tv FOX and Friends Saturday FOX News September 18, 2021 3:00am-7:00am PDT
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taxi cooperatives assembled miniature gardens and created beautiful gardens of taxicabs that were parked in a lot. >> jesse: did you pick, this richard? >> richard: i surely did. this is how you solve climate change. >> jesse: oh my god. >> richard: absolutely adorable. >> jesse: have a great weekend, ♪ ♪ ♪ [national anthem] ♪ [national anthem] ♪ [national anthem] ♪ [national anthem]
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pete: try doing that at 6:00 a.m. good morning and welcome to "fox & friends." that was the u.s. air force brass quintet performing our nation's anthem and that is the u.s. honor guard performing live in front of the u.s. s up trend here in new york city because we are -- intrepid because we are celebrating the air force's 74th birthday all morning long. look how impressive that is. will: can't do it at 6:00 a.m. or 9:00 a.m. or 9: 30 a.m.
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pete: there is a huge bayonet on the end of every one of those rifles. a long knife on the end of the rifles that they are throwing at each other. rachel: when they train, do people get hurt? pete: my guess is that they usually -- look at that they usually train with nonlethal. rachel: shield over it. pete: when they do it for real they are doing for real. impressive. happy birthday to the air force 74 years young. rachel: 74 years. i'm going to say happy birthday to the air force to my dad. chief master sergeant retired 32 years air force veteran. i'm an air force brat. i'm very proud of that. pete: i'm very afraid of master sergeants. always have been. rachel: you should be. pete: you technically outrank them but you definitely don't. rachel: he is the most gentle chief master sergeant miguel campos. gentle but strong. will: happy birthday to the air
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force it is incredibly impressive display reminds me of stripes. i don't know if you ever saw "stripes" when they showed up. pete: a little better than stripes. will: absolutely. rachel: make everyone want to go back and watch stripes. we begin with a fox news alert. there is a huge twist in the disappearance of 22-year-old gabby petino. the family of her boyfriend, brian laundrie say that he's now missing. will: this is as authorities search laundrie's home after he was named a person of interest in gabby's disappearance. pete: carley shimkus outside the laundrie home in florida with what police uncovered. carley? >> yeah. that's right. good morning to you. and it sounds like this twist surprised north port police just as much as everyone else. the laundrie family reached out to them after they say they haven't seen their son brian since tuesday. as of now, there are two missing person cases. one for gabby petino. the other for her boyfriend,
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brian laundrie who was named a person of interest in the disappearance of gabby. the north port police releasing a statement saying we understand the community's frustration. the north port police department and the fbi have been pleading with the family to contact investigators friday, yesterday is the first time they have spoken with investigators in detail. now, last night police arrived at the laundrie house around 6:20 p.m. eastern time stayed over two hours to help in the search for brian. the petino strongly worded statement through their lawyer saying all of gabby's family wants the world to know brian is not missing. he is in hiding. he is on the run. gabby is the run missing. tons protesters came out in full force last night as well demanding answers. >> honestly, this is absolutely crazy for him to come back and not say a word about anything. not to report her missing before
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he came home is a shock to hear. >> he is a cowards and he need to talk to the police and he needs too cooperate. >> so the search for gabby continues today in the area of grand teton national park. the fbi is now leading that search effort. one other thing, device. authorities yesterday confirmed that the disappearance of gabby petino is not related to the double homicide of a newly wed couple in me be a, could you ut. the search pete thank you, carley. will: two things about the story stick out to me and am aspects of the story that have fast anyoneating. i'm honestly just getting caught up on the details. fascinating how some of these crimes, potential crimes capture the nation's attention. i'm fascinate what captures the media as a byproduct the nation's attention the second is have you guys read in on steve
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milton potential zone of death in this area of wyoming. the sixth amendment of the constitution requires you to be tried by a jury in the district and state where the crime occurred. there is this zone in wyoming and idaho where no one resides. there are no residents. and so you have no no place for a jury pool perfect place for a crime. rachel: why are people so captivated by this. crimes all over the country. some more interesting than this one, for example. why do you think it's this one? will: i don't have an answer for you, rachel. pete: i don't either. a lot of their trip was cataloged and captured. rachel: tiktok. pete: happy couple enjoying this road trip. retrofitted this van. the family thought they were in great place. you have the footage of the
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police stop which is happenstance on the side of the road where they are stopped. body cam footage of them. and he doesn't -- we don't know what happened. let's hope she is missing. let's hope there is a misunderstanding. with every passing moment that seems less likely. rachel: yeah. pete: it is and then you have the family dynamic. you have the fact that the parents of gabby actually went to the home of the boyfriend the day before she was reported missing as well. no information. and then he comes home and lawyers up first? rachel: that's weird. pete: that's always weird. you would say something if you felt like had you something to say that was material to the case and could contribute to her return. instead, silence. and that's. will: suspicious. pete: very suspicious. rachel: hope something happens here as you say every day she is in a very rugged terrain or they think she is wherever they are looking right now. that's a very dangerous area to be if she is alive.
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will: we will keep an eye than throughout morning. the pentagon calling last u.s. drone strike in can a bawl mistake. pete: the department of defense thought it was targeting an isis-k terrorist but ended up killing 10 civilians including seven children. rachel: lucas tomlin joins us live as pentagon leaders. >> drone targeted a will 'vehicle before destroying it believed it was carrying highs sis fighters and explosives. the called this a mistake. >> i will stress this was not a rushedin the 36 hours precedinge strike our leaders on the ground at the airport and strike cell received more than 60 different pieces of intelligence receipted to imminent threats. >> the strike took place three days after 1 american troops were killed when a suicide
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attack on the kabul airport. general mackenzie anticipated more attacks. 10 innocent including seven children were killed in the strike. two days after the strike, after the u.s. u.s. troops left kabul. president biden touted the military's to ability launch these strikes without any friendly forces on the ground. >> we have what's called over-the-horizon capabilities which means we can strike terrorists and targets without american boots on the ground. >> after the strike, u.s. military's top officer, general mark milley called it a success. >> we think that the procedures were correctly followed and it was a righteous strike. >> we knew from the very beginning there was a possibility civilian casualties. >>ening there will likely be no disciplinary action taken againsts u.s. military. will, rachel, pete? will: lucas i wanted to ask you a couple of quick questions. they're admitting mistakes when it comes to civilian casualties. are they maintaining at all there was any person of
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interest, target also killed in this strike or simply all collateral damage and let me ask you, too lucas because i know you pressed the pentagon on this detail as well. you asked them if there were any u.s. boots on the ground to help coordinate this strike. you pressed them as to whether or not there were any special operators. what about intelligence operators? was there any cia presence or assets on the ground? >> will, i have been told this was signals intelligence that picked up this threat and they were watching this white toyota carolla. for specific, 75% of the cars drive around kabul are white toyota carolla. they are everywhere. but general mackenzie was very clear the intelligence said that they were hearing shatter about a strike and the context is important. and this was three days after 13 americans were killed in that devastating suicide attack. more attacks were anticipated. general mackenzie all the top brass even the president were anticipating more attacks. at the end of the day, these were civilians that were killed. the car was parked.
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there were water jugs loaded into this vehicle and not explosives. will: to be clear everyone that was killed in this strike was an innocent victim? >> that's correct. there were no isis fighters. no isis, you know facilitators, planners, no terrorist what is so ever in this vehicle. all civilians killed. that's why general that ken is i came out yesterday, he was very clear, and took responsibility and said it was a tragic mistake. pete: lucas, thank you very much. lucas is exactly right. whether it's white toyota pickup trucks or white toyota carollas they are everywhere. if you are relying almost singularly on signal intelligence, digital intelligence whether it's a chatter or video surveillance. you can get fixed on be one vehicle that's the wrong vehicle and then pretty soon all the signs are the wrong signs, loading things, in you think it's explosives. it's water bottles. that's what that "new york times" report ultimately laid out there. was also a stop for that week at a taliban police station, which they thought might have been a facilitation, ultimately apparently they were asking for
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permission to deliver water at a particular location. who knows the particulars, but, you meant matily, it's the limits what you can do when you don't have human intelligence on the ground and frankly what were we relying on for intelligence at that moment the taliban who had told us that isis k was there devout enemy as a result could have given us indicatio another strike was imminent which does create you are general civility you can't fault the department of defense for urgency to say our marines and others vulnerable it position at the gate which they were. if you are tracking a vehicle for 8 hours and you hit the wrong vehicle, it means you have very limited and shallow amounts of intelligence verified on the ground because you don't have anybody on the ground verify it. rachel: pete, i keep hearing this term over-the-horizon. what does that mean? pete: over-the-horizon means you don't have to be in that region or in that country or in that city in order to strike there it usually over the horizon in order for it to be effective, you need human intelligence. you need systems.
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that is why the taliban and there are reports about this widely systematically going around and hunting down anyone that's worked for the americans in kabul and elsewhere because anyone who has worked with the americans is a potential intelligence source who could give up information. they're consolidating their power quietly while letting a few americans and siv applicants get out. everyone else is in the vice grip. rachel: that's why trey gowdy on sunday night in america said over-the-horizon is a euphemism for infanticide. take a listen. >> over-the-horizon apparently is a euphemism for infanticide. i want to note layer of review before this country, the world's greatest country, decides to kill seven children. who gets to approve it? who reviews it, what's the quantum of evidence. it's not lost on me, bret, that joe biden was slow to pull the trigger on usama bin laden but quick to pull the trigger on this drone strike while he was having really bad press that resulted in the death of seven
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children. so, trump gets criticized for killing the right people. let's see what happens to biden for killing seven children. rachel: it is very interesting. and i think an important point to make is that this story would not have come out. if not for the "new york times" investigating that video and really countering what the military was saying had actually happened on the ground. will: yeah, another angle of this story as i listen to you lay out all the white vehicles in kabul, pete, is was there then a potential target of interest that got away? pete: there probably was. will: we targeted a family in the end, ended up killing a family with seven children, does that mean we lost the real target somewhere along the way and i'm sure. pete: yeah. and was the airport the target? how much did we really know about that target? there is a lot of you are general city will for sure. the dip laden raid and strikes
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not it over-the-horizon. different from flying a reaper from hundreds of miles away. it's not as effective. rachel: listening to you this makes complete sense, common sense, why are our generals promoting this over-the-horizon like this is a good thing. will: they are responding to the political decision to completely pull out of afghanistan. pete: because you have to have a way to justify how you conduct counter-terrorism without having boots on the ground. and the new buzz word and the phrase is over-the-horizon. and we have had successful over-the-horizon attacks. no doubt about it we were able to deploy further and deeper than any other military in the world without boots on the ground. it doesn't mean it's always effective and it calls into question how much we can target isis-k, al-qaeda, and whether we will target -- rachel: i just think our national security depends on our military being honest about what's actually effective. that's what we are paying them to do. will: all right. turning now to your headlines, millionaire robert durst is
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found guilty of murdering his best friend susan behrman. convicted of first degree murder of killing beverly at his home 20 years ago. durst murdered behrman because she knew about the mysterious disappearance and death of his first wife. kathleen was declared legally dead in 2017. her body has never been found and no one has been charged in the case. durst is facing life in prison. his sentencing is next month. overnight, flames from an oil refinery lighting up the sky after a magnitude 4.3 earthquake hits los angeles. million residents fearing the marathon refinery was on fire. officials say the flames were part of controlled flaring to burn off excess gas after the refinery lost fire. first responders were initially called to the site but later turned away. moderate shaking rattled los angeles area during the quack quakewith you no injuries repor. game winning touchdown seconds
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left on the clock. the cardinals getting the 42-35 win. and maryland also complete the 40 quarter come back against illinois last night with this last second field goal. taking the walk-off win 20-17. don't miss today's lineup on fox starting with the pregame big noon kickoff live in oklahoma with the sooners will take on nebraska and then usc will go head to head with washington state and those are your headlines. pete: there we go. thank you, will. still ahead, border patrol shutting downtown point of entry in del rio, texas fox news gets a firsthand look at the escalating border crisis. >> they're using this dam right here to walk across the rio grande and enter the united states illegal limit. >> wow, that is a lot of people down there. pete: sure is we will show you more of the shocking new images as the white house ignores the chaos. rachel: and an fda panel says no shot for a covid-19 shot for
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will: new images of the international bridge in del rio, texas, the number of migrants from haiti surgeons past 11,000. rachel: shutting down the del rio port of entry as the u.s. plans to send the migrants back to haiti maybe as soon as tomorrow. pete: well, we will see if that actually happens. all we know is that signals were sent that people will not be sent home and as a result you got over 10,000 there in encampment under the bridge with no real logistical to ability air no open air behind them. that's what so power played live on our air yesterday bill melugin our drones were blocked but he was able to get up in a helicopter with the texas department of public safety in texas. lye reporting from that helicopter over tell rio texas. here is a portion of bill melugin yesterday talking about
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the ever growing crisis. >> look at the massive people down there this time two tase ago there were over 4,000 people there are now upwards of 11,000. we are talking nearly a tripling of the numbers in just 48 hours. these are mostly haitian immigrants but take a look at this as we move up the rio grande right here that mexican town, the mexican city where all these migrants are gathering. you can see they are using this dam right here to walk across the rio grande and enter the united states illegally and that is a steady trail of hundreds of people crossing from mexico as we speak right now, arriving into the united states illegally. wow. that is a lot of people down there. pete: it sure is. rachel: incredible reporting. you know, it's award-winning reporting. you wonder why other reporters don't want to be there doing the same stuff that bill melugin is doing. but what's interesting is pete buttigieg tried to stop this reporting. he tried to stop these images
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from coming forward with this. pete: only problem images. rachel: i don't want to exaggerate this. but if you look at china and this is what concerns me about america. becoming more like china. china says we are not doing anything with the uyghurs, there is no concentration camps and a long time no images, just sort of rumors about things happening and someone managed to get a drone but we saw the images of the uyghurs, you know, sitting, you know with their hands behind their back, clearly a concentration type situation. we saw the images of the buildings that they were stored in. again here, the biden administration saying there is no crisis at the border. there is nothing going on here. and but we had border patrol telling us this thing is out of control. even mayorkas slipped out in a he thought the cameras were off
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he said this is unsustainable. see the imible mass, this cannot be denied. this is happening. all of these people are wanting to be turned into the border patrol, will, but the border patrol can't take them. there is not enough of them. there is not space in our facilities. this is an absolute crisis. it's, i mean, you see it. will: you mentioned some names here i think need to be emphasized. the faa answers to pete buttigieg transportation secretary as you mentioned. pete buttigieg obviously answers to joe biden. so if a ruling like this is coming down, you have to assume it's coming with the blessing or the directive of the white house. you brought up mayorkas. steven miller was on "fox news primetime" last night talking about mayorkas and his future. watch. >> every single republican in the house should be on board on an impeachment resolution for mayorkas tomorrow that is a minimum first step and dare democrats to stand in the way of it everything that's happening today is self-inflicted purposefully and deliberately by
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this administration and about time we did something about it. pete: it's true. being on the lookout for vice president kamala harris to make a trip to haiti to address those. [laughter] pete: haiti is not close to del rio, texas. rachel: no, it's not. pete: check your map. you have to take a serious concerted trip to go there because you believe you will be let in. will: many are responding to the humanitarian crises in haiti. multiple earthquakes and problem that country. you mentioned in that segment the most important point to underline. they're operating under the assumption that they can get into the united states of america. in other words, we have been sending a message that has been clear for the better part of seven months to a year because it happened during the campaign as well that if we make this trip across from' an island nation across water up through central and south america and up to this border that you see right here we will be received with open arms. rachel: let's go full circle to what we started talking about which was afghanistan. you have got bagram air base where we released terrorists,
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prisoners when we closed that base. they also are seeing these images. they also know that our border is open. this is not just a humanitarian crisis. this is a national security crisis. pete: our border patrol agents will acknowledge they have no capacity to deal with those types of threats that could be coming across the border. rachel: homeland security. pete: managing refugee camps. rachel: that's why stephen miller is right. his job is to protect our country. pete: in overwhelming vote fda panel did not recommend the vaccine booster shot for most americans. our next guest says there needs to be better date and it soon coming up. ♪ ♪ water? urgh! (rocket ship) hey! hey! heads up. thank you! water tastes like, water. so we fixed it. mio this is sarah. sarah tried to save money by ordering a do-it-yourself orthodontics kit.
