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The Ingraham Angle 12_12_25 FULL END SHOW FOX BREAKING NEWS TRUMP December 12, 2025 - Minecraft Fatihi 2 (1080p, h264)
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00:00Good evening, everyone. I'm Laura Ingram. This is the Ingram Angle from Washington tonight.
00:04As always, thank you for spending some time with us.
00:06Now, the Open Borders crowd, they like to justify illegal immigration by contending that it's a victimless crime.
00:14But look at this photo. It's from the aftermath of a head-on crash in Oxon Hill, Maryland, that changed one American woman's life forever.
00:23An illegal alien driving his vehicle crossed the yellow line, hitting the car she was a passenger in.
00:31She was left with broken vertebrae, collarbone and wrist, fractured ribs, injuries to her intestines and uterus, as well as a ruptured diaphragm, collapsed lung and a concussion.
00:43The illegal at the wheel, Kevin Alexis Mendez Ortiz, fled the scene.
00:48He was picked up three days later when Prince George's County police found him driving without a license and then ran a record check.
00:56Well, there they found he had multiple hit-and-run-related violations, along with a laundry list of other vehicular traffic citations.
01:05And if ICE hadn't then taken him into custody off the streets, who knows how many others this individual would have injured or killed.
01:14According to ICE, Mendez Ortiz is from Honduras.
01:17He entered the U.S. illegally in 2022. That's the height of Biden.
01:22He was released shortly thereafter when he appeared before an immigration judge, just released onto the streets.
01:28So this was classic Biden-era catch and release.
01:32And in Washington state, if you think this is an outlier, a 29-year-old man was killed yesterday after a semi-truck crushed the car he was in.
01:41The driver, an illegal Indian.
01:46He was caught and released at the Arizona border in 2023 by the Biden administration.
01:5225-year-old Kamal Preet Singh is facing charges for vehicular homicide after he allegedly crashed into the back of the vehicle, crushing it between his and another truck.
02:03So while Democrats and the Biden administration, they allowed this to fester for years, guess what?
02:13The Trump team is actually doing something to stop it.
02:17We will pull every dollar possible from every single state that's unwilling to work with this administration and these longstanding rules to make sure that when an American family gets in a car,
02:31they shouldn't be worried that they have an unqualified foreigner operating an 80,000-pound big rig that could endanger their lives.
02:39Good for DOT. Good for Duffy. That is long overdue.
02:43I'm terrified driving on the roads these days. You don't know what's coming on the other side.
02:47And in Charlotte, North Carolina, residents are still reeling there after learning that the suspect and another horrific stabbing on a light rail car was carried out by Oscar Gerardo Soloranzo Garcia, a twice deported illegal alien.
03:02The pattern here is familiar. It's sickeningly familiar.
03:06A foreign thug, previously deported in that case, waltzes right back into the United States during the Biden years, and he goes on to commit a heinous crime.
03:16But by actively shielding an illegal alien or any illegal aliens from federal law enforcement, Democrat governors, Democrat mayors are telling the rest of us in no uncertain terms,
03:27we don't care what happens to you.
03:30I'm talking Johnson, Wu, Bass, Newsom, Pritzer, Waltz.
03:35These chaotic operations are doing nothing to make us safer.
03:39It is very specifically aimed and very racially motivated towards a Somali community that matters greatly.
03:45Stop attacking our cities to hide your administration's failures.
03:49Boston will not back down from who we are and what we stand for.
03:54Is it really stunned Doc Healthcare? Yeah, I'm proud of that because I believe in universal healthcare.
03:57You know, others may say it. I did it.
04:00First state in the country.
04:01Thank God we now have a president committed to protecting the people.
04:09Those mayors, those governors are committed to helping illegal aliens every step of the way.
04:15In just one year, the Trump administration has done what the Biden administration refused to do for four years.
04:19They shut down the border. They ended mass catch and release.
04:23They designated drug cartels as foreign terrorist organizations.
04:26They restored interior enforcement.
04:29They've ended a lot of this temporary protective classifications for refugees or asylum seekers in the country.
04:36According to federal officials, more than 600,000 illegals have been removed from the country thus far.
04:41It's just a start, but it's not nothing.
04:44And just as importantly, the administration says more than 1.9 million have decided to leave on their own volition.
04:51So illegal border crossings, what about those?
04:53Well, they're effectively zero.
04:55That is what law enforcement looks like.
