tv FOX and Friends Saturday FOX News September 12, 2020 3:00am-7:00am PDT
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yellowstone in front of the mobile. a piece of advice, don't do that. don't do that. >> dana: you could, but you should not. that's it for ♪ everybody is working for the weekend ♪ everybody ♪ >> rise and shine, welcome to "fox and friends" in the 6 am hour. looks like a beautiful day outside. a little dark. i never quite get used to the dark mornings the role in is we head into the fall. we have a big show planned, some great interviews, good stuff,
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how are you guys feeling? >> everybody is working for the weekend. we are working on the weekend, we will let you get over whatever you did last night. there is no friday night for us on saturday morning, never moved to alaska, lots of darkness too much of the year and working for the weekend i once saying that are karaoke party. it is not on tape that i'm aware of the now i am aware of it. >> it could be on someone's iphone they accidentally cut by hitting the password too many times. have a great show this morning, mike pence spoke to is
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exclusively, and marshall blackburn, and others so stay with us this morning and we were talking about how we are fully in election season. we put on our karl rove whiteboard had to sketch which states developed and wired what it means that races are taking. all those things go into consideration for campaigns as far as where they go, why they go there and who they send, donald trump is out in nevada this weekend, on the western time zone in nevada, las vegas on sunday and we were scouring the joe biden for president website looking for events and none yet. i imagine some will develop but we will start to get a sense of how each campaign views the
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race-based on where they go. there is a joe biden event this week, there are still zoom meetings, there is an event taking place this week, a virtual event you can dial into but the reason so many are taking place is they are focusing on the battleground states and the supporting to the cook political report the racist tightening in florida and nevada which moved from joe biden's camp toward donald trump's camp, florida has moved to a tossup and nevada instead of likely democratic, leaned democratic state, look at this right now. this is nevada and how it is broken down, 2000, 2004 nevada went for president bush, 2008-2012 flipped to president obama. 2016 hillary clinton won the
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state by this and 3 points, important battleground states moving to the right. >> a lot of battleground states are really tight last time around but it will be key that donald trump is on the ground talking to people and never underestimate the power of these knock on the door campaigns which the trump campaign is doing exceptionally well. people knock on your door and ask who you're voting for and talk about why you should support the candidate of choice, in person conversation cannot be outdone, you see every emphasis on the virtual on the side of the biden camp but it's not the same thing, thinking about nevada keep in mind this is a state that has been hard hit by the pandemic i heavily tourist reliant state who suffered quite a bit so the economy will be a key issue. lockdowns, small business owners
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will be paying close attention, that will be the case for many states that have suffered as a result of lots on button a in particular with a heavy emphasis on tourism, we will really pay attention to talking points when it comes to the economy. >> you mentioned ground game which is usually significant on both sides. a tale of two campaigns. the biden campaign going completely virtual knocking on the road doors were the trump campaign reached their 100 millionth voter in person either over the phone, phone banking or doorknocking and as someone who has been involved in trying to mobilize people to make phone calls and talk on doors phone calls is easier, not as effective, doorknocking can be very effective, face to face and the apps and technology now used to target voters, they are not going to random voters, they are going to multiple on it, florida, michigan, pennsylvania, minnesota, nevada and they know
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where the republican voters are and whether they are likely to vote, walk up to the door, what is your plan to vote for what concerns do you have, those are effective voter interactions, a big difference 100 million to 0 and when i mentioned the states the states i mentioned are important because of the electoral college and where people vote and what decides their election. bill mara was on hbo last night talking about the difference between the popular vote and the electoral college. >> this is frightening to me. nate silver says if joe biden wins this popular vote by less than one%, wins, wins the election only has a 6% chance of becoming president. if he wins by one percent-2% he's got a 22% chance of being president. if he wins by 2 percent-3% -- you've got to get up to 5 percent-6% before he has a 98% chance of winning the election. that is a big big big victory
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and if he doesn't get that races titan at the end. the battle before the last election, you guys are whistling past the graveyard. >> we are not just citizens of the united states but texas, connecticut, michigan and arizona, we are elected not just by the important quote federalism was woven through the country from the start. one thing we need to highlight, i have a tentative humility after the 2016 election in predicting outcomes. the polls are tightening in nevada and florida, seem to be positive for donald trump but who knows? look at the energy, look at crowds, look at the voter interactions and right now if we
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are trying to measure energy, one campaign is out there interacting with voters and the others on the zoom call. i don't know what could happen but if i measure it the same way i did in 2016 bowls are moving trump's way. >> bill myers being honest which he is pretty much all the time and just saying don't be lazy, michael moore has a similar statement interesting to watch a lot of leading figures on the left coming forward saying listen, don't assume you have it in the bag, some polls say you are taught but don't assume that. many democrats and republicans assumed they would wake up to hillary clinton announcement that she would be the next president, it did not go that route soliciting do what you need to do, hit these battlegrounds, michael moore urging the biden campaign you need to get to some of the states, don't pull hillary clinton, won't work out to your advantage, interesting to see them saying that you will see this talking point continuing the weeks ahead. we following another story, bixler, donald trump nominated
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for a nobel peace prize for the second time. lucas hamilton joins us with more. what is the latest? >> the second time in a week donald trump has been nominated for the nobel peace prize after another arab nation recognized israel. >> peace and cooperation, bahrain will normalize diplomatic relations with israel. and now you will see a lot of that is loaded up with peace. >> berets before the rob: to make peace with israel and the second in recent weeks in a deal brokered by the trump administration. it has been two dedicated since an arab nation did this, donald trump expect more countries in the middle east to join the rain and the united arab emirates whose leaders join the president for a formal white house ceremony next week, this new alliances one thing in common, common enemy, iran but the
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latest is not for bahrain but breaking a deal between serbia and the breakaway republic of kosovo, donald trump hosted both leaders last week at the white house, former president obama received the peace prize in 2009, weeks later he ordered 30,000 us troops to afghanistan. secretary of state mike pompeo is presiding for the first ever peace talks between the taliban and afghan government. >> this wasn't even a reflection of the most recent development between bahrain and israel. i had a chance yesterday when the reading of the names was happen to sit down with mike pence and i asked him about the actions that have happened in the middle east and the president's potential for a nobel peace prize. >> i think donald trump deserves the nobel peace prize and likely deserved it before now. with this president understood
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from early on is that we can achieve peace through strength. >> that is just a portion of the longer interview that will air at 6:30 with the vice president. >> the second nobel peace prize for donald trump in as many weeks, that has caused employment of anonymous sources the atlantic to put its name on this op-ed calling for end to the nobel peace prize, the trump nomination prize shows that they. it. here's a quote from the atlantic, the record of achievement of the peace laureates and the rationale for their work is so eclectic the committee should take a break to consider if peace is a category worth recognize, peace has a chance and blue it, the atlantic says when it comes to the nobel peace prize, take the ball and go home.
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>> you have to laugh because what else do you say, the inability to look beyond your partisanship and give credit where it is due. that's what is wrong with politics, these are accomplishments by the president the question, people on both sides of the aisle should be applauding these accomplishments and it is so ridiculous to see media twisting and turning, the nobel peace prize has no value because donald trump is up for it, it is ridiculous, look at past winners, 2009 barack obama, 2007 al gore, 2000 jimmy carter, nelson mandela, the dalai lama, mother teresa. i don't remember any of these articles popping up about how the nobel peace prize should have been eliminated as a result of these people. you need to take a beat because the stuff makes you look really
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bad and then when another article comes out somebody may be willing to give you credit on people sit back and say i'm not going to do that because you're distrustful as a result of articles like this, it is just absurd but that is the state we're in with media. we will turn to some headlines, four more minneapolis police officers charged in george floyd's deborah heckled. hundreds of protesters standing outside the courthouse in minneapolis, the judge did not address motions to dismiss charges oral up the possibility of moving the trial to a different location, the judge disqualified four prosecutors over a, quote, sloppy work while interviewing a witness. straight to fox news alert, mike pompeo arriving in carter restored peace talks between afghanistan and the taliban.
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mike pompeo urging both sides to take advantage of the historic opportunity. >> the entire world wants you to succeed and is counting on your succeeding. >> he says both sides are committed to not harboring violent extremists and the decisions will affect the future of us assistance in the region. donald trump awarded the medal of honor to army sergeant mayor thomas patrick payne for helping to rescue isis hostages in northern iraq. >> you embody american fellow, you personify the model ranges lead the way and you inspire us all. >> pain was praised for his heroic efforts during the 2015 raid. he ran into a burning building multiple times to make sure no one was left behind. pain had been deployed 17 times, the first living delta force member to receive the medal of honor. amazing. fantastic man.
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>>, got, oops, dozens of cell phones from robert mueller epstein were accidentally wiped before they can be reviewed by the inspector general. for federal prosecutor brett coleman reacts to that next. what you're made of, we're made for. usaa throughout our history any time something bad has happened to us ...we've recovered. every time. we fall, we rise. we break, we rebuild. we stumble, we learn.
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>> newly released records reveal cell phones of several dozen people were wiped before the inspector general could review them. among them lisa page whose phone was, quote, restored to factory settings and deputy andrew wiseman who, quote, entered his password too many times. here to react is federal prosecutor, help me out here. this is one of the highest profile infections we have seen.
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we cover the process, is it common that dozens of people would suddenly say i have nothing on my phone because it has been wiped? >> when it is common is when a criminal is trying to hide evidence in an investigation. we see it in cases but we charge those individuals with destruction of evidence or interfering with an investigation, obstruction of justice. this is a coincidence if one or 2 it occurs but dozens and before the inspector general is going to investigate, it is unbelievable. >> i heard a term anticipatory obstruction of justice, they know someone will ask for it so they get rid of it. they had to know the way they conducted this investigation could be under scrutiny because of how high profile it is so a
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dozen people make up various excuses, what consequences could come from this? >> this falls in the same vein as an investigation we often hear in today's media, the thousand and one violations which is in essence it can be keeping or withholding information you know an investigator will be asking about so that is what is happening, you have individuals who knew there would be investigations into what they did. there were clear signals sent that they were going to review what the mueller team did in the investigation of the attorney general did what he should have done and the inspector general was reviewing it. i'm disappointed the inspector general did not make more of this when he knew about it, there should have been updates
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to the investigative reports and i hope investigators are building a case and will do something about it. the american people are tired of seeing those that are supposed to investigate bad behavior and now we know the russian hoax they were looking into should also be_me and face consequences. >> you say consequences, this story is absurd yet i have a biting sense that they are going to escape, but somehow on a technicality -- is there a chance their actual consequences? >> you and i both know there weren't consequences for someone smashing with a hammer cell phone or deleting emails there should be consequences. i hope the attorney general turns this over to an investigator who wants to get to the bottom of this. >> your point, these are lawyers
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and special prosecutors -- thank you, appreciate it. from multimillion dollar apartments to ivy league education a look at the privileged lives of the protesters, the rioters in manhattan. wait for this. ment and offer plans to mix and match starting at $35. plus, get the samsung galaxy s20 5g uw on us when you buy any note20 5g. only at verizon. that selling carsarvana, 100% online wouldn't work. but we went to work. building an experience that lets you shop over 17,000 cars from home. creating a coast to coast network to deliver your car as soon as tomorrow. recruiting an army of customer advocates to make your experience incredible.
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and putting you in control of the whole thing with powerful technology. that's why we've become the nation's fastest growing retailer. because our customers love it. see for yourself, at carvana.com. i had moderate-to-severes rheumatoid arthritis. i've always been the ringleader had a zest for life. flash forward, then ra kept me from the important things. and what my doctor said surprised me. she said my joint pain could mean permanent joint damage. and enbrel helps relieve joint pain, and helps stop that joint damage. ask about enbrel so you can get back to being your true self. enbrel may lower your ability to fight infections. serious sometimes fatal events including infections, tuberculosis, lymphoma, other cancers, nervous system and blood disorders and allergic reactions have occurred. tell your doctor if you've been someplace where fungal infections are common. or if you're prone to infections, have cuts or sores have had hepatitis b, have been treated for heart failure or if you have persistent fever, bruising, bleeding or paleness. don't start enbrel if you have an infection like the flu.