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my name is monique, i'm 41, and i'm a federal contract investigator. as a single parent, i would run from football games to work and trying to balance it all. so, what do you see when you look at yourself? i see a person that's caring. sometimes i care too much, and that's when i had to learn to put myself first,
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because i would care about everyone all the time but i'm just as they are. botox® cosmetic is fda approved to temporarily make frown lines, crow's feet and forehead lines look better. the effects of botox® cosmetic may spread hours to weeks after injection, causing serious symptoms. alert your doctor right away as difficulty swallowing, speaking, breathing, eye problems, or muscle weakness may be a sign of a life-threatening condition. do not receive botox® cosmetic if you have a skin infection. side effects may include allergic reactions, injection site pain, headache, eyebrow, eyelid drooping, and eyelid swelling. tell your doctor about your medical history, muscle or nerve conditions, and medications including botulinum toxins as these may increase the risk of serious side effects. see for yourself at botoxcosmetic.com racism rach an fda advisory panel giving the white house a stinging setback yesterday voting overwhelming against covid-19 booster shots for most
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american adults. in a 16-2 vote the committee only recommended a third shot for those over the age of 65 or at high risk for severe covid complications they provided shocking little data about the safety of the boosters, the contraindications, the dosing and even efficacy. so, it makes sense to not approve -- you should not be approving a vaccine at population scale with such scant data. the advisory made the right choice there. rachel: what's your guess why the biden administration would be pushing that without the fda and scientific data behind that?
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>> well, i think the vaccines are quite good against. rachel: i have mine the booster, i'm sorry. >> no, no. of course. i mean i think what's happening is that the vaccines are quite good at protecting against the severe disease it will protect you if have the vaccine against hospitalization and death from covid. which is good news though have overpromised the vaccines do not seem to protect against infection. can you still get sick with the vaccine. many break through infection after a few months. protection for a little while but it stoorts wane. so because of the administration overpromised the vaccine, they promised it would protect against all infection. they want to boost tore promise up. on the other hand the vaccines are effective against severe disease. that is good enough. we use it to protect the older people against the worst of covid. rachel: sure. >> you don't really need a booster against all infection.
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covid is mostly just a mild infectioning are especially the young vaccinated. rachel: i want you to listen to this clip by bill maher, he is saying the media is responsible for scaring people cite a survey "new york times" a liberal paper what are the chances that you would have to go to the hospital if you got code the answer is between 1 and 5%. 70% of democrats thought it was way, way higher than it really was. hillary media has to take responsibility for that for scaring the [bleep] out of people. rachel: in addition to that, doctor, the finish papers which a lot of the countries in scandinavia have been handling this with a lot more common sense than we have. for some this fear has been leapt on they should find a way back to normal life. covid does not disappear. if we fear other people's consequences will be dire.
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what could you say? >> i mean, that's bill maher is absolutely right. the panic that has been caused during covid actually has pretty substantial consequences. people are stayed home from cancer treatments and cancer screening. people have stayed home from heart attack diagnoses. it is actually a very bad thing. and, of course, mental health consequences as well. i think, the american media in many ways uniquely with all due respect if you look there have been surveys around the world. the american media has actually had much more panic inducing stories than in many other parts of the world. it's the same disease everywhere. we shouldn't be inducing panic effect. we should be working very hard to tell the population the vaccines have been successful in blunting the worst of the disease. the highest priority should be to get older people unvaccinated who have not had covid vaccine. that is still who is at great risk. let's do that. rachel: i think probably the worst has been is the fear that's been induced on children
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who really don't suffer much from this disease if they're healthy. it's really bad what we have done to them and their childhood and their psychological health. but doctor, thanks so much for joining us this morning. >> thank you. rachel: all right. up next, a clinton campaign lawyer pleads not guilty after he's indicted for lying to the fbi about the trump-russia investigation. law professor jonathan turley examines the case and this is a true gentleman. it see the adorable 4-year-old going viral for showing some respect. ♪ be our guest ♪ be our guest ♪
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clinton attorney michael sussmann pleading not guilty. ties between the trump organization and russia. sussmann faces up to five years in prison if convicted. let's bring in fox news contributor and g.w. law professor jonathan turley. jonathan, great to see you this morning. let's talk about this. the sussmann team is pleading not guilty but it looks like he sat before the fbi and did not admit any conflicts of interest who he was representing just an objective source of the truth here. what's he looking at?
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>> well, he is obviously looking at the potential for jail time but the most fascinating aspect of this is the indictment itself in terms of the information that it shares. this is another road that leads back to a law firm called perkins couey. that was a law firm that funded the steel dossier. and another partner mark elliott who was with that firm was connected with the dossier. it turns out that his colleague sussmann was with this effort to create another sort of russian collusion allegation. and the alpha bank allegation was always rather preposterous this idea that there was a communications link between alpha bank between the trump campaign and the kremlin but what's really interesting is touring this period the clinton campaign was denying connections. so, various clinton officials denied that they had any connection to the dossier until after the election when
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confronted with irrefutable evidence. they even denied it reportedly in a meeting with congress. now, this indictment says that sussmann was also hiding the connection with the clinton campaign. now, the reason all of that seems particularly interesting is we learned last october that president obama was briefed by the head of intelligence that hillary clinton was suggesting the creation of a russian collusion story to get out of the email scandal. that was occurring around the same time. so this is filling in a lot of gaps. will: jonathan, i want to move to this story supreme court justice clarence thomas had things to say texas abortion decision at the supreme court. you and i have talked at the past. i'm an attorney. i went to law school. i'm fascinated by supreme court doctrine and jurisprudence. i'm fascinated by the idea that a supreme court justice can follow the law, apply it, without letting his own
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political bias come into play. i think for many of us this is one of the reasons why we like justice scalia so much. he said i'm going to end up with a decision that i don't necessarily like the outcome of it. that's where the law leads me. now, the media thinks everything is a political decision. they think everybody is just a political player. here now enters justice thomas and he says the following. i think the media makes it sound as though you are just always going right to your personal preference. so, they think you are anti-abortion or something personally, they think that's the way you will always come out. they think you are for this or for that they think you become like a politician. so here's the question. jonathan. i think for anybody that disagrees with me, for example, about justice scalia. many on the left that do. they would say he was a political player as well. i know this is a big broad question. but our supreme court justices, aorta least how many of them, really playing the game of following the law wherever it leads them or are they political actors? >> i think that the justices have been unfairly maligned. i have said that for years.
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i don't agree with many of the decisions that they reach. but they really do attempt a good faith resolution of cases. what people call politics is really jurisprudence. we want justices to be consistent. we have justices with conservative values and liberal values in terms of jurisprudence. but they are very faithful to their legacy. what's fascinating, will, also is that you now have members both the left and the right pushing back on this. saying that this is wrong. you had justice breyer saying the same thing that we're not political animals. and the court just finished a term that was most noted by its unanimous or near unanimous decision. will: really quickly i'm out of time but just a quick answer on this. i'm curious, jonathan, do you think justice breyer or for that matter former supreme court justice ruth bader ginsburg ever came to a decision they didn't like the outcome of? >> yeah. i think that they often find
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themselves in positions that they don't necessarily like. it's just that they try to be faithful to the legacy of their jurisprudence and people say that makes them robotic ideologues it makes them faithful jurists. are. will: we will can ask justice breyer one day what one you didn't like the outcome of. thank you. >> thank you. pete: turning to additional headlines, police revealing disgraced south carolina lawyer alex murdaugh admitted the man he hired to kill him is his opioid dealer. curtis smith is accused of supplying murdaugh with oxycontin for the past 20 years. behind bars in the botched suicide for hire plot. this as the lawsuit claims murdaugh stole $3 million in insurance money from the family of their late thane. gloria saiderfield died from a slip and fall they say at murdaugh's home in 2018. an investigation has since been open in her death after the coroner said an autopsy was
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never performed. 'organizers saying they created a new campaign attorney and filing updated at the tismghts last recall fell short by about 380,000 signatures. make no mistake this is not a white flag it's a doubling down on our efforts. and talk about prince charming this 4-year-old boy is going viral for tipping his adorable mickey mouse cap to greet disney princesses during a parade at disney world. mom posted on tiktok getting 35 million views. some peeferl recall commenting calling the boy a true prince and a real gentleman. what do you think, rachel? rachel: this is the most adorable thing ever and i'm curious to know what is your most favorite disney princess. will, pete?
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will: wow. arielle i'm getting confirmation she was a princess. presidential. pete: do you think i'm a girl have everything. will: i was going to watch this landing. you stuck the landing. rachel: that was amazing. will: rick reichmuth definitely has a disney favorite. rick: i want to give all my time over to pete right now. iting. pete: it ♪ i don't care i want more ♪ i want to go where the people are. will i know it i do. rachel: things we never knew about pete. rick: went on and on and on. pete: keep going. rachel: i'm annoyed that rick won't give us the princess he
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likes. pete: or the weather. rick: i didn't foresee a question going in that direction. arielle. how is that? all right guys, we are that peak of hurricane season tropical storm it moving away from land. no disturbance moving in the direction of u.s. i don't think we have anything to worry about this one either. a lull in hurricane season which is great news. if you are waking up this morning take a look at that, 51 degrees in minneapolis, the cold air is beginning to have its impact, at least across parts of the northern tier, southeast incredibly warm and wet. we will have a lot of rain this week. next four to five days continually to across the central gulf. by the time this is done spots may be four to five inches of rain total but obviously because of all of the moisture that's been in here this tropical season it's going to cause some problems. take a look at this out across the west. we generally don't see this coming this early in the season but starting to see our first really big storm across the
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pacific northwest moving into northern california this is such good news because of all the fires that are out there getting a little break because of some rain. all right, guys, back to you. will: thanks, rick. pete: standing up for america's founding documents after the national archives puts a warning label on the declaration of independence and the constitution. are the constitutional controversy coming up. ♪ there's software. and then there's industrial grade software, forged from decades of industrial experience and insights. meet honeywell forge. analytical software that connects assets and people to deliver a cybersecure record of your entire operation. so that everyone,
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♪ pete: sadly distracted driving every year. jeb motors pledging to end it. he lost his 18-year-old son mitchell 5 years ago tomorrow to distracted driving. steve founded the foundation in his son's honor to raise awareness. he joins me now. steve, thank you so much for being here. we're sorry for your loss. tragic doesn't describe it. and 5 years ago tomorrow he was rear ended and ultimately killed by someone who was distracted while driving. you founded a foundation to do something about it talk to me about that. >> yeah, well, first of all, thank you, pete, it's really a pleasure to be here and it's great to be able to tell mitchell's story. , we lost mitchell as you said
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five years ago to a distracted driver. mitchell rear ended his first month at michigan state university driving up to school. perfect weather. traffic slowed down and unfortunately the young lady behind mitchell did not. she was distracted and she drove him across a very narrow median into oncoming traffic and he was killed instantly. as horrific as this is for me and my family, what we quickly learned is we're not alone. and the stats say that 9 to 10 people in this country are killed by distracted drivers every day. we feel and we're certain that that's way under estimated. we believe it's probably closer to 50 people per day. so can you imagine 50 people per day being killed by distracted drivers it's really really a huge problem in this country. pete: i believe that steve. and we are putting the numbers on the screen right now. unfortunately we are very short on time. but, if folks want to learn more what's the biggest thing people can do right now to address this issue? >> first and foremost it's about personal accountability. we're asking people put your phones down and just drive.
