tv FOX and Friends Sunday FOX News August 16, 2020 3:00am-7:00am PDT
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"justice with judge jeanine" is next. remember i'm watters and this is ♪. pete: welcome to "fox & friends." will cain, take note, that is how you start an hour right there. that is with britney spears. that is true with britney spears. not sure you start an hour. will: are you a fan of the songbird of the generation. pete: i feel it is yes. otherwise i'm not invited for day three? jedediah: we were asked to submit some of our favorite
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music. pete and i so different on so many things both submitted a brittany song. that is how you come together, my friend. that's how you do it. will: excited to be invited back for day two. before next weekend i will do my homework, a ton of brittany suppose to be invited back. pete: don't follow her on instagram. there is not a lot going on. she is wonderful but we'll leave it right there. we're glad to have you. we have a big show. four hours. don't leave it. we will keep asking questions of will cain. i have a few in the hopper. we'll talk about the d. [c. their convention starts tomorrow. great development on the 9/11 memorial. speaking of memorials, we'll start with fox news alert. president trump's younger brother robert has died. the president visited him one day before his death. ashley strohmier joins us live as the president reflects on his
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loss, calling his brother his best friend. reporter: those close to the president say he had a very good relationship with robert and he was two years younger than the president. robert trump died in a hospital in new york. robert took blood thinners, he experienced brain bleeds which started after a recent fall. president trump released a heartfelt statement. it is with a heavy heart that i share my wonderful brother robert peacefully passed away. he was not just my brother but my best friend. he will be greatly missed. his memory will live in my heart forever. robert, i love you. rest in peace. fortunately president trump was able to see his brother before he passed. he died 11 days before what would have been his 72nd birthday. he sped more than a beak in the icu for a serious condition. he was young e of five.
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he shied more away from the public. he tried to block his niece mary trump from releasing the book about the trump family. the president is expected to attend his funeral. unknown how that will affects rallies already planned. robert trump was 71 years old. pete: thank you very much. two different men as far as the spotlight concerned. what you can see about robert's life his devotion to his family and his brother. two years younger. supported him and his candidacy and presidency. strong bond there, jed. jedediah: a our thoughts and prayers go out to the trump family. this will be a difficult day for them. we're thinking of you. this is a big day and week for politics because the the dnc
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kicks oaf tomorrow. this will include key speakers. a lot of key speakers on the list. we'll show them to you now. some that would stand out, bernie sanders and michelle obama. that will be a keynote. that will be definitely a big one. we have andrew cuomo who failed miserably in new york when it came to the nursing home congress. governor john cast i kasich who cannot decide whether he is a democrat or republican. michelle palm. she is obviously beloved by some people on the left. i always said she would run for president, that would be the candidate to beat for sure. what can we expect from her? an obama ally will tell us. it is not, it is a quote from "the hill." yep, i think she will come hard at trump in the most artful way. i think it will be one of the
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most defining and memorable speeches of the cycle. she has one of the most powerful voices to get-out-the-vote. i absolutely agree with that. what do you think, will? will: the list of speakers you read including former first lady michelle obama. what sticks out thome, we the people, i don't know how you have platform we the people when you leave out pete hegseth when that is tattooed on his arm. did you get an invite? pete: i did not. i'm surprised. if they need a last minute invite i'm available. to your point, will, fitting for the dnc to start out their convention with an avout socialist. they're starting on the right foot based on where their party is. they're going to governor nursing home. with whitmer, they're going to governor lockedown. james clyburn. and then doug jones women be
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senator for 10 more minutes. they're going to amy klobuchar. senator comb your hair with a fork. then they end it with michelle obama who is the most formidable name on the list t strikes me as very fit, will the socialist kicks it off. will: what strikes me the biden campaign is not doing, getting out in the public very much. even on a week where the democratic national convention is set to kick off. we're seeing the basement candidacy basically play out in full. we're not just talking about interviews that have been declined or interviews not been taken up. i'm talking about heading into the dnc declining sunday show invitations. this is something our own fox news channel's chris wallace talked about yesterday on guy benson's radio show. listen. >> we've been counting all week having a top official from the biden campaign, campaign manager, the top pollster, the chief strategist, they are not
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putting anybody out. at first i thought, well, maybe it is because it is fox news and they're boycotting us. no, they're not putting anybody out on any of the sunday shows. point, i don't understand what is going on here. this is the damnest thing i've ever seen. vice president not really doing any serious interviews. not answering any questions since the rollout. he continues to lead with what i will call the basement strategy. i don't think you can hide from now until election day. will: that was on guy benson's radio show on friday and jed, what's clear here the biden-harris campaign plan to win the election by staying quiet. letting president trump to do the talking. hoping that is enough for people to vote for biden-harris. jedediah: this is very odd to me because i understand keeping joe biden away because he fails miserably when he goes out does interviews. they know that. he knows that. but to keep the no team, why no head pollster?
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why no campaign stratgift. very odd that no one who represents the biden campaign is not being put out. not just "fox news sunday" shows, maybe it is about fox. it is any sunday shows. it is very unclear at this point. why, do they have no confidence in anyone on the team? i don't really understand. are they afraid they will slip up. they see joe biden is in the lead in the polls. if we say nothing we're better off than a slip-up. seems the team has no confidence going forward and any desire to put something in front of the public. why let everyone know hey, we're here. we're not afraid of you. we're not afraid of the press. it seems like a really odd statement to me. pete: feels like they're going to four corners offense a little earlier here. especially yesterday we covered the fact that president trump will go to swing states this week competing with the virtual convention which sure, cable news channels will cover. how much does that crack into
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the national consciousness in the moment we're in when president trump has a knack for grabbing headlines himself. our fox news coverage starts to night. we're a sunday show also, guys. the biden campaign, we still have 3 hours, 51 minutes on the show. anyone from the biden campaign is welcome to come on this program to answer chris wallace 's out pouring they should do something. speaking of outpouring there was huge outkey nationally, we cover i had it about the 9/11 emmoral and. they were not going to do the tribute in light. 40 staff members. the outrage was palatable from vets, from patriots, people across the country, new yorkers, and they switched their stance on it, thank goodness. here is the statement from alice greenwald, 9/11 memorial president. for the last eight years the
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memorial has put tribute in light. this year it is message of hope, endurance and resilience are more important than ever. in the last 24 hours we had conversations with many interested parties and believe we will be able to stage the tribute in a safe, appropriate fashion. pete: will, we had frank seller on, saying we'll do it if you won't. pressure like that was successful. will: it shows people's voices can be heard and change can be made. this was absolutely the right choice to go ahead with this tribute. we need to show we can still make wise choices. we can go to church. we can go to work. and honor those giving life in service for their country, jed. jedediah: it was utterly ridiculous for the museum to come out to say this is impossible. i understand they want to be safe during covid time there is a way to stay safe. frank siller said if you're not going to do it we'll do it. they faces enormous pressure.
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this is moment everyone remembers and wants to remember in the future and wants to honor those people who served and honor the people who were lost. i'm happy to see this. unfortunately it took that kind of pressure to make it happen. we'll get what we can get in new york city. we'll turn to your headlines. 24 protesters, 17 chicago officers are hurt in violent clashes. [shouting] demonstrators using bikes to create a barrier on city streets. authorities say it started as a peaceful protest to defund police before agitators quote, hijacked it. beating officers with several items including a skateboard. police reportedly using pepper spray to control the crowd. four people are charged with felony assault on officers. now extreme weather. watch as a firenado rips through parts of california. wow. strong wind as high as
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60 miles per hour turning a wildfire into a rare phenomenon during the nevada border. the fire burning 20,000-acres forcing evacuations in several california counties. firefighters scrambling to move cars stuck on and high way as flames inched closer. luckily no one was hurt. the fire is only 5% contained. fda issues merge authorization for yale saliva test for covid-19. it does not require a swab or collection device, instead using small saliva samples from people showing symptoms of the virus. researchers saysay fda authorization could make the test available in laboratories across the country in coming weeks. air force pilots are set to take on their most advanced opponents ever. the pilots will face virtual dogfights against artificial intelligence. each pilot will sit in an
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simulated f-16 and face off against opponents just like a videogame. it is goal to develop unmanned drones in future flights. the pilots will be online next thursday. those are the headlines. pete: good for them. will: i got a chance to go up in an f-16. and a flight simulator. it is hard. you think i play videogames. i can do a flight simulator. no. it is very difficult. i couldn't get my bearings. pete: i tried not to puke the one-time i went up in the air. will: the entire goal was not to throw up. pete: absolutely. you will learn more about will all day long. send your questions to foxandfriends.com. what is your favorite video game of all time? will: madden. got to be football. pete: contra, you remember that growing up? it's a little shooter game.
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will: no. jedediah: mine is superman? pete: go ahead. >> super mario brothers original. will: all time hit as well. coming up, remember this shocking video, a conservative attacked on campus. his attacker was released on bail. now he is charged with stabbing a person. that activist joins us lynch to react coming up. our agents helped make saving on insurance easy usaa. what you're made of, we're made for. usaa i had moderate-to-severes rheumatoid arthritis. i've always been the ringleader had a zest for life.
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♪ ♪ the open road is open again. and wherever you're headed, choice hotels is there. book direct at choicehotels.com. ♪ ♪. jedediah: you remember this viral video. it shows conservative activist hayden williams being punched in the face working at berkeley university, while doing a turning point usa. the attacker, zachary greenberg was released on bail. he is facing charges from stabbing a bicyclist. he says if the case was taken seriously the latest attack
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could have been avoided. hayden, thanks for being here. remind us of the assault against you at uc berkeley. >> as you said i was helping a conservative group table on campus and out of nowhere this guy comes up to our table and starts cursing at us and right in that moment i pulled out the phone to start recording and he flipped over our table and then started ripping my phone out of my hands and fortunately, some students walking to class saw what was going on, record the it as well. we had apple footage what happened today. jedediah: now you have the same individual, zachary greenberg, being arrested again for a stabbing and released again on a 35,000-dollar bail. what is the message here about consequences for actions, hayden, or lack thereof, i should say? >> right. when you these people are not held accountable for their actions they get the message that, what they are doing is okay and obviously because the
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d.a. in almeida county sat on this case and, 16 months out. there is still no indictment. he got the message this is okay and he stabbed somebody now and i'm just wondering, what's next? jedediah: yeah. what is next? have you spoken to the d.a.'s office or gotten any feedback from them as to what is going to happen here? >> they haven't really seemed interested. the last time we spoke they kind of referred to this as a playground fight and it was anything but that. it was an unprovoked, vicious attack and, thankfully it was caught on video. this guy, he has attacked most recently, he is a father and, i hope that justice gets served for all of the victims of jackie
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greenberg. -- zachary greenberg. jedediah: is there any trial coming? there has to be some recourse for people that face violence like this, and get no answers? >> it is crucial there is a fair trial and a speedy trial and, i as you said he is out on bail again. this guy is a threat to the public. you know, he is clearly, clearly violent. it is up to the courts to hold them accountable for his actions so that he, people like him know this sort of behavior won't be tolerated. jedediah: hayden, thank you so much for being here. we're glad you're doing well. obviously something needs to be done in the name of prevention so things like this don't happen over and over again. thank you as always. >> thank you. jedediah: still ahead, joe biden is leading president trump in national polls but a new fox poll reveals most voters think
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call or go online today. ♪. will: we saw it in the 2016 election. the silent majority speaking up. >> both of you have said we don't know what we're going to do until we get in the ballot box. right now you get in the ballot box, who are you pulling lever for? >> right now i'm feeling like trump. >> you were still undecided when we talked to you last. where are you right now.
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>> i think i will pull the trigger on trump. >> i think donald trump offer as new perspective. pete: that was election day in 2016 when the diners were a thing. they will be back. this is new "fox news poll" reveal voters think their neighbors secretly support the president over joe biden. here is react, former liberal democrat, founder of the #walkwaycampaign. brandon strong. these rallies you're doing across the country are own hi growing. talk about the idea voters in their minds i think my neighbor might be supporting trump, but i don't know. is that sentiment alive in 2020 like it was in 2016? >> oh i think it is definitely alive in 2016, i think everybody is questioning as should they be voting for trump when they see what is happening around the country and see what their options are. the left has created a bully culture, people who love trump,
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really support trump don't feel comfortable saying out loud. the polls are very skewed, because a lot of people are afraid to tell the truth how they feel and how this information may be used against them. i think really interesting analogy to that too, when we walk around, we see all of the businesses who have black lives matter signs in the window in fact many of these people are putting up black lives matter signs so their store won't be matched or looted. this gives so many people support black lives matter when it is not true. you can't bully people in the voting booth. that is only poll really matters what happens on election day. pete: interesting, you mentioned polling. bill maher, hbo's real time, often left of center, speaks truth people don't want to hear, he talked recently about biden's lead over trump. here is his take. >> biden's ahead but he is not to my view comfortably ahead, not for my comfort.
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hillary was ahead by more at some points. i just got to ask, what is your party doing against this walking disaster that you can't close the gap better than that? pete: you used to be a hillary supporter, not a trump supporter, on election day of 2016. you thought the polls were right. they were wrong. are we seeing the same thing? >> yes. we are seeing the same thing exactly. and that taught me such a lesson in 2016, yes i voted for hillary clinton and i do apologize to the american people for that. i will be voting for trump in 2020. i'm very excited to do so. but that taught me a great lesson. those polls were out of control. they were saying that trump had a 3% chance of winning on election day itself. they were saying he had 1% chance of winning this is what happens when once again you bully people afraid to admit they're going to vote for the president and skew the polls by overloading democrats that you're polling. i don't think there is a lot
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of -- pete: your rallies, rescue america rallies continue. you've been in sacramento, west hollywood, most recently milwaukee. blue states, blue cities. you've seen huge turnouts. why? >> people are sick and tired of being told they can't go to work, they can't go outside, they can't gather but leftists groups are allowed to together, by tens of hundreds of thousands smash windows, loot cities, destroy our state and country. i want to bring people out who want to rescue america from the radical left this is something absolutely gaining steam. we're in milwaukee. 400 people came out in milwaukee. nearly 1000 people came out in beverly hills in california to rescue america. we're headed to philadelphia next. go to "walkway campaign".com to keep up with what we're doing. we have a lot of great events rest of the year. rescue america rallies happen every single week.
