tv Kennedy FOX Business September 21, 2022 7:00pm-8:00pm EDT
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decline and that's a vicious cycle. >> absolutely. that's why i'm for propolice and the citizens of these law-abiding citizens, they want police officers in their communities, liz. liz: and minorities. ted williams, you're terrific. come back soon. don't forget, we're less than a month aand i we'll be in dc september 17 and 18. thankers for watching us and join us again tomorrow evening. good to see you. kennedy: well, get some canned beans and potassium iowa hawkeyes dean, it might be time to restock the fallout shelter. vladamir putin threatened nuclear war. he's not bluffing. how do we stop the madman before he killing everything and everyone on earth? putin backed into a corner and foreign ukraine is unmitigated disaster and the russian economy is in tatters, and russians are fleeing the country literally every flight out of the country is sold out. there's a 20-mile traffic jam at the border with finland having
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said that, they do have great vodka. and now we all know what happens when you corner a bully. they say things like this, watch. >> if the territorial integrity of our country is threatened, we will without doubt use all available means to protect russia and our people. this is not a bluff and those trying to blackmail us with nuclear weapons, prevailing winds can blow in their direction. kennedy: yeah, he's not talking about a far party. pretty chilling and comes a few days after president biden said this on 60 minutes. >> i wonder, mr. president, what you would say if he's considering using chemical or tactical nuclear weapons. >> don't. don't. don't. it will change the face of war unlike anything since world war ii. it'll be consequential. they'll become more of a pomoxus rye in the world than ever and depending on the ebbs tent of what they do, it'll determine the response that occurs.
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kennedy: today at the un, the president responded directly to putin's new threat. >> a nuclear war cannot be won. and must never be fought. kennedy: the president calling on all nations to stand up to putin and support ukraine but if putin's fingers are already on the but button, how do we stop a nuclear apocalypse and house judiciary committee chris stuart and congressman, welcome to the show and these are very serious times and very serious threats. do you think our country is meeting the rhetoric appropriately and if not, what else should be said? >> i think very strongly on something here and i'm not a flower toting pacifist and i'm a military guy and i believe that america has an extraordinary responsibility to defend freedom and democracy around the world to win. we have to look at last 20 years
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and the problem was we had an unending and open ended commitment and we never really defined what success was and our president has committed us, but he's never said this is what victory means. this is what winning this war means to merge a definition, or perceived definition may be very, very different than zelenskys right now f. we're going to walk any further down the path, the president has to tell the american people this is what we're trying to do in ukraine. if that means expelling every russian soldier from ukraine, including from the regions regions likelike crimea, i prome going to war with russia. if we're going back to pre-february lines, we can negotiate that and that's not
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what zelensky is thi thinking ad he's idea of winning the war is expelling every russian and there's got to be clarity on this and there's a growing sentiment on that and what we're getting into we don't want to be a 20 year commitment like afghanistan or iraq and never knowing what it is we're trying to achieve there. kennedy: part of the problem is congress has abby indicated so much responsibility in terms of war and war powers and in terms of declarations and i'm one of the people i guess you'd describe me as more of a pacifist with the respect of people who wear the uniform and fight for freedom and put their needs and their lives above all else to keep this country free. having said that, i don't trust this president to make decisions to put millions and millions of lives at risk here. and all though russia and ukraine has different ideas of
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victory in their part of the world, inserting the united states into the middle of the entire thing seems like a fool's errand. >> well, and i don't think someone has that view would be a pacifist at all. that's a reasonable series of questions to ask and i hate to come back to this. i mean we've just ridden this dead horse and beat it so badly and how can you look at afghanistan and not just president biden but general mille, our secretary of defense, general austin, how can you look at this team and say, yeah, i got confidence in them after the debacle in afghanistan for which in one has been fired or took responsibility and they claim everything went swimmingly well. if that's their definition of a victory or success, that should worry everyone saying do they have the judgment? do they have the experience they've demonstrated that they can lead us through this very
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difficult situation because they've lost my confidence and i think they've lost the confidence of most americans when it comes to not just the important but critical national security issues. kennedy: it's not beating a dead horse. it's very, very important to look at l how a 20-year conflit ended and people that fought in iraq and afghanistan and questioned themselves whether their commitment was worth it so, you know, those are the people i think about but when you question that, i also think that russia and china are looking at the united states asking the exact same question for very different reasons. congressman stewart, thank you for your time i appreciate it. >> thank you. kennedy: the u.s. provided over $15 billion so far in aid to ukraine since biden took office. national security council spokesperson john kirby insists the u.s. is not at war with russia. so why is putin threatening us? get into it with the party panel, she's the editor and fox
