tv FOX Friends FOX News October 3, 2018 3:00am-6:00am PDT
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jillian: finally the ugly. you can buy these sandals for a lot of green u selling for $122 a pair. just a note. they are not edible in case anyone was confused. rob: bye. the fbi investigation into supreme court nominee brett kavanaugh could wrap up as early as today. >> they have been trying to destroy judge kavanaugh since the very first second he was announced. they know judge kavanaugh will follow the constitution as written. >> hillary clinton back at it again, repeating some of her favorite themes from 2016. >> he has been a racist. he has been sexist. he's been islamophobic and he talks to that america. >> she is thought attacking the president so much as she is attacking his voters and the explanation is trump won because it's a bad country. >> president trump talking
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to the national electrical contractor's association. >> we have created him a hard hat with the president seal. >> [cheers] >> we are here at the college of the ozarks in missouri where students faith, freedom, love 6 country and hard to work hard before they leave this campus. they call it hard work u. ♪ [chanting hard work u. ] ♪ ♪ [chanting hard work u] >> live from the college of the ozarks in missouri, it's
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"fox & friends" for this very special wednesday as they perform a medley of america and at the same time there is hollering hard work u. hard work u which is their motto. ainsley: waking up early with us many of them may not have gone to sleep. brian: pete hegseth has been there since yesterday. the crowd pumped up last night and told. pete, you welcome that type of applause. you used to getting that when we toss out to you. pete: never ever ever. this is the first time ever i can barely hear you guys. i'm telling you it's a special campus. we had a chance to visit yesterday. i'm telling, faith, freedom, patriotism. they took a big stand on nike. special place in missouri. we will talk to you later on and bring you the special aspects of hard work u as they call it here. steve: they call it hard work u because all those students who are full time go to college free, right,
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pete, if they work how many hours a week? >> brian: a lot. they walk out after four years without any college debt. that's better than most colleges. ainsley: that school had the nike contract and now they don't. brian: they didn't like the nike add like a lot of people didn't. some did. college of the ozarks took two minutes to say we are getting rid of the nike apparel. all our sports teams will not be wearing the nike swoosh. steve: pete will be down there talking sports, nike and so much more. we will be talking about the fbi investigation brett kavanaugh. the investigation could wrap up today, which would set, perhaps, of the stage for a potential vote later on this week. ainsley: the deadline is friday. this as bombshell revelations dr. christine blasey ford's sworn testimony comes to light. brian: we have a lot going on. garrett tenney in washington to break some of it down for
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us. hey, garrett recommendation good morning, y'all, an ex-boyfriend of dr. ford is raising new questions about her testimony to the senate including claims that she never helped anyone prepare for a polygraph examine. in a letter to the judiciary committee obtained by fox news the man said there were a number of things ford said under oath that didn't line up with what he saw during the six years they dated back in the 1990s. the contradiction that chairman chuck grass solid most concerned about though is the ex-boyfriend's allegation that ford helped a friend prepare for a polygraph test. the ex-boyfriend wrote i witnessed dr. ford help mclean prepare for a potential polygraph examine. dr. ford splangsd in detail what to expect, how polygraphs worked and helped mclean to become familiar and less nervous about the exam. that is significant because very different than the answer ford gave when she was asked about this specifically last week. >> have you ever had discussions with anyone
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besides your attorneys on thousand take a polygraph? >> never. >> last night at a rally in mississippi, president trump defended his nominee and struck a different tone on dr. ford's testimony pointing out the gaps in her recollection of the alleged event. >> how did you get home? i don't remember. how did you get there? i don't remember. where is the place? i don't remember. how many years ago was it? i don't know. i don't know. [crowd cheering] >> i don't know. fox news has learned the fbi could deliver its report on judge kavanaugh to the white whe house as early as this afternoon. dr. ford's legal team is complaining that they still haven't been contacted by the bureau but law enforcement sources tell us agents already have hours of their sworn testimony and only reach out if there is some new information if they need to corroborate. if the fbi does conclude its investigation by today, we're expect the senate to vote on judge kavanaugh's confirmation this weekend. steve, brian, and ainsley.
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brian: garrett. thanks so much. of course, they are reaching out. they want to be interviewed again after we already saw hours of testimony as everybody saw widely watched. the fbi said i saw enough. i think i know where you stand. we will try to corroborate the story in the next few days. and right away guys like chris coons and others say how could you not do that and also debbie rams is upset because, yeah, i appreciate the interview i got. she is the second accuser from the new yorker magazine but i gave you leads we don't know if you followed up on those leads. steve: 20 leads. they are very concerned their story is not getting out. it's very predictable. ainsley: i love how everyone tries to play fbi agents when they're not agents. steve: what's interesting in garrett tenney's report how dr. ford's long-time boyfriend. they dated for years. they lived together for a while. na addition, he says she never mentioned any sort of
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sexual assault during their time together. never mentioned brett kavanaugh's name. not afraid of confined spaces or flying. he says she sheeted him. he got a bill, i read the letter that he signed to the senate judiciary committee it said that at one point after they had broken un, apparently she charged 600 bucks on their credit card and he was upset. she lied about it and then she came clean when he said i'm going to call fraud prevention. it is a suggestion that she actually coached somebody. he says she coached monica mclean how to take polygraph. ainsley: who was her best friend at the time. steve: monica mclean is being mentioned as somebody that dr. ford may have misspoken or told something untruthful. ainsley: prosecutor asked her during the hearing have you ever prepared for a polygraph something in that line of questioning. have you ever talked to anyone other than your lawyers about a polygraph test she said no.
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her boy friend she dated for six years, she lived in a small apartment with one front door and never expressed any fear or possibly i can't of only having a front door. steve: lots of difference. brian: democrats are saying we are going to go over two things. we are going to say he is emotionally unfit because he seemed very angry during his testimony. number two, going to show he was not telling the truth when it came to his drinking. out comes this letter, we don't know from whom, it's in the "new york times." here is an excerpt that democrats are zeroing in on. quote, brett kavanaugh it would probably be a good idea on saturday the 18th to warn the neighbors that we are loud, obnoxious drunks and prolific pukers among us. advise them to go about 30 miles away. so their ah-ha 19 will 3 he and him friends were going down to the maryland beach community, which is a vacation area that they seem to be in college and they would be drinking. so clearly he can't be a supreme court justice.
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ainsley: they are claiming it was kavanaugh signed that letter. signed fff bart. in the hearings one of the senators asked him about mark judge who called him bart. he said is that your nickname? is that what you were called? he said you would have to ask mark judge about that. brian: they did by the way. they talked to mark judge yesterday. steve: apparently this note was written -- remember this calendar that said beach week across it? they had this annual beach week there at georgetown prep and sounds like mr. kavanaugh was one of the people who was organizing it. but he had written a letter and said, i'm going to be in ireland when everybody shows up. somebody is going to have to collect 50 bucks per guy. and at the bottom, brian, to your point talked a little bit to your point where we are obnoxious drunks were prolific pukers among us. senator orrin hatch took that in and said if you thought they couldn't want to ice throwing story we are
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talking about the "new york times." this party planning with teenage rebel brett kavanaugh suggesting they warn their neighbors in advance about the possibility of loud noise. so senator orrin hatch is poo pooing the big "times" exclusive. ainsley: the president was in mississippi yesterday for a rally stumping for a republican there. he had this to say about kavanaugh. >> all of the democrats know and all they really know how to do is obstruct, resist, demolish, destroy, and delay. [crowd boos] >> they have been trying to destroy judge kavanaugh since the very first second he was announced. [crowd booing] >> because they know judge kavanaugh will follow the constitution as written. [crowd cheers] brian: he did go after the accuser because we know even
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the prosecutor from arizona says there is huge holes in the story. ainsley: the accuser's story. brian: we don't know how she got there, how she left, how she knows brett kavanaugh. what house it took place in. is that enough to destroy somebody's career, life, and reputation? however the tactic of the president laying low has been lauded by all sides. last night he chose to blow it as the fbi is handing in the report as early as today. i wonder about the wisdom as much as the crowd loved it, i wonder about the wisdom tactically of him doing that and -- ainsley: making this her story. this ex-boyfriend penned this letter and saying i don't believe a lot of what she said. a lot of what she said when we dated and what i witnessed isn't true. brett kavanaugh is saying it's not true. there is no evidence. i don't remember any of this. and then have you letters that are in the "new york times" saying that he drank a lot and threw up and did beach week and all that in high school and many of you did, too.
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he is saying there is no evidence. you have to make up your own mind. the law says you are innocent until proven guilty. there is no evidence of guilt here. steve: to brian's point the president has been criticized roundly by some who say look, last week, he said she is a credible witness. now he is mocking his or her. it was last week as well that senator lindsey graham took the floor of the astronaut, and he blistered his democratic colleagues for going after brett kavanaugh the way they did. and he, yesterday, had a warning for democrats about the future if this is where we are at today. >> people can look at it, and then we're going to vote. it's time to vote. i keep telling my colleagues, if this is the new normal god help us all. who would want to be a judge in this environment. and we have got to turn this around before it's too late. taking kavanaugh down would unleash forces from the darkest side of american
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politics in perpetuity. if you think only one side is capable of doing this, you're mistaken. brian: there will be reprisals. you never hear senator lindsey graham talk like that. is he so furious. he has known this guy 20 years. ainsley has this point this letter going here and ex-boyfriend. nobody says this happened within the last 30 years u we're not debating the 90's. we're not debating 2,000. we're not debating 2010, we're not debating 2015. we're not talking ba drunken incident in downtown washington, d.c. we are talking about a college kid. so, as it relates to sexual assault, dead sear useless. as it relates to a college kid acting like many college kids who are now adults i think that you are going over a bridge too far. the question is what does susan collins, lisa murkowski, heidi hide can't and joe manchin think? we could have a vote as early as saturday.
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steve: some of the people come out said look, it's one thing for kavanaugh to have been a big drinker or whatever back in the day. but what they're upset about is the fact that he appeared before the senate committee last week and in sworn testimony he said things that they felt had happened didn't happen. they feel that a supreme court justice should not be a liar. that's why some of them have come forward. look, forget about what he did 30 years ago. what he did last week was wrong because he lied about and then fill in the blank. ainsley: president was at that rally last knight and he was saying she doesn't remember where she was and how she left and doesn't remember where it was. the crowd goes wild. he tweeted -- this was a tweet president trump -- president donald trump the only reasonable to vote for a democrat is if you are tired of winning. and that was his tweet. and then hillary was speaking yesterday at the atlantic festival. she called the president sexist and islamophobic. listen.
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>> he has been racist. he's been sexist. he's been islamophobic. he has been anti-lbgt quncht. he has a view of america that is incredibly constricted. and he talks to that america. he talks to them all the time it's by no means a majority as we know. but it is a very hard core who are responding to him and supporting him for a variety of reasons. whatever they might be, economic reasons, supreme court reasons, or some of these other more troubling biases and prejudices. brian: he believes that part of the people that support donald trump are people that have biases and prejudices. i'm sure there are people who voted for her who have biases and prejudices.
