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tv   FOX and Friends Sunday  FOX News  January 21, 2024 6:00am-7:00am PST

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>> it's 9:00 a.m. hour on "fox
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& friends weekend" on sunday, january 21st, all eyes on new hampshire as candidates make their final pitch. former president donald trump looking ahead, surrounding himself with the south carolina delegation. former governor nikki haley's response coming up straight ahead. rachel: se senator fetterman d far left progressives left him, he donned his best sweats for the interview. >> he's wearing them. watch this, a rancheer saves a trapped calf on a frozen pond. he's live with us for the final hour of "fox & friends weekend" which happens to start right now. ♪
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>> that is manta locking, i hope i'm right, shores, new jeer you sigh. looks -- new jersey, looks like a view from heaven on the water there. mantaloke i'm told. john deline from the new york post donned sweats to interview youwith us this morning, havingn that in the past with john fetterman. rachel: he was denied entry into fancy restaurants. >> i didn't recognize him downstairs because there was a dude down there in the green room in sweats. he said hey. that was had him. >> you're interviewing him at 9:20. fetterman was a fan of the gig. he's got a good sense of humor.
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there's the shot. he went and interviewed him had. that's where the stuff is coming out from the interview in the new york post. i'll let john kind of share his consistent thriewtion collusions from -- conclusions interest the interview, stick around to hear it. >> him wearing the outfit right now, i don't know who this is. >> he was wearing it in new york, wore it to the senator's office, he's wearing it with us today. setting the tone. >> it was a good gig when he tried to get into fancy new york city restaurants. i had a fun conversation with john. you'll enjoy it. rachel: you preinterviewed him. >> i did. i saw what looked like a home homeless man in the green room. he's a great writer for the new york post. fourth and final hour of "fox & friends." it's our final hour before all of new hampshire goes to the polls on tuesday and makes a big determination in the republican race. this really is -- it is the live free or die state. this is the fire line, fire wall for nikki haley for sure. if donald trump runs away with
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it, changes the whole race. if she's able to make it tight, changes the whole race. >> what's tight? >> i don't know. 5 points. rachel: that's the question. >> this is all spitballing at this point. she's got to be able to keep the spigots on in her campaign a, donors have to believe there's a path to victory. she would have to overperform the polls. rachel: if he wins, he doesn't really win. if she had his numbers it would be like -- i mean, it would be like the blowout, even if she beat him by 5 points. he can beat her by 15 points and they would say he's not doing well. there's a double standard. >> by any objective standards, this is a run-away. no other republican candidate has led this much this early and with a forecast of states where he's leading by even more. south carolina is at 60 or 65% of the vote. rachel: and having blown out
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the expectations in iowa. >> and he's got the entire south carolina republican delegation with him in new hampshire to try to troll these former south carolina who is trying to catch him in new hampshire before they go to south carolina, if you can keep track of that. >> the south carolina delegation, many, not just donald trump but ron desantis are weighing in on nikki haley's record as governor of south carolina. >> can someone tell me major you achievements of nikki haley when she was governor? anybody? gas tax. tried to raise the gas tax. not an y aachievement, that's a bad one. i think it's remarkable because i can tell you like if you were in florida and we had hundreds of people, you started saying -- hands would shoot up. >> almost every politician from south carolina is endorsing me. how of do you do that when she was the governor? you what you need to know about
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nikki haley, every globalist -- liberal, biden supporter, never trumper is on her side, it's not too many home state of south carolina is on our side. rachel: i believe one of nikki haley's biggest donors was on kneel caputo's show, and she was bragging about the support she has from donors and he said how many democrats were giving donation toss the nikki haley campaign. donald trump has been using that. >> rachel, did i tell you that the very precinct in iowa where we did our fox nation reporting from, we didn't realize it because nikki haley got 26 votes and trump 25. rachel: a more moderate district. >> a moderate district, a small one, 70 or 80 voters but it was cool to go behind the scenes in the caucus. the caucus chair said at least a third of the nikki haley voters were democrats could came to
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change their affiliation and vote for nikki haley in the precinct we were in. i was looking at the group, getting side eye. i'm like why am i getting side eye from republican voters. they probably were democrat. a decent number of them there. if you're an independent or moderate or democrat who doesn't want trump, n nikki haley is someone you vote for. she kind of makes it sound like don't you want to be a candidate that attracts democrats. this is a republican primary. rachel: that's the case they're making that she's a better general candidate. that's what they're trying to say. >> she might be a better democrat candidate. >> governor haley, i wanted to get your thoughts, the lieutenant governor under your stewardship, what are your thoughts. >> that's a person i ran against for governor and beat.
