tv The Ingraham Angle FOX News September 24, 2020 7:00pm-8:00pm PDT
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roll call lesson 24 hours after being wounded in the line of duty, amazing to see. real heroes. we've forgotten, haven't we? i forgot the copse of 9/11 and throughout the cops on those ball fields. thoughts and prayers with the families and the officers that were shot, and everyone else. let not your heart be troubled, laura ingraham ready to take it away. >> laura: i think most people in america, they want their kids in school and they want their kids playing sports and they love the police. they love law enforcement, people in uniform, no one is perfect and there will always be a bad actor in life, and every group. but i think what we are seeing on the streets of suburban america, that is not this country. that is a violent antarcti and c sometimes racist group of peop people. a >> laura: but it's not going
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to stop, nor should it stop. >> laura: we will see you tomorrow, i laura ingraham and this is "the ingraham angle" from washington tonight. amy coney barrett's friends and families speaking for the first time to our own raymond arroyo about the woman and the mother that they know and they respond to the anticatholic, anti-christian smears being circulated by the media. also dr. scott atlas on why the schools should open and how he schooled the white house press koran company beta, i know you didn't see that. and a man arrested on camera for singing church songs outside without a mask. okay, both are here tonight. but first, the midwest big choice, that's the focus of tonight's angle. >> laura: ready scenes playing out over the last 24 hours
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across the country show us once again we saw that diners at st. pete florida at a restaurant out there, they were treated this way by blm thugs who don't believe you have a right to be happy, ever. >> [crowd noise] >> laura: in seattle, an officer fell off his bike and then this happened. >> [crowd noise] >> laura: imagine if that police officer didn't have his helmet on. and in portland, oregon, it wasn't bats.
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>> [crowd noise] >> laura: but rather a molotov cocktail used by these animals against the police. and we all know this, two police officers were shot in louisville last night, the suspected shooter, lorenzo johnson age 26. there is his mug shot. he was charged on multiple counts but not for attempted murder. at least, not yet. officer robinson debts roaches, an african-american, and still in the hospital tonight. he is expected to recover but major aubrey gregory who was shot in the hip, he just walked into the department roll call thursday morning to a round of applause. sean and i were talking about, that's the real america. and it's awesome. now, as we get closer to the election, it is interesting, is it not, to see things moving, may be moving with the events and moving with the recognition of what's been happening, and
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things usually do. right, they type. even though the polls don't always reflect what's happening on the ground. but on the betting market site, predicted.org, president trump is now favored to win 240 electoral votes. now you look at the rcp approval trends for president trump since june 30th, which might give you a sense of where headed. back on june 30th he was upside down in his approval by 15 points. but after the summer of love, that number has been cut in ha half. in the new "abc news" "washington post" poll has a pro-trump friend in florida where he is up four points and in arizona where his up up one point. the fox and the quinnipiac polls show that the ohio race is anyone's call at this point. the group has michigan, plus one for trump, very close there.
