tv Outnumbered FOX News October 13, 2021 9:00am-10:00am PDT
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>> fox news aletter. as parents push back against the school boards and department of justice on the crackdown on mom and dads about the concerns of what is taught in the classrooms and protests to label them domestic terrorists. some moms and dads are not being bullied and calling this unamerican. i'm joined -- biden 2020 surrogate and center seat go
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pack chairman. fierce backlash in virginia as parents sound off about their rights to speak out about their children's education without being targeted by the government. comparing this crackdown to what goes on in communist countries. watch. >> i spent my entire school years in the khaoeupby counter revolution. i'm very very familiar with communist tactics of dividing people. now they're labeling parents and concerned citizens like me as domestic terrorists. what's the next step? will parents one day risk their lives just to speak up for their children. >> i could not believe in america which is suppose to be the land of liberty, somebody could target parents like this. parents are the primary
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educators for our children. no one can take our place. to tell us we have the audacity to speak up for our children is shocking to say the least. >> now there is a fear. they instill fear in the parents. fear in the community that is is you pos to be a sport. >> i think it's responsible for citizens to speak up on how tax payer dollars are spent. even if you don't have children your monies go to the schools. >> you have to vote for new school board members. it's very important. >> this is about your children. your own children. for me this, i'm fighting it because it's about our future. the future of this country. we can not be intimidated. >> kennedy, all of these parents poignantly point out the different angles we see playing out here. number one the investment in
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their chilled's education and the investment and tax dollars going into this. what struck me the first mom you saw speaking who said at first they called us racists. that wasn't enough. then they moved onto domestic terrorists. referencing it starts small and graduates until they eventually hope to take them all down. >> you're absolutely right. it's a encroachment that is slow and begins with one issue and takes hold on the entire public education system. what is happening is the federal government is operating out of fear. they're terrified of the teacher unions. they donate so much money to mostly, a vast majority of the recipients of their donations are democrats. they're holding to these unions who are running the show. they're scared of them. now they're instilling fear into parents with the threat if you go to a meeting and if you're
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out of line and don't speak correctly then you will be on a list. you will be targeted and your child will be targeted. that is something. that is a fear that will unfortunately have a chilling affect and silence parents. they should ask why, why are they so upset now and link it to the pandemic. the pandemic invited parents into the classroom. parents saw what they were learning and became first hand observers on zoom. really, that's where my attacks money is going and how my child is propagandaized during the day. then the unions don't want teachers working more than three hours a day. many parents are frustrated and upset. they're not by and large violent. >> julie, i don't want to make a joke about this but the level of
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>> david, notwithstanding what jenna said the national school board association called on the federal government to utilize everything up to, as i mentioned the patriot act, hate crimes act and the united states postal service there. is a broader application in the call. that's partly why over five states have called out we haven't anything to do with this. we don't want to be involved. florida, arkansas, montana, tennessee and missouri. they said they don't want anything to do with it. they strongly denied an association of calling on weaponization of the doj for parents. >> the passion that julie brought to this conversation makes me think maybe she will run for school board. >> i can barley be a class teacher. i elected to be the class teacher for my 6 grader i don't know what i was thinking. >> this is going to be a boom
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for private schools, for charter schools. for home schoolers who will look for an alternative other than in the public school. there are plenty of wonderful organizations out this that provide scholarships for kids to go to charter schools and what we're going to start seeing is once again democratic politicians policies are going to hurt the very people they think they're going to help. in many of the poor and rural communities across this country. to jenna's point you ask most every day teachers they want to teach the kids the basics. reading, writing, a reurgt ma tick so they're ready to compete in a world where china isn't teaching the agenda of ivy league schools. they're teaching math, science, reading as our other competitors in russia and india.