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>> yet another nearly 80-year-old that's trying to make an impact. >> i don't think either of those arguments are particularly effective. and the age argument is not going to work with donald trump standing across from joe biden. it's not about age. it's about mental acuity. joe doesn't have it. trump clearly does. i don't know how you're moving votes with that. >> a story we all think is important and getting very little coverage is that a government watchdog warned the biden administration what that they are failing to track chinese ownership of u.s. farmland. almost 400,000 acres of u.s. farmland is apparently held by chineseen the at this the at at. it's a huge threat to the farming institution and american security. we had a farmer on the show earlier to talk about the issue. >> jo china's coming over here d
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running up prices for american farmland, stealing seed technology on soybeans and corn, a threat to america's agriculture, farm belt in the country. it's national security where they're buying land next to military bases. all of these things are happening under this administration's watch and they haven't said anything about it, about how to put a law in place to he prevent china from buying america's farmland, that should be the first thing they should do. >> he's exactly right. it is staggering when you consider the volume and amount and that the government doesn't really track or doesn't have their arms really around who is buying and how much they're buying. and we know joe biden could potentially be compromised. you're talking about the white house. but to me, it's a lot more than that. kevin roberts talked about being in davos and how our elites are part of the willful captured class, they have business interests in china, don't want
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to are ruffle those feathers. how many are compromised because of the processes that go through china. it's common sense to say don't let our enemies buy our farmland. too many people in washington have a of different view than average people. and that's what makes trump different and so dangerous, he'll come in and say stop buying the farmland you're not you allowed to the anymore. rachel: you could see it happening with donald trump. chinese have common sense. americans can't go in and buy chinese farmland. the competition for the farmland is particularly hurting small farmers. so also i think it's really worth noting too as we see a decline in patriotism and we've covered those kinds of polls, you have to be very y uniquely unpatriotic to provide shell companies can under which many of the chinese companies are buying this farmland, the ccp and other buyers.
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they're using other american companies and these llcs to buy it and so they're using americans to do this. so that's also very troubling. they own -- exactly, it's this. they own also two of our largest -- i think these are pork processing plants, just very big concern among farmers that our food supply is under attack, that we're leaving -- >> who do you think they're going to feed first if there's a problem? not us. rachel: exactly. you talk about what's happening in das versus. i mean, you -- davos. i mean, you see the warm on farming in europe. american farmers know that's started here so this is a massive topic. i'm so glad -- he's done our show severe times and he's fantastic and he's raising really good alarm. i hope members of congress are watching this. and realize that the american people want someone to do something about that. >> it's not just our food, it's
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also the minds of our kids, the poison they use for the minds of our kids is tiktok and the mindless videos scrolling through on, again, topics they wouldn't let chinese kids see but they'll happily let american kids see. one north carolina middle school is having a bit of a problem with tiktok. so much so, kids are heading to the bathroom time and time again throughout the day to make tiktok videos in front of bathroom mirrors. here's a portion of what les atkins, the public relations officer for southern alamance middle school, this is what he said to a local news station. students were going to the bathroom and making tiktok videos. we all have cell phones now. we have to learn to use them and put them down so, will, the school has taken the mirrors down in the bathroom which they say has led to less kids going to the bathroom to make tiktok videos. >> pretty interesting
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psychologically, we have a generation -- he can count ourselves in some ways guilty of that, spending our lives staring at a mirror, at a phone, projecting something out there as opposed to being alive and present in the real world. i don't know what the mirror has to do with tiktok. i thought everybody danced in front of it, instead of did it in front of a mirror. >> you've seen the videos, you hold it here, you take a video in the mirror. >> you guys said earlier, take the phone away, leave the mirror. rachel: leave the mirror, take the phone. this happened at my kid's school. there are no phones allowed. they literally -- if they have a phone, in our school there's a lot of kids who don't have phones and my kids don't have phones until they're 15, 16 years old. but there are cubbies and they put them in. that should be standard in all schools. >> it really should. it's not hard. for the parents out there making
