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tv   FOX Friends  FOX News  October 1, 2019 3:00am-6:00am PDT

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there you go. jillian: my friend mike jarrett right there. he went viral a fundraiser thrown in his honor raised $10,000 which he donated to childhood cancer research. rob: bye. ♪ we're just getting warmed up ♪ just getting started ♪ already fired up ♪ a party ♪ ain't nothing like it around here. brian: i would like to cut a deal with jason aldean to make it our permanent song. ainsley: warmed up is what happened five minutes ago. we are in the game right now. steve: live from new york. it's the "fox & friends" show. brian: that's where you meet people. ainsley: i wish i could say i could do that but nope. steve: thank you so much. it's october 1st. congratulations. you made it and it's hour one for "fox & friends" for a tuesday.
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ainsley: time to start christmas shopping and talking about the news. president trump doubling down on identify the ukraine call whistleblower. brian brian that's going over well. the search for answers democrats subpoena the president's personal attorney named rudy giuliani. i don't want to give tall away. steve: griff jenkins joins us from washington to break it all down. >> good morning, steve, ainsley and brian. the house democrats moving forward subpoenaing rudy giuliani. writing in a letter you acted as a of the president in a scheme to advance his personal political interests by the office of the president. the chairman wants text messages, phone records and other communications believed to be in giuliani's possession. now, when asked last night if he will comply, giuliani had this to say. >> i don't know. i'm weighing the alternatives. i will go through it. i will get my evidence together and my charts. i don't know if they let me
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use videotapes and tape recordings that i have. griff: defending his ukraine call. >> trying to find out about a whistleblower. we have a whistleblower that reports things that were incorrect. as you know, and you probably now have figured it out, the statement i had made to the president of ukraine, a good man, a nice man, knew was perfect. it was perfect. griff: and we're learning that secretary of state mike pompeo may have been in on the ukraine call. remember, pompeo has already been subpoenaed by those house committees. walk this out just a little bit, guys. there are questions whether the senate would take up impeachment if the house voted in fair of any articles. he mcconnell said he would have no choice to do so based on the senate's rules. steve: if rudy does not produce this evidence that they are asking for by october 15th, and he just said he doesn't know whether or not he is going to comply, don't be surprised
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if the house democrats then use the fact that he did not comply in one of their articles of impeachment against the president of the united states. ainsley: you know they will. steve: passed as prologue that's what they did during the nixon days. ainsley: asking for phone records and other communications. asking for documents and depositions for from three of his business associates. he has to turn those over by october 15th. they are trying to rush it through. brian: people start realizing this is a reof the mueller probe. headlines and produce very little and in the end end with a thud. they think they can rush it through. they can get the focus back on to 2020 and their candidates who if you watch snl even snl has trouble realizing there is quality over there get people like rudy giuliani in front of them. get people like william barr in front of them. it's easy to get them there then try to score points. you are going to try to
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outverbally slug rudy giuliani? best of luck with that you will try to pin william barr to the ground as if he has done something that he should be covering up? i don't think so. as we are about to discover and go over some of the sensationalistic headlines there is almost no there there. big headline get your attention. look at the story easily explained. ainsley: too much in the weeds. going of a the president with impeachment. then they are going after rudy giuliani. now it's bill barr. and americans are saying what? how are they connected? connect the dots for us? what are you talking about? it's so much information. if you look at the polls, the recent quinn pam polls 47% of regular voters want impeachment. 47% don't. our country is totally divided split down the middle. brian: they are gaining momentum. steve: change in the net regarding impeachment. trying to create the narrative that this is a
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lawless president. that's what they want people to think. of course, when it goes to the senate, i don't know testimony that people that think he would actually be convicted. devin nunes explained what's the rush? because, keep in mind, even though congress is on two week recess, i was going to say hiatus, they are full steam ahead. they are going to depose a couple people this week in this impeachment probe. shear congressman nunes. listen to this. >> this was all concocted, okay? they are rushing to imimpeachment. they want to get impeachment down before disease. they know if they go through next year and drag the country through it will continue to be a loser. they have to move fast. one thing they learned with the mueller probe is that the longer it sat out there, it started to rot and started to smell and likely a lot of those people are going to be in trouble. steve: apparently, according to the "the washington post," nancy pelosi ordered the house democrats to keep the momentum going despite the two week high a tus. the staff of three committees scheduled for wednesday and thursday to
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depose marie, the u.s. ambassador to ukraine who was removed by president trump's administration this past year. also kurt volcker who resigned this week as ukraine envoy. on friday they are going to talk to the inspector general of the intel community. and that would be michael atkinson. he received the whistleblower complaint. even though congress is technically out of town, the democrats are keeping the pressure on. ainsley: they are also. brian: they are not leaving. ainsley: they wanting to interview the whistleblower. they have said no date has been set for that his lawyer is saying he is entitled to anonymity. he doesn't want his identity to be put out there because he fears his safety. brian: so here's the big story yesterday. and expect something every day. but just read beyond the headline. begin with the "new york times." trump pressed australian leader to help barr investigate the mueller's inquiry origins dating back to 2016. and "the washington post" in
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this headline barr form mayly asked foreign foirnlsz to inquiry into the cia and fbi activities in 2016. that shouldn't be surprising. the president asked publicly and said publicly now that i have william barr which he called a real attorney general i want to find out what led up to 2016. i want to find out what launched the investigation, that launched into what happened to me and my campaign behind the scenes because i have been unable to get answers since i got this job and i have been on constant siege since i got this job as we wait for michael horowitz, the inspector general, to come out with what he found out and john durham to work his way through his investigation. steve: those two newspapers presented that news as big bombshells. it's not bombshells. the president pretty much told us from the, i think, the white house in may that he wanted the attorney general to talk to the other countries regarding mr. durham's investigation. let us go back in the way back machine to may of this year.
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>> for over a year people have asked me to declassify. what i have done is declassified everything. he can look. i hope he looks at the u.k. and i hope he looks at australia. and i hope he looks at ukraine. i hope he looks at everything. because there was a hoax that was perpetrated on our country. it's the greatest hoax. brian: why are you making this a mystery. if you are writing that story you could have included that sound bite in your story. build up a story build off that the president admitted earlier and now we find out william barr took it up. instead president look to back pedal every day he talks two or three times a day if he is going in and out of his house about things like that. he is being pressured heavily by republicans to get to the bottom of all of this. so you would think australia on their heels would look to do damage control. wrong.
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they told fox news, quote. after the president said what he said, we initiated the contact. there was no pressure. we acted in order to help. i have got news for you. if we found out that some our people were affecting the italian elections or the french elections, or the u.k. elections, we would also say we will help any way we can. ainsley: right. if the attorney general is looking in. they are investigating what happened during the mueller probably. don't they have the right to talk tore countries? brian: absolutely. ainsley: lindsey graham said this on hannity's show last night. >> barr should be talking to australia. he should be talking to italy. he should be talking to the u.k. to find out if their intelligence services worked with our intelligence service was improperly to open up a counterintelligence investigation of trump's campaign. if he's not doing that he's not doing his job. so i'm going to write a letter to all three countries and asking them to cooperate with barr. now, this is a letter sent by my democratic colleagues cols in may of 2018 to the ukraine saying that if you
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don't cooperate with the mueller investigation, we're going to stop our aid. it's okay to cooperate with mueller to get trump but it's not okay to cooperate with barr to find out if trump was a victim of an out-of-control intelligence operation? we're not going to have a country like that. brian: the reason why those countries matter remember the names ambassador downer from australia. remember the name joseph mifsud goes over to a spy school in italy. that's where papadopoulos had met him one time. having said that there are a few questions we want to get answered if you sincerely want an answer to the story. that's not all we learned yesterday. ainsley: remember your son asked joe biden last week. did you ever talk to your son about business dealings with this oil company? he said no never talked about it. then his son said yeah we did talk about it once. look at this picture fox news obtained this.
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tucker carlson had it on his show last night. that's joe biden second to the right. and then. >> hunter biden far right. >> and on the far left devin archer served on the board of burisma the gas company the other end of four some. ainsley: i guess they played golf for four hours in silence. steve: we know what they didn't talk about. ainsley: who is trite he says he didn't the son says is he right. steve: the vice president was very clear. he has never talked to his son about his business dealings. ainsley: his son was very clear we have talked about it. steve: where is my son talking to that guy about his son? ainsley: lots of sons. brian: here it is. >> how many times are you ever spoken to your son about his overseas business dealings? >> i have never spoken to my son about his overseas business dealings. here's what i know. i know trump deserves to be investigated. he is violating every basic norm of a president.
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you should be asking him the question why is he on the phone with a foreign leader trying to intimidate a foreign leader if that's what happened? that appears what happened. you should be looking at trump. steve: he goes on to say ask a question. peter asked him four more questions but the vice president, who obviously in that picture was not talking about his son's overseas dealings. ainsley: no he changed the subject. brian: always good when his son brings the people he works with to you you and you get a chance to meet them. just so happened the word burisma came up. steve: the former vice president may not have known he worked with hunter biden. ainsley: i won determine what that conversation was like. brian: shown one a pair hoping to get a four some and other two burisma happened to be sitting in the hampton's lobby. ainsley: don't they say most business dealings are done on the golf course. brian: i have heard that.
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ainsley: didn't talk about burisma. steve: the vice president was clear never talked about the overseas dealings. what do you think about that? ainsley: in the hamptons. brian: i think he has a follow-up question. meanwhile straight ahead. spent 30 years at as one of chick-fil-a's top executives. what's behind the chain's success? our next guest is taking us behind the scenes and the drive-thru ♪ ♪ ♪ raced on it ♪ when you have pain...