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you can use, if you must connect, use hands free tools like apple car play, android auto or other bluetooth tools but put the phones down and just drive. and then second, i would say get involved with the national coalition on distracted driving and help us get hands-free legislation passed in every state in the country. pete: i would love to see that steve kiefer, thank you for what you do. god bless you. >> thank you so much. carl lost his gig as a hand model during a bizarre hitchhiking incident. [ thud ] aah! it's over. but with amerisave's great rates, he can save money while he looks for foot-modeling gigs. and that's something he can give a big thumbs-up to. see how much you could save at amerisave.com.
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(jackie) i've made progress with my mental health. whose resumes on indeed so when i started havinga. unintentional body movements called tardive dyskinesia... i ignored them. but when the twitching and jerking in my face and hands affected my day to day... i finally had to say, 'it's not ok.' it was time to talk to my doctor about austedo. she said that austedo helps reduce td movements in adults... while i continue with most of my mental health medications. (vo) austedo can cause depression, suicidal thoughts, or actions in patients with huntington's disease. pay close attention to and call your doctor if you become
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rachel: here in new york city and that is the u.s. air force brass quintet performing god bless america because we're celebrating the air force's 74th birthday all day long. welcome, will. will: good morning. rachel: good morning, pete. pete: i would have loved to have hosted the show from the intrepid it has been done before maybe we can do that again soon. happy birthday to the air force 74 years. grateful for everything they do for our nation. will: beautiful weather here in september. absolutely let's host it from the deck of an aircraft carrier. sun is up right there as the air force band plays. happy birthday to the air force. meanwhile, speaking of a sunny day, it's a day at the beach for president joe biden. he hits the shores on the delaware. pete: rehoboth beach, delaware for a little vacation. will: he is vacationing in delaware as the u.s. admits a drone strike, the one was conducted while we were on air here on "fox & friends." rachel: here live. will: actually was one that
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killed afghan kids. this meanwhile as the border crisis surges as well and the fda fight booster shot. they said yesterday that the third booster shot that the biden administration has already came out not just in favor of but have purchased does not have scientific backing. all of this taking place while president biden has the a weekend at the beach. pete: that's right as he often does. he take as break after a very short break of a couple of meeting. it gets even worse. two biden disasters is the core of the "new york post" it is a disaster when you are knitting that you were hoping to strike an isis bomber and instead you killed 10 civilians and that's not an indictment of the military and the people trying to execute it. they were under a lot of time pressure and limited resources and limited intelligence and we talked about that earlier. but, still, this is something that the biden administration has to own especially if they're selling us this over the horizon capability is going to be enough to deal with al-qaeda and isis-k which clearly it wasn't in this case and for reasons of a lack of intelligence, for reasons
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notify basing there. it's going to continue to be a problem. especially as the afghans continue to hunt down anyone who has ever worked with us. and then you add that to the images on the border of a shear invasion of over 11,000 under that passageway in del rio, texas, what bill melugin has done recently on the border showing how many more want to come. and there's no answer. nothing from the white house. there is nothing from the border czar kamala harris who was supposed to get to these root causes which have clearly not been addressed and all a sham to begin with and mayorkas, people are calling for him to be held accountable. he hasn't done anything about it lends people to the question do they really care, rachel, about whether or not the border is addressed or do they just want the media story to go away? rachel: they want the media story to go away which is why pete buttigieg tried to get drones using his -- the power of the to get the drones out of the sky so we can't see what's happening. so they could continue with their narrative that, you know, there is nothing going on there look at that also, i have to say
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with the afghanistan story, pete, you know, until the "new york times" came out with this story, the biden administration was, you know, kind of saying this was a success and they had their version of whether a had happened. they said yeah, interest was a mistake but, you know, there were two explosions, and then the "new york times" investigates the video and says, no, there is not. all of this comes back to joe biden who you -- as you said, is now at his beach house. ari fleischer was on the laura ingraham show last night the ingraham angle and he says what we have been saying for a long time that the president is not really in charge. that he is using his teleprompter. he has no communication skills because i don't think -- i think he is checked out. listen. >> i don't think they're one big comm shop, communication shop. i think they are one big teleprompter shop. without a teleprompter, where would joe biden be? he can do no communicating on his own. when he does it's almost botched
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and his policies backfire. i mean, this administration has just on every policy they have announced hurt the united states of america. they have helped the taliban in afghanistan. they helped russia through their energy policies. they helped people who want to come to america illegally through their border policies and now b. to hurt all americans with economic policies. forget communication, it's been a policy failure along every stage of the way. will: hard to say success beyond policy and communications. it would be really hard, i think, to lay out anything over the past -- they came in saying covid would be their major focus, right? that that would be what they would attack. is covid under control right now? by their own definitions. pete: by their own definition,. will: what is success. pete: read what the so-called elite media is saying $3.5 trillion bill hoping to pass in reconciliation. the $5 trillion bill that would fundamentally transform a lot of the way our economy operates the hyperfocused on the green new
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deal. they think they want to use got all these crises on the side focused on passing a massive bill and getting it beyond 51 votes. booster shots voted down 16-2 by that fda panel, and we didn't even mention it, but france recalled their ambassador because of the deal that we just made with australia and u.k. over nuclear powered submarines which is not a bad deal for us. that's good. let's check china. i thought we were going to build back better all these alliances turns out we gave a middle finger to the french and they sent back the french, too. rachel: we have only built back better the taliban. they say this $3.5 trillion will be their success or what they're pinning their success on. i think it's going it backfire. we are going to see inflation spiral. you lose the economy. you lose everything. and you know, even with covid, you know, it's affecting our economy that they refuse to acknowledge natural immunity. they refuse to get america back
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on track. this is a disaster. and this is the problem with not having america first. if you start your administration with that idea, putting americans first, none of these things would happen. pete: you are right. you mentioned -- i mentioned that it would maybe be their success or maybe they know the ship is sinking and they need to get this passed while they still have the votes. the midterms are coming where they won't control either chamber. do it now or never do it. will: turn now to a fox news alert. the fbi is now searching for missing 22-year-old gabby petino. and now her boyfriend, brian laundrie. his family claims they have not seen him since tuesday. pete: this as authorities search laundrie's home after he was named a person of interest in gabby's disappearance. rachel: carley shimkus is live outside the laundrie home in florida with what police are saying. carley, what are you hearing? carley: yeah, well, pete, will, rachel, yesterday police rolled up to the laundrie family house
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around 6:30 p.m. eastern time and the media protesters swarmed this neighborhood because everybody thought there was a break in the gabby petino disappearance and we soon learned that police weren't here because of gabby it was because the laundrie family called them because they haven't seen their son since tuesday. so now there are two missing person cases. one for gabby. the other for brian. gabby's family is now making a clear distinction saying in a statement through their lawyer all of gabby's family wants the world know that brian is not missing. he is hiding. he is on the run. gabby is the one missing. the north port police releasing a statement as well saying we understand the community's frustration. we are frustrated, too. the north port police department and the fbi have been pleading with the family to contact investigators. friday is the first time they have spoken with investigators in detail. the police also making it clear that while brian is a person of interest, he is not wanted for a
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crime at this time. but members of the community say they think he should be. >> a reasonable person, a rational person, if they had an argument out there, whatever, and he left her behind or something, he would at least called her family, his family, his friends or something and say look, me and gabby are not getting along. come get her this is where he is at. he just stayed silent. that, to me, shows guilt. carley: gabby's family has been searching for their daughter for a week. now they say their desperation is turning to anger. they are trying to remain optimistic. >> i know how these things sometime end. you know, i am trying not to think of that i just hope people pay attention. i hope people look. i just don't want them to stop until we bring her home. carley: the search for gabby continues out west in the over 300,000-acre grand teton national park. authorities in utah have also
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made it clear that the disappearance of gabby petino in that double homicide of the newly wed couple in moab, utah, they say those two cases are not related. guys, back to you. many. >> carley, thank you so much. pete: that sure is a new wrinkle. you could say two people missing one is hiding and another missing. knowing where he is and getting him to talk it feels like is the crucial aspect of this case. you can follow cell phone records which i'm sure they're attempting to do pings and locations. but, ultimately, if you are the last person who saw her and you know what that location is, that's something people deserve to know and i think that's why you see the anger here so much. rachel: yeah, the interest is that people have been following this couple. they were instagraming their trip. a lot of young people are very interested in these people that turn their cars or their vans into mobile, you know, homes and do these travel adventures and they were posting things along the way. but, look, obviously in our
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country you are innocent until proven guilty. but if you are the boyfriend or the husband of somebody who is missing, you don't go missing yourself. you are out there trying to find that person. there is nothing that has happened on the part of this boyfriend that indicates that he is concerned about finding her. and now supposedly he is missing. but i think the family, you know, has a right to say what they're saying which is he is not missing. he is hiding. our daughter is missing. put the attention back on us. will: i would lo to know when exactly he went into hiding when we lost location of brian laundrie. the media and the police seemed to be camped out at his house quite some time when and how and where did he eventually? pete: that's where the technicalities come into play. okay if we're not charging him anything and not a person of interest per se, we don't have -- there is no requirement to keep tabs on him per se until there is something more official. rachel: what about his family? had his family cooperating? it's all very -- pete: a member of gabby's family actually went to that home to
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reach out to the family early on before she was even reported missing. rachel: that's also odd as well. i'm always amazed when i see these stories come out how calm the family members are. like i could see myself in that situation like freaking out and i would not be able to keep it together the way they have. pete: got to be underneath. rachel: yeah. will: meanwhile move to this story as well. the arizona attorney general has condemned the biden administration for putting a warning label on our nation's founding documents. the national archives and records administration put this warning on to or before any viewing of the declaration of independence, the constitution of the united states. the catalog and web pages con tame some content may be harmful or difficult to review nara's records span the history of the united states and our charge to preserve and make available these historical documents. as a result some of the materials presented here may represent outdated offensive and possibly violent views and
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opinions. pete: this is absurd on his face. of course i'm sure the national archives has documents that are offensive somewhere in there. i have gone and looked specifically at the declaration and the constitution on the national archive website. on each of those specific documents potentially harmful content is right there on top. if you are a kid searching, this the first thing you are seeing is beware, potential -- there it is harmful language alert. rachel: unbelievable. pete: on the declaration of independence. this is not a university posting it this is the freakin' national archives. this is our own government stating that our own founding documents are harmful. rachel: the founding documents that the rest of the world admires makes everyone want to come to this country. i'm sorry, guys, i saw this story and, again, we see these things in universities as you said. we're not surprised by the crazy marxist, you know, perspective of these professors and
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students. but that this is coming out of our own government. that our own government is putting this warning label says something about where we are at. in our freedom's history. arizona a.g., attorney general mark brnovich wrote a letter saying this is shameful action from the national archives and misguided alert should be taken down immediately. there is nothing harmful about our founding documents. these inspired writings govern the formation of our new country in the late 18th century and provided the road map for it to grow into the greatest nation in history. right on, right, will? will: absolutely. i mean, what a -- what an absolutely -- i don't know. i don't know what the right word of condemnation is we are looking at the greatest nation on the history of planet. greatest experiment in human freedom. although imperfect. greatest experiment in human freedom that has ever been been attempted on the face of this planet. and to think that that experiment needs a warning label placed on top of it is just so
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stupid, idiotic, immoral, so many different words of condemnation that none of them are sufficient. rachel: don't forget we fund the national archives. i want congress men and women who are listening to figure out who exactly came up with this idea? and who authorized putting a warning label on our wonderful, awesome, you know, admired throughout the world in history founding documents? somebody should be held accountable for this. pete: this is the illogical state how the left operates. critical theory and critical race theory can't call critical race theory instead call diversity equity and division. once you have that inside your department everything that happens there may have happened during a time frame where everything wasn't as diverse equitable and inclusive as they deem it to be therefore slap warning labels on everything. that's how they divide us and create the belief that america was poisoned from the beginning. it's been immensely effective. divorced from the theory and wrapped up in words like diversity, equity and inclusion and then we buy it and now we
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have a warning label on the declaration of independence. rachel: our founders are heroes. our documents ought to be revered and this has to change. all right. turning now to your headlines, a 15-year-old girl arrested in a deadly hit and run is accused of doing it on purpose. and laughing about it. the teen took her grandmother's toyota and sped down a washington state road hitting and killing greg moore. the 53-year-old second from left in this photo was on a run. a passenger in the car says the teen saw moore and said, quote: i'm going to scare him. i'm going to bump him then laughed as she drove off. she is now facing several charges. disgusting. it fence something going back up around the u.s. capitol. ramping up security ahead of today's so-called justice for 6 rally. organizers of the event want to highlight what they consider to be unfair treatment of those charged in the january 6th
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riots. those political prisoners. authorities say there is no specific or credible threat. and that the fencing is just a precaution. pete: pelosi back up. rachel: london is caught maskless at nightclub this despite her own city's health department requiring everyone to wear masks is indoor public spaces. reporter asked her about her lack of mask. the mayor saying, quote: at the end of the day, everyone who comes in to the nightclub has to show proof of the vaccination. that gives me a lot of reassurance. will: they were probably sophisticated. rachel: they were super sophisticated. pete: as long as reassured i don't have to comply by all the rules of everyone else. to be clear there is an indoor mask mandate as insane as it is inside san francisco and you saw that there wasn't a mask insight. will: i want to know was the wait staff, the bar staff and everybody working there masked
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or not? rachel: of course they were. the people who supervisors the elite. will: they are not sophisticated. rachel: me must wear mask. they must be dirty. will: like the people carried aoc's dress train they had to wear a mask. pete: it is the sophistication standard. will: 100 percent. pete: if you are fancy, you don't have. to say. will: correct. rachel: never mind where we live in a country we have to show our papers to go out to eat. slow our vaccination papers. pete: what if you are fancy like applebee's on a date night. rachel: everybody at applebee's has to wear a mask and walmart. will: i haven't been to applebee's in a minute. coming up, raising crime in no, again. a diner shot in the leg while defending himself from robbers. rachel: this boy made a patriotic. in it for the long haul. how he is hitting the pavement to honor our fallen heroes.
