Wednesday, April 19, 2023

Patti LuPone bashes Christian Right as no different from the Taliban in rant on 'The View': 'I could cry' 'I'm going to get in trouble,' LuPone said before her remarks

 

Patti LuPone bashes Christian Right as no different from the Taliban in rant on 'The View': 'I could cry'

'I'm going to get in trouble,' LuPone said before her remarks

Actress Patti LuPone declared that she doesn't know the difference between "our Christian Right and the Taliban" during an appearance on "The View" on Tuesday. 

"I could cry… I don’t know why he’s doing this," an emotional LuPone said in response to a question from co-host Ana Navarro about Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis and the LGBT community. "I don’t know, I mean I've said this before and I’m going to get in trouble. I’ve said this before, and it’s been in print. I don’t know what the difference between our Christian Right and the Taliban is. I have no idea what the difference is." 

She added, "what's happening in this country right now in the name of religion is so dangerous." 

Actress Patti LuPone sits down with the hosts of "The View" on Tuesday, April 18, 2023.

Actress Patti LuPone sits down with the hosts of "The View" on Tuesday, April 18, 2023. (Screenshot/ABC/TheView)

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"It’s not this country. It’s not America," LuPone continued. "When I was growing up, I didn’t know America was an experiment. They never said America was an experiment when we were growing up. It was a democracy. And now it’s in such danger. It’s so upsetting. It’s upsetting to hear the loudest voices and not any kind of pushback to the loudest voices that are the extremity in this country."

Co-host Sunny Hostin turned to the actress and said, "that's why we need people like you." 

LuPone bashed former president Donald Trump and Rep. Jim Jordan, R-Ohio, during the segment as well. 

Navarro asked for LuPone's reaction to the recent criminal charges filed against Trump. 

"The View" hosts Whoopi Goldberg, Sara Haines, Joy Behar, Sunny Hostin and Alyssa Farah Griffin on Sept. 20, 2022.

"The View" hosts Whoopi Goldberg, Sara Haines, Joy Behar, Sunny Hostin and Alyssa Farah Griffin on Sept. 20, 2022. (Screenshot/ABC/TheView)

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She said Trump doesn't get "any pushback" and told Jordan to "go home" after the House Judiciary Committee held a hearing in New York City on Monday focused on violent crime. 

"Jim Jordan, go home to your own district. I just want to say, New York’s murder rate in 2022 was 5.2% per 100,000 people, nearly three times lower than Columbus, Ohio. So go home, Jim Jordan. Stop picking a fight. Do the job you were hired for. Get out of New York," she said. 

WATCH WHAT HAPPENS LIVE WITH ANDY COHEN -- Episode 19017 -- Pictured: Patti LuPone -- (Photo by: Charles Sykes/Bravo/NBCU Photo Bank via Getty Images)

WATCH WHAT HAPPENS LIVE WITH ANDY COHEN -- Episode 19017 -- Pictured: Patti LuPone -- (Photo by: Charles Sykes/Bravo/NBCU Photo Bank via Getty Images) (Photo by: Charles Sykes/Bravo)

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LuPone made headlines in 2022 after she was heard yelling at an audience member to pull their mask up over their nose during a filmed conversation that followed a performance of the show "Company."

The hosts of "The View" defended the actress's comments during a May 2022 show. 

Goldberg echoed LuPone's profanity-laced rant and said, "Put the mask over your nose!" 

Published April 19, 2023 11:30am EDT Reporter says he filmed hundreds of military-age Chinese men heading toward US in migrant groups US sees surge of Chinese nationals crossing southern border compared to 2022

 

 

Reporter says he filmed hundreds of military-age Chinese men heading toward US in migrant groups

US sees surge of Chinese nationals crossing southern border compared to 2022

A reporter released new video that appears to show hundreds of military-aged Chinese men in Panama heading toward the U.S. border.

Muckraker.com founder Anthony Rubin said on "Fox & Friends First" Wednesday that every day, multiple times a day, groups of men are lining up and getting on buses to continue their journeys.