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let's keep this going now. if trump carries florida, north carolina and arizona, along with the other states he is already expected to win, he'll have more than 250 electoral votes. at that point, the only way for democrats to win would be to sweep pennsylvania and the midwest with mail-in ballots. the democrats have gamed the south, believe me. they see this coming, which is why they are trying to delay the count in the midwest for as long as they can. so think about this. after being the punch line for liberal elites for years and years, the midwest finally has its moment in 2020. if you're from wisconsin and you're an independent but trump's tweets bug you, okay, i get it. but focus on what matters. your family, their future, your and their safety, and
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prosperity. the 2019 economic numbers, we've gone through this, our irrefutable proof that trump's policies work. yet liberal mayors and governors have done their darndest to screw it all up. covid of course brings out the worst in the already underperforming politicians in the midwest poster boy for failure is illinois governor j.b. pritzker. of course to joe biden, illinois counts as a shining example of success. the liberal billionaire governor is a genius and chicago's mayor lori lightfoot? she's a courageous trailblazer. that's the democrats ideal midwest city, chicago. high taxes, pro pod, anti-gun, antibusiness. here's how adam schuster describes that. in 1980, illinois has 4.5 billion in unfunded pension
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debt and a perfect credit rating. today, illinois has nearly 140 billion in unfunded pension debt and its credit rating is one notch above junk status. that debt now eats $31 of every 100 taxpayer dollars sent to the state. now, illinois is so antibusiness that it ranks only above new york and california on chief executives magazine's list of most antibusiness states. a fabulous place to live and start a business, why has its population been declining? now for six years straight. and in chicago, if chicago is a place to be, why didn't the obama spend all their time in the other home and rarely visit there? now the fact is, if you live in the midwest, and if you vote for biden, you're voting for the policies that ran illinois into
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the ground. if her from wisconsin, from iowa, or michigan, why would you want to follow illinois lead? think of it this way, one party, the republicans, have already shown that they know how to help you. trump really is just all about returning power to people, the american people, and that means respecting your freedom to live your life, raise her family, and yes, pursue your happiness. on the other hand, chicago style democrats, they are not up at night worrying about any of that. after all, why would they? their supporters think that you are a bunch of racists who are destroying the planet. so more freedom for you means less control for them. they don't like that at all. governor pritzker seems to relish wielding his expanded authority under covid. his state hospitals and i see yous are manageable levels, but
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he still won't let kids play sports. >> while parents might choose to send their children out onto the playing field, i can tell you that someone else who becomes ill because of that decision wouldn't call that your personal choice. i want our kids back on the playing field or on the ice as much as anyone, and we will get there when the doctors say it's safe. >> laura: so if you live across the state in ohio, across state lines, or in indiana, guess what? your kid can play football this fall, but not in illinois. but what his state lacks infield sports, it makes up for in street crime. in cook county, there have been 677 homicides so far this year. that's 200 more murders and during the same reporting period last year. overwhelmingly, the killings take place in chicago and most victims are black.
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but at least he has his priorities straight. >> almost all states that have legalized have done so in a way that produced a multibillion-dollar industry dominated by a handful of corporations. but illinois is attempting to produce a cannabis industry that actually looks like illinois. >> laura: he's worried about pot diversity. oh, my god. democrats want you to sacrifice your entire future in order to do what? well, control your decisions and punish trump. and they are going to vice grip on -- they enrich their friends and of course fun there social justice projects. his puppet masters don't like midwest values. consider the makeup of the party leadership today. biden, harris from california, schumer from new york, pelosi
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from california, and aoc, from new york. cne midwesterners and their? neither do i. the midwesterners know that biden will bring back outsourcing, open the borders, cater to the aoc crowd and suck up to china. but if you vote for trump, you're going to send a message that even the swap cannot ignore. which is the following. in america, the people come first, and that's the angle. joining me now is ben shapiro, editor in chief of the daily wire and author of "how to destroy america in three easy steps." you say that this election is no longer a referendum on president trump, but on the left. explain. >> joe biden's entire campaign was rooted in the idea -- bulwark of moderation against the radical left and yet time and time again he has refused to condemn them. he did it a little bit when he
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was running against bernie sanders, the default not bernie sanders but now he will not condemn antifa, black lives matter and now he won't even answer some questions about whether to end a filibuster, ad states to the senate willy-nilly or pack the supreme court of the united states, which means he is tacitly promising transformational change. that means that moderate old joe, that is done. the question right now is how radical will the transformation be? >> laura: i think the implicit promise to america, not just moderation but all the senior scene scene playing out tonight in brooklyn, in louisville, across the country, seattle, portland, that all of that is going to magically go away because uncle joe gets back into the white house. >> that's exactly right. >> laura: x plane with that's never going to happen. >> it's never going to happen because when you put your head out there for the radicals to chop it off, they are going to chop it off.
