tv FOX and Friends Sunday FOX News October 11, 2020 3:00am-7:00am PDT
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♪. pete: this is october 11th, 22 days to election day. welcome to "fox & friends." jedediah good morning. in the military we see 22 days and a wakeup. it is 23 days. that is how we put it. will said off air we want to start off with trivia. what is that song, will. will: nope. pete: number two, what was the score of the texas oklahoma game
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yesterday? will: what are you doing? you want this to go today? i don't understand what we're doing. pete: a showdown or shoot out all morning long. this game was four over times. unfor the senately texas did not come out on top, will. will: it was unfather gnat. >> i saw a tweet from will. i think it was yesterday your wife had written you something. you tweeted it out asking if you were okay. was that after questioned's game? will: i was. i married the sweetest woman in the world. are you mad. remember okay, remember a few months ago we didn't think we would have college football. she is always good-looking at bigger picture. jedediah: good for her. sorry for your lows, will. will: it was a great game. i took 2 1/2 hour nap. it was in the second quarter. it was still going. we won't talk about college football all morning long. there are bigger stakes we
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learned in our country as we learned amid covid-19. the president talked about holding a peaceful protest. that is exactly what he did. his doctor put out a memo yesterday saying he was no longer at spreading covid-19. he was fired up to be out there with supporters. back to police law enforcement event. here is a portion what the president said yesterday. president trump: on behalf of myself and the first lady this is an incredible out pouring. we're starting very big with our rallies. because we cannot allow our cointry to become a socialist nation. we can't let that happen. this is most important, this is more important than even four years ago. i use towed say the most important. it was true at the time. this is the single most important election in the history of our country. get out and vote e.
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pete: with this week behind, there is one thing you can bet on the president won't be outworked. his campaign schedule is shaping up that way. will: what i found interesting, his doctors said he is not transmissible. he can't give the coronavirus or likely too. satisfied cdc guidelines. which suggest 10 to 14 days at coronavirus you're at a point where you're non-replicating. won't give it to other people. what i find fascinating about this, we'll have dr. mark segal on the show. we crystallize in our mind 14 days, 14 days. it is not so quite clean. the president has the doctors and cdc permission to get back out on the trail. here is a list of his scheduled visits. monday in sanford, florida, tuesday johnstown, pennsylvania. kerry does does says the
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schedule is hellacious. listen. >> he will talk to the american people. he has a hellacious schedule in front of him already. he will talk to the american people about the promises four years ago. and all the promises he has kept. the left won't talk about. ohio, iowa, great white whale of texas. every four years he has a chance. those state are offer the map. georgia is republican. north carolina. when you look at the map, the american people have seen what the president has been able to accomplish. we're getting down to just a few battleground states. we know pennsylvania and michigan will be battle frowned states. jedediah: yeah, you know, we've been talking about this for a long sometime. there have been two very different approaches here from the trump campaign, the biden campaign. there was a lot of speculation whether the strategy would change on the part of the trump campaign due to a lot of criticism they received from the rose guarden ceremony, no need
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to rehash that. looks like the strategy hasn't changed. perhaps a lot of protocol. in the white house there were a lot of masks in. i think it is pretty clear that president trump sees it as his role to get out on the campaign trail. he will proceed as he was before. he will be hitting a lot of states. he will be on the ground either you're comfortable with that or you're not. that is a decision i think voters will have to make. what is really good both campaigns have been really clear where they stand on covid-19, how they feel about it and they have illustrated that very well. they have been very consistent on both sides about follow through on that. biden campaign included in that as well. i think that paint as clear picture for voters. they can make a decision as they see fit. covid-19 and handling of that virus is one of the key campaign issues. a lot of other of campaign
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issues including law and order and crime which we've seen soar in the cities. including the economy which is first and foremost. when we talk about the issue of transparency, there is one issue the biden campaign has not been transparent. we have the hearings beginning monday on amy coney barrett. it will be a big week. some will likely be difficult headed in her direction. joe biden was also asked a very difficult question. he has been asked this question numerous times as it relates to court packing. we talked about the impact of that. on a local news channel he gave a response to that we question that left many people unsettled. check out what he had to say. >> i have to ask you about packing the court. >> sure. >> yesterday you said you wouldn't answer the question until after the election this is the number one thing i'm asked about viewers. >> asked by viewers who are republicans who don't want me continuing to talk about what they're doing to the court right now. >> don't voters deserve to know. >> no they don't.
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i will not play his game. he would love me to talk about, i already said something on packing the court. he would love that to be the discussion. instead of what he is doing now. will: whoa, the voters do not deserve to know. very convenientlily conflating two things. he is trying to say what donald trump is doing by confirming a supreme court justice right now, which is totally within his constitutional rights is somehow packing the court. instead of filling a seat and you, and republicans want to ask me about it. you don't deserve whether or not i want to blow up the court, expand the court, politicize the court, overturn a branch of government. this whole idea of don't deserve, will, it is very condescending remark. good on local reporter ktvn, a fill eight in las vegas. sometimes takes localreporters to ask the question, the national press pool as they figure gel to each other would
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never ask joe biden would he pack the court. they will never ask that. the local media did. he condescendingly said. you don't deso i i have it. will: that is a eyed opening admission. there is a lot of hand-wringing whether president trump will accept the results of the election. he wants to make sure the mail-in ballots are up and up. strikes me over the last four years there has been one party continuously not accepting the results of our elected processes who are delegitimizing everything from the 2016 election, from the russia collusion story, to packing the court potentially to doing away with the filibuster. every time the results are not to their liking there is some extreme measure designed to delegitimatize the process. forgive me for noticing this, for observing that is exactly how it played out. number two, jedediah, i will say, you pointed this out as well. cruise cruise said this is biden trying to placate the left-wing
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of his party. here quickly, listen to what ted cruz is saying why this is happening, jedediah. >> joe biden said the voters don't deserve to know an answer. the reason they're doing this because the answer is yes. because their party, the democratic party is captive to the hard left of the party. they intend to pack the court which would politicize it, would destroy its independence. it is something fdr at the height of his power tried to do, his own party, the democratic party said no, it would destroy the court. will: jedediah, i know we're tight on time, i don't want to steal your thunder, you made your point, you might be placating your party, this will come back to bite you. what happens when the other party uses same techniques you're using. it is a short term win and you will lose in the long term. >> never sit and think the same tactics you're utilizing could be used against you in a very short period of time. what is interesting about this is that he believes, joe biden
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believes that his potential voters don't care about this issue. that they don't care about the response, that he is not going to have to answer the question. if he shrugs his shoulders, it doesn't matter. i would love to see polling on that. sometimes polling is not accurate. i would love to see some people on the fence or people inclined by joe biden are bothered by the elitism comes through here. that is outrageous. that is one thing he has done. to the national media credit, they asked multiple times he is not answering it. when people are about to make a big decision on election day who to vote for i think voters care. will it sway their votes the fact he won't answer questions about that. that remains to be seen. will: i don't know whether they do care but they should care. we'll pick it up throughout the show. beginning fox news alert. one person is killed after
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gunfire breaks outdueling rallies in denver. the authorities say the victim was part of a pro-police rally which was meant by counterprotesters. police were on the scene ready to respond. >> there was a large presence because we had two groups with opposing views. we know that can always get very tense. there is always potential for violence a local news station private security guard is now in custody. police say the security guard does not have any affiliation with antifa. house speaker nancy pelosi and some senate republicans are slamming the trump administration latest stimulus deal stalling talks. pelosi says the bill was insufficient, saying it is one step forward, two steps back. the gop senators are arguing that the price tag is just too high. treasury secretary steve mnuchin put forward a $1.8 trillion last week. a 200 billion-dollar increase from the previous proposal. here we go. i have to read this, to college
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football. oklahoma takes down texas in a historic red river showdown with four overtimes. >> rattler, again the throw, steps up to the pocket. throws on the run. oh. will: sooners nailing a touchdown in over time. trey brown intercepted sam ehlinger. they won, 53-45. what do you want to do. next story clemson will keep the number one spot after dominating miami. final score, 42-17. by the way, alabama outlasted ole' miss in the highest score in sec history, 63-48. florida gators were not so lucky. texas a&m upset florida in the final seconds winning 41-38. if i was an aggie fan, gig em,
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but i am not. i love seeing fans in the stands. people going nuts. real audio of reaction to people. the way it should be. pete: coming up the confirmation of amy coney barrett begins tomorrow. we'll have wall-to-wall coverage. where she will likely face another round of attacks like she did in 2017. >> the conclusion one draws is that the dogma lives loudly within you. that's of concern. >> do you consider yourself an orthodox catholic? pete: our next guest is a reverend who shays these kind of attacks have no place in political debate. ♪.
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♪. pete: welcome back, w her supreme court cone firmmation hearing set for tomorrow many anticipate another round of attacks on judge amy coney barrett and her faith. >> the conclusion one draws is that the dogma lives loudly within you. that's of concern. >> do you consider yourself an orthodox catholic? >> shouldn't you sit down with her first before deciding. >> she made it very clear with support for her groups against women's reproductionproductive. >> you make a cities whether a woman will have the right to control her own body. the issue is whether she could have be fair and objective. pete: those clips are from 2017 and now. attacks on her christian beliefs and membership in charismatic christian community represents
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rank religious bigotry that has no place in our public life. joining me reverend eugene river iii. director of seymour church and policy studies. thankthank you for being with us morning. you heard what they say in the past and on cable news. what do you anticipate? >> i anticipate bigotry, unfairness, the quote from vice president biden is unacceptable. there is a philosophic and intellectual bigotry and i'm particularly, as a descendant of slaves i'm particularly sensitive to the issue of unjustly persecuting a person in the united states for their religious convictions, their faith. this must be philosophically, politically, morally objected to
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and the argument for conservatives and people of faith must be conducted at the highest intellectual level. we've got to oppose this idealogical and philosophic bigotry, fighting smarter, not harder. no, no, it's on and we have to engage it in a smart way. jesus make as quick point. he says, i send you out as sheep in the midst of wolves. be wise as serpents, harmless as doves. we must articulate the religious principle, freedom of conscience, surrendering no ground. the black churches, particularly the black pentecostal churches, which are hundreds of millions around the world, this sister represents the convictions, reasonable, philosophically defensible positions of millions of people around the world and we must stand with her, not blinking, being shrewd, smart,
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not sounding like xenophobic fundamentalists but as people who have marined position which we will defend. as we defend our system. pete: reverend, it's on, well-said. how are we as nation, founded and grounded in faith, how are we still at a point having faith, believing in it strongly become as negative in a confirmation hearing? >> well, two things, as you know, much of the political discourse, frankly, in the democratic party is driven by bicoastal elites who frankly have contempt for black people amount lot, white liberals have contempt for poor black people and our faith. the same thing for regular americans. it is the bicoastal elites that think they're better than everybody, martha vineyard's, aspen crowd, who sit high, look low on people.
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we'll engage their crowd because they need to be displaced philosophically and intellectually. pete: well-said. waiting on my invite to davos. reverend eugene rivers. god blows you. >> god bless you, my brother. god bless you. pete: coming up 300 police officers will be recognized for their service in our nation. our next guest says it is critical for how hard these officers work for americans. more how you can enjoy the memorial service after the break , include the best in entertainment, and offer plans to mix and match starting at $35. plus, get two samsung galaxy s20 fe 5g phones for $200 when you switch. only at verizon. >> tech: every customer has their own safelite story. this couple was on a camping trip... ...when their windshield got a chip. they drove to safelite for a same-day repair. and with their insurance, it was no cost to them. >> woman: really? >> tech: that's service you can trust.
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resume outdoor worship services with more than 100 people. the judge says city's support for ongoing protests suggest that it favors some large gatherings than others. mayor muriel bowser appeared at the one of those gathers during the height of the lockdown in june. join agroing list of businesses to close amid the pandemic. after nearly one one years the roosevelt hotel will close its doors for good. the reuters reports it will shut down the operations at the end of the month, citing losses from low occupancy. pete: i have stayed there. police are being honored for their service to go our nation. the national law enforcement memorial and museum hosting a weekend of remembrance to recognize those heroes a a long with more than 170 fallen officers. will: here with more the ceo of the national law enforcement memorial fund is here today.
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marsha, what are you doing as part of this memorial fund and this demonstration to help draw attention to the dangers in law enforcement. >> good morning and greetings from washington, d.c. this is a big weekend for us at the museum and the memorial. we're spending the weekend remembering the fallen and honoring our law enforcement. we started yesterday with a 5-k, usually held in washington. this year it was held virtually. we surpassed every number that we have done in prior years from attendance to fund-raising, to teams to states that were participating, which really showed a lot of message around the country that's coming to us from our nation's states. supporting law enforcement. we're moving into a morning memorial service this morning. each year on may 13th we
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hold a candlelight vigil on, in the nation's capitol on the mall. we read the names of all the fallen officers the year before. unfortunately this year we were unable to have that ceremony in washington. so today we're taking advantage of gathering in washington covidly distanced. it is a small ceremony, it will be streaming live on facebook. we will read all 307 names of fallen officers that were engraved on the wall in april of this past year. pete: marsha, i know considering what police are up against right now. it takes that much more significance. you do it with a heavy heart when you see the numbers. why is it so important to remind the public to read these names? >> it is our mission. we have been, we have been challenged by congress to make
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sure these names of these fallen officers are never forgotten and that is why we exist. that is why the memorial exists in washington, d.c., and we are the only living memorial in washington and so the importance is, is not just to remember those who have fallen but let's also take a moment today, and remember all of the men and women who woke up this morning and left their families to go out and to protect us all so that we can live in communities that are safe. will: yes, marsha, that is exactly well-put. it is not just a memorial for those who made the sacrifice but the risks associated. when we scrutinize every law enforcement interaction today the risks they're taking on every day. thank you so much for your time this morning, marsha. >> thank you for having me. will: watch the memorial service and a special reading of the name live on the national law enforcement officers memorial fund on the facebook page at 10:00 a.m. eastern. thank you. president trump is making a
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return to the campaign trail this week starting with a rally in florida tomorrow. former florida attorney general pam bondi joins us next with what we can expect. ♪ election... (fisherman vo) how do i register to vote? hmm!.. hmm!.. hmm!.. (woman on porch vo) can we vote by mail here? (grandma vo) you'll be safe, right? (daughter vo) yes! (four girls vo) the polls! voted! (grandma vo) go out and vote! it's so important! (man at poll vo) woo! (grandma vo) it's the most important thing you can do!
