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00:00Court action today for two teens accused of throwing homemade bombs outside New York City's Gracie Mansion as part of
00:06what authorities describe as a larger ISIS-inspired terror attack.
00:11Now, the NYPD says it's targeting online radicalization after foiling this plot.
00:15And take a look at these other examples of online radicalization that are also described as extreme.
00:22And this is what's happening. This is very chilling, guys. Teen ISIS-inspired terror suspects in court right now.
00:29Negatively impacting our youth. Fox Nation and Sean Hannity are getting into the thick of it with a new documentary
00:35series called Radicalize, the first episode out today. And here's a sneak peek.
00:41The scariest words ever uttered by parents is not my child.
00:46Damn, this is bad.
00:49It can be anybody's child. And you need to be constantly vigilant to that reality.
00:56It's a scary thing, Dr. Sewell. A lot of parents saying we never saw it coming.
01:00Well, because they didn't see social media coming and they didn't see the impact.
01:03And that was also made a lot worse during the pandemic because people were so isolated.
01:09I'm so glad that Sean Hannity is hosting this because I want to tell you something about him that I
01:14don't even know if Ainsley knows this.
01:16But way back in the day.
01:17So, okay. Fox Nation investigates radicalization in America.
01:23He was so friendly to people on the other side. Bob Beckel was one of his best friends. Bob Beckel,
01:29who used to co-host The Five, very liberal. And Sean used to invite him over to his house.
01:35Sean Hannity.
01:35The idea of coming together, you can be ideologically opposed but still be friends. We've lost that as a country.
01:41And that's how radicalization thrives in the gap of where that used to be.
01:46Yeah, Emily, seeing the other side as an enemy. Look, our producers found some audio of these two individuals that
01:52threw the bombs at Gracie Mansion.
01:54Let's listen to those audios that can reveal very big things right here.
01:58It's chilling. You literally hear one say, all I know is I want to start terror, bro. The other pontificating,
02:04killing 8 to 16 people.
02:05Yes. Thank you for coming to me on that because that's what stuck out to me was the callousness and
02:10the actual statements that they were making.
02:13So, the audio tapes that they talk about how I wonder if and they talk about how after 9-11
02:18when all flights were grounded, they talk about wondering if that will happen here after their bombs go off.
02:24They talk about also this is not sort of a just in that realm detached.
02:28They were very bad at this. Very bad.
02:30Video game style. They talk about how in all of their testing of the bombs, one warning the other, you
02:35know, sometimes the fuse was slow, sometimes it was fast.
02:38So, be ready for that.
02:39This two teens, you see, this is first and this is second.
02:43They did so horrific things.
02:45Out of dialogue between them that I just keep coming back to the word chilling to hear these two youth
02:52and remember how the mainstream media characterized and shaped them.
02:56Two teens traveled across straight lines to visit.
02:59No, mainstream media stop this.
03:02No, no, no. The radicalization is permanent. It is frightening and is not just limited to the United States.
03:08It's right that it could happen to anyone as Dr. Pinsky said, but really Dr. Drew, but really, I mean
03:12this stuff is happening.
03:13This is, this is, we got them, we got them.
03:16In other countries, these are what is happening online. Al-Qaeda and ISIS, they are, they are using these social
03:22media platforms to radicalize.
03:24Yes, terrorist groups are doing all this. We got to save our children. Watch on your children as well. It
03:30can be anyone's.
03:32We're seeing the effects here on the home front. Thank God no one died, but guys, this is a really
03:38big issue and the dialogue is frightening.
03:40Ainsley, a quote from one of these wannabe terrorists, and this is all on audio.
03:43Just can't wait for that bomb to go off and his freaking head, the body to get split in half,
03:48bro dead.
03:49That is a quote that someone said before committing an attack that thankfully no one died in.
03:54That is just disgusting, bro.
03:56It is very disgusting. Very, very bad.
03:59This is so cool. I'm going to say three, two, one. I'm going to take it out as fast as
04:03control.
04:03It's a game for them. It's a game. No, bro.
04:06Control is possible. We're going to light it, aim it at him, ate him at his feet and then run
04:10to the car.
04:12This is evil. It's evil. And how do we get here? How do our children, remember Columbine, if y'all
04:19were old enough to remember that?
04:20This is how we encounter them.
04:23Oh my gosh, who would have ever thought to do this to children? And now we're seeing it over and
04:27over.
04:27And if you look at how many there are, there are too many for us to even report on all
04:31the time.
