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tv   FOX Friends  FOX News  February 6, 2018 3:00am-6:00am PST

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rob: dog nearly burns down a house after trying to get leftover pancakes. sparking a kitchen fire within minutes. everybody is okay. they come in. they put the fire out. and dog is fine. jillian: share the pancakes and have a good day. rob: see you later. ♪ na na na na ♪ yeah, this is my town ♪ na na na na that ♪ this is my town ♪ i was born and i was raised. brian: got to be able to fit all those people in this show in three hours. ainsley: we have a big run down for you. isn't it nice to go back home? that song always reminds me of going back home. steve: busy tuesday live from new york city. first, straight to our top story. it is the battle of the
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dueling memos. ainsley: house committee voting unanimously to release the democrats' rebuttal. now it's up to the president whether or not that will be made public. brian: so there is a memo, there is a memo and a follow-up memo. griff jenkins is live in washington because he got the memo that we needed to start the show today. hey, griff. >> good morning, guys. memo battle is on. the committee voting unanimously to release the democrats' counter memo. now the president has five days to decide whether or not to release it to the public. the same review period as the republican one. and the top democrat on the committee adam schiff says this will better inform the public and he is calling on the white house not to make any redactions based on politics. >> our memo, in terms of sources and methods, we want to make sure that those that are in the best position to vet that have the opportunity to do so. we want to make sure that the white house does not redact our memo for political purposes and obviously that's a deep concern. >> but chairman of the intel
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committee devin nunes defended his memo that asserts the fbi surveillance abuses calling them very dangerous as the president in ohio yesterday said the nunes memo really exposes democrats. >> did we catch them in the act or what? you know what i'm talking about. oh, did we catch them in the act. they are very embarrassed. they never thought they were going to get caught. we caught them. so much fun. like the great absolute. >> now we wait to see what the president does as minority leader nancy pelosi calls on the president to expeditiously release it guys, we are also learning there may have been a second dossier as well. put together by that same british spy christopher steele, containing anti-trump information that came from, quote, a friend of the clintons. you'll remember mr. steele has been referred by senators graham and grassley to the doj for criminal prosecution, possibly. so, there are more onions layers to this onion to peel tol
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back. brian: christopher steele i don't know who i was working for i got hired by fusion gps. i didn't know i was working for hillary clinton's camp was getting the information from hillary clinton's camp, maybe feeding it to the press and they have this circular echo chamber that put a narrative out that affects this case. >> that's right. a second dossier and it appears that may have also reached the state department as well. there is going to be a lot to look into this. that's exactly what chairman nunes says is he digging in to right now. brian: john kerry's state department? >> that's correct. steve: griff, thank you very much. ainsley: if you are confused. there is that first dossier that we have been talking about. steve: that's right. the dirty dossier. ainsley: that's right. we'll be talking about it throughout the show it alleges hillary clinton's friends were feeding information to that spy, that english spy, christopher steele to come up with a dirty dossier against her opponent. steve: it was going to be the backup to the original
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dossier. we do know some of the names. we talked a little bit about it yesterday, cody shearer who is a friend of the clintons. he had apparently been a journalist for a while. then there is a guy who is actually currently working at the state department. this guy's name is jonathan whiner. he worked under hillary rodham clinton. sea special un enjoy for libya. and friend of clinton worked in the clinton white house. the three of they had fed stuff to steele he put in this other one was the backup plan, dossier two the backup plan if dossier one didn't work. ainsley: it's unbelievable. steve: unbelievable. brian: 24 hours after hillary clinton lost, they said this whole let's talk about building up the russian narrative. that's what they're doing and that's where we are at. ainsley: senators now grassley and lindsey graham heading this up. they said that christopher steele lied to the fbi. they want him investigated again. now, going back to griff's original comments about the memo, so you remember that
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memo came out of the house intelligence committee. steve: one on friday. ainsley: one released on friday by the president. the democrats didn't that released, right? none of the democrats within the house intel committee voted for that. every single republican and democrat voted for the democratic rebuttal to come out yesterday. brian: the democratic memo they evidently pushed back on what the republicans are saying and that's andy mccabe flat out said without the dossier we don't get a fisa warrant and they are going to push back on the fact that there was nothing in the warrant that said the phase petition. -fisa petition. they never said hillary clinton for america on it that's what the democrats are going to push back on. steve: from what i understanding, apparently the democratic 10-page rebuttal is very specific.
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there is some stuff in there that's going to have to get redacted. if the white house redackets it, then it's going to be a political fight. brian: the fbi, too. steve: they have not had a comment yet. if the white house were to say look, you have to take this stuff out it has secrets in there stay tuned for that meantime mark levin was on last night on this channel. why is it the democrats didn't want that original memo that came out on friday to come sought? and all this other stuff. why is it? he connects some dots. >> now we know why schiff and the rest of them are fighting so hard. now we know why the left wing prey torian guard democrat media are fighting so hard. how arwho are they trying to protect? hillary clinton. who else are they trying to protect barack obama. hillary clinton knew, yates, the deputy attorney general. the extensions, rob rosenstein, now the deputy attorney general. he knew. fbi director comey, deputy director mccabe. why would it be left out of
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the president's daily intelligence briefing, which i mentioned in march, congress also needs to get ahold of. ainsley: don jr. also comments on this telling you, americans, why you should care on this. why? it should worry you all this abuse, all this fisa abuse, listen. >> americans should be scared what's going on right now. when you hear this stuff going on, you don't think of this happening in the united states. you don't think about this happening in the country where we have a foundation of laws and principles grounded in the constitution. because this seems like a clear violation of that you have a court that virtually nobody knows anything about gist haphazardly granting full surveillance of american citizens in this case the duly elected future president of the united states based on shady information paid for by the opposition party candidate in that presidential race. i mean, this is crazy stuff. brian: just keep in miptiond, too. when the democratic memo comes out, the fbi will get a look at it, too.
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it's not just going to be the administration crossing things out. it's going to be the fbi possibly redacting and crossing things out. ainsley: fbi and doj have that memo. so does the president. the president has five days like did he with that original memo to distribute it. it will be redacted. steve: also, devin nunes has called for the release of all of the transcripts of all four times they went to the fisa court. exactly what did they ask for? one other note. christopher steele the spy was supposed to show up in london courtroom to give a deposition in multi-million-dollar lawsuit against buzzfeed. did he not show because he does not want to talk and that is not good. brian: unrelated but related now this news. we all were focused on football and 100 million people watched the super bowl. but then news came out about a tragedy. colts linebacker wilson killed the morning of the crash in the super bowl. now we find out according to indiana state police who that person who killed him
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was a guatemala citizen twice deported from our country for being here illegally. ainsley: wow. so the driver and the linebacker, they were in the car and linebacker was getting sick. so they pulled over on the side of the highway. and they i were outside of the car. that man right there, allegedly ran them over was three times the legal limit, was drunk. and one of the individuals he hit flew into the middle of the road. was run over again. this guy has been deported two times, once in 2007 and once in 2009. steve: apparently, as soon as it happened, he took off. and. ainsley: on foot. steve: tried to run away. when he was caught, he told the police i'm from mexico. he is not. he is in the country illegally from guatemala. he is currently being detained by the local authorities on behalf of the feds. a state rep out in indiana, todd rikita tweeted this out. this news should make all americans angry.
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twice deported illegal immigrant is suspected of killing two hoosiers including colts linebacker edwin jackson. we must do more to get these dangerous illegal immigrant criminals off our streets. build a wall and put an end to illegal immigration. brian: mike huckabee weighed in. >> all of this was unnecessary. if we had border security, he would have been deported once. well, first of all, he would have never gotten. in but once deported he wouldn't have been back. now is he twice deported and he has come back and he has killed two people. what does it take to make some of these people understanding that the reason that americans want the wall is not because we don't want people to come and share the american dream. it's we don't want people coming in and giving us the american nightmare of some dead innocent people killed by folks who shouldn't have been here in the first place. ainsley: it is a parent's worst nightmare. derdon.
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she has been on couch talking illegal immigration. the reason she support trump he sniewrts amnesty and want to build the wall. all she has left of her son are his ashes. brian: 10 minutes now after the hour. jillian, welcome. i know you have had a day of celebration in philadelphia. steve: great day. ainsley: are you going to go to the parade? jillian: i'm trying. ainsley: what time is the parade? jillian: 11:00 a.m. on thursday. not that i have every detail. let's get to the news we are following. america's show of force intensifying against afghanistan. record number of air strikes just dropped on a training camp taking out terrorist fighters. the b-52 bombers also destroying several afghan army vehicles in the process of being converted to explosive devices. in just a few hours, vice president pence will arrive in tokyo on his way to the olympics in south korea. he is expected to meet with japanese prime minister shinel zoshinzo abe.
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>> we are traveling to the olympics to make sure north korea doesn't use the powerful symbolism and back drop of the winter olympics to paper over the truth about their regime. jillian: he has not ruled out meeting with north korean officials during the games. john mahoney best known as the down-to-earth loving father on frazier has died u. >> you are always whining about wanting to change your hair. >> i don't whine. [laughter] >> i'm so sick of me hair. get it cut like princess di. >> >> playing the role of martin for 11 years. he was 77 yeerlings old. that's a look at your headlines guys. back to you. steve: he was great on that show. ainsley: that was a good show. thank you, jillian. steve: media in panic mode after the stock market's big slide yesterday.
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>> waves too crash and it does happen from time to time on wall street. the white house is finding that out very clearly. biggest point drop in the history of the stock market. steve: how worried should you really somebody in next guest will share what the media is not telling you. ainsley: i love that they're laughing about that pete is having breakfast with friends in ohio this morning after the president's visit there. pete? pete: that's right. we are at holly's home cooking in west crarl ton, ohio. come on out if you are here. the president was outside of cincinnati sheffer corporation. talking to employees who receive that $1,000 trump bonus. they don't think it's crumbs at all u we are talking to people as we always do on "fox & friends." their specialty is biscuits and gravy. stick with us on "fox & friends." we will have fun at the diner in a little bit. ♪ watson.