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♪. >> oh, yeah! oh, my gosh. oh, my gosh. that is so awesome. ! ♪. jedediah: adorable. it is your shot of the morning. a group of families in boston showing appreciation for their delivery driver with this amazing surprise. pete: the family dressing their kids up as mini ups drivers, even their dogs. will: imagine ups drivers don't get enough love. one much the moms shared the facebook because they have become close from kevin during quarantine as he gives them essentials with a smile. jedediah: look at that dog. i love it. absolutely. okay. after making his first in-person public appearance since his covid diagnosis president trump
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is eager to return to the campaign trail. pete: tomorrow the president returns to the all-important state of florida where he will kick off a full week of campaign events starting in the sunshine state. will: here what we can expect to see, former florida attorney general, women for trump co-chair. it's pam bondi. good morning, pam. >> good morning. will: tell us about the busy week the president has scheduled. i know he has three events starting with florida. what can we expect from the president. >> he does. he has so many events in florida and around the country. get ready to see president trump coming to an airport near you. he is all over the country. he will be in florida multiple, multiple times because florida not only is his home state but he knows how very important florida is to the entire country will: pam i have to ask you real quick because another part of reaching, these rallies are huge for him. they will continue to be. no doubt he is crisscrossing the country. hard to compete with the amount of eyeballs come with a debate.
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you were part of his debate prep last time. do you have an update where we are on him standing toe-to-toe with joe biden the next couple weeks? >> i was part of the vice president's debate prep. pete: sorry. >> the president wants, of course he wants to debate joe biden. he wants to debate him in person that is it what a debate is all about. not looking at a teleprompter. not reading cue cards which is what joe bide roane would be doing from his basement. we've seen what he has done with other things. he has done. you've seen that at the, the things he held where they were, the questions were set up and he was reading the scripted answers? that is horrible! that should not be done. we cannot trust him to debate over a video. so the president will go out there to reach the american people, himself on friday. he was on with rush limbaugh. i think it was the largest radio rally ever. he is back. he is back stronger than ever. he will be all over this country speaking to hundreds of thousands of people.
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jedediah: pam, we've seen that one of the key issues that voters care about is the issue of law and order. florida police chiefs association made first-ever presidential endorsement backing president trump. you were there for the announcement. give us your reaction tock there, what it was like to be there in person and also to the announcement in general. >> jedediah, it was great. these, one of the officers came up to me said he was very somber and he said our country will be lost without president trump. and that's so correct. that's why, that's why, why joe biden can't name one single police organization who endorsed him. president trump has over 30 law enforcement organizations who have endorsed him including, here is just a few for example, jed. the nation's largest police union, the fraternal order of police, with 355,000 officers. the national association of
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police, 241,000 sworn officers. the union of police associationses 11000. new york, police benevolent association with 24,000. and then in florida, we have the florida police benevolent association, 30,000 officers. and friday, the florida police chiefs association. so incredible amount of support from police because they know who is going to protect them and the country knows who is going to keep them safe. that's donald trump. will: pam in fact, i think we have a list of endorsements all the police organizations that endorsed the president trump. i don't a story on a "fox & friends," a lifelong democrat, a sheriff, who shifted over to endorse president trump. i've seen polling on this, pam. i don't know, i'm genuinely asking you has law and order remained a top issue for voters out there? do you think one that is swaying people. you had pa rally where that was
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the theme law and order on the white house lawn but is it one that is moving non-committed and independent voters? >> i can only tell you from my experience being all over this country for the president and in many swing states and throughout florida. people want to be safe. we talk about all these other very crucial elements for the race, the economy, the supreme court, none of that works if we're not safe. people get that they understand that. they're looking at what's going on in seattle. they're watching what's happening in wisconsin. they're watching what's happening in new york city. and people want to be safe and they understand just like there is officers down in miami on friday. they all understand how important it is to have president trump reelected. he will not defund them like joe biden will do. he will not reimagine police
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like joe biden will do. which means defunding them, we all know this. pete with his great military career, pete knows as well first-hand that the great men and women of our military, all of our first-responders are supporting president trump. so i think that is going to make a big difference in this race. as you said. undecided voters, they really care about their safety. it is not just law and order. it is being safe. so they can go to church today. so they can go to their jobs. so they can take their kids to school, jeb. pete: take it for granted until its not there. until the fragility the security is not there. pam bondi, co-chair of women for trump. from florida. thank you so much for your time. >> thank you. pete: turning to a few additional headlines this sunday morning. shoplifting mobs are terrorizing new york city luxury retailers, stealing tens of thousands of dollars worth of merchandise. the "new york post" reported that the disturbing pattern
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began in late may and continues on a weekly basis as stores being labeled racist if they don't try to stop it. in july two dozen people rob ad high-end store out of $1.5 million in designer clothes. a major setback for simon cowell. the "america's got talent" judge will reportedly remain back ridden from surgery for six months. he broke his back in three places falling off a an electric bike. he is resting at his home in malibu with round-the-clock care. we wish him the best. a frustrated bride to be could not wait any longer to say i do. >> hi, guys, i'm finally making him commit. we're getting married now or like it is over. whoo, do it. pete: the bride ambushing her fiance while he was working at
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target, giving him a now or never ultimatum. she brought along a pastor and a bridesmaid, so they could exchange their vows right then and there. apparently been engaged foretwo years but have not set a wedding date. we do not know if the couple went through with it. but we're work hard to find out because america deserves to know. this. so was it a combination of covid but more so he just got massive cold feet. i'm coming to target in a dress. will: not a shotgun wedding and certainly a wedding unduress. i give her credit, she doesn't care if it is in the aisles of target. she is getting it done, jedediah. jedediah: that is a woman i would love to ininterview. she knows how to get it done. she came prepared with a dress with all the people necessary to happen. that guy is in some trouble. rick reichmuth, what do you
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think? rick, do you think that is a good idea? have you ever seen a ambush quite so prepared? rick: i have so many thoughts about this. pete: he should run. he should run. will: scrap the weather. rick: that's the main one. i hope he is gone. i'm sure she is lovely and could not know anything about her. maybe fully they should be together, i have no idea, i have no idea but run. guys, here you go. here is your temps as you wake up this morning. really feels like summer across a lot of the south. delta happened. things are calm across the south. it will remain that way a lot ofth week, which is good news. temps won't be incredibly cold behind this you see moisture across parts of the central mid-atlantic, across the tennessee valley where the moisture was. still there. it will move up into the mid-atlantic into the northeast. florida, you see spotty showers at times from this. a lot of the rain moving into
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the far pacific northwest. snow, much cooler air coming in. we were into the 80s across montana. you have some snow. across parts of the southwest. not any moisture penetrating four corners of california. today's fire threat is across the lower front range where we'll see very strong winds that threat for fire continuing again today. all right. guys. there you go. will: good stuff, thanks, rick. wait until you hear this story. yelp, the business review site, is going to start flagging businesses accused of quote, racist behavior. could this run the risk of harming businesses barraged by false accusations? david webb is here with his take next. (announcer) carvana's had a lot of firsts.
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the site is planning to alert users of restaurants and companies with quote resounding evidence of racist actions. by link to a credible news article so consumers can learn more about the accusations here to discuss is fox news contributor david webb. let me start with an open question. how do you think this will go? >> it won't go well over all, in plain business sense, forget race related issues for the moment, it won't go over well because too often people don't want to do anything more than go out and eat a meal, just like they want to go to a baseball game. if this becomes part of it, then yelp is going to lose. will: david, strike mes also, how do you protect, linking to a credible news source, how do you protect against verifiable complaints? sometimes accusations of racism often are subjective in interpretation. by the way, david what is the definition of racism because it seems to be an evolving scale as well? >> it's a moving target and
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there are also false claims out there. we've seen the fakery of a rachel dolezal or a sean king. we had recent stories come out people who fake hate crimes. this becomes a mess. yelp is making a bad business decision but looking at their management structure, looking at the various people, they have tweeted about issues related to race and what we're doing, we're creating an environment where your business is subject to the interpretation of someone else. you mentioned credible news sources, who is the credible news source and who determines that it is an actual verified story is important but beyond that, when is it, when is it a case of you're using discrimination to prove you're not discriminating for instance on a facebook? you can talking about yelp, facebook has buy black friday. what about women-owned businesses, do you have something william owned
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businesses very as you mail-owned businesses? what if you have both? what if it is a mixed race theme? this is dangerous when it comes to the cultural issues. connell: dangerous because accusation of race i am is used as weapon, an ever expanding weapon. you wonder how this is accuse used on yelp. our top priority to ensure the trust and safety of our community to provide users of reliable content toe inform spending decision and whether they will be welcome and safe at particular business. david, everyone, you, me, everyone wants to do away with racism to the best we accomplish, what is yelp, what is the real motivation here? is that their motivation? is it fear? is it profit? what is motivating yelp to take this step. >> bad virtue signaling. if you have a concern, remove your business at yelp. it is easy to do. you don't have to put up with it. will: looking more like east
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germany where you tell on your neighbor, whether or not the thing you're telling on isn't the point. the point is to tell on your neighbor. thanks so much for your time. >> thanks, will. will: up next, want to make money without leaving your couch? kurt the cyberguy breaks down how to get extra cashing without ever having to leave your home. ♪.
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cyberguy." kurt, you have got to be warned i will be taking some notes here. i'm taking this very seriously. the first way you say, the first way you say, to make that cash from home sell your old tech. i have a few phones that could fit the bill. tell us. how do we do it? >> good morning, jedediah. most people do, average american has just shy of $200 worth of old tech laying around their house. go on a scavenger hunt today. look for old phones you're not using anymore. tablets, games, other cds, dvds, there are sites like declutter. declouter without the e at the end. they will pay a third more, this coming week we expect to see new iphones. new phones hitting big. do i trade in my phone. this is usually about a third better value to let declutr by
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your phone. they have done six million transactions. it is an easy way to find cash sitting around the house. jedediah: sounds good to me. your number to is rent your car to others. >> you know real good for people who have more than one car or are not using their car on a regular basis. toro, you probably heard of, a website people can rent the car. car makes such as jeep wrangler, that is one of the highest yielding cars that you can put on that site. they pick up the insurance for you. they handle a lot of the risk. you choose who you want to rent to. but that will cover about 2 1/2 times the car paint on a jeep wrangler. you have a tesla? that is also a sharp vehicle to put up on their also. jedediah: uh-huh. this next one is a great idea, rent unused space for parking and stoushrage. >> so again you want to be really, be smart about who you're renting to and stay in
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control of that. neighbor.com is a website you can go to. if you have extra space in your garage, a basement, if you have driveway space to allow someone to park there. neighbor.com lets you list it there you set the terms. you have to be aware when you get out of that, so, you don't want them coming and going from your house constantly. but an easy way to make money. jedediah: now the final one, curt, i know i can do because it says get paid for your opinion. >> super easy. recent, for example, focus group, find focus groups.com. they list a whole bunch of focus groups. if you wanted to answer anything about social media for an hour 1/2. they paid $175 for to you go do this. find things you have a genuine interest in. have fun with it, get some cash in the bank. smug mug, if you want to sell photos from the old vacations, go to cyber guy.com.
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sign up for my newsletter. i will tell you how to sign up forethose things and erase yourself. jedediah: thank you, kurt, for your time and how you help us make the extra cash. more "fox & friends" coming up >> tech: every customer has their own safelite story. this couple was on a camping trip... ...when their windshield got a chip. they drove to safelite for a same-day repair. and with their insurance, it was no cost to them. >> woman: really? >> tech: that's service you can trust. >> singers: ♪ safelite repair, safelite replace. ♪
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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. ♪. will: good sunday morning to you here on "fox & friends." it is will cain, jedediah bila and pete hegseth. welcoming you into our show on this great sunday. good morning, jedediah. jedediah: good morning to you. doesn't feel like a sunday to me. i don't know. you ever wake up feel like you're on the wrong day? i feel like i'm on saturday. i had so much fun yesterday with you guys, i want a repeat. pete: 6:00 hour of saturday is like our monday.
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by the middle of the show we're on tuesday. during the break it is wednesday. we're basically on thursday of our week. will: you don't have to tell me. what kind of answers do do i get when i invite a buddy up for a beer on monday? pete: reverse week. i go to bed at eight a lot now, which is maybe a little different than most people. if they could program activities a little earlier for us weekend morning show hosts we would appreciate it. good morning to everyone that is here. 7:00 on the east coast. probably 6:00 where you are. i'm guessing we got a lot of central time viewers. we appreciate you being here. the confirmation hearings for president trump's supreme court nominee, you will watch it all week. we've been waiting for it. they start tomorrow. judge amy coney barrett will face hours of questions on various topics including, you know this one's coming, abortion and health care. david spont live at the supreme court with what we can expect this week. david, good morning. reporter: good morning.
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will be a busy week here at the supreme court. the justices will hear cases. as you mentioned across the street at the capitol the confirmation hearing for amy coney barrett. republicans want to transform her from judge amy coney barrett to justice amy coney barrett as soon as possible. she will be the fifth woman to sit on the high court if confirmed. republicans if they want to get this done. president trump wants her on the bench before election day to hear several important cases. democrats furious about the nomination arguing the president and majority leader mitch mcconnell rushing the process before the election. >> not constitutional what they're doing. should focus on what is happening right now. the only action going on is this court being packed now by the republicans. after the vote is already begun. i'm going to stay focused on it so we don't take our eyes off the ball here. reporter: meanwhile vice president mike pence
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defending judge barrett over attacks on her catholic faith. listen to this. >> in america we cherish the freedom of religion of every american of every faith. and these attacks on judge barrett's faith got to stop. judges amy coney barrett will be justice amy coney barrett. reporter: right now some of the big topics and important topics we'll hear this week at the con officialmation hearing. her stance on abortion. her stance on health care. gun rights and immigration. now the issue of health care the affordable care act also known as obamacare, the justices, the eight justices potentially nine, if barrett is confirmed will actually hear about this issue one week after the election. judge barrett said in the past she is anti-the affordable care act. as you know president trump put out his health care plan just a few weeks ago. but that hearing kicks off tomorrow on capitol hill. back to you. will: david, thank you for that.
