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tv   FOX and Friends  FOX News  September 3, 2021 3:00am-6:00am PDT

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worse those numbers would be if the media throughout the course of the last 8 months covered joe biden the way they covered your father-in-law. we will see. lara trump, thank you so much for joining us and have a great weekend. >> thank you. >> thanks, guys. todd: you have a great weekend as well. todd: you as well. jillian: thank you. "fox & friends" starts right now. >> lawmakers are demanding answers on evacuations from afghanistan. todd: now joe biden's approval rating is tanking to the lowest point of his presidency. >> he is under water for one primary reason it's not the american way to leave americans behind. >> it was like a war zone. >> dozens are dead following historic flooding from the remnants of hurricane ida bringing record breaking rains. >> it was devastating that my body is still trembling. >> it allowing texas' heartbeat bill to stay in force. >> everyone speaking against this bill very comfortable taking the life of a little
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texan who has a heart beat. >> biden administration is helping a country secure a border with afghanistan. but is fine with the southern border being wide open. >> it should offend every american taxpayer spending millions of dollars in afghanistan to secure their border while the cartels control our border. ♪ grew up military man ♪ way of life and i understand ♪ and i'm so proud to say ♪ it led me who i am today. steve: live from washington, d.c., it is friday, september 3rd, because it's a friday, technically still the summer, today is our all-american summer concert series and today that woman who is singing jessie james decker going to be singing three hours from right now on the channel you trust for your morning wake-up news. ainsley: she has done so well with her life. she has written all these books. she has the commercials, weight loss commercials.
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steve: south beach. ainsley: she married a physical player and relate show and a singer. brian: she looks really happy in the music videos. i can't wait to see what she is like in the real life. ainsley: i watch the reality show for a while she is really cute. they have a great relationship. her kids are precious. she has a great relationship with her sister and mom. steve: she has been here a couple of times. she knows the place. we are delighted to welcome her. brian: once her husband is done made all that money and had all the success is he happy retired? what you do do at 35 when you roar retired. ainsley: when we do the diner segments what do we always say? that is what retirement looks like go to breakfast at 6:00 a.m. with all your friends. brian: those people are in their 60's. he is in his 30's. we begin with a fox news alert. the president today will head down to louisiana to survey the damage from hurricane ida. the powerful storm leaving at least 59 people dead in eight
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states. ainsley: that includes 46 people in the northeast after remnants of ida battered our region with record breaking rain. steve: and then the flooding that came as well. fox weather correspondent steve bender joins us live from new orleans with the latest. steve, the president is heading your way. >> yes, good morning, guys. and the national guard is out here. obviously in preparation for president biden coming in later today. but let's talk about the remnants of hurricane ida and what it did to the northeast. you guys just mentioned it killed 46 people as it ripped through on wednesday and thursday. and that does include actually connecticut state police sergeant. that's 26-year-old sergeant brian, he was found yesterday morning after his cruiser was swept away by those floodwaters. now, it was a frantic scramble for many in the northeast to get to safety and we hear from one man who was clinging to his wife to make sure she was safe. >> i want to go my neighbor.
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my neighbor on the second floor he hold my hand and i hold my wife's hand. and my [inaudible] hand so we can get out. >> it wasn't just the record rainfall in the flooding there was also tornadic conditions in the northeast. making it even more difficult. when you are talking floodwaters. you want to get to higher ground. when you are talking tornadoes, you want to find that safe interior room. and yesterday there was seven tornadoes confirmed around southeast pennsylvania and southern new jersey. so, the threat of ida has now drifted back out ointo the atlantic as we don't need to worry anymore. now it's all about the damage and trying to revitalize those communities. we are here in new orleans and really we are now just assessing the damage. entergy doing a great job getting the electricity back on slowly but, notice, behind me it is the gas stations that are slowly coming back up. we are just outside of a
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racetrack station here it is quiet. we are still under a mandatory curfew until 6:00 a.m. our local time but police cruisers are making sure everybody are in line so it's not just a free for all for the gas because we're still at a shortage here. of course, we will have more word as president biden comes in later this afternoon to assess the damage. reporting live from new orleans, we'll send it back to you guys. steve: all right. thank you very much. the cover of "the new york post." there the face of the little 2-year-old boy killer storm. what we're learning today is a number of the people who died in the new york city area were apparently in garden level, lower level, or basement apartment. and unfortunately, as is detailed in the "new york post," a number of these apartments apparently including that apartment, were illegally carved out of larger house. not zoned for residential. and so i'm sure there is going to be a push to, hey, make sure that if you have an apartment on the lower level, there is a way for people to get out because that was the problem.
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ainsley: right. so the neighbor who lived above them said the water had already gone up to her knees. so she said imagine the basement floor. steve: all the way. ainsley: basically a swimming pool with stairs. the little by died and both of the parents died. little boy's teacher was coming for a home visit yesterday. it was not canceled. she shows up. she realizes the 2-year-old was killed and she starts sobbing. she said he was such a sweet little boy and great family. brian: ida hit. devastating in louisiana where those get the power on and standing that state up again. the president is looking forward to change the narrative to anything at all except afghanistan which has turned out to be the worst disaster in american military history not because our men and women who fight but because the one who lives in the white house. even pushing back on his aides even though is he desperately trying to throw them under the bus. it looks like the american people are on to it under a degree. a marist poll is now out and talks about the approval rating of joe biden. he has 43% approval rating.
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it was 49 over in august. disapprove 51%. still unsure in single digits. also keep in mind, too. that 71% after watching what happened in afghanistan say the war was a failure and not worth it that's a lot different from after we killed bin laden. a lot different after we ousted the taliban in throw weeks. ainsley: this is his lowest level since i object becoming president. people don't understand why he pulled out of afghanistan the way that he did. steve: and, when you look at the cross tabs on that particular poll, he lost 5 points with democrats, which, you know, you think oh, they are squarely behind him, right? nope, not the case. down 10 points with independence. of the people who approve of afghanistan, 94% of republicans don't approve of how he handled afghanistan. 71% do not approve of what he did with afghanistan regarding the independents. that could be one of the reasons why last night out of nowhere
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with no advanced warning the president went to walter reed at 8:00 last night and apparently no advanced warning that he was going to go. earlier the white house had announced a lid but then they lifted it and said in a statement that the bidens were visiting wounded warriors. let's just hope that the president did not wear a watch, because last sunday at dover with the dignified transfer, we heard from a number of a parents of those whose lives were lost in afghanistan the president kept talking about bo and kept looking at his watch. and that really bugged a lot of them because they felt so disrespected. brian: that's what he has always been a bloviater. he talks about himself nonstop and people roll their eyes including president obama. just real quick on this, ainsley. he went and visited the marines. we keep focusing and should on the marines who lost their lives. the what about the ones that are injured. three in serious condition. one is in critical condition. and 11 are in stable condition. and that's what he saw the ones
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that were able to get out of ramstein and get over to -- ainsley: those were the marines at the abbey gate when we lost the lives of the 13 american service members. these are the marines that were sent to germany to our hospital there then they were flown home to walter reed. keep hearing thousands. >> then we heard hundreds. what is the real number? fatima, the lady who was trapped in afghanistan, she finally got out to germany. now she is back home in west virginia with her kids. she was the one who said i don't even know if i'm going to see my kids again i'm so scared. she said we need to know the real numbers there are thousands of americans and thousands of afghan allies that are trapped still in afghanistan. so these senators, 26 of them. more than two dozen. they are demanding to know the americans, green card holders and special immigrant visa applicants still stranded and fatima used the word stranded three times in her conversation on "fox & friends first" this morning. steve: a portion of the letter from the republican senators to
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the president says our immediate priority is the safety and well-being of american citizens, primary residents and allies left behind in afghanistan. we are also concerned by reports that ineligible individuals including afghans with ties to terrorist organizations or serious violent criminals were evacuated alongside innocent refugee families. goes on to say americans need to see the united states will not abandon them to terrorists forever abroad. and the worry is that, you know, in the melee to get out of kabul, you know, who exactly did get on airplanes and where did they go exactly? and did we let in to the united states and we have already seen hundreds of people in to the interior of the united states, were any of them party of a terrorist organization? the vetting that has gone on with those people is, at this point, a little, you know, opaque. we haven't seen exact, aside from the administration saying yeah, we are really vetting
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them, are they vetting them the way they are vetting people on our southern border? ainsley: the process is supposed to take 18 months to two years. steve: instead takes 18 seconds. get on the plane. brian: i understand cutting red tape sivs the majority of the afghans who helped us during the war didn't get out. who exactly is here? where are they and why didn't they get out? did anyone have a hit list? by the way, if you want to know why our allies are upset with us? we communicated so poorly, the canadians had to leave because they didn't have any protection. they believe they left 1250 canadian citizens in afghanistan. germany between 10 and 40,000 staffers who are local. that work for them that they wanted to get out. france the numbers are also through the roof. australians also, you had an australian reporter yesterday in the briefing saying why don't you guys communicate? we lost 40 guys in this fight, too. we stood by your side since 9/11 20 years ago. but you have not communicated,
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mr. foreign policy, mr. chairman of the foreign policy committee with all this experience as vice president let everybody down. he didn't return boris jobs' call for 48 hours after he decided to pull everybody out. ainsley: after the media. brian: do you believe this. ainsley: after the media started reporting he hadn't talked to a world leader. brian: stayed in the hamptons and went to walter reed -- excuse me not walter reed, camp david. this is outrageous. the other big story is that there is this pushback, i see jennifer griffin's pushback from the pentagon that the gate was actually closed and that the americans couldn't get in until the last minute. we got almost no americans in the last 36 hours through those gates and empty planes left kabul at the last minute, the pentagon says no, we kept those gates open. steve: five hours longer. brian: we are going to see if there is any veracity to that statement. we can crosscheck that. steve: one of the senators that signed that letter that landed
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on the president's desk is tom cotton. and he says we need to know what we need to know, mr. president. watch. >> the biden administration has been saying for the last three weeks so, there will be time for an after action review once we are done in afghanistan, once all of our troops are are out. just today you started hearing a different tune from john kirby at the pentagon, for instance, saying that they can't conduct an after action review. what they really mean is they won't. but i will. and the congress will. we will get the answer, just yesterday, for instance, we demanded answers from the administration about all the afghans they evacuated out of the country because they screwed it coming up and going, tammy. we left the vast majority of loyal afghans who served alongside of our american troops there in country. steve: right. ainsley: we cannot forget about them. they are still there. brian: who did we fly out if we forgot the majority of people that helped us? steve: apparently we didn't vet people properly. that's the worry. washington examiner has great
