tv Fox and Friends Saturday FOX News February 10, 2018 3:00am-7:00am PST
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♪ >> president trump will not declassify that democratic memo on the russia investigation by the house intel panel. >> the republican memo lays out a series of factual conclusions the democratic memo largely deals with analysis and editorial opinions. >> "new york times" reporting national spy tricks out of 100 grand last year. >> one thing to go out getting money potentially getting information on a sworn inform the united states. another thing to go out and spend $100,000 trying to get north korea offer wilinformation commander-in-chief. >> we will begin immediate construction of a border wall. >> another top justice department official is
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stepping down associate attorney general brand is doj. >> mike pence watched the opening ceremonies a few seats from the north korean leader kim jong un. that comes shortly after pence delivered a tough new warning for the hermit kingdom. >> south korea, all of our allies across the region are fully prepared. >> military option? >> well, to defend our nation and to take what action is necessary to defend our homeland. ♪ ♪ ♪ you make me want to roll my window down and cruise ♪ down a back road. pete: good morning, it's saturday, february 10th. it is 6:00 a.m. it is "fox & friends weekend." and, you know, brian always says get up and get dressed. i say the opposite. i say stay in bed, pull the covers up and join us. rachel: best way to watch "fox & friends" maybe get a
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cup of coffee. griff: that's why i'm so excited to be sitting with you guys. we have the week in washington with the amount of news and get to sit with you guys and get to talk about it we have a lot to cover. if you are waking up, pay attention, there is a lot to get to. start with my colleague in washington if we don't mind, ellison barber, get us caught up. >> good morning, griff. a lot of people on capitol hill were expecting the white house to redact aspects of the democrat's memo. the memo they were releasing in response to that controversial republican memo. but they still expected the president to release it after all the bipartisan house intel committee unanimously voted to make it public. but it seems at least for now that is not going to happen. in a statement, white house counsel don mcgahn said in part, quote: although the president is inclined to declassify the february 5th memorandum. because the memorandum contains numerous properly classified and especially sensitive passages, he is
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unable to do so at this time. the democratic memo was drafted as a rebuttal to the one written by the chair of the house intelligence committee republican devin nunes. the nunes memo accused top brass at the fbi and department of justice of misuniteunitedmismiss using sure powers. declassified that memo despite the fbi publicly saying they had, quote, grave concerns about material omissions of facts that fundamentally impacted the memo's accuracy. adam schiff says his memo shows that the fbi and doj acted properly when they sought a fisa warrant on former trump campaign advisor carter page. in a shipment schiff writes quote after promising to treat the democratic response in precisely the same way, the white house now seeks to have the democratic memo sent back to committee and revised by the same majority that produced the flawed nunes document to begin with. pete, rachel, griff? pete: ellison, thank you
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very much. looking back at this week, griff, you reported on it from washington all week long, the republican memo released unredacted. some of our intelligence services saying they didn't want it released because of omissions not because of what was in it but what wasn't in it democrats saying here is our memoranda longer convoluted memo. they are saying there is stuff in here we can't show to the public. that's what the president ultimately said. go back and redact the things that shouldn't be in there and then we can release it to the public. rachel: democrats are saying that the president making this decision proves there is a coverup on the president has something to hide. and so here's what nancy pelosi has to say about that i'm sorry, it's a quote. the president's decision to block the democrat memo from release is part of a dangerous and dispirit pattern to cover up on the part of the president. clearly the president has something to hide. and trey gowdy saying no, this is actually a
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pre-planned plot by the democrats. pete: this from tuesday of this week he predicted this might be exactly what the democrats wanted. listen to trey gowdy. >> the democrats are politically smart enough to put things in the memo that require either the bureau or the department of justice to say it needs to be redacted. therefore it, creates this belief that there's something being hidden from the american people. keep in mind, this is the same crowd that voted not to release our memo and voted not to gain a lot of this information in the last 12 months. but unfortunately we are in an environment where you would include material that you know has to he redanted and you know responsible people are going to redact it just so that question won't be asked. griff: it's important to note too this week that the president huddled with don mcgahn and his la but also department of justice official chris wray to look at this memo to find out was it indeed as trey gowdy said a trap and had things that
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couldn't be released? we now know that the president says we can't release it. it looks very much like this was the plan all along and that the white house saw it coming a mile away and brought in as many hands as they could to include the fbi and doj and say back me up, guys, this can't be released. pete: to me the key on the pateling memos are sources and methods. remember when the democrats said you can't release the republican memo release sources critical to our intelligence-gathering. they released it and there were no sources and no methods at all. devin nunes who was part of that releasing that first memo said this upon release of the democratic memo. listen to what devin nunes says. i warned that the democratic memo contains many sources and methods, ranking membership pledged to seek the input of the department of justice and fbi regarding the memo's public release. and it's no surprise that those agencies recommended against publishing the memo without redaction. so, the hypocrisy here is not the republicans. it's the democrats who said don't release your memo.
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it has sources and methods. then they released an entire memo full of sources and methods knowing that it would have to be redacted so that they can make the republicans look like they are hiding something to muddy the waters. for democrats, this is not about the truth. this is about trump. and about making him look bad like he is obstructing or hiding information when in actuality he wants to put it out. rachel: people on both sides of the aisle in congress who have seen this memo. they say, listen, what is in that memo, besides the sources and methods that you're talking about, none of it refutes what the republican memo says about the allegations that the fisa application was in some way misleading. pete: it provides context, right? rachel: exactly. pete: provide context. you know it was not used judiciously to obtain those
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warrants. griff: your favorite "new york times" let me show you this everything you need particularly if you like john gray novels. u.s. spies paid russian peddling trump secret. now, here's the deal. the u.s. spies pay $100,000 to some shady russians who offer both the stolen nsa cyber tools they want to retreat and trump come kompromat. you are given the picture that the u.s. was there to recover these spy tools and had no interest, if you will, in more dirt on president trump. important to note, this is sitting president trump, not what we saw in the past, which was candidate trump. rachel: aim correct that in the report in the "new york times" that these shadowy russians actually never delivered the cyber weapons supposed to be delivering. only delivered these
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unverified and like we video about trump? pete: grainy cell phone video supposedly showing in 2013, then citizen trump with russian prostitutes no. audio or evidence that that is him at all. i labeled the "new york times" the failing but slightly informative year new title. take a look at the title yourself. you raise an important point, griff. this is when he was president trump. this was september of 2017. listen our do a lot of great work, work with shady people to get information important to us. the nsa was hacked. we lost cyber tools. i have no doubt we recovered those. you have to work with shady folks to get that information back. if they are peddling information on your commander-in-chief that's going to make him look back, they better distance themselves a mile away from that information while they are doing that. they say they did. but, you know what unfortunately, there has been so muchs in information and what you see from strzok and page and others, you
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hope, you pray, that there aren't people inside those institutions still trying to get anything they can to make our president look bad. griff: that's a point this article leaves you wondering why are our spies still interested in dirt on the president. rachel: that's the question. by the way this russian dirt was going to cost $10 million. they got a discount. it wept down to $1 million. pete: they were onto the fact this guy might not have what they said he was going to have. rachel: turn to your headlines right now a police officer gunned down while helping deputies serve an arrest warrant. chase maddox a nearly five year veteran on thes force shot home. called for back jump after a man resisted arrest. the gunman killed on the scene. sheriff deputy mike coagulate corely and ralph call low way are both recovering from gunshot wounds. one is out of the hospital the other in stable condition. maddox leaves behind a young
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child and his wife who is due with their second child any day. oh my goodness. what a tragedy. second white house official resigning after being accused of domestic violence. speech writer david sorensen's ex-wife claims he was physically and emotional live abusive during their two and a half year marriage. sorensen denies the accusations. white house official says he was confronted as soon as they were made aware. comes two days after staff secretary rob porter stepping down following abuse allegations from two exwives. porter also denying the claims. another trump administration official is leaving the justice department after nine months on the job. the doj saying that rachel brand is stepping down as associate attorney general to take a job with walmart as executive vice president. brand was next in line to take over supervision of robert mueller's special counsel investigation if deputy attorney general rod roach stein quits or is fired.
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the 2018 winter olympics beginning with a dazzling display of swirling lights and tightly core greater weight of the evidence performances in the opening ceremony in pyeongchang. nearly 3,000 athletes from 92 countries all gathering to compete for gold. vice president pence and second lady karen welcoming team u.s.a. take a look. >> to gangnam style. nice. president trump and president trump and kim jong un impersonators making it to the olympics. both were short-lived. both kicked out of stadium after posing for selfies. pete: go u.s.a. what to add to that almost nothing. griff: next up for congress a deal on daca. possibly gain citizenship, what did those angel parents think? jamel shaw's son was killed
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by illegal immigrant. he joins us next. pete: next guest says president trump was threat to press. one so says this president is giving more access than obama ever did. ♪ ♪ it's time for the 'ultimate sleep number event' on the only bed that adjusts on both sides to your ideal comfort, your sleep number setting.
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♪ ♪ flesh. rachel: fresh off passing a budget deal, daca is now on the americans with disabilities act this week at the u.s. capital with congress set to debate new immigration laws. what do the angel parents think of this upcoming deal. jamil shaw jr. lost his 17-year-old son jazz in 2008 when he was murdered on his way home from a football game. illegal immigrant was the man convicted of the crime. jamil shaw, thank you for
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joining us today. >> hi, thank you for inviting me. rachel: good morning. 10 years later you say you still can't believe that this happened. what did happen? >> yeah, first of all i want to make sure that i want people to know that i'm annot affiliated with the angel parents. that's not my organization. yeah. ask the question again, i'm sorry. rachel: that's okay. i wanted you to really briefly tell us what happened with your son so we can get the viewers up to date. >> yeah. basically, he was shot to death by illegal alien that was brought over by no fault of his own. he was brought over at 3 years old, so he would have qualified for the dreamer daca debacle. my son was just walking down the street coming home from the mall on a sunday. we went to football training program. he asked me to go to the mall. i reluctantly yesterday said ok, just be home by 7:00. 7:00 came. he said i'm on the bus, dad.
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be there in a minute. 10 minutes i called where are you at around the corner. i heard two gunshots. i couldn't believe it. heard two shots and there he was laying in the street dead. rachel: you know the details of the daca program it is citizenship for 1.8 million illegal daca recipients, dreamers. and in exchange for an end to chain migration and the lottery system. what do you think of that deal from the white house? >> you know, i don't like the daca part. i don't like the amnesty part. i don't believe we owe them anything, you know. they seem to believe just because they were brought over that that makes them a child of god, you know. the guy that murdered my son was prout over 3 years old. he didn't stay 3 years old. last assault with a deadly weapon, battery on a police officer. give him 8 months in the county jail and let him out
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four months early. the same day he got out he was back to murdering. just because you were brought over and then they say, you know, the sins of the father on the kids. what about the mom and dad? they are bringing the kids over illegal. they are illegal. nobody gets in trouble and our family members are dead and they claim we are racist. rachel: what do you want to see in this bill? >> well, you know, i want to see hard core enforcement. i want to see people getting deported. i want to see the gangs, raids on the gangs. i want to see all the gangs and all the criminals. i want them to go in the county jail to get the people. since they don't want to help out, you know, we got going in there and do it ourself. we have to be hard core enforcement. i'm sure they have got to make some wheeling and dealing, you know. i personally don't like the amnesties but you, you know, i'm sure that you know, some things have to be done, i want the gangs, i want the
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18 street, ms-13, c 14, ceranos. the place is full of them. low hanging fruit and get the criminals. see what happen later. we have got to do that first because the democrats are going to trick us, find an activist judge and just tear it all down. rachel: one quick last question. you told me once in the green room that your friend said that president trump would forget about you after the elections, forget about your son. is that true? has that happened? >> no, i think he is doing a good job. is he doing big time forcement. he is going for the gangs. trying to build the wall. if people would help out and give him a chance he could do more. i'm happy what he is doing, you know. i wish he wouldn't give them the amnesty. i wish he would make them earn it one by one. they get vetted one by one. not just blanket amnesty just because you were brought over. i don't like that part. i'm willing to take a little medicine just to get what i
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want. rachel: thank you, jamil, you have been a tireless advocate for your son and you you have been honoring his memory for 10 years now advocating on behalf of other people who have had their children lost in similar situations. so you are a hero to many people. thank you for joining us this morning. >> and march the 2nd will be 10 years he has been dead 10 years march the 2nd. rachel: our hearts still break for you. thank you for joining us this morning. >> thank you. thank you for inviting me. rachel: you got it. still ahead, corey lewandowski, dan bongino, tom fitton and anthony scaramucci, all here live. plus, critics are blasting the president for wanting a parade to celebrate our military. but our next guest served in the air force and says it's a great way to show appreciation for the troops. talk about that next ♪ ♪
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rachel: some quick headlines, kim jong un second ago rare invitation to south korea's president asking for a meeting in the north. the world leader's sister delivering the message to over lunch in seoul. although the president hasn't officially accepted the offer, he encouraged north officials to engage in dialogue with the united states. this as vice president pence will soon leave the olympic in pyeongchang for the u.s. new overnight, several people injured in a crash involving canadian prime minister justin trudeau's motorcade. a driver pulling out in front of the motorcade colliding with the trooper's motorcycle near los angeles. the trooper, the other driver, and her son were taken to the hospital with minor injuries. the car carrying trudeau was
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not involved. pete: we take it from here. i'm glad justin from canada is okay. president trump inspired by france's bastille day parade says he would like a celebration for our own military right in our nation's capital. griff: critics seem to hate the idea. take a look. >> we sometimes have military parades to mark the end of wars. in this case it's apparently just because the president wants to see all the tanks and stuff. he just likes it. >> we're getting more north korean every day in this country. >> this is probably more about his ego than anything else. who is the rocket man now? it's just beneath us as a country it? >> would look like a bunch of great americans who were probably feeling a bit embarrassed that they were required to do this. marching down pennsylvania avenue. griff: our next guest says it's a great way to show appreciation for troops. joining us for veterans assisting veterans john
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mcdonald. he served in the air force in desert storm. he is also running for state senate in boston. john, good morning. >> good morning. how are you guys? griff: what do you think about a parade? >> well, i think it's a fantastic idea. you know, and that's exactly what it is. it's amazing how many people pile on when the president suggests almost anything. you know, a parade and showing our patriotism and military pride i think is a great thing. i'm a veteran of operation desert storm when i came home we were paraded all over the country and nobody complained then. this is an opportunity, in my opinion, for at least to take a look at who we actually will recognize and who we will appreciate and i think a good start would be our vietnam veterans and welcoming them home is an opportunity. because they never had the parades, and to show our patriotism and our pride is a good thing. i don't know where and what time in this country when we