Documents
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the first people who leave the revolution are always the second people to the guillotine that's what's happening here with joe biden. joe biden proclaims he is going to be some sort of gradual push into change but who are behind him are not looking for anything gradual. they see him as an obstacle to change or at the best may be some of facade they can push aside when the time is right. he's made a bargain with the radicals in his own party and they're going to eat him up. >> laura: is a story out in minnesota that began to get some traction today and it was very disturbing. and this was a home owner who woke up to find that their garage basically was on fire, had been burned down, they had a trump flag or poster up and had been burned and then biden 2020 graffiti and the nt for symbol, and this is minnesota nice. there's a message being sent by the far left and i think people are beginning to see that
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arsonist behavior, looting, even murder, none of it's off the table. >> the fact is, again, generic statements about violence and looting being bad are not going to cut it. we all know that at this were right-wingers performing this violence, joe biden will be out on the front lines for claimant right wing ideology was innately linked to violence and cruelty but as soon as [indiscernible] out there harassing people at restaurants or burning things down or perhaps shooting police officers as we saw in louisville last night, well then the movement that they are linked to, the broader ideological movement, he refuses to condemn. it's one thing to condemn generically violence and looting. i was told that when donald trump did that in charlottesville that was not enough, he had to specifically condemn one specific ideology, which by the way he absolutely did, actually. now you have joe biden generically condemning violence in the media has declared it -- i guess we're done here, there's nothing more to see. >> laura: one of the left 'us biggest media stars is reading the current situation as follows.
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>> the president now saying that the election will not be decided by the voters and he expects the supreme court, to which he is crying to appoint a new justice white before the election, he expects that it will be the supreme court which handles the question of who the next president is and he expects that the conservative majority will throw out the ballots and then we won't have to worry about any transition of power. >> laura: the hyperbole notwithstanding, this is pretty standard now on the left. >> it is. the manufactured garbage for which they open saying that this election is going to be stolen by trump is going to be a coup, john podesta gaming out that it looks like if biden didn't accept the loss -- hillary clinton said there are no circumstances under which biden should accept the loss. stacy abrams tried out as governor of gorge georgia and they have the temerity to turn around and said that is a threat to the institutions, that trump was going to generate some sort of constitutional crisis. i think it's pretty clear that democrats are making way for an awful lot of chaos in the
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aftermath of the selection. >> laura: thank you so much tonight. coming up, the covid you are not seeing, white house covid advisor dr. scott atlas is here to expose the real truth. plus an idaho man arrested for refusing to wear a mask at an outdoor church service. guess he wasn't protesting hard enough. he's here with me next exclusively. ♪
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>> more than 90% of the population remains susceptible to coronavirus. do you agree with that assessment? >> yeah, i think that dr. rex field misstated something there. i'm going to answer your question if you let me finish. the data that he was talking about was his surveillance data that show that roughly 9% of the country has antibodies. but when you look at the cdc data state-by-state, much of that data is old. >> were we to believe? >> you're supposed to believe the science and i'm telling of the science. i'm telling you the science and that's the answer. and if you want to look up all the data, you're free to buried >> americans are looking for the best information. >> i'm giving you the best information. >> laura: that was a perfect exchange. white house covid advisor
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dr. scott atlas, joining me now. thanks for joining us tonight. why was it so important to correct that reporter's line of questioning? >> thanks for having become a laura. i emphasize with the american people have been hurt. a variety of sources, some of whom should know all the facts, but not everybody knows the data. but not everybody is hands-on with reading the data in the media is done a poor job of explaining -- allowing the data to be brought forward. having said that, the facts are that people like me are reading as much as we can, we are trying to do the best we can because the truth is critical here. we are in a pandemic and it's a bit of tragedy and 200,000 people have died. on the other hand, the truth -- the facts have evolved.