04:57And as for putting America's safety and well-being first, well, President Trump and his team at DHS and the White House, they have paid a price as well.
05:06Like the ICE agents, they've been doxed.
05:08They've been threatened and they've been dragged into court by lawsuits funded by left-wing NGOs, the open borders lobby and the cheap labor cartel that profits off mass illegal migration.
05:20But guess what?
05:20The Trump team keeps going.
05:22They're undeterred.
05:23And here's a warning Americans can't ignore tonight.
05:27Remember, if the Democrats win the midterms, then they regain the White House.
05:33Everything that's been done to help fix this situation is out the door.
05:37The floodgates will reopen.
05:40The border will be overwhelmed again.
05:42Drug trafficking will surge.
05:44Human trafficking will explode.
05:46Sanctuary cities will multiply.
05:48And Americans will once again be told that their suffering is the cost of compassion.
05:55So Congress has to act now.
05:57That means ending the filibuster and locking immigration enforcement into law.
06:02No asylum claims after illegal entry.
06:05No asylum for economic hardship.
06:07Strict biometric controls in the visa or any entry process.
06:11Visa overstays.
06:13Yeah, well, if you do that, you lose the right to return.
06:15These are just a few common sense reforms.
06:18They're popular with the American people.
06:20Wildly popular.
06:21And they should unite.
06:22Should unite both parties.
06:25Well, if both parties cared more about the country than selling the country out.
06:30All right, here with end of the year reaction, Stephen Miller, White House Deputy Chief of Staff for Policy.
06:36Stephen, thank you so much on this busy night for being here.
06:40Tim Walsh, you might have seen this, went after President Trump today for daring to highlight the massive fraud happening in his state.
06:53Watch this.
06:53I think this idea that the Somali community is to blame for this because they didn't do more.
06:59I think that's how we got into this.
07:01And that's, you know, again, don't I know we're not going to lose the whole plot here.
07:05All this work is being done.
07:08Donald Trump brought this to the attention like this is something brand new.
07:12This is not brand new and it's been being worked on, but he made it white hot and very dangerous.
07:19Stephen, it's the president's fault that the Somalis stole a billion dollars in counting.
07:27Yeah.
07:27So it's obviously, it's obviously on your heads.
07:31Well, he's right about one thing.
07:32It's not brand new.
07:33The Somali community has been engaged in massive, endemic, systematic fraud against the American taxpayer for years.
07:42What we're going to discover ultimately, and we are in the throes right now of a full-throated, all-hands-on-deck federal investigation,
07:50is that the scope, scale, size, and sheer magnitude of the fraud eclipses anybody's worst nightmare.
07:56Look, according to official government records, 90% of Somali households with children are on federal welfare.
08:05The real number is probably 100% because federal records are always undercount.
08:09So you're talking about a population that has been imported into Minnesota in which virtually every single member of that population is receiving welfare from the federal government.
08:23This could very well end up, Laura, being the greatest financial fraud scandal in American history.
08:31And, Stephen, isn't it the case that this is a window into the corruption of so many NGOs that take federal money to resettle refugees, to give advice to refugees, consult with refugees, prepare the way for refugees?
08:50And this is happening across the country with a variety of NGOs, including here in Minnesota, but this could just be the tip of the iceberg, could it not?
09:01Yes, well, you're exactly right.
09:03President Trump has blown the lid off of the refugee industrial complex.
09:09And the way this works is exactly the way that you said.
09:12The U.S. government historically, and this, of course, got taken to the highest degree ever under Biden, hands out billions, would it be billions of dollars in grants to these third party groups, non-governmental organizations to work with the Department of State to find the poorest populations from the most dysfunctional places in the world and then bring them into small town America.
09:40They typically look for areas in rural communities, rural places, or more traditional Midwestern towns that they can completely transform.
09:51So they send them to small towns in Ohio, to small towns in Maine.
09:54And, of course, we've seen their central project has been in Minneapolis and St. Paul in the Twin Cities in Minnesota.
10:02And so these nonprofits get massively rich.
10:06They rake in a fortune.
10:07They become some of the wealthiest nonprofits the world has ever seen.
10:12And their job is to fly the refugees here, to help them become citizens, and to ensure that they are enrolled in every welfare benefit program imaginable.
10:21It's a gravy train.
10:22All of it at the expense of the American people.
10:24Exactly.
10:25It is heinous.
10:25It is shameful.