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have people in this country that don't think that patriotism is a good thing. that they don't think that the united states is a great place. and i disagree with that. >> john, you and i have stood in formation, sometimes being in formation in parades not all thatch fun. it does have a uniting purpose to it. why do the left and some of the media automatically go to well, if he wants a parade for our military he has got to be autocrat turning into north korea. why is that the reflex. >> it's because it's the president. and in this political climate the objective is to win and win at all costs even if that means that you are tearing down one of the greatest institutions this country has ever seen. if. so people criticizing the president. some of the progressive democrats out there criticizing the president actually looked at the benefits of the military and looked at it -- they want to divide us based on race or social income. if they looked at the
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military for what it is, which is probably one of the greatest racial union fires in the history of the world, where you come in whether you are black, you're white, whether you are rich or poor, and your drill instructor looks at you and you know, pete, you are all equally worthless in their eyes until you become either a marine, an airman, you become a sailor or soldier. we work together. everybody from all different background, and you come out and the only thing that you are pleading is red or red, white, and blue. if they looked at that as a benefit as a place that weekend start and unify people, but the problem is most of the people serving in congress right now, think haven't served in the military, and less than 1% of the population are on active duty and only 1% of the population in the united states has actually served the military. i think we need to start looking at the military as a very positive thing. you know what? griff: that's a great point. got to jump in. by the way i point out chuck schumer in 2014 called for
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parade. a lot of -- thanks for joining us today, man. >> thank you have a great day. pete: proud to be equally worthless with you. coming up, another disgusting display from a college professor. this time one professor sending president trump a death wish. a student familiar with that professor is going to join us ahead. griff: plus, more memo madness this morning as president trump delays the release of the democrats' memo. our panel of radio talk show host is here to sound off next. ♪ ♪
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with built-in amazon alexa. a $339.98 value. >> i think at this point just get it out. just get it all out. even if it has sources and methods. the democrats felt comfortable putting it all out there. they can take responsibility for any of the downside that goes along with it. pete: you're aware of the duling memos in washington, d.c. the democrats are confident about fisa memo countering claims of fbi surveillance abuse. but, president trump not ready to release it yet to the public. asking democrats to revise their document because of national security concerns. here to sound off on all of this is our radio talk show host panel rick ungar, cathy barnett and andrew willcall all join us here. rick, i will start with you. the democrats howled but sources and methods in the republican memo there were no revelations in that then
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they jam-packed their own memo with sources and methods and wonder why they want -- the white house or our intelligence offices may want some things redacted. >> here is the problem that i see. i think the president made a mistake. he should have redacted something in the original nunes memo so he could say see, i was concerned about national security as the fbi and the justice department were. but he didn't. now, when he has problems with what's in the democrats' memo, first of all, if i were him, i would have had my national security team do some redactions. but by sending it back, the pro-trumpers are going to go i understand it's national security. the anti-trumpers are going to say you just don't want us to see it, but it's the people in the middle. and they're going to have a problem with this. pete: you are talking politics and optics. you are saying redact. >> that's what this is about. pete: that is not what this should be about though. >> democrats got exactly weigh that wanted. they wanted continuation of this campaign of disinformation. muddying the water. that's the reason why they have a rebuttal what do you
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need a rebuttal for? just present the facts. because americans are not as dumb as most politicians seem to think that we are. we have some real issues here. i believe that we're in the midst of a possible constitutional crisis. i don't know if democrats have heard of this thing called the fourth amendment. but we have a right to be secure. in our persons, in our home and our papers. and against unreasonable unsear. everything you have seen so far. there is a tremendous amount of wrongdoing from the democrats against our democracy. pete: andrew, both sides alleging him is i in these memos. who is right? >> as long as there is no sources and methods, right? that's been the whole thing. now all of a sudden the democrats are the friends of the badge, right? all of a sudden they are the pro-law enforcement. the law and order crowd. and then the republicans hate the cops. that's ridiculous. i think the hypocrisy is more, rick, no offense, on
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the democrats' side. >> why would you say that? >> you don't redact something for the sake of redacaing americans with disabilities acting. if there something that the law enforcement and intelligence community says look, this is going to be harmful to national security. no, is there evidence that donald trump or any of his associates were wiretapped outside the boundaries like she said of the fourth amendment, that's what needs to be made public. >> can i respond to the first amendment thing real quickly. here's the reality i agree with you both on the fourth amendment. but you have to tell me why this very same congressional committee reapproved how fisa operates not four weeks ago. they had the chance to make -- >> -- and rand paul was out front of that. you are right. pete: there is changes that could and should be made. >> tools. pete: if used properly very important tool. are democrats truly after the truth or are they after trump? >> you know, you would probably have to ask each democrat. >> they are after trump.
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>> i am after the truth. my problem is that if you are going to release -- look, you and i both know this democratic memo, it's gonna get out. it's gonna get leaked. pete: the president said he would release it. >> no he, didn't. he said he was going to extend back. >> illegal leaking. >> republicans didn't leak theirs? we all knew what was in the nunes memo. [talking at the same time] pete: counting on leak something a back handed way to hope for an argument. >> what if the democrats take it to the floor and read it into the congressional record? that's another option. >> by all of their wrongdoings they are shady enough to do that. pete: we have got to leave it there the debate will continue. the three of are you be back in the show as well. rachel? rachel: that was a nice spirited debate. turning now to your headlines, illegal immigrant found guilty of murdering two deputies vowing he is not done. >> kill more cops.
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rachel: show nothing remorse while a california judge reads out guilty verdicts. he has been deported multiple times. even caught taunting the victims' families sitting in the front row. his behavior similar to previous outbursts in the court. rachel: next month arguments will be made on whether or not he will receive the death penalty. the nationwide deadly flu outbreak could be the worst on record. the virus killing 63 children. 10 of them dying last week alone. according to a new grim cdc report. flu and pneumonia causing one of every 10 deaths last week according to the agency's acting director adding that number is sadly likely to rise. an unlikely source praising president trump for his transparency to the media. a "new york times" photographer telling c-span
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the white house is more media friendly than when president obama sat in the oval office. >> we're getting a lot more, i mean from a photographer's standpoint we get more access to the president. i see him more on a daily basis than we did barack obama. rachel: veteran photographer's remarks comes as the president is constantly slammed for not giving access to the media. and those are your headlines. ll beaten is n bean is no longeg back your grand father's jacket. why they are changing their policy. worst week in the markets in two years. next guest says there is no reason to panic. what does this all mean for your wallet coming up next? ♪ you and me baby ♪ head games ♪ i can't take it anymore ♪ head games ♪ i don't want to play those
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pete: we are back with extreme weather deadly storm moving northeast after slamming the midwest. the storm killing at least two people. icy roads and snow causing dozens of crashes, nearly 50 vehicles including multiple semis all involved in this chain reaction crash on i-94 in michigan. don't want to be behind that nearly 200 flights already cancelled today as well. chief meteorologist rick reichmuth is tracking all of this for us but more importantly, rick, it is national umbrella day. you launched weather man umbrella which we should check out. >> thank you; it's a big week. so, the cold air is in place where we had that snow. the snow that you were just seeing right there, it's been this really narrow band of snow. cutting right here across parts of illinois in towards michigan. that's been the bulls eye of it. some spots have seen around maybe seeing 9 to 11 inches
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or. so we will see another inch, maybe two throughout the weekend with this band. it's been looking the same for about the last couple of days. you see not really that thick. what we see you said moving towards the northeast. it's rain, not show. loot of moisture coming here across parts of the south. might see some flooding around the houston area this morning. all of this moisture pulling in up across parts of the eastern seaboard. all this moisture here across the southeast. by this afternoon, moving in towards the northeast as well, it will be heavy at times. places like d.c. and baltimore could see up to around 3 inches of rain. we will see some areas in the mountains. maybe 3 to 5 inches of rain. that means a chance for little bit of localized flooding. rachel. >> umbrellas. rick: you need umbrellas at this point. without a doubt. griff: wall street capping a day of wild swings late rally that sent the dow jones industrial average 330 points higher even with the rebound, this was the worst week for the markets in about 2 years. rachel: that's not stopping the boon in the overall economy with jobless claims
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under president trump dropping to 45-year low. so what do we make of all of this? joining us with reaction david bonson is the founder of the bonson group and author of upcoming book called crisis of responsibility. welcome to the show. so we have had a wild week in the stock market. >> tryinged this wild week in wall street because the wage growth was so good in the month of january. it sort of accelerated fears about undesirable inflation coming super than people wanted. so interest rates spiked higher. and then it just kind of caused sort of chain reaction of things. at some point this week it became irrational. nothing was making any sense. it just -- we were overdue for a correction. and then now this correction got overdone. and so, to me, i think that you can't really put a lot into the way this particular week went. it been a very long time
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since we had seen that kind of price movement. things sort of resettled. the fundamentals are very, very good. pete: david, that's why it happened. so what should investors going into this week do? >> well, investors versus traders, very likely shouldn't be doing anything. you can't try to trade, either panic selling or panicked buying. in the midst of that kind of chaos. it was technically broken. the market wasn't functioning the way it normally would. so investors need to stay calm. they need to understand, we have had 60, 60 little panic movements since the financial crisis. and each time things sort of reset. sometimes two days later. like in brexit. we dropped 1,000 points after brexit. we were up a thousand points a week later. i think you have to kind of let those things play out. hopefully stick to a good longer term plan. rachel: we are seeing some new polling coming out from you quinnipiac saying that voters are increasingly beginning to credit president trump with the economy. we saw earlier on a lot of liberals say no, the good news it's obama's economy.
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now voters are saying it's trump economy. what do you think of that? >> so first and foremost every president always gets too much credit when things are going well and too much blame when they are going poorly. i will be as nonpartisan as i can there. the fact of the matter is, this isn't up for debate there is a deregulatory environment going on in corporate america that is highly stimulative to business. ceo confidence, their willingness to put into business investment is something i haven't seen in a decade. the reason is clearly they don't feel they are going to run into unnecessary head winds. we call it personnel is policy. he has a personnel in his cabinet basically supportive of overall growth. i don't think they felt with a that i in the prior administration u it's a big deal. griff: 30%, that's how much the stock markets have been up since president trump took over. david bahnsen, thank you very much. great new book "crisis of responsibility." it's fascinating to tell us
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a little bit our culture. thanks for being here. >> thanks for having me. >> can't stop talking about olympics. president trump says he went stand for it literally. rachel: another disgusting display. this sending president a death wish. a student familiar with that professor joins us next next. sfx: muffled whistle text alert. i'm your phone, stuck down here between your seat and your console, playing a little hide-n-seek. cold... warmer... warmer... ah boiling. jackpot. and if you've got cut-rate car insurance, you could be picking up these charges yourself. so get allstate, where agents help keep you protected from mayhem... ...like me. mayhem is everywhere. are you in good hands?
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♪ ♪ pete: welcome back, a northeastern university professor under fire after he wished president trump dead. in a now deleted youtube video barry blue stone chicks professor was heard saying this sometimes i just want to see him impeached. other times, quite honestly, i hope there are no fbi agents here, i wouldn't mind seeing him dead. he said that in front of a room full of students. here to react is northeastern university senior and campus reform.org correspondent audrey kinnerdine. audrey, thanks for being here this morning. when you heard about this statement, what was your reaction and did it surprise you? >> so, let's just
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acknowledge this for what it is. here we see a respected professor advocate for violence against our president in a public forum while is he representing my university. this is outrageous. and i was very disappointed when i heard this but honestly, i wasn't surprised at all because i see this rhetoric on a daily basis with my other professors. this is just an escalation of that. i have had professors call trump a racist, a white supremacist. i even had a professor this semester say that the land of the free and the home of the brave is a microaggression. so i'm really not surprised at all this didn't happen. pete: you didn't get those on tape. >> this one was. they this to delete it. we asked the professor about it. he did apologize telling fox news. this take a look at what he said. he meant to say i would like to see the president disappear from the white house. this president has created such deep divisions in our country. we also have a statement from the university which i would like to play for you
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as well. they say professor bluestone comments do not reflect the views of northeastern university. while faculty members are free to express controversial opinions the university cannot provide a public platform for comments that could be con stewed to condone violence. they say they do not reflect the views of northeastern university. yet, setting aside out death threat. you are saying these are exactly the view of the majority of professors at that university. >> yeah. northeastern is really big on having diversity inclusion. but their definition of diversity inclusion does not include conservative views. that has been very clear to me in my four years at northeastern. it's real unfortunate the consensus of hostility towards president trump that i see in my classes but honestly, this is not just at northeastern. campus reform.org reports on this all the time that on all college campuses there is this liberal bias that professors are using their authority and their power to advocate for their liberal
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point of view. and really just not allowing any other views to take place in the classroom. i often feel like i can't speak out because i'm afraid that it's going to hurt my grades. pete: we had charlie kirk on of turning point u.s.a. say the same thing. a lot of conservatives feel like they have to change their view if they want to get the right grade. you are more attune to the political bils of professors. your average student going to northeastern or campus today, are they just going to bend to what the liberal orthodoxy is for fear? are they indoctrinated slowly? do they change from freshman to seniors? is that what have you seen? >> yeah, it's really unfortunate that a lot of people are just like they start out with conservative principles and they are kind of just drug into it. like it's just every professor you can see that they have such liberal bias. and it's really unfortunate. most of the classrooms that i'm in is one against 40, including my professor. so, not only do i have to have the confidence to speak up in class and to
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participate, but i also have to have good articulate points i can argue for these principles because a lot of students aren't exposed to that while they are in college. pete: good practice for the real world. aubrey ken derine. pete: we move on. still ahead, corey lewandowski, dan bhut dan bongid anthony consumer coming up on our program. you don't want to miss any of those. can google use your phone to spy on you, even if it's turned off? exclusive fox news investigation is uncovering the startling truth about your privacy and mine. ♪ mvo: you're not doing work to help somebody, you're gaining something from meeting mr. adderley. it's a calling to not only everybody in this neighborhood in miami, but to the nation how great we are.