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...and protects from future stains. crest. healthy, beautiful smiles for life. >> allegation is so serious, it gets to the very heart of our nation's democracy. >> the president is once again not just inviting but coercing a foreign nation to get involved to try to help him in yet another presidential election. >> president has betrayed his oath of office. the president has abused his power in a manner that undermines our national security and the integrity of our elections. brian: akim jeffreys let's go to where the facts lead us except i already made my conclusion up. i digress. attack presidenattack here is to
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personally interrogated khalid sheikh mohammed enhanced interrogation if you read his book you would understand for sure he stopped countless terror attacks by what he did. dr. james 34eu678. 34eu678 mitchell. you said you have seen what's happened to the president and it's deja vu. what they did to you. >> what they did to me and dr. jessen is they took things out of context. they had anonymous complaints. they didn't allow us the opportunity to address them. they implied and somehow magically divined motives and intentions that weren't really there and took every single ambiguous thing that happened and spun it in the worse possible way to create this sort of prosecutorial brief of wrongdoing. and they are doing that to the president. they have done it for three years in a row. brian: they are doing it hand in hand with the press like they did with you. look at some of these headlines during your investigation. psychologist open a window of brutal cia
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interrogations. the cut comes out with this story meet the psychologist who helped the cia torture. vioxx sayvox says cia torture pm as explained by the stole psycht who designed it. >> this says more about what's going on in their minds than it does about the facts. what they want to do is they want to twist the facts and misconstrue the facts so that they can paint the worse possible picture to grab power. but one of the things it should tell the voters is that they think you are stupid. they think that you don't understand the words that you read in the transcript. you know, he did not those things that they are accusing him. just that we did not do the things that they accusers dollars us of. brian: adam schiff so invested in donald trump being corrupt and terrible and illegitimate that he
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can't let go of that bone. correct? >> right. he has invested -- he is like a hostage taker who is trapped in a investigation where there no way for him to save face. he has put so much of his self-esteem and so much of what's important to him in to this effort to try to get trump impeached that there is no way out of it that he can save face. and he is squandering millions of american dollars. and he is just going to continue to do it. you don't get a do-over just because you don't like the president of the united states. you don't get to make up crimes out of, for example that transcripts which any ordinary person can read and see that those things that they're accusing the president of, joe biden actually did. brian: and lastly, we are going to go over this in the next two hours and 50 minutes. but a revelation showed when he was on the phone with the ukrainian president, the ukrainian president didn't know the money had been held
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up for a month as they evaluate the aid they were going to give. so what do you mean he is sitting there like a mob boss? final thought? >> my final thought is the american people should show them that they are not as stupid as the democrats in congress think they are. apparently the only place that the constitution doesn't apply right now is in the house of representatives when it's under the control of the democrats. and if they can do that to trump, they can do that to you. they can do it to the farmers. they can do it to the ranchers. they can do it to the power companies and anyone they choose to do that. to say they should not get control. brian: in your case they did not want to know how effective you were. themed the headline and look sanctimonious and looked above all of this when they checked off on all of it. that's for another time. dr. mitchell you came back stronger and maybe the president could learn something from that dr. james mitchell, thanks so much. >> thanks for having me. brian: you got it. meanwhile straight ahead she spent 30 years as one of
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into the water. six people are believed to be trapped on boats under the debris. divers are searching for victims right now. the collapse sparking this fire on board an oil tanker in the water. 10 people are hospitalized. a california tour decide charged with passing u.s. secrets to the chinese government. the doj releasing surveillance video showing the man leaving an you envelope full of cash in a georgia hotel room meant for an fbi double agent who would lee a memory card with fake u.s. secrets. the suspect a naturalized american citizen is accused of completing five so-called dead drops. he faces up to 10 years if convicted. that's a look at your headlines. ainsley send it back to you. ainsley: thanks so much, jillian. chick-fil-a surging past competitors becomes the third fast behind mcdonald's and starbucks. we get it all the time across the street. after more than three decades at the company our next guest reveals what it
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takes to win the hearts of those customers because they are so nice in the restaurants. in this new book it's called bet on talent. there is a picture of it. here with her veto to success is former chick-fil-a vice president dean turner. congratulations on the book that came out. >> thank you so much. it's my pleasure. >> the way chick-fil-a does it they created a remarkable culture for all of their employees and also for the guest to engage. in secondly, selected extraordinary talent to deliver customer service that wins the hearts of their customers. ainsley: start there customer service. what's the manual for customer service? >> first of all just treating everybody with honor, dignity and respect. and being willing to go above and beyond what is second mile service. ainsley: how do you select talent. >> a heart for service and track record of leadership.
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ainsley: do they have to work in the restaurant? that's their baby, right? >> not necessarily. last statistic that i knew about before i retired about 70% of chick-fil-a franchise did work as team members. ainsley: how do you select them? i'm sure you would turn away a lot of people. >> i can't answer how they are selected as of today. for the 20 years that i did it was really first all the focus on people that had entrepreneurial spirit and that fit a certain location that chick-fil-a had available. chick-fil-a selects their own locations. and then they select someone who operate that location. and so it's based on their leadership track record entrepreneurial spirit and desire to serve others. ainsley: i feel like customer service is phenomenal. dad always said customer is always right. i remembered that when i was waiting tables. anything they requested i would say yes. to say as long as we had the food somewhere in the restaurant i would find it. is that what y'all teach your employees? what's the customer service manual? >> what's amazing about chick-fil-a customer service remembering well over 2,000,
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almost 2500 different franchises. and they have nearly 200,000 employees. they are responsible for teaching that to their team members. and i think it comes from who was actually selected. will cathy the founder of chick-fil-a will decisions. the most important one for chick-fil-a is who they give the keys to the restaurant. to say. ainsley: you told me during the commercial break a love letter to chick-fil-a. tell me why you call it the love letter to your company that you worked for so long and what the is story of chick-fil-a, mr. cathy, tell us about him. >> mr. cathy started his first restaurant in 1946 outside of atlanta. he had that one restaurant, added a second one that burned to the ground in the 1950s and opened chick-fil-a in 1967 with the first restaurant in a mall there in atlanta. he grew that business during his lifetime from that one store to which he passed away in 2014. i think the company was about 5 billion. i don't have that exact for
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sure. somewhere in that neighborhood. of course now chick-fil-a has sales over 10 billion in 2018. ainsley: incredible. >> incredible growth during that time. ainsley: he decided to close on sundays. can you elaborate on that? the family agreed to continue that after his death, right? >> that's correct. >> he decided from the very first week he was opened. he was tired on saturday night and knew team members were too. take a day off. later as the business expanded he realized it was the right thing for him personally and also the right thing for his business. he wanted his employees to have that opportunity to spend that day with their family or rest or do anything that's they wanted commicommitted to. ainsley: when anyone would hear that my dad worked as coca cola they would smile. we love coca cola and this one and that one. i'm sure when you tell people you work for chick-fil-a it's the same reaction. >> absolutely. credit to all of those franchises who take such
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great care of their customers. ainsley: thank you so much. congratulations if you are opening up a business and you want to know the tricks of the trade, have you got to read the book bet on talent. congratulations. >> thanks so much, ainsley. ainsley: two of our nation's finest killed in the line of duty in one week. up next, our law enforcement panel on the origins on the war on cops. if they see an end in sight. we're carvana, the company who invented
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ainsley: shot of the morning and touching moment between our president and wounded veteran. steve: president trump elm bracing retired army captain after he led the crowd in singing god bless america swearing in ceremony joint chiefs of staff. brian: severely wounded by a bomb in 2011 while serving in afghanistan. uses music as a form of rehab. the president moved by what took place yesterday.
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steve: indeed. ainsley: bless his heart. his wife standing by his side. i assume that's his wife. sweet, very touching. steve: 25 minutes before the top of the hour. jillian joins us with some video you have got to take a look at. jillian: intense water. pull survivors from a fiery plane crash. watch. first responders rush into the woods scene of a wreck only to find three people dead in deland, florida. witnesses calling 911 after seeing the plane nose dive into the ground and hearing a loud boom. the ntsb is investigating. more than a dozen students rushed to the hospital after being mistakenly injected with insulin. teens supposed to be getting a tuberculosis test at their school in indianapolis. as can you imagine parents furious. >> they could have died. my daughter could have died.
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>> how come you did not pay attention? did you 16 kids. when you got to your 16th child that's when you realized it was a mistake. jillian: the school is working to figure out how this happened. an insulin dose can cause sugar drops in nondiabetics lead to fainting and seizures. a student government bans the pledge of allegiance at meetings. a group from the university of oklahoma claims it is incompatible with the u.s. constitution because saying one nation under god limits freedom of religion and speech. one student also points out the pledge was written to celebrate columbus day which the city of norman recognizes as indigenous people's day. many students call the move unamerican. a u.k. teen spent the last seven days like this. >> dude, where's my car? where is your car, dude? >> hey, where's my car? >> where is your car, dude? >> dude, where's my car?
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ainsley: 19-year-old councilner spears searched for his missing car one week. drove to a music festival and forgot where he sparked it. when his story went viral he saved the day when he spotted the car. in case you are wondering what conner's mom thinks she is quote annoyed that he was so irresponsible. that's a look at your headlines, steve? steve: all right. thank you very much, jillian. turning to tragedy on the police force as two of our nation's finest killed in the line of duty. political science radio capturing moments right after new york city police department officer brian was shot dead by friendly fire in the bronx after a violent struggle over his gun with a suspect sunday morning. >> shots fired. >> this lots comes as the city of texas mourns a sheriff's deputy sandeep dhaliwal killed in a shooting routine traffic
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stop. their deaths bring the total number of officers killed in the line of duty this year to 33. here with reaction our law enforcement panel, former new york city police department officer and army veteran darrin porcher screen left right there. retired new york city police department lieutenant joe cardinale and former new york city police department dr. oscar odom. thank you very much: we cover these stories because it seems like they don't get enough attention. when you look what's going on dr. odom, what are your observations? >> it's a disgrace and sad to see our country to see what is happening to police officers across the country. this is a tough job that people wake up in the morning and they want to go out there and protect and serve the public. this job, we shouldn't be out there saying that when officers come out there that we should abuse them or do anything to them. these 123er officers are there o make a change. steve: dr. odom, famously seen officers getting buckets of water thrown on
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them. buckets, milk. you name it. war on cops. doesn't seem like the cops have the respect they once had. >> yes. i think they need more backing from the government. the government needs to give more backing to the police officers to show them we are throughout to help people, to serve people. this is the thing. nobody take as job to get abused. no matter. they need to start standing behind the police officers and helping them out. steve: joe, there are a lot of officers in new york city and around the country feel that city hall simply does not have their back anymore. >> well, they don't. they don't. historically, this mayor has done everything -- has gone out of his way to create a situation where the police officers are last on his list. and he could say anything he wants. we know his actions, you know, speak for themselves. when you have a city council that passes laws, every law they are passing right now is against what police have to do. you don't want to go out there. you are so afraid to go out there and do your job. like i have said before, what is a cop's job description these days? you don't know because it changes every day. to say suit the politically
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motivated, you know, politicians that have to get reelected. they have to serve this area. that area. and you want to know something in the cops are last on the list. and they should be first. they are our first line of defense. and they should come first. steve: yeah. dr. porcher, your line of work is so important but at the same time, it's so complicated. you never know when you are going to get the call about, you know, the guy you work with was shot in the bronks. just doing his job. you just never know when that's going to happen. >> yes. you know, that's true. when we take into consideration the social contract. protections for citizens by government and we, as police, are agents of the government. police are here to serve the public as public servants. enforcement is a small component. i want to say it's 10% of what officers do. it's primarily that service component of 90%. but it gets to policing community need to have that strong relationship. because it's that relationship that builds trust that affords greater
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protections for us as a public. so as we move forward, we need to stand together with not just police but the public because we need to accomplish this feat because we are in this together as a result. steve: dr. odom the phrase war on cops has been used a lot. if there is a war on cops, are we any closer to the end of it? >> i would hope so. because the thing is that time and time again, one of the things that they should do is also put out there to let people know the times that we do save people. because it happens on a consistent basis day in and day out. police officers are saving people. people are coming and they're making comments. thank you so much. these are the different things that we are doing so. this war that they have on cops, it needs to stop and it needs to stop immediately. because police officers are out here to protect the public and to make sure people are okay. so that they can go on with their day-to-day lives. without law enforcement, we have nothing. steve: right. joe, a lot of it comes back to community outreach. i mean, it seems ludicrous to say but in some
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communities the cops need to be recognized as they are not only there to help you but they are -- you know, you are my friend. you are here to help me and save my life if i, you know, call the number. >> it's always been a 1-2 component. you need the community. you cannot exist in a police department without your community. backing of the community is so important. when police feel they are losing that and that city hall doesn't promote it, all right. they dismantle it, that's the problem. that's the problem. you need the community behind you. i think the community deep down wants to support the police department. but, when you have the rhetoric that's coming out of city hall, the way it's coming out today, if they just back off. and there is no mending, you know. we do have to take a step forward and we have to get back to that community policing. steve: dr. porcher real quick final word. >> i want to salute the two heroes that protect the lives of us as americans. this is what stands for. what we all do as cops. no matter what the situation we step in there to protect
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the citizens that we don't even know. steve: all right. well-said. dr., joe, doctor. thank you very much for joining us. there are the heroes that you are talking about right there dr. porcher. thank you. meanwhile, it is 17 minutes before the top of the hour. did you catch this moment from nancy pelosi on the president's phone call with ukraine from "60 minutes"? >> he told me it was perfect. there was nothing in the call. but i know what was in the call. i mean, it was in the public domain. steve: did she know something before the whistleblower report was made public? some people think so. does the judge? he is next. ♪ ♪ don't blame it on the moon light ♪ don't blame it on the good time ♪ blame it on the boogie ♪ with advil liqui-gels, you have fast-acting power over pain, so the whole world looks different.
