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tv   Kennedy  FOX Business  September 29, 2021 7:00pm-8:00pm EDT

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know it's a bad thing for the president. elizabeth: congressman john katko, it's great to have you on. it's good to see you again soon. i'm elizabeth macdonald. you've been watching "the evening edit" on fox business. we thank you so much for watching, and we hope you have a good evening. ♪ ♪ kennedy: is brian laundrie can still alive? is he on the run? and, actually, hundreds of miles away from his comfortable florida home where mom and dad still at this moment are mowing the lawn like nothing's happening? well, we got a new lead as fbi and an army of private investigators try to hunt him down. he vanished two weeks ago after reportly going on a hike near a swamp near his florida home. investigators say reportly they have grown very suspicious of that -- reportedly have grown
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suspicious of that story because they haven't found as much as a fingernail. yesterday we learned he and his parents went camping on the gold coast near st. petersburg, yeah. the family, the lawyer says he left with the family. potentially explosive developmentses, police in boone, north carolina -- go, heels -- now looking at reported sights of laundry on the appalachian trail. that 750 miles north of where he was last seen. there have have also been reported sightings as far as away at canada. eh, yeah. in other words, if he's not gator field, he could be anywhere. an attorney for gabby's family says if brian is out there, he needs to surrender now. >> the laundries did not help us find gabby, they're sure not going to help us find brian. so, brian, we're asking you to turn yourself in to the fbi or
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the nearest law enforcement agency. kennedy: yeah, come on, man. hundreds if not thousands of tips and leads, when should investigators folk their attention? joining me now to discuss director of friends ific science at george mason is, please welcome mary ellen o'toole. welcome to the show. >> thank you. kennedy: i love your glasses. let's talk about this. how do you start sifting through these leads and develop a likelihood of where brian laundrie might be? >> well, two separate questions. most likely all the planning that he did was up front, so that's when he had the time and the help of maybe family and maybe friends to decide where to go. so that's the first consideration i think that they're looking at. and then the second consideration is at least initially it's likely he would have gone someplace he's familiar with as opposed to someplace he had no previous context with.
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you know where you can go, you know places to avoid, where to set up campgrounds. so they will be looking for other areas where he has camped in the past. but again, it was important that as more time goes by, it's better for law enforcement and it's worse for a fugitive because he has to make decisions on the run, and that always involves making mistakes. kennedy: and if he is on the appalachian trail and surviving off the land, you pointed out there's a big difference between going camping for the weekend and taking canned bacon and actually having to differentiate what is e bl, how to kill things, how to make shelter and all of that, and the latter is very, very difficult. is he the kind of bern based on what you've read and seen that could conceivably live on his own without supplies, medicine, food and everything else one would need out there? >> that's the tough thing.
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people can be weekend campers or they can know how to, you know, live off the land for a period of time. but when you are absolutely dependent on being able to do that and you have no source of supplies, food and water and medicine and you also know you happen to be one of the most want people in the united states, that's a lot of pressure. kennedy: yeah. >> and when you add pressure and paranoia like that, your decision making deteriorates as does your judgment, and that's when you start to make mistakes. no matter how good he is, the likelihood that he can exist if on his own without any help from anyone else for months at a time is not likely. kennedy: so we heard that he and a woman were seen in a cell phone store buying a cell phone in florida just a few weeks ago. what was the likelihood that his parents are still in contact with him even if it puts them this legal jeopardy? >> well, that's a tough one
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because, obviously, they're his parents, and they want to know if he's okay. but i think at this point most people will understand that cell phones can be monitored the, they can be tracked -- kennedy: i don't know. his parents do not seem like they're operating with every card in the deck. do you think brian laundrie's monitoring this? because a lot of sociopaths become obsessed with their cases. when they become the focus of national attention. >> i would say is i don't know if brian is a sociopath, but i would say that he knows that he needs to know where the investigators are looking. that's critical information for him to survive. so i think in the very beginning and up til recently he has had a way to monitor the investigation. that's the most important source of information for him. kennedy: are you surprised that they let him go?