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common side effects: dizziness, sleepiness, weight gain, swelling of hands, legs, and feet. don't drink alcohol while taking lyrica. don't drive or use machinery until you know how lyrica affects you. those who have had a drug or alcohol problem may be more likely to misuse lyrica. now i have less diabetic nerve pain. ask your doctor about lyrica. >> plump not declassify that memo by the intel panel. >> because the memorandum contains numerous improperly classified and especially sensitive passages he is unable to do so. >> the "new york times" reporting that a shadowy russian tricked spies actually out of 100 grand last yeenchts one thing to go out and spend money potentially getting information on a sworn enemy of the united states. another to go out and spend $100,000 trying to get information on the commander-in-chief. >> a year later, core korea is n
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trump's crosshairs. >> w >> rachel brand is the number three person at doj. >> winning 2018 winter olympics winning with the dazzling display opening ceremonies in pyeongchang. vice president pence and first lady karen welcoming team u.s.a. ♪ baby, why don't you just meet me in the middle ♪ pete: my microphone wasn't open. i will say it again. look who is in the middle with us, rachel campos duffy, griff jenkins made the trip from d.c. glad you survived the amtrak. griff: thank you. i'm always so glad to join you guys. enjoy that cup of coffee in
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bed. cover the news the story in d.c. the dueling memos. we have dossiers and memos and this and that if you're like us it's a little confusing. we will break it down to you. last week devin nunes the four page memorandum laying out how the fisa process was abused by intelligence agencies in the previous administration. democrats howled saying it's going to reveal sources and methods. of course it didn't do that then they said we have our own memo provide co context. some said it lacked context by omission. democrats say we viewer own memo. the white house gets to choose whether to declassify or not. white house yesterday saying they want to release the memo, but, some important retractions need to be made for reasons of national security. this is the president's lawyer don mcgahn. although the president is inclined to declassify the february 5th memorandum, which is the democrat memorandum, because the memo
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contains numerous classified and especially sensitive passages is unable to do so at this time. so it goes to the doj. it goes back to the committee. make the proper redactions and then they are willing to release it. rachel: no surprise, democrats are reacting in unison. it looks like they may even have the same talking points. look at this. >> these are quotes on our big old wall. rachel: pelosi dangerous and desperate. schumer says president's double standard is appalling. griff: that's very fascinating because here you have the leaders of the democratic party in unison with this immediate attack. it almost appears to many outside viewers that this was the plan all along earlier this week on tuesday, chairman of the oversight and government reform committee trey gowdy sits down with martha maccallum and says this is a great interview. >> this is a trap. listen to gowdy. >> the democrats are particularly smart enough to put things in the memo that
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require either the bureau or the department of justice to say it needs to be redacted. therefore, it creates this belief that there is something being hidden from the american people. and keep in mind, this is the same crowd that voted not to release our memo and voted not to gain a lot of this information in the last 12 months. but unfortunately we are in an environment where you would include material that you know has to be redacted and you know responsible people are going to redact it just so that question won't be asked. pete: part of the reason trey gowdy is leaving congress because is he 60 d.c. game. that's exactly what is he calling out. we knew democrats would do that. push out a bunch of information that reveals sources and methods so that responsible people will redact them. it will make the republicans look like they are hiding something. the other talking point the democrats are using is this is obstruction of justice. it's all part of the conflation they want with the whole russian collusion thing. this president obstructs and hides. he's not transparent. they accuse the president of hypocrisy. they are the true hypocrites.
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because they said the republicans would release sources and methods. republicans did not. then they did that very same thing. for democrats, this is not about the truth. this is about trump. and yet again we see that with the attempt to release the memo. griff: just to put a fine point on it we will find out perhaps on tuesday whether or not the committee decides to redact and send back. at the end of the day, when it finally comes out. we will find out whether or not this democratic memo contradicts the republican memo. e. pete: rachel, had you auto point about that. rachel: my husband did see the democrat memo and he saw the republican as well. based upon the reporting that is out there already from those who are seen it they say, listen, there is nothing in the democrat memo that actually refutes what the republicans said in their memo about the abuses of the fisa application. we got to move on. there is another -- oh, you had something to say. pete: i got what you where to say. i'm holding um my failing "new york times." slightly informative this
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morning. there is a story that caught our eye. u.s. spies paid russian -- paid a russian peddling trump secrets. so, this is a story about the cia. i encourage you to read it in short, what happened -- this is september of 2017, so just four or five months ago, not candidate trump, then president trump, the cia and others were approached with the possibility that they had russians two things. one, dirty information about president trump two cyber weapons stolen from the u.s.a. a problem. who paid for what and why. and were cia agents or others paying to get information about trump or were they legitimately paying to try get back some cyber weapons and then the russians were also peddling trump? that's the key question. >> as you read this and as a reporter, you know i'm very fascinated by it. it travels to these towns like novels are. rachel: a spy novel. >> by were the interested in
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continuing to pay money, originally 10 million. only ended up getting 100,000 for secrets on president trump? there was at no point in this reporting anything delivered in terms of these cyber tools stolen by the nsa. what they were given were simply things called conpromat grainy no sound 15 second video of a man two prostitutes hotel room in moscow no way corroborates the claims made by the russians that it's dirt on trump. rachel: the "new york times" says that the cia didn't really want the trump dirt. they only wanted the cyber stuff. in the end they got just this dirty trump stuff. which is shady stuff. grainy video. you really can't see anything. by the way the original cost of this information was $10 million by the time the deal was made. brought the price down to a million dollars. you have to wonder, what is the cia doing trying to get
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dirt on a sitting president? deep state stuff. pete: i hope it's true that they were looking to get this nsa cyber weapons back. rachel: i do, too, actually. pete: russians sweetening it by saying we got stuff on trump. most of our professionals out there would do that you just have seen so much through other processes politicization of those systems. you wonder were they prepared to take it just in case there was something there? we don't know. this is a story we will definitely be following even more. rachel: thank you to the "new york times" for giving us this story. pete: not totally failing every morning. griff: one more story to get to. winter olympics going on. apparently north korea is completely winning it. look at the headlines from the media on north korea. the "new york times" olympics open with korea ans marching together offering hope for peace. cnn, north korea is winning the olympics and it's not because of sports. a.p., winter olympics open with a dazzling spectacle and signs of korean unity. seriously, like they may
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should four stars on north korea. we forget that this is the rogue nation that has absolutelied that i clear they want to annihilate the united states and may have nuclear missile capabilities to threaten us u. pete: they starve their own people and throw them in jail and execute anyone who shows any semblance of freedom whatsoever. mike pence, our president has played this exactly like you wants an american leader to go. not shaking hands with the sister and standing for so-called anthem. going under one banner. do you know what north korea wants? they want a united korean peninsula under their rule, under a nuclear shield. let's not mince words. the media is say what they want from kum ba yah. this is offensive. we can either fall into it or not. rachel: the real victims in this sending a really powerful statement to the -- he had the parents of otto
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warmbier and other dissidents as well. kudos to him for highlighting that. sat down during their national anthem. why would you ever want a u.s. representative standing for that? rachel: absolutely. pete: north korea so so clear cut i don't feel they should share you have the field with our athletes. hasten. rachel: i'm not a huge fan. i don't find the olympics that interesting. what's going on between north and south korea and the united stated whole diplomacy angle is far more interesting to me than the games. go ahead, tweet me. tell me how bad i am. i'm a bad person. pete: you are right. trump is not keeping their eye off the ball because of some olympic rings which i think is important. rachel: we have to turn to some headlines right now. so let's do that a police officer gunned down while helping deputies serve a warrant. five year veteran on the force shot inside a georgia
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home. deputies calling maddox for backup after man resisted arrest. the gunman killed on the scene. sheriff deputies michael corely and michael calloway are both recovering from gunshot wounds. one is out of hospital. the other in stable condition. maddox leaves behind a young child and his wife who is due with their second child any day. terrible news. a second white house official resigning after being accuse you had of domestic violence. speech writer david soren senne's ex-wife says he was physically and emotionally abusive do yo during their two d a half year message. he denies the accusations. this comes two days after staff secretary rob porter stepped down following abuse allegations. president trump weighing in on porter's departure. >> obviously, tough time for him. he did a good job in the white house. we absolutely wish him well. >> porter also denying those allegations. for the first time in five years, fewer americans are
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giving up their citizenship. according to the irs, just over 5100 people gave away their citizenship this year. that's compared to 5400 in 2016. a direct link for the crime is unknown. however, the drop began to build around president trump's tax cuts. and those are your headlines. pete: do you become a citizen of another country? rachel: yeah. do you remember all the celebrities that said if president trump is elected i'm going to become a canadian. pete: i thought it was move to canada. bye-bye to you 5100. not missing you. pete: maybe america is a better place to live now. pete: there you go. griff: memo madness. corey lewandowski is here to weigh in. he has a lot to say about it. pete: bette midler slammed for tweeting where's rand paul's neighbor when you need him during the
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to grow your business with us in new york state visit esd.ny.gov. griff: president trump not ready to release the memo. the white house asking the white house to revise it citing national security concerns. pete: joining us are reaction chief strategist for america first action and co-author of let frump be trump corey lewandowski. corey, thanks for being here this morning. your reaction to the white house decision to send it back to doj and the committee saying, hey, if it's got sources and methods or if it is classified it needs to be redacted. how do you make of the democrats' response to that? >> well, i think what have
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you seen here is another partisan issue, which is the democrats specifically put information in this memo that they knew the white house could not sign off on, because of national security reasons. and what i think this white house has said and what i have said is that more transparency is better. and what the white house is asking the democrats to do is to go back and remove the information from the memorandum that would allow the white house to release all of the information. but, look, this is a partisan issue now. this is about politics. this is not about what is best for the american people. adam schiff and others in the democratic party want to put the white house in a position of knowing the information that's in the memo that they sent over cannot be released for national security reasons. look, if they wanted to, the house could declassify the memo on their own under article house rule 10, but they know the house knows and the white house knows that the information that the democrats have included is strictly partisan and is classified and cannot be released. that's why they have done this. griff: corey, let me ask you this, the president met with
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the fbi director, lawyers at the department of justice, to huddle and review this before determining that it couldn't be released because of what democrats put in there. and as you mentioned, it seems this was the plan all along. do you believe this was an effort by democrats to take away the fact that this is the most transparent white house we have had in a long time? >> of course it's an effort to do that. look, they want to do anything -- the democrats want to do anything they can to disparage this white house, to make it a political issue here. and what we saw with the republican memo is -- there was no information in there that couldn't be released. so the white house declassified it and said sure, feel free to put it out. then we saw the memo and what it showed is that according to information that we now are fairly sure is serious is that the fisa application, as it related to carter page was composed, at least in part, by the false dolls yea that the clinton campaign paid for and the democrats don't want to talk about this. that's the biggest issue that we have to face right now is that the dossier that
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was paid for by the clinton campaign was used in an application to spy on a u.s. citizen on u.s. soil. that should be gravely concerning. the democrats' memo that they have classified information in does not want to get out then specifically what they want to do is make sure that if the white house does put it out, they have to redact so much of it that they will call it partisan politics. rachel: corey, we have to ask you about rob porter his firing after these allegations of domestic abuse. there was talk that john kelly was reported to have put in his resignation if the president wanted to accept it. is the media overplaying the reports about his potential resignation? also, a comment on the response from the president yesterday, which did not mention the women in the abuse and domestic violence in general. >> yeah, look, i think the media is overplaying the hype of john kelly, the media's demise. i don't think john kelly is going anywhere. i do think it's fair to say that the white house could have handled this situation better. we also now see that a
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second staff has left the white house under very similar circumstances of being accused of domestic abuse. clearly, nobody should be working in our government that is involved in that type of issue. domestic abuse. the women should obviously always be understood, listened to, and heard and those accusations should be taken very credibly. there was a breakdown in the system somewhere. i don't know where it was. but clearly these women, who have accused rob porter of doing this have told rob porter about it and these accusations should have been taken seriously. rachel: especially with photographic evidence. >> it should not rely on photographic evidence. a source that is credible that has come forward on multiple occasions said this happened to them should be taken very credibly. those accusations should be investigated to the fullest extent of the law. a person who cannot get security clearance should not be working in the white house. pete: corey lewandowski, thank you for your time. we appreciate it this morning. >> thank you. pete: all right. well, can google.
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go for it rachel. it says your name. rachel: it says my name but -- can google use your phone to spy on you, even if it's turned off. you take the next part. pete: fox news exclusive investigation. we're going to bring it to you ♪ one way or another got this cod #stuffynose #nosleep #mouthbreather just put on a breathe right strip it instantly opens your nose... up to 38% more than cold medicine alone go to breatheright.com today to request a free sample. on the only bed that adjusts on both sides to your ideal comfort, your sleep number setting. does your bed do that? right now, our queen c2 mattress is only $699, save $200. ends soon. visit sleepnumber.com for a store near you.
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griff: welcome back. quick head lines for you. unspecified gender option for drivers license applications. if the bill passes into law, citizens would be able to use an x instead of identifying as either male or female. maryland could join california, washington state and the nation's capital regarding transgender licenses. and your drivers license could be soon replaced by an app. on your phone with the help of federal funding cyber security companies test ago two-year pilot
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program. the app. shows your license just as it looks on your plastic version but has settings that allow to you limit what's shown. app. designers say it showed a layers of security like a fingerprint. critics worry it could lead to identity theft. pete: we shall see. can google use your phone to by on you, even if it's turned off? rachel: exclusive fox news investigation discovered the truth about your privacy. griff: bret larson joins us now to explain, bret. good morning. >> yes, the terrifying information about google tracking you and they are tracking your every move. what exactly do they know? we took a tour of d.c. with two android phones. one of them in airplane mode and both not connected to wi-fi to find out what kind of data google collects. take a look at what we found. >> our first stop sims convenience store just outside our fox bureau for a quick coffee. from there we took a walk to the capital and took a quick walk around the senate office buildings and then
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decided to hop in a car and head around town. >> hello. >> to run our test, we had to do more than walk the block. so we took a tour around our nation's capital. first, due north to the children's national medical center hospital and then west to saint al ban's school and the national cathedral. our tour around town was a 14-mile journey that lasted more than an hour. the entire time the phones had no access to the internet. >> oh my goodness. >> not a wi-fi connection and not any cellular data service. it almost seemed quaint to assume that google wouldn't even be able to collect data on me. google's business model is simple. collect data on its users and then use that data to sell targeted ads. it's a business model called surveillance capitalism. does that critical data collection work even when your phones aren't connected? so we're back here at our fox bureau in d.c. and we have got both of our phones, exactly how we left with them. the only difference, really, i snapped a couple of bad selfies at the national
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cathedral. but otherwise, they have stayed in my pocket for the entire day. so let's find out what they know. this is our man in the middle device, it's basically a wi-fi network that these phones are going to connect to once we turn their wi-fi on. we are actually going to get a copy of the same data that google is going to get. we will be able to decrypt it and find out where we have been throughout the day. within minutes the numbers rolled. in the phone that wasn't on airplane mode registered more than 100 locations, 130 activities and even 152 barometric readings. as soon as it hooked up to our wi-fi, it transmitted 300 kill bites of data straight to google. the phone even logged our exact locations. tracking us all around town, the capital, the hospital, the school, and the cathedral. you may notice what's missing here is the exact route that we took. but it got that data, too. it knows when i got out of the car. the metadata has a time log down to the very second tracking everything. when they think that you are walking, riding, and, yes,
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even getting out of the car. okay. so you are thinking this isn't a big deal. i will just putt my phone in airplane mode. we thought of that too. this is the other phone we had with us that no sim card also remained in airplane mode the entire time. let's see what kind of data it captured. the phone with airplane mode activated logged more location activities than the other phone. also transferred hundreds of kill by thes of data to google as soon as it was activated. only thing missing stop at children's hospital. it still knows we are there. there it is. exiting vehicle. 100 percent accuracy. >> through complicated user agreements and software google gets sign away privacy for nothing. even following knew places where most people would expect total privacy. government buildings, a children's hospital, a private school, a church. every move you make, every step you take, google is watching you. now, in a statement to fox news, google told users who want to opt out of tracking that they should turn off
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their location history, which is not actually an easy thing to do. it's a complicated process. griff: that's stunning. >> we all come out of this like oh my gosh. rachel: we are all freaked out. griff: one on airplane mode also had no sim card yet was still tracking. >> they both had the sim card h no connection to data service. what's interesting is they are able to collect so much data about us because our smart phones actually have a lot of devices inside them. they have g.p.s. they have a bare met particular pressure sensor. they have all of this thing to allow it to collect data points and all time stamped because the clock inside of our phone. it's pretty easy to do that. when you put it into airplane mode, you are not actually turning anything off. you are shutting off the wi-fi and you are shutting off what would be the cellular modem. there is still blew tooth sensors. rachel: this is scare. what can people do? >> sign out of this stuff. turn off the tracking. it's easy, relatively easy to do. rachel: through your settings. >> the downside to that of
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course, is you are not going to get these active maps. you are not going to see on your commute today it might be slow. other thing nothing says that you have to use your actual email address. create a different google account per se. pete: because you are using google maps or is google getting. this this is google's business model. this is how they make money. give you services for free because they get to learn something about you. you are not a customer to google you are a product. the more information they have about you they get to turn around to advisor advertiss and say look how much information we have. you want to sell ads? griff: you probably have questions. we will try to get them to bret. it's fascinating. certainly intrigued us and i bet our viewers written treeged too. griff: thanks, griff. remember this chilling message to cops in court? wait until you hear his latest outburst after hearing the verdict.
