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tv   Fox and Friends Saturday  FOX News  November 2, 2019 3:00am-7:00am PDT

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>> they were having a lot of fun,
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at one point saying what democrats with impeachment is trying to undermine the 2020 election, delegitmize2016, which is one of the greatest wins. >> he celebrated the u.s. military raid against al-baghdadi. beto o'rourke is unfortunately out of the presidental race. it was a great rally. he slammed the impeachment inquiry, pulled no punches, typical trump. >> in washington, d.c. you've got impeachment hearings happening, they've -- >> they're behind closed doors. >> they voted to formalize it. a bunch of socialists saying they're going to pay for $52 trillion of me medicare for all. contrast that with the message the president brought last night in mississippi and you tell me who is playing a better hand. >> we're now an economic
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powerhouse. the stock market hit today another all-time historic high. [ cheering and applause ] >> just days ago, the united states brought the world's number one terrorist leader to justice. [ cheering and applause ] >> the delusional democrat fantasy, i'm now supposed to be afraid of someone called 1% joe. beto, did you hear? he came out of texas a very hot political property and a he went back as cold as you can be. >> best to, we -- beto, we never knew thee. >> it always sounded like he was reading someone else's talking points, always going for the biggest punch line, went so
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far left, talking about a mandatory gun buyback. seems like everything he was saying was like what can i say to grab a headlined toward the end. he stood on a table, which as a germa phobe he offended me. i think it was a gracious exit and it was time. >> i think we saw the making of the message for 2020, the president saying at one point he's creating jobs, killing democrats and democrats he said -- killing terrorists and democrats are going insane he said with medicare for all, the green new deal, all of that and the president was making clear that he's not going to stand for the impeachment battle, that he's pushing back hard as nancy pelosi seems to be having second thoughts about all this, saying we had no choice but to do this. watch. >> this is not about his personality or his policies. that's for the elections to decide. this is about our oath of
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office, about whether he's honoring his oath of office to protect and defend the constitution. the rule of law is a republic, the rule of one person is a monarchy. heeding the words of our founders, they knew we always had to strive for unity in our country and so we hope that this can be a healing process as we uphold the constitution. that's what we're doing in our investigation. >> i'm not sure what they're doing. there's three or four explanations. >> we hope this will be a healing process? it's utterly delusional. if that's the face and that's the message and that's the disposition the democrats want to put forward in 2020, versus -- think about the rallies that the president had, the power, the energy, the mass -- bernie and elizabeth warren and kamala harris could barely muster crowds about half that size in their hometowns on their launch
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day. there isn't the gathering of energy and then they try to put forward impeachment as the answer. and it also doesn't jive with things they've said in the past. >> nancy pelosi -- let's hop in a delorean, let's go back to 1998 and listen to nancy pelosi on what the effect of impeachment might be. >> to move forward on an impeachment is very serious. i think it has traumatic impact on the confidence the american people have in government, that the world has in our president. >> yeah. now things have changed no doubt about it. what the presidents is zeroing in on, nancy pelosi has been driving the train, if you will, but has a co-conductor, if you will, in adam schiff. and that is the person that the president has been teain been tf on, saying adam schiff and nancy pelosi are running this behind closed doors, not giving the president due process. at the rally last night in
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mississippi it was about going after the process and saying this hasn't been fair. watch. >> first they engineered the russia hoax. then the mueller witch hunt. and now corrupt politicians nancy pelosi -- >> [booing] >> and shifty adam schiff and the media are continuing with the deranged impeachment witch hunt. yesterday's vote by the radical democrats is an attack on democracy itself. the american people are fed up with democrat lies, hoaxes and extremism. the democrats' outra outrageous conduct has created an angry majority that will vote many do-nothing democrats out of office in 2020. >> yeah, and you know, democrats are going of to have to figure out how to win the pr battle when it comes to an
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impeachment battle. hunter biden's business dealings, how that relates to joe biden, a lot of this can get very -- it can get in the weeds politically. it appeals to us that work in the media. a lot of people around the country i think will get exhausted and a they'll say democrats could be spending this time talking about health care, education, the economy, issues that relate to what we're living and breathing every day and the struggles of americans around the country. instead, they're focused on that. he they have to make it pal a palatable for the country. >> they're talking about a phone call. they want to impeach a president who is widely popular, especially with his base, over a phone call. the transcript of which or read-out of which we have. the script that the president laid out last night is a re-election script. it's obama, what he said in 2004. gms is alive and bin laden is dead. that was obama in 2004.
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this is baghdadi is -- >> 2012. >> i went back in the delorean. the same message a, we're killing tea terrorists and the economy is as good as it's ever been. all that mueller and the phone call, it's like -- you're talking about practice. what do you think, friends at fox news.com. now to a fox news alert. nearly 1,000 anti-police protesters descend on new york city streets and it turns violent. >> demonstrators blocking traffic, vandalizing a city buffs and shouting obscene insults at police officers. >> aishah hasnie is live in the newsroom with the breaking details from overnight. good morning. >> good morning. the protesters starting as a demonstration against subway fares, built then into anti-police demonstrationses. watch.
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>> [chanting] >> lots of profanities overnight. marchers held signs that read no cops on the mta and don't let these business touch us l. dozens of people went underground into a subway station to protest the $2.75 ride fares. demonstrators also saying they're opposing what they consider over-policing of the subway system of after social media captured a confrontation between a 15-year-old boy and a police officer earlier this week. the nypd just releasing a statement to fox news, responding to the protests, saying the nypd does not interfere with constitutionally protected activities and works to ensure public safety as new yorkers exercise their first amendment rights. over the last five years, the nypd has focused on precision policing, anti-gun and anti-violence strategies, coupled with neighborhood
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policing philosophy, has allowed officers to build stronger relationships was the community and drive crime down to historic lows while successfully bringing the most violent offenders to justice. still waiting to he hear from the mayor's office, though. thankfully or rather no ones was arrested. we haven't heard of any injuries. back to you guys. >> we'll be getting back to you on this story. thank you. that's so many stunning pieces to it but no one was arrested after all that and the way the police are being treated. we have other video from halloween, the day before, where in another neighborhood in new york city folks were just throwing trash, you see literally on police cruisers so that the police officers could not do their job. i've listened to some of it on social media. police officers are saying we're trying to patrol your neighborhoods and protect your families. by not letting us drive the cruiser around, you are less safe. >> it takes them all this time that they could be spending
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doing the job they're supposed to be doing to protect citizens, and here they have to clear boxes off the top of their cars. >> they're calling police pigs and you should punch them and nypd, kkk, because they want to stop fare jumping in the subway. we're not talking about police brutality. we're talking about enforcing the fact that you need to pay $2.75 if you want to ride the new york city subway and if you jump over the thing, you could be arrested. that's what's at issue here. you lose control of the city when you can't handle things like that. >> where's the mayor? where's the governor. $52 trillion and millions of jobs, that's the cost for elizabeth warren's medicare for all plan. but she somehow insists it will not raise taxes on middle income americans. >> our next guest says the numbers just don't add up. he explains, coming up next. ♪ we just want the world dance.
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so let me be clear n this. costs will go up for the wealthy. they will go up for big corporations and for middle class families, they will go down. i will not sign a bill into law that does not lower costs for middle class families. >> well, it's time to fact check you all of that. the numbers are finally in. senator elizabeth warren revealing her medicare for all plan would cost quote, unquote, just under $52 trillion. that over the next decade. more than double the total u.s. national debt. so how could she actually claim she will not raise taxes on the middle class to pay for all that? here to react, seth benson, president of gdp advisors. good morning, seth. >> good morning. >> there's so much here, i don't know where to begin. but saying it's just under
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$52 trillion, as if 51 or 52 matters. >> let's get the printing presses out or the money printers, rather. $52 trillion, that's right. here's the reality of it. people lie. numbers don't. and when you start to add up $52 trillion and start to think about where that money is coming from, the only way you can actually get to a place where that makes sense is generational debt. because there's quite frankly no way to take the current health care system as it is structured today, restructure it into a government funded system, bringing on new action action an he's for free -- access for free and keep costs down. they will go up. >> look what democrats want to do in terms of adding to the debt. here's the plan. $8.8 trillion over the next 10 years from company payments to the federal government in the form of medicare contribution, 1.4 trillion from the tax generated from higher incomes of workers that no longer have to
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pay an insurance premium and 6.8 trillion on new taxes on financial firms, corporations and top 1% of earns. at some point to the rich people run out of money for you to tax. >> they absolutely do. it's a common statement. eventually you run out of other people's money. i don't know if there's a lack of understanding how basic economics work when the plan was being structured. the reason i say that is because it all works together. our u.s. economic system works together and so if you take all this money away from employers through new taxes, where do new wages come from? and let's not forget that employees pay oftentimes a portion of their health insurance premiums and so now the employers' going to have to pick up that tab through new tax as well. it's going to cut jobs. it's going to cut wages. at the end of the day, americans aren't going to have free choice of health care. >> there's millions of people who get their health care through their employer. i like my current health care. i assume many people feel the same way. you mentioned job cuts, the fact
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of the matter is all of a sudden you want to wipe out the health insurance industry and millions of jobs. here's how senator warren addressed that. listen. >> the university of massachusetts amherst told kaiser health news that could result in about 2 million jobs lost. he said those would be mostly administrative positions and insurers. >> i agree. i think this is part of the cost issue. and should be part of a cost plan. >> so she doesn't really address the jobs issue and explain what she would do with all the jobs that might be wiped out. i heard her in another clip say well, we'll move some of the people from the health insurance industry and they'll sell life insurance policies or car insurance. i mean, i'm not sure you can really make all this up here. >> no, this is -- again, i don't know if i should roll my eyes or shiver in fear. the concern here, again -- when you're looking at the economics of this, right, she's taking a snapshot in time of the current economic structure but not factoring in that you have 2%
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unemployment overnight if this passes. that taxable revenue from that structure is gone. not to mention the squashing of innovation, new health care advances. you want to cure anything in the united states, forget it under this plan. >> let's get back to taxes. there's a study saying raising the wealth tax would not come close to actually covering the plan and this gets to whether or not the middle class will have to pay as well. a medicare for all report from the committee for a responsible federal budget, quote, even with extremely aggressive revenue raising policy changes, we only identify enough revenue increases from high earners and businesses to cover about 40% of the cost of medicare for all. so seth, if only 40% of this can be paid for, according to this sort of nonpartisan little bit of left group, they say only a 40% will be covered by taxing the rich, the other 60% is going to come from going after the middle class and the poor. >> it absolutely has to. or what i said at the very beginning, they're going to print money and inflation comes
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into play and then we have generational debt coming into play. there's zero way of paying $52 trillion for a health care system without taxing the middle class. >> that means they're coming for you. seth, we appreciate you coming in. >> thanks for having me on. >> what a story. mark zuckerberg turning the tables on screen writer aaron sorkin, using his own words against him after he attacked facebook over free speech. our next guest says the feud shows how powerful big tech has become. we'll discuss, the fight over facebook, next. ♪ orlando isn't just the theme park capital of the world, it also has the highest growth in manufacturing jobs in the us. it's a competition for the talent. employees need more than just a paycheck. you definitely want to take advantage of all the benefits you can get. 2/3 of employees said that the workplace is an important source for personal savings and protection solutions.
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firefighters are t bat lidg batt another wildfire in california. the maria fire exploding to nearly 10,000 acres, burning out-of-control, prompting evacuations and threatening more than 2,000 homes and other buildings. as the wildfires grow, governor gavin newsom is threatening to take over the state's utility company. pg&e is criticized for mass a me power outages. and jane fonda spending the night in jail again after being arrested at a candlelight caylee matclimate changeprotest. fonda is vowing to continue her so-called fire drill fridays through january of 2020. can't wait. cover it every of saturday. facebook's ceo mark zuckerberg firing back at hollywood screen writer aaron
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sorkin by using his own words against him. it started when sorkin, the writer of the social network, wrote an open letter to zuckerberg, criticizing facebook's stance on political speech. that's when zuckerberg fired back, using a phrase from sorkin's 1995 film, the american president, saying, quote, you want free speech, let's see you acknowledge a man whose words make your blood boil, who is standing center stage an advocating at the top of his lungs that which you would spend a lifetime opposing your yours. what do you make of this feud between these two? >> i think this dispute over political ads and free speech masks the you true issue, which is facebook is not guaranteeing any free speech, neither is any big tech. all of the political speech you see is controlled by algorithms and editorial decisions designed to put information in front of
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you picked by someone else, that goes for all the information we see and consume. they have unprecedented access to what we see and that's a problem for a lot of american. >> what about aaron sorkin who believes zuckerberg is allowing for potential god knows how many levels of misinformation to spread, he's part of the problem. what do you say to that? >> i think these d they are noty doing anything to create a digital public square. everybody wants somebody to come in and control what we see and what we do. to be honest, silicon valley is happy to oblige. i do think that mark zuckerberg has a case to say, look, broadcasters are not required at all to police political ads and that's by law. so if facebook wants to take a position as a broader, maybe they should be treated as such. >> sorkin's open letter to
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zuckerberg says, quote, this is a portion of it, i admire your deep belief in free speech, it's a bed rock of our democracy. this can't possibly be the outcome you and i want, to have crazy lies that supports the most important decisions we make together, lie that's have a real and dangerous effect on our elections. what could zuckerberg do here? if you leave it up to him, then, doesn't subjectivity become involved and what is deceptive and what is a lie and he would make decisionses that would inherently have his opinion in it, would it not. >> that's the whole issue with big ebbing the, that is humans are involved making subjective decisions, the consumer is deferring to p them bought what should and should not be you truth while at the same time big tech says we're a free speech digital public square. those things are not in alignment. facebook says they're a broadcasters. the courts say broadcasters
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cannot fact check political speech because of tissue you cited, because there's subjective inference that's go into this. if companies want to be free speech digital spaces, then perhaps they need to be subject to transparency and accountability that we require from every other actor in this space and right now they're not. >> many politicians have gone after zuckerberg. he had a contentious exchange with aoc. when the public hears this, whose side do they agree with? >> it's a huge issue for the public. more americans get their news from social media than from newspapers. i think they want an honest accounting, they want to he know where their news is coming from and they want to know it's not controlled by an algorithm or editorial decision by someone in silicon valley. that's the key issue. there's a lot more transparency and accountability required from big tech than we're currently seeing. >> thanks, ray rachel, for beg here today. >> thank you.