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pete: brandon, you're paying your penance for 2016 and you're doing it very, very well. congratulations. keep up the feet. we appreciate it. >> thanks. pete: will cain, new host of "fox & friendses" weaken. he is no stranger to the fox news channel. we'll break out the vhs tape. we'll take a trip down memory lane next. ♪ for bathroom odors that linger try febreze small spaces. just press firmly and it continuously eliminates odors in the air and on soft surfaces. for 45 days.
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♪. ♪ living in america jedediah: this weekend we're welcoming our new co-host to the "fox & friends" family. pete: who is that young man. many of you recognize will cain from the sports world, he used be to a very familiar face on the network and he is now again. take a look back. will: i care about ideas. i care about philosophy. i care about the law. that launched me into doing television here at fox. i was on "fox & friends." >> we continue our conversation with will cain. will cain. will: i was on "hannity," and. >> tonight on the great american
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panel, will cain is here. will: i spent several years as conservative analyst. how am i supposed to unpack that in 30 seconds? this is what politicians do, they strife to seek to be in power. when it comes to rearranging national health care, when it comes to tax cuts, please. i don't want my politicians checking the latest polls to find out the way to vote. first stimulus was a waste. big government solutions are likebad for you. they taste good going down. if i were republicans i wouldn't brag about the numbers. like the knicks bragging how better they are than the nets. my problem ask with the pledge. it doesn't go far enough. it is weak. he said the top political goal of republicans is going to be defeating president obama. does that outrage you? will: it doesn't outrage me at all. it is totally worthy goal. they have been obsessed for a decade. they have been obsessed keeping democrats out of power. what did that get us.
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>> charlie wrangle, william jefferson clinton, i thought nancy pelosi would drain the swamp. will: why are you so surprised, sean. democrats are essentially all-in on this the about, just in the past few months. i think again, the confluence of events this country, one of the biggest reasons why i come over. there are several reasons why i wanted to come over to fox news and in particular "fox & friends." i think it is important. this moment in the country, it's important. i need to be part of this conversation. pete: nice. will: couple takeaways. i grown up, i cut my hair. why didn't anybody tell me before? second, put on a tie, cain. i'm working my posture. i get down into the point. sit up, man, look at pete hegseth. pete: i was like this the whole time on the package. will: you work on tv, that is
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the point, when you weren't on tv. pete: we've got questions. you might have more questions after that segment there as well. keep sending them in. here ask an email from steven, who would be your favorite person to interview you have not interviewed yet? will: i answered this a couple times. i said i would love to interview charles barkley. reason i say that i love independent thinkers, inspirational people. i give you a couple more, former navy seal, david goggins, who i am a big fan of. it is all about challenging yourself. putting yourself through hard times. i love david going begin's message, if i had to pick one, maybe "fox & friends" could do it. former vice president joe biden. i would love to challenge president biden on his positions during this election. can we make it happen. jedediah: i don't hold my breath, will. i don't think he will be phoning in anytime soon. will: have a conversation, joe. i'm here. jedediah: i have the question of the day though, email from
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thomas. i is amazing. cowboy boots or shoes, will cain. will: man i would love to say it is always cowboy boots. pete can do a fat check on me right now. shoes as we speak. but get me out of this studio, let me put on a pair of jeans and it is cowboy boots i promise you. it is cowboy boots. pete: i've seen it. i will give him that. not today. i usually have seen him in cowboy boots as well. i feel you got this yesterday as well. are you related to dean cain? i think we're recycling, because it is the most asked question from what i understand at "fox & friends." am i related to friend of the family dean cain? i will tell you what. i will tell you the answer to that if you hang around until 830 eastern. i will tell you the answer whether or not i'm related to the man coming on this show, who has been on this show several times and a good friend of the family two hours from now. pete: my heritage coming on to do a dna test.
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no actually, we don't. if they want to come on they can too. send us your questions, please, friends@foxnews.com. he is ready to answer. jedediah: make them juicy. i need some juicy questions. come on. will is no, jed. will: all fair game. do it. jedediah: all right. we'll turn to some headlines in the hour now. the fbi is expected to arrive in lebanon today to investigate a massive explosion in beirut. lebanese officials asked agents to help them figure out what caused the blast earlier this month killing more than 170 people and injuring thousands. the u.s. undersecretary of state for political affairs toured the damage yesterday, calling for a thorough and transparent investigation. take a look at this, police rescue a man trapped under a car in arizona. devon said he was working on his wife's car when one of the jacks collapsed causing it to fall on
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his chest. police arrived in minutes. allowing hickock to be pulled out. he walked away with some soreness. luckily he will be okay. two separate weddings are crashed at fire at a d.c. hotel. the fire forced two parties to evacuate. it spread to several floors. despite the chaos the two parties seemed to take it in stride. they had a photo-op and luckily no one was hurt. there was record-breaking trump parade in florida. thousands of supporters showed up on bridges. they needed more than 1080 boats, is that right, to beat the record. they beat it with 1600 votes. drone footage capturing the sheer size of the parade as it
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stretched through pinellas county outside of tampa. that is pretty cool looking,. pete: pete "guinness book of world records," boat parade, the spanish armada got nothing on trump supporters. will: we saw it turning out live on "fox & friends." pete: you can shut down the rallies. trump supporters say we'll get in the boats. fly 15 trump flags. i would like to see what a biden boat parade would look like. they would be in canoes. you can't use gas. that is not allowed. will: we're allowed to check the weather, throwing it over to rick reichmuth. what's up, rick? rick: good morning, guys, a lot in the weather world. eastern part of the u.s., this time of year we do have tropical systems. we have two across the atlantic. we call them fish storms. not impact us at all. that will be the j, k storm,
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don't remember the "l" storm. haven't got there yet. it will come soon enough. across parts of the southeast that has moved on. most of precipitation in across the mid-atlantic. coastal areas of the northeast and eventually parts of new england t will be mostly light drizzle. a little bit after news sans to start your day. across the west a few scattered showers but we're talking about heat. the heat continues across the west all this week. a little improvement by texas by tomorrow. one more hot day in texas you have to get through. back to you, guys. pete: rick, boat guy, canoe guy, which one? rick: i'm a canoe guy. calm lake, nobody out there? for sure. pete: appreciate it, rick. rick: taking the boat and canoe not the political message. pete: joe biden was supposed to be in wisconsin for the dnc this
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week but president trump will actually be there. are democrats making the same mistake cost them background states four years ago? wisconsin resident, rachel campos duffy is here next. ♪ welcome, today's discussion will be around sliced meat. moms want healthy... and affordable. land o' frost premium!!! no added hormones either. it's the only protein i've really melted with. land o' frost premium. fresh look. same great taste.
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>> tech: when you've got ...safelite can come to you. >> tech: and you'll get a text when we're on our way. >> tech: just leave your keys on the dash and we'll replace your windshield with safe, no-contact service. >> tech: schedule at safelite.com. >> singers: ♪ safelite repair, safelite replace. ♪ ♪. pete: we're back with a couple quick headlines. two hotels at universal orlando will temporarily close this week. universal blaming covid-19 for the shutdown of lowe's sapphire falls resort and ventura hotel. guests who have reservations will be accommodated at other hotels in the resort. no word on when they will reopen. the world's famous arena also taking a big financial a reason.
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the world's most famous arena. madison square garden reporting a loss of more than 78 million bucks in the fiscal fourth quarter. the company's assets include the knicks and rangers. both teams haven't played any home games as you know since march i'm a big knicks fan. will: hard to make money when you can put no games or concerts. democratic national convention kicks off tomorrow and while joe biden remains in his basement the president and vice president will counter campaign in wisconsin. hillary clinton notoriously ignored the key swing state when it mattered most and lost. joining us now to discuss is fox news contributor and importantly, wisconsin resident rachel campos duffy. good morning, rachel. >> good morning, will. congratulations. welcome to "fox & friends." will: thanks so much, rachel. i'm happy to be here. the trump campaign certainly wants to make joe biden's choices symbolic of hillary clinton's choices some four years ago. president trump is trailing joe biden in the polls in
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wisconsin 44-49. that is much less than he trailed hillary clinton some four years ago according to a marquette poll. rachel what are you seeing on the ground when it comes to this race. >> i happen to live in north central wisconsin. that is critical, many say what won the election for donald trump in 2016. what i see here is a lot of enthusiasm. i'll tell you the silent voter is a real thing. so i'm a kind of well-known conservative so people come to me very regularly go, i'm voting for trump. so that happens. i've spoken to people in the campaign offices, they say that, the biden campaign offices are, weak traffic. on the ground they're not doing door-to-door. they're relying much more heavily on their digital component, texting voters, communicating with them virtually. the trump campaign is putting on masks. they're knocking on doors.
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here is something i think is really interesting. they're seeing a huge demand in the trump offices for trump swag. in fact, in several towns that i've been to on the demand is so high for trump swag for t-shirts, flags and bumper stickers and hats of course that there has been pop-up businesses that have popped up to, private businesses to meet that demand. so that is something i didn't see in 2016. also if you're driving along our highways you see trump signs, not a lot of biden signs. again that sounds like oh, big deal, that is what we were seeing in 2016 when the media and the pollsters were saying that wisconsin was going for hillary by eight points. will: rachel, i just traveled across the country the same thing when it came to signs on road signs across the country. >> there is an enthusiasm gap. will: that being said. trump still does trail biden not just in wisconsin but national
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polls. i mentioned symbolism earlier. the choice of the biden campaign to stay in the basement while trump is hitting the streets, becoming somewhat symbolic of the debate over coronavirus. will this work? will running out of the clock in your estimation for biden and harris work for the election? >> i don't think so. what they're trying to do with biden, keep him controlled. not have any gaffs. not change the game so the poll numbers don't change. that is very risk-averse campaign. i don't think that really works. trump sends a strong signal. i worry about wii. i am coming here. there are two stops this week. that looks very strong. what trump is trying to do. the message he is going to bring to wisconsin is going to be, listen, it is about policies. it is not about whether you like me or not. it's about liberal policies that joe biden has. right now a lot of the policies that democrats are pursuing are doing the work for trump.
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so you have defund the police, open borders, a lot of the suburban moms need to be won over care about safe neighborhoods and bringing the economy back. that is the main question. who do you trust to bring back the economy after covid. stuart: appreciate you sharing some of that sentiment of what is going on on the ground in wisconsin. real good talking to you, rachel campos duffy. >> weekwise. will: take care. >> thanks, will. will: two teens robbed at gunpoint running a lemonade stand but police replaced the money they lost. one of those teens joins us live with the sweetening. ♪ ♪ book two separate qualifying stays and earn a free night. the open road is open again.
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♪ pete: caught on camera. two 13-year-old losers robbed, the losers are the ones who were robbing them at gunpoint while putting a lemonade stand. running a lemonade stand. they're on search for the ones that robbed it. the ones that robbed are losers. being praised for the response buying lemonade for the boys to replace the stolen money. jedediah: we're joined by one of those teens from the lemonade stand tristan and peoria police chief. welcome to the show. this story is so crazy to everyone watching that. teenagers can't run a lemonade stand in peace anymore. chief, kind of astonishing. how did you get involved in the story? >> so the officers that responded, i have what they call
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is a community officers, community policing sergeant position and the community policing sergeant, sergeant stinson, came up with the idea after the incident happened to do a fund-raiser for the kids and, so now email to the department, hey, we would like to try to replace the money with these kids and encourage them. and it took off from there. will: it is awesome that you managed to replenish these two guys. walk us through the moment. tell me what it was like. tell me how it all played out? >> so for a couple months i've been running my lemonade stand with my classmates and last week two boys came up with a gun and took all the money. it was really surprising but there wasn't really time to be scared because as soon as there
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were so many people helping us out. will: wow. chief, do you have any sense of who these, who these individuals were that robbed the stand? it's wonderful that the money is being replenished as it should be and the community would have out pouring of support? any chance you will get accountability on this? >> yeah, i believe so we have detectives as sign offed to the case. she is making progress. i do feel comfortable we'll make an arrest. jedediah: wow. this is such a come he will pelling story. tristan, thanks so much for being here. chief marion. thank you for all you do. very sad story with a positive ending with replenishing those funds. everyone in the country loves lemonade stands. pete: keep it going. will: keep it up. jedediah: if you can't have a lemonade stand what can you have president trump defending the postmaster general as
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packed proteins feels like. meat! cheese! and nuts! p3. because 3 is better than 1 ♪. pete: welcome to the second hour of this sunday edition of "fox & friends." that's will cain, our brand new co-host we're still happy to have here but we didn't know he came with the baggage of this kind of music. will: you don't like it? i don't know it. several types of music that i like, country and western. i like them all, jed. this is what you would call texas country. this is pat green, me and "billy the kid." i will introduce you to all types much country, outlaw,
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texas, the basically the whole genre as we get to know each other. jedediah: i have never heard of you either. pete and i will educate you on the top 40. that's all we do. we need brittany, j.lo, that is our familiarity zone. we'll get some country from year. pete: we can connect on '90s rap. will: we can connect on '90s rap. we'll have to disagree on britney spears. pete: we have a later. we might take it to the people in some sort of a poll. jedediah: we may have have to. pete: we often resolve our disputes that way. we let the people work. we have we the people here. will: i think i'm going to win. jedediah: yeah. we the people. meantime, president trump is defending the post master general after protesters march outside of his d.c. home calling for his resignation.
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[other thans horns blowing ♪ jedediah: mark meredith joins us live as nancy pelosi is considering bringing the house back from recess over postal service concerns. what is the latest. reporter: good morning. president trump has confidence in the postmaster general he appointed even as democrats up on capitol hill are trading to rein in the changes recently made at the post office. look at video from saturday you saw demonstrators outside the postmaster general's home here in washington. hours later president trump said he is glad to see the postmaster general making changes, reorganizing things from top to bottom ahead of the general election. president trump: the steps he is taking are trying to stop the tremendous losses at that have taken place for many, many years. he is trying to streamline the post office and make great again. reporter: democrats say recent changing cutting over time will hurt state's ability to rely on mail-in ballots come november.