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news contributor, katie pavlich is back and marie harf and founder of baseball politics, brad polumbo. welcome, people. katie, this is really the last thing the president wants or needs but in the end when you're talking about nuclear annihilation, we have to be on the side of the united states president. what can the united states do during the un general assembly to bring more of an international coalition to bring the temperature down? >> well, based on the speech today, i'm not sure that we're going to get anywhere when it comes to the un and it's a bit of a joke considering that russia is a permanent member of the security council at the un and has veto power and the kind of resolution that security council may bring against russia and they're making more money now than they were making before the war started on oil as a result of the sanctions that we
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put into place. europeans aren't pulling their weight when it comes to the war with ukraine either and the united states again is the one pouring all the money into the situation and pledging billions of dollars per month and with the -- like the congressman said, not any plan to certify that the american people are not, you know, in a proxy war with russia. and the other thing is that the president today talked about russia and he should have talked about iran and china more and talked about e up and downing the un and it's a corrupt body and it's the administration wants to continue giving military aid about people about what the plan is from here and ukraine is winning on a lot of places as a result of the aid and the administration owes the american people an explanation and vladamir putin is threatening nuclear war against the entire world and specifically america. kennedy: yeah, against the united states and, you know, obviously, marie, before you
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worked at fox, this was your wheelhouse. this was the arena where you lived and worked every day and some of these issues have haunted us for quite some time, including the point that katie brings up. russia's seat on -- permanent seat on the un security council. is there any way of undoing that and there was talk today about adding more permanent members. what is the solution there? >> well, i think adding more members is a good idea and the reality is the un is not going to solve the problem and un does many things well and they're not going to end this war. they're a forum where countries can gather together, pledge their support to ukraine like you heard from many countries today but, look, the reason from ukraine is winning the war is because of american assistance and european assistance mostly but there are over 50 countries as part of the coalition. the real answer about what the
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goal is is up to president zelensky. we are not there telling them what they should be doing. we're helping him get to the negotiating table and win there. what we saw from vladamir putin today is a man who knows that his strategic plans have failed and he thought this would be over in a few days. he's increasingly isolated, and he is desperate. kennedy: yes. >> these threats should be taken seriously but they're coming because we're doing well and we should see them in that light. kennedy: okay, well you bring up in your phrasing you bring up a very important point: is there a we here, brad, and should there be? obviously the united states will have a say in what ukraine does because with billions and billions of dollars going there, they want a return on their investment. should there be a we in terms of united states in the middle of
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ukraine and russia? >> well, i certainly think morally there should be. almost everybody across the board from the beginning has sided with ukraine in the sense that they're being invaded here. russia are the bad guys. putin are the bad guys. i mean, it's complicated, but that fundamental truth is something almost everybody can agree on. but it's dangerous to fight a proxy war. i worry about this in part because people like putin have nuclear weapons and they're not afraid to saber rattle. i'm glad that president biden is speaking about how nuclear war must be avoided at all costs but it's at moments like this when i wish we had a commander in chief that i had a little bit of confidence in their competence because i barely trust this guy to pick out the flavor of pudding he's going to eat in a given day and he's looking lost -- kennedy: i appreciate when he said a nuclear war cannot be won and must never be fought. i concur with that and all
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americans should. having said that, it seems like china is the only actor or the only world superpower talking about negotiating and they're far from rational. party panel, much more with them a bit later in the show. coming up next, we're 48 days from the midterms. all eyes on georgia. very tight senate race. the republican and democrat candidates virtually tied. will our libertarian be the deciding factor? we've got the senate candidate chase all over. he's here, next. ♪
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looking at you, shane hazel. looking at georgia libertarian candidate and outside of them. i know you've had a very interesting political journey. are you excited or nervous that it is culminated in a lot of people being mad at you and this is before the general election in november. >> well, i've been a libertarian canned dates for congress before and a libertarian for over a decade now, and i'm used to both the parties not liking me and think that i'm spoiling an election when i'm just providing a choice for voters. kennedy: do libertarian candidates in georgia, is it different than in other st stats you took as many democrats from hillary clinton as from donald trump and do you tend to take
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here we go again. >> i'm earning across the spectrum to be sure and i've spoken to people that normally vote as a democrat and happy to talk about justice reform and talk to people who are normally republican voter who is are happy to talk about gun rights and make it easier to start a small business and libertarian voters who like freedom and liberty and all that good stuff and i really feel like i pull from everywhere but i'm happy to earn those votes and i feel like, you know, if you want those vote goes out and get them. kennedy: do people respond to you when you go out and knock on doors because a lot of times that's a libertarian and even if they're running as republican or democrats tend to be more republicans and a lot of democrats nowadays are wanting more government and when you go knocking on doors, what are you hearing from people in terms of, you know what, i've never even heard of libertarian and i thought it was librarian. i'm impressed with you, boy.
