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tv   FOX and Friends Sunday  FOX News  January 12, 2020 3:00am-7:00am PST

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♪. pete: we're singing a, it is 6:00 a.m. on sunday morning. b, on weekend we like to be d.j. pick songs start of the hour. dean: this was not mine. lisa: claim no ownership over this. ♪.
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pete: this is my peek. it seems great. part of the soundtrack of my life. dean cain. lisa boothe here this morning. lisa: good morning. happy 6:00 a.m. that is good we're here at 6:00 a.m., that is what time the show starts. pete: it is important to be on time. dean: west coast, it is three a.m. lisa: kudos and props anyone watching from the west coast. unless you're getting home from going out. good for you. pete: in the break i will tell you about the time i didn't make it by the 6:00 a.m. show. not today. we're ready to go. there is lots of news to cover it. we begin with a fox news i alert. thousands of iranians take to the street shouting death to the dictator after they admit shooting down a plane.
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dean: rick leventhal in jerusalem with more on the demonstrations. rick? reporter: good morning, pete, dean, lisa. all week iran's top leaders adamantly downed any involvement downing the passenger plane. accusing u.s. rubbing salt in the victims wounds. then an about-face. iran admitted it shot down the 737 with surface-to-air missiles by mistake, killing all 176 passengers and crew on board. thousands took streets to the tehran last night demanding those responsible and put on trial. questioning why the airport was open in the first place with iran on high alert after attacking military bases housing u.s. troops in iraq. there were 52 canadians on board the plane, a dozen ukrainians. the rest iranians. many of them students. the general in charge of the iran aerospace division.
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he said he accepts full responsibility and when he learned of the crash he wished he was dead. president trump tweeted in farsi native language that the government of iran must allow human rates groups to report facts on the ground by iranian people. there not be another massacre of peace pull protesters nor an internet should down. the world is watching. secretary of state mike pompeo said the they are fed up with the world's regime, brutality of the irgc. we stand with the iranian people who deserve a better future. britain is accusing iran of violating international law for arresting its ambassador during iran during the protests. he was detained an hour before he was released. pete, dean, lisa. back to you. pete: thank you very much. they say what started as vigils for the ukrainian flight ultimately turned into anti-government protests.
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you heard chants, death to the dictator, death to liars. soleimani was a murderer. his leader is a murderer, ayatollah khomeni. death to the islamic republic, down with khamenei. the media loved to cover the protests against america. yet these are videos that have to be snuck out of iran because the regime doesn't want you to see it. but a lot of dissatisfaction and trouble at home for the ayatollah. dean: videos snuck out were taken by regular citizens, a little bit by the british ambassador apparently, why he was arrested which is crazy. the thing that no one is talking about i find really interesting. admitting they shot down the airliner. the fact they're not putting down this sort of revolt. one person missing very key if those things that was general
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qassem soleimani. he crushed the protests before. he is not there to crush them now. i think they are really missing that guy. pete: good point. lisa: you said, the chant, i now belief the word of the great satan. iran originally lied, admitted they had done it. iranians don't believe their own government which they didn't before. adds another layer to it. what is important to look at what is going on with iran right now, not only internal pressure they're facing we see with the protesters bravely risking their own lives to protest their own government, something that we can freely do that in the united states. you can't in iran. but also external pressure. dean you mentioned the fact they arrested the british ambassador right? i want to read the quote. there is a quote from the foreign minister, british foreign minister. basically what he talks about, he talks about the fact iran is essentially becoming a pariah. they're insulating themselves to
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such a degree. not only internal pressure they're facing but external pressure. pete: put in place by killing of qassem soleimani and pressure of our sanctions. this stands in stark contrast of june of 2009 when the green revolution happened in iran. the regime was on the brink, barack obama did nothing. in fact he ordered our agencies like the cia and others to stand down, to sever ties with the green movement because he was so obsessed with cutting a bad deal ultimately became a terrible deal with the ayatollah and that regime. he couldn't see past the fact maybe people want something different. this president, tweeting, pushing out we support you fully. you're right, dean, taking out of the hands the ayatollah the tool of qassem soleimani to crush these people. we'll see where this goes next. you can't just put that cat in the bag in iran. the people have seen and heard more of the truth. they know they're being lied to.
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lisa: just think when you see college student in the united states professing wokeness and going and protesting free speech and trying to shut down free speech and speakers on college campus, you look what is happening, more than four universities where this is happening in iran. young people literally risking their lives to exercise their right to free speech literally. they could be murdered by the iranian government which we've seen before. these brave individuals, pray for them, keep them in your prays as they go out there in the streets. that is what bravery looks like. pete: iran's first female olympic medalist, in taiwan dough defected overnight in europe. saying i'm sick of being used as a tool of the regime. i'm out of here. something the world takes a look at. dean: pretty amazing. pete: you're right. dean: let's switch topics real
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quick. investigation into the deadly shooting at a naval air station in pensacola found some saudi servicemembers had ties to extremist groups. now they are expected to be expelled. pete: we remember that attack at pensacola, terrible one, where the shooter posted a manifesto making it clear, his allegiance to radical islamists. well they vowed to do more vetting. who are the saudis here training with us? do we know enough about their background. we learned more about their background. over a dozen have ties to radicalism. here is the quote from department the defense, spokesman lieutenant colonel robert carver. in the wake of the pensacola strategy the department of defense tree stricted to classroom training foreign programs students from saudi arabia while we cubbing a review and enhancement of foreign student vetting procedures. that training pause is still in place while we implement new security screening and security measures. dean: that is terrifying.
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>> that is terrifying, right? not only the individuals in the saudi military. what kind of people do they have serving their military is one question. go, we invited them to the united states. we trained these individuals. they're on the military bases with the brave men and women. there are some concerns. when president trump gets criticized potentially looking increased vetting measures we were told the individuals are vetted. dean: should have been vetted at the highest level if they are going to be takenning at the military bases, yet -- pete: if you can't vet the saudi military guys, coming to train with us, how will you vet the refugees or anybody else you bring in here? the sad truth of this, radicalism is way more mainstream across the middle east than people admit, especially in saudi arabia. so what looks like sort of casual, anti-semitism or casual islamism is more rampant than we think. if you're not checking social media. not looking what the people say, here they are on our shores.
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dean: look right in. pete: email us, friends@foxnews.com. what you do think about the more recent revelation. one guy pulled the tricker in pensacola. turns out over a dozen more sympathetic to the cause. if at novel at least sympathetic. will there be more? email us. at friends@foxnews.com. lisa: a lot of news to cover. turning to the headlines with a fox news alert. 11 people are dead after tornadoes, severe storms sweep across the united states. in louisiana, an elderly couple died after the tornado tossed their mobile home 200 feet. three people killed in alabama, after a twister barreled through pickens county. in texas, two first-responders were killed after hit by a car while responding to a crash on an icy highway. hours away in houston, 60 mile-an-hour wind destroyed a gas station, knocking out power to thousands of people.
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also breaking right now, we're learning about one of the united states soldiers killed in a roadside bomb in afghanistan. city officials in aurora, illinois, say 21-year-old miguel villone, died in the explosion. the second american service member killed in the attack has not been identified just yet. the taliban is taking responsibility for the attack. we pray for their families right now. pete: miguel vialone. name we need to remember. >> thank you for his service. pete: turning to something totally inconsequential, turning to the nfl, tennessee titans pulling a huge upset over baltimore ravens. titans running back, derek henry, making a record, rushing for over 180 yards in three straight games. dean: look at him go. pete: henry even threw a
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touchdown pass. that put them up big time. lisa: here is clap from tennessee fans in the house. pete: if you know your football, it would was supposed to be jackson's year in baltimore, but it is not. dean: i still say lamar jackson wins mvp. pete: he might. i was asleep. in san francisco, my minnesota vikings lost to -- dean: they got pummeled. pete: 27-10. they had one nice deep pass to stephon digs. other than that san francisco was the better team. lisa: are you doing okay? you seem a little down? pete: we didn't deserve to win. dean: houston texans taking on kansas city chiefs, that will be a big one. in lambeau field, seattle seahawks facing the green bay packers on fox. pete: we all --
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dean: rooting for the seahawks. tell you right now. lisa: i'm receipting for no one. i like the redskins. i'm technically wearing -- pete: name one player on the redskins. lisa: oh, crap. no, no this is bad. kirk cousins. pete: no. he is quarterback of vikings. lisa: move on. got to read. dean: is the queen laying down the law? meeting she is scheduled with all the princes to iron out out the megsit mess. ♪. we're carvana, the company who invented
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pete: back with a fox news alert. iranian universities erupt into anti-government protests over the shoot-down of the ukrainian passenger jetliner. what began as a vigil for 16 students when the iran military mistakenly shot down the plane turned into a passionate rally for regime change. here to discuss iran born, human rights axe activist, advisor to the national iranian congress. erica, thank you so much for being here this morning. those protesters risking their lives to talk about the true nature of the regime. what are their prospects for success? why were they out there? >> well, good morning. thank you so much for having me. once again the iranian people are rising to get their voice out to the world that, the
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islamic republic is not a government that represents them and from the chants and slogans that you hear, you know, it is death to dictator and down with this regime and asking khamenei to step down. i think, in the course of the last week since the elimination of qassem soleimani, the iranian people want the world to know that the islamic republic does not represent them. pete: erica, in 2009 there was similar movement, the green revolution. barack obama did very little, the united states did very little to support protesters. what can america and the president do now? >> well last night president trump tweeted out in farsi which has really empowered the iranian people and boosted the morale,
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that the leader of the free world is listening to them and we asked that you continue to stand with us. pete: how can, what's the best way to stand with protesters? amplify that message? how do you move to the next step of actually getting rid of the ayatollah and changing this regime? >> well, that is a very complicated question but i think that, if the international community continues and all media outlets continue to give a voice to the iranian people, you know, the iranian people are not asking for war. the iranian people are not asking for the united states to topple the regime. nobody supports war. i don't support war. neither do the people that are in the streets. you know, when the government of iran knows that they are weak at home, and it is, the right of the people to replace this
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regime and you know, some of the slogans that the protesters have been saying is, constitution, constitution, referendum, referendum, they are the slogans are pretty obvious. [speaking farsi] which means, 40 years of crimes, death to this regime. the it is pretty clear the iranian people want to replace their government. pete: absolutely. refreshing to hear, not "death to america," but down with that regime. we wish them the best on streets of iran today. thank you so much for your time. >> thank you so much for having me. pete: god bless. coming up a suspected serial laughing all the way to the bank. the reason? new york's lax bail laws. we'll discuss it next. ♪.
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♪. dean: some quick headlines. "judge judy" targeting far left democrats as she hits the campaign trail with democratic candidate mike bloomberg. >> it's a young country, therefore doesn't need a revolution and those that are touting revolution in this country are wrong. this is not a time for, as my australian friends say, all talk, no trousers. dean: the tv judge endorsed bloomberg before even entered the race. rudy giuliani said the supreme court should dismiss the impeachment trial against president trump. >> the rules are set by the senate. >> right. >> then, the chief justice,
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interprets the rules. >> okay. >> the chief justice will be given the power to dismiss. the chief justice, it will be dealt with like a trial. dean: giuliani adding he believes president trump would be acquitted if the senate trial moves forward. pete? pete: suspected serial robber, laughing all the way to the bank thank to new york's new bail reform law. he was freed on bail after police say he held up four banks in less than two weeks. he got out of jail, and then he robbed another bank. lisa: you heard that, right. the suspected robber's grand larceny charges are non-violent felonies. under the new law, that means he can't be held for jail pending trial, no matter how many times he strikes. dean: here to weigh in new york state general assembly women, nicole. we had you on before. here is the headline in the "new york post." wow. >> first thing he said when he
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got out, i can't believe they let me out. what were they thinking? that is the quote in the paper. lisa: incredible. pete: i rob four banks, arrest me, i rob another bank. doesn't make sense as a criminal. >> doesn't make sense to the criminal. what people around the country need to take note. this is what happens when you have one party democratic rule, you're trying to aim to be the most progressive or regressive state in the nation. not just the state legislature that voted this in, governor cuomo, our local lawmakers, city council, the mayor want to close reich is island. they support this because they want to empty out of jails. federal lawmakers, court court, my opponent, congressman max rose snorted both those policies, bail reform and closing rikers. what if this is taken to the federal level? this could be disasterous here in new york. lisa: governor cuomo said he might be looking at changes or saying there might need to be
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changes to the bill reform law. one an indictment of this law, democrats law in the first place and second what do you anticipate for those changes? >> look the thing is, we had socialist democrats, left-wing of the legislature and then you have the moderate democrats. they're fighting right now. some of those moderates are joining us saying yes, this goes too far. we need to change it. they're getting a lot of pushback from the left-wing members of the legislature. no one is taking a real solid stance, saying we need to change it. the governor should show leadership here. he should halt the law. allow us to do public hearings, law enforcement. the d.a. association is against it. we need to know why. we can then craft a good bill, considers dangerousness, considers criminal history, returns judicial discretion, protect witnesses. this bill does not protect witnesses. this will lead to witness intimidation. pete: the bill went into the effect first of the year. we're starting to see it in reality. what the is biggest defense for the left-wingers that defend the
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bill? when they see something like this on the cover, how do they defend the reality. >> i don't know how they defend it. nothing they say so far makes any sense. pete: why do they want to let the guy out? there has to be a rationale? >> the idea no one should be kept in jail unless they're guilty. some cases you have confessed people, somebody in albany, was released january 1st, held since july he confessed to manslaughter, a homicide charge. he was released because the bail law didn't take into effect some of these serious crimes. manslaughter, homicide, aggravated assault, strangulation, every type of drug dealing except for human, accept for heavy trafficking, all released with no bail. lisa: look at the cover of "the new york post." there have been a lot of articles critical of this law. how big after political liability do you think it will be for democrats that voted for isn't. >> in new york it is hard, people will vote down the party line. they flip the state senate in 2018.