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dan bongino former nypd officer has a message for that killer and is he next. drive griff plus l.l.bean is no longer taking back your grand father's jacket. why they are changing their lifetime return policy just ahead. pete: because it doesn't make sense. lifetime? drive griff it's l.l. bean. ♪ dream on ♪
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>> the president has been consistent in the investigation only in his obstructive behavior. i trust the department. i don't trust the president. so i would like it hear from the doj on tuesday before our committee and i am going to leave it to our ranking member who has led us, i think, very, very well through this investigation to make those calls. pete: trust the department, not the president. here to react dan bongino former nypd officer, former secret service agent and host of the dan bongino show which can you find on anywhere where podcasts are available. dan, thank you for joining us this morning. so your reaction to how democrats are reacting to the white house decision to say, hey, let's make sure we are not releasing anything to compromise national security in this memo. >> pete, the democrats have forfeited all credibility on this case. they haven't told the truth from day one. pete, here's what even more tragically amusing about the democrats. they step -- they lie so much they step on their own
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story. they told us before the release of the nunes republican memo oh my gosh sources and methods, it's going to jeopardize national security. nobody should see this. cover it up. sweep it under the rug. then the memo came out oh this is a big nothing burger. this is a total dud. nothing to see here, folks. mo along. they have not told the truth from day one on this. they have forfeited all their credibility. this is important. they are covering up what i believe to be the biggest scandal in modern political history. that is the bying on of the trump team by the obama administration with no evidence to do so. griff: go ahead. rachel: one other thing i love that you call it obama gate it goes all the way there and he has sort of gotten a little bit of a pass on that. my question is about the underlying facts of the memo -- the original republican memo. those who have seen it say that -- or those who have seen the democrat memo say
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that memo does not undercut what was said about the fisa agreement or the proof for the fisa agreement that it hasn't undercut that so when this all comes out, and we expect that it will come out. aren't they going to just have to eat their words? aren't they going to have to backtrack on all of this? >> yeah. rachel, you make a great point. listen, the democrats could put out all the memos you want. put out memos on the weather. great. i don't care what you put out memos on. the bottom line is the democrat memo does not undercut the essence of this scandal. and let's uncomplicate this for everybody watching. the obama team spied on the trump team. the information used was presented through a dossier. the information in the dossier came from the russians and it came from the clinton campaign. what does that mean? what it means is, the clinton campaign hijacked the justice system. the justifiable system was basically bought off by the
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highest political bidder and that was clinton campaign to gather information from their own con signature larry to get in the hands of the fbi to use as an excuse to spy on the trump team. nothing in the democrat memo is going to change that one more point on in this is important too. the democrats can't run from this. there are court transcripts of people in court with their right hand up saying i swear to this. they cannot run from this. there is no plausible didn't for the democrat. griff: dan i got to quickly ask you about every time i'm talking to you it seems like i have to ask you about something immigration. being cheered after killing two california deputies and threatens to kill more. take a listen to this. >i find the defendant guilty. >> kill more cops, too. griff: what do you make of that? >> i have to be candid with
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you. i'm tired of this debate. i know a lot of americans are, too. this is not complicated. you have to be a knuckle head to not understand, this okay? listen, if you're in the country illegally, you should not be here. i get it a good swath of people who come here illegally may not commit additional crimes later. fine. but some do. and some of the ones who do kill california deputies. they are now -- this is families that are missing. they are gone. there is a big vacuum at the kitchen table right now because this man beast decided to kill two deputies and should have never been in the country in the first place. this is not complicated to figure out. you want to come here, there's an open door. it's called the legal process. my wife did it. is it complicated? yes. is it ugly at times? absolutely. but there is a way to do it. you don't get to jump in the window because some of the people who jump in that window go on to do devastating, horrible things like this savage did, killing those two deputies. it's a darn shame we have to
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have this conversation over and over again. really, i'm tired of it. and you should be, too. griff: thank you, dan. that's why i ask you. we keep having this conversation but you put it very, very clearly what people need to be paying attention to. dan bongino, thank you very much. racism raach thanks, dan. >> thanks, guys. rachel: arizona fire captain is laid to rest as the emotional 911 calls are released from the night of his deadly shooting. >> firefighters kyle, shot in the head. took a gun out and shot him in the head. >> all i heard was a big bang and then the car [bleep] and took off like hell. rachel: kyle was killed while out with friends in scottsdale. the gunman said he felt threatened when prayer walked towards the car. prayer's friends say he pulled the gun for no reason. killing him days before his
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35th birthday. minneapolis woman indicted on terror charges after trying to join al qaeda twice over seas. 19-year-old got as far as dubai when authorities stopped her from boarding a flight to ethiopia last year. her family reporting her missing days before setting a series of fires at a catholic university. she is also accused of lying to fbi agents about recuting classmates. she expected back in court on monday. actress bette midler sparking more online outrage after dismsdin defending tweet g fun rand paul getting attacked by neighbor. writing where is rand paul's neighbor when we need him? but instead of apologizing, she is blaming everyone else tweeting, quote: selective outrage committee so worked up about a joke. how about some outrage to help solve opioid crises, mass shootings, and puerto rico?
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social media users slamming midler saying regardless of political views, encouraging violence is always a bad joke. and those are your headlines. pete: all right. we're moving on. griff: i don't know what to say about bette midler. rachel: a little past our generation. pete: yesterday. l.l. bean famous unlimited return policy has been around for centuries. times are incorporate chicago. why they are giving the legendary rule the boot next. griff: pulling all nighter not to study for exams. they are kids battling cancer. how the veecket is hitting close to home. pete: is that live? wow. ♪ ♪
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♪ pete: welcome back. we learn on this program, i do at least. every single day. i don't know that ll bean has a return policy. can you return any item you bought at any time. griff: lifetime. pete: lifetime return policy they guarantee their quality at l.l. bean a family company of 106 years. this policy has been in place for 100 years. it turns out some people might be abusing that return policy. the executive chairman of l.l. bean had this to say about why they're changing their policy. instead of lifetime return to one year. it said some view our guarantee as a lifetime product replacement program, expecting refunds for heavily worn products used over many years. rachel: what we are seeing some people are finding their dad's old l.l. bean jacket and trying to return it or finding something at a garage sale that's l.l. bean and trying to return it and abusing the system. that's lying and they are ruining it for everybody else. sure. griff: for all of us that grew up with the famous bean
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booths. those leather top brown. in wisconsin a lot of people wearing them. they got better with time. like a fine wine. why would you take them back to begin with? rachel: get money. pete: one lady returned 17-year-old ski jacket because she burned a hole with her cigarette. when you go to cheat the system you hurt it for everybody else. now they don't have a lifetime replacement. now they have one year. email us friends@foxnews.com. who is right here l.l. bean to put constraints on the return or is the customer here. griff: the intention of the policy. it says on the clothing quality guaranteed, right? not a government -- pete: i don't understand. like i have wornl this for 20 years and now i'm going to go return it. what a sham. rachel: it is a sham and it's lying. pete: that's right. good point. as congress gets ready to deal with daca, a dreamer is now speaking out against the democrats. saying they don't have his back and he supports trump.
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he joins us next hour. rachel: plus, college students staying up until dawn, not to party wit but to fund raise the kids battling cancer. i love it one of those students live in nashville to tell us how the event is hitting close to home next. pete: kind of looks like a party. they don't know they are on camera yet. wait for it. griff: hands up, guys. somebody tell them. pete: they are not watching us right now ♪ ♪ switching to allstate is worth it. (announcer) purchase $699 or moret tat helzberg diamonds and get a free megablast waterproof speaker with built-in amazon alexa. a $339.98 value.
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transportation costs. the huge decrease coming after president trump accused the postal service of charging too little to deliver packages for amazon. do you think? and the online giant is also rolling out a new service called shipping with amazon. employees would pick up packages from businesses and deliver them to customers. the service expected to start in los angeles in the coming weeks before rolling out nationwide fully consult out the postal service for -- griff, over to you. griff: thanks, pete. college students staying up until dawn not to party but to raise money and awareness for saint jude children's research hospital. and for one of those students, the event hits close to home. rachel: belmont university senior joe martinez sister was diagnosed with leukemia in 2016. he has made it his mission to help in the fight to end childhood cancer. griff: joe joins us now
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executive director of belmont's up until dawn siewnt student organization. good morning, joe. first, we want to find out about lily, your sister. tell us who she is and about her being diagnosed. >> good morning. so lily is my 4-year-old baby-sitter. and as you said, she has acute lymphoblastic leukemia. rachel: how is she doing? >> she is doing great. she is in remission. unfortunately, the treatment protocol for her type of cancer is around 2 and a half years. so there is still some times where she has rough days and has some rough treatments but she is doing better and on the upswing. we are all very excited for that. rachel: we are happy to hear that she is a beautiful, beautiful little girl. so you guys have been up all night. you guys are going to reveal what have you raised. so let's get the big reveal here. how much did you do by staying up all night? how much did you raise? >> awesome. so the way that we will do this reveal actually is i will countdown and belmont
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students here with me will raise boards to reveal our fundraising total because it's been a secret for all of us throughout this night. rachel: all right. let's do it. >> awesome. you guys belmont students, you ready? [cheers] >> 3, 2, 1. [cheers and applause] rachel: wow. $146,000. pete: joe, that is fantastic. i love it, you guys up all night. raising nearly $150,000 way to go. pat yourselves on the back. and, you know, joe, i just -- i don't even know if you can hear us you are partying so loud there i wish i was there right now actually. rachel: your parents will all be proud of you. look at that joe, can you hear us? you can't even hear us.
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fantastic. while we wait for that excitement to calm down. rachel, i will make a point for joe is very, very important. they are just raising this money. joe, way to go. congratulations, everybody. i wanted to quickly give you a moment to sound off on the importance of supporting organizations to make sure that no kid dies from cancer again. rachel: that's right. if you are an organization or school can you also follow this example. this is a wonderful way to raise money and get together and party with your friends for a good cause. griff: joe is, everybody feeling pretty proud of what they have done there. >> everyone seems very excited. [laughter] griff: good job and partying for a good cause raising nearly $150,000. we will give you one last time, kids, take it away. show us some support partying to end childhood cancer. let's see it. >> come on, guys, show us
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your support. [cheers and applause] drive griff joe lamar la. griff: it certainly couldn't be more of an important cause and kudos to them at belmont university, nearly 150,000. rachel: awesome. griff: still to come geraldo rivera and anthony scaramucci both here live. that is power television. ♪ new dawn ♪ it's a new day ♪ it's a new life ♪ it's a new dawn 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. all, for a smoother tasting cup of coffee.
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begin your journey at ancestry.com a trip back to the dthe doctor's office, mean just for a shot. but why go back there, when you can stay home, with neulasta onpro? strong chemo can put you at risk of serious infection, which could lead to hospitalizations. in a key study, neulasta reduced the risk of infection from 17% to 1%, a 94% decrease. applied the day of chemo, neulasta onpro is designed to deliver neulasta the next day, so you can stay home. neulasta is for certain cancer patients receiving strong chemotherapy. do not take neulasta if you're allergic to neulasta or neupogen (filgrastim). ruptured spleen, sometimes fatal as well as serious lung problems, allergic reactions, kidney injuries, and capillary leak syndrome have occurred. report abdominal or shoulder tip pain, trouble breathing or allergic reactions to your doctor right away. in patients with sickle cell disorders, serious, sometimes fatal crises can occur. the most common side effect is bone and muscle ache. so why go back there? if you'd rather be home,
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russian tricked americans out of 100 grand last year? one thing spenting money getting information on a sworn enemy of united states. it's another going out and spending $100,000 trying to get information on the commander-in-chief. >> talk that john kelly was reported to have put in his resignation. >> yeah. i think the media is overplaying the hype of john kelly's immediate demise. i don't think john kelly is going anywhere. >> winter 2018 olympics beginning with dazzling display from the opening ceremony in pyeongchang. vice president pence and second lady karen welcoming team u.s.a. ♪ oh, oh ♪ what are you waiting for. pete: good morning, everybody. third hour on "fox & friends" saturday morning. first hour for you though. third for us, first for you. bring it to you like the
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first one. rachel: do you have hot chocolate? pete: i do. "fox & friends first." i have literally never had hot chocolate. rachel: needs marshmallows. pete: i saw it in the green room. griff: straight from the swamp in d.c. drink up. pete: i love it. rachel: i serve hot chocolate. i put marshmallows in it i think it's fitting that pete would drink hot chocolate. pete: do coffee every morning. try hot chocolate. it's really really good. also national umbrella day today in case you didn't know. our own rick reichmuth has a company called weather man umbrella. if you haven't checked it out, you should. we will check it out later in the program. holiday evente inventinged justr him. griff: we have news. in d.c. bringing you the story of the dulinonthe dueling. appears they sent it with a
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bit of a trap because they put a lot of things in there and the president, after meeting with the director of the fbi and with other lawyers, his white house lawyers and department of justice lawyers, they determined that there were national security concern information in there. and so president trump is not releasing that memo. sending it back to that house intelligence committee saying redact some of this stuff. send it back to me. and then i will release it. pete: the white house lawyer don mcgahn said this why they are sending it back. although the president is inclined to declassify the february 5th, memorandum, which is the democratic memorandum, because that memo contains numerous properly classified and especially sensitive passages, he is unable to do so at this time. the key word that they're using is it's not going to be released yet. it's their intent to release it just like the republican memo that was released a week ago by devin nunes. four pages long. the president wants this out there. they said we want to be transparent. we don't want to violate national security while doing so. predictably, rachel,
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democrats going apoplectic. rachel: those of you have not sure what the democrat memo is the democrat memo says that the facts in their memo prove that the fbi acted appropriately when they sought that fisa warrant on carter page. just to make that clear. but, yes, the democrats responding in unison. we have nancy pelosi saying dangerous and desperate. adam schiff says extraordinarily reckless. schumer, president's double standard is appalling. but trey gowdy says this has been a setup that the democrats, included information that they knew would be redacted. so that it looks like the president is covering something up. take a look at what trey gowdy said. >> the democrats are politically smart enough to put things in the memo that require either the bureau or the department of justice to say it needs to be redacted. therefore, it creates this belief something hidden from the american people.
