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tv   The Ingraham Angle  FOX News  November 24, 2020 7:00pm-8:00pm PST

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army of bureaucrats protected barack obama and is working to destroy the trump agenda." thanks for watching, i hope you and your family have the best possible thanksgiving, tammy bruce is filling in for laura ingraham tonight, it's all yours. >> tammy: happy thanksgiving to you and yours and welcome aboard. i am tammy bruce in for laura ingraham and this is a special edition of "the ingraham angle" from new york city tonight. joe biden today introducing his cabinet to the country and while msnbc claims it's like he's assembling the avengers, we'll expose how they are really just a bunch of swamp creatures, not a surprise there. plus corn and cobb are not the only parts handing out this thanksgiving, sources tell fox news michael flynn is next. this show has warned you for months about the dangers of mail-in voting, what lessons can we learn to avoid this complete
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disaster in the future? dinesh d'souza joins us as well. and you've heard about "the new york times" 1619 project, basically a warped history of america, now there's something better. it's called the 1620 project and we will explain it to you. but first, a national scandal is unfolding before our eyes which is not unusual as an entire generation of students is being conned out of a real education by unscrupulous and greedy teachers unions hell-bent on using the pandemic to their advantage. as a result, schools all over our country are still shut down and kids have been forced into online learning and the cost has been staggering. for instance, in los angeles, schools and saw a sharp drop in kindergarten enrollment, about 6,000 students. in st. paul, minnesota, 40% of high school students have failing grades, 40%.
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even higher percentage of kids in houston, texas, are failing at least two classes. in our nation's capital, there's been a 14 percentage point drop among black students in kindergarten through second grade who met literacy standards, and just 20 miles away in fairfax county, virginia, a new survey of academic performance in schools found that f letter grades are up -- are you ready for this? 83% this year. for fairfax middle schoolers, fs are up 300%. >> your children's education, your jobs and incomes, your other responsibilities has been tremendous. we also could not be prouder of how our students and staff have stepped up to learn and to teach in new ways and how everyone has adapted to these challenges. >> tammy: wow, how everyone
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has adapted -- this isn't like going from a b student to a c student, this system is failing these students. it are being left behind, special needs students aren't getting the help they need, get the teachers unions want the schools to say closed. even more power under the bite administration. >> we win this election, you're going to get the support you need and support you deserve, you won't just have a partner in the white house. >> tammy: that should be concerning to some people and joining me now is offer m -- cya garrett, education activist and founder of cynthia garrett ministries and author of i choose victory, that is a great title, thank you for joining me, i appreciate it. >> thank you. >> tammy: i was just in
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relating that to our audience, the numbers are shocking. we've had shocking news this year especially out of fairfax, how are parents doing and isn't there -- i think there might be an uprising or there should be to deal with the entire school board, what's going on out the there? >> parents are so angry, the man you just heard is the superintendent of fairfax county, parents now have this bumper sticker on their cars. they have fire, audit -- i was so angry listening to your segment just now, the data on poor kids who are failing now because we have a superintendent who is failing our children. scott brabrand has famously said equity is at the heart of his initiative and what he has done
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is he has become an activist instead of an educator and what he's doing is failing the kids that he supposedly trying to reach. usually the data is plus 34% but right now the number of kids who are economically disadvantaged and failing are 1 out of 5, or e learners, 1 out of 3, and our boys, 1 out of 10. it's unbelievable. what we have is a lost year, just like you said. it's a political scandal, it's a travesty, and our superintendent is making more than $300,000 a year. it's horrible, it's so outrageous. >> tammy: there are so many different fronts to this, you've got teachers unions and political interest there, you've got the impact psychologically
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on children, if you get a f, you fail at a young age, it sets into motion attitudes and framework in addition of course to the people getting rich in this framework as though they are useless or throwaways, what is your take on what parents can do considering the long-term impact. this isn't just one year that is lost but the psychological impact on children overall. >> you're right, the psychological impact is incredible because you and i both know that when you get a f, you get a failing grade, the word fail is sort of on your forehead. students tend to withdraw, they become more and more resistant to learning, so the inequity gap has just gotten wider and wider. kids who are already struggling -- now they are way behind.