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if we want our students to be in a best place, competitive in the global marble we have to focus on the basics. that is not happening now. >> can i ask something quickly, emily i am of course. >> you are more likely to be targeted and charged by the fbi for raising your voice passionately at a school board meeting then you are for trying to set a federal building on fire with people inside in portland oregon. >> this is true. alright guys, coming up today the president is set to address the supply chain crunch that threatens to destroy the holiday season. there will be things people can't get. stay with us.
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>> president biden set to address the supply chain crisis that's affecting nearly every american as we learn we're paying 5.4% more for goods compared to last year. that is a 13 year high. the white house now warning american shoppers they won't be able to get key items like popular toys for christmas due to the on going supply chain nightmares strangling retail stores. including tonka trucks and the lol dolls. stuck in factories or container ships off the west coast. so, david, this is really a phenomenal problem that is not going to solve itself before christmas. as we see more and ore of the pictures of these ships and they're stuck in ports from savannah to long beach. what is the administration
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possibly going to do about this before the holidays? >> at a time when we should be bringing more supply chain home ultimately you have the biden administration enacting policies that will make it worst. including the trillion dollars in reconciliation they want to continue to pump more government money into the system only making inflation go higher so that we can, think about this. we're going to pass a reconciliation bill. we have to borrow money from china that we don't have, so that we can, what is in this bill, we can have more solar panel and climate troops, who is the number one beneficiary of the most important part of a solar panel? the manufacturers are in china. all of this is to the benefit of china. again this administration all they want to do is put more government money and we get more
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inflation. we don't get dolls for our children for christmas. >> yes, if there are two things that really affect the bottom line. especially for moms, moms tend to control the pocket books. it's not only we talk about being protective of their children's education but also paying so much more for something that may not even be there. jenna, i want to read you a tweet from the president who said this. president biden just last week tweeted: i have never been more optimistic about this country than i am now. we are passing the bipartisan deal and the build back to build theory economy to beat the competition and deliver for working families. so, i think there are a lot of people who are paying a lot more money, jenna, that don't want to hear the nonsense. their bills are going up with less to show for it why isn't
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-- aside from the 101 dogs my children won't get i'm most interested in supporting tparlers and we can support food for the most vulnerable. >> start a go fund me. i think that would be a good call. >> i think, i think that will hit an emotional note with people out there. yes the real real that is what is going to happen. >> emily, people can't afford meat. things are sky rocketing. that's not the only problem
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playing the ad machine station. the time is bad, when the credit card bill comes in january when parents have to pay so much more for so much less that will affect independent voters come midterm time. >> yes, to all of that. inflation is one of the results of a lot of disaster decisions the administration has been making. it's an important one. this is how americans field the impact over the kitchen table. we have seen a plummet in independent supporting by 19%. that's decreased in the approval rate for him. come midterms. i think there will be a great wakening and reckoning. to jenna's point i agree with and you pointed out, kennedy. the meat products, 50% increase. all grocery items up 5.3%. heinz and general mills, the large companies responsible for
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cereals and everything that families rely on every day. those have sky rocketed up to 26%. we talked about the trucking industry yesterday. right, how crucial freight is and how we are feeling it not just the fresh foods. the supply chains are fragile cutting out retail there is no direct to consumer pipeline right. it sky rockets and food goes to waste. in the trucking industries that was the highest growth industry in 2016. 16% is now bottom out. why we see such an impact. so many things are inner related. as you pointed out when peoples pensions are now worthless and credit card bills are higher and the dollar is worthless that is what we see and why we feel it think the christmas and holiday times as a benchmark we look to it and wrap our brains about what it mans. in the short-term every meal and
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grocery store trip it matters. americans are feeling it yes they respond to the vote. >> here is an idea, prop up american businesses. i know we have to go to break but prop up american and buy plan. the fact that the boyd en economy is touting -- it would make barbie pull her hare out i have so many if you need lol dolls just come to my house. please, clean up my floors. >> coming up we now know what caused gabby petitus death. there are a lot of questions still in the case. we have reactions to all of it. both families weigh in next.