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>> i've knocked on the last month a thousand doors and when i talk to voters, oftentimes i hear frustration from both parties because they feel like nothing's getting done and it's just a bunch of show. i liken it to pro wrestling and two people simulating combat in the ring and get us excited and go in the backstage like look at the marks and we've got them over on them and a lot feel that way about the two party system and a lot of other things that rafael warnock and herschel walker ignore and spend time attacking each other and i'm talking about what to do to help the people of georgia. kennedy: that's what most people are concerned about and they're a little offended that the two major parties aren't addressing their pain. it's much easier for republicans to be the opposition party because you don't have to have ideas especially when the ideas, democrat are executing are bad for the economy and so bad for society. i can only imagine what people
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are saying. you've got people saying inflation isn't that bad. you know, we've got a robust jobs market and it's like, yeah, but when the economy turns south because of central banking and the fed screwing around with interest rates, they're going to cause a recession and they want 1.3 million jobs to evaporate. then that's going to be bad too. what is the libertarian fix for the god awful central banking and fed problem that we have? >> one thing is looking at the way rafael warnock talks about the bad things it's done but it hasn't reduced inflation and we need to cut spending and reducing the deficit to where it's negative deficits, paying down the debt and as far as fed and central banking, we need to audit the fed and once people see what the fed is up to and things they done, people will
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quickly jump on abolishing the fed train and that's when people getting more education about what the federal reserve does and -- kennedy: yeah, ron paul has been piloting that train for a long time and i'm a happy, happy occupant and it's been pointed out to me in a podcast, these ideas were once considered extreme and will become mainstream with economic pain that these big parties are applying to introducing american voters and those in georgia who have no reason but to hold their head up and more. coming up, the federal reserve speaking of which -- speaking of that which we shall end, announcing another rate hike to fight red hot inflation and jerome powell says pain is coming. what kind of pain are we talking about, hot shot? party panel rejoins me to ebb
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kennedy: oh, we were talking about this and fantastic measures to fight inflation and what will it mean for you? chairman jerome powell. oh, jerome. announcing yet another interest rate hike and steep 75 basis points they thought he might go to a full point. this of course marks the third straight month of increases that means mortgage payments are up, a 30 year mortgage for $400,000 home with 10% down, that's now $2,340 a month and that's $20 o -0 more than you would have paid yesterday. that sucks. powell says that's not the only pain coming why -r way. he's going to spank you. >> what is that economic pain in your mind? job losses? is it higher interest rates on credit cards? what's that economic pain? >> it's all of those things.
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higher interest rates, slower growth and a softening labor market are all painful for the public that we serve. but they're not as painful as failing to restore price stability and then having to come back and do it down the road. kennedy: it's also not as painful as everyone in central banking saying inflation is transitory. when all these other rationalists are running around going, no, it's not. we're headed for disaster. by the way, shoutout to eddie lawrence. well done with the question, young man. short term pain for long term gain. see when i believe that and tell that to a single working mom with two jobs and no way to pay for christmas presents. is jay powell the right guy to fix this. the party panel is back, katie pavlich, marie harf and brad plum bo.