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i think so much of what parents can do has got to do with showing up, you've got to start to show up in a classroom, at the board meetings, we've got to show up and we have to speak up and we have to get angry and we have to start demanding change. >> tammy: i would like both of you to hear a little bit about what joe biden had to say about the reopening of schools, listen to this. >> what will you do to get kids back in school, how much will you be working the phones and working with governors and mayors? >> it takes a lot of money to get them back, the estimates are 152 mecca $250 billion a year to see if we schools. >> tammy: does that say it all -- suddenly it is about money, but saving money come a bunch of things that have nothing to do with worrying about the kids and america in general is agreeing that there is no reason to not have these schools open, isn't that kind of
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a confession about what this is really about? >> what is lost in this is our children, that is what is the tragedy. right here is the book that our superintendent paid $20,000 to have this authors speak for one hour, one hour. just imagine that he is just putting in safety mechanisms right now for our school systems and yet failing our kids. there's a young man watching you tonight, his name is teddy, he woke up at 5:45:00 a.m. the sign up for the last school board meeting because he wanted to beg the superintendent to open up schools, he was so excited, he was going to go back a couple weeks ago and on the eve of his return, canceled. if school was canceled, they are just playing around with kids' lives. and meanwhile, they are going after this social justice activism. my son goes to high school,
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scott brabrand, the superintendent has been at war with this high school's parents and students to change admissions to "include equity." , meanwhile, he has such injustice in the way he's actually educating our kids. they get a f grade and our kids -- >> tammy: we need to think about what is the biggest factor in school shutdowns? we've got a new study for the wisconsin institute of law and liberty, they found the presence of a teachers union was more of a deciding factor for a wisconsin school districts choosing to direct their classes virtually, not the extent of the pandemic itself in the communi community. that's apparently consistent with national research -- what they are saying is it had nothing to do with science or what's best for your kids, what's your take on that? >> we know it has nothing to do with science, the sciences always always said that children are not really the ones at risk.
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i think that a lot of this in my estimation -- i look at it honestly, i just go i know we've been lazy in our school district and i know that there's been a lot of money thrown at what's called the problem, fixing the problem. but honestly part of the problem i think is that we have a lot of people who really and truly like in some sense what's going on. that may sound harsh but that's how i feel. >> tammy: i think you're right, that's what a lot of us have seen. it's a big question, it's been eight months. this is now very serious, a lot of people are still being moved through fear. i want to thank you because now this is about the children, this is about the next generation long-term impacts. thanks for being with us, clearly a problem with got to keep an eye on. destroying our education system is not enough for the left, now blue state tyrants are dragging millions of americans back into lockdown as cases arise, but
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don't think for a second that americans will just roll over. rich lowry writing in "the new york post" says get ready for major backlash, the next wave of lockdowns, the rights populism and limited government impulse will presumably be reunited in a way they haven't been since the days of the tea party. joining me now is the president of the committee to unleash prosperity which is a very nice name for a group and a cardiologist and ceo of foxhall cardiology, thank you for joining me -- i appreciate it. let me start with you because we've seen protest like in huntington beach, california, it was a happy protest but it was a protest of a lockdown. we saw a buffalo, new york, jim of fighting, telling a health inspector to get a warrant before she was able to come into the gym. americans standing up for themselves -- do you think we've hit a breaking point?