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i think that was a big mistake for the people of new york. now we have no balance. one party rule down the line. i think that this, there will be consequences, not just for the state legislators who voted for this, but people like my opponent max rose, who led support and gave governor cuomo political cover to pass this. pete: nicole, thank you very much. sos, as they say. a man rescued, rescued after being stuck in alaska's subzero temperatures for three weeks! how he managed to stay alive. could you? we'll answer that. dean: i couldn't. lisa: i don't think i could. definitely not. dean: that's rough. hey! my focus is on the road, and that's saving me cash with drivewise. who's the dummy now? whoof! whoof! so get allstate where good drivers save 40%
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>> name popeye's favorite food? >> chicken. pete: wrong answer, but it was a great answer. remember the woman on family feud, she lost $10,000 after confusing popeye's, sailor man, with popeye's chicken. lisa: taking in stride. now the fast-food chain, giving her a prize. popeye's tweeting in part, survey says you got it right. message us to claim your $10,000 worth of a popeye's. that is a lot of popeye's. i don't know if i need that much. pete: the correct answer was
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spinach. the question was phrased in a confusing way. dean: you're so young, you young people. pete: favorite food of popeye's? have you watched tv? the commercials are out there. lisa: she got a lot of, she got a lot of, $10,000 worth of chicken. dean: $10,000's worth of popeye. pete: give yourself a little bit of time. peter morici, international trade commission, university of maryland professor. what do you think about the losing on game show, win in popeye's chicken? >> i would rather have the money. i think it was terribly unfair what happened to the woman. great dispute at school, i gave you a valid answer. just because you're old and didn't understand it is not my problem. pete: as economist of course you want the money. that is how it always works. >> nothing is more important than money, to an economist. not love, life, death.
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that is what we are what we are. pete: speaking of widgets and trade deals, the first phase is expected to come this week. how will it affect the widgets we trade with kind, what do we look for the first phase of the trade deal? >> there is short ofage agricultural exports and shortage of a lot of stuff. we should send them a lot of manufacturing products. the economy will take a shot in the first quarter because of boeing production shutdown. we started to see it in the december jobs report. this could give the economy an antidote for that. the question for mr. trump, whether the antidote comes soon enough. i was in the white house the other day, i posed that question, does it come soon enough for the fall election? lisa: peter, one issue comes up between the united states and china, is enforcement. are there any enforcement mechanisms in the first phase of
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the deal? >> we haven't seen a lot of the deal. supposedly we can snap back tariffs, that we can snap back the tariffs. that is tough. suppose chinese buy agricultural products but lackadaisical about the other stuff? if we snap back the tariffs, farmers bet it in their head they stop buying agricultural products, will that happen, june, julys august, when people make up their mind about november? i don't know how enforceable the deal is the next nine months. pete: truly phase one, in hopes it goes well, maybe there is phase two of more meaningful stuff? you don't sound optimistic about that? >> phase two, they decided to reignite, recreate the dialogue, obama bush people had with china for phase two. the strategic dialogue. it's a talk a shown. they put secretary mnuchin in charge. he got whatever he wants. when we talk to the chinese, there is always something for financial services i don't know they really care over at the treasury department about
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high-tech. or they care about manufacturing all that much. wall street, as long as they're making deals they're happy. my feeling is, the deal-makers have gotten a hold of this agenda. i'm a little skeptical what comes next. dean: switching topics real quick, 2020 democrat pete buttigieg is out with a one trillion dollar infrastructure plan to save the planet. here is what he said. >> we're talking about where a new project will be sited or the jobs we'll create with the infrastructure plan, make sure we're focusing on those who were excluded, whether racial, economic or regional exclusion. that we're doing something about that, proactively in our infrastructure agenda. dean: does that make any sense? save the economy, help the economy, kill the economy? >> we could use a package to renew the roads and rails, so forth. that reminds me of the obama years. remember mr. obama, with the high-speed rail and green buildings and all that? in the end the stimulus money
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didn't get out because the bureaucrats are spending too much time reviewing what people wanted to do. "cash for clunkers." the problem with democrats they take a problem that is real and substantial, like health care costs or infrastructure and then they want to use it for a trojan horse socialism. that is what this is about. pete buttigieg is not a moderate. bloomberg, "wall street journal," so forth, mainstream media are telling you he is a moderate, to brand him and sell him to you, they realize they can't get elizabeth warren or bernie sanders in. they're very worried about biden's energy level. they think this is the ticket. this guy is really a trojan horse for socialism in america. he is as dangerous as bill clinton, perhaps worse. lisa: wow. peter morici. pete: you're totally right. lisa: thank you so much for being here. have a great day. >> have a good day. enjoy the playoffs. lisa: thank you, sir. now turning to your headlines, a
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man waving his arms for help as a police helicopter flies over his makeshift shelter in the alaskan wilderness. tyson steele surviving in the bitter cold more than 20 days after his cabin burned down. he drew a giant sos sign in the snow in hopes of being found. steele mistakenly put cardboard in his wood stove last month, catching his cabin on fire. he was able to make a shelter where he stayed until his rescue. crazy story. the royal palace in crisis mode. the queen will reportedly host a private sit-down tomorrow with princes harry and william and their father rinse cars. they are expected to discuss, megan and harry's role as the couple steps down from royal duties. megan will join the meeting over the phone. is i put my arm around my brother all our lives. i can't do that anymore. all we can do, all i can do is
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try to support them. wow. pete. pete: thank you. the internet going wild over this egcellent way to peel the hard boiled eguche. the video shows someone putting egg in a glass, with water it, spinning it around before under water, sliding off the shell with ease. commentators who tried it having mixed reaction with one major egception. this person found an egg inside of their egg? how is that possible? that is matrix stuff. the other blasted person in the video for leaving sink on six second video. we will lose the planet. as we like to do on "fox & friends," we figure rather than watching it, might as well try it. we have all the necessary ingredients. we have hard boiled eggs. we got the water. all you need. >> throw it in here, cover it
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up, shake it. i only know what i saw on the six second internet video. i think might work. dean: i'm calling disaster. lisa: no, no. oh, god. it is everywhere. pete: only did it for a couple seconds. lisa: i made a mess. what do you do? no. pete: didn't slide off. dean: wait, wait. pete: adam's is really nice. lisa: this is going everywhere. pete: adam proved the concept. lisa: my hands are not big enough. dean: mine pretty much works, it was a little slow. lisa: you guys have bigger hands. pete: definitely peels off. look at that. dean: i have too much water. and lisa, you have small hands. it actually worked. i'm hungry. lisa: i can't.
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pete: good breakfast. part is not just the water, you shake it around, you crack the shell a little bit. lisa: dodo it the old-fashioned way. >> softens it. then cracks. pete: doesn't slide off nicely as does on the video. but it comes off. i will say it works. dean: leaked facebook memo warning social network employees not to use the platform to influence the 2020 election. caylee mcenany and jessica tarlov weighs in on the message and concern about facebook's influence while we have brake -- breakfast. ♪
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♪. lisa: a leaked memo published by "the new york times," a facebook executive warns employees against tilting the scales against trump ahead of the 2020 election. andrew bosworth who was head of advertising at facebook during the 2016 election, posting on the company's internal page in part, saying as tempting as it is to use the tools available to us to change the outcome i'm confident we must never do that, we will become that which we fear. but are facebook's ad policies the reason trump won in 2016? here to debate it is trump 2020 campaign national press secretary kayleigh mcenany and fox news, jessica tarlov. >> good morning. i. lisa: lisa: i want to tweet the comment. i have a question for you, jess. andrew bosworth said, was facebook responsible for getting donald trump elected? i think the answer is yes. he didn't get elected because of russia or misinformation or
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cambridge analytical. he got elected he ran the single best visual ad campaign i have seen from any advertise are period. jess, we're at a time democrats are calling for facebook to essentially censor the political ads they put up. is this why? >> i don't think they're asking them to sensor the political ads but be truth check. there was response to nancy pelosi video. the facebook said put a little sign, there are complaint about this ad, you can learn more isn't adequate. andrew bosworth that trump campaign used facebook to the best of their ability, a central factor they won, not because of russian disinformation, there were only $100,000 worth of ads tied to russian troll bots in the 2016 this is more of a conversation than who used
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facebook well. there is that thud have truthful information out. kayleigh woe agree with me with we want the most truthful information out there. lisa: is this pressure on facebook or something more. >> if we can't beat them, we will change the rules of the game. that is exactly what this is. donald trump ran one of the greatest political campaigns in modern history. brad parscale ran the most effective digital advertising campaign that we've ever seen in the history of electoral politics. so because they can't beat the president's message, and the prowess of brad parscale, what they're doing is saying, let's ban all political advertising. this is what they do, but i think most of america agrees with me saying we don't want big tech, want the massive companies censoring speech deciding what is acceptable and what is not. the google fact checker i would note, tend to only fact check conservative sites.
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that is what happens. we're not going to allow that to happen. facebook made a good decision not banning political ads. lisa: do we need to make a change to federal law? most networks broadcast any ad given to them. >> enlen weintraub who runs fcc. she spoke out against the decision facebook made. mark zuckerberg getting testimony they have accepted responsibility. lisa: would you have same mentality on facebook if it was run by a bunch of trump supporters? >> i think so. really this has nothing to do with the political leanings of anything. by the way, mark zuckerberg has been hosting conservative dinners. jack dorsey has been in meeting with president trump who was upset about the losses in his follower account. the big tech industry has been catering to the conservative agenda. when i hear that we're only ones being censored look at top site promoted.
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sites like fox news there. this is ridiculous argument f we can't have a smart honest, discussion what is going on with big tech. we'll not get anywhere. and 2020 is fast approaching. >> kayleigh, are they catering to the right? >> that is news to me. news to many of our voters who routinely complain and give examples of censorship. news to live action a pro-life group who was censored on facebook. even mark zuckerberg admitting that in fact there was bias in that decision. google executive finally saying or engineer saying, that you know google seeks to change the course of the 2020 election against donald trump. that employees there want to do that. we have lots of evidence, documented evidence of bias. they are certainly not catering to conservatives. >> thank you both. have a good day. comedian ricky jer vase panned by -- gervais panned by the media after takedown of elites at the golden globes.
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the new message he is sending. comedian michael lost tis is next -- loftis is next. legacybox is simple and safe, with over half a million satisfied customers. visit legacybox.com today, and get 40% off. with truecar, to sell just enter your license plate and see your car's value in real time. sports package and low mileage? nice. within minutes, you'll have a true cash offer, and you can head to a dealership and get paid, today, right now. (sensethe lack of control when iover my businessai, made me a little intense.
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♪. dean: remember comedian ricky gervais got a lot of attention going after hollywood in his golden globes monologue? he is defending himself against critics accepting conservative fans after the speech. tweeting, if you don't believe in free speech for people you don't agree with and hate what they stand for, you don't believe in free speech. pete: here is the michael lotis.
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>> yes. pete: he is new fans on twitter. >> everyone i know on the right, tweeted a version of that speech. defending free speech. ricky gervais does it as a liberal, it is supposedly shocking. the last of a dying breed, the sane liberal. understanding he can have the balance. like, a bear riding the bike. used to see it all the times in the '50s, '60s, now it is rare. is that a bear riding a bike? no, that is sane liberal like ricky gervais. dean: old days, don rickles, dean martin roast, made fun of themselves, that reminded me of that, if you're not targeting yourself, other people will be laughing at you, whatever. they have new hosts. ricky will not be doing it. i'm heartbroken personally. >> it will not be the same. we'll not have the wonderful,
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wonderful moment. liberals love, speaking truth to power, until ricky gervais shows up at the golden globes, starts speaking truth to power. don't look directly at the blast. it was fantastic. >> will he see financial impact as a result of things he said? >> i don't think so. he has incredibly popular tour going on. he also has a deal already in place at netflix. he has that kind of, he has wonderful, wonderful position now, where they can't hurt him. he is untouchable. next year, it will be tina fey and amy pohler. they will be nicer. they still have development deals and things they have to work on. you know -- lisa: very cushy with hollywood? >> yeah, they are in there. dean: not going to watch next year, then? >> no. you had to be losing is man. being in the business, being in the meetings, biting your tongue, nod and agree, have
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gervais, pop, pop, pop, pop, fantastic. dean: brilliant. it was brilliant. lisa: thanks, michael. we have to move on. pete: coming up a controversial new idea from dr. oz. don't eat breakfast. lisa: what? pete: i already failed. repay y? maybe you could free zoltar? thanks, lady. taxi! only pay for what you need. ♪ liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty. ♪
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with esri location technology, you can see what others can't. ♪ ♪ ♪ if. ♪ lisa: are you rocking in. dean: this was my song -- i saw them live in 1976. i know you're looking like that because you weren't alive, and that's just not right. but kiss was a big deal. lisa: i know! i just woke up -- pete: we play deejay on the weekends at the beginning of the hour -- [laughter] kiss, 1977, that was like their
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heyday. dean: that was my first concert. lisa: how was it? dean: it was amazing. i didn't know there were encores. they came back out -- lisa: and if you don't know, now you know. pete: you don't know, now you know. dean: rock and roll all day, party every night. that was my 1977. pete: it's been your life. dean: i don't do that anymore. [laughter] pete: we're glad you're here. we've got three more hours of news and some fun as well. dean: let's move straight to a fox news alert. thousands of iranians taking to the streets after the regime admits to shooting down a ukrainian passenger plane. pete: yeah, took 'em awhile. they had to admit it. president trump calling them brave. lisa: rick leventhal is live in jerusalem with more of the details on the demonstrations. rick. >> reporter: and this, my first concert was also kiss at
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the capital center in landover, maryland, in 1974, okay? so i think i win. [laughter] pete: there you go. lisa: there's some camaraderie about this. pete: much older than me. >> reporter: so as you said, after days of denial in iran, finally admitting it shot down that plane, sparking massive demonstrations in the streets. thousands protesting against the iranian government in tehran last night. chanting, among other things, "death to the dictator," demanding those responsible be fired and put on trial prompting a tweet from secretary of state mike pompeo who wrote: the voice of the iranian people is clear, they are fed up with the regime's lies, corruption, ineptitude and brutality. we stand with the iranian people who deserve a better future. president trump also tweeting support for the demonstrators writing among other things: there cannot be another massacre of peaceful protesters, nor an
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internet shutdown. the world is watching. of iran was on high alert for retaliation when it shot down that 737 wednesday, just hours after firing 16 ballistic missiles after military bases housing u.s. troops in iran, payback, iran said, for america's targeted killing of iran's top general a week ago friday. and it's still blaming the u.s. in part. >> translator: this is the from the mischief and actions of the u.s. in the region. really that night we were ready for a full scale conflict. >> reporter: the british foreign secretary also releasing a statement saying the iranian government is at a crossroads moment it can continue its march towards pariah status with all the political and economic isolation that entails or take steps to deescalate tensions and engage in a diplomatic path forwards. britain also wants an apology after its ambassador was
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detained for an hour during those protests in tehran overnight, accusing iran of violating international law. pete, dean and lisa? dean: rick, real quickly, what is the feeling in israel about what's going on there? they're pretty much target number one. >> reporter: yeah. they were -- there's definitely tension here. in the first days we arrived, shortly after all this started, but things have settled down here a bit. i think they're a little less worried about retaliation from iran, but they know that this isn't over yet, that the tensions and butting of heads will continue for quite some time. pete: rick, thank you very much. great question, dean. it is front and center for israel, how iran responds. dean: all the time. pete: and the fact that they thought a full-out attack was possibly coming shows you how worried iran is and how inexempt if, frankly. -- incompetent, exactly. they tried to lie about it for
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almost a week until they're called out by actual intelligence that proves they shot it down. now they have to admit it, which is tough for a regime that lives and thrives on propaganda. your people say you were telling me one thing, now you're telling me another. lisa: think how weak iran is right now. as you see these protesters on your screen who are out there despite the fact they could face death, protesting this e regime, their government. you also have the external pressure. arresting the british ambassador, and then you see that strong statement that rick had shown from the foreign minister saying that iran's basically becoming a pariah. qassem soleimani has been taken out, his reign of terror is now over. think about this place of weakness iran is. the clock is ticking as the united states puts further
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sanctions on them, so they're really in a place of weakness at a time where we might try to negotiate with them. dean: this is a different protest because the person who crushed the last protest was qassem soleimani, and he's not there. pete: great point. death to the dictator, death to the liar, soleimani was a murderer, his leader is also a murderer, that's a reference to ayatollah khamenei. we had a middle east activist on our program earlier. he knows about these protests and why they're doing it. here's what she had to say. >> from the chants and the slogans that you hear, you know, it's death to dictator and down with this regime and asking khamenei to step down. the iranian people want the world to know that the islamic republic does not represent them. i think it's pretty clear that the iranian people want to replace their government.
