tv FOX and Friends Sunday FOX News September 12, 2021 3:00am-7:00am PDT
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whose lives were lost on september 11, 2021. we salute you and we love you. [♪♪♪] ♪ o say can you see by the dawn's early light, what so proudly we hailed at the twilight's last gleaming ♪ ♪ whose broad stripes and bright stars through the perilous fight o'er the ramparts we watched were so gallantly streaming ♪
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♪ and the rocket's red glare, the bombs bursting in air, gave proof through the night that our flag was still there ♪ ♪ o, say does that star-spangled banner yet wave? ♪ ♪ oe o'er the land of the free, and the home of the brave ♪ rachel: good morning. it is zick in new york. that was lee greenwood with "the star-spangled banner." i just love him. to me is just like a wonderful man. he is such a patriot.
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should do lee greenwood every time. pete: would be okay with that. official anthem singer of "fox & friends weekend". i like it. i don't know if you saw, rachel, tribute in lights, twin towers dominating the skyline. rachel: they say you can see it from a 60-mile radius. it is pretty spectacular. pete: another reminder of a powerful day for all of us to be there. spent the day a lot thinking about that. frankly a lot about what you said, rachel at the end. we saw 20 minutes of what happened in real time, the remembrance and heroism. there is a lot of anger that comes throughout the day and what was done to us, how it unfolded since. rachel: when i got home at the end of the night, my husband decided to put on, my parent were there, my sisters, we
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watched the 9/11 documentary. i saw the boiling, feeling of anger coming up about it. will: we had trouble letting go. before college football kicked off, i went back to my hotel, i watched the 9/11 documenttry, turning point t gets political two or three episodes into it. i had trouble letting go that moment yesterday. i don't think we're alone. many people at home feel. when i came in, i saw 30 people with backpacks at 4:00 in the morning. i think runs up buildings and down the stairwells, people do this weekend for everyone. it is not a single moment of television this morning just for you, just for us, something we remember for days, more than that every day, every year.
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pete: 9/12, 20 years later you don't want to let go the feeling of 9/11. you see our nation let go, talk about words like unity. feel like words. rachel: we start as the nation remembers 9/11 and thousands of lost lives 20 years ago. president biden traveling to all three sites of the attacks on saturday. will: ashley strohmier live with a look at the tribute including a inspiring show of unity. reporter: good morning. president biden and the first lady started the day in new york city with standing with former presidents barack obama and bill clinton and speaker nancy pelosi ground zero memorial with a moment of silence at 8:46 a.m., to mark the time the plane hit. then he went to shanksville. he praised hero of the victim's family. >> these memorials are important but incredibly difficult for
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people affected by this, it brings back the moment you got the phone call, the brings back the instant you got the news no matter how many years go by. reporter: he followed former president bush acknowledging the heroes of 9/11 in his keynote address at flight 93 memorial. >> these americans were brave, strong and you united in ways that shocked the terrorists. this is the nation we know. reporter: also in shanksville, vice president kamala harris remembered the resilience of the 40 passengers of flight 93. >> the most dire of circumstances, the 40 spend -- responded as one. they fought for their own lives, to save the lives of countless others. reporter: president biden ended the day by laying a wreath at the pentagon crash site. as the 9/11 tribute in light shined through the new york city
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night, new yorkers came together for a emotional pre-game scene for the mets-yankees subway series. they held signs and flags reminding us never to forget. the teams embraced each other after a moment of silence and touching national anthem. take a listen. >> not and the home of the brave ♪ reporter: former yankees and mets managers at the time of the 9/11 attacks, joe torre, and bobby valentine threw out the first pitches. the yankees went on to win to snap their seven--game losing streak. will: thank you, ashley. rachel: thank you, ashley. will: as president biden went to the three different locations of the attacks on 9/11, he began to talk about what you pebegan to talk about this morning the division in this country, but
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the division we well earned. what are we doing about terrorism, the home of terrorism, safe haven of terrorism? what are we doing about afghanistan? 20 years later we left afghanistan and not only left the taliban in charge. watching the documentary, such a good reminder of the reasons we went in. it is stunning look to explain to us explain why we went to afghanistan and leave the same people in charge of the country. stunning to look at george w. bush and we will go after al qaeda and anyone that gives them safe harbor and specifically the taliban. and then go, the country is yours, taliban. it is stunning to see that happen. rachel: why joe biden is out defensive right now. right now he is defending the withdrawal. here he was in shanksville, pennsylvania, doing just that. >> if you told anybody that we were going to spend 300 million
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bucks a day for 20 years to try to unite the country after we got bin laden, after al qaeda was wiped out there, al qaeda come back, guess what, it is already back in other places. what's the strategy? every place where al qaeda is we're going to invade and have troops stay there? come on. 70% of the american people think it was time to get out of afghanistan spending all the money. the flip they didn't like the way we get out. u it its hard to explain how we get ought. in tajikistan, pull up with a c-130, let anybody involved getting on the plane, would have people sit on the wheel well. rachel: hard to explain with a mask on but he said $300 million a a day.
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he said 70% of the americans wanted to get out. pete: how intimidating. a babbling president with a diaper on his face. how else would you get out. anyone serious seeing taliban at a enemy, how we executed the final moments of that, has everything to do how we're viewed and how that mission is viewed, instead. not only hand the country to the taliban as you said, we legitimatized a terror state. we're still in the process of contemplating whether to legitimatize. enter the state department and process still ongoing. they got all our weapons. rachel: i was going to say, they got our guns. we took orders from them. the way we exited we took orders from them. they have been professional. as they're executing orders to us they have our guns. by the way so interesting that you said we're legitimatizing the government. the french are saying hell no,
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we're not legitimizing the taliban. america is saying if you do some things right we're work willing to do something with you professionally. will: couple takeaways from the video. i want to handle this, it reveals the nur rosies, leader of the free world, outdoor setting, wearing a mask where we can barely understand them. that is not safety. that is nur rosies, terrible message to the world. come on is not an argument. come on is an exclamation point at the end of a sentence. come on, is worthless. he painted a afghans hanging on the wheel well after c-130. he said this was a worst-case scenario. i have news for president of the united states. that happened in kabul. that hatched in your withdrawal plan. the horrible picture you painted what could have happened in tajikistan happened in kabul. people were happening off the wheel well of c-130s, dropping
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from 30,000 feet in the sky on to the ground. your worst-case scenario played out under your watch. pete: that is why there is so much anger. it doesn't devoid the sacrifice of so many for years, people emphasized that point. when you go through all that, do what you did, speak honestly, some spoke honestly about the threat of nature of the threat we faced and islamism, destruction of the west, then your leadership hands it back over to them. actually they're more radical today than they were before. we have leaders in our country believing their propaganda taliban 2.0 might be a real thing. give it ten minutes after the cameras are completely gone. they will go back exactly where they are, they openly embraced al qaeda. not quietly. they openly embraced al qaeda and affiliates there. that is shameful. rachel: what is most damaging of all the fact, the reason, the
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rationale the terrorists gave for why they thought it was okay to kill americans on 9/11, we're teaching that to our own kids. that we're imperialists that we're bad. we added stuff to it. we're racist. our history is not worthy of being celebrated. it needs to be torn down. so there is so much emotion for me around 9/11. and even george w. bush, you know gave a speech i thought was overall quite good, and then at one point he brought up domestic terrorism which you know, he didn't name who that was, we don't know if he was talking about antifa, or talking about the people on january 6, i think we can assume what he was talking about perhaps, but i think again, that distraction. domestic terrorism is not the threat. it might actually be why our military wasn't prepared and didn't have a good plan on this withdrawal. so again, these, this day was not used in a way that i thought
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should have been. pete: i don't know if you saw milley speak from the pentagon, he rattled off list of enemies, suddenly lists the taliban of one of our enemies. rachel: i thought they were partners? pete: i was this close to him saying domestic extreme is as well. that is how far gone our political leaders. he did not. will: they take it back to domestic terrorism as the primary threat. they did it in the '90s, early 2000s and do it now while real terrorism plays itself out like september 11th, 2001, pivot back to domestic terrorism. who they see as the enemy in this country. rachel mentioned george w. bush was in attendance yesterday, as was bill clinton, barack obama, and joe biden as president donald trump. he spoke with the fire department. rachel: he didn't go to the event. will: city of lower manhattan speaking with first-responders. here he is talking directly to
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some nypd officers about his future and their future. watch. >> if you are elected again would you -- [inaudible], would you strongly consider having days of recognition for the outstanding service of men and women from the departments around the country? >> i think it is an incredible question, you won't believe this i have never been asked that question before and it should be asked. i like the idea. i think they deserve it. >> there are two type of citizens and would you strongly consider that? >> you have a deal. [laughter]. isn't it amazing nobody ever, when i say question, nobody ever brought that up. pete: i don't know if we have the photos, reception president trump got down there was extraordinary from law enforcement and first-responders. around the enthusiasm. can you imagine joe biden taking questions from cops straight up? can you imagine what the questions would be, considering what the democrat party has done
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to law enforcement, the way they have been demonized. here is video of him down there. it was, not doing the political mask theater. vaccinated. doing his thing. he is out there with the people talking to them, cameras everywhere, having discussions. the love is evident in both directions and that is kind of inspiring images you want to see as opposed to masked up -- i'm glad they were there honoring the folks at 9/11. that ceremony is important for the sitting president to be at. that was inspirational to see this. rachel: the sitting president by the way did not actually speak at that event in new york city. the president here though, putting the focus back on first-responders, on the police officers. if you're a police officer, if you're a border patrol agent, if you're a firefighter, you knew during the four years of president trump's administration that you were appreciated, you were loved. i talked to so many especially
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border patrol agents we never felt so loved and appreciated as we did with president donald trump. i thought it was great he did this visit. as you said, pete, the love is mute all there, the love is mutual. reporter: look at joe biden, barack obama, nancy pelosi, chuck schumer that is the party flirted with, if not embraced idea of defunding the police, reimagining police and there they are honoring first-responders. i believe that honor is severe for 9/11 and 20 years later turning our back on some of those people. fox news alert, fbi releasing a newly classified document from its 9/11 investigation. the heavily redacted document includes details of the fbi investigation of the support saudi arabian hijackers received in lead-up to the attack. the saudi government of course
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denied any wrongdoing and so far they're saying there is no evidence of a direct link in the newly-released report but very heavily redacted. it is expected to be the first of several previously classified reports to be published about saudi arabia's potential involvement in 9/11. all but one of the 27 scientists who dismissed the covid wuhan lab leak theory in a very reputable peer reviewed journal are found to have links to chinese researchers. 26 of the 2, investigation by the telegraph revealing those scientists were either funded or had close ties to the lab's researchers. the scientists wrote a letter in "the lancet" journal dismissing completely the possibility that covid-19 originated from the wuhan lab. the letter at the moment effectively shut debate down into the wuhan lab leak theory. oh, wow. will: i amazing. have you seen what you're about to read?