10:26And I'm proud of the fact, which we don't say enough, President Trump has stopped all refugee resettlement into the country.
10:34The only refugee resettlement that is happening are the Afrikaners being persecuted in South Africa.
10:38I want to move on to what's happening with this lawsuit.
10:42All these states have lined up, joining this growing list of states, California the biggest, to sue the Trump administration over its H-1B reform, which would require $100,000 for applications for the H-1B foreign worker visa.
11:00Now, 19 states' attorneys general are suing.
11:04The administration has seen this before.
11:07Obviously, the Chamber of Commerce wants the chief laborer coming in.
11:10So they're part of this.
11:12What's your response to this?
11:14And do you expect to be successful on appeal?
11:18Or in the litigation?
11:19Absolutely, because the, yes, because the statute, 212F of the INA, which President Trump posted recently online, is so explicit that the president has the authority not only to suspend or restrict any immigration he deems necessary, but to impose any restrictions on the entry of aliens as he deems appropriate.
11:42It is the broadest grant of authority, probably in the U.S. code, and that grant of authority is entirely to the president when it comes to imposing restrictions on foreigners.
11:52Now, if you look at this policy the president implemented, and we haven't talked about it enough, this is the first time in American history that a president has taken action to stop companies from using low-wage labor to replace Americans.
12:07So the entire cost model, then they call them body shops, where they basically, there's a group of Americans that are working in the middle of their career in IT jobs.
12:16These body shops come in, they meet with the CEO, they fire all the Americans, they make them train their replacements, and they hire labor at half the cost.
12:24That whole model, that whole financial model is blown up by this fee.
12:28That's why it's so important, Laura.
12:30Stephen, you've done so much work this year, and it's been a long road to get there.
12:36Keep it up, and happy new year to you, my friend.
12:43Oh, they were so happy.
12:46Remember those years?
12:47Because they told us Obamacare was going to be amazing.
12:51It was a big bleeping deal.
12:53But now, it turns out, it needs another bailout, and it's not going to get one.
12:57Dueling health care bills failing in the Senate, one, the Democrats' plan to just extend the COVID-era Obamacare subsidies,
13:06the other, Republican, plan expanding health savings accounts, meaning you get the power to bargain as you want and spend as you want.
13:14So this means health care premiums for millions of Americans will go up at the start of the year.
13:20How can Republicans look themselves in the mirror knowing they have to go back home and tell people over the holidays,
13:28I voted to send your premiums up, Republicans are going to say.
13:32They're going to say they voted, are they going to tell their constituents they voted to double their monthly premiums?
13:38Are they going to tell their constituents they voted to kick you off insurance?
13:42Are they going to tell their constituents, I voted to get you sick and go broke?
13:46Don't I love how he just sits and reads?
13:48He's been there for, what, 40 years, still has to read all his lines?
13:52Well, by the way, Chuck, no, none of the above, because Republicans are actually trying to come up with a fix for this.
13:58You broke it.
13:59House GOP leaders met behind closed doors today to hash out a plan.
14:03Here to react, tell us more.
14:04House Speaker Mike Johnson.
14:06Mr. Speaker, thank you so much for joining us on this busy, busy Friday.
14:10Take us inside this meeting.
14:12I know there's a lot of grousing on both sides here.
14:14How close are Republicans to some type of agreement on this, quote, fix?
14:23We're very close, and we're delighted to present this and put it through the House next week.
14:28Here's the important thing.
14:29You said it very well, Laura.
14:31The Democrats broke America's health care system 15 years ago when they came out with that Obamacare proposal,
14:37the Unaffordable Care Act, it did exactly the opposite of every single thing they promised.
14:42Premiums have skyrocketed in some categories up to 70 or 90 percent in the last 15 years.
14:48They will continue to skyrocket.
14:50So the Democrats' proposal right now is subsidize it further.
14:53They want the American taxpayer to give billions of dollars to insurance companies
14:57in a program that is just riddled with fraud, waste, and abuse.
15:01We're not going to do that.
15:02Republicans are bringing common-sense solutions.
15:04We are bringing solutions forward that will actually lower the premiums for all Americans.
15:09It's long overdue, and we've got some great ideas to do it.
15:11How do you avoid getting blamed for this?
15:16The same kind of thing happened in the shutdown in October.
15:20We all know what they promised on Obamacare.
15:23It was all a lie at the time.
15:24I fought against it morning, noon, and night, three hours a day on the radio.