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>> when you say let him go -- kennedy: i mean, slip away without any surveillance or any tail? >> it is a little surprising, and i think probably more information will come out about that once this investigation, you know, is concluded. but it is a little bit surprising to me, yes. kennedy: yeah. me too, man. i think he's a real dirtbag. we'll see what happens though. i do think he should surrender. he is a want man but not for the reasons that he would like. mary ellen, thank you so much for taking the time. >> you're very welcome. kennedy: more breaking news tonight, a los angeles judge has just removed britney spears' father jamie as her conservator. this is huge news. he will no longer run her life and her finances for the first time since 2008. that's when obama was elect. that's so long ago. all right. the decision comes days after jamie was accuse of bugging
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britney's phone and planting surveillance cameras in her bedroom. britney's lawyer wants an investigation into those educations. -- allegations. in the meantime, is britney free now? let's talk about it with tonight's party panel, jason meister is here, we've got democrat strategist talk radio host and fox news contributor leslie marshall holding it down in l.a. and from the spectator usa are where he serves as contributing editor, stephen l. miller. fantastic glasses, stephen. i will start with you, jason, since as far as i know you are the only lawyer on the panel. what does this mean for britney spears? is she free? >> first of all, this is great news that just came out that you just broke. look, she should have never been put into this conservatorship to begin with. the whole purpose of conservatorship is to help people that can't live their own
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life safely regain their freedoms. this did the exact opposite. this 39-year-old woman didn't have control of her own body. they put her on birth control, and they put an iud in her or to prevent her from having children, which she wanted to have. this went on for 13 long years, and she was drugged, she was manipulated, she was enslaved by her own father through this conservatorship. so this case has far greater implications than just britney spears because it puts a highlight on the fact that there's so many others that are being abused by the system. kennedy: yeah. and there is legislation that has passed in california, there's proposed legislation in the senate right now. leslie, this kind of abuse and misuse of the conservatorship system can't happen, you know? it's -- think about all the people whose names and stories we don't know. think how they're taken advantage of by an overreacting judge who decides that, you know
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what? you're not capable of making your own decisions, although you can make everyone in the conservatorship millions of dollars. >> yeah. you can make the money, but you can't own it or spend it. this is a 39-year-old woman who that some difficult times as many stars out here in los angeles do when they start out as kids fame is very, very tough to handle. and we saw that with britney. but for a woman, and i am a pro-choice woman, to force a woman to have a contraceptive inside her body, to not be able to have a child if -- kennedy: and they have not deny that, by the way. yeah. the conservatorship has not denied that that took place. >> correct. no, correct. in addition, could not get mare. you know, well enough to earn the money, not well enough to spend the money or control the money. i am so glad this decision has
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been made. i don't think she's entirely free yet because, you know, they are switching, you know, who's going to, you know, control things. but at the same time, we are not talking about somebody that was locked up in a padded cell, you know, for the majority of her life. we're talking about somebody who had some difficult times, as many of us experience whether mentally or emotionally, and i'm sad that this has gone on for so long. and to your point, kennedy, god only knows how many people are in this situation right now -- kennedy: yeah. and how easy it is -- [inaudible conversations] >> name recognition that britney spears does. >> kennedy: -- to take someone's civil rights away from them. there's a lot of blame to go around here, stephen. and, obviously, britney is the product of media and cull you are the, and they're seeing -- culture, and they're singing a vastly different tune now than they were in 2007. should she be as mad at the media as she is at her dad? >> maybe a little bit more. [laughter] but that's me. yeah, we kind of saw her whole drama play out in courtrooms
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similar if there's a vh-1 show or a bravo show, and we're going to be seeing netflix documents, so these guys really haven't learn their lesson. they loved watching her shave her held and take an umbrella to a paparazzi's car. they ate it up, they egged her on. she was hypersexualized at a young age, and she's kind of this media product. these people kind of drove her into madness, and now they're embracing her and saying, oh, you're free and we love you and everything's great now, and you have a very exemployee tative media culture, and then we all sit around and wonder how a reality tv game show host became president of the united states. kennedy: and guess what? he will again. and that man's name is chuck woolery. >> might again. [laughter] kennedy: coming up, hundreds of americans, including children, held strand in a filthy air airplane hangar in abu dhabi
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after evacuating from afghanistan. is this what president biden calls an extraordinary success? looks crappy to me. we break it down in a moment. ♪♪ as someone who resembles someone else... i appreciate that liberty mutual knows everyone's unique. that's why they customize your car insurance, so you only pay for what you need. [ nautical horn blows ] i mean just because you look like someone else doesn't mean you eat off the floor, or yell at the vacuum, or need flea medication. oh, yeah. that's the spot. only pay for what you need. ♪ liberty, liberty, liberty, liberty ♪
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♪ kennedy: the nation's top military leaders pointing fingers at each other and the president while americans suffer. the department of homeland security or denying landing rights to a flight of more than 100 americans, green cardholders and children trying to flee afghanistan. now they're stuck in a squalid airport hanger in abu dhabi with no diapers, sleeping on floor, very little food and water, organizers scrambling to come up with a new plan all while these families and their safety hangs in the balance. the defense department placing blame everywhere except on themselves. >> the issue on why we didn't bring out civilians and sivs sooner, again, the call on how to do that and when to do it is really a state department call. kennedy: oh, yeah. i'm going to blame you. bureaucracy, yea. just a last week the state department blamed the pentagon.
