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tv   FOX and Friends  FOX News  October 15, 2021 3:00am-6:00am PDT

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thank you for joining us. at congratulations. that's quite an accomplishment and-- quite possibly an indicator of how things would go next year. >> we are only about 13 months at this point. >> thank you for joining us in this week. have a great weekend and we will see you back next week. "fox & friends" starts right now >> former president bill clinton has been hospitalized. >> receiving treatment for non- covid related infection. >> doctor say he is responding well. >> vaccine mandate standoff in chicago. >> she calls on officers to defy the city's orders. >> they were literally trying to push this policy through by a dictator. >> sending in heavy hitters to boost terry mcauliffe. >> we will do everything we can to help. we believe in his agenda. >> the border crisis has exploded under the biden administration. >> how bad is it?
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>> we are at an inflection point. >> mass migration. >> note-- no balls, two strikes. did he go? he did and the game and. at the l.a. dodgers are headed to the national league championship series. brian: we begin with hillary clinton visiting the holocaust-- california hospital hospital where her husband is receiving treatment for a non- covid related infection stealing his team says the 75-year old is on the mend. brian: todd pye wrote joins us with the latest. >> former president was admitted to the university of california medical center after feeling fatigued with a source telling fox news a was a urinary tract infection that developed into a broader infection and for two days he received treatment. his doctors as a quote he was admitted to the hospital for close monitoring and administered iv anabiotic's and after two days of treatment
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his white blood cell count is trending down and he is responding while the 42nd commander-in-chief was in town for a private event for his foundation and he's in the icu, but only for security reasons. he's reportedly walking around joking with hospital staff and a spokesman says the 75-year old is on the mend in good spirits and is incredibly thankful to the doctors. his wife and former secretary of state visiting him late last night. this is not clint's first health scare since leaving the white house as he underwent a quadruple bypass in 24 and a pair of stents implanted following the health episode he embraced a vegan diet. we will bring you any update on his health as we get them and in the meantime, back to you. ainsley: we wish him all the best. keep him in your prayers. brian: i guess he has had trouble with his help over the last few years. we will see how he does appear meanwhile, it's
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insane, not only are we dealing with a pandemic, this whole mandate mania has been-- cost is such a toll and division in this country. it no matter where you stand even though it may be most of the people in your workplace are vaccinated, the portion that's not vaccinated now face the end of their jobs and perhaps their careers. ainsley: we see that in chicago where the mayor there is a saying today is the day for the vaccine deadline. you have to get vaccinated. you up to disclosure vaccine status on the city's portal or you can file for an exemption and if you do that and you don't get the vaccine you have to agree to testing twice a week. >> new york post puts it no job no job and what we are finding out is that listen, everyone is an essential worker with their job, but turns out the police on the job they do is incredibly essential. ainsley: especially in chicago. >> especially in chicago. they have given police officers an option to test instead of get the
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shot and many are opting to do that. well, the police union in chicago is fighting back and saying they will not take this lying down. this is just-- john, the chicago fraternal order of police presence on how everyone is pretty much kicking the can down the road. >> the citizens of chicago can rest easy. police officers will report and will not be sent home, won't be locked out so that is one good thing. all they did was kick the can down the road a little bit, literally trying to push this policy through by a mandate and a dictator pure secondly, we have a profession and no one wants to work and. it gave us a stronger position. you can't lay off, get rid of thousands of cops because you will never replace them. we can't replace what we have now, the attrition rate, you multiply that by a couple thousands and the city would have had an early shopping spree this season. abby: lori lightfoot said you either get vaccinated or you can
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get tested twice a week and he is saying that's not acceptable because it's none of their business basically whether or not you have not vaccinated. your health information is your business only. he said file for an exemption but don't enter information in the city's portal and plans to take the city to court. brian: if you look at what's happening right now in this country depending on the city you are in, for example, new york city with nypd, the commissioner is in favor of mandating the vaccination, so the city and this ridiculous surveyor we have for a few more months will demand that. firefighters will be next, medical workers now, thousands have lost their jobs, teachers. obviously, substitutes are in. this is happening all over the country and now, we have the private industry that's about to get their new rules from osha to find out if you have a certain amount of employees, you will have to demand they get
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vaccinated. pete: the enforcement, they will attempt to begin the enforcement and these are all the people who worked through the pandemic on the front lines. the other new data point , i think it's 20% of the tsa has yet to get a vaccination. of those are the people working the airport screening people for the last two years let alone the airlines themselves what you see with southwest, so all the people who went to work during covid 19 go without a vaccine are now told as you know and it's coming to a business near you and an industry near you and there's a lot more collective power than i think people think. no caps in new york or chicago? what does life look like when there's no tsa agents to the question is and what places will people like that stand together because they believe in health freedom and actual privacy for-- ainsley: you are in the military. the navy is doing this. you have to get vaccinated.
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pete: it's true, the military is a bit different when you sign up you surrender a lot of your rights. 60% have vaccinated. ainsley: they say you have to be vaccinated really by november 14. today is november-- today it's november 28, but they say you have to get the last shot by november 14 for it to be effective. pete: another reckoning. brian: another way to divide the country and a president that is supposed to bring everyone together. everyone day he squints at his teleprompter which is about 20 feet too far away and he yells at you to get vaccinated. yesterday again he did not take any questions because the economy, afghanistan, no good answers and here he is yesterday saying the same thing. >> down to 66 million, still unacceptably high number of unvaccinated from almost 100 million in july. vaccination requirements should not be another issue that divides us. that's why we continue to battle misinformation
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that's out there and the companies and communities are setting up there-- is stepping up as well to combat these misinformation. brian: number one, don't tell me you care about vaccinations when you are letting 1.6 million people enter the southern border we are actually offering them free vaccination set. 20% are sick with some type of illness. almost all of them are turning it down. don't tell me you care about us any allow that to happen at the southern border. number two, 18 and up, 79% had gotten at least 1%, 68 fully vaccinated. a delta variant is dropping off the cliff like it did in israel, india and the uk and we are down 26%. this is the only thing he rates high on, so he's using this as politics to jam down our throats to look like a guy in charge. instead he looks like an
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angry guy who can't get anything right. ainsley: ron desantis is upset with joe biden and said if you force these vaccinations on businesses with 100 more employees i will take you to court. he has a multimillion dollar lawsuit ready to go up against joe biden. listen to what he says. >> we will contest that immediately. we think the state of florida has standing to do it here we also know businesses that we are going to work with-- let's not have biden come in and effectively take away the jobs of people who have been working hard throughout this entire pandemic. i'm offended that like a police officer could potentially lose their job. it's fundamentally wrong to be taking people's jobs away particularly given the situation that we see ourselves facing with the economy. brian: did you say this, 24,000 employees of the airlines, proximally 24,000 employees including airport screeners will
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be out of a job by november 22. when is thanksgiving? ainsley: twenty-fourth. brian: has lacking a look? no reason to go home for christmas, we have no presents to exchange. ainsley: twenty-seventh. brian: great timing. pete: never been a more stark reality where you live is a determinant on your quality of life and whether or not you get a choice as a human being and in none of the conversations ever include natural immunity. how many times did we talk about the police officers because they had covid for the last 18 months? ainsley: we all want covid to be over and done with an eye understand vaccines are effective, but the problem is for those that can't get it or won't get it, they could lose their job, they probably will lose their job. we have so many vacancies. chicago, 1000 vacancies in the police department with the crime up. we see murders every weekend, i mean, staggering numbers they need police officers and
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ultimately the folks in chicago, new york, in your community are affected because if you call 911 wait times will be longer without these police officers. brian: thank you. ainsley: 6:10 a.m. on the east coast. a wake-up call for democrat terry mcauliffe in virginia with the hard data that suggest a candidate for governor is out of step with the virginia parents when it comes to education. pete: transportation secretary is mia as the supply chain bottlenecks. the call from republicans for the transportation secretary to testify. ♪♪
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ainsley: good morning. gillian: it starting with a supply chain crisis default-- republicans demanding pete buttigieg testify before congress as political reveals pete buttigieg has been on maternity leave since mid august. senator tom cotton saying pete buttigieg was unqualified to serve as secretary of transportation and now he's absent during a transportation crisis that is hurting working-class americans appeared john deere workers go on strike for the first time in a 35 years over 10,000 workers across 14 plants walked off the job of the farm equipment maker. they want and improve the standard of living and better retirement benefits and work environment. they say the company fails to present an agreement that met those demands appear to the company says it's committed to a favorable outcome for all parties.
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evacuations are underway in california as the fire near santa barbara grows to 16,000 acres of flames coming within a half-mile of the reagan ranch where president ronald reagan once hosted a number of world leaders, over 1300 firefighters are working to buy the flames. they have been able to reopen a major highway after it was closed for three days and the fire is only 11% contained. let's go to the nfl with the eagles coming back-- falling short as tom brady and the buccaneers walk away with the win on thursday night football. >> back there giving the ball to the open guys. >> he has all day. he has brown. he has a touchdown. gillian: brady leading tampa bay 28-22 victory over philly. that's a look at your headlines. ainsley: how hard is that to report it?