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the post office already warned some states delays are possible. house speaker nancy pelosi, she put out a statement saturday writing, quote, president trump is openly working to destroy the post office and sabotage its ability to deliver absentee ballots in time to be counted. now fox has learned it is possible that democrats could cut the august recess short by a few days, to come back to town to address changes to the post office. however no final decisions have been made. this is something now getting talked about. we'll continue to keep an eye on that. back to you. pete: mark, thank you very much. will we were talking before the show on this. this is starting to build a feel like an excuse or something democrats, a narrative they will continue to want to push, regardless of the election results in november. donald trump tried to decimate the post office so votes couldn't be counted. "the wall street journal" has an excellent op-ed out recently at that talks about pushing back on the fact that the dysfunction at the post office, you think that is donald trump's fault?
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here is the headline. post office problem isn't trump's. democrats cry sabotage but mail volume is way down, the postal service is losing billions of dollars as the president pointed out. here is part of it. the post office, here is a portion of the editorial. congress has only itself to blame itself for the mess. the red ink is no fluke. the post office is meant to be self-sufficient. total losses since 2017 run close to $78 billion. it is current model is not financially available. it's a blockbuster service in a netflix world. if this is donald trump's fault in 2013 when the u.s. postal service tried to save two billion dollars stopping saturday delivery, i don't think donald trump was president in 2013. will: he was not, this will be a massive story. i'm afraid of the results of 2020 election is more about the process than it is who won the election. jed, every once in a while a story comes along that stinks
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from every direction. like a circular firing squad. fingers pointed every which way. it is true the postal service is not efficient nor honestly a good service. it is also true mail-in balloting will be fraught with fraud. it is true president trump trying to streamline the post office at this time in terms of timing will lead to all supports of suspicion. this story stinks every which way, jed. jedediah: it absolutely does. you're right own all the points. why haven't been people talking about the problem with the post office for years? this is going on for a long time. every time internally they try to do something about it. as you said, pete, make suggestions about saturdays. there is only so much backlash. seven unions are involved in decision making with the post office. this is wrought with problems have nothing to do with the president. i would be careful if i were the president though in terms of his wording with respect to the post office. the last thing he needs for it to look like he is trying to prevent these ballots from getting to anyone.
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i don't necessarily think that is his goal but he should be careful. will: they will try to make him look like -- pete: make him look like that is what he is saying. people will blur the distinction with absentee ballot which a voter requests, versus push out to the entire voter role mailout ballots f the post office can't handle the current volume who is expect to do that in a timely manner. that is a very fair critique. jedediah: that's right. we have another big story that is kicking off because the dnc kicks off tomorrow. i know lots of us are excited about that to see those speakers that are coming in but guess what? everyone on the team isn't quite on board with the platform. squad member rashida tlaib is voting no on the democratic party platform because it doesn't include a plan for single-payer health care. check out this tweet. today, i cast my dnc ballot and voted no on the proposed platform. i constantly hear from constituents we demand for for a
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single-payer system and away from the for profit system that leaves people to suffer and die because they cannot afford health care. for a party we must push a future for every resident with the availablility to thrive. we need to rid our society of oppression and greed. unfortunately in my view the platform does not do enough. that is rashida tlaib. that is the tweet from her. clearly the hard left-wing of the party that is still going to say, oh, the green new deal? not enough. x, y, z, not enough. the defund the police, not enough. they will push that party further and further to the left. the question what is the center of this party anymore? when we talk about moderate democrats is that a dead breed? will: you know, jed, what will be fascinating about this week about the democratic national convention, it is clear biden wants to play run out of clock. he wants to play defense. he wants to win the election to allow trump to talk while he remaims silent in his basement. you can't, can't during the
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democratic national convention. the reason i bring that up, will they embrace messages like rashida tlaib's or the far left platform? will they take the stage to talk to everyone, try to send a more moderate message. my suspicion what you will hear coming this week is some pretty far left messages. pete: you will hear attempt to moderate from the stage and sound moderate. i dissect bullet by bullet what the platform is. what they vote on. what does the platform say about borders, criminality, on guns, on police, on the green new deal. it is not far enough on health care fora she had rashida tlaib, what does it say about god or life or israel? the platform is a ultimately a reflection on values. that is the activist state on the where the party is. we'll cover what they say. will: which members will pull the entire party in a certain direction. i will tell you another
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story that will have an underlying influence on the election. sports has a massive place in our culture, college football, two of at least the two of the power five seasons have been canceled. president trump is realizes this is important part of american culture. he is speaking out on whether or not we should play college football. president trump: i want to say i want college football to come back. these are strong, healthy, incredible people. they want to play football very badly. a great, great talent at quarterback, trevor lawrence called me two days ago. i spoke to him a couple of times. he said, sir, i want to tell you we want it back. we want to play. he made the statement says he feels he is safer on the field, safer on the field than he is outside of the field. we're trying to help the nfl. as long as they stand for our national anthem. as long as they honor our flag and our country. if they start dealing i will not be helping them much. might come back but i won't be
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watching. neither will a lot of other people. will: a little later in the show army football coach at west point will be here on 9:50 eastern time. here is what i like, pete, about what the president just said there. number one college football is incredibly important to american culture. number two i like the president enabling individual choice, be it players, be it americans, enable people to take on their own risk assessment, make wise decisions. the choices i see from americans have been pretty wise,. pete: pete i agree. what happens when you have two power conferences opting out, three still in, can you have a full season where half the conferences are playing? will: you have no non-conference became. virtually every conference will play just their conference opponents. i guess that adds up to an all sec national championship game. pete: what you want. will: that is how it works anyway. pete: jed, sec or big 10. jedediah: i have no idea what
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that means, any of that but i have a question for will honestly. what people are most afraid of, this comes up with reopening schools as well as sports a start-up, then a start. they start playing. all of sudden cases emerge. they stop again. is that something to consider? you don't want that. the thing is cases will emerge. people will get this thing. that is going to happen. will: that is absolutely true, jed. the question is always the threshold. the alternative for potential to stop and start is never starting at all. we can't hide forever from the virus. we can't wait for perfection. we can't wait for a vaccine. we'll have to push for normalcy and handle what comes in my estimation. pete: we'll see how that unfolds when we learn more. the president clearly saying let's play some football. let's turn now to some headlines. riot police step in as protests turn violent at stone mountain park. they clashed with protesters
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over a confederate memorial. officers used tear gas to break up the crowd. unclear what caused escalation. the park is set to reopen today. president trump is considering a potential pardon for nsa whistle-blower edward snowden. president trump: i seen people very conservative and very liberal. they agree on the same issue. they agree both ways. i will take a look at that very strongly, edward snowden. pete: president trump previously calling snowden a traitor for leaking classified information working for the cia in 2013. snowden is living in russia after being granted asylum. michael jordan broke a ton of records during his nba career. now his shoes are setting records. a pair of nike air jordan one sneakers worn by jordan in 1985 in italy, selling for $615,000 in an action. the biggest price tag ever for a
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pair of shoes. what makes the shoes special, a little bit of glass in the sole when jordan broke the backboard with a monster dunk. i didn't know jordan broke a backboard. will: 615 thou dollars, i don't know if we can do this, is the buyer anonymous. this looks suspiciously like 615,000-dollar jordans on pete hegseth's feet. i don't know if you can see that. pete: these are the low version of the same sneaker. will: they are close. pete: these are on sale at the "fox & friends" store. jedediah: yeah. little as i know about sports. i was a big michael jordan fan when i was growing up. maybe i save my cash to get my michael jordan sneakers. will: you should. jedediah: coming up, the tribute in light is back on. the emotional ceremony will proceed after public pressure on
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♪ jedediah: welcome back. after receiving backlash over its cancellation the tribute in light ceremony commemorating the september 11th attacks is back on in new york city. will: organizers announcing yesterday they were able to obtain enough support to safely host the memorial after originally canceling the tribute due to the pandemic.
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reporter: author of the thank you for my service, matt best. you might know him from black rifle coffee. matt, appreciate it. what do you make of the backtrack 24 hours later? they're not reading the names. at least the tribute in light is not happening. break it down for us. >> this is super important. this is the progressive idea not to commemorate and all the tragedy that happened. 9/11 changed the course of american history and the world. a lot of veterans signed up to join the military because of 9/11 to serve their country. so i think it is a step in the right direction. this is something that i think is very important to the country and most veterans, that we have a tribute in light. jedediah: you know, mat, right now the country is in trouble economically as a result of a lot of the shutdowns due to covid-19. as the economy begins to reopen, there is a look to veteran-owned companies. forbes drew attention to this. check out the headline, as the
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economy reopens look to veteran-owned companies. we have a excerpt from the article, veteran-owned businesses are especially poised to lead the economy out of the current crisis. because those gone to war are trained in the art of responding what are known as buc volatile and complex and certain environments. hope i said that right. can we get your reaction to that? >> that is something we've done at black rifle coffee advocate for veteran hiring. it is honor to employ men and women of our country. a paragraph operations order you're executing in a time of war in very dynamic and stressful environment, all the skillsets that you learned there are absolutely applicable to the business and commerce world. i think we need a lot more leaders that know what sacrifice are and i think veterans are going to be the leaders in the coming generation. will: i find that fascinating, mat. i ran that by pete as well, i
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know you both guys are veteran. the idea of learning how to thrive, not just survive in a ambiguous chaotic environment. that is obviously a state of war. that is increasingly the status of our country. it seems veterans are perfectly poised to lead us out of that when it comes to business, mat. >> absolutely n a time of war, even in the military, in any sense you can't roll on your back to say i can't do it. there has to be critical thought. you have to be able to pivot on a moment's notice. a lot of things that veterans have done, they didn't learn these skills. they have actually implemented them in a real-world environment and i think that is the difference between a lot of guys and gals that have served compared to who haven't. pete: that is a great point. the president calls it the invisible enemy. you spent five deployments in iraq and afghanistan, effectively fighting a invisible enemy hiding in the population yet you have to get the job done. mat best, thank you very much. if they don't follow you on instagram or black rifle coffee
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touchdown! only mahomes. the big events are back and xfinity is your home for the return of live sports. ♪. jedediah: senator kamala harris coming out on top as joe biden's running mate despite her concerns about her record on criminal justice. she described herself as a progressive prosecutor, critics
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point to her past actions as california's attorney general. what would her impact be on the prison system if democrats win the white house? let's ask jack brewer. an advisory board member for black voices for trump. welcome back to the show as always. we see a big distinction here, right, between what kamala harris is saying now and what she actually did in a position of power in california. what do you make of that difference? >> there is a big difference. this is scary, ladies and gentlemen, across america. i work in prisons across this country and to see a ticket like harris and biden put together, i mean you look at kamala harris' record. almost too long for me to keep up with. she literally used tech technicalities to keep people locked up that shouldn't be locked up. she went so far to increase arrest for people with non-violent crimes this is in california, in one much the most liberal states in our union. she was very, very tough on
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crime, not just crime, but oversentencing people. she also kept folks in prison that shouldn't have ever been there. these things are really scary living in a time where we have more black and brown men incarcerated in our country than in the continent of africa. now you want joe biden, who actually wrote the mass incarceration bills responsible for breaking up homes across america. you're teaming him up with kamala harris? if you go to california, people in the black lives matter movement are staying against her. why? because she actually was against prosecuting fatal shootings for police officers. she didn't want the cases to come across her desk in california this woman is bad news for americans and this is a very scary time when it comes to criminal justice. donald trump has done so much to help black men get out of prison that shouldn't be there. and now we're taking steps backwards if we elect this lady
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into office. we can't do this. jedediah: yeah. the question is obviously will voters dig into the records? or will they just believe the talking points coming from the biden camp. there is an interesting poll that came out, jack, i want you to weigh in on. it was a "fox news poll." the question, who do you think your neighbors are supporting for president? 39% say trump and 34% say biden. there is this idea that there are these silent trump supporters, jack, are afraid to speak out, that support the president but don't want to be discriminated against. don't want to be judged for that. you know what? i will support him silently. there is consensus that happened last time around in the last election. do you think that is happening again right now? >> no doubt. i can tell you, i'm a black trump supporter. so i get a lot of people that come to me. i can tell you right now, folks are not comfortable with speaking their political viewpoints in our society today. people are being shamed. it is really sad.
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people can't even speak their mind. they can't stand up for their principles. they can't stand up for the religious principles in public because they're shamed. i think you will see a massive silent majority. i know, i get conversations, text messages people call me to vent all the time because they feel like they can't even speak their minds even when they know they're on the right side of history. i think november 3rd of this year is our time as americans to stand for american principles, to stand for the fear of god, keeping religion in our schools and keeping those things that really make america great. jedediah: yeah. we'll certainly have two very distinct tickets when it comes to platforms to look at. jack brewer, as always thank you so much for being here and for your insight. >> god bless you guys. jedediah: you as well. coming up, you have met will's family and heard all about their trip across the u.s. now we're introducing you to his montana family. hear more tails from his time on
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♪ will: wonderful to introduce me to you as one of the new hosts here on "fox & friends." i'm sharing with you some of the things i've been through over the past self years and particularly the last several weeks. pete, jed, as you know we took a trip across the united states, we covered 16 states, one of the reasons we stopped montana. i spent a year in law school living in montana, working on a ranch. one of the best years in my life, guys. absolutely incredible. not just for the physical beauty of montana and the work but the people i met there. i would like to introduce you to my quote, unquote, montana family. owners of the l diamond ranch in clinton, montana. good morning dan and rhett.
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>> good morning will. will: i will turn it over to pete and jed. they can ask you the kind of questions what kind of cowboy i was. i will say it at the outset, dan, where is your hat? i made one request, wear your hat. i told him to wear it. >> you're not supposed to wear a hat in the house. will. pete: there are rules, will. thank you so much for being here. we're glad you loaned will to us. you had him for a year 20 years ago. tell us about the will cain you got to know over a year there? >> well, i don't know, he is pretty incredible fellow, i'll tell you that much. very quick learner. he can do the hard work and, and everything else. i can only think of maybe in the whole time that he was helping us, he only got lost with a load of horses once.