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who drop the ball sneer so many balls -- ball here? so many balls have dropped, it's like prom night. here with me now, veteran and founder of the d place now, subscribe now, brian soups is back. >> ball drop. kennedy: there we go. all over the place. you go ahead and take it from there. >> well, i mean, in my living memory i really cannot remember a period where the two major foreign policy parts of the hearn government have -- american government have contradicted each other and the chief executive. because the pentagon can lean forward. they know damn well what their air lift capabilities are, what the requirements are going to be. the state department in general is sort of a tolerate guy from in the background as far as -- yale in the background. they knew damn well the
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approximate count of americans. this is on the pentagon. the state department is allow to be stupid because they generally are, but this is on austin, and it's on general milley, and this is on them. they knew the americans that were on the ground. they knew the airlift capability that they had, and they knew they were putting people who had no business getting on c-17s on c-17s. kennedy: yeah, 124,000 of them. yet here you have 28 americans, 83 green cardholders, 6 people with sivs including in that 59 kids. but somehow you can take 14,000 people and --124,000 people and get them out. these people are stuck in abu dhabi, and they're talking about refueling in egypt and hopefully landing in dulles. so when there are constituents of some of these lawmakers who question those over the last two days who are super upset with all of this, they're hearing
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these stories, they're seeing these images. what was your takeaway from the testimony over the last two days? >> again, like i said two weeks ago, milley should resign. i'm not going to -- [inaudible] yesterday hiding behind the question about shouldn't you resign, why haven't you resigned by tomton, hiding be-- tom cotton, and hen -- then the 13 dead soldiers, that was outray you because he's a political appointee. what no one call him on was his father was an enlisted navy corpsman on iwo jima. my father was on okinawa. he didn't have the option of resigning. the dead from four weeks ago, they didn't have the option of resigning. unlike milley, i took the oath
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of enlistment, then i took the oath of commissioning. i couldn't raise my hand and say, frankly -- [inaudible] kuwait. that wasn't an option. and that wasn't his dad's option on iwo jima. so hiding behind his dad, this is the guy who is the chairman of the joint chiefs? please resign. or never do that again and apologize. but this is a absolute -- and, by the way, him acting like he's not political, well, i can't resign because that'd be political. what's talking to bob woodward? kennedy: yeah, i was going to say, what's the point of being the source for articles and books setting the record straight? that is a political act when you are shaping the narrative in order the for people to see things a certain way base on their politics. that is you acting like a politician and not, you know, i serve at the pleasure of the president. >> he's a politician dress as an actor from saving private ryan. frankly, i'd rather have the guy
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who played george marshall be chairman of the joint chiefs now, because he's more in character, and he doesn't oversell is it. milley has clowned himself to everybody who has actually been down range and done it, seen it, the whole thing. i don't hide behind mid dad, and i don't say, well, my dad was on okinawa so, therefore, i can sexually harass someone or i can steal. [laughter] i don't get that. my dad didn't resign either. so, yeah, milley -- by the way, he's also now thrown the administration under the bus. so now i tell you probably friday -- kennedy: good. and often he should as well -- austin as well. blinken too. bunch of numb skulls. i hate to use that kind of filthy language, but thank you for your time. >> clear the deck. oh, thank you. drop a ball. kennedy: they've all been dropped. none left. all right, democrat terry mcauliffe may have just alienate every parent in the
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state of virginia. i'm going to break down why he's dead wrong on school choice. my memo is next. ♪ ♪ ah! come on! let's hide in the attic. no. in the basement. why can't we just get in the running car? are you crazy? let's hide behind the chainsaws. smart. yeah. ok. if you're in a horror movie, you make poor decisions.