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defend him sphrfl robbers who demanded he turn over his watch. the gunman fled the scene and police have made no arrests. new york councilman joe borrelli joins me now. welcome, coup sillman. thank you for joining us today. i have to believe that criminals make calculations what is going on in new york city that these criminals think they can get away can w. something so brazen? >> well, that's exactly right. this is a risk/reward calculation. these criminals have seen headline after headline of bank robber gets out with no bail in new york city. and they decided that we don't even need a clever plan. we just need to go up and rob people. start with the question though. is anyone going to be surprised when these two people are
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eventually arrested and we find out they had a length rap sheet and probably let out on bail reform? as you pointed out it's just a risk calculation and in new york they are just well aware that the criminal justice system has no more teeth. rachel: this happened in a high end area. do you think the fact that now the crimes are moving more and more into these high end areas that is that going to get more of a reaction, perhaps, out of voter? are they going to demand more out of their officials and get these policies to change? >> well, i hope. so this is a neighborhood that's long been considered safe and these type of crimes are what, you know, make tourists question visiting here. make residents question living here. just over a decade ago. we had 60 million tourists visit here per year. spending money, enjoying themselves. fighting to get the best hotel rooms. unfortunately, those days are just gone. we used to have a republican mayor and a republican governor in this state and new york was one of the most safest states --
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safest city and state in the community. rachel: i had friends said not going. they would love going to new york. they are not coming this year they don't feel safe. new york's ordered release of 141 inmates from rikers island what effect do you think that will have. >> we have real issues on rikers island violence and staffing levels. what the governor is saying here basically we are not going to accept responsibility and the brunt of the problems and the need to reform the jails. we are actually going to put the burden back on you, the public. you are going to face the consequences. wee will let people out who have righted their parole. it is insane that the only way we can reform our jails in new york is to just let people out. and my warning for the rest of the country is that governor hochul was elected as a moderate. this is what happens to moderate democrats when there is unrestricted power in your state
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some people taking otezla reported weight loss. your doctor should monitor your weight and may stop treatment. upper respiratory tract infection and headache may occur. tell your doctor about your medicines and if you're pregnant or planning to be. otezla. show more of you. ♪ pete: welcome pack. well, a parent outraged after seeing a los angeles high school classroom covered with anti-police posters and left wing flags including one reading f the police. this as a college professor at virginia tech apologizes for being white in the syllabus which leaves us wondering what is continuing to go on in our schools. here to react is former professor dr. mary grafer. thank you so much for being here. i want to start with the high schools because we have known about it in education for quite some time. the idea that an american high school would be full of
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anti-police propaganda and information presumably it's acceptable. other teachers see it other administrators are aware of it how did we get to the point where this is the kind of environment in our classrooms? >> well, this has been going on for a long time. it's been developing and i have been monitoring it over the last two or three decades. but we really saw the explosion a couple years ago when 1619 project came out and inflamed people until police sentiment the 1619 project had a photograph of a black lives matter protester against these riot geared police officers. talked about slave patrols, that policing was going back to that. so connected everything back to slavery and so, it justified, in a sense, this anti-police
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sentiment, and and it's been infused into classrooms k through 12. so immediately these lessons were put into the classroom right after the 1619 project was published. pete: so it gives, presumably intellectual under pinning for this anti-american, anti-police sentiment. i want to get to that because you wrote a great new book "debunking the 1619 project." we want to get rid of this stuff in our classrooms we have to get rid of the narratives that are poisoning it. what are you debunking when it comes to the 11 project? >> well, there is just so many things. i opened that magazine and thought there is just so much wrong with this. well, first of all, it says that slavery here was unlike anything that had ever existed in the world before. that's the title of one of my chapters. slavery has been a worldwide
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institution justified by the major religions as far back as we can go in history. but the 1619 project presents it as an exclusively american invention. and it presents the slaves as having been kidnapped by europeans from their african home lands. it doesn't mention the other africans were the ones who raided the villages and sold them to the slave traders who then sold them to the europeans. it doesn't mention that they were black slave owners. it presents slavery as a uniquely white american thing. and it presents it in these very graphic terms. that, of course, would aspire outrage among people. especially the young, when you read about, you know, the
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suffering as it's presented, and it traces all back to one group of people, which is historically false. pete: that's the powerful of a narrative. once you are telling one side of history or just a portion of it, you create in the mind's eye of children the idea that their country is poisoned from the beginning, that their founding date of 1776 is evil and it should, instead, be 1619 which is exactly what that "new york times" magazine article attempt to do. i want to recommend our audience check out mary graber's book debunking the 1619 project. you want to get a accepts how they have gotten control of our classrooms curriculum a book like this indispensible mary graber, thank you so much. >> thank you. pete: you got it border patrol shutting down the point of entry in del rio, texas, as fox news gets a firsthand look at the escalating crisis. >> they are using this dam right here to walk across the rio grande and enter the united states illegally. wow. that is a lot of people down
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there. pete: sure is. we will show you more of the shocking new images as the white house straight up ignores the chaos. plus, one hospital says if you want a vaccine religious exemption you have to stop taking drugs like tylenol, too. the new policy sparking outrage. ♪ bring me a higher love ♪ centrum multigummies aren't just great tasting... they're power-packed vitamins... that help unleash your energy. loaded with b vitamins... ...and other key essential nutrients... ...it's a tasty way to conquer your day. try centrum multi gummies. now with a new look.
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visit askforaustedo.com right now arriving into the united states illegally. wow, that is a lot of people down there. will: that's the voice of our own reporter bill melugin capturing alarming images of the bridge in del rio, texas where the number of migrants surges past 11,000. retired acting ice director and fox news contributor tom homan was live on our air yesterday as we received these images in realtime. he joins us now along with laura allen a rancher in del rio's county of val verde.
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tom, what's your reaction to just not images but numbers as well? in august of this year 209,000 encounters at the all right. one year ago 50,000. looking at increase of over 300 percent. there are the numbers, tom, and you have seen the images. >> well, once again, the biden administration is lying and saying there is 209,000 encounters which is down from the 212,000 the month before. let's be clear, the encounters are down almost 4,000 but the border crossings continue to rise because what's happening, will, they are taking more and more agents off the line to deal with this crisis like what's under that bridge. they shut down checkpoints to do this. they're taking more agents off the line although 40% were already off the line. when you take agents off the line there is going to be less encounters it means more got-aways so what the administration is not telling you yeah we have less encounters but got a lot more got aways, the crossing at the border hasn't slowed down a bit. let me tell you something i
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talked to border yesterday he goes tom, it's broken arrow. broken arrow. we are overwhelmed. we have lost operational control of the southern border and he says the white house is not helping us. the secretary of homeland security is not helping us. we have been abandoned these are words that should strike every heart in this country we have lost control of our border on purpose because this administration shut down policies that worked they knew what they were doing. they caused this surge this was intentional. will: pointing out the numbers july to august. those numbers even as they are reported august to august year over year are just stunning. 317% increase. and you are talking about, by the way, border patrol agents being pulled. i know that's something you are experiencing. you live in del rio, your ranch is outside of del rio. can you each get border patrol to respond to everything that's happening in your community? >> well, you know what we are
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seeing is that there is less availability to respond. increased number of agents what mr. who heman said what we are seeing there are times you can call and you have maybe two and the response to that is, you know, we don't have agents. and i just wanted to make a note real quick, not only am i a rancher? i'm a lifetime residence and former val verde county judge. i have seen this at every level from inside and out. we have never seen anything like this. will: put that in perspective for me, laura. i didn't realize that by the way. i mean, being a rancher puts you on the ground. lets you see what's happening literally on the dirt that area of the country. have you lived there your entire life so you have context about your town size and ability to handle this kind of crisis. but you have also been a judge as well. you have background into the legal system and the pressure and the threshold to deal with something like this. put it in context in had your
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lifetime, how does this compare? >> in context in my lifetime there is nothing in comparison. we have never seen anything like this. you know, we have friends. we have family. we have, you know, community members that are border patrol agents, customs, et cetera. law enforcement, and they are inundated. they are to the breaking point. this is absolutely unacceptable. will: tom, i would love to ask you about this drone flight that was grounded by the faa. the faa answers to the transportation secretary pete buttigieg answers to the biden administration where would an order like this come from to drown drone coverage from the press at that bridge in del rio? >> came from the white house. look, they have been lying from the beginning, are right? they said it was trump's fault. it was slow down this summer. because of hurricane. it would slow down in the summertime. they have lied from day one. they don't want the american people to see the truth.
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alejandro mayorkas needs to be removed. he is the secretary of homeland security. his actions or his inactions has caused our homeland to be less secure than ever has been. i worked for him when he was deputy secretary. he knows how to stop this crisis. we stopped it we built detention centers. we held people. we have consequences, deterrence. we had enforcement posture. we removed people. and we shut it down. he is doing the complete opposite by releasing people. not removing people. and not seeing a judge. so, he has purposefully either taken orders from the white house to ignore his responsibility as secretary or he has fell into the progressive left. look, 350,000 got aways, will. 350,000 people have came across the border were not arrested. you can fill the dallas cowboys stadium five times with the number of people come across the border and got away. how many carried fentanyl gang members terrorist watch lists? we know brpd arrested 11 on terrorist watch list.
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how many of 350,000 are on terrorist watch list that should scare the hell out of every american and this government has failed us. this administration has made made country less safe and that scares the hell out of me. will: laura, i would give you it the last word. i have heard this word used to describe the southern border invasion. you have heard from tom the number of got-aways 350,000 got-aways. you hear the numbers of 11,000 people encamped there at the international bridge. what word would you use to describe what's happening in your town along the southern border? >> well, actually, we were close to 13,000 and above yesterday. and our town is approximately 40,000 people. the county is approximately 50. we are very rural. 3200 square miles of county to cover. and there is just simply not enough. there is not enough agents. and got-aways are a true, true problem. because the people that are coming here to this bridge, these 13,000 plus, they are just
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simply standing here wanting to turn themselves in. there's approximately two miles of fence right here at this bridge and that's what is holding this area outside of that, in the 3200 square miles of county that we have. there's a lot of property to be crossed. and it is an invasion. it is a full on run on our border. will: yeah, to listen to you describe it the word that occurs to me is absolutely overwhelmed. tom, laura, thank you so much, both, for being with us this morning. >> very welcome, thank you for having me. will: let's turn now to chief meteorologist rick reichmuth for our fox weather forecast. hey, rick. rick: good morning. so, tell you what, temperature-wise things looking really good across eastern part of the country, across the far northern tier things are looking a little bit chillier there we have temps only into the 50's. so we're starting to see that colder air begin to make its way in across parts of the lower 48. we also have moisture we are going to be dealing with across
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parts of the central gulf, areas that have seen so much moisture over the last number of weeks. we're going to continue to see a little bit more moisture there. start to see moisture coming in which is really good news across areas of the pacific northwest. places that have been so dry and we have been talking about all of this heat, obviously, all of the fire conditions right there. now we are watching start to see some of that moisture come in. this generally starts to happen some time in october. this year. getting a little bit earlier which is good news. because of that, where we have got so many of these fires across parts of the northwest, we are going to see a little bit of help there and certainly some of this smoke that we have been watching also beginning to go away also, which is good news. all right. guys, send it back to you. will: thanks, rick. still ahead, one 12-year-old boy following through on promise to honor heroes running one mile for every first responder who paid the price. he joins us live to share his mission. first here is the u.s. air force brass quintet performing foot
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♪ pete: a 12-year-old florida boy is on a mission to honor our nation's heroes by running one mile for every first responder who makes the ultimate sacrifice in the line of duty. will: next week he is heading to virginia to present injured officer robert potter with a $10,000 check. rachel: zachariah cartilage of oning for heroes joins us now. zachariah, thank you so much for joining us this morning. and tell us why you decided that this is how you want to honor these heroes. >> yeah. so the idea started back in 2017. i ran in a tunnel 2 towers 5 k here in my hometown in orlando and i was assigned the name badge of officer stuart 9/11 police officer who lost his life on 9/11. after the are up itself, i learned more about him and the ultimate sacrifice he made and
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ultimately other first responders who also lost their life in the line of duty over the other years. and after that i wanted to start doing something more for our fallen first responders since i found out how much we were losing every single year. so i had the idea to start running one mile of every fallen officer in the line of duty are. will: i have two questions and i hope i don't hold the zechariah do you do distance learning for school. >> right now still in school learning i go monday through friday in school at the same time nonprofit i'm still in school. will: i'm trying to figure out how you are so good at camera and talking eloquently. my 12-year-old would be more nervous than you are talking into that camera. rachel: pretty awesome. will: i figured distance learning might be giving you experience but no you are poised. one mile at a time? go out in chunks? how do you get to 1,000 miles? >> yes, sir. so, whenever an officer or firefighter loses their life in
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the line of duty, we few pages update everyone is lost in the united states. i run one mile, which was my elementary school track loop. and it's seven laps around there one mile each. we carry flag for the officer or firefighter and then we send the flag to the families after the run. pete: that's really cool. just the visual of a young kid running around their elementary school track in honor of something so much bigger. you have inspired a lot of people already. you are inspiring us this morning zechariah, how can folks learn more about when you do and how you support it. you are delivering resources to wounded members of the first responders as well. >> yes. so there is two ways they can donate. the first way is through www.running 4 heroes.org. on there there is a donate button where they can donate on. other way is facebook or instagram page there is a donation button on there. they can also, if they want to
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shop for any merchandise, they can go on the.org page and on there they can order page like z line shoes. the shoes i wear when i run. as well as other merchandise. whenever someone orders the merchandise item it goes straight back to running for heroes as a tax deductible donation. rachel: zechariah we cover a lot of sad, depressing and crazy news here. this is just giving me a lot of hope for america. pete: that's true. who taught you this outlook on life? >> definitely my family and really other first responders. when i had this idea as well as are god is my huge inspiration as well. and when i started running i had lots of inspiration come a long way. but when i was learning about these first responders who gave the ultimate sacrifice, i was finding out that there was so much first responders that put on their badge and kiss their families goodbye reported for duty. expecting to come home at the end of the day. i really wanted to help them out because these losses are so
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unexpected. will: inspirational prompt and impressive young man. zechariah thank you so much. >> thank you so much have a good rest of your day. will: bill maher taking aim at aoc over the tax the rich dress. next. ♪ the trumpets they go. ♪ e like milkshake mustaches high fives and high dives. or 3-on-3s... 2-on-2s... and 1-on-1s. we see how these moments make us smile so, we make it easy to share your smile with safe and convenient care — all in one place, with evening and weekend hours. right now, new patients get a complete exam and x-rays — free without insurance. plus, everyone saves 20% on their treatment plan. celebrate life's happiest moments. call 1-800-aspendental or book online today. 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.