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polumbo. katie is the government up to it? >> i don't know. it's like a run away freight train inflation and the only way to stop a run away freight train is for there to be a bad experience and trying to blunt this blow but the reality is that things will become a lot more expensive in america whether it's inflation continuing to rise with average american families paying $12,000 more per year or whether it's just making money more expensive to borrow so every sector of the economy is getting hit. the labor market, the market for buying new homes, the housing market and nope nobody's untouched and so it's really going to suck to wrap it up. kennedy: really feels like we have not learned some of the lessons from the past, marie, when you repeat bad history, even worse things happen in the future. >> look, i think chairman powell is trying to avoid to crash and trying to hold onto some of the good economic news and gas
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prices for example keep coming down and we've had record job growth and wages increasing and he's trying to keep that steady while cooling inflation and he's trying to avoid that crash. i think it remains to be seen whether he'll be able to do that but there are some indicators that inflation is starting to get close to peaking. gas prices coming down for months now and other things like food stuff, buying new homes for example, yes, interest rates are higher and they're making food more stable. >> they're 23409 coming down unless it's tomatoes. kennedy: yeah. >> we'll see cost of other things stabilizing in the next few months hopefully. kennedy: yes, because they can't afford to eat when they lose their jobs and this is one of the natural consequences of raising interest rates. you're trying to cool the economy so people can't borrow money, so they can't buy things and when they can't buy things
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and borrow money to start new businesses or fund their businesses, that means they fire people. that is also one of the very intentional consequences of what the fed is doing right now. >> yeah, look, it is, but we're also living through a cost of living crisis right now. it's sort of a vicious cycle because it starts with the inflation that the government created by running the money printer, spending trillions they don't have, and then people can't afford things and they run up credit card debt. they get themselves -- we're seeing a huge surge in credit card debt compared to where we were just last year. now credit cards, mortgages and anything that involves borrowing money is going to become more and more expensive at the exact worse time for that to happen. unfortunately we're going to be seeing in play out for some time where the long run consequences of this inflation that our pollicis created are going to cost a great deal of suffering
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for americans and that's what we need to remember. inflation doesn't just happen. it's not just an abstract economic phenomenon that you read about in the news. it is directly related to our policy choices and if we don't hold people accountable who got us into this mess with their reckwreckless spending and pring policies, we'll be back here again or never get out of it in the first place. kennedy: that's a worry that we get ourself into a cycle we cannot ex-cape. i remember the interest rates in the '80s. i remember that because there's no economic mobility for the middle class. when you can't afford to borrow money. you can't send your kid to college and there's loan forgiveness and it's also making everything worse. you can't afford to buy that first home and can't start a business and then the cycle perpetuates. it's interesting though because with the economy and it's
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probably not a great time to slack off at work. 50% of americans are doing the absolute bear minimum at work and quiet quitting and another study shows it's popular amongst the young 82% of adults and 18-29 find the idea appealing and is quiet quitting a wise move these days. you know, katie in a lucy goosy labor market drive anywhere and work from sprinter van and only work a couple days a month. quiet quitting is great. do what you want to do, live your dreams, live, love, laugh. when that starts to tighten and the government's spit goes off, what happens then? >> i heard about this concept and looked at it like, okay,
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young people, get it together and get to work and work hard and make it to the next level. when i started thinking about it more, especially as you mentioned with the student loan forgiveness and it's a reallocation of debt people didn't take on for them to pay the bills, young people were conditioned to think that well, even if i work really, really hard the person next to me is given the same rewards and regardless of how much effort and time i spend and why would someone put on and with the same kind of pay. we have cultivated this idea among young people and everyone treated same regardless of effort or achievement so i can see where some of this may be coming from. kennedy: is it a good idea that -- i guess what i'm trying to say that people do have a good work ethic for people who do have a longer term view of
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their employment prospects. do they realize that everyone sitting on their ass doing nothing, doing just enough to not get fired like in office space, i'm going to do my tps records. >> i mean, i always do mine. i think that, yes, there are some benefits first to people that work really hard. because you can continue to stand out from people who maybe aren't working quite as hard but the other good thing coming from this, people shouldn't do the minimum at work. i think since covid people have started realizing they need more work/life balance and not sitting in a cubicle or 8 or 10 or 12 hour as day working on things that don't really matter that much. if that can come from that, that's good and i tell the 20 something-year-old kids that work for me they need to work hard and no one is quiet quitting,@ as far as i can tell. kennedy: brian, you're very young and supple and smooth. are you a quiet quitter?