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contained and if you look at the structure behind me that is what you will see, block by block over and over again and when you're in this neighborhood there is a dense smoke as thick as fog. this is the deadliest of california's wildfires, nine have died in the search for victims is ongoing and it is all part of an extraordinary fire season in california. since august fifteenth, 2.6 million acres of burned, 14,000 firefighters are battling 20 major blazes. listen to i gavin newsom thinks this is happening. >> we are in the midst of the climate crisis. we are experiencing weather conditions the likes of which we've never experienced in our lifetime. >> reporter: in oregon dozens of people are missing, the state's emergency management director says they are preparing for,
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quote, mass fatality event, tens of thousands of enforced to evacuate, listen to how this evacuee is trying to cope. >> part of my faith and belief in taking care of each other, the best community you have is each other. >> reporter: back here in butte county we know at least one firefighter who has a 7-year-old.who lost his house and dog, it goes to show for some of these firefighters is not just physically exhausting but mentally exhausting as well. jillian: we will head over to will. >> the nypd revealing new mugshots of the protesters suspected of smashing and graffitiing these windows in the black panther rally in new york city. 6 of these protesters seem to
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come from rather privileged background, one made plans to take over abandoned luxury parties and defend them by tossing bricks off the rooftops. joining me to break down these arrests is brandon tatum. let's walk through a few of these protests, look at who they are, what they had done in the background from which they come in some insight into what is going on with this protests. let's take a look. this is clara from the upper east side of new york, the daughter of architect and child psychiatrist. in addition to their multibillion-dollar apartment, have a second home in connecticut, she was arrested on felony rioting and misdemeanor charges, what does that have to do with improving black lives? >> 0 to do with it, nothing to
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do with police brutality and everything to do with parents not teaching their children about responsibility. there is no way you come from that much wealth and privilege and you are going to sit up here and get arrested for protesting and burning stuff. it makes no sense. when you have well, somebody worked hard to get to that point. we are not translating that with communists who want to destroy everything when everything should be free. jedediah: the son of the best-selling comic book writer was arrested on felony riot charges. that was for the rising crime rates in new york city, the fact that several young black children have been killed in shooting for surely that is what he was protesting, right? >> definitely not. they are not thinking about black lives, don't have any
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statistical danger to anything they are doing outside of damaging and writing other people's property. even if they were peacefully protesting they would still have no basis for what they are doing. makes no sense, they have no cognitive understanding of that. these are just young people taking advantage of the black struggle and blm, protesting their parents, protesting their white guilt, they have been brainwashed into the institutions we call the educational system that is occurring today and i am hoping these young people wake up and come to a conclusion that it would be more proactive and beneficial to the movement to dissent. >> proactive, productive, something more than destroying the neighborhoods, they seem to come from places of no hardship. they know hardship in these privileged backgrounds, thank you for your time today.
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jedediah: the new york mets yankees on 9/11 doing their friday game. >> they were five acts including fdny, remembering the heroic efforts during the attacks 19 years ago. met yankees famously war nypd and fdny hats a week after the attack in 2001. the league did not allow the last year. nice to see some patriotic latitude in sports. speaking of patriotism, yesterday my favorite assignment on "fox and friends" being at ground 0 on 9/11 honoring that
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day and so many that gave so much at the beginning, two decades of conflict, the price citizens was there attending the 9/11 memorial ceremony in new york city and a chance to spend time with the vice president we sat down with a stop at the end why fire station as well. watch. >> to be here in the shadow of the freedom tower, a dramatic shot, almost at this moment this area was covered in dust and 243 of these men losing their lives forever americans. where is your head now. >> breaks your heart to think of 343 firefighters that rushed into those towers and never came home. it also fills your heart to
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think of the selflessness first responders. >> i came here to say thank you. we remember all those that were lost. >> on a day like today i thank the heroes who answered the call every day since. we brought justice to usama bin laden, destroy the isis caliphate, a great sense of heartache for those who suffer loss with a sense of pride. >> the afghan and iraq wars are part of the -- or administration announced more troop withdrawals, how do you make sure it doesn't correspond with any uptick in the enemies we gathered? >> we are bringing troops home because we managed to secure stability, taking the fight
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directly to isis, the progress we made in iraq able to bring more troops home and negotiations begin this weekend. >> the president acknowledged this is serious but don't want to stoke fears. >> the projection, and shared with the american people, the president said it in a way to expand panic, to assure the american people and get through this together.
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>> in light of covid-19. >> we will get through these times and we are opening up america. at the height of this pandemic because of the foundation, for families and businesses added 10 million jobs and we will keep driving what you keep driving for that, but i have every confidence, but if i can close the thought a week after 9/11, 100 members of congress, the mountain of degree in rescue and
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recovery, american resilience, such an honor to be here today. the challenges we face. the american people always come to gather, always face any challenge with strength and just as we did then we will get through these times together. >> a personal story about 9/11 and the way his children react to the feeling that place, no one wanted to talk politics or get political. we are grateful. brian: you brought up young people understanding what happened 19 years ago today, yesterday, we watched, people who weren't alive. let's check in with the weather. what's going on across the country?
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>> incredibly busy week. the fires across california, the tropics are continuing to explode. we have the peak of hurricane season this week, we still have most of the activity had of us ineffective season and a little bit of the storm snuck up on us, a store developed off the coast of florida and continues across areas of florida. as it does it is going over swampy for land it's not going to weaken it anytime unfortunately but then we will see get back towards areas of the calls and strength into a storm named sally. sometime tuesday, monday into tuesday something in the central gulf, the panhandle of florida to western we see anna, they are still cleaning up from the storm we had last week earlier, laura. very strong tropical storm may be a hurricane by the time it moves over there.
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one other thing, the incredible temperature drop across parts of the west, 100 degree temperatures and all the snow, the same storm brought the wind that drove a lot of fires across oregon, so many fires across the west, large fires continue to be active and by tuesday we start to see moisture in the pacific northwest and coastal areas of rain in northern california, the first sign of that coming. jedediah: great to see you. combating coronavirus with light. are next guest deploying uv technology to jensen stadiums across the country. we will show you how it works,.
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whether we see them or not, we need to know that they're always there. for the past 25 years, masimo has been monitoring patients in hospitals around the world so that doctors and nurses can make sure you feel safe. as new challenges have arisen, we've grown to bring that same safety and support to the place that you want to be most. if we've learned nothing else, it's that when challenges arise, there's only one way to rise above. together.
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>> fighting the coronavirus with light? one company using a type of ultraviolet light to kill 99.9% of viruses and bacteria in the air and on surfaces, now being used in offices, restaurants, gyms, senior living facilities across the country and even by the miami dolphins, the founder and chief, ross moment as a board member of a condominium in new jersey which is now reopened its jim thanks to this technology. thank you for being here, this is a fascinating topic.
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i want to start with you fred. explain how this works and show us a little bit of how this is implemented and what it looks like. >> first of all this has been around for the last 15 years in terms of research and the research out of new york, doctor david brenner of colombia proved how effective this is. the other piece about it is it is safe for the human body. it does not penetrate your skin to cause us any harm. you can use this light as we utilize the space ourselves. it is a down light replacement unit with a light source around it. it has a uvc matter in the middle that puts out the 2 nanometer light the will clean our air and our surfaces in real time as we use the space and
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causes no harm. behind me is a portal, the portal has the same light source senate and you walk through that portal and make a turn and we clean our surfaces to reduce the pathogen load. >> you have implemented this in new jersey, you are a board member. how have you implemented and what is the reaction of residents? >> we have implemented both the products, also included the air sanitization proper which is running behind, two amazing and generally circulating the air using the uv light fred mentioned, the board members and our manager and staff and
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employees and members, it has been very positive, very proactive approach but we have antimicrobial pads on our door handles. we take it very seriously. we believe the health institution is one layer for continuous - we feel this is continuous and a safer environment, any combination of masks. >> this is fascinating and i know we will see a lot more of this is places begin to reopen. we will follow this closely and have you back later, really fascinating stuff. coming up, on fox tomorrow the
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tradition, players will now be able to virtually celebrate with their fans after crossing the goal line. here to explain is kurt the cyberguy. how does this work? >> good to see you. when you are watching tomorrow, the nfl finally takes off what you will get is if they install on each end zone the things they are calling virtual fan, a showtime space where a player can run up and celebrate after a touchdown or if you are just near it and want to interact with fans. on the edges you will see some invited fans to microsoft teams and those will be the lucky people and try to figure out how to get invited to this in the deal is each clubhouse decide
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who gets to be part of this. the cool thing about us watching at home is energy where you can hear other people responding to the game and cheering them on is blended into the actual programming. it should feel a little closer to the real thing. this is not far off. what i predicted in july when talking about the mlb, that maybe one day they will sell tickets for you and i to virtually attend the game until the stadiums open up and then you would see us sitting in seats, this is the next best thing. this is an interesting idea, a way to bring that energy back to the players, something they don't get when they are playing the game, they feed on the crowd energy, you can't feed on it when you don't interact with them. each end zone will have that
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display that is interactive constantly. will: the team goes around and performs the end zone dance and then to hear things back. >> it is like a giant interactive selfy machine on each side of the field hooked up to your team, your fans depending on which team you are at. >> i think it brings a little something special and so many people are plugged into the digital world because they have been locked inside and haven't had access to normal things but thanks for bringing this to us, you have some really cool stuff. >> you can subscribe to the free cyberguy.com newsletter and i will share more about more nfl technology.
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eveyou can adjust youriggesta, comfort on both sides - your sleep number setting.. can it help me fall asleep faster? yes, by gently warming your feet. but can it help keep me asleep? absolutely, it intelligently senses your movements and automatically adjusts to keep you both effortlessly comfortable. will it help me keep up with mom? you got this. so you can really promise better sleep?
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not promise... prove. don't miss the final days where all beds are on sale. save 50% on the sleep number 360 limited edition smart bed. plus zero percent interest for 24 months. ends monday. to learn more, go to sleepnumber.com. will: good evening, for months jenna has been dying for a sense of normalcy, to get back to the lives we had before covid-19. this week we have one small step towards that normalcy.
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a return to sports that we saw thursday night in terms of the nfl and the first slate of college football. there are no huge matchups but clemson is playing, the burnt orange tie. there is a reason for that. it is also national encouragement day. very nice. doing a great job right now. will: your knowledge of sports never ceases to amaze me. on twitter i have no idea what you are talking about 60% of the time but it is intriguing, a way of presenting to those who are not experts that we can follow along. >> thank you for that. jedediah: another thing going on right now is there's a stalemate in the senate thanks to democrats who have decided to block the senate's relief plan,
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democrats have been obstructionists on this for a long time, donald trump accusing pelosi and schumer of holding out for a blue state balance of what democrats want is more money, they are saying it is not enough money so they are not going to give in at all and people will not get the extra $300 weekend extra unemployment benefits, a lot of things, small business loans, school funding a lot of things to help the american people in a difficult time and i don't understand the strategy of holding out when so many are suffering around the country. it remains to be seen who people hold accountable for this standstill. a montage of protesters stood outside mitch mcconnell's house holding him accountable. [crowd chanting]
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>> for you and your security out here, we are going nowhere, no justice, no justice! [crowd chanting] jedediah: why are they outside mitch mcconnell's house when he has been arguing for relief packages for a long time? why are they not outside nancy pelosi's house or chuck schumer's house, democrats given nothing on this, republicans have come to the table repeatedly and said let's do something temporary to help people and then come back to the table and talk about bigger funding ideas and have a discussion about that but to hold this money hostage, you've got to hold that accountability, that is with democrats at this time.