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pete: the president also tweeting overnight in farsi that he supports these protesters very much, unlike the obama administration in 2009. but as these protesters literally, as he said, put their lives on the line. dean: yeah. that's real bravery, real protest. pete: as they do that while members of congress are debating the finer points of whether or not killing qassem qassem soleis truly imminent, because the administration has now gone to capitol hill to present the information and intelligence, give a briefing about what the information was behind killing soleimani. well, you're getting different reactions one of which, predictably, is from adam schiff. now, he got that intel brief, and here's what he tweeted afterwards. he said i've been a member of the intel committee for over a decade, been briefed hundreds of times on threats. when targeting a top government official for killing, we don't know precisely when and we don't know precisely where does not
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constitute imminent. so according to adam schiff, the killing of qassem soleimani -- lisa: well, and senator ted cruz has a little different opinion on this. he says this, he says i was in the classified briefing too. credible intel that soleimani was actively planning multiple deadly attacks against u.s. servicemen and civilians in the coming days, that's pretty damn imminent. the democrats are the masters of the shiny object. we see this with the russia information too, right? when collusion kind of died off, oh, then it's obstruction of justice. don't look over here, look over here. and if you look over here, what president trump did was take out a terrorist, right? who has claimed the lives of hundreds of american, who was the puppet master of all this disaster across the middle east, as you pointed out. a guy who was behind the russian embassy, behind killing an
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american contractor. so you've got this terrible guy, president trump takes him out. what do democrats do? instead of saying thank god a terrorist is dead, they say, oh, it wasn't imminent. or he's a general, he's not a terrorist. president he's a government official. -- lisa: why not say a terrorist is dead, it's a good thing for america. of dean dean that's exactly what he should do schiff, just from the language, a top government official? lisa: what is that about? dean: i would refer to him as a terrorist, as we've been doing for over a decade. pete: yeah. democrats have lost their mind. if you look at the quote from adam schiff, we don't the know precisely when or where, if you know anything about intelligence, often you don't. [laughter] but you often don't know when you're going to see qassem soleimani again or know where he is. think about schiff, how dumb he is. if you're the intel committee chair, you know that about intelligence. imminent could be days, weeks, months, you don't always get a
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chance to shoot at the guy who you know is planning something somewhere in the near future. that counts as iminnocence. he just knows better. he knows how much he hates trump. he's just got to make this look bad somehow. lisa: does it even matter, right? if there's something imminent coming up, one, look at what happened the other day, look at the american contractor that lost his life, that's enough right there. but then you look at the fact we know he's responsible for hundreds -- pete: yeah. his track record is well known. lisa: if it's tomorrow, if it's next week, if it's a month, it doesn't matter. if he's done all these terrible things, take the guy out when you have the window of opportunity. dean: taking out terrorists was done i by the previous administration if a lot, a lot, a lot. we're in new york, and we have this whole situation with the no bail, laughing all the way to bank. so this guy, he was arrested for, what, three or four bank
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robberies, and then he gets out on no bail and robs another bank. pete: yeah. there's a new bail law that was passed the first of the year. you commit all these crimes, you don't stay in jail as you're awaiting your day in court, and the most recent example, we'll talk about it more, but this guy robbed four banks, he gets arrested, he gets released, and then he robs another bank. and what he says is i can't believe they let me out. even the criminals look at the new bail reform laws in new york and say it doesn't make any sense. lisa: and the nypd deputy commissioner, benjamin tucker -- oh, we've lost it. he probably was critical. [laughter] here's what he said, another unfortunate example of what we're nation under the bail reform law, certain individuals need to remain in jail for the safety of our city. judges must have discretion to make that happen. i think most reasonable-minded people -- pete: e-mail us, friends@foxnews.com, what do you think about the new bail law,
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how crazy is it. a few additional headlines, a manhunt underway for the gunman who wounded five people. police saying the shooting happened at a party last night in aurora, colorado. three of the victims are children. all are expected to survive. no word yet on a motive for the shooting. and an attempted kidnapping caught on camera in california. a homeless man is accused of trying to take a little girl away from we her mother at a restaurant. the girl's father and uncle holding the man down until police arrive to arrest him. and dr. oz's new medical advice, don't eat breakfast? saying the most important meal of the day is a marketing sham. he suggests waiting until you're actually hungry, which is usually the morning time -- [laughter] and eating brunch instead. studies are divided on the benefits of breakfast with some saying it has no impact on your body weight, others say skipping
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it could increase your risk for heart disease. dr. oz joins us tomorrow live on "fox & friends" to talk about it. those your headlines. that'll spark some debate. lisa: that certainly will. looking forward to watching that. we're also watching this, the democratic party facing backlash from its base all because the next debate features only white candidates. dean: but shouldn't the focus be on their policies? fox nation host david webb is here to react. [laughter] ♪ ♪ we're carvana, the company who invented
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of transparent, inclusive rules. it's for the voters to decide. voters are getting called, and they're making their preference felt. so if you want to make sure that a candidate of color makes the debate stage, when a pollster calls you, make sure you make that preference felt because that is how you move the polling needle. lisa: dnc chairman tom perez pushing back against criticism over this week's democratic debate. dean: the event angering party activists who say the all-white line-up threatens to weaken the party's call for diversity and inclusivity. pete: here to react, fox news contributor, david webb. tom perez's advice, when you're answering pollsters, think about race. >> that's what you're supposed to do. this is liberal ideology that meets reality. here's their reality check, it doesn't work. it's not republicans or even independents making the decisions in these polls.
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they're polling democrats, and democrats have decided who they want on that stage. so they're not meeting their own reality, they're not meeting reality. their ideology is gnawed, and this -- flawed, and this is the problem with them. and the democrats are going to lose because of this. americans don't sit there and go let me look at your color first, they go let me look at your politics and policies. lisa, you done a lot of campaigns, when you're that middle class person, your incomes are up almost $6,000 on average overall, labor participation rate, 62%, unemployment lower than it's been in 50 years, historic lows, markets going up, flowing downwards to main street, why would you give that up for a guy who says i'm going to tax you? lisa: well, somehow the implication from the left that if there's only white candidates on on the stage, it's racist, what does that say about democratic primary voters?
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>> i guess if you use tom perez's logic, democrats are racist. lisa: obviously, we don't think that's the case, but if that's the ground that you're setting -- >> the problem is liberal stupidity. they set the stage, they live in the hypocrisy of the moment. what matters now doesn't matter tomorrow morning. pete: well, there is one candidate who seems to be getting a great deal of support amongst the black community x that's joe biden. when you look at the recent poll of 2020 presidential candidates among democratic-leaning black voters, biden gets almost 50%. pete buttigieg, zero. just kidding, i made that up. [laughter] well, he's not on there, so maybe he is zero. that number for biden, what do you think of that? >> it's flawed. they're polling widely for biden in south carolina, arguably one of the weakest candidates i've ever seen in his appeal, his
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personal appeal, his political appeal. so so they're polling very tightly when you look at it to get him -- lisa: david, why is he registering so high with african-americans? >> he really isn't. if you poll tightly enough, you can come up with that result. when you look at the real clear politics average of polling, i like to look at that tracking and that trend over time, these candidates are all within range of each other. the biden breakout's not going to happen, and you know the guy who's sitting around? it's michael bloomberg. lisa: all right. >> you will see the democratic primary flush out. warren and sanders eventually have to take each other out. i think warren takes. that sanders gets angry, his supporters, do you think they're going to go to warren? i don't think so. lisa: watch fox nation for david webb. >> i'll be there. pete: thanks for being here. all right. well, it's not a bird -- [laughter] it's not a plane and, no, it's not -- [laughter]
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what the navy just revealed about this ufo encounter. lisa: that's cute. ♪ ♪ theraflu dissolves in seconds, so it's ready to work before your first sip, and absorbs quickly to target and attack 8 cold and flu symptoms fast. try theraflu. $12.99 all you can eat ♪ now with boneless wings. only at applebee's. ( ♪ ) hey there! i'm lonnie from lonnie's lumber. if you need lumber wood, lonnie's is better than good. we got oak, cherry, walnut, and more. and we also have the best selection of plywood (clattering) in the state... hey! (high-pitched laughter) man: dang woodchucks! (wood clattering) stop chuckin' that wood!
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lisa: back with a fox news alert, australian prime minister scott morrison announcing a multimillion dollar plan as the country battles raging wildfires. 28 people have died, 5 of them firefighters. former "fox & friends" co-host anna kooiman live with more on the prime minister's plan. of anna? >> well, hello, lisa. hello to everyone at home. this is australia's war, that's what you'll hear australians saying about the ongoing fire crisis across the country. now, we did hear from the
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embattled prime minister, scott morrison, today who says that he could have personally handled this crisis a lot better and also addressed climate change. as you mentioned at the top, he did announce a mental health care plan to help address ptsd. >> there has been a deep scar in the landscape that has been left right across our country. but i am also very mindful as it's begun of the very real scars that will be there for quite a period of time to come for those who have been exposed to the trauma of these bush fires. >> a half billion animals are estimated to have died so far and the land left unscorched is still parched from a three-year drought. they've started doing food drops, carrots and sweet potatoes, for endangered animals. >> we're worried that many species could become extinct. we've got fragile populations that have been facing drought, and now, of course, having faced
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the devastating fire. >> residents living in the fire danger zones are sick and tired of the ongoing evacuations. >> i just want it over and done with. i don't want the weather to change next weak and all of a sudden it's still a threat, right? so you've got to go through all that crap again. you know, if it came through, then we'll just go behind and hold up, save -- mop up, save what we can. that will be it. we're done with it. finished. but now, no. >> today in sydney we reportedly again woke up with air quality at the hazardous level. air quality has been a major concern across the country even in the cities where the fires are not burning. very often there are days when pools and tennis courts are closed because health care professionals are urging residents to stay inside, lisa.
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lisa: thank, anna. we're praying for everyone in australia. >> thank you. pete: all right. thank you, lisa. it's not a bird, it's not a plane, it's not my man flying in the skies as superman. dean: no. the navy possessing secret, unreleased surveillance from the famous incident, it's been circulating online for more than a decade. pete: but more information remains classified. so what does this all mean? if joining us now to discuss is nick pope, a ufo investigators who previously ran the british government's ufo project. so we're now learning, sir, that navy intelligence, there's more classified video, maybe it's additional video from the same encounter. what more do we know, and what does it tell us? >> well, this is a huge development. the navy still says that these objects remain unidentified. but previously they said the
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videos were unclassified. now we know, as you say, that there is a classified video. out probably contains more telemetry data that might just help answer things, telling us how fast it is, how big it is, and that would enable us perhaps to really get a handle on what we're dealing with here. dean: my uncle was actually an an f-15 pilot in the u.s. air force, and he very much believed he saw some strange things in the skies. i guess last year there were over 6,000 ufo sightings in the u.s. and canada. obviously, this is a big, big deal. how seriously should we take it? >> very seriously. in parallel with this revelation from the office of naval intelligence comes a revelation that they have top secret briefing slides on this incident. now, they're refusing to release that, of course, because that's
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information that would cause exceptionally grave damage to the united states. but this has been discussed in the senate intelligence committee and in the senate armed services committee, and that that may be what these briefing slides relate to. pete: chet underwood, he was the pilot who shot this video, you know, he's reacting to this as well from december. he said the thing that stood out to me the most was how erratic it was behaving, its changes in altitude, air speed and aspects were just unlike what i've encountered before i. wasn't behaving within the normal laws of physics. so if our government knows something we don't, will there ever be a point at which they're compelled to reveal that? >> well, i think at some stage they'll have to. the pressure from the, from congress, from the media, from the public, the pressure for answers about this is, i think,
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unstoppable. and maybe some of those senators who have had those classified briefings without bringing classified information into the public domain, perhaps they could give a sense of what we're looking at here. because the theories are, you know, is this our own test, is it russia, is it china or is it something else, maybe even something extraterrestrial. that has not been ruled out so far as i understand. dean: we've got to remind everybody, this was from 2004. it's now 2020, how long would it take to get real information? who knows. nick pope, author of "open skies, closed minds," thank you so much for your time. pete: thank you, sir. appreciate it. dean: all right. it's the battle royale, meghan markle and prince harry leaving the royal family? now the queen calling a meeting. pete: predicting the mexit crisis will only get worse.