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what she doesn't understand is everything the president is doing, whether you like it or not is not to make the trump empire bigger. it's to make america matter more to americans. is he fighting for americans. and we can debate the policies within that but they are trying to marginalize what he is doing. what is he doing saying i'm going to think about this country first whether it's the trade deals. i'm going to try to do what's best for america. i used to do what's best for my family and my company. ainsley: doesn't it show she still doesn't get america. she didn't visit some states. this is why the electoral statelectoralcollege is still s. she said that deplorable comment that really hurt her during the election. she wasn't speaking to conservatives. she didn't want to go to certain states. she is still saying that kind of thing. she is saying anyone who voted for trump, at least this is how i'm interpreting it, anyone voting for president trump is incredibly constricted. she is calling him islam
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phobic, sexist, racist, is she calling people who voting for him too is this deplorable 2.0. steve: that's what tucker was saying last night. >> not attacking -- she is attacking the voters. trump won bigots they supported trump. that's fantasy like the russia explanation. more upsetting. this includes some of the republican leadership, have thought through why this happened. it happened because the people on charge in elections day 2016 made a bunch of bad decisions and voters are mad about it. they have not learned from this experience at all. the country becomes more divided as elites refuse to respond to voters and volatile and more primed for the next thing which could be even scarier in my opinion. brian: what he does is when you attack, islamophobic. the voters don't go away they stop talking and become
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more of a silent majority. show up how did this happen? the when polsters call they don't answer honestly. when the friends ask them they don't answer honestly. when they go to the voting booth they vote the way they want. to say most people agree easier to win re-election than election. he is going to say, trust me. look at what i did. and he is going to have a very strong report card. if it ended right now, he said the mid terms are about a referendum on him. he said that last night. well, he just redid nafta. the economy is on a role. the military is being reinfigure gore rated. he does have a report card to run on. ainsley: we stand up for freedom. we'll stand up for this country and we stand up for the national anthem. everyone behind him stood up what we could say on cameras and a everyone started screaming so excited. brian: do you want to know personal risk? this is personal risk 50 years of his businesses is now on the front page of the ninels. his dad's legacy, tax
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returns. there is no financial benefit for donald trump running for president. steve: they are trying to blow up what they say is the myth that he is a self-made man. that he only started with a million dollars. instead he started with lots and lots and lots of money. and it essentially is a crime family. ainsley: his dad has been dead for a very long time. steve: 189 minutes after the top of the hour. a very busy wednesday. jillian: yes it is. get you started with a fox news alert. the united nations highest court ordering the united states to lift some sanctions on iran. u.n. taking sanctions on iran that impact imports of humanitarian goods. state tv praising the decision. the ruling is legally binding. we have to wait to see if the president will comply. also breaking right now, an intense search underway for whoever sent packages filled with deadly ricin to the president and the pentagon.
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the secret service intersecting an envelope that tested positive for the poison before it made its way into the white house. screeners at the pentagon also discovering contaminated envelopes addressed to secretary james mattis and a top navy chief. all of this coming hours after a scare at senator ted cruz's office building in houston. two people rushed to the hospital after coming into contact with a white powderly substance. that was not hazardous. moments ago the first lady former slavery outpost in guana. her visit following a welcome ceremony with the king this morning. the first lady spent her first day in africa visiting a hospital. holding adorable baby and passing out teddy bears and plan she will visit four countries this week focusing on child welfare. those are your headlines. seems like a successful first day. ainsley: so. could you the baby. racist, sexist, islamophobic. what does tomi lahren think
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brian: quick headlines right now. we start with a fox news alert. frightening new images show how close china came causing a disaster to south china sea. chinese warship coming within 45 yards of crashing into the uss decatur. this happened on september 30th just last week. the force to perform extreme maneuver to avoid a collision. that is huge news. volcano erupting overnight on end dough nearb end neetion .
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it's possible the quake triggered the eruption and french fugitive who escaped from prison in helicopters is reportedly under arrest after three months on the run armed men help him break out of a visitors room before taking off from the prisoner's courtyard that happened in july. there is the circle. no word on how the police tracked him down. steve: but, they have got their man. meanwhile, hillary clinton is going back after the deplorable theme with some of her favorite that failed in 2016. >> he has been racist. he has been sexist. he has been islamophobic. he has been anti-lbgtq. i mean, there is a long list. he talks to that america. he talks to them all the time it is a very hard core who are responding to him and supporting him.
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ainsley: hillary clinton rattling off list of insults. here to react is fox nation host tomi lahren. >> good to see you guys. what are we going to do with hillary. ainsley: tucker carlson saying this is deplorable 2.0. attacking the people who voted for president trump. it sounds like. >> well, you guys are exactly right. earlier, when she is attacking president donald trump. she is actually attacking americans and she is attacking his supporters. and she couldn't be more tone deaf. what she is really doing when she is saying he is racist and distract from the point that black unemployment is historic lows. when she is saying he is sexist trying to distract from the g.d.p. growth over 4%. when she says he is islamophobic. trying to distract from the fact commander-in-chief overseeing the isis. trying to accomplishments, and distract voters. it's not going to work. steve: meanwhile, tomi, you have a number of members of the mainstream media. they have tried to do their best, it appears, to
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diminish judge kavanaugh. i know there was a "u.s.a. today" opinion piece that said that kavanaugh should stay off the basketball courts. he should not be coaching children. and then there was a cartoon that was widely circulated that showed kavanaugh's 10-year-old daughter praying for dr. ford. and there it is right there. what do you think is going on here? it looks like some is all in on killing kavanaugh. >> imagine that of course. the mainstream media is all in on killing anything that has to do with prawfn and kavanaugh is just another symptom of of that trump derangement syndrome. furthermore, they are not helping themselves by doing. this all they are doing for kavanaugh supporters, for trump supporters and americans concerned with due process. justice and having a great supreme court justice. all they are doing in the mainstream media and on the left are encouraging trump supporters and red waive to come out in force. what they think they are
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doing is changing the minds of voters and think they are going to make a blue wave. in fact what they are doing is strength the red wave, they will see that in november. brian: republicans are beginning to surge in the generic poll. wonder how much is going to hinge on kavanaugh especially heidi heitkamp down by 10 points in north dakota. democratic senator there might she not have a choice to vote for brett kavanaugh? >> i hope that some of these democrats in vulnerable states like north dakota are really paying attention to what's going on this doesn't even fall on party lines americans are quite tired of it. >> 344 minutes on accusations against causative amongst the networks. 14 minutes on kavanaugh's denials. and this is media research center looked at abc, cbs, and ntsb morning and evening news between september 13th and the 24th. what's your reaction to that? is that fair? >> well, of course it's not fair.
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but i think out american people go outside of a lot of things from news as well. they are looking at social media. they at watching fox news to get the real story. they are paying attention to other people that have analysis on this. because they don't trust the mainstream media. the leftist mainstream media anymore. again, they are shooting themselves in the foot with this continuous, negative coverage because the american people don't want to see a good man be treated this way. doesn't matter if he is conservative, liberal, or in the middle. the american people do not want to see this happen to a good man. steve: well, the fbi report could be submitted to the administration later today. could be a vote later this week. so stay tuned. tomi, thank you very much for joining us u of course, one of the hosts from fox nation. if you want more information about the subscription based streaming service go. to foxnation.com. thanks, tomi. what's coming up? ainsley: 29 minutes after the touch of the hour, this professor called for judge kavanaugh and republican senators to die on twitter. turns out shy has a history of targeting conservatives. one of her colleagues is speaking out next.
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>> plus, pete is live at the college of ozarks with a very special guest. pete: i'm here with tyler and kaedyn and this is reba, right? >> yes. >> we have a chance to feed this beautiful travel here, they work at the college of the ozarks. don't disturb the calf, she is feeding right now. i have never gone this before. more "fox & friends" on the other side. ♪ yellow, too. ♪ and the red man medicine for treating diabetes,
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♪ ♪ ♪ brine brian is that the greatest band ever? steve: no kidding. if anybody is sleeping in the ozarks they are awake now as the college of the ozarks plays the army and marine corps song. pete hegseth is live from the college of ozark in point lookout missouri. [cheers and applause] ainsley: that's right. the school prides itself on auto good students hard workers and american patriots. brian: pete hegseth was stuck at princeton during his years. hey, pete, what is it like out there? >> i should have been stuck
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here instead. what is it like? look at it what a great college they have got here. college of the ozarks. they came to national prominence because they took a stance on the nike issue. they said we are going to just stand and they did the school is about so much more than that, hard work, patriotism, faith, which they put at the forefront. we had a chance yesterday to talk to a bunch of students on campus. this is what we saw. take listen. we are here where students love faith, freedom and love 6 country work hard before they leave campus. they call it hard work u. where are eright now. >> we are at the keeter center. lodge on campus. we have 15 rooms. all guests.
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pete: all students running this how did you end up at the college of the ozarks. >> i was fortunate to come to the college of ozarks. i came from a family those opportunities weren't available because of the institution's ability to work for my education, i'm able to stand and talk to you today. >> how many hours door do you work. >> 15 hours a week and two 40 hour work weeks. >> you are a student you have the regular course load. you are also overseeing 8 students that make sure that this milk not only makes it to the keeter center and process it to be sold on the open market as well. >> yes. pete: what's the biggest prize had you working here. >> everything, honestly. did i not come from any souter of ag background. every single day i came in knowing i was going to learn something new. i like that. pete: on a farm but still on campus at the college of the ozark. we have peas over here. green beans, color flower. broccoli.
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pumpkin. pete: i look around this is not your typical experience. >> the school likes to educate the head, the heart and the hands. by going to class i'm age to learn a lot and implement what i learn in class work station like the campus garden. pete: we are can over 40,000 different products. students make that? >> correct. >> have you learned how to be proud of your country from being at this college. >> definitely. and the ability to stand up for what you believe. pete: ability to make killer job and families and butter. >> um-huh. pete: would you be willing to show me how to do this? >> yes, of course. >> can i try one of these? >> yeah, be careful, it's hot. >> it is. am i going to burn my tongue? >> no. >> good? >> fantastic. really good. well done.