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reporter: no, i haven't. a cat survives the dramatic fall from the hard rock stadium in miami gardens, thanks too a fan with an american flag. will: will blow you away. watch this. [inautomobile conversations] pete: he is clinging. got caught by american flag. will: other angles, this cat is hanging on for dear life from the upper deck, dear life from the upper deck. rachel: how did the cat get there? will: who knows. going like this, for a long time. these guys run down there with american flag like a fire tarp and catch the thing. pete: unclear how the flag got there but the flag saved the day. the stadium tweeting quote, we wish the cat the best in his remaining years. those are the headlines. will: that is amazing. pete: that is cool. will: up next as president biden
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♪. pete: we're on tv? didn't know. [laughter]. join us, we have 3 1/2 hours left, ought to be interesting. speaking of interesting, there was a exchange in the white house press briefing room between peter doocy around jen psaki, he asked about a very honest contrast. you have what joe biden announced it pertains to covid mandatory vaccines, using osha with companies with 100 employees to be vaccinated or weekly covid tests. quite a contrast with what is happening at our southern border. peter doocy asked jen psaki about that. take a watch. >> our objective to get as many people vaccinated across the country as humanly possible. so the account's announcement yesterday was an effort to empower businesses to give
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businesses the tools to protect their workforces. that is exactly what we did. certainly we want everybody to get vaccinated and more people are vaccinated whether they are migrants or whether they were workers protects more people in the united states. reporter: but is it a requirement for people and business with more than 100 people. it is not a requirement for migrants at the southern border. why? >> that's correct. go ahead. will: that is unacceptable. that is unacceptable response. reporter: that's correct. no why answer? why is it correct? will: i don't know. rachel: what is interesting so many of the governors and the governor of texas and so many of the mayors and even the border patrol were saying we're getting covid here in texas. we're getting increases because people are coming through the border. this isn't just some like gotcha moment about you know illegal immigration, there really is an increase of covid because of
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this surge of people at the border who aren't vaccinated and who were coming in from god knows where in the world. we know it is not just central americans. will: many have posited, including many of us on the couch the reason for the administration's approach to illegal immigration way it is because it is potential voting constituency. look who is carved out of the vaccine mandate, voting constituencies. united states postal service is carved out of the federal government mandate. various teachers unions had caveats and carveouts. entire executive government branch, certain departments and constituencies don't have to follow their mandate. illegal immigrants are another group. they are not concerned about a vaccine mandate. rachel: having fall out because vaccine mandates are sparking resignations in different places. one is in hospital. new york up state hospital says they're actually going to pause baby deliveries because some of
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the nurses in that department are saying i don't want to take the vaccine because i'm concerned it might affect my fertility. we don't know what the data on that is, people go, i don't want to take a chance because it is kind of a new vaccine. i also heard, i don't know if you guys heard this, pete, you with the military, people not wanting to reenlist, enlist at all because they didn't want the vaccine mandate. pete: pending lawsuits on that as well. young healthy soldiers who already had covid saying why. rachel: why am i doing this? pete: that will be difficult. the dod has the ability to centralize things. i heard from a recruiter, i had recruits in the docket ready to go. i spoke to one a couple days ago, they are not showing up because they don't want to be involved with the mandate of vaccine. that health system is lewis county health system, their ceo said this about these nurses, if we can pause the service, pause
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the service, meaning deliveries. rachel: how do you do that? pete: focus on nurses who are vaccinated we will be re-engaged delivering babies in lewis county. anyone pregnant, eight months pregnant, go ahead and pause. rachel: dig a pause. pete: nurses that will take the shot, we can care for you. rachel: that is a way to get a woman really angry, she is in labor, tell her to pause she will kill you [laughter] will: talking about hospitals being potentially overrun, inconcluding a staffing shortage. a condition where more staffers are looking to opt out of work. exacerbating the labor shortage, they're very adept creating labor shortages past several months, totally disconnected from vaccine mandates, but creating a labor shortage. rachel: why can't they give nurse as test? when we went to the w hotel yesterday where we did our 9/11
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commemoration, we had to take a test before we went in. there are the rapid tests. why couldn't they do that? pete: that would be fairly easy but if your agenda is 100% compliance of a vaccine this is what we decided you have to do, a covid test is out for someone who won't comply. rachel: absolutely. will: toby keith shares a patriotic message for 9/11. >> never forget. always remember, stay vigilant and never apologize for being patriotic. will: his full message, as the race to recall california's embattle governor nears the end, business owners speak out about what is at stake if gavin newsom stays in power. ♪.
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just two days away, a new study finds the state is losing business headquarters in unprecedented numbers. the hoover institution reports 22 headquarters left california between january 2018 and june 2021. with more fleeing the first half of 2021 than all of 2018 or 2020. here to tell us how much is at stake with this recall are two california business owners. the owner of pizzeria travena i hope i said that right, cynthia. and i owner of cow wise spirits company in pasorobles. cynthia, i hope i said your last name correctly around give you a chance to correct me. seeing businesses flee california, so clearly the writing is on the wall. >> i think businesses have been fleeing california even prepandemic because of the sweeping policies that this governor newsom and the
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administration put into place that affects our business on day-to-day basis. employee wage increases, employee health mandates. it makes it untenable for small businesses particularly to keep up to manage profitability with all of that. on top of it you bring on the pandemic where we had these rolling shutdowns and arbitrary shutdowns during, for the last year-and-a-half. so it is really hard to have faith in governor newsom if he stays in office, what he is going to do going forward. will: aaron, i was looking at betting odds, what going to happen in the recall election, looking like according to the odds, we know how reliable polls have been on past elections, looking like gavin newsom has a good prospect to retain his position as california's governor. what does that mean for you and your business? >> over the past 18 months in particular we've been experiencing unprecedented
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shutdowns and business closures and even though he let up in order to, potentially win the recall now, if he does win the recall stay in office i think we will see more business closures and more economic strife in our especially with small businesses on main street. will: let's ask both of you this question, go straight to you with this, aaron, i live in texas. every time i turn around people in california moving to texas. we talked about how many businesses have left california. what's keeping you there? what's keeping you and your business open in california? >> yeah. i love this state. i named by business after this state. i love california. i love the people here. i love the scenery here. i love the weather. that is what is keeping me here. i would be lying if i didn't look like states like texas and florida. it would be nice to run a my business in a state more hospitable to economic innovation.
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will: cynthia, the same question to you, do you think you can stay open in california if the current conditions remain? >> the pizzeria in st. helena has been there for 30 years. i joined an organization three years ago. we don't have the opportunity to just pick up a pizzeria and move it to another state. sure, could we open new restaurants in other states? agreed. i love california. even despite the drought and fire, a lot of the other issues we're having right now, i love living here. i love the lifestyle of living in wine country. it's a scary prospect to be a small business owner this state which we had a headquarters where we could move to get away with some of things that are happening here. will: the mountains, the beaches, the ocean, many of the people. >> the wine. will: and the wine all beautiful. unfortunately many of the ideas that govern that state ugly. hopefully your businesses can survive that ugliness. thanks to you both for getting up very early for us in california. >> thank you so much. >> thanks for having me on.
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will: coming up this impressive young girl who read the names during the 9/11 memorial, and wants to be a firefighter when she grows up will join us live. graham allen is encouraging us to become united just like we were 20 years ago on nine 12. ♪. ♪ ♪ life is full of unexpected surprises. for your first day of school. but other times, it helps knowing what to expect. at university of phoenix, you can count on fixed, affordable tuition for your program. learn more at phoenix.edu
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♪. ♪ red, white, and blue ♪ pete: country star behind this post-9/11 anthem has a new message for america. listen to what toby keith had to say as we mark 20 years since the attacks. >> let's all gather together, our families together, pray that god will keep us safe the rest of our lives and forever here in the great united states of america. we have all know where we were during 9/11 and the impact it had on this world. never forget. always remember. stay vigilant and never apologize for being patriotic. pete: never apologize for being patriotic. that's right. keith sharing this video on twitter, with the hashtag, never forget. another patriot is calling on americans to stand together as we did on september 12th,
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2001. our next guest is a veteran embodying that spirit on that day, with his apparel company, 9/12 united. making it like the day there was no race, religion, sexual orientation or political parties, we were all americans. retired army staff sergeant graham allen joins us now. by the way a congressional candidate in south carolina. good luck with that, graham. you're doing your part and continue to serve. today is 9/12, you are starting that mind set. are we living like it was 9/12? where are we? >> pete, 20 years ago to the day, this was the most american day we've seen maybe in 100 years. everybody was american. you couldn't find an american flag because everybody bought one because what happened after
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september 11th. a year ago we started this company with you here on fox news. we swore we would never forget. and unfortunately the truth is where we are right now there are some people who have. so our mission is very simple at 9/12 united. it is to remind americans to live every day like it is 9/12. it has been our mission the past year. that is what we live by. that is what i believe is going to set america on the right course to be pro-america. this is not a left thing. this is not a right thing. this is an american thing. and we see it all the time here. i saw some very horrific things posted yesterday that disheartened me. yesterday should have been a time for us to remember the lives lost on september 11th. a lot of people used it as an opportunity to take political shots. which is the exact opposite of what 9/12 united is supposed to stand for. if there is anything we can all get around as americans, it should be that we are americans.
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at the end of the day we're all in this fight together. that is what 9/12 united stands for. over the past year we've been able to support small businesses here on your news network. we've been able to support the dear america foundation which supports first-responders, veterans and their families. our mission is simple. it is not a left thing, it is not a right thing. it is an american thing to live every day like it is 9/12. pete: graham, how do we do that proactively? i was thinking, month before the 9/11 attacks. we had a fight over an election in florida. it was a partisan political moment yet we came together. 20 years later feels like those basic ingredients that what connect us have been eroded, fractured, fundamentally. you talk about loving america, do we have a culture, an education preparing young people to actually respond, say, god
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forbid have another 9/11 type of attack the way we did in 2001? >> well the answer to that is unfortunately no right this second. i think there is a difference between loving americans and being americans and liking each other all the time. those are two different things. what we're in a different situation now we turn everything into political, if you don't believe exactly like we believe or think exactly like we think we have to be enemies. that is not the way it was supposed to do be, not the way it was designed. american constitution never said we like each other all the time or we'll agree on everything. so many things in our conetutions, for our rights designed for people who don't see eye-to-eye with each other. that is all part of being american. as americans how do we fight back, we need to keep pushing. america is not dead, it is surely alive, i keep saying that
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every day. we receive thousands of messages at 9/12.com, every single day, thank you for supporting this mission, left and the right by the way, saying thank you, this is exactly what we believe. i believe that the majority of americans just want america to be america. and that is what we do here at 9/12, united. pete: i hope you're right. you see the national archives put trigger warnings on the founding documents that stuff gets people looking sideways. i don't know if that is possible. you're trying to do something about it. graham allen of 9/12.com. we appreciate it. >> thanks for having me. pete: will, over to you. will: turning to your headlines more kids have been shot in chicago this year than died in covid in all of the united states throughout this pandemic. at least five children this year, throughout, throughout the pandemic this year. five children have been shot in chicago so far this weekend
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including a 12-year-old boy who was killed. latest numbers from chicago, police say 261 children shot this year. 41 fatally. meanwhile the cdc reports that 214 under the age of 17 have died from covid so far this year in the united states. the gulf coast could be hit with another storm as a new tropical disturbance turns across mexico. the national hurricane center expects it to become a tropical depression today or tomorrow. texas and louisiana are bracing for potential flooding while recovering from hurricane ida. texas governor greg abbott activated resources including rescue boat teams in case of potential flooding. ashton kutcher is heckled by sports fans over how frequently we should be bathing. watch. >> i have a new charity project right now, outside wine. the whole idea is is -- will: here the crowd at espn's
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college gameday saying, take a shower during kutcher's live appearance in iowa. he sparked comical after he doesn't wash his body every day. pete: who does. just kidding. will: just your hands. whatever you need. pete: whatever part got dirty that day. rachel: let you guys talk about hygiene habits. pete: could do it in 20 minutes. talk to the "kurt the cyberguy" next. rachel: protecting your privacy. ♪.
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rachel: welcome back to "fox & friends." with cyberattacks on the rise it is never a bad time to start practicing good cybersecurity habits to keep your family safe. joining us is "kurt the cyberguy". >> rachel, freshly showered for you this morning. good morning to you. the latest scams we're following are tech scams coming your way.