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steve: how is your blood pressure today. yesterday the stock market took a slide and said the day was crumbling and called it terrifying and the white house is worried and as usual mainstream media went wild like this: >> the dow plunged almost 1200 points more than 4.5% fall to finish below the 25,000 mark. and erasing a lot of our retirement savings. >> waves do crash and it happens from time to time on
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wall street. the white house is finding that out very clearly this evening. >> the president was right all along we set a new all-time record only it was the biggest point drop in the history of the stock market. >> wasn't really a market crash. it was more like a market drunken veering into a ditch and the ditch was icy and it couldn't get out and it had to call a tow truck. brian: now i remember why i didn't watch that show. how we all should be worried about that. here is not what they're telling you former wall street analyst fox news contributor liz pete. liz, are you worried? >> i'm not particularly worried. look, almost every year you have a sell-off between 5 and 15% at least once. what we're seeing is a change in the economy. the fed has backed off after almost a decade of propping up the economy and stocks with very low interest rate. adding trillions to the fed balance sheet. now the economy is actually doing it on its own. in fact, we should be celebrating the things that the market is so anxious
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about. wages are going up. that was a big issue in the last election if you will remember. wages are finally going up because the economy is gaining steam. in the first quarter we may see growth of 4% for the first time in a very long time. really all of these trends are extremely positive. earnings are unbelievable. s and p earnings in the first quarter could be up 20%. no, i'm not concerned. i think this sell-off is rattling because you have a whole generation. steve: big. >> generation of traders who have never seen this kind of thing before. they have not seen volatility. steve: no obvious catalyst for what happened yesterday aside from the fact that they have insinuated inflation so they will have to fed. plus have a lot of machines on wall street that make things go like that. >> i had overnight it was the machine driven trading was really what drove the market down. it was not fund mentales. if there was a tipping thing, it was probably the jobs report. which was very strong. you saw a little bump up in wages. but i emphasize little, not much more than that i
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think -- i actually think that bit coin may have been an issue because all of a sudden millennials who astonishingly think that bit coin is much more attract tia investment than stocks or bonds and saw things could go down and boy did it get whacked. there is a little nervousness out there perhaps because of apple and bit coin. i think basically the economic fund mentales. ainsley: that's wall street. how does it effect main street? >> main street is going to be pretty happy, right? the worst news for democrats is that the market and the stock market is really not that important to mainstream america. what is important is rising wages. the tipping in the economy and the news right now that we see is very good for middle america. i think, frankly, republicans should be happy we are seeing this now and not six months from now. ainsley: okay. thank you, liz. >> we'll see. ainsley: first this country made the national anthem gender neutral and now
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canadian prime minister justin trudeau has a new target in pc crusade. >> love going to change the future of man kind. >> we like to see people kind. not necessarily mankind. more inclusive. it's time for the 'ultimate sleep number event'
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$700 million from the pentagon. and wikileaks founder julian assange who looks a lot like that could leave the ecuadorian embassy as a free man for the first time in five years. that should make pamela
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anderson happy. a british court will decide whether to drop an arrest warrant violating bail related to crimes in sweden which it may not have committed. he will be extradited to the u.s. for questioning if he leaves the embassy. that should be interesting. steve? steve: thank you very much, brian. president trump has long-stated that he and his family, the target of a politicized justice department and fbi in a recent op-ed on the foxnews.com site former assistant secretary of state robert charles agree agrees with president trump. he write i have interacted with some of these professionals during the past two decades and never perceived them as political. but something overcame them. grab them and turned them into something else during the 2016 election campaign. they have devolved into political animals. former assistant secretary of state robert charles joins us right now from washington, d.c. robert, good morning to you. >> good morning. steve: who are you talking about? >> well, you know, i want to just talk about this allegation that this is a
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reckless revelation, this memo and in fact it really isn't. there is a public right to know what's happening behind the scenes. this is a very secretive court. and at the end of the day, no sources and methods are given away in this memo. i do think every american should read the memo and opposition memo. in the grand scheme of things, it's odd to hear opposition to the release of this memo from people like adam schiff, because adam schiff has spent nine terms arguing there should be greater openness at the fisa court. wanted outside counsel to be able to present to that court. i think in the biggest -- there is always a wait, there is a moment after which the public right to know outweighs sort of what you call the endemic national security interest and the national security interest tips in favor of the pluck right to know. that's where we are right now. steve: schuyler. i understand osurely.of the fisr the years how many were
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denied. >> 35529 warrant requests between 1978 and 2013, only 12 were denied. that's very peculiar as a starting point, but it's even more peculiar when you think that one the denials that occurred was in june of 2016 it was for surveillance of this individual tied to the trump campaign. you have to understanding how the fisa court works there are 11 judges. of that group four are democrats. oddly in october of 2016 they reversed themselves and granted this praise warrant for surveillance of the trump campaign. how did that happen? it happened because the press has not talked about this there is a fisa review court there are only three members of that court. they were all appointed by bill clinton. one has to surmise maybe this denial went to them and individuals, three judges who were appointed by the husband of the candidate who provided the opposition research to the praise
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warrant. probable cause warrant. steve: would it surprise you if they did use that dossier as proof that they have got to go after carter page because they heard george papadopoulos spout off his mouth when he was liquored up overseas? would that surprise you. >> not at all. indeed i think they did use it that's what the memo suggests. it goes to the heart of what is probable cause before the fisa court? three things are required. you have to be targeting a foreign intelligence agent. you have to be looking for either espionage or terrorism. and you have to think that a crime has been committed. now, i'm not sure i see that in this memo. the memo doesn't suggest any of those things. let's just imagine they did all exist. you have a major problem. that is what they call the fruit of the poisonous tree. if a fourth amendment violation occurred and there was literally a constitutional violation by
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the use of this false information to get the warrant. steve: right. >> then the fruit of the tree is all the evidence that comes from that in the future surveillance warrants. so really you have got a major problem there are exceptions to that rule but none of them fit here. mccabe has said that without that steele dossier they wouldn't have granted the warrant. that's number one. number two, the only corroboration was a news story actually sourced to steele ironically. no other way to get that dossier. finally the good faith exception doesn't work because they knew this information had come from a politically financed hillary clinton financed source. steve: but, robert, ultimately they said we are going after carter page but really it was the trump campaign. it was everybody in their circle. they were using this one guy as the excuse to spy on everybody. >> it certainly looks that way. and then you have to ask about these hundreds of
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unmasking of americans. it's very troubling and should be to every american. steve: robert charles former assistant secretary of state to powell former bush and reagan white house staff. we thank you very much for joining us live. >> thank you. steve: all right. it is 6:30 here in new york city. pete hegseth is having breakfast with friends this morning in ohio after the president's visit. he's going to be chatting with folks right there as he serves up some coffee. don't forget, pete, it's 75 cents a cup. plus, the video is frightening. a varnl smashing into a trooper's car on a freeway. holy cow. >> oh. steve: the new warning from police coming up. but, first, happy birthday to singer rick atly. he is 52 years old today. happy birthday, rick. ♪ never going to make you cry ♪ never going to say goodbye ♪ never going to tell you a lie and hurt you ♪
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green mountain coffee roasters packed with goodness. ♪ >> believe it or not, nancy pelosi and those in congress who want. [crowd boos] >> who want to raise your taxes. they want to raise your taxes. they don't want to give the money to the military where we need it. without the military, we might not be here. [applause] >> or we might not be here for long. believe me. believe us all. nancy pelosi what she's doing to this country and she has gone so far left and schumer has gone so far left ornghts i look forward to running against them. president trump in ohio yesterday touting the economy before touring one of the plants giving out some of those tax cut bonuses. steve: well, this morning. pete hegseth is live from holy's home cooking in west
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carrollton, ohio. he got a tour of the same plant. joins us now with the post game report on potus visit to ohio. hey, pete. pete: that's right. good morning. before i talk to a couple voters here in west carrollton. we got a chance to go to sheffer corporation. we spoke to employees that received that $1,000 trump bonus as nancy pelosi referenced as bread crumbs. we had a chance to talk to that ceo of sheffer corporation jeff norris. 125 employees. can you tell there is a great rapport between him and his employees. i asked him what was it like and what did he say to you and what does his policies mean to you. this is what he had to say. >> does it surprise to you see the amount of obstruction he faces just institutional resistance to the policies that seem like common sense to guys on the ground? >> yes, it's very frustrated when you turn on the news
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and listen to the politicians and honestly, it's like a bunch of fifth graders and like i said, if we did that here at our company, we would be shut down in a heart beat. he is just a breath of fresh air. he is not connected to anybody. and he is just doing what he thinks is right and he wants to make it right for the worker and he wants to make it right for the owners. pete: yeah. that was jeff norris. the same message came from employees on the ground as well when we asked them about their bonuses. they are very appreciative of it as we are here at holy's home cooking in west crarlton down the road from that plant. we wanted to talk to a couple small business owners who supports the president and listened to his speech yesterday. printing and signing business. you are a member of the city council. you sought president. you heard his speech saying america is open for business. did it resonate with you. >> absolutely. it's typical trump. everything he says, whether you like the way he says it
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or not, seems to work out pretty well and we are a fan. pete: why is it that nancy pelosi and the left is dismissive of $1,000 and calls it bread crumbs. >> $1,000 is definitely not crumbs to me. i can't imagine, she lives in a different universe than the rest of us, i guess. pete: when the president sign behind him in that event open for business as a small business owner you feel like you have a new era where you are able to operate more freely? >> absolutely. with the reduction in the taxes, in particular, it gives everybody, even small guys like me and rick the opportunity to do things we probably wouldn't have had otherwise. pete: investing in the company. >> investing in the company, right. pete: rick, also a trump supporter. you watched this speech yesterday. >> i didn't get to watch it i just got clips. pete: sorry, my fault. >> that's all right. with that being said, i'm just positive about his approach to the tax reductions and the building
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spirit in america to grow companies and get jobs for americans. so, but unfortunately i didn't watch the speech. pete: you talked about how his policies are what's most important to you. >> oh, yeah. the problem everybody is jamming trump when they should be listening and watching his policies. that's what's going to make america great again u. pete: guy, that's what we heard on the ground at the shefer corporation as well. deanna, can i see right past the camera. talking to her in the 7:00 hour getting a sense of those $1,000 bonuses and what it's like on the ground in the trump economy. back now new york. steve: she got the bonus. she can buy breakfast. pete, thank you very much. ainsley: thank you, pete. steve: 22 minutes before the top of the hour and jillian joins us with headlines. jillian: good tuesday morning. get you caught up on the news of the day. brand new video just released of an out-of-control driver crashing into a state trooper's squad car parked on the side of the highway.
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jillian: minivan smacking into the cruiser before spinning out into the snow in minnesota. no one has hurt. but police say this should as a reminder to people to move over for emergency vehicles. canadian prime minister justin trudeau embracing political correctness setting a young woman straight for using the word mankind. >> the love that's going to change the future of mankind. so we like you to -- >> we like to say people kind. not necessarily mankind. it's more inclusive. >> there we go. exactly. jillian: the woman was asking trudeau to make it easier for religious charitable organizations to provide for those in need. a girl scout could be in trouble for selling cookies out of a pot shop. a san diego girl scout council now looking into whether 9-year-old girl broke any rules when she and her father sold 300 boxes outside of a marijuana
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dispensary. word got out after the pot shop posted this picture online. the organization saying while the dispensary is not an approved sight for sales. the girl didn't technically break any rules since she sold them on the sidewalk. and happy birthday to former president ronald reagan. the 40th commander-in-chief born on this day 107 years ago. ♪ happy birthday to you ♪ happy birthday, mr. president ♪ jillian: reagan here celebrating 72nd birthday with wife nancy in 1993. he died of alzheimer's disease in 2004. guys? steve: there you go. thank you very much. ainsley: aren't we glad he was born? he was a great american. steve: there you go. thank you, jillian. the democrats' rebuttal to that fisa abuse memo heads to the president's desk. what happens now? will he release it? judge napolitano is on the case is he coming in to tell us. brian: we usually put him on
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the stairs. [laughter] ohio congressman jim jordan brad wenstrup will be here and stuart varney. play this game. which one is stuart? ♪ get ready because here i come ♪ baby boomers, here's something you should know. there's a serious virus out there that 1 in 30 boomers has, yet most don't even know it. a virus that's been almost forgotten. it's hepatitis c. hep c can hide in the body for years without symptoms.