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piece about a guy with an american passport also in, you know, he was born in afghanistan. but he is an american spin trying to get out. so he was in contact with the department of state. and the department of state said okay, go to the interior ministry, and there he was confronted by a member of the taliban, a taliban guard, and he showed the american passport. and the guard said go tell the state department to f themselves. he got into the airport and on to a plane during a fire fight the day after the explosion at the abbey gate. so he was happy to get on. ultimately, his message and the reason he talked to the washington examiner was to let people know that the taliban did everything they could to keep people with blue american passports from getting on airplanes. brian: steenks i find that hard to believe this new taliban 2.0 seem really nice. i think that flies in the face of what we have been told. people that might even be our
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allies in the future according to general milley. ainsley: fatima said there were some air lifts in order to get air lifted you had to get through the gate. that was the are issue. brian: who thought taliban handling our security would be a problem. steve: the only reason that guy got on the plane fire fight people shooting on each other and ran on the plane come on blue passport. brian: doesn't happen at jfk. steve: it's still a mess over there and try to straighten things out. ainsley: it will be for a long time, too. 6:15 on the east coast. come up, president biden is working to secure another country's border, another country's border while leaving our southern border wide open. immigration officials in the u.s. are fuming. brian: and from the battlefield to the football field, this retired navy seal joins the nebraska football team as a walk-on as america walks 20 years since the 9/11 attacks and today he will join us live. ♪ take a stand ♪ where liberty is in jeopardy ♪ i will always do what's right
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i. jillian: miller's family says he was ambushed while driving his daughter to school. police say the gunman got out of another car, walked up and opened fire. miller's family says it may be a case of road range. chicago police are searching for this man who they believe is the shooter. more than 1,000 people gather at a vigil to honor a fallen marine. lance corporal was one of the 13
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service members killed in a kabul airport attack. the vigil was held in his hometown in california. his mother giving this heart breaking speech. i can't imagine living this life without you in it. you have touched the least of so many people doing what i know you wanted to do is making a difference in this world. >> he served in the military two years. he had only been in afghanistan for just over a week when he was killed. a homeless a advocate in los angeles is attacked by a homeless man who says he welcomed the possible arrest. >> stop it, you are going to go to jail for this. stop t i would like to go to jail. i live outside. >> that advocate declined to press charges. the high cost of living and high unemployment have contributed to surging rates of homelessness in recent years. and south dakota governor kristi noem is getting back up in her -- getting some back up in her fight for the state's annual fireworks celebration in mount
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rushmore. 16 states attorneys general are supporting lawsuit to bring the display back. in march the biden administration denied the state's application due to covid concerns and objections to local native american tribes. that's a look at your headlines. send it back to you. steve: maybe it's come back. brian: easy to forget we have a huge border problem in our country not if you work on the border patrol because every day you are overwhelmed. the numbers are as astro no, astronomical. don't worry the vice president is on it. oops i am worried. she doesn't care and isn't interested in it imagine how border patrol feels when they hear our border is being ignored but another border is getting the president's attention. ainsley: the border the northern part of afghanistan. steve: northeast? i. ainsley: tajikistan, we are securing that portion of the border so our border agents at home oh finally he cares about a border it's just not our
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borders. steve: right. so, you know, as afghanistan has fallen, clearly, we are helping tajikistan do that so that the bad people from afghanistan don't get into that country. so, what we're doing is we're apparently going to give them a whole boat load of doe to provide housing for tajikistan border patrol agents and their families. the united states has given $300 million to that country since 2002 to help them with their border. always about afghanistan. but you're absolutely right brian and ainsley, so many people in the border patrol community here in the united states are saying wait a minute, we got a really big problem on our southern border. you know, nobody is vetting anybody coming in to the country via mexico and yet why are all eyes on afghanistan? ainsley: this is what some of the border agents said they didn't want to give their names because they are worried about retaliation and their jobs.
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they said it's heartening to see the biden administration finally getting serious about border security it's just too bad it's in another country. this is a slap in the face to us. biden has already destroyed afghanistan so the borders don't need to be open. brian: is he also looking at the tajikistan afghan. we need a base to stage because we have lost ours. we're going to go over the horizon from qatar and uae. i'm sure all our terror targets were stay put as we go thousands of miles with a predator drone. not going to be effective. mark brnovich wants to be the next senator from arizona. he wants to take on -- he is taking on mark kelly. he's the attorney general now. and he said this. >> 2 million people are expected to cross our southern border legally. the cartels now have operational control over our border and literally we have seen people on the terror watch list. we know that there has been tens
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of thousands of got aways that have been -- that are slipping into our communities. people crossing the border legally. refugees, possible terrorists coming across the border is a crisis in afghanistan where the biden administration has spent taxpayer dollars. here on the southern border, president biden and cartel kelly don't give a damn it should offend every american taxpayer going to spend millions of dollars in afghanistan to secure their border while the cartels control our border and terrorists and criminals are coming across. brian: unbelievable. mark kelly has been invisible in a crisis. to say what you want about democrat kyrsten sinema she has done a great job. she does not go on board with democratic doctrine if it doesn't work for the people of arizona. mark kelly has been invisible mia with a military background seeing this breach of security is really disappointing. here is the biden plan on tajikistan break ground on 2022 break ground for border security attach many. housing for the border troops of
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tajikistan and their families. steve: fantastic so, they have a place to live. brian: we paid for our border wall. it was being done. now we are paying to destroy it or store it. unbelievable. ainsley: spend the money on them making sure that they are safe. they helped us. and our border numbers have gone up in august. gone up 13% in august over july. we had almost 213,000 arrive here in august, july, 188,000 and about more than half of those 213,000 remain here in america. steve: in the beginning of this half hour, if you missed it, we were talking about how joe biden is underwater on his approval rating. historically during the administration, what is the number one worst topic he does on? and that is immigration and border patrol protection. when you look at afghanistan, now that number is degraded. he has got to do something about all that stuff. it's starting to chew at the big number.
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and if he wants to get reelected, you have got to figure he does. he has got to start fixing stuff. it looks like everything is going south. ainsley: i'm worried about all those people trapped over there. fatima who was on earlier, she said there are so many people, she has family members. she is here in america. not allowed to be on camera because she is worried about her camera there. she said there are so many people still stranded there and she used that word several times. brian: right. ainsley: we can't forget about them. i don't want this story to move on. the president doesn't want to talk about it. steve: change the subject. ainsley: en notify the networks with covering that phone call that he made with the president of afghanistan. brian: where he wanted to talk about optics rather than winning a war. ainsley: why protect him during this time? need to tell the truth. we need to tell the numbers and protect these americans stranded over there fearing their lives. brian: everyday the border patrol is a war and ignoring. we are not ignoring it kamala harris is. it's her job to ignore every assignment she is given. 27 minutes after the top of the hour. steve: now codifying roe v.
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wade, back on the top of the democrats' agenda. we will dive into that coming up next on "fox & friends." [relaxed summer themed music playing] ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪
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♪ steve: on this friday a fox weather alert. at least 46 people are dead after the remnants of ida under president the northeast with record breaking rain and the flooding. the flooding is how so many people died this as president biden heads down to louisiana today to survey damage from
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hurricane ida. senior meteorologist janice dean joins us now with the latest fox weather forecast. and janice, that number right there, a couple of nights ago, it was water, water everywhere. janice: yeah. and we had severe weather as well. at least seven reports of tornadoes across heavily populated areas of the northeast. here are some of the, you know, the latest rainfall totals in pennsylvania, close to 10 inches. close to 10 inches in new jersey. and, again, some of this coming within just a matter of hours in central park over 3 inches of rainfall in an hour. in just a span of four hours. that's why we had tremendous flash flooding in these areas. and a lot of folks really didn't know what to do. there are the storm reports the past 48 hours. you could see that cluster of tornadoes in around the d.c. and baltimore area. up towards philadelphia and also towards cape cod. it was a volatile system. the legacy will be the flooding, obviously it was a category 4 storm that hit louisiana. but devastated parts of the northeast. the good news is a gorgeous
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looking forecast for the cleanup over the next couple of days into the long weekend with no major systems to report just calm, cooler weather for the northeast and we will continue to keep you up to date. jillian over to you. jillian: main highway that goes through center philadelphia. still completely under water. janice: that's a good point. the rivers are still rising. even though the system is offshore and the weather looks great. those streams and rivers still have to crest in a lot of those areas. good point. thank you. jillian: got to be careful. thank you, janice. now let's go to a fox news alert. a man carried out an isis inspired stabbing attack at that time a supermarket in auckland, new zealand. the man injuring six people inside a store before a special ops team took him out. they killed him about a minute into the attack. riots reporting he was already under surveillance for being extremist but immediately to's law prevented them from locking him up. four people are dead after a private luxury jet crashed into a building in connecticut about 10 miles southwest of heart ford. the small plane went down shortly after takeoff.
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police say the pilots and two passengers no were on board when the plane went counsel. tarts parts of the area were evacuated for safety as firefighters put out the blaze. the cause of the crash is being investigated. indianapolis colts quarterback carson went opens up about not being vaccinated. he tells the media it's a personal decision for he and his family. statement comes as he declined to say whether he was activated. off the covid-19 after considered high risk following a positive code test. send it back to you. ainsley: thank you so much, jillian. the supreme court upholding texas' abortion law banning terms once a feelings heart beat is detected. usually around six weeks. president biden blasting the decision as an assault on women's rights and white house press secretary jen psaki snapping at a reporter from a catholic news network who questioned his stance. >> why does the president support abortion when his own
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faith teaches abortion is wrong? >> he believes that it's a woman's right, it's a woman's body, and it's her choice. >> who does he believe should look out for the unborn child. >> i know you have never faced those choices nor have you ever been pregnant but for women out there who have faced those choices it's an incredibly difficult thing. the president believes that right should be respected. ainsley: here to react lila rose the president of live action and the author of fighting for life. good morning to you, lila. >> good morning. ainsley: what was your reaction to the way jen psaki responded to this reporter who works for ewetn the catholic network? >> um-huh. well, it's clearly a sexist response which is ironic coming from someone whose boss is a man. she is saying because you are a man you are not allowed to ask this question you have never been pregnant and her boss, president biden, who is weighing in on an texas heart beat abortion law is also a man. but that's kind of beside the point. the bottom line is this. the president's job as our elected leader, our chief official in this country is to defend the rights of americans.