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>> it will have no effect on him, no $600, no peace, that was the supplemental employment insurance. it boggles the mind to think that is an argument that will be persuasive deciding who is to blame for this one republicans as you said have been willing to come to the table and say whether it is ppp loans or some additional unemployment but not so much disincentive for people to go back to work as we open up, these are evidently reasonable arguments to make and the president is weighing in on behalf of the way republicans do this policy and schumer want trillions of dollars of bailout money for blue states that are doing badly economically and in terms of high crime. as a condition to making a deal
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on stimulus usa is coming back strong. that is the other part of this, job numbers improved, unemployment has dropped, people are going back to work and hopefully as states open up even more that will improve. making more bailouts less necessary after a government mandated shutdown americans need help, why can't republicans and democrats come together to find the relief package? we will ask marsha blackburn at 715 eastern time. video of protesters when it comes to the government passing a relief bill. we have become used to videos, one of the biggest divides in our free. are as these are radical political platform driven by many who are critical of these issues. there is some doubt out there. here is a new york post cover from this morning title occupy my street. protesters in new york share
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something in common. clara clay byrne is one of the protesters arrested following protests in new york city, she comes from a privileged background, parents who on two homes, one in new york and one in connecticut and she's not alone. across the mugshots spectrum we see privileged protesters decrying hardship they never lived. i asked the tucson police officer how to explain these riots, the damage they are doing to property and what it has to do with saving black lives earlier on "fox and friends". >> these are non-people taking advantage of the black struggle, essentially protesting their pants, their white guilt, 0 to do with black lives or police brutality and everything to do
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with parents not teaching their children about responsibility. no way in the world you come from that much wealth and privilege and going to sit appearance get arrested for protesting and burning stuff. makes no sense. jedediah: how dare they destroy property, they come from privileged backgrounds where financial distress is not something they had to think about and they go out and destroy the property of others who may have worked really hard to establish those things. it takes an incredible amount of elitism and audacity, don't know what their feelings are about black lives matter or what their motivations are when it comes to a movement ideologically but when you act out that way on a path of destruction takes a lot of nerve. will: i tell you what clara believes based on what is in the media, there are no cops, like
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saying a word good slave masters, all cops are bad because of the systemically racist system, she shelled up examples of revolutionaries, little mini privileged movement, i don't know, soviet leader joseph stalin, communist revolutionary early on trustee, full on hard car marxist and when i listen to your interview with brandon tatum they were spot on, they were hot to take the rest talk take themselves because they are white and as a result they are taught to fight a system based on white privilege so they find a way to say i am guilty for myself and i will destroy. >> those radical politics, were to be enacted with methods like this, taking over new york city apart is abandoned during covid-19, tossing bricks off the rooftop. that is why new york post has a
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headline occupy my street. bill maher understands this is a point of vulnerability for democrats, their unwillingness to call out looters and destruction of property. >> i'm not down with this properties on the table is something we can just take because things are not right. >> where is the mass destruction of property happening right now? if you look at portland it is two square blocks. >> it is in the media. you have seen it. you look at me like i am making this up like this is a justifiable approach. >> is that -- >> i saw this guy out of papa john's yelling through broken glass you are going to elect trump and i'm trying to feed my family. >> i would love to see his hate
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mail inbox, he is taken so much heat from folks on the left who have endorsed, deported or refused to argue against this horrific meeting because he's not blind, he is saying you can't endorse or keep your mouth shut on massive destruction of property, and expect people to feel confident about the ability to lead or elect you president. you have to give credit, so maybe a live interview democratic politicians to redirect their message and they are just brain-dead on it, not budging at all, so committed to their narrative, it is quite something to behold. >> this is almost all on our education system. it is what these young people are taught on new york city schools and schools across the
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country that america is a racist country and if they buy into it it is part of the racist system. what we have to consider is this might not be ignorance but understanding the ideology are advocating, marxism inherently has a hatred of property. this is not a mistake, it is part of the ideology they are advocating. let's turn to your headlines. 17 people are dead in massive wildfire burns across the west coast. in california 14,000 firefighters are battling 28 major fires, governor gavin newsom is blaming climate change for the fires. >> we are in the midst of a climate crisis. we are experiencing weather conditions the likes of which we've never experienced in our lifetimes. >> an organ of family. a 13-year-old boy died when trying to save his grandmother from intense flames, they tried escaping wildfire, dozens of people are still missing in that state.
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9 protesters confronted by an armed services couple cited for trespassing. the standoff between demonstrators and mark and tricia mccloskey made national in my -- headlines engine, the couple said protesters through their neighborhoods, their facing felony charges for holding guns while defending their home during the march. a field goal didn't have an outcome but cost one man 100,$000. he took the total score to be under 53 and a half points which goes looked good until a combined 23 points in the fourth quarter. he would have won 90,$000, final field goal pushed the score to 54, the entire headlines. i can't add sports gambling to my voices. i don't need todd: to one. you can't but that is part of
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the field plus it makes watching the game which way your bet breaks. >> i will not weigh in on peter devices but at some point we will educate you about his shopping habits, we will get into that another time. speaking to shopping a clothing company known for their pricey yoga pants for promoting and invest to resist capitalism. ♪ is mealtime a struggle?
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ancient this bill is not going to happen because it is so emaciated, so filled with poison building was designed to fail. >> this was a very big assault on the well-being of our country and they are coming up with a mealymouthed little proposal and say why don't we just take that. >> senate democrats blocked the coronavirus really feel that included billions for the unemployed, schools, farmers and the postal service so will congress pass any relief bill before the election? >> marsha blackburn, you heard it from democrats, too little too late, why can't republicans and democrats come together on a refill. was holding this up? >> it is beyond me that they will not come to the table and when you look at the bill we had on the floor this week it was
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targeted, it was focused on getting people back to work, children back to school, by putting in place liability protections. a second round of ppp meeting the president's commitment on unemployment insurance and repatriating pharmaceutical manufacturing back to the united states which has been one of the problems talked about repeatedly and solving it has had bipartisan support on capitol hill but doesn't of support from schumer and pelosi because they to the issue. they want people suffering, they want to be able to blame donald trump because they never accepted the results of the 2016 election. >> do you anticipate any changes? >> i think people are becoming so outraged by what they see happening in washington and the fact that they just will not
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come to the table, they are waiting for a big blue city and blue state bailout. they have to have money and they create other issues like a drama a day in the democrats and i they will continue this from now to november. >> we had a new drama emerged with dozens of cell phones on mueller's team wiped, this stuff you can't make up. what is your reaction? >> this is so implausible. how did you have 29 phones were 29 people forget their password? devon nunez was in williamson,
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tennessee, we were talking about this and lisa page's son goes missing and this shows you why you have to investigate the investigators but here is the thing. they got caught, trying to use the fbi, the permit of justice and that was the obama department of justice to investigate a candidate, a private citizen running for president, the investigators transition, they got caught and now they are trying to execute a cover-up nobody ever could have made this up. >> doesn't pass the plausibility test at all. marsha blackburn, thank you so much. coming up as we honor the life
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lost on september 11th one better wants everyone to live like it is september 12th. graham ellen wants to inspire all-americans to be united, he joined us from ground 0 coming up. and it's made for her she's serving now we also made usaa for military spouses and their kids become a member. get an insurance quote today. we anoticks and fleas?oilitary simplifies protection. kids
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capitalism, critics slamming the brand after it posted about the resist capitalism workshop on instagram. many calling out lulu's hypocrisy because the company is worth billions of dollars and sells very expensive things, some with $120 but resist capitalism. tesla ceo elon musk teasing many exciting things will be unveiled on battery day. it comes in that situation the companies close to unveiling improved battery technology for tesla cars, battery day will be mostly virtual and set for september 20 second. a day for everything. >> nra veteran launches a primerica clothing line called 9:12 united honoring the day after the september 11th terrorist attacks when americans came together showing unity, support, and courage.
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>> on september 11th, 2001, america was attacked. >> the pain, heartbreak and tragedy. there was a silver lining back then. >> the country was united. >> regardless of faith, politics or skin cover. >> we came together. >> let's put our issues aside. >> we stood hand-in-hand with our fellow americans. >> many people are hurt and they are more divided than ever. let's unite. >> we are 9/12. >> graham ellen is behind the new effort. he joined us from ground 0 one 9/12. tell us about my/12 united and why you are launching it. >> it is extremely humbling to be here at this how the grounded i can't help but think about this day 19 years ago when the country was united as americans. if you look around today everything, we see more divided
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than ever so we are so proud and humbled to announce the launching of our company 9/12 united, today is the launch day. live like it is 9/12 the subject of being united as americans. this is a pro america giveback organization. a portion of our proceeds go to the deer america foundation which is a pro military pro first responder charity. i know i have made a living being controversial and saying what i want to say but at the end of the day i am an american first and that is what this company is about, reminding us if we can do anything to honor the people that lost their lives on 9/11 it is to live every single day like it is 9/12 and that is what we hope this company will help us accomplish. >> our viewers can go to 912united.com.
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it is not a republican or democrat thing. we have our own political views but we are in the middle of a cultural battle where people are saying america is evil and you are taking the view, we love this country and we should celebrate the way we did that day. >> absolutely. this is not a left or right thing, this is 100% a pro america thing. if we can all agree on one thing, it is that americans on 9/122001, we were all-americans that day. there was no race, gender, political party, political preference and that is what we hope to push and connect with america with this company and enforce the fact we should all live like it is my/12. >> i spent some time with you at that site, we talked about the 9/11 generation, it will air on our network this sunday. here's a portion of the clip.
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>> when 9/11 happened it was not just a horrific devastating attack. it was a dropping of the veil for all americans that we are not invincible, this is the real world and there are evil people out there. >> thanks for joining us, congratulations on 9/12 united. you can watch this sunday night, 10:00 on fox or anytime on fox nation. live like it is 9/12. appreciate it. donald trump back on the trail today heading to nevada. estate he narrowly lost four years ago. rhonda mcdaniels has more on the president's campaign strategy. i'm leah and that's me long before
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...to soccer practices... ...and new adventures. you hope the more you give the less they'll miss. but even if your teen was vaccinated against meningitis in the past... they may be missing vaccination for meningitis b. let's help protect them together. because missing menb vaccination could mean missing out on a whole lot more. ask your doctor if your teen is missing meningitis b vaccination. >> reporter: at no time before has there been a clearer choice
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between two parties, two visions, two philosophies and two agendas for the future, there has never been a vision like this, sleepy joann trump, if we went america wins, that's what it is about. if we when america wins. >> that was donald trump campaigning in the great state of michigan and we are going to bring in rhonda mcdaniels, rnc chairwoman who has run the state of michigan to talk with us about the campaign but today we want to focus on nevada. a lot of happening there in the state of nevada, donald from making a sincere effort, very close election last time around, loss of 3% of the vote. let's talk to you about it. the cook political report released this headline. electoral college awaiting changes, florida and nevada shift right and that breakdown, 2000-2000 for went for bush, 2008 in 2012 want for obama, 2016 hillary clinton won the
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state by less than 3%. what do we expect to see from donald trump on nevada, any predictions understand how it will go? >> i'm very. on a, the president is going out there today. we've seen a lot of energy for this event. a lot of support from hispanic voters, hispanic voters who recognize that donald trump is good for the economy. they believe in the american dream. many of them appreciate what the president has done on immigration and we are not going to have a third-party candidate in nevada that steals votes from the republican party this cycle. we feel very good and that is why we are heavily invested in the ground game. >> i have so much skepticism towards polls, positive or negative for any candidate. so much humility from 2016 as predicting the way the election will go but one thing we learned is perhaps ground energy. what we see from rallies is more indicative of any particular paul. right now what are you looking
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at as the best measurement of where the selections going to go? >> that are in c uses voter scores which are more analytic and monitoring the electorate and we see the president in every battleground state see movement in his direction, since is not rushmore speech july 4th but then you see what you see on the grounds. i love going to the rallies and feeling the energy and every state there is something happening. the energy is higher than i saw in 2016, volunteer base we are seeing coming out to support the president is higher than it was in 2016, 2 million volunteers strong. we feel really good heading into the home stretch about the positive movement and positive energy for the president and biden has the ground game, no
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energy. compare the two events in michigan, the pictures of by and worn versus the president in freezable and it was remarkable. >> when people in the political world say so-and-so has no ground game that is just hyperbole. in this case that is really true, they are knocking on no doors whereas the rnc just crossed the threshold of 100 million phone calls or door knocks and you talk to that data. presumably these are targeted door knocks, people who want to get out to vote and have a plan to vote and again be a hectic approach. that one side of the ledger but we have a report from conservative watchdog capital research center that says this. of 2018 is an indicator we should expect to see the left carpet bomb the presidential election with buckets of anonymous cash while complaining that the evils of dark money the entire time, it mentions advisers putting in $600 million worth of ads. do you have a concern because there been reports that joe biden campaign is on air and some places the trump campaign
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isn't, the air war is going in their direction versus the ground game? >> i just want to say this. the campaign and the rnc work hand-in-hand, i'm very confident in the path the campaign has put together to secure victory is what the rnc is doing to work in tandem with the campaign and is dark money that comes in is, like you said, scattered, not based on data. the hundreds of millions of dollars we have invested in data the rnc build a compass as to which voters we need to target, where local voters, how we turn them out and make sure we can do that. and an election like this ground game will be a different thing. >> joe biden answered questions
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from monday with respect to whether or not he was using a teleprompter. his campaign as of yet has refused to answer the question directly. let's visit that. take a listen to him answer those questions and get your reaction. >> what will your administration do? thank you. >> it up here. you know, there used to be a basic bargain in this country, workers shared in the wealth, their work helps create. >> i find this odd and deeply disturbing that there has been no transparency over something that clearly was transpiring there. what do you say? >> i don't have a teleprompter and the president of the united states doesn't use a teleprompter, we challenge the biden campaign to come out and say whether your candidate is using a teleprompter, a teenager
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or college student asking the question it has to be on teleprompter, these are fair question is the media is not asking a candidate leading to lead our country to negotiate with putin and can't answer a question from a college student or high school student without using a teleprompter. it is deeply troubling, he is hiding from the press, his refusal to take tough questions or have tough interviews which i want to make sure there is no teleprompter on the debate stage but the fact that he can't be transparent speaks volumes. shannon: can you guarantee there will be in a teleprompter or technology to help in the debates? >> rudy giuliani streamed for the trump campaign. i have a feeling he will make sure biden is not allowed to have a teleprompter going into that debate. will: thanks for joining us. no teleprompter.
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turning to a few additional headlines, new details in the drowning death of glee actress rivera, an autopsy report saying rivera's son told investigators she said get back on the boat, the report says she helps her 4-year-old son get on the boat while yelling help. and sadly disappearing into the water, was found five days later in the carolinas. the iranian wrestler accused of murder has been executed according to the media. allegedly killed the security agent from the water and sewage department during protests, the case grabbing the attention of donald trump, the act was in anticipation of the protest, the wrestler's confession, and victims family.