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>> he told me it was perfect. there was nothing in the call. i know what was in the call -- i mean, it was 2349 public domain. steve: i knew what was in the call. speaker of the howtsz nancy pelosi revealing details from a conversation she had earlier in the week before the transcript of his phone call with ukraine's leader was actually publicly released. ainsley: this prompting house republican conference chair liz cheney to tweet that it's starting to seem like a political setup. brian: here to react fox news senior judicial analyst host of liberty file on fox nation judge andrew napolitano. good morning. were you able to read body language and understanding? are we being overly analytical by listening to her words and seeing her lip trip and thinking she knew something. >> our colleague who knows everything about capitol hill that chad pergram has remind dollars us and me that ms. pelosi for years was a member of the house
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intelligence committee. that she still enjoys a top secret security clearance and that she has many, many friends and colleagues in the intelligence community. it would not surprise me at all if she knew what was in the transcripts of the telephone call between president trump and president trump zerches a few days before no crime or impriority unless it's true. it wouldn't surprise me if she knew about it ahead of time which is why she said what she said to scott pelley. does that change the dynamics in the case? i don't think so. i disagree with congresswoman cheney for whom i have a lot of respect and affection but i don't think this changes the impeachment scenario which the democrats are determined to go forward on. steve: whistleblower intel and democrats? >> they think it looks like
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coordination because of this change in the rule about whether the whistleblower had to have first hand knowledge or whether the gather information from others. in 2012, when president obama was in office, there was an effort in the congress to change the whistleblower statute to require first hand knowledge from whistleblowers. congress rejected that so, the inspects general have been looking at complaints using their sense of reason, does this make sense? is this credible? not was this person in the room when this was said? the best evidence of what president trump did and said is not what the whistleblower says about the president. but the president's own words. steve: the transcript. >> in the transcript, of course. how the transcript came about, whether mrs. pelosi knew about it ahead of time. to me, are secondary issues that are not going to push forward or slow back. ainsley: what happens with joe biden and his son? are they going to open that up investigation on both of them?
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>> you know, it depends on who you talk. to say if you talk to rudy giuliani, he has a lot of evidence of inappropriate behavior by the former vice president and his son. yet, the prosecutors in ukraine and even prosecutors here in the united states say there's no there there. brian: we can't book giuliani, joe biden doesn't want us. to say. [laughter] >> wait a minute, he was here yesterday, brian. brian: can. good. it's been released. steve: judge, thank you very much. >> thank you, all the best. steve: cash liberty file foxnation.com. brian: that's him looking serious. steve: and this is him looking happy. meanwhile, we will switch gears straight ahead. fox news alert. chaos rocking the streets of hong kong right now. police have shot a protester apparently in the chest as new reports sur fossa of a secret chinese military buildup happening behind the scenes. what does this mean for security at home? that's a big question coming up next. >> vo: my car is my after-work decompression zone.
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brian: a fox news alert now. hong kong police say overnight pro-democracy protester was shot in the chest by an officer during violent clashes. ainsley: this coming after the country quietly moves thousands of troops into hong kong late last month nearly doubling military presence in the city. brian: these crazy protesters have not stopped. robert spalding joins us now. this does not surprise you that they are cracking down, does it, general? >> not at all. you know, the chinese communist party wants to take control of hong kong. they promised that by 2046. they have done it incrementally. the hong kong people have finally figured it out. ainsley: how do we stop china's aggression here and what does this mean for america? >> i think one of the things that we can do is stop sending our retirement funds
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over to build their weapons to help them oppress their people to include forced organ harvesting of prisoners of conscience to dominate land mass with their road initiative and to really suppress freedoms everywhere. brian: i thought i was reading donald trump's book. this is it. he thinks china is a threat. joe biden doesn't. mitch mcconnell doesn't. he believes that little by little they are taking over our freedoms and that is their goal by luring us with money and cheap goods. that's the premise of this book. >> that's exactly right. i talk about a gentleman named roy jones. he worked for the marriott corporation. and he was fired by mayor yoted because chinese he liked a tweet about tibet. here is an american corporation on american soil firing an employee at the behest of the chinese communist party. you face this throughout our country. ainsley: how dangerous is this their aggression and totalitarian government? >> it's funny because when
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we think about danger today, we think about planes and ships and tanks and bombs. really what they are trying to do is use information and money to essentially get what they want. they do it everywhere. and they are absolutely. ainsley: take over, don't they. >> absolutely. brian: general, if they get the richest most successful people in the country with the most influence on their side like ray dalio of blackstone little by little china says china is not a threat. you are a voice in the wilderness that says they're. >> not only that michael bloomberg said xi jinping is not a dictator. if he is not a dictator, i don't know who is. brian: we have been drunk by money. >> we have been paid off. ainsley: i was in a cab with a man originally from tibet. killed people and too many people away. he moved here and got out. >> people aren't aware of the things going on in china. i talk to people about do you know what an eco machine is. a machine to keep a body
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alive while you take out organs? it's terrible. brian: book is called stealth war. how china took over while america elite slept. >> i will talk to you more on radio. ainsley: thank you for your service. hy there's otezla. otezla is not an injection or a cream. it's a pill that treats differently. for psoriasis, 75% clearer skin is achievable, with reduced redness, thickness, and scaliness of plaques. for psoriatic arthritis, otezla is proven to reduce joint swelling, tenderness, and pain. and the otezla prescribing information has no requirement for routine lab monitoring. don't use if you're allergic to otezla. it may cause severe diarrhea, nausea, or vomiting. otezla is associated with an increased risk of depression. tell your doctor if you have a history of depression or suicidal thoughts or if these feelings develop. some people taking otezla reported weight loss. your doctor should monitor your weight and may stop treatment. upper respiratory tract infection
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♪ ♪ >> you better believe it is october 1st. september sure flew by. brian: my son brian's birthday. october 1st. ainsley: alli a girl i used to baby-sit's birthday. brian: she grew up. ainsley: she grew up. her dad orthodontist i worked for forever. brian: steve wanted to ask me doesn't have the audacity how much did you charge for baby-sitting? ainsley: they paid well. they paid me $10 an hour.
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back then that was big. brian: tax-free. steve: anyway, it's october 1st. thanks for joining us. we is a busy second hour starting now. president trump doubling down on his push to identify the ukraine call whistleblower. steve: the search for answers comes as democrats subpoena the president's personal attorney rudy. ainsley: griff jenkins joins us live from washington to break it all down for us. hey, griff. griff: rudy giuliani is the latest target of house democrats chairman of three committees subpoenaing him saying this you acted as the agent of the president to add convince his personal have. they are giving him to turn over text messages phone records and other communications believed to be in giuliani's possession. and they want documents and depositions from his business associates. now, when asked if he will comply, giuliani had this to say. >> julie: i don't know i'm weighing the alternatives.
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i will go through it and get all my evidence together. i will get my charts. i don't know, if they let me use vaption and tape recordings that i have. griff: meanwhile the president who is continuing to rail against the impeachment inquiry. >> this whole thing is a disgrace. there has been tremendous corruption and we're seeking it. it's called gran the swamp. now the new president of ukraine ran on the basis of no corruption that's how he got elected i believe he means it. griff: pompeo may have been listening in on that ukraine call. pompeo, you will remember, has already been subpoenaed by those house committees. now, questions over whether the senate will take up impeachment ultimately if the house votes in favor of it, majority leader mitch mcconnell tipping his hand yesterday saying he would have no choice but to do so based on the senate's rules. brian, ainsley, steve? brian: good job. thanks for teeing us up, griff. i want to add something else, which is important. if you are looking and characterizing that call and comparing it to the
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whistleblower's 9-page document, whoever he is or she is, keep in mind, if you are going to prove that the president is use offing leverage to get a ukrainian leader to do what he wants to do to help himself politically, why would go so down in the conversation before he even brought up the name biden and it was the ukrainian president that brought up the name rudy giuliani. and ken volcker who resigned over the weekend said ukrainians were not made aware that the assistance that they were about to get was being delayed and was being reviewed until after the call how could the president be extorting and holding the money over the ukrainian president's head when he didn't have an idea it was being delayed yet. that's accord go ahead to our envoy volcker. ainsley: all of congress is taking two weeks off for the religious -- for the jewish ideas. nancy pelosi is ordering democrats to keep the
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momentum going. brian: for the good of the country. steve: couple of depos tomorrow. they have three committees that are meeting and going to be interviewing these people or deposing these people. one ambassador to ukraine by president trump earlier this year and kurt volcker who resigned last week. steve: the inspector general for the ic on capitol hill in front of intel committee. ainsley: they are pushing it fast and forward. steve: speaking of fast. a couple of years ago we had on this program two reporters. i want to say they were from the hill. they wrote a book called shattered. and it took a look at how in the book it revealed conceded the president to donald trump john podesta and robby mike got together at headquarters in brooklyn
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that's how he won. 24 hours after he won. they hatched the narrative included with the russians. since before he was inaugurated. the media as you will see in this montage has been pushing for his impeachment. watch. >> if he takes the risk of going to trial and convicted that could be seen as impeachable offense. >> if is he not a legitimately elected president in your mind, there are tools that congress has. >> to investigate and prosecute a political rival is in and of itself an abuse of power and arguably an impeachable abuse of power. >> that tweet fits the republican definition of an impeachable offense more fully than what bill clinton was actually impeached for. >> i think we are in impeachment territory for the first time. >> really? >> in your view does that rise to the level of impeachable offense? >> the proof against the president of the united states in a pending impeachment investigation.