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>> i most certainly am not. i'm more of a hustler. i'm sympathetic to a lot of things young people have about the economy, things too expensive and they're inheriting a massive debt from older generations and living beyond their means, all that said, this idea of quiet quitting and economic anilism and it's in the long run hurting yourself. in the short term may be able to free ride a lit and will layoffs start in the next recession, you'll be the first one out the door and you might be able to coast for awhile, but you're got getting a promotion or climbing a economic ladder by doing the bear minimum in life and there's stuff among young people getting views on tiktok and it's not setting you up for success. kennedy: your bosses now. your bosses figure this out. they're still paying attention and they need you in the office like they need bodies right now.
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it is a tight labor market but it's not going to be for very long and i think brad makes a wonderful point. if you are the one who's doing the least, you'll be the first to get fired. which absolutely sucks for you. katie, if you were going to tell your 20-year-old self anything about how to exist in the work environment and in corporate culture, what would you say? >> i think i was a pretty good hard working hustling 20-year-old. i'm still a hustler now and i'd tell young people today if they want to get ahead, show up to work and people who have done the work for the time ahead of them, they'll take notice and make sure that they are the first on the list when it comes to a promotion. and i just would say not everybody should get a trophy and that applies to little league and also applies to the workplace when young people are out the door out of college trying to make it in the corporate world.
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kennedy: now, katie, i don't want to be a bragger, lenny, my lazy french bull dog and i, we got second place in a dog show. he went as a hot dog and i was a bottle of ketchup. we didn't just wear 16 pieces of flair. we had so much flair, they couldn't deny us. i got a $50 gift card for this. >> where are the photos? kennedy: i got to post the photos. he was so obstr obsessed with te doggy ice cream. marie, katie and brad, thank you so much. one of the most famous ucla bruins of all time claims he's been a victim of california crime and the homeless crisis. what can be done to stop it? california resident steve hilton, the king of california is next. ♪
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kennedy: maybe some people are and former nba and ucla great bill walton and deadhead has been writing angry letters to the mayor of san diego for letting his city become overrun with homeless encampments and one letter bill writes "you speak of the rights of the homeless. what about our rights and we follow rules of a functioning society and why are others allowed to disregard those rules"? absolutely right, bill. and claims he was recently assaulted and any way to turn around the golden state? joining me is anchor of the fox news channel and host of the
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daily california podcast and knows this issue all too well, steve hilton, welcome back. >> great to see you, kennedy. listen, i have to start by saying what a fantastic track. is it called bumped out weird with the cure track. kennedy: we d. >> haven't heard it for years. what a treat. kennedy: we love the cure here, even if robert smith is a weeping clown in makeup. i think he's fantastic and i love their music and i love california. i think the homeless crisis is really emblematic of what's wrong in the state and bill walton is right. it's not equal application of the laws. if you law-abiding father of two hard working business owner. if you went and popped on the sidewalk, they'd throw you in jail. but people are doing that all over venice beach and san francisco and they just sort of move them around a bit and nothing happens. >> that's exactly right. literally, i saw that this week. i was out in venice this week making a little film for the podcast, the daily california.
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worked with people who really know the issue, local organizations. that's what they've done. all those famous things in the video and it's been cleaned up they say. it hasn't. it's been moved on and moved to another street and you go and talk to people in the community who have to put up with this. just in the space about half an hour and kids going to school coming across a dead body and a homeless encampment the other day exploded and was on fire. these stories, you want to say unbelievable but they're not anymore because they're so common and comes down to two things and they've got wrong strategy. the people they put a lot of money, huge amounts of money going into this and the strategy they're following now, the
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democrats in charge is they call it housing first. let's put them in housing but actually the cause of the underlying problem, which is mental health and drug addiction are around 70% according to the people working in the community say around 70% seriously addicting to drugs. they're not dealing with that problem at all and the second problem is the system that they're using for this. all this money gets shoveled into nonprofits who just recycle this public money with the wrong policies and nothing ever happens and they're raking in a fortune and the problem don'ts and taxpayers are funding it. that's so outrageous. kennedy: they vote for things like measure h because they want to be caring and compassionate and want to do the same thing. they want to treat members of society like they are disposable and the governor comes out and lies about it and says we have moved 1200 encampments and he was the mayor of san francisco and they said they were going to
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cut homelessness in half in five years. what happened to homelessness in that five year span? did it go up or down? >> it went up. it's about half a billion. it's not even a big city in san francisco. it's unbelievable and on and on it goes. and every city now has this problem and it's so well known and you can make a life there on the streets and even sometimes you see stories and again talking to people that work there. they provide the housing for some of these people who are living on the streets but they continue to go to the streets and hang out there and you've got criminallalty of the drug problem and they're controlled by gangs for the purposes of selling drugs and find one of the homeless people and tun them into the dealer. kennedy: absolutely right. they find ways to make money. women are getting assaulted. it has to end. gross nards. not you, steve.