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we'll come back to amy coney barrett in just a moment. i want to clear up one thing in that report from david you heard a clip from joe biden describing republicans push for amy coney barrett nomination as quote unconstitutional, jibing that as court packing. that is blatant manipulation. that is not true. it is not court packing. it is not the definition of court packing. republicans have the absolute constitutional authority to push judge barrett's nomination forward. joe biden knows that. making it a blatant lie. pete: reading my mind, will. reading my mind. will: back to amy coney barrett, issues coming upper eugene rivers, director of seymour institute of black churches an policy studies was on with pete earlier today. here is what he said about the issues of abortion and faith. >> as a descendant of slaves, i'm sensitive to the issue unjustly persecuting a person in the united states for their
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religious convictions, their faith. this must be philosophically, politically, morally objected to. this sister represents the convictions, the reasonable philosophical, defensible positions of millions of people around the world and we must stand with her. will: yeah the reverend was fantastic. we didn't just have him on because today is also clergy appreciation day. in case you didn't know that. that is another reason why that is so fantastic. will, glad you brought that up. that it is unconstitution is flat-out true. he said that amy coney barrett is against the affordable care act. that she doesn't believe aspects of it are constitutional, forcing people to mandates to purchase things. you would say ruth bader ginsburg saying i don't like the law, i will strike it down. amy coney barrett says it is
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unconstitutional i may strike it down. look for abortion to be a big issue. also health care. i believe democrats believe that is political wedge for them. speaking about another issue talked a lot on the trail, the issue of energy, issue of energy independence and fracking. americans very much appreciate the fact we're not dependent on middle east earn sources of oil after being entangled there because of desk decades and decades of that reliance. there is an energy renaissance in our country, which brought a great deal of middle class jobs that raised people. the president has been an advocate time and time again. all of the above. we want to unleash the energy renaissance in america. joe biden who is captured by the environmental class has been all over the map on that. where is he on fracking? where is he not on fracking. yesterday in erie, pennsylvania, he was in a modest socially distanced event. here is what joe biden said about fracking. in this clip, is he for or
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against it. we'll find out. >> you know the fact is every time the word climate change comes up donald trump thinks hoax. every time it comes up i think jobs. let me be clear. no matter how many lies he tells i am not, not, not, not banning fracking, period. [applause] jedediah: yeah, so this is another key issue where he has been on both sides of the fence because he is trying to appease several aspects of his audience at the same time and that doesn't work. the one thing i will say about the president, he has been very consistent. people like consistency because they know when they step into a voting booth they feel secure in what actually voting for. look at a little bit after flash back montage of joe biden and kamala harris on fracking. see how it differs what you heard from joe biden this now. >> what about saying stopping fracking and -- >> yes, yes. new pipelines, exactly. no more new fracking. >> would there be any place for
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fossil fuels including coal and fracking in a biden administration. >> no. we would work it out. make sure it is eliminated, and no more subsidies for either one of those. kiddo, take a look. you don't have to agree, i want you to look in my eyes. i guarranty you, i guarranty you, we're going to end fossil fuels. >> no question i'm in favor of banning fracking. [applause] will: so, jedediah i sense a little bit of inconsistency. you asked what we would see. you know what we thought. everyone including "saturday night live." watch this. >> if anyone should be talking about fracking it is my guy, joe biden. joe biden fracks in had is free time. joe biden will frack you so good pennsylvania. while i personally wanted to ban fracking, now that i know pennsylvania loves it, i want to
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say this, you guys can bet on your wawa cheesesteak and all the water in the schuylkill river, biden ain't banning fracking. go wiggle. will: well-done. how do you reconcile the issue. will, i say look me in the eyes, look me in the eyes, i will get rid of it, it is gone, fracking is gone. how do you reconcile that, i will not, not, not, not ban fracking? you reconcile it through political pandering. that is what it is. ultimately i need to get elected in pennsylvania, i need what i need to say now. if the trump campaign does it correct. you go to the workers in those industries, do you really believe he won't ban fracking? look what he said. there are a lot of ads in those states making statements. voters are smarter than that, jed. jedediah: a quick note, seven counting on people voting against president trump. he doesn't need them, he feels, they're not going to be inspired to vote for me. he knows that he knows there is
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not a lot of energy. be honest on the left, there is not growing burgeoning enthusiasm for joe biden but he is counting on saying well, i don't like president trump. i don't like the way he approaches issues. i don't like the approach. i will vote against him. joe biden feels he can get away with that and feels he will not be challenged. most every media reporter should be on this, what is going on here? what do you stand for. you said this in 2019. you're saying this one now, which is it so voters know what they're voting for? they don't do that. he asks them once, if he give as meandering answer and he knows that. it is right he can in many respects he can get away with it, rather than voting against, voting for. pete: maybe he wants to frack the court. you combine the two, people understand how it all makes no sense. look me in the ice, look me in the icy will do headlines right now. starting with an extreme weather alert. georgia slammed by strong storms
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as remnants of delta head north. heavy rains flood the atlanta highway with multiple tornado warnings with this one spotted in walton county. this tore a homeless shelter's room off. in louisiana, creole seeing heavy flooding as delta made landfall in a hurricane. people in lake charles driving boats through the flooded streets. there are more than 350,000 power out ofages statewide. the fbi joining the investigation into the alleged, alleged hack of steve scully's twitter account. c-span political editor was set to moderate this week's presidential debate before it was canceled last thursday. a tweet was sent from his account to former white house communications director anthony scaramucci, asking and i quote, should i respond toe trump? it was delete ad short time later. scully shamelessly denies sending the post or attempting to send a dm that accidentally
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went out. now he says he was hacked. who believers him? i don't know. some companies take coffee, well, very seriously. >> put that coffee down! coffee is for closers only. will: a dutch financial group says companies should pay for coffee, even when employees are working from home. the national institute for budget information, that is an interesting organization, workers should be reimbursed for things like coffee, toilet paper and energy bills as they struggle to make ends meet during cove cover and those are your headlines. interesting idea, if you're at home, you're k-cup should be paid for by the company. should be a perk, dave. will: right on. writeoff. what is a writeoff. pete: i don't know. they know. they're the ones writing it off. pete: if you know the quote, you watch a lot of "seinfeld." this
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guy is on his game. jedediah: pay for the coffee two of you, pay for my celery juice. celery is getting expensive. this is proposal i get behind. celery is expensive. good for but you can go bankrupt. it is so cute that you think i have a yard. i love it. all right. still ahead as students across the country learn from home, a new report in the "atlantic" says schools are not super spreaders for the virus. why they say fears may have been overblown and new data backing their case up. that's next. ♪
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♪. >> if you're asking whether i take my faith seriously and i'm a faithful catholic i am although i would stress my personal church affiliation or my religious belief would not bear on the discharge of my duties as a judge. jedediah: judge amy coney barrett's faith and her pro-life views are set to be a major focus as her confirmation hearing kicks off tomorrow. here what we can expect, executive director of democrats for life of mercuries tin day. kristin, welcome to the show. what do you think when it comes to abortion and amy coney barrett's faith in particular? >> i think we'll see a a lot pushback from the abortion rights side. it will be the number one issue at the hearings. it is going to be pushed very hard. jedediah: now this is what, take a look what amy coney barrett said when it came to roe v. wade. this is from 2016 speech prior
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to becoming a federal judge. quote, i don't think the court case roe's court holding woman ace right to abortion would change, but the question whether people can get very late-term abortions, how many restrictions can be put on clinics i think that will change. what about that statement do you think will be zeroed in on senators who will be grilling her this week? >> i think the over all concern that roe v. wade will be overturned and something pro-life democrats support but also on, we also support the restrictions on abortion and regulation of abortion to at least make it safe for women. i do think that those things will be discussed and especially with in colorado, we have prop 115 being trying to pass in colorado right now which is ban abortion after 22 weeks. so it will be a huge discussion and huge debate over this next two weeks. jedediah: yeah you know, kristin, what i always find baffling about this, people zero
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in on her personal faith and personal opinions, regardless what they are, and she has been public about her faith and public about her opinions, that shouldn't matter. what should be asked is how would you rule? so look at her rulings. why is there lack of attention to how she would actually rule and more attention placed on her personal feelings? does that say something how democrats view the lens of the supreme court and what that position should mean? >> unfortunately the democratic party has become so obsessed with abortion and abortion extremism and really eliminating all regulations governing abortions. if we look at personal positions of abortion, my own senator tim kaine he is personally pro-life and he doesn't vote that way. we have a lot of democrats who shea they are personally pro-life and don't vote that way. if we judge people on their personal positions we need to push back against some democrats, including joe biden himself who says that he is a catholic and believes that you know, in the pro-life view as a
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catholic. jedediah: right. yeah. kristen, unfortunately we're out the time. thanks for bringing up a great point and joining us. >> thank you. >> coming up president trump looking ahead to a big week of campaign events after giving this update to dr. marc siegel. president trump: i know there is a danger but i can't be somebody who goes into a basement and hides in a basement for the rest of my life. i'm running a country, the greatest country in the world. jedediah: dr. siegel on that next. i'm making sandwiches! on king's hawaiian bread!
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yum! king's hawaiian. i remember herwho was because she had a bracelet that had the names of her children. she asked me, 'doctor, am i going to be okay?' and i could not give her the answer that i wanted to give her. there is no excuse for why we don't have this under control at this point. joe biden listens to medical experts. he actually has a plan that does the things that we should have been doing many months ago. and joe biden is not going to let his ego get in the way of fighting the disease. ff pac is responsible for the content of this ad. car vending machines and buying a car 100% online.vented now we've created a brand new way for you to sell your car. whether it's a year old or a few years old, we want to buy your car. so go to carvana and enter your license plate, answer a few questions, and our techno-wizardry calculates your car's value and gives you a real offer in seconds. when you're ready, we'll come to you, pay you on the spot, and pick up your car.
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sure it's secure. and even if the power goes down, your connection doesn't. so how do i do this? you don't do this. we do this, together. bounce forward, with comcast business. ♪. pete: time now for the news by the numbers. first, $2.5 million. that is how much a british woman, wrong graphic, we'll get to that in a moment, a british
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woman stuffed into five suitcases while traveling into a london airport. that is not the suitcase. they arrested her before she pot on to a flight in dubai. now we'll go to the shark story. that is how much this shark weighed. dubbed the queen of the ocean. they spotted the massive 350-year-old shark off canada's court. i didn't know they lived for 50 years. that should be the number. finally $250, that is how much this luxury pool float will set you back. versace inner tube is covered in the designer's signature print. already sold out online. sorry, will. you will have to wait. will: sign of a declining civilization. by the way sharks live a long time. i think longer than 50 years. we should look that up. pete: i will do it at the break. will: president trump at the white house yesterday for his first public event since testing
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positive for covid-19 last week, telling the crowd he feels great. he talked to dr. siegel about his recovery to allow him to get back on the campaign trail. president trump: as soon as i felt something, i'm thinking about it, i see what is going on, i have a lot of people are around me, even though there is tremendous testing but a lot of people are around me. so i think about it. i know there is a danger but i can't be somebody that goes into a basement and hides for in the basement the rest of my life. i'm running a country, the greatest country in the world. will: i misspoke, he tested positive last week, not last year. you know that. fox news medical contributor dr. marc siegel is back with me. i'm glad your back. important things to get into. i found it fascinating. the president's doctor says it is good for him to get back out there. he is not transmissible. the cdc kind of put him on the same timeline. what are we looking at?
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is there any number you can count on to be safe to get back out there the president included? >> that is an excellent question. the guidelines the cdc put out 10 days from the onset of symptoms. they believe you can get back to circulate without being contagious, that is based on multiple studies and analysis. that is that. there is another thing not talked about enough. when he was in the hospital and since, he had testing done most of us don't have, where they look at viral replication. how much virus do you have? it is called the viral load? how much is it alive? that is really important because you can continue to have genetic particles testing and come up positive that way for a while afterwards but this is live, virus contagious particles are being tested there. he is not showing that to his doctor, dr. con any, but cdc guidelines say it is very unlikely he will be contagious. will: that is morn to because we
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crystallize our numbers in our head of 14 days. that is not neat and clean. i think this is incredibly important. this is from the @tan lick. i will read the headline. schools are not superspreader. fears from the summer appear have been overblown. here a quote on the article. data from 200,000 kids in 47 states, last week of september, reveal infection, .0.13% and .1.3% infections, be or two .2 infectious over two weeks a group of 1000 staff. even high-risk areas, students are well under half a percent. dr. siegel you talked to president trump about this, about opening schools. in fact let's listen to what he had to say to you in that first on-camera interview about these infection rates and schools. president trump: that's one thing you learn, this is a
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contagious disease and generally you get better from it. but we also have medicines that will help a lot. if you look at mortality rate i think it is up 95, or 85% mark. i think you've seen that. you pointed it out to me, what we're doing now with the medicines and all of the things is incredible you know, especially younger people. you look, i wish they would open schools. i hope they open schools. some of the states are closed. the cure is worse than the problem itself in many cases. it is a terrible thing. will: dr. siegel, the president, the data, even "the atlantic" it is time to open schools, is it not? >> yeah, that is a very important statement he made there and when you consider, according to education week last month, 100 of our top school districts, will, had 75% of the students going online. the damage according to cms administrator verma is very high. 22% decrease in immunizations. 44% decrease in early childhood
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development analysis. 77% increase in dental work of children largely because they're not in schools. a new study came out of brown university shows only one in a thousand children actually get infected from covid-19 about one in 200,000 teachers way less than they were expecting. it is not spreading amongst schools and teachers nearly as much as anticipated, which would lead to the conclusion a lot more damage is occurring from keeping kids out of school than if they were there. will: right, right. we hear so much about follow the science. why not follow the science. this is also in the news, dr. siegel. it wasn't something we talked about in the preinterview i know you're good too talk about this, the w.h.o., the world health organization is now saying shutdowns are not the right mechanism to fighting covid-19. shutdowns after what are we looking at now, six months essentially of embracing shutdowns. now is not the tool recommended for fighting coronavirus.