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remember when robocall something really annoying? now there are robo texts. look at some going around. irs.gov official notice you have been granted $548 in relief. sounds great, but completely not true at all. it is verizon, we build you incorrectly. collect here, fedex, we have a package for you. jennifer from walmart, you have a item waiting for collection. people are falling for these right and left because inherently we want to solve problems. you see a text come our way, a sense of urgency, we give it attention. be on the way for those -- rachel: kurt, these are companies that we recognize these names. i mean it is the irs. that is a government agency. you have walmart and amazon and we order from these places. >> all the time, right? rachel: yeah. >> it is tricky. that is why you get a text you have to ask yourself did i ask for this message? do i really have an order
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coming. go straight to the order. don't answer the text, don't link to a text if you didn't ask for it. five ways to arm yourself for these threats coming to us at home right now. number one, upgrade your home wi-fi. don't rhett the old router let in the troublemakers that are out there. boy they are. deploy, right there, top anti-virus protection. not just one but all of your devices. find the right one for you and your family. get that one and get it going. then install a password manager. this is so important. it will help manage your pass passwords, i don't remember did i change that password? a password manager, strengthens your passwords, so you just can get to them. a vpn, to keep everything private away from snooping eyes. a virtual private network create pass bubble around what you're
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doing, cannot easily be penetrated by a hacker. make regular backups to avoid becoming a ransomware hostage. they blocked my computer. they want thousands of dollars to unlock it. backing up with a device, this desantis extreme pro portable ssd. amazing rugged drive. takes on water and dust. i originally got this for travel and loading for videos. download everything at home. the key, tip, unplug it from the computer or your device after you backed it up, so that is not available to a hacker that might get into your system. cyberguy.com, rachel, we'll put not only showering tips but how to shower yourself in safety. rachel: how to shower yourself in safety. that was awesome, kurt, thank you for this advice. everybody is dealing with these kind of scams. thanks so much. coming up in the next hour, a new york teen going against the grain, pledging his allegiance
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but this is worth. and that - that's actually worth more than you think. don't open that. wealth is important, and we can help you build it. but it's what you do with it, that makes life worth living. principal. for all it's worth. ♪. pete: live shot of the freedom tower, lower manhattan, standing tall and proud, 1776 feet tall, it should be the tallest in the western hemisphere. we're live, 7:00 here on the
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island of manhattan on "fox & friends." september 12th, year of our lord, 2021, my friends. rachel campos duffy and will cain. glad you're here. rachel: would you tell will i'm wearing egg plant and not viking colors? will: i was going purple. rachel: i'm a packer fan. i'm not wearing viking colors. anyway i'm not very supporting anyway. will: tell yourself it is not purple, eggp plant you're not a viking supporting fan today. rachel: not a viking. pete: eggplants are purple. there you have it. i think you look dashing. will: kickoff to the nfl. we'll get you ready for the first sunday of nfl games later in the show. you will enjoy this next story because it is jaw-dropping in a way, unsurprising in another. if you remember in march of 2020, we were beginning to wonder where did this virus,
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this pandemic, this crushing weapon on the world has killed so many, where did it eminate from? did it come out of a lab in china? there was a scientific letter published in "the lancet." 27 esteemed scientists, 27, who all dismissed the idea as a conspiracy theory that would have originated from a lab. this i believe is from that march 7th, 2020 letter. the rapid, open, transparent sharing of data on this outbreak is being threatened by rumors an misinformation, look at that word, around its origins. we stand together to strongly condemn conspiracy they're ritzes suggest something covid-19 does not have a natural origin. we ask others to support public professionals, health professionals across waa hahn
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across china. we now know a little lair, 26 of the 27 scientists involved in that letter had funding connections to researchers in china. rachel: so interesting. it is so interesting, that that's coming out now. remember the people who came forward early, president donald trump, senator cotton, all of these people were called racists because that was another tool that was being used. this very fancy, well-respected "lancet" journal you know, was one way to sort of wrap themselves around this moral authority and scientific authority to make claims that there is no way it came from the lab. they also were employing racism and other ways to keep people and throw them off the scent of the wuhan lab. fauci did the same thing, dr. anthony fauci did the same thing and his buddy peter daszak who was involved in the laundering of our federal tax dollars to fund the wuhan lab
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and gain of function actually sent a letter to anthony fauci saying, thank you, basically for throwing america off the scent because he knew that dr. fauci had a lot of authority and respect and if he said it didn't come from the lab, then just like "the lancet," people would say okay, anyone who thinks that must be crazy. pete: just put up the picture of peter daszak, ceo of ecoalliance we learned was the pathway which funding was provided to the wuhan lab through the u.s. government. the only consensus that they all worked with wuhan. 26 of the 27 have links to chinese researchers their colleagues or benefactors. all it took was "the daily telegraph" up. newspaper to do foia requests and it was a giant cya exercise. to be apologists for that institution and communist chinese, ultimately they were
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beholden to for one reason or another. these were not american researchers, they were folks around the globe. they warranted us to believe, tom cotton and donald trump were conspiracy theorists pointing to the chinese and reckless work at the wuhan lab. we had to spend a year-and-a-half, cutting through the misinformation, you zeroed in on the right word, will, to get to the truth, a lot of these same individuals are bee judgingly acknowledging -- begrudgingly acknowledge, look at evidence it was miles from the top virology lab in china? will: coincidentally down the street from one of the most highly protected, government funded virology lab down in the world. how would you like to be the one boob in this equation who wasn't on the take. happened to be a sheep, ridiculously wrong, not getting money out of the deal.
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that person must feel like a fool today. rachel: pete, what you say is very funny. i laughed when you first said it. immediately i got angry again because i think americans are just losing faith in every institution. so anything that comes out of the government, anything that comes out of the scientific community that we used to trust or the health bureaucrats or health agencies that we used to trust in government, we don't believe anything anymore because of this kind of stuff. where was the cia? why do i have to wait for, who did you say discovered these guys were connected? pete: "the daily telegraph." rachel: why do i have to wait for that? where was my cia? where was my -- where are these people? i just think this is why everything just feels so upside down. people don't recognize america anymore because we're losing trust in everything. pete: a lot of this has been exposed. elites with fancy titles going to fancy titles journal that
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their buddies in the media recycle and suppress everybody else. rachel: they're all on the take. will: would be helpful, we may have run something similar in the past. i would love to see a visual, running list of every single true story dismissed as either a conspiracy theory or misinformation. who is labeled as racist or disinformation. it is stunning number of stories at this point, over 18 months you will have been told was a complete conspiracy theory, to be revealed absolutely true. should keep a running tally. something for everyone to see, what you will see the same people cast the same accusations over and over. rachel: yeah. you're crazy, you're a conspiracy theorist, you're a racist, you're antiscience, you're a neanderthal you know, the list goes on but it is just, it is really sad what's happening right now, it's really, really sad. pete: when they're found out they are never held to account. rachel: never. pete: never feel to put a
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retraction on page a-16 anymore. over here. rachel: all those 26 names they will continue to work. i don't think there will be any consequences how they misled the public. pete: will continue to cover the story. rachel: waiting for fauci. pete: you mentioned the minnesota vikings who will win today. there were a lot of sports, including texas longhorns, will. how did they do? will: i took the vikings today. that maybe should give pete concern. i also took the longhorns yesterday. they got smoked by arkansas. pete: sorry about that. arkansas a powerhouse in college football. will: anyone who watches this program knows i love sports, so does pete by the way. many of you watching love sports. there are many reasons mainly because it is fun t brings us together. it did so in september of 2001. one of the healing arenas, one of the powers of healing that brought this country back
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together i think really embodied by at least in a moment that pitch that president george w. bush did at yankee stadium. amazing moment. fox sports tom rinaldi has been reflecting on the healing power of sports. watch. reporter: 20 years later. we say the names. we hold the memories. we carry the legacyies. how, in the stories we share, in the lives we honor, in the promises we keep, to them and to
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each other, for sure, there is weight in memory but there is a beacon in its spirit. and that lasts, and it rises, and it binds, us, to each other. a generation has passed since but the message and moral have strength over loss, of will through pain, that endures. >> the question has already been answered, should we be here? yes. reporter: that given day is joined to this one, bound by
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respect and remembrance and shaped in all a day can bring. its possibility and its energy, its passion and its connection. its unity. in all we share and all we are and the challenge of how we honor them by all we may be now. american. will: really good piece by tim rinaldi. tom was at espn when i was at espn. now he is at fox. i'm at fox. we should pay attention to the great things tom puts together. during that piece there are very few places left where we as a country come together honestly stand before the flag and listen to the national anthem. it has become somehow
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controversial, the role of the national anthem in a sporting event. outside of sports what are the other moments where we really come together to chant usa? when do you see the american public gather, 60, 70,000, strong yell usa. rachel: at a trump rally. will: trump rally and sporting events. it is an important venue. it is an important tradition. an important outlet i believe to create unity. rachel: i agree. i think it is so interesting to have this moment, this 20th anniversary allows us to examine as a country where we were and what we're doing and i don't think the american flag was as controversial 20 years ago as it is now. we didn't have two anthems. my husband is boycotting sports because, professional sports because he is sick and tired of this. he is boycotting a lot of other companies too because he just doesn't know how else to express that he wants an america to be
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america again. i don't know what's happening. pete: what tom rinaldi put together and what you said, will, so many all of us had visceral reaction to the politicization of the flag and field. that is the one place, one place where you're not rich, not for poor, not black, not white, none of that matters pulling for your team and pulling for your country and when you start tugging at that, that is when people really get angry and rightfully so. i was watching the nass car race last night. they prayed in the name of jesus christ. rachel: where was that? pete: where was this at? i was watching, i swear. this was a short track in brings toll. no, bristol is next week. will: martinsville. pete: short track. denny hamlin came in second. they did god bless america. first-responders leading the
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first lap. there are places in sports where they honor properly. will: it happened in college and pro sports as well, 20 years after 9/11. watch. >> citi field this saturday night, part of an emotional day filled with so many memories of the events from 20 years ago. [cheering] >> we rise and recognize a moment of silence for those we lost in the tragedy 20 years ago on september 11th 2001. [cheering] ♪. >> in front of the first-responders, damian jackson, 21-year-old defensive lineman for the nebraska cornhuskers, who spent six years in the navy, four as a navy seal [cheering]
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will: there it is. do that. there is the cathedral. rachel: that's it. that's beautiful. what unites us is freedom. i think that is probably what is underlying so much of, what this national debate is about. freedom is everything, right? if we're having debates in america right now about freedom an i think, you know, what i saw there, those images, they make me well up. i love america. i love america because i love freedom. pete: you're so right, that idea of freedom. we have all these debates, covid and others. rachel: yeah. pete: answer to the debate and freedom, you look at the college football stadiums, people say you know what? we're here. america's back. the flag is waving. a big answer to a lot of -- rachel: end it on this. our strength is not our diversity. our strength is our love of freedom. that is what unites us. i think we've gone off track on
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too much emphasis on what makes us different, our diversity and not -- pete: kamala harris said yesterday. rachel: on 9/11, keeps going back to diversity. no, freedom is what unites us. that is what this country is about. when we get back to that, we get back to those images not just being in college stadiums, not just on 9/11 but everywhere. pete: it's cool. we're all different. we're all different. we're very different people. what makes america special, we unite around one thing not that we're all different. they can't figure that out. they're ruining the country. rachel: put that point on that thought. turning now to your headlines starting with a fox news alert. u.s. forces shoot down a pair of drones attacking the er field airport -- pete: erbil. rachel: erbil airport in northern iraq t happened
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yesterday, the day america marked the 20 years since the 9/11 attacks. spokesman for the u.s. coalition forces say there was no injury or damages. the drones rigged with explosives were made in iran. john f. kennedy's family torn apart over whether to release his killer. kennedy and six of his children pleading with the california parole board to keep sirhan, sirhan behind bars. he should not have the opportunity to terrorize again. but, two of the late senators children including fox news correspondent douglas kennedy are in favor of releasing sirhan. telling "new york post" is creating a rift in the family. the board is still deciding syrian -- sirhan's fate. wisconsin school system offering cash to kids that get a covid
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vaccine. offering a cash 100-dollar incentive for eligible students to get vaccinated. more than 30,000 students are eligible. it could cost the district more than $3 million. those are the headlines. also undermines parental, you know, rights over your child f you put $100 in front of my kids they will take it. that is interesting. $3 million, i could think of a lot we could do with that. will: absolutely. pete: buy more vehicles for the taliban. coming up while president biden, joe biden continues to defend his mismanaged afghanistan exit, former president trump calling it what it is rushed. we have the exclusive interview coming up. how one legacy of a 9/11 responder living on through the niece he never met. that fearless girl tell us of
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♪. >> people think it was time to get out of afghanistan spending all that money but the flip of it is they didn't like the way we got out but it is hard to explain to anybody how else could you get out? will: vaccinated outdoors, still masked, president biden defending the afghanistan troop withdrawal but former president trump slamming the exit as rushed, blaming biden's incompetence. in exclusive interview with fox news digital, he says, to have that embarassment, take place in afghanistan, with the same people who did the damage 20 years ago is the greatest embarassment in the history of our country. fox news political reporter brooks joins me now. reporter: i'm good how are you? will: i'm well. tell me what he had to say. reporter: president trump had some pretty harsh words for president biden calling him completely incompetent saying the withdrawal from afghanistan is rushed. will: what did the former president, what did donald trump say he could have or would have
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done differently than what biden did? reporter: so the former president said if he were still president this never would have happened at all. he said the taliban knew the conditions that he set in that initial agreement he made with them when he was president. he planned to withdraw u.s. troops in afghanistan in may of 2021. part of that agreement included the condition not to target american soldiers, american military, assets or americans in afghanistan and the former president touted that agreement and the taliban's cooperation with it saying that american soldiers and american military assets were not targeted for 18 months after that agreement was struck. but he said that the problem with the biden withdrawal was the fact that the military was withdrawn first. will: right. reporter: if this were to have happened which would have never happened under his leadership the military should have come out last. will: i wonder, i don't know if you got to this part of the question or the conversation, i
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wonder what president trump projects would have been the case in afghanistan today had he been president? in other words, would we still have a presence? would he have withdrawn the united states military? would he have done it last as he suggested to you? or would we still have soldiers present present in afghanistan if donald trump was in charge? reporter: if the provinces fell to the taliban, he said the structure of the agreement would have changed. will: right. >> safed and i quote they would have been bombed into hell had they tried to take one province of afghanistan or target any military assets at that time but the problem is he said is that the taliban is now possibly going to use the military assets that the united states left behind. he warns that is the real problem. will: yeah. i would have to imagine the contingencies, quote, unquote contingencies in place would have never been met. if i'm projecting correctly here that would mean we were still in afghanistan.