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♪ kennedy: terry mcauliffe, he's an establishment told who -- to, but when he was governor the first time around, he veto a series of education bills incluing a school choice bill that would have allow parents to use state money for private or home schooling. sounds mighty nice, huh? yeah. but school choice is a dirty word to the democratic elite who are generously fund by corrupt teachers unions hell bent on keeping parents out of classroom decisions like began economiesome, mcauliffe doesn't send his silver-spooned
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spawn. no, back in 2009 his four progeny attended a $30,000 a year country club. terry -- they should call him tony. and of course this was handsomely fund by teachers unions who have given him almost $700,000 in donations to date. unions want parents wholly divorced from their cartels, so it was no surprise last night when mcauliffe told his republican rival this: >> i'm not going to let parents come into schools and actually take -- out and make their own decisions. [applause] >> so i don't think parents should be telling schools what they should teach. kennedy: you know what? i think parents should have a very active role in what their kids are are learning because they care most about outcomes, something public schools have all but abandon in the wake of the pandemic which has academically fail forgotten learners.
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unions want money, power and is control. those uppity parents stand in the way. terry mcauliffe and gavin gavin newsom, if they had such great faith in their crumbling public schools, why not send your kids there? it's not just republicans and libertarians who during the pandemic saw behind the curtain and were sickened by the laziness and inefficiency of the one-size-fits-all education system in this country. democrats who support school choice now sit at 70% as of june 2021, that is an 11-point bump during the. pandemic. progressives can slap their claptraps about equity and oppression, but at the end of the day, all parents want is what is best for their kids; a seat at the table and a voice and choice where their kids get to sit. and that's the memo. ♪ ♪ kennedy: a new study shows the number of kids who enrolled in charter schools jumped more than 7% since the pandemic start, and
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the proof is in the pudding. school choice is the wave of the future, so why do politicians want to get in the way of the future? here with me now, national director of research at the american federation of children, it is corey deangelis. welcome back, corey. >> hey, thanks for having me. kennedy: now, i don't know who terry mcauliffe was appealing to last night saying that he wants to keep parents out of school and out of the process, especially when so many of them were instrumental in the process. a lot of them for the first time during the pandemic. >> yeah. he was signaling to the teachers unions that support his campaign, but that's really alienating a lot of parents that are supporting school choice more than ever. and, look, the reality is that a lot of us know already that parents know and care more about their children's education than bureaucrats sitting in offices hundreds of miles away. and this is just, it's a huge gap for mcauliffe because it
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was found out not too long ago that he was, he's a school choice hypocrite. like you said, he's sending his kids to private school but then fights against school choice for others which is horrible news when you see the latest polling that came out just this morning at real clear opinion research. nationwide polling finding that voters overwhelmingly reject elected officials that are school choice hypocrites, those that exercise school choice for their own kids and if then oppose it for others. 62% of respondents said that they'd be less likely to support a candidate if they were a school choice hypocrite. only 9% said the opposite, and about 20% said it didn't have an effect. but those are huge numbers, and it doesn't look good in a tight race like we're seeing in virginia for mcif all live. kennedy: tell me about some of the parents who are choosing home schooling which has double since the pandemic, the number of kids went are from 2.6 million to over 5 million now. and, you know, like i said, there's been a 7% jump in kids
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going to private schools and charter schools. so tell me about some of these families because people say, oh, these are just rich white people. is that true? because that sounds kind of racist. >> it's families from all types of political backgrounds. in fact, if you look at the census bureau data from the american poll survey, the latest numbers show that the biggest jumps in the number of families home schooling were among black american families which include about 16% of their households home schooling at least one child in the household. so this is from all different types of backgrounds, surges in support are among all different kinds of backgrounds especially for democrats and people who had their kids in the public school system. covid really showed why we need educational freedom and to have the money follow the child. and like you said is, charter schools are seeing tons of new students whereas the government schools lost about 1 is.5