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birthday of the air force all morning long right here on "fox & friends" as they are outside at the uss intrepid. we are inside here headquarters of fox news. good morning pete, good morning rachel. pete: good morning. rachel: i love this birthday. i'm an air force brat as you guys know. was traveling all over the world as a kid. i rarely lives -- barely lived in the states. i lived overseas on all these bases such a great life. my dad was in for 32 years chief master sergeant and i love the air force. pete: i love going to are air force chow halls. rachel: better than army? pete: by far the best food in the military. will: is that right? pete: army chow halls are a dime a dozen. >> the air force they do a lot. rachel: food is better? pete: they do a lot of good stuff but they is v. a hookup. rachel: growing up after church on sundays on the base they would let families go into the mess hall and so i got to do that. i have to tell you i loved it. pete: it's good food. rachel: it is.
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will: i would lo a chow hall ranking by service. pete: army last. let's start there. rachel: the marines are better than the army for food? pete: i don't know. i don't know how many marine -- i don't think i have a proper samplings of marine corps. rachel: why don't we do diners from mess halls? pete: we could have a chef or chefs from each service. will: i don't want their best. i don't want them to do something they roll out once aer i don't. i want to know what the average soldier and sailor eats on a day-to-day basis and i want to know who is getting the best day-to-day food. pete: average wednesday chow hall meal bring it. rachel: meat loaf. will: cafeteria in high school everybody knows which high schools had the best food. which service has the best wednesday lunch. rachel: do you a lot 6 veterans shows. pete: i think we can definitely get get to the bottommen or diner at town halls.
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good idea. happy birthday 74th birthday to the air force. keep making good food and keep patrolling the skies for us. rachel: absolutely. we begin with a fox news alert. disappear appears of 22-year-old gabby petino. the family of her boyfriend brian laundrie says he's now missing. will: this as we get a bird's eye view of authorities conducting a search at laundrie's home. he is considered a person of interest in gabby's disappearance. pete: carley shimkus is live outside the laundrie home in florida with what police uncovered. carley, good morning. carley: yeah, that's right. good morning to you, are pete. you know, it's calm outside the laundrie house this morning. guys, it was a madhouse yesterday when police rolled up around 6:30 eastern time. they went right into the house. right through the front door. no knock or anything. they stayed for about two hours. they collected some evidence. they also searched a vehicle, a silver car that's right behind me. everyone thought this had to do with the disappearance of gabby
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petino. but we would soon learn that it has nothing to do with gabby and that the laundrie family called the police because they hadn't seen their son since tuesday now there are two missing person cases one for gabby and the other for brian. the petino family making a clear distinction though saying in a statement through their lawyer all of gabby's family wants the world to know that brian is not missing. he is hiding. he is on the run. gabby is the one missing. north port police releasing a statement as well saying we understand the community's frustration. we are frustrated, too. the north port police department and the fbi have been pleading with the laundrie family to contact investigators. friday is the first time they have spoken with investigators in detail. now, speaking of detail, the police released a description of brian. they say he is 5'8", 160 pounds. last seen wearing a hiking backpack with a waist strap.
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they are making it clear while brian is a person of interest. he is not wanted for a crime at this time. protesters came out in full force last night some carrying signs others chanting bring gabby home and dirty laundry. all of them demanding answers. >> obviously, this is absolutely crazy for him to even come back and not even say a word about anything. in the even report her missing before he came home was a shock to hear. >> i think is he a coward and he needs to talk to the police and he needs to cooperate. >> yeah, so the fbi is now leading the search effort for gabby in grand teton national park where she was last known to be on august 25th. the search for her enters 7th day. the search for brian enters its first full day. pete: do authorities believe he had been there at all?
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was he there before he left or was that never his location or did they not know that? carley: i asked police -- that's such an interesting question because i asked police during a press conference on thursday if they knew where brian was and they said yes. they know where brian is. but, apparently now the family is saying that he hasn't been at this house since tuesday. so i think that him leaving this area came as a big surprise even to police. police said when they showed up at the laundrie house yesterday they thought brian was inside. he was here at one point because he drove the -- the white car that is gabby's car back to his parent's house and then police took the car. they searched it for evidence. so, yeah, he was here at one time. but his parents are now saying he hasn't been at this house since tuesday and they don't know where he is. will: really quickly, carley, the media scrum the presence on that lawn and around that house
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begin? carley: yeah. so yesterday i would say that on thursday the media presence was a little bit lighter than friday. and there were a lot of police up and down the street on friday morning because and we were wondering if it was because of the laundrie family and they were going to park in the driveway and go inside the house. it wasn't because of that it was because of the media presence and this is a neighborhood. i mean, the houses are close together and they wanted to make sure that the neighbors could sort of live their normal lives. but around 6:00, the crowd of protesters started to form. and then the media started to come. even more media and protesters came when police went inside the laundrie house. everybody thought it was because of gabby it was really because of brian. will: window adding up between tuesday and thursday when laundrie could have left that home. otherwise, that home has been under constant watch by police and media for several days now. all right, carley, great property report, thank you so
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much. carley: you bet, absolutely. i was going to say unless there is an exit out of the back because we can't see the back of the house. so, how he got out of the house well you make such a good point is to be determined. we don't know at this point. rachel: sounds like his family should know. pete: yeah. a lot of unanswered questions where people could answer if given the opportunity. or if they took the opportunity. carley, thank you so much. appreciate it. rachel: thanks, carley. pete: now to another big story the pentagon calling last month's drone strike in kabul now a tragic mistake. rachel: defense department thought it was targeting an isis-k terrorist but they ended up killing 10 civilians including tragically seven children. will: lucas tomlinson joins us live as pentagon leaders apologize for the strike once was hailed as a massive success. lucas, i think it was described as a righteous strike. will: that's right, will. the u.s. military thought it was killing isis fighters and destroying a car filled with
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explosives on august 29th. instead, no terrorists were killed. only civilians, the head of the u.s. military central command says his forces made a tragic error. >> this strike was taken belief -- evacuation of at airport. it was a mistake and i offer my sincere apology. >> strike took place three days after 13 were killed in suicide attack at the airport. general mackenzie said at the time he anticipated more attacks. 10 innocent civilians including seven children were killed. without any u.s. troops on the ground, this was considered a blind strike. american reaper drone had shadowed a white toyota carolla in kabul for 8 hours before firing a hell fire missile destroying the vehicle. without u.s. bases in afghanistan drones must fly from hours from a base in the united arab emirates. after the strike president biden touted the operation without any friendly forces on the ground. >> we have what's called over-the-horizon capabilities, which means we can strike
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terrorists and targets without american boots on the ground. accomplish. >> three days after the strike, u.s. military's top general mark milley called it a success. general mackenzie said he knew something was wrong immediately. >> we think that the procedures were correctly followed and it was a righteous strike. >> we knew from the very beginning there was a possibility of civilian casualties. >> mackenzie said the secondary explosion reported by the military propane tanks located behind the car exploding when it was hit. will, rachel, pete? will: thank you, lucas. will: let's bring in morgan or morganortagus. >> good morning. will: no isis-k members. seven children killed in this drone strike. i think what many people are wondering when they watch this story unfold, they are wondering what kind of pressure or what kind of influence went into the decision making? was it an honest mistake as we just heard from our military leadership or was there political pressure to get on the offensive, to do something after
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13 of our soldiers was killed? was there political pressure to look strong and get sloppy? >> well, i'm sure there was pressure on everyone. after you have 13 americans killed, right? like everybody wants to attack the enemy at that point. but i really see this over-the-horizon strike, whether a we're calling that, it's really nothing more than bill clinton's cruise missile diplomacy from the 1990s. does everybody remember that? we are just talking about cruise missile diplomacy only with more sophisticated drones now. as pete knows as well as i do. he and i both served, there is no way to have a counter-terrorism strategy based simply on drone strikes or strikes from, you know from, other military equipment. it's one piece of the pie. effective strategy against isis or al-qaeda or any other insurgent group requires things like intelligence officials on the ground, right? who is doing recon before and
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after a strike? diplomatic facilities, you don't necessarily need 100,000 troops on the ground. you can look at syria where i don't know if the exact number has been reported but we have a very small number of troops and we are enable syria and iraq to keep isis at bay there and to keep them crucially from being a threat to the homeland. and so i really see this as being concerning. one thing that i want to point out to the audience because i know this story gets confusing. i got confused by it at first. remember, there were two different drone strikes. there was one a few days before this that reportedly the pentagon says they killed an isis planner facilitator. to my knowledge, they have still not released the names from that strike. now we have the second strike where we were told it was a righteous strike by general milley, which was clearly at a minimum a very poor choice of words if not outright spin to the american people. so you have a second strike where you have this innocent aide worker as jonathan sphwran axios pointed out, the seven
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children that were killed, this is hard to hear but we need to know what happened, they were the children and the nephews and i believe maybe nieces but the children and nephews and nieces of that drone worker. whether a were they doing in the father uncle was coming home with father car for the family. the children ran out, according to jonathan swan from axios. children ran out to greet the father and were killed. rachel: what kind of damage, morgan, has this done, this entire debacle, especially this attack and the killing of these children, which as you described, is so heart breaking, what kind of damage is this doing to our reputation on the world stage? >> well, you know, my problem is whenever you come out with this a week later so this broke last friday from the "new york times" and then a week later on a friday afternoon, of course the administration confirmed the dod confirmed all of this happened. we all know quite well what a friday afternoon news dump is, and so we, you know, pribleg
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predictably you know saw news like this being dropped. the big problem with this in my opinion, rachel, is when no one is held accountability for this, i think from a communications perspective, our enemies have a field day. right? they are able to say look what the americans did. the americans are the ones killing children. the taliban -- this is why we wanted these awful americans to leave because they kill children. meanwhile, guess what the taliban is doing this week? they're letting little boys go back to school but not letting little girls. rach r5eu67 i saw that. that was also sad. pete: they are using the information they have about whoever has worked with us to quietly kill them and take them into custody because, of course, what you need for effective over-the-horizon counter-terrorism is human intelligence. anyone who has worked with us is potentially a suspect for that type of intelligence. they are just consolidating their craft. real quick, we only have about 30 seconds. you were the state department spokeswoman. if you were at that podium today. what would you change? given all that's happened, where
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we are, what would you change about america's message right now. >> well, that's hard, pete. i would change a lot. listen, i think the main thing is that you have to have leverage in all of your negotiations, right? the state department cannot function without the force of the military behind it so, all we have right now with the taliban is economic leverage. and guess what? if we threaten to pull the money away which we should, guess who will fill the void? china, russia. that's why you have to have a gun to the head, literally and figuratively, to terrorists whenever you are negotiating with them. and on the last note. i know you have got to go, pete. maybe messes aren't too bad. will: we have official ranking, morgan. you want to share this quickly before we say goodbye morgan. pete: ranking the mess hall navy marine corps prisons homeless shelters, army. [laughter] there is your official. >> air force is the best at
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everything. air force has the best golf courses. pete: happy birthday air force and they do have great golf courses as well. will: thank you, morgan. thank you very much. appreciate it. >> thanks, guys. will: bill maher taking aim at aoc over the tax the rich dress which he says is completely misguided. he is shoveling down red pills apparently. enjoying chocolate cake. now, she can have her cake and eat it too. nexium 24hr stops acid before it starts for all-day, all-night protection. can you imagine 24 hours without heartburn? the sleep number 360 smart bed is on sale now. it's the most comfortable, dually-adjustable, foot-warming,
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how and what types of ethics complaint are potentially on hand here? what could she be facing? i think we have all talked about the fact that the servants around her and i use that word intentionally treated as servants wear mask aseses as she goes unmasked. no coincidence that the designrs red tax the rich appears to be written in sort of red blood
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style ink. that is a message both in style and in substance. pete: i thought it looked like eat more chicken from chick-fil-a. rachel: i thought that, too. bill maher was on realtime, his hbo show and here is what he had to show about the idea that the rich aren't getting taxed. >> new york city, 65,000 the richest 65,000 new yorkers out of 8 million people pay 51% of taxes. >> and what proportion is that. >> i'm just saying 65,000 out of 8 million pay 4568 it's not like we don't tax the rich at all. i'm all for ending income inequality but let's not lie. the rich pay a lot of the taxes. >> there are lots of things we need to amend about the capital system. we have crony capitalism in this country no. doubt about it. i'm just saying. [applause] >> you wear tax the rich on