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not to stand against the most vulnerable americans' rights which are children in the womb. texas has decided which is their right, to protect those citizens to protect those members of their state. and biden is coming out to blasting them for it it's really ironic that someone who says he is a catholic and also whose job is to defend the common welfare is actually working actively against our most vulnerable americans the unborn. ainsley: you wrote the book fighting for life. what was your reaction when the supreme court said this week we are not going to get involved. >> we were thrilled at that reaction. i mean, this likely would not have happened with a different composition of a court. i mean, we have now justices who seem to be sympathetic to that first human right which is life constitutionally protected right. and so we're really excited to seat fact that the supreme court passed at least for now on looking at texas' law and has allowed it to remain in effect. listen, every single day that
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the heart beat law is in effect in texas over 100 lives of children are saved. clinics have shut down. they have pulled back their hours of abortion clinics and meanwhile you have 164 pregnancy resource centers open in texas who are helping women with their children, with their pregnancies, helping them choose life. it's a wonderful day for the pro-life fight. ainsley: lila, how did you get so involved in this mission? you wrote a book about it you made it your life's work. >> i got about it because i found out about the problem. once you find out about crisis of abortion. the development. heart beat 3 and a half weeks. brain waves forming by six weeks. you see the humanity of the child and learn the death toll. today listen in our country 2300 children are killed every single day by abortion. it's leading death toll, more than covid, heart disease, cancer, any other cause of death. once you see the human rights of the child and you see that abortion doesn't empower women, it hurts us.
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it's devastating for us. you recognize that we have to -- i had to get in the fight. and so i'm determined like the rest of the pro-life movement to bring this all the way to the end to completely complete protection for preborn children and a cultural life and change we are fighting for as well. ainsley: other than learning about christ the best day in my life is when i held my baby. are you a mom. >> i am pregnant right now. due in two months and have another little boy, yes. i completely agree. and we are fighting for a future where they're safe. they are safe just as safe as anyone else. ainsley: best day of my life. thank you so much. great to talk to you. have a good weekend. thank you. of the taliban takeover is quote haunting state department officials who admit the majority of our afghan allies are left behind. so, what is it really like on the ground after the u.s. exit? lara logan is going to tell us next. ♪
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or if you are nursing, pregnant, or plan to be. more time is possible. ask your doctor about verzenio. ♪ ♪ be he. brian: not each the state department is convinced the u.s. withdrawal from afghanistan was executed properly. one senior official telling fox news, quote: we are haunted by choices we had to make and the people we are unable to help. i don't have an estimate for you on the numbers of sivs and family members who are still there but i would say get this: it's the majority of them. i thought we pulled out 122,000? if they are not sivs and only 5,000 americans, who are they? here now is fox nation host lara logan. lara, i imagine you feel that same horror because you know a lot of these same people that we left. >> you know, brian, one of the worst things though is to be talking to people arranged say well, we only left 250 american
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citizens behind or we didn't leave anybody at the gate. you know, it's like the commander of the 82nd airborne donahue, they are trying to deny that they didn't open those gates. they are trying to pretend that those gates were open when i was on the phone, i'm one of, i mean, literally dozens of and dozens if not hundreds of people who were on the phone with people at those gates for 8, 9, 10, 11 hours straight we never abandoned them. we were begging the 82nd airborne. in fact, i could hear the soldiers yelling stay back or we will shoot. i was yelling down the phone please talk to me, please talk to me. so i don't know what the pentagon and donahue. brian: can i tell, lara, everyone what you are referring to? we were talking off camera? jen griffin got an email because they want to get some clarification on were those gates open the last 48 hours. why didn't americans come on empty planes the last two days they came back and said gate 3 was open 4:50 killer five hours
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during the time he got 29 american passport holders. 852 afghans and 36 contractors out. if nip presented themselves at the gate he would have been -- he would have let them into the airfield. is that true? >> no. that's a lie. that a barefaced lie. there are -- i can send you, brian, there is a picture of an old lady in a wheelchair with her american passport. her elderly husband with his american passport and pregnant american mother three months pregnant with her little girl. two green card holders with three children who live in houston, texas who all were born in america and had their american passports and green cards. and they were at the gate. there are so many people who know that this isn't true. it's just more it's more of this administration and those responsible for this showing that they are prepared to say literally anything to hide the
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truth. they have never ever done anything to change the outcome of where we are now. we're just so distressing about that is it makes you -- it really makes you wonder how we got to this boycott. americans are so ashamed. brian: we are. can. >> they are apologizing and begging forgiveness from the afghans talking to. and it's okay. we understand, we know it's not you. but you know, i mean that is now what defines the u.s. military and doesn't matter how much the pentagon and the white house lie about it and by the way the state department, because they were still -- we're hearing through back channels foreign governments all around us that the state department is pressuring them not to let any of these flights, you know, land and not to let them take off and not to help any of the rescue efforts that don't come through the state department. i know of two incidents personally where there was a plane in the air and the u.s. -- the americans in the tower in kabul at the airport were
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refusing to allow them to land. brian: unbelievable. >> i spoke to a delta guy on board that plane. they were told if you land we will shoot you down. brian: lara, i know it's especially agonizing because you know it's not true and you know the people left behind and you know the other networks are going to ignore it the other major story they jogged away from was the border. did you incredible documentaries on it now axios headline i will share with you. those unaccompanied minors that came across by the thousands, one in three released migrant kids are not trackable. we don't know where they are. what's your reaction to that? >> at the time when this started happening, i was getting reports from, you know, really weird places in the country like out of tennessee, that there were planes arriving in the middle of the night and all these kids were getting off and they were being bused. and people were following these buses and sending me these videos. what they saw was people coming up to the buses and being given kids and loading up their cars
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and off they go. i had former homeland security investigations officials come to me and say like there are ngos, some of them were working for them, who were paid to get rid of these kids as fast as they could. i'm carrying children to the hospital with broken limbs and discentury and code and other illnesses and cleaning them up and getting rid of them. we don't ask where they're going or do any checks on the people picking them up. we are just told get rid of them as fast as possible. they are being paid millions of dollars. this is a major issue that is at no one is even asking the biden administration about what happened to these kids. and why were they doing this? and who was paying for it? brian: yeah. let's see if aoc has an extra white outfit where she can go to a chain link fence and start weeping 4500 kids released. unable to reach either the
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migrant or the sponsor. okay. that's an axios report. lara, thanks so much. >> outrageous. brian: don't worry the vice president is in charge. i'm sure it will be straightened out. she has been so active. lara,thanks so much. >> thanks, brian. brian: the cost of a gallon of gas heading higher this holiday weekend and you can blame i'd do. how long will it take for the pumped up prices to subside. financial expert mitch rochelle is on deck to discuss. chievable steps that give me confidence. this is my granddaughter...she's cute like her grandpa. voya doesn't just help me get to retirement... ...they're with me all the way through it. voya. be confident to and through retirement. ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪
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♪ steve: for the first time in four years the federal government is tapping into our strategic oil reserve to send fuel to louisiana after hurricane ida. the massive storm also beginning blamed for higher gas prices you may face heading into this holiday weekend. mock crow advisers llc founding partner mitch rochelle joins to us react. he joins us from the palm beach area, make up for short fall in refinery capacity given what has
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happened with ida. are you surprised at that? >> no, i think it's actually a smart move. think about folks down in baton rouge in new orleans, 65% of those gas stations don't have gasoline so anything they can do to jump start in about 80% of the refiners in the gulf area wouldn't reducing. there is certainly a short-term problem down there need to be fixed. that's hat strategic petroleum reserve of 600 million plus barrels is there for. i think it's a smart move. the bigger issue though is the fact that we as a country are now a net importer again of oil from foreign countries toward the tail end of the trump administration we were net exporter of oil. steve: right. think that i surprises loot of people. mitch, as you look at the amount you are going to pay for a gallon of gas this weekend as we look at some of the damage in the flooding from ida, right now you will pay a dollar more than you did last year. and then on the heels of what you just said, now we are a net
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importer rather than exporter, people are going wait a minute, are we going it the wrong direction? >> yeah and post katrina, that sting stuck around for awhile. i believe it was about 45 cents a gallon people paying as a result of the disruption in the gulf from katrina. so we potentially could add another 50 cents to a gallon of gasoline as a result of hurricane ida. the last thing that consumers and small businesses need right now is another tax in the form of higher gasoline prices. steve: that's exactly what it is. in the meantime look at the thousand of businesses impacted not only in louisiana and mississippi but also throughout northeast, which you are familiar with, mitch, there are going to be a lot of small businesses that are going to find a tough row to hoe to reopen given flooding and everything else. >> yeah. and the way i look at it, i often refer to the basic unit of transportation of a small business in america and remember there are 30 million plus small
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businesses in america. the basic mode of transportation is a pickup truck. and now it could cost $1.50 more. it's really hard for small businesses. they are still reeling from the post pandemic shock and biggest challenge is being able to compete with big businesses for talent in this heavily disrupted labor marketed. again, the last thing they need is a tax in the form of higher gasoline prices. steve: absolutely. most businesses like most houses, don't have flood insurance and, unfortunately, a lot of people woke up yesterday morning and realized wait a minute, what do you mean we are not covered for that? mitch, thank you for joining us from west palm beach. >> good to see you. steve: good to see you. coming up straight ahead on friday telecast, kayleigh, the general, recall pete. and jessie james decker on all-american concert series. it's dignity. the freedom to go where you want,
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lowest point of his presidency. allies in the media are coming to his defense. >> they see this is going poorly, very poorly for him. again, they will wound him but they will not kill him. >> hurricane ida, the powerful storm leaving 59 people dead in eight states. >> that includes 46 people up here on the northeast. >> still into hurricane season so you can't let your guard down. >> jen psaki snapping at a male reporter after he asked how president biden could support abortion. >> i know you have never faced those choices nor have you ever been pregnant. >> every single day that the heart beat law is in effect in
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texas over 100 lives of children are save of safe. >> the biden administration is helping our country secure a border with afghanistan but fine with the southern border being wide open. >> i'm disgusted. she is expected to expect our sompt. he has not con one thing. >> loose, picked up. ohio state has got it. touchdown. ♪ city life no matter where i'm going. brian: i remember, oh, ainsley it's your turn to start. ainsley: go ahead. what do you remember? deign. brian: my daughter kaitlin younger are empire state building. i know it's the entire state building. empire. yes, the entire building. no, we went back and forth. ainsley: really cute. brian: she is older now. steve: does she remember that story? brian: i don't know. i am going to try her this weekend. ainsley: is she the daughter
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that orders all amazon packages and doesn't put the name on the packages. brian: that's beyonce. the credit card clears it and arrives says katie. steve: like cher. ainsley: like oprah, like prince, beyonce. steve: just that simple. ainsley: that's right. we heard from jessie james decker she is going to be on with us at the end of the show. steve: friday in the summer and i think this could be the last one we have and it's been a good season. meanwhile, we do start once again today unfortunately with fox weather. today president biden is heading down to louisiana to survey damage from hurricane ida. ainsley: this as the remnants of the storm they battered the northeast with heavy rains, flooding, tornadoes, leaving at least 46 people dead. brian: fox weather correspondent steve bender joins us live from new orleans with the latest. steve? >> yes. that historic flooding that hit into wednesday and thursday, guys, led to 46 people being
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killed and one of those is connecticut sergeant brian monthly, he was killed during that historic flooding and it was because he was working after overnight shift thursday and his vehicle was actually swept away during floodwaters from the remnant of hurricane i'd do. governor ned lamont asking all state u.s. flags to be lowered in half-staff in honor of the sergeant. others barely escaped those swift moving waters. one resident actually leaving his apartment to move his car nearly cost him his life. mark ferrera escaped rising floodwaters in his home only to be swept away by strong current on the street. >> it was just a madhouse. when i came back outs to the block, i was holding onto the top of the fence for dear life just so i could actually come back here safely. >> and others needed a vehicle to survive and actually one mta bus driver is being honored for her bravery. ross shah emonte began driving
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as the nearly to the seats need slide of her bus. terrified passengers climbed as high as they could while ross is a navigated through this path that ultimately looked like a river. she finally got them to safety. back here in louisiana, the water heads starlighted to recede that's helped us get to this clean-up evident underway. power has been restored to parts of the french quarter. you will notice behind me we are standing behind of a gas station. curfew just been lifted here in new orleans. that means people are getting out. as we drove in earlier this morning they set up barricades. there is a system in place as we are not letting a free for all for the gas pumps president biden will fly in to see the damage here left coastal.