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>> i think that most americans are not naturally inclined to massive street protests like we are seeing in europe, normal american way to deal with something stupid coming from government is to ignore it and do what you wanted to do anyway. the problem comes in precisely with a type of enforcement action you're talking about, when people try to go about their lives anyway, if government sends agents into their home and businesses and try to stop them from doing so, that's where you're to have flash points. people are not going to tolerate that, you could potentially see more of an interruption of the kind of outright opposition we are seeing in europe. >> tammy: i got a column that's coming out even tonight, it looks a bit at governor kate brown of oregon, the woman that says it's going to be the summer of love -- she's instituted new coronavirus lockdowns just prior to thanksgiving, she's got the harshest lockdown measures in the country now and she's asking oregonians to snitch on their neighbors -- listen to this.
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>> do you want people calling the police on their neighbors? >> this is no different from what happens if there's a party down the street and it's keeping everyone awake. what did neighbors do? they call law enforcement because it's too noisy. >> it sounds like that could be a "yes." >> yes. >> tammy: wow, doctor, i want to get to you because this is a huge step, you've got the government encouraging you to turn on someone who might have more than six people in their own home minding their own business and equating it to something that disturbs the entire neighborhood with noise. is that a stretch? >> it's beyond a stretch, it speaks to kate brown's native spain and the fascism that she left as a child. the reality is that lockdowns have never been done before in history but also had been derided by the cdc and the
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w.h.o. and there is no science that supports their use. in fact, the parris island study we talked about last week clearly shows that strict quarantines and lockdowns don't work. this push toward this and there are other studies, there is one that i sent your producer earlier today from economics done in france come you look at 188 countries -- it's clear lockdowns simply don't work and all they do is damage the economy but they don't prevent the spread of the virus. >> tammy: you as a doctor, i can just imagine if neighbor returns in neighbor, there's going to be a few broken noses in hospitals throughout oregon. this is almost like an effort to divide us in general, the same organ that just passed a measure in the election to legalize hard street drugs like heroin and meth and lsd. >> just make sure you only have five people when you're shooting
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up. >> tammy: exactly, you can be shooting up but you can't be having dinner with your family. the median medical cartel is already pushing biden to create a nationwide covid tracking program, listen to this. >> the first item is to integrate local, state, national leadership and messaging, why do we not have an up contract tracers in america, why does everybody not have a contact app in america? we have lots of money for other things, wise enough money for isolation and quarantine for people who are asking to stay in isolation and quarantine. >> tammy: privacy concerns aside, we've been talking about tracing people, there are apps for tracing, something that new york said they were going to do but they said but don't trace people and don't ask people who went to a demonstration. the double standard makes it impossible. >> it's probably impossible anyway to be honest, we are
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talking about a respiratory virus that's spreading, many of them don't even know they have it, the idea you can determine where transmission occurred -- i think it was always a stretch. that really only worked -- when you look at prepandemic before we all lost our minds, these types of containment strategies only work if you have less than 1% community spread come you can only do it in places like new zealand. in united states where you have millions and millions of people who have it, it's never going to work. >> tammy: we aren't an island like new zealand, we have hundreds of millions of people here, is it a pie-in-the-sky? >> the w ho recognizes last year -- this isn't just his theory, it's actually scientific fact. what is so disturbing is they preach at us and follow the
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science but they are really saying just do what we tell you to do, sit down and shut up. they aren't following any science, even the science of organizations they claim they support like the cdc and the w.h.o. there is no -- contact tracing doesn't work, it's that simple, we know this. >> tammy: speaking of the cdc, it's also damaging the trust people have in government. the cdc put out a guideline for thanksgiving, they don't want you to play loud music, they don't want you to be singing, they want you to not drink alcohol, all of these things with this argument that the federal government somehow knows better on how to micromanage your life to literally track every breath you take. apologies to the band the police, and every move you make at this point. don't play your music loud than
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people won't have to shout, this is from the cdc. >> there was a great tweet i think from dave rubin who said the ultimate rebel act now is having karaoke bars because you can do all of those things at the same time. we've reached a level of absurdity to be with all of this -- when this virus hits, with geographically in season we see these very big outbreaks, we see them happening in sync no matter what the government policies are, we sought in all the planes in states whether they had masks or lockdowns or schools open, restaurants open, they all went up and they are all starting it looks like to come down -- switzerland and france rose and fell together, i think these policies and recommendations have nothing to do with anything, we want to control something we can't control. >> tammy: thank you, we know the pandemic is serious and thank goodness for donald trump's operation warp speed because now we have multiple vaccines and that i think obviously will make the difference. and take the air out of the
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balloon of these tyrannical politicians, thank you. coming up with joe biden, heading back to d.c. we think, the swamp sees an opening to retake the reins of power. plus sources telling fox the knife that president trump is planning to pardon michael flynn. congressman matt gaetz and retired brigadier general robert spalding are here with reaction coming up next. muscle and joinn with topical nsaids first. a formulation they recommend can be found in salonpas. a formulation they recommend can be found in salonpas. salonpas. it's good medicine. hisamitsu.