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[bleep] and people always saying rich don't pay taxes. they pay some taxes. they big a big part of the freight already. rachel: good point. pete: yeah, bill maher as he has been doing with much more frequency recently making a lot of sense. this is someone obsessed with the limelight in comrade cortez, couldn't resist an invitation like this, ethical or not, and so in order to accept it as a commoner, to go to such a swanky event she literally had to go to the point of writing a slogan on her cress. that's how obvious she had to be about her so-called disdain for the wealthy when all she wants to be is amongst them. ainsley: it was so interesting because she said i'm here representing the working class. you can experience the met gala through me going to the met gala. it's actually quite funny. i love that bill maher brought up crony capitalism. we saw crony capitalism and how it hurt the little guys that that communist aoc likes to say that she represents during the
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pandemic. all these big crony capitalist amazon walmart. all these big companies that were allowed to stay open while the little guy, the small businesses were crushed during this pandemic i don't recall aoc saying anything about that. will: i love bill maher's conversion into sanity and the way it's received by his guests and his panel. rachel: they don't like it. bill will there is a saying in the south and places like texas i want to use pced version of it passing gas in church. as he passes gas in his own church, it's interesting to see his choir respond there. his panel how they respond to him just revealing the statistics and sanity the rich do pay something like 50%. is he doing it in the same way because you can acknowledge we do have some work to do on income inequality. we do have work to do on helping out the middle class in this country. it's not always solved by blood red tax the rich. it's solved by fixing the way
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this government works. pete: he is also rich and doesn't want to be taxed more. bonus rational part of economics. rather than command economics the idea that people. will: recognize the relates that tax the rich is not a solution to solving the problems of the lower and middle class. it's simply a slogan you paint on the back of a dress it try to create more favor in social media. rachel: i'm a flat tax kind of girl we all ought to have skin in the game. pete: checked with the congressional authority in the break before the segment. rachel: sean. pete: would she be in real trouble with the ethics committee? possibly if you are taking a gift of that size and there is no rational reason for it she could be in real trouble. we will find out. rachel: let's hope she is held accountable. pete: after the north carolina governor vetoed a bill to ban critical race theory. the lieutenant governor and parents are fighting back. that's next. ♪ ♪ if i can't find heaven ♪ i'll walk through hell with
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. will: back with a fox news alert. the desperate seven for missing 22-year-old gabby petino is in seventh day thought fbi is searching for her boyfriend brian laundrie who has also gone missing. he appears to be in hiding. carley shimkus is live outside laundrie's florida home with reaction from gabby's family. carley? >> yeah, will,. >> there a s. a mainly development in this case has nothing to do with gabby petino. the laundrie family reached out to police yesterday because they say they haven't seen their son since tuesday. gabby's stepfather has responded in disbelief. listen. >> i don't think i even a moment to fully digest it yet. yeah. i don't even know what to say. carley: the family also responding in a statement through their lawyer saying all
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of gabby's family wants the world know that brian is not missing. he is in hiding. he is on the run. gabby is the one missing. north port police arrived to the laundrie house at around 6:30 p.m. eastern time yesterday. they walked right into the door, right through the front door. stayed for about two hours. collected evidence, searched a car that's behind me right now. all in an effort to find brian. police also releasing a description of him saying he is 5'8", 160 pounds. last seen wearing a hiking bag with a waist strap. north port police making it clear that brian is still a person of interest, not wanted for a crime at this time. the search for gabby continues in grand teton national park where she was, will, last seen on august 25th. will: all right, carley, thank you so much. nancy grace will host a live one hour special tomorrow at 10:00 p.m. eastern on the fox news channel on this case. it will be available on fox
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nation on monday. rachel, over to you. rachel: thank you, will. parents in north carolina are taking a stand against critical race theory after their governor vetoed a bill that would ban the controversial teaching in school. governor roy cooper claiming the legislation against crt, critical race theory, quote: pushes calculated conspiracy laden politics into public education. but our next guest is defending parents who don't want this curriculum taught to their kids. north carolina lieutenant governor mark robinson joins us now along with jill homan, a mother of two, who preemptively switched her daughter's school just to avoid crt. so i'm going to start with you, jill. so, this has been something i have been hearing as well, which is that, you know, parents are complaining about crt. teachers and some democrat politicians are saying crt, what's that? that's not happening. >> rachel, thank you for bringing this issue up. you know, critical race theory
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1619 project, anti-racism, equity, it goes by many different names but the fact of the matter is it's inboth teacher training and school. that's why we spoke out against it in junction county. it's something we don't want our kids growing up with that in their education system. the fact of the matter is, in junction county, teachers have training that says that math is racist. there is training that librarians have received that called for them to diversify book offerings to combat systemic racism and sexism. and so, the fact is if it can be in johnston county it can be anywhere. we do not need that in our school system. rachel: lieutenant governor, i'm glad that you are fighting against crt. i think it's very damaging. teaching kids to hate our country be suspicious and hate each other. i don't think it's healthy.
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one of the things that i have noticed is that a lot of this is emanating, as jill said, from our teacher's colleges. many of those teachers colleges are public universities funded by the state. so whether you and the governor -- what are you doing about that? >> well, you know, this past launched our facts issue in tia. that is the opening salvo in what i'm going to call a long war on bringing education in north carolina where it needs -- back to where it needs to be. look, we spent a long time in this nation healing old wounds and learning about the past divisions and injustices. and we have come together greatly as a nation. we are together now. we work together. we serve in the military together. we worship together. we marry each other. we have made great strides in this nation. things like crt and associated things that go along with it those things are going to drive another wedge in between us and drive us further apart not bring us closer together. we need to teach young people
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about shared trick tries we have had. not the so-called justices that exist now. rachel: look at concept house bill against crt it says it would ban that one race or sexist spherier. that the u.s. was created by members of a certain race or sex to oppress others. and individuals should feel distressed by virtue of race or sex. what has been the support that you have been seeing, lieutenant governor for this bill? what is the reaction from constituents? >> it is overwhelming and for the governor to call it conspiracy-driven, that's just -- i can't concede that. from the very beginning of my campaign this is one of the mainly issues that we heard about from thousands of people across this state. this is a serious issue that needs to be dealt with and it's high time we start doing that we have known about it for years. but it's time for us to put our foot down and start making sure that we do something about it.
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rachel: jill aside from fighting for this kind of legislation, what are you personally doing to make sure your child is protected from this very dangerous ideology? >> well, first, i would like to applaud the lieutenant governor and his work in shining a light on what's happening. we have excellent representation general assembly, including are phil berger, speaker moore, john belle and so i have been enthused by their work. also, we, in johnson county, we have a lot of parents who are very concerned, that's why you have over 200 parents showing up at school board meetings, speaking out against this. look, the fact of the matter is when you have 29% of african-american kids in our region, reading at grade level, that is the real civil rights crisis. and that breaks my heart. it is unacceptable that we are failing these kids. but the positive news is that we have great teachers in johnston county. we need to equip them with the
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basics in education, allow them to teach. and we need to also teach our kids that they have greatness within them, that they can learn anything. and we live -- we have a great opportunity in johnson county to turn this around. rachel: thank you, jill. lieutenant governor i applaud you for taking this on. as a special place to tamp down what i believe is a very dangerous marxist takeover in our school system. >> absolutely. rachel: thank you both. >> thank you. rachel: all right. a democrat lawyer pleads not guilty to lying to the fbi about his ties to the clinton campaign. but has the durham probe done enough to hold democrats accountable. former congressman jason chaffetz reacts next. ♪ tomizer tool? so you only pay for what you need. sorry? limu, you're an animal! only pay for what you need.
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try centrum multi gummies. now with a new look. ♪ >> cheeseburger in paradise ♪ heaven on earth. rachel: it's your shot of the morning. one of pete's favorite days of the year. it's national cheeseburger day. he told me that he ate cheeseburgers for like six months in the military. pete: i love them. celebrating with black craft burgers and beer land shark bar and grill at margaritaville resort times square. it's not meant to be a competition but we might try them both. will: march go ritaville has
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doubles i ate a black cap during the commercial break. two cheesier bergs being a double. pete: we both had the black cap burger. will: if i do that double night night 40 hour in the show. rachel: did you eat one in the show. pete: i had a black cap. and by the way, we are going to do some grilling tomorrow and did i win the "fox & friends" grilling contest with a cheeseburger a couple years ago. will: you are not going to win tomorrow. rachel: yeah tomorrow is the contest. will: every time he mentions his victory you play that kind of music for him? ♪ ♪ will: what in the world? i have been on the show a year and didn't even know this happens. rachel: you will lose tomorrow. i'm grilling, too. i'm in the contest this year. pete: you are? will: i feel confident going in. will: you keep eating that. pete: i'm going to give the win. will: you are going to announce
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the champion. pete: these two. margaritaville excellent too. whatever. rachel: edges lent. kind of medium rare and the cheese is like melted and really salty. yummy. of. will: jason chaffetz is not here. have you been to margaritaville? >> you are killing me. everyday in my world is cheeseburger day. so i will be good. i will take care of myself. rachel: everyday for knee is margaritaville. i have a daughter named margarita. with all right. jason, thanks for coming. i wanted to have you last week on prime but you were not available so we got you this weekend. we want to talk to you a little bit about the clinton campaign attorney situation. michael sussmann pleads not guilty after allegedly lying to the fbi. you have covered this thing more
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closely than anybody i know. what do you think about this and what do you think about how donald trump is feeling right now as we're finally seeing maybe a little bit of justice here? >> well, the top line here is that the clinton campaign, the democrats, were funding by the millions of dollars an effort to paint a picture about donald trump that was not true. for years we heard political hacks like adam schiff and others -- eric swalwell saying there were all these ties that the intelligence was saying all these ties between trump and russia. that was a fabrication. so this indictment is about mr. sussmann who was passionate of perkins couey really working for a guy named marc elias and what they were doing is they went to the fbi. the general counsel, mr. baker, and they were saying that all these things about trump but they failed to disclose, when asked, evidently, that's the charge, that they were actually working for the clinton
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campaign. rachel: unbelievable. >> this is but a pinprick and only i hope the beginning. this 20-plus page indictment as andy mccarthy did a good job of laying this out is much more about a bigger broader story. they were running up against the stat statute of limitations. there should be. thousands of pages by the inspector general naming of 12 different people that really should be prosecuted in this case. i would be terribly disappointed if this was the end. pete: jason, how typical is an arrangement like this in washington, d.c.? high level lawyers almost pass through for the dnc and the clinton campaign and fusion gps and now they are meeting with the fbi and handing over information that you know, just a couple weeks later happens to make its way to the "new york times" reporting that the trump organization is under investigation. all they want is that dust cloud. but they all know each other. i mean, how common are these
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types of arrangements that we barely get to see? >> i think they are more common than most people realize. what they do is take a tid bit of information, even if it's fiction. then they give it to the fbi. then they can go back and say oh, there is an investigation or the fbi is looking into something. then the fbi goes and says wow, look what is showing up in the newspaper. we better investigate that. so, it's this way to start this dust cloud as you call it and create this aura that isn't -- that isn't true because they are pursuing a political objective. that's what michael horowitz and inspector general report pointed out how the fbi at the highest echelon was using the media to manipulate it to justify their existence in being able to do further probes that really had no -- there is no basis in fact to move forward. and donald trump was on the receiving end of that for years. how does he get his reputation back that was elm wedded into the american psyche.
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rachel: i think this is the most outrage juries story ever. that's why it seems -- it makes me mad that's it's happening so late. rachel: nobody should have to go through this smear campaign. nobody should have to do this. of it's not just that it is frustrating for donald trump. it frustrates all of thinks voters. i mean, they had four years of this around the president's neck dragging him down. it's amazing what he actually accomplished. despite having this -- these four years of lies being told about him. jason: yeah, again, the top line is the clintons paid for it the democrats paid for it they poured millions of dollars. normally you have to disclose campaign expenditures except if you give them to an attorney. then you can allow the attorney to go do all the dirty work and spend all the millions of dollars without any disclosure. and i think the durham report is going to start peeling this back, at least a little bit. there should be a lot more indictments. this is a second one. remember, you had kevin clinesmith who pled guilty because he actually took
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information, intelligence information, manipulated it, changed it. and then moved forward on it. he pled guilty as well. but, again, he should be in jail. not getting one year probation and 400 hours of community service. rachel: so dirty. will: jason chaffetz thank you so much we will have a burger sent to you next time. pete: probably not. he is stuck. will: up next, nikki minaj is calling out cancel culture calling the woke mob. of rap star's statements next. ♪ ♪ the sleep number 360 smart bed is on sale now. it's the most comfortable, dually-adjustable,
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will: nicki minaj comparing cancel culture china after speaking out about the vaccine. >> i remember going to china and they were tell us, you know, you cannot speak out against, you know, the people in power there, et cetera. don't y'all see that we are living now in that time? will: here to react outkick founder clay travis. clerics good morning from gainesville, florida, which we will get to in just a moment.