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homicide. as far as the time of death we are estimating three to four weeks from the time that the body was found. >> while the corner revealed gabby petito was strangled and a victim of domestic violence. brian laundrie's attorney is referring to it as strapblg gee. gabby's mother says the words are garbage. laundry is a person of interest but not a person of interest. he returned to the florida home gabby and he shared with her parents he is now missing. fox caught up with his parents. >> how do you feel that gabby died by strangulation in the wilderness of wyoming. does it bother you gabby was strangled? was your son involved in strangling gabby? >> julie the plot thickens.
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that guy has to be a glutton for punishment. i don't know how you can mow your lawn knowing you are the resource the entire country is looking to for your son. >> he needs to forget about the hedges and stay in the house or look for your son except for the one time he went out for 20 minutes. i think it's interesting how the corner has handled the case. normally in a missing person, body found case you get the cause of death first. you don't rule it a homicide first. it was interesting the corner ruled it a homicide but didn't disclose the cause of death. the other thing is they didn't release the body to the family. that typically happens within a few days once the autopsy is complete. they don't hold onto the body unless this is more evidence on the body or there was damage further. more abuse was done to the body. i also think it's interesting that the corner did slip up and say this was a case of domestic
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abuse. this is a slam dunk case for the prosecution if they ever find brian laundry. >> in the court of public opinion it seems to be going a certain way. due to wyoming state law this is are reasons why the information was with held in the beginning there. are additional questions we have that were still not answered by the corner. was her body buried, left in the open, discovered in the same place she was murdered, drugs in her system. etcetera, there are a host of questions to be answered. i feel it's a crash course for americans of different jurisdictions, different state laws versus federal and how it plays out real time. >> yes. it's interesting. because i know you study this and cover this a lot, emily. one of the reasons that we have law enforcement federal and local that cooperate is because of ted bundy. ted bundy was killing people
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across the country and the jurisdictions didn't have access to each others information. they were not communicated or have a way to do that. supposedly our systems have changed. they now interface. even though they have access to that sort of information they're communicating you see how the fbi and the moab police department and various law enforcement communities in florida have dropped the ball in various ways. i worry that the wyoming corner here has done the exact, exact same thing. i understand they are safeguarding the information because of particular laws and in that state. it is just leaving so much out there in the open. the fact that they have with held her body for so long from her family and left them in a cruel limbo. they haven't been able to lay her to rest. i think that, that is absolutely, it's not odd it's
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shameful. also the corner sent a memo a week ago saying it was strangulation. manual strangulation but didn't include that in the report that he filed yesterday although that was a document that surfaced on social media yesterday. it was signed and stamped, dated a week ago by him. >> jenna, a silver line south family of gabby petito has brought attention to those missing and murdered that don't receive the national attention that gabby and her family has. keeping for example with savannah act. the communication between law enforcement agencies focused on missing and murdered indigenous women. >> emily, thank you so much for bringing that up. i know this is a sub ject that means a lot to both you and i. one in three american women are victims of some level of domestic violence. the united states is considered
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>> california retailers feeling the effects of so called organized retail crime they call it. wall groans closing five more san francisco stores after recent reforms opened the flood gates to a massive shoplifting surge there. the penalty of stealing anything less than $950 has been down grade today felony to a misdemeanor leaving brazen thieves like these running out of stores in broad daylight facing little to no consequences. emily, i know you love
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california. jesus, first of all the cops there have no control. now obviously the thieves have all of the control. the fact that they're lowering it to a misdemeanor stealing something under $950 is saying so every person on the street. kennedy, you should go get a louie vuitton bag. i don't know if you can find it less than $950 but they're giving them out for free in california. >> right the inner laying complications at every step perpetuate this. we have the down grade from felonies to misdemeanors, and das that won't prosecute. none of this is good. i think with the safety first on the forefront this is why the businesses are losing so much money. on the back end these places are closing. where for example the elderly and infirm rely on for their vaccinations and medication.