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we would have some troop presence which many think we should. we should have kept2500 troops. he saw police officers yesterday, they asked him as well, what is your plan for 2024? reporter: i asked him point blank what is your plans. he said what is happening in country is a disgrace. he said he it looks like he will have no choice. he did not make a formal announcement. something clearly on his mind and press him when he will make a formal announcement on that. will: seems to be leading down that path. he told the police officers i think you'll be happy, i think you'll be happy with my decision. brooke sigman, thanks for getting that interview. reporter: thanks. will: up next we're days away from the california recall election with embattled governor gavin newsom neck and neck with republican challenger larry elder. could california go conservative? larry elder sounds off on the
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when bipolar i overwhelms, vraylar helps smooth the ups and downs. ♪. rachel: time now for your news by the numbers. first, 13. that's how many gorillas tested positive for covid-19 at the atlanta zoo. officials uncovered the outbreak -- pete: mask on them. rachel: that's right. listen to this they uncovered the outbreak after the primates were coughing and having a runny nose. they believe a vaccinated employee infected the gorillas. $35,000, that is how much tickets to famed met gala costs happening tomorrow. the money goes towards the museum. one million dollars, how much fox corporation is donate to tunnels to towers corporation. the donation will support first-responders, military heroes and their families. founder frank siller finished
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his 537-mile never forget walk at ground zero. we'll talk to frank a little later in the show. will: really awesome. the race to recall governor gavin newsom in the final 48 hours, if polls and betting odds are accurate looks likes he may survive as 60% of voters want him to stay. that is up 10% from just six weeks ago. rachel: gop front-runner larry elder sounding off why the choice is clear. >> we can do something about the rise in crime which is up in every major city here in california. newsom shut down the state to the point where kids educated in government schools were denied a whole year of in-person education. before that 75% of black boys could not read at state levels of proficiency. he shut down the state and more severe way than did any of the other 49 states, to the point now where a third of all small businesses are now gone forever. many of which were run by black, brown, asian-american people that gavin newsom claims he
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cares about. pete: fox news contributor, our friend, california resident leo terrell joins us now. leo, always great to see your smiling face. we know it is early in california. thank you. handicap the race for us, if you would, leo. there is lot of frustration obviously with gavin newsom. there are a lot of democrats as well. where do you see it right now? >> i tell you, pete, i think it is going to be a very close race. i cannot dispute the polls but i question the integrity of the polls. i would submit to you the following. if there is massive same day voting on day of the election, expect the majority of those votes will be yes on the recall. so i expect a very, very tight race. it will depend on the same day voting. let me be very clear, this is a recall based upon democrat, independents and republicans who are outright frustrated with the most incompetent in the country. crime, homelessness, wildfires,
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something very personal to me, poor education just throughout this entire state is horribly run state. rachel: yeah, leo, i definitely think that school choice and disempowering the union monopoly on our education system and our children is definitely going to be on the ticket in this recall. but i'm really curious, tell me what you think about this. you know, back in 2016 there were a lot of people who wouldn't tell pollsters that they were willing to vote for donald trump. and yet here the polls are saying no, gavin newsom is going to win by 60%. do you think, i mean you talk to a lot of californians, a lot of independent the, democrats, are there a lot of people out there embarrassed in such a blue state, are scared to say they would vote for larry elder but you know, when it comes to the actual voting day they will? >> rachel, i agree with you
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100%. this might be a mini remake of 2016. a lot of people in california, this is a blue, blue, horrifically blue state. and people are reluctant to express their feelings because of the backlash. it is run by the political unions, the teacher unions, the seiu. this state is controlled and monopolized by the democrats. i would submit to you, there are a lot of people who support larry elder. look at the crime, look at the lack of school choice, this state is in trouble. let me be very clear, the democrats are worried. they have thrown the kitchen sink at larry elder. got obama's videotape. you got joe biden is coming here tomorrow. klobuchar, warren, kamala harris, the most unqualified vp ever, they're not taking anything for granted. so their internal polls must be telling something is wrong here. will: leo, i don't want to build this question on a false
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premise, the false premise being the polls are right. your skepticism is right. don't take polls at face value, still, let me ask you, what would be the in the minds of california voters if gavin newsom isn't recalled? if the polls are right he is increasing in support or probability to win this over last couple weeks, why? is that delta variant push? fear, paranoia? what would the voters of california be gravitating towards gavin newsom over? >> i'll tell you very simply. the democrats again, playing every possible card, will. they have played the race card. they have tried to demonize, i will give them credit, they have tried to flip this argument and try to call this a white supremacist backed plan to take over this state and what they have done, what they have focused the attention away from the incompetency of gavin newsom, and have tried to flip the switch. you will tell you right now. they have even played the race card, the race card against
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larry elder, a black man who refused to be part of the democratic party. who left the democratic plantation and now they're claiming that larry elder is the black face of white supremacy. you also had a woman with a gorilla mask, a white woman, wearing a gorilla mask attacking larry elder's staff. i submit to all three of you, if larry elder was a democrat or liberal you would be hearing hate crime, hate crime. you hear nothing from the democrats. why? because larry elder is republican. that is insulting to every african-american, every person of color who assumes that you have to be a democrat if you're person of color. that is a lie. will: would drive the news cycle for a good several weeks. they did it over covington incident which wasn't even real. this is real. >> exactly. pete: we would demand to know the identity of the masked gorilla no we dill don't know. we still don't know. let me add one other point.
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a month ago 300 recall ballots was in a car, in a city in southern california. we don't know how they got there. there has been no investigation. the identity of that person has not been disclosed. so i'm questioning the election integrity upcoming, election next tuesday. rachel: definitely in light of what happened, what you described i do remember that incident coming out, not hearing much about it after. it does call into question that. will: we'll watch all of that. leo. thanks. >> will and pete, will and pete be nice to rachel. pete: we always are. what are you getting on to us? rachel: leo, i appreciate that. >> okay, good. rachel: love you, leo. you're the best. will: see you, leo. straight ahead, how the legacy of one 9/11 first responder is living on through his niece he never met. >> you have inspired me to fall in your footsteps and become a firefighter too. will: that remarkable young girl
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as many ways as trelegy. with three medicines in one inhaler, trelegy helps people breathe easier and improves lung function. it also helps prevent future flare-ups. trelegy won't replace a rescue inhaler for sudden breathing problems. tell your doctor if you have a heart condition or high blood pressure before taking it. do not take trelegy more than prescribed. trelegy may increase your risk of thrush, pneumonia, and osteoporosis. call your doctor if worsened breathing, chest pain, mouth or tongue swelling, problems urinating, vision changes, or eye pain occur. it's time to start a new day. ask your doctor about once-daily trelegy. and save at trelegy.com. ♪. rachel: we'll never forget the day new york's bravest ran into the twin towers to conduct the rescue, the greatest rescue mission in american history. their courage and selflessness still inspiring so many today
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like who said she wants to follow in her uncle's footsteps honoring him at the reading of names. >> my uncle christopher, i know you're with us every day watching over us. even though i never met you in person i miss you a lot. i'm morning in order to have your name as my middle name. you inspired me to follow in your footsteps to become a firefighter. we hope you watch over us and keep us safe. we love you so much, uncle chris. rachel: that fearless girl, kyra, joins me with her mother pam. i watched you, you're only nine years old. you're in fourth grade. you were so brave in front of the president, in front of the whole country, where did you get that courage? >> i don't know. i just had it my whole life.
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i always just loved doing things. i didn't care who was watching me or if i did anything wrong. rachel: maybe you get that courage from your uncle. i hear you want to be a firefighter as well, right? >> yeah. >> you had a firefighter birthday party? >> yeah. i always love firefighters, i always wanted to be one. rachel: what does a firefighter birthday party like. i have to hear this real quick. tell my what you guys did. >> we had a bunch of firefighter decorations. my parents surprised me with a fire truck. rachel: that is pretty awesome. mom, tell us about, she never, kyra never got to meet her uncle although she clearly carries his spirit with her. tell me about your brother what it meant for you to have, you have another daughter who read the names. kyra did as well. tell me what that means to you? >> oh, well, i mean, obviously it takes a lot of courage and i told my other daughter two years ago, i told kyra again yesterday
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that i could never do that. so there is clearly the courage in the blood and the bravery to even just get up there and read the names. kyra takes it a step further wanting to be a firefighter but my brother was a brave, crazy brave, fearless man. that is definitely in her blood. we just try to live life for him, two what he would do. i obviously can't do everything he can but, little kiril a here will take on the torch. rachel: pam, i'm seeing that, the beautiful necklace you have on with his picture. it's gorgeous. >> thank thank you. rachel: what do you think your brother would think about what you're doing, your family? your husband is a first responder especially kyra who wants to follow in his footsteps? >> i, i hope he is proud. i don't know what he would think. i definitely hope he is proud. i think he would love kyra. i think, i think he is is always
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with us. we talk about him all the time. my girls have cried to me about missing him because we have talked about him so much he is present. and i think he is with us all the time and they feel him. some of my daughters have dreamt about him. they even said they have seen him when they were little. so i think that he is with us. if he was here he would be taking letter to the firehouse every day. rachel: you think about your uncle even though you never met him? >> yeah. rachel: what do you think he would think but now? >> that i'm probably crazy wild. rachel: yeah. so pam, you talked a little bit to our producers about, like, how 9/11, it means obviously so much to you but sometimes you're shocked that people are forgetting. you scheduled a massage. rescheduled for you on 9/11. you were like, what the heck? >> i just don't understand how someone can look at a calendar,
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to see that date, just hey, you want to come out on september 11th? i don't know how people can hear the date, not feel something. not say something. rachel: do you feel like america is forgetting? >> i feel like some people are definitely. not in new york but there are places where you know, they turn on the tv yesterday and today is, life as usual. maybe in another 20 years they will feel it again but yes, definitely. people are planning weddings and i think that's wrong honestly. i think it should be a day of real reflection and people really need to remember what it was like that day an go back to that place in their hearts and honor. rachel: i think you're doing a fabulous job keeping your brother's memory alive and kyra, you are doing a wonderful job keeping your uncle alive and i think you're going to carry on his legacy as a firefighter. i have no doubt you're actually
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going to do it. thanks for joining me today. you're an amazing little girl. >> thank you. rachel: okay. christopher mozilo was a second generation firefighter. his unit was one of the first to arrive on the scene on that dreadful day 20 years ago. he remains among the missing victims in the terrorist attack. may he rest in peace. this is mike. mike blew his entire life savings on a permanent perm shampoo invention, which actually attracted more cats than customers. now instead of wasting money, mike is looking to save it with amerisave's great rates. see how much you could save at amerisave.com. with amerisave's great rates. living with metastatic breast cancer means being relentless. because every day matters.
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♪. pete: senior at one of the most selective high schools in new york city is refusing to go woke. in a "new york post" op-ed daniel efrinz, writes, even though i find myself in similar circles as my activist counterparts. i did none of those things. i'm a proponent of pluralism but i don't support virtue signaling that accompanies so much woke politics. well-said. daniel joins us here on "fox & friends." thanks for being here. >> thank you for having me. pete: what outstanding op-ed in "the new york post." check it out. you write i'm a religious conservative, and christian with a after school job as dishwasher
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at panera. you describe your core, inoculation, three stages in shock, what are the ways which you were fortified as a young man, 17-year-old with such a perspective of the world? >> first i would say the values of my parents have, values my parents have given to mee is a very important shot and it cannot be missed. parents must be giving their children values and they must be there for their children. we have seen the full brunt of what happens when children don't get values from their parents, notably the black community. i would contend, wealthier families don't spend enough times with their children. pete: your christian faith and discipline, they disciplined you quite a bit now you're saying hey, paid off for me? >> yeah, definitely. i would say that my parents are more, i want to say, my parents,
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my mother isn't a tiger mom but i would say that my parents definitely did rule with an iron fist. have i gotten older they explained why they did certain things and ultimately i have come to understand them. pete: the second shot you talk about the ability to go to a charter school which is something under a lot of contention here. what has that done for your life? >> charter schools provide a lot of discipline especially for children. without that, without the first shot with our parents, when you go to a charter school you're supposed to have a uniform in check. have your belt, your shoes. if the charter school has shoes you're supposed to bring in and what not. hard for discipline. fold your hands. track a speaker and those things will really, really i would say prepare a child for the real world in the future. pete: absolutely. finally there is a history teacher that took you in. it is not that you lived in a cocoon.