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keep in mind, this the same crowd that voted not to release our memo and voted not to gain a lot of information in the last 12 months. unfortunately we are in an environment where you would include material that you know has to be redacted and you know responsible people are going to redact it. just so that question won't be asked. pete: that was a great interview on tuesday on martha maccallum's program. but he saw it coming from a mile away. he saw it coming on tuesday almost initially they said if they are trying to muddy the waters, the president at any time redact any of the republican memo because there was no revelation of sources and methods. even though the democrats howled you're going to release sources and methods. then the memo came out as dan bongino pointed out, it's a nothing burger. now the democrat memo, 10 pages long, full of footnotes, apparently revealing tons of sources and methods. which means if you are being responsible with national security, you are going to redact it we had dan bongino on the program who know as little bit about intelligence and national security and keeping secrets secret. this is what he had to say about the democrats' approach to all of this. >> they have not told the
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truth from day one on this. they have forfeited all their credibility and this is important. they are covering up what i believe to be the biggest scandal in modern political history. and that is the spying on of the trump team by the obama administration with no evidence to do so. and the democrats can put out all the memos you want. put out memos on the weather. great. i don't care what you put out memos on. the bottom line is the democrat memo does not undercut the essence of this scandal. griff: that's a really key point. this memo now, congress is out on monday. on tuesday when this memo goes back to the house intelligence committee, maybe we will get to see it the but the point dan is making and the point you were making earlier, rachel that is that the key pressroom mills of the republican memo is under this democrat. you guys all right? [laughter] the key of the republican memo is not refusing the democrat memo. if it does come out. it could end up being embarrassment for the
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democrats that are so outraged in the -- rachel: maybe in the end they are hoping that the memo never gets out at all. it's either fully redacted or never gets out and then they can say hey, look. pete: the president knows it needs to be released it should be released. sunshine has been their best solution so far transparency. there has never been collusion. the one the democrats also using on this all the same time is obstruction. this is the president obstructing, remember, collusion was their talking point for a year. now they have pivoted to obstruction. that's what they're trying to do with democratic memo. we will see it but see it with national security implications removed from it another thing that has some national security implications is a story we found in this morning's failing "new york times" both the online and print edition. in the print edition, i think the title is even more succinctly put. u.s. spies paid a russian who is peddling trump secrets. so, u.s. spies presumably from the cia or other agencies. working through an
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intermediary to get to a russian, someone who is purported to have russian contact who is peddling two things. one, some cyber weapons that we wanted back. because our nsa was hacked seriously over the last couple of years with critical information that we need back. so our intelligence agents trying to get this back. this russian agent was peddling something else, information about now president trump from salacious grainy videos and different information they said they h the question is were they really going after the cyber weapons, our cia or seduced by information about president trump? again, this happened september of 2017 he has been the commander-in-chief for 8 or 9 months. talking to russians about secrets potentially about trump. >> to answer that question, from the article, we read the reporting which reads like the spy novel. pete: suitcases full of cash. griff griff to answer your question they paid $100,000 for the trump and nothing on the cyber tools.
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rachel: originally pay $10 million and went down to a million dollars. ended up paying only $100 million. the point is that there was nothing there. they never got anything on the cyber warfare weapon that they wanted to recover. and they ended up getting very unverified and likely fabricated dirty stories on donald trump. it sounds like another dossier. and what the heck sour cia doing going after this kind of material on a sitting president? pete: we really want to home they were going after the cyber weapons and the reconciliations tried to sweeten it with something on the president. it shouldn't be a rejection. it's not our job to commander-in-chief. our job is to get the information back to the n is a. hope that's the right story. you have to be skeptical and look at these things in a critical eye in light of what we have seen other intelligence agencies. people inside. call it the deep state and call it bhaw want who don't like this president and been
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willing to pedal information. rachel: we saw adam schiff and senator mark warmer. both of those people key figures in the senate and house intelligence committee reaching touted people they thought were connections to russians who could give them more information on donald trump. pete: if only it was about the truth. about trump and not the truth. griff: why offer those two things? was it because we have made a pattern of showing our interest for dirt on trump? pete: where can i get a cyber weapon? what does that look like? rachel: i have to turn to headlines while you look for your cyber weapon. a second white house official resigning after being accused of domestic violence. speech writer david sorenson's ex-wife claims she was abused by him during their two and a half year marriage. soorenson denies the accusation. this comes two days after staff secretary rob porter stepped down following abuse allegations. president trump weighing in on porter's departure.
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>> obviously tough time for him. he did a good job when the white house. we absolutely wish him well. rachel: porter also denying those allegations. a federal judge expected to make a decision next week on whether or not the trump administration can wave environmental laws to build the border wall. san diego judge criticized by president trump on the campaign trail is now presiding over the case. trump previously suggested the judge may be biased due to hispanic heritage. he also presided over a lawsuit against trump university that was settled for $25 million. the 2018 winter olympics beginning with a dazzling display of swirling lights and tightly choreographed performances for the opening ceremony in pong jiang. nearly 3,000 athletes gathering to compete for the gold. vice president pence and second lady karen welcoming team u.s.a.
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♪ ♪ they did that gangnam style. president trump and kim jong un impersonators also there. they were kicked out of stadium after posing for selfies. those are good impersonators. i'm kind of impressed. pete: improved version of kim jong un. rachel: i think the president looks better than the one there. pete: yes. griff: you love the olympics? rachel: i hate the olympics. but i have been so pleasantly surprised by how many people since i announced that on the show have been tweeting back that they also hate the olympics. pete: i hate the olympics, quote of the day. all right. we're going to keep going. as congress gets ready to deal with so-called daca. a dreamer is now speaking out against democrats. saying they don't have his back and he supports trump. he joins us just ahead. griff: plus is, james comey being protected by his
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friends at the fbi? judicial watch is trying to figure that out. tom fitton live on that next ♪ i'l ♪ [burke] vengeful vermin. seen it. covered it. we know a thing or two because we've seen a thing or two. ♪ we are farmers. bum-pa-dum, bum-bum-bum-bum ♪ (announcer) purchase $699 or moret tat helzberg diamonds and get a free megablast waterproof speaker with built-in amazon alexa. a $339.98 value. your heart doesn't only belong ♪to you. bye grandpa. and if you have heart failure, entrusting your heart to entresto may help. entresto is a heart failure medicine that helps improve your heart's ability
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♪ ♪ pete: welcome back. new bombshells in the investigation of that anti-trump dossier and its ties to hillary clinton. pete: former obama state department official reportedly confirming that british spy christopher steele worked with allies of hillary clinton to convince the state department that trump was compromised by the russians. rachel: here to break it down for all of us is the president of judicial watch tom fitton. welcome. >> thank you, guys. rachel: tell us about these additional ties that the clintons have to the russians. >> well, you know, the
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democratic dossier is the self-licking ice cream cone. [laughter] >> turns out key state department official under barack obama who met with chris steele who told them about the dossier and what was in it, and he did his own little dossier. so now this is, i think, dossier number four. he summed up the steele dossier in his own document. he shared it with another person at the state department who then supposedly shared it with the secretary of state john kerry. so now you have got the state department not only working with christopher steele, but also sidney blumenthal, who is also gathering information through cody shearer another clinton operative also sharing it with the state department. turns out the state department official shared the steele information from w. blumenthal and cody shearer information as well and it turns out, excuse me, he shared the steele information -- he shared the blumenthal information with steele who then supposedly sent it over to the fbi as
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well. again, all of this is being -- coming from the staple types of sources, blumenthal and steele, being used to target trump. you know, my view is that not only has trump been vindicated in the last several weeks about the mishandling of the dossier and the lies about the clinton dnc dossier, it shows that he has been victimized. he has been victimized by the obama administration, who were using all sorts of agencies, not just the fbi and justice department, now the state department, to dig up dirt on him in the days leading up to the election. pete: tom, let me ask you. this folks on the left will say this wasn't a conspiracy. folks in ernest trying to find out whether an american was compromised by a foreign government. where do you draw that distinction between legitimate inquiry, maybe at the beginning, if it ever was, and a witch-hunt to find dirt on a candidate? >> look, a senior department state official doesn't meet with someone like sidney
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blumenthal just to find information out about russia. remember, blumenthal, clinton foundation connected, sending dossiers almost every day to hillary clinton while she was secretary of state. these are not actors operating in good faith on behalf of the american people. these were paid, political operatives who were using their access to their friends in the various obama agencies who wanted to hear from them. i can't get -- i couldn't get a meeting, i guarantee you with information about hillary clinton or donald trump with anyone even in today's state department. sidney blumenthal who is radioactive across the washington, d.c. is getting access. pete: great summary. paid political operatives with access to people and power. griff: tom, you brought so much of this through your legal actions. now you are actually suing for something else and that is you are looking at whether or not james comey, former fbi director james comey's friends are still protecting him.
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what is that about? >> he has a big book deal, $2 million. and typically fbi directors and other senior officials like him have to submit man you scripts and before hand and other documents to their agencies for prepublication review. and we ask for those records and we got back we don't have any records which we don't believe. we pushed back, they ignored us and we sued in court. the same fbi let comey walk away with these alleged memos about his conversations with donald trump, which i really don't believe were accurate. but they let him walk away nevertheless, turns out some of those documents were classified. they didn't mind when he leaked some of the information to the "new york times" through a friend in a corrupt effort -- successful effort to get independent counsel appointed or special counsel appointed. so we suspect that the fbi is giving him a pass, frankly on the reviews required to make sure there is no classified information and other things in this book he is coming out with in the next few months. >> so when we we expect to
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see information from this lawsuit? how long? >> let's hope the fbi, actually, starts following the freedom of information act law which it's violating in refusing to turn over the documents respond to us now. maybe director wray can now figure out what it is his fbi has been up to with respect to james comey and why comey has gotten a pass for walking out of the agency with documents. evidently he now wants to use to write a book about. pete: tom fitton judicial watch. thanks. >> you are welcome. pete: presiden pete: pete one photographer says this president is giving more access than obama ever did. rachel: as congress gets ready to deal with daca. a dreamer is now speaking out against democrats saying they don't have his back and he supports trump. he joinks us next. ♪ mom's got this cold
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uh huh, sure. still yes! xfinity delivers gig speed to more homes than anyone. now you can get it, too. welcome to the party. ♪ ♪ griff: welcome back. quick headlines there is a new commander in town. president trump naming vice admiral as the new pacific fleet commander. the senate will vote on his nomination next week. the promotion coming after two pacific fleet ships were involved in a separate collision last year killing 17 sailors, causing the navy to fire several leaders. and the national guardsmen flying in to help battle the opioid crisis hitting the city dubbed overdose capital of america. the epidemic crippling huntington, west virginia as the coal industry dwindles causing people to lose their jobs and turn to drugs. the guard men working hotlines, tracking down dealers, while police patrol
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the streets. pete? pete: probably not what they thought they would be doing when they joined the army. immigration debate taking center stage as lawmakers face a march 5th deadline to strike a deal on daca. rachel: while democrats say they are fighting for illegal immigrants' rights one dreamer isn't buying it saying democrats don't have their back and are doing nothing to actually help their situation. yanes is a dreamer brought to the united states from mexico when he was 1 years old. now welcome. >> good morning. how is it going? rachel: good morning. tell us what you like about the president's plan. >> well, let me begin by first thanking donald trump for his leadership, his compassion, and also the courage to take on this issue. at the end of the day, you know, here's a guy who wants to provide a pathway to citizenship for myself and really make a difference in my life. so, for that i'm for that i'm also, i believe, we need to have border security so it doesn't happen again. that's very important.