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the impeachment showdown is in full swing and a former acting cia director is now praising how it got started. >> an often used term about a deep state being there to take him out. >> thank god for the deep state. >> so is this proof the president's concerns about a political takedown are valid? we'll discuss that coming up. plus, president trump rallying voters in mississippi last night and this morning todd piros is having breakfast with friends. we're going to check in with him, next. don't miss it. ♪ fact is, every insurance company hopes you drive safely. but allstate actually helps you drive safely... with drivewise. it lets you know when you go too fast... ...and brake too hard. with feedback to help you drive safer. giving you the power to actually lower your cost. unfortunately, it can't do anything about that.
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you can see what others can't. ♪ we are returning you power to you, the american people. with your help, your devotion, and your drive, we are going to keep on working. we are going to keep on fighting. and we are going to keep on winning, winning, winning. >> [ cheering and applause ] >> we get so tired of winning. >> he's not tired of winning yet. >> no, he's not. and so after the l rally, we want to get the reaction of the folks, of the people. we're in mississippi, our own tv's todd piro, having breakfast with friends live from the double barrel restaurant there in tupelo, mississippi. i think it's quite fitting, the double barrel restaurant on the day beto drops out. on purpose or --
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>> reporter: couldn't be more fitting. we spoke to the folks at the l rally last night. so many opinions on so many things, people were so full of excitement. take a listen to what they said p. >> what do you think about the whole impeachment thing? >> i think we all know what that is. it's a as far as. iit's a farce.>> i think it's d partisan. >> let's go to washington, show them we the people. we are the people. it's our choice. >> i believe this impeachment is just a -- it's political in nature. they don't have a crime. they don't have evidence of a crime. they're just trying to remove the president so they can further their agenda. >> reporter: all right. so that's what the folks said last night. let's see if the folks here can raise the bar on those great answers. we begin with james james. you said impeachment is ridiculous. why? >> well, to try to take out a dualy elected president is
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ridiculous. and they've done it since i guess the inauguration. >> reporter: you said the trump economy is the best overall economy in your lifetime. why? >> it is. more people are working. let unemployment among all groups. and the economy, i don't know, just the best in my lifetime i guess overall. >> reporter: tina agrees with you. you say the economy here in mississippi is booming. why? >> we have more jobs. we have more people working. businesses -- you can go to any store in the town and their park lots are packed. we have more people spending. we're looking forward to the christmas season. people have got more money in their pockets so they'll be out spending more. we've got housing being built. our economy is just really flourishing under president trump and governor bryant. >> reporter: when i asked you about the 2020 democrats, you had a unique phrase. you called them spoiled
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children. why? >> spoiled children. it's like trump won the presidency and they all run to their corner and go wah, wah, what do we do now. it's like a child that -- they didn't get what they wanted. they didn't get hillary clinton in. and so they're going to cry and throw a tantrum and like do everything to get the attention on them and, i mean, that's what spoiled children do. i mean, when you give them and give them -- like the dance, they have been given and given and given, they have lined their pockets on the back of this country. >> reporter: we've got to run. that's it from now. we're going to check back in with you later on. have a great one, guys. >> we want tina back next hour. wah, wah, wah. >> reporter: you like the wah, wah, wah. particularly pete, it reminded him of home. >> that's the way it is. >> that's true.
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todd, if you would - -- >> it's still going. >> what do they have on the menu. >> they've got a deep fried bacon blt. it comes with a side of double barrel fries. >> and they've got catfish fil. let. a sign that kamala harriss' campaign could be in trouble, will she go the way of beto, she fired her entire field team in new hampshire and closed all of the fieldhouses in the granite state. the campaign headquarters will stay open with a smaller staff. she is canceling campaign appearances in new hampshire all next week. a fox news alert, chaos returning to hong kong as riot police and protesters clash while demonstrators defy a ban on protests.
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earlier, clouds of tear gas filling the streets and just minutes ago police putting out some fire as huge crowds of anti-government protesters push this months-long campaign. and no doggie door, no problems. check out how this adorable pooch let her owners know they accidentally locked her out of the house. >> chika hopped on her back legs to ring the doorbell with her snout. the pup's owner eventually heard the doorbell ring and brought her back into their home down in georgia. those are your headlines. and those are your cute headlines. i like them. >> dogs are very smart. >> greg says it, animals are great. >> and they're smart. >> animals are great and so is adam klotz. adam is smart and loves dogs and
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we're happy to have him on saturdays. >> whenever i get locked out i find my way to the doornd a ring, ring, ring. what many a i talking about this morning? it's beginning to feel a little bit like winter across the country. take a look at the numbers, largely the entire country sitting in the 30s and in some cases the lower 30s. 40 degrees currently in new york city. with numbers like this, we've got freeze warning from mississippi, all the way to connecticut, with those temperatures getting down close to freezing and in a whole lot of areas, especially deeper in the south, the first big cold early morning we've seen so far. when you talk colder temperatures, that means winter is coming and we are losing daylight saving time. pete, for you, that means one more hour you'll get at the bar tonight. for the rest of us that means one more hour we'll get to stay in bed. remember to set your clock back, you get an extra hour of sleep. >> ten seconds to respond. >> you're not wrong, adam. the bars' at my house. but i'll take that hour every
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year. >> oh, yeah. >> beautiful. thank. after a hero's welcome in washington and decades of waiting, dc about to celebrate a world series title. >> tens of thousands of fans expected to line the streets for today's championship parade. >> i wish i could -- griff jenkins live in the nation's capital. how you doing out there, griff? >> reporter: a cap and the tie i've been wearing since the world series began. it is going to be a party. it may be cold, about 33s degrees, but this is where the rally is going to happen. the parade starts at the monument at 15t 15th and constitution. it will end here at third and penn. we had a parade with the cap l tollcapitals last year. this is where the party is. take this, on may 28th, major league baseball stats gave the nationals 0.1% chance of winning and yet they did. no team has ever won all four games on the road and no team
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has ever trailed four games be. >> neil: thinthe post season ank and won. lets show you the few, the mighty, the brave who have turned out here. these folks came out. these guys got here at 2:00 a.m. i want to talk to one woman out here, her name is kimberley belue. why are you out here today. >> i'm here because we love the nats. my brother played in the minor league system for five years. we know the players and we're so pumped. s this is what dc needs. >> reporter: then i've got another guy, i'll point out -- what was your name? where did you come from? >> greensboro, north carolina. >> reporter: greensboro, north carolina. the parade doesn't start until 2:00 p.m. but the party will go all weekend long because on sunday, tomorrow at the cats game they will honor the nationals and on monday president trump invited the nats to the white house. >> the party does go on.
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>> no man on tv has a wider range than griff jenkins. >> that's true. >> on a caravan convoy on top of a train in mexico and covering the parade in washington. you the man, griff. >> we'll talk to you soon. still ahead, the former cia acting director goes on record praising the so-called deep state. >> the president's concern and often used term about a deep state being there to take him out. >> you know, thank god for the deep state. >> there you have it. so are the president's concerns about a political takedown valid? we'll discuss with someone they that he knows, next. ♪ nobody's going to slow me down. ♪ oh, no, i've got to keep on moving. ♪ ain't nothing gonna break my stride. ♪ i'm running and i won't touch ground. ♪ oh, no, i've got to keep on moving. ss cars... trucks... and suvs. four years in a row.
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headlines. the saints man of god linebacker returning the favor to the children of god who had his back. demario davis treating dozens of students to a pizza party. they gave him their own head bands after the nfl fined him for wearing a man of god head band. he is selling head bands for charity and raised more than 60 thought. a surprise appearance on cap l toll hill from 50-cent. he met with house speaker nancy pelosi to talk dis verse at thid representation in the entertainment industry. he sent out his pic with the caption, my number one lady, nancy pelosi. big changes coming. r over to you, pete. i think it's fity cent. >> thanks. john mclaughlin going on the record and praising the so-called keep state for prompting the impeachment inquiry into the president. >> you have to agree that now -- >> totally. >> -- the impeachment inquiry
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is underway, sparked by a complaint from someone within the intelligence community, it feeds the president's concern and often used term about a deep state being there to take him out. >> thank god for the deep state. >> thank god for the deep state. here to discuss is the author of the upcoming book, the plot against the president, journalist lee smith. thank you for being here. when you hear a former acting cia director saying god bless the deep state, they know about this from the beginning. >> right. i think that most americans would probably be -- you had a scene before, people being interviewed in tupelo, i think most americans around the country don't want to be governed by the deep state and don't want to be spied on by the deep state and they don't want them making decision about who is going to be president of the united states. >> the characterization of brennan or mclaughlin would have, no, these are patriots, deeply embedded inside these institutions to guard the
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constitution, just doing what's best for the american people. >> i think anyone who checks out former cia director john brennan's twitter feed will see someone who is rather more like a the guys that used to walk around times square with signs saying the world is coming to an end. there is no reason to have faith in people like mr. brennan, mr. mclaughlin. we've seen what mr. comey and what mr. mccabe at the fbi were doing the last several years, running an operation against the president of the united states. >> how doeses this president best deal with this reality? here we are three years in, there's a whistleblower with information about a call, all coming from the inside. >> right. well, we do know that the whistleblower is an active cia officer. i think that has to raise questions about what is happening at the central intell jens agency. we've -- intelligence agency. we've heard good things about the director but if this is what's happening at her institution, that looks like
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trouble. there should be hard questions put to her about what's going on over there. >> at the beginning of the administration, the idea of a deep state was dismissed as conspiracy talk. right? but those that have been in wash washingtowashwashington understn unelected class that people think they're better than you. >> you see what they did first. they said there's no such thing as a deep state. it's a conspiracy theory put forward by donald trump and right wing lunatics. now they say there is a deep state and it's an important thing that's protecting the country. >> from the beginning, i felt like comey's only defense would be i was doing it because i'm a mega patriot. that's what they're saying today. >> that is what comey is saying. i live in washington. it must be frustrating for people around the country who he see a large audience in washington actually applauding something as fa fanatical as sag
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the deep state should govern the country. my book is about honorable and fantastic public servants like congressman nunes, but we have a problem, people who think they are entitled to run the country. >> th lee smith, thank you vey much. all right. apple warning iphone and ipad users update your device or be forced offline. kurt the cyber guy and what you need to know, coming up next. ♪
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it's a that time of the
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year, daylight saving time ends at 2:00 a.m. tomorrow morning. >> that means the clocks fall back and you get an extra hour of sleep. >> kurt the cyber guy is here with great gadgets. >> it's the best time where you get that free hour, right. >> we're going to do that tonight. 2:00 a.m. wait, we've already got an alarm going off. here's sort of four new ways to wake up, right, technology, gets you on time. this one is the nightmare clock called the sonic bomb that is going to go off, we're going to keep our eye on it, we have it set to go off -- >> called the sonic bomb? >> yes. this one over here is the most modern tech advanced one called the philip's wake-up light. it's designed to simulate the sun rise. so if you tap this one over here, it will help you give an idea. it will gradually wake you up as the alarm is going off. >> so you're not stunned. >> to me, this is about as equivalent as saying can you please pull your car up in my
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face and turn on the lights. >> i like it. >> is this is terrifying to me. people swear by it. if you sleep really hard, it's hard to wake up, this will just scare the daylights out of you. you will jump out of bed. >> it's not working so far. >> well, have we hit the time yet? we haven't hit the time yet. it's coming. >> what's down here. >> this is the emerson -- this is an inexpensive - -- >> [buzzing noise] >> that will work. >> i will pummel this across the room if i have this. >> this is for pollut bluetoot. and then we have alexa who is saying -- what's she saying on it. >> microphone and camera off. i don't like those on. i always turn the camera off if you have it in the bedroom.