15:27So they were lying then.
15:28And we knew they were lying because the numbers didn't add up.
15:30But now the left is blaming you.
15:33You and Republicans.
15:34It's your fault.
15:35Yeah, of course.
15:38It's a total fiction.
15:40The mainstream media, of course, parrots the talking points of Chuck Schumer and the Democrats.
15:44But the way we defeat that is with the simple truth, the facts.
15:47The Government Accountability Office just came out with a new report this past week, Laura,
15:51and it is astounding.
15:53Just for example, over the last two years,
15:54they submitted 24, two dozen, totally fraudulent applications for these Unaffordable Care Act subsidies.
16:01Okay?
16:0123 out of 24 were approved.
16:04There were no social security numbers provided, no verification of income, or even citizenship.
16:09Okay?
16:09Of course not, right?
16:10This, tens of thousands of dollars paid to each one of those to the insurance companies for people that do not exist.
16:17Okay?
16:18Dead people, $94 million of taxpayer dollars paid to insurance companies for people that had been deceased.
16:24Then you had social security numbers.
16:2668,000 social security numbers in 2024 alone were used for multiple persons.
16:31In other words, multiple people using one number to bilk the system and defraud it.
16:36That's the system that the Democrats created.
16:38That's the one they want us to subsidize.
16:40So when we go forward with the truth, we explain to the American people the reason their costs are out of control
16:45is because they created a broken system.
16:47We have the solutions to fix it.
16:48That is the message and the truth, I think, that's going to prevail as you go into the election year.
16:53Mr. Speaker, earlier this week, President Trump announced that he's lifting some export controls on NVIDIA,
17:00allowing the chip maker to sell some products to approve customers in China.
17:05Why is that the right move for the U.S.?
17:09A lot of people thinking, well, why are we giving anything to China, understanding what their ultimate ambitions are?
17:17Well, clearly, China is a principal threat to us, except for the national debt.
17:22They're the national security threat that we watch the closest, and we've got to compete with them,
17:26and we've got to stay ahead of them.
17:28I met with Jensen, who's the CEO of NVIDIA, just last week, and he came in to try to explain this
17:33because I have the same concerns as so many others.
17:35And the way he explains it, Laura, is that he has about 95% market share, effectively, of AI,
17:41and with the chips and everything that is involved in that.
17:44And his argument is if he's not able to compete in China,
17:47then their system can overtake him and overtake, thus, the U.S. and the U.S. companies.
17:52So it's a delicate balance.
17:54The president is fully aware of all these factors, and he's trying to navigate through that
17:59in a way that makes sense for our national security concerns, among everything else,
18:04in addition to trade and all the other concerns.
18:05So it's delicate.
18:06It's a delicate balance.
18:08We've got to treat China as the adversary that they are,
18:11but also they're a really important trade partner in so many ways, so it's tough.
18:16I know.
18:16I also met with him, and I heard the same argument, and he's a very nice, brilliant person.
18:24I think the guardrails have to be up, and they have to be enforced.
18:27And if they can be, perhaps that's going to work out.
18:29But I'm going to keep my eye on it.
18:31Mr. Speaker, have an incredibly great Christmas and a happy new year.
18:35All right, coming up, if you hate the smell of weed, and I do,
18:38then you're really going to hate this next segment.
18:40I like to sit down, enjoy a nice joint at the end of a work day.
18:54Oh, lovely.
18:55Well, we heard this might be coming, but we hoped we were wrong.
18:58We're hearing that President Trump, who is notoriously anti-smoking and anti-drugs,
19:03is set to reclassify marijuana as a less dangerous drug in federal rules,
19:08and that this could happen as soon as Monday.
19:11Now, I know a lot of cool tech bros and pot growers and banks and the cannabis lobby,
19:17they're feeling pretty high right now.
19:19But further normalizing weed use is a horrible idea.
19:24Marijuana is currently classified as a Schedule I drug,
19:26which puts it on the same level as heroin and LSD,
19:30and has a high potential for abuse.
19:33But what the administration is set to do would categorize it alongside steroids or Tylenol with
19:40codeine.
19:41Here with me is Kevin Sabbat, President and CEO of Smart Approaches to Marijuana.
19:46All right, Kevin, you know, we know we've heard the arguments many times on both sides,
19:50but what would the practical effect of this be rescheduling weed?
19:56You know, thanks for having me again, Laura.