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brian: pete, you learned a lot. [applause] >> it's a very special place, guys. it really, really is their mission is very intentional. i have a chance now to talk to general terrence dake acome dance of the marine corps. you flew ronald reagan. part of the helicopter crew. board of the college of the ozarks. this college got a lot of the national attention because of the stand it took on nike and standing for the anthem. based encore principle that it believes in. tell us about the principles of the school. >> in fact the principles of the school and the one we are talking about nike is really a one we have taken a stance that says do not disrespect america. we look at the college as being a place where students can come they can learn about our country and do so in an environment that we hope nourishes that as we do. patriotism, in fact back in the 60's during the vietnam situation, the board of
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trustees took a position, we think that patriotism is waning not just on this campus but on the country and made a stand of that as one of the pillars of our colleagues. patriotism, education is one of the things that we do. pete: do you know how different that is than most colleges and universities today that feel like patriotism is passe, it's yesteryear. but here you reinforce that our country stray special place. >> we absolutely do. we believe america is an exceptional nation. we believe that the kinds of things that we stand for need to be broadcast and we appreciate the opportunites to do that here. patriotism here, we do it in several ways. one of those is a travel program where we team up with students with a veteran, send them off to the battle fields where the veterans fought. and let that student learn and hear about the sacrifices that those people made on their behalf. we talk about sacrifices in america a lot. but the sacrifices we talk about aren't always
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well-placed. i think the sacrifices that the veterans do, the battles that they fought and our students see and hear that and bring that back to our campus, that's part of the patriotism. will. pete: general, our viewers, i mentioned ronald reagan, you were part of flying him, part of his presidential detail, what was that assignment like in the marine corps? >> you know, that's kind of different. that's really not a marine corps mission. marines fight battles but flying ronald reagan was a highlight for an old helicopter pilot to be able to do that for sure. ronald reagan had a thought, too. that said that democracy can be extinct in a single generation. therefore, the kind of things we talk about standing for the flag. putting our hand over our heart when we pledge allegiance and when the national anthem is played, those are things that are important because they stand for symbols that reinforce. pete: amen. freedom is never one more generation away from extinction. a lot of universities talk
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about thanking our veterans. this place lives it i have seen it across campus. they send folks with war veterans to where they served and they truly do honor those that mean so much to this country. [cheers and applause] >> thank you for being here. [cheers and applause] brian: what a school. ainsley: that's a great concept. pete do they have a football team? pete: no, but they have a great basketball team and baseball team. maybe football eventually. but they have taken stances there, too. teams that come here cannot kneel for the anthem. ainsley: everyone on campus has to work and then can you graduate debt free. steve: like the sign says. ainsley: we can't hear you pete. because everybody behind is you so riled up. brian: can we hear jillian? steve: absolutely. she has the news. jillian: test, test. good morning. brian: no one is cheering for you. i have news to bring you. georgetown university professor is briefly suspended by twitter. after calling for the death of republican senators to
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support judge kavanaugh. christine's former colleague telling our tucker carlson she also called her a nazi enabler for voting for president trump. listen to this. >> what she is tweeting is not just a simple, single, you know, troubling remark, but part of this larger dynam make we faced over the last two years that i considered extremist, all left insurgency in america that is time to topple this government with any means necessary. >> georgetown university responded by saying she is entitled to free speech but the school expects her classroom to be free of bias. and urgent manhunt underway right now for a man suspected in one of the largest gun thefts in atf history. they load offed up a u-haul with hundreds of guns from a ups distribution center in memphis and plan to sell
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them. jackson got away from police in chicago and now on the run. turn bow was caught and arrested. 364 firearms were found in that truck. well, this is a crazy story. she wanted to get rid of her messes, not her booze. the new york city woman was shocked when she came home to her cleaning lady passed out drunk on the floor. the other one nowhere to be found. here's the mess they left behind at her apartment after eating her ice cream, drinking her alcohol and causing more than $400 in damages. when she asked for reimbursement the company told her one of the maids was having family issues. okay. brian: sounds good enough to me. you have family issues can you do whatever you want. steve: did they get the 400 bucks back? ainsley: they were supposed to clean the apartment made it messier. jillian: got drunk h a party. steve: only in new york. brian: thank you, jillian. please follow that story. remember this protester who confronted senator jeff flake? >> you are allowing someone
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who is unwilling to take responsibility for his own action. >> senator, diewpghtsd to respond. >> to sit on the higher court of the country. brian: we just found out more about her. charlie hurt is furious about it he joins us next. plus some other stuff. when did you see the sign? when i needed to create a better visitor experience. improve our workflow. attract new customers. that's when fastsigns recommended fleet graphics. yeah! now business is rolling in. get started at fastsigns.com.
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steve: it's the confrontation we have been following activists challenging jeff flake over his decision to vote for kavanaugh out of committee. >> look at me when i'm talking to you! you are telling me that my assault doesn't matter. that what happened to me doesn't matter. and that you are going to let people who do these things into power. that's what you are telling me when you vote for him. steve: well, our next guest calling this a disturbing set-up as we learn that activist works for the center for public democracy a left wing organization heavy live funded by billionaire george soros.
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fox news contributor charles hurt wants to tell us more about it you say this whole thing was coordinated. >> it was completely coordinated. you have the cameras there and media there and you have these as you point out paid activists. these are not volunteers or people that are out trying to do their civic duty. they are paid activists and, of course, the press, they know how to stand by for road kill like this. and when they took off after jeff flake into the elevator the cameras were all there it was a perfectly coordinated hit job. this is confirmation by mob rule. this is government by mob rule. you know, the emotions are over the top again by paid activists which, to me, changes sort of the tenure of it all. these are the same people that disrupted the kavanaugh hearings in the first place standing up, shouting, demonstrating during the hearings. steve: right. >> you know. i guess the thing that strikes me the most about all of it, yeah, there are a
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lot of high emotions going on right now on both sides. i couldn't help but watch dr. ford's testimony and judge kavanaugh's testimony with enormous emotion. when you have emotions running this high. maybe we should stop and look at the facts and look at the details and look at the evidence. evidence and facts are the most important at times like now. steve: it's all about the narrative. the narrative is that image where you have these activists and activists shouting at ted cruz at the restaurant and mitch mcconnell out at the restaurant. look, they are very effective at this. to have the cameras right there to get their message across and for him, mr. flake, to say we have got to have a one week pause, that's the jackpot for them. that's what they're all about. and it worked. >> you are right. the proper all along for kavanaugh has been that they have a story. they are telling a story. and is he trying to disprove that story. the story almost always wins because of what you just said.
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the narrative, the narrative works. steve: it does in this case. let's see what happens next. charlie hurt, charlie, thank you very much. meanwhile, the left continues to hammer judge kavanaugh over bar fights in 80's and throwing ice decades ago. should that prevent him from serving on the supreme court? our next guest is a former federal prosecutor hear from him. plus call it deplorables 2.0. hillary clinton slamming president trump's supporters again u sound familiar? sean spicer with reaction about 20 minutes. ♪ ♪ get the recipes at walnuts.org.
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>> we did find one incident in which it is alleged that mr. kavanaugh did throw ice at someone however, and to be very clear, it is alleged that the injury to that person occurred when a glass was thrown at him and mr. kavanaugh was not the person named as the person who did that. ainsley: new haven police officers releasing a 33-year-old police report about a far fight allegedly involving brett kavanaugh as the left continues to hammer him about it, accusing him of throwing ice it happened in 1958 allegedly. brian: should that prevent someone from serving on the high court. francey headache hakes joins us now. looking back to 1958 what kind of justice he will be. does this matter? >> i think it matters only to one side of the political aisle and not the other and not to most of the american people. throwing ice on someone, if
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it is even a crime would have been a misdemeanor. the statute of limitations is long gone. it's sort of absurd at this point, i feel like. ainsley: how do we get to this point. first it was sexual allegations and now accusations of him throwing ice, bar fights, drinking too much in high school and planning parties. >> i think, ainsley, we are where we are now because those sexual assault allegations have not stuck. there is no corroborating evidence to any of them. the third one with julie swetnick is down right farcical and its face and internally inconsistent. she has already backed away from some of her claims. i think what's happening now is those sexual assault allegations have not been proven. they haven't stuck to kavanaugh. and so now the democrats are trying to find anything they can to discredit him ahead of the vote. >> what you told our producers is that there is one problem. you know, because testified that he didn't drink too much and never blacked out. and they want to show a series of incidents that
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shows people thought he did drink too much and did he black out. how do you prove someone didn't remember something 34 years ago but that's what they are trying to show. that he didn't tell the truth. >> right. well, you can't show something did or didn't, especially happen 36 years ago. so what they're left with is accusing him of lying to the senate. and that's really all they can do now is try and say well, some people allege you were a back out drunk. you say you weren't a blackout drunk that means we can't trust you. ainsley: it's happening on both sides have you dr. ford's ex-boyfriend coming out saying lying during the hearing. >> whole situation so ugly. i have followed supreme court confirmation for decades. i have never seen anything like this. even the clarence thomas hearings don't come close to what's happening here. and you are right. both sides are trying to discredit everyone. brian: there is nothing to discredit about you. thanks so much for your
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insight. appreciate it. ainsley: not that we know of yet. >> thanks brian and ainsley. brian: we are going live to the college of ozarks where pete is all morning long ♪ we're on the move ♪ >> tech: being there whenever you need us that's another safelite advantage. >> singers: safelite repair, safelite replace. new sleep number 360 smart bed.
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>> fbi investigation into supreme court nominee brett kavanaugh as early as today. >> they have been do i do i have trying to destroy judge kavanaugh since the very first second he was announced. they know judge kavanaugh will follow the constitution as written. >> hillary clinton back at it gyp repeating some of her favorite themes from 2016. >> he has been racist. he's been sexist. he has been islamophobic and he talks to that america. >> she is not attacks the president so much as she is attacks his voters and the explanation is trump won because it's a bad country. >> president trump talking
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to the national electrical contractor's association. >> we have created him a hard hat with the presidential seal. >> yes. do it. [cheers and applause] pete: we are here at the college of the ozarks in missouri where students learn faith, freedom, love of country and how to work hard before they leave this campus. they call it hard work u. ♪ ♪ [cheers and applause] brian: the enrollment at the
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ozarks applications with going to soar after people see what we have seen over the past two days. ainsley: this school is amazing. you have to work while you are there. steve: it's worth it you don't pay. ainsley: it's so worth it because you don't have to pay. when you enter in, you graduate debt-free with a degree but with work experience. pete: that's exactly right. you have work experience and no debt, right, guys? pete: exact opposite of over other college and university in this country. what i love about college of the ozarks otherwise known as? >> hard work u. pete: i didn't stage that they know it taught faith, freedom and freedom and to work hard. walking around this campus and visiting today. a demonstration for standing for what this country has stood for, including standing for the flag. you might know the college of the ozarks. they made a stark decision to say if nike is going to run those kind of ads, they are not going to use nike anymore.
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they took a lot of heat for that they did that because their principal said we stand for the flag we believe four country. we will talk to a lot of the folks, including students this morning about their opinions of everything affecting our country. i think a lookout of college kids are thinking about their career and future in this country right now as we have a national conversation. no better place to be than the college of the ozarks this morning. folks, thanks for having us. steve: absolutely. pete: back to you. ainsley: pete, i don't know if you can hear me. pete: yeah. ainsley: how do they afford this the kids all work and sell whatever they are making? pete: the kids work. i tried the chocolate milk. last night i had some of the steak in the dining room here. they provide what is used here on campus. they also sell it i don't even know what the website is. buff we will get it to you. just google college of the ozarks i think you will find your way there. they also have a strong endowment. because a lot of people believe in the mission of this college and invest in the next generation of kids not just here in missouri but around the country.