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we will cover that all day long. send it back to you guys. steve: thank you very much. as we were talking in the last segment, 65% of the gas stations in new orleans and back baton rouge out of gas. also, on this friday morning, we have got some new video into the newsroom. t.d. bank ballpark the home of the yankees double a affiliate in new jersey as you can see right there out in bridgewater township new jersey completely under water. much like the surrounding area. the somerset patriots president and general manager patrick mcvery says that the club is in the process of evaluating the extent and the damage caused but from what you can see right there, the damage is significant. brian. ainsley: you know, when you think when it hits new orleans that's going to be the hardest point of the storm or the strongest point. steve: the city is under sea level. ainsley: i know. you don't expect it to roll up to the northeast and kill so many people up here. more than -- almost 50 people killed up here. one we reported yesterday that
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2-year-old little boy and here's a picture of him. he was killed living in a basement with his mom and dad. all three of them were killed. and the water went all the way up through the basement. up the stairs, into the next floor. and the lady who lived above them said the water was all the way up to her knees. so she said they were living in a swimming pool basically with a staircase. brian: they say broadcast teams are tight and become like families. i think yankees have an example of that sticking with the yankees team. it started pouring at the end of the yankee game and john sterling didn't stick around the legendary broadcaster. yankees win, he is 83 years old. hops in his car to go home and he gets stuck. and the water is rising. steve: river road and edge water. brian: he calls his partner, susan wald map. susan waldman says i have an idea i will call the spanish broadcaster ricky ricardo is actually his name. i got it they keep him on the phone until they can locate him.
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they pick him up, get him out of his water logged car. he was only a half mile from his house drive around for hours to get him home. a perless situation broadcasting team combined efforts to save their lead broadcaster. the yankees broadcaster won that one. ainsley: that's so nice of them. brian: 6 minutes now after the hour. turning to washington, d.c. the president's approval rating has got to concern the white house. it is dropping like a rock since the afghan pullout. ainsley: peter doocy joins us from the white house on when measures are coming home. they want to know the exact number right, peter? pete: with those poll numbers turns out president biden was more popular when he was dealing just with the pandemic or sending people $1,400 checks. after a few weeks of the afghanistan crisis, his numbers are upside down. he lost six approval points in a month down to just 43%. thinking he is doing a good job and a marist pbs news hour npr
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poll 51%, a majority now disapprove as the some americans and vulnerable allies remain in kabul. >> we left the vast majority of loyal afghans who served alongside our troops there apparently we evacuated tens of thousands of afghans who had no clear or direct connection to american troops who we really have no idea who they are. pete: cotton and 25 oh senators written to biden our might priority is the safety and well-being of american citizens, permanent residence and allies left behind in afghanistan. americans need to see that the united states will not abandon them to terrorists abroad forever. the president and first lady visited walter reed where service members hurt in last week's suicide bombing at the kabul airport are being treated all-american troops now out of afghanistan. but, fighting continues there. as a tiny pocket of freedom fighters defend a small part of the panjshir valley from the taliban without any help.
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>> we feel abandoned. because we're right now fighting a war against terror. however, we have no allies. we are the last remaining u.s. allies inside afghanistan. we are not being supported. there's no one by our side to help us against transnational terrorism at the moment. pete: today the president is going to talk about the economy before heading down to inspect ida damage. questions about kabul cbd and is he going to wrap up his day in delaware at home for the weekend. steve: peter, i hear a chainsaw in the background. pete: we know why. steve: peter sent us a picture that shows one of the trees on the white house campus fell overnight. peter, speaking of in the night, was it a surprise that joe biden wound up getting the armored up suburbans and went up to walter reed at 8:00 last night? >> it was a surprise. they told us at that time about 3:40 yesterday that the president was done for the day. they called a lid, which basically means camera men and women can start to go home for
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the day. less than an hour later be on call at 6:00. in the 7:00 hour they took the motorcade up to walter reed. it's about a half an hour if you drive from the white house even in a motorcade. remember when president trump needed to get their quickly he actually had to take a helicopter that far. but they took the half an hour ride there. and spent about three hours with men and women being treated there before coming back around 10:30. about a late a night the president has had since he got here. steve: peter, go help that guy load the wood into the truck. peter: i don't think he wants my help. brian: i think they are fully staffed. the other thing to keep in mind, too. one of the soldiers or marines in critical condition, too. in serious condition said they struggled because we are focused and should be on those who lost their lives the 1. but 20 got wounded. and it is serious. and i imagine that president biden had to see that up close and personal.
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and you have to wonder if this phone call from to ghani from the president when they talked to each other prior to his. steve: prior to leaving afghanistan. brian: the president of the united states says he does not see it's inevitable that taliban take over the country. there will not be another saigon moment. it would be worse. they think the 300,000 well-armed army would be able to stand up to 75,000 taliban. but, even president biden had to know when he was saying this this wasn't indeed true. now this transcript has emerged. here is a little of the dialogue. i need to tell you this is biden to ghani. i need to tell you the perception around the world that parts of afghanistan, i believe, is that things are not going well in terms of the fight against the taliban. and there is a need, whether it's true or not, there is a need to project a different
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picture. ainsley: things aren't going well, but please don't tell anyone. he paints a different picture. steve: essentially, there you can see them a month earlier, the president of the united states asked someone to lie in exchange for military support. we have since heard a number of republicans and commentators say hey, wait a minute, phone call? that's what got donald trump in trouble. this is an impeachable offense. so, you know, the fact that it's out now and it's embarrassing to the white house. so you would think, and we talked about this yesterday and talked a little bit about it the day before. when you look at the other cable channels and the broadcast channels, look at that. nbc, cnn, abc, msnbc, and cbs zero air time telling that story. gee, why would that be? ainsley: remember, jen psaki wouldn't answer the question about it either. steve: not going to talk about a private conversation. brian: can you imagine if
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kayleigh mcenany said the ukrainian call? i'm not going to talk about it. reuters might want to do a follow up on the story this isn't the daily caller engineer means veracity is fine. reuters did the story. does anyone at rioters want to follow up on that story? ainsley: then he says we told people to get out. you also told the president of afghanistan if it's bad don't tell anyone. do you know how many lives could have been saved if he had said it's so bad get out now? brian: how about this? the actual context of the call it was a desperate situation. when ghani came here, i know people that had dinner with him. he said listen, slow down the pullout. we're in a lot of trouble. you have got to slow down the pullout. you have got to give us back air cover. that was conversation with high ranking officials at dinner prior to call with biden. the call comes out he asks for the same thing. you have to give me front loaded
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air power. there is between 10 and 15,000 terrorists coming from pakistan the taliban is pushing forward. so there -- i want you to lie about perceptions and there is the chief executive of the united states ignoring a call for a government that we supported for 20 years. steve: well, you know, we saw the president there in the white house, i think on tuesday, he was defiant. brian: yell at us. steve: do it differently? he said no. ainsley: it was a success. steve it was messy but we're out. brian: the worst. ainsley: it was a success pullout went smoothly. steve: extremely successful is the terminology from the white house. brian was talking to larr la logan a little while ago. she has great sources inside that country. is calling out how joe and company is handling this. watch. >> this administration and those responsible for this showing that they are prepared to say literally anything to hide the truth. and yet they have never ever
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done anything to change the outcome of where we are now we are apologizing and begging forgiveness the afghans we are talking to. they are being magnanimous we understand it's not you. i mean, that is now what defines the u.s. military. steve: and the american public is frustrated by what has happened. we have cited this a mass muffin reports poll shows that a majority of americans, 52% think joe biden should resign over how we got out of afghanistan. unfortunately, a majority of them think that vice president harris is not qualified to be president of the united states. and she would be next in line. brian: keep in mind, i know what you are saying well, afghanistan, we've wanted to end the war anyway. keep in mind besides in america we are embarrassed by the president's pullout and his attitude and him screaming at us 48 hours ago. we have alienated our allies.
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if you read what they are saying in the u.k. and france and australia, where and canada where those -- they still have allies and citizens on the ground, because we didn't communicate when we were leaving, and we didn't supply any forces to extend it? and even though our allies asked us to extend this deadline. we didn't. and, therefore, the after-effects of this are going to ripple as long as joe biden is president. steve: one of the after-effects as we come up on the 20th anniversary of 9/11 is are we safe in the united states? that's why we kept presence there to make sure that what happened over there wouldn't happen here. can we still say that with certainty? a lot of people say no. ainsley: is joe biden going to call it an extremely successful if that happens? so many americans are still over there so are our allies. we have brought some home. they are worried about their family members there now we have to worry about the taliban and terrorists coming into our country and we have southern border that's wide open.