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and if a wall is necessary to add an extra layer for border patrol to do their job in a safe and responsible manner, then, you know, i think it's necessary to fund it the last couple of points is the diversity lottery, i think it's outdated. i think it's time for people who want to come to the united states to focus -- for us to focus on skills so it contributes to the american economy right away. at the very end, the republicans are in a unique position to really lead on this and really provide immigration reform that's long overdue. pete: what do you make of the way democrats have postured on this. saying they are for dreamers and advocates and tieing to to budget gimmicks and floor speeches. >> look, you know, three points i want to make about that. number one is the democratic leadership, nancy pelosi and chuck schumer really have no clear message, have been, you know, we have been
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confused. at the end of the day they have been using us as pawns. the second point i want to bring in is they never should have shut down the government over daca. we should have never held our american people and our military hostage. there is plenty of time on the table to fix this. march 5th is the deadline. and you can see republicans already willing to do something about it. as we speak. and the last thing, point that i want to say is that look, democrats own all three branches of the government 2008 and 2011. they still still anything. rachel: i read your story, it's very impressive. tell our viewers a little bit about your story so they understand what you are coming from. >> yeah, so pretty much i came in the u.s., you know, when i was a year old. you know, i grew up as a child. at one point i was homeless, you know. i grew up without a father in my life. and also grew up in a rough neighborhood. but, the reason i was
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over -- able to overcome these challenges is because of the conservative values that i grew up with. that's, number one, my faith in god. i believe in jesus christ, my savior. number two is my family. i also believe in value and prosperity, hope and also working hard and standing on your own two feet. look, at the end of the day, you know, when i hear the national anthem, i get goose bumps all over me. i always pledge allegiance to the flag and i would never disrespect it. i would never take a knee. and i would do anything to serve in this country to die for this country. and, you know, all i need is a chance. rachel: wow. pete: powerful story. sounds like it is the american dream. what do you say to the supporter of this president who say would just didn't sign up though for a pathway to citizenship. we didn't sign up for amnesty. he said famously in his state of the union americans are dreamers, too. what do you say to them. >> look, i think at the end of the day you are looking at a president that's all about results and it's all
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about -- at the end of the day, i think he needs to meet democrats in the middle. and he is bringing this pathway to citizenship so that we can actually finally get something done immigration reform. at the end of the day, in terms of legislation, you probably possibly looking at one of the greatest presidents to get things done. i mean, look at the tax cuts, he got that done. now he is trying to do immigration reform. thought next thing is infrastructure. this guy is -- donald trump, president trump is willing to work with democrats but at the end of the day it's democrats that don't want to work with him. rachel: we have seen a lot of the activists on capitol hill who quite frankly aren't making as compelling of a case why we should let them become citizens as you are. why aren't we seeing more dreamers like you who are grateful, anxious to be part of the system and, again, grateful to the american people and president for this? where are they? >> you know, i ask the same question. i know they are out there. there is plenty of conservative dreamers out there that have the similar
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story as i do. i had a chance to go to washington, d.c. and have a meaningful dialogues with people like senator james langford. senator roy blunt. house speaker paul ryan and we sat down and the first thing we connected with was our faith, our conservative values. i think ultimately at the end of the day, conservative dreamers are in a unique position to, you know, create that meaningful dialogue without really attacking folks in the beginning. and i just wish, you know, more conservative value -- dreamers can stand up and, you know, voice their opinion as well. rachel: thank you for joining us, kudos to your mother for raising an amazing kid. hoping to hear more from other dreamers like you. >> thank you so much. rachel: you got it thanks. pete: coming up. another disgusting display from a college professor. one sending the president a death wish. a student at that university responds next. rachel: plus from, accusations and spying onto the president delaying the release of that democratic fisa memo, our panel of
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radio talk show hosts sounding off on all the hot topics of the day. pete: we let him back in ♪ feel that tingle of a cold sore coming on? only abreva can heal it in as little as two and a half days when used at the first sign. abreva starts to work immediately to block the virus and protect healthy cells. abreva acts on it. so you can too.
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enbrel helps relieve joint pain, and helps stop further damage enbrel may lower your ability to fight infections. serious, sometimes fatal events including infections, tuberculosis, lymphoma other cancers, nervous system and blood disorders and allergic reactions have occurred. tell your doctor if you've been someplace where fungal infections are common. or if you're prone to infections, have cuts or sores, have had hepatitis b, have been treated for heart failure or if you have persistent fever, bruising, bleeding or paleness. don't start enbrel if you have an infection like the flu. since enbrel, my mom's back to being my mom. visit enbrel.com... and use the joint damage simulator to see how joint damage could progress. ask about enbrel. enbrel. fda approved for over 18 years. griff: stunning new report from the "new york times" lays out accusations of spying on the president. the headline reading u.s.
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spies seeking to retrieve cyber weapons paid russians peddling trump secrets. here to weigh in is our talk radio all-star panel rick ungar, andrew wilkow and kathleen barnett. guys, what do you make? you have read this story it reads like a james bond novel. rick, i will start with you. what do you think of this. >> it's fascinating. i wish we knew more. i don't like the story. i don't like seeing that we were out doing that. i don't care if it's the president that they are trying to gain bad stuff on from phony people, that was the problem. this was somebody peddling stuff that wasn't for real to get money. so, yes, it's a disturbing story. griff: cathy, the headline, u.s. spies seeking to retrieve cyber weapons paid russians peddling russian trump secrets. also wants to make sure we understand the point they were there to get the weapons. >> you can't make this stuff up. remember last year? we were all joking that if donald trump had used russian salad dressing then
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the democrats were going to be calling for his impeachment. now we have democratic leaders actually engaging with russian oligarchs. >> democratic leaders. >> he is. he is a congressman. we also -- and now just yesterday we find out about the two u.s. spies and $100,000 that they paid. you can't make this stuff up. what's interesting, pardon me, is how comfortable the left seems to be with all of these flagrant fouls that are coming up. democrats are like teflon don nothing wants to stick with them. i many hopeful at some point there will be a thunder russ call for an investigation. there is tremendous amount more information against what the democrats are doing than this whole 14 months of dealing with donald trump. >> teflon don -- griff: what do you make of this. >> got to give kudos to the "new york times" for referring to cody shearer as a democrat operative that's nice to see. sounds like what some of the
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american intelligence services were willing to pass on somehow got legitimized when democrat operatives somehow came into the mix. when they couldn't get a fisa court warrant the first time around, a little bit more seasoning was added to their claims and all of a sudden there was surveillance of trump. griff: rick, here's the deal. it started with $10 million that the russians wanted. now it went down to 1 million. ultimately 100,000 was paid and all they got was this dirt on trump. do you think the russians knew that the appetite for our deep state as it were, the americans to get trump different on trump that they said we're going to offer to him because they can't resist it. >> first of all, i need a copy the tape of this where andrew gave kudos to the "new york times." we may never see that again. look, what it does show and it's worth everybody noting, i don't care what side you are on, what the russians were really interested here, maybe not so much in helping get donald trump elected.
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but in sowing disorder in our elections. that's not good. i don't care if you are a liberal or conservative. that's a bad things. i think that's where the focus has to be. the problem is the president who has had this concern that russian involvement somehow delegitimized his election, which it does not. he was elected president. if he would take a stronger hand in going after this problem. i think that it would do us all a whole lot of good. griff: listen, you talk about the president says he was taking a look at the democrat memo from the house intelligence committee. can't release it because it's got national security concerns. he huddled with the director of the fbi and his lawyer don mcgahn at the white house and said going back to the house. >> why do you care about the fbi and the memo. >> exactly what they wanted. democrats got exactly what they wanted. they are pushing this campaign of disinformation and this allowed them to rush on to -- especially adam schiff who finds every camera there possibly is, to
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come and tell us that there is a constitutional crisis underway. and to tell us that oh, the last thing we want is for donald trump to -- is to start marking out things. but he loaded it with information that revealed sources and methods. griff: andrew, was this a trap all along by democrats? >> the schiff memo? i think he purposefully put stuff in there to say they won't release my memo. take outs the sources and methods. take out the information that's pertinent to national security. and give your claims. give your findings. if you are doing it on purpose so you can run around screaming to the cameras, they won't release my memo, take out the stuff that the intelligence community is saying to take out. >> the intelligence community wanted to do that why is the president -- just fine. fbi and justice department on this one. but when the fbi wanted to huddle with the president on the nunes memo, he completely discounted him. you have to ask that question. >> all adam schiff talked about when the nunes memo was coming out was sources
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and methods. sources and methods. he knew exactly what not to put in there. griff: we have to let it go. it's a hot topic, andrew, cathy, rick, thanks very much for being here. now, we have, rick, rachel, and pete outside for a very, very exciting day. it is national umbrella day and the godfather of umbrella creation rick out there. hey, guys. rick: can you believe it? a day for umbrellas just for you. rachel: did you create the day by yourself? rick: this was before hand i'm just going to take advantage of it. pete: if you saw our program a couple weeks ago. >> november 15th. two and a half months. pete: two and a half years -- two and a half months not two and a half years. rick launched weatherman umbrella.com. like everyone else you have been buying crappy umbrellas for a really long time. >> i was sick of just bad umbrellas. but, also, the other problem is you don't have it with you when you need it. so we made an app. you get alerts on days that you need it. rachel: this what i lo most about this umbrella you get
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alert. rick: don'ter with remember where it is you get a tracking device. rachel: umbrella is in the car. >> it actually works. i took the product you gave me that day. i have had it ever since. it's in my car. i use it when it rains. i haven't used the app. yet. it's a great idea and i will. it's constructed to last. take it throw in the car grab it again. usually there is something poking out the side of other umbrellas, it's broken can't use it after a week or two. mines is as sturdy as it was then. know it's going to work when i need it to. i'm serious. it's quality stuff that you are actually going to use. rachel: look at these cute colors. not your typical umbrella color. that's what i love because it? >> by the way because of national umbrella day free shipping. we now have four sizes. we have added on golf. got a big golf one back there. rachel: do you have kid sizes? >> not yet. pete: valentine's day day coming up could be a sleeper
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gift. rick: not if you are like in the first year. maybe if you have been married for seven or 10 years it's a good gift. pete: honey, it's been a great first year. rachel: this is what you are getting. pete: weather man umbrella.com. rick: national umbrella day. pete: even better ceo. rick: working on it. pete: going to rain. rick: going to to rain a lot. pete: president trump it is a threat to the press. one white house photographer from unlikely location says this president is giving more access than obama ever did. rachel: valentine's day is just four days away. while you are looking for gifts significant other. don't forget about your pets. we have the pur r' fect gifts to give them ♪ you ain't nothing but a hound dog ♪ crying all the time ♪ well, ain't never baby boomers,
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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. left untreated it can lead to liver damage, even liver cancer. the only way to know if you have hep c is to ask your healthcare provider for the simple blood test. if you have hep c, it can be cured. for us, it's time to get tested. it's the only way to know for sure.
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i. pete: we are back with a fox news alert. israel's military launching a large scale attack after one of its fighter jets is shot down by syrian forces. the incident coming hours after israeli helicopter took out iranian drone launched from syria claiming it violated their airspace. both israeli pilots abandoning the f-16 and surviving, thankfully, the jet crash. israel striking a dozen iranian targets in syria in response. both sides now urging each other to avoid any furthest can a legs. we will stay on top of this story as it develops. and a northeastern university professor under fire after he wished president trump dead in a now deleted youtube video berry bluestone was heard saying this: sometimes i want to just see him impeached. other times, quite honestly, and i hope there are no fbi agents in here, i wouldn't mind seeing him dead, a student at that school reacted on our program earlier. >> here we see a respected
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professor advocate for violence against our president in a public forum while is he representing my university. this is outrageous. pete: well-said. in a statement to fox news, bluestone elaborated on his comments claiming, quote: i meant to say i would have liked to see the president disappear from the white house. this president has created such deep divisions in the country. there you have that one. violence on campus. [laughter] griff: so much for suppressing the press. "new york times" photographer says trump gives more access than obama. now, let me just preface this by saying this is a very important story because we have in washington a press group. all of the press joins together, white house correspondence association to try to get access to not only presidents but also lawmakers because the job of the press is to shine a light and be that extra watchful eye. but this is a "new york times," typically not a fan
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of president trump photographer saying access has never been greater. rachel: let's see what he has to say. >> we're getting a lot more, i mean from, a photographer's standpoint, we get a lot more access to the president. i see him more on a daily basis than we did with barack obama. pete: it hasn't just been him. most so-called journalists have said that they have had more access to this president than previous presidents throwing questions out that he is willing to answer open access to aids and others. this has been a very transparent white house. especially when you contrast it with barack obama. griff: and he has been willing, you know, time and time again, he has a dignitary a photo op., and throw a question out there whether it's the release of memos or something else and he very frequently answers. rachel: other thing they say about president trump is he like a dictator. here you see total openness and transparency. also he is are not giving talking points. when he is talking to the press or giving access, he is really being himself.
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we are really getting a true view, not just sort of the government line of what is going on. we are getting real insight into what he is. pete: griff, you talked about journalists being watchdogs i believe you and others do that job well. most are rabidly anti-trump leftist who want to go after him. yet, he gives that access anyway. i mean, it really speaks to the amount of transparency that does exist. even the "new york times," photographers. griff: email us. let us know what you think about this. friends@foxnews.com. we want to know what you think about the access of this white house. is this the most transparent white house that you have seen as far as consuming the news out there. pete: more memo madness this morning as president trump delays the release of the democrats' memo. former white house communications director anthony scaramucci here to weigh in next hour. griff: valentine's day is just four days away. while you are looking for gifts for significant other, don't forget about your pets. we have the purrfect gifts
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to show. i'm going to go nuts for rascal. rachel: did you better with the purrfect than did i on the last one. n't share it with ! right, mom? righttt. safe driving bonus checks. only from allstate. switching to allstate is worth it. ibut it doesn't always come naturally. this i can do, easily. benefiber® healthy shape is a 100% natural prebiotic fiber that's clinically proven to help me feel fuller longer. benefiber® healthy shape. this i can do!
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griff: valentine's day is right around the corner. pete: while you may be busy finding gives for significant other, the next guest says you shouldn't forget about four legged valentine. rachel: joining us now with the purrfect gift options for pets the pet doctor. tell us, we don't have a lot of time so we want to get through these. go through the products. >> first thing people think about valentine's day is treats. chocolate and candy are the number one valentine's day gift every year. remember, chocolate is toxic
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to pets. so you want to get them a treat. these are my dog's favorite. these are vita bone artisan inspired treats. come in irresistible flavors like barbecue chicken. maple bacon and then for animals on grain-free diets, supreme source grain-free treats are great. all of them made in the u.s. and conveniently located at grocery stores. rachel: is this a pet beverage, looks like champagne. >> yes. this is actually pet wine and champagne. it's nonalcoholic because, again. griff: chicken stock. >> alcohol is toxic to pets. made for pets. kind of a silly gift but fun, fun. rachel: these are adorable by the way. how cute is that? >> because, again, jewelry is something that people think about with valentine's day gifts. >> look at this. nothing says i love you like diamonds, right? why not include your pets. can you see this beautiful bling collar we have here.