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he found his way back without too much help. other than that, i don't know of any faults. will: jed, i will tell you this, what he is talking about i got lost once with a entire trailer full of horses. got lost in a valley. had to find ply way back. i had to follow a ups truck but dan, i found my way back eventually. jedediah: before you ask, before you told that story i was going to ask if he made any big mistakes. obviously working on a ranch is really hard work. what are some of the things that will had to learn how to do before he got there? >> the thing with him, when he first came over, our mom had called and said that this junk gentleman, wanted to come over and see the ranch. he did, he came over but he came and somebody said he made the remark that danny was a redneck. will: i would never --
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>> his hair was a little bit bushy. so he tried to stuff it underneath a baseball cap. we met him. he helped danny and they were bucking bales and putting things in the barn. they back in that evening and after they were done. had his hair and it went whoosh. it was out from underneath the hat. he said that is the hardest work i have ever done. will: jed, i learned how to stretch, and little bit how to shoe morses. that is buckets bales of hey, lifting, stacking 80-pound bales of day all day long. jed, pete, i hurt from my fingertips down to my toes. i wasn't worried about the long hair i was trying to hide. pete: you can't. what about will coming back, this summer, getting a chance to know his wife and kids? >> we can't even describe it. we never met wes before.
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we had been back to see will and kathleen in new york in january to the pbr was in madison square garden. but charlie was just little then. so it was a great pleasure to have them stay with us here for a few days. will: dan, rhett, i know it is early in montana. you're used to getting up and early working. i appreciate you to get up doing a little bit of television. you know how much i appreciate you and your family and the state of montana. >> you're part of our family, sweetheart. your whole family is. will: thank you very much. dan, i will say good-bye to you guys. dan wants everybody to know the ranch is for sale. there you to. pete: l diamond. check it out. >> thank you very much. >> bye now. jedediah: thank you both for being here. will: wonderful people. they're absolutely wonderful people. it is hard work, jed.
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i will tell you. it is heart work. pete: i doesn't feel you're all hat little cattle. i think you're mostly cattle. will: i have a little hat and very few cattle. our weatherman rick reichmuth. what's up, rick? rick: why don't we pitch in and buy the ranch. will: i'm all in. rick: there will be space. the only we have to get up two hours earlier to do the show. that won't be that much fun. that is very, very true. guys, it will get to 97 degrees in clinton, montana, in case you're wondering for the folks out there. here are the temperatures waking up. hot across parts of the southwest already. 5:30 in the morning. 4:30 in the morning in california, temperatures in the 90s. they're not cooling down at all during the night. that is one of the reasons we have excessive heat warnings across the west.
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incredibly hot in texas. one more day of heat in areas of texas. look at this, 105, 107. tomorrow we get a break, things into 90s. things improve. in the west, 124 in death valley. 114 in phoenix. that sticks with us for much of the week. back to you. pete: when i rented the rv, they said specifically you can't drive it in death valley. will: really? pete: so hot. so i didn't go to death valley. pete: everyone stay away. thank you, rick. jedediah: thank you, rick. we're going to turn to some headlines for you now. a father says the alleged killer of his five-year-old son was his neighbor for eight years. cannon was shot and killed while riding his bike outside of his north carolina home. his father austin, said accused
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killer came over to dinner the day before the shooting. sessions is behind bar without bond, charged with first-degree murder. police have not revealed a motive. donations pouring in for cannon's family. a go fund me raising more than $700,000 has been established. a former football star is in serious condition after being shot in atlanta. chip banks and two other men were found shot outside of a home. one of them died. banks and the other victim were taken to the hospital. no word on any suspects as of yet. banks was picked third over all by the cleveland browns in 1982. the linebacker was named defensive rookie of the year and made four pro bowls during his career. the fda grants emergency authorization for yale university's saliva test for covid-19. the approval coming after a successful trial on nba players and staff. it does not require a swab or election device. instead using small saliva samples of people showing symptoms of the virus.
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researchers say fda authorization could make the test available in laboratories across the country in the next couple weeks. calling all "clueless" fans, the '90s movie making a comeback. what? >> i'm in. jedediah: the new of it v series will center horowitz's best fan. a spin i don't have ran for three seasons in 1996. i have never been more excited for a headline. i love that movie, guys. i used to walk around pretending to be cher all the time. i think it was one of first movies i saw with a boyfriend back in the day. i'm a pop culture queen. i bring all pop culture. will: that was huge. big moment in pop culture history. jedediah: that was good. will: absolutely. pete: i have nothing to say. will: pete, you talk about britney spears a minute ago.
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don't try to be "clueless." if. pete: if that is where what if started, we should cancel it. secretary of state mike pompeo slamming the decision not to extend the arms embargo on iran calling it a serious mistake. state department spokesperson morgan ortega with with the potential fall out o next. getting it right. it's so iconic, you can just sit it on a shelf if it's missing, you know it. your family, my family, when they drink that coffee, and go "man, that's a good cup," i'm proud because i helped make that cup. ♪ you can adjust youriggest sacomfort on both sides...eep your sleep number setting.. i'm proud because i helped make that cup.
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nucala is a once-monthly add-on injection for severe eosinophilic asthma. not for sudden breathing problems. allergic reactions can occur. get help right away for swelling of face, mouth, tongue, or trouble breathing. infections that can cause shingles have occurred. don't stop steroids unless told by your doctor. tell your doctor if you have a parasitic infection. may cause headache, injection site reactions, back pain, and fatigue. ask your doctor about nucala at home. find your nunormal with nucala. ♪. pete: welcome back. secretary of state mike pompeo calling out members of the united nations security council after they overwhelmingly rejected extending the iran arms embargo. >> i regret too the whole world didn't join against the world's largest state sponsor of terrorism to insure they can't have weapons systems that present risk. the united states is determined to make sure that the iranians and this regime, this theocratic
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regime doesn't have the capacity to inflict more harm on the world. pete: the embargo was set to end in october. china and russia predictably opposed proposal. several european allies sustained from the vote. here with reaction, state department spokes american morgan ortegas. we appreciate it. iran is the world's greatest sponsor of terrorism. we had an arms embargo. the united states said let's renew it. let's make sense. almost everyone is against us or abstains, why? >> yeah. there is a real lack of moral courage at the u.n. security council. this is 13 year arms embargo, longer potentially. this lasted through republican and democrat administrations. this is the something the world and u.n. security council recognized as needed. why is that? as you said in your intro, iran is the leading state sponsor of terrorism. so your viewers know, pete, what
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the world, the countries that represented at the security council to do friday night, quietly abstain to allow iran have the in october to purchase conventional weapons from china and from russia. now mind you, there is a lot of people who were against it, namely israel, namely the countries and in the gcc, the gulf cooperation council. these are countries directly affected by the maligned behavior of iran in the region. the countries who are susceptible to being attacked with these conventional weapons because iran is the leading state sponsor of terrorism. they said please don't do this but our friends in europe, the united kingdom, sadly, france, germany, they didn't have the courage to vote no. they just abstained. pete: the u.n. proving how useless it truly is. we could go on and on about the u.n. failures but i want to move to this. this is an important development. an historic peace agreement between israel and the u.a.e. the administration was front and
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center on it. tell us what it means. >> it is beyond historic. in 25 years, in 25 years we have not seen this type of success, this type much agreement between israel agreement between israel and. you know me in a prior job at fox. i spent a lot of time in saudi arabia, i lived in the middle east. it was really such a personal moment for all of us this week involved on working on middle east issues for years. it is the type of agreement i never thought i would see having lived in the gulf and what it took an administration, it took a president, it took jared kushner, avi berkowitz, it took a group of people we'll not go with 25 years of conventional thinking. instead we will put forward a historic agreement between the israelis and the palestinians. we'll work with the arab neighbors in the region in order again not to accept the
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conventional wisdom. i can't tell you how important that is. the world said when we moved the embassy to jerusalem, when we recognized golan heights, when we took a number of steps in israel there would be chaos in the middle east. instead what do you see under president trump's leadership. you see peace between a gulf state, probably more to come and with israel. no one would ever thought that would happen five years ago. pete: truly a special moment. it can't be understated. some people says this takes annexation of judea and west bank off the table. does israel still have the option to do that? >> israel has a right to act within their best sovereign interests. it is certaining something that will be delayed for several years now. jared kushner talked about this openly but you know, we will see what happens. we're looking forward to hopefully other arab countries in the region following the leadership of the u.a.e. pete: hopefully it begins an after lan much. considering those countries
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wanted to wipe israel off the map several decades ago. >> true. pete: thank you very much. home can feel a bit crowded right now but there is a new way to make space but you have to think small. an inside look attain any homes and offices popping up nationwide. that's next. ♪ sale of the year on the sleep number 360 smart bed.
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tiny homes for five years. now they're building backyard accessory dwellings which are surging in popularity in recent months. will: i thought i was only one looking for a little office outside of the house but i'm not. apparently this is very popular. joining us is bob. he is the founder and ceo of in shed by bantam built. bob, this is a very popular idea, huh? everybody is looking for a tiny house or office out back? >> yeah. so for the last five years of designing small spaces this right here is our traditional kind of tiny house on wheels but in the last couple of months with so many people working at home and pools being so popular we decided to create other models. you have over here the bunk house, maybe a place for the kids to have a sleep-over or just hang out in the backyard. we've got our pool house here. this is an interesting product in the fact that it is
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completely off the grid. so even though it has a full bathroom and shower and so forth, somebody can put this in their backyard with a shed permit. wouldn't have to run any plumbing or anything to the backyard. maybe somebody not used to having a pool, they can have a nice place for people to not to bring water inside of the house. in here, we have our backyard office. which has become extremely popular. jedediah: wow. will: that is it what i need, guys. jedediah: wow, bob, i am a tiny home enthusiast. i love tiny homes. i'm dying to get one. i'm hearing some of the tiny homes are powered by alexa and you have ones off the grid options? can you tell us how they work? >> yeah. so, you know, we understand that a lot of people, they have been living in their house a long time. maybe their systems are
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outdated. might be real expensive to have kind of automation, things brought into their home. so we thought it would be fun to really overupgrade these offices. really want the people that decide to purchase them or use them in their backyard to really invite them to the backyard. get used to using the space. enjoy all the fun, functionality. so if i said, hey, alexa, turn the lights off. >> [inaudible]. which one did you want? >> the office lights. >> okay. >> we turn the lights off. so, just fun little things like that. we've got sound systems in here. tvs. pete: bob, that is pretty cool. i think a lot of men and women working from home are looking at their significant other thinking i think we have space in the backyard. bob, thank you so much. for more info, theinshed.com.
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thank you, bob, appreciate it. >> thank you. pete: we have a great though of the show we have two more hours. we still have peter navarro. debbie dingell. don't go away. 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,
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♪ jedediah: welcome, everybody, to the 8 a.m. hour of fox & friends weekend. that is the bare naked ladies. you know that's my pick. got to bring in some nineties music for you all. i am here today. pete hegseth and our new cohost, will cain, who is already bringing his a-game to the talk about. i don't know about his a-game when it comes to music. that still remains to be seen but when it comes to commentary, absolutely. welcome, will. we're so glad to have you on
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your first weekend. will: thank you, jed. i will tell you this, when it comes to music i'm happy to do this with you and pete. we'll take your britney spears and you have a we'll take both my favorite kinds of music, country and western and we'll put it to a poll, pete. we'll put it to the people and see who has a better taste in music. pete: we often produce results that way. our producers can put it on twitter, instagram, we'll do it. i took some liberty for the both of his, since we didn't get a gift for will. he likes all beer, miller lite, but he prefers cold beer. this is straight from my fri.ge will: nice. pete: this is coors light, and that's for you. will: thank you. pete: on behalf of jed and i -- will: i don't know how this goes over with the bosses, but -- pete: coors light straight from the hegseth compound fridge. cheers to you. you can have it at 10:01 today in honor of the first weekend. will: thank you, sir. we'll save that -- pete: the mountains are blue; so you know it's cold.
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demanded cold. will: and i like coors light. thank you, sir. we do have some news to get to this morning. the d.n.c. kicks off tomorrow night. one of the themes will be "we, the people" with key speakers including michelle obama who's expected to go to bat for biden. one of the fascinating stories will be what defines the democratic party in the 2020 election. if you look at the list of speakers, pete, jed, we might get some clue. on the list of speakers this week it will include many, quote unquote, moderates in the democratic party, including some former republicans like former governor john kasich. on the other hand you will have the governor of michigan, gretchen whitmer who pete you referred to earlier as "governor shutdown." you also have bernie sanders. i find it fascinating how the democratic party will be defined and how this election will be defined. we will hear it from the stage the stage this week. one of the people who will have a big platform is the former first lady of the united states, initial. according to obama's allies,
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she'll say something like this. she will "come hard at trump in the most artful way. i think it will be one of the most defining and memorable speeches of this entire cycle. she has the most powerful voice to get out the vote." >>will, you mentioned that there is on potentially some moderates at the list. i'm looking at the sheet. i'm just looking to see the moderates. maybe doug joan but he'll be a senator for like ten more minutes 'cause he's going to lose in november. amy klobuchar tried to be a moderate, but the base didn't want it. you can't start your moderate day by kicking it off with a socialist. will: bernie sanders is the first speaker. will: whitmer, sanders type of socialists, i guess former republican in john kasich. what will define them, jed? jedediah: yeah. i mean, it's all going to be about michelle obama. she is the force. she is the person there that has to convince people to get out and vote for joe biden. bernie sanders, i don't really understand how bernie sanders is
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going to endorse joe biden. it's utterly ridiculous to me. he rallied against him. his rallied against most of what joe biden has fought for in his very long political career. so that remains to be seen how bernie sanders will have to twist and contort himself like gumby in order support joe biden biden. it remains to be seen whether those so-called moderates will actually say anything remotely resembling a moderate platform. that's not where the heart of the democratic party is right now, not in a moderate zone so remains to be seen. but i do think michelle obama will be the key there to the whole thing. and we see an interesting parallel developing here, right, between the two campaigns. because joe biden was supposed to be in wisconsin this week for the d.n.c. guess what? he's continuing to stick close to home opting out of that and on the other side you have trump and pence having events, counter countercampaigning in wisconsin, getting there on the ground in front of people, letting people know what they stand for, why they should be reelected. so you got one ticket that's sort of hiding, not really sort of, but actually hiding.