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>> yeah, will, i agree where the w.h.o. is coming out now, i'll tell you why. i think people out there need to understand, physical distancing, masking, disinfecting, washing your hands, that is the primarily tool as we wait for a vaccine. now we're hearing about antibodies, monoclonal antibodies from the president and other people may be an effective bridge but the reason shutdowns don't work because of all the other damage occurs. people continue to spread the virus regardless. i need people to understand, the reason we sealockdowns almost punitive on behalf of governments saying hey, we don't believe you can do this on your own. we don't believe you can distance on your own. we don't believe you will wear a mask, so we'll lock you down. enormous damage economically, mentally, physically. i agree with the w.h.o. will: seems quite important, w.h.o. saying no more lockdowns. data showing schools are not super spreaders. might be time to come to our
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senses. you did telemedicine with the president a little bit tonight on tucker's show. thank you for your time. >> welcome to "fox & friends." will. doing a great job. great to be on with you. will: thank you so much. coming up joe biden facing backlash over this comment to reporters about back the court. >> don't voters deserve to know? >> no they don't. i will not play his game. he would love me to talk about, i already said something on packing the court, he would love that to be the discussion. instead of what he is doing now. will: former governor mike huckabee sounds off on that dodge next. nge juice. now no fruit is forbidden. nexium 24hr stops acid before it starts for all-day, all-night protection. can you imagine 24 hours without heartburn?
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simparica trio. ♪. >> sir i've got to ask you about pack the court and i know that -- >> sure. >> you said yesterday you weren't going to answer the question until after the election but this did the number one thing i've been asked about viewers in the past couple days. >> you've been asked by viewers who are probably republicans who don't want me continuing to talk about what they're doing to the court right now. >> don't the voters deserve to know. >> no they don't. i will not play his game. he would love me to talk about, i already said something on packing court. he would love that to be the discussion. instead of what he is doing now. will: he already said something about packing the court. we have to check the tape to see what that was, if it ever was. let's bring in someone you do deserve this morning, mike huckabee, fox news contributor, former arkansas governor, author of the three cs that made america great. governor, good morning thanks for being here.
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a presidential candidate on the eve of an election saying you the voter do not deserve to know my position whether we should add supreme court justices. your take? >> pete, this is pretty bizarre. like going to the car dealership to buy a new car and car salesman says, look, i'm going to tell you what this car is going to cost after you sign the papers and take out the loan without an amount on it. i will fill that in later. let me ask you, is there anybody watching today who would do that? no. because nobody is that stupid. because is anybody stupid enough to vote for a guy who tells you will not tell you what i'm going to do until after you vote for me, get me in office, good luck with the results. this is an insane answer. i hope the press will press him on this, force him to take a stand. will: yeah i think the only rebuttal of that, governor is the answer he will pack the court. that is why he is not answering the question. >> of course. will: let's stick with what joe biden is saying, governor.
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this is, we'll need you to interpret this be a constitutional interpreter here if you can. he is saying what conservatives republicans are doing naming amy coney barrett is in fact unconstitutional. listen to this. >> only court packing going on right now is going own with the republicans packing the court now. it is not constitutional what they're doing. the fact is that the only packing going on is this court is being packed now by the republicans after the vote is already begun. i'm going to stay focused on it so we don't take our eyes off the ball. will: so is it unconstitutional? is it packing the court what republicans are doing, governor? >> of course it isn't. joe might want to read the constitution sometime. if he were god forbid be elected he would know he would be elected for a full four-year term, even when the voting starts for the next term he have doesn't cease to be president. none of his powers are taken
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away. that is explicitly clear in the constitution. ruth bader ginsburg understood that. she said that. he might want to read some of the things both in the constitution been said about it by people he claims to believe in and trust. jedediah: you know, got a third biden comment for you. third time is the charm, governor, where he warns of potential chick cainerry at polling stations. this is him on in pennsylvania. >> make sure you vote because the only way we lose this chick chick cainry going on in polling places. not a single person said mail-in ballots are corrupt no, evidence. he is trying to make it that way. i will accept the outcome period, all you have to do show up and vote. they will determine this what i was referencing the attempts
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that are made to try to influence, scare people from voting. should not pay attention to them jedediah: you see there, governor, he had to clarify he would accept the election outcome. why say that comment about the chicanery. what is the goal there? >> i am impressed to say the word chicanery. i'm not sure that was a word in his vocabulary. he is not using a lot of those these days. he is casting doubt on income of the election and outcome of election. that is what the democrats have done for four years. they never accepted the 2016 election. why on earth would they believe we would accept the 2020 election if they don't get what they want. that is really after front to the american system of voting and letting the results be tabulated. when it is over you suck it up, you move on, that is how we do it. that is how we have done it. if you don't accept the results, what i wish the press would
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focus on is the impact of government agencies, the fbi, the cia, the highest levels of people of the white house, as early as summer of 2016 were already plotting to make sure that the election turned out a certain way. when they couldn't somehow control it, they have spent the last four years trying to stage what is simply a coupe coup day tau against an elect government and using government resources to do it. that ought to be the biggest scandal in american history. pete: chicanery. going down to get my churned butter and there was chicanery from the farm boy. is this a term that is effective? last word. jedediah: a interesting 23 days, governor.
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we'll knead your sense of humor to get through it that goes without saying. >> i hope amy coney barrett will take a copy of the constitution with her. when they ask her a question, what is your view of abortion? my view is exactly what is in the constitution. here it is in my hand. irbelieve what the constitution says about it. what does it say? you tell me, what does it say about it? leave it there. stick it back in the faces. that is what she is supposed to do. it will be an interesting week. jedediah: that is what she is supposed to do. that would be called doing her job. thank you, governor we appreciate it. another person we appreciate every single weekend is our friend rick reichmuth. rick, how are you doing over there? rick: i'm not sure i know what the word means. will: fick it out because you're accused of it every morning. malarkey, poppycock,. >> i saw a commercial with that going on. this is in the south the remains
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of delta. what was the center of delta. across parts of alabama. all the moisture is out in front of that, some of it is heavy across the southern appalachians. maybe a localized flooding with that. only place seeing significant parts of precipitation, parts of the pacific northwest we need to see moisture. we had incredibly dry summer. a lot of that is coming in as snow as you get to the higher elevations. we are not getting it down into the southeast. we'll show you what you get next couple weeks. you might get water, six or seven inches of rain. getting a lot, really, really quickly. look the at the temperatures, guys. incredibly warm air across parts of central plains. 92 today in amarillo. they will take a break. come right back. towards the day on tuesday we start to warm back up. by wednesday we're back into the
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♪. pete: kim jong-un hosting a military parade in north korea saturday where he claimed amid tears that the rogue nation has zero covid-19 nation and praised socialism for saving his nation. this came as he unveiled so-called monster new ballistic missile. here with analysis, former national security advisor, author of the new book, battle ground, the fight to defend the
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defend the free world, general h.r. mcmaster. we appreciate it. >> great to be here. pete: start with north korea, as you look at the that rogue reg gomez and the work you did there to prevent them from further expanding their belligerent behavior, where are we right now? >> well, pete, we haven't gotten as far as we hoped to get. we're testing a thesis that we could convince kim jong-un is safer without the weapons than he is with them and this is that campaign of maximum pressure. as you know the president had two summits with kim jong-un that did not deliver but the positive aspect of that is, okay, at least we talked with them but we didn't give on the sanctions, that are i think beginning to have a significant impact on the north korean regime in part because of covid. covid was in some ways the best way to enforce the u.n. security council sanctions against, against this dangerous regime. pete: of course he is saying there are zero covid cases just
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like vladmir putin wins 100% of the vote. so what's next then on the peninsula? how, what can be done if talking and not giving hasn't necessarily prevented them from moving forward? >> what he is doing, he is continuing to pursue this nuclear program. he is continuing to pursue this missile program and, while his people are destitute. this is why you saw him crying what he is trying to do is blame others, except his own, this is the only hereditary communist dictatorship in the world and i don't think, it can't work forever, pete. so i think it is important for us to keep, to keep the pressure on, to constrain the resources. we saw that big parade. you saw that thing, with like 11 tires, whatever, not even the tires are made in north korea. so these sanctions can work, if we can convince china particular to enforce them.
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95% of the trade, 95% of the imports into north korea come through china. pete: still does hinge on china. get to your book, the battle grounds to fight for the free world. you mentioned that this is not the book most people wanted you to write? why did you say that? >> people wanted me to write a palace intrigue book. that is not good for the american people. while we're at each other's throats with vitriolic discourse today, these crucial challenges from the world from potentially nuclear armed north korea not going away. what i help is the book will help all americans understand these challenges better and have civil discussions about what to do about them. so i make recommendations in the book that i hope will help us secure a future of peace and prosperity for generations to come.
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pete: i hope you're right. the book is "battlegrounds, the fight to defend the free world." general mcmaster. thank you for your time this morning. >> thank you so much,. pete: pete tomorrow is columbus day. while some will celebrate others protest. we discuss coming up. it's time for sleep number's fall sale on the sleep number 360 smart bed. can it help keep me asleep? absolutely, it intelligently senses your movements and automatically adjusts to keep you both comfortable. and now, the queen sleep number 360 c4 smart bed is only $1,399, save $300. plus, free delivery when you add a base. ends monday.
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♪. pete: it is that time of year again. tomorrow is columbus day. yeah you can still call it columbus day. we'll hear more calls to tear down his statue and replace the holiday all together. will: do we really know, do protesters know about the man ho sailed the over shun blue back in 1492? jedediah: here to break down some of the biggest myths is christopher columbus scholar,
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author of columbus and the crisis of the west, dr. robert royal. thanks so much for being here. you're an expert on this topic. super important one. what are people getting wrong when it comes to christopher columbus right now. >> well, look, if you're kids have gone to public schools for the past couple of decades two phrases they probably learned about columbus, one that he was genocidal maniac which no historian really believes, or that he was worse than hitler. hitler killed 40 million people and actually did try genocide against the jews. he killed six million jews in europe. these comparisons are ridiculous. they have been part of our educational system, that is why you see some people stomping on statues of christopher columbus. i don't blame them. they have been taught as some sort of monster. i called my book, columbus and the crisis of the west, because i tried to go back to present the real history what he did and
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what he achieved. great accomplishment of discovering the new world but also i call this a crisis because it is not really about him. he is being used as kind of a symbol for everything that mostly left-wing historians, theorists commentators are against in the west. they talk about him bringing capitalism and all sorts of oppressions which he did not by the way. they were already here among native-american peoples. the crisis we're on the verge of committing cultural suicide. we're criticizing figures in the past. of course columbus is right at the beginning of the americas. so it makes him a prime target for tomorrow. pete: he was a christian who believed in spreading the christian faith. we don't have much time but who is the christopher columbus you knows an expert. >> you're right. he was a sweet tempered human being who couldn't handle the difficulties you have when two
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civilizations come together this is a daring man. this is a man who carried out something he thought inspired by god to discover the new world. was able to do it. it was a technical achievement and an achievement of human will at the time. for me there is not the worst thing is criticism of columbus, that you can replace. that now we're having replacement of columbus day with indigenous peoples day. why do we can sell one part of our culture to celebrate another part? we're excluding another part of our culture in the name of being inclusive. will: sometimes a hero cannot be criticized and monster. history is somewhat complicated and nuanced. dr. robert royal, thank you for your time this morning. >> my pleasure. thank you. will: coming up a busy week ahead for president trump with three campaign stops in a row starting tomorrow. a preview coming up.
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this couple was on a camping trip... ...when their windshield got a chip. they drove to safelite for a same-day repair. and with their insurance, it was no cost to them. >> woman: really? >> tech: that's service you can trust. >> singers: ♪ safelite repair, safelite replace. ♪ ♪ jedediah: welcome, everyone, to our 8 a.m. hour, fox & friends weekend. times flies when you're having fun. this is our third hour already, but for all of you just tuning in, welcome board. how you doing, pete and will? pete: doing great, jedediah. you know, if you weren't watching about 20 minutes ago there was a segment about this whale that has been alive for 50 years off the coast of canada. and i said, i didn't know whales live for 50 years. will said, i believe you they live longer than that. will i said i think they live
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longer that that so i googled it it. they live 20 to 30-year-old. but the greenland shark can live 400 years. he might have been there for clarify columbus. you know what i mean. will: well, not quite as old as the greenland shark. i would like to share this. cnn this morning. on thursday, my youngest brother had his first child. kie cain was born, i believe it says 8 pounds, 12 ounces. and you can see he's already exercising some good choices in television viewership. pete: he sent that to friends@foxnews.com? will: happy birthday. jedediah: he's starting off so informed, will. look at that. these informed, tuning in to the best show on tv. he's got a good start. congratulations to you and your family. that's beautiful. will: happy bird, kie. glad to have you in the world. very cool. jedediah: i love it. we have a the big news day today as always, but we've been covering the latest in president
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trump's battle with covid-19, and he looks like he's coming out on top. his doctor has just said that he is no longer at risk of spreading the virus to others. this comes after yesterday an event was held at the white house. the focus was on law and order. president trump spoke a lot about his supporters. he previewed what it will look like for him getting back on the campaign trail. let's take a listen to president trump yesterday at the white house. trump: on behalf of myself and the first lady, this has been really an incredible outpouring, and we're starting very, very big with our rallies and with our everything, 'cause we cannot allow our country to become a socialist nation. we cannot let that happen. [cheers] this is the most important election we've ever had. this is more important than even four years ago. used to say the most important, and it was true at the time. this is the single most important election in the history of our country. get out and vote. pete: looking at strong as ever
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to the crowd there at the white house. and yesterday after the show the updates kept coming in my phone of the updates of the campaign this week and going forward. here are the campaign events for the president coming up. he'll be in florida on monday, johnstown at the jack murtha airport in pennsylvania and des moines, iowa, on wednesday. and that's just the beginning. i got to believe, guys, as we go forward, there will be rallies on multiple days. with the president recovering, i think you'll see that dynamic change a lot in just a few days. we had pam bondi on who is co cochair of women for trump on the program earlier, asked her about the pace of the president going forward in his events. here's what she had to say. >> he has so many events scheduled in florida and around the country; so get ready to see president trump coming to an airport near you. he is all every the country. he'll be in florida multiple,
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multiple times. florida is not only his home state but he knows how important florida is to the entire country country. the president's going to go out there and reach the american people himself. on friday he was on with rush limbaugh. i think it was the largest radio rally ever, and he's back, back stronger than ever, and he is going to be all over this country speaking to hundreds of thousands of people. will: you know, the president back on the campaign trail is an important point, not just for governance and for the campaign, but for those of us watching from home, the recovery process from covid-19, we talked to dr. segal today, he's in a condition now where he's nontransmissible. the cdc says ten days after symptoms you're safe to get back out there. i think it's a way to understand what we as a society and perhaps as individuals as we make our choices are dealing with as well well. i just want information to help guide the way and not fear. and, by the way, accurate information.