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who says they don't? coach mcadoo! you know, at td ameritrade, we offer free access to coaches and a full education curriculum -- just to help you improve your skills. boom! that's lesson one. education to take your trading to the next level. only with td ameritrade. soi want you to pick a newr truck for your mom or dad, knowing that they could possibly pass it down to you one day. oh. cool. but before you decide, you should know that chevy silverados are the most dependable, longest lasting full-size pickups on the road.
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which means that ford f-150s are not. (giggles) which truck would you pick? the chevy. there you go. boom. that was obvious. plus it looks cooler. no doubt about it. now they know what to get me. ainsley: another declassified document set to shake up congress and this time it's the democrats' turn. >> this will help inform the public of the many distortions and inaccuracies in the majority memo. we're going to insist that the department of justice and the fbi report to us on what actions they think are necessary so we can segregate any political interference from the white house. steve: well, the democrats' rebuttal memo now heading to the president's desk as the house intel committee voted yesterday unanimously to make it public. so what happens next? brian: judge napolitano is
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here. judge, what happens next? >> well, it's up to the president now. presumably the -- according to congressman schiff, the fbi and the doj have already reviewed it or are in the process of reviewing it if the president does nothing, comes out on saturday. the president can redact or the president can prevent it from coming out. it's entirely in his hands. he has both a legal, national security, and political judgments to makes a to whether he wants this do come out. ainsley: what do you hope he does? >> i hope he releases it because it will show who is spinning. who is exaggerating. it will also show, this ainsley, raw intelligence. there is everything in there. if you like donald trump. you will find some stuff in there if you don't like donald trump, you're going to find some stuff in there. so the pressure, once this democratic memo comes out, the will build for the raw intelligence on which the republican memo is based and on which the democratic memo is based to come out. that will send the intelligence community through the roof.
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because this stuff is never ever made public. brian: fbi going to get a look at it before it comes out, according to schiff. >> yes. what does raw intelligence consist of? digital recordings of telephone conversations, copies of text messages, copies of emails u any kind of fiberoptic information that was transmitted that was captured by the intelligence community. intelligence communities, which exists to preserve national security, doesn't want the public or the bad guys to know the nature and extent of what they capture and download. if these raw materials come out, we will know that. steve: so a week ago, the democrats didn't want the republican memo to come out it came out on friday. they were steamed that when there was a vote, can we release both of these simultaneously and the republicans said no. and it was a party line deal. ultimately, we understand now it was political from the democrats. but what about the fbi and the departmen department of jus? why were they so squarely against the release last
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week? >> three words in the republican memo. the fin fbi and doj begged congressman nunes to remove and he and the republican majority chose not to. the references to chris steele. the author of the infamous dossier referred to in the republican memo as long-time fbi asset. so we have an agreement with great britain, canada, australia, new zealand, we are the 50 called. five eyes: we freely exchange intelligence information. in return for that exchange, we agree not to recruit someone from one of the other countries. the fbi recruited chris steele contrary to that agreement. if they recruited him at the same time he was still an mi-6 agent. that means he was spying for great britain and spying for the united states, which would violate british law.
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he could be subject to prosecution. the fbi did not want that known and congressman nunes decided. steve: now they know. brian: okay. now move onto the other story front page of the "new york times" today it says it's a division among the legal team of president trump. ty cobb says talk to robert mueller. jay sekulow and john dowd say do not talk to him. governor i didn't say city says he should not talk to him. >> let me tell you how it will work. the request to talk to him is a request. so if he talks to mueller, it will be a massive interview. it won't just be mueller it will be prosecutors and fbi agents. it won't be under oath. it won't be public. it will be a q and a. president can answer however long he wants to. we all know what he is like. he doesn't always use an economy of word. sometimes it's informational. mueller wants to know what he is thinking. sometimes it's deadly. they may want to trap him. if he doesn't do that they can have the grand jury subpoena him. mueller has two grand
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juries. one downtown washington, d.c., one in alexandria. ainsley: president's attorneys don't think that will happen. do you. >> i do. my advice to the president which is pretty much standard advice is never ever ever talk to a guy that owns a grand jury. he is not your friend. brian: they are going to go fight the subpoena and go up to the supreme court how will they rule. >> i doubt that it would go to the supreme court because it is so procedural and so basic that if somebody is serve sag subpoena. they could subpoena you or me and drag us down there what do you know about trump and the russians say no, sir. we would have to go and answer. standard rule is you are subpoenaed. you have to go. the president would have to go. he doesn't have to answer but he has to show up. steve: right. thank you for showing up. >> any time, guys. ainsley: former dynasty sadie robertson spent some time in one of the world's most dangerous countries. she left just one hour before a massive bombing killed hundreds of people. she is here to tell how her faith helped her fight that fear and tell us about her
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♪ ainsley: in october, sadie robertson left mowing do you mou -- the country's worst terrorist attack ever. she and her mother were there helping to deliver food to those in need after the country suffered a drought saying that her faith kept her from giving in to the fear. she writes all about this and much more in her brand new book. it's called "live fearless a call to power, passion and purposes." the former "duck dynasty"
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star joins us now. thank you for being with us. >> thank you. good to be here. >> tell us what happened in some mall yanchts it was very crazy. my mom and i had gotten to mogadishu. it wasn't we didn't think scary things weren't going to happen. we'll went bob golf amazing man of god. we were like let's go. when we wept we got news that there was a truck driving around with bombs. so for four days we had this knowledge that this was here. definitely fighting anxiety. fighting fear that whole time and speaking scripture and peace the whole time we there were over not just ourselves but over the country. it was very crazy that the hour that we left the bomb went off and just devastating that it happened to the country. it's definitely a place of fear. but, yeah, my mom and i were very grad we got to at least be there and help whatever way we could. ainsley: sometimes when you are young and doing mission work. i'm going to go. we will be safe and bob has safe houses for us and everything will be fine. >> yeah. ainsley: when you get over
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there do you realize how dangerous it really. >> yes, for sure. ainsley: you feel it? >> it's in the air. for me, too. i think even in this book i wrote so much about it's not that things aren't scary. even when things are scary to still go into it and have you peace and have you trust that god is who he says he is so it's actually running in to those places and being a fearless leader in the face of fear. ainsley: what other advice do you have? other people are watching you and i know you grew up in godly family. some people are new to the faith or don't have faith at all. how do you overcome that fear? >> yeah. well, for me, a lot of it was just falling in love with who god was. in the bible in judicial 1:9. god gives you a wherever you government god is giving this promise to joshua. something that hit me in that is really cool. how could you not be afraid when so many things are scary. how could you not be afraid to go to mogadishu and bombs are going to go off. god tells joshua he will be with him wherever he goes. do not fear.
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he says have this word on your heart. have it on your mind and meditate on it day and night. and when you have that, and when you know who god is when you know the things he has done, then you wouldn't be afraid. if you know is he going to be with you wherever you go, you will have peace. so for me when i began to love this book, that's when i was able to write this book. i just encourage everybody, you know fearless and learn so much from it you are never going to change by this book. you will change by this book obviously. ainsley: you should still read this book. >> you should still read this book. my journaly of freedom. cool thing through this book not just my journaly with freedom. i walk it out with you and your journey. i'm excited to give people a solution. you don't have to live in anxiety. you don't have to live afraid all the time. you can have peace and there is freedom available. i hope people can walk that out together. ainsley: how old are you. >> i'm 20. ainsley: written a book and living a life we would all love to live. i love that you liv have so much
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faith. "living fearless" send her to the number one position. we have ohio congressman brad wenstrup and jim jordan. they are both live in the next hour ♪ that's why there's otezla. otezla is not an injection or a cream. it's a pill that treats psoriasis differently. with otezla, 75% clearer skin is achievable after just 4 months, ... with reduced redness, thickness, and scaliness of plaques. and the otezla prescribing information has no requirement for routine lab monitoring. don't use if you're allergic to otezla. otezla may cause severe diarrhea, nausea, or vomiting. tell your doctor if these occur. otezla is associated with an increased risk of depression. tell your doctor if you have a history of depression or suicidal thoughts, or if these feelings develop. some people taking otezla reported weight loss. your doctor should monitor your weight and may stop treatment. other side effects include upper respiratory tract infection and headache.