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you have had tough conversations with yours peers and teachers. you understand the other side of the equation, those conversations are important? >> yeah, definitely. i would say in the past year usually we would do office hours after school and office hours is usually 20 minutes, just to give a grievance about a test grade that was inputted incorrectly but we spent more than 20 minutes talking about different ideas. it was very refreshing seeing student who were normally scared to talk you know, speak with open minds. pete: talk about refreshing, talking to you is refreshing. so many of your friends, so much culture, social media gone woke, gone in that direction. is it intimidating to cut against the grain or liberating? >> well, i would say there are very few things that aren't intimidating but the question isn't whether it is intimidating or not. it is whether you have the, i would say the guts to continue on with it despite that
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intimidation. pete: i'm a intimidated by you a little bit. this is an impressive junk guy. this is not the last you will hear from him. dan ifrense. >> thank you. check out bari weiss's stub stack. pete: where it first came from. more "fox & friends" on the other side. psst! psst! allergies don't have to be scary. spraying flonase daily stops your body from overreacting to allergens all season long. psst! psst! flonase all good. it's the biggest sale of the year, on the new sleep number 360 smart bed. it's the most comfortable, dually-adjustable, foot-warming, temperature-balancing, proven quality night sleep we've ever made.
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one of the things i judge whether or not i watched a good movie whether go to a pdf and i want to know more and read more that's generally if i had a good experience, i need more and after yesterday show after we left somewhat early 9:00 a.m. on the east coast after september 11 yesterday i had the need for more you did as well watched a documentary and thought about watching the world trade center and about the flight 93 movie i can't remember if i saw that but i needed to be there were and soak it in a little more. rachel: i did too late last night my family sat around and watched a documentary about 9/11 and it was interesting the emotions i felt those emotions onset will be have the raw footage of fox reporting on the day of 9/11 i was surprised how angry i got and then i got angry again and then in the evening watching that and just thinking my goodness it seemed like a
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movie except it is real, the images are so horrible. will: we talked about it all day long and it fell proper in fitting to let it sit and even 912, the day after they can about where we were as a country, how do we muster that and re-create that can we re-create that, is that even possible in light of where we are. it is fitting and right to have those conversations and that reflection. rachel: and with kids. the other challenges i was determining when there at the place, talking to kids yesterday some could get it and some couldn't. but you know when your kids ready and even starting early to give them an understanding is super important. rachel: joe biden obviously attended the ceremonies here and in shanksville, pennsylvania and in washington, d.c. and in
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shanksville he was asked about the withdrawal from afghanistan which we talked about all day yesterday has color this anniversary in a way that we can did not expect so pete wanted to defend his withdrawal and here's what he wanted to say. >> that were gonna spend $300 million a day for 20 years to unite the country after we got bin laden, after al-qaeda, guess what it's ready back to the places. it's a strategy of replacement al-qaeda we will invade and have troops there, come on. 70% of america to get out of afghanistan but the flip they didn't like the way we got up. but it's hard to explain anybody how else do you get out, if they were there and we pulled up within a 130 and said will anybody who is involved with us
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to get the plane, you have people hanging on the wheel well. rachel: we should probably have captions underneath because it's hard to understand what he's saying. what is more difficult is why he's wearing a mask outside. on a day where we need to be projecting strength especially after the way that we got out of that war and humiliating fashion with the taliban calling the shots in the taliban holding our own weapons and directing us on how we can do it this was just insufficient. pete: projecting nationality might be a lobar into project the ability to understand science you don't need a mask you're fully vaccinated. beyond that to the point that he's making we talked about this two hours ago when we opened up the show he painted a terrible picture of people hanging from a wheel well into the kazem which
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is exactly what happened in kabul. people hanging from wheel wells and dropping from 30000 feet in the sky, the worst scenario is when the played out under his watch and i made this point earlier but this time as i watch it i'm finding not only the masking and the weakness insufficient i am finding the kaman as imploring us to move along with this point insufficient in the way that he leans in and whispers and lays out in hector's, it is not enough to explain what is going on right now. will: did color when we are sitting on the balcony and he asked the question outdoors with a mask, in shanksville that you seen on the camera totally and completely not in keeping with science and not necessary at all and it makes us look small if you're the taliban the last
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thing that you see his strength. but he asked the question how else can you get out, how else, how about any other way, any other way than the way that you did it. he must be in such a bubble of the advisors who patted his back and tell him you did the tough thing that no one else would do. no one's litigating whether or not we should get out of afghanistan. that's the throne he debates every single time we all knew it was time to in the way in which we were doing it. we don't have to go through the litany of things prepared to steer those families in the face whose families were killed on 9/11 enabled by the taliban and somehow rationalize and justify that what you did a few weeks earlier would not just the marines and others that were killed but the manner in which america was dishonored and how we left as a total absolute disconnect. our enemies in the world look at that and say we are ready to march. whatever that's an iranian bomb or taiwan or the taliban and al-qaeda who were legitimized with the terror army there is
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nothing about joe biden in his posture that makes you said unto think a better think twice. that's what makes this world on 912 if not more dangerous than the dangers world in 2001. rachel: thinking back on 2001 we did have yesterday president george bush who gave a speech on talking about what we've learned from these 20 years and the pain that our country is gone through. here he is discussing violent extremists and making a comparison between violent extremist abroad, the taliban, al-qaeda, isis and those at home. >> there is a little cultural overlap between violent and extremist abroad and violent and extremist home. in the disregard for human life. in their determination of
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national symbols. they are children of the same foul spirit and it is our continuing duty to confront them. will: who is he talking about is a talk about antifa. rachel: a lot of people are wondering is antifa, january 6, that is probably based on where our focus on them. he gave a good speech, it was moving he was a central figure in that moment 20 years ago in so many ways and he did bring this country together for a while for a little while but this speech part of the speech just really jarred me in the disappointed me, one it takes the focus off of who we need to be focused on which is islamic terrorist because the general said last week the one who
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advised joe biden on how to do this to get out of afghanistan are saying the way that we did it is not good innately said were probably going to see an increase in terrorism. it is a problem when we equate that because it takes the focus off of who we need to be focused on and we know that our generals have lost focus in that regard and also motivation matters, the zalman terrorist want to kill americans, they hate western civilization and the hate america they have lots of reasons for the and regardless of what do you think about what happened on january 6 the people there went in with flax and they were not america haters they were hit angry in expressing their anger in a very bad way about an election result. will: talk about taking mark national symbols that applies to a lot of groups. rachel: fair enough.
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but i will say this domestic terrorism is not on the same level with islamic extremist who murdered 3000 people knocked down two towers in new york city 20 years ago in the security apparatus put in place the surveillance and monitoring apparatus in the wake of the terrorism attack, watch fort be careful and don't let it be pivoted back onto the people of this country do not let domestic terrorism be the excuse to spy and destroy every single liberty that we have enjoyed to the founding of this country. pete: we have seen that from the left the comparison even uncovered 19 to terrorist and action and they're willing to go there to come back home. rachel: we have a standdown on white supremacy in the military and i am not seeing that worthy of a standdown. >> that your nonwhite rage speaking cannot be a thing. pete: over the last 20 years
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2000 people and responders have died from illnesses related to 9/11. rachel: they will be honored during a special ceremony at ground zero today. foundation chairman and ceo joins us now. the guy who never stops frank, great to see you this morning it was amazing to watch you enter the ground zero area yesterday live on the air in your so generous with your time and efforts over the last 537 miles walking across countries, here you are the next day what is tunnel to towers doing today and how are you feeling. >> think you guys and thank you for your great support from fox pretty today were going to read the names of all of those who have died from 9/11 illnesses, after 9/11 it was nine -- 12 in america came together and we were told the air quality was okay but it wasn't and there were 70 people on the pile looking for the brothers in helg out with the recovery and rescue
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efforts with the days and months to come. and to this day we've had so many that are dying with 9/11 illnesses. we want to read these names of the forgotten ones and we don't want to forget them they died from the same attack that my brother died from 20 years ago and were gonna recognize them today and make sure that we always do. rachel: i'm so glad that you are doing that i interviewed a young man yesterday, he himself as a first responder and his father died of this cancer that came after because he was exposed to this and i think so many people forget about it i'm so glad tunnel to towers doing the, it was such an amazing and inspiring thing for all of us to see your journey coming into new york, we were really moved by that and our company fox core is announcing their donating $1 million to your foundation in
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support of first responders and military heroes. how do you feel about that. >> first of all i don't know what we would do without fox, that's absolute truth we've had an unbelievable growth because of fox and to receive another million dollars, somebody asked me yesterday after they announced the million dollars, how do you feel because they know i walk 537 miles and i said i feel a million times better. because i know what the money will help and do it will pay off some of the mortgages of those who have died from 9/11 illnesses for first responders because her foundation was built on the fact that my brother was a first responder. 257 firefighters, 310 and why petey and 17 were port authority police officers have died of
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9/11 illnesses and these families i'm stare not have seen their love ones fade away right in front of them and sometimes over a long period of time and it's gutwrenching and we as americans have to take notice of this terrorist attack keeps on taking lives and that's what were gonna do today working on her these 912 families. will: that's so important they were the forgotten ones in there in the number of the thousands who continue to suffer and die after the terrorist attack that day. let me ask the question the people asked you, 537 miles, extremely emotional day 20 years later, how do you feel today? >> physically i feel fantastic somehow or another my brother spirit carried me the spirits of all of those that died in the spirits of those who have died since 9/12. i went down right after 9/11 looking for my brother i was on
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the pile and i won't even say some of the body parts and stuff i was part of the recovery and it was a war scene. these men and women that went down there, the construction workers, iron workers, they were down there digging and looking and will never forget it. in fox i cannot thank you enough that will help us pay off some of these mortgages. we made a commitment our first responders that died in 9/11 related illnesses, we made that commitment that we are going to take care of those families and some of this money will certainly do that. thank you once again to fox we have an unbelievable relationship with you guys and thank you for your respect yesterday, thank you for airing my journey because it was a never forget walk but it was not just never forget but it was not to forget what happened on 9/12. >> think you that's what a lot of people are thinking when they look back.
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thank you for keeping their memories alive and having so much integrity for the way that you go about it. rachel: you look fantastic, i hope you keep walking it looks good on you. >> that the couple of times you said that. i think you look good too. >> think you guys. >> turning out to additional headlines. president biden will campaign for governor under governor gavin newsom one day before the recall election. leo terrell joined us last hour on what to expect. >> if there is a massive same-day voting on the day of the election you can expect the majority of those votes will be yes on the recall so i expect a very tight race. >> larry elder continues to dominate the field of recall replacement candidate. the gulf coast could be hit with
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another storm as a new tropical disturbance turns across mexico. the national hurricane center expected to become a depression today or tomorrow texas and louisiana are bracing for potential flooding while still recovering from hurricane ida. texas governor greg abbott has activated resources including rescue vote teams with flooding. a week two of college football to dropping upsets. we'll see your pick producers. >> is a good one, organ beat number three ranked ohio state, the ducks top the box 35228 and in jacksonville state florida state 20 - 17 with alaska touchdown. oklahoma crushing western carolina 76 - 0 i believe that's all the headlines and we have.
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pete: arkansas soon to be sec rival texas 40 - 21 and they stormed the field. after the defeat. rachel: i don't know a lot about sports but 40 - 21 seems like a lot. you really need frank back in here to get your back to keep that up. >> that does say something about texas this is not anti-texas, this is watch them score. rachel: up next to have something to say? will: no, you said it. rachel: the nation's growing call to retire from progressive to supreme court justice stephen breyer has a warning on the dangerous impact of packing the court. chris wallace joins us with a sneak peek of his "fox news
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sunday" interview. pete: one university is banning frat parties, you know why to curb the spread of super spreader events of covid. we will tell you where. ♪ as someone who resembles someone else... i appreciate that liberty mutual knows everyone's unique. that's why they customize your car insurance, so you only pay for what you need. [ nautical horn blows ] i mean just because you look like someone else doesn't mean you eat off the floor, or yell at the vacuum, or need flea medication. oh, yeah. that's the spot. only pay for what you need. ♪ liberty, liberty, liberty, liberty ♪
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stephen breyer is against packing the court with an exclusive interview with chris wallace. >> president biden has a commission to come back in november and discussed and weigh in on possible reforms for the court, what do you think of the idea of increasing the number of justices on the court. >> one party can do it then another party can do it and surely on the surface it seems to me that it changes all the things around and people will lose trust in the court. pete: the full interview airs today.