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gillian: it is what it is. i was asleep and didn't get to watch it. brian: this comeback is news two me. the other thing is, didn't he have a bad hand, one of his fingers? pete: brady? the guys like playing video games. he might. brian: let's talk about someone not playing video games, it is terry mcauliffe and looks as though he feels as though he's being threatened by bob youngkin to the point where he's calling out the big guns, president obama, stacy abrams. ainsley: joe biden is going there. brian: joe biden will go to help him out because he's getting a real challenge in a state he was supposed to walk right through and get the job he once had. pete: a big issue he didn't anticipate, brian is education in the future of children's education and he's made some statements about who should control that education and
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declaring it should be the government and not parents. he pressed again on tuesday about that. who should be in charge in the state of virginia of who educates the child. here's what he said. >> who do you think should be in control of education? >> that's the question. >> who should be in control if not virginia parents? >> you are dangerous here. i will build education. ainsley: he did not like that question, obviously. they are outside and he's asking the reporter if he is vaccinated, they were far away and he just didn't want to answer the question. when you look at loudoun county and fairfax county, these parents are concerned. they are going to school boards, the ag says we have to call in the fbi. it's so divided especially in that area and people were so upset with him when he made those comments that parents need to stay out of the classroom and not rally against what's taught in the classroom and if you look at the polls, we have a-- first
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of all let me give you this poll. when asked by fox news, should parents be telling schools what to think or what to teach in schools, 50% said of all voters said parents should be involved, 40% should-- sedation and if you focus on those who are parents, 57% parents should and 34% said parents should not. i'm actually surprised of the should not, 40% and 32% even though people thinks parents should be involved in-- is higher. i'm not can be one of the matzoh because my teacher every day and complains. i'm grateful for our teachers and i come from a long line of teachers in my family and i know their hard job, but if they teach things you don't agree with you have every right as a parent to go to the school board and speak out. brian: absolutely. bob youngkin is pretty confident, terry mcauliffe is pretty cocky and you saw him a couple weeks ago when police officers put
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their hand up and said when you talked about defending the police and he yelled back at the guy, again a question about education, this guy was caught on amtrak caught around talking without a mask on. outdoors he has a mask on ridiculously and then he yells back at a reporter just like the tone i thought for someone that wants a vote and once elected-- yeah, there he is. i can't see the mask from here, so dangerous. someone must have manipulated the photo, probably. although, when he goes outdoors in a wide-open setting rushing to a car -- let's look at the fox poll that talks about where we are at in this race. terry mcauliffe has 51% among likely voters. 46 bob youngkin. fox polls aren't that really kind primarily to democratic candidates
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these days so i guess that number is to make him feel secure, but if you look in actions and the fact that when he is on the call with donors a saying we could be blowing this when he say joe biden is not popular here and when you see the fact that you call in the big guns to campaign for him, i believe his internals show it's closer. pete: it's a tough state right now. it's a purple state trending blue. brian: 50% approval rating joe biden right now according to our full. pete: in virginia? brian: according to our paul. ainsley: terry mcauliffe has name recognition. pete: they had him twice. this issue of education is a new one that no one expected and when you have critical race theory, gender identity theory pushed in the classroom, a lot of parents-- you know add that on top of inflation, on top of crime, on top of illegal immigration. yes, it's a governors race, but those issues seep in. do you want more of terry mcauliffe who has
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been in the political business or 34 years? ainsley: and when you look at how close that is, is it an indication of what we will see next year end the midterms? is it dangerous for joe biden and the democrats to have someone who doesn't have name recognition to be so close to terry mcauliffe who has been in estate for such a long time. jen psaki was asked at this and she downplayed the election because the reporters asking if this could be assigned for trouble for the democrats and biden. >> i think the president , of course, once former governor terry mcauliffe to be the future governor of virginia and there's alignment on a lot of their agenda whether it is needed to invest in rebuilding our roads, rails and bridges or making it easier for women to rejoin the workforce, i will say-- i will leave it to other outside analysis to convey off year elections are often not a bellwether and there's a lot of history here in virginia, but again, we
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will do everything we can to help former governor terry mcauliffe and we believe in the agenda he is representing. brian: if they lose it's not a bellwether and if they do it's a good sign for the president's agenda. senator sinema and senator manchin not budging at all on the 3.5 trillion and senator sinema says you kind of breached my trust and i want the one point to pass before even look at the 3.5 which ever-- which made everyone in the squad pass out on the spot. having trouble on their side to meanwhile president biden supreme court commission skeptical of court packing but wait until you hear the idea the panel is open to. pete: a growing number of illegals are hopping on trains to sink deeper into the u.s. and lawrence jones gives us a look at how texas law enforcement catches these stowaways. >> put a guy in the tower and he sees people in the open containers and as the train rolls,
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people are jumping off. >> some troopers actually get on top of the train. ♪♪ oh! are you using liberty mutual's coverage customizer tool? so you only pay for what you need. sorry? limu, you're an animal! only pay for what you need. ♪ liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty. ♪ 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, in your boardroom and beyond, speaks the same language. honeywell forge. industrial grade software.
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♪♪ reporter: for the state of texas the border fight is bigger than the physical barrier. it's the tools that illegals used to get into the country. they use trains and some of them surrender themselves willingly and other ones are on. who's there to meet them? 's texas department of public safety. >> the train will come in and we put a guy in the tower. the guy will see people sitting in these containers and as the train rolls people are jumping off. some troopers will actually get on top on the train. >> we are currently in a train yard in texas where the texas department of public safety special operation unit is conducting inspections of the train
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yard. here you see a bottle of water right hear from migrants illegally entering the country. you see electrolytes for them and even close. shows that mere desperation they had to get into the country. they hide under the train right here and you can see broken ties. this one is connected and you wonder how they got the tools to do that, did they bring that with them? >> some bring knives in their shoes. like they will hide the knife in their shoes. >> they were brave dudes they were sitting right here. >> right against the wheel. >> oh, yeah. one bad move. >> wow. where are you from? >> honduras. >> how long have you been traveling on the train? you don't know. how long have you gone
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without water? it's okay. tds has arrested over 1200 migrants since july for trespassing and they came from two different countries. >> honduras and el salvador. >> they will be charged with criminal trespassing. >> here we enforce criminal trespassing which governor abbott lodged and they will be charged. state violation. reporter: you are the senior man in charge of a lone star. tell me what your instructions are with this mission. >> the texas national guard, they are our enforcement partners and we are mobilizing additional personnel equipment as well as capabilities under the direction of governor abbott to deal with the crisis. reporter: how bad is it, general >> we are at an inflection point because i think we are illegal
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immigration, it's mass migration as you have seen with the caravan in del rio. reporter: we have heard there is another wave of migrants coming this way. are we prepared to handle that right now with the current resources we have? >> yes. it's hard to say if you are prepared when you are talking about caravans of 60,000. that's a tall feat, but we continue to mobilize additional personnel, equipment and capabilities well enough thousands to thousands of people, so you are ready for this? >> we are ready. reporter: ainslie, part of the frustration that troopers have is that there is a signal from the biden administration for these people to come illegally to the country and they say they have a job to do, they have to protect texas and enforce the law on the books, but as you see the first thing that troopers did was give this young man and a lot of these migrants water and food because they are dehydrated, but if the biden
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ministration is signaling to them to come to the country illegally-- i was sent back to you in new york city when those border patrol agents, what a tough job they have and they are working around the clock. ainsley: they are giving them water trying to follow the law and then you see the migrant that was crying. what was his story? reporter: he came from honduras and he had not eaten in that couple days and he was highly dehydrated. i actually had the opportunity to go to the prison where they are located and that guy was actually transported to the hospital yesterday because he was in such bad condition, so i wasn't able to see him in the jail for his processing. ainsley: we have a heart for those individuals and we love this country and we know how to rate it is, but we can't go soft on our laws or terrorists will come in or crime will come in or fentanyl will come in and that's what we already see. lawrence, thank you. excellent job. coming up, joe, time to
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let that mandate go with a giant billboard calling out joe biden in the middle of new york's times square. we will hear from the group behind that no-nonsense message next. ♪♪
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shingles? camera man: yeah, 1 out of 3 people get shingles in their lifetime. well that leaves 2 out of 3 people who don't. i don't know anybody who's had it. your uncle had shingles. you mean that nasty red rash? and donna next door had it for weeks. yeah, but there's nothing you can do about it. camera man: actually, shingles can be prevented. shingles can be whaaaat?
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camera man: prevented. you can get vaccinated. baby, call the doctor. camera man: hey! you can also get it from your pharmacist! 50 years or older? get vaccinated for shingles now.
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employees to vaccinate their workforce. the massive sign says: hey, joe, time to let the mandate go. stop making small businesses your vaccine police. it was paid for by job creators network. alfredo, what prompted that in particular? >> well, brian, good morning and thank you for having me. it was the feedback we were getting from our small business members across the country. we are in the middle of bring small businesses back and each time we hit any employer that was over 100 employees they would come to me and say we are concerned the labor shortage is a real issue for these small businesses and they were concerned to have employees just walk off the business and go to an employer with less than 100 employees and in some cases unemployment rates are 2%, so that's a very, very real situation they are facing on top of everything else, brian. brian: he tells us to look at the big picture, don't just look
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at people losing their job, look at the big picture and add to this which is not really a-- in new york when they put this mandate on medical workers and teachers, 34,000 people lost their jobs, went on leave or workers, coming up next, hospice workers, these are not glorious jobs, they are admirable professions and now, we are saying hit the road and no unemployment insurance. >> it's crazy and that's part of the issue as well and as you know, we are ready to sue the administration as-- we hope actually the president realizes that this is just a nonstarter. it's a major issue for small businesses and that they reverse course because again they are getting tremendous amount of feedback like you said. this is impacting healthcare workers, i mean, i have seen
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doctors being escorted out of hospitals by security. i mean, this thing is ridiculous and it's going to impact everything i mean think about the supply chain issues and the things we are facing. these companies that might have to let go 20, 30% of their workforce if they are a small business or face $14,000 fines, i mean, it's ridiculous. these small businesses are still suffering from post pandemic. we did a monthly monitor and we show only 10% of small businesses have actually recovered from the pandemic, so this is the last thing they need to deal with. brian: under 100,000 cases we know cases have dropped 20%, vaccinations, people who got at least one shot and natural immunity, they were telling us before the pandemic started it's called heard immunity and they keep moving the goalpost. >> they do and we aren't anti- vaccine, i mean, i'm personally vaccinated, but we think it's a situation or it's
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a conversation that takes place between you and your doctor and at that decision is a personal decision and should not be mandated by the federal government. this is an overreach by this administration. brian: keep in mind, some people watching around the country say that's not my city. it's coming because in california, chicago, we see what's happening and now you are asking bars and restaurants-- excuse me, can i see your vaccination card and you have a party of 10, one person doesn't have it. you have professionals told you can eat here. the host gets blistered because of this, the waiter gets in trouble and income the inspectors, is this supposed to bring the country together? >> it's ridiculous like i said and it's kind of compliance cost i need to hold small business owners for example like a restaurant owner responsible if for some reason a fake id or fake covid card was used, i mean, how are they supposed to know what is fake or real, i mean, again these mandates are
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complete overreach. that's why we put up the billboard and frankly if the president doesn't hold us back on the first day the rules are issued we will be in court. brian: i was going to play it but i would rather talk to you about it as he said he would never do this and he totally once again did not tell the truth and reversed it. >> yeah, completely disingenuous and that's the other thing we take exception with when they announced it is they said we would do this for the largest employers in the country. i don't know about you but when i hear that i think delta, coca-cola, not bob's manufacturing in sioux city, iowa. brian: airlines camper-- wait for that as tsa workers that are not vaccinated. we saw what happened this weekend for your thank you so much. >> thank you, brian. brian: thanks for the billboard. jillian, you are poised to tell us something else. gillian: family speaking out after the team involved in her stamina sentenced to the maximum
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to nine years and life with the family saying we still find words inadequate to describe the pain, trauma and suffering our family has endured since her senseless murder. she apologized for playing a role" destroying two families. she was just 18 years old. for the first time in a century, arlington national cemetery will allow visitors to walk along the tomb of the unknown soldier took the honors typically reserved for soldiers of the army third infantry regiment. spectators can lay flowers on the tomb november 9 and tent to mark the 100th anniversary. today president biden supreme court commission will meet to discuss reforming the nation's tort. the 36 member delegation releasing the first report showing members are divided about packing the court. the report comes after democrats called for an expansion following the court's conservative majority. the white house noting their release of materials are an assessment and not a recommendation. the commission plans to
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cement a final report to the president in mid november. the thrilling first postseason series between the l.a. dodgers and san francisco giants ends on an empire's controversial call. watch. >> no balls, two strikes did he go? he did and the game ends a swinging strike three. gillian: watch it, doesn't look like he broke, two outs, two strikes with the entire ruling two strikes eliminating the giants in post season with many. l.a. advances to face the braves tomorrow night. i was going to say brian what do you think, but ainsley-- brian, my initial thought, what do you think? brian: i should know this, but is that reviewable? gillian: i don't know. brian: why wouldn't it be?