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not, for example, inaccurate information about what is constitutional and un unconstitutional. for example, here's joe biden talking about judge amy coney barrett's coming nomination and whether or not the republicans' push for her position on the supreme court is constitutional. listen to this. >> court packing is going on right now. it's going on with republicans packing the court now. it's not constitutional what they're doing. the fact is that the only packing going on is this court is being packed now by the republicans. after the vote has already begun begun. i'm going to stay focused on it so we don't take the eyes off the ball. will: jedediah, that's not true. joe biden knows that's not true. the republicans have the constitutional authority to nominate judge barrett and that makes what joe biden just said a lie . jedediah: yeah, he's conflating the two issues because he feels that it won't matter. he's looking at the polls and he's saying to himself, well, i've been in the lead for a
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while. i don't know. polling is challenging; right? because i want to say, my instinct is to say, well, let's see if the polls reflect that he hasn't answered this question and people care about it. but we also know that we can't trust the polls and last time around, the last election cycle in 2016 they were wrong, in large part. i don't know whether we'll really know how people feel until election day, when those votes are cast and people make a decision on voting for joe biden on a very important issue. to its credit the trump administration has been very forthcoming about the supreme court, about where they stand on a lot of issues. we talked about fracking earlier and how the biden camp has been back and forth on that be with both biden and kamala harris. so people deserve answers on what these candidates stand for in order to make a decision, that they feel they can be confident going in that voting booth, if they are integral in electing that person they know what they're going to get. we spoke with mike huckabee earlier who talked a little bit about the scotus nominee.
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this will be a big week, the amy coney barrett hearings. he talked about this. listen to what he said. >> if joe biden were god forbid to be elected, he would know he would be elected for a full four-year term and even when the voting starts for the next term, he doesn't cease to be president president. none of his powers are taken away. that's explicitly clear in the constitution. ruth bader ginsburg understood that. she said that. he might want to read some of the things in the constitution that have been said about it by people he claims to believe in and trust. pete: it's a great point. there's a lot of things the left and biden could tries to say about this. unconstitutional is not one of them. if you want to say too fast or in an election year, but sometimes you got to call it out as you did will and say that is a lie. it brings me back to a comment you kind of alluded to a couple of hours ago, will, about normals. he's almost running a candidacy,
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and i'm going to return american to the norms. when you actually look at who has destroyed our norms over the last four years, it's democrats who would never accept the election, what ran a sham impeachment, what brought up ukraine, what ran investigations who are now stroking the 25th amendment. they're the ones that rejected the norms, and it's joe biden going forward who wants to reject norms by saying we're going to add justices to the course, we're going to add states, we're going to potential the electoral college. so to run a normalcy campaign is no grasp toward reality at all. will: not to get too cute with the segue here, but returning to normalcy, returning to norms, this is an incredible important story. the world health organization is urging world leaders now to step away from lockdowns, not to use lockdowns as a tool of fighting coronavirus. this is dr. david navarro of the w.h.o., special envoy on
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covid-19. listen. >> we in the world health organization do not advocate lockdowns as a primary means of control of this virus. the only time we believe a lockdown is justified is to buy time to reorganize, regroup, we balance your resources, protect your health workers who are exhausted. but by and large we'd rather not do it. pete: joe biden loves globalist organizations, loves talking about the scientists and the doctors. what would he say? will he be asked whether or not lockdowns should be used to buy time? remember 15 days to slow the spread, here you are, if you have a watch, i don't know if you have a month or not. die it all the time. but it's been that, been six or seven months of lockdowns. he's calling for more of them. will: it's no laughing matter. we are crushing economies. pete: crushing. will: putting people in positions of mental deathly decline, keep kids out of schoo. pete: against the science. will: accumulating massive cost to society against the science,
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to your point. time return to reasoned normalcy jedediah. jedediah: what's really frustrating to watch is all of these businesses that have come forward and said, we have a protocol in place. like, businesses want their clients and their customers to be safe. that's how -- that ensures the legacy and growth of their own business and they're coming forward and saying we're doing what the c.d.c. recommends, we're doing what we can to make sure that you can come in, that you can enjoy our services, and that you can feel confident and safe to do it. and now we're at that point where we're not trusting those businesses. it's been painful to watch. i have many friends who are business owners who said i got out, i did all the ppe, everything i was supposed to do, and i've been punished as a result. that's a pattern that needs to change because so many of these businesses have been shut down maybe forever. and it seems to make no sense. they've got to at some point be able to trust these people or don't go in, make the decision and say i'm not going to go into any business, i'm not going to become part of society, you have that option too.
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but you can't shut down people who are trying to make a living and trying to make a living in a way that deeps you and i safe as well. it's so unfair. pete: it would have been nice if you're leaders recognized that months ago. attila's jim in new jersey, thousands of people in their gym zero cases of covid, being charged every day for violating the lockdown. one person killed after gunfire breaks out as dueling rallies in denver. police were on the scene ready to respond. >> there was a large presence because we had two groups with opposing views and we know that can always get very tense and there's always potential for violence. pete: a local news station's private security guard is now in custody. police say the security guard does not have an affiliation with antifa. wouldn't think so. and president trump is
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nominated yet again for a 2021 nobel peace prize. a finnish parliament member quoted him for attempting to end the era of endless wars. sees received three nominations for 2020. this one ez new because it's for 2021. 2020 was given last week for fighting hunger and food insecurity. lord knows if the president was a democrat he would have won it for what he did. and comedian bill burr tackles cancel culture on saturday night live. >> how stupid is a cancel thing? they're going after dead people now. they're trying to cancel john wayne. like, did you hear what he said in that interview in playboy in 1970? can you believe that? it's like, yeah, he was born in 1907. that's what these people sounded like. pete: well done.
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burr made the comments during his opening monologue of last night's saturday night live episode, and those are your headlines. will, it is the comedians oftentimes who are the most outraged by cancel culture if you can't make a joke about something and you're canceled for it, what job do they have. will: bill burr is great. a comedian who often tells the truth. jedediah: and he's a hundred percent right. will: still ahead, biden is ahead of president trump in new polls, prompting our next guest to ask, then why are democrats asking so desperate? charlie hurt breaks down the potential fears next. ♪
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♪ will: democrats are encouraged by polls like this one. the latest fox news poll showing joe biden's up ten points ahead of president trump among likely voters. but our next guest says if democrats believe they will win, why are they acting so desperate desperate? here to explain fox news editor of the washington times, charlie hurt. you say the democrats are acting desperate even with polls that seem to indicate advantage for democrats. what kind of desperation are you pointing to? >> it's really strange, will, and i don't really know what to make of it but at the end of the day i'm a big believer that campaigns never lie. you just got to know what to look for. the first things started back in the summer when they started all these crazy conspiracy theories about president trump trying to steal postal trucks and take out post office boxes so people couldn't vote. and i just thought, man, that's
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really crazy, to be ten points up. why are you worried about this stuff? why are you making stories about this stuff? of course they weren't true. the other thing is watching kamala harris'' debate performance the other night and all of this stuff about are they for fracking, do they want to ban fracking, you know, all these issues that they will not be straight with the american people about, those are signs of a desperate campaign. why can't you just tell us whether you intend to pack the court, expand the courts, blow up the third branch? why can't you just explain what it is that you're going to do? and they don't want to do any of it . will: well, here's a potential answer, charlie. tell me what you think of this. i don't know if it's desperation but whether or not we're talking about the 25th amendment or post office boxes, what they seem to want is to constantly keep the attention on president trump. it seems like the strategy is we don't want to talk about what we believe in. we want to talk about president trump and his personality. is that desperation or is that just an out-and-out strategy? >> will, and i think you're
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exactly right about that. the strategy here, as long as they are -- it doesn't matter who they are. they're just short shape shifters. they can be anything. they're not donald trump. and that's their campaign. and it's a really bizarre campaign. but i would say this. if you are ten points up in the polls or 20 points up in the polls like some of these polls are, you don't need to play that game. just be who you are. so that tells me there is a sign of desperation here. and watching former president obama and michelle obama with that video that came out last week, it is so wildly different from the optimistic campaign they ran in 2008. there's something fearful in their eyes about what they're seeing. and we don't know what it is at this point, but it makes me wonder if they're not afraid what's going to happen. will: really quickly i have ten seconds. joe biden's embracing this return to normalcy, but they're embracing all kinds of abnormal ideas like d.c. statehood, puerto rico. this illustrates our point.
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isn't this really just donald trump's personality against their policies, but they want to keep it highways personality? quickly. only have a little bit of time. >> absolutely. and it also reveals that they really are a whole lot more radical and their plans are a lot more radical than they're letting on right now. will: yeah, the normalcy seems, again, about personality. that's what they're trying to sell. >> y.ah, will: all right, charlie, thanks so much for your time this morning. >> you bet, will. will: coming up, as judge amy coney barrett prepares to face senators at tomorrow's confirmation hearing, a long time friend says the judge is ready for the challenge. and diet gimmicks have made us heavier and sicker. the solution for losing weight the right way is golo. we help transform your body and change your lifestyle, so you can lose weight and get healthier. over 20,000 people of all ages, and entire families, switch to golo every week, because golo works.
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i remember herwho was because she had a bracelet that had the names of her children. she asked me, 'doctor, am i going to be okay?' and i could not give her the answer that i wanted to give her. there is no excuse for why we don't have this under control at this point. joe biden listens to medical experts. he actually has a plan that does the things that we should have been doing many months ago. and joe biden is not going to let his ego get in the way of fighting the disease. ff pac is responsible for the content of this ad.
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coney barrett, is so to begin tomorrow at 9 a.m. and here longtime friend says barrett is ready. that friend and law professor at the university of notre dame, nicole estelle garnet joins me now. nicole, welcome to the show. great to have you here as we approach monday, what's going to be a vigorous week. so one of the concerns that has been raised about judge barrett is that she has these very strong personal convictions, particularly regarding her faith and that that may inform her decisions on the court, particularly with respect to roe vs. wade. can you speak a little bit to her character and what you think might happen with respect to that issue? >> of course. so i think, you know, it's always appropriate to ask a judge or a nominee whether they understand the role of a judge, and everyone comes with personal views about many things. but judge barrett has been asked under oath, she's told the country when she accepted the nomination, and she has a demonstrated record of judicial
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opinions that demonstrate that she understands the role of a judge, her personal views are irrelevant. what matters is fidelity to the rule of law. it's the constitution. and coming to know what the words as written mean. i think as far as faith goes, i think it's really off -- should be off the table. i think hopefully the senators will stick to their word and keep faith off the table in the hearing. lots of people have faith and perform public duties including supreme court justices and they perform them well. and it's the actual offensive to suggest that people of faith are unable to do.so jedediah: i would be surprised if her faith didn't come up at some point. you've known her for a very long time. can you speak to some of her strengths and how that would play out in terms of her role on the supreme court if in fact she will be confirmed? >> sure. i've known amy barrett for a long time, 22 years. we actually met when we clerked together on the supreme court. so the first thing i would say is she has a great legal mind. it stood out from the very beginning when we were clerking
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-- i was clerking for justice thomas and she for justice scalia. she really stood out among the group of clerks as someone with an amazing ability to understand very, very difficult legal questions. she's been my colleague in the law school for the last 17 -- yeah, 17 years, and i would say that there she's also just demonstrated hard work, very, very highest character, a commitment to doing right by her colleagues, by her students, a commitment to thinking rigorously. she never lets anybody off with soft thinking. she always asks tough questions of her students, and they love her for it. i think she brings all of those things to the table as a justice justice. i think it's also important to point out that when she accepted the -- when she accepted the president's nomination she said that her judicial philosophy was that of justice scalia, her mentor. so that tells us what kind of justice she'll, i ajustice who cares about the constitution and
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cares about what the constitution and the text of statues mean as they're writ.en jedediah: thank you so much for being here, nicole. we appreciate your input, spent that you've known her for a long time, very audible information. thanks. >> thanks so much. jedediah: and still ahead, in his first public event since returning to the white house, president trump holds a peaceful protest to support law and order order. former new york city mayor rudy giuliani on that next. history
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♪ hillary: i want to thank four law enforcement, and i want to thank everybody in the community and the community drive in law enforcement. we're here today to deliver a united message to police officers all across our great land in american, every american every race and color, we love you, every race, color, creed, we support you, we honor you. it's a dangerous profession. they've been doing an incredible job. pete: that was the president yesterday at the white house for a peaceful protest. here to comment on that and more let's bring in rudy giuliani, the president's attorney as well as former new york city mayor. rudy, thanks for being here this morning. appreciate it. >> thanks for having me. pete: of course. we always love having you. we had you on last sunday, and you clarified and talked with us about the president's condition. here we are a week later, feels like a world away, the president
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about to hit the trail again. >> yes. pete: talk to us about where we are and where we're going. >> well, i think i have good news this weekend too. i've talked to him a lot during the week. i don't think he had any kind of problem all week. i mean, he could have done this three, four days ago. and i think he's taking it slowly, listening to the doctors doctors. he just happened to have recovered very, very quickly. a testament to the medicines maybe or also to the fact that he is in fundamentally really good health. i know people -- it's a little bit funny because the doctor originally put out he's like a 40-year-old man or whatever. look, i work with the guy five months in a row, 24 hours a day, and i am known for not sleeping and having tremendous energy, and he outworks me and he's got nor energy than i do. it's rational. he's just like that. you got to buy it. and i think he feels uplifted by the fact, i don't care what the polls say, joe's on the ropes. you don't do something stupid
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like he did yesterday and you're asked a question, "doesn't the public deserve to have the right to know if you're going to pack and ruin the supreme court?" and he said "no, they don't have the -- they don't deserve to know." you're right. you can't say you're in your right mind if you're running for office of the president of the united states. the supreme court doesn't belong to joe biden. hey, joe, it's the government of the people, for the people, by the people. abraham lincoln. not your government. belongs to me. belongs to the moderators. belongs to everybody out there. and we don't have a right to know when you are going to fundamentally alter one of the three key branches of our government? i mean, when franklin roosevelt tried to do this, we almost had a revolution. democrats opposed him because we had democrats who loved america then more than their greed for power. will: you know, rudy -- >> it's outrageous. outrageous. will: it is outrageous, rudy.