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backing the blue the community in alabama lights have been supportive police, residents of huntsville replacing a porch lights with blue balls, they called the police to pass through the neighborhood, that is one officers noticed the surprise they said thank you to the community and those are your headlines. we did something like this a couple weeks ago too. >> many in the law enforcement community need to see that support. doctor anthony fauci warning americans to hunker down. how concerned should we be with fall right around the corner, we will discuss next.
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this is nothing new. throughout our history any time something bad has happened to us ...we've recovered. every time. we fall, we rise. we break, we rebuild. we stumble, we learn. we come together. we work together. we innovate and create. we meet up and get to work. we find our way forward. every time. this has been the key to our survival, the key to our growth that whenever we thought we were at our weakest, this is when we became the strongest, became the best version of ourselves,
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and found our way home. together. masimo. together in hospital. together at home. for people with heart failure taking entresto, it may lead to a world of possibilities. entresto helped people stay alive and out of the hospital. don't take entresto if pregnant; it can cause harm or death to an unborn baby. don't take entresto with an ace inhibitor or aliskiren, or if you've had angioedema with an ace or arb. the most serious side effects are angioedema, low blood pressure kidney problems, or high blood potassium. ask your doctor about entresto. >> as the country recovers from the impact of the pandemic white house coronavirus task force member doctor anthony fauci is
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issuing this warning. >> what i would like to see is keeping the lid on it, keeping the baseline down until we get a vaccine. i believe we will likely get a vaccine by the end of the year, beginning of 2021 and that will turn it around as we need to get to this fall and winter because it is not going to be easy. will: a pulmonologist joins us to react. those are statements that have caused some controversy by anthony fauci. do you agree we need to. the flu season? >> we are always prepared and because of the and to make the silver lining we are more prepared and going through the
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pandemic they have record low levels of influenza. because we are wearing masks and keeping distance this will make a dent in huge new numbers but everyone wanting to get their flu shot this week. >> people are concerned by what he means about hunker down, does this mean more shutdowns? will i be inside the next few months? we will stay tuned to see what he means to specify. we have to few experts talking about these uv lights that are safe for human exposure, they kill viruses and bacteria on surfaces, sounds promising and exciting but one thing that occurred to me is are we over
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sanitizing ourselves? with the immune system the way you build an immune system is you have to be exposed to things in small doses over time so is there a risk of over sanitizing our bodies? >> it is an incredible technology that has been well tested and placed in a room, it can kill 99% of all viruses within 25 minutes, this should be pervasive. we've used this for a long time and it does no harm to the body, doesn't even penetrate the cells of the skin. i'm in favor of that. add ventilation and other factors. i'm not sure i agree we should think about all measures in the pandemic as overhead sizing. we are learning there are so many things we can mitigate and still have a robust immune system so now. i don't agree with that. >> that is good and insightful information.
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i'm glad to hear it is safe. we will see this put in a lot of jim's and apartment buildings and whatnot. thank you for being here as always. still ahead, high school football players in connecticut fighting to save their season. should athletes protesting after full contact themes were canceled, some of the players speaking out join us live next. it's time for the biggest sale of the year on the sleep number 360 smart bed. can it help with snoring? i've never heard snoring. exactly. no problem. ...and done. save 50% on the sleep number 360 limited edition smart bed. plus zero percent interest for 24 months. ends monday.
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[crowd chanting] >> thousands of football players in connecticut fighting to save their season, a rally outside state capital urging lawmakers to intervene when the applet conference is canceled. the conference has once again met with the state health the permit in the wake of the rally to find common ground. 3 a next guest were at that rally. senior quarterback, lineman kevin junior and his mom and the team's head coach. let's start with you. how did this come together, thousands of high school football players and families together, how did this come to gather? >> people set up the rally and just started making noise. it was spread on social media. coaches told us about it,
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teachers telling me about it. tray was a big impact on me. >> what is your argument? what is the argument of i school football players about why you should be playing this fall? >> the last play, and in the certain play. will: we had thousands of football games for this season. alabama has been playing for four weeks or three weeks, what does the state of the connecticut know that these other states missing, connecticut is more concerned than other states.
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>> that is a good question. we need to deal strictly with numbers, comparative to other states and that needs to be the bottom line. this has become more in opinion than a factor. will: utah, alabama, tennessee, several weeks of football,blooge what do you think will happen? will the state of connecticut listen to your son and others across the state that want to play football? what will happen? >> the rally, the lawmakers, the governor hearing what we had to say and scheduling the meeting a couple days later. i feel he did that to appease
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the masses hands it is a high risk, we are just praying they make the right decision. >> what do you do next. what do high school football players do next. >> we seem to be deserving this. sean: what a huge turnout to try to get high school football back like many others in connecticut. thank you for joining us. good luck with everything. will: the biggest ceos in the big apple blasting diblasio demand he take action to save
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video game person. jedediah: i'm an old school super mario brothers kind of girl so i wouldn't be upset about pulling that out and by the way, yes, that's an amazing sound and i do like milkshakes but i make them with coconut ice cream. will: we need a national get outside and enjoy the weather day and national go do something with your kids maybe watch a college football game on your outdoor television we need to get away from the milkshake and video games day, can we do that? pete: [laughter] jedediah: not a bad idea. pete: there's got to be a national get outside day. but the scaffolding is coming down outside fox & friends which has been here so maybe -- will: we're going to get do go outside. pete: throw the football and eat a milkshake at the same time. that be classic fox & friends. we will get there stick with us don't worry. stick with us this morning, as well. we have a great lineup of guests coming up more from vice president mike presence and the interview yesterday on 9/11
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at ground zero, lawrence jones, nancy grace and plenty to get to will: big show. jedediah: big show and we are deep now into this election season, and it seems that the weeks just flyby and all of a sudden we're here. president trump has a very strong ground game, and we talked about some of the differences that have gone on between the trump camp and the biden camp one of the things that the trump campaign is doing really well is getting out to the states in nevada you see that saturday and sunday, and minden and las vegas making his case to voters remember that was a race very very tight last election cycle the president lost that state by less than three percentage points so he's making his case on the ground lots of doors knocked on by the rnc, by individuals saying listen this is why you need to reelect president trump and i think that's a smart game and a highly contrasted game, pete, to that of the biden camp, which really has been largely absent when it comes to those in-person
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conversations that are so important in election cycles like this one. pete: they've had a hard time trying to figure out what campaigning looks like for them, when covid-19 happened, they sort of embraced this whole idea that we're going to stay away from public events. they thought it would work for them whether you want to call them hiden biden that was the strategy and they thought staying out of the spotlight would work and then come out of the mount rushmore speech and what happened at the rnc as far as a great presentation they felt like oh, boy we need to get out there but getting out there in virtual settings or with those small little white circles where you only have six or seven people at the event hasn't turned out to be very effective either and then you contrast that with the president going to wisconsin, going to minnesota, going to michigan, with large crowds and high enthusiasm and match that with a very intentional ground game where they're canvassing neighborhoods in states like north carolina and florida and
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ohio and virginia and nevada where they are, and as ronna mc daniel talked about earlier, they are targeting low propensity voters knock-on the door of someone not sure if they will vote and remind them of their voting options where to vote all the things that motivate someone to actually take the step of voting, but what the trump team is also aware of is the left has a series of outside groups that plan to spend tons of money on the airwaves on the other side. here is a report from conservative watchdog capitol research center which recently wrote "if 2018 is any indicator we should expect to see the left carpet bomb the 2020 presidential election with buckets of anonymous cash while complaining about the evil s of dark money the entire time" will it is a contrast of approach. hits ground, out with the crowds versus you called it the zoom call campaign, which is the right way to put it, and a lot of tv ads. will: you know what we're seeing is seeing biden-harris campaign reveal their strategy. a few weeks ago we talked about
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the four corner strategy. run out the clock, while we see the trump campaign directly connecting and making their case with voters through state-by- state campaigns and rallies what we're continuing to see from the biden-harris campaign is to stay virtual, neglect to put a really clear policy perspective forward, jedediah and attack the president keep the subject on the president through their partners in the mainstream media and why does that matter? because we will continue to see "scandalast stories" come on a weekly basis you talked with ronna mcdone yell about this air and advertising and media campaign that the democrat s will partner up with staying in the basement, staying on the zoom call, staying virtual and running out the clock and here is what she had to say about breaking down those two strategies and that campaign. >> we feel really good heading into this home stretch about the positive movement and the
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positive energy for the president and biden has no ground game, no energy, the money that comes in is like you said it's scatter shot not based on data. the hundreds of millions of dollars that we have invested in data at the rnc has built a compass as to which voters we need to target where our low propensity voters and how do we turn them out and having this ground game makes sure that we can do that in an election like this that ground game is a difference maker. jedediah: the thing i'm really starting to wonder about, guys is how many people have already made up their minds? i don't know what percentage that is, but when i talk to voters most of them have already decided who they are going to vote for. i don't know how much remains to be figured out between now and election day, because the contrast is so deep and its been going on for so long that that's one thing that remains to be seen. pete: that's a great point and that's why it becomes a turnout game, who can get the
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people they know are with them to actually take the action and mail-out ballot zone, you're going to see republicans saying come out to vote on election day but if you can't, send in your ballot. democrats relying a lot on absentee ballots we'll see. jedediah: yup. that's exactly right and there's another big story we've been following this morning is really one that you just can't make it up. republicans have been demanding answers because dozens of cell phones from mueller's team were accidentally wiped clean before they could review by the inspector general. this is the explanation for the white phones. lisa page's phone was "restored to factory settings when they received." andrew weisman "entered password too many times and wiped his phone." i mean, this is the kind of stuff that really infuriates you about politics. we talked about this type of topic in great detail when it came to hillary clinton and just vanishing e-mails and this is what people can't stand about politicians because if this were a regular citizen you'd have to
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hand over your information. this kind of excuse just wouldn't fly but here you have people in the political spectrum and no one knows, will there be any accountability, will? will they have to answer for this? we actually don't know because people get away with so much these days. will: i'm kind of new here at fox so still trying to remember all my passwords to log into everything. pete: the welcome binder will save you. will: i can sympathize with forgetting your password perhaps but i've never forgotten my password to the extent of wiping all the data clean. i don't even know how you'd do that. i'd have to ask somebody. how exactly do i go about wiping my data off this device? it's absolutely beyond the realm pete: i think we need to call kurt the cyberguy. will: we already had him on once today. pete: he will come back tomorrow how in the world, it was 29 people. not one person. will: they all accidentally wiped their data, yeah, that's believable. by the way, pete earlier spoke to former federal prosecutor
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brett tulman about this and whether or not it was accidental or intentional. listen. >> you have individuals who know make no mistake about it, they knew there be investigation s into what they did. it was a clear signal sent by the department of justice that they were going to review what the mueller team did in the investigation. this is a coincidence, certainly if one or two occurs, but dozen s and before the inspector general is going to investigate. i mean, it's unbelievable. will: except it is believable and jed you made a freudian slip in your commentary you said you can't stand when politicians do this except they aren't politicians they are lawyers and prosecutors but they are acting like them so you're not wrong. they're acting like politicians in the way they conducted this and that's the way people feel. jedediah: because i was referencing hillary clinton and it's just everyone in the sphere , everyone, there's a protected class here that we are just not part of, that regular
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americans just aren't part of, and people look at this and say if that were me, and i just said oh, i accidentally deleted it, i mean come on, man. we're not dumb. pete: think of the guy in the navy who took a couple pictures in the submarine and they want to throw him in for five years, you know as if he's committing espionage and these guys i'm going to try to delete -- will: it's brazen. that's the thing. it's brazen. dozens at the most opportune time. pete: i dare you to try to hold me accountable that's what it is another big story we're following devastating damage out west as historic wildfires burn across several states at least 17 people are dead, as firefighters race to contain the flames. ray bogan joins us live from the fire zone in berry creek, california with the latest. ray? >> pete, will and jedediah good morning to you. we're on the west side of the north complex fire in this area is just at 5% contain
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ment and if you take a look behind me, you can see this burn structure. if you're going throughout berry creek that is exactly what you're going to see block-by-block. this is the deadliest of california's wildfires right now ment nine people have died and there's an ongoing search for victims and this is all part of this extraordinary fire season. since august 15, 2.6 million- acres have burned and there are 14,000 firefighters battling 28 major blazes. listen to why california governor gavin newsom thinks this is happening. we're in the midst of a climate crisis. we are experiencing weather conditions the likes of which we've never experienced in our lifetime. reporter: in oregon, dozens of people are missing. the state's emergency management director said they are preparing for a "mass fatality event." tens of thousands have been forced to evacuate. take a listen to how this e
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vaccination wie is trying to cope. part of my faith and believe is that taking care of each other is, that's the best community you have is each other. reporter: now, here in butte county, california we've learned of at least one firefighter who has a seven-year-old daughter and that family has lost their home and a dog and really it just goes to show for how these firefighters it's not just physically exhaust ing but mentally exhaust ing as well. will, pete, jedediah, back to you. will: thanks, ray. jedediah: absolutely thank you so much, ray for that report. coming up, some of the biggest ceo's in the big apple blasting bill deblasio demanding he take action and save the city. the ceo who organized the effort joins us next.
