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tv   Fox and Friends Sunday  FOX News  February 11, 2018 3:00am-7:00am PST

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the battle over the rival memos. >> president trump declines to release the work of ranking house intelligence democrat adam schiff, the president criticizing it as political. schiff firing back saying this, mr. president what you call police call are called facts. >> it was totally a political act, disingenuous. ohio mourning the loss of two police officers shot and killed while responding to a 911 hangup call. the officer is in custody. the officers were 20 year veterans and 17 year veteranses.
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olympic sporting action. a lot of focus indeed was on sports. it was also on politics. influential sister of the north korean leader kim jong-un met with soakian president moon. there was no daylight between the u.s. and soak in their aim to rid the north of its nukes and missiles. ♪ ♪ free and easy. the musical track that they chose for right now. but what they were play in our ear moments ago was the one hit wonder "lady in red" because. >> they were. "lady in red." i did it for valentine's day. coming up. >> so we do. >> valentine's day on sunday because we won't be here on
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smond and tuesday. griff, good to have you here this morning. >> what a weekend of news we have. only being overshadowed by this thing happening involving athletics. different colors. >> something like that. the lady in red is a huge fan of the olympics. >> yesterday i said i hate the olympics and i thought i was going to get a lot of twitter reviews. you wouldn't believe how many people wrote me saying, i hate the olympics too. i thought it was a bad person. >> i haven't checked on the olympics since 1996, the atlanta olympics. >> you think we would be hearing about the athletics. instead we're not. what we're hearing about is apparently north korea had a monarchy that we didn't know about. and i'm reading today -- i can quote from the headline, a high level delegation from north korea led by a youthful
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political princess. a youthful political princess. they're fawning over this young woman, 30 years old, certainly attractive. but my goodness you would have thought princess diana has gone to the olympics. >> good analogy. here's some head lines. fawning over the sister of the dictator who murders people. okay. cnn says this, kim jong-un's sister is stealing the show at the winter olympics. "washington post" get this one. of north korea captivated, all swaller and smiles, king jong-un's mysterious sister gets her star turn at winter olympics. >> so interesting. if only ivanka could get these kind of glowing head lines from cnn and from the media. and it's also interesting that one of the tactics that the media has spent you can't
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normalize the trumps because that would be normalizing republicans and by extension giving their ideas a platform to be discussed. so you can't, you can't normalize the trumps. here they are normalizing the sister -- which by the way, i kind of feel bad for her. she's had siblings who have been murdered by her brother. who knows if she's being forced to be there at all. still you don't want to be complicit. where are all of the articles of being complicit. as you said, brutal. >> i normally don't come on this show. in many weeks i've been allowed to come here but my blood is boiling. people forget they're making the suggestion, the media foolishly i would say that the korean peninsula is possible because this 30-year-old kid shows up. we forget what the rogue regime,
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brutal dictator has done to thousands of people. another to war wormbier, you remember him? >> we have to put this in context of the spirit of olympics. their athletes are not exchanging ideas with other olympic ideas with others i oth. this is not political for me. i'm telling the truth about the regime's treatment of my son. guess what? they do this to countless other people. this is standing up and being the voice of otto. >> thank goodness this administration and vice president pence have been there to have the message. think about the headline from the washington post. ivanka trump of north korea. ivanka trump is in the white house working for paid leave and this is what she's complicit in
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the white house? the sister of kim jong-un, complicit in the murderous starvation regime of her brother who suppresses her people to seek nuclear weapons. i don't know if she's happy or not. i hope she defects. >> if i was her i would run away right now. >> she's surrounded by bodyguards who are keeping her from defecting than protecting her. it's the never trump, hate trump media will find whatever angle they can. >> you get the idea that they hate trump more than north korea and all of the atrocities that are going oin there. it's not just that they're normalizing north korea. they're trying to find a connection. we've heard it before from the media. donald trump is like, you know, a dictator. >> exactly. >> and it's the most insane analogy because if anything this is a president who has been trying to take power away from
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centralizcentralized governmente it back to the people. >> the dueling memos which i cover all last week and this week, the "the new york times" today has a headline. now remember, the president cannot declassify the democrat memo because it has sensitive. >> it's responsible not to. >> but he can't. why? we learned after the "the new york times" has a head line that president trump won't release it after democrats of course, we played yesterday, piling on the president for not releasing it. we now learn, after the headline that trump is to blame to release it, we learn in the "the new york times" article, and i think we've got a quote here. there's the headline, pressure by trump may lead to revision of the democratic memo. here's the article, in a letter to the white house on friday, top justice department and fbi officials said they had law enforcement or national security concerns about declassifying parts of the democratic memo.
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so essentially the fbi, the authority which determines whether or not it should be released told him not to do it. he can't do it because of these things in there. so he sends it back. yet he gets blamed. this is the trump blame game. >> look at the headline. but that quote you just wrote was buried in the article. so it's trump trying to stop this memo but then you look at this and you see it's really the fbi and the doj. >> remember the democrats yelling about the nunes memo saying our agencies don't want to release it. >> the reason that the fbi and the doj had issues with the republican memo is because of omissions. they wanted more context in the memo. there was nothing in the memo that was wrong. fine. you can't release that stuff which is what we talked about yesterday. democratsintentionally included sources and methods in their
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memo to make it look like president trump is holding things back. very very different. and again, the breathless attacks from democrats are not based on anything other than a political mo thif. because our intelligence agencies are now saying you can't release this because it would jeopardize the national security. >> now it goes back to the democrats and they have a chance to revise this. >> to the committee. >> to the full committee. >> based on recommendations by the doj. >> we'll see it? >> you'll see it in a responsible form because this white house has said you should see it, just not everything that could jeopardize us. >> there's a lot of hypocrisy out there because we know that mark warner, the senator, the democrat senator. >> senate intelligence committee. >> from the senate intelligence committee actually made contact with russians which is interesting because we know thay trying to make sure that it was done where nobody else -- he
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wanted to do it without the other members of the committee, the republican members of the committee finding out about it. >> so senate warner reaches out to russian lobbyist who said he had connections to christopher steele, he alerted the committee six months later, got defense for that, this is part of the text message exchange between senator warner and this lobbyist, he said, senator warner, we have to so much to discuss. you need to be careful but we can help our country. the lobbyist says, i'm in. that's one part of a longer exchange. how do i get to clirs fer steele. how do i learn what you know about president trump. turns out we have videotape. it turns out people say things. do you know about this? >> remember that meeting at trump tower, don jr., absolute attack, mark warner. >> uncharged, right? >> -- against don jr. let's look back at what mark warner had to say about that meeting at trump tower. >> the president and frankly i
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can't believe what he's saying. here was in black and white an e-mail that said, hey, meet with this russian lawyer acting as an agent of the russian government and this is part of the russian government's effort to help then candidate trump and to discredit clinton. onanybody, democrat or republican, that would take that kind of meeting with not only a foreign government but a foreign adversary. >> so that last july, special report with brett baier. the trump blame game is on fire and the north korean princess is saving apparently the world. it's all. >> there may be some other head lines. if you want to take it. i don't know. that's what you need to know. good morning. >> i love videotape so much. >> the video helps. >> a little bit of a different turn. i got to take a hard turn to
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headlines. fox news alert. police are identified the man accused of killing two police officers responding to a 911 hangup call. the officers are gunned down. >> 9 # 11 what's your message. >> please help me. >> what's wrong? what's going on. >> he shot the police officers. >> your husband? where is your husband now. >> he is in there. help me please. >> during died at the scene, morally died in the hospital. >> these officers gave their life in protection of others. >> a makeshift memorial was set up for the fallen officers who had combined service of nearly 50 years on the force the tour of the grand canyon turns deadly when a chopper crashes 600 feet to the ground killing three people. crews still rescuing four
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survivors and treating them. strong winds from air lifting them to a ner by hospital. seven people, including the pilot on board taking off from las vegas. it's unclear what caused the crash. and those are your head lines. >> tough stuff. well president trump slamming the swamp over reports of a shady russian spy scammed intel agencies out of 100 grand. but is he right to blame the swamp? we'll ask former cia analyst next. this officer wants you to know there are rooms available at the green roof inn but you don't want to stay there. the hilarious video now going viral. >> we have a one-star rating. there's no privacy in this hotel. enough to help you save, we could start a carpool. look at this traffic. don't worry.
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a "the new york times" report out yesterday, we reported on it, says a russian spy duped u.s. intel officers out of $100,000 and offered to give up trump's secrets and stolen nsa cyber weapons. the cia is calling the report patently false. here to discuss is former cia analyst and senior vice president for policy and programs with the center for security. fred, thanks for joining us. the story that came out, the cia working for cyber weapons, working with shadowy russians, the russians offering up information about then president trump. the cia says we didn't want that information. what do you make of this story and its validity ? >> you know, it makes sense that the cia would try to acquire information like this and pay a lot of money for it. but the bottom line for me is this. we have the instance of a russian intelligence linked russian trying to provide
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salacious anti-trump material that is similar to the steele dossier funded by the democratic campaign. and i think the question is how can the democrats continue to maintain this collusion narrative. how can adam schiff continue to say that donald trump is soft on the russians and colluding with the russians when we have all of these reports of the rughtses trying to smear and undermine mr. trump. >> fred, you know the agency. i want to take them at face value. we're looking for the cyber weapons back and then they tried to get dirt on president trump. would agents say we don't want that? could they be so deuced by that? what happens on the ground? >> i mean, part of this story, this is being talked about, that there were people in the agency, careers who wanted this information to hurt the president. but the story says that agency officers did not want this information. i hope that's true. that's very promising. the reason the president is so credible is because the agency's reputation and the reputation of
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the intelligence community has gone down so far because they have constantly leaked against him. yesterday there was another report on how the president received the presidential daily brief that was completely inaccurate and it was leaked by agency officers to embarrass mr. i don't think trump is prepared to give the cia the benefit of the doubt when it comes to stories like that. >> the cia has come out saying this, the people swindled here were james risen and matt rosenburg, the two authors of the "the new york times" piece. the fictional story that the cia was built out of $100,000 is patently false. you want to believe the cia but at the same time you've acknowledged that the cia will pay for information or secrets. would it be unlikely that they would pay for the first piece of information and once they don't get it they cut it off? >> a similar story by the intercept.
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i want to believe the agency. i worked there for 19 years. but i thought the "the new york times" story sounded plausible. there's another angle here. why was this leaked in the first place. who leaked it. and i think the people who leaked it are people in the agency who resent the fact that pompeo has an off-the-books channel with russian and they don't like that because they denies access to information that they would like to leak. >> are you concerned at all that fbi, cia, nsa, any agents of our government still today would be looking for information on a sitting president? president trump? >> i'm worried that that's going on. i'm encouraged with director pompeo at the cia. i think he's going to stop that from happening. this is why we need strong leadership at the top of these agencies, to make sure that these agents keep politics out of their work and do the work of the american people. >> that's what we hope for thanks for your time this morning. appreciate it. >> good to be here.
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a fox news alert. one in ten deaths in this country last week were because of the flu. and the outbreak showing no signs of showing down. how worried should you be? we're bringing that to you next. plus, the media gushing over kim jong-un's sister at the winter olympics. all she did was show up and smile. why are they glamourizing that nation. a reality check about that country coming up. when you combine ancestry's dna test with its historical records... ...you could learn you're from ireland... ...donegal, ireland... ...and your ancestor was a fisherman. with blue eyes. just like you. begin your journey at ancestry.com so allstate is giving us money back on our bill.
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welcome pack. some quick head lines. a security scare overnight at
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l.a.x. internet. a shirtless man shutting down runways after scaling a fence and running up to a plane preparing for takeoff. police arresting the unidentified man who may have been mentally ill. a doctor convicted of sexually abusing girls has been transferred to a federal security prison. larry nassar starting his prison sentence this season's nationwide deadly flu outbreak could be the worst on record. one in ten americans are dying from the flu with no signs of stopping. center for disease control and prevention has reported 63 deaths from pneumonia among children this season alone. how worried should we be. joining to discuss is
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radiologist nicole sapphire. thank you for joining us. it's one in every ten deaths last week. should we be scared? >> those statistics are terrifying and the truth is they're all true. however, you know, i want to be honest and say that we're on par with some of our other seasons. we have influenza like diseases or diagnoses right now that are mapping where it was in the swine flu epidemic in 2009, 2010. the thing that's scary is we're going to exceed the deaths from the swine flu. that's what concerns me. the amount of people being diagnosed with the flu isn't necessarily more than we've seen in the past. the concern is why are people dying from the flu. it's not just the diagnosis from the flu. when you have the flu, it releases chemicals into your system and that causes inflammation which can cause new moan yapneumonia, sepsis and het
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attacks. >> what can we do? we're going to exceed the number from last year. can that be slowed down and what can we do as patients to make that happen? >> the far majority of adults and children who get the flu are going to cover completely. be just fine. stay home. stay home from school, stay home from work. don't go to the store. if you have the flu -- and the great way to tell a difference between the cold and the flu is high fever and chills. the flu comes on faster than a cold. if you have signs of the flu, only leave your house to go get medical treatment. the sooner you get medical treatment, you can start on medications, the sooner you recognize you have the flu, the sooner you're going to get better. the one thing i encouraging people to keep on eye out for is the child and the adult who has the flu and then they start getting better and then they're sick again. that could mean they have a super infection. that's when people are dying. if that happens to you, seek medical treatment immediately.