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brian: general milley says we might be allies with them soon. that's good because they seem so nice now. 16 minutes after the hour. jillian you are poised to give us other news? jillian: let's begin with this. a chicago police officer is hospitalized after a massive fire rips through a building on chicago's south side. residents jumping from their lives to escape the flames. >> they came up and made like a matt for something that they could jump on and they coaxed him to jump out. jillian: officials are investigating. the officer is expected to be okay. one person sent to the hospital in serious condition. west virginia senator joe manchin is urging his fellow democrats to hit the pause button on president biden's $3.5 trillion social spending package. manchin saying the not yet finalized legislation is not an urgent matter and that he supports some provisions in the bill but wants to make sure federal funding is being spent responsibly. remember the pro-antifa high school teacher who had his radical views exposed by project
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veritas? >> 180 days to turn them into revolutionaries. >> how do you do that? how do you [bleep] >> i probably as far as left as you can go. jillian: that teacher is now put on leave and reportedly set to be fired by his california school district over those remarks. but the school district superintendent tells fox news he has heard of a prior complaint against teacher but has yet to find record of it. he says internal probe found evidence of violations as far back as 2018. and the ftc wants to know why our mcdonald's ice cream machines always broken? the "wall street journal" reporting the feds are gathering information from franchise owners to investigate whether manufacturers are blocking them from getting the machines fixed quickly? well, we all need our ice cream. steve: what is this mcflurry gate? >> i guess so. ainsley: so good. brian: are they good for you? ainsley: no. jillian: i think they are
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fantastic for you. steve: make you feel good, brian? they are good for you. brian: anything that makes you feel good is good for you? okay. ainsley: no. do not teach your children that. steve: that's why they call it comfort food. ainsley: brian said anything. anything goes that makes you feel good. brian: going verbatim. ainsley: 7:18 on the east coast. taliban seeking legitimacy and could announce a new government as early as today. how will the u.s. exit impact our standing in the world? ask general jack keane. steve: warrior who served in the navy seals for two terms now a walk-on for the nebraska cornhuskers. he joins us to describe his incredible journey from the battlefield to the football field to mark 20 years since september 11th, 2001. ♪ ♪
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brian: ing announce new government as early as today. one spokesperson called china the group's main partner. so how will the new government impact relationship with allies and adversaries as well as our relationship with china. bring in jack keane four star strategic analyst. general, does it worry you that china will be best buddies with afghanistan's new government whenever it forms. >> well, yeah, certainly. listen, as we said before our departure, that the beneficiaries the direct beneficiaries of our departure
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from afghanistan would be our adversaries who are right there. that's russia, china, and iran, china and iran border afghanistan. and i totally disagree with the president. they are thrilled that we're out of there. we had seven military bases and multiple cia bases inside of afghanistan on russia and china's border -- excuse me, russia-china and iran's border. and one country away from russia. they wanted us out of there, and now we are out of there. certainly they will take advantage of this situation as best they can. certainly china there is some risk for china they don't want epicenter of radical terrorism forming in afghanistan nor do we. russia doesn't want that either. nonetheless, this is an opportunity for them to gain influence in southern asia and central asia and for china to continue the beltran road initiative signature initiative
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is pakistan to extend that into afghanistan yes, they're are opportunities there. certainly for these countries. also concerned very much about what it will mean for these countries in terms of how they look at the united states. they believe that the united states is weakened by this. particularly in suring up our allies. they are going to move to take advantage of that situation. after all, the facts are all three of those countries are masters at trying to gain influence and do that short of war. and i think those campaigns will be accepted up. i have been already been asked by one of our allies in the middle east what is the implications on iran as a result of this. well, look it, iran got rid of the united states on its eastern border, brian. we are on their western border. i would assume that i will see a stepped up campaign by iran backing their proxies inside of
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iraq to hit the united states. to put pressure on the united states to get out of iraq another major victory for the iranians. that's the concern i have with our adversaries. it's not that we are going to go to a war as a result of this decision. they are going to take advantage of this because of a weakened resolve. if our allies believe that resol is weak weakened. what they will do is take more risk with that relationship. in other words, they won't stand up to the aggression as much as they should in their regional areas in the pacific, in the middle east certainly. and along the eastern european border with russia and a southern border. so, those are real concerns. listen, the united states is still a super power. it's number one economic power in the world. it's got the strongest overall military in the world, despite some recent erosion in its capability. i mean, this is the country everybody wants to come to.
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people will still respect us. but they are wounded and shaken by what has taken place here. brian: as are we. you are not just summarizing inaccurately what the administration keep saying the president and jen psaki the other day there are few countries that wanted us to stay in afghanistan more than china and russia because it would have tied up our resources and tied up the u.s. military. please? 2200 troops, covert cia and seven military bases? that was not tying up the bulk of u.s. resources. and general, real quick, you had a chance to talk with begany the last time he was in america what did he ask for? what did we give him? what government that regime alive was u.s. intention and u.s. air support. he wanted that and we were pulling that away. and then we also pulled away the contractors to keep his air force flying. he was in desperation and i met
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with him with a lot of other people but i talked to him on the phone a number of times and i mean he was appalled bewhat was happening to him. certainly, what people don't realize is that all during the negotiations, that the trump administration started with the taliban, during those negotiations we were not providing air support to the afghans had who were being pounded by the tall back. the taliban stepped up their campaigns because they knew the united states was in negotiations and we were not going to support them with air power. a couple of times we did. most of the times we did not. the most casualties they took were during that time frame. and i believe that conditioned the afghan ground forces to the debacle and collapse that we finally saw take place in late july and august. brian: so they can't be really surprised. these facts don't mix. general jack keane, thanks so much. >> yeah. great talking to you, brian. have a great weekend.
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brian: always educational. meanwhile, the tragic situation under folding at the border summed up in a single photo. a migrant girl carrying her little brother hours before she and her mom died in the scorching dessert heat. and our next guest blames president biden's policies for it. ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ summer is a state of mind, you can visit anytime. savor your summer with lincoln. serena: it's my 3:10 no-exit-in-sight migraine medicine. it's ubrelvy. for anytime, anywhere migraine strikes, without worrying if it's too late, or where i am.
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steve 7: 3 here in the east back with fox weather. today president biden will head to louisiana via air force 1 to survey the damage from this week's hurricane ida. ainsley: remnants of the storm slamming the northeast. the governor announcing the state's death toll has climbed to 25. ryan christopher joins us live from rochelle park. it's in new jersey with the latest. good morning, ryan. >> , good morning there, guys. the scene has certainly changed. all the streets were flooded. see neighbors taking out trash early in the morning. today, thankfully that water has receded. let me show you some video right here. this is a baseball park. it's a before and after of the yankees minor league affiliate here in new jersey. you can see how much water took over that entire park and then today a very different story and also let's take a look at this video. tornadoes in south jersey right near philly one confirmed. massive damage in the state of new jersey. also this morning reporting on
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house explosions. right in the middle of all of this flooding has been houses completely disseminated in the middle of this flooding. thank you for your time this morning. we appreciate it we met philip. he has been walking around to different houses in the neighborhood and he has been taking hoses and helping to clear out people's homes. how much water did you have in your basement. >> i had about 4 and a half feet. almost 5 feet of water. my basement some of these neighbors down here completely filled. so we actually all of our neighbors we have actually -- the guys we banned together and been helping each other out. we help out all our neighbors and everybody. >> you are saying very multicultural neighborhood great to see people come together regardless of age, race, ethnicity. >> this is a slice of the american dream. and in that sense, we are a blue collar neighborhood. we are close knit. we have every corner of the nation represented on my block here. we love the earth miss diversity and we really it just makes for
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what the american dream is all about. this kind of trial and diversity that we come up against one had foundation fall but we are -- >> something good come from all of this. kindness and helping your neighbors. ainsley send it back to you north jersey. steve: pickup day in rochelle park down by the famous garden state mall. all right. check in with senior meteorologist janice dean for a look at our fox weather forecast today it's actually a beautiful feels like fall here. but you look at those numbers, and you realize there has been a major rain event. janice: a good point brought up it's after the storm that the neighbors come together and help each other. you see that every single time. it's just you know makes you believe in humanity again. but the -- you know, some of these rainfall totals were reminiscent of the storm when it
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came ashore a category 4. to get close to 10 inches in heavily populated areas in new jersey, rhode island, new york. look at staten island, close to 10 inches of rainfall and it came in just a matter of hours so the waters just rose and there wasn't a whole lot of time to react. current temperatures we have got, you know, cooler, drier weather that's going to remain with us throughout the weekend that's united states news. the clean up will continue for new york. you got record breaking rain over 7 inches in central park. really nice looking forecast for the weekend. we could see some showers on monday on holiday monday but otherwise, you know feels like fall, flight temperatures in the 70s. and take a look at your last 24 hours. the good news for much of the country fairly quiet. we do have a front that's bringing the potential for showers and thunderstorms across the plains and the midwest and the imusk. but nothing, you know, nothing too major to report which is great as we head into the holiday weekend. especially, of course, for folks still cleaning up along the gulf
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coast. steve and ainsley, back to you. ainsley: all right. thank you, janice. speaking of the weather. it was 11 degrees where this columbia mother and daughter found dead in the dessert of arizona after crossing the border to seek asylum. her name was claudia marcella pin i can't. and she shared a photo of her young daughter carrying her young daughter 2-year-old through the dessert and hours later claudia and 10-year-old daughter died from heat exposure. clawed yaps husband who lives down in florida told her to go back. she said she was already there then my daughter said no, dad, i really want to see you. they only had 25% battery left on their phone. steve: claudia made a frantic call to 911 for help. but her phone died before she could send the location. you know what it's like out there when it's hot like that. >> this story hurts. any border patrol agent that has ever had to deal with death, we
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understand that without proper policy and programs in place we can't just reach these individuals in time to know this tragedy was preventable, to know that had we had the proper resources in the area and available we would have been able to save these people. we have had agents that have died, put their lives on the line to go in to save these people. that's what we want to do. to know this was preventable, really upsets us and it hurts knowing that we have had to see this over and over again. ainsley: the president is securing tajikistan borders to protect folks from the taliban. our southern border agents say this is a slap in the face. he will secure that border but not ours. they say it's heartening to say the biden administration finally getting serious about border security. it's too bad it's in another country. they say this is a slap in the face to the u.s. biden has already destroyed afghanistan. so the borders don't need to be open.
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what's your reaction, brandon? >> yeah. we have complete and total chaos on our southwest border. we don't know who is come in. we don't know where they are come frfment we don't know what their intentions are in the united states. yet, is he willing to go and secure a border of another country. his responsibility is to his citizens, to all the people that are crossing the border illegally to everybody that's currently here. that's where his responsibility is. yet, is he failing in that and he is failing miserably. when we look at the threat that we face on a daily basis, and the protection of citizens of this country, where is he? and is he nowhere to be found and, yes, it is very ironic that he is willing to go and secure the border of another country but he is not willing to secure our own borders for our own citizens. steve: it is frustrating for so many people. brandon, thank you very much for joining us today. >> always good to be with you. thank you. ainsley: thank you. steve: coming up on this friday, a brand new poll finds six in 0 americans say this country on the wrong track. ainsley: our "fox & friends weekend" team is on deck to discuss it.