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and we do have a right to know. we do deserve to know. he clearly doesn't think, though he's going to pay the price for not telling us. i want to tell you about this, rudy. >> arrog.nt will: i'm hesitant to even play this, to be quite honest. but i don't want to give it air. i don't want to give it airtime. but i think the real question is is this indicative of a growing vindictiveness and anger in our country? keith olbermann is back; right? he's back in the political sphere, he's on youtube. a show on msnbc. he said that. i want you to listen to this. i believe we have a clip on his new online show where he's talking about not just president trump, not just those who support president trump, but people like amy coney barrett as well and i want you to listen to the rhetoric. >> he and his enablers and his supporters and his collaborators and the mike lees and the william barrs and the sean hannitys and the mike pences and the rudy giulianis and the kyle rittenhousees and the amy coney barretts must be prosecuted and convicted and removed from our
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society while we try to rebuild it and to rebuild the world trump has nearly destroyed by turning it over to a virus. will: rudy, that's unhinged, it's insane. >> unhinged? will: what i'm asking you, though, is it a growing sentiment? is it beyond keith olbermann? >> yes, it is. i've talked a little about it. i think i'm going to write about it a bit. there's a hatred in the democrat party that is beyond anything i've ever seen in politics. you know, we've always had disputes and whatever. but, i mean, i have friends, i had friends who were democrats -- i probably had more democrat friends than republican friends when i was mayor. i had a city -- 45 members of the city council, dems, 6 republicans. i passed a lot of legislation, groundbreaking legislation. i needed the dems. they were good friends. we could talk. we never had any anger or hatred
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hatred. they let the hatred get out of control -- pelosi, schumer, biden, hillary. they drove the hatred beyond anything, 'cause they're using it as a political weapon. and it's completely unjustified. disagreement over his policies? fine. hatred of the man? i mean, what does he do? makes you hate -- you don't like the way he talks. it's ridiculous to hate a man. they hate him because they have such greed for that power. and, frankly, some of them make a lot of money when they're in power like joe biden. family makes millions. so does the pelosi family. so it's a greed for power and money. and he stands in the way of it. they let the hatred grow. and then they do irrational things and mean things and horrible things. keith olbermann should not be on the air. i think he was taken off once because he's so hateful. he's not even a political commentator. he was a half -- excuse me -- he was not a very good sports reporter. i mean, i love sports and i listened to him on sports and i
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had to put him off when he was doing sports, because he wouldn't cover sports, he's rip into players, rip into fans, rip into umpires, rip into -- this man probably has his own personal issues. very, very sick guy. but hatred is -- it's a horrible thing. it eats away at you, and it makes you become completely irrational. that's how they can do things like you don't deserve -- telling the public of the united states, you don't deserve to know about the highest court in your land because it doesn't belong to you, pal. it belongs to me. i'm an arrogant democrat. i can do what i want. i'll tell you when i'm ready to tell you about the court. jedediah: yeah, i mean, rudy things have gotten so personal. and i think we saw an ugliness emerge like never before for the first time -- at least i did in those kavanaugh hearings. i was blown away by what i had witnessed the character attacks, the personal attacks. >> good point. jedediah: it had gone to a new horrible place. and since then couple that with
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social media and a lot of other elements, it's just gotten deep deeply personal in an unfortunate way. but i want to ask you about a topic. there has been some good news that we've seen with respect to covid-19 this week. first off with president trump, but secondly with former new jersey governor chris christie who has said that he's left the hospital, he has received his treatment there. he seems to be doing well. do you have any updates you can provide for us on his recovery? >> yeah, i just got a text from him, just got a text from him which means he's up early; right? he says he's doing great, he's doing fine. and i talked to a lot of friends of his too. he is doing fine. it was really -- he would not have gone to the hospital but for the fact the underlying issue of asthma. if that had not been it is case he would gone home and recovered nicely. it was just a case if he needed oxygen or something else with the asthma. almost like the president. i think the regular person where they weren't taking extra care, neither one of them would have ended up in the hospital. but thank god they did, and
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they're coming out of it. and looks like the president's totally out of it, and i think chris is a day or two away from being totally out of it. pete: that's great to hear, mr. mayor. jed mentioned it, kavanaugh. we've mentioned this morning amy coney barrett coming. joe biden also said it's un unconstitutional what's being done. you can address that if you want as well which is ridiculous. but what do you anticipate -- you know, this time during kavanaugh they were already making outlandish accusations against him. we haven't really seen that. how do you feel about this week will go are amy coney barrett? >> well, they're in a box, really. she is a very, very -- i mean she could come from central casting as a candidate. it's like mr. smith goes to washington. she seems like a person that wants to do it for exactly the right reasons, and she has exactly the right background.
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the group that she belongs to, a catholic, evangelical group, and even the new york times who did everything to rip them party, " "they seem to be very happy." happy.". oh, my god. they're happy. which would get the new york times people very upset because they're all very unhappy. do you notice, i used to be a person who used to say, democrats and republicans we've got our good ones and our bad ones and neither one has a multiply on virtue or vice. this is different. the republicans don't hate. i don't hate. president doesn't hate. i don't hate them. i can deem with them. i can negotiate with them. they're the ones who hate. and it's really, really deep within them right now. and they -- it almost has to be exorcised. you know, i studied to be a catholic preach for a while. never became an exorcist or i'd do it for them. the devil's got to get taken out of them, it really does, and we've got to get back being able to talk to each other. and i have the answer to the
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exorcism, like beat 'em by 20 points. that will straighten themselves out. believe me, that will straighten themselves out. will: that's a fascinating story you told us, mother democrat friends than republicans, 45 democrats versus 6 republicans, but not that kind of collegiality anymore. thank you for that and your perspective. >> thank you. you do a great show. pete: thank you very much. appreciate it, sir. will: in the spirit of fox & friends and collegiality, let's go to one of our other friends, rick reichmuth who has the weather. >> good morning, guys. all right, we've got summer stealing in across parts of the south, really warm temperatures, in fact way above average today across parts of texas and the south. obviously yesterday hurricane delta making its way across parts of louisiana, mississippi, alabama. now behind that we've got very warm temperatures and still have some moisture from it.
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we have a really dry week ahead which see good news from folks who are trying to recover from these horrible months we've had of hurricane season. now we still have some moisture going in across parts of the south and across areas of the carolinas and the southern appalachians. rainfall that might cause localized flooding, view showers in florida as well. i will tell you for now we are not looking at any significant activity in the tropics, which is a little bit of a break. activity in the pacific northwest, rain we need, six or seven inches in the higher elevations, snow as well, but out in front of that we have another day of pretty significant fire threat across parts of the lower plains so watch for that today and the temps are going to be really hot really windy as that fire threat continues. these are the temps. you get the idea, into the nineties, a break tomorrow, and pop back into the nineties until wednesday. back to you. pete: thank you, rick. appreciate it it.
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open your church. the church is essential. pete: a los angeles pastor issuing that rebuke to democrat leadership over the crackdown on houses of worship. that pastor, john macarthur, of grace community church joins us now with more of that message that's gaining a lot of traction on social media. pastor, thank you so much for being here on this good sunday morning. we appreciate it. expand on your message that you have for other pastors and other christians. >> well, it's pretty simple. there is a narrative floating around that there's this great, grave danger in california and so we shouldn't have church because we're going to spread death. nobody believes that anymore. in fact you have -- if you're between -- if you're between 50 and 64 in california, you have one in 19 million chances of dying from covid. the rated of infection in covid is 100 one-hundredth of 1%. there are something like 600
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people in the hospital with covid complications out of 40 million. and this is just a ridiculous narrative to try to match with reality and with facts. that doesn't scare up. and so we're saying have church, meet with your church. and we've been doing it for weeks. we have about seven, eight thousand people on a sunday. and they're just normally pushed together. no mask, no social distancing, and we don't have anybody sick and we haven't for a number of weeks. pete: pastor, you've been in defiance. you've been encouraging other religious leaders to do the same same. the question i have for you is the "why." why does the left yell about data and science but when it's numbers like this, and especially people of faith in churches, do they insist on draconian lockdown measures? why? >> well, there has to be an obvious underlying reason. you know, i don't mind masses of people, tens of thousands of
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people in the streets, you know, the black lives matter events and all of that, those things are perfectly permissible, but they don't allow a church service? there's only one possible underlying reason, and that is that they favor one over the other. the problem with that is the constitution favors religious freedom over anything else. we're not asking for equal treatment. we're asking for the preferred treatment that the constitution gives us. pete: absolutely. and the assembles you're referring to are supposed to be peaceably assembled last time i checked. not a lot of criteria being met there often. when you mention -- what are you preaching to your parishioners these days? what's the message in life where we are with this as well? >> well, that's a really good question, pete. and it's been a long siege. i've been preaching in this kind of environment for six months. so, you know, do the math. i've had to preach 30 different messages on all of these sundays
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30-plus messages; so i have run the gamut, everything from why are there riots to who's behind the riots, how do we understand the collapse of our nation. he did a message a few weeks ago on is this a nation under god? that got an immense aamount of traction. but primarily what we're trying to do initially is bring comfort to people. once we realized that we weren't going to kill grandma and people were not going to die if we had church -- and again i remind you you, we've had no one from our church in the hospital for almost seven months. pete: wow. >> so once we knew that, i just wanted to encourage the people. and the encouragement came in such a profound way that at first a few hundred people came back after we started with social distancing because we were told people were going to die. so -- pete: sure. >> -- we backed off and we didn't have anybody there. few weeks passed and people started coming on their own, just kept coming and coming. and then a few weeks ago we had a sunday we invited the children
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back for the first time in six months. we had a thousand kids show up on a sunday. incredible sunday. we had balloons and little lollipops for the kids -- pete: we've got -- >> -- a phenomenal time -- pete: unfortunately we got to leave it right there, pastor, staring down fear with the power of christ. we love it. more fox & friends on the other side.
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♪ will: this just in. the new england patriots shut down its facility this morning after a new positive covid-19 test according to reports. the nfl is reportedly pelage to still play the broncos-patriots game tomorrow. the titans also announcing they closed their facility after a staff member tested positive for coronavirus.
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here was an up-to-date. fox sports jim hale. we only have a minute or two. should i be encouraged like this this? we get positive tests but the nfl seems to be working around them and rescheduling games. it doesn't shut down the league right now; right? >> yeah, good morning, will. exactly. you nailed it. this protocol the nfl has put in place which, by the way, they strengthened this week, it does seem to be working if teams follow it. unfortunately for the patriots and the titans, they just got back into their facilities yesterday from the first scare. but this is what you have to do to be safe and to be able to continue playing. and hopefully these new strengthened protocols, things like you have to have five buses instead of two or three, no position group all on the same bus, spreading people out, hopefully we will continue to see a positive impact and see these cases dwin.le will: we got a full slate on fox news today of games -- i'm sorry -- fox sports today. rams at washington. there's a quarterback change in washington. eagles-steelers, panthers-
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panthers-falcons. what do you think really quickly we should be looking for in terms of stars and big games? >> going to be lots of fun, kyle kyle. alan takes over, makes his debut in washington but i've got the rams in this, the way they're running the ball, hard to stop. eagles a steelers, fun battle in pennsylvania but i'm taking the steelers. panthers at falcons, i love the falcons, what matt ruhle is doing is great. i'm taking the falcons because i don't think they're going to go 0-5. they're going to go up and play. i'm going with the cardinals. will: i agree with you on matt r ruhle. that's a program builder there. dolphins and 49ers today. thanks so much. coming up in our final hour, senator joni ernst, trump 2020 adviser katrina pierson coming up on fox news. ♪ i got my mind-set on you.
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♪ ♪ pete: that is a live shot across the plaza, and we look forward to being out there soon. the scaffolding is gone. will, you've gotten the sort of remote, robotic version of "fox & friends" so far. soon that we will be introducing you to the antics. will: yeah. i remember pop quizzes in school. i think i want to institute a pop trivia on "fox & friends." it's going to be like name that tune. as we bump in, we'll see who gets the artists and the song first.
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i have no idea who that was -- [laughter] jedediah: neither do i. will: i know you do competitions on "fox & friends." pete: absolutely, we do. jedediah: that song, i feel just by the vibe of it, i should know. i'm going to disappoint you by saying i don't know, so we're going to have to start studying. i have backup in the britney spearses department from pete -- pete: always. is it national sausage pizza day or national vegetarian pizza day? will: i'd rather be wrong and say national sausage pizza day. pete: you are correct. it is 9:00, it's actually the fourth overtime. [laughter] i'm sorry! he had a rough game yesterday. texas and oklahoma fought hard for four -- jedediah: he's out. pete: four overtimes and they didn't take it, but we love you. we mock you because we love you.