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>> what's the point where -- i have kids at the house. what point do i need to go to the doctor? >> if you have young children under the age of five or any with chronic conditions, bad allergies, you should always go see the physician if you think they may have the flu. don't try to keep them at home. but for the other kids who have fefer and chills that you can manage, they're still eating and drinking, using the rest room, give them a week. clean everything and get rid of everything in the house they've touched. >> the stories are maybe more scary than they are, we're hearing people their kid gets sick and two days later they're dead. so i mean, it kind of confuses me. you're saying wait a week to go to the doctor. >> no, i'm not saying wait a week to go to the doctor. if your child has the flu and it's not a complicated coarse, then for the majority of them they're going to get better. what i'm saying is some children are getting better and then they get sick again and people are
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thinking they got a relapse of the flu. that getting sick again could be an emergency. it's good to have the diagnosis, get swapped but that's the only time they should be leaving the house. >> too late to get the flu shot? >> absolutely not. the worst is yet to come. >> thank you so much. very helpful for a lot of parents at home watching. tensions flaring in the middle east, israel and syria, one step closer to confrontation after an israeli fighter jet is shot down. governor huckabee is in jerusalem right now. we'll get his take on the situation. they may tb friends on "sex and the city" but kim catrel and jessica parker have some bad blood between them in real life. ♪
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south korea's president sharing with her this historic handshake. >> this grand breaking moment, kim jong-un extending an invitation presented by his sister to south korean president. >> we're going to bring in mike huckabee who happens to be in jerusalem this morning. sir, thank you for being here. before we get to topics of
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israel, vi to ask you about the fawning of the media over kim jong-un's sister. she's a political princess. why would we bend over backwards to characterize her as such? >> it's the narrative o the meda must want to paint. but the little sister of little kim comes from a keun triwhere most of the people are starving to death, where repression is extraordinary and where they kill visitors like they did with the gentleman, warmbier. that's the sad thing. they haven't changed their ways. they's an incredibly dangerous country that threatens the peace of the world. having the sister show up pretending she's all full and games doesn't change a thing in north korea. >> they actually compared her to ivanka trump. and you have a daughter by the way who is also complicit in the
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trump administration. i mean, how do you feel about this kind of coverage? it's really unbelievable that they're trying to normalize this dictatorship's family. >> well, having watched the news coverage of the trump administration for the last year, nothing surprises me anymore about the way the media portrays not just this white house but portrays everything else on the globe. i mean, they pretend that good is bad and bad is good and most of the time they can't tell the difference. but most people in the world can. and nobody is fooled by the theatrics of north korea and them pretending to be normal. they're anything but normal. they're still the hermit kingdom, still dangerous, still pose a threat to the world and they still have no business getting close to a nuclear weapon. >> governor, let me ask you, israel and iran closer to confrontation. we saw what happened yesterday. you're on the ground. bring us up to speed on what you see there.
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>> well i think a lot of people would say, boy, it's really tense there and certainly there's some tension because of what happened yesterday. but the one message that became very clear is israel, i think, said about as perfectly as they can. if you try to get into our territory, we're going to hit you and we're going to hit you hard. and there's several holes in the landscape of syria today that are the reminders of the 12 strikes that the israelis inflicted upon that launch site and some other sites as well. let's not kid ourselves. the reason that this president and others need to be concerned about the iranian deal was shown yesterday. the iranians are not good people and they have no intention of becoming good people. they only have one thing in mind and that's to inflict as much carnage as possible. but the israelis did yesterday will bring a calm most likely to this country for the next several days. and u was very important that both the white house and the
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state department issued strong statements of support for israel to protect itself. but israel did the right thing yesterday by saying, you come at us with a knife, we come at you with a gun. you put somebody in a hospital, we put somebody in the morgue. the only way to deal with these bullies from iran is to hit them hard. >> you're in jerusalem. you're a great friend of israel. so what happened was, iranian drone came into israeli space, they dealt with it, then there was an attack, an israeli fighter jet shot down in syrian air space. could this escalate inside that region. it ultimately is a co confrontan between israel and iran which has implications for the united states. >> well it certainly could. and the two pilots of this, both survived. one of them seriously injured, one not. the they both ejected. the plane crash landed into
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israeli territory, so that's good. but the russians have said to the syrians, back down. don't escalate this. the u.s. is clearly standing the israel. i don't see what could be possibly gained if there was any escalation on the part of either the syrians or the iranians. it would be a fool's eaer rand . let's hope what they did yesterday proved this isn't a smart strategy. i don't think we're going to see them do it in the future. i hope not. >> thank you so much, governor. be safe and come home safe. >> thanks. glad to. turns now to your headlines, hungs raises a candle at a vigil remembering a fallen georgia officer shot and killed in the line of due pi. an autopsy report showing officer chase mad ducks died
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from an gunshot wound to his head. 26-year-old newly wed leaving behind his young son and pregnant wife due any day now. two other deputies shot are expected to be okay. the suspect was killed in the gunfight. take a look at this incredible video. police frantically evacuating a subway train after a passenger sparked a massiv massive fireba. david ferguson threatening to light himself on fire using paint thinner when a shilg officer tried kicking away the can. officers struggling to stop him before a wall of flames pushed them out. at one time an officer's shoe catching on fire and another burned a bill to ban use use youth tackle football in maryland can't get off the ground.
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a state senate considering sponsoring the bill. the mesh should would forbid tackle football and hitting a soccer ball with your game until high school. along with banning lacrosse and hockey checks. this comes amid growing concern over the lasting effects of head injury. >> who comes up -- anyway, i'm going to stop available at the green roof inn in florida, it might not be a plais you'r place you're look. >> let me tell you about your accommodations. we have a one-star rating, no privacy in this hotel, no meal selection. you eat what we give you or you don't eat. >> well that sounds like my kitchen actually. you eat what i give you. >> yeah. >> flag her county jail deputies having a sense of humor with this new vacancy sign and a list of accommodations inside the jail. they're hoping the sign will
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make people think twice before breaking the law. >> i didn't know what that story was. now it makes sense. >> i love that kind of sense of humor. let's check in with rick. it's a little wet here. >> you don't make different meals for all of your kids? >> i've got like eight of them. >> hot dogs one another. >> it's not possible. you would be cooking all day. >> big storm all across the east. warm temperatures with this one. 68 in raleigh, flooding concerns across virginia. back across the northern plains. that's the cold air. this overall pattern sticks with us, cold ner the northern plains and warm across the eastern seaboard. we have a lot of drought going on across the south. you want to get the moisture but some is coming too fast. had a torn warning across the florida panhandle and alabama. to the north of that we have flooding across parts of
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virginia. i think we'll see a little bit of flooding throughout the day towards areas of washington, d.c. and baltimore. more heavy rain falling there. it's all rain, not snow. look at the future radar to see how the storm plays out. rain with us most of the day. it's out of here finally by tomorrow morning's commute. a few lingering showers across parts of florida. >> get your umbrella out now. >> get it out now. >> weatherumbrella.com. >> weatherman umbrella. >> just trying to help you out. a fox news alert, two police officers shot and killed in ohio. the latest in what's already been a deadly year for law enforcement. the department's union leader said we have to end the war on cops. now he joins us next. that's true. plus, a memo from senators chuck grassley and lindsey graham backs up the surveillance claims made in the devin nunes
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memo. we're going to cover this memo on how it validates the nunes memo coming up. ♪ 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. does your bed do that? right now, save 50% on the ultimate limited edition bed. ends soon. visit sleepnumber.com fora store near you. a little to the left. 1, 2, 3, push! easy! easy! easy! (horn honking) alright! alright! we've all got places to go! we've all got places to go! washington crossing the delaware turnpike?
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this is a fox news alert. two police officers shot and killed saturday while responding to a 911 hangup call in westerville, ohio >> two officers down. critical. suspect is down withi, also sho. >> so far this year, nine police officers across the u.s. have died in the line of duty. keith ferrell is the executive vice president of the fraternal order of police in capital city, ohio. he joins us. thank you for joining us. i talked to you yesterday. it was certainly an emotional time. tell us how are the families of these officers doing? >> well, first, thank you for having me. obviously it's a traumatic time
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for these families. both officers have children. some very young. it was very emotional. not just for the families of the officers but for the police family. in westerville, the surrounding communities and i'm sure across the country. >> the president tweeting yesterday, my thoughts and prayers are with the two police officers and their families. tell me about officers morelli and joering. tell me about what they did? >> as far as yesterday or in the careers? >> yesterday and their careers. the country needs to know both. >> yeah. these absolutely are high roe hd people need to understand that. one of the officers had 30 years on the police department. the other had 17 years. it was a saturday afternoon while most people are at home with their families, or at sporting events watching their kids, these two put on a uniform to go out and serve the people of their community. even after all of this time in
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service. they responded to a 911 call like officers do across the country every single day and were immediately attacked by gun fire upon arriving. >> and just so i know that our viewers fully understand, there was a hangup. they don't know what they're going into. but yet they go in and lose both of their lives. it just speak to the absolute courage, bravery and sacrifice. this is happening all across the country. violence last year, 46 awessers kille46 officerskilled in the l. what do you make of this as the larger example of the problem across the country? >> so unfortunately even in my 22-year career we've seen a change in mentality. and it's a small portion of society. but there is a portion of society that made the determination that it's okay to assault or try to hurt police officers. and that's very different than
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we've seen. there are more ambush style attacks and a different state in policing. and that can't be acceptable. we're seeing violence across the country not just with the police but violence itself needs to stop. >> there's a go fund man gofund. tell us how people with help? >> i hope you're putting that up on the screen. go to the page, through our lodge 9 capital city lodge 9 website with the link they're providing, that money, it will go to those families so we can take care of those kids and everyone else hopefully for the rest of their lives for the sacrifice, the heros made for the citizens. >> keith ferrell, thank you very much for joining us and please to the families of morelli and joering, tell them we thank them for their sacrifice and wish them the best. >> thank you very much. president trump says republicans want to fix daca far
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more than the democrats and now a dreamer even agrees. you'll hear from that dreamer top of the hour. a memo from dwrasesly and graham backed up the surveillance claim made in the devin nunes memo. why is the media barely covering this? you'll find out. we'll cover it. ♪ if you're 65 or older, you may be at increased risk for pneumococcal pneumonia that can take you out of the game for weeks, even if you're healthy. pneumococcal pneumonia is a potentially serious bacterial lung disease that in severe cases can lead to hospitalization. it may hit quickly, without warning, causing you to miss out on the things you enjoy most. prevnar 13® is not a treatment for pneumococcal pneumonia... it's a vaccine you can get to help protect against it. prevnar 13® is approved for adults to help prevent infections from 13 strains of the bacteria that cause pneumococcal pneumonia. you should not receive prevnar 13® if you have had
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welcome pack. you know on this program we like to bring things to you that maybe the so-called mainstream media missed. we may have missed this. el this week senators grassley and graham declassified further information in a memorandum about the so-called russian collusion and fisa information. now we know about the house committees. new nenunes and the democrats. neither of them known as partisans, they're looking to get to the bottom of this. if you're looking for collaboration on what devin nunes said, it's in this memo. the reason we caught this is andy mccarthy, a writer for national review, a legal scholar himself, wrote this article.
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and part of this article said this. it said, with its verification by the grassley/graham memo, the nunes memo, the one we've talked a lot about, now has a thousand time for corroboration than the steele dossier. and mccarthy goes on to write if this were a democrat being targeted, this would be wall-to-wall political scandal of no end. now you have two committees saying we've seen the fisa abuse, we know that obama's white house along with help from the clintons, worked with the fbi and doj to target for political purposes donald trump and no one is talking about it. >> right. >> and we have another committee saying in a mem to grassley and graham that's what happened. >> and what grassley and graham declassified was their criminal referral of christopher steele, the author of the dossier for which was used as evidence to get that fisa warrant and ultimately you now have mccarthy and others calling for, and this isn't been covered
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either, there should be a separate investigation specifically into this or into why they are not looking into the fact that the fisa judge was misled when the fbi went to him and didn't tell him that that dossier and christopher steele's information was paid for by the clinton campaign. >> it's not just the fisa judge that was misled. remember when comey went to visit the president to talk about the dossier and then he leaked it to the media so the media could cover that he had talked about it to the president. do you really think in that meeting he told the president that that dossier was paid for by the hillary clinton campaign? >> great point. >> that never came out. they hid it then, they hid it in the fisa warrant, and they misled a judge and this is absolutely scandalous. >> so thank you andy mccarthy. look at the grassley/graham memo. it validates this, the justice
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department and fbi used clinton generated innuendo to convince the fisa court to issue surveillance against carter page who had been let go from the trump campaign so that they could surveil on the trump campaign. >> and we still have an on going investigation against a sitting president based on this. coming up, presh off their super bowl victory, some philadelphia eagles, they're going to boycott the white house. we'll react to that next hour. plus, congressman jeff raf cliff here life. your an amazing machine. especially when inside another amazing machine. the lexus es. with standard technology like lexus safety system plus. the lexus es, and es hybrid. experience amazing at your lexus dealer.