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it's simply like alexa, wake me up. >> it will eventually get there. >> a pel there's news i want l you. if you own an older iphone or ipad, especially the old ipad 2, anything 2012 and earlier and a lot of people have this stuff. >> yes, they do. >> and also if you think you have a new phone but you may have the old phone in a drawer somewhere, get it out. you've got to update the software by tonight because at midnight tonight it will no longer connect to the internet so that it could update later. >> a lot of people like the older versions and don't want to upgrade. >> you've got to do it. it won't connect to the internet ever again if you don't do it tonight. so apa pell has a -- apple a has a warn about it. >> check out kurt the cyber guy online. thank you. the media fawned all over robert francis beto o'rourke. now he's out of cash and dropping out of the race. and the president is not shying
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away from calling out his failed bid. we'll give you that clip, next. ♪ i want to drive it all night long. ♪ through all these cities and all these towns -- if you have postmenopausal osteoporosis and a high risk for fracture now might not be the best time to ask yourself are my bones strong? life is full of make or break moments. that's why it's so important to help reduce your risk of fracture with prolia®. only prolia® is proven to help strengthen and protect bones from fracture with 1 shot every 6 months. do not take prolia® if you have low blood calcium, are pregnant, are allergic to it or take xgeva® serious allergic reactions, like low blood pressure trouble breathing; throat tightness; face, lip, or tongue swelling rash; itching; or hives have happened. tell your doctor about dental problems
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so we're in this little town near salerno and everyone has dad's eyebrows. help your family discover their unique story, with a gift from ancestry. ♪ i dream of para, para, paradise. ♪ para, para, paradise. we get to be the dj sometimes and as we lined up during the break and they said this is one of ed's picks, pete was rolling his eyes. here we go, going back to sinatra. >> i heard him smile when he heard the music. >> good pick. >> i don't know that song. it's a little hard for me to dance to. >> that's the whistle. >> you're going to whistle through it. >> there's the cold play screenplay. >> i have all these songs that i would like to drive in malibu with the roof down, if i had a
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car, which i don't. >> good job, ed. >> well done. >> what are your picks? friends@foxnews.com. in the meantime, breaking news. >> president trump hitting the campaign trail, sharing his message with mississippi voters last night. >> the president praising the economy and hitting democrats over the ongoing impeachment inquiry. >> our man in washington, lucas tomlinson is live, breaking down the biggest moments from the president's big rally. >> reporter: the president touting major economic success, hours after the release of a new jobs report showing the economy gained 128,000 jobs. president trump pledging to the people in mississippi he'll continue to fight for the mesh e american worker. >> if i would have said during the campaign that i would create 6.7 million new jobs since the l election, these people would have gone crazy. i'm a fighter for your jobs, for your wages, your familiar tries, your families -- factories, your families and dignity.
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>> reporter: the president had a lot to be happy about last night. he took aim at the mainstream media and the democrats, blasting the ongoing impeachment investigation, calling it a witch hunt. >> the media are continuing with the deranged impeachment witch hunt. this is one i never thought i'd be involved in. the word impeachment. to me, it's a dirty word. not a good word. totally phony deal. they know it. everybody knows it. >> reporter: this morning the president will return to new york. he'll be in attendance for tonight's ufc fights, dwayne the rock johnson is expected to also be in attendance tonight, guys. >> all right, lucas. i'll bet he'll be all over the parade. he's a big nats fan. the president is flying to new york city tonight to go to the ufc fight at madison square garden. >> he will sleep at his own bed at trump tower. even though it's not his official residence. >> he like so many others decided i'm going to florida.
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i have sad news to report today because beto o'rourke's road to 2020 has ended. i'm in grief. i'm in mourning. despite launching his presidential bid with the vanity fair spread, claiming he was born to run. he quit the race, lots of his fans are upset about this. they were big fans. remember, he came out with a bang in terms of fund raising. >> you've got the cover there, media thought he was going to be the next obama. >> remember this quote? the quote from beto o'rourke said beto's choice, i want to be in it, man, i'm just born to -- >> yeah. >> that was just the start of it. the medias was all over beto o'rourke. >> i saw him for the first time just a month ago when he sat down with oprah and me at the rest of the people in the audience thought wow, this guy has this dynamic, positive energy. >> he has what that raw talent,
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he is very obama-esque. >> people voted for him that hadn't voted democrat before because they had that crush on him. >> his name is named ulysses. i love that. >> he had a gleam in his eye. evan smith says seeing him it's like seeing a jesus christ, superstar. in that moment, he was owning that. >> if we sat here and wrote a script like that, people would say come on, you're making that up. reporters, journalists didn't actually say that. he jesus christ, superstar. he actually said that. >> i don't know who they were watching because he was not a obama dar-esque. you can disa agree with him all you want. he was good at campaigning, he did have a star quality, i think. i understand the appeal of mayor pete. i get it. this guy always sounded like he was running a bad campaign for
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high school president. so many people decided he was going to be the obama, the person who was going to save the country, before they got to see him perform on the debate stage. >> some were saying hey, this could be the next -- it wasn't random democrats and he raised tens of millions of dollars in the techs at senate race but he lost the race. he's an incredibly self-absorbed guy. remember when he drove across the country to figure out whether or not he wanted to run and live streamed the videos of him contemplating, am i the awesomest guy or second awesomest guy. >> they say now he's biting the dust. >> we saw him in the dentist's office. >> getting a haircut, all of those things. what got to him, he believed the headlines. i think in all seriousness, and the hype. he believed he was what the media was making him out to bend a when people watched him, they're like you're just jumping
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on the kitchen counter. >> the president loved every minute of it. watch. >> beto was nasty. and he said that he was born for it, like he was born from heaven. he came out of texas a very hot political property and he went back as cold as you can be. he was against religion. he was against you having a gun. [booing] >> and he was against oil. that's not a good combination in the state of texas. when he quit, i said see, people think this is easy. this isn't easy. >> it's pretty basic. how can you be from texas and be against guns and oil? that's kind of elementary part of politics. >> it's the modern state of the democrat party is they've gravitated to the coast in their view of the world and they're trying to wi win middle america.
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>> i want to know if you're in mourning with me over the loss of beto. >> are you really in mourning? >> deeply. now thats he' that he's gone, ds gone, where's my comic relief. >> they're about to drop fast. he wasn't going to make the november debate. you see kamala harris firing staff in new hampshire. and joe biden, the guy that's supposed to be the one that can beat trump, he's losing in iowa and new hampshire. >> 1% joe as as the president calls him. we'll see. facebook still in the headlines. mark zuckerberg versus aaron sorkin, the hollywood producer, round two. the facebook ceo was on the hill, he was getting grilled. now he's turning the tables on this hollywood screen writer, aaron sorkin, by using his own words against him in response to an op ed critical to facebook's stance on political speech. here's what sorkin wrote first. i admire your deep believe in
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free speech but this can't be the outcome you and i want that put crazy lie intuse the water supply, lies that have a real and dangerous effect on our elections. >> mark zuckerberg responded on facebook, that would make sense of. this is part of what he said to aaron sorkin. he said you want to claim -- things is a quote, he quoted aaron sorkin back to himself from the movie the american president. he said you want to claim this land as the land of the free, then the symbol of your country just can't be a flag, the symbol also has to be one of the citizens exercising the right to burn the flag in protest. show me that. defend that. celebrate that in your classrooms. then you can stand up and sing about the land of the free. again, aaron sorkin as ed pointed out in the american president. >> zuckerberg coming out and being this defender of free speech because so many folks, particularly on the left, sorkin included, seemed to sound like they wanted him to police ads on facebook and go through every ad
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and decide is this credible, is this fact l wally correct. when they don't realize there is inherent subjectivity, if he's going to do that, then that's going to come into play, what does edemas credible, may not be what you deem as credible. i spoke with the senior advisor at the internet accountability project. she had a lot to say. >> it's a huge issue for the public when you consider that more americans now get theirs news from social media than their do from newspapers. and so i think they want an honest accounting, they want to know where their news is coming from and they want to know it's not controlled by anil growly m or editorial decision by someone in silicon valley. they're not getting the answers they're asking for. there's more transparency and accountability required from big tech than what we're seeing. >> the left wing pc mob will turn a guy like mark zuckerberg into a right-winger, into a conservative. it's like the comedians who are inclined to be of lefty but
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they're saying whoa, you're saying i can't make a joke about somebody in this political environment. the true liberals, the ones that believe in actual freedom across the spectrum, it's always the speech you dislike the most that needs to be protected the most because that's what they're coming for. >> so many political ads from those on the left, so much talk from people like aoc who could say this is not factually correct, nobody goes after that. >> who is fact checking the fact checkers. turning to headlines. joe biden blasting fellow hopeful elizabeth warren's plan for medicare for all, calling it made up. >> she's making it up. look, every major independent study that's gone out there that's taken a look at this, there's no way. >> biden insisted the u.s. could afford his health care plan which he says would cost
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$750 billion over 10 years. warren's plan estimated to cost about 52 trillion, you heard that right. >> 52 trillion. a 15-year-old boy accused of shooting a little girl as she was trick or treating. >> [sounds of gunfire] >> that teenager is expected to be in court today to face charges. the 7-year-old girl is in serious condition. she apparently wasn't the intended target when she was shot. lori loughlin pleading not guilty to new charge ms. the college add a missions scandal. last week she was charged with conspiracy to commit federal policy. they deny other accusations of money laundering and conspiracy. loughlin and her husband are accused of a $500,000 payment to get their daughter into usc. mariah carey ringing in the christmas season as only she
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can. >> santa. >> ho, ho, ho, ho. >> it's time! >> what just happened. >> i'm terrible econ fused. the legendary singer is tweeting this video of her going to bed dressed as an '80s rocker on halloween night, before waking up ready for christmas. now i get it. it took me a second. i got it. >> where is the video going? >> i love that song though, all i want for christmas. >> she does have an a iconic christmas song. president trump touting the brand-new jobs report that blew past expectations. >> so will the outstanding economic news spell trouble for democrats in 2020? we'll discuss, fair and balanced, next. ♪ don't stop me now.
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visit takeactionpv.com we have the best economy we've ever had, the best unemployment and employment numbers we've ever had. unemployment has reached the lowest rate in over 51 years. soon to be historic. >> the president out on the trail, touting a booming economy at his mississippi rally after the october jobs report beat expectations. >> with 128,000 jobs added in october, can the left and the media's worries of a recession finally be squashed? >> here to break it down is brian benburg, brian, good morning. >> great to be here. >> this jobs report, the number
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itself was 128,000. the president touting over 300,000 jobs. >> it's more than just the last month. you had a revision to previous months of 95,000 jobs. this past month was supposed to be a terrible month, maybe the first month in 109 that didn't have job growth because of the gm strike. but instead of getting that, we got 128,000 jobs. so this -- you can't overstate just how big this number was. when you look at all the headlines going into yesterday, the thought was this is going to be a bad number, ooh, the president's economy is losing steam. we came out of the day with exactly the opposite. >> what industries are benefiting the most. >> leisure and hospitality, big gains, we saw big gains in finance and health care. a lot of the same industries month after month. retail actually had a nice comeback. that's been an industries that's been lagging a little bit. so pretty much across the board. manufacturing has been down. we've been talking about that
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this year. but if you adjust for the gm number, you actually saw a little bit of growth in manufacturing as well. it's amazing how resilient this economy is right now. much more strength than a lot of the critics have been giving it credit for. >> there's another number that people often don't focus on but i know you do, that tells us another piece about the economy. it's the labor participation rate went up. what does that mean. >> this number matters so much. because it's telling you how optimistic people are about their ability to get a job. when they that number goes up, what it means is, people who used to say, look, there's no way i'm going to get a job, are getting off the couch, they're getting back in the market, they feel like they can find a job. it's a measure of optimism. you talk about polling in again 2010 township and what numbers -- polling in 2020 and what a numbers matter, when that number goes up that means there's a baseline level of optimism that we haven't seen in a long time. >> what would you compare this economy to in american history. >> you've got to go back to
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before the great recession to talk about any kind of op optimm at these levels. it's probably been 10 years, 12 years since we've seen -- certainly more than that that we've seen this kind of optimism. this is isn't that a generation hasn't seen. the students i'm teaching right now that recently graduated, they haven't seen o mitch like that. they -- optimism like this. they have a different screw of thview ofthe economy than studem five, six, seven years ago. that will play out in unpredictable ways in the years you ahead. >> thanks for being here. how about this for a new school of thought. eliminating honors classes and teaching social justice in math class. >> oh, great. that will help. our next guests say it's fueled by democrats and their donors and they're getting away with it in your schools, in your backyard. no one's paying attention. we'll discuss it, coming up
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say nba league pass into your voice remote to upgrade for a great low price - or go online today. let's go straight to a fox news alert. nearly 1,000 anti-police protesters descending on new york city streets and turning violent. demonstrators blocking traffic, vandalizing a city bus and shouting obscenities at police officers. aishah hasnie is live in the newsroom with the breaking details. good morning. >> good morning. a lot of chaos out there. those protesters actually started this demonstration against subway fares and built it into an anti-police demonstration. watch this.