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gillian: when you watch it what do you see? brian: i know i'm not an umpire. i would hate to think if i'm an umpire on a game five in the ninth inning -- gillian: joe says it wasn't. brian: keep in mind that joe is a mets fan and when they dropped out he quit watching baseball. gillian: sorry, joel. we love you. brian: let's check it was senior meteorologist janice dean is a true professional. janice: i work in percentages, 50% yes or no. let's look at the maps and i will show you what's happening across the region in terms of temperatures, it's beautiful in new york city, 65 degrees and above average for the eastern third of the country. we have a cold front moving through, looks like a tornado warning in effect for parts of northwest arkansas, so with this culprit we could see severe storms
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including tornadoes, large hail, damaging wind really from the mid- mississippi river valley towards the eastern great lakes and we watch the radar as we going today and tomorrow with a front moving through saturday night and cooler temperatures roll into the northeast on sunday. there is the forecast rainfall, watch for the potential of flash flooding with some of these storms we will toss it back to brian. brian: thank you for your 30 minutes to the top of the hour. the marine who spoke out against the chaotic u.s. exit from afghanistan and next we will talk to retired special forces green beret who says lieutenant colonel schaller's thoughts are not uncommon around-- among the rank and file. voltarl my husband's got his moves back. an alternative to pain pills voltaren is the first full prescription strength gel for powerful arthritis pain relief... voltaren the joy of movement this isn't just freight. these aren't just shipments.
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jillian: good morning we're back with quick headlines the partner of slain chicago police officer ella french is greeted by his fellow officers as released from rehab. >> [applause] jillian: wow look at that, the officer was left fighting for his life after being shot in the traffic stop gone wrong. a passenger opened fire during the stop, killing officer ella french. two brothers have been charged in the shooting.
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>> an orlando area police officer has a big birthday surprise for a local boy. j. a. fernandez getting the 13-year-old his first bike, a student resource officer surprised the boy with a bike after learning he walked miles to school every day. that's incredible. pete? pete: thank you, jillian. very cool. all right, the sentencing expected today for lt. colonelro spoke out against the afghanistan withdrawal debacle, pleading guilty to six charges including conduct un becoming an officer. our next guest calls the ordeal a testament to how frustrated our service members really are with the biden administration's chaotic pullout. let's bring in retired special forces green beret derek anderson. thanks for being here this morning and you've got a big announcement i think we'll get to that in a moment, but you've done six overseas tours, iraq, afghanistan, multiple other places. you've been in the thick of it. when you saw lt. colonel
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scheller say what he said and then the fallout now pleading guilty saying i want an honorable discharge, i don't want any jail time, what do you make of the whole thing? >> yeah, pete, you know, our service members have an obligation to comply with certain rules and regulations as it retains to their exercise of their first amendment rights of freedom of speech, and you know, the colonel here didn't comply with that but i think there's something deeper here and i think it's a testament of how arrivers members and our veterans are feeling right now and they are angry and disappointed and they're upset with the biden administration and how they handled the withdrawal, and i think the marine corps colonel's situation and his comments after the fact are an example of that and i think our service members and veterans are also upset and frustrated with the biden administration because they're not answering the question of what the way forward is in afghanistan, and if you look back at afghanistan, and how it was pre-9/11, you look at afghanistan as an open feeding
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ground for terrorist activity, and the biden administration is essentially handed it over back to the taliban and hasn't had any oversight or what have you with them and i think as we say in the military, our 50-meter target is we need to get in good graces with our allies that we abandoned when we withdrew from afghanistan and we also need to ensure china isn't becoming a dominant power because right now they are take advantage of afghanistan militarily and economically and lastly we've got to get our intelligence back on the ground and seeing what and who is operating in the environment but right now with the biden administration i just think there's an inherent lack of leadership and it's not going to happen. pete: absolutely. you mentioned frustration with afghanistan, derek. full disclosure, we served together in the army national guard as well, gotten to know you, great guy. that frustration for you has turned into a big announcement and a next mission. what is it, derek? >> yeah, pete, i'm here today to announce my run for congress,
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in virginia's 7th congressional district which is in in central virginia, and like you said, pete, i spent 10-plus years in the army as a special forces green beret with overseas deployment to iraq, afghanistan, and other places throughout the middle east and my green berets and i fought the taliban, al qaeda, and isis first-hand and i can tell you that the catalyst for me for running for congress was watching the botched and failed withdrawal in afghanistan and the lack of leadership from the biden administration during and the lack of accountability since, it's just it minimizes the sacrifices our service members and their families made over 20 years and i've also had to watch abigail spanburger live up to the promises she made on virginia 7 and she's been on the wrong side of every issue and in lockstep with nancy pelosi and the progressive democrats in washington since she's taken office and she has not best served the people of virginia seven so i spoke with my family and friends and i decided i was going to run for
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congress, to continue my service for this country and lead and serve the people of virginia seven the way they deserve. pete: i have absolutely no doubt , derrick, you will be a candidate congratulations on the announcement we're glad you did it on fox & friends. by the way, derrickandersonfor va.com. go check him out the real deal. good luck, appreciate you starting out with us. >> thanks for having me, pete. pete: nba player kyrie irving and comedian dave chapell are the celebrities remaining fearless in the face of backlash and cancel culture. why their courage is an example for men, everywhere. >> ♪ at vanguard, you're more than just an investor, you're an owner with access to financial advice, tools and a personalized plan that helps you build a future for those you love.
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>> hillary clinton visiting the california hospital where former president bill clinton is receiving treatment. a source telling fox news it was a urinary tract infection that developed into a broader infection. >> president biden's top advisor s suggest inflation and supply chain issues are only a problem for the rich. >> everything is more expensive your policies are crushing poor families. >> the vaccine mandates standoff in chicago as the police union chief calls on officers to defy the city's order. >> the city blamed for officers will not be sent home they were literally trying to push this policy through by a dick
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dictator. >> how bad is this? >> we're at an inflection point with mass migration as you've seen with the caravan. >> throws and caught! o. j. howard for the touchdown. that is going to be the final 28 -22, a tampa bay win. >> ♪ brian: tom brady two wins in five days, he really deserves a break. meanwhile, we all hear washington d.c. population of 692000, is a compact city, as you know, full of monuments that you should visit, and it's 63 degrees there now, and it is 17. pete: 17? brian: winds out of the east. right? and yes. winds out of the east.
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we're indoors right now. the average three star hotel is $162. ainsley: okay. thank you. i wonder if that's gone up, hotel prices are up. brian: good point. maybe it was 145 last week. pete: maybe. ainsley: i ordered hayden two halloween costumes last month. i still have not gotten them. it's slow. the mail is slow. pete: they're in a container in the ocean somewhere. yes. are you a three star hotel guy, brian? brian: yes if i end up with too many stars i feel like i'm living too luxurious, if i have mints on my pillow, i'm out of my league, but when it comes to the costumes, william la jeunesse was on a boat yesterday in between the barges. do you know what barge her costumes on? ainsley: i don't know. brian: maybe william la jeunesse can propel up like a pirate and grab them. ainsley: listen the focus needs ton on our essential items so i can always put together a costume but our toilet paper, paper towels, all the cleaning supplies we need, store shelves
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are empty. brian: and remember i had a suggestion, be a ghost, just cut eyes out of a sheet. ainsley: we might be doing that. pete: always there is an option. ainsley: okay, let's begin with a fox news alert. hillary clinton visiting the california hospital where her husband and former president bill clinton is receiving treatment for a non-covid related infection. brian: his team says the 75- year-old is on the mend. pete: mark meredith joins us live with the latest. reporter: pete, anistonl brian, good morning to you guys. former president clinton is said to be recovering well after an infection sent him to a southern california hospital on tuesday. this news breaking overnight after it was shared by a spokesperson. clinton, whose 75 years old, has certainly faced numerous health challenges ever since leaving the white house back in 2001. we received a statement from the hospital, university of california irvine medical center which says clinton was admitted to the hospital foreclose monitoring and and administered
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iv antibiotics and fluids and his white blood cell count is trending down and responding well. overnight cameras capturing his wife, the former first lady as well as secretary of state hillary clinton visiting him in the hospital. you could see her there with a mask on surrounded by her staff as well as her secret service team. the hospital says since this news broke overnight, the outpouring of support has been tremendous but for security purposes they don't want people dropping off gifts or going to stand outside the hospital. clinton spokesperson says doctors have said that they believe the former president is going to be able to go back home fairly soon, potentially today. we'll be watching to see that. we also know that his california doctors have been in close contact with his medical team back in new york, as for the biden administration, we're looking to see if they will have any new reaction to this. it just broke overnight. the lights just turning on here, we'll let you know when they have something to say about this pete, ainsley and brian back to you guys. brian: all right, mark, thank you. ainsley: thank you, mark. well there's a supply chain crisis that we were just talking about. gas prices are up, think about transportation.
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gas prices are up, essential items, we can't get those very easily. we don't have truck drivers on the road or enough of them at least. we can't get cars easily. if you buy used car, the prices are through the roof now because they know these cars are hard to find. traffic jams at our ports, i saw one tweet that had a picture of the traffic jams of all of these container ships in the middle of the ocean and it said they are just bidens their time. pete: the other one i saw like that that said biden finally got a boat parade. brian: i saw that too. ainsley: [laughter] it's trending on twitter, #empty shelves joe is trending on twitter but look at these images and when you go to the grocery store this is exactly what you're seeing. you guys sent in a lot of these and we appreciate that. brian: it's almost all from them. ainsley: people are wondering where is the transportation secretary, pete buttigieg? turns out he's been on paternity leave for a few months. pete: where? ainsley: paternity leave. pete: okay, since august, our
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transportation, our totally unqualified transportation secretary, who has no experience whatsoever before he took that job, decides to take i don't know, a couple of months at home on paternity with his husband after they adopted a child, instead of doing his job? so that's maybe our eyes off the ball just a little bit? brian: right. it is a time in which the transportation secretary needs to be on-the-job and that's why they want him to testify about what he's been doing and what the situation is, and why he's making smug remarks about hey if you're somebody like me who waits until last minute to go christmas shopping it's not going to work this year that's know the what this story is about. this story is about what is rotting on those ships, and when those ships are here and they can't get in, that means they can't empty out and go get more stuff, so this is a glut and something we haven't seen before , in my lifetime and probably in your lifetime either , but for joe biden, he was so quick as we see these empty shelves to blame president trump when he claims that there
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was shortages in 2020, he pointed the finger right at the then-president. listen. >> we don't have a food shortage problem. we have a leadership problem. we have plenty of food. i'd harness the restaurant independent to help get food to those who need it and help get millions of laid off workers back to work and the job. this is not rocket sign. it's leadership. pete: so let's see the leadership. ainsley: keep in mind the differences that was during the middle of a global pandemic as people were dying and a virus spreading around the world people were out of jobs because of that virus, and then, you have president biden who was elected who promised us all we would get back to normalcy. that's the issue. brian: a couple of months without paper towels we were okay during that time and president biden, who showed great leadership in his basement ainsley: gas prices were down, remember? brian: they're up 40% now. ainsley: heating, your energy is going to go up, i think your bills go up what did we say yesterday the statistics are like 54% this year.