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this is not march. we know a lot about this disease, we know who to protect, we know who has high risk and we know who does not have high risk and when you get facts that are sort of partial truths, i think it's very damaging. the american people are very afraid. no one wants to be afraid on the way to calm fear is to actually know the data and explain it very clearly and logically. >> laura: dr. atlas, i know you read know mike referenced this in the exchange, there are other types of immunity that we have, we humans have, and one of them is t cell immunity, which could protect against this coronavirus. could you explain that very quickly for us though people understand that? we don't currently test for t cell immunity but a lot of my medicine cabinet things we should be because that would allay a lot of fears. >> there's basically two broad categories, one has to do with b
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cells and antibodies and the other is t cells and that was actually immunity that lasts longer. it turns out that antibody tests are done and we see how many people have antibodies but antibodies are transient. they only last for months usually and what we see here is we make an assessment of how many people have been exposed by doing the test. there's a lot more than that population but is actually resistant to the infection because of either t cell response from this infection or a t cell immunity from a related similar virus. and this is very important because the statement that 90% of people are still susceptible would make me afraid if i was one of those 90%, but it's actually untrue and when you look at all the data, whether it's from sweden or singapore or la jolla or university of
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washington, all of the country -- and now we see from japan where most of the immunity for this virus is felt to be due to t cell immunity and it explains a lot, it explains a lot about perhaps why children were very, very low risk for this. it explains perhaps why people in asia didn't have as much of a problem because they had prior coronavirus, it's really a story that's evolving here that we need to understand it because we are not all susceptible to the infection and we know now, it looks very likely, that at least three times that number of people with antibodies on testing have immunity and perhaps even more. it depends when you do the antibody test because as i said, it's transient. if i can say -- go ahead. >> laura: we just have to move along. want to put this up. we talk abut it briefly last night. this full screen that i'm about to put up is very important because you're right, there's
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still a lot of people afraid out there. here are the survival rates for different age groups, the best estimate at present, these are government numbers. from ages 0-19, the survival rates, if you get the infection, is 99.9 at 7%. age is 20-49, 99.98. 50-69, 99.5%. even if you're over 70 or older, survival rate is 94.6%. this is not to say it's still not a horrible tragedy. it is. it is a horrible tragedy. but those statistics, do they not indicate, dr. atlas, that schools should be open, sports should be played, and we've got to get back to normal life here? people just don't even know these stats. >> yes, this is a failure in my view of the public health officials who have not come forward with all the knowledge that we have buried it like i
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said, that we've learned. the disease is very, very low risk for children, it's extremely low risk other than those few children that have some sort of an underlying condition. it's low risk for young adults like college students, extremely low risk in this data is known, it's proven all over the world and they really help americans take the time to listen to some of these epidemiologists from stanford, harvard, oxford, you know, cambridge. these are some of the best epidemiologists in the world and we don't all have to be paralyzed with fear. we have to do very, very diligent protection of the people who are vulnerable and those are usually older people with other comorbidities and we need to open because we know the harms of not opening. >> laura: dr. atlas, thank you so much for your service to this country and for your perspective, we really appreciate it. >> appreciate that, thank you.