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chris wallace joins us. i like that you asked that question what do you think about the idea of increasing the number of justice on the supreme court you specifically i don't know intentionally or not did not use the phrase court packing, pack the court that's been a phrase that has been tortured and changed to use something different over the last couple months and i wonder how he would've responded if you asked it that way. >> he would've been against it but that's a turn that has negative to it right away. i'm just asking in a neutral way what do you think about increasing the number of justices on the court. the real point he has written a new book called the authority of the court and the parol politics. what he basically says congress has the power of the perks the executive has the power of the american government and the military and all of that and all that congress has is its authority comes from public acceptance and people trusted to be about politics and if you
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have a nine-member court which he objects to this, say 6 - 3 conservative and you increase it to 13 so it will be 7 - 6 liberal he makes two points, the republicans can come in and make it 8 - 7 conservative and secondly it makes the court another part of the politics of our country was not mess with the court let's maintain the authority of the court to public acceptance that they're trying to do the best that they can on the rule of law. will: we heard the last election and here we have abided a administration pushing to pack the supreme court were talking about using osha to enforce mandates, the cdc to enforce property rights. it is heartening to hear is "justice understand what norms
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or standards or even if the administration is pushing away from it. >> we will see how they end up voting when those cases come on abortion or mandates for vaccines and things like that. he is really saying in terms of the institution and you talked about a lot of things that take away from the authority, one is a hyper- partisan aspect of the confirmation battles. he is trying to say even at this point he's on the losing side 6 - 3, 5 -4 conservative, he's trying to say you talk about the danger politicians if you really want politicians get real good politicians like people to run for president or congress. that's not our role in our function and i said you have the textualism on one side and the consequences on the other, he tries to diminish that in a number of these cases you get on
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coalition because the way people view the law not the way they sat there and says i was appointed by donald trump or barack obama they thought it would be 6 - 3 but it's way more 5 -4 even jb politicians. i want to move to this you have a new book out countdown bin laden tell us in the book especially today 20 years after 9/11 a lot of us feel pretty bad that we begot out of afghanistan and it never occurred to me was time for the 20th anniversary but it never occurred to me that the taliban that was in charge of afghanistan on 9/11 2001 would be back in charge of afghanistan 9/11 2021. having said that there's a lot of good stuff we did in our 20 year war in afghanistan and this may have been the best, this is
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why we came in to get bin laden, it a-uppercase-letter al-qaeda protect the homeland from terror attacks from afghanistan we did all of that in this book is a history thriller i promise you everybody knows how it ends you were the last 100 pages and you will be flipping pages saying what happens next. we take you inside the cia hunt for bin laden and the president and his work habit deciding it was no more than a 50/50 proposition whether or not bin laden was there and with those amazing seal teams and the helicopter 162 miles into pakistan to raid the compound. it is a thriller, i promise. will: we can watch it is countdown bin laden 3:00 p.m. on the fox news channel you can also watch it on foxnation.com right after it airs on the fox news channel. >> thank you so much for having me on. will: covid-19 is taken the country by storm as a gun violence crisis gets overlooked
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the report revealing more children have been shot in chicago then died from covid-19 in the entire country. that is next. ♪ birds flyin' high, you know how i feel. ♪ ♪ breeze drifting on by you know how i feel. ♪ ♪ it's a new dawn... ♪ if you've been taking copd sitting down, it's time to make a stand. start a new day with trelegy. no once-daily copd medicine has the power to treat copd in as many ways as trelegy. with three medicines in one inhaler, trelegy helps people breathe easier and improves lung function. it also helps prevent future flare-ups. trelegy won't replace a rescue inhaler for sudden breathing problems. tell your doctor if you have a heart condition or high blood pressure before taking it. do not take trelegy more than prescribed. trelegy may increase your risk of thrush, pneumonia, and osteoporosis. call your doctor if worsened breathing, chest pain, mouth or tongue swelling, problems urinating, vision changes, or eye pain occur.
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it's the easiest because it's the cheesiest. kraft. for the win win. another buddy we can in chicago 31 people shot and five had died children among those in a 12 year old boy has died. this is a shocking new report shows more kids have been shot in the windy city and died of covid in the entire country this year. here to react project could in new beginnings church. pastor, welcome to the show, i really appreciate you joining us. i'm so sorry this story is so
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sad. this past week our president was talking about covid and said that republican governors were being calloused with the lives of children and i look at this figure and i don't see the president or any politicians frankly especially on the left talking about the number of children have senselessly died by gunshots wounds in chicago. pastor? >> yes, rachel, i agree the seriousness of the issue we have so many children who are being shot and killed and it's very unfortunate that the powers aren't paying attention or saying any words about it. i don't mean to take away from covid and what's happening with children with covid but in chicago and other cities their children who are dying of gun violence and something needs to be said and something needs to be done. rachel: why is this happening,
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there were lockdowns and when the schools reopen, elementary schools will be opened but many high schools were not at as you know. is that why kids were unsupervised, is it the drugs, the gangs, tell me what is driving this. >> great question a lot of things are driving in some of those that you just mentioned are on point. the fact that we had kids out of school for so long and that drugs are running rampant in our community, the young kids and young boys are taking pills and listening to the music that attract them toward violence. then you add to that you have a bunch of fatherless boys. they're not active in the boys lives. it is causing a lot of rampant wickedness and we need to do something about as a community, we have to come together we cannot continue to wait on individuals to save us, we have to do it ourselves. rachel: why is it such a taboo subject to talk about fatherlessness.
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you talk about it but a lot of people are afraid to talk about it because they feel like they're going to be accused of being racist or judgmental and as parents you and i both know that has to be at the center if not the number one reason why this is happening. >> in our culture there is something about putting your journey under dirty laundry out in front of people. we just don't do that but it's something that needs to be said and something that we have to deal with and if we can get more mentors involved in the space where the fathers have been absent that would help that's why we have project could and we try to do what we do but it's a subject we don't like to talk about a subject that needs to be talked about we need to get fathers engaged in the lives of their children especially these boys or we will continue to see the violence that we see every single day. rachel: project h.o.o.d is the name of the organization. we need to elevate the role of
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fathers in our culture in general. they are so important. thank you pastor. rachel: up next joe biden 40 million of hesitant americans to get vaccinated will giving illegal border crossings the past. is this fair, we asked judge jeanine pero next. ♪ otezla is not an injection or a cream it's a pill that treats differently. for psoriasis, 75% clearer skin is achievable, with reduced redness, thickness, and scaliness of plaques. for psoriatic arthritis, otezla is proven to reduce joint swelling, tenderness, and pain. and the otezla prescribing information has no requirement for routine lab monitoring. don't use if you're allergic to otezla. it may cause severe diarrhea, nausea, or vomiting. otezla is associated with an increased risk of depression.
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pete: welcome back new yorkers and uniting for the mets game 20 years after september 11 attack. rachel: american flags and signs reminding us to never forget the two teams that embrace each other before a moment of silence and honor of the victims. will: 800. pete: the former yankees and mets managers throughout the first pitch. let's bring in judge jeanine pirro host of justice, she was at citi field last night where she was on the five broadcasting live on a saturday from the baseball stadium. judge, how was it, has to be a pretty cool moment 20 years later. >> it was wonderful it was palpable, it was great to be an american. and with fox giving $1 million
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to frankfurt tunnels for towers the amazing work that they do. it was just the icing on the cake, it was wonderful, people were proud of the flag and proud to be charitable and kind to each other and they stood for the national anthem and no one took a knee, it's a weight america is supposed to be. and we have bobby valentine on the 52, it was great having them. it was an overall terrific day, all of us felt the sadness from 20 years ago, i was in the city and all of that but it was a wonderful, wonderful place to be in america, god bless america just like you see on the screen and never forget and we can never do that. it was great. rachel: very encouraging, gives me hope to know no one dared to take any on a very awesome event last night. good to hear. i'm going to ask you something that is happening in our country
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we have had so many issues around the border as you know our current administration has not been doing a good job, peter doocy has been doing a good job pressing the administration on so many issues and one of the things that he asked the press secretary jen psaki about, why do americans have to have these covid vaccine mandates but not illegal immigrants. take a listen i want to hear what she has to say. >> our objective is to get as many people vaccinated across the country as humanly possible. the president's announcement yesterday was an effort to empower businesses and to give businesses the tools to protect their workforces. that's exactly what we did but certainly we want everybody to get vaccinated and more people are vaccinated whether they are migrants or workers protects more people in the united states. >> there's a requirement for people with the business of more than 100 people, and not a requirement for migrants at the southern border, why. >> that is correct, go ahead.
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rachel: that is correct. >> there you go jen psaki doing the two-step. anyone listening to her or joe biden, knows that this administration is tone deaf to the reality of what's going on in america today. her answer is that's right, were gonna force any employer who has a company with 100 people into force them to have everyone vaccinated or there's going to be half defines and post to the department of labor. the all of you illegals coming to the southern border in the way i figure a million and a half so far this year, they don't have to get vaccinated. if they want to cross that line, they have to be vaccinated. i'll do you one better, they're refusing to be vaccinated. 30% are saying i don't want to be vaccinated and we let them ride in and we give the medicaid and education, medication, housing, money for food but we do not say to them as an
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agreement you have to get a vaccine. no, the law allows them to refuse to get the vaccine. this is an administration that is worse than tone death, as far as i'm concerned forcing americans to do one thing and telling illegals you don't have to do something which according to joe biden will save other americans is un-american. in the speech that joe biden gave this past week on vaccines was divisive, condescending, arrogant it was all you people on vaccinated americans, you are causing and killing granny. enough with this, this is america people should make that decision based on what they believe and based on what their doctor tells them. >> well said, we started this segment by showing this morning and one of the busiest hard-working ladies here at the fox news channel and you also
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have another season a new episode on fox nation on castles usa, you went to a castle with a dungeon, i think we have a portion, we will show it and have you tell us about it. >> would you like up with this one. >> i don't know. >> step on the floor. >> ticket there. >> that's it, the steps are double because there 500 years old. this is the dungeon. pete: what are we looking at i saw your face, where my going. >> all tell you all of these castles around the united states that i've had the opportunity to visit have dungeons and very interesting areas whether it's in galveston texas or in new york on the gulf coast, we were in the closet new hampshire. there was on castles on lakes,
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on bays, we've a very rich history of castles of the united states. it's a happy time people should go to fox nation and look at the second season of castles. i love the kitchen, i tell you i found garlic but you compound a few pounds of meat in that. it's a happy time it's great to see the finance fares and all of these incredible people with wealth and vision, literally bring castles to the united states. it was fascinating and i loved every minute of it and i think you will too. it's a happy time where you don't have to think about the politics of what's going on today. i loved it. rachel: i love looking at the castles and i love looking at your wardrobe in your shoes. i think i'm going to raid your closet, i love it. another reason to watch it. pete: for sure castles usa on
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fox nation would judge jeanine pirro. we appreciate you being with us. >> love you guys. rachel: take care. will: you just heard our vaccine status should be kept between us and our doctors, get this ravens quarterback lamar jackson is refusing to give into relentless reporters who are questioning his vaccination status. which team should we watch as week one of the nfl kicks off we will talk to founder clay travis coming up next. ♪
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pete: baltimore ravens quarterback lamar johnson is firing back over vaccination status. it creates a media frenzy the pro athlete and superstar telling reporters i want to keep that between me and my doctors in my family. that is all. here to react clay travis, is that too much to ask, he is saying this is a private health issue why can't it just be between me and my family and me in my doctors. >> is a totally fair and valid response from lamar jackson.