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usually it's brexit, today it's mexit. nigel farage, friend of the show, joins us next. ♪ ♪
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♪ ♪ pete: there's a battle royale
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brewing in the royal family. dean: prince harry and mercken heart attacking's -- meghan markle. lisa: as queen reportedly calls an emergency family meeting with the two brothers and their father, prince charles, for tomorrow. so is brexit officially on the way? pete: no, mexit. lisa: oh, my god! and i just said i'm here for this. pete: getting ahead of ourself. former u.k. independence party leader nigel farage joining us now. you cover all ends of the spectrum for us. today you're our cultural correspondent. [laughter] >> yes. pete: help us understand mexit. what's happening to the royals here? >> well, it's a very serious crisis. i mean, the royal family's had its ups and downs. of course, the horrendous death of diana 20 years ago was awful, but in terms of constitutional position, we're potentially
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facing the worst crisis since the abdication of edward the viii in 1936, and everyone that's watched the crown will remember those episodes very clearly. [laughter] what we've got here is prince harry who, of course, married meghan markle just 20 months ago, and it was a fairy tale wedding at windsor. fox news covered it very heavily, i remember that well. they were treated like rock tar royalty. rock star royalty. but it's all gone wrong. it's gone wrong because megyn markel has become quite political, not something we expect from the royal family, lecturing us on climate change and then getting into private gents all over the world. they started to tell us how unhappy they are. and basically, without telling the queen -- and isn't this important -- the queen has always stood by her grandson march i through the traumatic death of his mother and in the
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ensuing years. and without telling the queen who's been on our throne since 1952, they put out a press statement last week saying they are effectively retiring as full-time members of the royal family. deeply disrespectful to our queen. and here is the dilemma: they're called hrh, his and her royal highnesses. lisa: yeah. >> they have, they have at windsor very close to where they were married a very nice house provided to them by the country. they have income provided to them by prince charles but effectively from the country. you can't take all those things plus the security that goes with it and at the same time announce you're going to spend most of your life out on vancouver island or in los angeles, set up a foundation like the clintons and start to make your own
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money. they've got to make a decision, it seems to me. and the queen has called this showdown tomorrow. and e i think prince harry -- lisa: prince william has said i put my arm around my brother all our lives, and i can't do that anymore. all we can do and all i can do is try and support them. so, nigel, what's the broader impact for the monarchy? >> well, i mean, clearly william -- after, the queen, of course, when the queen is no longer with us and she approaches her 94th birthday in good health, i'm pleased to say. of course, it's prince charles after that, it's william after that. so in terms of succession to the monarchy, you know, harry is now down at number seven. and so, you know, he's not going to be the king of england. but the thought that these two brothers who'd been so close have now fallen apart, both of
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their wives haven't even spoken for six months, you know, all of us in our lives have seen somebody marries into a family, it doesn't go well, it leads to a family split. the difference is this is happening to one of the most public families in the world, and i think what is happening is very sad. i think the way the queen has been insulted is even worse. and it's, yeah. it's not good for our country. dean: nigel, one other question about this. there's a cnn headline, there's a lot of media headlines speculating on some of the reasons, and some of them say it's a racial issue. the guardian saying harry and meghan were meant to embody post racial britain. so much for that. "newsweek" saying meghan markle being a black woman in the royal family was never going to work. does this have anything to do with race? >> this is absolute rub everybody. because meghan, who is an outright supporter of hillary
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and of the obamas and takes quite a left-wing position on many issues, because of that her friends on the left in media refuse to believe she has done anything wrong, and they point the finger at racism. no doubt they'll point the finger of sexism too. can i tell you, this country took meghan markle to their hearts. it was a fairy tale wedding. they were like rock stars. everybody loved them, everybody wished them well. this mess is of meghan and harry's making, and i promise you racism has nothing to do with this whatsoever. lisa: well, i imagine that sentiment has changed with taking her to their hearts though. pete: nigel, we apologize. unless meghan markle was some secret double agent for america -- [laughter] i'm from america, you know, we've got a long history. [laughter] dean: hundreds of years ago. pete: we've gotten over it since. >> these things happen in
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families. pete: they do. that's a really good point, and you forget about the actual personal -- lisa: that's true. pete: nigel farage, you're a gentleman and a scholar and quite a great cultural critique expert. appreciate it. >> thank you. dean: thank you, nigel. pete: sanctuary showdown in illinois. the state's largest county releasing more than 1,000 criminal illegal immigrants in just one year. dean: retired i.c.e. director tom homan sounds off on that, still ahead. ♪ that's why i'm partnering with cigna to remind you to go in for your annual check-up, and be open with your doctor about anything you feel - physically and emotionally. but now cigna has a plan that can help everyone see stress differently. just find a period of time to unwind. a location to de-stress. an activity to enjoy. or the name of someone to talk to. to create a plan that works for you, visit cigna.com/mystressplan. cigna. together, all the way.
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dean: back now with some headlines. the next state to give illegal immigrants driver's licenses could be idaho. a republican senator is pushing a bill to let immigrants earn licenses in hopes of attracting more farm workers to the state. illegals would have of to undergo the same driving rumors as americans but -- requirementings as americans but would have to renew every year.
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thirteen states and d.c. currently allow illegal immigrants to get driver's licenses. prosecutor kim fox is hiring outside legal help, fox has slad for dismissing charges against jussie smollett last year. the actor is accused of staging a hate crime and lying about it to police. fox did not share how much her legal counsel would cost tax taxpayers. dana white, so impressed by her actions, he invited her to this weekend's mcgregor/cowboy fight in vegas, post on ins garages i want her to work for me. get ready for the best weekend of your life. someone she was fired last month for trying to stop the suspected thief. ufc in her future. pete: she got fired for that?
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she should be employee of the month. unbelievable. good for dana white. would you do that? dean: she was stopping him from going anywhere. pete: all right. i.c.e. calling out cook county, illinois, home to the city of chicago, for releasing illegal immigrants accused of crime. the county denied more than 1,000 retainer requests in fiscal year 2019 alone. here to react, retired i.c.e. director and fox news contributor, tom homan. tom, thanks for being here this morning. what does it mean when one county alone fails over a thousand times to honor i.c.e. detainers and actually cooperate with law enforcement? >> well, first of all, we're talking about chicago, right? pete: yep. >> you would think elected officials would want to do everything they can to make sure criminals aren't on their streets. but if you're an illegal alien,
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you're getting released every day e to reoffend. anybody can look up recidivism rates. 50% will reoffend the first year, 75% within the first five years. it's more than a thousand, pete, because a thousand is only the ones we know about. when i.c.e. puts a detainer on somebody says we know he's in your jail -- [inaudible] they're bounced against a dhs database. however, there's thousands of illegal aliens in jails in sanctuary cities weren't arrested by the border patrol. every year i.c.e. arrests thousands upon thousands of illegal aliens in jails -- pete: so there are other places, tom, where you do get access to the jails, where you can identify people who maybe were not arrested before, and then it's a peaceful transfer for immigration, lawful immigration purposes. >> absolutely.
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we call them foreign-born nomads. we don't have any fingerprints. hundreds of thousands of these people have been arrested, so access to the jails is what we need. not just detarian, you know -- detainer, taking our detainers. getting access to the jails to p find the 100,000 other ones that are in the country illegally -- pete: interesting. so that thousand number is people who have already committed a crime, but now they're in jail because they also committed a crime, we just didn't know about it before, so i.c.e. doesn't know about it, so that number's likely multiples higher than a thousand. now, we asked cook county, the sheriff's department, for comment. they wrote back: good afternoon, we have no comment at this time, but we would like to refer you to two laws for relative content, then they sent us two google linkings. what laws would they be pointing to as justification for this? >> there is no justification. releasing a public safety threat back into the public to reoffend
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when you can turn them over to i.c.e., that's just stupid. there's no law they're going to point to that can convince me that says it's right, refusing to hand them over to federal agency. they wouldn't do that in the fbi, dea, only i.c.e. this is a political battle. there's no legal basis for it. pete: absolutely it's a political battle, especially in the era of president trump who said we'll actually enforce our laws. as a result, the left has put a target on the backs of guys like you who have served this country. tom, thank you so much for what you do and for your insight, appreciate it. >> thanks for having me, pete. pete: judge judy gives mike bloomberg an endorsement on the campaign trail. the shot she took at the president during her texas barbecue, still ahead. plus, today is national sunday supper day. up next, the tips you need the bring this old school tradition
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♪ ♪ lisa: today is national supper day, as you can see. nowadays only 29% of american families sit down for family dinner every day with 10% saying only for special occasions. dean: here to explain why maintaining family dinners is so important is the author of "disconnected: how to protect your kids from the harmful effects of device dependency," psychotherapist, tom -- that's a big word. [laughter] i'm the only one who has a napkin in their lap, i'm going to throw that out there --
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lisa: bragging. pete: tom's bringing dinner here, and we're going to eat a little more next hour, right now we're just hanging out. why is supper on sunday or otherwise so important? >> it's actually important every day, okay? historically, in our culture as americans, i'm sure the way you grew up, we had dinner every night of the week. all of the research out there shows that the kids and families who have dinner most nights a week, those children are more likely to do better in school and are less likely to engage in risk-taking behavior like drug and alcohol abuse. there's so many good qualities about it. lisa: so what kind of tips do you have for trying to have the best dinner possible? can someone, what if someone's here, text messages -- dean: that's a no-no. >> we want to be present, is so we want to take these, put them in our unplugged box. lisa: i didn't even bring my phone. >> even when families are having
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dinner together at night, there's a tendency to be on our phones. we can't do what we're doing -- pete: so disrespectful to everyone else that you're there with. dean: and i'm the person who cooked all the food. you say preparing the food together is part of the deal. >> get the whole family onboard with the children. my kids sometimes will help, you know, prepare, definitely help clean up. it creates more interaction x then you sit down and eat together, so it teaches our children about discipline, about responsibility, a lot of good qualities that come from just sitting down and having meals together. lisa: so what happens if one night you can't do dinner, someone's busy, you don't get home till -- til late? >> one of the themes i prescribe to them, you've got to carve out 10 or 15 minutes literally every night of the week to sit down around a table and just converse with one another. there's -- very, very therapeutic. lisa: i loved family dinners growing up. we used to do smores and hot
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dogs -- pete: maybe the royal family could use -- [laughter] lisa: but they'll be in canada. dean: you have 150 people in your family, do you do family dinners? pete: on occasion. it's usually around an island. we try to get everyone seated at the same time as often as possible. right? >> especially teenagers and middle schoolers, they tend to want to not be in the kitchen area, to be up in their bedroom. i also say get kids out of the bedroom and get them into the family room. bed starts with sleep, family starts with family. lisa: you guys do that? dean: yeah, every night, sit down and have family dinner. lisa: we all turned out well. dean: we're one family now. pete: we are a family. thanks a lot. lisa: appreciate it. thank you. pete: did money given to iran by the obama administration pay for the missile attack on u.s. soldiers in iraq? former secretary of state john kerry's response to that
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scathing accusation, you might be surprised, when we return. i'm leah and that's me long before i had moderate-to-severe rheumatoid arthritis. i've always been the ringleader had a zest for life. flash forward, then ra kept me from the important things. and what my doctor said surprised me. she said my joint pain could mean permanent joint damage. and enbrel helps relieve joint pain,
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and helps stop that joint damage. ask about enbrel so you can get back to being your true self. enbrel may lower your ability to fight infections. serious sometimes fatal events including infections, tuberculosis, lymphoma, other cancers, nervous system and blood disorders and allergic reactions have occurred. tell your doctor if you've been someplace where fungal infections are common. or if you're prone to infections, have cuts or sores have had hepatitis b, have been treated for heart failure or if you have persistent fever, bruising, bleeding or paleness. don't start enbrel if you have an infection like the flu. visit enbrel.com to see how your joint damage could progress. enbrel fda approved for over 20 years. of course i'd love to take an informal poll. i used to be a little cranky. dealing with our finances really haunted me. thankfully, i got quickbooks, and a live bookkeeper's helping customize it for our business. (live bookkeeper) you're all set up! (janine) great! hey! you got the burnt marshmallow out!
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♪. lisa: we're in in a new york groove. we're in new york. we're grooving. pete: that is more sound logic i ever hear from democrats. you're in the right place on "fox & friends." lisa: forget about the -- pete: doughnuts orderlier, now that i know that noted. great to have you here. dean cain here for the entire weekend. we're having fun. had family dinner.
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dean: supper was great. pete: in the morning, even though "dr. oz" says you're not supposed to eat breakfast. dean: why we call it supper. pete: tomorrow morning he comes on "fox & friends" to defend that out outlandish view. he is doctor but. like a climate change activists take private jets. he says you shouldn't eat breakfast but i guess he eats breakfast. lisa: he likes brunch. that means mimosa. pete: we hope you have a mimosa and cup of coffee this morning. we start with news. lisa: as you mentioned there is a lot going on this morning. we're following a bunch of breaking news for you. fox news alert, thousands of iranians taking to the street after the regime admits to shooting down ukrainian passenger plane.
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pete: president trump supports the protesters calling them brave. rick leventhal live in jerusalem with more. rick. reporter: there were days of denials but iran finally admitting it shot down a ukrainian passenger plane, calling eight mistake and hasty decision by the air defense team. that sparked massive demonstrations across the country. thousands of people protesting against the hard-line iranian government many in tehran university, chanting death to the dictator, demanding that those responsible for the deaths of 176 innocent civilians on the plane be fired and put on trial. iran was on high alert for retaliation when it shot down the 737 wednesday t was hours after iran fired 16 ballistic missiles at u.s. troops based in iraq. pay back for the u.s. top killing of the top general at baghdad airport in general. it is still blaming the u.s. in
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part for the mistake. >> translator: this is the cost of mistakes and actions of u.s. in region. that night we were ready for a full-scale conflict. reporter: president trump tweeted support for demonstrators, writing there cannot be another massacre of peaceful protesters nor internet shutdown. the world is watching. the british foreign secretary added iranian government is at a crossroads moment t can continue to march towards pariah status with all the political, economic isolation that entails or de-escalate tensions and engage in a diplomatic path forwards. israel's prime minister waying in at a cabinet meeting this morning. >> iran lied, just as they lied about their secret nuclear program they're lying now about the downing of the ukrainian aircraft. they knew from the start that they had downed it. they you knew that it was an unintentional downing but they lied intentionally. they deceived the entire world.