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and i don't share it with mom! right, mom? righttt. safe driving bonus checks. only from allstate. switching to allstate is worth it. >> the battle off the rival memos. >> president trump declines to release the work of ranking house intelligence democrat adam schiff. the president criticizing it as very political. >> now it goes back to the democrats and they have a chance to revise this. >> schiff firing back saying this, mr. president, what you call political are actually called facts. >> it was totally a political act and disingenuinous and inappropriate. rachel: officers eric joering and anthony morelli were gunned down. >> those officers gave their lives in protection of others. those are true american heros. >> the olympic sporting action
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on saturday while the focus was on sports, the influential sister met with south korean president and there was no daylight between the u.s. and south korea in their reign to rid the north of its nukes and missiles. >> ♪ ♪ pete: thank you for the hootie and the blowfish. one of my favorite band growing up. darrius rucker want with them. griff: and now he's a country music star. pete: many adaptations to life. one thing one day another thing another day. why not? lady in red, rachel campos. griff jenkins live from washington d.c. in new york city rachel: good morning to all of you get your coffee, join us we've got a lot of news today. pete: it's sunday morning. we tell you to stay undressed maybe put on a reason if you
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want. lay on the couch but don't get out of bed just enjoy the morning with us. be lazy it's sunday. church doesn't start for a few hours there's no more football just kind of be lazy. griff: but do pay attention because we have a fox & friends weekend olympic update for you and that is a political princess from north korea has solved the crisis on the korean peninsula after more than 50 years. rachel: we can really explain that, that political print sense is the words of the american media, the dictators it's not sarcasm it's what they wrote. griff: it is so the media is just absolutely fawning head over heels over this beautiful princess. pete: sister of kim jong-un there she is 30 years old in the center of your screen, and the media has basically gone wall to wall infatuated with the fact she showed up, hasn't been poisoned and knows how to smile
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so here is headlines from so-called news networks. cnn says kim jong-un's sister stealing the show at the winter olympics, yahoo is saying kim jong-un's mysterous sister gets her star turn at the winter olympics so we've got all these athletes training for years and years to be on the world stage and we have to talk about the sister of a dictator? rachel: i love this somebody tweeted back to that cnn article yes, work it, oppress your people get that crime against humanity, girl. that's the kind of glowing weird coverage that they're sending out and they also in this say that she is the ivanka of north korea. wrong on so many levels, putting those two women on the same page one is working for paid leave. the other is complicit in really a dictatorship that is murdering
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its people, starving them and again, the word complicit used for ivanka in the trump administration why isn't it being used here? griff: it doesn't even stop there. already a representative, a u.s. representative to the olympic committee is suggesting that the north korean/south korean women's hockey team should receive, wait for it, the nobel peace prize. pete: really wait who would deserve it more the north and south korean women's ice hockey team or barack obama when they gave it to him before he ever did anything. i'm just asking but think about the fact that you've got a u.s. representative to the ioc saying give them the peace prize because they're skating together on the ice. do not forget north korea is flying under this unified flag with south korea, but you know what kim jong-un wants? he wants a unified korean peninsula under his rule under his nukes to impress the entire peninsula. they will never be a shared peace --
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rachel: so why is the media doing this, pete. why do you think they're giving this coverage to her? pete: i think it's because they absolutely hate president trump 's approach to resolving what's going on there. the reality that you can't live in a world where north korea has nukes and threatens the world with nukes and coordinates with iran frankly which also wants to threaten the world so he's used the toughest language, little rocket man, fire and fury, to talk about north korea, an the media hates it, so they want anyone that will fawn and of course the sister of kim jong-un goes to the south, invites president moon, the south korean president to come to north korea , all fine. talk all you want but if you talk and then let north korea get the ability to deliver nukes , icbm's to our shores that's not america first. the president is focused on that so is vice president pence to their credit the media wants to hate on them. rachel: so is mike huckabee and we had him on earlier and here is what he had to say about north korea. >> it's the narrative, the media must want to paint but look, the little sister of little kim
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still comes from a country where most of the people are starving to death, where repression is extraordinary, and where they kill visitors like they did with the gentlemen otto warmbier. that's the sad thing they haven't changed their ways. they're still an incredibly dangerous country that threatens a piece of the world and having the sister show up and pretend she's all fun and games doesn't change a thing in north korea. pete: did you know kim jong-un can get the peace prize? denounce your brother and then you'd be a peace advocate. rachel: then i'd watch the olympics. i would watch if that happened. griff: now there's another headline story we've got to get to and that is a headline in the new york times now, remember the president sent the democrat memo back for revision. he chose not to de classify it and democrats of course outraged the new york times has this headline out there, pressure
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from trump may lead to revision of the democratic memo. now, we have heard that president trump from the new york times and from democrats that it is the -- pete: it's the same thing. same thing. griff: but here is what we learned. buried deep in the story is it's the fbi and the department of justice who is pressuring the president to send this back for revision. it's not the president. it's the doj and let me just read the buried portion of this new york times article. in a letter to the white house on friday, top justice department and fbi officials said they had law enforcement, national security concerns about de classifying parts of the democratic memo. i covered this story all week and yet i don't remember any reports coming out of the doj and fbi was pressuring for revision. rachel: so it's not trump that's pressuring for revision.
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it's the doj and the fbi. griff: and that's why we don't see it as this memo goes back to the intelligence committee for the revisions called for by the fbi. rachel: and remember when the democrats last week when the republicans released their memo said we should do nothing to undermine what the fbi and the doj say. pete: yes. rachel: they just said you guys need to change your memo. pete: remember the doj and the fbi said about the republican memo, the nunes memo don't release it, because it omits facts like the doj and fbi wanted more contacts or context en the republican memo. not redactions so they released it. so in this memo, doj and fbi are saying you can't release this. sources and methods compromising of national security mr. president you have to be responsible and redact this which is exactly what the president has referred but again the headlines you don't see it at all. president trump obstructing justice not being transparent that's what the so-called mainstream media which is not mainstream at all, they are all leftist that's what they will say in reality he's being responsible.
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we'll hear what the democrats have to say and ultimately rachel you said this yesterday none of it contradicts so we're hearing what devon nunes said, what chuck grassley and lindsay graham had said, that the political opponents spotted president trump using the fisa process to do so. that's a fact but you turn on another channel, don't do it but if you turn on another channel that's all you'll hear. rachel: so we just saw a tweet come out by the way i want to switch topics here from the president recently said he put the tweet up here, republicans want to fix daca far more than democrats do. the democrats had all three branches of government back in 2008, 2011 and they decided not to do anything about daca. they only want to use it as a campaign issue, vote republican. well we had an amazing young man on yesterday. he's a dreamer he came here as a one year old child and he has made an amazing life here thanks to the opportunities that he's had.
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he has two degrees. he now works for a fortune 500 company. he is so grateful to donald trump for this opportunity and is calling out democrats. pete: he's grateful to donald trump? rachel: no because i told you he was smart. he was actually trying to do something for dreamers let's hear this clip. >> nancy pelosi and chuck schumer really have no clear message, have been, we have been confused, i think at the end of the day they've been using us as pawns and the second point i want to bring in is they should never have shutdown the government over daca. we should 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 republicans already willing to do something about it as we speak. at the end of the day you're looking at a president that's all about results. i think he needs to meet democrats in the middle and he's bringing this pathway to citizenship so that we can actually finally get something
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done, immigration reform. griff: now this issue is going to take front and center in washington this week in the coming weeks because despite nancy pelosi's eight hour on the house floor paul ryan has said look we're going to do something on daca, we want to do something on daca we'll see what comes up and what deal can be donald it will be interesting to see if democrats continue to just resist from any progress. pete: he was a very clear thinker and he pointed out a very important point. if democrats really cared about daca recipients they would have done something about it when they had the levers of power and they never did instead they did an executive action which kicked the can down the road, president trump had to deal with it and no i argue too generous of an offer but he's made a very generous offer on immigration deal and some dreamers are saying we should thank president trump. rachel: right and i think what he points out is that the deput ies hate donald trump more than they want to help the dream ers and this is the best opportunity for bipartisan deal that has ever existed.
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now is the time pointing out that, so well yesterday. if you get a chance go online and check out that interview. pete: we'll see if those democrats come to the table. rachel: we have to get to headlines and we have a fox news alert. a tour of the grand canyon turns deadly when a chopper crashes 600 feet to the ground killing three people. crews still rescuing four survivors and treating them on the scene blaming rough terrain and strong winds from airlifting them to a nearby hospital. seven people including the pilot on board taking off from las vegas. it's unclear what caused this fiery crash. defense secretary james mattis is on his way to rome. mattis departing just moments ago for talks with senior italian officials to reaffirm partnerships and alliances in europe and he then goes to brussels for a nato conference. mattis will wrap up the trip to the munich security conference. drama in the city.
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the feud between former co-stars on hbo hit show sex in the city kim catrell and sarah jessica parker. parker shared public condolences to her after the death of her brother and catrell accusing parker of exploiting her families loss and writing on instagram "i don't need your love and support at this tragic time" and the caption reading" you are not my friend." wow. deep thoughts. pete: wow. rachel: and those are your headlines. griff: i don't know what to say about that. pete: stilettos at dawn. rachel: i can't believe it's a headline, like the front page. griff: democrats say president trump's de session to not release the memo proves he has something to hide but not all democrats agree. mark pen is next. pete: and the video will give you chills a student choir fills an entire hotel, the sounds of our national anthem. your brain changes as you get older.
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>> tech: thanks for choosing safelite. >> grandpa: thank you! >> child: bye! >> tech: bye! saving you time... so you can keep saving the world. >> kids: ♪ safelite repair, safelite replace ♪ griff: democrats blasting the president's request to revise their fisa rebuttal after national security concerns delay its release calling president dangerous, desperate and wreckless. pete: but our next guest a democrat and former chief strategist for both bill and hillary clinton's election campaigns says shame on democrat s for politicizing the investigation. mark penn joins us now with more mark, good morning. so if you would, lay out as a democrat your response to their reaction of the president's approach to the democratic memo.
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>> look, i think in general we cannot have democratic facts and republican facts coming out of investigations. we're going to have to have one set of facts so i don't think overly partisan comments from anyone whether it's the democrat s or pelosi or the republicans make a lot of sense. the public has gotten confused they don't really hear most of the facts. we can't allow people to play to one base or another. i think that people have got to take the partisanship out of this and i think it's true of pelosi and the democrats and true of the republicans as well. griff: but wait, mark, doesn't nancy pelosi get more of the blame here for fueling the problem? >> well, look, today it's nancy pelosi so i think she shouldn't have made that statement. i think this memo has to go through a process with the fbi and the justice department. i don't think that process should be politicized and i think the spotlights on her. she's turning it to trump.
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trump is turning it back to them they both reverse their positions in the last two days, wow how more confused could the public be. we need more adults in this thing making sane, rational comments. pete: well mark, we've got an op ed in the new york post we want to get your comment on. michael goodwin kind of pulling back the layers of hillary clinton's deceit wrote this and i want your response. he said it increasingly appears the clinton machine was the secret original source of virtually all the allegations about trump and russia that led to the fbi investigation. the clinton connections are so fundamental there probably would not have been an fbi investigation without her involvement so mark what we've been talking about. st. truth more important or is it getting at trump and how do we get to that truth? >> look, i think we're beginning to learn some things fairly definitely and i think the grassley/graham memo is really quite credible and it does suggest that this dossier was a
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key part of this fisa warrant that steele seemed to go everywhere. steele created a one-man echo chamber almost everywhere with the media, the fbi, the department of justice. pete: and the clinton campaign. >> well i think the clinton campaign we know and the dnc paid for it. the chain back to hillary again, let's not overstate facts we don't know. nunes said he's going to investigate that. let's understand there's a set of facts we can pretty much agree to and then everybody would like to take it to trump to take it to hillary. right now we know steele is right at the center of what appears to be completely un verified allegations. >> mark penn thank you very much and interesting you mentioned that grassley/graham memo. not a lot of people covering it but we are here. thanks for joining us. thank you. griff: all right eagles star malcolm jenkins no relation won't celebrate his team's super bowl win at the white house. he says it's not worth his time.
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griff: now for your news by the numbers. first, five, that's how many people were arrested after violent protests against the campus event hosted by college republicans. police forced to use pepper spray breaking up the out of control crowd at the university of washington. next, 17, that's the age of the kid who earned the u.s.' first gold at the winter olympics, congratulations red gerard took first at the mens snowboarding, he's the youngest olympic snow boarding champ ever.
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and finally, 9% that's the chilly drop in ratings the olympic opening ceremonies saw compared to 2014. nearly 29 million people tuned in compared to the 31 million that watched the sochi olympic games ceremony. the ceremonial coverage on nbc lasting more than three and a half hours fueled certainly by rachel's opposition. pete: yeah i was going to blame her but i'm going to credit her. well done rachel. all right well her family holds one of the worst human rights records in the world, but that's not stopping the liberal media from making kim jong-un's sister the star of its olympics coverage. griff: headlines like this one under fire. the washington post claiming the ivanka trump of north korea captivates people in the south. rachel: social media stars and trump supporters diamond diamond & silk are here, welcome, ladies >> hi, thank you for having us. rachel: so we know that kim yo
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has a rap star name but why is she being treated like a rock star by the media? isn't she complicit in one of the most brutal edge reams on earth right now? >> absolutely. let us get this straight. she is no princess. what she is is she's controlled, she's abused and looks like she's suffering from malnutrition. you know, for the left wing media to even compare ivanka trump to this lady, i mean we just do not get that right there ivanka trump do not abuse people she is not in some kind of a dictatorship regime where people are being abused. >> that's right. >> so let us first get that straight and i find it very offensive for the left wing media to go after ivanka trump like that and compare her to this girl right here. >> and since the media is so infatuated with her maybe they should pack their stuff and move to north korea with her: griff: you call her princess. i read this morning from the a,,
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a high level north korean delegation led by youth full political print sense is expected to head home after a whirl wind three day visit in south korea. i ask you guys is it irresponsible of the media to call her this political princess when yet there are thousands, count thousands of political prisoners being tortured in that country. >> it is irresponsible. >> that's right. >> because you are trying to normalize her as if they're over there eating cherry pie. no, these people are being abused over there. yes. >> these people don't have food to eat. they don't even have heat to heat their houses. >> that's right. >> so no this is a brutal regime we need to be looking at how we can take and keep nuclear weapon s from these people while they try to destroy the united states of america. pete: well said well we got to get your comments on another topic as well. many of us watched a great super bowl game when the eagles came out on top super bowl champions so they've earned a trip to the white house but not for eagles
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safety malcolm jenkins who said he's not eager to go to the white house. he says visiting the white house isn't worth his time. listen. >> it comes to this presidency i'm just, i'm not very excited about getting my picture taken with him, you know just not worth my time. i'd rather spend my time working with, you know, whoever on these issues we've been fighting for. pete: what do you make of him skipping the white house? >> you know it's sad because it is a great honor when you have an invite to the white house. >> that's right. >> but you have to keep in mind some of these people like him are still stuck in that democratic plantation mindset, being controlled by the dogs that feed them the narrative and they continue to bite that narrative. shame on him he don't know how to man up and stand up and go talk to the president that can help him with these issues which is inner and urban cities with reform and the justice system. but oh, he don't want to do that shame on him. maybe it's time for him to man up and stand up. >> that's right. griff: i just want to tell you ladies there is no relation to
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griff jenkins and malcolm jenkins although if malcolm jenkins doesn't want to go to the white house, he's welcome to come visit me and i'll take him over to walter reed medical center and we can visit wounded troops. rachel: by the way diamond & silk i'll be joining you guys on your chit chat tour. i'm looking forward to it. >> thank you. get your tickets at diamond & silk.com. pete: will you promise to pull rachel up on stage and make her -- >> yes, she's up there with us so we can interview her, we'll have fun. griff: good stuff thank you very much for joining us we'll send her your way. >> thank you for having us. pete: griff: woodward and bernstein are the journalists who broke watergate. now they say president trump's actions are similar to nixons before the saturday night massacre. really? rachel: and the video will give you chills. a student choir fills an entire hotel with the sound of the national anthem. the moment that will make you even prouder to be an american.