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excuseses for their kid, with the exception of very rare medical reasons, and those are out there but with the exception of that, there's no reason your kid -- he doesn't need to techses you about his lunch. if he needs to get a lunch, walk to the office and make a phone call if you forgot your lunch or whatever it is 6. things are going to be okay if the kid doesn't have instant communication to you. better that the phone is away, they actually learn something from the classroom, go to the bathroom, fix their hair instead of making a video. rachel: it's more than okay. it's actually healthy for them to have this kind of time, eight hours away from their phone. you know once school is over a lot of them grab the phones anyways so at least eight hours, why wouldn't parents be on board with that? there's two things. no phones in schools and why aren't parents even in public schools behind uniforms? i'll never understand why parents aren't on board with this. >> such a beautiful thing when you don't have to think about
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what your kid is wearing. i'll say this, being in the military, the beautiful thing about -- obviously, there's utilitarian purpose for the uniform, cam knowledge. camoflague. you put a uniform on, you put a rank on and it doesn't matter, it should fade away in school too. rachel: kids in uniform pay more you a tension. >> he's making a face. >> i think that could be a thing from our generation. my kids wear uniforms. you know he what in wear every day, summer or winter, shorts and a hoodie,. rachel: that's the fetterman -- >> it's a uniform because they can wear a hoodie as part of the uniform, with a school logo and they have the option of shorts or pants. i think kids are wearing shorts and hoodies everywhere at all times. private schools, public schools, winter, summer, that's what i think is going on out there. >> it is true.
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my kids are always prepared for a be ballgame to break out. that's all they're dressed for. >> winter or summer. >> yes. rachel: my kids have to wear -- my son has to wear a blazer to school. >> wednesdays. that's the dress in our school, other days no. rachel: i think there's something that goes you know what, it's time to get to work. i like it. >> turning to your headlines. two u.s. soldiers are hurt after an iranian backed group of iraqi militants launched missiles on a u.s. military base in western iraq yesterday. two suffered concussions. they're spe expected to be okay. this makes 102 attacks on american bases in iraq and syria over the last three months. now, the head of the world health organization says a new virus that's 20 times deadlier than covid could be on its way. health officials are calling it disease x. but so far the disease is
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theoretical. scientists say they're preparing for the next global pawk. pandemic, the w.h.o. says they hope that countries sign the pandemic treaty to face disease x. >> give away your rights now for when it happens -- >> it will be 20 times worse than covid. rachel: they want in june for us to sign a treaty that gives ayou way our sovereign rights and head it to the w.h.o. to handle our response. there is a big -- biden wants to sign it and there is right now not enough attention on this issue. this is a major issue, people need to pay attention to it. >> one woman is sparking a debate online for threatening to leave her sister's dog at the shelter after a pet sitting nightmare. she says the 7-month-old puppy is not toilet trained, growls at kids and eats everything. the woman sid she needed money to board the dog because she can't, quote, cope. users weighed in, one saying if you can't follow through on the
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commitment you made, you need to pay for boarding the dog. another disagrees, saying they would feel bad if they heard their dog was trashing someone else's home. >> did the sibling agree to take it or was it forced upon. rachel: she agreed to take it. >> i'm assuming she agreed. rachel: she agreed. >> you would know the dog is 7 months old and you should probably know to some extent its house training. my point is, you know everything you're signing up for so you can't drop it off. >> you can drop it off but you better pay for it. >> you've got to pay for it. even then -- >> if it's it's pg& it's p be r my house, see you later. rachel: it could also interfere with your relationship with your sibling. so you have to go is it worth it of just put up with this until my sibling comes home. >> if i come to you and say will you house sit my dog and you go yeah, i think so and you i go i want to warn you, i
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haven't had him house broken yet, you're like okay. but you did. but you did. >> but i did. >> had in this hypothetical. then it's on you now. >> i would board it. >> no, you can't. >> i sure can. it's called -- involuntary commitment p. involuntarily committed dog. you know how they -- >> i'm thinking if you house sit my grand grandma, would you comr if the job was too big. rachel: coming up, fetterman is calling out democrats for chaos at the border as he claims progressive democrats have left him. our next guest donned his best john fetterman outfit for the interview, john levine is next. >> later, cowboy to the rescue, a rancher saves a trapped calf on a frozen pond with his lasso,