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>> [indiscernible]. [bleep]. get off of me! >> come on! >> [indiscernible] over a mask. >> is this america? for the crime of not wearing a mask outdoor -- outdoors. ohio woman tased and handcuffed at her son's football game. good news he's playing football, bad news, mommy is getting tased. as left-wing anarchists set fires, they smashed windows, harassed diners across the country, largely with zero repercussions, we had a police officer shot last week or the week before in california, it's all a blur. we don't even have him in custody but law-abiding americans are being arrested for violating covid dictates by petty dictators. and yesterday police in the town
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of moscow, idaho, arrested three people, including my next guest, after they were cited for being massless while singing songs in a church parking lot. >> [singing] >> should not be doing this and doing this kind of stuff for the mayor, this is embarrassing. you guys are stronger than this. >> laura: is that moscow, idaho, or moscow, russia? joining me now, the man whose arrest you just saw, commissioner candidate as well. gabriel, police are arresting you for singing massless outside while the protesters are given free reign over city and suburban streets. i keep saying this, i don't even recognize this country. how is this making any sense? >> it's unbelievable, the juxtaposition of rioters being
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able to go in the streets, maybe if i had a gun or a molotov cocktail i would've been fine but we had a resolution, like you said, it's petty, tyrannical resolution was initially signed on july 2nd and then it was renewed or extended this last monday through january 5th, where you have to wear a mask, where you can't social distance and so my church had been songs like this throughout the shutdown or throughout the face mask and social distancing resolution and so we organized after it got extended to januar. we all went out there. i did not think was going to be arrested, i did not think i was going to be cited so we are singing songs. just start singing the songs and they come up to me and my mom first and the guy standing next to me was my friend and i put my arm around him and said this is my friend and that's why they proceeded to arrest me. here's the deal, the mayor, on september 5th, was at a religious ceremony officiating it with no mask on. not social distancing. the mayor on september 2nd was
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at a public gathering -- excuse me, a little private party, about 50 people there with no mask on and not social distancing. when i was getting released from the jail and the deputies were releasing them from the trail i across on the other side and our deputies were in the office. >> laura: looks like he jammed up -- we will see if we can get gabriel back. i want to reset this for you, okay? so we have city streets across the united states, okay, for the last -- during the whole summer, filled with hundreds and at times thousands of people smashing windows, running into buildings -- and you're back. gabriel. so i want to put up something on the screen for our viewers. these are the covid stats for your county in idaho. confirmed cases during the entire pandemic, 392.
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confirmed deaths, zero. >> yep. >> laura: thank god. >> and no hospitalizations. it zero hospitalizations my county. >> laura: what you think is motivating this? this heavy-handed approach? >> well, tear and he is stupid and tyranny requires force and so what happens is once you kind of put your foot in it, your pride in your arrogance it's kind of starting to drive the rest of the elect and so now, when we test that tierney, when we -- it pushes them to actually bring force to the issue and that's why they arrested me. the cops did not want to arrest me. the officer didn't want to arrest me, the deputies at the county jail did not want to arrest me and yet this is what tierney forces the issue. >> laura: maybe they should be conscientious objectors. your message when people say you're part of a death cult. that's one of our dear friends
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over at msnbc said about the antimask -- are part of a death cult, gabriel. >> again, you've got to find the emergency. there's no emergency, no death cult in our county and when you look at it -- the problem here is we all believe this big lie and everyone has to say that the emperor has no clothes on. that's what -- the emperor has no clothes on have to say the emperor has clothes on. they're trying to force me to say the emperor has close on and that tierney is why things are stupid. tierney is stupid. >> laura: good people don't stand up and resist, guess what? tierney prevails. moscow, idaho, looking like moscow, russia. thank you for being on with us tonight. keep in touch with us as the story there developed. raymond arroyo's big exclusive is next. he spoke with the family and friends of supreme court front runner amy coney barrett and they respond to all the anticatholic, anti-christian smears that are already being leveled against her by the left. this is something, you don't
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♪ >> laura: seventh circuit judge amy coney barrett is widely expected to be president trump's pick to fill the supreme court vacancy left by ruth bader ginsburg. but who is she? for answers we sent our own raymond arroyo to new orleans to talk to some of the people who know her best, her friends, and her sister. for the first time, a member of the family response to the savage criticisms surrounding the people of praise [indiscernible] and unbelievable stuff that's been written about that. here is raymond's report. >> amy coney barrett's story starts here in louisiana, it's a suburb of new orleans. she went to school behind me and her father mike has been a deacon in this parish for nearly 40 years. she grew up in this neighborhood and a big family of seven -- a
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loving family -- where she learned some important lessons as her sister megan shared with me. >> everyone has a role i think. everybody. what was amy's role in your family? >> i think leadership probably. she used to be the one to organize games and things come always to get together at my grandparents house and she would kind of take charge but i think now -- although she is still a good leader, i think now i would say today that her role is unity and love, because she just makes such an effort despite her busy schedule, despite everything that she has to juggle, her love for people is remarkable. amy, i feel like has incredible wisdom. an incredible wisdom and patience. amy was always quick to come back, apologizing want to try to
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fix it. >> headlines have been filled with criticisms of the people of praise, charismatic prayer group that members of the coney family have allegedly been members of. the media has suggested the group is occult and erroneously the inspiration of margaret atwood's handmaid's tale. >> i think anything can be misconstrued and you can always pull things from a different angle but what i can say from my experience, though i'm not actively member right now, some of my fondest memories are of the friendships that i had growing up, the activities that we did. we did have prayer time together and that has been an inspiration honestly to me as an adult and i still maintain friendships with those very friends who i grew up with and the people of praise. so i think really what people need to know is this isn't a crazy group. my experience with it has been these are people who deeply care about one another.