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♪ >> talking to a democrat who said it felt like the avengers, it felt like we are being rescued from this craziness we all lived through the last four years and now here are the superheroes come to save us all. >> tammy: save us from what? fabless economy and peace in the middle east, freedom and prosperity that trump gave us? -- for the most part have been immersed in government and washington culture for decades. just like their boss. i think donald trump has people
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who has ivy league degrees as well but joining me for some perspective, matt gaetz and retired brigadier general robert spalding, former nsc official, thank you very much for being here with me tonight, i appreciate it. congressman, we've obviously seen this movie before. they sure have a glowing attitude about themselves, don't they? it doesn't end well for the american people who have become the forgotten men and women, are we headed into that same direction? >> maybe this is the avengers for the washington media, but it's "the hunger games" for the rest of us. joe biden has surrounded himself with the innermost ring of the establishment but what else would we expect from somebody who has been a creature of washington for the last 40 years? we know that personnel is policy, general spalding knows that to be the case and what it means for america is an embrace of america last policy around
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the world, more multinationalism, more utilization of america's resources to be the piggy bank and police force for the rest of the world. i think our country is best when we are a shining example of how to be the best in the most prosperous -- that is a stark contrast from what we see particularly from biden's national security team. here at home, i think it's going to mean more recrimination and political prosecution. we've had democrat members of congress and even hold members of the erin perrine suggested president trump needs to be prosecuted -- for what? he brought us the greatest economy in the world, he is winding down foreign wars, he's brought us one, multiple vaccines for taking on the china virus. >> tammy: it highlights what they did not do, and highlights their failure and this is exactly what we fired in 2016. it's very strange that we are in a position where down ballot it was a red wave, a complete
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repudiation the democrats have been pitching. identity politics, race war, building up the rest of the world, america last, and yet here we are, the media wants you to think that biden's national security picks are above politics. listen to this. >> when i look at that group up there, they are not political, they are career people. >> it's not going to be political and joe biden is saying these are people, this is a team that's going to tell me what i need to know, not what i want to know. that is a big change. >> tammy: that is a big change, it tells you exactly who's going to be running the country, not the guy who's going to want to know something, but the people who are going to feed him a little bit of information. they are acting as if national security experts are scientists or medical doctors, somehow if you're a career politician, you're not political -- it's quite the opposite, isn't it? >> what people don't understand
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is that what you have in washington, d.c., are these national security professionals that quite frankly agree with the terms of our engagement with the outside world, counter to what the president tried to institute which is to put american interests first. it's actually about creating a global enterprise that allows us to somehow have interests that are outside of our borders and the president tried to rein that back in and say we need to focus on the american people, american interests first. this is what they disagree with. >> tammy: it's interesting because president trump refocused that because we found our supply chain was controlled by the communist party of china. isis grew out of that dynamic. speaking to your point, here is a former defense secretary jim mattis from an article coauthored in foreign affairs magazine this week -- he wrote and did his coauthors, when
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president biden begins to reevaluate u.s. foreign policy, we hope they will quickly revise the national security strategy to eliminate america first from its content. this clearly is open, they are not hiding this, congressman, who does he think in your point of view that u.s. officials should be putting first if not us? >> general spalding knows because he helped write the strategy, the biggest threat america faces abroad comes from china and what joe biden is going to try to do is take a lot of american resources and try to find other nations and their potential admission to nato. for biden to have this very nato focused foreign policy, he is going to have to threat construct around russia which will in turn provoke russia which will further take our focus off of china. this group of people that biden has accumulated, they aren't going to put america first -- we already have too many products