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with voltaren. jedediah: new york business leaders are pleading with mayor bill deblasio to crackdown on crime and other issues jeopardizing the city's recovery and the group includes heads of major corporations including goldman sachs. who sent a letter saying their employees will be slow to return unless their concerns about security and the live ability of our communities are addressed quickly. our next guest is in charge of that organization, that started the effort getting more than 150 executives to sign on joining us now with more is partnership for new york city president and ceo, katherine wild. katherine welcome to the show, this is a very important message you have here, so what is your message to bill deblasio?
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>> thank you and i think our message is that we're committed to the future of the city, but this is the biggest crisis to hit new york city from an economic standpoint, a million people lost their jobs in three months is our retail economy was essentially shutdown we've had 44% drop in consumer spending. we have 240,000 small businesses , as many as one-third of them may not survive, so this is a crisis that's sort of an all hands-on deck. the health side of the crisis we've done a good job at containing but the economic recovery is going to be very difficult and this is important not just for new york city, but america. our region represents 9% of the national economy, and we have to come back strong for america to come back strong. jedediah: there is also the issue in a place like new york city, of crime which has soared completely through the roof out of control many
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people wonder if businesses will want to come back and operate in the city so is there a call to action for bill deblasio? are you expecting some type of action to remedy the situation and what would that look like? >> overall our fear for economic recovery is people 's anxiety about crime, which is probably greater than crime statistics. shootings are up but there's garbage in the streets and graffiti we haven't seen for many years, the subway windows are being knocked out with hammers by somebody who wants to make a statement, so there are these symbols of decay that we can't allow to happen. i said today in the new york times it's a chicken and egg situation. until people come back our streets won't be safe and people won't come back until our streets are safe, and somebody has to break the egg and we decided as a business community we really had to do that. jedediah: you know, kathryn, you also have andrew cuomo, the governor who isn't helping matters and he's going to
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consider hiking taxes for the city's wealthiest president if the federal government doesn't provide aid and this comes after just in august, him saying that he wants people to return to the big apple, calling on the rich people to return to the big apple. why would he present this conflicting message and what's the impact of that on people with money, on ceo's who ordinarily be inclined to invest in new york city? >> i have not heard a conflicting message from the governor. he has said everything is on the table because this is new york, and unfortunately, politic s drives a lot of our policy. i hope that's going to change. the business community that's one of the things we're calling for is we've got to be realistic we've got to be practical. we overcame the crisis after 9/11. we overcame the urban crisis of the 1970s because business worked together with all the sectors of the community and with local and state government to fix what was broke and in the interest of new york city,
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not to play ideological politics with each other, so we're hoping that's what's going to happen. i'm sure that governor cuomo understands because he's a smart guy that if you raise taxes in new york, which is the highest income tax in the country if you raise taxes in new york, you're going to end up having lower revenues because people are going to leave. jedediah: yeah that's exactly right, kathryn. i'm hoping he does understand that but you can't say we want the rich people to come back. we need you here, you invest in the community but by the way if you come back we're going to tax you right back out of here. that is, to me, a conflicting message that i'm not sure how ceo's or people who ordinarily be inclined to invest here will process that but it remains to be seen and thank you for your efforts and voice today on this important issue. >> thank you. jedediah: still ahead, the nfl is back after thursday's season kickoff nfl on fox makes its return tomorrow. so what can fans expect? nfl on fox reporter jennifer hail has a preview, that's
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coming up, next. >> ♪ ♪ i had shingles. horrible. a young thing like me? [camera man] actually anyone 50 or over is at increased risk for shingles. the pain, the burning! my husband had to do everything for weeks. and the thing is, there's nothing you can do about it! [camera man] well, shingles can be prevented. shingles can be whaaat? [camera man] prevented. you can get vaccinated. frank! they have shingles vaccines! -whaaat? -that's what i said. we're taking you to the doctor. not going through that again. [camera man] you can also get it from your pharmacist! talk to your doctor or pharmacist about getting vaccinated.
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pete: football is back the nfl kicked off its season on thursday with the kansas city chiefs beating the houston texan s and tomorrow you can watch six games on fox starting at kicking off at 1:00 p.m. eastern starting with my minnesota vikings. will: so what can fans expect? joining us now is nfl on fox reporter jennifer hail, thanks for being with us this morning. so, on thursday night, there was a pretty got good energy there
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was 15,000 fans or so in the crowd in kansas city. you could hear them. how many stadiums how many games will be like that on sunday, with fans in the stands and we'll be able to hear their enthusiasm? >> well, guys, very few, unfortunately, most stadiums still not having fans. the ones who are just a handful and of course, kansas city one of the best atmospheres in the league, but the good news is fox has gone to all sorts of lengths along with the nfl to try to make sure the viewing experience at home on sunday is pretty seamless. you're not going to notice a ton of difference the way they've setup the camera angles and planned the entertainment. it's going to be great to have football back, and although there's going to be a few tweeks a few things that are different for me personally i won't be on the field. i'll be in the first row of stands instead. i think most people are going to not see a ton of difference at home when they're cheering on their favorite teams whether it be the vikings, packers or whomever. pete: or some people cheering
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for the dallas cowboys i don't know who those are. jennifer what are you looking for week one, no preseason what do you expect as far as the quality of the game, anything different? >> in terms of the football, that is the biggest question out there. no preseason games truncated training camps i think it's really going to benefit the veteran teams for teams that have a lot of rookies, a lot of new additions, new head coaches, and man, you didn't have much ramp-up time, so, i think we might see teams settling in especially that first quarter, some errors that you wouldn't normally see during the regular season that you usually get to work out during the preseason but hey, guys i really think the important thing is that football is back and a sense of normalcy, and it's going to be very much like folks are used to watching, and these teams are so fired up. i spent the last month on the phone, and on zooms with everybody and they cannot wait to hit the field and play.
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they realize the importance of this moment that goes beyond just the win and loss column. what it means for society. pete: absolutely. i think a lot of people are ready to watch. jennifer hale, thank you so much for that we'll be watching you on the side line in the stands but actually on the sideline. it's all a little different, but -- >> a little relative. i have your vikings and packers so it's going to be a good one. pete: it is going to be a good one for sure and we'll see how tom brady does in week one, now as a buccaneer, jennifer thank you so much. >> thanks guys. pete: straight ahead did you catch this moment vice president pence and joe biden crossing paths yesterday near ground zero and i had a chance to sit down one on one with vice president pence, my exclusive interview is coming up, next. >> ♪ ♪ don't forget your lunch!
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>> ♪ and you can tell everybody , yeah, you can tell everybody ♪ pete: the shot of the morning, democratic nominee joe biden and vice president mike pence, and in ground zero. will: they employed the new handshake. they briefly chatted and tapped elbows as they attend the annual 9/11 memorial service event in new york city. jedediah: biden and pence stood
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just a few feet apart as they listened to the readings of the names of those killed in the terror attacks. pete: that was at the 9/11 memorial but the service which took place with a recorded reading of the names, and nearby was tunnel to towers where they did the live reading of the names frank siller, we had a chance to talk to him yesterday morning on 9/11, always a powerful morning and fox & friends always does it right. i had a chance right after that ceremony to sit down with the vice president and actually go to a fire station nearby and meet the firefighters and one right next to ground zero on that powerful day and he took a moment to talk to us. here is what he said. >> mr. vice president to be here in the shadow of the freedom tower as dramatic a shot as you can 19 years ago almost at this moment, in this area is covered in dust and 343 of these men are losing their lives for other americans. where does it put your head right now? >> it breaks your heart to think of 343 firefighters that rushed into those towers and
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never came home, but it also fills your heart to think about the selflessness and sacrifice that they showed day and selflessness of the first responders. >> i came here just to say thank you. today, we remember all of those that were lost. on a day liked to, i have to tell you, pete, i also think of heros who answer the call of our nation every day since who brought justice to osama bin laden, destroyed the isis caliphate and i come today with a great sense of heartache for the families that suffered loss but a great sense of pride in what we've done as a nation, every day since. >> certainly the afghan and iraq wars are part of the legacy post-9/11. the president, your administration, has announced more troop withdrawals in iraq. how do you make sure that
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drawdown doesn't correspond with any sort of up-tick in the ability for our enemies to regather? >> we're bringing troops home because we've managed to secure stability, by strengthening our military, by taking the fight directly to isis and iraq and because of the progress we've made in iraq, we're able to bring more troops home and negotiations will begin this weekend, we hope, for a lasting peace in afghanistan. pete: you heard the recent reports from bob woodward's book about how the president both acknowledged this is really serious but also i don't want to stoke fear talk to me about that balance as the head of the coronavirus task force. as president in a moment like this he needed to project strength and that's what i saw every step of the way. he shared with the american people all the facts as we have. dr. fauci even reflected on that but the president said it in a
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way to avoid panic, to assure the american people that we get through this and we'd get through this together and i think that's just the kind of leadership the american people expect from a president in times like these. pete: mr. vice president people are looking for a return to the life they had, normal life in light of covid-19. >> we'll get through these times and we're already opening up america again. at the height of this pandemic we lost 22 million jobs. now, because of the foundation that president trump poured and because of the relief that he secured from congress for families and businesses, we've already added back more than 10 million jobs, but we'll keep driving, we'll keep driving toward that day. we have a vaccine and put the coronavirus in the past, but i have every confidence as president trump does that we're going to bring america back. bigger and better than ever before, but if i can just close with just a thought about being here today. just about a week after 9/11, i
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traveled here with a group of about 100 members of congress, we walked to ground zero and literally saw the mountain of debris and what was still a recovery site and i saw heroism at large and i saw american resilience, so it's such an honor to be here today, because for all the challenges we face in 2020, what we proved in the wake of that terrible day in september of 2001 is the american people always come together. we always face any challenge with strength and just as we did then, we'll get through these times and we'll get through them together. pete: yeah, we're grateful to the vice president and his team for making that happen and guys it just didn't feel like a day for politics with 9/11. touched on it a little bit but ultimately everyone could feel the weight of 9/11 down there. will: i was watching you yesterday on fox & friends pete you did a great job. i was actually watching with my sons and you said something
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fascinating. you said we need to remind those who weren't alive, born after 9/11 what happened and how we respond responded and my sons have been to ground zero and been to the museum but what we saw yesterday and every anniversary of 9/11 and aired on fox & friends reminded my young sons exactly the way it played out and resonated in a way that showed them sacrifice, heroism, the way this country came together: it's powerful and a good reminder from you and something we should all remember when it comes to our young ones. pete: amen. jedediah: i always appreciate the view president's tone. i feel like it's so important right now. these are challenging times that we're in across-the-board. he has a way of being reassuring , honest, sincere, also there's an empathy that comes through in a sense that he understands what people have been through, i think it's just a really important voice to have out there right now particularly on a day like yesterday when so many people have really sad memories they're dealing with, i think he's a much-appreciated voice on that issue and many
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others so thank you, pete for doing that we appreciate it. pete: thank you. it was an honor. jedediah: we're going to turn to headlines for you now beginning with a fox news alert. secretary of state mike pompeo meeting with the taliban and afghan government for peace talks, pompeo urging both sides to take advantage of the historic opportunity. >> the entire world wants you to succeed and is counting on you succeeding. jedediah: pompeo says both sides have chitted to not harboring violent extremists and that their decisions will effect the future of u.s. assistance in the region. >> and the city council in rochester new york is trying to stop the development of a new multi million dollar police center. councilmembers say the project was approved last month before details emerged and daniel prude 's death and before the police department's command staff announced their retirement and the council is expected to vote on the project on tuesday. >> and golf icon and two-time major champion john daley revealing he has
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bladder cancer. the 54-year-old says he used to drink 28 cans of diet coke and smoke 40 cigarettes a day but is trying to cut down on both. he's ready to fight cancer saying "i accept the challenge and i'm not frightened by this ." >> and former president jimmy carter making a blunt admission in a new documentary. carter says willie nelson's white house pot smoking companion was in fact one of his sons and not a staffer. the highly-kept secret happened on the roof of the white house in the summer of 1980. the country music legend talks about the incident in his 2015 autobiography. carter did not say which of the three sons was with nelson. those are your headlines. will: there we have it. mystery solved. we've always wondered who was willie nelson smoking dope with on the roof of the white house and now we know it wasn't rick reichmuth. pete: [laughter] rick: [laughter] pete: that was good. will: it was jimmy carter's son. pete: that would kind of be a
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bucket list thing though, a little bit. like smoking weed on the top of the white house? jedediah: [laughter] rick: i mean, you're never going to get rid of that story the rest of your life. you're going to tell everybody that's what you did not going to lie especially if it becomes legalized that'll change everything guys. i want to give you a little bit of weather lesson here so bear with me. see these blue temperatures that's ocean water that's really cool, off the coast of south america. this is what we call la nina, and it's one of the things when you get that cold water brewing there one of the things that gives us an indicator of how overall weather patterns are going to go. now go up in across parts of the atlantic we have really warm water and upper air dynamics are really calm. that's largely due to la nina. us one of the reasons we're having this really active hurricane season right now and also gives us some indicators of what we can expect to see in the winter months so this just came out. this is what we would generally see in the la nina season. pick your area, and take a look at what we're talking about.