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i gotta go. your neighbor needs king's hawaiian bread. hey, i got you. guy fieri? >> president biden's approval rating hitting a new level afghanistan as six in ten u.s. voters believe the country has gone pretty seriously off the wrong track. brian: i'm even surprised it's at 39. "fox & friends weekend" co-host who i met in pepper pete hegseth, rachel campos-duffy i worked with her and will cain i saw him in the halls yesterday. rachel, i guess i will start with you because i like you best. are you surprised bay these numbers and do you think in the white house they are alarmed by it? rachel: they must be worried. and no, i'm not surprised. i think i hear two things the most when i talk to people. they say i can't believe how quickly even people who didn't like joe biden can't believe how quickly things have gone bad and how bad things are. and the other thing i hear a lot
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of, brian, is they are saying they don't recognize america anymore. what was also interesting about that poll really quick is that security issues, the border, and terrorism are now ranked number two among people's concerns. those are two things people didn't worry about under donald trump. these are new worries. steve: pete, what do you think? >> you got right track and wrong track. there should be a category for off the tracks. and i think a lot of people would check that one. if they could, this is seven months in as rachel talked about, this is a terrible number. and this is reflection of both ideology and incompetence, combine the two with terrible ideas and terrible execution or an intentional non-execution as you see with, i don't know, crime and the border. this is independence moving away big time and quickly and inside the first year of a presidency. ainsley: will, his approval
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ratings have plunged, too. 43% approve. 51% disapprove. that's down 6 points since july. your reaction? >> well, my reaction is this. if pete suggests we should have a category of off the tracks and the 60% believe we are off the tracks wake up to 40% that believe we are on the track. i think what we are doing is just getting started. i think this right here is essentially the execution. although you are right, hegseth. a poor sceex. but a execution of an ideology and vision and track this they believe they should take the united states of america. i think this is all reflective of a very calculated vision that they're looking to execute. and we are just now getting started. listen to, by the way, quickly, the prime minister of canada, and i know would talking about the united states. this is a worldwide ideology who said we are going to take this covid crisis and apply the lessons we learned to every crisis, climate crisis, job crisis, whatever crisis we can come up with. we have learned our lesson. so they are just getting started. rachel: the numbers are shocking because this should be a
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honeymoon period. and this is a very favorable press. so that's why these numbers are really shocking. brian: keep in mind they have dropped the phone call story already which is possibly the most egregious thing to emerge even though we are not out of it yet. rachel: agreed. brian: pick up the "wall street journal" today. joe manchin in it saying now is not the time for the 3.5 trillion reconciliation package. that was supposed to be his big win. but, who is familiar with your guest lists today or do you want us to carry you? will: who steps up on open question? i got it. pete: i have got it go for it, will will governor kristi noem that will be interesting. michael waltz, clay travis and lawrence jones in wisconsin right ahead of wisconsin-penn state because college football is back. ainsley: that is back. steve: it is. we'll be watching. thanks, everybody. ainsley: thank you. steve: so long, rachel. ainsley: coming up next, do you want to win $5,000? steve: yes.
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ainsley: who would say no to that? we have the fox bet questions that you need to win big. brian: nebraska football getting a lot of fans to salute to first responders. the former nea seal and walk-on in front of the pack joins us live next hour ♪ i will roll on ♪ go on away ♪ with rybelsus®. ♪ you are my sunshine ♪ ♪ my only sunshine... ♪ rybelsus® works differently than any other diabetes pill to lower blood sugar in all 3 of these ways... increases insulin when you need it... decreases sugar... and slows food. the majority of people taking rybelsus® lowered their blood sugar and reached an a1c of less than 7. people taking rybelsus® lost up to 8 pounds. rybelsus® isn't for peopl with type 1 diabetes.
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brian: fox@gives you another chance to win $5000 in a quasi- show answering six questions correctly. steve: we are going to give you the questions now pick the host of the fox nation happy hour, sign up with fox nation to get exclusive access to content, events in your favorite personalities. ainsley: one of our favorites is tom. a good morning, thomas. >> a good morning ainsley. i have my act open and ready to play. last week we only had one winner so gideon, download and let's play. which of the following football games will have the closest margin of victory,: georgia,
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clemson, penn state, wisconsin cap oregon state purdue, lsu? steve: georgia clemson. brian: i will take that also. >> how about commodities, agriculture commodities, which had the best close friday? steve: cotton given that damage down south from the hurricane. ainsley: i would say milk. i think prices have gone up; right? >> yes. brian: i don't know who drinks milk. ainsley: kids do. brian: pass. ainsley: you can't win if you pass. corn. >> which will make the most friday? steve: i would say 15. brian: no one watches movies on labors-- labor day.
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ainsley: i'm going with d. steve: as you pull the audience, that seems to be their favorite. >> big weekend at the box office. which of the books will have the best release? steve: woke income from our friend. ainsley: what about the afghanistan papers? brian: i think that will be number one. >> which driver will finish best at the southern 500, kevin harvey, or these others? ainsley: chase elliott. steve: martin truex junior. >> which of the following city will see the hottest temperatures saturday? ainsley: reno. brian: reno. >> everyone is going reno, how can it not? steve: that's fantastic. of those are the exact
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six questions and keep in mind these things have not yet happen so you have to look into the future and if you do, on that app you can win a bunch of money. thanks, tom. >> thank you. ainsley: one $1 million jackpot is back for season one is. brian: terry bradshaw? ainsley: yes. steve: when terry bradshaw's million dollars. brian: he is going to be out of money by the end of the year again. steve: i have a feeling we write him a check and then he writes someone a check. brian: that could be. ainsley: 7:56 a.m., don't go anywhere because we have jesse james it doctor rocking our concert series right here. ♪♪
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brian: the president's approval rating is dropping. >> lost big approval ratings. >> a terrible number and this is a reflection of ideology and incompetence. >> biden is working to secure another country's border while leaving ours open. >> his responsibility is to his citizens, yet he's failing miserably. >> jan sakae snapping at a reporter after he asked how president biden can support abortion. >> i know you can have
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it never faced those choices. >> a sexist response which is ironic coming from someone who's the boss is a man. >> paying tribute to the 13 service members killed. >> it's more of a symbol for what the country is made of representing the best in the world. ♪♪ brian: clearwater beach, i have not been there but i'm going to one of the live stage shows. more important, this is a jessie james decker and she-- the words go like this, don't need no hi, don't need no buzz, looking at you gets me drunk and she goes on. i look forward to her singing that at some point. steve: is that the song she's singing a? steve: yup.
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ainsley: can you relate. steve: i don't know if that's what's-- what she is singing today, but that's what she was just singing. today she will be singing, should have known a better. ainsley: look at that one up. brian: put your hand on my face, tell me what you want to say. steve: today is a friday and she is our feature performer. all-american summer concert series a. ainsley: i watched her reality show when she came to visit the site, she is precious. her husband and her have a great relationship. brian: my hunch in the kitchen and nothing hits the floor. he has great hands as a player so if you open the cabinet he has great hands. ainsley: what is on your mind today? steve: you mean there are no leftovers because he's a hungry
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guy? brian: that could be it also, also nothing breaks. just thought i would add that, straight to fox weather as we are learning 61 people passed away after ida battered the south and northeast. ainsley: flooding yankees minor league stadium in new york after dropping historical rain on the state. steve: it's actually in new jersey. fox whether correspondent joins us live from new orleans as the president is heading via air force one your way, steve. reporter: yes, the president will be here this afternoon to survey the damage, but as you reported sadly the number of deaths continues to rise. 61 killed over eight different states from hurricane ida. one of those who died is actually connecticut state police officer. they confirmed the 26-year old veteran was killed by how stark flooding wednesday night into thursday morning as he was doing a overnight
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shift when the floodwaters carried him away to format it was a frantic scramble to safety and here is how one survivor described in the moment. >> my neighbor hold my hand and i hold my wife's hand so we can get out. reporter: in a new york, mta bus driver is being honored for her bravery, rose monty continued to drive as floodwaters rose inside the bus to nearly-- she continued to weave a path and got passengers to safety. as you mentioned there was historic rainfall and you could see that the flooding was widespread, not only did it submerge the minor league infielder there but it also leaked into people's basements and ground levels of their home trapping them inside and that was the
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concern is the remnants of hurricane ida moved through the northeast. thankfully, that kicked out into the atlantic. back out here live to louisiana, the floodwaters have started to recede allowing some power back on in parts of new orleans and behind me we have some of these local pumps filling up, but only if you are open and you will know there are barricades with a system in place as lines will form as they aren't allowing a free for all at all for the gas and the power that's being turned on. several grocery stores have started to open, but we are a long ways away from full recovery and as you mentioned the president biden will move in later this afternoon to kind of survey the damage and we will have the latest on what he has to say throughout the day here in new orleans. for now, back to you. steve: live from new orleans where they are trying to get the lights on and they have run out of gas. ainsley: we heard so many stories yesterday from stranded
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cars to peoples houses that were flooded to the damage and to the death of the two-year old little boy that died with his mom and dad, the front page of the "new york post" and they were in their basement-- they lived in the bottom floor of this house. the woman above them said the waters came up to her floor to her knees as of their entire space totally full of water and she said it was a swimming pool to the staircase and they didn't get out to. steve: the "new york post" talks about how the number of the people who died in the last couple of days trapped in their apartments they were illegally constructed apartments, buildings not zoned for apartments downstairs and do so going forward we have to imagine the city will start to crack down if there is no way out, another exit, they will probably close them down. brian: the city is cracking down on everything in six minutes after that hour. the president's approval rating is a sinking below thanks to the afghan pullout and how
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it was executed. peter doocy joins us live from washington as a devout-- republicans demand answers on when americans are coming home. reporter: good morning. of the president's approval ratings are upside down meeting more people disapprove of him than approve of him. a majority 51% do not think he is doing a good job and 43% think he is coming down six points in a month of rough headlines about the afghanistan pull. >> left at the vast majority of the loyal afghans who served alongside in our american troops there, yet we apparently evacuated tens of thousands of afghans who had no clear or direct connection to american troops and who we really have no idea who they are. reporter: senator cotton and other republican senators have written a letter to president biden and part of it says, our immediate priority is the safety and well-being of american citizens, permanent residents and allies who were left behind
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in afghanistan. americans need to see that the united states will not abandon them to terrorists abroad forever to the president and first lady visited walter reed where service members first and last week's suicide bombing at the kabul airport are being treated. at the fighting continues in afghanistan right now is in the pan share valley as freedom fighters hope to say-- stave off the taliban without any u.s. help. >> we are right now fighting a war against terror, however, we have no allies as we are the last remaining u.s. allies in afghanistan and we are not being supported. there's no one by our side to help us against transnational terrorism at the moment. reporter: we have not heard anything from president biden about afghanistan since tuesday, even though some american citizens and vulnerable afghans remain there. back to you. steve: peter, thank you and peter that's the reason the 26 senators wrote the letter, but i
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think it was on wednesday when you racked up one of your reports saying the white house for the most part is trying to change the subject because afghanistan has been a loser for them. reporter: if you listen to the president's most recent set of remarks same folks at the pentagon on the state department, they think it is over in afghanistan. at they talk about the mission like they are done and it is something that is now in the past, which does not exactly match with the reality of the people who are still stuck there. i know they don't like the word stranded so people who remain in afghanistan without any american guns around them just in case things go haywire, so we are hearing from the president about hurricane ida and we will hear from him about the hurricane at 10:00 a.m. yesterday he had an event marking the jewish high holidays that are said to start, but nothing on afghanistan, the way he talks about it, it's like it's time to move on. abby: so we are just done with
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afghanistan and are going to help the americans is still stranded there or the afghan allies? steve: if they do they want site. reporter: they say they will get them all out. steve: because they are stranded, but to your point they are stuck. peter, thank you. brian: go ahead. steve: jan sakae took exception to peter using the terminology stranded the week before. on wednesday she was asked about this report that shows essentially our president speaking to the president of afghanistan and he was still in power and he said look, it looks bad there. i had to have you pretend everything is okay until we pull everything out and essentially he was offering, hey we will give you military support if you do that, but the president of afghanistan said look, mr. president, things are really going south. you have to help. ainsley: a sickly, even if it is not true we know things are bad, make it appear that we can hold back the taliban.