19:57You know, it would overnight allow tax breaks to the pot industry,
20:01and then they would be able to use that money for further marketing, further expansion,
20:06and, you know, further normalizing a drug that is 10 to 30 times stronger than it was,
20:11you know, 20 years ago, a drug that's causing psychosis, violence, schizophrenia.
20:15That's why it's so puzzling to me, Laura,
20:18why this president would want to sign his name to a recommendation made in the prior administration,
20:24which was really a political recommendation, you know, for the re-election or election,
20:29whatever you want to, whichever date you want to look at.
20:32And it was not based on any science.
20:35It's opposed by all the doctors.
20:37By the way, it wouldn't let anybody out of prison.
20:39It has nothing to do with arrest.
20:40It's not, I mean, it's just completely nonsensical.
20:43But it would also send a terrible message to young people that this is now safer than we
20:47thought it was when it's actually more dangerous than we thought it was.
20:50What are the top three reasons why weed is more dangerous than, let's say, alcohol?
20:57Well, it's very different than alcohol.
20:59Obviously, alcohol is plenty dangerous.
21:01Part of the reason alcohol is dangerous is because it's so ubiquitous and used by so many people.
21:05But only one in 10 drinkers actually use every day,
21:08whereas one in two marijuana users now who used in the past month use every day.
21:13So the addiction rate has skyrocketed because it's so much stronger.
21:16The other reason that we should not be doing this is that this is completely enmeshed with
21:21foreign criminal cartels.
21:23So by rescheduling weed to a lower schedule and opening this up, we're going to allow the
21:28international cartels, specifically the Chinese cartels, which are all over rural America,
21:33you know, planting weed all of a sudden.
21:34They become weed farmers, I guess.
21:36But it's really part of a much larger intelligence gathering operation that I don't think the
21:40president is aware of.
21:41This is enmeshed in fentanyl money.
21:43It is all about the foreign criminal cartels.
21:45So it's just a very bad idea.
21:48And really, the third reason is that alcohol, by the way, in and out of your system within
21:5124 hours, marijuana and its effects, not just the testing, stays in your system longer.
21:57And if it's rescheduled, we're now looking at what are we going to do about our pilots?
22:00What are we going to do about our doctors?
22:02What are we going to do about people that we, you know, our bus drivers, we don't want
22:05them to be high.
22:06So this this does not help America at all.
22:09And Kevin, when you when you think about this over time, I mean, it's I think our kids are
22:16under already so much pressure and so many horrible things that they have to deal with
22:21online.
22:21And you can see that this would be, you know, there's no calories or you can see this would
22:27be something that a lot of young people would lean into, which we know we've seen.
22:31It's just horrendous results.
22:33I know the president doesn't want that.
22:34I know he doesn't believe in drug use at all, encouraged his kids never to use drugs
22:39or smoking.
22:41So I think there's a chance of rethinking this.
22:44But I think the medical marijuana lobby and friends, perhaps, who said, look, it helps
22:48me with my cancer treatment or that, I think, probably pushed him.
22:52I think it is.
22:53I think it's honestly a couple of golf buddies that push him over the edge.
22:56I my understanding is that most of the administration does not want this.
22:59The speaker does not want this.
23:00I don't want to speak for him, but that is what we're hearing.
23:03Nobody wants this.
23:04Unless you're in the pot industry.
23:06So you get the tax break.
23:07So I really hope that the president just takes a deep breath on this.
23:10You know, he can actually do something about medical marijuana if he wants to.
23:14He can do an EO that would greatly increase research that could increase funding for research.
23:19That's a way to do this.
23:20If you want to look at the legitimate use, not not the way they're doing.
23:24All right.
23:24Good idea.
23:25Kevin, always great to see you.
23:27We're lone voices crying in the wilderness sometimes, but that's OK.
23:30And coming up, parents, I want you to listen up.
23:32An angle warning about what could be happening right now online to your kids.
23:37By the well-documented mental health risks associated with excessive screen time, American teens can't seem to exist without YouTube, TikTok, Instagram or Snapchat.
23:52A survey by Pew Research looked at the habits of 1,458 teens between the ages of 13 and 17.
24:00And that tells us that young people are on social media daily with a staggering one-third admitting they're on at least one of the popular social media sites almost constantly.
24:10And their interaction with chatbots, that's growing, too.
24:1564% of teens said that they'd used an AI chatbot, and 28% say they did so daily.