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>> a corridor in this case that congress can certainly read between the lines. >> whatever the white house thought it was doing to defend itself or to head off this impeachment is doing quite the opposite. >> impeachment. >> impeachment. >> impeachment. steve: that didn't pan out. as you know the mueller report said essentially they couldn't find any evidence that the trump campaign colluded with the russians. that was the basis for those calls for impeachment. ainsley: collusion and racism and then it was ukraine. they were looking for a reason. brian: the recession would have been bad. that's another r word i'm not showing off. it just came to me. meanwhile dr. james mitchell joined us earlier. he feels as though he was targeted by democrats to make what he did enhanced interrogation in order to get the worst of the worst and talk about the next plot to stop al qaeda from striking us here or abroad he said i recognize this pattern and the president has got to stand up to it or they could be coming to you next.
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>> they took things out of context. they had anonymous complaints. they didn't allow us the opportunity to address them. they implied and somehow magically divined motives and intentions that weren't really there. and they took every single ambiguous thing that happened and spun it in the worse possible way to create this sort of prosecutorial brief of wrongdoing. and they are doing that to the president. they have done it for three years in a row. he said if you look at the call. there is no problem with that call. if you look at the "times" yesterday and "new york post" story that william barr asked other countries to help out in investigation. yes, the president asked him to in front of marine one on the white house line, if you just read the headline you can see how some one could be ramrodded into a guilty verdict. steve: maybe the bombshell isn't that big of bombshell if we heard about it three months ago.
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ainsley: some people feel like he was in the wrong. other people say not at all there was no quid pro quo. the house is going to impeach him. the senate is probably not. brian: they just want to inquire to see if there is something there. second sense by the way there is something there. steve: meanwhile, bill maher is being interviewed by the "new york times" magazine and the reporter asked you know, why do you criticize both the right and left on your show and he had some interesting observations. he said, you know, his audience is not just a bunch of liberals. he said, you know, you look at the "new york times," you look at the atlantic, they quote figures like 80 peciousz of americans think political correctness has gone too far. the people on twit remember the people who control the media. he has a problem with that. ainsley: he says p.c. people protect feelings. they don't do anything. they are pointing at other people who are somehow falling short of their standards which could have changed three weeks ago. constantly changes the goal post where they can go gotcha. we live in an age where
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people want to cancel other people and disappear them. who is going to be left? brian: he has said things like this pretty consistently not just there. here is why. number one he is not politically correct number two is comedians aren't here. comedians go on stage big and small ache look at society and take an angle with it whether you think they are funny or not. that's what they're doing for a living. if everyone is going to look at every line they have and what they say decide that is an insult, their business is dead i believe comedians maybe not bill maher specifically comedians lead back to normalcy. if you can't laugh at yourself youreth necessity or gender or family or have fun like that. comedians might all quit. ainsley: people who used to love "saturday night live." brian: that's a political show now. ainsley: comedians get political. steve: in the "new york times" magazine he says the people on bitter who control the media a lot have gone
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too far. he says there are certain -- they are certainly more fragile than previous generations trigger warnings. safe spaces, crying rooms. microaggressions, that crowd feels like anything that upsets their tender sensibilities is completely out of line bill maher hopes the democrats win the election so they can broom that element out of their party and stand up to the twitter mob and ultra woke he says. brian: you saw what happened with kevin hart and going to host the events and they found out about tweets he said five years ago. eddie murphy about to make a come back. apologize for what really blew up his persona and his star. and that was, i think, the special raw. look back and that and apologize to anyone who is offended. don rick kels who he was alive would have to apologize for 70 years on stage he had fun having fun with people now people are all too sensitive. steve: what do you think of bill maher's comments regarding pcness in the country.
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ainsley: many people want to comments but they are too scared to. steve: we are also on facebook. brian: everyone gets up worried about halloween costumes that might pop up on instagram from past years. steve: jillian joins us on 7:11 jil11 a man is under aarret after dousing himself with liquid outside of the houses of parliament. the man had lighter and needed to be spray wad fire extinguisher. metropolitan police say no injuries were reported. right now the man is being checked out by pair medicine dings. and right now an urgent manhunt is underway for a convicted murderer on the run. police say calvin adams escaped an arkansas jail for the second time. he first escaped 10 years ago after stealing a guard's uniform to wear as a disguise he was arrested days later. serving life without parole for kidnapping and killing a man in 1995. a tourist is air lifted to the hospital with serious burns after falling into
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thunderstorm mall water near old faithful. he was reportedly walking in old yellow stone at night when he tripped and fell. park officials found evidence he was drinking alcohol. according to the national park service water at old faithful is 203 degrees. former white house press secretary sean spicer has dancing fever. ♪ ♪ jillian: they goes. spicer doing the cha-cha for movie night week on dancing with the stars. the show tweeting sean spicer is giving us all the feels with these moves tonight. spicer advances to next week's competition. i just love it. brian: wait a second he survived two weeks now? steve: so far. he danced last night and now america will grade him. he looked better last night than he did the week before.
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progress. channels his inner travolta. brian: thing to look great have 10 people dance great around you. ainsley: he just stands there. the lady with pretty hair swinging around a few times. brian: absolutely. sounds like steve did saturday night. that's the same formula used. steve ♪, brian: probably don't want to make those noise fuss want to keep people around you. police are now being told to leave a scene if ice is making immigration arrest. acting cbp commissioner mark morgan reacts next. - in the last year, there were three victims
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walgreens. be a flu fighter. get your free flu shot today at your neighborhood walgreens. >> as the crisis at our southern border continues customs and border protection reveals they have made over 4400 rescues as illegals try to enter the country. it's a dangerous journey our next guest says congress needs to work to prevent. acting cbp commissioner mark morgan joins us from our nation's capital. good morning to you. >> good morning, steve. steve: you don't hear much about the rescues where the men and women of your agency put their lives on the line to help save these people, do you? >> steve, you are spot on. thanks for giving me just a minute to talk about that. this is why i say that the men and women of cbp are
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heroes. 4,400 just this year. they are risking their lives while the cartels and the smugglers don't care about these individuals that illegally enter our country. the border patrol agents and the officers do. they are risking their lives every single day 4,400 and, steve, it's important. they don't ask what their nationality is. they don't ask them if they are illegally entering the country. they see a human being at need and left at the hands of the smugglers and they're risking their lives to save him with humanity and compassion. that's why the men and women of cbp are my heroes. steve: the number of men and women appear prelended at our southern border going down but the number ever rescues going up. >> absolutely right. we see those numbers continue to go up each and every year that should tell the american part-time this is a dangerous threat of cartels don't gave darn about these individuals. all they care about is lining their pockets with more money while they are exploiting this vulnerable population, steve. you are spot on. steve: okay. let's switch gears because this is going to hit you
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right here. this is what the chicago police department is doing. apparently homeland security is following the direction of chicago pd for its officers to not cooperate with ice -- here is statement from the chicago pd. the department of homeland security -- i'm sorry this is dhs. the department of homeland security is deeply concerned with the dangerous anti-law enforcement direction given by the leadership of the chicago police department. failing to support fellow law enforcement officers upon request for assistance not only places our heroic police officers in greater danger but keeps criminals on the street. so, in chicago, they are not going to help ice, true? that's right. steve, look, i have been doing law enforcement for a few decades. i can tell you i'm a lot more than concerned about this politically-driven policy. what the citizens of chicago need to understand is, this policy is going to create more victims in their city.
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ice has and always will. their priorities go after criminal aliens. not just aliens here illegally but criminal aliens that are here illegally and committed additional crimes against the city of chicago. just last week ice arrested and apprehended mexican national that had been deported twice for sexual abuse. this kind of policy would make that harder for ice to do. that's outrageous, it's reckless and lives will be in danger because of this. steve: because you have been doing this line of work for decades, as you have said, when did it become okay not to enforce the law ever the land. >> it's never become okay, steve. steve: but that's what's happening. >> it is. that's what the american people should be outraged. stop livin'ing to the politicians. start listening to law enforcement who have dedicated their lives to protecting the citizens. and i'm telling you, this policy is going to lose lives. when did it become okay that one law enforcement agency didn't help another? that's our strength. that's how we protect the
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citizens of every city in this country this is outrageous and reckless and something should be done about this. steve: you are not the only one who feels that way. mark morgan, thank you for joining us live and telling us the story about these rescues. hats off to the men and women of your department. thank you, sir. 7:21 in new york city. do you want to buy a new sweater. can you in three easy payments. that's right. we used to just finance cars. now it's okay. including sweaters? dave ramsey says that's dangerous and he have that cautionary tale coming up. ♪ ♪ i want you to know now ♪ ♪ (dramatic orchestra) performance comes in lots of flavors. there's the amped-up, over-tuned,
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jilt jill good morning, welcome back. time for news by the numbers. $1,000 that's how much this special prosecutor jussie smollett donated to the top prosecutor's campaign. "the chicago tribune" reports dan webb says he doesn't remember writing a check to states attorney kim foxx. webb is investigating whether foxx's office did anything wrong when it dropped all charges against smollett in his hate crime case. 52%. that's how many registered voters in california considered moving out of the state. the new poll says the top three reasons are high living costs, taxes and politics. and finally, 9,300 and $25. that's the cost of this iconic dress jennifer lopez wore to the 2,000 grammys. [laughter] the men are saying it's worth every penny. it's up for sale on a designer. ainsley: that was like the first provocative dress, right? that was the first time we
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had seen anything like that. brian: not me. for you. [laughter] ainsley: 25 minutes after the top of the hour. do you want to buy a new sweater but you are weary of whether you can afford it? do you have to do those installments? thousand there is a payment plan for that. steve: that's right. a brand new wall street journal article highlights the growing trend of every day items like clothes and make up paid for with point of sale loans. but is that a good idea? brian: our next guest says this just piles on to more debt many of us have with student loans and other big ticket items. take this time to welcome financial expert host of dave ramsey's show dave ramsey also ramsey solutions anthony o'neil both of you guys are together. hey, does this scare you, dave? is this everything you talk about on your radio show we should fear? >> >> i think the end is near. [laughter] it's down to where you are financing $10 sweaters on instagram. oh my goodness. it's a simple thing.