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♪ >> wall street has had a rough few days but in ohio president trump paints a rosier big picture. >> you are more than 3 million americans who have received a tax cut bonus. your paychecks are going way up. your taxes are going way down. >> the stock market is really not that important to mainstream america. what is important is wages. >> the house intelligence committee voting unanimously to release the democrats' rebuttal. >> i think it's going to be very hard for the white house like it was hard for the republicans on our committee to block release of this. >> just list the facts. they will see they come to a conclusion and have personal attacks on myself and chairman gowdy. >> as an american citizen to
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see this stuff going on to try to subvert democracy this way that is scary. >> everywhere i go, i love to hear what people plan to do with the money. >> i will be trying to save up money to start a family. >> both of my kids katie and math matthew will be going to college. we will use that money. >> nancy pelosi said this was crumbs. this is not a good day for fancy pelosi ♪ that's how we do it around here ♪ that's how we do it around here ♪ brain brian that's florida georgia line. if you are in nashville watching us. i think it's required in nashville. steve: to watch "fox & friends." brian: passed by the governor and the country. and i think the almighty. but i will say. this fgl house right off broadway is the coolest place. steve: they have their own place. brian: every floor has a
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different theme. ainsley: i want to go. let's do a road trip to nashville. brian: the theme with the velvet ropes was very saturday night feverish. middle seemed very new country and upstairs seems relatively y 2 k on sirius or prime country to. me the middle floor seemed very new country. i'm trying to think of the name. ainsley: where do you fall? brian: i'm new country. i'm new to country. ainsley: middle of the road. brian: also a sports bar, too. sit there and hang out. steve: there is beer. that's why you went. ainsley: we have a top story that we want to tell you about the battle of the duling memos. brian: house intelligence committee voting unanimously to release the democratic rebuttal. now it's up to the president whether or not to make it public. steve: kevin corke live at the white house with breaking details. good morning, kevin. >> ainsley, steve, b.k., you are right. the president and press
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secretary sarah sanders wants the people to know something very important. yes, the white house has received that memorandum. i have a statement from her this morning and i think you will find this one very interesting. it reads the white house has received a memorandum from the minority members of the white house select permanent committee on intelligence. as stated many times i love how she adds that because it's true the administration will follow the same process and procedure with this memorandum from the minority as it did last week when it received the memorandum from the majority. now, yesterday we saw the president tell a gathering in the great state of ohio, plain and simple, the memo that devin nunes put out proved his political opponent got caught misusing the system to spy on americans. >> did we catch them in the act or what? you know what i'm -- oh did, we catch them in the act. they are very embarrassed. they never thought they were going to get caught. we caught them. so much fun. like the great absolute. >> democratic leader nancy pelosi is also out with a statement. she says, look, the
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president must now put our national security and intelligence first. and expeditiously release the democratic memo after review and appropriate redaction of sources and methods by law enforcement officials. bottom line, when is it going to come out? we don't know. but we do know the president has it and he will decide whether or not it does. back to you. >> steve: all right. kevin corke. live in the north lawn of the white house. pretty pink sky over the treasury department back there. ainsley: once the fbi and doj tell them what needs to be redacted for safety reasons. i'm sure he will release it. so that america can see both. you can maker comparisons and make up your own mind. brian: the way i understanding this two things are going to stand out the democrats got to make clear there was a footnote at the bottom saying that the information from the dossier was politically motivated and andy mccabe was taken out of context when he without the dossier we wouldn't have got the fisa warrant. that's the focus that takes 10 pages. steve: so you noe about the first dossier which was used reportedly to get the fisa warrant to watch carter page
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and ultimately spy on all the trump people. now there is news that it looks like there is a second dossier. charles grassley and lindsey graham had written a note to congress asking about a steele memo from 2016 which apparently referred to the government got intel from a foreign subsource. who was the foreign subsource? apparently it was christopher steele. here is how it worked. cody shearer, who is long-time friend and ally of bill clinton and hillary rodham clinton had worked with steele. he gathered more dirt, right? then he gave it to this fellow who is currently working at the state department. and it looks like he is nunez's next target. his name is jonathan weiner. he got the information. then he passed it on to steele. and steele then put it in the memo, which was the second memo was going to back up the first memo if they needed it. ainsley: so in layman's terms, so sum it all up, hillary clinton and bill
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clinton's friends were giving information to christopher steele to write the dirty dossier. brian: dossier 35 pages that buzzfeed let out we told is you new. christopher steele, we don't know how he acquired this information, we know the bill was about $10 million. we also don't know if he was getting it from russians, russian sources. was he just walking around with a magnifying glass? steve: sounds like it was coming from hillary clinton's allies. let's think, so we do know that in the first dossier, a lot of that stuff unverified, right? essentially made up. what about the second stuff? think about it, if you were in the midst of a political campaign and you receive a bunch of stuff from hillary's friends, do you think it's going to make donald trump look good? i don't think so. brian: let'sed a one other thing. then you get that information and meet with friends in the media. they relay that information to us. and we're doing -- not necessarily anchors butter day people that are doing 20 million things at the same time. go wow, look at this. yahoo, mother jones, "new york times," all have the
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same story it must be true. steve: the thing about the yahoo story which was revealed by the memo we got on friday was christopher steele was fired by the fbi. right? because he was talking to the press. so he goes and he talks to michael isikoff and he tells him this story. then michael isikoff prints it. then the fisa court uses that story as rationale to spy on carter page. ainsley: unbelievable u well, that first memo, the one that was released on friday by the president. we just had judge andrew napolitano on set with us. he had this to say about that memo. >> three words in the republican memo. the fbi and the doj begged congressman nunes to remove and he and the republican majority chose not to. the reference is to chris steele, the author of the infamous dossier referred to in the republican memo as long-time fbi asset. brian: the judge was just
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here seconds ago. so, christopher steele is all over. this now you wonder why senator grassley and senator graham got together and essentially want to talk to him again. they actually want to bring up criminal charges about chris steele for not telling the truth among other things. steve: ultimately in the past we have heard that they have been -- the republican investigators have been going after the people in the fbi and in the department of justice now it is clear they are taking on president obama's state department. to see what role they had in the collection and dissemination of anti-trump information that ultimately wound up in front of the fisa court. brian: headed by john kerry who was rumored to have just told the palestinian leader don't worry trump is going to be out there in a year. we are in year two. why would he be off. why we say that. unverified although specific. he in there. mark levin on his show saying yesterday look out, this is getting to president obama. ainsley: we had a guest on
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earlier how the stock market went down yesterday. wall street she said might have had a down day. this is great news for main street because people are getting more money in their pocketbooks when they look at their paycheck. president trump went to ohio yesterday. and he was talking to folks there. and he was in a factory. we interviewed the guy who owns the factory yesterday. he gave out thousand dollar bonuses to all of his employees. this is the president talking about the democrats when he was at that factory yesterday in ohio. >> believe it or not, nancy pelosi and those in congress. [crowd boos? >> boos] they want to raise your taxes. without out military, we might not be here [applause] you. >> or we might not be here for long. believe me. believe us all. indianapolis pelosi, what she is doing to this country and she has gone so far left and schumer has gone so far left, oh, i look forward to running against them.
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brian: he went on to say that might be the best weapon for us in the mid terms. put nancy pelosi out there as this could be your speaker. a lot of people think, including many democrats, that is not an easy thing to overcome. steve: particularly if you take a look at her sound bite archive through the years. nancy pelosi, essentially the republicans would be -- have to just say dew points this person to be speaker again? ainsley: so we always -- listen, we always sit on this couch and we talk about her -- how she compares certain things and she just has some really funny sound bites. one time, i think it was during a commercial break it might have been on air. you said we should put all of her sound bites together. brian: have we done that. ainsley: the best of nancy please. brian: is there a chance for us to do that. ainsley: i think they heard your request and they did it for you, brian. brian: for example? ainsley: listen. >> do it so can you find out what is in it.
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version subterfuge, benghazi, benghazi, benghazi. >> we have to confer with the qatary who are told me over and over again hamas is a humanitarian organization. >> ohio state senator tina turner, doesn't she turn it on? >> scapegoat. do you know what a scapegoat is? that means in a community where people want to absolve themselves of guilt they get a guilt and they heap all of the ills onto the goat and then they run the goat out of town. >> healthcare, the debate on healthcare is like death. this is armageddon. >> anybody that's familiar with frankenstein knows it was a creation, monster created in terms of the bonus that corporate america received versus the crumbs that they are giving to workers to kind of put the schmooze on is so pathetic. brian: right. full circle. we end with crumbs but i'm sure it's nothing overall end. there will be other great phrases. steve: i think the most
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damaging thing she said in that whole thing was crumbs. ainsley: crumbs. brian: that's a look back at what nancy pelosi has brought to america. steve: that's right. 7:11 on this tuesday. liberals like al franken, elizabeth warren and conservative ben shapiro all invited to speak on a college campus. i don't think sea liberal. guess which one is getting the run around by the school? we will talk about that. brian: plus, the left in many cases in full panic mode in a way gleeful, perhaps, of the stock market drop. >> waves do crash and it happens from time to time on wall street. the white house is finding that out very clearly. >> it was the biggest points drop in the history of the stock market. brian: stuart varney says the sky is not falling and he has more to say since we gave him about 4 minutes. ♪ hold on tight ♪ to your dream ♪
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>> was it really a market crash. it was more like a market drunken veering into a ditch and that ditch was icy and it couldn't get out and it had to call a tow truck. >> and erase ago lot of our retirement savings. >> the president was right all along. we set a new all-time
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record. only it was the biggest point drop in the history of the stock market. steve: so what happened yesterday was a drunken crash in a ditch or something like that. stuart varney, yesterday, the market dropped. >> yep. steve: 4.6%. down 1,100. down at one point 1600. it was a bad day. >> it was a big sell off. let me tell you this from the get go. a, the sky is not falling. b, there is no economic catastrophe on the horizon. c, the left is spinning this because they really want to associate president trump with anything negative d, did you hear that bit about your retirement savings have been erased. nonsense your retirement savings are still up about one third since the election of donald trump. ainsley: this takes us back to december numbers. >> yes, we lost the gains of 2018. still got all the gains of 2017 very much in place. look, there are two reasons why we got this big sell
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off. number one, we were due. the market has gone straight up ever since the election of donald trump. brian: not natural. >> nothing goes up, straight up forever. all markets correct, period. you have gone from 18,000 to 26,000. okay, so now have you corrected at 24,000. that's what's happened. b, the economy is doing extremely well. and when the economy does well, interest rates tend to rise. rising interest rates are not good news for the stock market. hence, this sell off yesterday. and you will get more selling at the opening bell today. going to be an up and down day. extreme anxiety today. how it closes, i don't know it, probably will open lower. brian: sound. do you think the president from now on will have a different approach to when the stock market gets up again to maybe not get behind it presidents in the past have stayed away from the market because of its volatility. >> i think the president was right to tout the trump stock market rally. it was his policies which
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created the trump stock market rally. i don't think he should say anything about this current sell off. presidents shouldn't stick into that kind of sell off on a day-to-day basis. steve: right. >> steer clear of that, please, mr. president. by all means, take credit for the rally that you have seen so far. steve: i was reading the "wall street journal" today. it said there was no obvious cat list it could have been related to the possibility of inflation. but, stuart, explain this. it also said it could have been machine-driven. they have got all of these algorithms and things like that, when something happens, how do these machines take over at big wall street firms? >> okay. you don't have actual human beings who press a button buy or sell. you have a computer driven program. as you say the algorithm which looks at key movements in individual stock prices. it hits a certain price and, boom, the algorithm kicks in, you buy, you sell. steve: machinery them panic. >> the algorithm panic. mid afternoon yesterday, i
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was watching the tape it went from a minus 600 to a minus 1600 in the space of just a few minutes. brian: how can that be? >> that's the algorithm kicking. in. steve: the machine. >> a moment of panic. you are right to say al gore algorithmic panic today. steve: use it on show today. >> thank you very much. brian: thing kicked in because we learned something about the market overheating. when is the cut off when everything shuts down. >> are such things as colors. if it drops by a certain amount there is a pause in the trading. brian: you need a pause. >> do we? do we really? why not let the market function? you have a lot of people moving in today bargain hunting. steve: absolutely. >> the stock price of some companies have come so far down, that's a bargain. i will buy it. brian: i saw ainsley with coupons. ainsley: i am a coupon girl. some say coupons, some say coupons. >> i say bit coins a mess.
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ainsley: i only bought a little bits of it. steve: we will be watching stuart on the fox business network in two hours. >> thank you very much. ainsley: handing out tax cut bonuses in ohio. brian: we'll discuss it later. we will. steve: yes. ainsley: we will. um-huh. [ keyboard clacking ] [ click, keyboard clacking ] ♪ good questions lead to good answers. our advisors can help you find both. talk to one today and see why we're bullish on the future. yours.
