the heat will be lasting. dr. deborah birx on why covid cases are surging. welcome. i m neil cavuto, this is your world. you piled the news into this day capping a news week. let s go back to the white house with a president trying to get back to business as usual. moments ago, we heard from the white house. said the president is doing well. that his condition as improved and his appetite is still there. certainly trying to put a positive spin on the president s diagnose. officials say that he was still suffering from some of the same symptoms that we saw just yesterday, which was the cough, the run any nose and the fatigue. the same officials say the president has been responding well to an anti viral drug and his condition will only improve. we saw president biden on camera. pool cameras were allowed to go in the south auditorium and get a shot of the president as he was conducting a meeting with his economic team. the team was focused on lowering gas prices. the presid
and it s fuelling many more questions. what is in them, what is behind the empty folders and what really was going on there. meantime, there s this. americans taking to the skies and taking on turbulence before they even get up in the air. crowds at airports building and a lot of flights delaying. how you should be preparing. we got you covered with madison alworth in tampa on how flyers are holding up, grady trimble in chicago on those that prefer to drive are paying up and the inevitable professor dave dotson on why surging prices have so many down and out. i m neil cavuto. let s begin with what is happening at tampa international airport, a metaphor on the crowded skies and getting more crowded at airports. what do you have, madison? hi, neil. so 12.6 million americans are expected to fly through our u.s. airports this labor day weekend and around 20% of them should expect delays. that s because right now one in five flights are delayed. now, that is an improvement from
jesse watters with judge jeanine pirro, harold ford junior, dana reynaud and greg gutfeld. it s 5:00 in new york city and this is the five . wait a second, joe biden now has the power to fix the border? less than 5 miles it was a big i was crying to the whole world how he has done all he can on to blame for allowing millionse of illegals to waltz into our country and calls all sorts of chaos. biden sound his hands as migrants took advantage weaning of cops in times square then flipping the bird to americans when caught. just outside migrants were taking the selfies at a border wall in california. with an election five months away, joe biden changed his hard. president biden: today i will be passing my executive authority of able to me as president to do what it can or my own to address of the border. announcing actions to bart migrants who cross our southern border unlawfully from receiving a solemn, simple truth is, is a worldwide migration crisis and of the united states
all the reports of crime led in one direction without assumption is actually racist because you assume a black victims care more about black criminals than their own personal safety. harold: also assuming all the crime is being committed by blacks. what are your thoughts? dana: i m okay people want to opt in, i don t. i want to have alerts on my phone. at a friend, you know her, la laura. [ laughter ] she had one of those apps on her phone that would tell you every time anything happened and her phone was going crazy, she lives in new york city so it was a robbery, there was this guy that was that. it was too much. and if you watch local news and most big major cities, is the first 20 minutes is all about the crime. sometimes you may need a piece of it. is all okay with the opting and. i also think it s interesting that many of these cities are refusing to turn over crime stats to the fbi, that s why things are all screwed up.
night stalker richard ramirez, the man who killed polly klaas, richard allen davis, whose crime led to california s three strikes law, and scott peterson, convicted of murdering his pregnant wife. the bottom line is, we don t allow filming in condemned row simply because it s department policy. though denied access to condemned row, our producers found an inmate who lived there for nearly 20 years. when i arrived on death row, it was in the winter of 91. i remember because it was real cold, there was icicles on the ground. my condition for the death penalty was the double felony, the murder then the robbery, but you know, if you move a person from one spot to another so many feet, it s kidnapping. so they claimed it was kidnapping, threw another felony on there. during that time, i was young. i was wild. i was angry. the jury verdict was it wasn t