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any time a marketer can lower friction and make it, quote, easier emotionally for you to make a decision, they are going to sales. you were telling me -- >> actually paid cash for it, dave. >> they offered you payments. >> they offered me four payments for $20 sweatedder. ainsley: $2.50 per payment? really? >> plus interest. ainsley: the check cost that much. [laughter] >> yeah. these guys -- it's out of control. you know, a little firm, this company are already doing $2 billion top line with this. ainsley: oh my goodness. >> it's not a small thing. any time can you make it easy for people to buy, they are going to overpurchase, going to impulse. we just to be aware as consumers that they are very smart at marketing and they are very smart at getting us into debt. steve: indeed. albert einstein said the most powerful force in the universe is compound interest. you have to beware whether you have to pay interest. meanwhile, you guys have
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another town hall coming up. first, let's take a look at what did you last night regarding student loans, i believe. >> that's biggest lie we have ever believed. in where you went to school has some correlation with your future success. it has almost zero correlation with your future success. >> we are allowing our students to take a kid's approach to an adult decision. >> not everybody starts out in the same place but we are all running the same race. we have the same opportunities out there to make it. >> so that was about student loan debt and tonight you are hosting one on debt-free degrees, right? anthony? >> no, that was last night. it is still up on facebook. still up on our. ainsley: but they are not still up. we lost their satellite. they are back. okay. so last night was the debt-free degree town hall. what's tonight? >> tonight there is not one. last night there was, of course. last night there was -- the town hall and we will be
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running it. it's still on facebook. still on youtube. you will be able to watch it. the thing was a lot of fun. i think the hit of the night was the students on the panel you saw a glimpse of that had paid off all the debt. and had gone to -- i'm sorry, gone to school completely debt-free they are rock stars. >> young people who paid off -- not paid off all of their debt but went to school master's degree even a young lady paying her way through college right now to get her ph.d. we are really excited about everything that happened last night. even though the new tools that we launched last night as well. we keep hearing in the stoont loan crisis we have a crisis but we are bringing solutions to this issue. brian: anthony, a lot of it is parental loans for the student loans. the student takes out a loan and parents take out a loan for the student. and they are both saddled with debt and on their heels because they feel they want to do the right thing. i get the sense this is the high water mark, anthony. do you agree that either people are reevaluating where they are going or they are just finely saying enough on these payments?
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>> yes. parents are getting -- i mean not excited. they're getting excited kids are going to school debt-free also getting frustrated right now 20 years, 30 years later they are still paying for student loans. they do not want this for their kids. right now we're attacking the parent plus loans and federal loonsz and calling for congress to cut this out and really stop. this so that way our young people can have freedom and we can help their parents go into retirement with a fresh start. brian: we are asking the government to save us from ourselves, dave ramsey? >> well, the problem is they have been trying to save us from ourselves and have been loaning us $1.6 trillion in government insured student loans and now we have a plague. annual epic plague in the cultural right now. congress' job is to be good to its citizenry. not issue plagues to the citizenry. it's time for congress to pull this program. it's an epic failure. we all realize that. that's why some politicians are talking about forgiving it. but you can't talk about forgiving it without stopping the loans. that's intellectual dishonesty.
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ainsley: dave, do you recommend a technical for a few years because they're cheaper and then transferring to a university? >> it depends on the person and what they're doing. anthony talk as lot about community colleges for the first two years to get the basics out of way. they are about one tenth the cost and many states they are free. a lot of community cleanings are excellent education. not a lot of them are but a lot of them are excellent. people don't ask where you went to school the first two years. some people ask where you graduated from but most people don't even ask that. ainsley: that's true. steve: no kidding. dafer and anthony, if people would like to seat town hall from last night, where do they find it again? >> anthony o'neil.com. >> anthony o'neil.com. steve: terrific. guys, thank you very much. brian: if you want great information every day listen to dave wants radio show. ainsley: i love his radio show. brian: thanks, guys. meanwhile straight ahead. ainsley: payday for student athletes. it's now legal in california. is it a good idea? lawrence jones is here on that coming up next. brian: are you ready to rumble with the rock? he is back.
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>> can you smell what the rock is cooking? >> champ i don't know. >> most electrifying man in sports entertainment. doug, doug!
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that fits your business. (vo) ♪ the subaru crosstrek. dog tested. dog approved. subaru establishes national make a dog's day. helping hard-to-adopt dogs find homes. >> you can you smell what the rock is cooking? the people's champion. >> the most electrifying man in sports entertainment. the rock -- listen, if you listen. [chanting] >> brian: it's your shot of the morning. this is great news for everyone at fox. a wwe legend is returning to the ring after six years and many tattoos. ainsley: dwayne "the rock" johnson will be part of friday's fox premier wwe smackdown the rock tweeting that video writing "there's no place like home."
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tequila on me after the show, he says. brian: you weren't supposed to read that out loud. steve: we are celebrating the rock's return this morning as wwe joins us on the fox square in the next hour. when i came in this morning in the 3:00 hour. there were about 100 people stands outside that ring at 48th. brian: just waiting for ainsley which is a low number for you, ainsley. ainsley: they were not. brian: stephanie mcmahon is going to be here. ainsley: i follow the rock. do you all follow him on instagram. is he sitting at this little tiny table having a tea party with his daughter. is he this huge guy and his daughter is this tiny cute little thing. steve: would you smell what the rock was cooking? ainsley: i almost bought that table on etsy. they have the table i almost bought. brian: here's the thing. number one box office star. and i think he is one of the nicest guys. ainsley: he seems like it. just got married. steve: there is some suggestion he might run for president some day. ainsley: that's right.
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brian: eventually he would have to put a shirt on and wear longer pans. ainsley: he got his start on wwe. brian: went to the university of miami. played football. got a sear refuses injuries and drafted. ainsley: 37 minutes after the top of the hour. student athletes could soon be paid under this new law in california the governor out there gavin newsom signing a fair pay to play act in to law. steve: could spell problems with the ncaa. brian: todd piro joins us with mixed reaction on the new law. todd: we have got mixed reaction steve, ainsley and brian. under the new california law college athletes would have the right beginning in 2023 to profit from the use of their name, image and likeness. here is california governor gavin newsom. >> it's going to change college sports for the better by having now the
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interest finally of the athletes on par with the interest of the institutions now we are rebalancing that power arrangement. >> that sentiment echoed by a lot of now professional athletes who came through the college system like golden state warrior stars draymond green and steph kurt. >> someone needs to force this dictatorship to change. >> creating change and creating opportunities is huge. i know there is a stale lot of work to be done in that respect, but this is a nice step in the right direction. >> but as you might imagine, not everyone is on board including the ncaa which issued the following statement reading in part, quote: unfortunately this new law already is creating confusion for current and future student-athletes, coaches, administrators, and campuses, and not just in california. despite the backlash, calvary not alone, new york, florida, colorado, and south carolina could see votes on
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similar proposals and steve, ainsley and brian, multiple court challenges are expected. back to you. brian: yeah. not going to take place until 2023. joining us now lawrence jones. fox news contributor, host of "keeping up with the joneses." and he is also "man on the street" on fox nation. real quick, your reaction to this? >> i think it is great. it's capitalism. free market conservative and libertarian that believe people should have control of own destiny you are on the side of the players. they have been making money off of these players, off the back of the players for years now. meanwhile, some of the players like my brother weren't able to eat on the weekend. they are not given a liveable wage. ainsley: can't eat in the cafeteria? >> on the weekends they can't. number two a lot of people say this is about education. this is not about education. this is about football. that's the bottom line. steve: also a lot of money. >> and a lot of money. they are making billions off of. ainsley: your brother plays for a team. how does he make money in college? >> he doesn't.
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brian: sponsorship. ainsley: when this changes. >> you get sponsorships. not every athlete is going to be played the same. they are using player's likeness. ainsley: get a chick-fil-a jersey. >> if chick-fil-a sponsors you and says i want you to do an ad. you can get paid for that right now the university gets paid for that ad if you decide to advertise. because that's for the school. brian: alcorn state or the statestarting quarterback south carolina. >> there is a lot of legal challenges going to be interstate commerce because california decides to do. this a lot of tweaks that needs to happen with this. i think if you really believe in the players and you believe that they had should have access to the money you are using their faces and names. they are not buying the jersey because it says eagles. they want the player at the back of that jersey. brian: name is not on there, just the number.
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>> exactly. ainsley: go to the bookstore and buy jersey number 12 because you like that player then is he going to make some money. >> exactly. why not? brian: only go to the bigger universities that offer you the most money. >> drive competition. we are not for participation trophies. by the way the football subsidizes a lot of the programs at these universities because they make the most of the money. steve: all right. well, let's see what happens. mark cuban says he feels like college sports will crumble. brian: as will tim tebow. >> so be it for the destiny of these players? brian: without sports these players don't have a platform. if this was amateur no one wants it. >> why would the ncaa decide to do a rule one year and done? why? brian: the nfl? >> just like the nba. why don't the ncaa if the player's to do one year and out? why won't they do that? ainsley: well for four years we love to follow those players. >> bingo. it's not about the players.
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it's about the universities. it's time -- these are grown adults they should be able to decide their destiny. steve: it involves a lot of money and there will be court challenges. lawrence, thank you very much. >> appreciate it, guys. steve: a minute ago we were talking about the rock is returning to fox and janice dean has returned to the wwe ring. janice: is the rock going to be in this ring? that is very exciting. look at the crowd today. hi, you guys who are you guys here to see? >> stephanie mcmahon. janice: look at the line-up. i know a lot of them are here for fox news channel and "fox & friends." but a lot of them are here for the smackdown on friday night. it's happening. i love being in this ring] chanting smackdown] >> look at the maps. temperatures in the 60's right now in knox. it's cold enough for snow across the northern plains in the northwest. we had 48 inches of snow in montana. and we have got quite a change coming over the next
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couple of days with this cold front moving through the potential for showers and thunderstorms across the central u.s. back in to the southwest. are you guys excited? [cheers] janice: i love it, i love it, i love it] cheers] steve: janice dean who told me last night she thinks she is going to come dressed as a wrestler on friday. brian: real have any that's what happens if you have extra unitards you can make that decision. ainsley: last year she dressed up as a dinosaur. did you see that on social media? brian: make a huge mistake when asked about the ukraine controversy. >> a high ranking politician in this country and who used his office to benefit his son, his son was placed on the board of a very large energy company. any guesses on who this public official might be? >> probably trump. brian: yeah, how did they
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react when they react when they found out it was joe. joe biden. uncle joe to you ♪ you better move ♪ you better dance ♪ let's make a night you won't remember ♪ i will be the one ♪ you won't forget ♪
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then recalibrated the camera attached to my glass so my safety systems still work. who knew that was a thing?! >> woman: safelite has service i can trust. >> singers: ♪ safelite repair, safelite replace. ♪ jillian: good morning, welcome back. quick headlines now and a desperate search underways for three bronze plaques stolen from a 9/11 memorial. the heavy plaques were bolted and glued to stones. the plaques have a timeline leading to the attacks that honors the 147 people from the county who died in the attacks. it's unclear if police have any suspects. a high school taking heat for a banner used ahead of its homecoming game. take a look at this. [cheers] >> kentucky football team smashing through the sign that says quote make america
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great again trump those patriots. approving what appeared to be a political message with one calling it insensitive at the very least. a lawyer for the school district says that was not the students' intention. brian? brian: how dare they support the president. campus reform hitting the university of maumee last week to get the university's take on the biden ukraine controversy. the only problem some students weren't aware there is a biden ukraine controversy as well. watch. >> there is a recent news report out about a high ranking politician in this country and who used his office to benefit his son. his son was placed on a board of a very large energy company. any guesses on who this public official might be? >> probably trump. >> donald trump. >> is it trump? >> trump. brian: yep, how did the students react when they found out it was joe biden's son hunter? joining us now is a reporter for campus reform eduardo. what prompted you to ask this question? >> thanks for having me on.