04:32So some of them aren't even reported on. It's just evil. And it's being manufactured.
04:35It all is happening online. These are children that are isolated.
04:39They don't have a lot of friends usually. They don't socialize.
04:42The parents aren't paying attention to what they're doing online.
04:46Yes, parents do keep your attention on your child, what they're doing online.
04:51These are the youths.
04:54Many of these killers, you go and you look into their bedrooms and they have pictures up of the Columbine
04:59guys
04:59or pictures up of other people who have murdered. It's just really sick.
05:03The parents have to know what their children are doing.
05:05Yes, if you saw their room, the murderers, the terrorists by their mind and anything,
05:10they have a very bad atmosphere around them. Very bad.
05:14Children are doing and we need to somehow, whoever owns these platforms needs to do a good job of monitoring
05:21them
05:22because a lot of their ideas are talked about online.
05:25Yeah, and the antidote to this, Harrison, in my view, is faith in family.
05:30Yes, antidote is faith in family. We want to do faith in our family. Yes, dude.
05:36And instilling in your child their eternal meaning, that God loves them, that he cares for them,
05:40and instilling that deep in their heart.
05:41Yeah, who we are and whose we are.
05:43Yes.
05:44The Lord's.
05:44Well said.
05:45It has to start younger now.
05:46Yes, start your children to make a connection with God and stop them doing hatred.
05:52Only love is the way to win anyone.
05:54The parents' job just got bigger, and society cannot clean up what we can't tell them is coming.
06:00No.
06:00We know who we're raising, and we know what our challenges are at home.
06:04Whether we choose to talk about it and pay attention to it the way that we should.
06:09White House is doing a briefing right now, and I made a video on this, so keep updated.
06:14Subscribe, follow.
06:15You have an idea when a child is really small, which one really needs you more than another.
06:20And we love them all.
06:22Everybody is different by nature, and you have to let know what is happening with this one and that one.
06:28But it's time now for us to, you know, some kids should probably not have a phone.
06:34True.
06:35And you know, you talked about psychosis is contagious.
06:39That's so powerful.
06:40You know what else is?
06:41There are certain children who can't handle a lot all at once, and that's okay.
06:46But we have to know that about them.
06:48So maybe they aren't the ones.
06:50Everything is okay, but not in a bad way.
06:53Everything is okay, but let them figure out they are not going the wrong direction they are going.
06:59To have a phone at a young age.
07:01Maybe they, and I'm talking as young as, you know, some kids are still getting it under 16.
07:06Yes.
07:06But you could wait until 18.
07:07Eight years, even six years, ten years, kids are getting phones and everything, and they are exposed to Netflix series
07:15and all.
07:16You know what I'm talking about, right?
07:18I mean, with some of these youngsters, you know who's in your household.
07:22They can't control themselves when they're angry.
07:24They get agitated easily from people who are coming at them with opposing ideas.
07:29I mean, we have these.
07:29Yes, this is a big one.
07:31When sometimes in our homes.
07:33And we don't have to be embarrassed about it, but we do have to embrace it and know who's among
07:37us and get them help early on.
07:39The earlier the conversation, the who and who's you are.
07:42My parents had that conversation when I was little, like really little.
07:46We love you, Harris Kimberly, and the Lord loves you, and you belong to him and us.
07:53It's who's you are.
07:54You've got to start that early and know who's in your household.
07:57And you know what?
07:58Maybe you set some harder rules on women.
08:01Yes, yes.
08:02They're away from you.
08:04Like some kids, my mom used to say this, not everybody's built for a sleepover at seven.
08:08Yes.
08:08Not at seven.
08:10Seven is not a good rate.
08:12Okay.
08:13You like?
08:13And so we weren't allowed to have sleepovers and go to other people's houses until we were like 12.
08:18And I was like, gosh, I guess she doesn't trust us.
08:20And she's like, that's only a little bit of it.
08:23You're going into another environment.
08:25And I want to keep yourself in that standing position and watch it from their point of view.
08:32Right.
08:33Watch it from their point of view.
08:34I'm saying right balance.
08:35Right.
08:36Make sure that you're supported.
08:37And that I know the people where you'll stay.
08:40We had a lot of rules.
08:41Now, I grew up military, so that makes sense.
08:43But you've got to be involved on a different level, I think, now as a parent.
08:47Yeah.
08:47And knowing who's you are.
08:48I love that.
08:49That's beautifully said.
08:50Hey, everyone.
08:50Yes, guys, thank you.
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