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we're talking about a little bit warmer and dryer across parts of the south, a little bit cooler across parts of the pacific northwest, and the northern plains and wetter out across parts of the pacific northwest. that's really good news because we have this incredible drought going on along with this incredibly hot summer we had. that's because all of these fire s, so you go into the pacific northwest where you have drought and a little bit of a relief but down across the four corner states and into west texas, that drought will likely to continue and expand throughout the winter. all right guys thanks for letting me do that for you. pete: your graphics are next level today you worked hard this week we appreciate that. rick: you bet. pete: coming up nearly 30 years since the deadly and original bombing of the world trade center in 1993 and a new fox nation special looks at what led up to the attack and what was missed. we'll talk to the former agent who hunted down the mastermind behind the bombing, that's next. who is usaa made for? it's made for this guy a veteran who honorably served and it's made for her she's serving now we made it for all branches and all ranks
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pete: well the 1993 world trade bombing killed more than six people and injured a thousand other and now a fox nation special is looking into a series of events that set the stage for the dawn of islamic terrorism on american soil. >> they want to do something glorious that will make them iconic figures. >> okay, so one bomb in the world trade center is not good enough and now you start to arrest our brothers? make me show you what is coming. >> it becomes a race against time as to what were they going to hit next? pete: the former state department counterterrorism agent fred burton is one of the experts featured in the film you just saw him and he joins us now. thank you so much for being here and congrats on this project an important one. america learned a huge lesson on 9/11 but you were a part of trying to unfold something that happened decades earlier that had some connection. break down what did you miss and what did you find?
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>> well first, pete, thank you so much for having me on. pete: thank you. >> i think fox nation did a wonderful job telling our story. i think you really need to wind back the clock and look at events that started to unfold in 1979. we obviously had the u.s. embassy take over in tehran. we had the embassy ransacked benghazi style in pakistan and then we had our united states ambassador to afghanistan killed in kabul. then in 1981 certainly you have the assassination of the president and then there was an interesting event that happened on my watch as well, in the mid-1980s we had two of our agents shot in cairo, egypt as they were driving to the embassy that day so the state department was used to spectacular happening abroad and there was just a general consensus here in the united states that these kinds of things happened overseas, but really never happened inside the united states. pete: interesting you said you were reactive not proactive.
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is that why? i mean, it happens there, not here, and is that why we were caught off guard in attempts here? >> well, trust me, pete. i've thought long and hard about this. there was a lot of dysfunction in the counterterrorism community and the 80s. you had a lot of turf battles going on and a very disfunctional intelligence analysis system and the dissemination and flow of intelligence is nothing like we have it today, so there was just a lot of systemic kind of problems and in essence our nation just did not react like we did after 9/11 when the first world trade center attack took place. pete: there wasn't a sense it's was existential. do you think if we had been able to prevent what happened in 198f it could 9/11 is there a connection where that could have been prevented? >> absolutely.
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even if you look at the ring leader, the blind shake, he gets a tourist visa out of the u.s. embassy which just through bureaucratic failure and he comes to the united states and he sets up this cell in new york city and then when rabbi moffic it kahani was associated in new york, we traced that weapon from the streets of manhattan to the egyption army and we could never figure out how it got back into the united states, used in this political assassination. i firmly believe that if we had looked at that closer, we might have been able to unravel the plots. pete: fred burton, hindsight is always 20/20. we're grateful for the work you did then and for sharing it with our viewers on fox nation called "the rising crescent." coming up president trump taking a stand for education in america, and threatening to de fund schools that are teaching a controversial and devastating
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president trump: we will teach our children to love our country , honor our history and we will live by the time less words of our national motto, "in god we trust." >> [applause] will: as president trump vowing to restore patriotic education as he threatens to cut funds for schools teaching the 1619 project.
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the controversial initiative from the new york times magazine aims to reframe america's history by emphasizing its roots in slavery. but in a new op-ed our next guest calls for religious americans to reject that narrative. here to explain is co-pastor of our our report ministries and publication in chicago and a member of the the 1776 united latasha fields. mrs. fields explain to me, or pastor fields explain to me, excuse me, why should religious americans reject the 1619 project? >> i mean, good morning, thank you so much for having me. it's a pleasure to be here. the fact remains that we all know that slavery is definitely a part of our nation's history, but we have to, you know, be the repairs of the breach. we have to bring restoration, we have to move forward and i do understand and we all agree that some forms of racism, and discrimination exist in this country but as i said these flaws that america have they don't define who i am as an individual, and it should
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not define america any further and so we should hold fast to the truth, the spirit of truth and freedom that is etched in our founding documents and that's why i believe all of us and especially the body of christ, we should definitely reject this narrative that somehow, americas with this racism. will: i'm curious specifically how that applies to religious americans. honestly, my co-host pete hegseth and i were talking earlier about the power of redemption, being able to forgive past sins to move forward together. certainly that's a big part of christianity. you would think that be a big part of healing this nation and moving forward together as well. >> yes, you're exactly right and so we definitely need to be, again the repairs of the breach. we need to bring forward restoration and healing because the bible teaches us that and i love the scripture when the bible says there's little grace that god has given to us and then the place where we deserve to be punished, god has
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given us a nail in his holy place and revival and so that's what it has to do, the revival has to start within and until we as individuals and as families we have to start looking within ourselves to bring healing and restoration and this does not mean that we do not, if you will , expose the ugliness of slavery, the parts of it but we have to begin to bring restoration and healing and my biggest thing is we have to begin especially in the church to restore family, because god designed the family as an expression of his spiritual truth and we are to reflect his image. we are to fulfill a critical role and second to that encouraging parents to take their god-given responsibility and the authority that god has given them to teach their children, to guide their children, not government, and to give them and teach them and to demonstrate a moral and practical way of life and more importantly, to leave an inheritance for their offspring so that's my message
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to the church. that's my message to the body of christ that this healing starts in the family. this healing starts in the restoration of the family and us looking within ourselves and no longer identifying ourselves from something like slavery. you got to be responsible for our choices. will: responsibility for our choices, the importance of the family it also seems to me that this comes down to whether or not we want to double down on efforts to live up to american ideals or divorce ourselves from those ideals because we did not always live up to them. will we live up to those ideals or will we divorce ourselves from them? >> well i believe we need to live up to them and i believe in the american dream and again, i believe in the american dream because i believe in personal responsibility. will: right. >> i believe in hard work and those are the things that i believe in. will: yeah. i think there are many who share your beliefs. appreciate you joining us on, la tasha fields joining us. >> thank you for having me.
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will: protesters surround mitch mcconnell's home demanding covid relief money but wasn't it democrats who just derailed the latest gop bill? the chaos unfolding on capitol hill at the top of the hour. >> ♪ ♪ d? given my unique lifestyle, that'd be perfect! let me grab a pen and some paper. know what? i'm gonna switch now. just need my desk... my chair... and my phone. only pay for what you need. ♪ liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty. ♪
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>> ♪ ♪ jedediah: welcome, everyone. it is 9:00 a.m., welcome to the 9:00 a.m. hour of "fox & friends ", and the best morning show in the business you know it , you know it's true. will is not familiar yet with my dancing, typically, will we're on the couch and i begin dancing , and pete begins crying as a result of my dancing, but we'll get back to that soon enough don't worry. good to see you and good to see you too, pete. will: there's a camera on you plenty of time. we can surely enjoy a little bit right now jedediah.
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pete: i'm watching in the boxes right here. will: go ahead. jedediah: there you go, there you go, you have to join in that's kind of mandatory. pete: you once called yourself j eddy from the block. will: [laughter] jedediah: i mean, i didn't, but i gladly accepted the nickname. pete: that could be a good nickname "jeddy from the block." i've been told in my ear we might be pulling the clip. jedediah: that be the title of my next book, pete. pete: i like that. thank you all for being here we are the number one cable morning show in america because of you because you join us each morning and we're grateful that you do so stick with us we've got one more hour, the fourth hour of fox & friends. big story we're following this morning is president trump accusing nancy pelosi and chuck schumer of holding out for a blue state bailout, after senate democrats blocked the gop's proposal for covid relief. lucas tomlinson joins us live from washington with more on the stimulus stalemate. that's the way to put it.
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reporter: it sure is, senate majority leader mitch mcconnell accused the democrats of playing games with the coronavirus relief bill. the republican measure was defeated late this week. >> could we move forward with the floor processed to deliver hundreds of billions of dollars more for kids, for jobs and for healthcare? or do our democratic colleagues prefer to hide behind closed doors and refuse to help families? >> it is so filled with poison pills, so partisanly designed, it was designed to fail. reporter: apparently $300 billion in federal aid and 300 extra dollars per week in unemployment benefits and billions more to small businesses and schools wasn't enough as the democrats demand trillions more. rand paul was the lone otolaryngologist no vote, and 60 votes required to clear a procedural hurdle and president trump responding " pelosi and schumer want trillions of dollars of bailout money for blue states doing badly both economically and in terms of high crime as a
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condition of making a deal on stimulus but the usa is coming back strong" as you mentioned protesters showed up at mitch mcconnell's home demanding $600, double what the republicans proposed to unemployment benefits and also shouted"black lives matter." mcconnell predicts the republicans have a 50/50 chance of maintaining their majority in the senate after election day. guys? pete: thanks, lucas. jedediah: thank you so much for that reporting this is despicable behavior on the part of democrats, and this is election strategy. let's call it what it is. they think that they can hold off and hold off and that the blame will be pointed at president trump and he will somehow be held accountable for the lack of relief when in fact republicans have gone to the table multiple times now, saying we want to pass something please let us help people, please meet us in the middle and meet us half way and there's nothing but complete resistance on the part of democrat obstructionist on this issue they deserve fell responsibility for people not getting the relief they need. we spoke earlier with senator marsha blackburn who weighed in
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on this very issue. listen to what she had to say. >> when you look at the bill we had on the floor this week, it was targeted, it was focused on getting people back to work, children back-to-school, a second round of ppp meeting the president's commitment on unemployment insurance but it doesn't get support from schumer and pelosi because they want the issue, they want people suffering, they want to be able to blame donald trump because they never accepted the results of the 2016 election. pete: yeah, jed you're right they're making the devils bargain and you use the word resistance which is precisely correct and this is another form of the resistance that exists for them and i think that the president hitting the trail so adimately, his belief in a re bound is in people. open up your business' responsibly. let's allow people to get back to work is the greatest stimulus our economy could have and don't have the winners and losers
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double standard of the big guys are open, the small ones are arbitrarily kept closed and that's something the white house would like to see changed as well. will: let's move to the big stories of the week big because it illustrates a deep underlying issue and that is what, maybe who is driving joe biden's campaign. the republican national committee is calling out biden's campaign for not addressing an issue, a moment, and campaign town hall, where it appears during a q&a, joe biden was waiting for his answer to come via teleprompter. watch this moment. >> the biden campaign to come out and say whether or not your candidate is using a teleprompt er, clearly he is. this is freudian is, this is from a teenager asking a question that has to be a tele prompter so i think these are fair questions the media is not asking enough of this candidate whose running to lead our country to negotiate with xi and with putin and he can't answer a question from a
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college or high school student i don't know what her age was without using a teleprompter i think it's deeply troubling. >> let's move it up here. will: that was rnc chairman ronna mcdaniel talking about biden's apparent use of a teleprompter. you can see that video on the screen where he was asked a question by one of the people in the audience. take a listen to how it went down. >> i would like to know what will your administration do to help give them that chance? thank you. >> move it up here. you know, there used to be a basic bargain in this country. workers shared in the wealth. will: let me tell you pete and jed why this is such a big deal and it illustrates something deeper and the question is who is defining biden's campaign, every politician uses the tele prompter when it comes to making speechers but if
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you're using a teleprompter to answer questions it's not only about the scripted question, it's about the scripted answer. who is writing biden's answers for him? we're asking who is driving this campaign. joe biden is an empty vessel of politician and we all know that. is it the radical fringes? is it his vice presidential candidate? is it his aid? who is defining what biden says and what biden stands for , pete pete: it's a big open question a lot of people feel like it's bernie sanders back there, scrolling the teleprompter. i just enjoyed the fact that while you were attempting toss to a piece of sound about a teleprompter you properly read the sound you were tossing to but it went to a different one so even teleprompters -- jedediah: [laughter] pete: can be difficult. we deal with teleprompters all morning long. will: [laughter] but to my point, he did not, it's not when you're asking -- pete: that's exactly right which