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what do you think about nikki's comparison of the united states modern day united states to china? >> will, i mean, just when you think covid controversies can't get any crazier we end up in this situation where nicki minaj is actually making a lot of sense surrounding what you can and cannot say. i know we talked about this a lot the twin pillars we have to defeat in this country right now they are connected and intertwined court mixed with identity politics. what nicki minaj is hitting is unfortunately what is becoming a reality. we are having big tech companies and many other people out there the blue checkmark brigade as i say it trying to constrain what we can and cannot say and trying to keep us from having a fully developed marketplace of ideas. i think nicki minaj, believe it or not, is actually speaking the truth and this is what we need. our creative culture, our comedians, our pop culture, our entertainers to want as much freedom as they possibly can get and what they are doing is stepping back against the
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constraints, speaking out against it. i applaud nicki minaj, i think it's an interesting conversation that she has helped to create. will: yeah, clay we should have a deeper conversation about this at some point. the only thing i would add to those two pillars there is this elite power center that is constricts the ability of us to have certain thoughts beyond just big tech would be my point. >> so true. will: there is a nefarious nature to corporate america right now pulling into this division and taking advantage of it we will talk about that i hope, together at deeper level some time soon because i have bad news for you. you and i are on the same side of at least one bet this weekend and i'm off to a bad start this year. i will tell you which one i'm on the same side of after we go through your picks. what do you think is going to happen as we watch these games on fox bills, dolphins. >> 8 the bills need to get a win. they lost. gave up a big lead against the steelers last week. i think the bills are going to get the win. but i think the dolphins are going to keep it close, too. the spread like 3 and a half if
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i'm not mistaken or at least it was last night when i was checking it out. i kind of like the dolphins to cover but bills to win by a small margin they have to get back 1-1. they can't start off 0-2 in the afc east. will: there is bigging it here is where we are on the same side. sad for you, rams, colts, i have rams, i believe in stafford, i'm laying the four points. i like the rams. >> i'm with you. look, i think matthew stafford, i got made fun of some for this in the off season, will. i said i thought if you combine him with sean mcvey he has a real chance to win the mvp. he looked fabulous in week one. i think he continues it on the road against the colts, not sold on carson wens. carson looked bad against seahawks last week matthew stafford and sean mcvey win cover what should be an interesting game. will: totally agree with you on the rams and stafford mvp chant. here is what have you on fox 4:00 vikings cardinals should be
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a fun match up you should pay attention. to say pay attention to clay today on big noon show on fox sports be checking it out. clay, by the way, i took a very clayish bet today fec against big ten i like auburn on the road. am i smart or off on that one against penn state. >> you know what? ordinarily i would be the sec homer i went 'penn state. biggest game in happy valley in years. i think it's going to be a defensive struggle. will: i agree on the under. that's why i take six and a half. >> no argument. i know. will: second time we have been on the opposite sides of penn state. you can do the same as clay go to the fox bet super 6 app. and enter for a chance to win $25,000. no one has won terry bradshaw's $1 million jackpot and no one won it last week so you can if you download the app. and get to the grand prize. by the way go outkick and check out what's clicking on outkick
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intrepid because we are serving the 70 fourth birthday of the united states air force was the youngest of the services until we had the space for us. >> does the spaceport have a song like that? >> we saw the flag. >> it is in the process of building a tradition. >> it is. it is a-year-old. we should celebrate the one year birthday of the space force. ainsley: that would be awesome. >> i bet the space force has amazing food. earlier in the show we ranked the best mess halls among the service branches. >> because their force gets the highest ranking. >> the marine corps and navy, and my buddy laid it out better than any fellow veteran could, a navy guy said air force, navy, marine corps, prisons
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homeless shelters, that is the food ranking. if you disagree let us know. >> if you remember the space force, where do you sit. >> we will be doing a tour of different branches. we are lobbying for it. happy birthday to the air force from a fellow air force brat, me, and to my dad, sergeant the goal can post, it is your day. we begin with a fox news alert, desperate search for 22-year-old gabby petito in its seventh day. >> now she's not the only one missing. carley shimkus is life outside her boyfriend, brian laundrie's florida home of the shocking new twist. >> reporter: that twist is that
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brian laundrie is now missing. here's how things played out last night. police arrived on scene at 6:30 eastern time, they walked to the front door, entered the home without knocking, more police showed up with what looked to be evidence bags, they also searched the car in the driveway staying for 2 hours and left without taking questions. none of this had to do with the disappearance of gabby petito. the laundrie family attorney called police because his family hasn't seen him since tuesday so now there are two missing person cases, one for gabby and the other for brian. gabby's stepfather left in disbelief. >> i don't think i even had a moment to digest it yet. i don't know what to say.
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>> the family also making a clear distinction, they released a statement saying all of gabby's family wants the world to know that brian is not missing, he is hiding, he is on the run. gabby is the one missing. northport police say last night was the first time they spoke to the laundrie family in detail, they describe brian is 5 foot 8, 160 pounds, last seen wearing a hiking bag with a waist strap. while he is still a person of interest, he's not wanted for a crime, some members of the community say they think he should be. >> a reasonable person, rational person if they had an argument out there and he left her behind he would at least have called her family, his family, his friends or something, we are not getting along, come get her. he just stayed silent and that to me shows guilt. >> they cost started across country road chip in july on august 12th, they got into a physical fight police responded to. gabby was last seen on august
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20 fifth and came back to northport without her on september 1st, the fbi is now leading the search for gabby in grand teton national park, a park that is 300,000 acres. gabby's family is in wyoming helping with the search that has entered its seventh day. the search for brian entering its first will day. pete: thank you for that update, great work up there, in the last hour we asked carly when they would have known that he's missing or important to deck out hiding? because it seems his parents didn't know, they knew he left on tuesday. >> he had to have snuck out of the house. >> police thought he was there and there's a lot of confusion and misinformation about where he is, why he has gone, what his status is and why he won't talk to investigators about
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when he last saw gabby and that is the key to the case. >> it is very suspicious obviously. if your loved one is missing you want to be involved in the search and now he is gone. it says a lot about him. his family needs to speak up as well. >> we will keep you up on details on that, three major stories involving president biden's visit to his beach house. president biden is in rehobeth, delaware and the new york post points out it gets even worse, two biden disasters, we will outline a third, first on the left side here is us admits it killed 7 afghanistan children instead of isis fighters in afghanistan and on the right, what is happening at the southern border, images like you can barely fathom, when you have the defense department coming out and admitting it was civilians, not isis fighters
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who were killed in that strike and being quite earnest about a but also an acknowledgment the capabilities they say they had are not what they think and won't be what we think going forward. good that they owned up to it but ultimately a reflection of the fact that over the horizon how effective can it be if you don't have intelligence on the ground and maybe the intelligence we did have about a white toyota corolla and they are everywhere in kabul and baghdad, it is every other vehicle, where did that come from? was it from the taliban, you follow that vehicle for 8 hours and don't know the difference between water bottles and bombs? a lot of things don't add up. ainsley: terrorists and little children who are running up to the car to greet their dad and uncle who was coming with water. this is really sad. >> morgan ortagus was on the program earlier and here's what she said. >> there is no way to have a counterterrorism strategy based simply on drone strikes or
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strikes from other military equipment. it is one piece of the pie, when no one is held accountable for this i think from the communications perspective our enemies have a field day, they are able to say look what the americans did, the americans are the ones killing children, the taliban can say this is why we wanted these americans to live because they kill children. meanwhile guess with the taliban is doing? letting little boys go back to school but not letting little girls. >> a couple free take aways, this shows number one the limitations of our over the horizon capabilities combating terrorism, can't be very accurate. number 2 we exit afghanistan, we left afghanistan in murderous incompetence to the loss of life and increasingly
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not just skeptical but i have trouble anymore accepting official word from people in the highest authority no matter what institution you belong to win chairman of the joint chiefs of staff, general milley, in the strike after days of this drone strike we move forward. what we now know like messages from the cdc or fda on occasion or the white house messages from the administration, not a company by credibility. ainsley: the breakdown of trust in our government and institutions is the center and most important crisis our country is facing and this pandemic has only exacerbated that but there's another crisis mentioned in the new york post and also brings into account what morgan ortagus was saying about accountability but also the lies from the administration telling us the borders are open but we have a
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very good reporter who has been on the border using drones capturing images that were so damning to this administration that they used pete buttigieg to down the drone, they said there were security reasons, you can't be up there, they don't want you to see these images because this speaks to a crisis that is out of control. alejandro mayorkas a month or so ago said it was unsustainable. he said that on a hot mike. here is the proof in the pudding, we had tom home and on with laura allen, a texas rancher, tom home is the retired acting ice director, here are both of them talking about what they are seeing on the border. >> in context in my lifetime there's nothing in comparison. we've never seen anything like
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this and we have friends, we have family, we have community members, border patrol agents, customs etc. law enforcement and they are inundated to the breaking point. >> 350,000 people came across the border and were not arrested. you could fill the dallas cowboys stadium 5 times with people who come across the border and got away. we've lost control of the border. on purpose because this administration shutdown policies that worked, they knew what they were doing, they caused this surge. >> why do you think the administration is doing this at exactly the time we are seeing a potential rise in terrorism because of the debacle in afghanistan. will: this translated into power, democratic voters, that is the bet being made and a
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crisis being encouraged, incentivized and this gathering at this. is largely from immigrants from haiti. there is an ocean or least a golf between haiti and mexico so these are people making a very long trip because they believe they will be rewarded. there is not just incentives but encouragement to those images on your screen. >> vice president harris who is supposed to be the borders are maybe she will head to haiti soon. tragic things happening in haiti but that doesn't mean everyone qualifies across the border and people can't when there are plenty of people who want to wait in line and become citizens the right way, that process has been upended. >> he talked about addressing root causes. what you are seeing here, most people came across with the help of cartels. we are empowering the cartels, enriching them which is only making the situation in mexico worse. the root cause, what is she
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doing? this is the root cause. >> here is the third story taking place that you put a nail in the coffin of anyone who believes that our government simply follows the science was a month ago the biden administrative begin the push for a third booster shot, made purchases for third booster shot but in the last couple days and fda panel has rejected pfizer's booster shot for most in adults, they've endorsed a booster for people over 65 but for the population at large boosters are not backed up by data and not backed up by science, only backed up by the push from the biden administration. pete: this is people who know about vaccines and efficacy taking a vote and the vote was 16 to 2, wasn't even close. facing pressure from the white
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house but wanted this deadline because they want to continue to move forward with the iterations of the vaccine for reasons of which we now see not connected to science. they see the vaccine is the only way out of this and people get rich off the vaccine no doubt about that but also what doctor fauci and others decided is the only way we emerge from this and they ignore any other science, natural immunity gets ignored so it is one size solution, they will see cauterization for kids as young as 5. it is more than ignored, it is my lines. anyone willing to discuss any alternative or therapeutic, ignoring - the clip of fauci being pressed - on cnn he was pressed on natural immunity, don't have an answer. >> he acted like he hadn't
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thought of it before, good point, maybe we need to look into that. >> it is not a small point either. jillian: it is a giant point. you talk about americans losing faith in institutions this is the leader of public health who after a year and a half still refuses to acknowledge and talk about natural immunity which by the way already proven in israel and other places but it is better than the vaccine so why - 27 times better so the breakthrough cases are happening with vaccines, not natural immunity. >> natural immunity is recognized the myth vaccine pushes undercut and you don't know how many people need and therefore that kills vaccine passports, kills the project to recognize one's a massive truth, the existence of natural immunity. >> it is the great reset, natural immunity will disrupt the operation. will: billionaire robert durst found guilty of murdering his best friend susan berman, he's convicted of first-degree murder for killing berman at
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her beverly hills home 20 years ago. prosecutors say he murdered berman because she around the mysterious disappearance and death of his first wife helene mccormick declared legally dead in 2017 but her body was not been found and no one has been charged in the case, durst is facing life in prison and sentencing next month. nancy pelosi blames capitalism claiming it fall short for americans. >> you cannot have a system where the success of some springs from the exploitation of the workers. >> i wonder she found that piece of advice in a fridge full with fancy ice cream. her comments come as democrats push for steep tax hikes to push for president biden's spending package, republican sadie sykes will hurt the american middle class.
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pelosi is rich rich rich. 12-year-old florida boy is on a mission running one mile for every first responder who dies in the line of duty, joining us after passing the - >> i run one mile, my elementary school track loop and we carry a flag for the officer or firefighter into the flag to the family afterward. >> he's heading to virginia to present injured officer robert potter with a 10,$000 check from the first responder and those are your headlines. you know what it is? national cheeseburger day and i got the meat sweats i am sweating, i can barely breathe. ainsley: it is call a hot flash. all right. okay.
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entering middle age - pete: i am going to take care of myself. ainsley: riley clemens taking the world by storm and she performs on "fox and friends". rules for theen not for me, san francisco's mayor goes maskless at a nightclub. sounding off next. ♪♪ nothing rhymes with liberty mutual. only pay for what you need. ♪ liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty. ♪ (vo) how do you know when you've found your team? whether you're winning, or just doing your best. when you're on the lanes, they're right behind you. reunite with your team. go bowling.