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steve: put on a happy face as he went jen psaki was asked about this. listen to her response. >> in july rather between president biden and president ashraf ghani. secondly, that there were plans to project that afghans were still in control. is that accurate? >> i'm not going to get into private diplomatic conversations or leaked transcripts of phone calls. brian: meanwhile, that's totally unacceptable with any other administration. kaylee mac nine he said the leak phone call the transcript really won't get into that. with that have ended the investigation? now, we ended up with a marathon impeachment. ainsley: and not one of the other networks cover the story. steve: republicans have said that is the same reason donald
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trump was impeached over a phone call with a world leader. on page 28 of the "new york post" today that headline is: jen psaki desperate dodge and part of what it says is, the truth doesn't mind being questioned, but ally does not like to be challenged. white house press secretary jen psaki offered that observation wednesday by refusing to discuss the damning july 23, phone call. leaked audio which shows president joe biden knew well in advance afghanistan's army was failing before the taliban and that situation was dire. he only cared about perception. no amount of white house dodging can push that ugly truth from the public's mind. however, to peter's point and it's one of the reasons why the white house is desperate to change the subject. ainsley: they don't want you to know about this. they are protecting folks in a country north of afghanistan and
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protected not borders of the taliban can't get into that country and injure the people or take the people hostage, but yet our southern border remains open and our border agents are so mad about this. they say it's a slap in the face. you care about protecting that border, but not our own. brian: the refugees to start coming in, it will be a longer walk but in syria they basically flooded into europe and disrupted the society and because angela merkel her political career when she let anyone-- when she let everyone in. greece said we are putting our fence up in all these european nations and said wait a second, americans pull out, they don't consult us and they will have a flood of refugees appear we have 122,000 that we are bragging we got out. the state department tells us yesterday that most of our sib are not out and there's been trip-- they are having trouble sleeping at night because of that and we all know private organizations that are working to get americans with dual citizenship and americans out
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planning and different covert locations and are getting no help from the state department. i thought joe biden said we will get everyone out lied about that. number two, anyone still from here on in that wants to get out will get out. she clearly not only is not doing anything, he is hurting private contractors from doing what the government refused it to do, leave people behind. that bothers a lot of people that served and a lot of people that want to help the others stuck there and it doesn't seem to bother that-- this white house at all to be what he calls it extremely successful and said the evacuation efforts went smoothly. steve: for the people that are still there there are two ways out. the state department is telling them to stay there quietly and keep your head down, but they are waiting for the airport to open for commercial civilian travel and a lot of people are eyeing the exit thinking i will go to one of the two exits in the country, pakistan or worse case scenario
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they want to go through and ran-- i ran so a lot of americans are thinking do i really want to go to armor on, what do you do? steve: i would wait for the plane, i guess. brian: in the state department is not giving you permission to leave. steve: frustrating. 8:15 a.m. here in the east and jillian joins us with more news. gillian: more than a thousand people gather at a vigil to honor a fallen marine. lance corporal dylan marlowe was one of the 13 u.s. service members killed in the kabul airport attack and the vigil was held in his hometown in california. his mother giving a heartbreaking speech. >> i can imagine living this life without you in it. doing exactly what i know you wanted to do is make a difference in this world. gillian: he served in the military for two years and had only been in afghanistan for over a week when he was killed.
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oakland police chief makes a plea to criminals driving the crime crisis in his city. >> continued to do our best to message of those involved in the violence. we continue to ask those involved in violence to put the firearms down. gillian: eighty-seven murders have been reported in oakland this year including 11 last month and shootings are up 50%. stomach texas sees a surge in private donations to build a border wall and governor abbott's efforts to raise private funds went from around $1 million at the beginning of august, to more than $54 million by the end of the month. what sparked the jump in donations as it accepts funds to continue construction along the southern border after governor abbott vowed to take the border crisis into his own hands appeared rapper kanye west is trolled on twitter by pep a pig pick the animated
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cartoon pig pointing out its recent music offerings. it earned .54 on pitchfork, slightly higher than the 6.0 rating kanye got. pepa saying pepa didn't need to host listening parties. ainsley: pepa has a little fire. steve: pretty bad when you are trolled by a cartoon. ainsley: we love at pepa pig pick the number one cartoon watch during the pandemic. kids love it. gillian: the other one was a spongebob. brian: what about mr. magoo? gillian: that was not hot. ainsley: was that ever hot? brian: i think so. what about the gorilla it in the window. steve: i'm sticking with things from this millennium. ainsley: don't go anywhere. kaylee will join us later this hour. steve: the moment you have been
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brian: gives you chills as america marks 20 years since the 9/11 attack to get the nebraska
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football team released a video as a reminder to never forget with these commemorative uniforms per game next saturday september 11. a leading attribute to service members is a one himself, damien jackson, former navy seal and walk on linebacker will make a major contribution this year. he's already made a major want. damien, first off, we love but watching. you can't watching mouth -- without feeling patriotic. did you think when you watched it? >> it was pretty emotional. i think our media team did an amazing job at this and i got a lot of feedback that a lot of people like the video it was a heartfelt video and it's good to see that everyone enjoyed it and likes that we are doing this for people and showing them we still care. brian: you walked down the street and you told me in the break i'm not an actor and you are. you're not a guy that loves cameras, so you
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were reluctant, but they told you how it would be and what it was for. is that what changed your mind? >> yeah. like you said, i don't like doing stuff for the cameras and i don't really like the whole interview type of thing, but when they told me it was or 9/11 to remember those guys and remember the sacrifices every monday may then it got me on board. brian: not only do you walk down the street, you see a firefighter, you see a veteran, you see a police officer, the first responders, so it's the whole thing that made 9/11 a moment that america would never forget let alone the attack. it's what happened after the attack. >> yeah, on the first responders, all of the military, goes for all of them for all these years that have been sacrificing for us. brian: damien, do you worry about a loss of patriotism in this country? i know and passionate in nebraska they are extremely patriotic and believe a red, white and blue. do you worry about what's going on around
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the country that we are losing that? >> honestly, i don't. i see all the comments and icy just people loving america, loving the military and everything, so me personally i don't feel like we are. everyone still remembers and loves to see this stuff going on and that we are still patriotic. brian: i would lock to talk to you about you for a second. you went through a transformation. you are an athlete, never a football player and you decided to join the military. how did the military change you? what were you like before, what we like during and after? >> well, i would say before the military i was very selfish person and did everything for myself. i didn't really understand and i went into the military when i was 18 so it was all about me basically and when i got there i got called out real quick and i can do anything for myself. people will notice that, so i had to change the way i was and do everything for the team. that got my mindset
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changed being in navy. it's helped me for my whole career especially in football. i'm here for these guys and i would do anything for my team. it's all because of the military. brian: why did you jog over to the seals? what attracted you? >> honestly, it was because something i wanted to do and it looked like one of the hardest things in the military that you could accomplish and i wanted to take the challenge. it's kind of what drew me too it is that they lead, so that's really what got me hooked on it. brian: what will you be thinking about september 11, when you are out there? >> just-- we are going to have a game that day. all the fans that are out there. everyone will be there for the same thing. it won't really be about the game, it will be about 9/11 and the sacrifices so it will be good to see the fans of the people that
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celebrate with us. brian: what do you tell your teammates when you are asked what it's like to serve in the war? >> usually we don't talk about that at football. i kind of keep my military and my football career separate and a lot of these guys haven't really heard my story so i try to keep that stuff to myself. it's just something i believe in a. brian: damien, you blew it, people want to hear your story and they are moved. i'm so glad you said yes and appreciate you serving. wish you and nebraska did the best that shape your damian jackson, thank you so much. straight ahead, help wanted signs are still everywhere, so how many jobs did the economy outlet-- last month? the jobs numbers come in after the break and job -- joe biden's ratings are sinking. geraldo rivera reacts.