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it's unfortunate for the communities. i want to bring it back. what happens after? what happens after we see the videos of people running out, reversed santa with bags filled with good. anne amazon is like a big pawnshop. unlike e-bay and other retail giants am a sop doesn't cooperate with law enforcement. you need a subpoena. that's a ripe forum for these goods to be resold. think about it this way. amazon spends 700 million tkharz a year to combat fraud that's combating fraud. think about having millions a year bought and sold fraudulently on the platform. >> when you watch the videos. i have never seen shoplifting like this, ever. you wonder where are the cops. can i say that word. anyways where are the police? the miss are not there, they're not funded to be this.
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the democratic cities and states are taking money from the police departments so they can't do their job. it's a free for all. kennedy, here in new york state bail reform has made it so easy for serial shoplifters. he canner rodriguez, dubbed the man of steal. he is superman. he has been arrested for shoplifting 4 times this year alone. the man should not be walking the streets. and the mayor, thank you for that. >> no, at least he's consistent. what concerns me more in new york city are the people committing assault and pushing old ladies in front of moving subway trains and things like that. you see it over and over again. you read about a guy who pushed a woman who ultimately died in a mugging. these people have committed assault but it doesn't rise to felony assault. i'm not sure how that is. when you push someone into a moving train you're trying to
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kill them. that, that is attempted murder. that is not misdemeanor assault. you're never going to have criminal justice reform when you have the pendulum swinging so wildly and irrationally like it is here. people get away with it because these are organized gains essentially. they go in, hit it and quit it so fast that even when you call 911, when police respond by the time they get there the people are gone. they have vans waiting for them. you even have really brazen criminals in new york city targeting people with expensive watches. they roll up in a nice car get the watch and roll away. >> jenna, do you not see a pattern here. every democratic city has more crimes and less power in the hands of police officers who are suppose to keep this from happening. >> i don't think the defund police movement are pulling the
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rugs from the security guardsmanning the wall greens. you know my answer is going to be, we have to go back and understand why these people are walking into wall greens and taking air mattresses versus having opportunities to have, you know paying jobs. nobody wants that to be their career. they're stuck. >> there needs to be a deterrent. >> they're making more money stealing. >> there has to be punishment. >> as a new york who walks around with a watch on my wrist. i want to make sure we don't make it sound like new york city is a dangerous city it's just fine. >> it's just fine. >> the homicide rate is shooting up. people are pooping in the streets. >> i'm not suggesting there isn't poverty. i'm not suggesting there isn't need. please don't act like it was in '86. >> chicago california, new york city it's astro nominal. >> all over the country. my kids play at the playground
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on a daily basis in new york city they're find. >> i can go to 72nd and broadway. super fun. >> -- democratic policies hurt the people they say they want to help. while the storm clouds continue to brew and you see democrats jumping ship. yesterday congressman yarmi sth, congressman klein last month. they're getting out before they have to face voters. >> it's impossible to impossible not to note the police are under attacked for years. the biden administration hasn't stuck their neck out for them. quite frankly it's up to the cities and states to do so. the democratic cities and states are not doing it. not yet. >> new york is a hell hole. >> it is thanks to the mayor. it's not look sog hot when it comes to crime.