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that are made in china, they want our foreign policy made in china too and that's what we've got to push against. >> tammy: we've seen historically that's exactly what's been happening, sources are telling fox news just moments ago that president trump in fact plans on pardoning a former security advisor mike flynn. what is your reaction to that? >> what happened to general flynn is a disgrace to the country. the fact that the u.s. government used its resources to spy on the trump campaign and then essentially went after general flynn in order to get him out of the national security advisory, it's one of the worst things that's happened in our history. >> tammy: it's outrageous, congressman i take it you would agree, as we still await the durham report if that ever happens, what's your take away? >> president trump should pardon them michael flynn, pardon the thanksgiving turkey, he pardon everyone from himself, to the
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administration officials, to jill exotic if he has to, you see from the radical left a blood lust that will only be quenched if they come after the people who work so hard to animate the trump administration with the policies and the effectiveness that delivered for the american people. i think the president ought to revealed that pardon power effectively and robustly. >> tammy: indeed, gentlemen thank you very much. up next, how mail-in voting played out at the national lev level, dinesh d'souza lays out some of the sobering lessons for the g.o.p. plus congressional candidate claudia tenney from new york explains why boats are still being counted and her extremely close new york race, do not go away, we'll be right back.
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♪ >> tammy: if there is one thing that perfectly illustrates the differences between the trump and the biden campaigns, it's the size of their rallies. the president regularly turned out tens of thousands of people, thousands certainly while biden was lucky to see hundreds. usually it was six and a few circles surrounded by chairs, this wasn't just because no one was enthused about biden, it's because democrats and republicans were running completely different kinds of campaigns. while the g.o.p. focused more on traditional message like rallies, ads, doorknocking, and persuading people, democrats were using the courts to rig the game in their favor, in key
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states from quite a while ago. joining me and alice dinesh d'souza, conservative commentator and filmmaker who is new movie "trump card" is available on demand. it's almost like the twilight zone, i'm waiting to introduced rob sterling in the next segment, i love your point and that dynamic that we are experiencing here which is that it's almost as though the democrats never expected to need to campaign. they didn't need to be outside, they were expecting something else to happen, tell us your take. >> i've been in the country now for 40 years, i've seen ten elections and this is clearly the strangest, the most surreal. i fear it's going to leave a deep vein of distrust in the democratic process itself. why is this? normally in an election you have
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two sides, they campaigned vigorously, they put their case for the american people and one side wins and the other side is may be grumpy about it but they accept it. in this case, you had a complete different approach. on the trump side, the republican side from a vigorous campaign campaigning, tremendous attention of the campaign. rallies, campaign ads, mobilization, fire up of the base, make the case. at the democratic side, none of this was even visible. biden was in the basement, he would call a lid about 9:00 a.m. in the morning, he's got six people in the audience, more reporters than people in attendance -- it's almost as if the republicans were focusing on the campaign but the democrats were focusing on the election. this is not to say democrats weren't doing anything come of their energy and things like filing a flurry of lawsuits to enable male in balloting to control the vote counting process particularly in the swing states, manage where the barricades are put up. if massive preparation for
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litigation following the election, democrats invested less than republicans in the campaign. >> tammy: the only way that works is if the media switches, if you have that arm that explains that away while also treating the other candidate in a completely different fashion -- the debates showed that clearly. the town hall debate in particular is you have this separate arm which is almost effectively -- the campaign itself was the media. >> there's no question about it, we don't really have i would call it a real media in this country anymore and what i mean by that is if you think of the media as a sort of critically detached group that is applying independent scrutiny to both sides, sharing information with the american people -- the media covered up the biggest story of the election which was the biden scandal. even during the debates, it's very clear the moderators were
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almost lobbying for one candidate. it's like umpires jumping into the middle of a basketball game and trying to score points himself. >> tammy: what the media is doing and talking about joe biden's socks, donald trump had worn socks with a dog on them and they talked about he hates dogs so much he wants to step on them. looking ahead to the georgia senate runoff races where everyone should be focused, it's been reported the five-member election board voted to thin the use of the 24/7 monitored drop boxes for use through the runoff, use of the boxes was originally set to expire in late december. isn't this exactly the kind of thing that should be stopped as we return, as we returned to the traditional manner of voting?