24:2316% said they used chatbots several times a day or almost constantly.
24:29But while they may have their cell phones in their hands all the time, many teens are saying they're afraid to use them to talk to actual human beings.
24:38This is insane. Here to react is Tom Kirsting, psychotherapist, author of the book Disconnected.
24:45Tom, we're seeing report after report of young people who just are petrified of talking to other young people on the telephone, whether people still have a home phone.
24:58Most people don't. But on cell phones.
25:00And I see this actually with my own kids.
25:03Like, oh, no, I'll just I'll just snap him. I'll just text him. It's crazy.
25:07Yeah, you know, it is. And I'm so glad we're talking about this because we hear about the mental health epidemic.
25:12This is a social health epidemic as well.
25:14So, you know, human nature is in order to be a good socializer, a communicator.
25:19It's something that you need to do in order to be able to fly a plane.
25:23You need to fly a plane and learn how to do it.
25:25And our kids have not had nearly enough face to face interaction.
25:28And it's at a point right now where they can't even talk on the telephone because it makes it causes anxiety because it's foreign territory to them.
25:35Yes. So they're more connected than ever.
25:38Right. We're connected, but we're more isolated than ever.
25:42So a lot of these young men who are involved in these horrific acts of violence, we always find out that they're kind of loners.
25:50So they they didn't socialize much. They were on playing various video games.
25:55They were in their room a lot. This is a constant theme we've seen.
25:59Yet we only have a few countries that are doing something about this.
26:03Australia just became the first nation to formally bar users under the age of 16 from accessing major social media platforms.
26:11And that's a move. Obviously, global tech companies are monitoring policymakers around the world.
26:17But, Tom, do you think that's the way to do this?
26:21I see 16 and I say that's ridiculous. It should be at least 18.
26:25I do agree with you. I think 16 is a good start.
26:27And to your point, too, like the more connected that our young generation is, the more disconnected they are from other people and from themselves.
26:35The internal knowing of self. When you're distracted all day long, you never get to pause.
26:39You never get to reflect. You never get to experience what exists within you.
26:43So I am happy that Australia made this move. I'm not a big advocate of like the government, you know, overseeing everything.
26:49But, you know, this is a tipping point. I mean, you know, this is this may be this social media and the screen time may be the the biggest drug epidemic in our in our youth society.
27:00You know, in our youth's lifetime. Yeah, I mean, I think it's having and I see it.
27:05I see it with attention spans and I'm talking for people in their 20s to attention spans are nil.
27:13The ability to kind of look at one, look at each other, talk and have an extended conversation, even.
27:18And I see this in my kids and my 15 and a half year old does not have a phone.
27:22He's the only one in a school. He's probably mad at me for saying this.
27:24He's the only one in a school doesn't have a cell phone. Now, he does have a computer and that allows, you know, FaceTime to me and stuff.
27:31But, you know, most kids have their phones and they're in their back pocket or in their purse.
27:36But they're constantly any time they go to the bathroom, they take it.
27:40They bring it to the table. They bring it to a restaurant.
27:42And yet, when they're talking to adults, they have this thing called like the, you know, the Gen Z stare where it's kind of the blank stare.
27:52I mean, that's actually a thing now.
27:54Yeah, it's like you ask a young person, hey, how are you? And they look at you like you're crazy.
27:57And I'm glad to hear that your 15 year old does not have a does not have a smartphone.
28:00Now, the reason why the attention has been fragmented is because everything that these kids are absorbing is fragmented.
28:06Think of Tick Tock short videos. Everything is short. The brain gets used to that.
28:11And then when it gets to the point, you have to sit and read 20 pages.
28:14Try to find a try to find a kid, a Gen Z or Gen Xer that can actually sit there and read 20 pages.
28:19You know what I do, Tom? Every time I see a young person with a book and his or her hand on the plane and occasionally you see that,
28:26I always go up to the parent and I say, great work. That is awesome.
28:32Your child is reading an actual book. We should encourage it, Tom.
28:36I have a feeling this is going to be considered like the cigarettes or the alcohol pot of this generation, too.
28:42I think it I think we're only beginning to see the damage this has done to young people.
28:46Agreed. And thank you.
28:48Thank you for devoting your time and research to it as well, Tom.
28:51Thanks so much. Thank you.
28:53And ahead, Venezuela's dictator can't stop singing and a new Supergirl that isn't.
28:59Friday Follies with Raymond Arroyo is next.
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