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will: not mutual right now, but we'll move forward. jedediah: that's right. you have to worry when we start mocking you. that's when you need to start to get concerned. all right, we're going to move on. the confirmation hearings for president trump's supreme court nominee start tomorrow, big day. judge amy coney barrett will face hours of questions, and david spunt joins us live from outside the supreme court with what we can expect. david? >> reporter: good morning. going to be a busy week here at the supreme court. also the capitol across the street with that confirmation hearing taking place or will take place tomorrow. republicans want to turn judge amy coney barrett into supreme court justice amy coney barrett as soon as possible. the hearing will last for the majority of this week. if confirmed by the united states senate, barrett would be the fifth woman in history to serve on the high court. the president says he hopes and expects barrett to be on the bench by election day. democrats are furious about the nomination, arguing the
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president and majority leader mitch mcconnell are rushing the process before a presidential election. >> not constitutional, what they're doing. they should be focused on what's happening right now. this court is being packed now by the republicans after the vote has already are begun. i'm going to stay focused on it so we don't take our eyes off the ball here. >> reporter: meanwhile, vice president pence, he is defending judge barrett over several attacks on her catholic faith. >> in america we cherish the freedom of religion of every american of every faith. and these attackses on judge barrett's faith have got to stop. judge amy coney barrett is going to be justice amy coney barrett -- [cheers and applause] we're going to fill that seat. >> reporter: some of the big issues you can expect to hear this week, abortion, health care, gun rights and
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immigration. specifically on the issue of health care, the affordable care act, the justices one week after the election will hear the merits of the affordable care act and, of course, the president hopes that justice amy coney barrett will be here at that time. guys, back to you. pete: david spunt, thank you very much. tomorrow we start with opening statements from lund -- lindsey graham and diane fine tine, and and then you'll hear from -- dianne feinstein, all covered here on the fox news channel. big news this week as it pertains to that. but this weekend joe biden has been on the trail, the virtual trail. not just the virtual trail, the white circle trail, the socially-distanced trail, and he has taken a few questions. and one in particular caught our eye. we talked about it yesterday. this one, this question actual, though, was from friday. we talked yesterday about joe biden not being willing to answer questions about whether he would add justices or pack the court. this one is from ktnv, the las
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vegas station there in nevada, and a local relater asked again to joe biden, will you let the voters know whether you will pack the court, do they deserve to know. here's joe biden. >> sir, aye got to ask you about -- i've got to ask you about packing the courts. >> sure. >> i know you said yesterday you weren't going to ask until after -- >> well, you've been asked by the viewers or who are probably republicans who don't want me to continue to talk about what they're doing today -- >> don't the voters deserve to know? >> no, they don't. i'm not going to play this game. he'd love me to talk about, and i've already said something. instead of what he's doing now. will: young, voters -- you know, voters absolutely deserve an answer on who they are perhaps electing to the presidency to the united states, and joe biden's neglecting to give anyone the answer on what he would do on a very radical idea. i'm willing to put good money on the idea that pete hegseth, when
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he was a killed, played video games, and when losing, boom, hit the power button. [laughter] >> there was a runup to the console back in the day. will: that's right. i might have even flipped a board game once or twice. a lot of handling about president trump and the accepting of an election result, questions about whether mail-in balloting will be legitimate, but what i see is one party that continually embraced the idea of illegitimacy, whether or not the results of the 2016 election and russia collusion or the 25th amendment or ending the filibuster, over and over and over the game board is flipped when you begin to lose. and not answering whether or not you would pack the court is part of that radical game board flip. rudy giuliani was on the show earlier, we asked him about this neglect from joe biden. listen. >> government doesn't belong to joe biden. the supreme court doesn't belong to joe biden.
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hey, joe, the government of the people, for the people, by the people. abraham lincoln, not your government, belongs to me. belongs to the moderators. belongs to even out there. and we don't have a right to know when you are going to fundamentally alter one of the three key branches of our government? i mean, when franklin roosevelt i tried to do this, we almost had a revolution. it's outrageous. outrageous! off the charts. jedediah: when we showed that segment earlier with the reporter, the local reporter in nevada asking the question, joe biden's response -- the reporter says to hum, this is a key question that i'm getting from viewers, and joe biden says, oh, you're getting it from republicans. that's key. that is absolutely key. as we've been talking about, he doesn't think that his voters or his potential voters care about this issue at all. he feels like only republicans are focused on this. i don't know if that's true. i think that would be really sad
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if democrats or people inclined to vote for joe biden don't care about a court-packing issue and thinks they don't deserve the answer to a question. i don't have an allegiance to politicians ever, but i expect them to give me answers so that i can make an informed decision about who i'm going to vote for. and people should have the same expectation of politicians. i think rudy giuliani's point is really important, these people work for us, not the other way around. he owes people an answer if he is going to expect them to vote for him. and people should demand that answer. i don't care what side of the aisle you're on, you should demand an answer for him and not accept an elitist response that you don't deserve one. another thing you should demand is consistency from politicians so that once again you can say joe biden stands for x, y or z, and i know when i get into that voting booth, i am going to be voting for x, y or z. it's coming up again on the issue of fracking. here's what joe biden said on
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saturday with respect to fracking. >> you know, the fact is that every time the word climate change comes up, donald trump thinks hoax. every time it comes up i think jobs. let me be clear, no matter how many lives he sells, i am not, not, not banning fracking. period. [applause] pete: okay. that's what joe biden says now. what did joe biden and kamala harris say before? watch. >> [inaudible] >> yeah, yeah. no more, no new fracking. >> would there be any place for fossil fuels including coal and fracking in a biden administration? >> no. we would work it out. we would make sure it's eliminated and no more subsidies for either one of those. i want you to just take a look, okay? you don't have to agree, but i want you to look in my eyes. i guarantee you, i guarantee you
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we're going to end fossil fuels. >> no question, i'm in favor of banning fracking. [applause] pete: i guarantee. somebody define that -- find that girl and ask the question which joe biden she believes. will the real joe biden please stand up? he gazed into her eyes and guaranteed her he would get rid of fracking, and now he's out on the campaign trail i will not, not, not, not, not, not ban fracking. how dumb does he i think people are? will: and the inconsistentcy is not going unnoticed. >> if anyone should be talking about fracking, it's my guy, joe biden. joe biden fracks in his free time. [laughter] joe biden will frack you so good, pennsylvania -- [laughter] and while i personally wanted to
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ban frack, now that i know pennsylvania loves it, i just want to say this -- if joe biden ain't banning fracking. go wiggle. will: there you go. a pretty good, although i wouldn't be a. judge: of this, pennsylvania -- judge of this, pennsylvania accent. just a moment, we'll be talking to a republican senator on that judiciary hearing starting tomorrow. what will amy coney barrett face when the attacks come? will it be on faith? abortion? health care? senator joni ernst is going to answer those questions for us coming up. ♪ ♪ hi, i'm pat and i'm 75 years old.
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♪ ♪ will: congress shed -- set for a major showdown tomorrow. judge amy coney barrett expected to be drilled on several or hot button issues. jedediah: here to tell us what we can expect, judicial committee member senator joni ernst. senator, we have a big day tomorrow coming up and a big week for judge amy coney barrett. there's been a lot of talk about what issues will be focused on. many have focused on abortion. i actually think health care may take center stage this week. what do you think that people can expect to see? >> well, first, i want to congratulate judge amy coney barrett. she is a well known and well respected jurist, and so we thank her for stepping forward
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and being willing to serve as a justice should she be confirmed. but i do think you're right, i think a number of topics will be coming up. certainly, what we can also expect from the left is their continuous bigoted attacks on her religious faith. they know that they can't attack her on her job qualifications, so they absolutely are going after the fact that she is a mother of seven, she does believe, she is a catholic. and that's what we're hearing from the left right now. it's not about her qualifications, it is about her faith. will: senator ernst, i don't know that i agree it'll be about health care. it seems even when it's not abortion, supreme court nomination hearings are always about abortion, but pete has brought this up a couple of times this morning. do you find it odd that it's already ramped up? certainly rumblings, but nothing like we saw with kavanaugh one it seemed to be almost an
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all-out assault before the confirmation hearings ever began? >> yes. and i think they're a really? a quandary because judge barrett is so well qualified. she has been commended by liberals and conservatives just because she is just a phenomenal jurist. and so they are really struggling to find fault with this nomination. and i hope that we can continue and just have a fair process for the judge. i believe she deserves that. she is well qualified. and i'm excited to see how the confirmation hearings go this week. jedediah: yeah. it's going to be a fascinating week, to say the least. senator, we've received some good news, all of us, with respect to the president's health as he seems to be improving significantly with covid-19. it's been tough to follow a lot of angst around that, but he's hitting the campaign trail, and he's let us all know tomorrow he's heading to florida, pennsylvania on tuesday, wednesday will be iowa.
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what are your thoughts on the president and his approach to the campaign trail now? >> well, first, i am so thankful that he has recovered quite well, and i hope that we see that with other members and staff and anyone that has been affected by covid-19 as well. and it is exciting, we do have an exciting election cycle this year, and he's out there doing it as safe as possible. i actually, i don't normally dress like this, i'm ready go to on my motorcycle ride today, joni's ride across iowa, so i'm going the same sort of thing, getting out and campaigning. doing it safely and responsibly, going to get on that motorcycle and raise some dollars for the derecho disaster are recovery fund as well as the puppy jake foundation. while we can campaign in nontraditional ways, we should be, and i'm excited to see the president is with and able to do
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it. will: the harley shirt had to be recognized. [laughter] now we know it's part of the campaign and raising funds. all right. enjoy your ride today, senator. >> thanks so much, will. will: straight ahead, kim jong un making claims about covid-19. retired four-star general jack keane gives us his analysis next. on king's hawaiian bread! yum! king's hawaiian.
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jedediah: we are back with some quick headlines beginning with extreme weather. georgia slammed by strong storms as remnants of delta head north. heavy rains flooding this atlanta highway. there were multiple tornado warnings. the storm destroying this homeless shelter, tear thing off its roof are. and in louisiana, creole seeing heavy flooding where the delta
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made landfall as a hurricane. people in lake charles driving boats through the flooded streets. there are more than 350,000 power outages statewide. and house speaker nancy pelosi and some senate republicans are slamming the trump administration's latest stimulus deal, stalling talks yet again. pelosi argues the bill is insufficient saying it was one step forward, two steps back. meanwhile, gop senators argue the price tag is too hue. treasury secretary steve mnuchin put forward a $1.8 trillion offer last week, a $200 billion increase from the previous proposal. over to you, booth. pete: thank you, jed. kim jong un hosting a military parade in north korea saturday where he claimed, amid tears, that the rogue nation has zero covid-19 cases and praised socialism for saving his a nation. this coming as he unveiled a so-called monster new ballistic missile. here with analysis, strategic analyst and retired four-star
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general jack keane. general, thank you so much. we always appreciate having you on the program. two parts to that. first of all, kim jong un claiming no covid-19 in his communist nation, and yet we have this big parade and this big new missile. what's the state of the korean peninsula right now? >> yeah. well, that's a great question. first of all, i don't think we can believe a word he says about covid-19. that's just the reality of it. and, you know, they lied through their teeth just about every single day when they're talking publicly. here's what i think where we are strategically. president trump did the right thing walking out of the summit in hanoi back in february 2019. why is that? because we expected them to put on the table, pete, a plan for denuclearization. what's the schedule, etc. they wouldn't do any of that. so he didn't want that to be just another grip and grin meeting. we did that the first time. so he walked out. what has happened since that
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time? well, a couple of things. one, we tried to get him back to the negotiating table with those kind of detailses. they have refused. two, every they have not done any nuclear testing or a long-range missile testing which was the self-imposed moratorium that he agreed to from the outset, and that is a positive thing. what i think is going on with the north koreans is that they're waiting out the election, and we'll see what happens after that. i believe what they will do after the election regardless of who is elected, they will likely do a missile test of some consequence to use it as a negotiating ploy with the administration that's in power to reduce the sanctions as a result of the negotiation. this is the nonsense they've always done with previous administrations -- pete: yeah. >> -- and this one, the trump administration, has always resisted that. the sanctions are in place, -- pete: to your point, new
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election, new administration or same administration, fire off the missiles, get to the table. but this administration, the key difference is there never was a loosening of sanctions. have we seen that hurt? >> yeah, very much so. and it is significant. sanctions imposed more come prehensley than ever before. -- comprehensively. however, china still back doors the sanctions even though they today greed to three u.n. resolutions to oppose the sanctions and so does russia. and despite our best efforts to get them to curb that behavior, we have not been successful. nonetheless, the sanctions are taking an impact on that regime. pete: remains to be seen, but you cannot refute the fact this administration has done everything they can to i try to stare down that regime, give them every option to come back into the community of nations. let's move over to iran. president did a two hour telephone rally with rush limbaugh. as part of it, he was asked about the status of the iran
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deal. here's what the president said about that. >> we have strength in weapons and things that we never had before. we never had it like we have it now. and iran knows that. they've been put on notice. if you [bleep] around with us us, if you do something bad to us, we are going to do things to you that have never been done before, and i think understand that. pete: so when you add the scrapping of the iran dealing, the killing of qassem soleimani, what's the calculation the islamic republic of iran is making right now? >> yeah. well, that's also a very good question. where they are, they have had more sanctions imposed on them the, you know, the economy is in the tank, the place is spiraling out of control, and this is really significant. because in the 40 years, while they've had civil unrest before, pete, they've never hads by imagine the and sabotage being committed against the reregime internally. there's been dozens of sites that have been blown up, commercial plants, power plants,
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etc., missile development facility, a centrifuge development facility. the bets are that there could possibly be foreign intervention in that, it could possibly be the mossad from israel doing some of that the, but everybody agrees the extent of that could not be done without support from iranian resis dance movement inside the country. so that's worrisome for the reregime, because that's how the reregime will eventually go away, the people will make it go away. pete: yep. >> so where are they, get back to your question. we just imposed sanctions on 18 more banks as of thursday. so we're keeping our foot on the gas pedal here when with it comes to maximum sanctions. they also are waiting out this election to see what's going to happen, and certainly, they do not want this administration to come back into power, pete. i mean, that's a fact. and if it does come back into power, i think what we will see is the iranians don't have much
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choice but to sit down at the negotiating table with this administration and work out a better pathway forward. and i think part of the catalyst, you mentioned it, i've talked to some arab leaders, and they applaud this administration for standing up to the iranians as the number one strategic threat in the region which was not done by the previous administration. number two, the administration used restraint and not walking up the level of escalation. every time the iranians tried to provoke them in this last year and a half in terms of their behavior in the persian gulf, etc. and the third thing is what surprised everybody, when the administration took down qassem soleimani, three previous administrations did not do that the even though they had opportunity, that really got the arabs' attention. and that was one of the are reasons -- not the sole reason, but it was a contributor -- to i why the air a wraps are making the -- arabs are making the
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peace deal with israel. they know for a fact that this administration has their back back, and there's strength there, and they have confidence in moving forward and taking some political risks and making deals with the israelis. pete: yeah. which only isolates iran even more in that region. great stuff. general jack keane, thank you so much. >> good talking to you, pete. pete: all right. the clock is ticking on the campaign trail, and president trump not wasting any time getting back to business, rallying voters all around the country this week. we'll break it all down with trump 2020 adviser e katrina pierson coming up next. ♪ ♪ and depressions, wars that split a nation, and fractured the world. americans have always found a way to vote and make their voices heard. so stand with the national council on election integrity and help make sure every vote is counted. no matter who you vote for, or how.