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steve: they probably. will pete, thank you very much. steve: dropping it for the next two hours. meanwhile talk about the news of the day. it sounds as if -- remember last week a number of moderate republicans called for a one-week investigation into these allegations regarding judge kavanaugh. well, the white house talk to anybody you want to. it's got to be done within a week. it looks like they are going to be done later today and then that sets up mitch mcconnell. he has said that we're going to vote, then kind of vague about the timetable, nonetheless it looks like things are progressing wickly on this supplemental investigation. ainsley: the president was speaking in missouri and he was talking about how the democrats are trying to destroy brett kavanaugh because they know he is going to follow the constitution, his rally was in mississippi. he said that the democrats are trying to destroy brett kavanaugh because he is going to fault constitution but, remember, the democrats said that they were not going to vote for whoever the justice was.
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they didn't even know who the nominee was. listen to what the president said yesterday. >> all of the democrats know and all they really know how to do is obstruct, resist, demolish, destroy, and delay. [crowd boos] they have been trying to destroy judge kavanaugh since the very first second he was announced. [crowd boos] >> because they know judge kavanaugh will follow the constitution might get that chance through a series of tech nic cattles. mitch mcconnell said yesterday only senators will get this report from the fbi. i'm sure it's not going to leak out ever. in nine seconds. steve: democrats will leak parts out that are favorable to dr. ford and the republican also leak parts out that are favorable. brian: i think we are going to get the whole things in a matter of minutes. there you go.
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that's what we saw. and look at all these people's intake. going to sit there and say we talked to his friends. we talked to debbie ramirez. weave talked to these people. we are not speaking to dr. ford again. we heard enough from her. we did speak to her friend. we know that for sure and after two days they finally finished one mark judge and another college friend look to impeach him should he be sat. ainsley: letters come out say he was drunk and so forth growing up. steve: and threw ice. ainsley: threw ice while he was at yale. steve: a police report. ainsley: the lady, dr. ford, there is now a litter out about her from one of her exboiferredz and fox news just obtained. this a written declaration from ex-boyfriend. they dated six years. he knows her very well. a lot of what she said during the hearing he debunks. brian: never heard of sexual assault. never complained of being claustrophobic. ainsley: that wasn't an alarm for me.
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she said in the hearing she hasn't told anyone until she went to therapy with her husband. so that wasn't an alarm for me. what was an alarm she said in that hearing she was scared to fly. he said that is bologna. he had never heard of her six years that she was ever scared to fly. she talked about needing the to you with front doors because she is close ter folk bic acts anxiety and ptsd. lived in a small apartment with one door. never afraid of tight spaces. never aphrased the closed quarters and also about the polygraph test. steve: the pole graph is the headline u accord position one of her friends. ainsley: are you saying i buried the lead? [laughter] steve: we're getting around to this part. monica mclean says that she witnessed dr. ford coaching somebody, her, how to take a polygraph. so,. brian: she a psychologist and knows how you to do it. steve: psychologist u. ainsley: applying for job with the fbi and u.s. court of appeals. steve: that is in direct
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conflict with what dr. ford said under oath. that's why charles grassley has sent a letter to dr. ford's attorney and it says this: when asked under oath in the hearing whether she had ever given any tips or advice to someone who was planning on taking a polygraph, dr. ford replied never. this statement raises specific concerns about the reliability of her polygraph examination results. exactly. it will be interesting to see how soon they do get back to the committee because that's kind of a headline. brian: let's talk about the actual vote no. matter what you think, no matter what you say it, will come down to people you don't know. senator susan collins, senator jeff flake and senator lisa murkowski. jeff flake. ainsley: those all republicans. brian: heidi heitkamp and joe manchin. ainsley: both democrats. brian: might be pressure on at least heidi heitkamp and donnelly to vote for kavanaugh because it seems as though it's overwhelming in their state, their support for him as the next
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supreme court justice. so what about jeff flake who has absolutely nothing to lose because he is leaving the senate? he was at the atlantic yesterday and said now he has been troubled by kavanaugh's demeanor at the hearing last week. listen. >> i was very troubled by the tone of the remarks. the initial defense that judge kavanaugh gave was something like i told my wife, i hope that i would sound that indignant if i were -- if i felt i was that unjustly maligned but thin it went on and the interaction with the members was sharp and partisan and that concerns me it will myself give a little leeway because of what he has been through.
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on the other hand, we can't have this on the court. we simply can't. steve: so is he troubled by his tone. so, given that and given the fact that he asked for an fbi investigation. once the 302s, these written explanations of what was said in the fbi interviews with these various witnesses. if there is no smoking gun there, which is what, you know, ultimately they are looking for. they are looking for a piece of evidence or something that's going to sway them. what will jiff flake do. brian: he has got to stop hanging without chris coons. conservative, supported by president bush. more than even donald trump who has lindsey graham who he likes says i have known him for 20 years he is great. he understands the outrage. when you look at the people say figure get elected. if i get put on the supreme court people will die. other ones say the minute he sits there get impeechingsd. why wouldn't the same person who gave the opening remarks look at the people ridiculing for the last 10 days and go back at them directly that's called acting like a human being.
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ainsley: sounds like on the fence. bishy washy, trying to apiece the republicans and democrats. if this were me i would have the same tonal. then again he can't act like this on the supreme court. eh, that's what he sounds like to me. steve: we could know within a day or two. mitch mcconnell. ainsley: people are sick of that they wants one opinion or the other opinion. they don't want this in the middle. steve: we have plenty of those. ainsley: jillian. jillian: you mean they don't want the eh. ainsley: make up your mind. jillian: i like the sound effects. get you caught up on this. fired fbi director james comey invited to testify on capitol hill. house republicans could subpoena him if he does not agree to come in and discuss the fbi's actions leading up to the 2016 presidential election. comey's lawyers say he want to testify publicly but not behind close the doors. deputy attorney general rod rosenstein set to testify next week. lawmakers will question him about a "new york times" report claiming he joked about secretly recording
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president trump. intense search continues right now for whoever sent packages filled with deadly ricin to the president and the pentagon. mail screeners at the dod finding con tame nateed envelopes james mattis and top navy chief. the secret server intercepting an envelope that tested positive for the poison before it got to the white house. all of this coming hours after a scare at senator ted cruz's office building in houston. two people rushed to the hospital after coming into contact with a white how derby one stance which turned out not to be hazardous. the woman who inspired one of buddy holly's biggest hits has died. ♪ if you knew peggy sue ♪ then you would know how i feel about peggy ♪ my peggy sue. jillian: peggy sue passed away in lubbock, texas. the hit was originally titled cindy lou.
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but he convinced buddy to change the name to impress peggy sue it worked for a time. jerry and peggy sue eventually got married. they later divorced though. peggy sue's family did not reveal how she died. she was 78. send it back to you. steve: her name will live on forever. brian: a little depressing. jillian: sorry, brian, it's the news. steve: actual person behind the song. brian: i know. now we have to work on run around sue. we have to find out who run around sue is. guess she didn't learn her lesson. hillary clinton launching into deplorables 2.0. >> he has been racist. he has been sexist. he has been islamophobic. he talks to that america. brian: right. former white house press secretary sean spicer is part of that america. he will be joining us. a disturbing trend at the border. how illegals are using a certain loophole to get in. steve: plus, we are live at the college of the ozarks all morning long.
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pete is talking politics and patriotism. brian: that's aj. that's him wearing the -- ♪ cheering] this flu season, protect yourself... and your sister-in-law's... tennis partner's... chatty coworker's... youngest daughter's... entire judo class. one shot can make a world of difference. walgreens has specially trained pharmacists, that know which flu shot is right for you.
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>> he has been race iglesias. he has been sexist. he has been islamophobic. anti-lbgtq. there is a long list. he talks to that america. he talks to them all the time. they t. is a very hard core who are responding to him and supporting him. brian: that hard core made him president. hillary clinton is back going after the president and his supporters again. our next guest calls this another example of the left's dangerous and irresponsible rhetoric. or is, it just hillary clinton? here to explain is former white house press secretary sean spicer. sean, hillary clinton's numbers have never been so low among democrats in terms of popularity is that the reason to believe or is she just echoing everybody else's message? >> i think that's part of the reason. part of the reason she lost the campaign she doesn't recognize the 60-plus million people that voted for donald trump for president because most of those people wanted a voice in washington. they felt like the system
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was leaving behind their hard working americans that just want to play by the rules. work a hard day. and have their government respect them. and i think hillary clinton still doesn't get them. and equally, i mean, you look, there were two sides on that stage. not just hillary clinton. but this guy from the atlantic jeffrey goldberg who didn't ask a follow-up question. let so. go by the wayside. he is parstd the problem. not just hillary clinton but a lot on the left in the media don't get how many folks in america share the concerns and the jeangted and the policy that donald trump is forwarding. >> another major story. the president redid naflt tharenafta in away i have not he be critical of. this better deal that actually has tech and ip in it which wasn't there in the 1980s, obviously, has gotten praise from chuck schumer. you think that's been buried, why? >> well, because it's a win for the president. but, look, this president and a lot of presidents have talked about renegotiating nafta as you recall president obama said he was going to do that as a candidate. nothing happened. this president said he was
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going to do it. and he did it. and it benefits our workers, our farmers, our ranchers, our manufacturers. as you pointed out. i mean, nafta is two and a half decades old. the idea that the intellectual property prendses, the digital property rights were all updated. the labor standards, the environmental standards, things that democrats have talked about for years. the stuff for the auto workers. this tremendous for our auto workers. dairy farmers in wisconsin. what the president did was remarkable. brian: it is, guess who else it helps? union members. even mexico might raise labor wages up u gives more for workers in three countries, thanks so much sean spicer, appreciate it. >> you bet. brian: what happens if alexandria ocasio-cortez wins her election next month? i think she gets inaugurated. >> i love to be inaugurated january 3rd, january 4th. >> right. let's get national guard
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rated. someone tell her that's not how it works? juan williams promises to walk out here and talk about his book. ♪ ♪ i'm going down in a blaze of glory ♪ ♪ are you ready old man? ha! i've been outworking you all day. hurry in to your local mahindra dealer to get a free top and up to nine hundred dollars in savings on select retrievers. and as if that wasn't badur brand new enough, totals it. now your insurance won't replace it outright because of depreciation. if your insurance won't replace your car, what good is it? you'd be better off just taking your money
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what no one in the world has done before. all i need access, tools, connections. high-speed connections. is the world ready for me? through internet essentials, comcast has connected more than six-million low-income people to low-cost, high-speed internet at home. i'm trying to do some homework here. so they're ready for anything. ainsley: don't you want to dance when you hear that music? brian: not yet. ainsley: time for news by the numbers. 10 times, that's how many more illegal immigrants are pretending to be families to cross the border according to a "washington times" report. there have been 150 cases of people fraudulently using a family loophole between may and august of this year. immigrants who come with kids get more lenient treatment apparently. next. four. that is how many more weeks illegal border crossers will live for free in taxpayer funded hotel rooms.