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million -- 1.5 million children last year. families are voting with their feet to the types of education that work best for them. and, look, the way that we can get more of these types of opportunities to more families is to fund the students directly. in virginia with this race that we're looking at, they spend at least $13-14,000 per child, per year in the government school system. that money should follow the child to where ever they're getting an education. that would allow more families to afford to send their kids to private schools, and that would really lead to more equity in society. school choice is an equalizer in that a way. funding students directly allows more families to access educational opportunities. and, look, education funding is meant for educating children, it should follow them to wherever they're getting an education -- kennedy: and where where they're getting the best education. absolutely not. and if you're worried about where americans stand in the global climate in terms of math and science, in terms of education and you want to do better by our kids, then vote
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for people who are going to allow parents to make those decisions once and for all. corey deangelis, thank you so much. >> thank you. kennedy: now corey may be a young man, but the oldest person ever recorded was a french woman who lived to the age of 122. a new scientific study says there's no limit to the human life span and that we could theoretically live forever. is so would you really want too that? and what would you do with all that free time? the party panel is back. jason, leslie and stephen. only people with m names tonight. so, steven, i will start with you. my grandmother live to be 100. she that incredible wisdom and and faculties until the day she died. she exercised, she drank gin, and she inspire me deeply. i want to live to be at least 100 just like her. do you want to live past 100? >> that's a little -- that's pushing it for me.
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i'm trying my hardest -- kennedy: you want me to push you over a cliff in your wheelchair? [laughter] >> not for free. kennedy: you can a pay me, that's tine. >> look, you guys can stick around. yeah, i mean, you can stick around until the robots and roombas all band together enslaving us -- [laughter] i'm going to be checking out before that happens. it's going to be great when the self-driving cars start self-driving themselves into the entrances of 7/elevens as revenge for blowing into the nintendo cart ridges. i think i'm going to check out before that happens. you guys enjoy terminator. kennedy: i'm not worried about technology. i know that our sex robot overlords are going to lee us smiling, leslie, and i want to live as many decades as i can to enjoy the fruits of their lay wore. i said it. [laughter] >> okay. i think stephen needs a cocktail. look, i don't want -- unless i'm like your grandmother, kennedy, if i could be like your grandmother, if i could have my mind and i can have my body,
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then sure, you know? bring it on. kennedy: and the gin. >> but that's not always the way it goes, and if it's not, then i would like to go. if i don't have my faculties and i'm a burden on my family, forget it. kennedy: i think it's exciting, jason. i think this is a whole new sphere of technology, but we can't start deporting people when they're 62. if they live to 162, the government cannot be funding these people for 100 years. if you're going to live over -- >> build back better. [laughter] kennedy: joe biden is going to be president for the next 90 years. go ahead. [laughter] >> i actually did find this study somewhat fascinating because what they're saying is you can actually reach to 110, mortality actually plateaus. but i'll never make it. i'd like to take my benefits today as opposed to some undetermine date in the future, and conversely, i'd also like to defer my costs into the future.
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in health that translates to eating a big, fat, juicy ribeye today over the prospect of having good health tomorrow. but not to mention that this study didn't talk about it, but 95% of the people that live to the age of 110 are women. i don't know about the other 65 jimedders -- kennedy: kicks, man. that's a great ratio for you, what are you talking about? ♪ you're going to be like, yeah, lady. if come to poppy. or manager like that -- >> not if the sex robots have anything to say about it. kennedy: oh, sex robots. god, we're all going to have great ratios. i'm excite about this. i don't know when you guys became such glum pessimists. does anyone want to back me up here? you're all like, no, i want to die. no? nothing? all right. i'll go take a handful of pills because you've all depressed me. party panel, thank you so much for being here.