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[chanting] >> as you can see, there are marchers held signs that read no cops on the mta and don't let these business touch us. dozens of people went underground into a subway station, jumping over turnstiles to protest the $2.75 per ride fare. they say they are opposing overpolicing of the subway system after social media captured a confrontation between a 15-year-old boy and police earlier this week. the nypd responded, saying the nypd doesn't interfere with constitutionally protected activities and works to ensure public safety as new yorkers exercise first amendment rights. over the past five years, the nypd has focused on precision policing, anti-gun and
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anti-violence strategies, coupled with neighborhood policing philosophy, have aa loud our officers to build stronger relationships with the community and drive crime down to historic lows, while successfully bringing the most violent offenders to justice. if you can believe it, guys, crazy with everything that happened that not a single person was arrested. >> that is indeed shocking. aishah hasnie, thank you for those details. politics in america's schools, our next guest says leftist politicians are pushing radical changes all in the name of equity. >> including redrawing school boundaries, pushing new courses about math being racist and a push in new york city schools to end gifted and talented programs. >> here with more on his findings, investigative reporter and school board candidate. welcome to you both. what's going on here, luke? what is the objective here. >> it's a sight to be hold of.
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hold. in maryland 2500 showed up to oppose the bussing plan. at the end of the day, the politicians said it doesn't matter what people want, we're going to do the bussing anyway because of equity. they've got no data supporting that bussing works. the data actually shows the opposite including howard county's own data. you've got no public opinion. the politicians have reached a point where they're basically saying we don't need to represent the people anymore when it comes down to it, it's a moral mandate about equity and race. george soros and other funders have all these groups and they've gotten into the counties and cities that really control the lives of one in 10 americans who do the stuff that matters most to people. you know, we talk about the federal government a lot. but the schools and the counties and the cities, they control your kids. they've got your kids every day. if they want to move them across town or say you can't take advanced calculus because
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minorities don't succeed in sack clul as much, -- calculus as much, how will we compete against china in the future. they don't care that property values will go down. it's radical racial rhetoric. what they've done is cleverly realized if you take it to the suburbs where people don't pay attention to local politics and you can be the big fish in the small pond, they can move politics a lot faster than they can at the federal level. >> your reporting at the daily caller on this is fans takes particular. it's happening a-- fantastic. it's happening across the country. priscilla, you're from virginia. fairfax county, they're eliminating the chief academic officer and replacing that person with a chief equity officer. what are they trying to do here? >> when you listen to the work sessions, when the chief equity officer is presenting to the school board, they say that it's about equity of opportunity but also equity of outcomes and that's something that you simply
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cannot control. equity of opportunity, we can all aa agree with, every child should have access to a wonderful education in fairfax county. what they've done is they've hijacked equity to use it for partisan agendas rather than actually impacting student achievement. >> incredible. now, luke, this is somehow also bleeding into math. i may not be a smart guy but i don't understand in this case how is math -- here's a quote from the math ethnic studies framework, from seattle. how technology and/or science have been and continues to be used to on pres owe on press ane communities and people of color. >> they say it's used to keep minorities down and minorities haven't done as well in math as asians and, therefore, math must be racist. that's the assumption is any time everything doesn't break down evenly along racial lines, someone is racist and they don't have the obligation to say who
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or how. they just say it. what's interesting here, basically what happens is we have negative statistics about how asians and whites tends to would better on tests than hispanics and blacks and the democrats have controlled the counties and cities for many decades without being able to fix it. when the tests have reached a point where they're so negative, the democrat policy makers on the school boards have to decide, do we either change who is in power and change the strategies we use and try to fix the test scores or do we cheat the test and manipulate the scores to give the illusion of the equality of outcome. they can't figure out how to raise scores for blacks and hispanics, what they can do is take white kids and move them into the hispanic and black schools and say what do you know, the average test scores have gone up. that's success from our government policies. but notice the slight of hand there, the black and hispanic kids test scores haven't gone up. it's a fraud. >> we have a quote from the
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seattle public schools ethnic studies program manager that says, quote, the goal is to disrupt the status quo and do something different, it's important to break down barriers while valuing our differences. what do you make of that statement? >> so, this is what they do, they take something that sounds well intentioned but it's never thought through and something about fairfax county is there is a 10 seat majority of democrat backed candidates out of 12. so there's no opposition, no one to speak up against them and really they don't have to listen to anyone so they don't. so they've never come and asked minority communities if they want this. and speaking as someone who is hispanic, both of my parents are if from he'll va el salvador, it want my son to have to go to a different school because he's brown. the board is so obsessed with race but no offense, most of them are white people speaking down to us. it's important to have representation that truly represents the community and diversity of opinion and now
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they're goal is to squash all of us out. i've been called racist, base of course know one who opposes them is no longer included. >> i want to thank you for being here. so many parents who are faced with these issues, feel helpless. >> so well said. you're doing something about this. luke, keep i'll the reporting. keep bringing the stories to us. if folks don't know what's happening in the classrooms, that's how you lose the country. you're not teaching the next generation of citizens and mathematicians. we're papering it over. we have to leave it right there. >> thank you so much. president trump had a busy night rallying voters in mississippi. >> and this morning, tv's todd piro is having breakfast with friends. we'll check back in with him coming up. ♪ what i love about the south. ♪ do you have concerns about mild memory loss related to aging?
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aisle but also danced with her guests. she credits hours of strength training for the recovery. >> beautiful bride. that's awesome. >> you know who is beautiful and can dance? >> who is that? >> todd piro. >> i didn't know he can dance. we'll need proof, whether or not you can dance. >> he is live this morning at the double barrel restaurant. >> reporter: they're laughing and they didn't hear what you said. >> you shouldn't admit that, but that's okay. >> reporter: here's the deal. the paper here, the local paper called last night's trump rally a rock concert. this is my version of twisted sister. ladies, please don't get me fired. we begin with jenna. jenna, you say it's all about the 401-k. why? >> absolutely. because that's my future many that's my retirement. i want to retire with a good 401-k. and the dow went up yesterday.
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yeah! come on. yeah. >> reporter: that was clean. we got you through that one. you said -- >> i'm clean. >> reporter: you said impeachment is tearing the country apart. why? >> because you can't get anything done and it's tearing people apart and the dems keep saying trump is tearing people apart. they're doing it by their action. trump is trump. trump is well-calculated. he knows what he's doing and what he's saying. like i said before, he's saying on his twitter what we all really want to say. and we just don't. but we're so glad he says it for us. >> reporter: the phone's ringing, people must like you. jenna raised the r bar. the bar. when it comes to impeachment, like tina with her analogy to children, you have an analogy to democrats and children. it involves ice cream. >> you tell a child at 8:00 in the morning, sometime today we'll get ice cream.
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every 15 minutes it's go get ice cream, go get ice cream, go get ice cream and they're not happy until they get their ice cream and then they figured out instead of getting chocolate, they should have gotten lime sherbest t. it doesn't matter what the democrats get, they're never happy. they're never happy. it doesn't matter. uh huh. they just -- and i'm tired of it. and everybody else is tired of it and anybody who says they're not tired of it is a liar. >> that's true. you know what, it's like obama, he -- everything obama when he was in office, everybody wanted border security, he's the one who started the cages. who gets the blame for it? trump. trump had nothing to do with the cages. now he wants wore deer security and -- border security and they don't. >> i guarantee, before it's over, trump will be the one who set the california fire. >> and the straight winds, it's all his fault.
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>> i'd like to go now to jerry. [ laughter ] >> jerry, one of these ladies is your sister-in-law. one of these ladies is your wife. are you allowed to talk? >> occasionally. [ laughter ] >> as a result, jerry is a man of few words. we're having a lot of fun down here in miss sip b mississippi. we're going to send it back to new york city. >> i don't know if you can hear me, but diamondnd diamond and t called, they think these a.i. ladies are trying to steal their zack before the break, they looked at each other and said we should be the next diamond and silk. >> thanks, todd. good stuff. we'll check back with you soon. >> all morning long. >> can't top that. turning now to your headlines. a report reveals robert f kennedy's granddaughter died of an accidental overdose months ago.
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she had a mix of alcohol, methadone and several prescription drugs in her system when she died at her family's cape cod compound. her cause of death was unknown for months because of the backlog at the medical examiner's office. enough fentanyl to kill the entire population of ohio seized by authorities there. the ohio attorney general calling the 40 pounds of fentanyl, comparing it to chemical warfare and weapon of mass destruction. these three men facing charges in connection to the investigation. bent nil is 100 -- fentanyl is 100 times more potent than morphine. rick scott weighing in after president trump announced he's moving his permanent residence to the sunshine state. >> thank you. it's impossible to do business up there. they'll keep moving to florida. it's a death spiral. >> president trump slammed the leadership of new york, governor
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andrew cuomo and new york city mayor bill de blasio. he pointed to high taxes and energy costs as the reason why he's moving down south. and the terminator is back in theaters as arnold shares schwarzneggers daughter shows up with this photo as he was filming one of the early terminator movieses. >> when this is all over, i'll going to kill you. >> i understand. >> katherine says she's proud of her dad and cried when she saw terminator dark fate on opening night. he did say he would be back. >> i can't wait to see this movie. i'm so excited. i'm a passionate terminator fan. i really am. i cannot wait. >> guess who is also back? adam klotz out on fox square. good morning. >> good morning, guys. a little bit chilly out here on
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fox square. come stand behind me. literally as you guys were tossing you out, they were asking if they could stand behind me. these are folks from texas. you said it's colder in texas this morning than it is here. so that's the secret guys, come to new york city for the beautiful warm weather, get away from texas. let's take a look at the numbers and see if it's cold her in texas. there are spots there, dallas, 40 degrees, currently 408 degrees in new york city. i know there are spots in texas that are colder. filinfeeling like winter acrosse entire country. these are freeze watches and warnings all the way from mississippi, up to connecticut. when you talk about cold weather, starts to feel like winter, that means you get the time change. daylight saving time ends tonight which means you're going to gain an extra hour of sleep or if you're visiting new york city, maybe an extra hour out at the bars, you guys out late at night. that's right. she's guys are a lot -- these guys are a lot like you, pete.
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they will be out drinking an extra hour. i'll be sleeping an extra hour. >> this is a theme throughout the show. i might as well invite you over. what happens during that hour that you gain? is it like -- >> i don't understand. i still don't understand daylight saving. this age, i don't get it. >> thank gosh that the iphone figures it out for you. so it updates so you're all good. still ahead, the new york times calling out tv outlets that broadcast the national anthem, claiming they say it's a bygone tradition. >> joey jones has fought for our freedom and he has a message about our anthem, coming up. ♪ made in america. ♪ biopharmaceutical researchers.
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welcome back. an op ed in the failing new york times drawing so-called dividing
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lines around tv outlet's decision to air the national anthem. >> the piece suggests that broadcasters are encouraging unity -- not unity, but overt allegiance to the star spangled banner has become one of the lines that separate blue and red america, they they say it divides america. >> here to react is fox news contributor, joey jones. thanks for being here. if you watch our program, we don't get to see it when we prepare for the show, the star spangled banner plays before 6:00 a.m. on "fox & friends." the he local affiliates want to play the anthem. how in the world would the new york times make the case that that's dividing us? >> that's the question. the case is basic lynn that it's partisan. they don't have a great case against it other than to say in 2019 if you're a democrat or a liliberal you're somehow against the national anthem. that's what the op ed says.
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i don't believe that that that's true. people don't hate the national anthem. they believe in the social justice platform but they don't hate the country. they believe the country could be better but they don't hate it. i believe most of these affiliates play it at 4:00 a.m. i'll make a deal with the liberals that find this, the people in new york and dc, perhaps, if you fin find it so offensive at 4:00 a.m., you have my permission to stay in bed and a sleep in. the rest of us will get up and prepare for our jobs and celebrate our done you tri and believe it can be better i if yu invest in it. >> i suspect a lot of people agree with that. we decided since the president had the rally last night, we would get the pulse of the people. here's what they glien think. >> this country was founded for one thing. the national anthem represents that. >> i love the national anthem. i think it represents everything i believe in as a country. >> land of the free, home of
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the brave. it's for everybody. all nationalities, all -- just everybody. we have never been divided. >> the national anthem has been around for years. it's historical. i don't think people should look at that as devi divisive. >> i think it's beautiful the way it is. it's always been beautiful. >> there are plenty of patriotic liberals. if you're idea on the left that america was founded actually in 1,619th it's all about slavery, that we are defined by our sins, you look at symbols and see them as bad thing and isn't that the strain we're starting to get from the left. >> the national anthem is nothing more than a song. the american flag is nothing more than colors and patterns on a piece of cloth. that's 100% true. what makes it something more is how it ties us together, through races, religions and vocabularies and languages and
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all things that are uniquely american. it is uniquely american to be this diverse and live together and care about each other. that's what the anthems, -- that's what take the anthem ande flag represent. it's when we stop making the choice and fair rove down what it symbolizes to the worst of us, that's when we lost and that's what they're trying to do. i won't go so far as to say they're doing it consciously. that's exactly what they're doing. that's why i'm so against it. >> symbol of freedom, no doubt. we've got 30 seconds. i want you to react to beto o'rourke getting out. we talked about what he wanted to do to the second amendment. >> beto kept saying don't look the polls, listen to the people. well, beto, i think it's time to look at the polls and listen to the people. we don't want our guns confiscated. we don't like your platform. good luck to you. >> thanks for coming be in. today the washington nationals are celebrating their historic world series win.
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>> griff jenkins, our buddy, is live along the parade route. he's got the hat and tie. how are you, buddy? >> reporter: how about those nationals! [ cheering and applause ] it's time for the veterans day sale on the sleep number 360 smart bed. can it help keep us asleep? yes, it senses your movements and automatically adjusts to keep you both comfortable. and now, save $1,000 on the new sleep number 360 special edition smart bed, now only $1,799. only for a limited time.