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>> she attended a high school here at dominican in new orleans. she was a leader here, a vp of the student council and very close to a group of girls who she's remained friends with for 30 years. they call themselves the fearless foursome. i spoke to two of the foursome, adams and renee. >> amy and i served on student council together. our senior year we were on the executive board so we have a lot of opportunity to come up with some creative ideas. amy was all was coming up with great stuff. one time for halloween she said i think we should decorate the locker room and make it into a haunted house. so of course dominican, we had never done that before. but we put together proposal and i remember -- even said -- >> i said they're never going to approve that, you're never going to get the do that ever, they're never going to say yes. >> but as it turned out, we were
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successful in our pitch and they let us turn the locker room into a haunted house. i think it was a one-and-done. pretty sure they didn't do that any years after hours. >> might have been one of the wildest as ever. >> there was the story line being advanced that because she may or may not be a member of this people of praise group, that somehow she's a submissive woman who only takes orders from men and the man in her life. your thoughts on that? >> i mean, i know that's just not true. >> i think honestly laughable. but i mean, in the same breath, she's really approachable and most everyone who's ever encountered her says wow, this is a powerhouse. this is a person of integrity. and i don't know if you get those two words in the same
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breath say submissive. i don't see it. it's just not the girl i know. >> i don't think you get to where you are, where she is, as a submissive person. i think that kind of speaks for itself. i don't think i really need to give words to that. >> jenna martin was mentored as a freshman by amy coney barrett in her senior year at dominican. >> at dominican we are taught to be strong women. our motto means truth. so first and foremost, and he will always get the truth. she will always look for the truth. and her face is very strong. i never remember amy without a smile on her face. the smile that you see on tv now is the same smile that she had when she was 15, 16, 17, 18 years old. >> the deputy coroner of jefferson parish was a friend of amy coney during high school. >> amy was outgoing, engaging, warmhearted, kind, and the thing that struck you about her, she's
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hyper intelligent. >> you could just tell in conversations with her she was ahead of other people's thoughts. but she was humble about it. her upbringing and her balance is very important in her humility is only matched by her wit and her warm heartedness. >> one thing that struck me even amidst all types of people from all walks of life, all political parties, all viewpoints, supported her and have, and have said despite our differences, i respect you and i think that you are fit for this job and i think that there is no one better who would be able to separate herself from who she is, what her beliefs are to be able to see all angles and be fair. >> laura: up ahead, we attempt to answer this question. is joe biden okay? don't go away.