Rubin described why these individuals are taking this route to get into the United States.

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"This would be for people who can't fly into the U.S. directly. So what they do is they get on a flight, and they fly into some South American country. Then from there, they would go to Colombia, they would go across the jungle, pop out in Panama, and then they would head up to the United States. But this is going to be for people that can't fly into the U.S. directly. … You'd rather just fly into the U.S. and overstay your visa. This is for people that don't have that access for whatever reason." 

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March 29, 2023: Border Patrol agents encounter over 1,000 migrants in El Paso, Texas

March 29, 2023: Border Patrol agents encounter over 1,000 migrants in El Paso, Texas (Customs and Border Protection)

Rubin said it's fair to be concerned about the groups showing up at the Darien Gap at the Panama-Colombia border. 

He said many of the people he filmed "do not want their faces on camera." 

"Either they are foreign actors that are coming over here for nefarious reasons. … or number two, these are people that are afraid of some sort of retribution by the Communist Chinese Party.

"If it's number two, well then what does that mean? That means that these people are going to be beholden to the Communist Chinese Party once they're here. Oh, you're in the United States. Okay, well, we're going to threaten your friends and family back home in China unless you do X, Y, and Z.

"Either way, it's very dangerous. You can't allow this to just continue and have all these people cross the border. I mean, it just will not work."

Chinese nationals are crossing the U.S.-Mexico border into the U.S. in unprecedented numbers this year, with the first few months of FY 2023 already eclipsing the total for 2022.

The U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) reports that just under 2,000 Chinese nationals crossed the border in FY 2022, but the first few months of FY 2023 have already seen 4,300 encounters, according to federal data.

The Biden administration saw 1.7 million migrant encounters in 2021, followed by 2.3 million encounters in 2022. More are expected in 2023. According to Wall Street Journal, 2,200 migrants from China came through the Darien Gap from January to March of this year, compared to 71 in the same time frame last year.

"There are people from over 100 countries that are popping up here. And you would ask yourself why they're coming here," Rubin added.

He said many of the migrants are seeking "a better life" but his trip to the Darien Gap left him with concerns about America's national security. 

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Fox News' Anders Hagstrom contributed to this report.

Regulators should keep their hands off AI and forget M***-backed pause: economist Recent reports show millions of jobs will likely be replaced by AI

 

 

Regulators should keep their hands off AI and forget Musk-backed pause: economist

Recent reports show millions of jobs will likely be replaced by AI

The growing strength of artificial intelligence threatens millions of jobs, but if regulators stay away, the emerging tech may make society wealthier and more productive.

History has repeatedly shown the same result for other technological advances dating back to the Industrial Revolution, economist Peter St. Onge said.

"Throughout history, we've gone through tremendous technological revolutions. Generally, technologies kill jobs," St. Onge, with the Heritage Foundation, told Fox News Digital. "What happened? Well, you know, we had lots of new jobs. Almost nobody today works on a farm.

"This is sort of the way of the world," he added. The reason why you see technological improvements for any labor-involving function is in order to kill jobs - which is also known as saving work.

St. Onge pointed to the early 1800s, when most people worked on farms, and how the dawn of the mechanization of agriculture killed such employment as farmers turned to machines instead of hiring teams of laborers.

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Artificial Intelligence words are seen in this illustration taken March 31, 2023.

Artificial Intelligence words are seen in this illustration taken March 31, 2023. (REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration)

A report from Goldman Sachs last month found that generative AI could replace and affect 300 million jobs around the world. Another study from outplacement and executive coaching firm Challenger, Gray & Christmas found that AI chatbot ChatGPt could replace at least 4.8 million American jobs.

The figures have caused some anxiety, including in fields most likely affected by the technology, such as customer service representatives, technical writers and data entry clerks. However, St. Onge said Americans and businesses alike could prosper with AI - as long as regulations don’t stifle growth. 