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there's a reason why there's a shark on i my head. because the team that lost the astros had to be repeatedly tortured with the children's -- an annoying children's song. can i get the baby shark? come on, fire that baby up. >> reporter: you hear that? >> ♪ baby shark doo doo doo doo doo doo. >> reporter: back in june, there was a walk a-up song and he wanted baby shark to get his mojo. maybe that's why they won. now, come here for one second, michelle. why are you out here today? >> because i love the nationals and they're world series champs. >> reporter: did you go to any of the games? >> i did. i went to the clin clincher whey beat the cardinals. >> reporter: june or may there was a 0.1% chance that the nationals would win. did you believe in them? >> yes! yes! >> reporter: she waiverred on that for a second. chris sigh, come here for a --
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chrisy, where are you from? >> frederick, maryland. >> reporter: how many games did you go to. >> post season. all of them. >> reporter: why do you believe truly deep down in your heart, what was the main factor that the nationals won? >> because they're great! >> reporter: and? >> baby shark? >> reporter: and? >> your tie. that's right. >> reporter: chrisy and i were talking, it was indeed the fact that i worthies tie. all right. thanks very much. are you ready to get this started? [ cheering and applause ] >> reporter: they're expecting -- last year when the cap l tollcapitolshad a parade, there0 people. we'll see how many will turn out today. >> they'll have to get a lot more people out there. i know you're excited and i love the baby shark hat. >> love the hat. coming up, legendary football coach lou holtz he will be with pete and i in florida this coming week with a big fox
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♪ >> she doesn't want to give the people of our country a victory. she is very busy doing other things, having fun. democrats are now the party of high taxes, high crime, open borders. we're now an economic power house. weave thwe have the best econome have ever had. we have the best military we have ever had. and best employment and unemployment numbers we have ever had. got the best president we have ever had. [cheers and applause] [laughter] ed: there is a big gubernatorial battle this
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tuesday reeves against hood. the president getting involved there. i saw dave reeves come out and say mississippi is donald j. trump country. jedediah: amazing when you see him at these rallies he is so in his element. you can tell he absolutely loves being out there. face-to-face unfiltered zone with the people. it's a challenge for democrats because they need to have that same energy. they need to be able to go out there and really rally their own base. i'm curious to see how. ed: going to be a test. pete: they have a crop of candidates trying to run to be the next commander-in-chief. those candidates are dropping out like flies and can't get any oxygen to be a part of the conversation because the faces the american people are seeing are nancy pelosi and adam schiff and jerry nadler in the basement of the capitol running a secret impeachment inquiry that they now voted on this week. the president is saying i'm going to go straight to the people. i'm going to hold these rallies with energy about what i have accomplished, baghdadi is dead and the economy is roaring. and that's a big part of what he said last night. they want to talk about
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impeachment. here is how the president punches back. >> first they engineered the russia hoax. then the mueller rich hunt. and now corrupt politicians, nancy pelosi. [crowd boos] and shifty adam schiff and the media are continuing with the deranged impeachment witch hunt. yesterday's vote by the radical democrats is an attack on democracy itself. the american people are fed up with democrat lies, hoaxes and extremism, the democrats' outrageous conduct has created an angry majority that will vote many do nothing democrats out of office in 2020. [clears] ed: interesting test this well you have a gubernatorial battle in kentucky. why i mention that it's local so you don't care about the details.
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big picture is the democratic nominee is saying he is concerned about the national democrats doing all this in secret behind closed doors and if he had it to do over he thinks they should have gone public earlier. there you have a democrat, again, in trump country, kentucky saying i'm not so happy with what the national democrats are doing. mississippi, same kind of deal. and so now you go to the battle ground states the ones hotly contested and bill maher and others on the left are saying be careful because in the michigans and ohios and maybe the floridas, impeachment not so popular. watch. >> anyone who has been hoping that maybe he will be convicted in the senate by republicans, that's not going to happen. he's not going to get convicted. pennsylvania, michigan, florida, north carolina, wisconsin and arizona. those are the states that is going to decide this election. impeachment 53% oppose in those states. it's a loser where this election is going to be
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decided. pete: boy, you made me think of something how these gubernatorial races are being run. look at the contested spots. heisman to national democrats. they are out of step with the american people, that's a bad dynamic as you move forward then you have elizabeth warren on top of it all the new you quasifrontrunner talking about new crazies. jedediah: bill maher is talking about impeachment. this is a losing argument. don't want to talk about the issues, et cetera. another person not realistic at all is elizabeth warren. rolled out her medicare for all plan. kind of a big price tag. $52 trillion. ed: kind of. jedediah: you can't wrap your head around that money. almost hard to wrap your head around. you can't even do it. to give you perspective.
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$52 trillion cost of her medicare for all plan. $22 trillion is the total u.s. national debt. so, think about the amount of money we're talking about here when we talk about how much she actually is trying to justify and spending for this plan. republicans have come out against it. they have said listen, you know what? it's going to cost tax hikes even though you say it's not. going to come in the form of payroll taxes, taxes on employers and trickle down to employees whose wages are going to be cut. we are going to feel the effects of that. not only republicans who have been coming out against this plan. democrats have as well. take a listen to what they had to say. >> she is making it up. nobody thinks it's $20 trillion. it's between 30 and 40 trillion. there is no way. >> i'm not a big fan of medicare for all. i welcome the debate. i think that we should have healthcare for all. i think that affordable care benefit is better than the medicare benefit. >> i think it's definitely
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very challenging and the complexity with paying for healthcare is this. we are already spending trillions on our healthcare. certainly much more straightforward if you accept that there are going to be taxes that go up. ed: nancy pelosi went on to say she thinks it's a bit expensive. jedediah: just a little. ed: but when nancy pelosi says oh that might be too much federal spending, you got a problem. nancy pelosi likes federal spending. jedediah: a trillion dollars. what else can a sane person say. pete: $52 trillion over 10 years. $5 trillion a year. more than our entire budget we have right now. do you know what elizabeth warren studied when she was in the legal profession? she was a bankruptcy lawyer. well, she is going to put that to good use if she tries to do this eventually bankrupt america and then she will have the job. ed: tax the rich. we had benson on earlier healthcare expert you can't
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just tax the rich. you have to go after the middle class. watch. >> here sft reality of it. people lie, numbers don't. when you start to add up $52 trillion and think about where that money is coming from, the only way you can actually get to a place where that makes sense is generational debt. because there is quite frankly no way to take the current healthcare system as it is structured today, restructure it into a government funded system, bringing on new access for free, and keep costs down. they will go up. ed: jonah goldberg was on "special report" last night. he used a movie analogy. i know you are going to like this. jerry maguire. show me the money. and remember the sports agent played by tom cruise got in trouble jonah pointed out by writing down what he really believed. he had this manifesto and it blew up in his face because he was just being honest said elizabeth warren wrote down in this plan what she really believes. she wants to spend knew bankruptcy. now even democrats, joe biden, nancy pelosi, it's not just the republicans are saying you can't -- it
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doesn't add up. jedediah: what i can't wait to see though is the debate stage. she set the stage for a feisty debate because bernie sanders had to come out and say even though he wanted to put this plan forward he was going to have to tax the middle class to do it. she is coming out and going no, no, no. not going to have to do that. i believe when he comes out and challenge there is no way to do this unless you hike those taxes on middle class. no way. pete: she will say it's the ultra rich. the tippy tippy tippy top. of course it doesn't work that way. she goes into wealth confiscation. jedediah: going to change it to costs. going to overall costs. costs are going to go up. pete: always revenue and not taxes in their verbiage. hedge fund billionaire made a statement about elizabeth warren's plan. how much it resonates with your base, your vilification of the rich is misguided. for your suggestion that the capitalism is a dirty word and that these people, as a
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group, are ingreats who didn't earn their. either grossly uninformed or knowingly worshiping th know -- warping the facts. bernie doesn't say millionaires anymore. maybe i worked really hard. i created something that improved people's lives. now want to take 50, 60, 70, 80. what percentage of my income and a wealth tax on top of it. where do those businesses go in a globally connected word. they can leave, too. consequences of a policy like this don't end. and you contrast it with the economy, that this president has helped create by doing the exact opposite, and you have got a contrast for 2020 like we have never seen. jedediah: and cooperman is an example of a self-made says. he worked hard. wasn't born with a silver spoon. worked hard to where he is. this notion that everyone who become as millionaire or billionaire got handed something on day one.
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many didn't. many had to start at the bottom and work their way to the top some people that you admire and respect. the notion you are entitled to their money because they spent years and years and years of their hard years working for it, that's ridiculous. you are not entitled to their money. many times cooperman gives a ton of money to charity. many of them do. ed: what do you think about this? friends@foxnews.com. will the middle class have to pay higher taxes to pay for all these democratic plans whether it's the green new deal, medicare for all. pete: not even talking about the green new deal it. could have been worse, 53 trillion or 54. count your blessings. jedediah: maybe next time. ed: just about 52 trillion. jedediah: like talking about $52. it's amazing. it's craziness. turn to headlines for you now. firefighters battling another wildfire in california. the so-called maria fire exploding to nearly 9,000 acres and it is burning completely out of control. the fast-moving flames prompting evacuations and threatening nearly 2,000 homes and other buildings.
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and as wildfires grow, governor gavin newsom is threatening to take over the state's utility company. pg&e is accused of sparking some of the wildfires and is criticized for imposing mass power outages to prevent other fires from spreading. and now to a fox news alert. chaos returns to hong kong as riot police and protesters clash while common strartsdz defy a ban on protests. clouds of tear gas filling the streets. police putting out fires as huge crowds of antigovernment protesters push their months' long message. activist actress jane fonda spending a night in jail after fourth arrest at climate change protest. this time roseanne that are alsoarrested. vowing to continue fire drill fridays through january 2020. and mcdonald's is celebrating 40 years of the iconic happy meal with retrohappy meal toys. i like that. the fast food chain will
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give out these limited edition toys from november 7th to 11th, iconic characters like grim nisz and hamburglar. the happy meal debuted in 1979. that's the year i was born. that's why i knowed hamburglar. ed: very cool. so many producers don't know what the hamburglar is. buone asked me earlier about jane fonda mixed her up with jane goodell. pete: mcdonald's sad meal. i get the happy people and take the toy away. we're going to mcdonald's, what do you want? we will take a sad meal. [laughter] they are all junk. ed: oh, pete. house speaker nancy pelosi saying the impeachment inquiry is all about accountability and the constitution. >> it's about the truth. it's about the constitution. we will do so in a way that brings people together, that is healing, rather than
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dividing. pete: now a g.o.p. congressman wants to holds democrats accountable. congressman lee zeldin is demanding democrats release all transcripts. he joins us live coming up next most? most? ♪ still rock and roll to me ♪ i can't believe it. what? that our new house is haunted by casper the friendly ghost? hey jill! hey kurt! movies? i'll get snacks! no, i can't believe how easy it was to save hundreds of dollars on our car insurance with geico. i got snacks! ohhh, i got popcorn, i got caramel corn, i got kettle corn. am i chewing too loud? believe it! geico could save you fifteen percent or more on car insurance.
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janie, come here. check this out. let me see. she looks... kind of like me. yeah. that's because it's your grandma when she was your age. oh wow. that's...that's amazing. oh and she was on the debate team. yeah, that's probably why you're the debate queen. - mmhmm. - i'll take that. look at that smile. i have the same dimples as her. yeah. the same placements and everything. unbelievable. the same placements and everything. fine, no one leaves the tablefine, we'll sleep here. ♪
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♪ ♪ >> first they engineered the russia hoax, then the mueller witch-hunt. and now corrupt politicians, nancy pelosi. [crowd boos] and shifty adam schiff are continuing with the deranged
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impeachment witch-hunt. yesterday's vote by the radical democrats is an attack on democracy itself. pete: that was president trump last night sound go ahead off on house democrats and their decision this week to move forward with an impeachment inquiry. but our next guest says their resolution is fatally flawed. joining me now to explain is new york congressman lee zeldin. lee, thank you for being here this morning, before i get your take, this is what the speaker said about having no choice. he said you have got no choice to pursue the impeachment. listen yesterday. >> this is not about his personality or his policies. that's for the elections to decide. this is about our oath of office about whether he's honoring his oath of office to protect and defend the constitution. the rule of law is a republic. the rule of one person is monarchy. pete: 20 years ago she said it would be very damaging to
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do something like this. more recently said it should be bipartisan. of course it's none of those things. your take on what the speaker has done? >> the resolution that passed this past week actually ended up being bipartisan. it was a bipartisan vote against her resolution. this isn't about the speaker honoring her oath. it's not about the speaker honoring our constitution. it's about her honoring an enraged activist liberal base that gave her the gavel to make her speaker. this is about appeasing part of her conference that essentially rolled her into pursuing this impeachment. and the president is right. it has been a deranged approach. the strategies hat strategy hasn the bunker of the capitol business where everything has been unclassified yet what we have been seeing publicly the media will either report zero percent of what actually happened with a deposition in some of their stories. some cases 10%. you need the rest of the
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story. adam schiff's strategy has been to cherry pick leaks. he withholds key facts and he outright lies and that's why the transcripts need to be released so that we have the full story. pete: congressman, i have been watching you and others all week when you come out of those hearings, the frustration is palatable. you can see it and feel it. here we are part of a rigged process. voted to formalize it. you september the letter to the speaker demanding the release of all the transcripts from those secret hearings. what do you think the american people would learn from those? >> the democrats have been leaking out anything can be spun in their favor. what you will learn from the transcripts would be the rest of the story. where the media will say that a particular witness was talking about how there was a quid pro quo, and find out that it was actually a witness saying that he heard from someone else who heard from someone else and then that person said, perfect example bill taylor actually in his opening testimony,
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page 12, the only substantive reference to the bidens in that case it's not first hand information. it's not second, it's not third. he said he heard from tim morrison who heard from sondland who heard from the president and the president told zelensky. that was a fourth hand story. that's the only substantive reference to the bidens. so on the substance, i look forward to this debated because whether it's the july 25th call and so much more with this fact pattern the present didn't do anything wrong. it's the united states law to look into corruption in order to provide aid to ukraine. that's law going back several years since before donald trump was even a candidate to become president of the united states. but, in this case, ukraine didn't even know that there was a hold on aid until just before it was released. then the aid got released and ukraine didn't have to do anything in order to get it released. pete: great point when you have kept your mind when all those around you are losing yours. lee zeldin, thank you for being here. appreciate it? >> thank you. pete: suspended for too much winning?