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i would actually build on if i was him and i appreciate you having me on. this is a big flaw that the nfl has and also that our nation has. lamar jackson has had covid. if you look at his studies of people who have natural immunity that is people who have recovered from covid it is up to 27 times as protective as vaccinated immunity and it doesn't seem to fade as quickly as vaccinated immunity does. really what lamar jackson should do is make the argument, the same argument i've been making, i had covid i recovered and i haven't got the vaccine yet because i looked at the data and because doctors i trust told me i did not need to because our natural immunity. the same way joe biden is protecting this doesn't exist in the nfl is pretending this doesn't exist i would like to see lamar jackson argue on behalf of the people like millions of other americans that may have chosen not to get the vaccine because of our doctors saying you have natural immunity there's no point of you getting
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the vaccine. >> is ultimately the nfl going to make and test up on this how are they handling cases like this. >> there are several prominent quarterbacks and cam newton is not on the roster, he didn't get the vaccine video natural immunity and he recovered and we know kurt cousins, there's many other players a prominent nature there refuse to get the vaccine and there held with different protocols and the people who do good the vaccine and we will have to see exactly what ends up happening. 93% of nfl players overall have gone the vaccine by many prominent players practically several quarterbacks have not and they are being held to more stringent standards than otherwise would apply if they got the vaccine even though many of these guys have natural immunity and should be a serious and significant conversation. >> it should be up to the nfl at large. no doubt. we get to one week at the nfl yet particular commentary on one college game last night. >> you know what there is a big
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texas longhorn fan on the step right now and i saw this week how good longhorns against louisiana they went on the road in arkansas, i was watching all we can, what happened to your boys. will: it was a rough night, let me tell you something i watched you on the big news you pick texas. >> i thought you guys would win. will: they looked soft. >> that was an amazing atmosphere but i bought in and i watched you guys against the louisiana and i thought the offense was good especially the second half and boy was iran that's when they beat down. will: i'm going to give this interview back to pi standby by the time texas wins sec i have e true they will be atop team they will be running sec. i have a 3 - 5 year window but i'm standing via. >> i don't see that happening for anybody.
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pete: we have 20 seconds left with the big fox game we should watch today. >> i like seattle on the road against the colts and i like aaron rodgers taking place in jacksonville. it will be a lot of fun for both of those games i encourage people to turn on their phones and their televisions, i'm going to watch myself, happy birthday to my 10-year-old he wanted to go to an nfl game. pete: we have to go, more "fox & friends" in a moment. 72,807! 72,808... dollars. yep... everything hurts. only pay for what you need. ♪ liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty. ♪ why bother mastering something? why hand-tune an audio system? why include the most advanced active safety system
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end of the show and it's the number one highest selling album in honor of 20 years since 9/11. i am so excited to have them back on the show. pete: i know that song is one of the soundtracks of my youth. i think i've asked you pop-culture questions with your britney devotion days and you told me you grew up with michael w smith, steven curtis chapman, amy grant that was my parents, michael w smith is cool and still is cool, he put an album out in september 11, 2001 that's when his album came out he's reimagining the album 20 years later reflecting on where we are 20 years after that. he is going to join us at the end of the show. rachel: that will be very exciting and i'm excited to have that segment. somebody else who is reflecting his joe biden he is reflecting
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on how he got out of afghanistan and he's been asked tough questions and here he is defending the way he withdrew and afghanistan. >> we told everybody we were gonna spend $300 million a day to unite the country after we got bin laden, after al-qaeda, can al-qaeda come back, but guess what and 30 back every placement, a strategy we will invade and have troops, come on, 70% of america think it was time to get out of afghanistan spending that money but the flip of it they didn't like the way that we got out. but it's hard to explain to anybody how could you get out for example we pulled up with a c-130 and said were gonna let anybody who was involved to get in the plane you have people hanging from the wheel.
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rachel: is very hard to understand he's outdoors and vaccinated, he said $300 million a day which is how much the work cost per day, he also mentioned that 70% of americans, he believed agreed with exiting afghanistan and many ended by saying how else did you get out. pete: any other way, we made this point several times this morning but the worst case scenario taking place under his watch, people hanging from the wheel well of c-130s and dropping 30000 feet to their deaths occurred in real life, not just in joe biden's hypothetical. the other question that he asked are we going to go everywhere the al-qaeda exist. the answer to some extent, yes, that does not mean leaving troops behind but the reason in afghanistan the in order to put
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together a terrorist plot to knock down the two largest buildings in america and kill 3000 people requires ordination in a terrorist safe haven is not just a little camp in the western horn of africa. it takes a place and is willing to allow you a safe haven to plan something like that and that's why we were prepared to stay in afghanistan and the 2500 troops behind. if he continues in every way to change the conversation. anywhere away from the way that he handled afghanistan. >> absolutely that's why there was so much weight and gravity on our hearts reporting from ground zero because the words that we heard days after 9/11 from george w. bush and others there will be no safe haven and we will never forget those are words we want to live by and we look at what happened over the last couple weeks and afghanistan you realize in many ways we have forsaken that and that doesn't take away from the sacrifice of vote everyone did for 20 years now we have a mega terrorist state redo demised buyer state department the white house at many, many levels there
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still the taliban and citizens can leave if the taliban allows them to in joe biden, it's almost like he's plain a character of himself at this point do you see tom when he plays joe biden, that the most what i hear and what i see when you say come on man, how else would you do it, debating and saying how else would you get out, does he not hear it, does he not realize what he has created as a pre-9/11 moment because of how we left out and there's not a military commander that would be proud of how we exited is not about whether you exit how you exit and are logan has been so great on this topic throughout our botched withdrawal retreat from afghanistan, she talked recently about the dangers of that botched exit which colors all the way were feeling about the 20th anniversary of 9/11. take a listen. >> what we've done is given
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victory to al-qaeda on the 20th anniversary of 9/11 and i don't believe it's incompetent because it is way too many indications that we know exactly what were doing every standard operating procedure from the machines that are supposed to does destroy our data to the attack planes and military equipment that we have in place. there is 400 million things that we could be doing right now to change the outcome. where you don't have to leave weapons in the hands of the terrorist responsible for 9/11. rachel: i love that she brings up the weapons because first of all our hearts break the most obviously over the troops that we lost in the other afghans who were outside of that airport you also lost their lives or limbs and those troops that are injured and some of them still in the hospital. but everybody is scratching their heads about the weapons. i don't know anything about the
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military but even i was like why didn't they destroy the weapons and there's actually a procedure to do that if you're going to have to leave things behind and i agree we should have done that on our terms and we should not of gotten out on the taliban in terms and we should not be taking orders from the taliban and we should not be dealing with the taliban using our own guns. will: this is not incompetence layer logan and she lay that case out, she said if you look at the deal that we made in the deals with the devil in the calculations not just afghanistan but other places in the world what you were see and goes back to the reporting of 60 minutes what you will see is a continuation of decisions to put certain people in power. you should check it out she'll lay it out in more detail and what she's suggesting it is too much to be attributed to incompetence. rachel: does she jump to
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conclusion about why they wouldn't let this happen, who are they trying to empower, what is the endgame. will: she said they made deals with the groups in eastern libya to help establish for whatever reason, she doesn't answer the question she said that question needs to be asked of not just abided a administration for the prior obama administration, what are you hoping to accomplish, what stabilized enforcement do you believe the islamic's are capable of bringing to the world but why the same decisions in multiple places in the world and the latest being the taliban in afghanistan. >> you know the answer to this, woody commander-in-chief, donald trump had allowed this to happen, you know you have to have negotiations of the taliban, that happened that was ongoing part of the political reality of the situation but the man who crushed isis and the man who killed soleimani that was a reckless action, although the tehran herd was strength,
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wouldn't he have tolerated that exit, the answer is absolutely not, the weapons and the weakness in the erosion of american credibility, there would've been an exit as he said there would've been but it never would've been on the taliban terms and allowing gitmo traded terrorist to be the future leaders of afghanistan which they are now another doozy of a deal made under the obama biden administration, it would not have happened that way. that's what yesterday as well donald trump was not at the ceremony mast up like everybody else, but he did make a visit to first responders and law enforcement in new the reality of how we would handled afghanistan in her enemies the way he stared them down and give them no quarters is the reason why cops and first responders and military frankly respect and love him so much. were gonna play a piece of the sound of the conversation he had with police officers and said please run again mr. president but also asking them questions candidly that you didn't see joe
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biden with first responders talking and chatting and taking photos but you saw that from donald trump yesterday. here's a portion of that exchange. >> if you elected again would you strongly consider having data recognition for the service for them and women of the country. >> i think it's an incredible question and you won't believe this i've never been asked that question before and it should be asked, i like the idea i think they deserve it. >> i'm asking you to strongly consider that. >> you have a deal. it's pretty amazing nobody's ever asked, nobody's ever brought that up. rachel: such an interesting exchange, not masked, among the law enforcement and first responders there they clearly love him, i don't care if you're in the border patrol or a police officer, there was no question that donald trump loves them and
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they love him but again they are asking are you going to run for president that is something that they want to know and see support of so many in law enforcement and again, you mentioned we talk about his reception there were questions yesterday about president joe biden would be received at the 9/11 memorial given the events of the last few weeks. pete: there is some events with him being booed and yelled at with parents feeling what happened in afghanistan and the honors of the ceremony. it is belief in american respect to the people that are top lifting in our country. the recipe is not actually that hard and that is what they see in donald trump on that day. it fortifies a lot of people. rachel: we talk a lot about the recipe for raising good, we are
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all trying and you talk to a young man this morning that my jaw dropped and i just think he gives me hope in america. >> sometimes are doing the interview in the course of the interview you like he's impressive in his name is daniel and friends, he wrote an op-ed in the new york post saying i'm a 17 euro black american who refuses to go woke. he joined us on set he's a senior at brooklyn tech and throughout the interview he talked about his inoculation process. the news of the term quite apt here's a portion of what daniel said. listen. >> my parents have given to me a very important shock and it cannot be missed. parents must give tir children values, they must be there for the children, charter schools provide a lot of discipline
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especially for children and those things will really prepare a child for the real world. there are very few things that are intimidating but the question isn't whether it's intimidating or not but the guts despite that intimidation. >> he talked about the three shots of inoculation i believe it was his parents, faith, charter schools. my children were part of those in new york city and i can speak to the discipline and i believe the third one the role of culture. will: was an interaction where he had with the teachers he took the values in the instruction and then he was challenged, conversations to defend in a true safe space where different views are provided and you don't have to conform to the woke view
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speaker i talked to him offset need talk about culture, what your values, how were you raised in the principles and the things that you honor and how to live up to. he was so incredibly impressive. rachel: i picked up he was a dishwasher alpine era and my husband hires young people all the time when he was a member of congress and he said i avoid kids who had the fancy internship. he likes kids who work a real job, washing dishes, there is something about the discipline, the dignity of work and that worth ethic, this is a product of good raising this is actually help improve if you put the time and as a parent and there's a lot of voices working against us we talk about all the time offset on commercial breaks that you can inoculate your kids and you can get a head start on what they're going to face and challenge with in its proof and it's impossible. >> watching with the charter schools do and realizing
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democrats in the city are a target on their back. rachel: that should tell you everything about the democrat party and shining down charter schools while obama since his kids to private schools in d.c. and shut down opportunity programs for poor children, gavin newsom shutting down schools in california while sending his kids to the private schools that were left open this hypocrisy has to end and it may be why larry elder might win in california and a lot of parents on left and right are starting to wake up to funding children instead of funding systems. pete: he has an op-ed in the new york post, go check it out of the be posted on "fox & friends".com. it's worth watching. will: he is 70 you can pay attention to. turning to some headline starting with fox news alert the
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fbi releasing a declassified document from 9/11 investigation. the heavily redacted document includes details of the fbi investigation into the support saudi hijackers received in the lead up to the attacks. families of the 9/11 of victims and says the report indicates the saudi government although there's no direct evidence at this point saudi arabia denied any wrongdoing and suspected to be the first of several classified reports to be published. another fox news alert file fighters are battling a brush fire in los angeles county it shut down a major freeway in both directions north of castaic, california some lanes have since reopened and the fire has grown 400 acres. two firefighters suffered brain injuries and their conditions are unclear. firefighters say aerial and ground attack is flowing fire. this is pete's favorite story of the day, pay attention, this is