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you got another ticket that's out there front and center. we spoke to rachel campos-duffy who was in wisconsin, talked about that parallel, talked about trump sending a strong message to wisconsin voters. listen to what she had to say. >> what they're trying to do with biden is keep him controlled, you know, not have any gaffes, not change the game so the poll numbers don't change change. that's a very risk-averse campaign. i don't think in the end that that really works. i think trump sending a really strong signal, "i still carry about wisconsin. i'm coming here." his vice president's coming here here. that looks very strong. and again, what trump's trying to do in the message he's going to bring to wisconsin is going to be, "listen it's about policies. it's not about whether you like me or not. it's about liberal policies that joe biden has." >>you know, guys, a lot of pundits like to point at national polls which some have shown the vice president up. of course they're the same polls that showed hillary clinton up in 2016. but if you look at the swing states like wisconsin, like pennsylvania, like ohio, like
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florida, it's very tight or trending toward the president examine in those states much like what you see in wisconsin with joe biden in the basement and the president and the vice president going out, the president is registering voters, with masks on, out pounding the pavement enthusiastically for their candidate. the postal service, mailout ballots, you're starting to hear excuses and outcries if they don't win that's the reason, it was rigged. i think republicans would be in smart in part to play their game game. if they're going to push ballots out, register people better than democrats do, encourage people to get their ballots out early if they support the president. that will continue to be a theme as we cover it. what do we got, 70-something days? this is coming very, very quickly. but there was a story we covered yesterday we want to give you an update on because not often are we able to give you good news. in this case we do but it took 24 hours of pressure. after a lot of outcry the 9/11 memorial and museum is now reversing course and will do what it should have done and
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will hold the tribute in light ceremony. here's a statement from alice greenwald, the president of that museum and memorial saying, "for the last eight years the 9/11 memorial and museum has produced the tribute in light and the profound meaning it has for many new yorkers. this year its message of hope and resilience are more important than ever. in the last 24 hours we've had conversations with many interested parties and believe we will be able to stage the tribute in a safe and appropriate fashion." will, it feels like that should have been the extinct going into figuring it .ut will: it's good news. it shows new yorkers' voices are heard, americans' voices are heard, your, the viewers' voices are heard. it shows we can not just be allowed to go to the streets to protest and to riot, but we can honor those who have died in service of this country as well. and former army ranger matt best told us earlier today on fox & friends why it's so important to have this tribute. >> i think it's super important. you know, i think it's kind of
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this like progressive idea just to not commemorate and remember all this tragedy that happened. and really, you know, 9/11 changed the course of american history and the world and a lot of veterans signed up to join the military because of 9/11 and serve their country. so i think it's a step in the right direction. and it's something that i think very important to the country and most veterans, that we have the tribute in light. jedediah: yeah. and there was universal outrage to the fact that these lights were not going to be on display. this was not political. you know, i'm a new yorker. i spoke to many new yorkers left right, and center who all said this absolutely needs to go on; so you're right, will, voices were heard, and this was a moment of unity. remember, 9/11 was a moment of unity. when that happened, new york came together. politics didn't matter that day. and when honoring the heroes and honoring the lives of those lost politics also do not matter. that needs to be done and i'm glad it's happening. pete: it is great to see and politics shouldn't matter but the frustration for so many people is you see governors
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going at attilla's gym in new jersey, can't open even though they've had 20,000 people go through the doors and not have a case. that double standard frustrates people and adds on top of the fact that that we a no-brainer, but we'll get it and that is a great thing. turning now to a few additional headlines starting with this fox news alert. president trump's younger brother, robert, has died. the president visiting him in a new york hospital just one day before his death. the president saying in a statement, and i quote, "he was not just enter. he was my best friend. he will be greatly missed, but we will meet again. his memorial will live on in my heart forever." robert trump was 71 years old, and we remember him this morning morning. in other stories as well, an off-duty corrections officer is shot and killed in conveniences, new york. police say john jepp was shot 11 times after leaving a party.
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reports say it appears to be a planned attack because he was blocked by three cars after leaving the party. suspects reportedly took his department issued gun from his horse. he was shot several times. four people have died in more than two dozen shootings this weekend alone. and illinois police officers replenishing money stolen from a kids' lemonade stand after they are robbed at gunpoint by two losers. the incident involving two 13 13-year-olds caught on camera. one of the teens and the peoria police chief joined us earlier telling us about those terrifying moments. >> it was really surprising but there wasn't really time to be scared because as soon as we were robbed, there were so many people helping us. >> we have detectives assigned to the case, and she is making progress in the case. pete: thankfully, the teens manning the lemonade stand were not hurt.
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so far more than $3500, $3,500 has been raised to support them, and rightfully so. those are your headlines. something really wrong about robbing a lemonade stand. will: but as many bad stories as we just heard about, there is that silver lining. there is, pete, jed, that recognition that americans come together and help each other out out. $3500 raised for these teens as they search for these -- i don't know what to call these individuals who would rob a lemonade stand. jedediah: yeah. so i hate to interrupt you, will but we are now at my favorite part of the show yet again where the viewers get to ask will cain the juicy questions that are on their minds. hopefully they got some of my questions in there secretly, sneakily. he don't know i don't know about that but we'll see. we start with a email from mary: who was your favorite historical person from texas. will: this is a good one. allow me just a little bit of room. it has to be sam houston. we on our road trip, me, my family, listened to brian
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kilmeade, sam houston the alamo perform it's a great book, about the life of sam houston and it has to be sam houston as your number one texas hero. however, my sons love the story of william barrett travis at the alamo drawing a line in the sand with his sword sawing "any man that does not cross this line can leave. anyone that does cross this line stands here and fights today." that story we love as a family. pete: that's cool. that gives me chills just as we sit here. notice he didn't listen to " "american crucified." this is an email from rebecca. pete has inked his right arm with meaningful tattoos. will, do you have any tattoos? will: i only have two and they're brand-new, it's on this bicep it's pete, and on this bicep it says jed. pete: no fake news propose if you were to get one, what would you get? will: i lot of your tats.
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i they look awesome on you. it's not me. i'll work on.it will: you just got a new one yesterday. pete: i got a new one yester.ay jedediah: you did? pete: yes. my wife came with me. jen did, too. jedediah: what is it of? pete: it's a former platoon logo that i have. probably not your st.le jedediah: cool. will: not morning television. pete: not really. yeah. jedediah: i love skulls. i love skulls. i have a skull phone with little rhinestones on it. pete: maybe you would like. jedediah: i would like it. i surprise you sometimes, pete hegseth. all right. coming up, president trump is touting his police union support and a top democrat is warning joe biden not to underestimate unions. michigan congresswoman debbie dingle joins us live to explain why coming up next. ♪ i got my mind-set on you ♪ i got my mind-set on you
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♪ jedediah: it's one of the most crucial swing states in the race for the white house, and president trump won michigan in 2016 by only about 10,000 votes. our next guest is a democrat, warning her party that the president still has strong support from unions in her state including the michigan police unions. joining other law enforcement unions to endorse president trump for 2020, michigan congressman debbie dingle joins us now with more. congresswoman, welcome to the show, as always. so is this a problem for joe biden that you have several police unions that have come out in support of trump? >> well, good morning, jed. i'm thoroughly enjoying the show this morning. i want to say i love will's adventures.
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i have warned everybody that we believe the polls in michigan. unions matter. the working men and women of this state do. four years ago i warned everybody, including on fox, that donald trump could win michigan, and not many people gave me credibility. i do think law enforcement is one issue, but i will tell you that i've been with a lot of union workers, uaw workers, steelworkers, we're having a lot of issues, and they're concerned about two things. they're worried covid and the handling of covid and they're worried about the impact on families, their kids in school, pre-existing conditions, and they don't think the president's handling it right. and i want to tell you there's been a fury, just a total -- that post office in the last week, people are scared. veterans aren't getting their medicine. seniors aren't getting their social security checks. and there is -- i'm getting phone calls at home. i had a protest outside, what are you going to do? president's not handling issues, and those are issues that matter to union workers. jedediah: you know,
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congresswoman, you bring up the post office, and that's not important point to discuss because democrats have been talking about that usps bailout, mail-in ballots. a lot of this has been blamed on president trump, that president trump has taken issue with the post office, he's not going to fund the post office, but the reality is a lot of that needs to come from congress, a, and secondly, the post office has been in a trouble for a really long time financially, and that has nothing to with president trump; so is that a cop-out to say this is president trump's problem and his fault? >> no, i don't think it's a cop-out and, by the way, congress is going to be come back. the house will be back within the next week to ten days to do something, where a bill is being put together for right now during covid that we don't take out machines, remove membranes, tell postal workers that they can't work overtime. we need to deal with the post office. i've been saying that for some time. i've been meeting with my -- before everybody started talking about this for the last two years, i've been meeting with my post office leadership every other week.
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and, by the way, mark meadows was very helpful to me when there were issues two years ago. but we got to do something. and to have this very visible orders for no overtime only came down recently. the moving of the machines, that's not. so we should put a stop to it. that's what we're going to try to do in the house. i hope the senate will come back and do it. we are going to do something about that. people are upset. jedediah: yeah. congresswoman, you mentioned before as well that on leadership, when it comes to covid-19, people may have been dissatisfied with president trump. i would just call your attention to where is joe biden? he's completely absent on most issues. you don't hear from him. no one has any idea what kind of leadership he would present because he's not answering tough questions and giving that insight. would you disagree? >> yeah, i would disagree. i mean, first of all, there's a real difference about how we handle covid in this country and i am someone that's probably -- you couldn't budge me out of my house for the first three months months. i'm only going to events inside,
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not outside -- outside, not inside. i never take my mask off even to speak. my kids call me mama mia. i go to everything, black lives matter, law enforcement events, supporting them, which are happening, which a lot of them are happening i'm going to too. joe biden is trying to show the country we need to be careful. we need to wear a mask. there are too many people where i'm going that aren't wearing their masks, and our numbers are up again in michigan. and we've got to pay attention to that and we got to pay attention to it across the country. tony fauci told us on friday, if you want our kids back in school wear your masks and do what people want you to do. joe biden's practicing that. i wish the president would more. he would influence people. jedediah: well, congresswoman, we certainly have seen him, president trump wearing masks in certain situations as of recently and i would certainly agree with you on the need to take covid-19 seriously as well. we thank you so much for being here today on these monitor issues. >> thank you. it's always good to see all three of you. jedediah: thanks so much.
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still ahead, black lives matter protesters now demanding white people give up their homes in seattle. you heard that right. >> give black people back their homes. jedediah: one seattle radio host says those protesters should be called terrorists, and he joins us live coming up next. y pay for what you need. i wish i could shake your hand. granted. only pay for what you need. ♪ liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty. ♪ (announcer) improve your health, and strengthen your immunity., starvation dieting, processed foods, shakes, and diet gimmicks have made us heavier and sicker. the solution for losing weight the right way is golo.