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well, i went to the university of miami because i wanted to see if students knew anything about this scandal that sparked this impeachment inquiry last week. as you saw in the video, most students thought it was about president trump because we know the mainstream media works overtime to make sure president trump is painted in a negative light; however, things got really really interesting when i told them it was joe biden. they told me they weren't surprised at all. brian: all right. let's watch. >> would your opinion change if i told you instead of donald trump and his son don jr. the story i'm telling you actually involves joe biden and hits son hunter? >> i would not be surprised i'm not a fasten biden. >> are you surprised. >> still not surprised. >> definitely think it's corruption? >> definitely. brian: they are just down on everybody? >> yeah. look, this is bad news for the biden campaign. the fact that college students a key constituency for the democratic party are down on biden isn't good news. they are upset with the status quo. they are upset with career politicians and frankly this is the reputation biden has. they didn't settle for an
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establishment candidate like hillary clinton in 2016. and it looks like they are not going to settle for biden in 2020. brian: he comes out and says i never talked about my son about his job in the ukraine. turns out he is golfing with two members of the job in the ukraine along with his son out in the hamptons. good job, eduardo, i look forward to your next package. >> thanks for having me. brian: coming up straight ahead, if your home caught on fire, would you know how to get out? up next, life-saving tips from skip bedell could do anything he puts his mind to on the first day of national fire prevention month. for this segment he is going to wear plaid. ♪ what are you doing back there, junior?
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since we're obviously lost, i'm rescheduling my xfinity customer service appointment. ah, relax. i got this.
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which gps are you using anyway? a little something called instinct. been using it for years. yeah, that's what i'm afraid of. he knows exactly where we're going. my whole body is a compass. oh boy... the my account app makes today's xfinity customer service simple, easy, awesome. not my thing. ♪ ♪
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ainsley: all right. it is october 1st. can you believe it, skip? >> already, i know. ainsley: first day of national fire prevention month and we want to make sure that you are keeping your house safe. >> that's right. we are talking about new products that can help you keep safe and keep your family safe from fire. so we use insulation in the building environment all the time and unlike regular insulation this is rockwell stone insulation. this is actually made from stone. they spin it, they heat it up and spin it like cotton candy. it has great insulation qualities like keeping you warm and cool, moisture benefits and also sound. but the most important thing what we are talking about today is the high burn temperature. so when you put this in your home it, actually contains the fire and you can use this as a fireproofing between rooms. and what that does is it buys you extra time to get out of the house. if there is a fire in the room it will contain it within that room. you are tweeting creating like a fireproof barrier within the room. ainsley: they thought of everything. >> made it interior safe and sound and also exterior as well. brian: why is it always about ainsley?
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>> carbon monoxide and fire detectors, smoke detectors super important. most of us don't have it. 10-year battery life new thing. want to make sure they have at least a 10 year battery. combo unit for smoke and carbon monoxide voice alert tell you where the problem is. battery and also hard wired. every three out of five deaths in a mommy related to fires are because people didn't have a proper working smoke detoke tore. carbon monoxide silent killer. table top first alert. people don't know the number one cause of accidental death in american homes carbon monoxide. steve: when it beeps have you got to do something about it. steve: what do you do whether you have a fire. >> one on every level in the garage. acronym pass, what that is that's pull the pin, aim it at the base of the fire,
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squeeze it and sweep. that's how we are going to put out the fire. steve: we have a fire right here. >> you want to try to put it out. brian: did you take out the pin. ainsley: i have never done it. >> red on there 3, 1, 2, 3. nice, give it up for steve over here putting out the fire. >> something very cool. first alert and low's are doing right now. [chanting] [chanting burn it down] brian: want to thin out the crowd this is a perfect way to do it. >> janice you build up the crowd and we get rid of them. >> we are still here. steve: skip beldz.com. hand out goggles to everybody who came. >> get the first alert product. ainsley: we have a big hour ahead. jason chaffetz and michael goodwin are all here live. brian: and we're going to wrestle. ♪ ♪
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♪ ♪ we are the champions brian: we all smell like smoke. that should not stop you from watching. ainsley: we're about to have a little smackdown out there. wwe is coming to fox. we have the countdown lock in three days. that is stephanie mcmahon, chief operating officer of the wwe. >> so many fans out front. another day with new wwe coming up on fox on friday.
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brian: we have a famous wrestling personality every day. we don't tell them who it is. they line up because they see the ring. that is how big the wwe is. steve: thanks for joining us on the final hour of "fox & friends" on tuesday. president trump is doubling down on the push to find out the ukraine call whistleblower. ainsley: democrats subpoena the president's personal attorney rudy giuliani. brian: griff jenkins has been asked to work a lot. set us up every hour, even fox and friends first do you have still have it in you? reporter: they are looking to put a smackdown on this time on rudy giuliani. three committees subpoenaing the president's lawyers. they write, you acted as an agent of president in a scheme to advance his personal political interests by abusing the power of the office of president. they are giving him until october 15th, to turn over text messages phone records, other communications believed to
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be in giuliani's possession and want documents and depositions from his business associates. when asked if he will comply, giuliani had this to say. >> i don't know. i'm weighing the alternatives. i go through it. get all my evidence together, i will get my charts f they let me use videotapes and tape recordings that i have. reporter: the white house, the president railed against the impeachment inquiry. >> this whole thing is a disgrace. there has been tremendous corruption and we're seeking it. it is called drain the swamp. now the new president of ukraine ran on the basis of no corruption. that is how he got elected and i believe he really means it. reporter: in another development we're learning that secretary of state mike pompeo may have been listening in on the ukraine call. at center of this inquiry. pompeo has been subpoenaed by the house committees. maybe we'll learn more. walk it out a little bit. what happens if the house really
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votes in favor of articles of impeachment, guys? majority leader mitch mcconnell said he would have no choice but to take it up based on the senate's rules. steve: his hands are tied. the rules are the rules. griff, thank you very much. if you were watching yesterday you had the news that rudy was being subpoenaed and in that sound bite, unclear whether or not he was going to comply with it. "new york times," "washington post," came out with this bombshell. you see the headlines? from "the times," trump pressed australian leader to help barr investigate mueller inquiries origins. in "the washington post," barr personally asked foreign officials to aid inquiry into the cia, fbi activities in 2016. brian: should have whispered it. it's a blockbuster. steve: they don't want to whisper it. they want to scream it. another big thing the administration screwed up. it's a bombshell, right? ainsley: they have been saying impeachment since 2016. steve: it is not a bombshell
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according to mollie hemingway. >> it is not a bombshell. it has been reported for months prior to now. it is important this be investigated. we had for several years a dangerous and damaging conspiracy theory that was perpetrated throughout the media and by powerful democratic politicians and powerful people in our own government. it was done in conjunction with people in other countries. it is important if we have free and fair elections we understand how this dangerous theory got spread, who was involved with it. it helps explain why there is so much pushback about this investigation. there was a lot of involvement with democratic national committee folks in ukraine and other countries involved in this. they might not want that coming to light. that is why there could be so much push back on the efforts to get to the bottom of the story. brian: they told, we should say that adam schiff said my whole committee will stay in town. we'll start the subpoena process. we'll start the interview process. we'll try to make a deal with
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the whistleblower. there was rumors it was done on sunday. lawyer pushed back. it is not done yet. you get the sense that "new york times," "washington post" line up seven stories, come out every single day. i got that. next one will come up. you have to be ready to understand the story and don't be led like sheep through the story. steve: if you paid attention you would have known that the president of the united states actually told us he was about to take off on marine one back in may, look, i'm asking other countries to cooperate with the attorney general, ultimately what the attorney general is doing he is trying to facilitate the investigation of mr. durham, the u.s. attorney from connecticut who is looking into any sort of malfeasance and crazy stuff going on at the doj and the fbi. ainsley: nancy pelosi ordering democrats to keep the momentum going. she wants the impeachment thing happening. brian: for the good of the country. ainsley: before next year, before the election starts getting into high gear. finish it, start it before next year is what i'm saying.