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that's what just happened to a high school football coach in new york. we have legendary coach lou hoteholts to sound off on that. he's coming up next. most? we're carvana, the company who invented
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ed: time to say bye-bye beto. beto o'rourke ending presidential campaign struggles raising money. the one time democratic darling of the media told supporters in iowa he no longer has the means to seek the oval office but promised to do anything he can to support party's eventual nominee. and a sign that kamala harris' 2020 campaign could also be in trouble. she is firing her entire field team in new hampshire. that's a key state closing
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all the field offices in the granite state. the. canceling campaign appearances in new hampshire next week that looks like trouble. jedediah: big trouble. a high school football coach suspended because his team scored too much beating their opponent 63 to 13. pete is like why don't they keep scoring. lopsided scores policy. i didn't know they had it. mandated coaches who win by more than 42 points have to explain themselves. jedediah: what? >> is it worth beating a team 70-0? isn't 30 points enough? or is 40 points enough? pete: what is enough in the rule was put in place as a way to keep scores closer and not embarrass the other team? is that the right move? joining us now to react is legendary college football coach lou holtz, coach, thanks for being here. perfect person to speak to
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this. last time i checked. you can check the rule book for me, coach. the goal is to score as many points as you can on the field while there is still time on the clock. am i right? >> i agree with you on that. i think both of them are wrong. the organization suspended the coach is wrong. and the winningness coach is wrong as well. the way he handled it. the reason i say that, i was a head football coach playing west virginia coached by bobby bowden, very good friend of mine. as a matter of fact, my wife and i spent part of the honeymoon with bobby and five children. i was born in west virginia. we were playing up there. close game for the most part. late in the football game kept first team in two great runningbacks. they both scored in the last two minutes of the game to make the game lopsided. i meet bobby in the middlefield i said bobby, why did you run the score up? he said lou, it's your obligation to hold the score down not mine. don't like the score, coach better or score harder: you
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create all kind of problems with your football team. can you imagine you win a game 51-13. the second stringer didn't get in the game. he comments out of locker room all his friends want to know you must be bad. you couldn't even get in the game with the score so one sided. you let everybody play when you can and still win the game. that's your obligation to went game and give good experience to everybody. the attitude your football team comes outstanding. jedediah: coach, i want to read you a statement from the public school superintendent and get your reaction. i can state for the record that their rule is not working. i'm all for treating everyone justly my opinion that coach schaffer was done wrong by this group of self-professed experts on sportsmanship who appointed people to run this kangaroo court to be the judge, jury and executioner? what do you think of that? >> i think i agree with him along that line.
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when you look at this as you go along with your football team, you can't have people always holding the score down except by playing your second and third team. i say this. look at your schedule. look at your program. let's schedule teams competitively. give your players a fair chance to win or build your program so that you compete against the best one. guy into a conference and say who has the best football team in our club. we must build our program to beat them and compete with them. it's my obligation to make our football team the best i can i never worried about the team on the other side of the field except to show them great respect. i worried about our football team. how the attitude is going to be and how they are going to feel in the locker room after. ed: now you know why he is one of the winningest coaches. ing we are going to see you in florida this week with fox nation. we are looking forward to finally meeting you. and if you have never been on youtube to check out one his commencement speeches. i just watched one the other
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day. your stories are so darn good. i can't wait to meet you. check it out. fox nation streaming live next wednesday. coach, we look forward to meeting you. >> thank you. you need to listen to better speakers. [laughter] ed: you are great. pete: thank you, coach. a lot of wisdom. result 3459ly what coach is saying you got to manage the locker room. winning coach don't play second string you have to deal with that where does snowflake culture end? if a football team can't pile on. ed: one of the things i have been 18 you guys haven't been 78. you got to listen. i love that. ed: that is good. president trump rallying voters in mississippi last night. ed: this morning tv's todd piro is having breakfast with friends. todd, you have a lot of winners down there. >> there is a lot of winners down there. a lot going on. obviously talking with the folks in mississippi about the issues. but if you remember the sisters from the last hour. they have a special announcement for the nation oh my goodness.
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ed: it's your shot of the morning. no doggy door no problem. jedediah: let know locked out of the house hop on ridge. pete: unclear if she knew what she was doing. the pup's owner heard the doorbell ring and brought the dog back into their georgia home. ed: that is awesome. jedediah: i keep telling you, pete. they are smart and resourceful. she is showing you what's up. pete: i don't think dogs are smart. i'm not saying that i think they are dumb. i don't know what their intelligence is. i think they have instinct. jedediah: i gout you chica. ed: president had this big rally in mississippi last night. one of the cheers for the ole miss football games is hottied toy. i can't believe i didn't think of this sooner we have hottie toddy pyrodown there having breakfast with friends. pete: that's true. ed: todd, hottied toy. have you ever had one of those i don't love the taste but love the nickname.
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thank you nickname pervade "fox & friends." issues economy front and center. take a look. todd: how is the economy doing here in mississippi. >> great. can't fill jobs. they are open everywhere. there is not enough people to fill them. >> everything is going good. you know, the interest rates are low. people are big houses and cars and the workforce is better than it's ever been. >> trump is awesome. he is bringing in a lot of new jobs. >> i see people with more jobs. our unemployment is down in our county. seems like we are having more businesses come to town. i think he is doing a great job. >> everyone here has jobs. if you don't have one, they are out there. it's not hard to find one. todd: wayne agrees with everything you just heard. for everybody living together this is the best economy they have ever experienced. why? >> because i guess age group it's been so long since we have had a good economy that nowadays, you know, trump has done everything to
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improve it. lift the sanctions on everything businesses and everything. and you know, it's just basically the time span, you know. because it's been so long since we have had a good economy that, you know, basically younger generation couldn't remember that. todd: warn, thank you. donna agrees. you say this is a great economy. i say you think that because you have the largest watch i have ever seen on another human. you say it's because of the regulations. why? >> the regulations i go back to is the energy regulations. and if you look at our entire economy, it all goes back to energy. and if you start stifling energy, you stifle the economy. and so when you relax that, where we can really get out and cause the employment, and it builds out from there. todd: quickly, i want to get to ruth on impeachment. you say impeachment is stupid, why? >> because, first of all, the president did so much for our country, why impeach
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him when he did great things for our country. and not for the other -- everybody always works for the other countries. he is for us, americans. and we need somebody to care about us, the people, not the other countries. todd: all right, ruth. thank you. and now it's time for out announcement. i'm going to regret this. ladies, the sisters from the last hour. i'm told you have created a nickname. here we go. >> everybody wants us to be buttermilk and gravies i ain't going to be the gravy and she is not going to be the gravy so we're going to dhiewk one out. >> i'm thinking about grits and butter. >> no, no. grits and butter ain't going to do it. should be business cuts and butter. >> i will be the butter. you are more related to the dough boy. [laughter] >> you be the biscuit and i will be the gravy. >> i'm the slick one. i'm the slick one. >> honey, you just got cut
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out of the christmas list. [laughter] todd: all right. two follow-ups quickly. i'm going to hop on an earlier flight and give them the microphone for the next hit. starting a go fund me for jerry back there so we can give him a soundproof booth. back to you in new york. hottie toddy. i don't know what to say. pete: that was television. pete: i will say though that guy talking about energy. >> such a great point. and what i love about these segments there is a lot of common sense folks look around when the energy industry isn't stifled a lot of jobs come. jedediah: amazing how much common sense exists out of the d.c. sphere. ed: checking with the people all morning long. flight attendants two major airlines say they are scared of returning to work on that boeing 7373 ma 73 max jet. all demanding an active role
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in the decision-making process to let the troubled jets fly again. they have been grounded since march after 346 people were killed in two crashes overseas. pete: can you blame them? in kentucky a father of six dying at a florida beach after trying to save his children from a rip current. stephon richie was on vacation with his family when he saw three of his sons being dragged out by the current horrifying. he rushed in to help but sadly was overpowered by the waves. now, good samaritans brought him to shore and gave him cpr but tragically too late. richy's family says there were no warnings about the current. they are now raising money for his funeral. conner mcgregor has pleaded guilty to assaulting a man in an irish pub. mcgregor avoided jail time but fined more than $1,100. he admitted to punching the victim in april after the man refused to let mcgregor buy him a glass of whiskey.
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the fighter also reportedly reached a settlement with the victim but the dollar amount has not yet been disclosed. i bet it was more than 1100 bucks. actor jason making a daring move on set by letting 900-pound kodak bear eat a cookie from his mouth. make it quick. [laughter] he said he is did it to prepare for a fight scene with the bear in his new apple tv series. ed: yeah. those are your headlines, do not try that at home. jedediah: fit a bear in my new york city apartment. probably not. ed: i wouldn't do that with the baby coming the dog wouldn't like that. pete: fight with a bear? get paid extra for that. ed: adam klotz out on fox
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square? adam: the weather little bit on the cool side. group behind me, introducing myself, who am i? >> this is adam. adam: i'm out here one person at a time trying to get instagram followers that's why this is such a slow process for me. >i will add you on instagram. adam: that's the kind of advertising i needed. also, speaking of advertising. we have a lot of children's books authors here and we have some competition. >> prime pennsylvania, my name cheryl norris and i self-publish because it's really hard to get a publisher. that's why i'm here and i know fox is fair. there you go. adam: we do it for the kids out here. take a look at the forecast where it is feeling cold across the country. frost and freeze warnings from mississippi up to connecticut it. is chilly out there. when it starts to feel cold, then it's time to lose a little bit of sunlight. turn the clocks back one hour tonight for daylight savings time. that does mean an extra hour of sleep or an extra hour of partying for this group out
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here. take a look at the energy. [cheers] adam: they love the extra hour of sleep and partying. i'm going to work the crowd and see if i can get a couple more fans on instagram and twitter. ed: maybe get some free drinks tonight. jedediah: thanks, adam. more controversy out of california. the state's prop 47 was passed with the goal, at least, of reducing crime. now shop owners say they're actually paying the price. we will discuss after this. ♪ such a winter's day ♪ ♪ music) and you're saving money, because you bundled home and auto. sarah, get in the house. we're all here for you. all: all day, all night. (dramatic music) great job speaking calmly and clearly everyone. that's how you put a customer at ease. hey, did anyone else hear weird voices while they were in the corn? no.
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batch code 9189 and 9295. okay. and a new study shows deep sleep may help protect against alzheimer's. rim sleep helps trying ear cleaning system for your brain. system helps remove tickets sins associated with as hirms and other brain disease. sleep well. down to you guys. jedediah: thanks, pete. it has been called california's biggest blunder five years ago the state passed proposition 97. >> nonviolent property and drug crimes. ed: goal was to allow law enforcement to focus on violent offenders. given shoplifters free reign. joining us to react is president of california's retailers association rachel michelin. good morning. >> good morning. thanks for having me. >> to say as jedediah just did that this might be one of the worst decisions coming out of california in a long time says a lot given a lot of questionable decisions that come out of state all the time. >> that's true. true. and it is. it really what it has done
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is given free reign to folks both in california and outside the state to come in to put together organized crime rings where they are going in to retail stores, mom and pops and the large national brands and they're able to shoplift up to $950 without any penalty. ed: that's unbelievable. jedediah: rachel, look at the crimes reduced to misdemeanors under prop 47. shoplifting under 950. grand theft under 9506789 receiving stolen property under $950. forgive and fraud under $950. possession of meth, cocaine or heroin. so, in the past five years, what has been the impact of this on california in terms you have crime? >> it's dramatically increased. we have seen it all over the state of california. you see it in the major cities. but you are also seeing it now in the suburbs. see people walking in, sometimes with calculator
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calculating up to $950 mark. walking out of store. sometimes waving at the security cameras, putting consumers and more importantly the folks that work in these stores in jeopardy. because the more they do, this the more dangerous it becomes for the regular californians who are going in there trying to buy groceries or the different consumer goods they need to buy. ed: other retailers talking about the homeless crisis there in california and how that effects retailers as i'm sure i don't need to tell you. that's also happening in california. what can be done about this specifically in terms of prop 47? it's already there. what are you doing to try to overturn this and say wait a second this needs to be adjusted? >> there is a couple things, governor newsom did put in his recent budget over $5 million for task forces for public safety up and down the state of california to really look at and address this issue and sign from a public safety perspective what we can do to change it.