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>> getting this whole process whipped into shape is of fundamental importance. i'm worried about if republicans think these are rigged they might decide what's the point of showing up, what's the point of voting? i think there is no problem simultaneously and fighting for the presidential election but at the same time recognizing we have to mobilize the team in georgia, there are two very critical senate seats at stake. >> tammy: as the democrats have shown us, they are doing a bunch of things at once. there is no problem with conservatives and republicans walking and chewing gum at the same time. the president has his fight and people can support that flight as well as look at georgia because this nation is at stake and that is why we love president trump. it's because that was always his first focus, which is what was right for this country. i appreciate you being here. and now mass mail-in voting didn't just wreak havoc on the presidential race, it trickled down to the house races.
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like in new york's 22nd congressional district where a judge late tonight issued an injunction -- i got to make sure what's clear here. did he block it or issue it -- an injunction -- i think he blocked certifying the election results, is that correct? okay. he ordered a hold on the certification of the election results, that's very good and interesting for our next guest. it's also where our next guest . candidate claudia tenney leads with an extremely narrow margin, welcome aboard. i think your margin is under 200 votes at this point, what is your reaction to the state court decision? the new york election has been a disaster, a slow counting trying to get the right answers to things, confusion, what is your reaction to this tonight? >> we don't even know what the
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margin is because one of the counties is unable to put account together. here is what has happened. andrew cuomo issued an executive order in august altering the election rules and altering how we are going to process elections. we allowed no excuse absentee ballots, anyone could get an absentee ballots, he can apply for it online. didn't have to verify, you just have to have your name, date of birth, and address in your absentee ballot is sent and there is so much for fraud. >> tammy: you can get those details about people anywhere, name address and date of birth, it's everywhere on the internet. >> third parties have it, democratic party, republican party, we all have the data on these folders and i know a number of people, i've asked online have said we received a ballot and we didn't ask for it. there's so much room for fraud and this is what we think has been going on.
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the administrative burden on the board of elections has been exhausted and you have people who do not have the resources operating under these covid virus restrictions trying to count ballots, some by hand and dealing with 70,000 absentee ballots in a race with a normal amount is about 7,000 with no staff and they are trying to make this happen. it's rife for fraud. one of the counties in this district, their entire computer system was hacked and shut down. >> tammy: this entire new york debacle has almost every element that people warned about. hacking, this mass mail out where you don't know where the ballots are going and anyone can send in for them and now you are in a position where you don't even know at this point but the count is and thank goodness it's not going to be certified but considering what happened in the rest of the country and this
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blue wave in new york, you should be in washington. >> absolutely, think about this -- because there is no verification, no voter i.d. in new york, we have discovered this is a big new york post story today that broke -- there are a number of people who are deceased that actually voted in this election. to be able to ascertain who is a live voter who is eligible to vote, a registered to vote in the election just becomes burdensome. the courts are burdened and distressed. this is another situation we have a liberal democrat in andrew cuomo, the democrats usually win by process. >> tammy: it's clearly very similar to things going on around the country and an effort we are told to expand democracy and perhaps made it even worse and it stolen it from some people. good luck, we are going to continue to watch this,
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thank you for being here. great from there. "the federalist" has an answer to the anti-american narrative that has been infecting our kids history book. it's called the 1620 project, we are going to explain what that is in a few moments, stay right there.