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can you get your pet some bling collars. these are all from rhinestone dog collars. they are hand made again in the u.s. fashion, it's actually fashion week in new york. i know you guys know so lots of adorable fashions for your pets so tha they are warm and also fashionable on cat or dog. rick: is this made up thing or valentine's day is this a real thing people spending money on this. >> bottom line is our pets give us so much love all year around and asking ask for so little. way to show you appreciate them. rachel: ultimate. >> toys are another great easy gift for pets. hero dog toys holding one of old glory lines. made in the u.s.a. they come in red, white, and blue. rachel: you have to get to this bag, quick. this made me want to get a dog. >> dog toys. they have a really cool program the proceeds of all those dog toys actually support veterans with their hero for warriors donation program. so, again, hero dog toys and
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then awesome dog bags. the dog bags the fashion and the beds are all from glamour mutt which is a posh online store that have these cute bags so you can take your pet everywhere with you. because, of course, they love being with you. pete: where can folks find more. >> more on my website dr. ruth pet vet.com. link to all these pets. rick: all of these pets are adoption from social t's. >> right here in new york. griff griff thank you very much. we have got to go. these dogs have to go out and we have to tease something else. pete: only peed in the green room twice. marching under united banner after the olympics, really a sign of peace or just a distraction by the rogue regime? we ask congressman and air force vet adam kinzinger next hour. rachel: plus geraldo rivera joins us on the couch coming up next. ♪ ♪ more than a feeling ♪ more than a feeling
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>> president trump will not declassify that democratic memo on the russia investigation by the house intel panel. rachel: the democrats responding in unison dangerous and desperate extraordinarily wreckless. >> the bottom line is the democrat memo does not undercut the essence of this scandal. >> the new york times is reporting that they tricked american spies out of a hundred grand last year. >> one thing to go out and spend money potentially getting information on a sworn enemy of the united states is another to go out and spend a hundred thousand dollars trying to get information on the commander-in-chief. >> talk that john kelly was reported to have put in his resignation. >> the media is overplaying the hype of john kelly's immediate demise. i don't think john kelly is going anywhere. >> winning the 2018 winter oh,
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beginning with a dazzling display from the opening ceremony in pyeongchang. vice president pence and second lady karen welcoming team usa. >> ♪ ♪ pete: well look who flew to us from cleveland ohio? none other than geraldo rivera on the couch. geraldo: thank you, here i am. pete: here you are. he is real and he's fantastic. well i'll tell you this thanks for being here and tons of news. we've been talking about these dualing memos. last week republicans released their memo, devon nunes did not retract anything. democrats screamed that it was going to be letting out national security secrets, sources and methods. now the democrats memo has gone to the white house and they're saying there's stuff that will
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compromise sources and methods needs some redaction before it's released. they're saying not yet let's make sure our tracks are covered what do you make of these two competing mep os? geraldo: well nobody when the democratic memo was released despite all the hype it came out rachel: the republican memo. geraldo: i mean the republican memo right and i think the democratic memo i don't care how big it is, it will become regarded no matter what a political document, far better to release it than to keep it back and redactions here or there and fiddling with it. let it get out there. it's not going to change anything. it's not going to change anybody 's mind, and the more you keep it and the more you try to make it secret or the more you try to shave it i think the greater importance you give it, unnecessarily and incorrectly i'd say get it out there, release the dam memo, i'm so sick of this story already they're just running around in sybils. rachel: here is what the democrats are saying now that
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the president says he can't release it. "pelosi says dangerous and desperate. adam schiff says this is extra ordinarily wreckless and schumer is saying president double standard is appalling." so this is their reaction, but they're the ones who put all this information that needed to be redacted inside the memo. it's a trap right? geraldo: i think that this memo was crafted to generate exactly this conversation. this memo was crafted to cause discordant the appearance of a lack of confidence in intelligence and in the historic record. i think get it out. i'm in favor of fresh air, blue skies, let people see it, let people make their own judgment and i think that once they do that we'll move on to the next story. rachel: but then they will say the president is irresponsible for having released it. geraldo: i don't get what that.
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pete: we're talking about fisa applications, the nsa, surveillance of people, people may not know they're under surveillance so people may not die but what if there is stuff in there. geraldo: unless there is a proper name, joe dokes is in the moscow hotel and he's surveiling vladimir puttin. pete: exactly what if that's in there? geraldo: if that's in there okay it's a no-brainer. i submit to you it's not in there. i submit to you that's what in there is adam schiff's extravagant writing, flamboyant charges absolutely nothing that will affect the health and safety of the nation. i think get it out and by holding it back we make such a big deal over a big nothing burger. we know everybody says everybody whether you're right or left or center you say the democrats had to cramp this memo as an
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anticdote to the republican memo we'll show them. we could write a memo too and everybody sees it for what it is a sixth grader could see it my 12 year old could see it for what it is. the more we keep it back, the grander we make it. griff: geraldo you talk about what's in there let's talk about the u.s. article today the headlines u.s. spy seeking to retrieve cyber weapons, justice set it up very quickly you've got u.s. spies paying $100,000, promises by shadowy russians saying we've got stolen nsa cyber tools oh, and a whole bunch of dirt on president trump 's u.s. spies take the bait what did you make of the article geraldo: peter sellers pink panther. spies oh, they've got our nsa tools, they penetrated our deepest cyber secrets. now we'll blackmail them and they try to and they got the sp ies and they're going into the shadowy hotels in berlin and as
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a spy novel meeting here and i'll squeeze my arm three times you'll know it's me, i'll go like this, and it turns out that what they have on it, almost reminded me when barack obama showed video of his birth to prove he was in born in the united states and used the iconic theme from the lion king. this seems to me cartoonish spy versus spy. they purport to have video of president trump and two women in a hotel. turns out it's not president trump but about the two women, what their real gender is or anything. i think that this is a classic case of people having a sense of self-importance, they go speaking around and paid $100,000 to a scam artist. i tell you this if the intention of the russians was to disrupt the american political system with their interference in our election in 2016, they have succeeded far beyond their
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expectations. they have caused endless discussions, debates, and discord here in this country about who knew what, who was spying on whom, and were you a russian spy, and i think that history will come to regard all of this stuff as a great triumph by vladimir puttin and his thugs rachel: geraldo we need to move on to another subject we had a young daca recipient. i want to play what he had to say in the segment just before you came on. >> the democratic leadership, nancy pelosi and chuck schumer really have no clear message, have been, we have been confused i think i found a day they've been using us as pawns. they should have never shutdown the government over daca. we should have never held our american people and our military hostage. there's plenty time on the table to fix this, march 5 is the deadline and you could see
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republicans are willing to do something about it as we speak. rachel: geraldo, his story is very interesting. he came at one year old, raised by a single mom, he is the first person to graduate from college, he has two degrees, he's now working for a fortune 500 consulting company and he says thank you, president trump. this is the best deal we've ever gotten as dreamers and he's really upset at democrats who refuse to say yes on this. geraldo: i think that every word out of his mouth is exactly the way i feel. it is a travesty that the democrats chose to use daca as the scape goat for their budget negotiation. to take this issue and to bring it where it absolutely had no business into the budgetary negotiations was an absolute scam by the democrats. they have used these young people and they've used their melancholy stories for a political end. this kid is more articulate and
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more on point than any democrat i've heard on this issue in recent weeks. daca should standalone. i take the president at his word and i take his offer. i want 1.8 million daca kids to get this path to citizenship and i want the $25 billion trust fund for the wall established relatively immediately. to get the president's wall. rachel: he seems utterly un offended by the wall. in fact he says great have the security on the border because that's how i see it. geraldo: so were schumer and there are many many people who when they have an honest moment say what the hell countries have borders let us have this wall, if the electorate has spoken as they have then elections have consequences let them have the wall but give me these 1.8, stop torturing these young people like this good young man who should be, you know, on a path
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to citizenship, he came here at one year old. come on, everybody knows. pete: geraldo you talk about the election, i think the guys undoubtedly very very impressive , he's a very impressive kid but the people did also speak that they don't want amnesty as powerful as the human interest story might be the law is the law and if you're here illegally that is a crime broken in and of itself. is the president not compromis ing on his own position -- geraldo: yes he is. pete: but his voters will say that's not what we signed up for geraldo: in this world you don't get anything for nothing. compromise hurts. i'm hurting because here i'm conceding that we're going to have a wall that's going to disrupt the historic flow of undocumented immigrants that we've had for generations and centuries. they've come over, they harvest their crop, this back and forth, one-fourth of the united states used to be mexico for goodness sakes to go back historically
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but i'm compromising now. pete: what about chain migration geraldo: you know i say put chain migration and e-verify and all these other issues on the table for a negotiation on comprehensive immigration reform i want something very simple. 1.8 million kids, i'll give you the 25 billion for the wall. do the other stuff, you have the gang of eight, gang of six, gang of 15. rachel: we love to work out this negotiation here, geraldo, but we have to go. griff: you should be the negotiator. rachel: what i do think is clear is that the democrats hate trump more than they want to help dreamers and i'll end on that. turning to your headlines. new oversights, several people injured in a crash involving a canadian prime minister justin trudeau's motorcade. a driver pulling out in front of the motorcade colliding with a trooper's motorcycle near los angeles. the trooper, the other driver and her son were taken to the hospital with minor injuries. the car carrying justin trudeau
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was not involved. the accident happening near the ronald reagan president library where justin trudeau discussed canada relations defending the north american free-trade agreement. a second white house official resigning after being accused of domestic violence. speech writer david sorenson's ex-wife claims he was abusive to him. he denies the accusations and this comes two days after staff secretary rob porter stepped down following abuse allegations president trump weighing in on porter's departure. president trump: obviously tough time for him. he did a very good job when he was in the white house. we absolutely wish him well. rachel: porter also denying those allegations. for the first time in five years , fewer americans are giving up their citizenship. this, according to the irs, just over 5100 people gave away their citizenship last year compared to a record 5400 in 2016.
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a direct link for the decline is unknown. and those are your headlines. pete: thank you rachel. all right, well north and south korea marching under a united banner at the oles. is it really a sign of peace or just a distraction. congressman adam kinzinger is here to discuss next. griff: plus students and parents fighting back after one school district bans prayers before sporting events. they're selling these prayer matters t-shirts to basketball players and the father who print ed those shirts are here. that's coming up. >> ♪ ♪
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a formal invitation through john boehner and setting up the first meeting of the korean leader since 2007 but is north korea using the international spotlight of the olympics to distract the world from it's nefarious agenda joining me to discuss is republican congressman from illinois, adam kinzinger. so i'll put that question to you are they using the olympics to advance a false image? >> of course all you have to do is look back at history. every time it gets to where the west is about to confront north korea and i'm not talking necessarily military although we're close in this case, whether it's economically and everything else, north korea suddenly, you know, finds jesus and determines that they're going to start becoming friendly and all they do in this process is they let the west take a collective sigh of relief because we say oh, man that was close, at least we have some hope and optimism now, and in the meantime, they regather their resources and push forward on their plans, whether it's building a nuclear weapon or
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anything else so let's keep in mind if north and south korea want to march together that's their decision that's not my decision, but i think any chance that we're looking at this saying well this is just a new found chapter of optimism i think let's keep our expectation s pretty down. pete: this is the north and south reaching out to each other the vice president pence has been there pretty much snubbed north korea so far, has he played it right? >> look, i think i was very proud of what the vice president did. he represented america well but he also didn't, i mean i guarantee you, i guess i can guarantee i didn't get to see this in history but had this been president obama or joe biden they politico have been stumbling over themselves to shake the sister's hand. i think it was very important for the vice president to make the point that look we're here in south korea for the olympics but that doesn't mean we approve of people in work camps and building of nuclear weapons and this view in essence the north has and i was very proud of the play there.
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pete: absolutely, a lot of people feel like any action will be postponed for obvious reasons any sense you have about timing of actions america may take military or otherwise should there be future provocations from north korea after the olympics? >> so i met with the president there were a few of us in his office prior to him going to asia and i'll tell you people that say that the president is shooting from the hip on this they haven't talked to him. he knows what's going on in north korea and he's also very sober about the reality of what's going on but i think this administration is dead serious that we're not going to allow north korea to get a nuclear weapon. keep in mind if we allow them to by definition we have to allow iran and any other regime that wants to because the nuclear non -proliferation treaty is dead so we'll have a couple week respit but the economic sanctions continue to tighten basically the embargo and shipping continues and the prayer the desperate prayer is we don't go to military option but i think military option frankly frankly would come before allowing north to have a nuclear weapon.
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pete: very briefly congressman do you like the amount of spending allocated to the dod and this defense budget? >> yeah, look it wasn't a beautiful budget. i don't like the fact we had to spend more than it wasn't paid for but we have to repair the military essentially we can't do things like confront north korea or iran or isis so this was the right vote but we need to really focus on the broader issues like entitlement. pete: no doubt adam kinzinger congressman as well as fighter pilot appreciate your time thank you. >> you bet. pete: students and parents fighting back after one school district bans prayers before sporting events. they're now selling these prayer matters t-shirts to basketball players and the father who print ed those shirts are here live ahead. plus anthony scaramucci and neil cavuto, both coming up, don't go anywhere. yea, so, mom's got this cold
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rachel: the fight for faith continues as ohio's west branch school district is banning prayer before school sporting events after complaints from an advocacy group called freedom. the freedom from religion foundation. pete: that's right now some of the district students and their pants are fighting back raising money to defend against that foundation by selling prayer matters t-shirts. rachel: here with more students of the west branch school district and members of the high school basketball team, nick eve rett and nick's father who printed the t-shirts. >> good morning. rachel: so tell us what happened and how you learned that you could no longer pray in school? >> well, we had three straight home games and we just stopped praying in general and ours was
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asking like a bunch of questions wondering why because its been a tradition we always do it and just found out around the community that we stopped and it really struck us. pete: absolutely so the school received a letter from the freedom from religious foundation last time i checked it was freedom of religion but this foundation saying prayer is not allowed so that was replaced by a moment of silence. here is what the freedom from religion foundation sent. they said like the prayer practices in santa fe, at district events like basketball games are also inappropriate and unconstitutional and the district must immediately take action to end the practice of scheduling prayer at school- sponsored events yet you guys have said that this is something almost everybody in the team wants, everyone in the community wants. is it fair to say there's a reason prayer has been said at this school for years? >> right. i mean its been said for 40 years, so to give up that tradition, we thought well, it's something we're certainly not going to take lightly.
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rachel: one way you guys are fighting back is wearing these shirts that says "prayer matter" tell us how you came up with this idea for the shirts and also how successful has it been in your community? >> i was sitting at dinner one night with my family and i decided to come up with prayers matter and i thought that would be a good thing to put out and let people know what's going on and tell them about what's going on with the situation. rachel: and it's catching on right? there's more demand for these t-shirts and sweatshirts that you ever imagined. >> yeah, i mean i was thinking a few people were going to buy them and stuff like that members of the team and their family but we're up to a little over 700 shirts now and it's starting to get nationwide. pete: now guys sin ices might say why does it matter? why does a prayer before a game matter? separation of church and state, that feels like so yesterday. why is prayer so important to you specifically but also the school district?