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the canadian government extending a plan to house asylum seekers for another month. it was supposed to be a one month trial experiment. finally, number one, that is where fox ranks in all of cable news. [applause] and that is thanks to you and your family. fox news channel just named the most watched network for the 67th consecutive quarter. thank you so much. please don't stop watching. you keep us employed. steve: we are paid by the viewer. ainsley: that's right. steve: 25 minutes after the hour. president trump taking on democrats claiming they are out to cake out judge kavanaugh ever since he was nominated. >> all of the democrats know and all they really know how to do is obstruct, demolish, destroy and delay. [crowd boos] >> they have been trying to destroy judge kavanaugh since the very first second
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he was announced. [crowd boos] ainsley: could the chaotic kavanaugh confirmation process end up back firing on the dems? brian: that's a lot of c's ainsley. co-author of what the hell do you have to lose. i have permission to sell hell when juan writes a book and puts it in the title. juan, welcome. good to see you on the couch. >> juan: only for you. brian: you took the president's line, are you saying you agree with them what the hell do you have to lose by supporting him? >> juan: no. it's interesting. he says block black communities filled with violence bad schools worse than living in averages. i think most people took it, brian, is he making an appeal to the black community, hey, why are you voting for democrats or hillary clinton? vote for me and you might see a different outcome. came across as so condescending in the first place. secondly, he wasn't speaking to the black community,
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brian. he was speaking in michigan, white communities, rural or suburban, i think what he was saying so much dysfunction over there and i'm not a snowflake, i'm not pc. i'm going to stand here and call out those people who may be mugging you. i thought it was racially divisive. steve: i kind of remember that rally and it was televised. >> yeah. steve: he was speaking just generally about that his message going forward into 2020 to the black community is black unemployment has never ever been this low. and that is great for him. >> i think it's great for everybody. i think it's great for america. when you say this, he only typically uses this as a definition when someone says hmmm why did you call a black woman a dog. or say nfl players are sobs who should be fired. why do you make such insend area comments? and are you racially insensitive? steve: doesn't he make those kind of comments about everybody? >> i think when you play on the kind of stereo types
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about intellect, lebron james is so dumb he makes don lemon look smart. when you talk about lack of patriotism. ainsley: i think a lot of republicans have problems they don't want him to say those kind of things. the alternative. they didn't want to vote for hillary clinton. the economy and black unemployment is better than ever. many people like what's happening in our country and that's why they support him. let's get the big news of the day. brian: on the last point so we don't have to go back. he calls i mean he calls everybody dumb that he wants. to say he doesn't see black or white when he calls you dumb. is he not afraid of saying things politically incorrect. he feels is he not racist he has nothing to cover or worry about. >> i think he does. we oftentimes get caught up in rhetoric the kind of language i described him being insend area or divisive or off-putting. you also have to pay attention to policy. you have to pay attention to the fact that the voter fraud commission that could
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find no voter fraud and people say is this about voter suppression? brian: none of the attorney generals in these states would cooperate. >> juan: tough pay attention to more of than that one of the difficulties so easy to get caught up, brian, in labels and saying someone is racist. i think that closes ears and really important that we talk to each other so i try to get beyond that right now, if you just look at the polling. incredible. two thirds of americans think race relations are worse under president trump. that he -- they disapproved of his handling of race relations. what's shocking to me is half of americans, including 11% of republicans think he is racist. that's what they say. ainsley: let me ask you about kavanaugh. rally he played in mississippi. democrats delaying. a lot of the republicans believe. that is that going to hurt the democratic party? >> not at the moment. not according to the polls. in fact, what we see is the sort of tribalism in the country being exposed that you see increase in support among republicans for
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kavanaugh since these allegations have been made. you see also though a rise among democrats in support for professor ford and independents, especially suburban white women so critical in upcoming house mid terms are of a mind that she is telling the truth. last night, when he was out in tennessee, i think lots of people are kind of why would the president go after her in that way because it looked like you can see the consequence for women who come forward and say something. brian: you saw the reaction of the crowd tactically it might not have been the best move. a lot of people were very frustrated they felt as though who can sit there and defend high school record when you are 53 and woman accusing you can't remember so much? >> right. so i think that's why it's so critical that we get away from this kind of partisanship in the fbi do its job. i don't know. are they restrained? are they going to be able- >> juan: they said professor ford hasn't been interviewed yet. brian: we only saw her six hours.
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>> juan: i think in private you would have a different level of conversation about a sexual issue. steve: they have lots more questions for her now anyway. juan williams, thank you very much. >> you guys are so kind to take on a difficult conversation in the morning. thank you. brian: what do we have to lose? [laughter] ainsley: thank you, juan. brian: great job. ainsley: heading back to hard work u university. pete is live at the college of the ozarks. pete? pete: yes. we are with the students here this morning. do you guys have opinions about things going on in the country today? >> sure do. >> this is blaine from missouri. we will talk to him and others. politics, the flag, patriotism, here at hard work u. that's what you guys do right? [cheers] pete: stay with us on "fox & friends." ♪ your digestive system has billions of bacteria but life can throw them off balance. re-align yourself with align probiotic. and try new align gummies
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[battle him of the republic. [. [ steve: how great is that not far from branson, missouri is the college of the ozarks as they perform life and wakes up everyone down there in the ozarks. pete hegseth joins us now. pete, we have been hearing a lot about that particular college and now you are going to talk to some of the kids about why they went there. a special school with a special mission. faith, freedom patriotism and hard work at hard work u are what makes this a special place. talk to a bunch of kids. nice part is it's all about opportunity and lifting kids out. giving them a debt-free future but also a lot of folks from the local area that came from background that maybe otherwise they wouldn't have been able to
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go to college or have these kinds of opportunities which is so special. lane, where are from you. >> i'm from mt. vernon, missouri. pete: tell us about your story. >> yes, my grand father served in the air force. my fair served in the navy. my brother is currently in the air force. to say go to a college that just really values patriotism and that also can graduate debt-free is just a great opportunity. pete: patriotism, part of the motto of this campus, this campus got a lot of attention when they decided after the collin kaepernick ad that they were not going to no locker use nike apparel. making the statement that we stand for the anthem. what say to you about the principles of this college. >> the nike decision made by the college was a direct reflection of the patriotic goal very consistent with mission and vision statement. one thing about this university is that patriotism definitely runs deep. pete: thank you for theselves in your family. now we will talk to some other folks, too. what's your name, man? >> i'm naudia. pete: i shouldn't call you ma'am, you are young. >> thank you. i'm good.
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pete: how are you. >> i'm from a small agriculture farm. beef farm. it's in my backyard. my parents also went here. my but the college since i was little and opportunities to go here and graduate debt-free is amazing. very special. pete: the whole world is obsessed with the latest iteration of the brett kavanaugh hearings and controversies as a youngs woman how do you react to that. >> this will change the nation processes go. with any trial go back to the constitution. we have a right fair trial doonsd due process. innocent until proven guilty. pete: do you feel brett kavanaugh has been treated fairly presumed innocent or presumed guilty? >> presumed guilty. going back and following the constitution and due process we will see how everything ends up.
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pete: do you teach patriotism at the college of the ozarks. >> we do. we give out constitutions to students freely. we have a club here on campus young americans for freedom who is always willing to give out the constitution. >> the harvard law school no longer requires its law students to learn about the u.s. constitution? >> no. >> it's sad, actually, sorry to depress you this morning. appreciate it. >> i'm lauren. >> lauren, i'm pete. tell me about your back ground. >> i grew up in a small business family. i hernsd the ethics of hard work very young age this school is appealing to me with the five fold mission and goals. >> as you watch what's unfolding with brett kavanaugh. your reaction to the swurelg controversy? >> i agree a lot with what naudia said. we definitely have the right to a fair trial. and i do think that he has been treated unfairly and he was proven -- i mean they treated as he was guilty since the very beginning. i think it's really sad because we live in a world where any kind of accusation
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people automatically think the person is guilty. that's not what the constitution says. that's not how we should act. i think it's very scary for humans. pete: for young women and men for the future. >> scary for both. for the men, as soon as somebody says something, people obviously assume it and they don't wait until innocent until proven guilty. and then for the women. those who are actually, you know, if there is false accusations, then that's scary for the women who have actually, it makes them the women who actually have been hurt and mistreated to be believed. pete: thank you. great stuff. we will keep moving there is a marine over here. what do you say in the marine corps. you serve currently with the marine corps recommendation with the marines since 200014. pete: talk about president trump and his treatment of the military and military as commander-in-chief. >> i believe he has done a lot for the military. big supporter of the military. his actions prove that every day. i think compared to where we
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were a few years ago, i think nationally we are a lot stronger. we are a lot more respected in the international community and lot bigger player because of that stance that he has taken. steve. pete: thank for your service what are you going to do in the marine corps. >> my pleasure. jag officer law. pete: we make tough decisions at a moment's notice. young lady, tell us your story a little bit. >> my name is naomi. i'm from little rock, arkansas. i am from a family 11 children. so,. pete: you got me beat. >> yeah. i have a pretty big family. going to college was our own responsibility so to be able to come to college and graduate debt-free like that means the world to me. pete: what is the patriotic mission of this school mean to you as well. >> i'm from a military family. i have three siblings who currently serve and just like being at a school where they really do stand up for veterans. and patriotism, that also like it's just incredible for like me to be able to stand up for like patriotism
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without actually having to join the military myself. pete: we are all citizens of this free republic either we stand up for it or we lose it thank you. what a great group we have here. i have got to talk to all many them. they all know what's going on with the news of the dale. they all have opinions as you can hear. [cheers] pete: we are still going to be here at the college of olt zarks. hard work u. ainsley: very impressed. steve: debt free. you have think those kids are cheering. just imagine the parents. debt free. ainsley: exactly. steve: last thanks, pete. brian: check in with him and again and how he made that ice sculpture. rick scott had a fiery debate with nelson in florida. talk about that race that some say is a dead heat. steve army staff sergeant ronald shurer will join us live next hour ♪ my brothers and my sisters i will proudly take a stand
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♪ where liberty is in jeopardy ♪ i'll always do what's right ♪ i'm out here on the front lines ♪ from $899, during sleep number's fall sale. it senses your movement, and automatically adjusts to keep you both comfortable. it even helps with this. so you wake up ready to put your pedal to the metal. and now, during sleep number's fall sale, the queen sleep number 360 c2 smart bed is only $899. plus, 24-month financing on all beds. only for a limited time. sleep number. proven, quality sleep. at humana, we believe great things are ahead of you when you start with healthy. and part of staying healthy means choosing the right medicare plan. humana can help. with original medicare, you're covered for hospital stays and doctor office visits when you're sick. but keep in mind you'll have to pay a deductible for each. a
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which may worsen kidney problems. i discovered the potential with ozempic®. ♪ oh! oh! oh! ozempic®! ♪ (vo) ask your healthcare provider if ozempic® is right for you. jillian: good morning to you. back with headlines now. muslims working at a minneapolis airport say they were fired for praying on the job. >> they know that muslims pray five times a day. that night the manager was talking so rudely to us. jillian: the company they work for says they were not fired aing in a statement, quote: the employees at issue did not take those opportunities for prayer but, instead, unilaterally decided, without notifying their supervisor, to leave an aircraft they were assigned to clean. the company says the workers caused delays for hundreds of passengers. >> removing human remains from old plots to make room
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for new grades. the bridgeport, connecticut. found the park cemetery scattered with human bones and fragments of caskets. grave digger reported by the manager to throw out the old remains. some of the head stones dating back to the 1800s. steve: thanks, jillian. fbi probe brett kavanaugh could wrap up as soon as later today, setting the stage for a potential vote, perhaps this week. and our next guest who is running for the u.s. senate down in florida blasting these senators for disservice to america. accusing them of creating a circus in our nation's capital. here with more republican florida governor and senate candidate rick scott joins us from the beautiful city of name pels, florida. governor, good morning to you. >> good morning. get back to florida. you always like it down here, i think. we had a great debate.