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>> not everybody is abiding by san francisco's mask mandate like maryland and paris, she was caught breaking her own rules, masksless in a nightclub, packed. my next guest is a san francisco business owner who says the mayor is not playing her apart. that favorable phrasing, the owner of crossfit goldengate jim joins me now. what have you been going to as a business owner while the mayor is dancing masksless when she's telling everyone else they have to wear a mask >> i don't think there are many businesses in the country that
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have suffered the same closures as those in san francisco, gyms in particular have been the hardest hit. i have faced massive business restrictions, my businesses tremendously suffered. it has been the roughest 18 months of my entire life. >> are you open? if you are, how long can do people have to mass, what are the requirements? >> we have reopened indoors since january of this year. our covid metrics have been excellent but we've been very slow to reopen. we started at 10% indoor capacity with masks, we are what 100%. the rule in san francisco is if you're indoors you have to wear a mask. in addition to that, gyms, bars
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and restaurants mandate vaccines as well. brian: when we read the policy from san francisco. the san francisco mask policy, you are required to wear a mask to stop the spread of the delta variant. you must wear a mask even if you are vaccinated. you must wear a mask in indoor public buildings. every single box in that policy was violated by the mayor, every single one yet if you did the same thing you would be shutdown. why does the mayor think she plays by different fools? >> really great question. if there's anything we've seen over the last 18 months is that a lot of these rules that will make is don't feel they need to follow their own rules. i was surprised when i saw the photo of her but when i saw the video i was shocked. of using this video? and everybody, a packed bar, you're not supposed to do that in a bar. it is got to be almost offensive to your core. >> it is so offensive but it is honestly comical.
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i think it is great, she who is writing the rules thinks it is safe to be inside without a mask, then i think that is great news but the courtesy should be extended to everybody else. she was not apologetic at all, she said she was moved by the spirit, wasn't going to reach were her drink and hold it in her hands to be in compliance and she actually said verbatim she was doing what she thought was appropriate. i would like to be able to decide what i think is appropriate. i know members of my gym would like to decide as well. >> something being moved by the spirit is a new standard. every day just be moved by the spirit and open up, that is the unofficial policy of the mayor anyway. >> if you blundered and think you screwed up and want people to follow your rules then you should be pretty clear about that but if you think being moved by the spirit and doing what you feel is appropriate that apply for everybody.
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pete: good luck, and "fox and friends" reached out to the mayor's office for comment but we did not hear back. moved by the spirit. straightahead, the space splashdown, the first all civilian crew to launch into space at return to work, the man behind the historic mission. wealth is your first big investment. worth is a partner to help share the load.
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pete: we are back, the whereabouts of 22-year-old gabby petito remain a mystery. supporters held a vigil in her honor and people around the world wait for answers but now she's not the only one missing. carley shimkus live outside her boyfriend's florida home with a new twist in the case. >> reporter: there is a major twist, major development in this case. it has nothing to do with gabby
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petito. the laundrie family says their son brian, gabby's boyfriend, is now missing and they haven't seen him since tuesday. there are now two missing person cases, one for gabby, the other for brian but the petito families taking issue with that characterization. there lawyer said all of gabby's family wants the world to know brian is not missing. he is hiding. he is on the run. gabby is the one missing. northport police arrived at the laundrie family house at 6:30 eastern yesterday, walked into the house, stayed for two hours, collected evidence, searched the car, in an effort to find ryan. police also releasing a description of him. he is 5 foot 8, 160 pounds, last seen wearing a hiking bag with a waist strap, the search for gabby does continuing grantee ton national park where
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she was last known to be. her family is speaking out about her disappearance. they say their desperation is turning to anger but also hopeful. >> i know how these things sometimes end and trying not to think of that. i hope people pay attention. i hope people look. i don't want them to stop. until we bring her home. >> reporter: and other development on this front. use our police say the disappearance of gabby petito is not related to the double homicide of the newlywed couple in moab, utah, but most importantly the search for gabby and now brian continues today. carley: over to you. pete: out of this mission, space x making history launching four civilians into orbit, lifted off from the kennedy space center wednesday and expected to splashdown tonight off the coast of florida. one key people behind it,
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director of the inspiration mission, scott petit. you say four civilians in your mind goes to putting pete and rachel into space, it is four highly trained civilians. >> absolutely, pleasure to be with you. it is such a historic moment. the team is ecstatic to welcome these guys back to earth in a couple hours. we are heading out to the recovery shipping two hours to get ready for their splashdown. pete: these are four highly trained civilians but this does say something. we have seen private trips into space now on numerous occasions, now four civilians manning the spacecraft, what does this mean for space travel, space exploration going forward? what is the larger direction this is pointing 2? >> this is a huge giant leap
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toward space exploration 2.oh. this has been a consistent vision of elon and space x for a long time since the beginning, jared was a big fan of space x and it was an honor to be part of this experience and the fact that we were able with the partnership of space x to lunch four civilians into space is a testament to their pursuit of space exploration and making this a multi-planetary species. >> you have a mission to complete, get these four individuals back here and splashdown on earth but what do you think? what is next? words we go from here? >> will be a continued evolution of space exploration. hopefully guys like us can get on these next few missions just to see what space and sales for
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all of humanity. there were a lot of firsts on this mission, the highest altitude the dragon capsule has ever been. they have three capsules up there right now, haley, a true hero, and a rock star being the first, the youngest to be in space and she has a prosthetic so she's a true hero like all the other crewmembers. >> holders haley? >> 29. pete: really cool, served as an inspiration for all of us here today and was comes tomorrow. thanks for jumping on with us this morning. >> thank you. >> still ahead, shocking fox news footage shows 11,000 migrants packed under a texas bridge. kelly mcinerney reacts next. i wonder how the firm's doing without its fearless leader. you sure you want to leave that all behind? yeah. stay restless with the rx. crafted by lexus.
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(man) i've made progress with my mental health. so when i started having unintentional body movements called tardive dyskinesia... ... i ignored them. but when the movements in my hands and feet started throwing me off at work... i finally had to say, 'it's not ok.' it was time to talk to my doctor about austedo. she said that austedo helps reduce td movements in adults... ...while i continue with most of my mental health medications. (vo) austedo can cause depression, suicidal thoughts, or actions in patients with huntington's disease. pay close attention to and call your doctor if you become depressed, have sudden changes in mood, behaviors, feelings, or have suicidal thoughts. common side effects include inflammation of the nose and throat, insomnia and sleepiness. don't take austedo if you have liver problems, are taking reserpine, tetrabenazine, or valbenazine.
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austedo may cause irregular or fast heartbeat, restlessness, movements mimicking parkinson's disease, fever, stiff muscles, problems thinking, and sweating. (man) talk to your doctor about austedo... it's time to treat td. td is not ok. visit askforaustedo.com >> look at the mass of people down there. this one two days ago there were just over 4000 people. their operative 11,000. we are talking a tripling of the numbers in 48 hours, hundreds of people crossing from mexico as we speak arriving in the united states illegally. that is a lot of people down there. >> bill. in capturing this footage from the international bridge in del rio, texas where 11,000
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migrants are waiting to be processed. white house press secretary and cohost about numbered kayleigh mcenany, let me start with this. we know the policy from the biden administration remain in mexico, catch and release, things the biden administration reversed from the trump administration, the latest wave of people are from haiti, the result of a policy enacted by the biden administration to end deportation to haiti. why is the biden administration doing this, so obvious it is delivered, what is behind it? >> they are trying to placate their far left base, they've got an affirmative criticism from that plank of the base saying rollback title 42 entirely, they rolled it back in part and this disaster, to
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quantify it title 42 is the provision that allows us to expel migrants who arrive at our border due to public-health reasoning which there is a big public health concern with covert on the border among other things. only 44% of those arrived, record number of arrivals, 44% expelled with title 42. for two months straight we have released 100,000 illegal immigrants into the interior of the country, that is a stunning stunning number not to mention those images i'm looking at, human next, and under their, sewage, deplorable conditions, where is the great humanitarian kamala harris? >> in haiti the vaccination rates are low, especially troubling in terms of public health. i want to move to another topic about general milley who is defending his call to the
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chinese, our enemies, trying to warn them about, letting them know he would warn them if we were to strike them. here he is defending that call. >> these are routine calls in order to discuss issues of the day, to reassure allies and adversaries in this case, in order to assure strategic stability. >> do you believe that he was taking orders and directions from nancy pelosi to place this call, what is behind it and do you think it is treasonous? >> i don't trust bob woodward, never have, never will. i hope this is not true but what makes me believe the allegations of bob woodward are true are very simply this,
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general milley has not denied those words were subtle call. the words on the caller we will warn you in advance of an attack, we know secretary of defense miller said he never authorized that call, there was a january call, with denial, you can provide all the context you want but i'm waiting for denial. i talked to a head in the intel community under donald trump and he said the bigger allegation is the nuclear meeting, the fact the general milley inserted himself into the chain of command and that second that the chain of command, all decision-making needs to run through me on our nuclear strikes. that's not how it works, that's not how it works. he's not in the chain of command and he put himself there and for that he has absolutely no excuse. >> let's hope he held accountable, the american people are tired of seeing so many egregious acts, something that undermines our democracy and no one being held to account. great having you on the show. great to have you on this morning. let's turn to chief meteorologist for fox weather forecast, still hasn't told us
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to his favorite disney princess is but i will take the weather. >> full disclosure arial but also the only one i can name. that is to that is that was my generation, your generation. let's talk a little tropics, we are in the mist of hurricane season, tropical storm odette not impacting the us except simply good swells across the eastern seaboard. we are watching this next system across part of the atlantic, that one also doesn't look at this point that will strengthen too much. this is good news because we are right at the peak of hurricane season, just a few days ago we are on a downward slide, statistically most of activity. a few showers across the central gulf, significant flooding and one other story we will be watching, big rain in
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the pacific northwest, great news for the fires out there, what some of them out and bring smoke issues down. ainsley: we are not to end the show with pete singing the disney song, we are going to end with christian pop singer riley clemens taking the music world by storm and she performs on "fox and friends" weekend next.
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>> she was named one of people magazine at artists to watch who isn't afraid to sing about her faith in her sophomore album. joining us with a special performance of her latest single right here on fox square, riley, great to see you. >> this is so much fun. >> you are up and comeer, you have been doing it, you're young but have been doing it for a while. what is the inspiration for why you make music? >> from an early age i was drawn to the idea of the storytelling rooted in
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songwriting and i think to show it up and popping out but i believe it is important to share experiences through lyrics and melodies, make people feel less alone. pete: talk to us about the title track and the album, where do they come from? >> godsend was one of the first songs i wrote, i had the title godsend in the notes section of my home for 3 years, wanted to wait until i knew how to write it to sit down and start the song. it started with the line what if every broken place i've been with a godsend, that has gotten me through the past couple years, going through a lot of tragedy and up and down. it rooted me and it has been a route for so many people believing there is something more. pete: what do you say to me? >> it is beyond what words can
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describe my faith is the beginning of what i do and leads to everything i do. to create music and sing about my faith is surreal and i'm grateful and it is an honor. pete: looks like you will get a chance to go on tour across the country. where can folks learn to see you live and in person? >> all over the internet. go to rileyclemens.com, check out my social media. >> millions of views online and tons of fans already. this is not the last time you will see riley clemens. you are here on the plaza on this beautiful day with your wonderful backup here. would you mind performing godsend? >> it would be an honor. ♪♪
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♪♪ they were just teaching me to depend on your strength in the dark days ♪♪ all my tears got me crying out to you again ♪♪ what if maybe ♪♪ every broken place i've been in was a godsend ♪♪ i remember there never been a winter so cold ♪♪ turns out spring was around the corner ♪♪ you were turning it into gold ♪♪ and when i couldn't feel you ♪♪ and it was hard to breathe ♪♪ i realized i need you ♪♪ now i see the beauty in ♪♪ every closed-door ♪♪ everything a sharp foreign ♪♪ every answer that didn't make sense
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♪♪ what if maybe ♪♪ they were just teaching me to depend on ♪♪ your strength in the dark days ♪♪ all my tears got me crying out to you again ♪♪ what if maybe ♪♪ every broken place i've been ♪♪ was a godsend ♪♪ more mountains that i need your help to move ♪♪ godsend ♪♪ lead through the storm if it gets me back to you ♪♪ godsend ♪♪ i like to lead me when i don't know what to do ♪♪ godsend ♪♪ lead to my knees just to get me close to you ♪♪ every closed-door ♪♪ every single sharp foreign ♪♪ every answer that didn't make sense ♪♪ what if maybe ♪♪ they were just teaching me to depend on ♪♪ your strength in the dark days
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♪♪ these tears got me crying out to you again ♪♪ what if maybe ♪♪ every broken place i've been ♪♪ was a godsend ♪♪ oh ♪♪ godsend ♪♪ even if i didn't know it then ♪♪ one! two! three! four! five! 72,807! 72,808... dollars. yep... everything hurts. only pay for what you need. ♪ liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty. ♪ (vo) how do you know when you've found your team? whether you're winning, or just doing your best.
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with those guys, not you. we will go to quick promos, the law enforcement additional air tomorrow night at 8:00. jillian: catch from my kitchen table podcast can interviewing daniel. the new york post. todd: check out the will cain podcast, one of the greatest moments in television. >> new development in the search for gabby petito who was last seen three weeks ago in salt lake city. now her fiancé brian laundrie is missing. it family so they haven't seen him since tuesday, the fbi is searching. gabby's family says he is not missing. he is hiding and on the run. they continue demanding answers. we will have a live update
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