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detective passing away on his 1,212th anniversary of the cop. flick is the third colorado officer killed in the last five weeks. achesly? ainsley: thank you, jillian. president trump was in ohio yesterday. he was touring one of the plants that was giving out those tax cut bonuses before rallying with those lucky employees. >> she joins sheffer -- come on up, deanna, in 2012 as a customer service rep. and has climbed her way you all the way up to become a manager. dean that is looking at a tax cut of $1,500 and that's on top of her $1,000 that
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sheffer is already giving her. steve: now through the magic of television. that's the person pete hegseth is checking in with at holy's home cooking in west carrollton, ohio. pete, she just got a bonus. >> she sure did get a bonus. she got a bonus per the tax cut in addition to a bonus given by sheffer corporation. we are joined by the customer service manager. you were a rep now you are the manager of that department as well. i have to ask you first off what's it like to get pulled up on stage by the president of the united states? >> it was pretty exciting. weave didn't know until the night before that we were actually going to go up and speak to the president. we just thought he was going to shout out our names and talk about what that meant to us. he thought it would be more personal if we came and told from our own mouth what is it meant to us and our families. pete: nerve-racking? >> a little bit. honestly. i had a lot of people praying for me and i felt peace when i was up there. pete: you looked comfort and and peaceful as do you this morning. thank you for joining us. >> absolutely. pete: tax cut $1,500 back in your paycheck this year. what does that mean to you? >> honestly, like i
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mentioned, i have two kids that will be in college this year. so it's just going to make it a little bit easier to afford their tuition bills and have a little extra at the end of the month. pete: in addition to you, we talked to a few of your fellow employees at sheffer on the plant floor. they had some things to say. take a listen. >> the tax reform he is doing is helping me any time can i get a little more money in my pocket and i know our company seems to be doing a lot better as a whole. we are really busy right now. so i mean those are all good things. >> that $1,000 bonus that some democrats have called bread crumbs. what are you you going to spend it on? >> billsment getting caught up. starting the year off ahead rather than behind for once. pete: deanna, double whammy not just the tax savings coming in your paycheck voluntary $1,000 trump bonus that your ceo gave out. some democrats have described that as bread crumbs. what do you say to that idea that $1,000 doesn't matter. >> miami university wouldn't have taken bread crumbs from me if i would have used that
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to pay my daughter's tuition. it made a difference when the tuition bill was due. pete: where does that mentality come from that kind of tax saving and bonus given out generosity isn't significant. >> i think people who live in a different income level don't just realize what it is for the average american worker. that does make a difference. we heard a lot of stories from our employees of that being very timely and made a big difference to a lot of the people. pete: ceo has not received the kind of feedback he got from that bonus the board approved it what do you say to the idea that a people are more generous than you think? >> we need to look for the good of people like jeff norris willing to give back and show they are not the exception. pete: deanna, because you got $1,000 you are paying for breakfast for everybody, did you know that. >> no i did not. pete: excited. ordering extra food. thank you for being here today. >> thank you. my pleasure. pete: back to you. we hope you are spending
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your bread crumbs wisely this morning. all right. pete and deanna. ainsley: i love hearing those stories. tell her congratulations, pete. steve: no kidding. sheefs is now a lowell celebrity. brian: chilling new warning from the homeland chairman next. steve: country made anthem gender neutral. justin trudeau has a new target in pc crusade. listen to this. >> the love that's going to change the future of mankind. so we would like you to. >> we like to say people kind not necessarily mankind. it's more inclusive. >> there we go. exactly. [laughter] steve: university of toronto professor jordan peterson has the number one book out here right now. is he here to react to that by the way sea canadian. right back ♪ nowhere to hide ♪ nowhere to run ♪ t shop.
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♪ a new attitude ♪ my worries are few. steve: new attitude? i think it's the same attitude in new york. ainsley: look at that shot. that is our city. steve: empire building. ainsley: i love that shot. brian: beacon of freedom around the world. freedom to walk into the empire state building. let's talk a little bit about canada with canada jordan b. peterson the author of this book called "12 rules for life. an antidote to chaos." book came out number one on amazon. he was on our couch. we wanted dr. peterson to join us today. first off, dr. peterson, you put together this book after hearing from the people that talked to you after attending your lectures, right? >> yes. and before that as well. i have been writing it for about five years. steve: so the whole idea of 12 rules for life is, what? >> well, people need
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guidelines in their life. and what i have done is to try to write a sequence of rules that are you witty and sometimes obvious as well, i suppose. to try to go deep down inside of them and to find out why it is that we need principles to live by. loss to point out that we do in fact, need principles to live by to guide us towards a meaningful and productive life. and one that helps us deal with the tragedy and me november lens of existence. ainsley: we have to go pick that book up. congratulations on it making it to number one. you have been on our show a few times. so smart. your advice is something other people need to pick up and read through the pages. thank you so much for also weighing in on some other topics affecting your area, canada. you are in toronto right now. justin trudeau he interrupts a woman at town hall. asking him a question. he didn't like one of the words she used. listen to this sound bite and then we will get your reaction. >> all right. >> so that's why we came here today to ask you to
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also look into the policies that religious charitable organizations have in our legislation so that it can also be changed because maternal love is the love that's going to change the future of mankind. so we would like you to -- >> -- we like to say people kind. not necessarily mankind. it's more inclusive. >> there we go. exactly. [cheers and applause] brian: and the crowd roars. >> yeah. well, it's quite the performance. i mean, i'm afraid that our prime minister is only capable of running his ideas on a few very narrow ideological tracts. we saw the first evidence of that when he put his cabinet together. he insisted upon making it 50% women despite the fact that only about 22% of the elected mps were women. it was easier for him to do that than it was for him to screen people for the sort of confidence that would actually be necessary to be cabinet members.
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so we have seen a fair bit of this behavior. but that was the most egregious example, i suppose. steve: dr. peterson, i rye recall you taking some heat because you refused to use gender neutral pronounce. why was that? >> well, i actually said that i would refuse to use the pronouns that were mandated by law because they were mandated by law. i feel that it's completely inappropriate of the government to decide what language the citizenry should speak. there has never been an example of that in british common law history. i believe that was a very, very bad precedent. i didn't want to use language that i thought was generated by radical leftist propagandists and so i said i wouldn't do it. ainsley: i saw one tweet this morning that said neil armstrong should have said one small step for people kind. >> trudeau was listening to an ernest woman trying to discuss something important and he interjected an
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ideological statement in the middle of the dialogue and that indicates, i think, precisely the way he thinks. and i don't think he does think. i think he runs an ideology in his head and accepts the output without question. and i think we're really going to pay for it in canada in ways that we can't yet imagine. brian: well, we're going to find out. because you believe it's coming to us here in earthquake in. and have you been to both countries frequently. now let's talk about something else that builds on your premise. this whole father/daughter dances that are being cancelled around the country because of gender guidelines. even donald trump jr. weighed in with this quote: the father-daughter dances inherently leave people out not just because of transgender status just life in comfortable. these can be life uncomfortable events jordan fox board of education. that's their response cancel the dance because there is a lot of people who can't go. is there a problem with that. >> the problem of that is self-evident. it's part of that absolute on slot by the radical left
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fundamental structures of our culture. and if you are going to cancel everything that's triggering to everyone then you are going to cancel everything all together. because there isn't a single thing that anyone can ever say or do that isn't going to offend someone. and the idea that this is being done so that certain people's feelings won't be hurt, i think, is absolutely absurd. it's not compassion and care that's driving this. it's the desire to put forward a very pernicious ideology and being very, very successful in its application. steve: dr. peterson, they say that they are doing that to make things more inexclusive. >> yeah. well, they say all sorts of things and they are a very small noisy dangerous minority. it's really appalling that we are bending over backwards to do their bidding without question. under the name of compassion. ainsley: a lot of my friends have been posting pictures of the daddy/daughter dance recently. i think the pictures are so cute are little girls going to miss out on a memory?
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>> well, yes, for sure. and the thing is that even your terminology, when you are talking about little girls is something that's going to be increasingly forbidden as we demolish the classic gender ideas and no one is going to benefit from that. it's going to be a real catastrophe. brian: people are talking about deciding on what gender they wants to be as youngsters. >> yeah. well that's happening all over. it's an absolute epidemic. and we have decided that children as young as 3 or 4 can now decide what gender they are and then under got appropriate surgical and biological alterations to bring their morphology in keeping with that. it's a mistake of epic proportions and we are going to pay for it in a big way. ainsley: we do hear of that but how often dots that happen? >dots -- does that happen. >> it happens increasingly in britain in 2015, 57 kids in the gender dysphoria clinics and last year 2,000. steve: he has a great book
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out. a great number wise right now number one in amazon. it's called 12 rules for life. dr. jordan peterson. thank you very much for joining us today from canada. >> thanks very much for the invitation. brian: thanks for wearing the gel. looks good. steve: there you go. all right. thanks, dr. peterson. we will make it weird here. jillian, take over. jillian: no one knows what to say to brian. good morning to you guys. i used to love the father/daughter dances. brian: not anymore. jillian: i'm too old for that besides that let's talk about this. the threat of isis bombing a passenger plane packed with americans. that threat is very real. house homeland security chairman congressman michael mccall issuing the alarming warning calling for immediate action to sure up security at airports. >> most disturbing and quite frankly, kind of what keeps you up at night question.
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the crown jewels aviation and still seeking to blow up airplanes even though they might not be able to hijack it. that threat is very real. congressman mccaul says the u.s. must deploy more security scanners but can't because they are call up in bureaucratic red tape. democrats elizabeth warren and al franken both spoke there but the university of minnesota is allegedly trying to silence conservative speaker ben shapiro. according to a spokes personal from the young america foundation the school claimed there was a scheduling conflict despite no other request made for the same time. instead offering a small room several miles away from the main campus. the winner of a $560 million powerball jackpot is suing the state that made her rich. the woman calling herself jane doe filed a complaint against new hampshire's lottery commission to keep her name anonymous. she says she didn't mean to sign her name on the back of the ticket allowing it to be made public. the commission has denied a request to have a trustee
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resign the ticket instead. football season is now over. so to cheer you up a little bit, here is the brand new bad lip reading video from this season. >> they always say you get us helicopter and got it zero times. >> what's you going to do? decorate. >> say it again. >> decorate. >> what? >> decorate. i own a ford. >> you ain't got no ford, dad. you got a mazda. >> 'ow, 'ow. >> i'm not rick perry? ainsley: that's the best one. the popular parody video has already been viewed about 4 million times. steve: who was that guy? he looked like prince harry. jillian: i love those. i'm sorry i just screemsd. ainsley: is he going to start next year. jillian: to be determined. he has acl tear. i sit here and say he is the guy going forward. everyone is already like what's going to happen? ainsley: yeah, yeah, yeah. everyone want to know. brian: got a deal. 18 minutes before the top of the hour. more football news but this
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is disturbing news. a drunk driver accused of killing an nfl player is an illegal immigrants. he was deported not once but twice. how does this keep happening? ainsley: and president trump giving a special shoutout to one ohio lawmaker. >> bad wenstrup couldn't be here. that's army reserve duty. that's okay, right? that's a good excuse. that's the only excuse we would accept. ainsley: he is not only a congressman. he is also an iraqi war veteran congressman wenstrup. he is also a doctor who rushed to save steve scalise and helped victims of last week's amtrak crash. he is quite a hero. he is going to join us next.
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shut out, right? >> yi, it was. i appreciated it though. >> i mean, it just shows you what kind of year you have had being there during the shooting at the field. the train, and then the president mentioned to you while you are training -- while you are back in reserve training. >> yeah. i appreciated that. you know. it's been an interesting year to say the least. but whenever you have the opportunity to do something to help others, you should take it and i certainly have been put in that position by the grace of god, i guess. and i thank god for the opportunity to serve others. brian: so, very true. and, of course, there were people that showed up that feel as though this tax plan is helping the people of ohio that went firmly for the president where you are.