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more importantly there is a initiative. it's qualified for the ballot in november of 2020 that will roll back a lot of the things in prop 47. one of which is reducing the number from $950 back down to 450 and making it a felony. which it was before prop 47 took effect. hopefully that will make a difference in our state because we need to do something. this is not about, you know, the shoplifting or stealing of a candy bar, a pair of socks. this is organized crime. these people are going in. they are stealing items from retail establishments. they are turning around and selling them and then they are buying drugs. they are buying guns, and they're putting all californians at risk. jedediah: important to note this was put through by the voters five years ago. it will be curious to see how the voters weigh in next. thank you so much for being here rachel, appreciate it. >> thank you. ed: the washington nationals celebrating world series win today. jedediah: fans are already lining up for the big parade. we will check in with our
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own griff jenkins. is he live along the parade route coming up next ♪ living in the hall of fame. [cheers] ♪ and the world's going to know your name ♪ yeah, yeah ♪ here, it all starts with a simple...
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(vo) the flock blindly flying south for the winter. they never stray from their predetermined path. but this season, a more thrilling journey is calling. defy the laws of human nature. at the season of audi sales event. pete: after a hero's welcome in washington and decades of waiting. d.c. is about to celebrate world series title. ed: that's right. hundreds of thousands of fans expected to line the streets for today's championship parade. jedediah: griff jenkins live in the capital and home of the world series champions. how are you doing? griff: i'm great.
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biggest celebration in the country. not just decades. 95 years since a world series. are you guys excited about that? [cheers] griff: yes, they did. i mean, what are the chances that major league baseball team that had 0.1% chance of winning the world series in may and comes back scoring winning home run. fan section. the parade will start near the monument 15 and constitution. come all the way down here to where we are which is third and pennsylvania in front of the capitol. so fans, bryce gadden you are a fan. what do you think about this? >> awesome. griff: did you watch the game? >> yep. griff: did you think they were going to win the world series or were you surprised? >> i was surprised. griff: he thought they might not win? >> yeah. griff: what was going through your head when you watched game seven? >> that they might blow it. at first it looked bad but then in the seventh inning they came back. griff: who is your favorite player. >> trey turner.
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griff: all right. trey turner. how about that? now, what was your name again? >> tyler. griff: tyler, what do you make about it. give progressive for millions watching across the country. >> awesome being around all these great people. it's just amazing. go nats. [cheers] griff: we see a t-shirt pay tony. he scored the first home run in the game seven. he is a free agent now. you want him to pay. >> pay him. griff: pay him. all right. we have to give a little baby shark. because the whole country saw it. let me have it ♪ baby shark do do do do do do do ♪ shark do do do do do. griff: that's pretty much what's going to happen all day long. the parade doesn't each start until 2:00 p.m., guys. we will be out here playing this annoying children's song and just jamming with what may never happen again and that is the nationals winning a way from behind
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come back world series championship. back to you. ed: griff, pete gave me a great idea. get everybody and march to philadelphia to bryce harper's house. [laughter] ed: he left the nats. pete: saddest man in america today, griff, it's true. congratulations i will note the minnesota twins stole the national senators the first generation to minnesota. ed: second went to texas to become the rangers. pete: they did it. congratulations. the swamp got a victory. still ahead, once against it, now for it, what a difference a couple of decades makes. we will bring that to you. ed: nancy pelosi changing her tune on impeachment. plus, what the president is saying about all of that out on the campaign trail. that's at the want to hour. ♪ ♪ ng?
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>> he has some news, let's talk a new active dhs secretary and then have a lot of fun and these guys are eating it up. >> last night if you were not watching we will recap what the president said in front of voters in mississippi after a whole week of impeachment drama, a big vote to formalize it was he went to the voters to the week out. here's a portion of what he had to say. >> we are now an economic powerhouse, the stock market hit today another all-time historic high. just days ago the united states brought the world's number one terrorist leader to justice. special operators executed a masterful raid that ended his wretched life and punched out his ticket to hell i guess you could say. beto, did you hear, he came out
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of texas a very hot political property and he went back as cold as you can be. >> member when the president had that rally in texas a month ago and beto had a counter rally across the street, democrats are trying to puff up saying he had the same crowd size, not even in the race. the big picture of other fringe candidates framing this as basically saying he is killing terrorists, creating jobs and the democrats are moving further and further left on a bunch of policy proposals like medicare for all plus impeachment. >> impeachment was important because he was talking about how he was focusing on the issues and democrats are completely obsessed with impeachment. nancy pelosi came back and said they have no choice but to pursue impeachment listen to what she had to say.
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>> this is not about his personality or his policies, that's for the election to decide. this is about our honor, our oath of office about whether he is honoring his oath of office to protect the constitution. the rule of law is a republic, a rule of one person is a monarchy. the words of our founders, we always have to strive in our country, we hope this can be a healing process as we uphold the constitution. that is what we are doing in our investigation. >> nancy says she is trying to heal the nation, a healing process. we will jump in jet's delorean and go back 20 years when the shoe was on the foot and they viewed a little differently. is nancy pelosi then talking about would it be healing or something else? >> because to move forward on an impeachment is very serious, it
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has traumatic impact in the confidence the american people having government, that the world has in our president. >> she said more recently a few months back i don't want to vote on this move forward with an impeachment inquiry unless there is bipartisan support and what did you see in that vote? not a single republican voting for it. >> two democrats jumping ship. >> you can see she was reluctant for a long time because she was worried about the political implications of democrats of that focus on impeachment and worried voters would be looking and saying hold on a second, i care about the issues that affect the day-to-day and this would be a lot of fun for people in new york and dc but wouldn't be mesmerizing to the vast majority of the country so she was worried and backed into a corner and that is why she came out -- >> folks leading the impeachment trial saying we would rather not do this and the president who should be on defense is flipping it and saying i will embrace
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this, you want to take me on, this is an attack on democracy and i will take it to the people. >> first they engineered the russia hoax, then the mueller witchhunt, no corrupt politicians nancy pelosi and shifty adam schiff and the media are continuing with the deranged impeachment witchhunt. yesterday's vote by the radical democrats is an attack on democracy itself. the american people are fed up with democrat lies, hoaxes and extremism. the democrats outrageous conduct has created an angry majority that will vote many do-nothing democrats out of office in 2020.
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>> watching those two speeches, a tale of two podiums, anywhere the president goes thousands, tens of thousands turn out, people can't even get inside, you couldn't get 100 people to watch nancy pelosi's. she is leading the orchestra in washington this impeachment and the diner segment in mississippi, so much common sense wisdom out of the mouths of people watching the process play out. the veil has been lifted on the fake news media, they will never report the gang buster economy the president has, they want to twist the death of abu bakr al-baghdadi is something donald trump didn't do or did wrong, they see before their eyes the way the country is thriving, energy resources, production, regulations and then they contrast it with a $52 trillion elizabeth for an medicare for all plan we could never pay for in 100 years in the green new deal and socialism and impeachment. the contrast could not be clearer and i bet if us campaign aides around the country and you know a lot of them which card
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would you rather have, donald trump's or what the democrats are selling. >> talking about impeachment from day one, the second the guy got elected, let's find something, first we talked about collusion, then it became impeachment, we are talking, media talks about a, politicians talk about that and people at home are ignoring a lot of that. do i have more money in my paycheck to pay for what my kids need, is my small business operating better? these regulations helping me and my family. >> what they are actually hearing about the impeachment inquiry is not the things that affect them. lisle and said what the american people are hearing about this is largely until now been behind closed doors and he believes it has been unfair to the president. >> this isn't about the speaker honoring her oath or honoring the constitution. it is about her honoring and enraged activist liberal base that gave her the gavel to make
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her speaker. it is about appeasing part of her conference that essentially rolled her into pursuing this impeachment and the president is right. it has been a deranged approach. adam schiff's strategy had been to cherry pick leaks, he would hold key facts and outright lies and that is why the transcripts need to be released so we have the full story. >> so much oxygen about impeachment, candidates trying to be the next commander-in-chief who can barely breakthrough, beta without, joe biden, running behind in iowa, new hampshire, there is no clarity on the democrat side. >> and other thing is the war on cops, you got to stand up for law enforcement. anti-police protests in new york overnight, nearly 1000 protesters blocked traffic, taunted police officers, some of
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that in the boxes the night before on halloween where in new york city you had some folks protesting police throwing boxes on their police cruisers to prevent them driving around in some of the cops are saying you are preventing us from protecting your neighborhood, we drive around the streets, they couldn't move the police cruiser there. of somebody in your neighbor gets shot in your kids need the police, we can't get to them. we are here to help you. >> insane the police would have to spend their time cleaning up a car when they're being called to tend to the community and do their best to protect the lives of the people in that community, donald trump wasted no time weighing in on all the saying new york city is getting dirty and unsafe again is our police are being disrespected, people have water dumped on them because the mayor and governor don't have their backs, new york's finest must be cherished and protected. this is an ongoing story. there has been a constant trend where people feel entitled to disrespect the police in a way i have not seen in my lifetime. these are the men and women who get up every day and put on the uniform and risk their lives and
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safety for us every single day. we should be and could be grateful for everything they do. it is hard to watch at this point. >> the president moved his residence from new york city to florida but those thousands of people, all of that, protesting fair jumpers in the subway. the police are going to crack down on people not paying their tolls on the subway. they are jumping over turnstiles, police are stepping and saying if we don't enforce basic rule of law you lose everything else. that is what they are protesting. it is anti-police sentiment, you can't maintain law and order, you talk about these issues, it is a cultural issue too. the left is saying abolish ice and cultural you've got law versus lawlessness. >> we will turn to some headlines.
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a 15-year-old boy accused of shooting a little girl as she was crossing the street. trick-or-treating. [gunshots] >> that teenager is expected to be in court today to face those charges. the 7-year-old girl is in serious condition. she apparently wasn't the intended target when she was shot. 2020 democrat joe biden blasting elizabeth warren's plan for medicare for all calling it made up. >> she is making it up. every independent study out there that has taken a look at this, there is no way. >> biden insisted the us could afford his healthcare plan which he says would cost 7 $50 billion over ten years was warren's plan is estimated to cost $52 trillion. two guest at the usc fight, donald trump and dwayne the rock johnson. the president will attend at madison square garden in new
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york city, the rock will present a custom championship belt for the winner of the fight. pretty cool. that will be a show. the president will sleep in his own bed at trump tower. has the president ever gone to a usc fight? has any president? >> good question. >> it is a new sport, it is aggressive, people in the left don't like that, fighting, violence, people love it. it is a growing growing sport. >> i know. >> they would never go. it is so gross, fighting, somebody wins. toxic masculinity. >> part of the culture wars. part of the culture wars. donald trump rolling out a new campaign ad revealing his strategy for 2020, we will break down with his ads will hit the mark or not coming up next. ♪
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>> they say he is now mister nice guy. democrats push impeachment, the president's reelection campaign heading back with a focus on his accomplishment, that and making its debut during game 7 of the world series, joining us with more on the president's messaging heading into 2020.
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president and partner at maclachlan and associates jim mclachlan. i was fascinated not just by the ad but the fact that david path, the successful strategist for barack obama's campaign went on twitter and said this was an effective ad, democrats saying wake up to his own party. >> obama's campaign manager said it was a very strong ad. that's how you know they had a home run. they did a great job with that ad because what it does is democrats are trying to impeach donald trump it puts the trump campaign on offense, talks about his successes, talk about his whens and gets the focus on to the issues that matter to the american people. >> brad pascal said nancy pelosi's impeachment resolution day turned into a massive fundraising day for the president. 3 million on the line in one
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day, making 19 million in october online alone. impeachment sham is backfiring already. when you raise money online you don't spend in a glitzy fundraiser and have overhead. it suggests enthusiasm. >> that is the irony about donald trump. democrats talk about them being the party of the people, donald trump raises most of his money from small low dollar donors and another example of how the impeachment attacks against donald trump are backfiring on the democrats. as soon as they impeached him the trump campaign has raised millions of dollars. >> on the other hand in a reelection now president wants the stain of impeachment. >> the democrats are underestimating the intelligence of the american voters because
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here they have their friends in the media pushing for impeachment, the left pushing for impeachment. think about it. it is almost like nancy pelosi was dared into this was only a few months ago she said she wouldn't do this without bipartisan support in that she had been public opinion on her side. he doesn't have that. she lost a couple democrats that voted against impeachment and what we are seeing in the battleground states they are overwhelmingly even the new york times poll showed in the battleground states especially overwhelmingly against impeachment. >> bill maher made the point he doesn't think the president will be removed from office and this could backfire in these battleground states. appreciate you coming in. a new report reveals most chain restaurant beef is taxed with unnecessary antibiotics. should you be concerned what this means for your family?