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>> ♪ and the rockets red glare , the bombs bursting in air , gave proof to the night, ♪ ♪ pete: i mean the anthem itself is beautiful but you put it in that context and it's amazing, that's your shot of the morning more than 650 choir students waking up, louisville who test guests with their beautiful rendition as you're hearing of the star spank banner. griff: guests are erupting into the performance, for kids participating in the kentucky music educator's association all -state choir. rachel: that is -- pete: super cool. rachel: gorgeous. pete: can you imagine waking up to that? rachel: no. pete: i do. rachel: maybe i should make that my new alarm thing.
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better than the typical one. griff: yeah. rachel: [laughter] all right, turning now to your headlines. a teacher fighting for her life after catching the deadly flu during one of the worst outbreak s of the virus in years. christy whitley is on life support after contracting both strains of the flu two weeks ago despite getting vaccinated in october after giving birth to her son the 35 year old a special education teacher in central wisconsin, i'm sorry incent all texas. her family says she was healthy and very active before getting sick. thousands of men and women in uniform lining the streets during a heavy snowfall to honor a fallen colorado deputy. the procession escorting 35 year old el paso county sheriff's deputy. he was shot and killed after struggling with a suspected car thief, leaving behind his wife and their seven-year-old twins.
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and a veteran hospital under fire after putting 56 of our heros on a secret wait list for eye care. the omaha harold reports the norfolk nebraska va was offered a new treatment but lacked the necessary equipment and training and instead of following the rules and putting it in an online database staff kept names in a folder. they didn't say how many workers are disciplined but have retrained some of the staff and those are your headlines. pete: hopefully with the new rules of the va, whoever is responsible for that could be fired. we've got another headline that caught our eye. as you know i follow the va issues very closely as does this program fox & friends. the headline in the washington post caught our eye that said this. it said the white house targets va's deputy secretary, scott number two at the va as a warning shot to the agencies leader. now, we reached out to the va and the white house for a statement on this.
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we've not heard back from either but the article says that inside the va, the number two has been resisting, his name is tom bow man, he's been resisting the president's attempts to give real choice to veterans, you know you can go to the va, or go to a private provider. it was a central plank that's tom bowman on our screen, a central plank of what president trump ran on. if the bureaucracy is not serving you, go elsewhere so others have been fighting to make that happen. the number two there whose appointed in august has been secretly sort of resisting that working with veterans groups and deputies and others to say let's water down what the president is doing. let's not make that happen so it looks like the white house is looking to find him a new job, the number two, and shulkin is in hot water a little bit too. he's done great things but will he go full bore on veterans choice as well is a big question this program has covered a lot we want comments from the white house and the va, we'll see where it goes. griff: why, why is this guy bow
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man so so deep? the veteran service organizations, the veterans groups who do a lot of great things but -- pete: they're invested in the way va does business currently so they resist giving veterans a true choice and they build up a fake argument that if you give a veteran a choice you'll privat ize the va and shut it all down. president trump has said that's deserved the best possible care either at a va facility or from a private physician and that's what the va is attemtpting to deliver, mostly democrats but some republicans including the chairman of the va committee in the senate are resisting that true choice and so swamp creatures inside the vahads are going to do what they can inside the bureaucracy to fight back and it's important we shine light on that and i was very interested to see this. rachel: if he goes then the secretary will be on notice as well. pete: he's saying deliver what the president wanted it's not your perogative it's the president and the president is clear give vets choice so you know at fox & friends we pay
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very close attention to the va and vets we'll stay on this story for you. griff: we got to talk to rick whose probably utilizing one of those great weather man umbrella s. there he is, looking good. pete: that's army green, right, like? rick: yes, look at all of that. actually, yeah i love it. let's talk about the weather out there. big storm all across the eastern part of the country is causing major problems. the west where you've been so dry get ready, we have a chance of rain coming in across the southwest towards la this week which is great news we so desperately need it. we really need rain across parts of southeast as well you see the warm temperatures 63 in atlanta, 68 in raleigh. it's warm and we're going to continue to see more rain throughout the day today. it's a slow mover that means the rainfall totals are going to pileup and we'll see spots up to about five inches by the time this is donald down across the southeast, very heavy storms moving in we had a tornado warning earlier this morning. could see a few severe storms throughout afternoon as that line continues to pull to the
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east. very heavy rain still around the philly area this morning and it's probably not going to be, we'll put this map into motion, until tomorrow morning by the time this storm is completely gone out of here which is going to be great news finally, your weekend pretty much a washout. here is the precipitation still to come down across parts of the southeast another two to three inches, all right guys sending it back to you inside. pete: thanks, rick. rachel: thanks, rick. pete: we weren't paying attention to his weather the conversations always continue on the couch. rachel: we're still talking about the va. griff: curious why the number two guy isn't being made to answer. pete: if tom bowman wants to come on the program he's more than welcome so liberal billionaire just revealed as a major donor to a campaign trying to sabotage brexit and this is real political collusion and he joins us next. rachel: plus a bitter sweet night for a gold star daughter her army sargent dad died in a training accident last year, so a national guardsman stepped up
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and took the girl to her first father daughter dance in his place, both of them join us live >> ♪ ♪ oh, that's lovely... so graceful. the corkscrew spin, flawless... ...his signature move, the flying dutchman. poetry in motion. and there it is, the "baby bird". breathtaking. a sumo wrestler figure skating? surprising. what's not surprising? how much money heather saved by switching to geico. fifteen minutes could save you fifteen percent or more. what is this? when we love someone, we want to do right by them. but some things we can't control like snoring. (snoring) introducing theravent anti-snore strips. clinically shown to reduce snoring. theravent. the answer is right under your nose.
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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. pete: welcome back liberal billionaire george soros donate hundreds of thousands of dollars to a campaign looking to sabotage voters decision to leave the european union. rachel: the grant was to support british groups striving to ensure this crucial debate is not shutdown. pete: but wasn't the debate decided when a majority of voter s chose to leave the eu? here to weigh in former uk independence party leader and fox news contributor nigel farag e. it's no surprise someone will try to undermine the will of the people to puerto rico sue his
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open borders agenda. what do you make of the most recent attempt? >> i've been saying since 2011 that we all need to wake up to who george soros is and how big his organization is and just get a handle on this. he's open society for him has received $30 billion, not million, billion dollars and this is the biggest political campaigning organization the world has ever seen. he has got an agenda there's nothing illegal in that but he doesn't believe in what he calls nationalism and what i would call nation state democracy. brexit was about saying we want a governor in country and make our own laws and this man, okay, so far we've discovered about a million dollars that he spent on various organizations, but want to overturn the brexit result. i suspect that's the tip of the iceberg. if you really examine the money this man is spending across the
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whole of europe, in america, to push his agenda which is to get rid of the nations state and to encourage mass migration and i'd just say to people in an era when much of the media is obsessing about russian collusion, what is ever itable in an investigation is just what has open society done over the course of the last few years. rachel: nigel, for those viewers who don't know who george soros is briefly just tell us who is he? >> well, he's an 87 year old he was born in hungary and lived as a child through the bad times there under nazi rule. he came to the west initially to london and then to new york, he's been in new york for the best part of 50 years. i mean to be fair to hip, he is one of the most successful stock market investors history has ever seen. he's made tens of billions getting call after call right, so he's clearly a very clever
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man, very clever man with a big political agenda. and there's nothing wrong or illegal in that but as i say normally, you know, wealthy people might put a few million dollars into what they believe in whether it's the democrats or whether it's the republicans or whatever it may be, but in this case, we're talking about $30 billion and it is literally the biggest and most powerful campaign organization that's ever been seen across the west and we need to start talking about it. griff: nigel, let me ask you about another topic that is wood ward and bernstein the journalist behind watergate, now saying trump's actions similarly to nixons we'll put on the wall this quote from cnn and the washington post saying president trump insists it's all a witch hunt in an unfair examination of his family's personal finances. no wonder many people are making comparisons to this saturday night massacre of 1973. nixon didn't know it at the time
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but this saturday night massacre would become a pivot point in this presidency crucial to the obstruction of justice. what do you make of it? >> what i make of it is this investigation has been going on for a very long time incidental ly happening here too. did the russians influence brexit? you know, we kind of reached a level of histeria with all of this. all i can say is that if the washington post and cnn are putting these two guys out, who without doubt, did remarkable work 40 years ago, it must be just about the last shot they've got in the barrel. come on, months and months of these investigations are nothing of any significance whatsoever has been uncovered and i'm not surprised, the president in private is frustrated by all this after all what he wants to do is to get on with the job. i really think, you know, they basically don't have knew bullets left to fire. pete: of course now that we're
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in the clear our interview next will be conducted in russian so brush up on your russian. thank you, sir. >> thank you. pete: good to talk to you always appreciate it. thank you. pete: all right well, coming up a bitter sweet night for a gold star daughter. her army sargent dad died in a training accident last year, so a national guardsman stepped up and took the girl to her first father daughter dance in his place. both of them join us live with this inspiring story, next. >> ♪ ♪
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pete: welcome back to fox & friends. remember the story we covered yesterday i believe it was yesterday. democrat senator mark warner had
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we learned that in march of 2017 , he had reached out through a lobbyist for a russian oligarch to try to get in touch with christopher steele so he's on the top democrat on the senate intel committee basically going rogue and he let the committee know months later but he tried to get in touch with christopher steele. rachel: he wasn't kind of going rogue, he was going rogue. in the text messages reveal that he wanted no paper trail. now the way these committees work is normally the republicans and the democrats work together so they're working on the same information and by the way, highly unusual for a senator to setup a meeting for himself. there are staffers that do this. he did this on his own and in the text as i said he said i want no paper trail. he's clearly trying to keep the republican members of the senate intelligence committee out of the loop on this. griff: and we can show you these texts this is between senator warner and a lobbyist getting him to that oligarch.
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warner, we have so much to discuss you need to be careful but we can trip to help our country. waldman, i'm in. this is all about going to meet christopher steele but here is the thing. we now are taking a look back. remember when donald trump jr. had that meeting at the trump tower with a russian lawyer who by the way was far from what christopher steele is now been accused of criminally referred for his dossier but that meeting last year, we now have looked back to an interview given by warner and he was talking, warner, about donald trump jr.'s meeting. take a listen. >> the president and frankly i can't believe what he's saying. here it was in black and white an e-mail that said meet with this russian lawyer acting as an agent of the russian government and this is part of the russian
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government's effort to help then candidate trump and to discredit clinton. i don't know anybody democrat or republican that would take that kind of meeting with not only a foreign government but a foreign adversary. pete: i don't know any kind of democrat that would take that kind of meeting. come on. he says in black and white an e-mail. how about we have in black and white text messages from him, warner himself to this lobbyist saying hook me up with christopher steele. no paper trail. i've got to hear from this guy and learn dirt on trump. the hipocracy is so obvious. rachel: and that's on the senate side then you go to the house side and you have adam schiff getting prank calls by so-called russians who had dirt on trump and he also tried to arrange with his staffers a secret meeting to get dirt on trump, so you see it on both sides and then you wonder. pete: but for democrats remember this. it's not about truth, it's about trump. it's not about truth it's about trump.
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they want to get to the bottom of anything they can to discredit him. thankfully folks like devon nunes i wish the senate intelligence committee would be less cord quality, patting each other on the back. rachel: right because that's the other interesting angle we had marco rubio and also senator bur r on that committee sort of excusing, you know the fact that he didn't coordinate with them saying well listen nothing really came of it but you know and again that's the senate. they like to be very collegial, and they want to keep everything very bipartisan. you can imagine if that happened on the democrat side they would be calling out the republicans. griff: bottom line it's about hipocracy. warner says if the president does it, but if i do it no big deal that's a double standard and he's the member on the senate intelligence committee investigating the president for russia ties and yet he was trying to do exactly the same. still ahead, philadelphia now fighting the growing opioid crisis by getting this, legaliz ing a safe space to take
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drugs, is that a good idea? rachel: plus, texas congressman john ratcliffe former boston police commissioner ed davis, reverend franklin graham and maria bartiromo all live and coming here. stay with us. there are two types of people in the world. those who fear the future... and those who embrace it. the future is for the unafraid. ♪ ♪
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the future is for the unafraid. (announcer) purchase $699 or moret tat helzberg diamonds and get a free megablast waterproof speaker with built-in amazon alexa. a $339.98 value. 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. neulasta helps reduce infection risk by boosting your white blood cell count, which strengthens your immune system. in a key study,
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with accident forgiveness your rates won't go up just because of an accident. switching to allstate is worth it. ... ♪ >> democrats say the president's decision's decision not to release the memo proves he has something to hide. >> president what you are called political actually are called facts. >> i think this memo has to go through a process. i don't think this process should be politicized. >> officers eric joring and morelli died. >> these two put on a uniform to go out and serve the people of their community. they're absolutely are heroes and people need to understand that. >> olympic update for you. the sister of kim jong-un was
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part of the north korean delegation, kim jong's sister stealing the show at the winter olympics. >> having the sister show up and pretend she's all fun and games doesn't change a thing in north korea. >> vice president pence said saturday there was no daylight between the u.s. and south korea in their aim to rid the north of its nukes and missiles. ♪ pete: isn't that anthem of most of our lives, find something that we're good at? rachel: yes. pete: what are you best at, rachel? rachel: i love to cook. and i'm actually really good, and the best tacos in wausau, wisconsin. pete: i believe that. i'm inviting myself to your house for ta.os rachel: you should. we'd love to have you. pete: what are you good at?
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griff: curling. i was disappointed i wasn't chosen for the olympic t.am pete: are you the pusher or the sweeper? griff: i love to sweep. rachel: you're good at surfing, too, . pete: surfing will be in the 2020 olympics i believe and i'm making fun of the olympics. this is the story of the weekend weekend. setting aside the politics for which i apologize i brought from washington this story of the olympics which rachel is certainly a huge fan of the olympics. we've been giving her a hard time because she hates the olympics, but the story of the media absolutely fawning and just glamourizing the visit by the, as the ap says, youthful political princess kim jong-un, the brutal dictator of the hermit kingdom, his little sister showing up and sitting and smiling and now she has essentially solved the entire problem on the korean penins.la pete: give her a peace prize. that's her.