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. ♪ >> on beif half of myself and the first lady, this has been really an incredible outpouring. we're starting very, very big with our rallies and everything. we cannot allow our country to become a socialist nation. [cheers and applause] we cannot let that happen. more important, this is the most important election we've ever had. this is more important than even four years ago. i used to say the most important, and it was true at the time. this is the single most important election in the history of our country. get out and vote. will: president trump at a rally on the white house lawn just yesterday. he's scheduled now to hit the trail this week with, several swing states, where he'll make the case for why this is the most important election.
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here to wreak it down is katrina pierson, trump 20 senior adviser. with the process of the second -- loss of the second presidential debate, these opportunities become very important. what case will president trump make in florida, pennsylvania and iowa this week? >> well, good morning. you may have noticed already are that the president's re-election campaign did not skip a beat. we have been following his courageous lead and keeping up the momentum. we launched operation maga which maintains some in-person and virtual events from the trump camly -- family, coalition surrogates, even the bus tours are on their scheduled routes, and the vice president has stepped in to do some of those peaceful protests that thousands of americans have been participating n. as you can imagine, now9 that the president has been medically cleared to get back out on the trail, he'll resume holding those peaceful protests and in-person events following cdc guidelines and will continue to take his
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message and his record, message of hope, strength and patriotism, directly to the american people drawing a clear, stark contrast with the extreme radical left harris/biden ticket. jedediah: katrina, as will mentioned, that second debate has been canceled by the commission. joe biden is now going to, in place of that second dedebate, do a town hall with abc. there have been some reports president trump would be adding an additional event similar to what joe biden's doing with another network. do you have an update on that at all? >> the president may do something similar, but, look, there's no reason to have stopped the october 15th debate, no medical reason either. in fact, i find it highly suspect that all of a sudden the debate commission is concerned about covid because back in august when the campaign asked for an additional debate that would precede the first ballots being cast in 16 states in fairness to the american people, they said, no.
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but the commission scheduled these dates and procedures pre-covid. and since then the traditional in-person campaigning has been throttled for months. the pandemic was a threat in august when they didn't want to alter the format or the dates then, so i'm curious as to why it's impacting their decision now. the president is going to move if forward accordingly and get his message out to the people. pete: highly suspect is the right way to put it as e it pertains to the moves this commission has made. can you give us any updates on whether there has been progress or conversations about adding an additional debate? is it, will e it, does it look like it'll only be the 22nd? will that be in person? what can we expect and what could we expect to see it? >> well, i don't have any updates for you today. i would imagine there'd be some information coming through later this week simply because the campaign and the president is going to continue to push in fairness for the american
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people, and until then, this momentum that the president has is going to continue similarly to 2016 as we move into the home stretch having multiple campaign events per day every day, because our president as i've always said from the very beginning, is a machine with one gear, and that is forward. yet again, i suspect regardless he's going to outwork us all on this road to visibly for9 another four years of greatness under the leadership of president trump. will: i'll be watching for those stark differences drawn in these events. katrina thanks for your time. >> good to see you. will: the broncos/patriots game has been postponed. the denver broncos confirming the news after a patriots player reportedly tests positive for covid-19 this morning. espn reporting the patriots have closed their facility for the thursday time in ten days. the titansal confirming they've closed their facilities.
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and a heart-stopping moment in indiana when a speeding train slams into a semi truck. watch. >> oh, my god! [background sounds] will: the train plowing the truck after he got stuck on the track. the truck burst into flames, luckily, the driver was able to get out of the truck. the train's conductor with was treated for minor injuries. and a norwegian company believes it has found way to prevent hurricanes, developing what it calls the bubble. it's a series of pipes in the ocean that can push cold water to the surface, cutting off the warm water storms need to become hurricanes. the company is reportedly trying to raise $4 million for a pilot project in the gulf of mexico. how about that? pete: i thought you were going to i say nuclear weapons. still in favor of that. willwell nuking hurricanes? -- will:? pete: might work.
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[laughter] will: sounds like a business opportunity. pete: let's ask rick. you would know, rick -- rick's like, nuclear weapons, pete? really? if you get cold air up, does that change the dynamic? is this a real thing? rick: not cold air, cold water. so if you go down in the ocean, the water's a lot colder, storms need the warm surface water to form so, yes, in theory. that said, it would have to be a really large whatever that contraption is out there. will: right. rick: i don't want to poo poo on their idea, but it's kind of interesting. i would way prefer that over the nuclear -- [laughter] rick: all right. i prefer to just let it all kind of work as naturally as possible, to be honest. here you go. across the atlantic, things look really calm. this is great news. we are headed toward the end of hurricane season, about six weeks left, but really about 2-3
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weeks where you could still see some significant development, and things for now are looking calm. this is what was delta, made landfall, obviously, friday night. moisture spreading across tennessee, spreading across the carolinas. we've got this for about another day and a half, two days. of it's going to slowly move up the mid atlantic and towards the northeast, so get ready for a gloomy and wet monday. out across parts of the west, this is our first significant system, a really rainy week in store for the pacific northwest. you going to get some mountain snow. that's going to spread in across the northern rockies. we need that, but the southern rockies, the four dorners, unfortunately -- corners, unfortunately, our fire it is continue. ten temps into the 90s. again, we get a little bit of a break, 80s across the northern plains. so this general pattern of warmer temps though overall, i think, is going to stick with us for a while. we're not getting any big batches of cold air coming in
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anywhere across the lower 48. all right, guys, back to you. jedediah: thank you, rick. rick: you bet. jedediah: president trump speaks to our own maria bartiromo in an exclusive interview coming up in just minutes. maria is here with a sneak preview next. ♪ you're strong. you power through chronic migraine-15 or more headache days a month each lasting 4 hours or more. botox® prevents headaches in adults with chronic migraine. so, if you haven't tried botox® for your chronic migraine check with your doctor if botox® is right for you and, if samples are available. effects of botox® may spread hours to weeks after injection causing serious symptoms. alert your doctor right away, as difficulty swallowing speaking, breathing, eye problems, or muscle weakness can be signs of a life-threatening condition.
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here? nope. here. when the middle of nowhere is somewhere. the all-new chevy trailblazer. ♪ ♪ will: back to some quick headlines. disneyland is end helping new health and safety protocols will boost its chance for reopening, adding hand sanitizing stations around the park, guests will be required to wear face masks and have their temperatures taken. and lynwood springs,
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colorado, offering $100 to travelers who stay at least two nights. the first 1,000 visitors will receive the offer to run through november 30th. pete: well, new york city's going to have to start doing that soon. all right, ahead of his return to the campaign trail, president trump will first be joining our own maria bartiromo for an exclusive interview today at 10 a.m. eastern time on "sunday morning futures." jedediah: here with a preview is host and our friend maria bartiromo. maria, welcome, as always, what can you tell us about this interview coming up? maria: hi there, guys. thank you so much. we will have breaking news coming up with president trump. we are going to get into policy proposals for a potential second term. the president's going to walk us through exactly what he would like to do on economic policy and foreign policy as well as health care. i also have break news coming up on the health of both
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candidates. i've got medical sources who have given me information about the health on both candidates, and i'm going to share it at the top of the hour. of we will also talk with senator lindsey graham. he, of course, is presiding over the confirmation hearings of judge i'mmy coney -- amy coney barrett. he's going to walk us through the upcoming week, the introductions, the questions, when they expect it to wrap up. and, of course, we're going to go back to the declassification story. why is it that all of these documents are out, and we have people looking at them and saying this is not true, that is not true. we're going to zero in on one question, when did fbi start working hand in glove with the clinton campaign. we now know it was hillary clinton's idea to tie trump to russia and hacking. we want the know when the fbi decided, yeah, we're going to go with this even though we we know it's not true. we'll get into it all at the top the hour with the president. willwell maria, the news cycle's
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going to turn quickly to amy coney barrett. what do you want to hear, what's the one policy you want to hear proposed the next four years? maria: first of all, economic policy is going to be critical. most people don't understand what $4 trillion in tax increases means. for example, corporate tax rate, fine, goes up to 28%. that has a lot of impact. look at the capital gains tax. widen is proposing take -- biden is proproposing taking it all the way up to 39%. this is not just impacting people with stock market portfolios. you want to sell your house? 40. you want to sell art? boom, 40 percent if tax. and, of course, you want to sell stocks, same thing. i want to get in the difference, what does that mean for the deficit. and also the democrats' and the president's critics keep saying he has no plans for health care. what is he planning to do with those people with pre-existing
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conditions? i'll be asking him straight away. jedediah: thanks so much, maria. pete: the president just tweeted about it, he'll be there. so your appointment is set. [laughter] all right. jedediah: ufc fighter jorge vidal has his eyes on a new prize. he's here next with his plans to help the trump team for a knockout in one key ballot you know state. ♪ ♪ if your dry eye symptoms keep coming back, inflammation in your eye might be to blame. looks like a great day for achy, burning eyes over-the-counter eye drops typically work by lubricating your eyes and may provide temporary relief. ha! these drops probably won't touch me. xiidra works differently, targeting inflammation that can cause dry eye disease. what is that?
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over hispanic voters in florida. pete: the fighters against socialism bus tour kicked offed today in tampa before ending in miami will: jorge, last time i saw you, you were in a fight, now you have a different fight. and i know your family, jorge, immigrated from cuba. you have a vested interest in understanding the impacts of socialism. tell us what motivates you to get into this fight. >> that's a very good question. i believe this country's the greatest country in the world. i believe that with i have ounce of being in me -- with every ounce of being in me, down to my soul. i've had my fair share of what's on the other side of this great country, communism and socialism. i've been dealing with this since i was a kid through my
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family already here sharing story or my family that's still stuck in that system of presentation. so when i was asked if i had any thoughts or words on it, i said, hell, yeah, i've got a lot of it. i can speak for my father, i can speak for my aunt whos' missing her -- who's missing her breast who tried to escape from guantanamo bay and dynamite blew her breast off. i can relate the experiences that i'm having to my family. jedediah: jorge, one of the challenges with this message is the younger generations that seem to have a hot of distance between them and the reality of socialism. they're not as interested in hearing it. they don't process it the same way as the older generations. how can you reach out to younger generations in particular and make them aware of what's at risk? >> i think it definitely starts with school. we definitely have to start schooling our kids at a younger
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stage and make sure we get to them before the other side gets to them. but definitely just relating history to them, you know? history repeats itself. i tell my kids all the time, my son is 5 years old, but he knows very well -- [inaudible] so if i could use my voice to tell young people, hey, socialism might sound amazing from a liberal professor at the podium, but nobody's ever lived that that enjoys that. nobody's escaping capitalist countries to go to communist countries or risking their life to go to these countries. it's just a no-brainer. associate t body counts keep coming, so it's a no-brainer that socialism, communist is not for america. pete: jorge, great message. joe biden says i'm not a socialist, i beat a socialist, just different priorities. what do you say, how do you articulate the reason why you've seen the democrat party actually be captured by socialism?
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what do you see? >> well, one of the things i see immediately whether they call themselves socialists or not is this is the greatest country not because we have the best fast food, but because we have the greatest literature, which is the constitution. and when people are trying to mess with the constitution, our amendment, i immediately hit the panic button and get in defense mode and they're preparing for something much, much worse when there's certain things they're trying to do with the laws, with the filibuster, with packing the courts. we've seen this happen to other societies that were not socialist or communist get broken down and turned into -- will: hover i hay, we've got to run, i've been a big sports fans, i've seen you talk trash and do other things, you're incredibly educated and sharing a massively important personal experience. thank you so much. >> thank you, my brother. have a good day. will: take care. more "fox & friends" next.
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jedediah: thank you so much for sharing your sunday morning with us. we had a blast. we hope you did too. will: will you dancing? have a good sunday. pete: have a great sunday, everybody. go to church in person. ♪ maria: good sunday morning, everyone. thanks so much for joining me, i'm maria bartiromo. right here on "sunday morning futures," president donald j. trump calling in live, following up on our interview from earlier in the week. the president will join me exclusively ahead of his big first rally since testing positive for covid-19, now 11 days ago. this of after the second presidential debate was canceled officially with only 23 days left until the most important policy election of our lifetimes. the president will make his case for a second term right here. also this morning, two weeks after i first reported on this program there will be no durham report or indictments before the
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