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reporter: of course israel was among the first to support president trump's decision to take out that iranian general and now the world watches to see what if anything iran will do to compensate the victims of that plane crash. guys? pete: absolutely. dean: rick leventhal in jerusalem. pete: iran called on the carpet that they were lying. their people wise to it as well. there is enough information for them to make that determination. instead of chanting "death to america," they're chanting death to the dictator, death to liars. the regime told us our enemy is the u.s. but our enemy is right here. those are direct quotes from these protesters who bravely took to the streets in light of the killing of qassem soleimani and lying of that ukrainian plane. this could be a big opportunity inside of iran right now. lisa: keep in mind, iran is weaker than when president trump took office. secretary pompeo announced one day after they announced increased sanctions on iran,
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access to 90% of their foreign currency reserves. they have seen a decrease of revenues for the country by 80%. they're hit hard by the sanctions. they're weak financially. why we've seen iranian protesters take to the streets with downing of the plane. they're facing external pressure because of their malign behavior in the middle east, actions they have been taking. seizing a british oil tanker. killing of innocent individuals from variety of nations. they are facing a lot of pressure. they're weak. this is good position for the trump administration to be in as they try to force the iranians hand to get them to the negotiating table. dean: this is a complete reversal from where we were 2009? the last protests going on the previous administration. speaking of the previous administration as obama secretary of state john kerry denies that money from a $1.7 billion payment in iran in 2016 went towards funding iran's
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recent attacks on u.s. bases in iraq. a new op-ed points out the big lesson learned from last week the obama nuclear deal was fatally flawed. the jcpoa was doa, that is right. lisa: i like that. did you just do that? >> just happened. lisa: nice my friend. pete: welcome to tv for a living. nicely done. john kerry previous secretary of state, part of the iran deal, knew ba about pallets of cash that they were using to funded a venturism on the globe, he was on cnn on friday, said, no, it didn't fund terrorism. >> we gave them a little bit of money that was released at that period of time, not as part of the nuclear arrangement but the fact is the irgc had all the money it wanted. it is just not true that money specifically, directly went the to irgc. money is fungible in any budget. the irgc had its budget.
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they had its missiles long before we made any kind of arrangement with iran. pete: rough for john kerry. reduced to skype on cnn. michael goodwin took to the "new york post" i thought was strung rebuttal to john kerry saying in the piece. his claim bears no relation to reality. the agreement didn't create opportunities for america and other signatories to confront iran's malign activities t overlooked, helped to fund them. zero progress was made on curbing those activities until trump droned soleimani. plainly trump is not a warmonger, he is a deal-maker. his record is a someone uses military might as a deterrent. unleashes with discretion, only as a last resort. you can give money to try to appease, or kill their terrorists leaders to put them on their knees. that rhymes. lisa: i may need more coffee.
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dean: absolutely true. the behaviors of the two different administrations couldn't be more opposite. the thing amazing to me, watch john kerry on there saying that. money is fungible. we gave them a little bit of money. $150 billion is a lot of money. connell: we were ones begging to make deal under obama administration. only way a deal works if they come crawling back, limping groveling begging bleeding to the table saying we need a deal, otherwise we won't survive. lisa: the former secretary in 2016 in davos, switzerland admitted money would go into the hands of terrorist groups, and nothing the united states can do about it. he is speaking out of both sides of his mouth right now. michael goodwin mentioned deterrents, president trump made it known when i when took office. you remember when he did, sent 59 missiles to syria after they crossed line on chemical weapons
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xi xinping telling him this is power move. and same month dropped "mother of all bombs" in afghanistan. the tool of choice is economic sanctions but he is not afraid to use shows of force to essentially tell the rest of the world, don't mess with texas, right. pete: dictators see that. no doubt about that. dean: not by the book. he is hard to judge. if you're out there, he might just blow this up right now. see what happens. that unpredictability is an asset. pete: that is the word. president knows that as well. speaking of dropping a lot of something, talk about dropping a lot of cash. michael bloomberg jumped into the democratic primary. dean: dropping cash. pete: already spent over $200 million. if you were watching football game like i was unfortunately you saw half a dozen bloomberg ads. he is focusing on super tuesday. he launched what he calls day one on his run for the white house, eating barbecue
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with "judge judy." it is an interesting play. he has been mostly seen on television ads. he is on the trail in texas there with "judge judy.." "judge judy," america knows her, loves her. she has slammed the far left, when she had the first opportunity, listen. >> it is a young country. therefore it doesn't need a revolution. and those that touting revolution, in this country are wrong. this is a man who for decades has been championing the cause of what human beings have done to the climate. this is not a time for, as my australian friends say, all talk, no trousers. [laughter]. the united states of america is the greatest country on the planet. it should have the greatest president and -- pete: michael bloomberg went on. it wasn't just attacking the far left. he attacked president trump as well. listen.
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>> so naturally we came to texas to kick off our really big day. we called this day, day one because our campaign is opening its first ever nationwide day of action. i am running to defeat donald trump. [applause] unlike trump i've always been independent of special interests. i have experience beating donald trump. donald trump is a climate denier. let me tell you how i'm taking on donald trump. i don't think we can survive four more years of donald trump. lisa: what i think is interesting, judge judy had another line of attack for vice president biden. we don't need a number two in office. noting he was vice president. has not really been in charge of anything. dean: "judge judy" is effective, maybe "judge judy" should run. her sound bites are amazing. >> she has done this before. pete: it is a smart play. it is closest thing we've heard to a donald trump play. he was celebrity on tv people knew and liked. same with "judge judy." michael bloomberg latched on to that he is the most boring man on the
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planet. you love "judge judy" i have billions of dollars. if you don't like donald trump maybe i'm your guy. this will be interesting experiment, skip early states, put all money on early tuesday, grab a bunch delegates have influence on outcome. he is not compelling candidate but he is rich as god. what he can do is endless. we'll see. turning now to, starting with a "fox business alert." we're learning about one of the u.s. soldiers killed in a roadside bomb in afghanistan. city officials in aurora, illinois, say 21-year-old mig fell villalon died in an explosion. the second service member died in the attack. god bless that young man. a man charged with trying to bringing in military rifle, handgun and body armor on to a coast guard base in new jersey. dustin peters was attending a
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graduating ceremony, when the items were found in the car during a security check. authorities did not say why peters allegedly had the weapon. turning to the envelope, tennessee titans pulling a huge upset over the baltimore ravens, 28-12, a shocker. titans running back derrick henry first to make nfl history to rush for 180 yards in three straight games. even did a jump pass over there. early game, the 49ers stomped my minnesota vikings 27-10. tonight houston texans take on the chiefs. seahawks at the packers on fox. lisa: yes did your voice change there? pete: because we did not bring it at all. i can't defend it. see the ravens lose, shocking. dean: big surprises. good luck, guys. remember media said this about iranian terrorist who helped kill americans? >> u.s. has stripped iran of an
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inspirational military leader. >> soleimani is difficult to convey how revered he is. dean: people in iran are chanting death to the dictator. did that prove the media got it wrong? we'll discuss it next. into the enamel to keep the enamel strong. i know it works and i hear nothing but great things from my patients that have switched to it.
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soleimani some even suggesting iranians were grieving over the president's actions. lisa: meanwhile thousands of iranians are taking to the streets chanting death to dictate after the regime admits shooting down ukrainian passenger plane. does this prove the media was wrong? pete: here to react, media reporter for "the hill," joe concha. death to the dictator, that sounds different from our man. >> i thought christmas thousands would throw in don rickles for a moment. i don't quite get the death of soleimani he is hearing. why do you chant that? but death to khamenei, down with the regime, these are things i find it a bit odd i'm seeing in, hearing this out of iran this weekend, i was told by the u.s. media just last week that soleimani was revered. inspirational genius, beloved,
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exactly. all the comparisons to great americans like elvis presley. now we see what the reality was, what our media did not tell us or chose to -- lisa: why wouldn't they tell us though? dean: that is the question. >> bias of omission, lisa. when you do reports on general who is really a terrorist who gets killed you leave out the fact that 1500 people protesters, were slaughtered in iran just last month, then you compare the iranian leadership to president trump as if there is some remotely even equality there? the media has been called out on this one because of the actions of people in iran right now, putting their lives on the line because they do not like this regime and they didn't like soleimani, despite fact everything we heard last week when he was killed. pete: joe, we have a free press. this is also america. this is america where our view of the world is one in which our soldiers have been killed by soleimani and the likes of
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him -- >> hundreds. pete: hundreds of terror attacks around the globe. we would characterize him as a terrorist. dean: classified as that. pete: you can't get our own members of the media to use that phrase. why? >> it is amazing, right? look because we saw fear being sold when the iranian missiles were launched at u.s. forces. dean: world war iii. >> world war iii, that exaggeration that was biggest heads up missiles are coming, we're not doing this to kill anybody ever, strike. when you sell war obviously good for ratings. not that anybody is rooting for war, hey, you know what? you sell the fear and more people will watch. plus i think people wanted to believe that president trump was a warmonger, right? they didn't see what he ran on in 2016 or as he conducted himself while he has been in office. and that is the way it goes. lisa: leave it there, thank you. dean: economists warn a wealth
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tax could cost american workers $12 trillion. one of the candidates who want a wealth tags tax elizabeth warren, and our next guest says the warren presidency will destroy the american dream. lisa: you got the read done. wha? wha? (stammering) w-we have a melon rind stew. comes with a pork and bean reduction. yeah, we're going to just do a lap and we'll come back. okay. well, we'll be here. man! why isn't this working? my mouth is watering. i think that's just your rabies flaring up. with geico, the savings keep on going. just like this sequel. 15 minutes could save you 15% or more on car insurance. we got gristle pot pies!
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dean: quick headlines for you, man sentenced to 90 days behind bars after security camera captured him spitting on a trump supporter. he was found guilty of battery. he spit on the man inside after restaurant last year. police helicopter flying over his makeshift shelter in the alaskan wilderness. tyson steele surviving in bitter
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cold more than 20 days after his cabin burned down. he drew a giant sos sign in the snow in hopes of being found. he as wasn't -- was able to make a shelter until he was rescued. pete: wise man. economists warn bernie sanders and elizabeth warren's plans could cost american workers one trillion dollars. our next guest has a new book, elizabeth warren how her presidency would destroy the middle class and the american dream. founder cio team, david bahnsen. her wealth tax will raise a bunch of money to pay for things that she wants to pay for. turns out economists estimate increase lost earnings over 10 years about a trillion dollars. who is right. >> economists are right. larry summers, bill clinton
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treasury secretary, senior economic advisor, he has written big op-eds, this is total dud, it will raise less than 15% of what it will raise. the money it loses over time how much productive capital gets taken out of the system and puts into unproductive capital. it was a failure in denmark and sweden and france. so funny how liberals are always telling us look what is going on in sweden. let's do that. with the wealth tax, sanders and warren are doubling down what has been a failure everywhere. pete: talking point works for them right now in a far left primary. take from the wealthy and use it to pay for other things. does that, does reality you're talking about ever connect with the american people's perception of it? >> there is enough class envy and covetness in our society people love idea of taking money from people that have more than they have. that doesn't make it right. certainly doesn't make it american. the reality, we all know people
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maybe got lucky in life, born into a good family. that is not what this is about. even them, i don't think you should confiscate wealth from people. pete: of course. >> this is a tax on wealth-producing activities. we all need wealth producing activities. people hurt most when you tax wealth-producing activities are the middle class. that is what it is going after and this is disaster. pete: you wrote literally the book on elizabeth warren why her presidency would destroy the middle class. explain your argument. >> ultimately the things she is doing, reinforcing the notion, that everybody with lot in life is not happy with, has someone to blame. some bank or insurance company or big energy company, they're herring you and they're holding you down. i'm all for getting policies right. i'm all for not being bad actors, that play a bad role in our society but it is not true middle class is victim of some wealthy, big, bad, nefarious
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actor. i want a middle class with dignity that can take ownership of their own life. this is the aspirational society. that is what america is built on. warren's entire thesis, sanders does the same thing that middle class has aspirational vertably mobile possibility. i want to get the policy right. warren is creating a victim mentality. it is completely un-american. pete: you studied her as a result, race pretty closely, who wins the race of far left progressives between her and bernie. >> at the time writing the book, bernie had a heart attack. warren was going up in the polls. bernie has more momentum. pete buttigieg hurt warren caught her in hypocrisy about raising taxes. bernie admits he will do it. warren is the more electable candidate than sanders in a general election because she is willing to lie.
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she is, she is socialist who calls herself a capitalist. bernie is a socialist who calls himself a socialist. we do not like socialism in our country. pete: david bahnsen, congratulations on the book. elizabeth warren, check it out. chants of death to the dictator in iran as protests erupt in the middle east. the situation unraveling in the middle east right now. terrifying woman as a woman dangles her grandson off of a balcony, why? the reason will shock you. that's next. ♪. these people didn't sleep well last night. these people did, thanks to somnapure. somnapure from force factor helps you fall asleep faster, stay asleep longer, and wake up feeling refreshed. don't be a zombie - get somnapure. available at retailers nationwide.