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so you are on the intel committee and you know about the carl rove now. the democrats say i have my 10 page memo passed. you guys voted for it democrats didn't vote for yours. it goes to the president. you hope the president just releases it? >> well, i think it needs to be vetted. i mean, one of the points that they were making about ours when they didn't want ours released is saying we didn't vet it, when, in fact, we had vetted it by the fbi and by a couple of the analysts and legal team that were actually part of the fisa application and one who was in on the mccabe interview where he basically said it would not have gone through if not for the steele dossier. theirs needs to be vetted. i can tell you the one we voted on to move forward to the white house certainly needs vetting and redaction of things that would compromise methods and also there is personal insults in there and attacks that i don't think need to be in there. brian: what do you mean? >> there is some people -- republicans named and i don't think that that was appropriate. brian: so they went after
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chairman nunes? >> yeah. i think that we will see that they went after a couple of the key figures on the intelligence committee. personally. brian: so there is two things they say you mischaracterized. footnote at the bottom saying the does way was a politically motivated dossier and andy mccabe was taken out of context when he said we wouldn't have gotten the fisa warrant without the dossier. what do you say to that? >> well, again, going back to what i was just mentioning is the legal expert from the fbi was present at the interview and was part of the fisa application and said everything that we put out was factual. so, that kind of contradicts that and, besides, as far as it being politically motivated, that right there should have been enough to withhold it. and not make it part of what you are seeking to get a warrant for. even worse, what was withheld is it was paid for by the democrat national committee and the fbi. brian: now we find out there is a second dossier that comes out.
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maybe not as thick, but it involves michael steele, maybe the state department and members of the clinton camp. wait a second. i thought chris steele said he didn't know who was paying him. he just thought he was hired by fusion gps to get background information on donald trump. does that blow that whole story up? >> well, there is a lot more that needs to come forward and i expect that we are going to do everything we can to be the oversight for the american people and be as transparent as we can for the american people. i think christopher wray and for that matter rod rosenstein have a great opportunity to lead their agencies to a better day by working with congress and bringing forward everything that's involved. if there was some wrongdoing that it be protect find. theprotect find. w rectified. we know there is a lot of people that do a great job. brian: let them disseminate. how dare you. i do have a problem with these people that won't happen again and i'm going to clean up my fbi. thanks so much, congressman. >> that's right. brian.
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>> and thanks for your service. brian: illegal immigrant deported twice. rob schmitt has the details. that story next. prevagen has been shown to improve short-term memory. prevagen. the name to remember. need a change of scenery? kayak searches hundreds of travel and hotel sites so you can be confident you're getting the perfect hotel at the best price. soak it in. kayak. search one and done. the best simple salad ever?d great tasting, heart-healthy california walnuts. so simple, so good. get the recipes at walnuts.org. if you spit blood you may have gum problems,s and could be on the journey to much worse.
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brian: the suspected drunk driver who killed nfl player and his uber driver should have never been in this country. ainsley: police say an illegal immigrant with a criminal record is responsible for the innocent -- i mean, the incident that happened in indiana. steve: "fox & friends first" co-host rob schmitt joins us now with more on this awful story. rob? rob: yeah, guys, for republicans and the president a prime example of why the country needs a secure border. a twice-deported illegal immigrant from guatemala managed to get back into the
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country a third time and police say he got drunk saturday night and ran over an indianapolis colts linebacker and his uber driver very early in the morning on super bowl sunday. and both were killed. 26-year-old linebacker edwin jackson was a passenger in an uber being driven by 54-year-old jeffrey monroe. police say the driver pulled over to the shoulder after jackson apparently got sick in the back of the car. and that's when 37-year-old manuel who had been deported from the now sanctuary city of san francisco in 2007 and again in 2009, smashed into both men while driving a ford pickup truck drunk it appears one or both men were outside of that uber when they were hit by is sabala flen foot but found a short time later. he gave police a fake name driving without a license and blood alcohol of .329. according to police about three times the legal limit. very intoxicated.
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the vice president of course former governor of indiana mike pence tweeted out on my way to alaska i was very sadden ted to hear of the passing 6 indianapolis colts linebacker edwin jackson. >> this was a senseless and avoidable tragedy. this is a great loss for the entire indiana community. my prayers are with his family in their time of grief. here is congressman todd rokita on the matter. >> you can't have a secure nation or sovereign nation unless you are able to control who comes in and out. obviously we should have kept this guy out. >> he is awaiting charges for this crime and also immigration hold on him as well from ice. republicans and the president argue it doesn't matter if you deport criminal illegals if we have this porous border to our south. they will come back. in we had a guest on this morning very similar situation. a woman whose son was trying to become a police officer was killed by a guy who only spent 35 days in jail. he was deported illegal immigrant. only spent 35 days in jail after killing her son. steve: he was deported twice. he should have been
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deported. ainsley: you send them back and find a way to come back in. rob: they know how to get in because that's the way it is. ainsley: thanks, rob. brian: coming up next hour amongst our guest jim jordan. don't miss it. before discovering nexium 24hr to treat her frequent heartburn... lucy could only imagine enjoying a slice of pizza. now, it's as easy as pie. nexium 24hr stops acid before it starts for all-day, all-night protection. . .wi . . .
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♪ >> the stock market went down yesterday. wall street might have had a down day. >>? ohio, president trump pointed to a rosier big picture. >> your paychecks are going way up. your taxes are going way down. >> sky is not falling. the left is spinning this because they want to associate president trump with anything negative. >> the battle is on. >> house intelligence committee voting unanimously to release the democrat's rebuttal. >> like it is hard for white house and like it is hard for republicans on the committee to brock this. >> they list the facts. they come to conclusions have personal attacks on myself and
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chairman gowdy. >> to try to subvert democracy this way is scary. >> everywhere i go i love to hear what people plan to do with the money. >> i will try to save up money to start a family. >> both my kids, katy and matthew are going to college. we'll use that money. >> nancy pelosi said that is crumbs. this is not a good day for nancy pelosi. ♪ brian: that is montgomery gentry, the duo 20 years was together. nothing but success in the country music world. he is performing solo. ainsley: poor gentry lost his life in helicopter crash in new jersey. they were scheduled to perform in new jersey. he lost his life. steve: he will be joining us.
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they sang that song on this program. ainsley: eddie montgomery will join us. this is the first interview since he lost his friend and partner. steve: indeed. we have a busy final hour. there they are right there. let's talk about our top story right now. the battle of the dueling memos. ainsley: the house intelligence committee voting unanimously to release the democrats rebuttal. now it is up to the president whether or not it will be made public. brian: people expect him to make it public. will there be any redactions. kevin corke at the white house with breaking details. hey, kevin. reporter: we know the memo is here. will you ever get to see it? that we don't know. we do know this white house press secretary sarah sanders says the memo is at the white house. here is the statement. the white house has received a mem mum from the minority members from the celebrity committee on intelligence. at stated many times the administration will follow the same process and procedure with
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this memorandum from the minority that they did from the majority. fair and balanced like a network i know. that alleges foreign intelligence court surveillance abuses by some at doj or fbi which believed used a clinton campaign funded phony dossier to form the basis of spying on the trump campaign. >> this is what the fbi used to corroborate the dossier which is very, very dangerous, to take political dirt that was paid for by the hillary campaign to use it against your political opponents and open up an investigation. reporter: while the white house considers the fate of that democratic memo, this is what is very interesting. we don't know how soon the president will ultimately decide to release the memo. i can tell you this, the author of the memo wants it released and shown to the american people as soon as possible. >> your -- our memo in terms of
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sources and method. those in the best position to vet that have the opportunity to do so. we want to make sure the white house doesn't redact our memo for political purposes. obviously that is deep concern. reporter: congressman adam schiff, from california, the man the president calls little adam schiff. the president will decide in five days what form the memo will come out. it needs to be scrubbed of classified information of sources and methods. my partner john roberts and i will watch it. ainsley: kevin do you hear anything from wash about that he will release that? do you think he will? reporter: there is no doubt the inclination will be to get it out there, if you feel like nothing is untrue. the debate is fine. you can't deny nothing happened. i can guarranty you my sources that is the case. i cannot wait to see more of those.
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steve: thank you very much. brian: "new york times" by the way, thanks kevin. "new york times" wants the whole fisa application, would be a first, since 1978 when the fisa court started they want the whole application exposed. they're asking for the court for that. that would wipe out any editorial aspects of this. steve: transcripts for each of the four visits. so we did hear andrew mccabe said, they never, the fbi never would have sought a fisa warrant without the dossier, right? well, turns out there is a second dossier, this one also had christopher steele, the man screen right right there, but this time it looks as if it is linked to people in barack obama's state department. they have already gone after the republicans have, the people in the department of justice and fbi. now they're looking into whether or not barack obama's state department was involved in the collection and dissemination of anti-trump stuff.
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whether it was true or not to this new steele dossier. ainsley: sara carter was on with sean hannity last night. she is the investigative reporter. she is digging deep into all this. she has this to say about the second dossier. the second memo. this is the second memo. listen to what sarah has to say. >> we know christopher steel was in contact with friends of hillary clinton and persons at the state department. that he was being federal mitigations on president trump through these associates of clinton and that he put together a second dossier. this is stunning. not only did he include some of the information from the second dossier in the dossier that was used to obtain the fisa application but we know now that some of these allegations actually came from people close to hillary clinton. this was very political. brian: so they would come from hillary clinton. christopher steel would meet with that, get additional
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information and christopher steel would go to the press to get the word out that way. some of that press information reportedly was used in putting the application to the fisa court which approves almost everything anyway, to make sure they get the permission to spy on carter page and who knows who else. ainsley: is unbelievable. this is the second dossier, according to sara, she says that clinton's friend, clinton's allies were feeding christopher steele information and allegations while he was compiling the dirty dossier. these are hillary's friends. keep in mind hillary is running against the man the dirtry dossier is writing. steve: one of them worked in the administration. you figure one of nunez's next targets would be jonathan winner. he worked under hillary clinton, he was a special envoy to libya. so to recap, you have these two dossier's with the anti-trump
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stuff in it. you have two memos, one released on friday by the republicans. as kevin corke said, that is the democratic version. last week the democrats were 100% against the transcripts. they didn't want it revealed. neither did the fbi. why? the judge napolitano just explained that. >> three words in the republican memo. the fbi and the doj begged congressman nunez to remove and he and republican majority chose not to. the references to chris steele, the author of the infamous dossier referred to in the republican memo as, long-time fbi asset. brian: so this whole thing leads to what happened last month. actually two or three weeks ago, when lindsey graham and chuck grassley on the senate judiciary committee, they said based on what we know, christopher steele lied to us when he was here.