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her name is kim yo jong, and you have on the so-called mainstream media a fawning impression of who she is. here's some headlines on how they have characterized her. her brother let her out of jail and let her go to south korea, and they're saying this. cnn. kim jong-un's sister is stealing the show at the winter olympics. also the ivanka trump of north korea captivates people in the south at the olympics. and yahoo says all swagger and smiles, kim jong-un's sister gets her star turn at the winter olympics. rachel: that washington post headline, i don't think that's coincidental. i mean, putting -- pete: of course .ot rachel: -- north korea, the daughter of the -- or the sister of the north korean being dictator next to the name ivanka because as you know the media has been caring our president to the north korean dictator, despite the fact that, you know,
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dictators consolidate power. this administration had been but decentralizing all the power obama had in d.c. giving money back to the people in tax reform what they're doing with this is they're normalizing north korea, and it's really curious. i think a lot of people are upset. in fact, south koreans are upset about this. there's some protesters. i think we have footage of t.at pete: absolutely. so it's not all hugs and kisses and rainbows between the north and the south. you know, we saw them walk underneath the same flag, and some -- even a republican representative of the ioc has suggested maybe some of those north and south koreans should get a peace prize for watching together but a lot of citizens of south korea are saying, hey, by cutting a deal with the north you're cutting a deal with the devil. they're protesting that, saying they're starving in the north, it's political oppression. don't glamourize or glorify the sister off the regime.
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griff: we had someone on earlier that put it into perspective saying this regime threatens world peace. take a listen. >> it's the narrative the media must want to paint. look, the little sister of little king still comes from a country where most of the people are starving to death, where repression is extraordinary, and where they kill visitors like they did with the gentleman warmbier. that's the sad thing. they haven't changed their ways. they're still an incredibly dangerous country that threatens the peace of the world, and having, you know, the sister show up and pretend that she's all fun and games doesn't change a thing in north korea. griff: you know, here's the problem with this with my colleagues in the media, with the glamourizing. they're essentially giving her credit for setting the groundwork for some some of the historical summit after more than 60 years between north and
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south korea, and it's just irresponsible, i think, for my colleagues to write things like "a why do you feel political princess" when there are political prisoners being tortured and starved in their prisons and across that country. rachel: and thank you to vice president pence for bringing in otto warmbier's parents. he was killed by the dictatorship and bringing attention to the repression, the cruelty. people are eating dirt there. they're being tortured by the thousands in these gulags that they have. it's really quite astounding that the media wouldn't draw attention to that. griff: course because the media hates trump and they hate his approach to what's happened there to they write these headlines to try to make him look bad lining he's a war mong monger and she's a a peacemaker because he talks about little rocket man and fire and fiery. he's taking seriously the fact that we are being blackmailed by a backwards regime that can hit our people cause he can hit our
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shores emp. serious implications. he talks about military exercises. they say he wants to sets the world on fire so they find any reason to glorify the sister of the dictator who, you know, i hope she defects. if she's really a peacemaker she would defect to the south to tell the truth about the north. rachel: and then we should give up her the nobel peace prize. griff: the president's going to be beaten up for more than just this, and that is daca. when i go back to washington, front and center the issue of daca is going to come up, paul ryan saying that he hopes to do something. but here is the president's tweet about that. we're going to put it up for you yesterday. "republicans want to fix daca far honor the democrats do. the dems had all three branches of government back in 2008, 2011 and they decided not to do anything about daca. they only want to use it as a campaign issue. boat very." so yesterday we had a really fascinating interview with a young dreamer. he was brought here as a young
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child. his name is hilario yanez. he has two degrees, works for a fortune 500 company. >> nancy pelosi and chuck schumer really have no clear message, have been -- you know, we have been confused, i think at the end of the day they've been using us as pawns. the second point i want to bring is is they should have never shut down the government over daca. we should never hold the american people and our military hostage. there's 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. at the end of the day you're looking at a president that's all about results. i think he needs to meet democrats in the middle, and he's bringing this pathway to citizenship so that we can actually get something done with immigration reform. pete: hilario was fantastic and has an amazing perspective on
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this my country. let's not be mistaken. not every dreamer is hilario and not every voter that voted for president trump had an expectation he was going to advance amnesty. so there's a tight rote, the wall and some form of immigration reform. if someone is so grateful and loves this country so much and was brought here not of their own volition, you certainly understand that story, so that's what makes the debate coming forward so complicated and difficult. rachel: it is a very complicated and difficult case. and what was really compelling to me about hilario is he was not an entitled dreamer. he was one who was so grateful to the president, grateful to this country, says make me a citizen, i'll never kneel during the national anthem. i get goose bumps when i hear it it. so i think what he did for me when i saw it was really draw into stark contrast, who wants to help the dreamers and who's all talk? who thinks the resistance trump
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trump's helping the dreamers, and that, i think, if you haven't seen the interview, go to foxnews.com. pete: he said we need to fix the problem, too, he said build the wall, build the wall, end chain migration, the visa lottery system does not make sense. he's common sense. i think you can get that exchange. the question is is will democrats ever come to the table in good faith? he doesn't think they will. rachel: see now because the budget is off the table and when we talk about immigration it's just going to be are you for an immigration deal that will fix daca and fix the border, or not? griff: but we're not willing to come to the table is where the issue of immigration ended. maybe they should invite hilario to washington to the table. rachel: not a bad idea. our headlines now, starting with a fox news alert. russia media reporting a passenger plan crashed in the suburbs of moscow just moments ago.
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the saratok airlines flying caring 65 passengers and crew, all expected to be dead. the plane crashing shortly after takeoff from moscow. pieces of the plane have been found. a security scare overnight at lax airport. a shirtless man temporarily shutting down runways after scaling a fence and running up to a southwest plane preparing for takeoff and then taking a fire extinguisher out of its wheel wear. police arrested the unidentified man who may have been ill. the airport back to normal operations. loved ones gathering to remember philanthropist, in favor of the, and the grandfather of our own abby huntsman, jon huntsman sr., abby abby's father, john, giving this emotional eulogy. >> today it kind of feels like a part of utah died with him.
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a beautiful part of the state all of a sudden seems gone. today we bury a body, but we un unleash a legacy. rachel: following the funeral, abby shared this beautiful image a final balloon send-off from the huntsmans' grandkids. jon huntsman sr. was 80 years old. and those are your headlines. very sad. pete: we're thinking of you, abby, and the entire huntsman family. rachel: if you know abby, you know she comes from an amazing family. griff: and we thank him for the contributions of the huntsman family to this country. president trump delaying the release of the democrats' fisa but that memo. texas congressman john ratcliffe has had enough. he says what's most important is what's not in it. he joins us next. pete: a bittersweet night for a gold star daughter. her army sergeant dad died in a training accident last year so a national guardsmen stepped up and took the daughter to her first father-daughter dance in
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his place. both of them are coming up. ♪ hi, i'm bob harper, and i recently had a heart attack. it changed my life. but i'm a survivor. after my heart attack, my doctor prescribed brilinta. it's for people who have been hospitalized for a heart attack. brilinta is taken with a low-dose aspirin. no more than 100 milligrams as it affects how well brilinta works. brilinta helps keep platelets from sticking together and forming a clot. in a clinical study, brilinta worked better than plavix. brilinta reduced the chance of having another heart attack...
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♪ pete: president trump delaying the release of the democrats if so fisa rebuttal memo requesting it be readvised due of course to national security concerns. g.o.p. congressman john ratcliffe has seen the democrats democrats' memo along with all of its underlying sources, including the fisa application. he joins us now to weigh in. congressman, thanks for being here. was it a smart move based on national security for this white house to say, "let's be careful about this democratic memo and
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make sure it doesn't violate any national security concerns"? >> it was. the white house was just following the advice of the department of justice and the f.b.i. when the president sent back the letter to the house intelligence committee saying that there need to be redactions, those are coming from the department of justice and the f.b.i. who have dozens of concerns. pete: you've seen not only the democratic memo but also the source documents for the fisa applications that are at issue here. when this memo is released, redacted or otherwise, will it contradict what the republicans, devin nunes, put out in their memo? >> it won't. in fact it will confirm the most important points. to understand what's in the democratic response memo, you have to understand what's not in it. and what's not in it is a representation that the fisa court was ever told that hillary clinton paid for the dossier that was used to spy on the trump campaign associate.
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they weren't told that christopher steele was desperate and passionate about prevention donald trump from becoming president, and the fisa court also wasn't told that same christopher steele had a personal relationship with the number 4 lawyer at the department of justice, bruce ohr and his wife, nellie ohr who did the research for the dossier at fusion gps. those are all facts that should have been disclosed to the fisa court and never were. so the democratic memo can't contend that. instead what it does say is, well, the court was told about politically motivated actors, and they were -- pete: in a footnote. >> -- in footnotes that had very convoluted explanations about funding sources, and the democrats argue that the court should have been able to put this puzzle together. but that really reflects that they don't understand what the obligation is for an officer of the court before a fisa proceeding, an ex parte proceeding, which is for full disclosure. the court's not supposed to have to figure it out.
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they are to be expressly told before you try and take away someone's civil liberties. pete: so the hypocrisy of the left, every time they are exposed, there's a new explanation. the new explanation now is that christopher steele is a rogue agent, he was just doing his own thing with no direction from anyone else. based on what you've seen, was there collusion and coordination with democrats and christopher steele, or was he going rogue? >> well, we know that the f.b.i. and the department of justice ultimately did terminate the relationship with christopher steele because he wouldn't follow the rules and the guidelines with respect to providing them with information. we've of course subsequently learned that there are democrats that have tried to coordinate with christopher steele, and so, you know, i don't know the details of the democratic efforts to get in touch with him but we do know that christopher steele was not a reliable source and, as a result, he provided an unverified dossier that the
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court relied upon to issue a warrant to spy on an american citizen. pete: we know this spying occurred, congressman, briefly, we only have about 15 seconds. is this the beginning of this scandal or are we at the end -- where are we on the timeline of the exposure of this? >> you know, unfortunately, chris, much more -- or, pete, unfortunately much more to come. i've had the chance to see all of the underlying documents. when the inspector general report comes out, it's going to identify some more anomalies and things that have happened at the department of justice and the f.b.i. that unfortunately are going to make this story continue for some time. pete: that's an important reminder. the inspector general's report still due out from the department of justice. a lot of what we've learned so far has come from that as well. representative john ratcliffe, thank you for your time. appreciate it. >> pete, good to be with you. pete: you got it. well, a bittersweet night for a gold star daughter. her army sergeant dad died in a training accident last year so a national guardsman stepped up and took the girl to her first father-daughter dance in his
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place. we promise you will now both of them join us live next. ♪ and i'll be your friend ♪ i'll help you carry on morning on the beach was so peaceful. until... it... wasn't. don't let type 2 diabetes get between you and your heart. because your risk of heart attack or stroke is up to four times greater. but there are steps you can take to lower your cardiovascular risk. talk to your health care provider today about diabetic heart disease. and find out more at heartoftype2.com. your heart and type 2 diabetes. make the connection.
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griff: this is a fox news alert. a tour of the grand canyon turned deadly when a chopper crashed 600 feet to the ground, killing three people. blaming rough terrain and strong winds from airlifting them to a nearby hospital. seven people, including the pilot on board, taking off from las vegas. it's unclear what caused the fiery crash. and a car flips and flies into a building, injuring five people. incredible video coming out of
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oklahoma. the driver blaming a mechanical issue with the car causing it to catch air off the curb. despite how bad , the five people suffered only minor injuries. rachel? rachel: thank you, griff. five year old lost her army sergeant dad in a training accident last year. described as daddy's little girl 's dad, sergeant hinton, was never able to take her to a father-daughter dance but when the school held the dance last week, didn't have to go along. an illinois army guard soldier stepped up to escort her and they danced the night away. and joining us now to tell us all about it is first sergeant joseph eric bierbrodt with the illinois national guard and five-year old cayley hinton. welcome to you both. i'm going to start with you, sergeant. how did you find that cayley needed a date to the father- father-daughter dance?
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>> a request was made probably three weeks ago through the -- my chain of command, and as soon as it came out i'd seen the request and responded immediately. i've got two daughters of my own and i felt that this was definitely something that needed to be done. they chose our unit based on our location to where she lives. rachel: cayleigh, can you hear me? >> hm-hm. rachel: i remember my first father-daughter dance. what was your favorite part about this dance? >> dancing. rachel: dancing? and how did sergeant bierbrodt ask you out to this dance? did he send you something to ask you? >> yes. rachel: what was it? >> a big dog. rachel: he sent a giant dog, stuffed animal dog?
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wow, look at that. and i understand that you guys rode in a limo as well? >> yes. rachel: and you were wearing -- you looked like a princess at that dance. did you feel like a princess? look at that. >> yeah. rachel: that's amazing. and i understand that your brother, christian, he's 15 years old, he sort of stepped up in this situation. he opened the door for the sergeant bierbrodt; is that right? >> yes. rachel: sergeant bierbrodt? >> yes, he did. he was there all the way. rachel: tell us a little bit about cayleigh's dad. >> he was a sergeant in the army was stationed in hawaii. last year on mother's day there was an accident in which he lost his life. rachel: wow. difficult. listen, we're really proud of what the military's done, really come together as a family in this case.
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i know that cayleigh's mom said that cayleigh's daddy's little girl. i think when we saw that video of her dancing on your polished military shoes we all felt like she was america's little girl in that moment. thank you so much. one last question for you, sergeant. will there be a second father- father-daughter date? will you be asking her out again again? >> absolutely. if she would go with me, i would go with her in a heartbeat. she is a beautiful little princess. rachel: why is it so important to honor our heroes in these situations? >> because gold star families, we have to honor and care for the families, and we never forget their sacrifices. and as a military member, i view all military as a family no matter what branch of service they're in. rachel: well, cayleigh, you are a beautiful little girl. you are a princess to all of us. thank you for joining us, both of you. look. she's yawning. it's a little early in the
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morning. thank you both for sharing this moment with us and all the best to you both. thank you. >> all right. thank you. rachel: do you remember this teacher's disgusting anti- anti-military rant? >> [bleep] high level thinkers. they're not academic people. not intellectual people. they're the lowest of our low. rachel: well, we've got a big update on the student who recorded that, and he's going to be joining us live coming up. 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. and snoring? does your bed do that? right now during the ultimate sleep number event, save 50% on the ultimate limited edition bed with adjustable comfort on both sides. ends soon.