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he'll join us and we put our skills to the test, will hopes to clear his name after his last attempt. >> hold on, ainsley. hold on. >> you can do it. >> let me get my rope in order. >> i saw you ride that horse. you looked pretty good. >> i do it off dashcam ray. -- off camera. they're quitting the kibble. and kicking the cans. and feeding their dogs dog food that's actually well, food. developed with vets. made from real meat and veggies. portioned for your dog. and delivered right to your door. it's smarter, healthier pet food. get 50% off your first box at thefarmersdog.com/realfood
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>> pennsylvania senator john fetterman calling out fellow democrats for leaving him thanks to their progressive policies, fetterman telling the new york post it's not so much that i left the title, the title left me, progressives moved and my migrated to positions i don't agree with. we have a crisis at the border. it can't be controversial that we should have a secure border. the senator notably was rocking his i iconic hoodie and shorts. the man in the photo next to him is new york post columnist john levine. he spoke with the senator, gave the quotes to the senator in an exclusive with the post. he joins us now. >> in the full fetterman. >> which you're telling me he likes the whole full fetterman. >> he got a huge kick out of the original story where i
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worthies to different restaurants and got kicked out of them in september. his chief of staff said he's a post reader, you've got to come down and meet him and do an interview and obviously international events interceded and we eventually did it. >> you went down at their invitation. >> i didn't crash the office. so i just -- i showed up. i came down. and it was a very nice, cordial, 30 minute interview. i found him to be a fought thoul person, independent thinking and he appeared to be fully recovered from his stroke. i know people less lucid than him that haven't had a stroke. >> i want ted to ask you, how s the interaction in terms of 34e7b tall acuity or -- mental acuity or physician i call nature for him when you were talking to him? there was a period of time where he had to read questions on a computer screen. >> he still uses captioning software to help him understand
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questions. he speaks in a you fluid way, s thinking is agile. he's recovered enough to be able to stand up to his own party and whether it comes to things like immigration or israel or even -- or things like defawned the defe police, issues he said he disagreed with progressives now. >> he said that nation, speaking of israel, is most reflective of the liberal policies and it's a paradox where progressive members of our party don't seem to recognize that israel is a nation that supports that. you've spent a half hour with him. has he always been independent, has he never been someone interested at remaining at the cool kids table of the progressive table. what's going on with john fetterman. >> he said he was a progressive his whole career. he said i love bernie sanders. and now all of a sudden he doesn't want a note from progressives. he would say i didn't change, the background changed.
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they left me, they got crazy, progressives used to love israel. israel is a bipartisan issue, it wasn't controversial. october 7th happened and he said he was stunned by the reaction and all of a sudden you have people chanting how much they love hamas or from the river to the sea which is a call to genocide which now members of congress are saying stuff like this. i think there's some truth what he's saying. he didn't change on israel. he's always been pro-israel. >> i'm glad you clarified on israel. it seemed to open a pandora's box of issues for him that are surprising, the immigration one is a departure from his party and i don't know that we can say -- i say this in all honesty, i don't know what a was his position for years before this? >> immigration's fascinating. i would draw your attention to bernie sanders. i remember bernie sanders talking to lou dobbs 15 years ago on the cnn show talking about illegal immigration, as late as 2016 he called illegal immigration a koch brothers
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plot. you can look up the interview on fox. progressives used to be tougher on i'm phrase. it started to -- i'm grapes. -- i'm gr immigration. he embodies old time traditional progressive views on illegal immigration. he will be the first to tell you 300,000 migrants came across, migrant encounters documented in december, more than the population of pittsburgh every month. he calls it a crisis. he would like other democrats to call it a crisis as well. >> he's got our attention. he's interesting. i'm more interested in the things said by john fetterman. you can read more about what he said in the new york post in john's interview. thanks for dressing you, as always. the will cain show is live on fox news digital. every monday through thursday, 12:00 eastern time, that is at t
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foxnews.com or go to youtube, the fox page. we'll have an interview with michael shellenberger, people who have moved from progressive to sane over the last several years. still ahead, trump and haley rally voters two days away from the first in the nation primary. >> you're going to send a message straight to crooked joe biden, the worst president in the history of our country. >> we can't have a country in disyou array and world on fire and go to four more years of chaos, we will not survive. >> this as rumors swirl the end is near for governor des des. we have -- governor desantis. we have a live report. kaley mcinnay is here within analysis, nextg . we're taking the best fibers our farm can produce, spinning it at one location, weaving it, then finally into a cut and sewn product.