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and this all has my next guest asking is joe okay? joining me now is correspond for "the federalist," david, wonderful to see you tonight, the most shocking part of biden's disappearing act is the lack of curiosity from the press corps and even a defense from the media saying he's just doing debate prep. >> no. this has become bizarre. it's like joe biden and sandy koufax and every other day is yom kippur. that's not going to work. a big reason why we have presidential campaigns, especially with older candidates, is to make sure these people are fit for what is a growing and rigorous job. the only thing joe biden looks fit for right now is the early bird special -- i think you might need a teleprompter to order because he gets unusual difficult questions like would you like a salad with that? i don't know how anybody can be confident right now that this
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man is capable of being president of the united states. i certainly am not. >> laura: i think he knows that the press, they are basically doing is campaigning for him so if he thinks he's ahead and they know he screws up when he goes out and campaigns, then they will just pick up the slack for him but he was asked about this in north carolina about his health into stamina and this is how he answered. >> for those north carolina voters who buy into that, who may question whether physically, mentally fit for this job, how do you respond right now? >> i'm not the guy who can't run up or down the ramp to get to -- to deliver a commencement spee speech. just watch me and make your decision. >> laura: david, we are watching him and he's nowhere to be found. >> no. what's amazing about this is that the biden campaign could end the story by just getting the guy out on the campaign
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trail for ten or 12 days to go because the country. the way we've seen literally every presidential candidate operate before him, the fact that they won't do that and put this story to bed and instead they seem to be putting him to bed at 9:00 in the morning, it's going to raise questions for voters. it doesn't matter what the media does, people understand that if is not on the campaign trail is a problem. >> laura: over at msnbc, doing debate prep, that's all it is, period, but yesterday biden was asked about are you doing a lot of debate prep and let's play it so people see what happened. >> [indiscernible]. >> started to prepare but i haven't gotten really into it heavily. >> laura: how does that explain all the other days he hasn't been around? >> i mean, it doesn't. this is nine days in the month of september.
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sam stein might've explained one of them, but it doesn't explain the other eight. this is unprecedented and you're absolutely right that the media is going to do its very best to cover for this but the american people aren't stupid and if they continue not to see this man on the campaign trail they are going to ask serious questions and they're going to be absolutely right to do so. >> laura: david, come back soon, great to see her tonight. coming up, "the ingraham angle" gets results for college football fans. or was it the president? we will show you when we come back. ♪ so what's going on?
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i'm a talking dog. the other issue. oh...i'm scratching like crazy. you've got some allergic itch with skin inflammation. apoquel can work on that itch in as little as 4 hours, whether it's a new or chronic problem. and apoquel's treated over 8 million dogs. nice. and...the talking dog thing? is it bothering you? no...itching like a dog is bothering me. until dogs can speak for themselves, you have to. when allergic itch is a problem, ask for apoquel. apoquel is for the control of itch associated with allergic dermatitis and the control of atopic dermatitis in dogs. do not use apoquel in dogs less than 12 months old or those with serious infections. apoquel may increase the chance of developing serious infections and may cause existing parasitic skin infestations or pre-existing cancers to worsen. do not use in breeding, pregnant, or lactating dogs. most common side effects are vomiting and diarrhea. feeling better? i'm speechless. thanks for the apoquel. aw...that's what friends are for. ask your veterinarian for apoquel next to you, apoquel is a dog's best friend.
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>> i'm the football guy. i'm the one that wants to have football. are you watching? i want football. >> laura: once again "the ingraham angle" gets results. the pac-12 announcing today that football is back on. was it is just the ivy league left out of the game now? all five of the major college conferences will let teams duke it out this fall with some
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restrictions of course, but thank you to president trump for putting the heat on the commissioners and thanks to all the viewers for making it so we couldn't be ignored, the parents of the players, you deserve this. that's all the time we have tonight. shannon bream and the "fox news @ night" team take all the latest from here, shannon. >> shannon: all right, laura, thank you so much and thanks for the college football. breaking tonight, we are past curfew in louisville and protesters are on the marching again. as we learned yesterday, a grand jury charged 1 of 3 officers linked to the deadly showing of emt breonna taylor with wanton endangerment but not in direct connection to her death. the other two officers, including one whose bullet kilter were found to be justified in using force because they were fired on first. tonight they are called to release the full grand jury report. we are also investigating the reports of alleged voter fraud in texas as well as reports of
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