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pete: be up to 50% on heating bills this winter alone so it was a back of leadership then and now they are explaining it today as something outside of their control. we've been hearing for months and months that the supply lines are strained, yet, here we are with ships out at sea and stuff not on our shelves. ainsley: that's what's frustrating. the supplies are there and ready to come into the united states. pete: i heard from the head of a large trucking company who services these ports and he said even if you want to turn it on 24/7 you can't. they want to unionize all of these independent operator truck owners so if they get their $3.5 billion bill passed they want to unionize the truck drivers who don't want to be unionized. you can't materialize new truck drivers in the middle of the night and they need the chassis to do it and there's so many inherent problems in the industry unfortunately i don't see things improving for a very long time. time. that's just the truck driver side of it, which you can't just say turn it on 24/7 which is why brian when you hire people to
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run government when you have no experience running anything, like joe biden, like pete buttigieg, no surprise they think they can wave a magic wand and say we'll turn it on 24/7 it'll be fine. brian: how about bring in the head of the ceo fedex and other prestigious organizations and you bring them in and your one brainstorm is we'll keep a dock over for 24 hours? are you kidding me that's your plan? meanwhile yesterday this was stunning. it was about i would think about 10:00 in the morning when ron cl ain the chief of staff, whose a harvard economics professor and former chairman of president obama's council of economic advisors he retweeted this. most of the economic problems we're facing, inflation, supply chain, et cetera, are high class problems. we wouldn't have had them if the unemployment rate is still 10%. we would instead have had a much worse problem, retweeted. what a genius. those high class problems those rich people who always want meat and eggs and gas, not
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the working class, they don't need eggs, gas, and meat. they don't need to buy a car. every, there's very few things that happen in this country that affect everyone, the pandemic, and inflation. inflation supply chain is affecting everybody that you know except for this genius from this , no offense, from this ivy league school. pete: no offense taken. brian: who believes he's got it down and ron klain agrees. ainsley: think about the poorest people in america or the middle class america who are trying to put food on the table and buy paper towels. everything is expensive now and more expensive, and that means less money to go in your bank account, less money for everything. that's, this affects every single person in the united states. pete: inflation is the most powerful hidden tax in our economy. it's the most regressive type of tax because as you said, it hits the people at the lowest end of the totem pole the most. if anything it's the opposite of the high class problem.
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it is everyone's problem. this is a classic example of the statement made from someone who lives in an ivory tower or gated community. it is not impacted by a few thousand dollars here or a couple of percentage points here , when if you're living paycheck to paycheck or a truck driver or a nurse or on fixed income, because you're a retiree ,, all of those things matter. ainsley: the white house can say whatever they want but if you go on twitter the number one thing on twitter that is trending right now is #emptyshelvesjoe. one journalist writes, the supply chain is broken, inflation is insane, gas prices are the highest in seven years. we were humiliated by the taliban. the border is a disaster, but no mean tweets, and there are still people who will vote for this nightmare, #empty shelvesjoe. pete: so #emptyshelvesjoe just passed, let's go brandon, on twitter. brian: [laughter] fantastic. pete: as the surge of illegals along the southern border
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continues, the biden administration is now forced to restart president trump's remain in mexico policy, with plans to resume as early as next month. ainsley: fox & friends enterprise reporter lawrence jones is down at the border getting a firsthand look at the situation on the ground and he joins us now. hello, good morning. reporter: hey, good morning, family. a couple of things that you guys need to know, when talking about this debate here. part of the reason why we're here is because we want to highlight what texans are going through, and what the texas dps is able to do to serve as the last defense to texas as well as the country, but if you guys remember what our reporting about a month ago when the haitian crisis came and these folks were coming from central america, we reported that the biden administration actually warned last july about these folks coming to the country illegally. well we talked to our sources yesterday and they said there is about 30,000 migrants in panama right now that are going to make their way to the country in about three weeks, either they
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can come to this del rio sector or the rio grande valley sector , so the question is, what is the biden administration going to do? this is part two, they were warned the last time. will they do something different right now, the only people here that are securing the border is the texas department of public safety, as i've told you guys before, the border patrol, they're just not allowed to do foot pursuits and get ahead of this crisis. pete: lawrence it's such a great point. they may have the opportunity to restart it. the question is, will they actually use the tools at their disposal and experience shows, they most likely will not. lawrence jones thank you so much appreciate your report this morning. reporter: thanks, guys. ainsley: well, let's talk about the cancel culture, people who are against the vaccines and speaking out publicly, people who aren't getting them, aren't getting their salaries, we talked a lot about kyrie irving who plays for the brooklyn nets. he said i'm not getting the vaccine because this is my protest against all the people losing their jobs because they're not getting vaccinated. he said i am not anti-vax, i'm
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anti-vax mandates. here is a snip-it of what he posted on instagram, we want to show you this again. >> people are losing their jobs to these mandates, people are having to make choices with their own lives which i respect, and i don't want sit here and play on people's emotions either just use logic, you know? what would you do? if you felt uncomfortable going into the season when you were promised that you have exemption s or that you didn't have to be forced to get the vaccine. this wasn't something that i for esaw coming where i prepared for and what was best for me and my family. brian: new york says he can't play but you can play in new york unvaccinated because you got this one day visitor's situation. isn't that weird? so if the nets were still in new jersey he'd be able to do it so now the nets say too disruptive to play away games or certain games like california i guess could have the visitor's thing too, so he says, the nets just
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said, we're not going to play you. you're not on the team. ainsley: how much is he losing? brian: $16 million to $18 million just in salary of the team that's got championship material, so i don't know how this is going to end up but also factor in what's going on with dave chapell and his netflix special but he's maybe the top three comedian in the country and the netflix management stands behind him but evidently he made some transgender references that people found derogatory, i haven't seen the special and a lot of people at netflix are upset that netflix is allowing this to air. have you seen dave chapell? he's a comedian whose intentionally politically correct across the spectrum. ainsley: and three people at netflix, and one of those individuals is a transgender staffer. it's being reported that they barged into a meeting with executives with vice presidents and with directors and said they were suspended, but netflix is saying we didn't suspend them
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because they have been so vocal on twitter against dave chapell, but they also go on to say dave chapell is one of the most popular stand up comedians today and we have a longstanding deal with him. his last, oh, goodness i just clicked on something else, his last special, sticks and stones, also controversial, is the most- watched, sticky and most award-winning stand up specials to date. brian: this one is called "the closer." pete: what's interesting is that dave chapell almost feels big enough in comedy to your point. he can survive this cancel pressure. i find of felt the same way about kyrie irving when he first started. he's an absolute nba super star yet they are shutting him down for the season. brian: here is jason whitlock, he weighed in with tucker last night. we gotta get in this together. you can't look at this and go oh , look what's happening to black guys, and not understand, you're next. you're next. they're in your schools right
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now with critical race theory and teaching your kids that you're the worst people on the planet. they've come for us. from the great society initiatives and the total emsacu lation of the black man and creation of the welfare state and running the man out of the black family and now we have all of these confused and clueless and disfunctional kids. i'm telling you, you're next. ainsley: how far does this go? brian: yeah, cancel culture is going crazy, and dave chapell does have enough to withstand it and he said he sat home for a year, putting together this material, so he's not backing down. pete: it's so true, whether it is cancel culture in something you say or whether it is mandates that maybe don't hit your state or your industry or your job or your company yet, eventually, it becomes so strong , they need another place to go and another sector to control, and it'll be you so stand up now for people that are coming next. brian: speaking up upstanding
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up, jillian mele is standing up jillian: i am in the spot that you have marked as your territory. brian: well that's going to be it. there's a ground swell of support. jillian: oh, it's coming down? sorry, brian. brian: are you kidding? jillian: nope. brian: just wait for the plaque jillian: we do have a serious story so while you mourn that let's talk about this fox news alert, because suicide bombers hit a shiite mosque in southern afghanistan. at least seven people are dead and another 13 are injured in the blast happening during weekly friday prayers. that's according to public health officials in the area. this comes a week after a bombing claimed by a local islamic state affiliate killed 46 people at a shiite mosque in northern afghanistan. >> police in maryland are searching for this man who shot a 12-year-old girl from the
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sunroof of a car. surveillance video shows the suspect firing from the top of a sedan. the girl was critically injured. police do not believe she was the intended target. a $2,500 reward is being offered for information in the case. >> an fda advisory committee use than use than unanimously recommended the moderna booster shot. experts recommending a half dose for that vaccine for older and at -- risk adults. the fda is expected to adopt the panels endorsement in the next few days. >> so, do you need a date to an upcoming wedding? well, tinder can help you with that . the dating app is making it possible through its new plus one feature helping users find a purchase stranger to take. users can also indicate if they want to tag along. profile mentions of plus one have increased 45% since the start of the year, exactly. what could possibly go wrong?