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why wait? ask your doctor about prolia. pete: we are back with a fox news alert. two police officers shot and killed yesterday, saturday, while responding to a domestic emergency call in ohio. law enforcement has seen a deadly start to 2018 with nine u.s. cops dying in the line of duty so far this year. griff: fox news contributor ed davis is the former chief of police for boston. he joins us now. chief, first, what do you say about this latest shooting in ohio? >> well, good morning. our hearts go out to the families that are left in the wake of this ambush. it was a coward that attacked these two men who were responding to a very routine type of call, one they respond to multiple times a day, so this is very, very troubl.ng rachel: keith, what do you think is happening in the culture that
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might be affecting these kinds of stories? >> well, i think the constant drumbeat-of-negative press against police plays a role here here. we've been vilified over the past few years. we certainly have things that we need to correct, a lot of work that needs to be done in police but but the truth of the matter is there are good men and women out there every night protecting their fellow citizens. and when you see two of them sacrificed like this, it's just horrible. pete: mr. davis, i have to ask you, we had the high profile, you know, black lives matter movement, the conversation, you know, fry 'em like bacon, all the things that have gone on in our culture; what adjustments have been made, if any, -- i'm sure there have been -- in police departments and that have accounted for these situations we've seen. >> unfortunately when you have this type of mentality out there and you see officer deaths start to go up, the officers respond
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in kind. they have to protect themselves. so i'll bet every police officer in ohio is going to be responding to domestic calls very differently today than they did yesterday. so it does raise the ante and it's just so unfortunate to have this. rachel: is it hurting recruitment? >> some colleagues have said that it is, that it's very difficult especially to recruit officers of color into policing right now. and we lose on both sides when that occurs. but there are other departments like the nypd, commissioner o'neill recently i talked he said he had no trouble recruiting. so it depends on where you are in the country. griff: chief, very quickly, we're almost out of time, but is it your opinion that there's a mentality out there that it's okay to harm cops? >> oh, there certainly is among some people, if you look on the internet or you look at some of the rhetoric that we have coming
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out of not only extremists, zealots on one side of this but also responsible spokespeople who are angry for one reason or another. we have to team back a little bit and understand that 99% of the officers out there are working really hard to do the right thing. griff: thank you, chief davis, thanks for joining us. we want to put up on our page that gofundme page, you can go to gofundme.com/foplodge9health gofundme.com/foplodge9healthfund . thanks, chief. >> thank you, sir. rachel: now to a breaking story. we're following this morning out of russia. a passenger plane has crashed southeast of moscow. 71 people on board all feared dead. the plane crashed shortly after taking off from a moscow airport airport. russian media saying pieces of the plane have been found. the white house standing firm behind israel's right to
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defend itself after carrying out its largest strike on syria in decades. it all started when an israeli helicopter took out an iranian drone launched from syria, saying it was in their airspace. an israeli jet then shot down, leading to more attacks on syrian targets. mike huckabee, who lives in israel right now, says they are in the right. >> what's the israelis did yesterday honestly will bring a calm, most likely, to the golan mites and to this country for the next several days and it was very important that both the white house and the state department issued strong statements of support for israe. rachel: the u.s. is blaming iran and its allies, saying they need to work towards peace. a bill to ban youth tackle football in maryland can't get off the line of scrimmage. a state senator reconsidering sponsoring the bill while coaches are publicly voicing their disapproval. the measure would forbid tackle
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football and hitting a soccer ball with your head on public fields until high school. along with banning lacrosse and hockey checks, this comes amid growing concerns over the lasting effects of head injuries injuries. those are your headlines. i know you're not a fan of that, phil. pete: i think we should make everyone wear helmets all day long, just in case you get hit. griff: what is the thing with soccer? i played soccer in high school -- rachel: 'cause if you hit 2 with your head -- griff:. pete: what is the point, if you don't want to get hurt you play soccer? griff: the point of the game, you score goals with your head. pete: rick scores goals with his head when covering the weather. >> aren't our skulls strong enough to handle a soccer ball? pete: thank you for the common sense. >> exactly. griff: put a helmet on! >> that's because it's inside the thick skull. let's talk a bit of weather. we do have a lot going on right now. a really active week across
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parts of the west, which is great news. take a look at the map. cold parts of the north, really warm down across the southeast. overall that is going to be our trend for much of the coming, say, week, even two weeks, that will be a copy the dominant factor we're watching. you'll also notice here a lot of drought building in across much of the country. you notice parts of the east and parts of the west, parts of the center area of the country not going to get any rain, but right now we have big rain last night throughout the day today and all the way 'til tomorrow, severe weather down across the southeast, watch for that and some flooding conditions potentially, especially around parts of the mid-atlantic. this is how this is going to play out throughout the rest of the day in towards tomorrow. you'll notice it's still with us for quite a bit of time. and real quickly i want to just move out across parts of the west. we have not been able to get any rain in towards southern california and the southwest, and watch what begins to happen here tomorrow. we're going to have a bit of a rainy week across parts of southern california. we desperately need it.
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griff: you could hear the rain just pounding. rachel: yeah, we could hear it from here. griff: still ahead, philadelphia now fighting the growing opioid crisis by -- get this -- legal legalizing a safe space to take drugs. is that a good idea? pete: here kids, take drugs over here. griff: we discuss that coming up up. plus the media gushing over kim jong-un's sister at the winter olympics. why are they glamourizing the rogue nation? we'll ask questions and get answers. baby boomers,
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>> with over 63,000 drug over overdose deaths in 2016 alone, some cities are taking the opioid crisis into their own hands. like philadelphia, which has the highest opioid death rate of any u.s. city, and officials say the city's on track for 1200 over overdose deaths.
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so what's philadelphia's solution? becoming the first u.s. city to legalize safe injection sites. but is this the best course of action? let's ask our fox news medical a team's dr. mark segal and trial attorney, and marie appley, you're suing some of these pharmaceutical companies and opioids, but dr. segal, i want to start with you, is this a good idea, a safe space to legally shoot up drugs? >> let's start with the idea that i'm not in any way condoning this idea that drug use is killing a lot of people. but this isn't the first time -- we have syringe services programs throughout the united states. griff, over 30 states, over 200 programs, and they've been studied by the centers for disease control. they're a place to educate people. a place to have naloxone which is an antidote to opioids. in philadelphia over 60% of the opioid deaths you talked about
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are due to fentanyl which is much more powerful. you can start them with knacks alone, and you can say so seboxo seboxone that works. it reduces hiv in people who inject drugs. hiv cases decreased by 80%. hepatitis c decreases dramatically by using these programs, bringing them into the light, having medical professionals involved. i'm not condoning it but it cuts down dramatically on cost and health risks. griff: doctor, you say good idea idea. marie, what do you think about it? >> i think we could spend our money on rehabilitation and integrated rehabilitation and go to the root of the cause and go after the drug manufacturers and the distributors who are mis mismarketing it. and they're distributing distributing to communities and create pill mills, donating what they're supposed to be doing. what they're supposed to be doing is reporting any strange activity to the fda, which they're not doing because they're making money over it.
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so hold them responsible, work on rehabilitation, and get the message out there that these drugs are addictive, the opposite of what everybody's been told. >> there is no evidence that these syringe programs increase use of intravenous drugs, no evidence. now, i'm not in favor of what they're doing in nevada where they have like in a slot machine where you just push a punt and you get a syringe. that's not what i want. i like the idea of medical professionals involved, counselors involve, people that can start you on medically assisted therapy like ceboxone which really workers. i'm not for decriminalizing this this. putting pushers in jail is a good idea. that's different if you're an addict, you need medical help, we need to cut down on infections by sharing syringes. >> i would agree that there are two issues going on. one is to prevent new addicts
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from forming so that's going after the manufacturers and distributors and getting the message out. for the people who are already addicts, i think the way to go is rehabilitation. whether or not you give them clean syringes and give them nar narcn so they don't overdose in the future, i'm not against that but just giving them a location where they can shoot up, it's not going to be legal activity just because they're in this location. they can still get arrested. griff: right, 'cause they're doing the drugs. dr. segal, seattle and san francisco seemed to try this but it failed there. >> it failed in seattle because they had to get city council approval. here in philadelphia what i think will succeed is they're going to use a private company. so i think it will pass. with the current laws it's hard to get a city council to agree to do this but to get a private company involved has happened all over the country. by the way, i want to agree with one point marie is making. i think the drug companies are terrible, i think the pharmaceutical companies have enabled this problem and 250
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million prescriptions written by physicians in 2015 for opioids, physicians bear a lot of the responsibility here. griff: that, dr. segal is un unacceptable, almost every family community in this country knows someone or has been affected by this terrible tragedy. dr. segal, marie, thank you for coming in and weighing in with us. still ahead, remember this teacher's anti-military rant? griff: now the student behind the video has gotten a special invite. he's here to tell us about it next. plus, if you ever run into clinton eastwood, don't ask him for a selfie. the legendary actor just revealed why. hey! we didn't have a homeowners claim last year so allstate is giving us money back on our bill.
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♪ griff: time now for some quick celebrity headlines. omarosa, the former white house staffer turned housemaid on celebrity's big brother returning to the reality show after being hospitalized. fellow classmates -- cast mates, excuse me, saying they were concerned for your health after a, quote, dizzying competition on the show causing her to have an asthma attack. and to the great disappointment of some, the spice girls are not, i repeat, not getting together for a re reunion tour. victoria beckham shutting down rumors speaking to vogue during a preview of her all the time- time-winter collection at paris fashion week saying, quote, "i'm not going on tour, the girls are
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not going to tour." just last week she shared this photo convincing everyone that a reunion was in the in each, on so it looks like the spice girls don't want to be another hit. pete? pete: i have to return my tickets, then, griff, is that what you're saying? griff: y.ah, pete: remember when a california public school teacher went on this anti-military rant in his classroom? pete: the lowest of the low. well, the student who recorded that rant who comes from a big military family and wants to enlist in the military himself now has a special invitation to the white house and the pentagon from chief of staff general john kelly. rachel: joining us now, you high school senior victor quinones.
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what inspired you -- the feeling i got when i first heard about this was that this probably wasn't the first time that your teacher has gone off on the military. >> no. it wasn't the first time at all. griff: and so did you make a concerted effort to say, hey, i'm going to keep my phone nearby so if he does it again, i'm record it. >> actually the first time saying that anyone joins the military are retarded, so i ended up letting my dad know, and he just told me you let me know the next time he makes another rant about that, and it just so happen that he did and he had a lot of cell phones out, so i took advantage of that and began to rec.rd pete: it got of the attention of a lot of people, including, as you know, the chief of staff to the president of the united states, general john kelly. now, he saw what you recorded, he was on brian kilmeade's radio program. this is how john kelly reacted to what the teacher said. listen. >> i think the guy ought to go to hell. i just hope he enjoys the
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liberties and the lifestyle that we have fought for. pete: did your teacher who is now on administrative leave, does he understand where his freedoms come from? >> no, i don't believe he does, if he went on a rant like that. rachel: and so now you're going to the white house, i understand understand? >> yes, i am. rachel: and you've got a gofundme page because you're trying to raise money. who else is going with you? >> you know, my uncle louie, course my siblings, my parents. so -- pete: absolutely. >> looks like as many as 16 folks might be joining him on the trip. he's got a big family, a lot of military in the family. pete: obviously what victor did took some fragile. trevor you're there as a lawyer, usually if there's a lawyer there it means there's a legal aspect to this. what land mines could victor be facing from simply recording an anti-military rant? >> i actually think the land
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mines are something mr. salcedo may have to contend with. like many of the veterans who have stepped forward in support of victor, i'm here to provide moral support. there are potentially legal ramifications related to this case and my team and i are enjoying doing the research. we're finding a lot of things out. i can't say a lot about it now. i'm not comfortable discussing it because i just don't know enough but i do believe victor's family needs legal representation. i'm honored that they asked me to join them. rachel: victor, how did you find out that you're going to be going to the white house? >> actually, my dad texted me saying we're going to the white house, and he was really excited and pretty much it felt unreal. not an every day thing someone tells you you're going to the white ho.se rachel: that's incredible. if your family makes it to d.c. and the white house and you want a capitol tour we can make sure
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that congressman sean duffy's office gets you guys a capitol tour as well. thanks for joining us. you're eye real hero. pete: well done. thank you for exposing that. coming up the media gushing over kim jong-un's sister at the winter olympics. why are they doing that? we're going to ask that question and answer it.