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only pay for what you need. ♪ liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty. ♪ ainsley: we are back with a fox news alert. at the august jobs report was just released. in the u.s. adding
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235,000 jobs last month, less than a calmness expected and the unemployment rate fell to 5.2%. steve: thank you. fox news correspondent geraldo rivera joins us today. >> good morning, steve. steve: jillian just gave us the numbers and apparently it's disappointing. it was supposed to be over 700,000, so they missed the number by half a million. that's not good. i don't know yet why whether it was covid related or-- i don't have any of the back story but it's disappointing for the white house. >> well, i would only assume, steve, at this number reflects the fact that people are still getting extended unemployment in many states and are only now arousing themselves to get in the mood to go out and get a job in the fall, i mean, it's a positive number, but
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up-- modest as you suggest and it seems the economy is cooling a bit despite all of the stimulus that's been injected into it. i'm not an economist, but my gut reaction is that there's not enough incentive for people to go to work and that's why there are 70 help-wanted signs wherever you go throughout the country. it's quite alarming. you want people to get up, dust off their romps and get out and make some money. steve: why do that when you can get paid more to sit on your couch and i think you are right, i'm sure there will be some rationale that's covid related or something. meanwhile, here is something the white house probably not too happy about. there is a brand-new pullout from npr and essentially joe biden is a so far underwater right now, a majority of americans disapprove of his job performance. he has lost five points with the democrats and
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he's down 10 points with independence and you have to figure that if the white house-- there is a red flashing warning light on the desk saying, danger, danger this is not good for potus. >> the real problem is when he started it was good old uncle joe, president biden was handing out all that free money. the stimulus checks where there. of the vaccines were happening. they were free and they were getting out. at the covid related numbers were thinking, so i think it looks good for the president, but then you cannot experience the trauma of the withdraw from afghanistan and not to be scarred by it, steve. i mean, we all watched it and wanted it to work out better than it did. it was chaos. however you spent it in terms of the president, you want to applaud the president and this
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effort, it was a terrible mess and the death of the 13 gis is something that has exacerbated everything and even-- not even of course, but my god how can i say that, but the solemn ceremony, the-- steve: dignified transfer. >> that's the words i was looking for, the dignified transfer was so marred, seemed that the president was looking at his watch. he seemed unengaged. he seemed distracted. you know, the families made a point to protest that he came to speak more about his own family and his son than the president did about their own fallen marine in this case. it really, some ugly things were said and when i president is not on the same wavelength as a goldstar family you know that there is something wrong and i believe that the perception of something
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being a shaky has sunk it into american people and a pull, you know 43% president trump existed with that right from the get go. biden was well over 50%, though. he was on track to be one of the most popular, but obviously there's been terrible missteps and hopefully he can regain his composure, but he seems rattled right now. steve: and that's why according to our white house correspondent the white house would like to change the subject away from afghanistan. >> the ace reporter in the white house, steve? steve: the guy-- [laughter] steve: as objective as any father. [laughter] thank you, sir. have a good weekend. straightahead, switching gears, to something very serious, the new texas so-called heartbeat law that the supreme court let stand at driving
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liberals crazy. speaker nancy pelosi cunning for a vote to codified roe v wade while they went to pack the court. kayleigh mcenany points us with reaction with that next on "fox & friends" it's dignity. the freedom to go where you want, knowing your doctor can watch over your heart. ♪♪
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we switched to tide hygienic clean free. it's gentle on her skin, and out cleans our old free detergent. tide hygienic clean free. hypoallergenic and safe for sensitive skin. ainsley: we're back with fox weather and we are learning a 60 when people have died after ida butter the south and northeast with the powerful storm flooding yankees minor league stadium in new jersey after dropping historic rain took this as body cam video shows nypd officer saving a driver trapped in central park. drone footage capturing damage left behind by seven tornadoes in new jersey and pennsylvania and our senior meteorologist janice dean joins us. janice: this will go down as one of the worst storms to hit the northeast in history. we had heavy rainfall, some of the rainfall coming in a matter of hours in central park over 3 inches an hour,
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so the water came up so quickly and people just didn't know what to do or how to react to so it's incredible that some of these totals are close to what the totals were as a category four hurricane making landfall across the gulf coast. we also had tornado reports and heavily populated neighborhoods along the i-95. seven reports of tornadoes and one was in ef three. we talk about these tropical tornadoes that come from these tropical systems and you usually think they are weak tornadoes, but to have an ef three is considerable. of the good news is it will be cooler and drier this weekend for much of the weekend for the northeast for the cleanup. hot and humid for folks along the gulf coast that's was hard-hit by ida. hard to believe that it's not even a week ago i made a landfall. we will continue to monitor the weather and the progress of the rebuild. back to you, steve and ainsley. ainsley: thank you. the white house firing
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back when trust on joe biden's vow to protect abortion rights after the supreme court upholds the texas heartbeat bill. >> what is the president support abortion when his own catholic faith teaches abortion is morally wrong? >> he believes it's a woman's right, woman's body in her choice. >> why does the president not look out for the unborn child? >> i know you have never faced those choices or been pregnant but for women out there that have faced the choices it's a difficult and the president believes the right should be respected. ainsley: outnumbered cohost and former white house press secretary kayleigh mcenany is here to react. you used it to stand behind the podium and when you would get tough questions, i mean, he has a valid question and he works for a catholic network and he's asking the question many catholics want to know? >> it was a great question which is why jenna zaki crumbled under pressure on the follow-up and engaged in an attack because she did not have an adequate response so i thought
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that dismissive comment about his gender making a personal against him, to me it did not meet the moment. since roe was past 62 million, 62 million babies have been killed in this country. that's nearly a fifth of the united states population as it stands. that's not a moment for snark or dismissiveness, it's a moment where you owe the american people eight substantive answer to where the president stands, but i'm not surprised because previously jen psaki was asked at 15 weeks does the white house consider a baby a baby at 15 weeks and she would not say it's a baby and we know it 50 weeks a baby has a heartbeat, its eyes can detect light, it has arms and legs, it can move around and make facial expressions and think at 15 weeks a baby is a ab but the white house would not confirm that. ainsley: aoc said republicans promised to overturn world this is wade and they did and now progressives are saying they went to pack the court and congressman jones from new york
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democrat says he wants to add four more justices. do you think they will do that? >> no, i don't think they will but i don't put anything past the left. present biden was called this a boneheaded idea and said it was autocratic when fdr tried to do it but we know he doesn't stay true to his words with the possibility and it would be a huge radical step. the court really does need to take a look at their president. rao was a badly decided decision and had no constitutional grounding and even justice ginsburg criticized the opinion. they made up a right out of wholesale plots as justice thomas and the 14th amendment but the ironing is the 14th amendment guarantees the right to life, any person has the right to life including a baby. ainsley: joe biden says it's extreme in texas and violates roe versus wade and will launch a whole of government or some accounts. what does that mean? >> i don't know exactly what that means. i assume that means an
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attempt at packing the court which i don't think will go well. we have seen his respect for the court before and it's nonexistent because on eviction moratorium, on the mexico city-- the mexico policy under president trump remained in mexico he flouted the law where it suits him and he's been overturned by this court on each and every one of these issues, so he may try to again, engaging judicial intervention but i don't think it will go well for him just as the evictions moratorium did this thing when they would have to abolish the filibuster. we will see. thank you for being on with us. kiss your baby. >> thank you, you to a. ainsley: thank you. country star jessie james decker just released a brand-new single and she's performing "should have known better" to close out our all-american a summer series. what's going up-- coming up during your show? >> i always say don't
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let august pass you by, but it has. good morning. have a great weekend to get jobs numbers out at has covid changed the way america looks at work, we will talk to our friday money team. more on the fallout after dozens were killed in the northeast and also one of the two congressmen who went to kabul unannounced is here live and he has said that there have been plenty of lies. a senator tom cotton has a lot of questions and he's pushing on the senate side. mother coming up your is the biden agenda for trillions in spending now on my support cracks we will explain. see you in a couple minutes. that spin class was brutal. well, you can try using the buick's massaging seat. oh. yeah, that's nice. can i use apple carplay to put some music on? sure, it's wireless. what's your buick's wi-fi password? it's buick envision. that's a really tight spot. i used to hate parallel parking. ( all together ) me too! the all-new buick envision. built around you. all of you. pay no interest for 72 months plus current eligible buick owners
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ainsley: you love her hit songs like boys in the summer and i look so good without you. steve: country music singer is at with brand-new music. brian: jessie james decker joins us now, for the all-american concert series with a special performance of her noon-- new single. first, jesse, how is life treating you? >> life is great. can't complain. i have three healthy babies, a husband i love and i am working a so i'm happy. steve: and a lot of people don't realize you were actually born in italy and you were part of a military family and then he wound up in louisiana.
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i'm sure you are thinking about the folks down south where you used it to live so impacted by the hurricane. >> i have been checking in with my family down there asking what can we do and they just need waterpik they need water and gas, so we have been checking in. my whole family is from there and it's been really hard to watch. louisiana gets hit, man. ainsley: what a crazy last two years we have had with the weather and obviously covid. how did that affect your music business to e-mail, it slowed things down a bit just like you did for any of the artists, but it was also a blessing in a way where i could sit back and focus on my family and get back to what was really important which is being with each other and being present in the moment so i felt like even to the darkness there was a light that came through and it was just to focus on the people right there, your family. brian: for the first time in a long time you have had your husband around in the summer now that he's retired.
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was that like? >> it's great. i didn't know whenever he retired i was like what will this feel like but it was great and we get to spend even more time together and we work together and he's always in the garden and it's just a lot of fun to be together. we are used to it now. steve: absolutely and in addition to making music you write books. you wrote a great cookbook, so congratulations on all of that. ainsley: if she has done so much. >> thank you. i love me some food. steve: we would love us some music so ladies and gentlemen, by the way for your information about jesse visit jessie james decker.com. and in the meantime from her new album here she is singing "should have known better". ♪♪ you get what you give ♪ ♪ any report you so ♪ ♪ where you left your dirt ♪ ♪ boy a flower has grown
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♪ don't know what ♪ ♪ you got ♪ ♪ till it's out of your reach ♪ ♪ so i've been loving myself ♪ ♪ like you never loved me ♪ ♪. and if it hurts ♪ ♪ like hell you can ♪ ♪ only blame yourself ♪ ♪ should have known better than to break my heart ♪ ♪ going that funny ♪ ♪ now i've never looked better ♪ ♪ it's all your fault ♪ ♪. should have known better than to break my heart. forgive and forget ♪ ♪. will look in the mirror ♪ and i ain't ever looking back ♪ ♪ ♪♪
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♪♪ ♪♪ ♪♪ ♪♪ ♪♪ ♪♪ ♪♪ ♪♪
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♪♪ [cheers and applause]
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♪♪♪ >> you have to figure over the labor day weekend a lot of people will be going out to the intrepid new air and space museum in manhattan.
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it's terrific. >> enjoy your long weekend, everyone. >> before you do that join me on the radio that would be great and watch on fox nation. watch it wherever you are. >> then you can enjoy your long weekend. >> we'll enjoy a very long weekend. see you back here on tuesday. >> bye, everyone. >> bill: thank you, guys, good morning. lots to get to friday. swing and miss on the august jobs report. we added only 235,000 jobs last month. that's about a third of what we expected. unemployment rate did drop slightly 5.2%. president will talk about this an hour from now when he goes to new orleans to survey the storm damage there. more on all that coming up in moments. the remnants of the hurricane ida the because of over 50 deaths. dana has the day off. >> sandra: good morning, everyone. >> bill: smitty

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