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christopher steele lied what he has done with the fbi and contacts with the media. there is criminal referral there. it makes a lot more sense today as devin nunez starts on phase two what is behind behind the s. steve: stay tuned. christopher steele was supposed to show up at a definition in london. big buzzfeed lawsuit. he didn't show up. doesn't want to talk. ainsley: congressman jim jordan will be with us to talk about the story. first we hand it over to jillian for headlines. reporter: u.s. military show of force intensifying against taliban. record number of airstrikes just dropped on training camp taking out terrorist fighters. the about 52 bombers destroyed several stolen afghan army vehicles that were in the process of being converted into a explosive device. a community lining streets to honor a sheriff's deputy.
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officer mika flick gunned down in colorado springs. >> officer down. jillian: two other deputies an police officer shot by a suspect responding to reports of a stolen vehicle. that suspect also shot and killed deputy flick. leaves behind a wife and 7-year-old twins. he is remembered as outstanding detective. passing away on the 11th anniversary as a cop. flick is the third colorado officer killed in the last five weeks. in a few hours the house will vote on interim spending bill to avoid another government shutdown on thursday. after the white house reject ad bipartisan plan by senators john mccain and chris coons, that protected dreamers but did not include border wall funding. the president reiterated his findings. any deal on daca that does not include strong border security and desperately-needed wall is a total waste of time.
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super bowl champions philadelphia eagles getting a hero's welcome in the city of brotherly love. >> eagles claim. jillian: fans cheering for the team as they got of the plane from minneapolis. you bet they will cheer louder during the team's very first super bowl championship parade on thursday. the city making preparation, even closing schools. meantime quarterback nick foles got his own parade in disney world after winning super bowl mvp. i know someone who is down in disney right now. steve: saw him? >> they didn't plan on being down there at same time. pretty cool. brian: reminds me when jeff hostettler won the super bowl for the giants because phil simms got hurt middle of the year. i have two super bowl-winning quarterbacks. what do i do. in wentz case he is up for mvp. jillian: going forward he is the man. he has to get healthy.
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probably not at beginning of the season but which i'm not, mcl-acl tear, takes forever to come back. steve: i think you wind up at the parade. jillian: i hope so. steve: still ahead on this tuesday, hillary clinton is still trying to explain what happened. >> many of you who have read my book about what happened know that i think that misogyny and sexism was part of that campaign. steve: ed henry covered her campaign. he joins you live to react straight ahead.
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so you can keep saving the world. >> kids: ♪ safelite repair, safelite replace ♪ ♪ steve: another to be declassified document set to shake up congress and this time it is the democrat's turn as their countermemo, their rebuttal heads to the president's desk after the house intel committee voted to make it public yesterday. ainsley: gop congressman jim jordan was one of the lawmakers pushing to release the gop memo. he joins us to react. thank you for being with us. >> you bet. ainsley: this is interesting, when you look who sits on the house intel committee they all unanimously voted to release the democratic rebuttal, but only republicans wanted first memo out. the dems did not.
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why didn't the democrats on the house intel committee, like the republicans why didn't they want transparency? >> good question. we all want transparency on the republican side. i asked christopherway see what they actually took to the court. transparency is a good thing. i am all for letting the democrat memo out following the same republican process last week. steve: how much of the democrat memo would have to be redacted because there is secret stuff in there? >> there is some. i will leave up to the experts to figure out. that goes through the exact same process. i appreciate the way chairman nuon needs handle this. ainsley: the second dossier we're learning about you there the senate, through lindsey graham and chuck grassley. what is the most alarming thing to you, when you learn about the
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details? >> well the names we keep hearing, sidney blumenthal and cody shearer who people who have been around the clintons. they paid steele for the dossier and told him what to put in. talk about rigging the game. this will serve your purposes as a opposition research document. that is what the clinton team did, when you sigh names like sidney blumenthal come up, we dough posed this guy during the benghazi hearings. he has been with the clintons forever. he was knee deep in the benghazi story, they weren't scare with the american people what was catalyst of the attack, they tried to blame it on video. i find that interesting. they hire steele to produce the dossier and tell him what to produce to the dossier. they leak that to the press. ainsley: meanwhile they're the ones sending this british spy into russia to pull information
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that hasn't been proven. >> exactly. that is final work product. we come right back to the memo last week that final work product, that dossier was taken to a secret court to get a secret warrant to spy on fellow citizen, they weren't clear with the court who paid for it who was involved wit, they fired chris steele from any relationship with the fbi. he broke a fundamental trust. he went to the press, told them to work for the fbi. they still used this work products, this dossier, that is ridiculous how they handled this, why the memo yesterday by the republican was so important that the american people could see. steve: sound like you would like the transcript for whatever records. >> heck yes. steve: from the fisa proceedings released. i know devin nunez would like to. i haven't heard from democrats to say release the stuff. >> you have to ask them. i think the american people would like to see. remember this is secret court. there have been thousands and thousands of applications go to the court over the years. very few are rejected. find out what is given to the
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court. see this as example that would be good for the american people. ainsley: three of 11 judges were appointed by bill clinton. all it takes one judge to make the decision? >> when that application putting in front of the court, there is one judge making decision. there are subsequent times have to get renewed could be different judges but one judge at a time. steve: would be great to see transcripts to see what went down. jim jordan, thank you very much. >> you thanks, guys. steve: remember the judge who president trump called out being biased against him. the fate of long-promised border wall could end up in his court. we'll explain that coming up. ainsley: plus pete hegseth having "breakfast with friends" in ohio after the president was there. he will chat with some of the folks that were there. they heard the president speak. steve: holly's home cooking.
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there are two types of people in the world. those who fear the future... and those who embrace it. the future is for the unafraid. ♪ ♪
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♪ brian: quick headlines right now. moments ago, vice president pence landing in tokyo on his way to the winter olympics. he is not competing. he is watching. he will meet with the japanese prime minister tomorrow ships sew abe. he is not -- shinzo abe. defense secretary james mattis briefing congress on the national defense strategy today. the plan revealed last month will be expanded on today, focusing dealing with russia and china as main adversaries iran next, then north korea. lawmakers could question him about next year's defense budget. evidently we're missing $700 million. steve: that is not good. meanwhile president trump was in ohio touring one of the plants
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giving tax cut bonuses to their employees. before delivering a speech at rally in since gnat i it. ainsley: pete hegseth is talking to them from holly's home cooking in west carol ton, ohio. good morning. >> fried mush. >> the with what? >> fried mush. it is basically fried grits. we learn something on the road all the time. we went to the sheffer corporation. took the same tour president did. the ceo jeff norris took us behind the scenes. take a watch. >> does it surprise you to see the amount of obstruction he faces, just institutional resistance to the policies that seem like common sense to guys on the ground? >> it is very frustrating when you turn on the news and listen to the politicians. honestly like a bunch of fifth
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graders. if we did that here at our company we would be shut down in a heartbeat. he is a breath of fresh air. he is not connected to anybody. he is just doing what he thinks is right and he wants to make it right for the worker and he wants to make it right for the owners. pete: we're back here. so that was yesterday. today we're in west carolton at holly's home cooking. i'm here with ken. you are a custom builder, countertop company. sure form here in town. you've been there 20 eight years. it has been number of years, almost 10 since you have seen a wage increase. your employer issued a wage increase, told you why. why have your wages gone up? >> the trump tax cut plan, you know. simple as that. more money in the employee's pockets. pete: you're company feels like they will make more and pass that down as increase. what does it feel like when there is more money in your pocket in the form of wages every week? >> it is everything.
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tank of gas here. take your grandkids out for a movie, and you know, whatever. pete: you still haven't seen impact of tax cuts as well. >> that's true. that is another raise. pete: more bread crumbs. linda is health care worker. nancy pelosi says this money is bread crumbs. >> absolutely not. if you get $40. that is $40 more than you had. i will take any crumb you can get. that is like fine dining. pete: what will you spend money on? >> additional savings to build up your savings. pete: todd, you're small business owner helping companies make them more efficient. what has the tax cut in real economy done for your business? >> it sparked a lot of activity, new growth and construction. renovation. owners put more into that business like sure form. pete: you feel the president understands what the real economy is getting money back in
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people's pockets delivers? >> he came from that world. pete: very much so. todd, linda, ken, great crew. great folks behind us. we might camp out and use everyone's bread crumbs to pay for breakfast and more mush. steve, you will like it. steve: sound delicious. i like fried anything. pete: with lots of butter. ainsley: put cheese in there. fried cheese grits. steve: with a piece of bacon. that is breakfast. thanks, pete. brian: hillary clinton still trying to explain what happened two years ago. >> many of you who have read my book about what happened know that i think misogyny and sexism was part of that campaign. brian: her brand new blame game just ahead. ainsley: it was two years ago. you're right. steve: ed henry is on his way to the couch. he will sit with us. we have a lot to chew about. how are you? wish we had some fried mush for you. ♪
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fastsigns designed new directional signage. and got them back on track. get started at fastsigns.com. and got them back on track. in your noise-canceling trusteheadphones? maybe not. maybe you could trust your flight attendant won't be the chatty type. hello everyone, welcome aboard, i'm jason with a y. maybe you could trust your seatmate will be an introvert. i've been to south america, i've been to mexico, i've been to... maybe you could trust everyone will settle in for 10 hours of peace and quiet. (baby crying) (ice rattling) (singing & drum banging)
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i got to tell you i'm excited for these long flights. i love them because it gets me out of the house. or, you could just trust duracell. (silence) (♪) ♪ >> did we catch them in the act or what? you know what i'm -- oh, did we catch them in the act. they are very embarrassed. they never thought they were going to get caught. we caught them. hey, we caught em. so much fun. like the great absolute. steve: the great ed henry. fox news chief national correspondent. what do you make of the president talking about how we caught them? keep in mind if hillary won -- >> a lot of republicans saying devin nunez stood strong despite all the attacks. got a lot of information. they keep saying there is more information coming. we'll see.
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something brian got from congressman wenstrup in ohio is fascinating, that the democratic memo, we're talking about, has things that will be redacted, not just intel issues, but insults of republicans like devin nunez. i find that interesting, that is what the democratic line has been. is to attack, attack devin nunez in the memo, on tv. but they're not disputing the basic facts that the fisa judge was not told that this dirt was paid for by the democrats. ainsley: because they can't? >> they can't dispute that fact. i'm told by people who have seen the democratic memo that the president will now review over the next few days, in there, they also admit that the judge, the fisa judge, was not told about the dnc clinton tie. the judge was told there was a political motivation, someone who didn't like the president. steve: in a footnote. >> right, even the democratic memo admits a key fact, maybe the most important fact was not
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told to the judge. brian: some people say, fisa memo, 98% of all the fisa requests get granted. what's the big deal? what is your answer to that? >> my answer to that is secretive court. i keep seeing on social media this, number, that number, people don't know, or very few people know how the fisa court really works. that is why i think you're seeing this push to get beyond the republican version of facts, the democratic version of facts. let's see the underlying application. obviously as reporter for a long time i understand that the dozens and dozens of pages in this applications will have very sensitive information. you can't just dump all that out. redact it. give us the facts. the democratic or republican version. ainsley: what do you know about the fisa court? >> they're rotating group of judges. they're selected by the chief justice of the supreme court. federal judges that are sitting on other courts who are highly respected. some have been nominated by
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democratic, some by republican presidents. they go in there and get these -- what i knew covering the bush administration for example, it was, dana perino and i were talking about this, this is very high bar to get surveillance through fisa judge. ainsley: do you think the judge if they made the decision, if they allow the spying what proof do you have? >> exactly. we need some evidence. traditionally we talked about it from the foreign side which is in the bush administration there was all these questions about, whether americans are on the other end of the call without -- whether they were spying on americans. but it was, we have probable cause that somebody is plotting something. steve: right. >> listen, fisa judge, we have to listen in, we have to know what is the next stage in the plot. that is something almost everybody could agree as long as proper procedures are held, go for wait. we want to stop the attack. steve: over 35,000 fisa applications that have been granted only a dozen, through the many years were ever rejected. so you have got to figure, it is for the most part a rubberstamp.