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>> democrats say president trump 's decision to not reclose their memo proves he has something to hide. >> schiff firing back saying this, mr. president what you call political are actually called facts. >> they don't understand what the obligation is for an officer of the court before a fisa proceeding which is for full disclosure. rachel: officers eric joering and anthony morelli are gunned down. they died at the scene outside columbus, ohio. >> these two put on a uniform to go out and serve the people of their community. these absolutely are heros and people need to understand that. griff: olympic update for you the sister of kim jong-un she was part of the north korean delegation to south korea and
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cnn says kim jong-un's sister stealing the show at the winter olympics. >> having the sister show up and pretend she's all fun and games doesn't change a thing in north korea. pete: a bitter sweet night for a gold star daughter, her army sargent dad died in a training accident last year so a national guardsman stepped up and took the girl to her first father- daughter dance. >> she was a beautiful little princess. >> ♪ ♪ rachel: all right we start with your headlines. pete: no, no, i prepared for this show, i stayed up all night rachel: okay. pete: because i want to have all of the latest facts for our viewers who we love. you guys stay up all night too? rachel: yeah, i'm a night owl and that's why this is an adjustment for me i get up at 3:
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30. griff: i haven't slept in days. pete: it's true you're ever reporting. always on it. griff: catch monday through friday on the early fox & friends. pete: it has been a ton of fun always, rachel, griff bringing the news to you this morning and we were not up all night. but don't get out of bed, stick with us we've got a whole other hour of fox & friends and big headlines. rachel: we're starting with headlines and a fox news alert. brand new photos just into our news room showing the wreckage of a passenger plane crash near moscow. all 71 people on board are feared dead. the plane crashing in a snowy field shortly after taking off from a moscow airport. no word on what caused the crash we'll bring you the latest details as we get them. also breaking this morning, police have identified the man accused of killing two officers responding to a 911 hangup call. quentin smith's wife frantically calling 911 as officers eric joering and anthony morelli are
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gunned down. >> 911 what's your emergency? what's wrong? >> he shot the police officers. >> where is your husband now? >> please. rachel: joering died at the hospital. i'm sorry at the scene, just outside of columbus, ohio. morelli died in the hospital. >> officers gave their life in protection of others . those are true american heros. rachel: a makeshift . >> liz: memorial was setup for the fam en officer who together had nearly 50 years on the force pete: god bless them. rachel: one of the makers of oxycontin cuts its sails staff in half promising to stop promoting the dangerously addictive painkillers to doctors purdue pharma has been pitching the drug since 1995 calling it a non-addictive way to treat pain. purdue and other drug makers have been fighting lawsuits accusing them of pushing addictive painkillers through
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deceptive marketing. and the united states winning its first gold medal at the winter olympics by a 17 year old , red gerard becoming the golden boy after this final trick in the mens snowboard. he's now the youngest olympic snowboarding champ ever. team usa is in fourth place in the medal count. germany taking the lead with three golds. pete: it's early but when you're 17 and you get a gold medal is life all downhill from there? rachel: it put be. griff: speaking of gold medals i'm surprised anyone can get a gold medal other than the brutal dictator of north korea kim jong-un's little sister for whom the media has given every gold medal they can find. look at these headlines that we've been just unbelievable headlines. kim jong-un's sister is stealing the show at the winter olympics. washington post, the ivanka
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trump of north korea, captivates people in the south at the olympics. pete: stop reading. the ivanka trump of north korea? think about that. rachel: it's crazy. pete: it's unbelievable. keep reading sorry. rachel: [laughter] griff: i continue. yahoo all swagger and smiles, kim jong-un's sister gets her star turn at the winter olympic and just my favorite that i've been lamenting all morning and that is the ap wire for which i almost choked on my coffee at 4: 30 a high level north korean delegation led by youth full political princess. pete: not to be out done reuters a friend of ap, they purport to do the same thing, this just came in. we can't even keep up with these headlines fawning over north korea. this headline, north korea judged winter at diplomatic gold at the olympics, so kim jong-un lets his little sister out she's 30 years old there she is on the left. kim yo jong, goes to south korea with a delegation.
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she smiles, shakes a few hands, invites the president moon of south korea to north korea and a charm offensive as they starve their people and throw them in political prisons and threaten the world of nuclear weapons and our headlines here in the united states give them diplomatic gold and compare ivanka trump to her as if i advantage a trump's complicit with the trump administration, i don't know, tam cuts or paid family leave is similar to what this woman at the olympics is doing. unbelievable. rachel: by the way if only ivanka got this kind of glowing coverage here in the united states. i mean, she would just love to get this kind of coverage and again they use, you know, they use the word normalizing. the press did. we can't normalize trump that came immediately as soon as it started they still talk about that. this is absolutely normalizing the most brutal repress ever evil dictatorship on the earth. griff: you were right yesterday before any of these headlines
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started coming, she said i don't like the olympics and now you may be on to something. pete: like the media found a reverse way to hate trump. they don't like the approach he's taking fire and fury, you know, a bloody nose, talking about little rocket man so they're praising north korea to make trump look bad? rachel: i think she defects and that would be a story and then she could win the nobel peace prize, but other than that this is absolutely shameful. pete: well said well another issue we reported on yesterday is the release or pending release of the democratic memo a response to devon nunes republican memo that showed indeed the on administration used the fisa warrants to spy on members of the trump team. well the white house looked at this democratic memo put out by adam schiff who says there's got to be redactions and of course the media has gone nuts since then look at the new york times headline. pressure from trump may lead to revision of the democratic memo. well turns out if you read deeper into that new york times article never that first or second paragraph is always that sixth or seventh where they're
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forced to sometimes report something true. this is what they ended up saying about why the white house would be redacting portions of the democratic memo. they say in a letter to the white house on friday top justice and fbi officials said they had law enforcement or national security concerns about declassifying parts of the democratic memo, so it turns outsources and methods were contained in the democratic memo so they're going to get rid of them. the reason they didn't want the republican memo to come out is because it omitted things. there wasn't enough in there very big difference the hipocracy coming from democrats on this very glaring. griff: but the point here is that the pressure to revise this democratic memo before the president could declassify it the pressures coming from the fbi and the doj and the news of a letter or from the doj and fbi that it needs to be made the pressure, if you will, where was that? pete: and then on the republican memo, assistant attorney general steven floyd sent this letter to every media outlet saying don't
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release the republican one. this now we finally learned how the story ends and that is the pressures coming for the revision from the fbi and doj. rachel: but the bottom line the pressure is coming from the doj, the fbi that's not the headline. the headline is exactly what the democrats wanted it to be which is donald trump's trying to re press or cover up what we have in our memo although congressman whose seen the democrat memo say it does not refute any of the things that were in the republican memo saying how the fisa warrant was, they were being mislead. pete: absolutely. we have representative john ratcliffe on who had seen the democratic memo and underlying fisa evidence. this is what he said earlier on the program. >> to understand what's in the democratic response memo, you have to understand what's not in it and what's not in it is a representation that the fisa court was ever told that hillary clinton paid for the dossier used to spy on the trump campaign associates.
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they weren't told that christopher steele was desperate and passionate about preventing donald trump from becoming president and the fisa court also wasn't told that same christopher steele had a personal relationship with the number four lawyer at the department of justice bruce ohr and his wife nellie who did the research for the dossier at fusion gps. those are all facts that should have been disclosed to the fisa court and never were. griff: this is interesting because going forward this week this puts democrats in a difficult position in the house intelligence committee because the fbi and the doj is saying it needs revisions. the memo goes back, they can no longer push back on the white house for being at blame. they're going to have to choose to make revisions presumably and send it back to the president for which he will then declassify it. pete: we talk a lot about these mep os. bottom line is it looks like there was deception to the fisa court about what was really happening potentially for political motive. a lot of people want to know few people have seen what was said in front of that fisa court. a lot more needs to be revealed but if you step back even more
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there's a poll that came out yesterday at investors business daily that shows that 55% of americans believe that the obama camp spied on then candidate trump. think about that number, 33% of democrats with all the overwhelming russian collusion narrative that's come from all of the other buildings who hate president trump yet the american people, you're not dumb. you are not hoodwink, you understand when people are lying to you and that's why these memos matter because the truth matters. you see they hate trump so much they don't care about the truth. good bees what senators guam and grassley have done which has been underreported which validates the nun else memo. democrats could trial they want to muddy the waters but if you spied and you're being caught for it the american people are watching. rachel: let's bring in dan bongino in because he synthesize s it. this is military-state -- pete: police-state -- rachel: police-state kind of activities and this is obama gate. we kind of forget who started this entire spying, it was under his regime and that's what we
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have right now and by the way, our sitting president right now still is under investigation for russia with nothing to prove for it. pete: all based on an unverified dossier -- rachel: paid for by the democrat s. griff: by hillary. pete: thanks, hillary. griff: getting back to a great olympic story a very important segment coming up speaking of north korea just how ruthless and deadly has this rogue regime been? we'll break it down with a retired cia chief next. pete: plus if you ever run into clint eastwood, i never have but would love to don't ask him for a selfie. the legendary actor just revealed by he won't take one with you. remember that. it's time for the 'ultimate sleep number event'
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along with support, chantix (varenicline) is proven to help people quit smoking. chantix reduced my urge to smoke. when you try to quit smoking, with or without chantix, you may have nicotine withdrawal symptoms. some people had changes in behavior or thinking, aggression, hostility, agitation, depressed mood, or suicidal thoughts or actions with chantix. serious side effects may include seizures, new or worse heart or blood vessel problems, sleepwalking or allergic and skin reactions which can be life-threatening. stop chantix and get help right away if you have any of these. tell your healthcare provider if you've had depression or other mental health problems. decrease alcohol use while taking chantix. use caution when driving or operating machinery. the most common side effect is nausea. everybody had doubts, including me, but i did it. ask your doctor if chantix is right for you. pete: the liberal media not holding back for making kim
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jong-un's sister their shining star at the olympics, but a key point missing from their coverage, the fact her family holds one of the worst human rights records in the world. here to break it down retired cia station chief and vp at spg, daniel hoffman. daniel, you know about the nature of this regime so when you hear the fawning coverage from the so-called mainstream media, how disconnected is it from the reality of what folks live within north korea? >> well, i don't know that kim jong-un could have written anything better himself. it's worth remembering that his sister has been the director of propaganda and agitation department since july of 2015 and just a few months back was elevated to a more prominent position in the north korean bureau right around the time our sanctions were starting to sting the government. so there's a means for him to try to drive a wedge between the
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united states and south korea. we saw three hours of negotiation already between south korea and north korean representatives there was no discussion of scrapping the north korean nuclear program which has been our policy but rather the south koreans were saying that we need to saying to the north koreans that they should pursue talks with the united states. south korea is a democracy while the opposition in south korea favors scrapping the nuclear north korea's nuclear capability and the peninsula, president moon is a strong component of the so-called sunshine policy and again north korea is seeking to take advantage of that and look, you know, kim jong-un's found the right person to do it. pete: absolutely found the right media as well so if his sister is the head of propaganda i assume she doesn't talk that much about the fact there are between 80 and 120,000 people in prison for political prison camp s in north korea.
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>> yeah, i think you'd like to see someone hold her to some tough questions about that, about the humanitarian catastrophe that is north korea or the danger that north korea poses to its own region and beyond by pursuing this nuclear weapons program and icbm's. she does have a position of quite significant authority in the government and you'd like to see them hold her to answer some hard questions aside from being just a mantel piece. pete: of course she keeps that position because she's fawning to her brother because if she cuts the other way he will kill her as we know otherwise. this is the nature of that regime. it's how unhealthful is it to a resolution on that peninsula preventing nuclear weapons that can be delivered to our source how unhealthful is fawning over them or promoting peace talks that just delay the timeline. >> i think it's on us, the united states, just to hold north korea accountable for their humanitarian catastrophe and the danger of the nuclear weapons program that they continue to pursue with
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wreckless abandonment and i also think that it's clear that north korea is trying to drive a wedge among the different actors involved us and south korea so we immediate to pull south korea closer and highlight the necessity really of having a cohesive strategy together which does involve continued maximum diplomatic and economic pressure on north korea. pete: daniel, we see north and south korea walking under a unified flag. is there any scenario when kim jong-un in the north unifies the peninsula peacefully? they want it under their rule. >> yeah, i don't see that, that's why he's pursuing his nuclear weapons program and beyond that he knows he has a degree of deter answer. we haven't attacked north korea cognizant of the massive potential for damage to the region from just north korea's conventional weapons. i think he's pursuing the nuclear weapons and the icbm capabilities so that he can maybe himself seek to unify the peninsula under his own terms. absolutely that's the benefits of having the nuclear weapons is
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that the united states in his mind might not take action. pete: it's a huge card they can drop on the table. daniel hoffman thank you for your expertise appreciate it. >> thank you. pete: well forget the drive through. you can now get taco bell and kf c delivered right to your door we will tell you how, plus, president trump stressing our country's opinions on god in a powerful speech at the national prayer breakfast. franklin graham was there, he will tell us what he thought about the president's message and he's coming up next on sunday edition of fox & friends. friends, colleagues, gathered here are the world's finest insurance experts. rodney -- mastermind of discounts like safe driver, paperless. the list goes on. how about a discount for long lists? gold. mara, you save our customers hundreds for switching almost effortlessly. it's a gift. and jamie. -present. -together we are unstoppable. so, what are we gonna do? ♪ insurance. that's kind of what we do here.
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griff: all right quick headlines former democratic congresswoman corrine brown maybe getting special treatment behind bars. they have letters from fellow
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inmates angry that the 71 year old gets special meals, massages and even a brand new mattress. security officials denying those claims. brown was sentenced in december to five years in prison for corruption. and in the disgraced former usa gymnastics team doctor convicted of sexually abusing underage girls is transferred to a high security federal prison. larry mass after starting his 60 year sentence in tucson, arizona a facility specializing in treating sex offenders. >> [applause] pete: donald trump stressing our country's dependence on god, in a powerful speech at the national prayer breakfast last week. president trump: when americans are able to live by their convictions to speak openly of their faith and to teach their children what is right, our families thrive, our communities flourish, and our nation can achieve anything at all. rachel: franklin graham joins us
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now to react but first, you've been to north korea four times. what is your take on the human rights records there? >> well no question north korea has a great problem in this area regardless of who runs north korea, we need to be talking to them. a country that has nuclear weapons a country that could create havoc on the core en an peninsula, but that whole region we need to find ways to talk and i believe when you talk, we can maybe negotiate some of the problems away. not all of them but some of them and as i'm a firm believer in talking to them and trying to find a way around these roadblocks that we've had since the early 1950s. we've been there on the korean border for north korea border since the 1950s with our army and there hasn't been any change , there hasn't been any settlement. there's got to be away around this.