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steve: by the end of this year. ainsley: thank you. what they're doing, they have a two-week recess brian was talking about. still staff of three committees are still scheduled to depose several different people. one of them is yanovitch. brian: she will not be happy. she will love to rip the administration. never in sync with foreign policy of donald trump. steve: being ambassador that is political appointment. the president can put anybody he wants to in that -- ainsley: he can remove them which he did. steve: 100%. ainsley: kurt volcker is other one. resigned last week. was america's ukraine envoy. they will interview those two on wednesday and thursday of this week. on friday the intel committee will interview michael atkinson, the i.g. for the intel community. brian: the other big story we find outrageous that is the message from the new mayor of
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chicago, that you should not cooperate with i.c.e. if you are local chicago police. so with people dying in the streets at a dizzying rate through times in chicago we know through the inner-city of chicago, instead of attacking that, she is focusing on criminal illegal immigrants in her midst and making sure i.c.e. is not getting cooperation from local authorities that outrages cpb commissioner mark morgan. >> i've been doing law enforcement for a few decades i can tell you i'm a lot more concerned about this politically driven policy. what the citizens of chicago need to understand is, this policy is going to create more victims in their city. i.c.e. has an always will, their priorities are go after criminal aliens, not just aliens here illegal but criminal aliens that are here illegally and committed additional crimes against the city of chicago in this incident. it is outrageous, it is reckless, lives will be in danger because of this. steve: he also said he finds it
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outrageous that law enforcement agency here in the united states does not assist another law enforcement agency to simply enforce the laws of the land. when did that become okay? we're all mystified. ainsley: when did it become okay for you not to follow the laws of the land? steve: he is pointing out in the last year there have been 4400 rescues which is a greater number than in years past of the people coming into the country illegally by the members of the border patrol. they actually, you know, we heard some terrible things about those people. they put their lives on the line though, saved so many people from drowning and all sorts of things on our southern border. 4400 so far this year. brian: meanwhile jillian mele does not need to be rescued. came here of her own volition. has not had a problem since. jillian: chinese police shoot a pro-democracy protester at
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point-blank range. capturing up to the moments on china's national day. the victim is rushed to the hospital. his condition is unclear. streets are more calm today. chinese communist party celebrates 70 years power. the military debuting a nuclear missile that china says has power to strike any city in the u.s. a massive bridge collapsing in taiwan. look at that. you see it falling right into the water. divers are searching for people who may be trapped under debris. the collapse sparking a fire on a oil tanker. 10 people were hospitalized. the collapse happened 10 hours after a typhoon hit the island. an ex-police officer accused murdering her neighbor. she shot and killed john in texas. she thought john was intruder inside her home. her lawyers insist it wasn't
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intentional. >> a wonderful human being lost his life. but the evidence shows that it is just a tragedy. jillian: prosecutors say geiger must face con consequence. >> you're home is supposed to be a sanctuary. we can't have intruders busting in killing homeowners. jillian: if convicted geiger could pace 99 years in prison. a moment between the president and a wounded veteran will make your day. watch this. ♪ god bless america, my home sweet home, god bless america my home sweet home ♪ jillian: that is president trump
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embracing a retired army captain avilaa after he led a crowd in god mess america. he was severely wounded while serving in afghanistan. he uses music as a form of therapy. back to you. steve: that was a big hug. thank you very much, jillian. making america work again. president trump making a victory lap after major tech and car companies pump billions of bucks back into the u.s. ainsley: fox business network's charles payne is here to break down the economy boost and what it means for your wallet. ♪
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♪. steve: a heartbreaking story a community continues to mourn the death of a heroic new york city police officer department killed in line of duty. brian mokin spent seven years on the police force. police say he was killed by friendly fire trying to restrain a armed suspect wrestling with him for his gun over the weekend. family and friends remember him as a hero who loved and served
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the community. up with of his closest friends danny trucker, of salem, massachusetts police department joins us from boston. sergeant, good morning to you. >> good morning. steve: here at "fox & friends" we try to highlight as many of the stories because not as many news outlets do as probably should. tell us a little bit about your friend? where did you meet? >> we met at fordham university in 2004 when we were both on the track team. i was a year ahead of brian. and we became friends almost immediately. similar personality types and we had a shared love of music. we became pretty close. steve: right. in the "new york post" this morning sergeant, it talks about the incident that led to his death. it talks about how he chased after the fellow who ultimately wrestled him over his gun and the chief said yesterday, i got to tell you, there is 36,000
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cops in this police department and i'm not sure if everyone of them could have done that. he displayed incredible courage and honesty the chief says, because this particular -- your friend was such a standout, he was able to chase the guy down and force him to the ground because he was that good an athlete. >> that is the type of person brian was too. even just mentally and, everything about him. he had a unshakable moral fiber that i don't know that i ever seen in anybody else. there is a sense of doing the right thing. a sense of duty and, a calling to protect people. he was an incredible person. steve: but that calling wasn't his first job. didn't he have like a big money job somewhere he decided my heart is not in this? >> yeah. he, he originally got a job at merrill lynch in the finance
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world and he realized that it wasn't ultimately what he wanted to do with his life. he felt like he had more in him to give. steve: when he called you to say he was becoming a cop i understand you really couldn't really work two words in edgewise because he was so excited about serving the public? >> he was. i could feel his excitement through the phone. he called me, probably around 2010 i believe if the date's right. before i could even say hello on the phone he just blurted out with a level of excitement that it was amazing, that he quit his job. he was going to become a cop. he felt it was a calling. and that he was excited. he wanted to get out to make a difference and he really real hammered that point home. i really want to get out there to make a difference. that is the kind of guy he was.
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steve: sergeant, this is not easy for you to talk about, isn't it is? >> no, not particularly. steve: but it is what you and members of law enforcement go through every day, isn't it? >> there are a lot of inherent dangers in the job. things like this happens, it puts everything in perspective. steve: it has to be tough but i am sure you don't want to talk about the politics of the war on cops. >> that would be correct. steve: a lot of police officers across the country maybe their bosses don't have their back for political reasons. it is good to know police officers are looking out for each other. >> yeah. like you said, i am not here to talk about anything about the politics but something like this happens with brian, it, rather than sort of scare you into saying that you know, wow maybe this is too dangerous, it actually affirms the fact that
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this is a calling for a lot of people. this means something. and it meant something to brian to give everything he had to protect other people and rather than, rather than scare you into you know, backing off with something like this happens, i think it affirms that choice that a lot of us make that this means something too. and you know, just that this is the right thing and, to honor him the way that he lived. steve: you have done just that, coming on tv talking about your friend. sergeant danny tucker from the salem, massachusetts, police force. thank you, sir, very much for your service. >> thank you. steve: all right. we'll be right back. - in the last year, there were three victims
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♪. ainsley: some quick headlines for you. a u.s. city votes overnight to ban tobacco sales to people under the age of 21. denver's mayor is expected to sign the proposal today. similar laws go into effect in maryland and in connecticut today. those boulders meant to deter homeless camps on sidewalks are gone at least for now. san francisco removing the 300-pound rocks as several people pushed them into the street. the city is considering getting larger bold us. starting today you can pick a gender neutral option on your driver's license if you live in maryland. drivers can choose x as their gender instead of male or female. six other states including washington, d.c. have gender x options. brian: i will change gears. president trump cheering on the announcement of brand new jobs in auto and tech industry across
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the nation. steve: president cheering big news by hyundai, kia on 4 billion-dollar venture to develop autonomous technologies in the united states and america. that is a lot of great jobs coming back to america the president tweets. ainsley: how will these jobs impact the economy? here to explain, the host of "making money" on the fox business network charles payne. what does it mean for us? >> these are the kind of moving jobs of the future that we need. we think of manufacturing old smokestack stuff. this is way for humans to interact with robots and artificial intelligence. certainly autonomous vehicles, i gave a speech a few months ago, that is where everything is going to be. it is, it is important because you know, we hear a lot, for instance, electric vehicles. there is no real demand for them right now. these companies, there is a company in china was supposed to be the number one electric vehicle company in the world. the stock is down 90%. they had the earnings a week
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ago. they canceled the conference call. it is a buck now. people bought it at 20, $30 a share. there is inherent risk there. we want businesses to say where do i i want to locate the businesses? first and foremost locate businesses next to the customers. the companies are making the most profits off the american consumer. we have the technology, the workforce, the skills. it's a natural fit. it is great to see not just bmws and mercedes of the world but smaller car companies. steve: that is one of the arguments the president made with the trade tariff stuff with china, if you don't like it, companies, put your manufacturing plants back in the united states. >> a week ago apple announced they were bringing a plant to build macbook pros in the united states. brian: i give you exemption of the tariffs i you bring back manufacturing here with the macbook with apple, right? >> there were 15 things.
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they got 10 exempted. without that, apple is the richest company in the world. we're the biggest market. it is okay if you want to manufacture in chain for the chinese consumer. the issue many people don't understand with this, when you manufacture abroad, american companies and then ship the products back here, when you take american jobs away, you manufacture it somewhere else, then ship it back here and expect the americans to make you rich. now if you want to put up a manufacturing facility in china to sell to chinese customers or customers in asia that makes business sense. no one is opposed to that. brian: the fact, how amazing you can manufacture a product there and bring it back, still cheaper to make it there. it was a dollars and cents thing. with the corporate tax lower excuses got a a little less. >> the excuses got a little less. the business roundtable says it is no longer about the bottom line, we have conscious capitalism, that argument, we would have rather go have indentured servants make
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products for us. brian: 11-year-old making socks in thailand. >> that goes away. i applaud the business community if they're serious about this. if they're serious. i don't know, a lot of it is virtue signaling. brian: are you serious about the new look at fox business? >> you know we are. steve: we have a bunch of fox business stars on the outside of the business. they have a whole new look and whole new promo that goes something like this. >> when i grew up in brooklyn my parents lived the american dream. it taught me what it means to be invested. >> in high school i manage ad fast-food restaurant. i saw the power of business and the importance of making your money work for you. >> it is not just how you invest, it is with whom you're investing. >> every american will work every day to make it happen. >> we're all about investing in your future, your american dream. >> investing in you. ♪ brian: i love the slogan.
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>> yeah. we've been around for a while. we listened to our viewers. we know them very well. the one thing we tried from the very beginning but even more focused on is the main street aspect of this. how can they really benefit from watching us. it is not a show aimed at the wall street elites. it's a show about the economy, about business, but aimed at folks who are watching because i believe everybody watching can change their life. steve: sure. if you want business information your new app is great. >> the new app is great. the website is fantastic. a complete refresh, it's a beautiful look and really sharpened focus. brian: did you get a new clothe deal, you're dressing nicer. >> that is impossible. >> i'm spending a lot of my own money on the clothes. steve: you know why? you're investing in you. >> i've been investing in me a long time. i have to work on that part. ainsley: i always look at your cufflinks. really pretty cufflinks. >> thank you very much. brian: i'm listening to what you
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have to say. that is very surface to you. ainsley: i am a woman. i can do both. >> thanks a lot. appreciate it. steve: media have been relentless with its impeachment parade. >> if you take the risk of going to trial he convicted that could be impeachable offense. >> i think we're in impeachment territory for the first time. >> does that equate impeachable offense. steve: jason chaffetz is here. ♪ >> woman: what's my safelite story?