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steve: i'm coming to down this weekend. you had a fiery debate. senator nelson said given his emotional testimony last week is he not fit to serve on the supreme court. you liken what's going on in d.c. to the jerry springer show. >> it is. last night's debate is a great example why we need term limits. senator nelson didn't have one thing he could say he accomplished. he has been in office since richard nixon was in office. had nothing he could say. so, let's go back to judge kavanaugh. so, senator nelson has never met with him. right? he said before he was even nominated he would be against anybody trump came up with it's a circus up there. it's a jerry springer show. dr. ford and judge kavanaugh are just pawns in some game up there between the two parties. so, he needs to be confirmed. he has got a great track record. and i can continue to support him. steve: when you were talking about how senator nelson has been in d.c. too long, he turned around and said,
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look, rick scott is a liar and he has a bunch of conflicts of interest and his strategy is simply to change the subject any time anything tough comes up. >> you can go to florida facts.org and get all the information. here's a guy that's been in office for all this time. i put my assets in a blind trust, right? i made my money in business. he has made his money in politics. he put his assets in a blind trust? he has been paid over $4 million, you know, in his job as a politician. you are not supposed to get rich by being a politician in this country. we talked about the facts. we talked about issues, education, immigration, cuba. i had a lady on there that after he supported barack obama's appeasement policy to raúl castro the murder of american citizens, this lady was attacked by a machete five months after barack obama appeased raúl castro attacked by a machete. her left arm was cut off. stuck in the mud so she
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would die and senator nelson didn't even acknowledge her he completely ignored her. that was rude. steve: that's an extraordinary story. one of the things of interest to people in florida and you know this as you sit there in naples people are upset about the green algae and the red tide. and you said last night that senator nelson was in some measure responsible for that. >> he is completely responsible for it if you look at the green algae, in 1990, he had ads that said he was going to take care of the green aggie in th algae. dike at lake okeechobee. he has not spent one dime to fix that dike. it spread in two rivers. east and west coast. he has never done anything. after trump -- president trump got elected i went to president trump. i went to congress. i have gotten the money now.
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we have that dike finished by 2022. but senator nelson 40 years in public service never got any money to fix the dike. steve: well, they have got to do something down there. it is a mess and people are angry about it governor, thank you very much. >> have a great day. steve: you as well. we did invite senator nelson to appear on the program today. his campaign still not responding to us. but the invitation stands. all right. meanwhile, the prosecutor who questioned dr. christine ford says there are lots of holes in story about judge kavanaugh. next guest says one that really stands out it could change everything. president trump's new trade deal is a huge win for american farmers. one of those farmers is here to thank the president next hour. plus, we're live from hard work u. college of the ozarks. ♪ talking about my generation
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♪ ainsley: the prosecutor who questioned dr. christine ford released a report outlining the holes in dr. ford's testimony. rachel mitchell the prosecutor writing dr. ford has no memory of key details of the night in question. details that could help corroborate her account. perhaps, most importantly, she does not remember how she got from the party back to her house. our next guest says that is the biggest hole in dr. ford's story. daily wire contributor and author of the unholy trinity
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the left's assault on life, marriage and gender. matt walsh joins us now. why do you say this is the biggest hole of all? >> think about it, this would s. a key person. the country club is 6 to 8 miles from her house that means she didn't walk home. and so, according to her, her story, 15-year-old girl brutally assaulted. she thought she was going to die. she runs out of the house, fearing for her life, that's her story. she goes out the door. she gets into someone's car, by the way how did she get ahold of that person. no cell phones. must have went in the kitchennenned and made a phone call. that's left out. gets in the car with somebody just suffering that trauma that personal could tell us what did she look like? were there any injuries? was she crying? did she look like she had been traumatized by something. impossible to believe a 15-year-old after experiencing that if it happened could have pulled herself to the point where no one would have noticed something is wrong. interesting she can't tell us coincidently who it was who drove her home and also no one has come forward, not a friend, into the parent has come forward to say
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yeah, you know what? i picked her up from a party once around that time and she seemed like something wasn't right even though she wouldn't tell me what it was. no one has come forward to say that that is a huge hole because that person would be such a key witness for her. yet, i didn't know dentsly we don't know her. ainsley: at love people on the left do support her. you are right no. one i'm aware of. none of her friends have come forward and said anything. someone who did come forward who knows her well. ex-boyfriend of six years come forward and said there is a lot of hostil holes in hery as well. she felt like she was going to be sexually assaulted but wasn't? >> beyond that a lot of holes in the fact that she says she was traumatized and her grades were suffering and everything. yet no one in her family or parents no one in her family has come forward to say there was change in her demeanor and trauma mize ma advertised all those years later. that's a huge hole. ainsley: thank you for joining us. "new york times" claims president trump committed
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major tax fraud no. evidence. making recipes from my mother's cookbook like her chicken divan and other favorites from brian's mom and from steve who says youlo can'ts go home ♪ we haven't had any sort of benefit plans and we're trying to figure that out now. if i had had a little advice back then, i'd be in a different boat today, for sure. plan your financial life with prudential. bring your challenges. . . making my dreams a reality
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♪ >> the fbi investigation into supreme court nominee brett kavanaugh could wrap up as early as today. >> they have been trying to destroy judge kavanaugh since the very first second he was announced. >> this is the new normal, god help us all if you think only one side is capable of doing this, you're mistaken. >> hillary clinton back at it again repeating favorite themes from 2016. >> has been racist. he shoes been sexist. he has been islamophobic and he talks to that america. >> she couldn't be more tone deaf. when she is attacking president donald trump she is attacking americans and attacking his supporters. >> she doesn't recognize the 60 plus million people that voted for donald trump.
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>> we're here at the college of the ozarks in missouri where students faith, freedom, love of country and how to work hard before they leave this campus. they work here at the college of ozarks. be quiet. don't disturb the calf. he is feeding right now. i have never done this before. ♪ [shouting] [playing of god bless america]
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steve: land that which love. college of the ozarks live from not far from branson, missouri. pete hegseth is there with the kids who are screams, pete, they will graduate from college, debt-free. you don't have to pay. all you have to do is work. pete: all you have got to do work hard. that is why they call it hard work u. college of the ozarks. what a reception we've had. they graduate debt-free. they have jobs on campus. we'll share you video later on in the program. they emphasize faith, patriotism, commitment to your country. i will say this, guys, i have to say, i have never heard a hymn sung in a break until i was at the college of the ozarks. that doxology, christian faith is central part of what this campus stands for.
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they are unabashed about it. faith is front and center. they are bugging me talk more about your christian faith. we are. this is place on the national scene because of the stance they took on nike and standing for the national anthem. fair to say at the college of ozarks, you stand for the anthem? >> yes. usausa. pete: yep, they do. they stand for the anthem here, guys. we'll talk to a few more students as well as the college president who sets the standard. ainsley: the lady behind you, what does her banner say? pete: what does her banner say. miss hard work u what does that mean. >> it is our school's version of homecoming queen. it is different than other colleges. it is more about the experience rather than the end goal. pete: more about the experience than the end goal. that says a lot about this place. work hard and have opportunities
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for your country. can we stick around another hour? can we do that? [. [cheering] ing. >> college of the ozarks. brian: we'll talk about brett kavanaugh. rumors that the fbi investigation will end. they spoke to mark judge over the last two days. he is the former best friend of brett kavanaugh, about what he saw and what he didn't see. and how dr. ford's story holds up. speaking of dr. ford, she is upset, so far her people are she has not been spoken to again. the fbi feels we watched her for four or five hours. we got her side of the story. steve: maybe. brian: let's see what is happening to the other people. ainsley: fbi investigation is supposed to wrap up on friday. that is the deadline. many are saying it will wrap up today all the senators will get a copy of the investigation. one senator, senator cornyn,
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thinks it should be released to the public. he thinks all of us should be able to see it. chuck grassley is does not agree with that. in my experience in 38 years in the senate we never had a fbi report leaked to the public. brian: it will leak in matter of minutes. steve: parts of it will. president said on the south lawn fixing to go on his big trip. mr. kavanaugh is doing well. a lot comes back in terms of their investigation. in terms of what the democrats trying to do to the judge destroy him, according to the president. >> all of the democrats know and all they really know how to do is obstruct, resist, demolish, destroy, and delay. [booing] they have been trying to destroy judge kavanaugh since the very first second he was announced. [booing] because they know judge
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kavanaugh will follow the constitution as written. [cheering] steve: meanwhile chuck grassley sent a letter to christine ford's attorney and, what he is asking for is some evidence, things that she has brought up in testimony, that would be very helpful because there has been certain things that just don't add up. asking for the evidence to support her claims. he says they withheld the evidence including the notes from the therapy session, which was widely quoted, also the recordings of the lie detector she famously took not far from baltimore and exchanges she had with the media, in particular a whatsapp conversation with "the washington post" which they had seen a screen grab of. they would like to see the whole conversation. not just that screen. ainsley: dr. ford speaking in hearing. there were holes in her story.