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♪ will: we showed you this yesterday. black lives matter's protesters demanding white seattle residents give up their homes. listen to this. >> give us your house. give black people back their homes. will: the protesters telling homeowners they are living in historically black neighborhoods demanding they move out to fight gentrification. here to react, seattle radio
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host, jason rantz. jason, thanks for being with us this morning. how widespread is this kind of message from what you've seen in the black lives matter protests and movements in seattle? >> well, it's getting bigger and bigger. i mean, nationwide we're seeing more and more of this. it's obviously not just seattle. we've seen some of this kind of language pop up in portland and d.c. over the course of the last week. and there's a lot of people going into neighborhoods, and they're a mob, and they're terrorizing people on the basis of their race. they're targeting people because they're choosing to live in neighborhoods that they were not a part of any kind of gentrification. in this case they're talking about homes that were being built and homeowners who moved in who were not part of gentrification that happened more than a couple decades ago, and the people who were part of this mob are like 18 to 24 24-year-olds who were not even personally impacted by this gentrification. and the irony of it of course in the pacific northwest is, you know, it's not like the african-americans in the community were there before the
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native americans and so you really want to be woke progressives, you would make the case that native americans were the ones who were actually pushed out of the land, but we're not having that conversation. we're pretending that it's all about the white people who are part of the problem instead of coming together and saying, look look. we've got a some issues in a particular community. maybe we should come together and address it. but instead we're targeting literally people on the basis of their skin color and pretending that in 2020 that is the woke and appropriate thing to do. will: yeah. there are no historically black neighborhoods. there are no historically white neighborhoods. all land was possessed by someone else before. jason, i have to ask you this. what's the goal? what do you think the goal is of many of these protesters? equality is harder and harder to assume the end result of these protests. >> the entire movement is based on ignorance and this assumption that people did not earn what they got in life. and i think part of this is punishment. we've seen some -- a lot of this is being driven by anti-
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anti-capitalism. really this is ideologically based. the folks who are out there on the streets are driven by their socialism and their marxist beliefs. in this clip that you just played part of it is they go after this homeowner because they believe he works at amazon and that's really at the core of this. amazon is located in seattle, and they've been trying to drive amazon out of seattle for the last several years now. and part of this is because they're anti-capitalist, and amazon and jeff bezos is sort of the bogeyman of capitalism. and so by going after the homeowners, going after the rich white people, they believe that they're trying to take down this system that they are blaming for out-of-control housing costs, the gender gap, the wage gap. they're trying to go after all of that. and so that's really what's the state courts here. will: it's hard to believe this is a path to progress, that this is a path to equality. increasingly it seems like it's about power. jason, thank you so much for your time this morning. >> thank you. will: coming up, pop culture meets cancel culture. hollywood shows and films being
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♪ jedediah: it has been one of the top questions submitted by viewers. are will cain and dean cain related? pete: they're both part of the fox & friends family. dean cain joins us now. will, dean know house to stare into that camera with daggers. look at him. blue steel. jedediah: look at that. will: hold on, dean. there we go. [laughter] will: i don't want to be in any kind of competition with dean cain. >> my brother from another mother, as the late herman cain used to say, i'll answer the question right up front. will is in fact my older brother brother. [laughter] >> no, we're not related, but we could be. and will, you're doing a great
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-- you're doing a really fantastic job. and i know you've known pete and jed for a long time, but you're a really welcome addition to the weekend, and i am -- i'm a fan myself; so keep up the great work. will: dean, the feeling's mutual mutual. i know that you are a friend of the family, a constant presence here on fox & friends, and both as a cain and a friend of the fox & friends family, you set the bar very high. let's see if i can live up to it it. >> i think you'll be just fine. pete: so, dean, thanks for being here, man pap great to have you. we got to ask you about this rise in cancel culture in hollywood, in california. just yesterday a george washington statue was defaced and pulled down in los angeles. dean, george washington, the father of our country now torn down and defaced. they're looking for the suspects suspects. where does this stop, dean? >> well, you know, when president trump said, you know, where does it stop, soon enough
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they're going to tearing down statues of george washington. people laughed at him. that was what, two years ago? what is happening now? they're tearing down statues of george washington, the father of our country. i believe they caught people. pete: they did. you're right. i stand corrected corrected. you're right. >> good. because that needs to stop. that's insanity. this cancel culture within hollywood, it is a cancer. and it's mccarthyism, and it's threatening people that, look. i'm going to take away your ability to make a living, your livelihood if you don't toe the party line. and it's not going to end well, i promise you. and it's a huge mistake. it needs to stop, especially in hollywood. a creative community, you should have been able to have open disagreements yet still be accepting. and so often it's those who preach tolerance and acceptance and love and understanding instead of the ones trying to cancel everybody. jedediah: dean, what about these content warnings that are now
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being recommended to precede a lot of older films like gone with the wind, blazing saddles, these need to be contextualized. i believe the sitcom friends now got to have a warning message because a lot of those jokes wouldn't fly in 2020. is it a bad idea? is it a good idea? what do you think? >> i think it's a horrible idea, jed. i think it's terrible. if you want to put something in context, have that conversation with your kids, have that conversation with other people. but to have them tell you it's a contextual warning that, you know, gone with the wind? figure it out. you know, this is what things were like back then when we were making moves like this president fact that "friends," you're worried about "friends," worry about "90210," too, because i know that's a great show of yours. and blazing saddles, the only content warning you should have with blazing saddles is prepare to laugh so hard you can't
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breathe during the campfire scene. that's it. will: hey, dean, just to take it over from the other cain just for a minute. it's not absurdity that will lead to the end of the cancel culture, somebody will have to stand up and say stop. because it doesn't have a rational ending. it's simply about power. >> i agree a thousand percent. and i'll be one who stands up and says "stop." pete: i know you will. pete: we need you to stand up now and read some viewer -- you got the first viewer question, dean cain. you're in the hopper. what would you ask will cane? >> this is important. this comes from jeffrey. it's an email from jeffrey, wil. pete: right. >> it says will -- and i want you to think about this this one very hard before you answer. will, who is your favorite superhero? will: okay, dean; so my morning television instincts would obviously have me say superman. right? but i amn avowed truth material. i can't lie. that would be an act of disrespect to you so i'm going
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to tell you my favorite superheroes are not ones bitten by an alien bug or born with superpowers, but those who created their powers or used their minds and built themselves up into superheroes; so my heroes are ironman and batman. yes, self-created superheroes. >> i would have picked pete hegseth. pete: no. huh-uh. >> captain america. pete: you've got to respect the level of thought he put into that, dean. >> i do. pete: sophistication. >> i'm disappointed. pete: i should have been disappointed too. being craven and giving into the morning audience is what i do. will: now ask my favorite superman. pete: who is your favorite superman? will: it's christopher reeves. [laughter] >> that's mine too. jedediah: great comeback with that. pete: oh, boy. jedediah: thank you, dean. thank you for joining us. pete: always we love you.
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>> will, good luck. pete, you're a superstar. great swim the other day. crazy. pete: appreciate it. we'll see you soon. >> yes, sir. pete: you got it. jedediah: see you soon. we're going to shift over to some headlines for you now. a woman death lists alzheimer's and covid-19 as her cause of death but her family says she was never tested for coronavirus. they want to know why a south carolina hospice doctor signed off on the death certificate when her grandmother suffers from dementia for years. a man punched a great white shark to save his wife. jumping off his surfboard and onto the ten foot shark after it refused to let go of her in australia. doyle suffered severe injuries to her leg. she was flown to a nearby hospital for surgery and in stable condition. a piece of golden girls history is more than worth its weight in gold.
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>> just breathtaking. >> i know. you said it looked like a dump from the outside. jedediah: this los angeles home used during the show's first season telling for $4 million. that's a million above the asking price. only the exteriors of the house were used in the show, but that didn't stop fans from going crazy over the listing. and those are your headlines. i was a huge golden girls fan, guys, back in the day, man, i loved it. sophia was my favorite. pete: i'm writing this d.wn jedediah: do you have a a favorite golden girl. will: clueless, britney spears, golden girls. i'm just getting it all down here, jed. jedediah: and "90210." that's the key. i love that. see, pete, he takes notes. you just tell me that i should be cance.ed will: i just wing it. pete: you're right. you found a new ally. i work on it, jed. let's toss it to rick now and ask who his favorite superhero is.
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rick? >> oh. superman. pete: that's how you do it. >> i thought you were going to say -- i thought you were going to say who was my favorite golden girl. pete: well, who's that? i can't name one. >> i don't have one, but it's a good show, it's good late at night still. pete: can you see rick watching golden girls? >> i couldn't hear you because i was talking over you. these storms not to worry about there will be some storms coming very quickly behind that, i think in about seven days we're going to start to see a really big active uptick. be prepared across parts of the eastern seaboard. showers across the mid-atlantic, in the northeast, will stick with us through much of the day. very slow moving kind of band of showers that's going to be with us on and off scattered showers throughout the day. out across the west not any real significant rain anywhere, and it is hot. it's hot this morning already starting here. heat advisories, this is going to be with us for about the next five days all across the west. we'll have very dangerous heat that we'll have to deal with and be talking about a lot. what did you say, pete? i didn't hear you. pete: now i only have visions of
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you at home at night watching re reruns of golden girls. [laughter] >> that's not really the case. but sometimes. they're good. yeah. pete: why not? why not? rick, you are a man of many talents and truly a renaissance man. thank you, sir. coming up, a new report says there is lingering tension between president obama and his former vp, joe biden, with the convention set to kick off tomorrow. what's the real story? we'll ask a former obama adviser next. ♪ mr. blue sky ♪ please tell us why ♪ you have to hide away for so long ♪ where did we go wrong? ♪ mr. blue sky, please tell us why ♪ you had it's time for the biggest sale of the year on the new sleep number 360 smart bed
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until dogs can speak for themselves, you have to. when allergic itch is a problem, ask for apoquel. apoquel is for the control of itch associated with allergic dermatitis and the control of atopic dermatitis in dogs. do not use apoquel in dogs less than 12 months old or those with serious infections. apoquel may increase the chance of developing serious infections and may cause existing parasitic skin infestations or pre-existing cancers to worsen. do not use in breeding, pregnant, or lactating dogs. most common side effects are vomiting and diarrhea. feeling better? i'm speechless. thanks for the apoquel. aw...that's what friends are for. ask your veterinarian for apoquel next to you, apoquel is a dog's best friend. 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.
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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. pete: the democrat national convention set to start tomorrow but a new report is painting a picture of lynching tension between the obama and biden camp camps. former democrat aides suggesting
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president obama was not encouraging of a biden run in 2016. but our next guest is a former economic adviser to president obama, plays golf with him a few times a week. fox news contributor robert wolf is here to weigh in. robert, thank you for being here here. appreciate it. so it feels like conventional wisdom and common sense, this political article with quotes from ben rhodes and jen psaki saying, you know, that joe biden biden's an unguided missile, that he induces a lot of eye- eye-rolling, that even the former president obama said don't underestimate joe's ability to bleep things up. he didn't endorse him. is this real a true symbiotic relationship or is joe just trying to draft off of obama? >> yeah, i think it's a lot of bs. president obama and vice president biden have a great relationship. as you know, i've been with obama since 2006. i think i've been with them together and apart hundreds of times. you know i'm on the board of the
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obama foundation. i was their economic adviser. pete: robert, they can have a great relationship, but that doesn't necessarily mean that barack obama think's joe biden should be the leader of the free world at this point. he was a good vp, but that doesn't -- there's been no signs openly that he's, you know, truly cheerleading for joe biden biden. >> pete, i've had many, many conversations with president obama, and he could not be more excited that joe's at the top of the ticket. you know, listen. we're going into convention week week. the media blow things up. the truth is is going to be incredibly supportive. he always has been. what happened in 2016, we know a lot of it had to do with beau biden, and, you know, i met with vice president biden at that time. his heart was just not in it. pete: that's true. >> and listen. and you'll see the obama coalition is all coming together for the vice president -- pete: well, the -- holdrobert. it appears that coalition is
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coming together because bernie sanders, the avowed socialist will be opening up the convention on monday. is democrat party still open for socialists? >> i think the democrat party has a huge tent. to be the president of the united states -- remember, we have 300 plus million people. pete: yeah. >> so we're open to everybody. on monday night we have michelle obama closing. i have a feeling the person who has the number one podcast, probably the most iconic woman in the world today, literally the number one book ever sold, i have a feeling we're going to have a lot of grassroots excitement. we're not really worried about how exciting this convention's going to be. pete: not worried about how excited it is. do you anticipate any excitement excitement? how you make a virtual convention exciting? it's an honest question. >> yeah. no, and i think that's a fair thing. listen, we're in a new normal that no one likes. but -- and i'm not trying to try to do a what's-about-ism here but i'd rather have a virtual
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convention than what president trump did with tulsa that literally was a spreader. pete: okay. >> i know we have different views on this. i think we have a pandemic that we don't know how to reopen this country because the white house has done a pathetic job. pete: biden wants to tell everyone to wear a mask for three months and we'll see how popular that would be -- >> i don't think he said it that way. i think he -- pete: check the tape, in public -- >> he said he recommended, he thinks it's the right way but he wants the governors to support it. pete: a quasi-mandate but more or less the same thing. robert wolf, thank you very much for joining us. >> always fun, pete. pete: always. farmers have been hit hard since covid-19 struck. many were forced into bankruptcy but some have able to adapt. some farmers and ranchers will share how they've found success next. ♪ we wouldn't have it any other way ♪ cheers to the farmers that plant the fields in the spring ♪ that turn from green to that
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♪ will: likedustries american agricultural has been hit hard by the pandemic. according to the wall street journal, the number of farmers filing for bankruptcy is up 8% from the previous year. but some farmers and ranchers are finding success with a little adaption. it's what americans do. they innovate in the face of struggle. joining me nickie callas, fourth generation rancher and owner of callason, and third generation owner of johnson farm produce in indiana. nickie, i'll start off with you. i just read off the stats, 8% bankruptcies on farms, ranchers up as well with the closure of
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meat processing plants. what are you doing in oklahoma to overcome that struggle? >> well, i'm part of a task force headed up by our oklahoma secretary of guttural, blaine archer and we're working to alleviate this bottleneck so we don't have a problem with processing here in oklahoma. we identified that as an issue here, and farmers and ranchers through covid have continued working hard, working diligently to serve the american people, and so we are working to do that and alleviate the bottleneck but also here on our ranch, we have started selling beef direct to families and shipping it to 48 states. will: that's awesome. direct to consumer. and jennifer, i believe that's what you are working on as well at your farm, direct to consumer consumers, customers can come, as i understand it, straight to johnson's farm and pick their own produce. is that right? >> that's correct, yes. will: and so this is one of the ways you guys have dealt with
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some of the problems through the coronavirus. and, by the way, this was just the cherry on the top; right? farms were having trouble before the coronavirus pandemic. >> that's correct. yes. will: so what all are you doing at johnson's farms to help overcome these struggles? >> so we decided to do whatever it takes, not file bankruptcy this year, delivering to people, curbside, outdoor activities, spacing people out in the you i can rows, other rows, sanitizing the tractors every single time, whatever it takes to get people to come out so that we can make a living 'cause our crop was already in the field and there was nothing else that we can.do will: i imagine grocery stores, restaurants stopped buying. a difficult time for everybody in the business. nickie, how does a consumer buy direct beef, go direct to consumer beef? how do i do that? do i get to pick any cow? do i goat pick my cut? how does that work that i can buy straight from the rancher? >> actually our beef is federally usda-certified through