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pete: don't say it, brian. ainsley: leave it right there. brian: that's going right backup. pete: it's a ground swell of support? that's where i do all my interviews and it's just a matter of time. ainsley: it was a guy in college who gave himself a nickname and everyone made fun of him, it's like you don't give yourself a nickname. brian did not designate his curvy area, his corner. brian: it'll be nice, pete, for you to bring it up. pete: would you like me to bring it up? what do you think, should he get it? >> no. brian: that's good. we're going to debate this on the break. pete: chinese troops conduct beach landing drills as tensions between beijing and taiwan reach a fever pitch. is this a prelude to an invasion , retired general jack keane reacts to the chinese communist party. ainsley: and truckers in short supply, the big bonuses being
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that's cute, but my internet streams to my ride. adorable, but does yours block malware? nope. -it crushes it. pshh, mine's so fast, no one can catch me. big whoop! mine gives me a 4k streaming box. -for free! that's because you all have the same internet. xfinity xfi. so powerful, it keeps one-upping itself. can your internet do that? >> for a few days there, i actually wasn't feeling very well, and i realized it was because of what was happening in kabul and i was just so low about the way it had ended, if you will, and i guess the other feeling that i had was that it probably did not need to have
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turned out that way. certainly in the military considers the withdrawal the most dangerous part of an operation, but they really had a lot of time to plan. brian: they did, former secretary of defense robert gates for obama and bush sharing his thoughts on the biden administration's afghanistan withdrawal. it made him sick. let's bring in fox news senior strategic analyst retired four star general jack keane. general, i feel like we talked in this slow-moving disaster which is afghanistan. what's the significance of him sitting there with anderson cooper on cbs, on 60 minutes saying that? >> yeah, well i think there's clearly significant bipartisan support for the fact that afghanistan was a debacle, and we did, indeed, surrender this country and walked away from an allie that we were supporting for 20 years and we now have a terrorist organization running the country , and that's certainly not in our interest nor in our allie's interest, and
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definitely not in the interest of the afghan people, so yeah, you can understand former secretary of state, secretary of defense gates is feeling. he must have signed during his tenure as secretary of defense for two presidents the war in afghanistan was going on at the time, hundreds of letters, to gold star families about the death of their loved ones and so i'm sure it's personal for him, and i can understand the anguish that he has, because the american people feel that anguish. nobody wanted this outcome, brian. that's for sure, to include this administration certainly wants this outcome but they put in place the conditions that got us this outcome, and therefore, they deserve the accountability that they're certainly getting and will continue to get as a result of their strategic failure. brian: i'd just go back to that excerpt to this book, joe biden has been wrong on every national security and defense issue over the last 40 years and he said that when he was secretary of
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defense and joe biden was vice president and once again, he keeps his perfect record in bob gates mind and sadly especially after we watched those generals testify and secretary of defense saying not my plan. not what i suggested. essentially saying it's on you, president biden, and just lastly real quick because i want to get to the china topic. since that time the taliban is negotiating at doha, at which time they are demanding for us to unfreeze their money from the world bank, give them aid and they have not said they will divorce themselves from al qaeda , or stop them from commit ting any terrorist activities. where is our win in this? where is our leverage in this? >> we don't have much leverage here, frankly. we gave that up when we made the decision not to keep our modest forces there 2,500. that was always our leverage, and it's gone. yes, we have frozen their funds and that does give us some leverage, but it's not what we
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used to have. the taliban are doing exactly what they said they would do. they're running a monolithic government where the ideology is theres and they're not sharing power with anybody in afghanistan. women have no role in their society and any consequence and they're already executing that and they're running down everybody who still is in the country that's had a previous association with us, or our allies, and as you stated, they certainly are not rejecting the al qaeda, if anything, they're certainly supporting the al qaeda and they will grow and become a threat once again to the united states. that's how sad this really is. brian: i'm watching this video and we can queue it up now of a beach invasion reenactments or whatever they o're doing, drill s, to maybe stage what many people think be an invasion of taiwan, talking about u.s. mainland china. should we be concerned that china's very close to invading taiwan? >> yes, i think the timeframe is changing. our former commanders in the
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region who knew this situation well said that we're six to 10 years away from that. i think that window is closing. next year is the olympics in beijing. well in china. it's going to be greater than one city certainly, and the second thing is the national part of congress is taking place in the fall of the year, it's where they meet every five years and they will certainly enshrine president xi going forward so not likely in the near term, but yes, i think the risk of war will be high and we've got to put military capacity into this region in an urgent way. we've got to get past the rhetoric and get that capability into the region. that's what president xi's generals are paying attention to not words, and taiwan has to up gun themselves so does japan and so does australia. that has to be done with the sense of urgency because that is how we prevent a war. brian: i just hope the sound was up at the white house and
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the pentagon when you said what you just said because it's absolutely invaluable intelligence. thank you, general. >> great talking to you, brian. brian: meanwhile 30 minutes before the top of the hour, chicago police, taking a stand against mayor lori lightfoot's vaccine mandate. next we'll talk to the union police chief. bogeys on your six, limu. they need customized car insurance from liberty mutual so they only pay for what they need. woooooooooooooo... we are not getting you a helicopter. only pay for what you need. ♪ liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty. ♪
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ainsley: today chicago's vaccine mandate takes effect but in a city surging with violent crime what does this mean for the men and women who keep it all safe? john is the president of the chicago fraternity of police and he joins us now. good morning to you, john. >> good morning, ainsley. ainsley: so she says this is your option, you either can get vaccinated or file for an exemption if you do that and choose not to get vaccinated then you have to get tested twice a week. why are you against that? >> well because the policy for first of all is schizophrenic. the teachers have a different policy, the teachers are literally you're vaccinated or you get tested. you don't have to report your vaccine status. we have a mandate to report our vaccine status by midnight tonight. doesn't make any sense. ainsley: so you don't want, you're asking people not to go on the city's portal, and report whether or not they've been vaccinated or not. >> correct.
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ainsley: okay, so what are your police officers saying? how many are vaccinated or choosing not to? >> the numbers we have are probably around half are not, but even the ones that are still , like myself, believe that a forced mandate is absolutely wrong. ainsley: well you have a good argument. why are they making police officers report their vaccination status and not teachers? what is her response to that? >> don't worry about it. don't look over there. listen to what i say. everything from this mayor is a dictatorship. this is all about policy from the top. there was no public outcry from this policy to take effect. she just decided she was going to do it and push it on the entire city workforce across-the-board. there's low cooperation and this is just not the police department. you include firemen, first responders, we've gotten calls from labors unions, streets and sand, water department, you name it, everybody across-the-board is up in arms about this mandate but it doesn't matter. ainsley: she said no one is sent
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home immediately it takes a few days for them to figure out who is and who is not complying but if you don't agree to take the vaccine or get tested twice a week, "we will move forward and put people on a no-pay status." how will your officers pay their bills? >> well, i guess we're going to see how that works out because we had a meeting the other night , and our lodge had never been more filled with members. they are literally engaged in this fight going forward. they were willing to go into a no-pay status at midnight tonight and get sent home, if that's what was going to happen and get locked out by the city. i don't know that's going to change very much, if not they are threatening suspension or even termination. the reality is we have a profession nobody else wants to do right now. they cannot get anybody to go into this police academy but yet here she is villifying the police, yet again in a city that has over 185 expressway shootings this year alone, over 280 kids shot this year alone, and she acts like there's nothing else going on but this covid.
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ainsley: i hear there are 1,000 police vacancies in chicago, crime is surging and so are homicides. thank you for everything you did and working through the pandemic , john. >> thanks, ainsley. ainsley: we did reach out to mayor light foot's office for comment but we didn't hear back. 7:37 on the east coast moms and dads rejecting virginia democrat terry mccauliffe's views on education. a look at the numbers that show parents want to be heard. rachel and sean duffy are going to sound off on that, next. ♪ i see trees of green ♪ ♪ red roses too ♪ ♪ i see them bloom ♪ ♪ for me and you ♪ ♪ and i think to myself ♪ ♪ what a wonderful world ♪ a rich life is about more than just money. that's why at vanguard, you're more than just an investor, you're an owner so you can build a future for those you love.
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for governor, under pressure, over who should be in charge of the kids education. ainsley: despite his slim lead over republican candidate in a new fox news poll, participants are sending a very clear message that they want to say in what their children are being taught in the schools. pete: here to react fox & friends weekend host, rachel campos-duffy and former congressman and fox news contributor sean duffy. they are in the house, great to see you both. >> good morning. pete: so rachel i'll start with you. do you think this virginia governor's race, is it, will it end up hinging on education and are parents fired up about it to vote that way? rachel: yeah, i absolutely think this is the number one issue. if you talk to people, every parent says the most important thing in their life is their family, is their kids, and we're not a communist nation. we don't just hand our children over to the state to take care of. we are our first most important primary teachers as parents to our children, and we entrust our
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children to the schools, with control, to teach our children, and they've broken that trust. especially in loudoun county. loudoun county has become sort of this touch stone of what's happening across the country and it is not a conservative place. it's a liberal place, where you know, 70 some percent of the parents want their kids back so if they're upset about what's happening with schools you bet the rest of the country is saying we want control back. these are our children. brian: and sean just for the record you haven't handed your kids over to the state you have the older ones watching the younger ones for the second, correct? >> 100%, brian. brian: fox news poll here's the exact stat, the question, parents telling schools what to teach is that okay? all say that they should, 50%, all say they should not, 40%, parents say they should 57%, parents say they should not, 34% so, obviously, they should have a role and his comments were not
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walked back. does that surprise you? >> well, it doesn't. i think he is in too deep but brian if you look at those poll numbers if you're a parent you want to have a say in your kid's education, 57-34 but the fact we're having a conversation right now about who should decide what our kids are taught means we aren't teaching our kids the basics of math and science and english that this liberal leftist ideology is coming into our school and now there's a debate of what that should look like is a problem. you showed video of him walking out of the building being asked a question of who if not parents should be in charge of education i've been in that situation, brian. i can tell you when you're in a no-win situation you dodge and divert and get in your car and you get away, because the answer is for 57% of the voters believe that they should be in charge so get in the car and drive away. rachel: he also chastised the people for not, the reporter for not wearing a mask. i mean, his whole campaign is an