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jason, leslie and stephen -- >> you're welcome. [laughter] kennedy: new york's vaccine mandate for health care workers now facing a lawsuit after lawsuit. we saw this one coming. governor hochul, she's our sub, she's full steam ahead. is there a legal loophole for staff? plus later, ken-a-dog, here's a sneak peek at elsa. hi, elsa! i kiss your nose. bye. ♪♪
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♪♪ and even when things go a bit wrong, we've got your back. here, things work the way you wish they would. and better protection costs a whole lot less. you're in good hands with allstate. click or call for a lower auto rate today. ♪ ♪ kennedy: all i wanted buzz a pepsi. no jab, no job. that's the ultimatum for scores of health care workers who are refusing to get the covid
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vaccine for one reason or another. among them, a group of nurses here in new york who are now suing. they're claiming religious exemption. and it comes a day after the state made it mandatory for all health care workers to get vax. the problem is hospitals in new york and many other states are already dealing with severe staffing shortages, and now many nurses could get the boot if they don't roll up their sleeves. is there a better way to dole with? -- deal with this? joining me now, new york republican congressman, also candidate for governor, lee zeldin. welcome back. >> great to be with you. kennedy: so kathy hochul who is our governor now in new york because andrew cuomo is a greasy slimeball and he resign, is she handling this right way? if i think firing nurses when there's a nursing shortage might be a bit of an issue for people seeking health care, especially in emergent health care. >> no, i don't think she's handling in the right way at all. you can have, if you choose, enhanced ppe and testing as an
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alternative. you have really -- you're talking about 18 months of health care workers responding heroically, exposing themselves to covid, their family at home. they were treat as heroes, given parades if, and then all of a sudden this mandate comes down where where now thousands of new yorkers out on the streets terminated because they haven't gotten the vaccine. this is the same vaccine that the president of the united states, the vice president, former governor andrew cuomo, they were all this time last year throwing a whole lot of cold water, reducing trust can faith in that vaccine. it's also these same people who said that president biden said in december that we should not make the vaccine mandatory. yet here we are, these people are out of work. kennedy: yes, they are out of work. and if you have to go to the e.r., you know that you spend 85% of your time with nurses. and if there aren't enough nurses to cover shifts, you're not going to get seen, and that's going to be an issue not just for the ones who are
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fighting covid, but also the ones with broken limbs and gunshot wounds and the ones having heart attacks. and i know that governor hochul went before a church congregation and said the vaccine is from god, so just and take the it i don't like it, i think it's weird. >> she took it to the next level. i've heard of elected officials referring to voters, residents, constituents. she was referring to new yorkers as her apostles. kennedy: yeah. >> now, in order to fix the chaos that she created, she was going to activate medical professionals working as part of the new york national guard. well, these are medical professionals in their civilian capacity, many of them, so you're only further disrupting the system. so there already was a staff shortage, it's now been increased, and you're trying to make up for it by pulling medical professionals from other places. to your point, you have had
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services in hospitals shut down. if you're living in louis county, new york, in the north country and you're pregnant, you're not going to be able to go to the louis county hospital for maternity care services, you're going to have to drive a longer distance. we're seeing those impacts all across the state. kennedy: congressman, before you go, tonight is the famous congressional baseball game. it was canceled last year, of course, for the pandemic. and as you all remember back in 2017, a gunman shot four people at practice and almost killed house minority whip steve scalise. you played in that game, congressman, in 2019. so what does tonight's game mean for you and the nation? >> 26,000 tickets sold, over $2 million raised congressionalbaseball.org, foxnews.com right now has a link showing it live. it's 5-3 right now in the second inning, and the coolest part of the game is that the first batter for the republicans was steve scalise. and what's also cool is that the people who saved steve's life
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that day, like a capitol police officer being shot multiple times and engaging the shooter with a firearm while being shot at by a rifle, the only person who lost their life that day was the shooter. i can also report that the reason why the score is 35-3 is that -- 5-3 is that blake moore of the republicans had three-run in the field home run at the park. the action is hot, and it's all going to a great cause. kennedy: that's right. go to foxnews.com right after can the show and catch all the action. congressman, thank you so much. >> you got it. take care. kennedy: again, it is streaming on fox nation. there we go. foxnation.com, just like i said. topical storm is next. ♪ ♪ our retirement plan with voya, keeps us moving forward. hey, kevin! hey, guys! they have customized solutions to help our family's special needs... giving us confidence in our future...