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our processor, and we have started shipping beef direct to families all over the u.s. about 18 months before the pandemic hit. you never know what's coming your way in averaging and farming. it could be weather. it could be a pandemic. and we adapted and shipped -- you can go to our website, callasonranchbeef.com. you can also search for other farms and ranches that you can get your beef direct, but we're here to serve the american people, and we really love doing it. will: all right, nickie and jennifer, not just multiple generation ranchers and farmers, not just innovators in the face of struggle, but proud women-run businesses as well. thank you so much for being with us here this morning. >> thank you. >> thank you, will. >> thank you for having us. will: lawmakers could end their recess early to face concerns with the postal service. we're live on the debate on the hill next. ♪
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>> ♪ ♪ jedediah: welcome, everyone. we are in our final hour of fox & friends, and no music better to intro that than the queen, that's right, jennifer lopez, jenny from the block. will will not be surprised to guess that's one of my favorites and also, will, i have a surprise for you because earlier in the show pete talked about beat and he gave you a beautiful gift and i was thinking to myself i don't have any beer muggs at home what will will drink out of when he comes to my house so i brought two things to show you one this is a ski mug, it is not a beer mug it will not keep the beer cold but it's fashionable and looks like a
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cowboy boot nonetheless and the second which you will probably not approve of and pete will roll his eyes is this pyrex container which i've used this morning by the way to hold my celery juice and it's a fantastic container for green juice it won't disappoint and i have filtered ice in the freezer and i know you decided you didn't like ice but i got several social media messages from viewers that said ice in beer is not so bad. will: i have two responses to that, jed. i'm not too fancy for the can i'll be happy to drink it straight from the can and number two when it comes to jennifer lopez and britney spears to be honest i'm having trouble distinguishesing between you and pete. pete: that's fair that's fair. i will say that jed and i share that musical taste it's true. the best holder for your beer is your hand and will, you can note we have these in 8:00 hour i put them in the fridge to keep them cold for you and brought them back out. will: they will be open very soon. pete: jed good attempt. i will believe it when you put beer in your pyrex glass and
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drink it from a straw, but -- jedediah: i don't like beer. will: before we start opening beers let's get to news. pete: i guess. will: president trump defending the postmaster general after protesters march outside his d.c. home calling for his resignation. >> [air horn sounding ] will: mark meredith is live in washington as nancy pelosi reportedly considers bringing the house back from recess over postal service concerns. mark? >> will, good morning to you. democrats are accusing the trump adminitration of trying to basically make changes at the post office to influence the election but president trump is hitting back. he's defending the newly- installed post master general and he says he's only trying to make the post office great again. president trump: i can only tell you he's a very smart man. he'll be a great postmaster general, and he needs obviously if you're going to do these
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millions of dollars out of nowhere he's going to obviously need funding, but the democrats aren't willing to provide other things and therefore, they're not going to get the funding for that. >> but outrage is growing over changes that postmaster general recently made including cutting overtime on saturday as you mentioned demonstrators gathered outside of his home here in washington, and democrats insist they're going to keep the pressure up ahead of the election. house speaker nancy pelosi is accusing president trump of trying to sabotage the post office. she put out a statement saturday that says all patriot, democrats , independents, or republicans should reject the president's assault on the postal system in this election season. the post office has warned a number of states that it's possible some of the delays could happen when it comes to receiving those mail-in ballots. there's a lot of question there. we also just got word that senate minority leader chuck schumer is holding a news conference later today on this very issue and members of congress are hinting that the house could come back fairly soon to address this controversy will, pete, and jed back to you
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guys. pete: mark thank you very much it sure feels like the democrats are seizing on what they think is an advantageous talking point here it's voter suppression and sabotage of the post office guys i worked a lot on reforming the department of veterans affairs a massive bureaucracy in washington d.c. when you satisfy you want to overhaul it, your critics accuse you of wanting to destroy it. when you criticize it they say oh, you hate vets, no you can recognize there are thousands of people that work at the post office that do great work in their communities. that's not what we're talking about. we're talking about an attempt to demagogue president trump by saying he wants to sabotage a postal service that for decades has been run like a bureaucracy? well the wall street journal made this case better than i can and here is the headline of what they laid out. the post office's problem isn't trump. democrats cry sabotage but mail volume is way down and the postal service is losing billions of dollars. here is a portion of what they said. congress is only itself to blame
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for this mess. congress. that red ink is no fluke of circumstance. the post office is meant to be self-sufficient, but it hasn't broken even for years, total losses since 2007 run to $78 billion, according to a may report by the gao, which said that the u.s. postal service's current business model is not financially sustainable. it's a blockbuster service in a netflix world, and will, i mentioned it earlier in 2013 the postal service tried to save $2 billion a year by stopping saturday delivery. there are massive and powerful unions there, yet with an election looming, in covid-19 and an attempt to push ballots out, the left is trying to seize on that and say it's trump shutting down the election. will: it's going to be a massive story pete and jed not just during the election but obviously after the election. i do want to say this. this story stinks to high heaven from every angle in my estimation. the postal service is full of hard workers but also an in efficient service that runs in the red and many people have
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complaints about. it's right for streamlining and efficiency. it's also true that mail-in voting is going to be potentially right for fraud. it's true that governors across the state will have a ton of power over who and how they vote and if you don't think politics will be involved in that, you're not paying attention. but it's also true, pete, that president trump choosing to streamline the post office at this time, is going to raise eyebrows. it's going to raise suspicion, and for example, jed talked to representative debbie dingle, a democrat from michigan a little bit earlier on what she thought comes next from the post office. >> the house will be back within the next week to 10 days to do something. a bill is being put together for right now that during covid-19 we don't take out machines, we move mailboxes, tell postal workers they can't work overtime. we need to deal with that. i've been saying that for some time. to have this very visible orders for no overtime only the moving
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of the machines and that's now, so we should put a stop to it. that's what we're going to try to do in the house, hope the senate will come back and do it. we are going to do something about that. people are upset. jedediah: yeah, people are upset because its been going on for a really long time. it's just always fascinating when people choose to get outraged at convenient times for people. now is a convenient time fort left to be outraged about the financial struggles that have been ongoing in the post office for decades now, because trump has made some comments and i will admit, about the post office and about mail-in balloting but the bottom line is the policy needed to change for a long time long before president trump took office so if congress wants to act they should do something about it and stop finger pointing they are elected to do a job. pete: do you know what i'm outraged about and the president is outraged about is that i want my vote to count. i want your vote to count. i want, and the minute you've got fraud or you've got people, you know, at any address, who lived there before? are they dead or alive? are their kids at college all
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those ballots get pushed out through the postal service. how can we validate in every circumstance that it is that person as opposed to absentee ballots the president made the case for where you have a chain of custody, and you know whose requesting it, you don't have to be present. i'd love to see a voting weekend make election day a national holiday and then give everybody saturday, sunday, monday to vote and get rid of all of the monday sense beforehand which is only going to make the outcome of this muddy -- will: just make everyone's vote count, jed. jedediah: that's exactly right and not a bad idea, pete, actually you should float that around. it's a pretty solid one i haven't heard that before but the democrats have. you did it to a lot of people who watch this show, the democrats have bigger problems than complaining about the post office simply. president trump because the dnc kicks off tomorrow and of course joe biden is nowhere to be found still in his basement somewhere and what's worse is that not everyone in the democratic party is on board with the party's platform. you have squad member talib coming out voting no on their platform saying it doesn't include a plan for
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single-payer health care and this is a tweet, it says today, i cast my dnc ballot and voted no on the proposed platform. i constantly hear from constituents demanding we push for a single payer system and away for this for-profit system leaving people to suffer and die just because they cannot afford healthcare, as a party we must push for a future where every resident has the ability to thrive. that means we need a platform that works to rid our society of oppression and greed. unfortunately in my view this platform does not do enough so of course there will be people in the hard left wing of that party that will feel that the platform does not speak for them and i think the dnc will be really interesting because you have people like bernie sanders up first whose going to have to somehow twist like gumby to endorse joe biden who he has rallied against, and so many policies that joe biden has voted for in the past decade , we know joe biden has been in politics for a long time , so how powerful would that hard left wing of the party be,
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that aoc wing that feels really strongly that this party right now does not still even though it has shifted left, has not shifted far left enough to speak for them. will: jed it's clear that biden, harris ticket's plan is to stay quiet and stay in the basement allow president trump to speak and hope to win the game on defense and run the clock out but if they allow that wing of the democratic party, the tlaib 's to define their platform they will lose this election and lose touch with america and then lose touch with an election. i'm going to give you one quick example of this. president trump knows that left or right, mainstream america loves college football and now it has emerged as a huge, not just coronavirus flashpoint, but i believe increasingly it will be an election flashpoint. president trump talking about college football yesterday. president trump: i want to say that i want college football to come back. these are strong, healthy, incredible people.
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these are people that want to play football very badly. a great, great talent quarterback trevor lawrence called me two days ago, spoke to him a couple of times. he said sir, i want to just tell you, we want it back. we want to play, and he made the statement that he feels he's safer on the field, he's safer on the field than he is out, you know, outside of the field, and we're trying to help the nfl. as long as they stand for our national anthem and as long as they honor or flag and country, if they start kneeling i won't be helping them much, i won't be watching and neither will a lot of other people. will: inevitable first round pick, of the nfl quarterback trevor lawrence talking directly to the president. jed, pete this is my college football could become an election flashpoint. for two reasons it's incredibly important to american culture and simply ingrained on who we are on saturday afternoons but second what the president is pointing out there is empowering people with individual choice allowing them including athletes
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to run through their own risk assessment pete and make their own choices act the activities they choose to participate in. pete: you're reading my mind. there was one defining attribute of how the president has attempt ed to get his arms around this impossible invisible threat it's respecting people enough to let them make that risk assessment. if you're a college football player and you don't want to play or you feel like you might go back and be with a grandparent, don't play. if you're a coach that doesn't feel comfortable, don't play. if you're a ref that doesn't feel comfortable, don't ref. otherwise this can happen and it's part of raising our national psyche. so, we're going to have later on -- jedediah: yeah, no just quickly i was going to say i think this conversation is happening with is many areas of life right now. people are craving normalcy. we're talking about it with football right now. we've talked about it at length with schools and much of the decision-making is going the same way, that people are going to have to make ultimately those responsible choices for themselves, or their families about what they do but life will ultimately have to go on at some point and that's a
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reality that we're all facing despite the fears of the pandemic and virus, life must go on. pete: it must. will: later in the show we'll have army west point football coach jeff munkin on live an fox & friends at 9:50 a.m. eastern time. over to you, jed. jedediah: and i'm here with some headlines for you now and we are beginning with a fox news alert. president trump's younger brother robert has died. the president visiting him in a new york hospital just one day before his death. president saying in a statement, "he was not just my brother, he was my best friend." he will be greatly missed but we will meet again. his memory will live on in my heart forever. moments ago, joe biden tweeting his condolences saying, "mr. president, jill and i are sad to learn of your younger brother robert's passing. i know the tremendous pain of losing a loved one and i know how important family is in moments like these. i hope you know that our prayers are with you all. " robert trump was 71 years old. now to extreme weather,
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watch as fire nato ripped through parts of california. strong winds as high as 60 miles per hour turning a wildfire into the rare weather phenomenon near the nevada border. the loyalton fire burning 20,00g evacuations in several california counties. firefighters scrambling to move cars stuck on a highway as flames inched closer. luckily no one is hurt. the fire is only 5% contained. and those are your headlines over to you, will. will: thank you, jed. still ahead the white house and democrats are locked in a covid-19 relief stalemate. what will it take to reach a deal? we'll ask white house trade advisor peter navarro, next. ♪ book two separate qualifying stays and earn a free night. the open road is open again. and wherever you're headed, choice hotels is there. book direct at choicehotels.com.
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democrat governors and democrat mayors. nobody knows the deal better than i do. when it's right i'll meet but right now it's not right. they want $1 trillion to bail out badly-run statesnd a and they are democrat states. will something happen, possibly. pete: that was president trump yesterday calling out democrats for holding up another round of covid-19 relief. as negotiations remain at a stalemate. here on what we expect next, white house trade advisor peter navarro. peter thanks for being here. so the democrats -- >> can i say one thing? pete: of course. >> from the white house here, the president in bedminster, our condolences for everybody here for the loss of his brother and our prayers are with him today, sir. pete: well thank you, amen to that. we've covered it and mentioned it all morning long and we certainly echo that from here at fox & friends, so as we get into these talks, which are ongoing, you know, democrats are saying $3 trillion and the president said if you won't move i'll take
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executive action but now back at the table, so does this move forward or will executive action be enough? >> well, let's think about it first, the irony, pete, of what's getting chuck and nancy back to washington. it's not concern about the working men and women of america, who really need our help right now. they want to come back so they can rename the post office the united states ballot harvest ing service, so it's unfortunate we get these in the middle of the election we get all these new cycle things going on they seize upon. here is the way to a deal, pete and it's very very simple. start with a number and whatever it is, the democrats want 3 trillion, mcconnell and the senate wants 1 trillion, somewhere there's a number that we can work with. once you get that number, you decide what you both can agree on and after that, you basically trade-off across the table, because this is a divided government right now, but what
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you can't do, pete, is you can't have either side cross the others red lines. what are the red lines here? the red lines are bailing out massive blue states that basically did not do a good job in terms of taking care of the public. a lot of those , pete, are sanctuary cities and states which basically got in by giving a bunch of money away to illegal aliens, so that's clearly a red line there. clearly, this president does not want to support ballot harvest ing, nancy and chuck want a big, big amount for that. you know, there's other things. you can't make the republicans pay for things like planned parent hood and certainly the democrats have there's but this should be easy. this could be done within a day using that formula. it's a question of recognizing that there's real pain in america right now. the president understands that if there's people who are going to be evicted from their homes or foreclosed that's why the
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president last week signed four executive orders to help people, at work give them a pay hike, people are not at work, give them some relief. the eviction foreclosure folks and the people who had that crushing weight of student loans pete: we will find out. i've got to ask you real quick we only have a few moments there's a new report on using the defense production act to combat covid-19. give us an update real quick, peter. >> this is great. the democratic strategy and the chinese communist party strategy are the same. blame trump for the pandemic. biden has been blaming trump using saying that he hasn't used the defense production act, a report from my office shows we've used it almost 80 times, 80 times for testing, vaccines, personal protective equipment, we are engaged in the most rapid industrial mobilization since world war ii under the leadership of president donald j. trump. pete: peter navarro, white house trade advisor thank you for your time.