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>> all eyes are on new hampshire this week as voters in the granite state -- i prefer to
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call it the live free or die state get ready to hit the polls on tuesday. >> is it really cold, alexis. rachel: it looks cold. >> reporter: it is cold. that's how much i like you guys. i said sure, i'll do it. it is cold, though. we've been talking with lots of voters out here about the things they care about. they say it comes down to the economy and the border. we talked about the southern border all the time and the people here talk about the southern and the northern border. last night we saw the former president donald trump up on stage here, in manchester, new hampshire, talking to a large crowd. he's trying to make his final push out here to voters and so is former governor nikki haley. watch. >> the washington swamp has done everything in its power to take away your voice. but this tuesday it is finally going to turn your way. your voice is going to be given back. >> on tuesday, every one of you is making a decision.
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it's a decision to either go with more of the same or to move forward. >> reporter: last night the former president on stage at southern new hampshire university arena there, he talked for nearly two hours, focusing on how he would improve the economy and secure the border. trump says his competition is falling far behind him and says nikki haley doesn't have what it takes to be president, she continues to push back on that, saying he is going after a her because he is afraid of her because she is rising in the polls. we've been talking about this brand-new primary poll that just came out earlier this morning. it shows former president donald trump leading the pack there, nikki haley behind him, he is lealeading haley by 11 percentae points. haley holds a lead among undeclared or independent voters, trump holds a wider lead
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with registered republicans. trailing in third place is ron desantis, he hasn't spent as much time here on the ground in the granite state. is he done with the presidential race? i asked him. watch, are you looking for an off ramp at all? people are saying since your polling is lower here, you're focused on 2028. what's your answer to that. >> 2028, that's so far away. in political time. i'm focused on 2024. >> reporter: we have been talking to him throughout his campaign. he did fly home just the other night to basically sleep in his own bed in florida, he came right back to new hampshire, wanted to make sure that everybody knew he was not skipping new hampshire and has put in a lot of work on the ground game he says but it's not showing in the polls but at this point he says he has no plans to drop out of the race. >> all right. thank you, keep warm.
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rachel: let's bring in former white house press secretary, our friend kayleigh mcenany. are you staying warm, kayleigh. >> barely. i'm a floridian. 14 degrees with tennis shoes on was tough. rachel: tell us what you're seeing on the ground there. >> so what we're seeing, we're actually counting the signs as we drove in. i love driving around the state. you get to see a lot. there were more trump signs than nikki haley signs, reflective of the poll, a little anecdotal there. if i'm nikki haley, i'm looking at the polls. that two that came out this week had trump above 50%, today trump is at 50%. the media likes to set artificial expectations, can he breach 50%. if trump was to win here in new hampshire, and also win in iowa, that would be the first time a republican has won both states in an open primary since 1976. if gets above the 50% mark, and then he is starring down south carolina where he's above 50%, if he's pulling in majority
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support he's essentially running as an incumbent, though he is not an incumbent which is pretty impressive. we'll see. >> we were talking about this heading into iowa. you may or may not have this level of knowledge about new hampshire but i know that i do not and that is how it breaks down within the state. we were talking about urban versus rural and certain areas that had more evangelical vote in iowa and how that played for individual candidates. is there anything you know about how it plays within new hampshire for trump versus haley, to the extent there are urban centers like manchester or whatever it may be, is she more popular in those areas and he is more popular in rural areas, the same as in iowa. >> it's the same dynamic. in new hampshire we're looking at the suburbs. the city of bedford, when you look at bedford you see a place where trump lost in 2020 to biden but it's a place where you sununu got 72% of the votes.
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there's a dynamic between the more establishment lean represented by sununu and nikki haley and to your point the rural areas, the more conservative maga voters, that's where it breaks down. i'll watching the suburbs, 40% of people in the states are independent. i want to see the college educated voters, independent voters, has trump made up any ground there going back to 2020 and can nikki haley get a surge of independents the way john mccain did. he pulled off a an upset in 2000, fueled by independents. >> kayleigh, you're on the ground. there's a couple places folks can find you. what are you up to in the next couple days. >> the big weekend show i'll be here you 7:00 p.m. this evening, and harris faulkner and i will be on the ground noon each day, a lot to look at. we'll break down all the numbers in granular detail. secretary of state predicting record turnout. that would be quite an interesting factor if we saw
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record turnout here, we know it was depressed in iowa. >> thank you, kayleigh. rachel: thanks, kayleigh. >> thank you. >> by the way, you can catch more kayleigh, because she's featured also in my documentary on fox nation called poison ivy which we talked about a lot yesterday, how the ivy leagues went so side youways, she's a harvard law grad, she talks about what she saw there. she said it's the radical students pushing the universities over the cliff. check out poison eye i poi ivy n ivy on fox nation. >> world leaders talk about how to trump proof their economies if he wins back the white house. sunday morning futures anchor maria bartiromo reacts, next. mos are pretty much the same, but at fisher investments we're clearly different. (other money manager) different how? you sell high commission investment products, right? (fisher investments) nope. fisher avoids them. (other money manager) well, you must earn commissions on trades.