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with truecar, to sell just enter your license plate and see your car's value in real time. sports package and low mileage? nice. within minutes, you'll have a true cash offer, and you can head to a dealership and get paid, today, right now. pete: we're back with a fox news alert. thousands of iranians taking to the streets shouting "death to the dictator" after the regime admits shooting down finally a uranium passenger plane. demonstrators asking those responsible be put on trial. lisa: all 176 people on board were killed. they were firing missiles at military bases in iraq. dean: a olympian said whenever
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they saw fit they used me. she just defected. lisa: we have a muslim scholar with us today on the couch. i want to know how weak is the regime right now. >> it is in its most fragile and precarious time since 1979. they had a disasterous out come to attempt to intimidate the united states. attempts on embassy in baghdad failed. they had qassem soleimani decapitated. they have to admit they shot down their own commercial airliner, killing hundreds of people. 83 iranians, many iranians have lost multiple family members. the devastation in canada is is. they briefly arrested british ambassador. the britain threatened them they're either going down the avenue of total pariah status globally or think accept they deal with the international community. lisa: very strong statement by them too. >> yes. pete: for a regime that sells
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propaganda to its people all the time. how do they admit this previously, this wasn't us, they have to go to their people, no, we actually did shoot down this airliner? does that wake a lot of people up, hey this regime has been lying to me a long time. >> iranians have to ask themselves what else have they concealed. it wasn't just the error. they denied it at first. finally they're admitting it. they want to know what other faust hoods have been said. also the population, sacrificial animal, loss of life the as you mentioned 1500 people were killed in recent protests in iran before the qassem soleimani execution. pete: in november. >> yes. so they are finally able to voice what they have suspected all along. we must not ignore those voices. president trump made a wonderful statement on twitter in farsi, and english, that the united states is with the people of iran. we have no enmity with the people of iran but we despise the iranian, islamist,
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autocratic regime. this is totalitarian regime. they have had it 41 years, surrounded and suffocated in oppression since then and we see the veil coming off. dean: you mentioned president trump's for these protesters. during 2009 in the green revolution, president obama had sort of a different message. >> so well-said. i have this image in my mind of president obama watching protests on television, restrained, in 2008, he had speech in cairo, u.s. engagement with muslim world. in reality he was engaging secretly with the iranian regime at the expense of the iranian people. that was on june 12th. the protests june 20th, we remember, netta, the young girl who went to protest with music teach every and was shot to death on camera, and entire world saw her die. this is a legacy so that her death was not in vain if we can help the iranian people realize their dreams. lisa: will iran come to the negotiating table? >> many experts have been
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speaking about that. i can't imagine it because they are, as more they threaten the more promethian their group. they would have to deny this regime. the first time ever, this regime is seriously threatened. the people are saying the united states is not our enemy. our regime is not the men i. the enemy is not in the u.s., it is hire where we are in iran. that kind of explicit speech i never encountered. pete: we seen this a long time, chants of death to america. people say the iranian people are forced to chant their things. you can't put a pulse on everybody to speak for the entire iranian people. in mass are people more supportive of the regime? do they believe the soleimani was a good guy or bad guy? where are the iranian people? >> it is incredible ricochet over the last week. a week ago they were mourning their leader. size of those crowds, millions, that could not have been orchestrated. that was organic response to the
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humiliation of the nation this is nation cultivated in 40 years of eyed doughizing martyrdom. islamic regime, like any totalitarian regime needs external enemy to bind the population. external enemy would could be better than united states and israel. maybe a lot of indoctrination. many iranians killed were academics in north america. there are many iranians are greatly pro-american. in fact the iranian diaspora in 2009 was begging the united states to support the green revolution. we failed them and we must not fail them now. we are seeing after seeing the arab spring turn into a arab winter. this must come from the iranian people. we must help them. give them satellite communications. hot spot wi-fies. agencies must help them any way. money arms. pete: all the things the obama administration never did in
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2009. >> put a stop on even though advisors recommended many of those things. pete: another stand-down order from the obama administration. lisa: thank you very interesting thank you so much. dean: turn now to the headlines, starting with a fox news alert. a woman vanished from florida hotel is found dead. kelly glover was found missing on a work trip in fort lauderdale. they found her body in a lake near the hotel two days after she was missing. glover's husband said she was last seen on security footage leaving hotel in her pajamas without her phone and purse. autopsy is under way. look at this, a woman in china risking her 7-year-old grandson's life to save her cat. you can see her lowering the body, off herbal connie with a rope, dragging him back up after he dragged the cat. luckily no one was hurt. neither the boy or cat. the woman later apologized. sheave said she did not want to
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bother firefighters. pete: i have a lot of thoughts on that. but i will keep them inside. dean: there is smell hanging over one michigan community. officials say blooming marijuana plants. it is so bad leading officials to buy odor detection system. they tell the "detroit free press," that the system will cost $3400 to train workers about air quality. a 2015 law allows people to grow plants at their home. what smell is too much. lisa: up in smoke. dean: up in smoke. lisa: that did not rhyme. 11 people are dead after tornadoes and severe storms sweep across the united states. you're looking what used to be a mobile home in louisiana, which was tossed more than 200 feet by a tornado killing two people. pete: our own adam klotz is here to tell us if there is more danger to come.
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adam, good morning. >> good morning guys. that storm system is sweeping across the country. we saw heavy rain in new york city a couple hours ago. that entire thing will wind down, looking better next couple days. with me right here someone helps me with the forecast. what is your name? >> kate. >> kate, here is what i do, hit the button when i tell you to. feel nice in new york city. temperature 60 degrees. hit the next graphic. here is what we're talking about, big storm system working across the country, at this point nothing but rain and maybe a little bit of snow in new england this is wrapping out, moving out. i do think the rest of the forecast for the country will be pretty good. are you happy about that, kate? >> yes. >> help me back to you, everybody kind of wave as we toss it back to you guys in the studio. >> back to you. >> back to you guys. lisa: they can't see us. we're waving back. pete: wait to go, kate.
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lisa: way to go, kate. pete: low bar for giving really important nicknames. you don't anything about kate. how do you know she is great. dean: she did a great job on the weather. lisa: i like her. pete: kate the great forever more. after 3 1/2 weeks, house speaker nancy pelosi is finally sending articles of impeachment to the senate, but what was the reason for her delay? we'll ask fox news legal analyst gregg jarrett on that coming up next. ♪. >> man: what's my safelite story? my truck...is my livelihood. so when my windshield cracked... the experts at safelite autoglass came right to me. >> tech: hi, i'm adrian. >> man: thanks for coming. ...with service i could trust. right, girl? >> singers: ♪ safelite repair, safelite replace. ♪
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i had moderate-to-severes rheumatoid arthritis. i've always been the ringleader had a zest for life. flash forward, then ra kept me from the important things. and what my doctor said surprised me. she said my joint pain could mean permanent joint damage. and enbrel helps relieve joint pain, and helps stop that joint damage. ask about enbrel so you can get back to being your true self. enbrel may lower your ability to fight infections. serious sometimes fatal events including infections, tuberculosis, lymphoma, other cancers, nervous system and blood disorders and allergic reactions have occurred. tell your doctor if you've been someplace where fungal infections are common. or if you're prone to infections, have cuts or sores have had hepatitis b, have been treated for heart failure or if you have persistent fever, bruising, bleeding or paleness. don't start enbrel if you have an infection like the flu. visit enbrel.com to see how your joint damage could progress. enbrel fda approved for over 20 years.
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this round's on me.eat. hey, can you spot me? come on in. find your place today, with silversneakers. included in most medicare advantage plans. enroll today by calling the number on your screen or visit getsilversneakers.com set yourself free with fleet. gentle constipation relief in minutes. little fleet. big relief. try it. feel it. feel that fleet feeling. pete: welcome back. couple quick headlines for you. a conservative group as beef you might say over burger king over
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a word in this advertisement. >> the impossible whopper is going nationwide. >> damn, that's good. pete: the group calling the use of the word, d-word inappropriate and damaging to children. demanding burger king delete the ad or edit out the word. i didn't hear the word but sounds offensive to me. a new device can help parents with a d word, diapers. this is a smart sensor attaches to a baby's diaper. tells when it is dirty. lisa: can you just smell it? pete: or see it sagging. that might be useful at night. then they stay asleep. you can be preemptive, but during the day -- dean: we have our own sensors telling diapers are dirty. lisa: for a transition, maybe we need a dirty diaper for this topic, impeachment. i don't know. after nearly a month, house speaker -- wasn't that great.
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nancy pelosi is finally planning to send the articles of impeachment to the senate this week. dean: but a "new york post" op-ed is questioning the delay, suggesting that the speaker think impeachment is all a big mistake. the op-ed reads, my working theory is this. pelosi realized impeachment was a mistake. only way to mitigate the damage to undertake a ham-fisted effort to slam the senate trial or dampen or circumvent that inevitable moment. in the process pelosi destroyed the democrat's justification for pushing the impeachment in the first place. pete: is that argument correct? joining us fox news legal analyst, gregg jarrett. >> good to be with you guys. pete: what do you make of that? >> it's a solid argument. i think you're right, nancy pelosi made a mockery of impeachment and debased her high office. i think she withheld the articles for several reasons. first of all, she thought the specter of impeachment without an acquittal in the senate would damage president trump
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politically and prevent him from saying he was vindicated. it didn't work. public opinion hasn't changed. it undermined her entire rationale for rushing impeachment article through. was it urgent? second of all, i think she thought, she knew the articles of impeachment were incredibly weak, specious, bereft of any evidence. she hoped magically dropping out of the sky, some incriminating evidence would appear if only she just waited. but most importantly, blinded by her own arrogance and hubris, she thought she could extort the senate letter her dictate terms of trial procedures in the senate and calling of witnesses. it is none of her business. article i, section 3 of the constitution says it is the sole power of the senate to try impeachment. doesn't say, but only with the consent and direction of the speaker of the house. you know, pelosi's disdain and contempt for the constitution is
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exceeded only by her thirst for power. lisa: which is a little ironic because one of the articles of impeachment is obstruction of congress. >> right. lisa: have her own problem. there is a lot of debate right now how the senate should conduct its trial. how do you think the senate should conduct the trial? dean: great question. >> i think the template is the clinton impeachment trial in 1999. i was there in washington. i was covering every day of it. the procedure is this. the house, there is a presentment of the charges. the house managers present their opening arguments. input from white house counsel defending the president. then the senate makes a decision, based on what they have heard, what witnesses are necessary. you may recall that in the 1999 case, there were no live witnesses. there were three who were deposed and selected excerpts were played. i think that is the protocol that will be adopted on a majority vote by the senate.
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pete: what we know mitch mcconnell will do what mitch mcconnell wants to do. >> sure. he has every right to do. he is the majority leader. the republicans control the senate. pete: yep. >> so there will be input from both sides to be sure and lots of debate and controversy. pete: got it. gregg jarrett. thanks a lot. >> thanks, greg. pete: young people not so proud to be american according to a new poll. what they're missing about sacrifice and freedom and patriotism and capitalism and i could go on. i will stop. ♪. it's time for the january sale on the sleep number 360 smart bed.
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♪. pete: many young americans not so grateful to live in the land of the free and home of the brave. dean: new poll shows more than 1/3 of americans between 18 and 29 say there are other countries that are better than the u.s. if you look at just young democrats, that stat jumps up to nearly half. holy smokes. pete: wow. what are young americans missing? here with a lesson on sacrifice and patriotism is former ufc fighter, special forces sniper tim kennedy. thanks for being here this morning. >> top of the morning. pete: answer the question what are kids missing, why are they missing it? >> it is hard to explain to someone about what hard work and sacrifice can garner. everything ultimately that you want is on the far side of hard work but that hard work sometimes is prohibitive to a lot of people. they look at that oh, i just can't do it. wealth this beyond my reach. the american dream was a experiment, right? it never existed in human
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history. and this constitutional republic, this american dream is, i think something that they just don't believe is attainable anymore. my dad was a police officer. we lived in a one bathroom house, six, seven people running around using one bathroom. i own five companies nownow, right? success is only what you make it. they don't believe it. it is the truth though. the american dream is all about what you put into it. everything you want is far side of hard work. you just have to do the work. dean, tim, i believe, this is my own brain, if you were to talk to these 50% of american young people between 18 and 29, they might change their mind after using yourself as an example. i have seen some of your stuff. i think you're a very strong speaker. perhaps you can convince these young people of the beauty of america? >> i love it. i would love that opportunity. i would talk to anyone that would listen. you know, i have been to places where they take gays they throw
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them off roofs. they burn people alive in cages. they stone people because they dress the wrong way. they stone people because they go out on a date. the premise saying we're imperfect country. we're not flawless. humans are imperfect creatures. we're only superpower on the planet. we're a group of greatest people, that believed in hard work. that believed in the american dream. believe in freedom. they would do anything including sacrifice and hard work to achieve it. pete: we're so prosperous, so free, to take it for granted. if you don't educate kids, they think it is inevitable. they look around, saying who has it better than me. dean: they don't travel. they don't get outside the united states. pete: that is another thing. tim you've been around the world. a souper star for our country. >> thank you,. pete: you got it. big hour made. house minority whip steve
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scalise, maria bartiromo and much more coming up. ♪.
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♪ ♪ lisa: pete, this is yours, isn't it? pete: no. we play deejay on the weekends, the music we bump into at the top of the hour, except in this instance it appears no one -- lisa: no one chose this. dean: producer. lisa: anyone having second thoughts, or no one legitimately put it in? pete: sabrina, our senior producer, claims it. lisa: has that ever happened, you give a song and it's played -- dean: you like that? lisa: oh, i claim that one.
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and then pete knew every word. pete: i do. i don't know who sings the songs usually, i just know the lyrics to the song. dean: that's because you watch "pitch perfect", right? pete: i spent a lot of time listening in minneapolis/st. paul. dean: i was already 30 years old. [laughter] pete: he gets younger every time you see him. dean: that's right. pete: we're glad you're here, dean cain. we're going to move on to additional news on sunday, start with a fox news alert. thousands of iranians taking to the streets after the regime admits the shooting down of a ukraine january passenger plane. lisa: president trump calling the protesters brave. dean: rick leventhal is live in jerusalem as we hear from israel's prime minister on the
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strike. rick. >> reporter: good morning. the days of angry denials are over, and now we're seeing those massive protests against the iranian government after it finally admits shooting down that ukrainian passenger plane by mistake. it started out as candlelight vigils for 16 student victims on the plane, and now it's turned into massive demonstrations with chants of "death to the dictator" and "depth to liars," demanding the ayatollah step down and those responsible for the tragedy be fired and put on trial. met by security forces in riot gear, they fired tear gas and beat some in the crowd. at least six wounded. iran was on high alert for incoming retaliation when it shot down the 737 wednesday just hours after fighter more than a dozen ballistic missiles at bases housing u.s. troops in iraq. it was payback for america's targeted killing of iran's top general near baghdad airport, and iran's till blaming the u.s.
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in part for its own tragic mistake. >> translator: this is the cost for the mischief, inflammation and actions of the u.s. in the region. really that night we were ready for a full scale conflict. >> reporter: president trump is tweeting support for the demonstrators, writing: there cannot be another massacre of peaceful protesters, nor an internet shutdown. the world is watching. the british foreign secretary added: the iranian government is at a crossroads moment it can continue its march towards papa rye ya status with all the political and economic isolation that entails or take steps to deescalate tensions and engage in a diplomatic path forwards. and israel's prime minister also weighing in at a cabinet meeting this morning. >> they knew from the start that they had downed immaterial. they knew that it was -- downed it. they knew that it was an unintentional downing, but they lied intentionally.