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is that what happened in this case? >> right. did the judge push it through? we don't know. because it is secretive court. we don't know which judge. there have been reports it was actually judge nominated by a republican president. steve: we don't know. >> we don't know that for sure. i don't have the name. you don't have the name. a lot of people doing this by supposition. i go back to the point adam schiff and others are going with the insults, this is partisan. let's go to the facts, how about that? brian: fbi will have a chance too. indianapolis colts 26-year-old lineman lost his life. he felt sick. they pulled over to the side of the road in his uber-car. he gets run over by a drunk driver who happens to have been deported twice. >> what made me think first of all, awful tragedy, whether an illegal immigrant or not it is an awful tragedy. we can all agree on that. reminded me of the state of the union, when the president pointed out these two wonderful couples who had lost children
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because of illegal immigrants and ms-13, killing their children, right? and what did we hear the next day? we heard, oh the president always makes immigrants out to be these awful people and giving us the worst stories. then this happens. you say, was he taken out of context or is this actually happening, not just to average americans like he pointed out. they were sitting up there with the first lady and family. one of the father was crying his eyes out. he is still grieving his daughter. the president was attacked over that. pointing out reality what is happening in america. i bet you, because nfl more people will hear about this maybe the president was right. ainsley: parents who have lost their loved ones to illegal immigrantss they say, might not be forefront of their mind until it had to be. all they have left are their ashes. steve: president sent out second of two tweets. so disgraceful person illegally in our country killed colts
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linebacker he had win jackson. this is a one of the preventable tragedies. we must get the dems to get tough on the border. my prays and best wishes to the family of edwin jackson, whose life was so senselessly taken. @colts. >> whole budget battle about daca, get the deal, deadlines coming up and government about to run out of money. that would include border security as well as daca. where are we on this. brian: they always wait until the last minute. >> both sides. brian: will fund defense. senate will strip it out. >> totally different version. we're back to zero. steve: ed, great to have you on the couch. ainsley: jillian over there with headlines for us. jillian: good tuesday morning to you guys, to you as well. get you caught up with the headlines starting with this, data recorders recovered from
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the amtrak that slammed head on into parked freight train in south carolina. two people killed, more than 100 injured in the crash. ntsb officials are hoping the black box will provide answers why a lock switch operated by the freight company sent the amtrak on to a side rail. we're also learning that amtrak engineer applied the emergency brake in the seconds before the crash. a federal judge who has been criticized by president trump may decide the fate of the southern border wall. judge gonzalo the curial, talking about the administration ability to wave environmental laws to construct the wall. he said in 2016 that his descent created a conflict of interest in his ruling in a case involving trump university. hillary clinton blaming misogyny and sexism in america for her crushing 2016 loss to president trump. >> many of you who have read by book about what happened know that i think that misogyny and
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sexism was part of that campaign. it was one of the contributing factors. some of it was old-fashioned sexism. jillian: the former secretary of state appearing at awards ceremony in georgetown university. clinton criticized women who did not vote but supported the women's march. a look at headlines. steve: busy morning. thank you very much. meanwhile rather than look at us, look live, a couple miles south where we are. that is the floor of the new york stock exchange. market is set to open just in about 40 minutes, 50 minutes after record drop yesterday but our next guest says, don't panic. brian: montgomery gentry country music iconses but the music world was turned upside down when troy gentry was killed in helicopter crash. think how eddie montgomery feels. he is talking about a solo tour, something that troy would have
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wanted. he wakes upat 4:00 in the morning to work on his instruments. we'll hear him soon. my dad says our insurance doesn't have that. don't worry - i know what a lug wrench is, dad. is this a lug wrench? maybe? you can leave worry behind when liberty stands with you™. liberty stands with you™. liberty mutual insurance.
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especially when inside another amazing machine. your an amazing machine. the lexus es. with standard technology like lexus safety system plus. the lexus es, and es hybrid. experience amazing at your lexus dealer. this is the story of green mountain coffee roasters dark magic told in the time it takes to brew your cup. first, we head to vermont. and go to our coffee shop. and meet dave. hey. why is dark magic so spell-bindingly good, he asks? let me show you. let's go. so we climb. hike. see a bear. woah. reach the top. dave says dark magic is a bold blend of coffee with rich flavors of uganda, sumatra, colombia and other parts of south america. like these mountains, each amazing on their own. but together? magical.
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all, for a smoother tasting cup of coffee. green mountain coffee roasters packed with goodness. brian: "fox business alert" here. the stock market plunging monday. the dow overall lost 1100 points in the worst day of stocks since 2011 but we're still up 33% from election day 2016. so is this a reason for concern or just part of the ebbs and flows of the market? here to weigh in, we have been all ebb and very little flow recently, we have the fox news contributor james freeman. we'll talk about fisa. you talk about both. what is your assessment why we lost so much? >> basically a reading on the economy. people think the economy is better than they thought it would be. they think the federal reserve will raise interest rates faster than we expected. that is what triggered this selloff. so, it happens, as you
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mentioned. it has been amazing run-up since election day 2016. all this does is basically put us back to the levels of late 2017. brian: is it a panic? is there some fear? freeman sell, kilmeade has to sell and joe has to sell? >> fear does get into it. in terms of the middle of the day when you saw these declines yesterday, that is time not a lot of trading going on so you could have more volatility. and you could have a bad day today. you could have a bad week. but long term, what we're seeing the american economy getting stronger and, stocks they haven't been cheap lately but s&p 500 trading at about 17 times expected earnings, that is not a crazy number. brian: i saw a billionaire mark cuban say this is buy opportunity for me. we'll see what everybody else feels. i talk about your op-ed. you don't believe the obama administration reputation and fisa court reputation can survive this type of
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examination, what do you mean? >> well, we have a problem, based on the republican memo, we'll learn more from democrats, i would love to hear from the fisa judge at some point but based on what we know so far, the bar was so low to issue a warrant to spy on the opposition political party that it suggests either it was abused by the obama administration or fisa court really need to be changed because we think of a person in a black robe carefully weighing the evidence and what we see in that memo is uncorroborated, politically-motivated, really rumors being used to issue a warrant. brian: so what you're saying is this, if there is a footnote at the bottom of this dossier, hey, judge, take my dossier, here it says a problem with carter page, take a look at this, fine. where did you get this from? we got it from politically active group or politically-motivated group.
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okay. that is not good enough. >> based on what we know so far, this would not be enough to convince my editor at "wall street journal" to run a story. it would not be enough to convince you to have me on the program. we need to learn more but looks like the bar is to he low. brian: james freeman. we set the bar high for you, and you scaled it. >> thank you. brian: troy don'ttry's tragic crash in helicopter. eddie says this ising something he would have wanted troy to go on. that is next. h, yeah! [crowd 3] no, you're on fire! look behind you. [mascot] i'm cool. i'm cool.
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[burke] that's one way to fire up the crowd. but we covered it. talk to farmers. we know a thing or two because we've seen a thing or two. ♪ we are farmers. bum-pa-dum, bum-bum-bum-bum ♪
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♪ ♪ where i come from there is
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pickup truck with the tailgate down, where i come from, the pine trees are singing a song of the south ♪ steve: montgomery gentry producing hit after hit over last 20 years. days after duo completed their new album, troy gentry was tragically killed in helicopter crash in new jersey. eddie and troy plan ad tour in the 2018 to mark their 20th anniversary. brian: eddie montgomery is touring solo, something troy would have wanted him to do. the eighth studio album is out, here to you. this debuted number one. it has to be bitter for you. >> troy we were together over 30 years. i was used to looking to my left. that horrific crash, that day, tell you our whole lives changed the guys in the band. i tell you, we thought about what we was doing cd, do i tour?
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do i put the cd out? i remember me and him having a conversation a few years back, we was talking about it, if either one of us go down we want the other one to carry on the montgomery gentry. ainsley: how did you find out the news. >> i was there is. ainsley: you were in the helicopter. >> i was flying in. steve: flying in for a show that night? >> we have helicopter rides if you want to go. ainsley: wow, how is the family doing? >> you know as best as they can. his wife and kids, man, angie, tell you, just, something you don't ever get over. brian: how do you sing? you have to tap into emotion to sing? is it hard to get through this. >> it has been tough for me and the guys a little bit. we done our first grand ole opry appearance the other night. it has been very emotional. we've actually done a couple of shows. we put under our belt and, i
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tell you, i was nervous. all the guys were -- ainsley: the show must go on, right? that is what he wants? >> of it-roy was prankster. he had the big wooden spoon, he was stirring stuff up. steve: what will you perform for us today. a new song off the album. king of the world. it's a laid-back kind of tune. we're ready. steve: getting out of your way. brian: thanks so much. here's to you. ♪ ♪ ain't no hanging out a four-door window, bucket full of minnows ♪ ♪ box full of coke, but stay on the river i will fold ♪ ♪ got radio playing and listen
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to merle, hot sun, cold one, i will be a son of a gun, i'm keg of the world ♪ ♪ ♪ the gators in south louisiana, my neighbors in the swamp heading out ♪ ♪ you fly, sally and anna look listening to the bull -- frog. ♪ i'm in love with a green-eyed girl ♪ catch me a fish and go home get a kiss, yes, i'm king of the world ♪ ♪ ♪ got stringer full of bass and hook in my finger, ♪
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♪ take the good with the good, and bad with the better, weather ain't bad, so i butter not cuss ♪ ♪ got a roof over me. i'm king of the world ♪ ♪ ♪ hanging out of a four-door window, bucket full of minnows in the front floorboard ♪ not box full of greasy cold, fried chicken livers, a day on the river what i live for ♪ ♪ radio playing, taking a toke
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and listen to pearl, hot sun, cold one, i'll be a son of a gun i'm king of the world ♪ ♪ king of the world, king of the world ♪ [cheers and applause]
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. >> bill: it's now in the president's hands. will he or won't he make it go public as memo mania sweeps washington hang on, everybody. good morning, i'm bill hemmer live inside of "america's newsroom" and great to be back with you today. >> bill: minneapolis a very cold, too, you knew that, right? >> sandra: subzero temps there. the house intelligence committee voted to release the democratic memo that defends the federal investigation into a trump campaign associate. but yesterday president trump called out demoatin

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