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St. Onge, who has written about machines and technology taking over jobs for years, pointed to how in 1845 French economist Frédéric Bastiat wrote a satire piece on candlemakers protesting sunlight because it was stealing their jobs.  

A corn field and storage bins near Carrington, North Dakota, Aug. 8, 2019.

A corn field and storage bins near Carrington, North Dakota, Aug. 8, 2019. (REUTERS/Dan Koeck/File Photo)

"So the sun comes out in the morning, it steals everybody's job," St. Onge said. "The candlemakers can't sell any candles because the sun is out there giving it away for free. So if we get to that sci-fi utopia where AI does everything better than us then, OK, it's the equivalent of the sunlight given for free."

The economist said he believes it’s "fair" to characterize the advent of artificial intelligence as the modern era being on the verge of its own "Industrial Revolution," and that the only entity that could stand in the way of flourishing AI is regulation

He said he believes regulations would be a "horrible idea." 

"I completely sympathize with those who are afraid of it. And I share their fears," he said. "Fundamentally, the most important question to me in AI is: ‘Who is going to get there first?’ And the most likely candidates are Silicon Valley and the Chinese version of Silicon Valley, which has deep Chinese government influence."

The American and Chinese flags wave at Genting Snow Park ahead of the 2022 Winter Olympics, Feb. 2, 2022, in Zhangjiakou, China.

The American and Chinese flags wave at Genting Snow Park ahead of the 2022 Winter Olympics, Feb. 2, 2022, in Zhangjiakou, China. (AP Photo/Kiichiro Sato)

He said that when it comes down to the international AI race, he would much prefer an outcome where U.S. "tech bros" are AI authorities rather than the Communist Chinese government.

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In a recent podcast, St. Onge pointed to Detroit when the car industry boomed, but "bureaucratic micromanagement regulations" ultimately left people jobless.

"What if the river of new and better jobs is blocked off like a dam? Well, the jobs dry up, the old ones are gone. The new ones are either poverty level or they don't come at all. This is the Detroit outcome that lost tens of thousands of car jobs, never to be replaced," he said on the podcast.

He told Fox News Digital that politicians are often incentivized to roll out regulations to collect taxes, get a good sound bite or elicit political donations.

"So that's kind of a dangerous dynamic. And where governments stand in the way, they attack the existing producers, the existing companies, and they can often stand in the way of any new companies forming."

What happened in Detroit has likely also spooked Americans today who are concerned about AI taking jobs. Previously, each generation of family was twice as wealthy as their parents, but currently "parents and children are about neck and neck, which is really a tremendous failure of government."

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"I think that they look around and then they see that when jobs go away in places like Detroit, they do not come back the next day," he said. "In fact, they don't come back 40 years later. So I think people are right to be concerned, but I think that they're wrong to blame the tech per se.

"Tech is a river that makes us rich," he went on. "The problem is everybody needs to get out of the way. We need to have a respect for the fundamental economic freedoms that we always had."

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The ChatGPT logo on a laptop computer arranged in the Brooklyn borough of New York on Thursday, March 9, 2023.

The ChatGPT logo on a laptop computer arranged in the Brooklyn borough of New York on Thursday, March 9, 2023. (Gabby Jones/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

OpenAI’s chatbot, ChatGPT was released in November and quickly became one of the most popular online platforms, breaking records as the fastest-growing user base with 100 million monthly active users in January. The chatbot is able to mimic human conversations based on prompts, and can execute various tasks such as writing short stories, composing emails, answering questions and even coming up with recipes.

After ChatGPT’s initial release and various updates, thousands of tech leaders, experts and others signed an open letter calling on all AI labs working on tech more powerful than ChatGPT to pause for at least six months to roll out safety regulations. 

Twitter and Tesla CEO Elon Musk and Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak were among the signatories who warned that such computer intelligence "can pose profound risks to society and humanity."

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Despite the calls to pause, the AI race to create the most powerful system is in full-swing, with Google working to overhaul its search engine and even create a new that relies on AI, and even Musk working on a ChatGPT alternative that would serve as a "maximum truth-seeking AI."

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