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why she couldn't remember they picked her up. why isn't someone going forward, saying that she was in distress when we picked her up. her boyfriend of six years says there is a lot of holes in her story. she doesn't have a fear of flying. didn't need more than one door. polygraph, said she never prepared for a a polygraph test. and talked to her attorneys about it. in college she was prepping one of her best friend applying for the fbi and u.s. attorney's office how to prep for a polygraph. he says her story doesn't six. brian: boyfriend for six years, live together, never comes up about sexual assault or the name brett kavanaugh. we were joined by former federal prosecutor about these algations and her name was francis hakes the reason why they're going
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after his demeanor and his temperament and drinking in high school and throwing ice because they can't get anything else. >> where where we are now because shows sexual assault allegations have not stuck. there is no corroborating evidence to any of them. the third one with julie swetnick is downright farcical on its face internally inconsistent. she backed away from some of her claims. what is happening now those sexual assault allegations have not been proven, they haven't stuck to kavanaugh. now the democrats are trying to find anything they can to discredit him out of the vote. brian: and they're trying and they might have jeff flake. if you listen to jeff flake yesterday in the "the atlantic" he is on the fence whether brett kavanaugh's temperament and animus toward the democrats asking him of questions was over the top. jeff flake is really thinking, wondering if he has the judicial demeanor to be successful which i think is farcical, because two
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days before he thoroughly understands how he could be that angry. ainsley: he also said in the same comments yesterday at "the atlantic," he said, i don't know if his temperament is good enough to be a supreme court justice. at same time if this was happening to me i would be furious too if someone were falsely accusing me. talking out of both sides. steve: a sound bite happened at "the atlantic" festival broadcast on c-span, had a lot of people saying did hillary clinton just essentially memorialize the deplorables comment of 2016, with deplorables 2.0? listen to what she says about president trump and many problems and people who follow him. >> he has been racist. he has been sexist. he has been islamophobic. he has been anti-lgbtq. there is a long list. he has a view of america that is
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incredibly constricttive, he talks to that america, he talks to them all the time. by no means a majority as we know but it is a very hardcore who are responding to him and supporting him for a variety of reasons. whatever they might be. economic reasons, supreme court reasons, or some of these other more troubling biases and prejudices. steve: hmmm. >> what do you think about that? if you vote for him, if you support him, if you go to his rallies then you are incredibly constricted. he only talks to that part of america. and might be the economy. it might be the supreme court. you might be racist or islamophobic, it is not the majority. that is why we have the electoral system way we do.
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the electoral system speaks for the middle of the country. brian: she will not talk to one voter. keep their mouth shut at pollsters call. no one take as lead from hillary clinton. in fact her approval rating among democrats has never been this low. the thing they're trying to run the president down first on russia. then on saying he is a racist. today's sorry in "the new york times," saying looking through fred trump's tax records that donald trump is not even a real billionaire. the and they are doing a documentary on it. so they're doing everything they can to try to pry donald trump loose from his voters. steve: you know what? they tried that from day one. here we are, close to coming up. brian: two years. >> two years later he is still there. 8:11. jillian: it is tough sometimes. brian: where is the big
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happened -- hand. steve: there is no hands. that is what is so confusing. jillian: american pastor is on house arrest in turkey is filing an appeal to the country's highest court for his release. andrew brunson faces up to 35 years behind bars for terror and espionage charges which he denies. he was arrested in 2016 accused of supporting a failed coup in turkey. president trump has demanded brunson be released. another fox news alert. frightening new images show just how close china came to cause a military disaster. look at that, a chinese warship coming of 45 yards of crashing into the uss decateur in the south china sea. the american destroyer forced to perform a extreme manuever to avoid collision. the navy calls it unsafe and unprofessional. the first lady in the second
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day in ghana laying a wreath at a former slavery outpost. >> what happened so many years ago it is a really a tragedy. jillian: the first lady met with the king one day after visiting a hospital with babies and mothers. the first lady will be in four african countries this week. i send it back to you at 8:13. brian: now that jillian is finally done, president trump's huge trade deal is a huge win for the american farmworkers. one of the farmers is here to thank the president again. steve: college of the ozarks students are here and to sing us to break. ♪ praise him above ye heavenly host, praise father son and holy ghost ♪
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lot over the last 15 years. they have been taken advantage of by everybody. prices have gone way down and we're working on some other deals that will make them very happy. brian: president trump touting his new trade deal with canada as a victory for farmers and mexico by the way. giving access to more of canada's dairy market. how much will this help farmers when it is indeed confirmed? let's ask the host of meadowbrook participates in which is. pete, from what you know what kind of deal did the president cut with canada and mexico to update nafta? how will it affect you? >> it is good news for american dairy farmers and wisconsin dairy farmers. it will open up the canadian market a little bit and close a loophole they have been exploiting in nafta which has been dumping product on the world market and lowering prices around the world. brian: so interesting, right now under the old nafta canada
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limited how much milk, cheese, other dairy products could come to the united states. now what does this do? >> you know nafta really wasn't a, was not a free trade agreement for dairy because they walled off their dairy market and so, this opens up a little more access but really what it does is, it stops them from lowering world prices and gets us a little more market access and long run, and mexican side of it is really important as well because mexico is our number one trade partner in dairy. brian: i did not know that and were there limitations on what you could do with mexico prior to this? >> no. actually nafta was good as far as mexico but that is why the renewal was real important and it solidifies our working relationship with mexico going forward. you know both neighbors are really important and this was a trade agreement that needed to be updated.
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first originated in '94. so it was time to redo it. it was important to get it up to date and provide that greater access for dairy farmers. brian: hey, pete, what is your message to those democrats or republicans might have trouble or thinking twice about ratifying it? what is your message to them? it will be the new congress that has to do it but what's your message? >> it is really important. prices have been low. we've been losing dairy farmers at an unprecedented rate. we lost 1000 in wisconsin over the last two years. and, this is important for america. agriculture is one of the things that helps bring our trade deficit a little closer to not being as big of a deficit. brian: there are people behind it. it is not politics. pete, thank you so much. >> thank you. brian: straight ahead this american hero just received the medal of honor in afghanistan a
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and this is moving day with reliable service appointments in a two-hour window so you're up and running in no time. show me decorating shows. this is staying connected with xfinity to make moving... simple. easy. awesome. stay connected while you move with the best wifi experience and two-hour appointment windows. click, call or visit a store today. ♪ brian: glad you're up. hope you're dressed. crime doesn't pay edition, that is the theme. a taser takedown. a florida sheriff's deputy tasering a man after pulling him over on a stolen tractor. the guy tried to run, he hit the deputy. when he tried again, the deputy pulled out his taser he got whacked. what goes around, comes around, this bad luck bandit hits bullet-proof glass and hit him in the face. he was trying to get into a store in maryland.
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please give yourself up. it will only get ugly. ainsley: april 2018, as a senior medical sergeant in the special forces he put his own life at risk to save lives of fellow solders in afghanistan. on monday president trump awarded staff sergeant ron shurer the medal of honor. >> for more than six hours ron bravely faced down the enemy. not a single american died in that brutal battle thanks in great measure to ron's heroic actions. steve: well, today he is a member of the secret service counterassault team helping to protect the president. in addition to fighting a different kind of battle, lung cancer. right now is medal of honor recipient staff sergeant ron shurer. good morning to you. >> good morning, thanks for having me. steve: it is an honor to have you, sir. take us back to april 6, 2018. >> well, definitely a hard day to try to encapsulate.
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it was, like they said, it was a very long day as soon as we got off the helicopters we could see mountains everywhere. it was cold. it was very quiet in the valley until everything kind of exploded around us. and then for the next six hours we just started working together trying to figure out how to get out of there. ainsley: thanks to you, all those u.s. soldiers made it out of that battle alive. that is what led to you receiving the medal of honor on monday. what was that day like when the president of the united states is honoring you for your service? >> it definitely very overwhelming day but it was definitely very meaningful to have all of our friends, family, especially all my teammates from that day who could come out to share in the experience and, we're definitely honored that we can continue to share the story of the team more and, just how
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how proud we are of what we all accomplished that day. steve: sure. you say you wouldn't have gotten this award without the team. it is for everybody. i know you say you're not a hero. you say i just happened to be the medic there that day but what you did was heroic. you kept going back. you used your body as a shield. where does that come from? >> honestly, everybody on that team, it is a family. we, we spend months together getting ready to deploy. we spend months together overseas. you spend more time with them then you do, you know, the rest of your family. so it is truly a brotherhood. and, there is nothing they wouldn't have done for me. there is nothing i wouldn't have done for them. and, it didn't make sense not to do everything that i did that day. steve: sure. ainsley: it had huge impact on everyone coming back home to
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their wives, to their families. having more babies, continuing generations because of your heroic acts it is really cool. the military first rejected you for a medical condition. what was it that made you go back and try again? >> after seeing september 11th and seeing the war start to begin in afghanistan, it just didn't feel right to stay on the sidelines and not go out and try to play some small part in, in protecting america and trying to make afghanistan a little bit safer place. steve: i know for over a year you have been battling lung cancer. tell us about that. >> yes. unfortunately i was diagnosed last year with lung cancer. it's, it is definitely the next battle. but we're relying on all the skills that we learned in the army and just in life in general for relying on family, relying
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on friends, trying to come together. when i need help, definitely trusting those friends to help us. and then you know, when people do reach out to me with their stories for themselves or the family, definitely trying to reach out to them and help them. steve: what is the prognosis from your doctors? >> we're taking one day at a time and just keep moving forward. ainsley: we'll be praying for you. everyone watching, please say a prayer right now for him, for healing so he can be around for his kids for years to come and murder generations. thank you so much. god bless you. you are a hero. >> thanks so much. ainsley: 29 minutes after the top of the hour. this democrat is running for congress in california. how does he explain having his primary home in maryland? steve: i got to hear that. plus pete is live at hard work u. we'll check back with him at the college of the ozarks with the president coming up next.