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♪. >> if he takes the risk of going to trial and he is convicted that could be seen as an impeachable offense. >> if he is not a legitimately elected president in your mind there are tools that congress has. >> i think we're in impeachment territory for the first time. >> in your view does that rise to the level of an impeachable offense. >> whatever the white house thought it was doing to defend itself or fend off impeachment -- >> impeachment. >> impeachment. steve: they have been talking about impeachment. jason chaffetz former house government reform committee and author of a new book, the liberal scream to undermine trump, the gop and our republic. they have been talking impeachment. nancy pelosi is talking about inquiry, why haven't they had a vote? >> the vote is very important. nancy pelosi goes before the world it is informal impeachment
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inquiry but she doesn't have a vote. because it failed three times f they did have a vote, minority could get rights. they would have subpoena authority. nancy pelosi does not want doug collins, the minority member about, the ranking member on house judiciary to also to defend and to have subpoena authority. steve: right now it is lopsided. >> it is lopsided. they want to issue subpoenas, want to do all this, but don't want to give the minority to actually do the same thing. that is why she refuses to do that. ainsley: if he is able to do that, when he is able to do that, who will be subpoenaing? >> a whole host the people. hunter biden should be brought in. you could go through a whole list of things. let's find out, do some investigation. sometime for republicans to play offense. republicans are used to apologizing and trying to justify. nancy pelosi and the democrats they're always playing offense but nancy pelosi knows that she has got to withhold that ability of the republicans to actually do what they should be able to
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do is create the other side of the case. brian: right away they were talking about impeachment almost immediately after but nothing would rise to that level. why do you think this ukrainian conversation, everyone seemed to be in sync from certain media outlets to speaker of the house, before the call was released, before the nine-page complaint was out? >> it is a little too convenient they had a perfectly draffed document. you had a speaker who said on "60 minutes" had a preview of it. vanya shivashankar saying he -- vanya adam schiff said he knew identity of the whistleblower. it's a little too convenient. inspector horowitz and durham coming out. brian: with a counter narrative about the investigation of donald trump but this, they hope pun intended trumps that? >> well look, if adam schiff really had the goods on the president he would have led with that. instead, he to embellish what
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the president said, lie about it. by the way the house should stand up for itself. kevin america cart think should demand should have taken words down in that committee. you cannot disparage the president. you cannot address the president. there are house rules they should go after this guy, he should be censured schiff should. brian: what guy? >> schiff. he did the parody embellished. he lied about what the president said. i don't know if it is treason. it is in violation of house rules. they should call it out and pass on that. brian: he was reading from a paper as if it was dialogue. >> this was highly scripted. this was not some i am problem tu thing, he did it on purpose because the evidence isn't there. the evidence is not good enough. that is why they have to go out -- ainsley: what happens next? when will the vote happen. >> such urgent national concern they had to go on recess for two weeks so democrats can do polling to figure out, let's figure out where we're going
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next. brian: 50/50 whether the people want it. >> i don't think so. steve: really interesting how you explain why they did not take a vote. it makes perfect sense. check at hess new book. it is called, "power grab." brian: really not appropriate what is going on now. >> this is chapter on impeachment. it was highly predictable. it is on "new york times" best-seller list. brian: i was being sarcastic. could you toss to jillian since you came here? >> jillian, please, tell us the latest. jillian: i will. a fox news alert. north korea and the u.s. will hold nuclear talks within the next week. the state department confirming a meeting moments ago. north korean state media says it will happen on saturday. nuclear talks have been stalled since president trump met with kim jong-un at the dmz earlier this year. it comes hours after former national security adviser said north korea will never give up its nuclear weapons. intense body camera video
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shows intense attempt to pull survivors from a plane crash. watch this. first-responders rushing into the woods to the scene of a wreck to own find three people dead in deland florida. witnesses calling 911 after seeing the plane nosedive into the ground and hearing a lot boom. the ntsb is investigating. more than a dozen students rushed to hospital mistakenly injected with insulin. the teens were supposed to get a tuberculosis test at their school in indianapolis. as you can imagine parents are furious. >> so they could have died. my daughter could have died. how come you did not pay attention? you did 16 kids, when you got to the 16th child you realized it was a mistake. jillian: the school is working to figure out it happened. insulin dose could cause blood pressure drop in diabeticswhich
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could lead to finding and seizures. the versace jennifer lopez wore on the runway during fashion week could be yours. selling the dress for $9,000 t was inspired by a gown she wore to the grammys in 2000 that went totally viral. brian: where can you wear it? >> anywhere you want. better to be dressed up and down. ainsley: is that starting price $9,000? people pay hundreds of dollars. i remember that one, do you all? brian: we remember. steve: janice dean in the ww "e-ring." janice: i love this thing. can we have this every day on "fox & friends." hi, you guys! are you excited to be here? what is happening on friday? [cheering] we have stephanie coming up. it is fantastic. take a look at the new york weather live from the
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"smackdown" ring in new york city. we have cold front moving across the country. with that bring the potential of showers and thunderstorms. we could see flood watches and warnings from the southwest up to the great lakes. even some snow across the northern rockies. that was the big story this past week. hot, hot, across the south where we could break some records later on today and tomorrow. are you guys ready for stephanie? [cheering] oh, my gosh. so fun, i love this ring. there is stephanie right there. come on up my girlfriend. yes. yes. >> yes, yes, yes. janice: good to see you. steve: she is an occasional wrestler these days. brian: always be ready to wrestle if you're a mac man. you never know when a fight breaks out. steve: thank you very much, jd. ainsley: 40 minutes after the hour.
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president trump not just battling democrats but spies inside of the white house. michael goodwin breaks it all down for us. he says the walls have ears. prior to going to aspen dental i've had nineteen surgeries. i'm 100% permanently disabled from the military and after i went in to aspen dental it was just like night and day. they told me they were gonna take some x-rays, she said "and it's gonna be no charge to you". i'm not used to getting that type of service. my name is robert chackley and my rank for the military was retired sergeant major. at aspen dental we're all about yes. like yes to payments on your timeline not ours.
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♪. jillian: quick health headlines now. this year's flu shot may be ineffective. scientists develop a new shot every year based on predictions which flu strain will be most active. an expert says this year's prediction might be wrong. heartburn medication zantac is pulled off shelves at rite aid and walgreens. it follows a fda warning about a potential cancer risk. cvs pulled zantac and is
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everring refunds. no need to cut back on red meat. a new study found no proof eating red or processed meat shows increase risk of cancer. but health organizations are slamming the study saying there is proof that red meat can cause cancer. brian: trying to find out the identity of the whistle-blower during the ukrainian controversy. >> when you have a whistleblower that reports things that are incorrect. i made a call that call was perfect. when the whistleblower reported it he made it sound terrible. this whole thing is a disgrace. ainsley: your next guest says the whistleblower is one of the spies battling the president the war the democrats have against him. brian: a familiar face, "new york post" columnist, michael goodwin. no doubt about it. you have to wonder who your friends are working in the oval office. >> this is a remarkable situation. as i read in the column it very much begins to feel like 2016
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all over again. you had the cia, the fbi spying on the trump campaign. now you have a cia officer within the white house gathering information, going to democrats in congress with a democrat-connected lawyers. and shaping this in a way that sounds as though it is almost written by "the new york times" for "the new york times." ainsley: you write about how loose lips sink ships. we all heard that phrase. right. ainsley: why do you apply that to the president? >> i think it means the walls in the white house has ears. whatever he said somebody is listening to, that is proper with a president. these are people who are out to get him in many cases. >> how do they end up inside? >> i'm sorry? ainsley: how do they end up inside of the white house? >> i think it goes back to 2016. there is a movement against this president by law enforcement, by the cia, john brennan, james clapper. brian: you still think they're at it? >> absolutely.
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i think there are elements of it still at it. i don't believe the leaders are as they were then. i think there are agents within these forces that see it as their role to stop this president. brian: michael, do you know that the ukrainian president when he was on the phone with our president that day did not know that the money had been held up? >> right. brian: doesn't that change the complexion of the entire conversation? it was hey, congratulations on your win. i patterned my campaign after you. i need some javelin missiles. can you help me out on investigation. then biden's name came up two or three times. there is no money involved. the money coming a month later. >> there is a lot about these calls that are strange in the sense that we have no basis for comparison. we don't know what presidents say to foreign leaders. brian: never do. >> only under donald trump have we gotten a transcript released or leaked. i would love to know what did barack obama say to the iranians? what did he say to the russians? i suspect a lot of these calls
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have innocuous chatter because you have two leaders, each with their own domestic politics issues. so they probably have these kind of group gripe sessions sometimes where they share horror stories about their own politics. i don't think anything in the call is outrageous. brian: right. >> i don't think it is impeachable but it is in a vacuum. we don't know what the calls normally sound like. brian: we agree they should, president's guys set up a war room to fight back against the impeachment because the threat is real. michael goodwin. thanks so much. >> thank you. brian: you're invited, it is wwe on fox square. ainsley's screw gun is working again. stephanie mcmahon is here. live next. ainsley: what? did i put the stage together? brian: yeah. ainsley: got it. i was out there all morning. check with sandra smith for what is coming up at the top of the hour. >> quite a crowd. a lot to keep track of. brand new reaction for the
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fallout from the whistleblower story. house dems subpoenaed rudy giuliani. a new unearthed photo of joe biden and his son golfing with a ukraine gas executive back in 2014. why that is important. lindsey graham says "the new york times" report about trump pressing the aussie pm, prime minister, all about shutting down bill barr. we've got a big three hours coming up. joining us live at the top of the brand new hour. t you need. ♪ liberty, liberty, liberty, liberty ♪ seaonly abreva cany to help sget rid of it in... ...as little as 2 1/2 days when used at the first sign. abreva starts to work immediately to block the virus and protect healthy cells. abreva acts on it. so you can too.
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[upbeat♪action music] (pilot) we're going to be on the tarmac
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for another 45 minutes or so. >> ronda rousey might be -- stephanie woman on the planet. steve: well the wwe taking over fox square all week long, ahead
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of friday night premier of "smackdown." brian: i had not noticed. wwe chief brand officer, you know her, stephanie mcmahon, ladies and gentlemen. you know her. [cheering] ainsley: they're trying to do a friday night "smackdown". brian: there has been a lot of great moments from wrestling. i used to watch with wwf, with george the animal steele used to eat the turn buckle. before you were born. >> my first run-in with a live event was george animal steele. brian: he would eat a turn buckle. hard to explain to a child. what does it mean for joining fox, and all the hurdles you have climbed? >> you consider the fact my father really started wwe, i'm not allowed to say wwe. we lost a suit to world wildlife fund. now it is global media
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enterprise valued 5 1/2 billion dollars. that is not too bad. ainsley: why did he start it? give me the idea. >> this is really my family's business. i'm fourth generation. he always sought a vision for something bigger, something broader. to take it really mainstream entertainment. here we are on fox broadcast debuting this friday night with the rock, you know. he started his career in wwe. >> coming back, it brings people together. >> it does. >> no one gets hurt. it is entertainment. brian: it is full contact. >> you know what i mean. i love it brings everyone and every state and every country love you. >> thank you. it really is. it is such a privilege to be a part of this brand. when you think the fact wrestlemania is the kin to our super bowl brings people from 60 countries, all 50 states, all different backgrounds. we need something to bring us together. steve: you're called the brand manager. >> chief brand officer.
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>> chief brand officer. that is my executive title. steve: what does that mean? >> i'm responsible for the wwe's brand. having all of this right here. steve: when people think of that brand, you want them to think of what? >> i want them to think our mission is to put smiles on people's faces. that is what i think you see everywhere, right. i want to think of the most fun and exciting brand in all of sports entertainment. brian: i'm sorry. >> what is the most exciting part of it for you? >> it really is these guys. [cheering] we don't have a brand if not for our fans. ainsley: who was your favorite growing up? >> my favorite was andre. andre the giant. steve: thank you very much. >> no, thank you guys. steve: watch "smackdown" on friday on fox. we'll be right back. ♪upbeat music
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>> join us on fox nation
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february 6 this st. petersburg, florida. >> stick around for the end of the show show. if you have to run from this, run to the radio. >> bill: good morning, everybody. here we go. the fallout from the whistleblower story coming in quickly today. today's biggest headline putting both the president's personal attorney as well as his attorney general in the line of fire. we'll go through it one step at a time as we say good morning. it's tuesday, back together i'm bill hemmer live in new york city. >> sandra: good morning to you, bill. i'm sandra smith. since the story is moving so quickly here is what we no and are following at this hour. a subpoena has now been issued for rudy giuliani. house democrats giving the president's personal attorney until october 15th to turn over documents related to his dealings with ukraine. next the justice department confirming that attorney general bill barr asked

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