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>> tammy: last year, "the new york times" released its deeply anti-american essay series called the 1619 project, with the goal of recasting our great nation as an inherently evil and irredeemably racist country with a horrible past. of course, it's all lies. if you want to truly understand our nation's history, the federalists now has just the thing. it's called the 16th 20 project, in honor of the 400th anniversary of the arrival of the pilgrims and how perfect is that the? joining me now is a john daniel davidson, the political editor at "the federalist." it your timing is obviously perfect because we have thanksgiving, a lot of people have forgotten what we are celebrating but tell us a little bit more about what you guys hope to achieve with this project because the 6019 project has been everywhere. parents want to be able to overcome this and this perhaps
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is the answer. >> yeah, the 16th 20 project is not a direct refutation of the 6019 project which is self refuting come of "the new york times" has already walked back its central claim of the american revolution was founded to defend a slavery. they retracted that amidst a lot of pushback. the 1620 project seeks to understand and appreciate and deepen our knowledge of the first arrival of the pilgrims 400 years ago and to understand what they did with the mayflower compact and the experiment in self-government that they launched 400 years ago this year. it's important to do this at a time of radical historical revisionism that we see all across society from media to big tech to hollywood. >> tammy: you have to remind people about 1620, just about the nature of what has happened within the education system and
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do mention a 6019 project -- this is what nicole hannah jones the creator of it thinks about our history. >> we aren't founded as a true democracy, we are founded as a democracy for landed white men. look at the bloody internal struggles for democracy, for people who are not white men. >> tammy: we can understand how is there a generation out there toppling statues and thinking everything is evil because of that kind of rhetoric, look at our history to this narrow racial lens is poisonous but also isn't that what we rejected in this red wave in this election? we rejected identity politics, this is the core of that rot and cancel culture and racialism, what's your take on that? >> this whole way of looking at the world is fundamentally
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racist, that's why use of voters in california overwhelmingly reject affirmative action in the referendum, something like 57% in very deep blue california. americans are not on board with the 1619 narrative, they aren't on board with being told their country is irredeemably racist and evil. and i think they are hungry to learn about the true founding of america which was not 1619, it was 1776. 1620 planted the seeds for 1776 and that's what our project is all about. we hope to make the materials come of the essays, the interviews, the podcasts available to teachers and to get the word out to. >> tammy: that's what i was going to ask you, the other project is out there. this is available for teachers, homeschoolers, et cetera, great stuff at "the federalist." up ahead now, biden finally gets a semi serious question from the press. "the last bite" explains.
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>> tammy: we have breaking news. biden has finally been asked question by the media, semiserious. >> what you say to those senior trying to create a third obama term. >> this is not a third obama term. we face a totally different world than we faced in the obama-biden administration. the president, president trump, has changed the landscape. it's become america first.
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america alone. >> tammy: and yet somehow we got peace in the middle east and our nato allies to pay more for their own defense. that's all the time we have tonight. everything else with the economy. i'm tammy bruce in for laura ingraham. and the president of independent women's voice and you can learn more about me at tammy bruce.com and now to shannon bream and the "fox news @ night" team, they take it from here. the great shannon. have a good night, everyone. >> shannon: great to see you, tammy. have a happy thanksgiving. thank you so much. >> tammy: you too. >> shannon: travel is surging ahead of thanksgiving in defiance of the experts admonition that you stay home. in order to help stop the spread of covid-19. politicians and their medical advisors looking at new ways of making sure people comply. los angeles county restaurants refraining from nonadditional travel. new measures to make sure you

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