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♪ kennedy: the president of south korea's proposing a ban on dog meat which means i'll never get to try one of their delicacies, spicy ramen poodles. [laughter] this is the topical storm. topic number one, here we go. amazons has release a new line of smart devices for your home, and one of them is as creepy as jeff bezos himself, and that's
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saying something. oh, god. this is astra, a new amazon robot that video records everything you do, streaming it to other devices. i actually already have one of them because jeffrey toobin sent me a prototype last year. astra works as a home assistant following you around the house while playing music and delivering you drinks. like the other astras, it could cheat at the world series is. astro monitors your house for broken glass and alerts you to suspicious activities, you know, like a robot rolling around taking videos of everything. you nosy pervert. topic number two. celebrity chef -- has opened a new high-priced london restaurant serving an $840 steak. now we know where democrats are going to be holding their next maskless fundraiser.
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he became famous in 2017 for the way he put salt on a steak which is also what launched the career of liam hemsworth. the prices are as pretentious as the customers. the menu offers bourbon for $130 and a gold leaf tock a hawk steak for $850. tomahawk steak. former new jersey governor chris chris christie was happy to spend $840 on a single steak dinner, although he never went to london. that was at at an arkansas by's. we got the meats. topic number three. are are you tire of netflix and chilling? now you can cheese it and wine with this brand new cheese it and wine pairing package. [laughter] package. finally, a way to day drink
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without feeling so good about yourself. it includes four boxes of extra toasty cheeses and a -- full combo that can hold your wine and crackers at the same time. [laughter] ash your cig is relate onto your couch cushion. it also includes a coupon, just make sure you use it before your illegal pet bop cat tears it to shreds. the package sells for just $29.99. you can't afford not to. it's on the cheez-it web site. buy it now at cheez-it hq.com, your choice for all boom by cushions and fentanyl-based cereals. topic number four. a british museum gave an artist $84,000 to reproduce an old sculpture, but inshe he pocket the cash, gave the museum problank canvasses and called it
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take the money and run. it's too bad they couldn't fine an artest with more integrity like hunter biden. here's a look at take the money and run, yep. that was also the original name of the bernie sanders campaign. the museum loan the artist $84,000 representing the average annual incomes of austrians and and danes. instead he delivered these blank canvasses fill with the average annual incomes of unvaccinated new york nurses. in a radio interview the artist said, quote: the word is that i have taken the money. it's a breach of contract and is breach of contract is part of the work! and here i thought only disney was making art by breaching account. we'll be right back with kennedogs! i let the dogs out, yeah! finish. ♪ ♪
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♪ ♪ kennedy: it's our favorite, it's the peak of the week, time for kennedogs! send me your dogs, tell me all about it. kennedogs is the hashtag. first up, let's meet finley, he was found wandering the halls of congress trying to escape. luckily, capitol police wrought him to congresswoman marie newman's office. this is kelly, it's actually ja,
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and. kelly sent in her puppy, a long-haired dalmation. cruella is jealous. this is otis. look at that face. i love this one. oh, and is looked at h funny, and they're both so cute x they look very interested in politics. gary center in his pup -- sent in his pup thor. and you're such a good buy. and if this is sydney, her owner alex say this is her favorite spot on the couch to watch her favorite segment on tv the, kenny dogs. michelle sent in sweet, rosie. i to love french bulldogs. oh, my god, you're so cute. i'm dying for you. this is -- she's is fast dog at the dog park, we can tell, pearl, you're a whiz. lastly, a.j. says this dog was rescued and glad you found your
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fur-ever home. we love you. we love all the dogs. thank you so much for watching the best hour of your day. follow me on twitter and facebook. also tomorrow the, the carol markowitz and brock pierce. dvr every episode of kenney. good night. (birds calling) - [john] mining is really one of the last vestiges of the american dream. (mallet striking) (dramatic music) if you're smart, if you work hard, you might make something big

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