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doctor nicole safire breaking down the potential dangers next. if your gums bleed when you brush, you may have gingivitis. and the clock could be ticking towards bad breath, receding gums, and possibly... tooth loss. help turn back the clock on gingivitis with parodontax. leave bleeding gums behind. parodontax. but she wanted someone who loves with the cats.ng. so, we got griswalda. dinner's almost ready. but one thing we could both agree on was getting geico to help with our renters insurance. yeah, switching and saving was really easy! drink it all up. good!
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>> quick headline starting with a fox news alert, chaos returns to hong kong as right police and protesters clash with demonstrators to ban protests, tear gas filling the streets, police putting out fires. huge crowds of freedom loving antigovernment protesters push their month-long message. new evidence remains the trump administration remain in mexico policy is working, the department of homeland security said thousands of people have returned to mexico and returned home and giving up their asylum
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claims. the administration has returned 55,000 migrants to mexico. you put pressure on. >> before you go out to eat this we can you want to hear this, in a report finding out of 25 chain restaurants 15 of them got enough for serving beef race with antibiotics. only to polian pinero scored an a-or higher. antibiotics in meat might not be good for our bodies. should we be worried? doctor nicole safire. and and it is commonplace in the grocery store. and they incorporated that. and and and antibiotic
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assistance infections. people are dying from it. and they have a lot in our food. antibiotics are not working. and they changed their ways. and the government regulating this food, we want companies, we will change our ways. hopefully bringing attention of this will make them decrease the use of antibiotics. what they do is get healthy animals antibiotics to stave off infections. they don't need antibiotics, they would give antibiotics we would take and making it -- making us not able to use the
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antibiotics in the future. >> that happens because animals are kept in close quarters. and it is a preventative mechanism. you go and eat that food your body has to process the antibiotics on day one. this is something i think people have more awareness of. you think the free market. up and people will say do your own research and chick-fil-a has an option for me that have poultry or before whatever it may be that has antibiotic free options and i will send a message to wendy's that they need to pick up their gain. >> i hope it happens here. >> this is what they have to do, i believe there are enough health-conscious people who will say these are not the products we want. and it is not -- they demand antibiotic freezing. >> new research shows measles,
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and >> it has to add to literature we are ready have. when you get infected with measles your body forgets the antibiotics you acquired over life, making you more susceptible to future infections. to say a child did not get vaccinated, they contract measles, all of us in the antibodies they had in their bodies like the flu or common cold or anything else, chickenpox all of a sudden those antibiotics are depleted in their bodies and they are susceptible to getting those potentially deadly infections again not to mention measles itself is deadly and you should be vaccinated against it anyway. >> can your body billback antibiotics and you are more defenseless? >> your body is a beatable thing that has the blue to regenerate
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antibodies but when you have been infected with measles you don't want to be susceptible to other infections. your body is at a low. >> thanks so much. these kids had his back when he wore a headband, linebacker is returning, we will tell you how coming up. donald trump rallies voters, having breakfast with friends. don't miss it. ♪ - [woman] with my shark, i deep clean messes like this, this, and even this. but i don't have to clean this, because the self-cleaning brush roll removes hair while i clean. - [announcer] shark, the vacuum that deep cleans now cleans itself. and let me tell you something, rodeo... i wouldn't be here if i thought reverse mortgages took advantage of any american senior, or worse, that it was some way to take your home.
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you got it! we're petsmart! >> your shot of the morning, the linebacker returning the favor to the children of god who have his back, treating students to a pizza party. posted about it on instagram. >> supported him with their own headband at the nfl find some for wearing his man of god headband. he has raised $60,000. >> drew breeze is also outspoken about his faith. child of god. another child of god, man of god, todd pyro having breakfast
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with friends. >> nothing you say in new york is outrageous as that. three topics. you mentioned the deep-fried blt. in mississippi, the birthplace of elvis. we haven't gotten much into the rally. no better way than to get into the sister act nation. before we get stopped by somebody, what is your nickname? >> bickett and butter and gravy pools it off again. and no joke, people are calling
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to take their act on the road. your inside. what is it like kick you >> magnificent, fabulous. electrifying. i was really -- he was light but you couldn't tell. >> we were there from 11 to when he finished last night and it went by so fast. as long as the line was we may be great. you got goosebumps when it started. >> what was it like? >> for me i will be honest when he started talking about all the people, countries we helped that i did not realize and they pay us nothing and he said we have been helping all these countries and no one has ever paid us to do it. i'm going to start asking for money and i thought that was great. we have so many in the united states starving to death in our veterans need help and we are giving away to other countries. really amazing.
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>> he is on the right track. we want to tell you how glad we are you have been here. thank you for coming. thank you for coming. >> one of the most fun diner segments we ever had. i don't know how it made it past the sensors. back to you in new york. >> and topped it all off. >> taken over -- never seen a diner like that. god bless them. turning to your headlines, firefighters battling another wildfire, it is burning completely out of control at
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this point. protein evacuations and threatening 2000 homes in other buildings. governor gavin newsom threatening to state the utilities company. sparking some of them and imposing mass power outages to prevent other firefighters -- fires from spreading. lori laughlin pleading not guilty to new charges in the college admissions scandal, they were charged with conspiracy to commit federal bribery. they deny other accusations of money laundering and conspiracy. they are accused of a $5000 payment together daughters into usc, a case we are watching closely. the astros loss to the nationals, astros picture garrett cole penned a letter to fans and found he wouldn't return to houston. a local papa john's is making
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their own pitch to keep him. the restaurant tweeted let's we your deal with free papa john's houston pizza for life. it is a nice combo. your local brewery is promising a free beer for life following the world series loss. in the bullpen the last couple hours warming up, warming up. >> he is about to be a free agent and might be the highest paid pitcher, 30 million a year. adam would gladly take free pizza and beer for life. >> reporter: anybody out here take it for life? >> i was really excited about it. some athletes out here, a
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marathon coming up tomorrow. who is in the marathon? three or four people out here the weather is chilly. 50 years old and what is your name? amy, happy birthday to you. a little on the chilly side. let's look at this around 40 °, farther to the west into the 20s. when you get cool temperatures think about winter and you lose an hour of daylight. i love having sound effects but you gain an extra hour of sleep and how does that make us feel? i could keep going on with these sound effects. back to you. >> new york city in the dark like gotham city.
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>> in the morning the lights turn on sooner. >> i like it dark. >> you think you will get more sleep and stay up in our later. >> i can dilute myself or at least today. the president says goodbye big apple come moving his permanent residence down south to florida. it is actually a smart political decision and he explains why coming up. >> millions of dollars in new york. nice. but, uh... what's up with your... partner? not again. limu that's your reflection. only pay for what you need. ♪ liberty, liberty, liberty, liberty ♪
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audrey's on it. eating right? on it! staying active? on it. audrey thinks she's doing all she can to manage her type 2 diabetes and heart disease but is her treatment doing enough to lower her heart risk? [sfx: crash of football players colliding off-camera.] maybe not. jardiance is the number 1 prescribed pill in its class. jardiance can reduce the risk of cardiovascular death for adults who also have known heart disease. that means jardiance can help save your life from a heart attack or stroke. plus, jardiance lowers a1c
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york and they never treated me since i became president they haven't treated i think the office with the kind of respect and i don't mind paying the taxes, new york is an expensive place to live but many bad things are happening in new york. >> donald trump saying see you later to the big apple announcing he is changing his official residence to florida. the president joins 63,000 people who recently left the empire state for the sunshine state preacher to react the chairman and ceo of the peoples corporation, barack obama's national finance committee. what is behind this? he wants to get out of new york. any tax return he filed the state still has. what is behind this? >> he wants to win florida, a must win state for reelection making it his primary residence. i think in a close race that put
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him in better position to win and if you look at florida the last three governors, the last four governors of all been republicans the republicans swept florescence jet bush did two terms followed by charlie crist followed by rick scott and tom desantis. is it more in keeping with him, a swing state, trump is a more moderate republican anyway but overall winning florida has got to be the number one thing on his mind getting reelected. >> you are two time member of barack obama's national finance committee, you wonder what does he think of the president's policies? what is your reaction? >> the problem with democrats is they expect everybody to be clones. i am a business person, an american, i don't care for his style but not everything he is doing is wrong. some of his policies have been effective. we have the lowest unemployment
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in a long time, african-american unemployment since they have been keeping statistics, a very good thing. interest rates are lower which is good for my business, good for people who wants to buy homes, some of these policies are good and some are not. >> what democratic leaders refused to say what you admitted which is low african-american unemployment is good for african-american people and good for the overall economy but democrats want to block him at every turn and not give him credit. >> the democratic party leadership, other democrats feel like i do have taken the view that they will not do business with this president essentially. the issues of the country and the issues of their constituents are on hold pending the outcome of an election and that is not a
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way to run a government or get things done. business people understand you have to do business with people you don't like, i do business with people i don't like every day but we can come to a meeting of the minds and what is in our best interests and that is one of the challenges. i encourage democrats especially congressional black caucus which i was chairman of the congressional black caucus for two years. i encourage them to do some business with trump because he is transactional. you can move the agenda forward for your constituents and that is what your job is to do. that is a mistake they will pay for in this election. >> wise words from someone who understands business, understands the free market economy, you can exchange if you don't agree, i get to the guy want, you get something you want, it can happen. from a business perspective, the number we started the segment with, 60,000 people over the course of the year saying i'm out of here, going to florida. why are they making that move? >> quality-of-life.
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anyone who was here before this current mayor took office can see the diminishment of quality-of-life. i am 59 years old and never seen a city decline as rapidly from the time michael bloomberg left, the six years the current mayor has been in office, quality-of-life, making the city less safe, the inability to deduct state and local income taxes, the absurd cost of living, by the cost of construction and operating a motel. regulations and cost of doing business. i was in a meeting with asian investors. i wouldn't buy a hotel in new york city if they gave it to you for free because most of them are losing money from operations because of cost of doing business. all of those things make people want to leave and they are restrictive and people want to
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leave because of that. >> don peoples was supporting barack obama for a long time. the current environment -- appreciate it. coming up the gnats elevating their first world series when ever and fans are lining up for this parade. the baby shark correspondence live on the parade route next. copd makes it hard to breathe. so, to breathe better, i started once-daily anoro. ♪ go your own way copd tries to say, "go this way." i say, "i'll go my own way" with anoro. ♪ go your own way once-daily anoro contains two medicines called bronchodilators that work together to significantly improve lung function all day and all night. do not use anoro if you have asthma. anoro won't replace rescue inhalers for sudden symptoms and should not be used more than once a day. tell your doctor if you have a heart condition,
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itreat them all as if, they are hot and energized. stay away from any downed wire, call 911 and call pg&e right after so we can both respond out and keep the public safe. >> it's cold outside. ♪ baby it's cold outside ♪ >> dean martin's.indiana promising to keep performing her father's version of baby it's
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cold outside after they revamp the christmas classic. they are changing the lyrics in hopes of changing the song's message and immediately do arab. she loves performing the original hit song and will continue to perform a get with the original x. mariah carey is known for her mike: classic all i need for christmas is you. she is ushering in the christmas season. >> center. >> ho ho ho. >> it's time. >> this video of her going to be addressed as 80s rocker on halloween night before waking up waiting for christmas. she is a legend. >> creative artists.
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>> and and griff jenkins, honoring world series champs just one world series. >> under the thousands of fans lining the streets. >> griff jenkins live where fans are lining up. >> have fun so far. they have been 95 years since the washington post has seen a world series, first time for the nationals. i have an interesting family here. you are from where? >> outside rochester. 6 hours drive. >> there is no yankees thing happening. what is going on? >> my 9-year-old right is the largest national fan in new york, they have been following them for 5 years.
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we are all yankees fans but we are here to support ryan and already gnats fans. >> a converted yankees fan. why the like the next? >> i like the team. >> reporter: did you ever doubt the nationals were going to win? >> know. >> reporter: deal of the baby shark tune? >> yes. >> who is your favorite player? >> sofor. >> reporter: let me show you the signs you've got here, last year you had the stanley cup world champs, the women's nba this year and the gnats. >> i have been a fan from the beginning from spring training to the very beginning and a shirt from the beginning as well all the way.
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>> what was your name? >> ricardo. >> what do you say to yankees fans? >> yankees fans, the city of champions, dc baby ♪ dc baby ♪ >> reporter: last hit i've got for "fox and friends" so how about a little baby shark, we will take you out on a baby shark, here's how it goes. ♪ baby shark ♪ baby shark ♪ >> i will tell you the yankees will never embrace a kids song. >> "fox and friends" coming up. ♪ baby shark [♪] for powerful relief
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>> look at those guys, we actually get along, patriot
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awards first-ever. >> november 6th, don't miss it, there are not many left, streaming live on foxnation live. hope you are still here. neil: nasa's fight facility on the eastern shore where a rocket will take off with supplies for the international space station. there are no astronauts on board but it is a good sign for us space exploration. one of the last men to walk on the moon is encouraged by this and wants to see more american human beings doing this, something else is taking off, jobs, and movements toward impeachment continue rocketing.
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i am neil cavuto and you are watching live. we are all focused on this 12 mission to send supplies to the international space station, northrop grumman is behind it. >> attitude nominal. power nominal. performance nominal, attitude nominal, pressure nominal. power nominal. tbc performance nominal. inter-performance nominal.

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