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pete: reverend we talk a lot about political prisoners in north korea. what is the status of the church and religious prisoners as well? >> well there are some official churches and i've spoken in some of them so has my father but we also hear reports that in the interior christians are killed, prosecuted, any sign of christian faith and you could be executed and what i love about our president is that our president defends the christian faith. our past president scolded christians. this president is defending christians and he's very open about the christian faith, so i love that about president trump and of course at the prayer breakfast a few days ago he was tremendous that america is a nation of believers and we're strengthened by the power of prayer, he reminded everyone, and he also reminded us that faith is central to the american life and it is. it's central to our life as a nation and so i'm very very
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thankful that donald trump takes the stand. many people can condemn him that he is not an example of the christian faith. well he may not be the greatest example, well neither am i but at least he's defending the faith and standing strong on that. griff: reverend graham why is it that so many in the media miss what president trump's trying to do when it comes to prayer and politics? >> i don't know why they miss it listen, i appreciate i think his transparency in this issue. he's very open, he doesn't care if he gets criticized, he's just going to speak what he believes and i really believe he believes in god and of course as a believer, i believe that jesus christ is god's son, i believe that he died for your sins and my sins, that god raised him to life and we put our faith and trust in him god will forgive us our sins and heal our hearts and
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i believe the president believes this, and he doesn't always articulate it like a preacher would and i think people condemn him because they expect him to talk like a preacher. he's not. but he does have a very strong faith. rachel: reverend, it's interesting you talk about his strong faith. i've never, i'm a political spouse by the way. i've never seen a politician or a political family take on the abuse and the amount of just non -stop kit six that donald trump and his family have taken on. how are they getting through that? i know you know him well and is it sustainable over another four , two, maybe six more years? >> well, i think so, and that is if people pray and i think it's important that we pray for all leaders and the bible tells us to pray for those in authority, whether you voted for donald trump or you didn't, we still should vote. i didn't vote for barack obama because of his position on same sex marriage on abortion. i could not vote for him, but that doesn't stop me from
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praying for him when he became our president, and if we pray for donald trump if he does well , that our nation will do well. all of us will do well and at the prayer breakfast this was the 66th prayer breakfast my father helped to start it and republicans and democrats come together, they co-chair this breakfast. they set aside their differences and they work together and they've been doing this for 66 years. if christians and congress from both sides can get together and work together, it tells us we need more christians in politics we need christian men and women at every level and if there were more christians they would come together and work even though they may have differences but they would work together for the american people. pete: a lot of it is pretty simple there. of course it's been a baseline of religious liberty as well. reverend franklin graham thank you very much for your time this morning sir, appreciate it. thank you, god bless. griff: all right we've been telling you how businesses are giving back to workers, thanks
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to president trump's tax plan. now, a new survey is revealing just how much money is going into your wallet. maria bartiromo has the numbers that's coming up. rachel: and the video will give you chills. a student choir fills an entire hotel with the sound of the national anthem. the moments that will make you even prouder to be an american. >> ♪ ♪
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>> ♪ ♪ >> pete: fox & friends. we're friends and we bring friends on the set none more so than maria bartiromo. she's here every day during the week maybe the hardest working woman in this building and here in sunday morning futures in about 26 minutes. maria: that's right. pete: thanks for being here. maria: thank you so much. rachel: i always say i worked with barbara walters and i worked with maria bartiromo, career done. maria: oh, come on. i'm so honored to work with you all all the time. thank you so much. griff: speaking of work we're talking about the democratic memo, what do you make of this, now we know from a new york
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times article buried deep that it was actually the department of justice and fbi that is calling for the revisions, but you have the latest. maria: let's just call this what it is, shall we? this is an abuse of government power at the state department at the fbi and at so many agencies under the obama administration. what they did here was use government, government work to spy on a political operative so they lied to the fisa court yes they lied to the fisa court by omitting incredibly important information and that was that the democratic campaign and the hillary clinton campaign paid for this. so we'll talk with devon nunes the chairman of the house intel committee in about 20 minutes and he will give us the latest in terms of this democratic memo why they put a memo out there to basically say, obviously it has to be redacted they put all of this national security information in there so they could come back and say president trump doesn't want that.
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rachel: devon nunes' really been i think the unspoken hero, i mean we would not know what's going on right now, pete hegseth not just gone after this information but really withstood so much criticism, so much against his integrity for trying to get at the truth. maria: it's almost like a street fight at this point. devon nunes anything he says adam schiff comes back and tries to attack him. nancy pelosi a week ago said that devon nunes wasn't fit to be in office. they're trying so hard to stop him from releasing the truth so that the american people understand what went on here. leadership and at least 10 people have been fired already at the department of justice and the fbi they used government work, their power, their seat to spy on a political enemy during an election it's incredible. obama gate. griff: the economy another story , let's talk about the tax savings going into hard working americans pockets. maria: there's no doubt about it we've seen more than 200 companies give $1000 checks back
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or do something for employees, invest in their businesses. you're seeing a real impact of this tax plan but the thing people don't talk about as much is the fact that it's going to have a long runway. we're going to see this impact this economy for the next couple of years. obviously we're seeing a wild stock market because there's a new narrative right now. investors are digesting higher interest rate, little higher inflation, higher wages. these are all the kinds of things you want to see with the growing economy but right now the markets are digesting that understanding that rates are going to go higher. it's not 0% rates that have been the case in the last 10 years so expect wild swings i'm not worried. pete: we're digesting the additional money in my paycheck. i'm not kidding 13%. the 13% of business savings going into the worker's pockets. maria: and the left likes to say oh, they may, you know, buyback stock, they may pay dividends and not necessarily create new jobs. whatever they do with this additional savings is economic
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activity and ultimately hit the worker and the person whose actually the consumer out there. that's how you move the needle on economic growth by making an environment for business for favorable to business puts money back into the economy. griff: better paychecks and devon nunes you're giving us a lot this morning coming up in just 20 minutes. rachel: tune in for that. pete: and a busy week on wall street last week. maria: [laughter] thanks, guys. rachel: now to your headlines. if you're just waking up, we are following breaking news out of russia. brand new video into our news room of a deadly passenger plane crash outside of moscow. you can see what appears to be the plane's nose, the wreckage scattered across a snowy field. the plane crashing shortly after takeoff from a moscow airport. all 71 people on board are feared to be dead. emergency workers and family members gathering at the airport where the flight was supposed to land. no word on what caused this crash.
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if you ever run into clint eastwood, do not ask him for a selfie. the actor-turned director letting his feelings be known while talking about his new movie the 15:17 to paris. >> you know, i don't like selfie s and i don't like selfies period. it's a pain in the rear. rachel: his new movie based on the paris train attack of 2015 features the real-life heros it's in theatres now. choir students waking up louisville hotel guests with their moving rendition of the star spangled banner. >> ♪ ♪
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>> rachel: guests erupting into applause for the kentucky music educator's association all state choir members, and their annual performance tradition and those are your headlines that's so beautiful. pete: it is. were you ever a member of a choir? rachel: no, i can not sing. do you hear this voice? imagine. griff: do you wake up in a hotel room and wonder if you're dead, maybe gone to heaven and there's all these angels? rachel: all right we've got rick outside. pete: rick were you ever in a choir? rick: i was. pete: i love it. rick: i can carry a tune. rachel: come on rick. rick: you no one of the best parts about the show is i can produce from here so producers why don't i go and do weather from there live. rachel: sing it. rick: we should be there live for that. pete: next year. i agree. rick: producers let's work on that but talk weather right now. we do have a lot going on this week we've had a lot of drought
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going on and now we're getting a lot of precipitation that's going to be coming on both the eastern seaboard and the western coast throughout the next couple of days which is great news. we obviously have this rain going on right now and i'm stumbling guys because my click en just got stuck. batteries probably dead, and now i'm just stuck on this one map and won't be able to show you what's going on unfortunately. well we got rain on the east obviously. good news is we have rain coming to the west where they've been so dry with one of the hottest winters they've had and no precipitation and some coming this week so that's great news you'll appreciate that rachel in arizona. rachel: i will. pete: indeed. thanks rick appreciate it. rachel: thank you rick. griff: president trump says republicans want to fix daca far more than the democrats, so will democrats ever come to the table we'll debate it next. pete: plus we've got sugar, spice and everything nice, new york city's famed delmonico's restaurant here sharing chocolate chili rubbed steaks,
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there's bacon too and that's for valentine's day coming up, you won't want to miss it. it's the original and the best. >> ♪ ♪ 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: president trump says the gop wants to help daca recipients more than democrats do tweeting republicans want to fix daca more than the democrats do. the dems had all three branches of government back in 2008-2011 and they decided not to do anything about daca. they only want to use it as a campaign issue, vote republican! we had a dreamer on the show yesterday who said this. listen. >> nancy pelosi and chuck schumer really have no clear message, have been, you know, we have been confused i think at the end of the day they've been using us as pawns. the second point i want to bring in is they never should have shutdown the government over daca. we should have never held our american people and our military
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hostage. there's plenty time on the table to fix this, march 5 is the deadline and you could see republicans already willing to do something about it as we speak. at the end of the day you're looking at a president that is all about results. 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. pete: so is he right and can both sides come together? here to debate president of the black conservative federation de onte johnson and democratic strategist michael star hopkins thank you both for joining us. michael i'll start with you. can the resistance take a pause long enough to actually make a deal with this president and do something that both addresses border security which the president has demanded but also addresses the daca situation? >> look, the democrats have been trying since 2008 to get an immigration deal done. you know, we had comprehensive immigration reform that was put together by the gang of eight and republican president decided
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that he wasn't going to implement that and now we have president trump saying he wants to get the immigration deal donald he would sign anything that was put in front of him. two different bills have been put in front and he won't sign them. pete: wait we had a democratic president from 2008-2016 that took executive action but no legislation the democrats were able to push to fix this. but under president bush that's when the gang of eight came together to put together a bill and that's when the immigration issue started. the only reason we ended up getting daca was because republicans filibustered in the senate. pete: so he's saying it's republicans fault when a lot of people look back and say if democrats are going to make daca their big issue, they haven't solved it. >> that's true. you know, the republicans, the democrats have had, they had a democrat president, president obama had time to do it but he didn't. he didn't push it. president trump is working to make a compromise but something that speaker ryan said is that for a compromise, both sides have to know that you've got to
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give something you'll have to lose some and the democrats right now don't understand they will lose some issues and they will gain some but we have to come together and meet in the middle. pete: michael you understand right now democrats hold no levers of power so if they want to get a deal they will have to give. will they be willing to give to the parameters of what this white house talked about? an end of chain migration or end to the visa lottery program. can that happen in exchange for a pathway to legalization? will democrats actually come to the table to do that? >> i think democrats have come to the tailing and said that. we've offered up border security pete: that's not the same as a wall. >> there's a difference between doing a full voila cross the border and having a technological upgrade which is what was suggested by george w. bush, what was suggested by candidate trump and i think that it's something we could all agree to but lindsay graham said it best. we have no idea what the president wants because one day he says one thing. pete: he's made it clear. >> i think the president has been very clear. >> members of the republican party aren't clear about what the president wants when it
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comes to a bill. pete: the members want to pretend like president trump didn't get elected on these issues they run like the gang of eight from 2008 and voters voted for president trump because he said he would deliver on it. deonte, your thoughts? >> the president set his plan out when he ran for office and he's been pushing that plan and done a great job pushing for that plan. he set it out and go to the white house.gov website it's all clear and there and the problem is he's got to get bipartisan ship and support from republican s but you know the thing about it is president trump is going to push for what he planned and his campaign no matter who likes it or not and that's one thing we like about him. pete: yes or no, does a deal get done before the march deadline, michael? >> i sure hope so because we made a promise to the dreamers if they came out of the shadows we would get it done so i hope so. >> i hope that democrats can work with republicans to get something done. pete: a lot of hope. no yes or no there. we shall see. michael and deonte, thanks a lot appreciate it. >> thank you. pete: up next, how does chocolate chili rubbed steaks
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sound? sounds fantastic to me. we're making it for valentine's day which is coming up. griff at the tomahawk, stay away from it. >> ♪ ♪ ♪ if you have moderate to severe plaque psoriasis, little things can be a big deal. that's why there's otezla. otezla is not an injection or a cream. it's a pill that treats psoriasis differently. with otezla, 75% clearer skin is achievable after just 4 months, ... with reduced redness, thickness, and scaliness of plaques. and the otezla prescribing information has no requirement for routine lab monitoring. don't use if you're allergic to otezla. otezla may cause severe diarrhea, nausea, or vomiting. tell your doctor if these occur. otezla is associated with an increased risk of depression. tell your doctor if you have a history of depression or suicidal thoughts, or if these feelings develop. some people taking otezla reported weight loss. your doctor should monitor your weight and may stop treatment.
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griff: welcome back quick headlines no cars allowed georgia officials are considering creating a separate highway for trucks they say a new road would help reduce congestion for drivers the project would cost nearly $2 billion and two major chains are bringing the convenience of the drive through right to your door. you can now order taco bell and kfc and have it delivered, grub hub says the initial phase of their partnership will start over the coming months. pete: sometimes i just need taco bell.
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got to have it at like 2:00 a.m. and i can order it. okay, well speaking of great food with valentine's day right around the corner we've got the perfect dish to make for your significant other. griff: joining us from one of new york's most iconic restaurants which absolutely rocks is the executive chef from delmonico's. first quickly tell us about it. >> so in the same location since 1837, down near wall street, a restaurant first eggs benedict, baked alaska, of course steak, all in vented there. pete: and i was there about a month ago unbelievable. you've got to visit it. griff: what did you bring us today? >> so it's valentine's day, so chocolate, roses, so we're going to do a quick marinade. you have short ribs and tomahawk steak here we'll do a quick marinade if you can hold that and start wisking.
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a chocolate chili marinade for steak, pork, chicken works really well and a cocoa powder and this we make in the restaurant. it's spices and chocolate. i have a couple guys that make it. it's hard work. rachel: i love pete, what's that [laughter] >> some pepper. griff: how long do we do this? >> then we'll just mix the oil into it. griff: this is a marinade? >> kind of a semi-wet rub. rick: do you need it on there like hours? >> you can do it the night before. rachel: you'll put this on here? pete: even if you wreck the recipe and put love into it? >> that's it that's all that matters right? you just make it up as you go
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along. rick: how long for you to cook that? >> this one is for two. pete: or just get a reservation. >> this one we'll seer it in a pan and it would definitely go in the oven for about 20 minutes . pete: we only have 20 seconds chef for the fondu. >> okay so this is just a very simple recipe, it's online. it's chocolate, cream, a little simple syrup and here we have all kinds of stuff. we do our own cured bacon in- house. pete: i've been eating it all morning. rachel: chocolate and bacon? oh, my gosh. strawberries. you know, this is good. griff: they're playing music. we're coming right back. we're sticking with you. pete: we would never leave you. griff: more fox & friends coming up right away, something delicious to eat. >> ♪ ♪
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pete: rachel in honor of valentine's day i'm giving you the final word.
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griff: i got a giant steak from you from chef billy. this means you're back next week rachel. pete: happy valentine's day. rachel: thank you and happy valentine's day to all of you out there. maria: good sunday morning. a power at the fbi. democrats will go back to the drawing board this weekend if they want their countermemo on alleged abuse at the justice department released with the budget battle in the rear view mirror now president trump gets set to review this infrastructure plan this upcoming week and the rollercoaster ride on wall street continue, hi, everybody thanks for joining me this is sunday morning futures i'm maria bartiromo. the white house declining to release the democratic counter memo on alleged surveillance abuses at the fbi, citing national security risks. did democrats play politics to force the president's hand? i'll talk with house i

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