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they deceived the entire world. >> reporter: now the world is watching to see what, if anything, iran does to compensate the victims of its tragic mistake. guys? lisa: thank you, rick. dean: the world is watching, that's for sure. pete: not only is the world watching, but the leader of the free world is watching. president trump tweeting just moments ago related to this topic. to the leaders of iran, in caps, do not kill your protesters. thousands have already been killed or imprisoned by you, and the world is watching. more importantly, the usa is watching. turn your internet back on and let reporters roam free. stop the killing of your great iranian people. of course, he's referring to back in november when over 1500 protesters were killed. lisa: right. pete: thousands are in jail simply for speaking out against the regime. we forget that so much of their lashing out -- you haven't forgotten, lisa, you pointed this out very well. so much of their lashing out is a product of pressure. they're feeling at home, and they're trying to agitate elsewhere to distract from that. well, it's not working because their people are privy to the reality they're being lied to.
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now they're chanting death to the liars, death to the dictator, not death to america. huge opportunity inside iran. lisa: well, we talked to a muslim scholar about this just earlier. listen. >> i think the iranians have to ask themselves what else have they concealed. it wasn't just the error, they denied it at first. then finally they're admitting it, now they want to know what others have been said, and a sack rich animal lost his life. and as they are finally able to voice what they suspected all along, and we must not ignore those voices. we do despise the islamic iranian theocratic regime which is a totalitarian regime. they've had that country for 41 years shrouded, totally suffocated in oppression. and i think we're seeing that veil come off. dean: and what a difference this president's reaction to this than the 2009 reaction of president obama -- pete: bingo. dean: -- where he didn't stand
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up for those protesters. they got mowed down. but the media -- pete: the media. dean: they claimed that iranians were grieving over the death of their esteemed iranian general, soleimani, while of soleimani's enemies admitted he was a military genius. >> soleimani, it's difficult to convey how revered he is. he's regarded as personally and credibly brave. the troops love him. >> princess diana died, for example, there was a huge emotional outpouring. elvis presley in our culture.
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it turns out this general we killed was a beloved hero of the iranian people, to the point -- lisa: what i found truly, truly disturbing -- [laughter] we don't have time for that, but if you look at what the iranian foreign minister had said in blaming the united states for the reason why they ended up shooting down the ukrainian plane, compare the side by side, the juxtaposition between that and what some democrats have been saying, you look at pete buttigieg, congresswoman jackie spear, also blaming the united states when iran being -- has been solely responsible for doing that killing, their own citizens, right? they're the ones to directly blame. you look at the media that's been covering it, and it's been dispick bl. pete: yeah. the left-wingers are parroting the talking points of the
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iranian propaganda. it's easy american garbage. but yet you've got a president on the other side with his twitter account who can circumvent all of that to include speak directly to the iranian people in farsi as he tweeted just yesterday, encouraging them in seeking freedom. we had joe conch on the program, he does media bias, covers it. here's what he had to say. >> i don't quite get the death to soleimani, right? what we're hearing, because he's already dead. why do you chant, that right? depth to khamenei, right, down with the regime, these are things that i find a bit odd that i'm seeing and hearing this out of iran this weekend because i was told by the u.s. media just last week that soleimani was revered, that he was an inspirational genius, beloved, exactly. pete: elvis, for example, can did elvis ever export the technology of explosively-foreign penetrators meant to blast open humvees and kill people? oh, he played a guitar.
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>> the united states military, by the way. pete: i mean, the contrasts are lunacy. lisa: i think right now the question really is where does this go from here, right? you were saying the internal pressure that the iranians are seeing from their own people, we see external pressure. the brits put out an incredibly tough statement basically saying iran has become a pariah after they briefly arrested their ambassador for attending a vigil for, mind you, some brits were on the plane, right? so attending that vigil. the question, where do we go from here, right? we're already at the boiling point. pete: putting more sanctions on, the trump administration released even more of them. i mean, hopefully they go down. we'll see. listen, they're masters at oppression of their own people. the question is, is this moment different than other ones. you're not going to get -- everybody talking about going to the negotiating table, you don't negotiate with radical islamists who seek to wipe everyone off
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the map. they have to be limping and bleeding at that negotiating table or you get a different regime that's more reasonable and rational to deal with. dean: i asked joe concha where he thought it was going to go with the mainstream media, he said they'll figure out something else to talk about. so let us -- [inaudible conversations] lisa: don't judge me, but this is very interesting to me. so is mexit coming, right? we have been following this. so the queen is reportedly meeting with prince charles, william and harry tomorrow to hash out a plan. obviously, paying attention, meghan and prince harry sort of want to split their duties. they want the spend time, it looks like qanta right now, and also -- canada right now, and also in the u.k. they really want to roll back their duties. all right, they're saying they want to become, quote-unquote, financially independent. but only 5% comes from the sovereign grace, the other 95% comes from prince charles. they're keeping their house
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that's funded by -- dean: they want to keep their house. lisa: also potentially security detail which woulding be provided. so then that 5% doesn't become 5%, right? and this whole, quote-unquote, financial independence is really just a sham. pete: it's all a sham. they don't have -- they don't need real jobs. they live on the largess and the generosity of the british people. they're a side show. now, harry served his country, good for him. then he marries this american who doesn't like the scrutiny of the whole thing, and now she's effectively sort of dropped something in the old punch bowl with the royals, and now they're having a family meeting with the queen. dean: when the queen calls a family meeting, that is real. the queen calling a family meeting? pete: nigel farage was on the show, he nose about megxit, here's what he had to say. >> well, it's a pretty serious
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crisis. they were treated like rock star royalty, but it's all gone wrong, and it's gone wrong because megyn mark ifing has become quite -- meghan markle has become quite political. not something we expect from the royal family. i think what is happening very sad. i think the way the queen has been insulted is even worse, and it's -- yeah, it's not good for our country. lisa: i think dean cares about this more than he's saying. [laughter] we want to know what you think at home, so e-mail us at friends@foxnews.com, let us know your thoughts about megxit. pete: in the meantime, i'm supposed to read headlines, but the teleprompter's right in the middle. there we go. fox news alert, right now a manhunt underway for a gunman who injured five people at a party in aurora, colorado. three of the victims are teenagers, all are expected to survive. it happened in the same town where a gunman shot and killed 12 people at a movie theater in 2012. and an attempted kidnapping
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caught on camera in california. a homeless man is accused of trying to take a little girl away from her mother at a restaurant. ing the child's father and uncle pulling the man away, holding him down until police arrived and arrested him. and tennis all-star serena williams scores her first title win since becoming a mother. dean keane all right! [cheers and applause] pete: williams winning the ascc classic in new zealand. president trump tweeting: congratulations to serena williams, a great player, an even greater person. she spoke at the opening of the tennis center at the trump national golf club in 2015. dean: good for mom. congressman steve scalise was shot during a congressional baseball practice three years ago. he was on deck to react to a new law banning guns in the virginia
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statement capitol. state capitol. pete: if you ban them, they go away. t myself, too. order up. fries on the side. right where i like 'em. don't forget the grease fire. burn, baby -- wait, what? -[ alarm beeping ] -i said grease fire. what are you doing on the counter? when owning a small business gets real... sorry. can i get a to-go box? ...progressive helps protect what you built -with customizable coverage. -aah! ...progressive helps protect what you built >> man: what's my my truck...is my livelihood. so when my windshield cracked... the experts at safelite autoglass came right to me. >> tech: hi, i'm adrian. >> man: thanks for coming. ...with service i could trust. right, girl? >> singers: ♪ safelite repair, safelite replace. ♪
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ask your doctor about trulicity. ♪ ♪ lisa: virginia lawmakers bang guns at the state capitol. the democratic majority says it's meant to improve public safety, but won't this just make the building a target? pete: the topic is personal for our next guest who survived a 2017 shooting at a congressional baseball practice p. house minority whip steve scalise joins us now. sir, thank you so much for joining us this morning. it's sort of natural for you to react to something like this, because if someone would understand the consequences of guns and weapons, it's you. when virginia lawmakers say we're going to ban guns from the capitol because we want to make it safer, how do you respond to that? >> good morning. good to be with you. and the real concern is -- good morning. it's good -- this is an alarming trend in virginia now that they've taken over the statehouse. the governor of virginia is a
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strong anti-gun opponent of second amendment rights, and so they've got a package of bills to take away rights of law-abiding citizens in virginia. all across the state, by the way. this isn't just limited to the capitol. one of the things that is alarming, i think, to a lot of the people that follow this is that the leadership on the democrat side misrepresented the views of capitol police when they were trying to pass this. they actually said, oh, this was recommended by the police when, in fact, they asked the police and they said, wait, we didn't recommend it, we just talked about how it would be implemented. they were misrepresenting them, lying to the people about why this was being done. this is a broader agenda to take away the rights of law-abiding citizens in virginia by this new democrat majority in virginia supported, of course, by the anti-gun governor of virginia. lisa: you know, sir, as somebody who was on that softball field in 2017, from a personal stand point what would be your plea to both virginia as they're entertaining additional gun laws and also to other states? >> well, this idea that it's the
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gun's fault, not the criminal's fault is, i think, what is rooted in what they're trying to do to take away the rights of law-abiding citizens. it's good people with guns who stop gun violence are. in my case, it was people on that ballfield with guns, of course, capitol police that were there that effectively used guns to take down the shooter. in a texas church we just saw weeks ago where it was law-abiding citizens in that church with guns that were able to confront9 the shooter, otherwise it would have been a much more horrible tragedy. and so over and over again we see this attack on rights of law-abiding is citizens. and that's where they're going in virginia, and i think that's what's got most people alarmed. and the fact they had to misrepresent law enforcement to help get this thing snuck through is one more concern. and, you know, again, they'll do anything, it seems like, to take away the rights of law-abiding citizens. iron chi, it's that same governor of virginia who wants to make it illegal to kill a baby born outside the womb and call it abortion when, in fact, it's murder. that's what's going op over there.
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pete: yeah, the governor doesn't want to stop there, he's proposing universal background check, banning assault rifles, red flag laws. speak to the extent to which democrats truly want to go to get rid of our second amendment right if they can, briefly. >> yeah. we see it all around. you know, they always start saying, hey, don't worry, i'm pro-gun except. and then they go down this long road of taking away the rights of law-abiding is citizens, you know, when they're trying to make it easy for criminals to get out of prison earlier, but then they want to go after law-abiding citizens who are making our communities safer. i think people get this, by and large, but this is something the democratic party's been doing for quite a while. in the presidential debates, we had a candidate saying he's going to come and take your guns. when they say that, pay attention because they mean it. lisa: sir, thank you so much for being here with us. we're so glad that you're think and doing so well -- healthy and doing so well. >> great to be with you. go, tigers.
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pete: big games today, it's football sunday as well. green bay takes on seattle, houston takes the field against kansas city. we've got a panel of football players with us. ♪ ♪ for a cold sore,
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you must be steven's phone. now you can take control of your home wifi and get a notification the instant someone new joins your network... only with xfinity xfi. download the xfi app today. ♪ ♪ lisa: some quick headlines. a mass emergency alert since this morning turns out to be a giant mistake. it was send to canadians about an incident at a nuclear plant near lake ontario. the alert said there was no abnormal release of radioactivity, it was only supposed to go to people within 6 miles of the plant. but people 25 miles away in toronto ended up receiving it. and this announcement isn't a mistake. a japanese billionaire says he wants a girlfriend to go up in space with him. he wants women to be a part of a
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reality show similar to the bachelor, and the winner would join him on a trip around the moon in 2023. it comes just days after the billionaire gave away $9 million on twitter. dean, that is quite the interesting show scenario, isn't it? [laughter] dean: oh, yeah. looking for something to do. all right. it's sunday, so we're talking football over here. now, the tennessee titans pulled a huge upset over the baltimore ravens last night, they're now advancing to the afc championship. this comes as the 49ers head to the nfc title game after defeating the minnesota vikings. they didn't defeat 'em, they just beat them i, pete. so who should we expect to see facing off super bowl sunday? here to discuss, our panel of former nfl players, what a great looking group, all right? and also chris valeta, eric coalman, obviously, he's the best looking of the bunch,
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because he's a defensive back, like me. [laughter] first of all, some surprises last night. what happened? what happened to lamar? >> defense happened. dean: great defensive player. >> i mean, i loved seeing it, getting after the quarterback, six sacks in one game. that's what you play. if. >> titans are on a roll right now. there's no doubt the ravens had, they have the best player of 2019, the best coach, the roster, but 2020, it was all about the titans last night. >> in an age where you throw the ball all the time, the teams that run the ball the best are having the success when it comes down to the playoffs. dean: the niners and the titans ran the ball all up and down the field. how hard would it be to tackle henry? derek henry, he's a big man and he's fast. >> 240 -- dean dean 245. >> i wish i could have blocked for him. that would have been amazing. >> you play defensive back, you want guys like mathias and
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linebackers to slow him down. by the time he gets to that second level, if he has a full head of steam, good luck. dean: you were tackling back in the day, i'll tell you with. today we have some games going on. first of all, surprised to see houston. then we've got seattle and green bay. who's going to win? >> so, look, i like, i like green bay in the cold weather, i think aaron rodgers has had an amazing year with, obviously, his first-year coach. i do think while the chiefs have the better of the game, j.j. watt is back, and when he's back, it's a different team, a different defense, and i think that could be a difference maker. i'm from texas, i've got to go with the texans. too. dean: you could have said that in the beginning and saved all that other stuff. [laughter] mathias, what do you say? >> i like green bay as well. kansas city with the spagnuolo-led defense, that's going to be tough to beat. every team left has great quarterbacks, but i think it's going to come down to defense.
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dean: you would. you're a defensive all-star. i like your style. eric, who do you have today? >> i have green bay at home winning this game -- dean: because they're at home? >> because they're at home. i think they're on on a good roll. their defense is playing better this year. but when you go to the kansas city/texans game, andy reid is 22-5 in his career coming off a bye. i really like the odds of the kansas city chiefs, patrick mahomes with all the weapons he has, i really expect them to play great at arrowhead stadium. dean: it's all matchups. some teams match up better than others. that speed of kansas city, ty reek hill, i don't want to chase 'em -- >> can't coach it. >> the intangibles, that's where the titans are sit right now. ryan tannehill, no one expected them to be here, they're on a roll, i've got to stick with him all the way. dean: what else is there? we're excited for the games today. thank you all for coming in. best panel we've ever had.