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is why ronna mcdaniel is right to point out there better not be a teleprompter, or an earpiece, both of which we're using right now ironically but we're not running for president joe biden is and you should be able to answer simple questions. jedediah: that's the thing about it. just to take it one step further this is terrifying. this guy is running to be the leader of the free world and for some reason they're afraid to let him just answer questions why are they afraid? are they afraid he's going to make a gaf, are they afraid he doesn't have the answers or afraid he's going to go off script or afraid he can't handle the job? pete: all of the above. jedediah: if you can't handle but if you can't handle the job of answering some simple questions, what's going to happen in a debate? what's going to happen if you actually get elected and have to lead? this is a terrifying deeply deeply terrifying moment and they should have to answer for what went down here. people deserve a response and get in the voting booth and vote for this guy you deserve an answer. pete: and it wasn't a hard question that a politician of 47 years -- were i'll just leave it here. you might be able to except it
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on your television but you don't want him in the oval office. jedediah: [laughter] yeah, it's scary stuff. i mean it really is scary to watch this stuff unfold and another scary topic we've been covering is what's happened to some of these cities around the country new york city being one of those cities there's now a letter from new york city ceo 's that have written to mayor bill deblasio. here is a bit of what that letter says. there was widespread anxiety over public safety, cleanliness and other quality of life issues that are contributing to deteriorating conditions and commercial districts and neighborhoods across the five bu rroughs. we urge you to take immediate action to restore essential services as a necessary precursor for solving the city's long term complex economic challenges, and this is a group of ceo's that have come together and essentially are pleading and saying listen. please help us, we want these businesses to be able to function in this city but things are going terribly wrong. i spoke with kathryn wilde, president and ceo for
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partnership for new york city. check out a little bit of what she said this morning. >> our fear for economic recovery is people's anxiety about crime, which is probably greater than crime statistics. shootings are up but there's garbage in the streets, graffiti we haven't seen for many years. the subway windows are being knocked out with hammers by somebody who wants to make a statement, so there are these symbols of decay that we can't allow to happen. i said today in the new york times that the chicken and egg situation, until people come back our streets won't be safe and people won't come back until our streets are safe. pete: at what point, will, do these local leaders realize they're running their tax base and their employment base out of their city? if they want their leftist dream , they are going to need the dollars to do it and these are their people. will: the point appears to be not until it's too late but this is to the same point i was making earlier without a defined campaign at the national level of the democratic party will be defined, jedediah, by local
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politicians, extremists and those willing to fill the vacuum you know whose filling that vacuum from the democratic party right now? people like gavin newsom and bill deblasio. jedediah: yeah, and we also talk about accountability a lot and i'll just warn people, bill deblasio does get held accountable but andrew cuomo repeatedly gets a pass from people, from business owners, from people who live in new york city, from people around the country, so when we talk about whether or not these democratic mayors and governors will be held to account i'm not so sure they will be because some of these individuals get a pass for one reason or another, they shouldn't but they do. we'll turn to headlines now in this 9:00 a.m. hour, because at least 17 people are dead asthmas ever wildfires burned on the west coast. in california, 14,000 firefighters are battling 28 major fires. governor gavin newsom is saying climate change is responsible for the fires. >> we're in the midst of a climate crisis. we are experiencing weather conditions the likes of which we've never experienced in our
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lifetime. jedediah: in oregon a family believes a 13-year-old boy died while trying to save his grandmother from intense flames as they tried escaping a wildfire. dozens of people are still missing in the state. >> and insane video shows a mother desperately holding her child as a man tries to snatch the four-year-old in broad daylight. check it out as a man leaps over a railing and grabs the girl by the neck at a restaurant in south africa. a woman then jumps across the table to stop him as several others including the restaurant owner take down the attacker. more people nearby jumped into help pin the attacker down until police arrived and arrested him. >> and president trump awarding the medal of honor to army sargent major thomas patrick pay ne for helping rescue 75 isis hostages in northern iraq. president trump: you embody the righteous glory of american valor. you per sony friday the motto "
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rangers lead the way" and you inspire us all. jedediah: praised for his heroic efforts during the 2015 raid he ran into a burning building multiple times to make sure no one was left behind. he has been deployed 17 times is the first living delta force member to receive the medal of honor. >> and if you want to update your home, give it a name. the wall street journal reporting naming your home gives it a free and unique boost, and name ideas include "final view" for a house overlooking a cemetery or "daca, a russian word for cottage", the historian telling the paper naming your home can come off as pretentious , and that's the point and now i need to think of a name for my home. will: the point is to be pretentious. okay. coming up for the second time this week president trump is nominated for a nobel peace prize this time for brokering a historic deal but the media is
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pete: president trump receiving another nobel peace please nomination after brokering a historic peace deal between serb ia and breakaway republic cosovo. this comes on the heals of negotiating two other peace agreements in the middle east. state department spokesperson morgan ortegas was in the oval office between the latest deal between bahrain and israel. thanks for being here this morning. >> hi, pete. pete: we can talk about who deserves a medal or not and that remains to be seen but talk to me about what's happening in
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the middle east with these countries, uae and now bahrain recognizing the state of israel something almost inconceivable a couple of decades ago what's the approach and strategy? >> you know, pete you and ii think i've known you for 15 years and we've been working on these issues for a very very long time. you've done many deployments and it's just such a new day in the middle east, pete and it's happening so quickly, that it's almost hard to process all of that. when i was sitting in the oval yesterday i was lucky enough to be a fly on the wall and listen to president trump's phone call with the king of bahrain and of course prime minister benjamin netanyahu and the prime minister made such an excellent point and he said it took 26 years to get an agreement between arabs and israelis and now within the span of 29 days we have had two, and so this doesn't just happen overnight. this is years of policies that president trump started putting in place, at the very beginning of his administration, when we
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decided to embolden our allies and friends in the middle east and not reward the enemy the islamic republic of iran with billions of dollars in sanctions relief. pete: you boiled it down right there so standing up against building an alliance against iran by boxing it out but at the same time just standing up for our friends and through standing with them, it creates magnet effect and these arab countries are coming to the table. these peace deals don't happen overnight, pete again because of the policies because, you know when the president followed the law of the land and moved the u.s. embassy to jerusalem, recognized the heights when we did a number of these steps that everyone said would cause world war iii in the middle east and suddenly it doesn't, and you realize do you know what? you can actually empower your friends make the right decisions and peace does actually come through strength. pete: well, morgan i've got to go to the piece of sound from nancy pelosi, with friends like this who needs enemies but nancy pelosi said this about the deal.
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listen. >> we've been waiting for a very long time for the president's propose all for an israeli palestinian peace agreement that honored the two state solution. it still hasn't come. good for him for having a distraction on a day on the numbers of people who are affected and the numbers of people who are dying from this virus only increases. pete: so she's calling it a distraction. >> yeah, i think it's just an insult to the people of israel, the people of united arab emirate and the people of bahrain. remember these leaders in the u ae and in bahrain, it took a lot of courage for them to come to the table and to recognize israel. they are the first to do it and the region and now you see direct flights between these countries and you see peace and i'd just remind everybody this is not the only peace deal going on this weekend. secretary mike pompeo right now is trying to get to a peace agreement between the taliban and government of afghanistan so this president has empowered his
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secretary of state, has empowered jared kushner, and the entire national security team to pursue peace around the world and it's working because of four years of policies of strength. pete: morgan that was my next question. your boss is in qatar right now as a part of these peace talks between afghanistan and the taliban real quick what should we ex pet comes from that >> well this is the opening ceremonies we have had 19 years of fighting in afghanistan, 19 and you've been there, i've been there, pete. this is the hardest stuff that we do in diplomacy to get to the end of a war. we know there is no military end , no military solution to the end of the war in afghanistan, so we're going to try our best to bring all sides to the table, women, civil society, the government of afghanistan and the taliban to end america's longest war. pete: morgan ortegas, thank you so much for your time this morning. >> thanks, pete. pete: outrage growing over netflix controversial film " cuties" and a number of
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will: as major u.s. cities are plagued from damage from months of rioting and looting bill maher is calling out the media for excusing the violence. >> i'm not down with this properties on the table, as something we can just take, because things are not right. >> where is this mass destruction of property happening right now? >> do you watch the news? >> if you look at portland it's two square blocks. >> there was a view and it's in the media. please. i know you've seen it. [laughter] don't look at me like i'm making this up. that somehow this is a
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justifiable approach. >> well isn't that part of protests? >> so you're part of this , you believe in it? jedediah: here to react fox news analyst and fox nation host lawrence joins lawrence welcome as always that is a fascinating clip to watch. that exchange. what is your takeaway? >> this is nasty. this is disgusting but this is the press. there you go. they don't get out of their studios they don't go out in the community and see what's happening. this just goes to show you that there's some denial. i mean we've been reporting on this for months of what's happening in american cities, there's another perspective that i think is also wrong as well, when it comes to the shootings that are happening not just burning down buildings, they say well, overall violent crime is down, even though the shootings are up, and the rapes are up, and the battery is up, it's just a little bit of the numbers there, so i think this has become a problematic strategy.
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i think its because this is election time they don't want to talk about this issue, because as i continue to say, if you give people the option between their safety, their security, they're going to pick that over all of the other issues every single time, but i think it's sad that someone that was supposed to be a respected journalist, once at cnn, is now pretending like she doesn't see what's happening in america. pete: lawrence does the left have a marxism problem or you hear the word property all the time, but if you actually read the theory, property is, shouldn't be owned by the individual. there's disrespect for private report that seems to be a common thread coming out of a lot of these riots. >> well i think that the party has been hijacked and i will continue to say this , because i've been reporting on it for so long. i warned about it on the college campuses. i warned about it a year ago when i was going t portland and and all these progressive cities where these people have started
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to take over these cities. they wanted more progressive mayors. they wanted more progressive prosecutors that were going to allow them to get away with this they didn't just turn on a switch after the george floyd situation that was very tragic. these people came in place and they hijacked a sincere movement for change and they have their own agenda and if you don't believe me look at all these rich kids that were just out of portland. they didn't grow up with a struggle. they're all white. they're not for black lives. they have their own agenda which is marxism and they want wealth and redistribution and quite frankly some of their wets should be put on the line to pay for some of these damages. will: they are all rich and privileged. lawrence talk me off a ledge and tell me if i'm over reacting. >> i'll try. will: you're closer to college age than i am and you reported what's going on on college campuses and i have two sons and i'm increasingly reluctant to pay hundreds of thousands of dollars for them to be involved
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in an environment that teaches critical race theory, the 1619 project, professors who don't tell students what they want to hear and then there's this , lawrence, a rhode island professor wrote on a blog the following when it comes to the trump supporter who was assassinated in portland. he said that michael rinal, he killed a fascist. i see nothing wrong with that. at least not morally. lawrence, that's what he wrote on a blog post. a rhode island professor about the murder in portland. >> i'm not shocked at at all, as you are correct i spent two years talking about this on these college campuses. look, there is a ideology that is on these campuses, which is if i disagree with you, then you're racist and i think you should die. i mean, i don't think your life matters when it's something that i disagree with, and look i don't know the guy that died that day. he was definitely assassinated
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but even if it was ideology that i disagree with, i don't think the guy should die and that shows you what's being taught on these college campuses so to go back to your initial point should you send your child, your children to these colleges? no, i wouldn't do it. i would not do it. i'd find a private institution and quite frankly i think we should spend more time getting our kids into trade schools teaching them how to own a business and teaching them what life really is about. i don't think that the four-year university is going to do that and i tell people all the time if i could do it all over again i would have never went to college. too much money, too much debt and to learn what? will: yeah. pete: it's true we have to rethink it all, why do we give our money to alumni funds to schools that fund marxism and teach it, if the whole system -- will: and now excusing murder. pete: accreditation validates these places are elitist insane. >> there won't be any type of constantinople equestions for that type of rhetoric
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because many professors have tenure and there's certain protections for that. pete: lawrence jones thank you very much appreciate it. >> thanks. jedediah: thanks. pete: with just weeks to go until move 3 democrats are still pushing for universal mail-in voting, mail-out voting but a new poll finds many voters are not confident that mail-in ballots will be counted accurately. we'll discuss that. >> ♪ ♪ i'm susan and i'm 52 and i live in san francisco, california. i have been a sales and sales management professional my whole career. typical day during a work week is i'm working but first always going for a run or going to the gym. i love reading. i love cooking healthy. it's super important to me. i was noticing that i was just having some memory loss.
