it can stretch over several states and last for days or even weeks at a time. the air is so hot it is like being inside an oven. that s exactly how folks in texas, mississippi, and louisiana are feeling right now. heat alerts are going beyond those states to include some 60 million americans. tens of thousands of folks are now without power. just being outside for a short time brutal. i m sweating standing here. we used to walk everywhere. now we uber or drive because it s so hot and humid. lots of water, coolers packed all the way up. loaded with ice. everybody is watching each other as back. another thing about this. sandra: we ll be talking live to a rancher about the danger to his animals and his livelihood. first team fox coverage. stacy stiegel is on the ground in dallas, texas. first senior meteorologists janice dean. it is a dangerous situation in week three in texas of temperatures well over 100 degrees and we re setting records. so heat alerts are spread
they say that there s no national security concern. they ve told us that they have properly vetted the fufeng corporation and see no problem with it which simply isn t true. laura: just two months ago we again soundedd the alarm after the committee on foreign assessment said it didn t have jurisdiction to block this mills construction. let me put this bluntly, the committee that congressman dated and gave the authority to protect america s national security is allowing a chinese business with ties to beijing, that means the ccp, to operate mere miles from an american military installation. where s general austin? how about milley? well, tonight after months of pressure, the ap is reporting just hours ago that the u.s. air force has now told north dakota leaders that fufeng s plans do pose a significant threat to national security prompting city officials to say they ll move to stop the project once and for all. we re going to continue to monitor this story and highlig
destruction or any of that. i and i agree that the police had to stop it. and, you know, that makes perfect sense. i guess, you know the one thing i would be curious about, though, is what why is the distinction of people being from out of town so important? i mean, the first amendment certainly applies to the people out of town as well. their contention would be that these are national issues, that the questions around policing, around the environmental issues, the construction of the police training facility, all of these issues are national, and in fact global issues. so i m confused a little bit sometimes when there s so much emphasis placed on people being from out of town, as if that takes away their right to protest. yeah, what do you make of that, juliette? we did hear the police sort of emphasize that point. here s why the police were emphasizing it, and i totally agree with david, these are national issues, you re going to have people from out of state. if
here s the story. the former prosecutor whom irs agents said kept them from investigating the biden case the way that they thought it was leading and they thought they say fit today, she s answering questions about all of that behind closed doors with congressional investigators. that happened one day after the president s son risked a contempt charge, which is likely headed his way, and dodged their questions after he gave what amounted to an opening statement of his own on the sidewalk outside congress. no doubt though leslie wolf was likely asked about this based on the irs whistle-blower accusations against what she did. did u.s. attorney leslie wolf confirm your investigative effort that you had sufficient probable cause for search? yes, she did. thanks very much. you told congress that u.s. assistant attorney wolf said whether the juice was worth the squeeze. that s a quote. and that optics were a driving factor in the decision on whether to execute a search war