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we should prepare ourselves fofor a possible second term by donald trump fostering european competitiveness. >> the best defense is to attack and to attack properly you need to be strong at home. rachel: those were the global elites at davos how they plan to quote trump proof their economies should he win re-election. here to react, sunday morning futures anchor maria bartiromo. maria, so interesting to see this kind of talk and that wasn't the only time they talked
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about this possibility of trump winning and sort of ruining their globalist plans. what does it mean to trump-proof your economy? maria: well, that is incredible. rachel, thank you. you're right, it was raging all over davos. i just got home yesterday. i actually witnessed it for myself. but i want to just put in there a little balance because the truth is, there were other voice as well. you're right, i think, that the elitestheelites who are afraid g their grip on power are trying to figure out what they're going to do if president trump returns to the white house because we know he will expose corruption, he will expose anybody who is not working for the people and they don't want to lose their grip on power. but the other voices in the room were also heard. we spoke earlier on your program, we heard from kevin roberts, the head had of the heritage foundation, who smacked the whole idea of he globalism and collectiveism, group think.
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he smacked that down. the other incredible voice in the room was the president of argentina, he gave an incredible speech, basically saying free market capitalism is the only tool we have to end poverty and we see that organizations like this one, he was on stage, he said groups like this one who are pushing this collectiveism are wrong. and in the middle of his speech actually claus schwab got out od walked out of the room. the president of poland told me he had a great relationship with prespresident trump. he looks forward to more, that well cold trump at the presidential pal a has and they've been buying apache helicopters, they bought the patriot system and he raised his spending on defense to 4% of gdp. so i think your point is taken, well taken, that yes, the elites
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of the world are going to continue to be afraid of losing their grip on power should president trump return to the white house because we know what he'll do. he will expose any corruption or anything that sees, he'll call it out. but there was also a fair amount of pushback. this trip to davos. rachel: it was the first time i saw that. collectiveism, to me it feels more like futileism. this sort of globalist perspective, like these oligarchs are at the top, they're going to have all the energy and the red meat, they get to do all that stuff and they want to control what we can and can't do. it's just really fascinating and really important to see people pushing back at their own conference. sofas nateing stuff. what do you have coming up on sunday morning futures. maria: i've got the president of poland basically talking about how he's raising his defense spenderring. spending. we want to know why republicans are caving.
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we're talking with chairman michael mccall, the f chairman of the foreign affairs committee, yvet he voted for the continuing resolution. we ask ma will ask mark green ws the impeachment of alejandro mayorkas. we'll talk with robert kahaly. do you notice the money coming to be university of pennsylvania, donations from china have tripled in the last year. we'll be talking about all of the money from into biden's world as well. it's all coming up. rachel: sounds like a great show. thank you, maria. still ahead, cowboy to the rescue, a rancher saves a trapped calf on a frozen pond with his lasso. he joins us, ahead.
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what the? good morning hallow makes it easy to build a daily habit of prayer and meditation want to start with a five minute daily gospel? sure. take a deep breath and focus your attention on god in the name of the father, and and of the son and of the holy spirit. amen. rsv is out there. for those 60 years and older protect against rsv with arexvy. arexvy is a vaccine used to prevent lower respiratory disease from rsv in people 60 years and older. arexvy does not protect everyone and is not for those with severe allergic reactions to its ingredients. those with weakened immune systems may have a lower response to the vaccine. the most common side effects are injection site pain, fatigue, muscle pain, headache, and joint pain. i chose arexvy. rsv? make it arexvy.
