u.s. department of agriculture considers a ban on the childhood treat in school cafeterias. congresswoman elise stefanik tells us why it is not only government overreach but could hurt her constituents. john: stunning video of a ten-foot croc after it made its way into somebody s back yard pool. we ll talk to one of the men who secured it about his 40 years in the wrangling business. it s 3:00 a.m., you know what time it is, let s get ready to commute. sandra: that is a young south carolina woman landing an internship in new jersey. but instead of finding a place to live up north, she s travelling back and forth by plane. are housing costs so outrageous this is actually saving her money? what a story. i m sandra smith in new york. and on the crocodile, i bet they are glad they have lights on in the pool. john: 2:00 in the morning, imagine waking up to that. all those stories are coming up in a jam packed hour. we begin with a fox news alert on the unrelenting border c
process about $290 billion and in addition, also changes the circumstance for people on medicare by putting a cap of a maximum $2,000 a year they have to pay no more than $2,000 a year no matter how many prescriptions they have. for all the prescription drugs. which is especially important for people with cancer, and long-term diseases. it s a god send. literally be a god send for many families. second, the bill locks in place lower health care premiums for the next three years for millions of families that get coverage under the affordable care act. average savings of $800 a year for 13 million people. third, invests $369 billion, granted i call for 500 plus, but invests $369 billion to secure energy future and address the climate crisis, bringing down family energy bills by hundreds of dollars by providing working families tax credits. it gives folks rebates to buy new and efficient appliances and weatherize their homes, and tax cuts for heat pumps and rooftop solar, and ta
trying to redefine recession? we are not redefining recession. greg: president biden s prediction there being no recession lasting about as long as kamala s doomed presidential campaign. democrats are pushing more massive spending for some reason, to get us out of it. biden is brushing off the bad economic news while claiming dishing out $700 billion for things like fighting climate change and that will actually lower inflation. chairman powell and many of the significant banking personnel and economists say we are not in a recession. we created 9 million new jobs so far as i ve become president. businesses are investing in america and record rates. the inflation reduction act will add another $370 billion in clean energy tax credits and reconciliation. that doesn t sound like a recession to me. greg: now that biden s prediction has flopped, democrats and the media are getting on the same page to try to convince americans things aren t that bad. we have to remember
good morning! and welcome to way too early, the show that wants to hear more about this four-day workweek idea. we re going to tell you about that little bit later on in the show. i am kasie hunt on this tuesday, march 16th. we ll start with the news. europe s fight against coronavirus just hit another snag as more countries hit pause on the astrazeneca vaccine due to concerns about side effects. germany, france, italy and spain have halted use of the vaccine after reports of blood clots in some people who had recently received shots. denmark and norway halted the shots last week. astrazeneca says a review of 17 million people found no increased risk of blood clots and the world health organization is urging countries to continue using it. this comes as europe faces a third wave of coronavirus amid a slow vaccine rollout. the shot, which was developed with oxford university, has not yet been approved for use in the united states. the fda is still reviewing data to determi
Similarly to daily life on Capitol Hill, Republicans and Democrats recently faced off in the Congressional Baseball Game, an annual charity event that started more than 100 years ago.