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exercise in hypocrisy, just go to the internet. there's images and pictures of him on an amway train without a mask. he's inside buildings without a mask. that was again as sean said typical political way to dodge. brian: i won't go on the internet any more. ainsley: rachel and sean i'm holding your new book called " american christmas" tell us about it. rachel: we're kind of hosting this book, but it's really about all of you! brian and ainsley and steve doocy is in there as well, all kinds of fox people are in it as well, lawrence jones we're just going through everyone's christmas experience. >> bret baier and maria bartiromo, so this is we knew that joe biden was going to mess up christmas or fauci was going to mess up christmas. rachel: we're saving christmas. >> we're doing it in november, but now we're doing it in october. rachel: order early. >> it's not celebrating the holidays this is a celebration of christmas and a
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lot of your favorite fox personalities talk about their earliest memories of christmas and ainsley i read your portion of the book which is outstanding ainsley: thank you. so this is the cover if you want to go and pre-order the book you can do that now, and we'll make sure you get it in time for christmas. ainsley: we appreciate you all. rachel: pre-order on amazon, now is the time to do it as sean said. we have the supply chain issue so order now. pete buttigieg is off a paternity leave which might help a little bit. brian: and sean when you have time could you read my story? >> yeah, no. >> [laughter] rachel: he just read it last night for bed time stories. ainsley: actually, in all seriousness it was wonderful to be a part of it because i sent it to my entire family so that they could read our story and all the memories o of my mom, grandmother, my sister, me, all in the kitchen cooking for the entire family, my uncle, my dad, their roles at christmas and just told fun stories so thanks for doing that. pete: very cool. rachel: absolutely, it's
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christmas, not holidays. pete: that's exactly right, all-american christmas, it's a fox news book, so check it out and by the way rachel, in case you didn't know, this is what's coming up on the weekend for you and i and will. rachel: all right pete: governor kristi noem, lara trump, dan bongino, clay travis, leo terrell, i hope that meets with your approval. ainsley: i have a feeling she always does her homework. pete: yeah, yeah, she does her homework comes in with all her stuff prepared. rachel you're the best, sean great to see you. >> goodbye, guys. brian: let's check in with janice dean because she promises to do the weather with a jack hammer. >> no jack hammer so far, shhhh h. it's very quiet we love it. let's take a look at the maps across the east coast, temperatures are above average, we do have a cold front that's going to come visit us this weekend bringing showers and thunderstorms and the potential for some of that colder weather that's out west. we won't be cold enough for snow that's the good news unless you like that kind of thing. we do have the potential for showers and thunderstorms to cause flash flooding in some of
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the areas so just keep that in mind and there's a look where we could see the stronger storms later on this afternoon. pete and ainsley, and brian, to you. ainsley: we heard the jack hammer. pete: i think that was spliced in maybe. >> was that brian's grumbling tummy? brian: [laughter] ainsley: thank you so much. pete: all right well, major u.s. ports now clogged with cargo shipments partly due to a lack of truckers. brian: it's a high class problem. next we'll talk to the head of a company looking to fix the supply chain crunch, by offering big bonuses. hello, for the last few years, i've been a little obsessed
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pete: with the mounting supply chain crisis, the countries in dire need for truck drivers. our next guest has been sounding the alarm for months, and is offering huge incentives to bring workers back. now, raising the stakes, to 8,000 dollars signing bonuses. joining us now is the president of the nebraska land daniel roma noff. thanks so much for being here. you were on our program earlier this summer saying we've got a truck shortage. we need more drivers, now the bonus is up to $8,000. are people signing up as a
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result and where are we in that shortage in your mind? >> hey, pete. yeah, so back in may, we started off and i came on here talking about how we have a $4,000 sign- on bonus and that started going back into march when this got bad and started at maybe 1,000 and we kept bringing it up to 4,000 and it seemed to help and just the competition, it just keeps getting so bad and it puts us all of us employers in such a difficult place, because it's just turned into a bidding war to bring employees in, so to really run our business right way and for any business to do it we're put in a position where we need to spend the money and give these incentives, and so we've increased it now not only to $ 8,000 signing bonus but a $ 4,000 referral bonus so we're paying $$12,000 to hire every driver that we can find, and as we've learned, we've been hiring these employees and these drivers coming in throughout the summer and throughout this process, and it's not just
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about getting them and hiring them, but it's how do you keep them and keep them happy in such a difficult job market so as one driver might come in and receive a sign-on bonus for us you have another company doing the same, so our biggest investment has actually been how do we keep everyone here and keep them happy and working with us, and it's not just compensation, it's work of life, we made major investments in our trucks making sure we have the most up-to-date fleet and electric pallete jacks and we actually do a lot of things just to make their experience more comfortable in the company and enjoyable, we actually became best best company to work for in new york state for 2021 and what we're learning is the investment is not just this major major sign- on bonus but also keeping everyone here. pete: absolutely that's when there's a competitive job market you have to do that. daniel real quick 30 seconds we're almost out of time. when you look at what's happening at our ports, do we have enough supply there of drivers to address unloading ships and as our supply chain
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backs up? >> absolutely not. the port is a terrible terrible situation. i could tell you right now we import product from australia, new zealand, we're getting held up at the ports, and all that meat product has to go into a usa inspection house and when it goes there, you're waiting on the inspector and they aren't coming in, we're going to get hit with different situations there. pete: then waiting in the water and then here, and with perishable products too, my goodness what a crisis. daniel, thank you so much. good luck. appreciate it. >> thank you. pete: you got it. an update us again, please. coming up robert durst sentenced to life in prison for murder, life without parole for the series of the " jinx" we'll bring on judge jeanine pirro in a moment. l deal, ya gotta focus on the bread layers. king's hawaiian sliced bread makes everything better! ♪ (angelic choir) ♪
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healthmarkets service is free. dog barks ok bunker! ... he really doesn't want you to miss the december 7th deadline. don't wait. save time. find the plan that fits you. call the number on your screen now, or visit healthmarkets.com healthmarkets >> hillary clinton visiting the california hospital where former president bill clinton is receiving treatment. a source telling fox news it was a urinary tract infection that developed into a broader infection. he is responding to antibiotics well. >> the vaccine mandate standoff in chicago, after police union chief calls on officers to defy the city's order. >> everything from this mayor is a dictatorship. this is all about policy. there was no public outcry for this policy. >> democrats sending in their heavy hitters to help boost the race for virginia governor. >> we're going to do everything we can. we believe in the agenda he's representing. >> the border crisis has exploded on to the biden
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administration. >> how bad is it? >> we're at an inflection point with mass migration, as you've seen with the caravan. >> no balls two strikes and flo res, did he go? he did! the los angeles dodgers are headed to the national league championship series. >> ♪ pete: such a shot basically straight of the sun, right there brian: thanks for the play-by-play. ainsley: it looks like the northern star. pete: a little bit might be or just the sun. ainsley: it shaped like what we imagined was over bethlehem. pete: the north star, that's a fantastic point and there's ted and ted is coming in. by the way, atlanta winds out of the east, also, brian. brian: [laughter] they are. pete: 64 degrees, oh, man i
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don't have the celsius. brian: i go kelvin, minus 276. pete: you go kelvin? ainsley: when we intro with a certain city he's known for telling the strangest information. pete: well you usually go zip codes. atlanta? no? brian: well i don't memorize the zip codes but i would say this. pete has an interesting approach to his hello. there's the sun! and there's ted! pete: [laughter] brian: like, okay. thank you for that. pete: it's 8:00 it's just a warm up for the weekend. brian: 30319. if you're writing a long form letter. pete: and brian, you know i'll try to do better this weekend on the start of mine. brian: i would hope so, pete, prepare. that's all i ask. pete: i thought i had the wind speed in atlanta. i thought that was good enough. clearly not i need to drink more caffeinated water. brian: right. looking for a sponsorship?
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okay. ainsley: happy friday, everyone. we made it through the work week pete: happy friday, everybody. and we do start with a fox news alert. hillary clinton visiting the california hospital where her husband and former president bill clinton is receiving treatment for a non-covid related infection. ainsley: his team says the 75- year-old is on the mend. brian: mark meredith joins us live with the latest. reporter: brian, ainsley, pete, good morning to you guys. well former president clinton is said to be doing a lot better after an infection sent him to the hospital in southern california on tuesday. the former president spokesperson confirmed a lot of these details overnight saying clinton whose 75 years old whose faced numerous health challenges is doing a lot better after this you're o logical infection. we got a statement from the hospital, the university of california irvine medical center says the former president was admitted to the hospital foreclose monitoring and administered iv antibiotics and fluids after two days of
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treatment his white blood cell count is trending down and responding well. overnight cameras capturing his wife, the former first lady, hillary clinton visiting clinton at the hospital. you can see her there in the middle of the screen, surrounded by her aid, as well as secret service detail the hospital says since this news first broke overnight, they've seen a lot of people stop by try to offer well wishes , drop-off gifts but because of security concerns they don't want to see people do that. doctors say that they've been in touch with clinton's medical team back in new york. we don't have an exact time yet but of course also looking to see if president biden may have any well wishes to send to the former president. president biden will be heading up to connecticut later on this morning and brian since you asked it's 63 degrees here and it is beautiful in the nation's capitol. brian: and do you know the direction of the wind? reporter: [laughter] you caught me on live tv, that's not good. i worked so hard for you. brian: i know it was good but you can say, not windy.
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pete: toss some grass up. ainsley: brian knows the answer because at 6:00 a.m. we opened with a shot of d.c. and winds out of the east. pete: thank you, mark. ainsley: let's talk about what's happening in chicago because today is the last, today's the day you have to turn in on their database if you work for the city you have to say whether or not you've been vaccinated, if you do want to opt out, if you want an exemption, you have to agree to testing twice a week. this is all from lori lightfoot, the mayor of chicago, and a lot of people are really upset about this , because there are many that don't want their personal information on a city's database , including john catsenz ara. he was on our show earlier, and he made a really good point, listen to this. >> the policy for first of all is schizophrenic. the teachers have a different policy, the teachers are literally you're vaccinated or you get tested you don't have to report your vaccine status.