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jedediah: the democratic convention kicking off tomorrow. the weeks events will be mostly online, ending with virtual sessions from senator kamala harris and nominee joe biden on thursday, our next guest predict s harris will bring energy to the ticket. don peebles served on president obama's national finance committee joining me now. don welcome back to the show as always. we haven't gotten your reaction to the kamala harris pick so i want to do that first. was it a good pick for joe biden >> it was his absolute best pick and his best option available to him so yeah,
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overall it was a very good pick for him. jedediah: are you concerned at all about her record on criminal justice though? because we know that when she was in california as an a.g., she was considered the top cop. she was very tough on crime, she was considered an allie of law enforcement in many ways that protesters now believe was not advantageous to them so is that a problem considering that he too has that record, that parallels hers? >> yeah i think in this moment in time it is. i think that if you looked at the beginning of the presidential campaign for the democratic nomination, she was the obvious choice for the democratic ticket. i didn't think she was a viable candidate for president. she didn't have sufficient experience or management experience to do that, and but, i do think that her criminal justice record is going to give people to the left a bit of a pause, and younger people especially and i believe in order for this democratic ticket to win, it will need to see turn out results very similar
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to 2008 when obama energized the electorate and brought out young people and african americans in disproportion at amounts and i'm not sure with this criminal justice record of both the vice president and kamala harris' history in their prior offices, is that going to be a deterrent for those young voters to come out and vote for them? >> yeah, it certainly could be right now. no doubt kamala harris has energized in terms of fundraising we've seen that already remains to see where that goes as the weeks go on but we have a really interesting fox news poll i want your take on. the poll reveals that voters think their neighbors secretly support president trump over joe biden. this was the question you see it there. who do you think your neighbors support 39% for trump, 34% for biden. so do you think there are a number of people out there who are silent about their support for trump, don't necessarily say that outloud for fears of criticism or fears of being
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badgered whatever those fears may be but will turn up on election day and vote for him. >> yeah, look. from the day president trump entered the race to the day he was elected to the day he was inaugurated the mainstream media vilified him, and they vilified him and they have vilified him for essentially four years and that's taken its toll so he's not politically correct for many. look african americans can look at president trump and if kim that justice reform is your issue then look, he has done more for criminal justice reform than many other presidents historically and so in terms of his supporting historically black colleges, he's done more there as well, but i think african americans especially be very much an out cast if they were to say they supported president trump publicly so i believe that there is a strong hidden trump support base that will actually come out and surprise voters on election day. i'm not sure it's enough to propel him to victory but it's a
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very significant factor that's hard to measure and we saw it in the last election as well. in 2016 he never polled leading en in these states that were battleground states and he came out and won most of them. jedediah: yeah and it remains to be seen on those issues will people dig into the record and vote based on the record or will they just go on the talking points and if the biden-harris camp are saying the right things will that be enough. there's another issue going on around the country though because we see in a lot of these cities police injuries as a result of riots, financial losses to businesses from looter s, numerous protesters, numerous riots people are fleeing a lot of the cities you see new york city in total distress as an example, seattle, portland, so many cities that are led and i said led in quotation marks by some democratic mayors and governors that haven't really done their jobs. what happens here? who pays for all of this? >> i mean it's a sad circumstance, because in reality
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, the peaceful protesters have legitimate issues in terms of economic empowerment for african americanss and equal protection under the law, but this element that came that is i don't believe a part of black lives matter that has brought violence to these protests have distracted from the issues and they are damaging these cities and making people fearful. black, white, and every other race, they're making people fearful of staying in these cities and crime rates are increasing because police are distracted and you have this absurd movement to defund police which is, i mean, an absurd request and so it's having an impact of accelerating the exodus out of cities like new york and i think there's no better example than what's happening in new york where 300 people are leaving new york city every day, and people were leaving before the pandemic and before these protests but the protests and the pandemic have accelerated the exodus and
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i think these cities are going to be left reeling and in deep holes that will take them a decade or two to dig themselves out of. jedediah: yeah and the question is does that make law and order a key issue then of this national election and does that hand a significant strength to president trump who has been endorsed by many police unions and have had the backing of a lot of law enforcement remains to be seen. don peebles thank you for being here as always we appreciate your insight. >> thank you for having me. jedediah: thanks so much. a former fbi lawyer is set to become the first person to plead guilty in the durham probe accused of altering an e-mail to justify spying on carter page. congressman devon nunes is here to react and he is coming up, next. >> ♪ ♪ i wanted more from my copd medicine,
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will: it's the first criminal case brought by john durham's review former fbi lawyer kevin klinesmith expected to plead guilty for falsifying a document to justify surveillance on a former trump campaign advisor. pete: here to react ranking member of the house intel committee gop congressman devon nunes. congressman thanks for being here. you've been ahead of the curve on all of this since the beginning. you took a ton of criticism when
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it first started. now that there's this first guilty plea in the durham probe, put us under the hood. should we expect more? >> well we sure hope so. i want to make sure everyone knows that this was one of the main attorneys that was involved in all of the different aspects of what happened during this russian hoax that was perpetrated on the american people and on the republican party, and the president himself and his team. it's important to remember that this is the attorney that i always called the french- speaking attorney. he was the one that said viva la resistance, that was asked when he was going to quit and he was also very concerned about whether or not that his name was on a lot of these document, so he clearly knew that he had a problem right after the election. i think that durham is letting him off extremely easy. there's multiple indictments that could have been brought, probably including conspiracy, and including destruction of
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evidence, so my guess is, maybe he's going to cooperate. maybe he's not but this is a good first step. jedediah: what do you anticipate , congressman, coming next? will there be more revelations of deceit? what's your guess? >> well if you listen to what attorney general barr said the another night on his interview with mark levine, last sunday, about a week ago, he said something on the lines of there's a lot of conspiracies here that have to be tracked down and that's what people have to remember. this was the corruption here was so wide and broad based it stretches not just from the fbi and the department of justice but also stretches back to the democratic national committee, the clinton campaign, many operatives, foreign spies. the mainstream media continues to talk about russia russia russia. well they'velaw enforcement also implicated in this fiasco also. they were involved and receiving
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the dossier. there's also a very popular left wing think tank in washington d.c. called the brookings institute and they are knee deep in this. the department of defense was funneling money over to a group in cambridge that was actually spying on the trump campaign so there's a lot of moving parts here. i hope before the election we get a full report of everything i laid out so that we know at least exactly what happened and from there, a lot of people need to be brought to justice for this , but the main thing because is we need the truth. will: shifting topics for one moment, congressman i want to ask you about a proposed law in your home state. a wealth tax in california. it be the first of its kind in the united states. under this proposal residents who leave california, move out of the state, could be taxed for up to 10 years on their wealth. does this have any hope of passing in california, what do you make of this proposal? >> well what you're watching is california was really the first state that went into socialism, into one party control, essentially a bureau took over
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the democratic party, and you move people like kamala harris whose really never run for anything. she's never had to run, one-time she got on to the stage as a front runner in the democratic presidential candidate she flamed out she was so embarrassed didn't even wait for iowa because she was probably going to finish last so this is a party that has moved toward socialism. now, what you're seeing is the next step, which ultimately is communism, because they don't have enough of other people's money to pay for everything. so what they're talking about doing is they're talking about going through and assessing everyone and it's taking part of that money. now, surprisingly, the people that they are going to hit the hardest will be the tech oli gahchs that live in silicon valley which by the way they don't vote for republicans. you've already seen elon musk, tesla moving his operations to texas. my guess is he's out of california. if this gets anywhere close to passing what you'll see even their best supporters they will
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leave. they will leave california, and they won't be back, and so this is not a solution, but it's what happens when you make the transition to socialism to communism. pete: yeah they're flirting with the idea of kicking out their tax base which means they can't do anything. will: it's not kicking them out, pete. clawing them back after they move away. pete: that's true i stand corrected. devon nunes thank you so much for your time. appreciate it. >> thank you. thanks for having me. pete: all right still ahead the democratic convention kicks off tomorrow but congresswoman t laib is voting against the party platform because well it doesn't include single-payer government-run socialist healthcare. is this a sign of what to expect this week? maria bartiromo here to react. >> ♪ anything you want, you got it, anything you need, you got it ♪
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the man accused of killing his 5-year-old son was his neighbor for eight years. he was shot and killed while riding his bike outside his north carolina home. his father austin says accused killer darius sessams came over to his home for dinner the day before the shootings and he's behind bars without bond charged with first degree murder. police have not yet revealed a motive donations pouring in for the family and a gofundme raised more than 700,000 dollars take a lack at this a police recuse a man trapped under a car in arizona. devon haycock was working on his wife's car when one of the jacks collapsed causing it to fall on his chest. police arriving within minutes, lifting the car just three inches allowing haycock to rollout and he walked away with soreness but thankfully is expected to be okay. whoa. coming up today on "sunday morning futures", in just 15 minutes president trump and jared kushner one topic we can
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surely expect, the biden/harris ticket as the democrat national convention kicks off tomorrow look at that, bannon, kushner, trump, ron johnson as well. this as the squad member, votes against her party's platform. will: because it doesn't include a plan for single-payer health care, pete. jedediah: here to discuss "sunday morning futures" host maria bartiromo, maria welcome as always. we love having you here and we love having you here especially to the with the dnc kicking off tomorrow so what do you make of that of someone like tlaib, and there will be others coming out saying guess what this platform isn't left enough for me. maria: yeah i think there's such a fight going on right now guys good morning to you. it's great to see you all. we're going to see both sides play out in a big way this upcoming week with the democratic national convention. it is party time now. look at some of their speakers. this upcoming week what you've got happening, this week is of
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course michelle obama on monday onference, theig headliner but convention on monday night is bernie sanders, and then on tuesday night you've got aoc, alexandria ocasio-cortez and then wednesday night you've got hillary clinton as well as another major major left progressive talking about senator kamala harris of course and then you've got key speakers being really all the way to the left, you've got joe biden on thursday night, and the point is is there is a real back and fourth going on within the party right now in terms of how the government should go, should they go all the way to the left. that's why you see tlaib doing what she's doing this morning because they're fighting and still unclear as far as what position they want to communicate and this week is going to be, you know, kamala harris is going to be the media will talk about her as being
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moderate but look what they're sandwiching her around with, whether it's bernie sanders or you've got all of these other very progressive people within the party. they have to do this to get the bernie bros on board with the convention this upcoming week so it's going to be something to watch and you're going to see continued pushback on any moderate ideas here because it really is the extreme left hijacking this party and that's been going on for some time now. pete: well the tension is real maria you're right and you have a great lineup today as you always do we'll be watching in just under 13 minutes maria bartiromo, thank you so much. maria: i'll see you then. pete: college football in jeopardy as major conferences side line their fall seasons, but army, head coach, jeff mon kin is convinced his team can play safely. he joins us next. >> ♪ ♪
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will: hopes of the college football season are getting tackled as major conferences like the big 10 and pac-12 punt on their fall kickoff dates, but army west point is independent and determined to play head coach jeff monken says he's confident his team can do it safely and he joins me now coach thanks for being here today. army has chosen to play its fall schedule or put together a fall schedule to play. the big 12, the sec are still looking to play. how is it so many are coming to different conclusions, different programs, different conferences all with the same info, right? with the same access to doctors coming to different conclusions. why?
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>> each team, i think, has to make the best decision for their student athletes and their school, conferences are making decisions for what they think is best for that group of schools, and we certainly respect that, and we're trying to do the same, just do what if we can play, if we can do this in a safe way we want to be able to do that and so we're just pushing forward. will: and what led you and army to decide you would play football this fall? >> i think everybody wants to play football. i don't think any of the teams that aren't playing don't want to play. everybody wants to play, but again those decisions are made based on what those teams, those schools, those conferences feel can be done from the health standpoint to keep student athletes and coaches healthy and safe and we've got protocols and guidelines in place here on our campus that i think are allowing us to do that, and we've got a great administration. our superintendent, lt. general darryl williams has done an
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unbelievable job with his staff and the academy and administration, mike buddy and our athletic department and the support they've given us just allowed us to be able to prepare and be here all summer, and fortunately our team has stayed covid-free the entire summer. will: that's good news i'm going to put this up on the screen for the viewers this is the landscape of college football, big 10, pac-12, mid- american conferences canceled their season, planning to play the acc, the big 12, the sec, the sunbelt conference, conference usa all planning to play. independent teams, it varies. and coach, army is an independent team which gives you an added hurdle does it not? you've got to put together a schedule without a conference and with teams canceling how did you manage to put together a schedule to play this season? >> several of the opponents that we had already scheduled and had agreements with are still playing so that made those games easy. those that were made in our schedule, and then there were
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others as you said, that as there were cancellations, we had some contingency plans in place and our athletic department, the folks that work in scheduling, had gotten way out ahead of that and even in march of this past spring we're having conversations with other schools who may perhaps be in the same situation and kind of saw that, you know, if there were going to be teams that maybe decided to cancel that we had a plan in place, so right now we've got a schedule, and we're excited about it, and are confident we'll be able to play football this fall and play a full schedule. will: glad you are coach one last question we just have a few moments, i think it's the right decision to play football and i know you have precautions in place but what if you do have coronavirus positive infections? what's the standard? how do you know when to call off your season or postpone or cancel a game? >> we would have to make that
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decision like everybody else has , and do what's right for our program, our student athletes and coaches, but the protocols we have in place to test, to treat, to protect our people here, i think are as good as there are anywhere in the nation for a college football team and for a student body, so we're very confident that we're keeping everybody safe and that if there are cases that pop-up, that we'll be able to keep it under control and we'll make those decisions when they come. will: coach jeff munke, of army west point. pete: beat navy. will: i'm answering more of your viewer questions, right after this. >> ♪ and he was trying different things, he was smoking funny things, making love out by the lake to our favorite song ♪
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jedediah: welcome back, everyone , and we are at one of your favorite parts of the show because our new co-host will cain is going to answer more of your viewer questions and this one, will, comes from someone named jedediah from new york city. i feel like i've met her not really sure. regardless she has a great question and that question is what is your favorite 90s team drama and are you on team brenda or team kelly? will: i can do this. jedediah: will? will: that's a 90210 reference. the blonde. i'm on which one was the blonde? kelly. jedediah: team kelly. we have to disagree on this as well because i'm on team brenda, but at least you knew it was a blonde. [laughter] pete: and i'm on team "saved by the bell." i want to take a moment and wish a very happy anniversary to my lovely wife jennifer.
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that is a photo from moments ago and our beautiful daughter whose three today i love you both and we'll see you. will its been an awesome weekend wang can't wait. pete: have a great sunday, go to church everybody. maria: good sunday morning everyone. thanks so much for joining us i'm maria bartiromo straight ahead here on "sunday morning futures" it was a monumental week for the trump adminitration with the u.s. brokering the first middle east peace deal in 26 years, between israel and the united arab emirate coming up one of the agreements to to lead architect jared kushner is here to tell us why the president's cease plan could change the course of history and this is the next phase of the 2020 presidential race kicks off tomorrow and it is convention season day one of the democratic national convention begins tomorrow and the republicans will get their turn the following week. both conventions happening virtually, because of the
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