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>> no it's not. you don't get to call new york that. i live here, sister. i live here, i walk the streets, not like that. i read the new york post. i talking to cops. i know what is going on here. that's not -- >> no, i will tell you as a journalist. i know the cops and people in nypd. a lead detective in new york city texted me during the show. the police here can not do their jobs because they're not backed up by the democratic leaders. >> new york is struggling don't call it a hell hole. >> it's not a hell hole. >> talk to your local precinct. >> i feel safe walking across the city. do i trust the democratic leaders give the miss the power to protect us. no, we're on our own. thank you, mayor. that's all the time we. have up next ... we have. up next ... >> william shatner is back on
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>> president boyd en unveils his plan on the supply chain crisis. why are things getting worst not better. how long will it last. now with know how gabby petito died. what is next. will the local officials or fbi bring charges in her murder. first it was soccer moms, then security moms, now it's school board moms. we look at the latest suburban voting block and what it means for the mid attorney. i'm john roberts join sandra smith and me at the top of the hour for "america reports." >> there is no potential dangerin this. if man could fly he would have wings. he did fly. he discovered he had too. >> captain kirk has boldly gone
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where no one of a certain age has gone before. 90-year-old william shatner became the oldest person in space this morning. the blue origin rocket carrying him and three others off from texas. here is shatner after he landed. >> to see the color go right by you. now staring into blackness. the blue, the sheet, this blanket. this comforter of blue around us. blue sky then you shoot through it all. you rip the sheet off you like sleeping and you look into blackness. >> julie, captain kirk made it to space. >> i thought that was a touching interview. i thought jeff basos did really well listening and pretending to be interested. i don't know.
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he, he was awesome. i thought william shatner was emotional. i don't know if jeff basos caught on. this sin spiring for billionaires like myself that normal people will take a trip to space. it's exciting. >> we will take another shot of shatner's comments. watch. >> what you have given me is the most profound experience i can imagine. i'm so filled with emotion about what just happened. i just -- it's extraordinary. extraordinary. i hope i never recover from this. >> jenna, i found this beautiful. i grew up a total treky. we had every episode of "star trek" on vhs. i cried at this, he said, i hope i never recover. >> i covered this in depth in my
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book "over view of fact." often times when individuals have the privilege looking at the earth from space they're humbled in a way that is hard to process. this idea of, you know, being so insignificant in the grand scheme of the cosmos helps to unify exactly how we're so deeply connected. i'm confident that the experience he had, i want to cover kennedy a thought. if you can't get your louis vuitton bag for christmas. claire v. is a incredible purse maker based in the united states. that's where the hip fashioners are turning now. >> he talked about the color, william shatner. the blue was over in a instance. he called life to death up there. >> it's incredible.
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age does bring you wisdom. all he has been through his life as a public person. to have that sort of access to emotion and that kind of intellectual clarity. i think it's beautiful. it goes to show how you know age brings you something that, sometimes we fear the aging process. lock how he has embraced his life. this is something that, that he will never forget. it inspires people from every generation. i love how truly moved by it he was. he has meant so much to so many people. it was a incredible gift that jeff bezos gave to him. even though jeff bezos is creepy. >> i was creeped out. i love him. >> it was precious and a beautiful moment to witness. being able to watch it real time. more "outnumbered" in just a moment.
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and there is a secret tunnel leading to a cocktail by. the queen enjoys to indulge in few drinks per day. including a dry martini and a glass of champagne. she isn't the person they give away the royal secret. this bar is one of the most famous spots where the martini was the inspiration for the james bond spinoff. this martini is shaken not stirred.
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how awesome is this that they were having martinis together. and this is only thing missing when it comes to going to space. >> i think i would ask elected party with the queen at think i would be great. she is single now so i'm sure she is incredibly fun. >> anything having to do with secret tunnels and mischief at the bar i'm absolutely in. my cocktail is tequila but i'm sure this bar could accommodate. >> they don't deny this althoug they do refer to the walls. >> how my times have we said this about our own mice. i love the story so much in par because it normalizes the queen.
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there's a lot of secret tunnels that involve the queen and that she parties. thank you to all of you for a great show it thank you for watching and here is america reports. >> have a martini lunch and we will keep things rolling here. at any moment the white house i going to defend the supply chai crisis a backlog of shipping ports threatens to derail the holliday season. is it already too late? >> have this to your to do list in october to start your holliday shopping. the briefing comes out of the president's remarks of a supply chain crisis later this afternoon he is expected to announce how walmart fedex and ups are go
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