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washington state university go cougars. the problem is no one wants to wake the bear up and ask for the cure for diabetes. that's poking the bear and this is topical storm. topic one, united states space force released official song and just like outer space, it's an infinite void. let's listen. ♪ kennedy: the song is called semper supra, which is latin for moves like jagger. it was written by a team of military service members and this is what happen when is you hire military members who are strictly forbidden from using
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drugs. it's unit the service members while capturing the spirit of the corp. and this is the perfect song to play in a place where sound waves don't travel. congratulations space force gad indians -- guardians, you got your own song. topic number two, fda warning social media users to stop cooking chicken in nyquil. part of a new viral trend all though technically bit more of antiviral trend. it's called sleepy chicken challenge. tiktok users showcase themselves using nyquil, cold and cough medicine as a marinade for chicken. if you want your tiktok videos to go viral, better include breast. this challenge makes sense to me. i hate when my chicken gets cold. a fork full of chicken helps the medicine go down. fda says it's not a good idea
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and that boiling a medication could cause you to inhale extremely high levels of the vapor and telling people that only led to the creation of new tiktok recipe, the adderall beef wellington. delicious. i've never been so focused on beef. actually that's not true, prom night, very focused. topic number three. southwest airlines surprised passengers on a flight from california to hawaii by giving all of them ukulele to play during the flight. spirit airlines giving pass passengepassengers free macheteo settle on board disputes. every passenger on board is expert of first three notes of hot cross buns. some found ukulele annoying especially because the strings weren't long enough to hang themselves. if it were on this -- if i were
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on this flight, i'd be praying for a musical crash. if you think this is bad, wait till they give everybody a crying baby. these passengers should be grateful because there's much worse music you can hear on a an airplane. much worse. ♪. topic number four. a car thief was literally stopped in her tracks in washington state after speeding away from police and into a puddle of wet cement. after that, the road runner dropped anti-se an anvil on her. the unidentified three drove through construction barricades and into wet cement and got stuck in traffic. the suspect tried to escape on foot while trying to carry a bottle of whiskey in one hand and baby in the other.
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that sounds irresponsible and i hope someone saves that bottle of whiskey before it gets damaged and the tow truck freed the car and the driver was followed and arrested and makes this the world's greatest, lamest get away since the flight to hawaii. ♪. kennedy: time for a handful of pills yet? where's my nyquil vapor? time for kennedogs because dogs are better than cats or rabbits or goldfish or ferrets. tweet me photos and descriptions of your dogs and tell me all about them using #kennedogs and first up is amy's dog pooh bear. then we have margo, it i'ms wees cargo. look at that out fit.
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rhymerhymes with escargot.it's. thomas' dog sen joying the fresh fall weather. what a good baby. up next, melissa gives us her boys koby and remy and they're the best of friends and we've got cuties and terry's dog tara, olive, and riply. i love them. thank you for watching the best hour of your day. follow me on twitter and instagram and football games low me and tomorrow night on the show, it's game night with brian, olivia rondo and congressman thomas massey. can't watch the show, kenne dvr make every day a kenne day. have a good night.
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>> on this episode of t mansion global, we're abiding by the westbound code of the west, 10 rules that govern the way cowboys live, and work, except rule number 9, that says some things aren't for sale. if you thought luxury could not include pulling up your bootstraps and getting dirt you were your finger nail, think again, welcome
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