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incredible a cat survives a dramatic fall from an upper deck in hard rock city miami gardens with an american flag, watch this. he hangs there for quite some time by a claw there are other angles you can see, these guys made a tarp out of an american flag and save that cat, it's unclear how the cat got into the event the stadium tweeting not the cat, the stadium. in his remaining eight lives. rachel: it look like the cat came through the flag at one point. pete: it broke the fall enough. i did watch more videos and he was double calling for a while. will: then went single and the whole cloud crowd is watching
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for a good half minute, i don't know how he was cleaning on the side, let alone on the stadium. rachel: that's why you like cats. >> the cat could probably tweet if we gave them an opportunity. rachel: still ahead new signs and pressure on the supply chain could reach a boiling point as inflation soars. we'll tell you what this means for your wallet. pete: healing the nation after michael jw smith after coming up. let's go walter! after you. walter, twelve o' clock. get em boy! [cows mooing]
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of 9/11 and the reason i happen is a controversial subject in many schools across america and there's an organization in america's foundation and they picked up and said a lot of kids aren't learning about 9/11 and teachers are not teaching because of sensitivity and other reasons and what they did they said we will help kids tell the story themselves and if you're part of the organization though send you a bunch of flag so you can send a memorial on your school, it is very, very touching what they do but many of the students have done this have been facing their administration tries to stop them from doing it or the actual memorial itself. pete: in something like that happened in missouri as student was, i believe confiscating american flags and taking off american flags from one of the
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displays and he was approached by a young student with young americans from freedom who had his videocam out, watch. >> what's up, who are you. >> okay. >> kinda weird when a random person walks up. pete: this is at washington university in st. louis this group put the flags up in commemoration of 9/11 and the student decides to put them in trash bags and throws american flags in the bag. here's a statement from the student, he says i had no intention of removing the flags from the medfield area in my
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protest did not have the chance to be actualize my plan protest was to place the bags of flags on medfield with statistics explaining the human cost of 9/11 in the past 20 years, i did not deface, destroy, damage flags nor did i interfered with any registered event time. rachel: it's very obvious what is happening right there. this is not the only places this is happening it happened once at notre dame, this is happened and the reason is because of a lot of people feel like we sell the video from campus reform interviewing students how should we talk about 9/11 and some say if you talk about 9/11 your placing blame on muslims or your offending people or it might be too gruesome and we have to whitewash this and i think it's really troubling because often times many of the students and teachers who were indoctrinating the students i think have the same feelings about america as
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some of the terrorist and the rationale that america is bad and that is why they don't want to tell the story. pete: is become a marker of higher education to believe that america's ability in every story that is founding is flawed in its people have been racist in america itself is something that needs to be fundamentally transform that is in fashion and something taught at higher education kept across this country. >> washington university small credit they put out a statement saying they're disappointed to learn about the destruction of 9/11. rachel: if we don't teach her kids to love america, were gonna have a hard time defending america. pete: the 2021 nfl season kicks off on fox will talk to kick off post ahead of the big matchup. ♪
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pete: joe biden successful evacuations from afghanistan but those on the ground tell a very different story my next guest fought through smoke bombs and gunfire to get home to san diego. aria joins us now. you had to fight your way effectively out of afghanistan and the white house has said we contacted amick and citizens 19 times, we were working with the taliban, what was your reality of the experience. >> sorry i am trying to fix this. >> the experience was terrifying and it was devastating to see i had to go through a lot to come to the u.s. and i was told because i'm an american a u.s. citizen it would be easy for me
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to cross and go to the airport and that was not the case at all. i had to go through if you could see the pictures the chaos through the terror of the people to get myself being shot at pretty much it took me three days and three attempts to escape afghanistan and my driver was being really bad i was hit and they were running after me with a machine gun and that was the third attempt and that was my first day leaving afghanistan. pete: when the white house as they were successful do you think it was are they trying to cover up for the fact that there was little plan in america's left to fend for themselves. >> americans were left to defend for themselves. sorry. pete: go ahead, don't worry about the camera. >> we had no idea, there's a lot
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of americans on the ground, contractors, workers, myself, we had no idea and we didn't know the extent of the danger that we were in so we had no idea and from my experience and everybody on the plane took one hour for the taliban to take over control of afghanistan and it was pretty terrifying and what i don't understand people that are responsible for september 11 that are administration was collaborating with them and having meetings with them and to me i don't know what to think or how to feel because this is a country we have so much faith in and my loyalty always has been for the united states and always will be, however, i do have a lot of love for the afghan people, the completely misunderstood and unrepresented in the media and they are genuine people. pete: unfortunately we have to leave it right there but you are
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speaking for many and with a lot of clarity in your speaking counter to the narrative which is were reaching out to americans, constant contact, making it easy and the one thing that you reinforce it entirely relied on the taliban those that enabled the attacks 20 years ago, were glad you're in the state, god bless you. will: a big day for sports fans, football is back in week one of the novell of fox begins his afternoon here with the most seen matchup, kick off post carissa thompson. a big game, and the later afternoon window, do some pics. >> we have pics every week all day every week and i bet on horse racing in february, and more on that in just a minute
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and fans are back in the stands, the 2020 road games actually had a winning record for the first time since 1968 that is no more home-field advantages and it starts for me with the eagle falcons game, i will tell you both teams get new head coaches, matt ryan is going to be playing with jones and the first time over a decade jailing her is finally named as a starter with the departure i young team have a lot to prove and a lot of rebuilding for both of them last year, that should be fun to watch i'm gonna take the eagles on this 15 - 3. pete: i'm on the same side, i'm betting on defense, that is my week one philosophy good defense, what are the games do you like. >> san francisco was riddled with injuries, unprecedented how many guys went out to them but this is a really good football team as you know only a couple years removed from the super bowl when they lost to the chiefs they're going up to a new
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look team jared goff with the departure of matt going to the rams in los angeles, the 49ers hopefully they stay home this year, detroit has a lot of holes in that team. rachel: the one that's been number one for 20 years the late afternoon window for you guys at fox it is packers and saints, last time i saw him as a full-time starter he was throwing a ton of touchdowns in a ton of interceptions, what does that tell you that's going to happen today. >> that was a narrative he's hoping to write the shift in the first time sean payton will be without on that roster since 2005, this is his seeming good news for him he has a great defense on the other side and i don't think it's going to be easy for aaron rogers, we know coming off of the season and the weapons that he has on offense but his left tackle is out and we know how important that
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position is, i think this one will be closer than we thank you so much emotion in this game for new orleans to be displaced and having to go to texas they will play this in jacksonville because of hurricane ida isaac is closer than we think for the packers if they win this one by a score and for you guys you always get a chance to win at home $1 million, he's doing it again terry opened up the wallet give it away more money you have to download the fox app and play for free and it's football season i know were excited about this. >> you're on the eagles and niners and you have to go to the will cain podcast i was 0 - 3 last week. >> is not how you start it's how you finish. i'm gonna tally up at the end of the season. we will be watching today, thank you so much. will: coming up next maria bartiromo will join us live on "fox & friends" we can right after this. t liberty mutual
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and it can cause violent uncontrollable coughing fits. sometimes followed by vomiting and exhaustion. ask your doctor or pharmacist about whooping cough vaccination because whooping cough isn't just for kids. brushing only reachesharmacist about whooping cough vaccination 25% of your mouth. listerine® cleans virtually 100%. helping to prevent gum disease and bad breath. never settle for 25%. always go for 100. bring out the bold™ rachel: u.s. producer prices surging at the fastest pace on record for the fifth consecutive month in august this trend is a troubling indicator that inflation fears won't be going away anytime soon here to break down what this means for you sunday features anchor maria bartiromo, great to have you, explain what this means. >> thank you very much, good
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morning, basically what you see prices at the producer level up year-over-year better than 8%, the producers are paying more for that product which means they will pass that on to the consumer, consumer prices are rising because consumers are paying more at the registers because it's more expensive at the producer level. for some time the federal reserve and the biden administration has been saying these numbers will be transitory as soon as we get through the supply shock that we've been seen in disruption in the supply chain that this will go away we see more and more evidence that it's not going away and that we have the huge spikes in pricing because of all the money that were throwing out the economy even with all the crises underway across the world from afghanistan to the wide open border and in texas the biden administration and the democrats continue to 0 in on this massive
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spending plan which will only make inflation worse, were gonna be watching this and i want to connect the dots to shutting down wagner mayor based and leaving all the rare-earth minerals in place in afghanistan for china to go exploit because the truth is the fact that we close down and shut down the bagram airfield means that we left all of the minerals, afghanistan is mineral rich with lithium, cobalt, copper, $1 trillion worth of rare earth minerals will go to china the early have one of the largest copper fields, although rare minerals are important because of the raw materials used to make things. like cars, homes, electronics and all of those minerals are rich in afghanistan where the ccp is moving in aggressively, we will be talking about this in the show coming up in 15 minutes
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because we understand now that the ccp is negotiating a satirist of forces of agreements with the taliban and perhaps wanting to move in and acquire take over the bagram airfield its enormous blackeye for the u.s. india administration into cotton run out of afghanistan, 20 years after the worst terrorist attack on our country. were gonna talk with afghanistan veteran michael walts and michael mccaul, congressman ranking member in the foreign affairs committee, congressman mccall is going to be the first republican to question anthony blinken tomorrow because he is going to be testified in front of the committee. we will see if there's any accountability in this administration for this massive blunder out of afghanistan which is having so many implications down to inflation as well. rachel: we have a jampacked show, it's always good, thank
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ask your dermatologist if cosentyx could help i'm not a cable tv personality or an entertainer like larry. i'm the businessman, the only cpa running for gov ernor. california is a mismanaged mess. taxes, cost of living, water, wildfires, homelessness. these aren't political issues; they're readily fixable management issues. career politicians? celebrities? i've solved problems all my life. let's fix this great state!
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pete: in 2002 michael w smith celebrated america coming together after 9/11 with his patriotic hint there she stands. rachel: album or should which was released in 2001 offered hope to a nation in despair. >> 20 years later he is re-envisioning that album. >> michael w smith joint is now. thank you so much for being here, we absolutely love having you, who would've thought that album that came out 20 years ago is beyond 9/11 in your re-envisioning now, talk to us about the progression. >> obviously i made the record and little did i know it would be released on a horrific day for our country i was supposed
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to be in atlanta i was on a tour in chicago the night before and i felt like i needed to be home and unfolded an identical anywhere. it didn't dawn on me until that night though my word this record came out today and little did i know that this record would be a healing record for country and all the way around the world believe it or not. the crazy idea was to reimagine the record and do it with a full symphony or orchestra and i cannot be happier turned out to be a spectacular night and i'm very grateful. rachel: i know you're a man of faith and you believe in your heart that god has used your talent and your work to do well in the world to bring his light to the world. tell me how you think specifically with regard to this project that god is doing that. >> i have always said this for years and years, music is the most powerful universe language in the world as chris tomlin has
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said music was god's idea and there's something about music that is a healer and three and a half minute song can change somebody's life is extraordinary to me, a melody, music, rhythm, all of that, it is incredible and i've heard over and over in testimony after testimony, story after story how somebody is not completely changed by one of my songs and it kinda blows your mind. i think there is something special about this record and were living in an unprecedented time and there is fear and worry and we've been through a crazy year end a half. i believe god is going to use his project and my faith is really high, there is no fear in this house. i think our best days are ahead.
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pete: three and half minutes can change somebody's life, we can take three and half minutes and we have the great pleasure to listen to a special performance by michael w smith. enjoy. >> give thanks to the lord our god and king his love endures forever. ♪ for he is good he is above all things ♪ ♪ his love endures forever ♪ ♪ saying grace, saying grace ♪ ♪ with a mighty hand and outstretched arm ♪ ♪ his love endures forever ♪ ♪ for the life that's been reborn ♪ ♪ his love endures forever ♪
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♪ seeing grace, saying grace seeing grace, seeing grace ♪ ♪ forever god is grateful ♪ ♪ forever god is good ♪ ♪ forever god is grateful ♪ ♪ forever god is good. from the rising to the study son ♪ god endures forever ♪ ♪ by the grace of god ♪ ♪ we will carry on ♪ ♪ his love endures forever. ♪ sing grace, sing grace ♪
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♪ sing grace, ♪ sing grace ♪ ♪ forever god is grateful ♪ ♪ forever god is good ♪ ♪ forever god is grateful ♪ ♪ forever god is good ♪ ♪ forever god is grateful ♪ ♪ forever god is good ♪ ♪ his love endures forever ♪ ♪ yes his love endures forever ♪ ♪ yes his love endures forever ♪ ♪ yes his love endures forever ♪
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will: that will do it for us this morning on "fox & friends"s. pete: went by fast. will: thanks for joining us. have a wonderful sunday. pete: god bless our country and go to church. ♪. maria: hello, everyone, welcome to "sunday morning futures." i'm maria bartiromo. coming up, changing the conversation. a major u.s. drone attack misses its target and instead kills children in afghanistan days before 9/11. joe biden pivots, going all-in on mandating a covid vaccine no matter your rights and freedoms. >> we need to do more. this is not about freedom or personal choice. it is about protecting yourself and those around
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