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we have a mandate to report our vaccine status by midnight tonight. everything from this mayor is a dictatorship. this is all about policy from the top. there was no public outcry for this policy to take effect. this is just the police department. you name it, everybody across-the-board is up in arms about this mandate. ainsley: we said what does lori lightfoot say to you when you said look, the teachers don't have to do this. why do the police officers have to do this and she said to him, don't look to them. don't look to the other side. just do what you're supposed to do. what they do doesn't matter. brian: it's that union that supports me as opposed to the union you represent. the police chief just his words says just listen to what the mayor says, but the union president feels differently. i think to have a testing option , i think that's relatively fair to have a testing option. i get it, to say mandate, you're fired. that's my big problem with it but i also understand too, these police officers want natural
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immunity factored in and most of them don't want to go through that procedure. pete: by the way you point out the double standards of different unions and members of congress are exempted, their staff are exempted, somehow the post office -- brian: that's under reported. pete: very rarely brought up certain portions of the federal government got carved out. do you know why? because they had the right political connections and you're right. certain courts of union types of unions get exceptions others do not that's where they drop the hammer if they decide to and ultimately revealing your personal health information used to be a sacred right. now people walk up to me and every once in a while someone asks are you vaccinated and i just look at them and say it's not any of your business. one way or the other it's not your business. it's my personal health information. how do we turn that cart back around? ainsley: she did say, lori lightfoot said if you don't agree to the vaccine or the testing twice a week if you don't go on the database and tell them, we will move forward and put people on a no-pay status. brian: so for the longest time we heard 75% is herd immunity and we get close to that we'll be set. then you factor in the natural
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immunity, the antibodies that we have are born with or got, because we had this thing called asim to not ic spread, a lot of people don't know it when we took the antibody test, mysteriously the antibody tests disappeared. we used to see them a lot, we never talk about therapeutics, only vaccinations. we are right now over 70% of us have at least one shot, over 60% of us as a country, people eligible, 18 and up are fully vaccinated but that's not good enough for the president who came out for six minutes and yelled for a while, essentially about this. >> we're down to 66 million, still unacceptable high number of unvaccinated people from almost 100 million in july. vaccination requirements should not be another issue that divides us. that's why we continue to battle misinformation that's out there, & companies an communities are setting up their stepping up as well, to combat the
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misinformation. pete: he stumbled through it long enough to say more mandates are coming and shaming everybody who has not chosen to get the vaccine, remember the percentage brian, you made a good point it was 70, 75, 80% herd immunity then we're out of the woods and now we're there plus natural immunity, no one talks about it. everyone needs mandates. brian: how about we don't ever have good news? the number of cases have dropped 26%. hospitalizations dropped precipitously, basically it's the upper northwest of the states that are the problem right now, they are going to get the focus to drop there and i think in 36 states, the number s are dropping specifically, and if you look at uk and israel, it is going to get further down and if you talk to these doctors the next variant coming in nothing seems close to the delta variant. ainsley: ron desantis says he's vowing to sue joe biden if he forces this , companies over 100 employees, he's saying should get vaccinated. he says let's not let biden come in and takeaway the jobs of the people who are worked hard
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throughout the pandemic. brian: over 20,000 medical workers have been left their jobs since the mandate in new york. 8,000 which are in home care, define that as a very much in need. next up, hospice workers. so you gotta tell me that we're going to do this who hospice workers? pete: pilots, tsa agents, thank you all for being heros during the pandemic. now you're zero. brian: and thanksgiving no tsa? the pilots, the workers, this weekend when you were on southwest that could be coming to an airline near you. ainsley: let's talk about what's happening on the southern border two sisters ages four and six are found wandering alone near the arizona-mexico border, releasing these images as they work to reunite the girls with their family. the sisters were found in an area officials say is a popular crossing point for un accompanied minors. pete: as the crisis at the southern border continues, lawrence jones getting a firsthand look at the situation on the ground visiting a train yard in texas where troopers
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catch stow away illegals. brian: lawrence jones joins us from bracketville, texas. reporter: hey, good morning, family. we have been here at the border all week, showing you this crisis, and part of the reason why we're in this train yard is because this is what a lot of legals use to get inside of the country. the people that are responding to those illegals trying to enter into the country, the texas department of public safety, special operations unit. take a look. for the state of texas the border fight is bigger than the physical barrier. it is the tools that the illegal s use to get into the country. trains, and some of them surrender themselves willingly and the other ones they run, whose there to meet them? the texas department of public safety, dps. >> that train will come in, we'll put a guy in the tower and the guy in the tower will see people sitting in these open
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top containers and as the train starts to roll people are jump ing off. >> some of the troopers actually get up top on the train . reporter: we're currently in a train yard in the state of texas where the texas department of public safety special operations unit are conducting inspections of this train yard. if you see here, you see a bottle of water from migrants illegally entering the country, and even clothes, it shows the desperation they have to get into the country. they hide under the train here, right here, and you can look here, you'll see broken ties, this is once connected and you wonder how they got the tools to be able to do this. they bring that with them. >> some will conceal knives and
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things like that in their shoes. they will hide the knife in their shoe, for example. >> they were sitting right here , right against the wheel. >> yes, sir, oh, yeah. one bad move. >> wow. >> where are you from? >> honduras. >> how long have you been traveling on the train? >> i don't know. >> how long have you gone without getting water? it's okay. >> dps arrested over 1,200 migrants since july for trespassing. >> they came from two different countries? >> honduras and el salvador. >> charged with criminal trespassing. >> right, this particular area, we are able to enforce the criminal trespass initiative
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which governor abbott launched and right now these individuals will be charged with state violation. reporter: you're the senior man in charge of lone star. tell m ewhat your instructions are with this mission. >> okay, sure, the texas national guard, we're supporting our law enforcement partners. we are mobilizing additional personnel, equipment, as well as capabilities under the direction of governor abbott in order to deal with this crisis. reporter: how bad is it, general >> we're at an inflection point , because i think we're out of illegal immigrants, it's a mass migration, as you've seen with the caravans that hit del rio. reporter: we've already heard there's another wave of migrants coming this way. are we prepared to handle that with the current resources that we have? >> yes, we are, it's hard to say if you're prepared when you talk about caravans of 60,000, that's a tall feet, however we're continuing to mobilize additional personnel and equipment and capabilities, well
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in the thousands of people. reporter: so you're ready for this task? >> we are ready. ainsley: lawrence? reporter: guys after that ride- along yesterday, we had the opportunity to also go to the prison where they are processed and get their court date. that one individual that you saw that was emotional and going through obviously hadn't gotten food in days and water had to be transported to the hospital, these trains that they jump on and jump off on, there has been legs amputated, arms, limbs, it is a very dangerous process and if you talk off the record as well as the border patrol, part of the frustration that they have is the biden administration's encouraging these folks to come into the country, and these people are just listening to that administration. they think that it's pretty cool for the president of the united states to do that knowing good and well that they have to enforce the laws that are on the
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books currently. i'm going to send it back to you guys in new york. brian: what's so interesting is griff is where it starts, in panama, and they are saying the same thing in panama, that they are saying in new mexico, that they are saying at the border, is that they got the go sign a year ago, that the administration was changing, the opportunity is now and they're coming here. reporter: that's exactly right and there's about 30,000 folks, we got tips from our sources yesterday where we were talking about and they're waiting to see which direction are they going to go, are they going to come here to the del rio sector or go to the rio valley? they think they are coming here to the rio vector. that's where the haitians came about three weeks ago, so they are saying they anticipate them to come here, again. the question is, what is the biden administration going to do this time? this is their second opportunity to get it right the first wave they were warned back in july and they did absolutely nothing to stop it. brian: our drone team exposed it or they would have been really caught.
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thanks so much lawrence, appreciate it. ainsley: keep in mind he's in office for three more years at least. we're going to continue to see these stories. brian: he gives a six minute get a shot speech and runs away he's never held accountable. nobody else asks him these questions. ainsley: well he doesn't answer the questions. pete: but why does he think he has to when he ran a whole campaign from a basement? there's never been a moment. ainsley: jillian has headlines. jillian: speaking of being held accountable whose responsible for this because now we have kilmeade, and hegseth angle which makes no sense. pete: you moved it? what about pete's place. jillian: that's better. brian: we're in the process. ainsley: we talked about this. what be yours? jillian: this is my main spot. pete: your spot is over there. jillian: i do. all right ainsley: rip that off. rip that one off. pete: we'll sort this out later in the show. ainsley: you can join me that whole downstairs, brian that is
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ainsley's area. jillian: [laughter] the whole studio is ainsley's area. jillian: all right, let me get to headlines while you guys sort that out and let's start with this. republicans demanding transportation secretary pete buttigieg testify before congress amid the nation's supply chain crisis. this as politico revealed he was on paternity leave since mid- august but he reportedly returned on october 7. john deere workers go on strike for the first time in 35 years, over 10,000 workers across 14 production plants walked off the job of the farm equipment maker. they want an improved standard of living and better retirement benefits than work environments. they say the company, "failed to present an agreement that met those demands." the company says it is committed to a favorable outcome for all parties. >> well, november is around the corner and the pringles mascot is getting ready. the chip company announcing the pringles guy will be embracing the no shave november
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trend they released this picture showing the mascot snipping off his iconic stash for a good cause. november aims to raise awareness for mental health issues that's a look at your headlines, we'll send it back to you. ainsley: that's pretty creative. thank you. pete: at the end or at the beginning, or both? jillian: i think it's no shave november. so why does a female know this? ainsley: you let it grow out and then you shave it. brian: i still remember the commercial when pringles first found the way to stack chips, i remember thinking we can do anything in this country. >> [laughter] brian: the pringles people say we can do better and get more chips in a cylinder and then it was genius. ainsley: it is great packaging. stuff it in your purse or bag and you just go. you don't worry about your chips pete: how good are pringles? they're so good. brian: they look so much alike. they do. ainsley: they are all the same. 8:19 on the east coast companies
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across the country offering big bucks to drive big trucks. pete: we'll talk more about that and more with geraldo rivera. there he is. brian: [laughter] >> ♪ oh! are you using liberty mutual's coverage customizer 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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experiencing, and affecting all ox us here to react fox news correspondent at-large correspondent i should say, geraldo rivera, the same guy that you see all over the channel great to see you, geraldo. geraldo: you too, buddy. brian: first off how do we solve this? geraldo: i have a plan. right now you have to be 21 years old to drive a long-haul rig. why? my daughter was 16 years old and got her license she's already as good a driver as i am. i think 18, 19, 20-year-olds that's the pool of available potential drivers. this is a great job. this is a ticket out of the ghetto. this is a way to get a six figure job. brian: and see the world. geraldo: and to do that as well and to be independent and run your life, and these truckers now, you know, the gps, they know exactly where every vehicle is, how fast the drivers are driving. there's enough monitoring with proper training, the school here mentioned in the piece. i think you've got to escalate covid has disrupted everything.
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the supply chain not just the goods but also personnel. people who were going to be drivers and then their companies shutdown or one problem or other, now that is am had in the rear view mirror, let's open it up to the 18, 19, 20-year-old s in social life, in the inner city. the hardest years are to get the kids through. they graduate high school and it's a great accomplishment but now they are 18 years old and what are they going to do? this will be a great place. you establish these schools, you get out of high school, your tuition in trucking school is free if your family is below the poverty line, get these kids working with great reflexes. brian: and they have to flood the schools with recruiters don't you think? geraldo: that has to be part of it, but i had a welding job at my house recently, and the weld ers came in, they were high school graduates, and just
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mentioned we were talking about welding as a job. they're making 80 grand, 90 grand a year. these are great blue collar jobs are great jobs there. many of them are union jobs not all of them but they're great jobs but i submit to you this is the plan. this is the available, let's give these kids something to do, give them a career that they can really make a living doing and help the full benefits and help america's shelves get restocked. brian: since cops came back on fox, everybody is talking about it. tell me about the latest episode that we can see on fox nation. geraldo: this is a vivid, kinetic, energetic, reality. it's not a reality show. it is reality and so when you watch these producers going with cops and you never know what's going to happen. you never know if the person they stop maybe it's for a taillight or whatever it is has a gun in his or her lap or is loaded with drugs or it's like jumping off a diving board.