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my name's cody archie. and i'm erica. cody: and we're first generation ranchers from central texas. erica: and because of tiktok, we're able to show people from all over the world where their food and fiber come from. cody: we have dorper sheep and we have beef cattle for the sole purpose of going into the food chain. we use tiktok as a tool to inform people of what we do and why we do it. there's just a plethora of knowledge and of information swapping going on there. tiktok is helping us protect this way of life for future generations.
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here's why you should switch fo to duckduckgo on all your devie duckduckgo comes with a built-n engine like google, but it's pi and doesn't spy on your searchs and duckduckgo lets you browse like chrome, but it blocks cooi and creepy ads that follow youa from google and other companie. and there's no catch. it's fre. we make money from ads, but they don't follow you aroud join the millions of people taking back their privacy by downloading duckduckgo on all your devices today. rachel: move on over. our next guest is roping them in. >> a cowboy came to the rescue of a trapped calf on a frozen pond in northeast nebraska,
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pulling it to safety with a lasso. >> max bishop joins us now. great to have you on the show. you probably have done roping in your life. have you ever roped on a frozen pond before this? >> what that was pretty much the first time for that to play out, especially when we have someone extra around on the camera and stuff. >> our audience is getting a look at what you were able to pull off. how many attempts did it take? >> well, it's kind of c comical about that. i have a 75-foot rope. you can see there's a second rope. so my hands were froze, my feet were froze, i had to walk out for the rope to reach. i threw it a couple times, the rope wasn't long enough. the more proper way, if you see i throw a great big loop. the better way is a smaller loop
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and you add extra coils to the rope. i had shoulder surgery, tore my bicep off my shoulder so i had shoulder surgery three months ago. so when my neighbor called, and you can't go my shoulder's jacked up and i can't help you. you have to do what you've got to do and cowboy up. the whole dang rope goes flying through and the calf and the end of the rope goes across the pond. my other hand a was too froze to hold onto it. i had to throw a big loop to make it work. i think the distance was an issue and the way it was facing, i had to get the rope on the foot. if you see the whole footage, if we're roping competitively, someone is pulling the cow or the cow is running so you're throwing a trap and the cow steps through it on the back end and you catch the legs. i had to wait for it to move so the rope is waiting there, waiting for he it to get the foot on the ice where i could slide the loop under underneat.
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rachel: it is very manly. we're really impressed. you said you were cold i'm looking at that little calf. my heart a is breaking for the little calf. how is that calf doing? was the calf cold? did it need help after? >> yeah, we took care of that. we had to get it in the truck. we let it go to the mom first. the mom will calm it down. we had a couple people, city folks saying you should have carried it up to the mom. that's city people, different than reality. that mom, you could see it hollering. she was not happy about the situation. i was pretty -- every time she was fixing to drive me into the pond -- [laughter] >> you think you can pick the baby calf up and say here, m mama, here you go, she's not happy about it and she'll probably run you over. after she calmed down, we were
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able to catch it again, get it in the truck and get it warmed up and we let it nurse on its mom first, to calm it down. rachel: all these calves need their had mamas. >> you awesome stuff. thank you so much. very neighborly and skillful as well. >> what people like most more than the roping was neighbors helping neighbors and being part of something good. we have over half a billion views in just one day, it went viral. people want to see a positive message out there. >> we've got to run. thank you, though, max. >> thanks, max. an: what's my safelite story? i'm a photographer. and when i'm driving, i see inspiration right through my glass. so when my windshield cracked, it had to be fixed right. i scheduled with safelite autoglass. their experts replaced my windshield and recalibrated my car's advanced safety system. ♪ acoustic rock music ♪
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>> woman: safelite is the one i trust. they focus on safety so i can focus on this view. >> singers: ♪ safelite repair, safelite replace. ♪
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for all bipolar 1 symptoms. and in vraylar clinical studies, most saw no substantial impact on weight. elderly dementia patients have increased risk of death or stroke. call your doctor about unusual changes in behavior or suicidal thoughts. antidepressants can increase these in children and young adults. report fever, stiff muscles or confusion which may mean a life-threatening reaction or uncontrollable muscle movements which may be permanent. high blood sugar, which can lead to coma or death, weight gain and high cholesterol may occur. movement dysfunction and restlessness are common side effects. sleepiness and stomach issues are also common. side effects may not appear for several weeks. ask about vraylar and learn how abbvie could help you save. will: make sure and tune in to "fox & friends" for special coverage from new hampshire starting tomorrow, we appreciate you being with us today -- pete: go to church. ♪ ♪

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