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bunch of ball players, that's it. playoffs today, 3:05 tennessee titans versus the kansas city chiefs. i pick kansas city in that one. and at 6:40 today we've got seattle v. green bay, that's on fox, and i'm taking seattle. i'm just going against y'all. that's it. we'll see what happens. all right. now making a perfect pivot to wildfires in australia, wildfires are still wreaking havoc across australia as experts warn they could threaten the global food supply. our anna kooiman lives in australia, and she's lye on the ground with an update next. plus, michael bloomberg says he's open to spending $1 billion to beat president trump. he's well on his way right now. that's a billion dollar promise that he won't be able to keep? we'll find out. maria bartiromo is on deck with the numbers. ♪ ♪ i wish i had gone into aspen dental much sooner.
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pete: we are back with a fox news ale, australia's prime minister announcing a multimillion dollar plan as the country ballots raging -- battles raging wildfires. lisa: 28 people have died, and 5 are firefighters. dean dean anna kooiman is live in australia with more. anna, how's it going down there? >> reporter: hi, guys, good
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morning. well, this is australia's war, that's what you will hear aussies say about these ongoing wildfires. it truly is a crisis, and we did hear from the embattled prime minister, scott morrison, today. he addressed climate change and also said his personal response to this crisis could have been better. he then announced a $76 million plan for mental health care, addressing ptsd is and trying to keep this at bay. >> there has been a deep scar in the landscape that has been left right across our country. but i am also very mindful that is the government of the very real scars that will be there for quite a period of time to come for those that have been exposed to the trauma of the bush fires. >> reporter: it's very real. about half a billion animals are estimated to have died so far. and the land left unscorched is still par ed from a three-year drought. many experts fear this could be
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changing the ecosystems in australia's unique environment for generations to come. parks and wildlife branches have started dropping food, things like carrots and sweet poe pota, for endangeredded animals. mean while, residents are sick and fired of the ongoing evacuation. >> i just want it over and done with. i don't want, i don't want the weather to change next week and all of a sudden it's still a threat, right? so you've got to go through all that crap again. you know, if it came through, then we'll just go behind and mop up, save what we can, and that would have been it. over and done with, finished. but now, no. >> reporter: today in sydney we woke up with air quality at the hazardous level, and this is something that cities across australia have been dealing with, even those that aren't dealing with actually fires. you wake up, and it smells like
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a campfire. other days it's fine, some days it's terrible. you'll have swimming pools and tennis courts and things like that closed while health care providers are urging folks to stay indoors. pete: thanks, anna. dean: hey, one quick question. i understand a couple dozen people have been arrested for arson as well. are they talking about that a lot in australia? >> reporter: you know what? this is actually something here at the new south wales rural fire service that they have said they're very cautionary about bringing this up constantly because it's, it's -- accounts for about 1-2%, if that. this is natural causes that are causing these; lightning, we've had drought for three years, incredibly high winds, record-breaking temperatures. these are natural causes for the most part causing these fires is what i hear at the emergency operations headquarters here in sydney. pete: thank you so much for covering this, we appreciate it.
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dean: billionaire michael bloomberg rallying with judge judy in texas. lisa: the former new york city mayor not ruling out spending a billion dollars of his own money to defeat president trump if he doesn't win the nomination. he told "the new york times" it depends whether the candidate needs help. if they're doing very well, they need me less. if they are not, they'll need more. you know how much money -- [laughter] how much money a billion dollars is, it's a lot of money to me, it's a lot of money to anybody. pete: here to react, host of "sunday morning futures," maria bartiromo. thank you for being here this morning >> thank you so much for having me. pete: it's true, anybody who spends a billion dollars on a race, and he's focusing on super tuesday. are we underestimating the disruptive gores michael bloomberg -- force michael bloomberg could be? >> you're right. money has a major, major impact. don't forget what happened at the end of last year, lisa, you and i were talking during the commercial break. he put up more than $100 million
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to help the democrats win the majority in the house. it worked, they won. ing so, you know, money can go a long way. remember at the end of last year we were talking about when you put in the word impeachment into the google search engine, you google impeachment, the first thing that comes up is a michael bloomberg ad. he's really putting his money specifically to attack donald trump. the problem is he's still not necessarily resonating with a broad swath of people. we'll see if the money can actually get him votes, but right now it's not resonating. remember, last week he came out with a so-called jobs plan, and it sort of went unnoticed. we still don't know the priorities of michael bloomberg, what his priorities and policy changes would be. we know that he's probably going to raise taxes on the rich, and we know that he's probably going to come up with a climate plan. beyond that we don't know what his priorities are. whether or not the money will take care of that remains a question. lee least interesting, because a
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different strategy than we've seen previously, he's got a massive amount of funds behind it. your show, "sunday morning futures" has been doing so well. congratulations, maria -- >> thank you. lisa: who do you have today? >> we have a big show, secretary of the treasury stephen mnuchin coming on, we're going to talk about china, they're having a huge ceremony on wednesday, the signing ceremony for the phase one deal. steve bannon coming on, former white house strategist, he has an incredible way of pinpointing exactly what the centerment is right now -- sentiment. wait until you hear what he's going to ask president trump to do tomorrow morning. he's calling for the president to make a move tomorrow morning, we'll tell you about it. and representative kevin mccarthy is going to walk us through the impeachment. we are expecting nancy pelosi to send the articles next week, we'll be talking with senator rick scott. and devin nuñes is breaking news on a letter that he sent the
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inspector general last night. so we have a lot of breaking news in the next hour. it's going to be a big show. lisa: huge show. dean: breaking autonews. all right. let's turn now to your headlines. 2020 hopeful andrew yang blasting the dnc for not including him in tuesday's primary debate writing in part: we are not going to allow the dnc to dictate who they wish to see as the nominee and deny the of the people. yang didn't meet the polling requirement to qualify for the debate. he claims there weren't enough polls conduct since the last debate for him to advance. a former mrs. florida fighting her sentence for social security fraud. karen turk pleading stealing her mother's checks instead of sending them to a nursing home for her mother's alzheimer's care. she tells abc news the home did not care for her mother who died last year, and her guilty plea
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was -- [inaudible] a judge sentencing her to one month in jail. she plans to appeal. now, dr. oz serving up a hot take on breakfast. the tv host telling tmz the so-called most important meal of the day is actually a marketing ploy. he says people should wait until they're actually hungry, which could be hours after they wake up. he suggestings eating brunch as your first meal of the day as well. dr. oz will join us tomorrow on "fox & friends" to talk about this, and pete vehemently disagrees with him finish lisa: i mean, what if you're always hungry? [laughter] dean: he'll probably have a reason. pete: you don't know this, but maria's till -- maria, should we eat breakfast? >> yes! [laughter] lisa: there you have it. pete: maria -- lisa: i'm with you, maria. pete: we'll toss out to adam klotz. adam, are you a breakfast guy? adam: i agree with dr. oz, no breakfast. lisa: get outta here. adam: i think you can pass right
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by breakfast, not eat until one or two in the afternoon, you're going to feel better, eat less over the course of the day. so, pete, i think you're wrong. but as far as the forecast guys, boy, it is fantastic out here in new york city. temperatures up into the upper 60s right now. this is all associated with that big storm that ran across the south, unfortunately causing tornadoes, killed 7-8 people yesterday. this is a really big story. that system's still on the move. as of right now it's running up into new england. i don't think this becomes a big storm any farther, but there's still some snow a little farther north. here in new york city, guys, we're really enjoying this. upper 60s, going to be a beautiful day here, and the good news is that storm system running off the country. it's going to turn out to be a nice sunday. back in to you. pete: adam, thank you very much. appreciate it. all right. we've seen the devastating effects of socialism in venezuela and around the world, but that hasn't stopped far-left democrats from, of course, pushing socialist agendas here at home >> to 135 million americans for
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free. >> we can make public colleges and universities tuition-free. pete: our next guest fled venezuela. his warning to those pushing a socialist america. ♪ as a struggling actor, i need all the breaks that i can get. at liberty butchumal- cut. liberty biberty- cut. we'll dub it. liberty mutual customizes your car insurance so you only pay for what you need. only pay for what you need. ♪ liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty. ♪ doprevagen is the number oneild mempharmacist-recommendeding? memory support brand. you can find it in the vitamin aisle in stores everywhere. prevagen. healthier brain. better life. the ups and downs of frequent mood swings can plunge you into deep, depressive lows.
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>> health care coverage to 135 miln americans for free. >> we can make public colleges and universities tuition-free. >> free -- >> free. >> free. pete: well, far-left democrats promising free stuff. sounds good, but our next guest grew up in venezuela and experienced firsthand it's not and has a warning for all of us.
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lisa: daniel mar tee know fellowed veps wail a la in 2016, and he joins us now. hi, daniel. >> hi, lisa, how are you? lisa: i found this number staggering. all right, so your family, you went from being in the middle class to very poor. in the early 2000s your parents were making $3,000 per month. by 2016 they were making $2 per day. tell me a little bit about your family's experience with socialism. >> yeah. look, in venezuela we were promised everything when i was little. we were promised free housing, free food, free health care, free education. and most of those things were partially delivered by the government, but the price was very high. inflation went up because the government didn't have enough money to tax people, so my family suffered from inflation. that's what happened to our income. from $3,000 to $2 a day, that's something. pete: what would you say to
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americans who say, okay, that's venezuela. we're the united states of america, we can afford to go a little socialist, and it won't affect us? >> look, the problem is it's not just venezuela, right? it's cuba, it's the soviet union, it is all the countries that have tried socialist policies to some degree have suffered from economic nightmares to some degree as well. if all the policies that the democrats are currently proposing -- free health care, free education, free housing like some of them are saying that housing's a right -- they will not have the ability to tax people for those. and if they do, what are we going to be making? they're going to take 70% of our income? lisa: you mentioned some of those policies, so you've got senator bernie sanders, you've got elizabeth warren espousing and pushing these policies, you know, free everything, right? so there's this misconception by them saying, look, it's going to empower you as the individual. but doesn't it just end up el
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empowering the ruling class? >> that's exactly what happened in venezuela and in all countries where the government's powerful. right now in spain, spain is definitely not a socialist country, but it has many of the things that the democrats have proposed. what's the result? low wages, low quality of life. people are just conforming to what they make. engineers, people who just get out of college, the up employment rate is over 40% -- unemployment. in the united states unemployment is liss than 10%, the economy's booming. american people understand that what's going to make us prosperous is more free markets, not socialism. lisa: well, thank you, daniel, for sharing your story. pete: yeah, you can see his column at town hall. thank you very much, appreciate it. >> thank you. pete: all right. sunday dinner used to be the norm. >> oh, this is so fabulous, ain't nothing like getting together with family and having
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a good meal. pete: so today we're serving up sunday supper for a reason, because it's national sunday supper day. lisa: it's also delicious. pete: coming up next. ♪ ♪ these days we're (horn honking) i hear you, sister. that's why i'm partnering with cigna to remind you to go in for your annual check-up. and be open with your doctor about anything you feel. physically, and emotionally. body and mind. when youyou spend lessfair, and get way more. so you can bring your vision to life and save in more ways than one.
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♪ ♪ lisa: today is national supper day -- dean: yes, it is. and earlier -- lisa: thank you, pete. [laughter] dean: we talked about the benefits of sitting together as a family around the table, but now it's time to eat. pete: here to share how you can recreate a family meal like this is james beard award-winning cookbook author of sunday supper, she wrote the book on it -- dean: she wrote the book.
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pete: cynthia. dean: i messed it up twice. pete: thanks for being here. >> my pleasure. pete: so what is the secret, before we dive into a great -- dean: we're already diving. [laughter] >> i think we've begun. pete: we have. dean: am i allowed to start eating in i'm getting yelled at. >> i think you should wait for the cook to sit down before you start to eat, right? go ahead, i'm seated. there you go. lisa: is that real or do you say that to make us feel better? >> no, shul. the person who's doing all the hard work, you should wait for them. dean: this looks great. who has the time to do this on a sunday? >> so sunday is really the best way to try to do a family meal together because you've got a little bit of extra time in your day, and you can use it as an opportunity to do some advance meal prep for your week. so this pot roast, for example, i'll take my leftovers, and i'll shred those, maybe toss them with a chipotle adobo sauce, or
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noodles, so i've got two more meals because i was smart enough to make a family supper. lisa: what else do we have here? >> mashed potatoes. if you don't have time to make homemade mashed potatoes, i'm not going to cry if you use instant. just mix them with some cream and put in some herbs. these are real. i would never do this. pete: there's something opposed to a supper than a dinner. why is it sunday supper? >> well, traditionally, sunday supper in the south is a lighter meal, not this. this is more sunday dinner. but i think the alliteration caught on. pete: i like it. dean: what's the thing about having a sunday supper? >> you want to sit down together with your family. you know, we need to spend more
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time at the table. while this is a gorgeous spread, not everybody has time to do this. so this pot roast can be in the slow cooker or the instapot, however you need it. get the kids to help with the green bean, they can do the batter for the herb spring rolls, they could do the batter for this gorgeous georgia peach cobbler -- dean: that looks really good. they can clean up? >> and they can clean up. you remembered that. [laughter] you know, it's a way to get the whole family involved. the whole point is to sit together at the table. if you need to bring part of it in from takeout, i still want you to do the main course because it's a good strategy for cooking during the week. but then have the magic at the table with the conversation -- pete: it's all about being at the table. >> all about it. pete: i love it. sunday suppers, check it out. thank you for being here. >> my pleasure. pete: more "fox & friends" moments away. we'll be taking a break. ♪ stroke of heartache
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pete: that meal was fantastic. go to church everybody. sunday. maria: welcome. good sunday morning everybody. thank for joining us i'm maria bartiromo. straight ahead on "sunday morning futures," my exclusive interview with treasury secretary steve mnuchin as president trump hits iran with new sanctions. former white house chief strategist steve bannon is here. he is calling on the president to delay the state of the union. he will join me coming up live. republican leader kevin mccarthy on the house voting to limit the president's war powers. why he says the measure has no teeth. devin nunez is here with exclusive news. he will break news on the ukraine whistle-blower

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