarp medicare supplement insurance plan, insured by unitedhealthcare insurance company. medicare doesn't cover everything. and like all standardized medicare supplement insurance plans, these help cover some of what medicare doesn't pay. so don't wait. call now to request your free decision guide. it could help you find the aarp medicare supplement plan that works for you. these types of plans have no networks, so you get to choose any doctor who accepts medicare patients. rates are competitive, and they're the only plans of their kind endorsed by aarp. remember - these plans let you apply all year round. so call today. because now's the perfect time to learn more. go long. ♪ >> it's time now for one more thing. >> absence makes the heart grow fonder. you know that old saying. so take a look at this video. [inaudible] >> let me explain. that's a 1-year-old monkey, and he's being rated reunited with the two people who raised him after he was left to die from pneumonia by his monkey mom. he now lives at the zoological foundation in miami. the two humans who raised him, tonya and george, had not seen him for a few months but if the sound of their voices and the sight of them, you can see that he was full of hugs and snuggles and even buried his head and nuzzled into his father's shoulder. nothing beats love, even across the species. >> if only greg were here. monkey love. this is u.s. marine officer veteran retired dea agent and fitness director george hood and he set two new world records for the plank in 24 hours. the first record was for the longest continuous plank. he held the plank for ten hours in 10 minutes in the second was for most cumulative plank time in a 24-hour period with a total time of 18 hours and 10 minutes. this is so savage, i find it very attractive. we are part of a fund-raising effort and he raised money for the ymca of metro chicago is a urban warriors program and this is a program that connects veterans to youth who have been exposed to violence, and there's a lot of that in the chicago area. 7,000 calories. >> i don't see how that's possible. >> he's like a superhuman. >> okay. i'm impressed. i did 3 minutes the other day. >> i can do two. >> i did three, but i'm not as heavy. last week the lieutenant colonel daniel b holland, memorial military working dog hospital, that's a mouthful but it is in san antonio. it opened a new wing with expanded space for a postoperative patient and aquatic therapy room. it's the only hospital in the u.s. military working dogs injured in the line of duty can go to. injured dogs come all over the world like in afghanistan and they receive cutting edge care in the hospital can house anywhere between 700 to 900 dogs at a time. that's how important these dogs are to us and to our safety. and once a month all of them lined up inside the hospital for their checkup and that's a process that lieutenant colonel jackie parker calls organized chaos. it sounds quite amazing. congratulations to them and their new hospital wing. >> if you are a kid and you make a mistake, you can do two things. you can stand your ground and make an excuse, or you can do what noah did, check it out. >> oh, my gosh, . >> he broke a watermelon and he bolted. >> then he came back. he did walk away first. >> if i knew noah, he's out the door and he hit the highway. >> he's looking for the camera, video camera. speak a little did he know someone there was ratting him out. jason. >> the good folks at heber valley artisan cheese -- there's going to be a new cheese. if the jalapeno honey not that we are working on and we had a really good taste tester come by yesterday, none other than mitt romney, who decided to step back and go check it out. he gave it a little taste test, give it a thumbs up to try to figure out how long it's at age than i do hope i can come back to the five at some point and we will sample some trees. >> where is it? >> it's got to get to just the right age and then we will bring it in. >> how much jalapeno? a lot of jalapeno? >> just the right amount. >> it might be perfect for kimberly's food court, just saying. you can audition for it. >> it's all jalapeno business. >> thanks for joining us as we kick off the independence day holiday. we had a lot of fun. tune in tomorrow for our fourth of july special. it's a fan mail the whole show, so don't miss it. but now "special report" is up next. >> jon: thank you. this is a fox news alert. welcome to washington, i'm jon scott in for bret baier tonight. president trump expected to make remarks at a military salute to service charity dinner within the hour. we will take you there live when he does, because while we expect him to think veterans for their service, we also wonder whether he might hint at some of the other big issues facing his administration, including new details about who he is interviewing for the supreme court. it's a list that now includes a sitting senator. chief white house correspondent john roberts joins us from the north lawn with details. good evening. >> good evening to you. the white house has been tight-lipped about the interview and selection process but it appears tonight that president trump is nearing the

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