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brian: pete hegseth has been there all morning long, since 4:00 a.m so is that group of students. pete, is anyone going to class today? pete: is there class today? i think there is. they all get a pass for the morning a little bit, because you know what? this is hard work u where they really do work really hard but this morning they're taking a bit of a break for us. they love our country, they love faith, they lovall use and they love working hard. that is why they're here. i'm here with tory. where are you from? >> republican, missouri. pete: there is a town named republic, which i love. give me your story. >> my cousin went before here and his stories. i came here. took an interview and got in and it was a great experience. pete: you're working hard and debt-free which is pretty cool? [cheering] we talked a lot about that, christian faith, the faith aspect of this school is very
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important to you. why? >> i feel like as a christian it is our duty to build communities and relationships, that is our goal here. just being in ra. i building up people and individuals in a christ-like manner and just glorifying god with everything we do. pete: well-said. how about the patriotic aspect the stance this college has taken standing for the national anthem? >> i support it. i believe we should stand for the national anthem. pete: well-said. tory, thank you very much. she was nervous. she shouldn't have been. fantastic. come on over. [cheering] we'll talk to eric. you're wearing looks like a servers outfit. >> that's correct. i'm a server at the fine dining establishment at the keener center at college of ozarks. pete: i had dinner and it was fantastic. that is why you're wearing this. one of the things we talked
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about brett kavanaugh and treatment he received in nomination hearing. what do you make of the treatment of him? >> it is really concerning for everybody, young men, anybody in the country, the fact that a simple allegation can ruin a person's reputation and credibility without any evidence. that is important in the kavanaugh situation evidence is the deciding factor. not just mere allegations. pete: absolutely. the constitution requires that the rule of law requires that the president talks a lot about it, he is in the news every day. what do you make of job he has done in this and the nomination process overall? >> i appreciate what he has done for the economy. attempt to go back to conservative values means a lot for this country. also, you know a lot of people disagree with trump, i believe the position of president of the united states deserves to be respected regardless whether you agree with his decisions or not. [cheering] pete: very well-said. i bet, i think i can speak for
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the group when you say if you're debt-free and you have a good economy, means you will have a good job, that's all good, right? >> probably. [cheering] pete: thank you very much, eric, great stuff. mr. president, come around. we'll get the president. dr. jerry davis. you're the reason we're all here. this is 100-year-old institution. you have been president here for 30 years. a lot has changed in this country over 30 years, yet the vision of this school remains consistent. how do you stay with the mission and values of this institution? >> you talk about leadership. chairman of the board of trustees here is four-star marine general. since the vietnam war unfortunately higher education has drifted farther and farther to the left. in my opinion we have too many colleges and universities become little more than liberal enclaves of snowflakes that whine about everything and accomplish nothing. pete: well-said. not a lot of snowflakes behind
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me i an attest to that. president talked about patriotism, standing for the anthem and the flag. you know, this college took a strong stance when nike came out with the ad. said we're not using nike apparel anymore. big backlash across the country. you've also seen a lot of support. how did you make that decision and do you think other colleges would join you? >> i intuitively we did what the right thing to do, whether anybody likes it or not, i don't really care. we owe this country something if we live here, we certainly owe it our respect especially to those who have warn the nation's uniform and fought for our freedoms. on a couple of occasions i've gone with students back to vietnam on veterans trips. i remember standing out on the old runway in caisson where many marines died and i stood beside two or three students and
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recipient of medal of honor. can you show me where this happened. he pointed to a mountain. he said you need to understand, all these hills are bathed in american blood. if you see something like that, like i have, and these students then you're citizenship takes on more meaning. and it is about time everybody in this country realized that we owe the veterans more than we've given them. and i'm proud to represent a college that says so. pete: well-said. i get chills hering that. [cheering] young lady what is your name? >> my name is rachel. pete: i brought you up because i saw your head nodding what the president was saying. what does the it mean to have a president and the college of these values? >> a blessing someone in powerful position we need to grow our young students and young people in this country, honor our country, honor our god and have a very strong education system. pete: she was not planted.
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i grabbed her out of the audience. can't always find someone that can articulate it that well. mr. president, all the buildings you have no debt at the institution. funded by donors. who builds the buildings? >> the students and the staff build the buildings. we don't have any debt. washington would be advised better follow us and follow them pete poet a lot of wisdom they can use these days. >> this is the real america. [cheering] pete: i'm cool with that. you guys really do work hard. we talked about the buildings. these buildings are built with hands of students here. >> that's right. all these student industries, whether hog farm, you didn't see the hog farm. pete: i didn't. i wish i had. i went to the dairy farm. >> you couldn't even handle a calf. reporter: apparently my technique was poor. >> you can improve on it. these beautiful grounds are kept up by the students. students run dining halls, run the computers.
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everywhere you find work you will find a student hard at work. pete: been amazing us to us here at "fox & friends." is this book for me? >> if you like to learn more about this special school, if you will go to our website we'll send you a complimentary copy. thank you very much. pete: mr. president. i'm stealing this copy. he wasn't giving it to me but it is mine. thank you, mr. president. >> usa. usa. brian: unbelievable. i think the amount of applications going into the college of ozarks will quadruple. ainsley: i do too. steve: take off from this studio to go outside. janice dean has the weather. janice: our friends came here to see us. what is your favorite morning show, my friend? >> fox. janice: that is fantastic. let's look at the weather. it was a beautiful day in new york city. we had a lot rain last night but thankfully it cleared up. we have a picture of some lightning hitting one
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world trade center. do we have that? do we have that? i'm not sure what we're looking at right now. if we could go to weather 7, my friends. i'm not sure those are the maps we're looking for. it is a beautiful day here in new york city. we do have the potential of showers and thunderstorms across the great lakes and upper midwest and potential for heavy rain over the southwest next couple days. any birthdays or anniversaries here? right here? what is your name? >> cierno. janice: where are you from? >> bronx. janice: what is your birthday? >> october 1st. janice: how are you? >> 15. janice: did you know steve doocy has a book out? do you know we have a food coming up? >> let's go. janice: we'll go back inside. steve doocy up to you. steve: we'll cook up pot roast, meatballs. brian: happy cookbook. might find it only in that book.
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there may be some knockoffs. don't fall for it. steve: what happens if alexandria ocasio-cortez wins the election last month? >> i would like to be acknowledged january 3 record, january 4th,. steve: inaugurated? somebody might tell her that is not how it works. brian: crowley did it all the time. special edition of "cooking with friends." making our family recipes only found in steve's new cookbook, like my mom's meatballs. steve: they are dell hadlicious. we'll find out who make them next. ♪ [cheering] >> tech: so you think this chip is nothing to worry about?
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well at safelite, we know sooner or later every chip will crack. these friends were on a trip when their windshield got chipped. so they scheduled at safelite.com. they didn't have to change their plans or worry about a thing. i'll see you all in a little bit. and i fixed it right away with a strong repair they can trust. plus, with most insurance a safelite repair is no cost to you. >> customer: really?! >> tech: being there whenever you need us that's another safelite advantage. >> singers: safelite repair, safelite replace.
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♪ >> inaugurated january third, january fourth, first time for health care. be part of our society. but, really it is that we have a duty to always fight and maintain the strength of our values. steve: okay. she would love to be inaugurated if she wins her congressional race here in new york but they don't actually inaugurate congresspeople. they swear them in. ainsley: that was alexandria ocasio-cortez who was talking about the process and she hopes to be inaugurated. yes the president is only one out of three branches of government that gets inaugurated. people of congress get sworn into office. then she went on to say she was going to get inaugurated on the third and start signing bills on the fourth. people are being critical of her, she doesn't understand. you don't get inaugurated.
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only you president signs bill present to them. steve: she has her view how things work. roger's tweet, you don't know anything how government works yet you want people to vote you in? congress doesn't sign laws into action. you weren't august rated. you were sworn in. things are not free. taxpayers pay for them. need i keep going? brian: people are getting worried about her. she is the future of the democratic party many people say. according to perez, that is not going to age well. this tweet from lisa, she is out of her league. i couldn't help at laugh hysterically at inauguration portion. ainsley: i don't think anyone will care. i don't think democrats will care. republicans will criticize her for it. democrats say she doesn't know, she is outsider, she is not politician and she is new. she will learn. brian: here is the thing, if she continues to be front and center there is lot of people with egos there will be jealous of attention she got. and it will underline the angst when she makes major flubs like
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she has. you can point to 10 separate times, every interview she does has major issue. steve: even though there may be major issues, she has a major supporter barack obama. he endorsed her. brian: he endorsed 230 people. if you endorse 230 people, you might as well endorse no one. ainsley: she likes socialism. brian, get on the train. brian: don't raise your voice to me. steve: coming up special edition of cooking with friends. we're making our family recipes in my new cookbook, like my favorite pot roast. the one my mom made when i was growing up. ainsley: we're going home. brian: the book is doing great. we'll learn more in y a matter f we'll learn more in y a matter f moments . we'll learn more in y a matter f moments new! zzzquil pure zzzs. captured lightning in a bottle. over 260 years later
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mitch mcconnell still pushing for a vote this week. hillary clinton back in the spotlight. we're also watching the markets this morning the dow hitting another all-time high. the head of the federal reserve says the outlook for the u.s. economy is remarkably positive. we have new headlines. kellyanne conway from the white house. our a-team is here. rona rona mcdaniel. senator kennedy. join us in "america's newsroom" in a few minutes. steve: brian? brian: special "cooking with friends" because we're cooking with doocy. ainsley: steve has this awesome cookbook, "happy cookbook" he rote with his wife. steve: we have recipes as soon as you smell them it triggers something. when i was growing up it was this pot roast. how many of you actually made this? cream of mushroom soup. you throw in the lipton soup. you have a little water.
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and then you mix it up. the way my mom did it, she actually put it in a big pot on the stove and cooked the pot roast all day. brian: right. >> but my wife kathy has stuff to do. she uses the, she uses the slow cooker. this is the key to have that, all that soup on the top. put it in here. you put it in the slow cooker. ainsley: in the crock pot. steve: for eight hours. brian: one thing of steve's book, look at table of contents you know almost everybody in the book especially fox viewers. ainsley: your mom's recipe is in here. brian: right. my mom was known for her meatballs. the sauce that goes on it. a couple of things she used to make it almost every day, leave it in the pot. it has to go a little longer. everybody likes, next generation, grandkids point this out. steve: that is picture. brian: that is example last time everybody was together at my brother's house.
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they used to make meet ball heroes for the bar. she make them at five. wrap them up and sell them at night sieve steve got to you come home. brian: my school was 30 miles away. i used to come home. she put them in tupperware. i would feet the whole hall. ainsley: that is how moms do it. steve: chicken divan recipe is in there. ainsley: that remind me of home. she always had friends over. feed as lot. eats vegetables with the broccoli. there is my mom. brian: here is the question, goes to the next generation? do you have that now. ainsley: my mom's chicken divan, a my mom cooks a lot of people say paula deen cooks, butter, sour cream. all the real stuff. steve: anyway, these are some of the recipes. there are over 100. these recipes make you feel good. maybe why it is currently the number one cookbook in america according to amazon. ainsley: congratulations. steve: thank you very much. mrs. doocy and i will have a
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book tour this weekend. we'll be at the villages friday, october 5th, then saturday we'll be in tampa, florida at the barnes & noble. sunday, naple is, florida, 12 noon. hope you can come by and buy a book. ainsley: so proud of you. brian: get out there in florida. don't blame it on the weather. i know the weather is always great. more "fox & friends" back in a moment. i'm only one disciplined not to eat on camera. i deserve a lot of credit for that. majority of adults lowered their blood sugar and reached an a1c of less than seven and maintained it. oh! under seven? (vo) and you may lose weight. in the same one-year study, adults lost on average up to 12 pounds. oh! up to 12 pounds? (vo) a two-year study showed that ozempic® does not increase the risk of major cardiovascular events like heart attack, stroke, or death.
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sweatshirt. we'll talk to the president. yeah, guys. they told me i have 10 seconds left. we'll take it out on hard work u, special place and country. >> bill: good morning, everybody. fox news alert the f.b.i. may wrap things up today. we wait for that as new revelations question some of dr. ford's sworn testimony from last week. big show today. i'm bill hemmer. how are you doing? >> sandra: you could say that just about every morning this week. good morning, everybody. thanks for being here, i'm sandra smith. republicans releasing a new letter from ford's ex-boyfriend that contradicts her testimony that she never helped anyone prepare for a polygraph. >> bill: president trump on the stump in mississippi pulling no punches in a campaign rally. here is how that went down. >> president trump: they've be
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