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>> ♪ ain't no mountain high enough, ain't no mountain low enough, ain't no river wide enough, to keep me from getting to you, babe ♪ pete: two beautiful shots of new york city, the freedom tower, lady liberty here on this saturday morning, of course the day after 9/11, and which we had a segment earlier on the show live like it's 9/12 and hopefully we can rally around love of this great country, jed. jedediah: that's exactly right and an amazing sentiment and we saw that image of mike pence and joe biden bumping elbows that
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inspired the nation everyone just took a pause in that moment and said hold on a second let's figure out a way to take a deep breath and i was hopeful and still am that we'll get back to a point where we can actually have a conversation without going at each other's throats, so remains to be seen but you got to stay optimistic. will: to your point, pete what we need right now like we need it on 9/12 was unit it. we have opportunity, and the return of sports, football this weekend, or moments like remembering what happened on 9/11, what we need more than anything is to come together over some common purpose. pete: uh-huh. no doubt. well said let's turn to a few additional headlines this morning. the four former minneapolis police officers charged in george floyd's death are heckled as they leave their first joint court appearance. >> [chanting] pete: hundreds of protesters standing outside the courthouse in minneapolis. the judge did not address motion s to dismiss charges, and did not rule out the possibility of moving the trial to a
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different location. the judge also disqualified four prosecutors from the case over their "sloppy work" while interviewing a witness. >> and this just in, hundreds of protesters re-launching the yellow vest movement this morning in paris. police have already arrested 25 people protesters hitting city streets again after halting demonstrations because of covid-19. the yellow vest movement started in 2018 over france's tax hike on fuel. >> and texas senator ted cruz now calling for a criminal investigation into netflix new film "cuties." cruz calling out netflix and the films producers in a new letter accusing them of sexual izing young girls and the film has been under fire for showing pre-teen girls dancing provocatively and many on social media have called for a netflix boycott. >> and an alligator bites a woman while trimming trees near a florida lake. officials say the 10-foot reptile bit both of her legs. a wildlife trapper captured the
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massive gator and took it to a farm and the fort myers woman is recovering at a hospital in stable condition. those are your headlines. i mean, that's terrible to hear but she's lucky to have her life too. will: absolutely. pete: holy cow. jedediah: you all know how i feel about the reptiles i remember you brought them in one of my first weekends here you brought in the reptiles and one crazy person on our team loved the reptiles and that person is rick reichmuth. rick you have to explain yourself to the audience yet again on this reptile loving that you do. rick: i do, i love them, i love every animal. i can't think of a single embassy animal that i don't think is cool so reptiles definitely. that's the biggest thing i can't wait to get back to normal life so we can start to do that in the studio again, guys. pete i brought another good map for you here. none of these are me by the way it's our great producer brandon who made these but we've got so many fires going on across areas of the west, in fact over 100 large fires going on across the
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entire area. we've had a lot of smoke you've seen these images this week of what the west coast looked like under that thick blanket of smoke a lot of that smoke moved offshore with an offshore wind this week, that's what fueled a lot of these fires, that were so strong but a lot of it is coming back in. take a look at how far this smoke is going to carry. some of this , all the way across the atlantic and then across parts of northern europe, so an incredible plume of smoke here not going to cause respiratory issues across europe but it will likely cause pretty nice sunsets and interesting skies. we are going to see rain coming in across the pacific northwest, northern california starting by about tuesday, into thursday that's great news we need to get the moisture here is the beginning of what will be rainy season in the next few weeks and one other thing guys, a tropical system we're starting to monitor across parts of florida moving across the gulf we could be talking about very strong tropical storm maybe a hurricane tuesday into wednesday across parts of the central gulf so our active season continues. all right guys back to you. will: thank you, rick. jedediah: thanks so much rick we
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appreciate it. we are less than two months out from election day two months and democrats are still moving full speed ahead in their push for universal mail-in voting but a new poll reveals 3 in 10 voter s feel confident their mail -in ballots will be counted accurately. will: let's bring in fox news contributor deroy murdock. thanks for being with us this morning are you surprised by this that very very few americans seem to have much faith in mail-in ballots? well they shouldn't. it's a big mess. the democrats are bringing this to us, totally unncesssarily, in which we've seen a number of really scary things already just a couple just last week, big bags of mail just dropped off at a parking lot in glenndale, later on in an allie in san fernando about 12 miles away. you could have this happen during the election and the thing is if ballots are dropped off, blank bag lots people expect or that have been filled outgoing in if they go a stray there's very little way of knowing that's happened and
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also the u.s. postal service standard is for political mail that if we have 96% accurate delivery that's fine, perfectly appropriate for them and their performance standard so if you have 80 million ballots going out and 4% don't get there that's 3.2 million ballots that might not be counted so in a tight election or a not so tight election that can throw an election not just for president but for congress, for senate, for governor what have you completely astray. there's a total disaster and the stuff, the policies should be if you're afraid of covid-19, if you have underlying conditions if you're elderly or disabled you can get an absentee ballot, you can send that in but what you should not do is blast ballots willy-nilly all across a state based on voter roles full of errors people who have moved away or died and multiple examples where these ballots show up in apartment buildings, people who moved away aren't there, people who died aren't there to collect them and they are thrown in the trash and i've held in my hands in colorado
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half a dozen ballots that were thrown away in an apartment building and ballot integrity activists retrieved them and i could vote six times for corey gardner for senate back in 2014 and the same thing happened in las vegas and we'll see it all around the country and this is a total disaster and we need to stop this immediately or we'll have a real disaster. pete: you've done a great job laying this out exposing many ways this could be exploited. what does it do to voting if people have very little confidence their ball lt. may actually count. does that mean they vote and hope or does that mean maybe they say i'm just not going to do it altogether. what's the result? >> some people might get frustrated and say i'm not going to bother. what people should do is vote in person. the best way to have your ballot counted is show up in person and another problem is if you vote at home some people make mistakes there's no fraud involved here rather than fill in the bubble they put an x or a stray mark somewhere the ballot is discounted and thrown out. we had 25% of the ballots i believe here in my congressional
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district here in new york just thrown out because they were filled out badly. if you go to the polls you can ask somebody, do you fill it out this way, use a pencil, use a crayon, and a poll worker whose trained in this will say no you need to use a pen, and fill out this way and then your ballot will be counted properly. we need to get people to vote in person as much as possible. that's the right way to do it. jedediah: thanks so much for being here deroy on this. it's interesting lots of concerns about this , emerging and mostly hearing voices on one side when in fact these problems with mail-in voting have the potential to effect both sides of the aisle so wish we heard more voices thank you for your voice as always. will: thank you, great stuff. jedediah: coming up for multi million dollar apartments to ivy league educations an inside look at the privileged lives of protesters busted from rioting in manhattan. >> ♪ ♪
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>> the time will come. and everything will be different . will: we're back with quick headlines wonderwap 1984 will be released on christmas day. the film was supposed to come out this summer but the released was pushed back because of the pandemic. >> and subjects will get the chance to use her country home as a drive-in theatre. it normally houses the royal family during the holiday get aways will host drive-in movies for three days starting september 25. parking spots will be given to ticketholders on a first come first serve basis and each spot will offer distance between vehicles so guests can sit or stand outside, as long as they remain socially distant.
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jedediah? jedediah: interesting. interesting use of the property. i think that i would go. i don't know. i'm a fan. have to think about it a little more but i think so. would you guys go? pete: i'd bring my most beat up car like an old one that rumbles and just rumble into the queen's summer home in my beater. will: i do want to go to a drive -in. jedediah: exactly you'd do that. well, one of the topics we've been talking about obviously for several weeks now are these violent protests-turned riots that have erupted in a lot of cities one of the key cities being new york and there's been a quest to figure out who are these rioters? well we've got some information now emerging about a wealthy 20- year-old in particular who has been accused of some pretty massive destruction in new york city, and you see those mugshots there. they're now called privileged protesters. that is a woman we're talking about the front cover of the new york post it says "occupy my street" that mugshot is from cla
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ra claybur, i believe i'm saying her name correctly and we're seeing a pattern of individuals who come from very wealthy backgrounds whose parent s have been very successful who live in, you know , $1.8 million apartments in this case, and decide they're going to go and destroy other people's property in the name of what? in the name of black lives matter? in the name of marxism, in the name of i'm not sure you'd have to ask them directly but it's rich to me pete and no pun intended on that that you've got these people that come from such privilege that think it's perfectly okay for them to act in the name of destruction and destroy what other people have worked so hard for for so long. pete: no pun intended but pun appreciated what do they stand for? this clara, she loved stallin, looking to, i mean, these are white, wealthy kids talk taught to hate america in their schools and therefore themselves because they're white so they hate all cops and captitolism and this is the son of a new york times best
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selling writer, assigned model and actress, the one who is on the front cover of the post had a second home in connecticut. that's where they actually arrested her, will. will: if your kids summered in europe and are instagram influencers who want to tear down america to the studs. pete: yes because it's what they were taught to do. i wonder if their parents are proud. coming up summer is coming to a close but that doesn't mean you're stuck indoors. skip bedell is showing us how to make the most of our outdoor living. >> ♪ we were smoking funny things, making love out by the lake to our favorite song, sipping whiskey out the bottle, not thinking about tomorrow, singing sweet home alabama all summer long ♪ ready to juvéderm it? correct age-related volume loss in cheeks
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with juvéderm voluma xc, add fullness to lips with juvéderm ultra xc and smooth moderate to severe lines around the nose and mouth with juvéderm xc. tell your doctor if you have a history of scarring or are taking medicines that decrease the body's immune response or that can prolong bleeding. common side effects include injection-site redness, swelling, pain, tenderness, firmness, lumps, bumps, bruising, discoloration or itching. as with all fillers, there is a rare risk of unintentional injection into a blood vessel, which can cause vision abnormalities, blindness, stroke, temporary scabs or scarring. ( ♪ ) juvéderm it. talk to your doctor about the juvéderm collection of fillers. small businesses that arer already struggling prop 15 raises property taxes $11 billion every year.
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will be hit with higher rents and tax bills. that means higher prices for gas, food, utilities and healthcare. increasing the cost of living for a family by $960. and supporters admit homeowners are next, changing prop 13 and raising property taxes on people's homes. it's the wrong time to raise taxes on californians. vote no on prop 15.
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will: this summer we saw sales spike for outdoor essentials like pools and gardening tools but with cooler weather around the corner how can we transition our outdoor living spaces into fall? here to show us home contractor skip bedell. skip, good morning thank you very much for being here. >> good morning guys how are you doing? pete: we're doing great. break it down. >> can you hear me? will: yeah, i can. >> yeah, so today we're talking about extending your outdoor living space, and that's what we've done here. these are so, a gazebo we built an outdoor living room and outdoor dining room these things are amazing because they allow you to extend your outdoor living space right outside keeping everything nice and dry in the wintertime and the rain so they're made out out of aluminum and galvanized steel, you build them in just a couple of hours and let me show you the outdoor dining room these things are just amazing so we've built a complete formal outdoor
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dining room with this aluminum patio gazebo and again you're able to keep everything nice and dry and clean here with the aluminum and galvanized steel roof so speaking of the dining room let me show you one of the best things to have outside. this is a pizza oven straight from italy come check this out. this has a real fire brick floor and this is going to allow you to cook all year around outside and serve into your outdoor dining room, so outdoor pizza oven allows you to cook pizza, make steak, seafood, bacon this thing is amazing with convection operation, this is wood fired but they also have gas and natural propane as well so alpha, straight from italy italian pizza oven the best thing is that again it delivers directly to your home, you assemble it in just minutes and now you have an outdoor pizza oven ready to cook all year long. that combined with these aluminum patio gazebos it really extends your season and allows you to continue your outdoor
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entertaining right into the fall and right into the wintertime, and one more thing with the outdoor heater is i'm going to be talking about fire feature s later this week but when you combine all this stuff with outdoor heaters you're bringing the inside to the outdoors and you are allowing your whole entertaining season to extend into the wintertime, so check out all of the stuff on my website with great links to all of these products. pete: skip bedell. i was listening but i'm amazed but what you've done with that backyard there. will: i want some of that stuff. pete: it's a beautiful thing, skipbedell thank you so much turn that television to fox & friends i caught you at the beginning. >> it is turned to fox, it is. >> ♪ ♪ pete: more fox & friends moments away. from prom dresses... ...to soccer practices... ...and new adventures. you hope the more you give the less they'll miss.
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jedediah: thank you so much for joining us today, everyone. i am off to plan a family halloween costume that i may wind up deeply deeply regretting will: thanks for hanging out with us this saturday morning we'll see you again tomorrow morning. pete: will this is for you. have a great day. david: voters and investors on edge as the 2020 race gets into full swing. president donald trump heading to the battleground state of nevada within hours, and democrat nominee joe biden will be fueling up for florida within days, so, how will this battle for the battleground shake out? welcome, everybody i'm david asman, in for neil cavuto, and this is cavuto live, and we are live in washington d.c. with lucas tomlinson where the president is preparing to head out and wilmington, delaware and hillary vaughn where the man who wants to be president is hoping to see his florida numbers
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