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>> well, i mean that's the consensus of the reason we're at the position we're at. the love and grace of jesus christ should be in more places as opposed to less and why aren't we moving in that direction as opposed to eliminating it from public places. people need to be exposed. rachel: so what happens of you break this ban? let's say you have your next game and you guys just decide we're going to pray and exercise our right to pray. what happens to you what are the consequences? >> who knows. i mean, there's threats all over the place of what could happen, but i mean that's part of the deal and kind of why we got these t-shirts to prep ourselves number one to show the administration that the communities is behind you number one and number two to raise money to help fund any defense that might be necessary that comes along. pete: well that's it. ultimately the west branch
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school district is afraid of litigation which could be very very costly so part of these, go ahead. >> right and what happens is, i mean these groups come and pick on these schools knowing darn well and these public school systems they don't have enough money to defend themselves or at least they don't have a set aside pot to help defend themselves, so i mean it's almost bullying. i mean coming in saying stop this or i'm going to sue you for a quarter of a million or half million dollars and then all of a sudden what's the school district supposed to do without people in the community that stand up and say wait a second, pump the brakes here a little bit this is what we care about and this is something worth fighting for. pete: a great point legal intimidation. they come in from the outside and tell you how you're supposed to live. these shirts represent fighting back. people can actually buy these and by doing so, can potentially contribute to a legal defense right? the website prayer-matters.org, correct? >> correct. >> yes. rachel: well thank you for coming on, and powerful message and i couldn't agree more.
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pete: we hope you make you guys very busy putting those t-shirts together. good luck with the rest of your season by the way. hope prayer continues and hope we sell a lot of prayer-matters. org t-shirts. rachel: good luck. pete: appreciate it. well, remember this illegal immigrants chilling message to cops in court. wait until you hear his latest outburst after hearing the verdict. rachel: and president trump just tweeted about his decision to block the democrats rebuttal memo. former white house communications director anthony scaramucci is here to react, next. morning on the beach was so peaceful.
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pete: well president trump up this morning and explaining his decision not to release the democrats memo, just 12 minutes ago he tweeted this. he said the democrats sent a very political and long response memo which we knew, which they knew because of sources and methods and more would have to be heavily redacted whereupon they would blame the white house for lack of transparency told them to redo and send back in proper form. well here to reabout we'll bring in anthony scaramucci, former white house communications director. anthony we appreciate your timer ly in las vegas so what do
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you make of the president's response he basically understood and knows democrats are trying to make it look like he's not being transparent trying to block information to make him look bad what do you make of this? >> well good morning guys i love the fact that the president is using twitter in that way, see so he's really just cutting through everything, coming right over-the-top of all of that political gainsmanship and explaining directly to the american people the nonsense that goes on in washington, and so my bet is if they do the right thing on the memo, he'll release the memo because he'll want to create some level of balance because he does know that he has the goods basically on some of those people that were trying to politico lit size those agencies so we'll see what happens but i love the fact that the presidents out there explain ing directly to the american people this is what they sent me, this is why i can't put it out. rachel: so anthony, we just had -- >> what i love about the president is every time they're throwing a ball at him, it's like they're throwing a dodge
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ball at him and he's just moving faster and throwing more balls back at them so it's fun for me to watch it. rachel: anthony we just had geraldo on and he made the case that look whatever is in there just get it out. radical transparency is the way to go. get it out so we can stop having questions about it what do you think? >> well, you know, having been in there again i was only there for a short period of time but being exposed to some of that sensitive information, you really, you know, you have to remember every time you have sensitive information that could be tied into something that could put somebody in harms way whether it's troops, federal bureau agents, any type of situation like that, i think somebody like the president would take great care in that and put that over the politics of it. i do think geraldo is right from a transparency point of view it makes the president look great to get as much out as possible but he has to measure that in terms of what's the right protocol for national security,
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but i agree with geraldo but i'm also sense etiesed to some of the information in there that has to be protected. griff: let me ask you about just something else we saw at the white house, rob porter, high ranking aid leaving for sexual misconduct, the whole battering the wife so now the media is making a lot about is this going to cause john kelly's chief of staff to resign. is the media overplaying this story what do you make of it? >> so i'm actually not sure about that but here is what i would say. the chief of staff's job is to protect the president, protect the institution of the presidency, not only make sure that the staff is working well but we have to recognize that the president has a pulpit and he's sort of the leader and at the end of the day the white house actually controls the news cycle and so we have to really find out what happened there. i know rob, i've met rob, i like rob. if those allegations are true and if they are that's one issue
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and if the chief of staff if john kelly knew about them, then that's another issue. the combination of those two things i do think puts the president in harms way and so the president has got to come first the country has to come first and i'm sure that john kelly will do the right thing at the right time at the right moment. pete: anthony as you know washington d.c. obsessed with in treeing so they've used this as a reason to dust off the headlines they've had during this entire presidency, politico with this headline white how lurches into crisis mode again. you still talk to folks at the white house and the inner circles is it crisis mode or are they managing this like they would anything else? >> well listen i would say it's not really crisis mode. the presidents done a phenomenal job. look at the jobs numbers that he's tweeting about this morning look at the overall growth and health of the economy. look our military footprint. look at the position between north and south korea. all this has been created by president trump's wisdom and
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guidance on a whole multi lateral level of different things. if there's some things going on inside the white house my guess is that happens in most corporations, maybe there's nothing going on at fox news maybe you guys all love each other but sometimes when you're in a high pressure environment with big egos there's a little bit of warfare. you know, i've used the example before where the 1977 yankees just to show my age because that was a great year for me as a kid , they were killing each other in the locker room but when they brought it out on the field they went on to win the world series and so i would just say that we've got to get it right internally and if people are not doing the right thing to protect the president, okay, and also think about the overall system and the institution of the presidency, then that has to change, but you know you guys are right. they're definitely right in treeing. it's way more fun to write about gossip and way more fun to write about nonsense than it is to
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write about all the good news the president created. rachel: anthony you were the white house communications director for 11 days, but so what would you advice the communications team right now? i mean we've been on this story for, you know, almost a whole week, but the left wing media is eating it up. how do they get past this? >> well listen, like i said, i was out speaking at the university of chicago the young college republicans. i thought there would only be like five people because that many republicans were there but turned out to be a big crowd. i did david axlerod's podcast and said if john kelly knew about it then get out and apologize and say you knew about it and let's clear it up. if you didn't then get out there and say you didn't know about it but you've got to clear this thing up because you're leaving a mill stone on the administration and going into the congressional elections you don't want to be the wife- beating enabling party going into november of 2018. it's just not going to work for
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the republicans so you've got to cut it out and you've got to clear it up and i would be very direct about that which is probably why i'm not there any more because i'm a pretty direct person and i'm also somebody that has, you know, capability of evaluating talent looking at people for what they really are and so here is what i would say. i've been close to the president for many years, worked on the campaign for two years now. 11 days days in the white house but you can get a strong sense for what people are really like and put the president and put the party over yourself and do the right thing here. that would be my recommendation griff: that's a good recommendation, anthony thanks take care. appreciate your time. well, wall street ending the week on a high note after the worst week for the markets in two years. neil cavuto here to tell us what it all means for your wallet, next. griff: plus giving back to our military brides. these women selected to get free wedding gowns for their big day. hear their stories and meet the
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rachel: we're back with quick headlines, an illegal immigrant found guilty of murdering two deputies vowing he's not done. he's been deported multiple times caught taunting the victim 's family and showing no remorse. arguments on whether he will receive the death penalty will be made next month. and bette midler sparking more outrage after poking fun at senator rand paul forgetting attacked by his neighbor an her first tweet coming after the senator protested the government 's budget vote writing where is rand paul's neighbor
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when we need him but she tweeted outrage committee so worked up about a joke how about some outrage to help solve opioid crisis, mass shootings, and puerto rico? social media users slamming midl er saying violence is never a funny joke. griff: all right wall street cap ping a day of wild swings with a late rally that sent the dow jones industrial average 330 points higher even with the re bound this was the worst week for the market in about two years. pete: now despite that jobless claims under president trump dropping to a 45-year low. rachel: so what do we make of all of this? here with insight is neil cavuto , the host of cavuto live which airs this morning right after the show so really quick, neil what are your thoughts on the market this week? neil: well good news can be bad news. i think the president was by a lot of people tend to be influenced by it but that was the history of wall street it tends to pounce on good news as a sign the better it gets the more interest rates rise that's
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exactly what's been happening, guys and the fear is that not so much that rates go back to what they were, you know, when i was younger, when i had double-digit interest rates but they're going to go higher and you don't know how much higher, or how much the federal reserve and other central banks around the world because this is a world wild phenomenon. you don't know how far rates could back up and that unknown, wall street hates the unknown. it hates uncertainty and it is more apt to sell on that than buy on that. what's been remarkable is all this time its gone by it hasn't done that. now it's making up for lost time pete: now these jobless claims though quite significant 45 year low. that's great news on the ground. neil: you know, i'll flip it around again, pete because that good news could be interpreted and once it sinks in it's in the part of that improving economic environment. it is dramatically improving no doubt about that. there's not a right or left way to present this or a red or blue way to present this. the economy is rapidly picking up steam. the atlanta federal reserve estimates we could see first
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quarter growth above 5%. that would be remarkable. so very good for us. not good for those who have gotten used to low interest rates and that's how we've been spoiled. we've gotten used to throughout this whole, you know, economic recovery if you want to call it that with ridiculously low interest rates just to get back to normal we would have to be triple that if you want the rates to represent, you know, past historical performance. i don't think people are ready for that. griff: neil speaking of being ready what's on cavuto live today? neil: well mark cuban was a big fan of saying i buy when things look beaten up. his view is continue to buy market averages because they represent the best bet for this economy so the billionaire investor on that the new york stock exchange chairman tom farl ey says as crazy as these markets have been they have been behaving as they should so just stay calm. charles schwab put out a report to its individual investors now
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might be a very good time for you to reposition your stocks, if you feel a little bit nervous want to sleep at night maybe go into safer investments, we're going to pursue that and of course rand paul who started this big come ocean in the senate over this big budget bill that he says is an embarrassment to both parties. rachel: thank you, neil exciting show don't turn off the tv after fox & friends. neil: you are the wind at my back, thank you. rachel: up next giving back to our military brides these women selected to get three wedding gowns for their big day hear their stories and meet the designer who made their dreams come true. >> ♪ i think i want to marry you ♪ they appear out of nowhere. my secret visitors. hallucinations and delusions. the unknown parts of living with parkinson's.
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what plots they unfold, but only in my mind. over 50% of people with parkinson's will experience hallucinations or delusions during the course of their disease. if your loved one is experiencing these symptoms, talk to your parkinson's specialist. there are treatment options that can help. my visitors should be the ones i want to see.
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military brides who have either served themselves or are marry ing a veteran who has served. and now one bridal designer is looking to thank them by helping to make their wedding day dreams come true. joining us now is madeline garner designer of the gowns i have to tell you i love this story. i'm the daughter of a veteran my mom was a young bride when she met my dad who was an enlisted man in the air force and couldn't afford a wedding dress and had to borrow one, so this story really touches close to home, so i want to get right to it. let's bring each bride out individually and you can tell us what they're wearing and a little bit about them. >> okay first up is serenity she's in our mindy gown and doesn't she look beautiful? rachel: like a princess. >> this is exactly right. it is a princess gown it's a strap less bodice, and i've left the bodice with layering but underneath there is nude so a hint of skin tone shows through it's a new trend, also the trends of the all natural bead
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ing which the girls are lov ing so they do sparkle but it's not. rachel: now is this the dress she's wearing at the wedding? actually these are decoy gowns we don't want to mess with tradition so we have to show them in a beautiful gown but as you know we want their fiancee to be shocked of course. rachel: tell us about your fiancee? >> so my fiancee he is a veteran he served eight years in the marine corps and he's just a very proud vet and, yes. rachel: he's going to be a proud groom too. >> he is, yes he is. >> thank you, serenity. who do we have next? >> next up is erin. erin is wearing the kelly gown. it's just such a gorgeous traditional gown with a little bit of a new twist so the bodice is all lace but it's a
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beautiful look and it's layered english net with the long lace. rachel: so erin tell us about your fiancee? >> my fiancee's name is jordan and he is a second lieutenant in the army national guard in rochester, new york. rachel: you're in the military too? >> i am mess i'll commissioning in may so i'll be a second lieutenant as well. rachel: amazing story thank you so much. next, we have? >> catarina. and she's wearing the marisol gown which is a beautiful gown and the bodice has nude netting with lace and this is a great dress for the girls that just want something slim yet slightly traditional. rachel: okay, and you also, tell us about your fiancee because you guys have a connection there right? >> yeah, so my fiancee was also in the army reserves and national guard but i'm actually a captain right now. rachel: okay. >> yes and i've been in 14 years
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rachel: how did you guys meet? >> we met through mutual friends in new york. rachel: this is a gorgeous dress by the way. >> thank you, thank you. she wears it so well. rachel: so why was this charity, this type of, why is it so important to you? why did you pick this as your way to give back? >> it really all began right before the holidays we were thinking how can we give back to all these beautiful brides out there and then we came up with, well we need to give love and give back and we need to serve those that are serving us, so we went to the military and we put feelers out there and we found these three lovely girls who came to us, but now we're launch ing the full campaign. it will be on morilee.com/ military bride. rachel: your giving one a week correct? >> we're giving away one bridal gown to a deserving military bride per week from now through march 31. rachel: incredible. so what does this mean to you? >> for me this is just an incredible opportunity. you know, i know personally how
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hard my fiancee works now and i know that he applied the same thing then and just to be able to receive this for his service and for everything he sacrificed has just been incredible. rachel: that's awesome. so how can people sign up to become the next bride? >> they just go to the website m orilee.com/military bride and tell us your story. tell us all about you, your fiancee. rachel: one more time the website? >> morilee.com/military bride. rachel: you guys are the most gorgeous brides ever. >> thank you. rachel: thank you for joining us more fox & friends ahead. stay with us. >> ♪ ♪ ♪ if you wear a denture, you not only want a clean feeling every day, you want your denture to be stain free. did you know there's a specialty cleanser that's gentle enough for everyday use and cleans better than regular toothpaste?
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he gets the best deal on the perfect hotel by using. tripadvisor! that's because tripadvisor lets you start your trip on the right foot... by comparing prices from over 200 booking sites to find the right hotel for you at the lowest price. saving you up to 30%! you'll be bathing in savings! tripadvisor. check the latest reviews and lowest prices. pete: i think we're on tv. rachel: we are. okay we have a surprise for you girls. you are actually keeping these dresses. they're yours so you get a
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second one. pete: apparently the trend is two dresses these days. thanks for joining us today on fox & friends we'll be back tomorrow and sunday login for the after the show show. have a great saturday. neil: wow, how you holding up, whiplash on wall street a lot of worries on main street and washington still spending like it's easy street. welcome everybody i'm neil cavuto and everybody deep breath , we are live from the financial capitol of the world, where all eyes are going to be on monday's market opening, its gotten to be a little bit here stocks suffering the worst week we've seen in two years one of the most volatile we've seen ever. why? well in two words, rising rates, but specifically rising interest rates and that is hitting main street as well, because everything from car loans to home loans, are forcing everyone to shell out more
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