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you don't know if there's water in the pool or not, but it's the men and women in blue, the thin blue line protecting civilization from anarchy and i am delighted to be working with these cops, delighted to have helped launch this series over three decades ago, and now it's back, never should have gone anywhere, and if you want exciting, real live television this is it. brian: sadly we have a lot of crime to choose from. foxnation.com go there, download the app and see cops might be one of the most popular things we've done there. thanks, geraldo, great job. geraldo: my pleasure. brian: coming up straight ahead , judge jeanine pirro, arch en it any of geraldo rivera has been cracking cases, now she wants your help and she gives us the low-down coming up. >> ♪
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ainsley: it is hispanic heritage month and we are taking a closer look at those making a mark in our hispanic community. fox news correspondent alicia acunia is here now with a story of a boy from puerto rico who grew up to be the nation's top doctor. how cool is that? reporter: hi, good morning, ainsley. living such an accomplished life his family immigrated to a small town in puerto rico during
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the 1800s. that's where garcia's grandparents inspired in him a passion for science and medicine >> it's one small step for man , one giant leap for mankind. >> watching the 1969 apollo 11 moon landing from a small dairy town in puerto rico, inspired a young garcia to take an interest in science. >> we have one of the few tv's at that time in the neighborhood , in my grandmother's house. reporter: garcia's grandparents taught him to question and innovate but his biggest inspiration came from devastation. >> my grandmother died from ovarian cancer. i got mad at that time but then i said, let me make a solution out of this. reporter: garcia specialized in obstetrics and became an obgyn surgeon and then went on to become the highest-ranking
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medical doctor in the united states, as the first u.s. assistant secretary of health. >> people know what that means, you're the boss of the surgeon general, and essentially, you oversee the entire public health system. reporter: garcia can claim any number of hispanic firsts, including the first hispanic to hold the rank of four star admiral in the u.s. public health service and the first hispanic commissioner of health in connecticut where he managed the anthrax scare in 2001. >> we are investigating everything. reporter: following his work in government, dr. garcia kept up his ambitious fight against cancer joining m. d. anderson cancer center moon shot program with a mission of making a giant leap for patients. >> the moon shot is to discover within three years what you can do in 15. reporter: with dr. garcia's newest venture, a company called ambitna, the goal is to use ai and algorithms to create more diversity in clinical
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research. >> we are underrepresented, hispanics are underrepresented, african americans are underrepresented, unless you're connected with a system and the system is a great system, you will have no access to a clinical trial. reporter: dr. garcia is the chief medical officer at american express and sits on various boards but he still finds time to prioritize family. >> i'm very proud of them. reporter: his hispanic fraternity. >> it's all about order, about heritage, about serving. reporter: and writing. >> this is the main character in the book that i'm writing. reporter: inspired a children's book and dr. garcia's experiences inspired a book on leadership, both due out this winter. >> god has provided me with so many opportunities. when you come from hispanic and puerto rican, having the lessons learned from my family allow me every opportunity i have been
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given to be able to try to help the system or the ecosystem and try to create innovation. reporter: as the u.s. assistant secretary for health, dr. garcia took a team to afghanistan in 2008 to combat a more than 50% c -section mortality rate for mothers and infants at a women's and children's hospital in kabul. now he works daily to try to protect the midwives he worked with there. ainsley? ainsley: wow what an interesting story. thank you so much, alecia. well he said he killed them all, and now robert durst is going to spend the rest of his life behind bars, judge jeanine pirro is fighting for justice in the case since she was a prosecutor. we'll talk to her about that, and more, next. >> ♪
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brian: a long legal saga comes to an end as 78-year-old robert durst was sentenced yesterday to life in prison for the murder of his friend susan burman back in 2000. prosecutors accused the new york real estate of killing her because she was planning to tell authorities she faked an alibi for hit durst after his first wife vanished in 1982. pete: he inspired endless media coverage and in 2015 became the subject of the hbo crime documentary. ainsley: as a prosecutor she investigated the disappearance of his wife and even wrote a book about it and she joins us now. good morning. >> good morning. ainsley: this took up a portion of your career didn't it? >> well it was one of many cases but the way it started was very interesting. i was sitting in my office one
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day and rest gators came in and said boss we got a tip that kathy durst's body is in a lake in salem. i said who is that and little did i know he was from one of the wealthiest real estate families in new york city and thus began the saga where i reopened a cold case where a fourth year medical student went missing in 1982, but now, i'm the d. a. in 1999 and i just, i felt a kinship with her, because she was a medical school when i was in law school, i mean, you know, and i saw pictures, she wore the same bellbottoms, had the same kind of hair, the same thing and i said no fourth year medical student is just going to dropout especially back then, when you fought so hard to get into medical school, and so i began the investigation, and durst went into the new york city police department with a magazine with his father's picture on it, wealthy guy, said you know, i haven't seen my wife in five days but i think she ran off with another guy.
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nypd guy says the detective says yeah, sounds reasonable to me, she probably ran off with another guy, and that's when i hit the ceiling and i said not a chance. we were about to speak to susan burman before he went out and actually killed her execution style, and i remember calling police commissioner in los angeles saying you gotta get this guy, he killed susan burman but in the meantime , he killed his neighbor in galveston, texas, and chopped the body up and said i had to chop the body up because jeanine pirro, she was chasing me, that's the defense attorney, no one would believe me so i chopped his body up and put it in the galveston bay there, and he chopped it up, i mean, this guy knew what he was doing and they said jeanine pirro made he do it so i was the bad guy for years and of course i was right in the end so now he's going to prison for life and money and power will not save him. pete: wow. well, that's a perfect segway
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into your new series on fox nation. it is "can you solve it"? you've solved many. this is here is a trailer for the series, watch. >> together we'll break down a real life crime as it unfolds to see if you can crack the case. we'll layout the clues and the suspects as police discovered them, and we'll give you time at the end to see if you can solve it. pete: awesome series. >> one of the things about solving a case, any murder case, any case, a burglary case, is common sense, putting the facts in line with what is presented to you, and i think that it's a great promo for the show. can you solve it? you probably can solve it but you've got to make a lot of decisions and that's what i love about this fox nation show. brian: another reason to get fox nation, also can you solve it is now available now and be sure to catch justice with jeanine tomorrow night at
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9:00. >> tell them why. brian: the big story, i think that i am the reason, some people say lindsey graham is good, and bret baier. ainsley: leo terrell. >> well, you know, i would anticipate putting up your picture up but i have no control over that. brian: yeah, right. >> the things that i have to think of. brian: we know. i'm going to tell them that story that'll be may fox nation series one with geraldo and the judge. pete: great to see you, judge. ainsley: always good to see you let's hand it over to senior meteorologist janice dean for our fox weather forecast. >> good morning, i got fans here what's your name? >> jeff. >> where you from? >> pennsylvania. >> eileen from franklin, massachusetts. >> verge from franklin, massachusetts. >> a birthday real quick. >> happy birthday! >> very nicely done you've done this before. let's take a look at the maps it's a beautiful day in new york city. we do have a cold front that's going to bring the potential for showers and thunderstorms
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for the mid-mississippi valley up towards the ohio valley and in the north east saturday into saturday night, so just in case you've got plans going to be a wet one there's your forecast temperatures so it's very warm in the east coast, that front is going to bring those temperature s down to more seasonal temperatures and there's your forecast rainfall as we go through the next couple of days is not a huge big storm but it is going to cause some wet weather across the east coast on saturday. all right, say hi to pete and brian and ainsley. >> hi! ainsley: hi our friends. pete: good morning. >> did brian wave? brian: i did wave. pete: modestly. ainsley: they got a wave today. brian: i'm not an over-waiver. brian: meanwhile with 14 minutes left to go here is what's still ahead. how does $5,000 sound, tom shillue is on deck with the fox bet questions you need to answer to win big. pete: first let's check in with bill hemmer. bill: winds from the south here in new york. >> [laughter]
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ainsley: what's the zip code? bill: 10036 noted. hey, have a great weekend, guys. great show today, nice to see you. everybody knows the economy is front and center you see it every time you walk out your door folks. are higher gas prices a high class problem? the professor from harvard who coined the phrase joins us live on that. also, jason riley takes on education in america, why its come to the forefront senator tom cotton on defending taiwan it is a friday, folks, see you in 10 minutes. ♪♪ is someone trying to steal your butterfinger? call the bfi.
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brian: what's this? what is this? i see ainsley? ainsley: brian wanted a little corner and i wanted the whole studio so that ainsley's area. brian: [laughter] pete: whole bottom floor. brian: wow. pete: you have a great agent. brian: how did you do that? you got the whole first floor? ainsley: thank you, tammy. brian: now when they say brian, go downstairs i have to go to ainsley's area. pete: ainsley's living room. whatever you want. ainsley: pete do you want to see brian's tiny little corner? pete: yeah. brian: all i wanted was a corner. right over there. ainsley: this is brian's little corner.
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pete: that used to be known as the rail stand. ainsley: it's the kilmeade corner. brian: i wanted it named after me. ainsley: but you're sharing it. pete: i laid a little bit of claim to that too. ainsley: you're sharing it with pete. brian: i use it so do we make a deal here? ainsley: look. brian: [laughter] ainsley: a little piece of tape. i get a big graphic. jillian: the headline position who does that? ainsley: jillian, you can walk over there you claim your spot. that's your spot. brian's trying to steal it. pete: i will say, brian, you claim to invent walking in all the spots here. brian: no, no, i invented walking on television. pete: you do, more than anybody. so i think, i'll give you, hold on, i'll give you kilmeade's corner. brian: if jillian blesses it. pete: if i can take pete's place jillian: where are you going with it. pete: move it to the corner on the stairwell. brian: what do you mean so you want -- pete: i want the stairwell if
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you get the curvy couch -- right down here you claim to have invented this but everyone knows that's fake news. brian: [laughter] that's untrue, right? ainsley, you can back me up on this. right here, i did the walk to the rail. pete: you want kilmeade's corner you have to give me pete's place because the walk here, couple of steps, one, two, three? that was invented by me. ainsley: what brian would do is stand there, right before we were about to go on air, he be ready to walk down the stairs , and then as soon as he heard the music it was his time to go, then he would walk down, and then do his show. >> [laughter] ainsley: okay we got to get to tom shillue. jillian? here you go. jillian: it's official. right here. ainsley: you share the area downstairs with me. jillian: sharing is caring, ainsley. pete: wow. that's a deal? brian: it's a deal. pete: you saw it. it's real. >> [laughter] brian: the fox bet super 6 app
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give you another opportunity to win $5,000 in a quiz show game just answer six questions correctly on a wide variety of top topics. ainsley: tom nation host tom shillue is the host of happy hour and sign up to get exclusive access to other original content events and your favorite personalities on any device. pete: man i feel like i got a great deal. good morning, tom what do you got? >> good morning. we have great questions this week. downloaded the app, you should too. let's do question number one, how many teams will finish week six with at least six wins? ainsley: i'm going with c. pete: five wins can only be five wins because it's week six and only one undefeated team. i'll say three. >> there we go. ainsley: brian? >> which undefeated college football team will score the most points this weekend?
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brian: oklahoma state. ainsley: georgia. pete: georgia. >> which of the following stock s will finish the day highest? 5% on friday at 4:00 p.m., southwest, robinhood, sofi, apple, merck or starbucks? brian: i'm going to say merck. pete: i'm going apple. brian: i'm going robinhood. >> there we go. which of the following cities will have the highest temperature on saturday? pete: i'm going with whatever brian says. ainsley: i'm going with -- brian: anything but minneapolis ainsley: montana. cut bank. >> there we go, how many combined runs will be scored in game one of the alcs? brian: 0-3. ainsley: d. pete: 4-5. >> beautiful if you want the last question you've gotta download the app there's six of them that's the fox bet super 6
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app why didn't you guys ask me where i am. am i in beautiful country or what? pete: it's a great shot. ainsley: they met tom's trees. brian: [laughter] nice. tom's autumn. all right, thanks so much, tom shillue appreciate it. don't forget to answer the nfl sunday challenge on fox bet for a chance to win $100,000 of terry bradshaw's money, thank you, tom shillue, don't ever stop smiling or doing your joe biden impression. >> [laughter] ainsley: or adam schiff. pete: more fox & friends. >> ♪
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>> the freedom fighter out on stage november 7th live. just go to brian kilmeade.com. see you out there. >> all right. >> have a great weekend, everyone. >> good morning. filling up your gas tank a luxury. prices sky rocket and a top biden official downplaying the issues that affect your wallet. dana perino has the day off. it's friday. >> it is? >> good to be here. i am joulie. gas prices are up 10%. just the past month alone to their highest leveln

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