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tv   The Big Sunday Show  FOX News  December 12, 2021 2:00pm-3:00pm PST

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[inaudible] >> i think we are still trying to get the most accurate information. we expect there to be, you know, a significant death toll. we are checking on new information coming in from the company and hope to have a clearer picture on that. i mean, there have been, there have been, i think, multiple bodies. but just the wreckage is extensive as we continue to try to get through it. >> governor -- [inaudible] >> we have the national weather service here. they could answer any questions. >> good afternoon. my name is christine wheldon,
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meteorologist at the national weather service. our meteorologist in charge, the national weather service in paducah, and we have had several teams out surveying the damage. of course, as you all know it. spans a good number of miles, so it's a lot of ground to cover. but i did do an aerial survey yesterday, and i can tell you that the track is continuous from south of casey in fulton county all the way until at least beaver dam where we finally turned around. so the damage that we have surveyed so is far indicates that the rating is at least an ef3, however, we have more renowned experts on the surveys right now and also experts within the national weather service that are looking at the data, and we'll be looking at possibly upgrading that as well. on behalf of the national weather service, our hearts go out to each and every person that has been affected by this tornado. it not only affects us here locally, but across the entire
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weather service where we've had numerous people come to us and say how deeply sorry they are for everything that's happened here. as we get more information, we will definitely release that to you. we have lots of surveys to continue to do over the next couple of days and a lot of work to do. >> [inaudible] >> that's the highest rating that we found along the entire track in our area. our area -- [inaudible] [inaudible conversations] >> and there are locations along the path -- casey, dawson springs, brandon that are definitely harder hit areas. >> [inaudible] >> we have not figured out that because the survey's not been completed. as you go south into tennessee, that's another weather service office that's covering that. and then you go east and the -- [inaudible] covers everywhere east of the county, and their survey's ongoing for the last couple of days, and we still have to figure out exactly how long the
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path is. >> great. we'll just take one more, and we say that i think it's at least a 3 and look around. it's, this is -- i'm not a meteorologist, but i expect we'll find it's much more severe. yeah. >> [inaudible] >> right now i can't process whether this is a new normal or not. we're just trying to identify the dead, locate the living, reunite families, try to give people a place to stay and something to eat, get them their medicine, meet their needs. all the rest of it over time we can talk about. and what i'd say is please just focus on our people and the help that they need and they deserve. as we get more information, as we get concrete numbers, we will
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be transparent about them. we will get them to you as soon as we can. please understand we're 40 hours in, in the midst of rubble, but we're tough people. we've got a ton of help. thank you to the federal government. we could not ask for a stronger response. thank you to our federal delegation. we're going to get through it, and we're going to get through it together. [inaudible conversations] >> they can get you -- [inaudible] >> you were just listening to the governor of kentucky, andy beshear, talking about the devastation in his state as well as an official from the national weather service service is, a press conference in mayfield, kentucky. of course, the journalists were asking many questions about the number of deaths in the state, the number of homes and businesses lost. of course the governor was very careful to say that those figures are being tabulated right now, and he highlighted the fact that we are still 40 hours only into this devastating
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incident that ripped through not just kentucky, but, of course, america's heartland as well. with respect to deaths, he said the best case scenario could possibly be 50 deaths in that state. of course, kentucky is where we were covering the story of the collapsed candle factory as well. the governor made sure to praise the emergency responders, the volunteers as well. he called them special. but he reminded everyone the wreckage is extensive, and the recovery and rescue continues to be underway. so you can see some of the images there, just massive devastation that's going to be very difficult for these states to dig out of. but, of course, the leaders in charge are putting plans in place to make sure that all will be well. but you are watching "the big sunday show," and i'm jackie deangelis. i'm going to toss it over to sean duffy. >> along with david webb and abby hornacek. tonight, a brazen smash and grab
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robbery in chicago, stealing millions of dollars worth of merchandise. and as the number of smash and grabs rise, president biden's approval rating on crime is actually plummeting. a new abc news poll showing only 36% of americans approve of his handling of crime, down from 43% in october. david, i want to talk to you about this because i'm surprised that joe biden's approval is not at 10%. it's actually at 36%. but i want to get your take on this smash and grab in chicago, and when you're going for millions of dollars' worth of merchandise, what message does this send about safety to the community at large? >> well, what it says, sean, is that they're planning, these crooks are planning now. i do happen to know one of the owners, and i spoken to him earlier today. and, you know, when you look at what they came in and did in what is essentially the fifth avenue of chicago, a nice
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neighborhood. people shop there, obviously, a lamborghini dealership and then a vendor who's in there with the watches, they took over a million -- not a thousand, which is allowed. but joe had this to say, understandably he was very upset earlier today, he said, one, the police in chicago are wonderful. they've been there a long time. the police are not the issue here. the community likes them. but the policies that are there, the mayor's policies, kim fox's policies and the policies of the politicians over the years are a problem. the other problem here, one of them, is that the children -- and these are young men, obviously, not just children -- but all around chicago they're being emboldened to do this. they're making plans to do smash and grabs. whether they should be -- when they should be working on their education, when they should be taking care of their growing-up period to go on with their lives.
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so these are a lot of issues x this has got to end. joe told me the city is fed up with this, the business owners are fed up. let me give you a little bit more, one, there were six employees in the store. all were armed. one of them had a red dot on the gunman. they chose not to shoot because he had the gun down at his side, you see that at the video. if that had happened, they would have had to make a choice because should it play out that way not only is it a danger to the people inside including the manager and his two kids, the customers that are in there, but then you look at what happens. black lives matter, all these other criminals come out, they loot, they burn, they destroy the neighborhood. so there are a lot of dynamics at play here. and you have business owners -- not just joe, but others -- who are worried about what happens during the or shopping season or in any season to their town. this is a failure of leadership, and it's failing the kids in chicago because they're the ones
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who are growing up into crime rather than growing up with a career. >> quick comment on what you just said also -- sorry, sean. lori lightfoot also came out and said, you know, this is kind of on the business owners. hey, guys, you've got to hire more security. just to give a little more content to what david was saying. >> to that point, abby, i look at this and say these politicians, the mayor and the d.a., they ran on light on crime policies, right in so the people who voted for these policies are at fault, but do you think the electorate is now changing because they see what it looks like to have soft on crime leaders in their community? >> are you asking that to me, sean? is. >> yes, i am. >> absolutely. and you see it in the approval ratings of joe biden. and you look across the country, this isn't just smash and grabs. it's homicides, 12 large cities breaking records, and it's leaders in those cities that are
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pretty much kind of brushing it off saying, look, you go to philadelphia, the d.a. says there isn't a crime crisis here. meanwhile, they've seen a record number of homicides, 523 this year as of wednesday. more than 2100 wounded from shootings, a 14-year-old was shot 18 times while waiting for the bus. 59 children gunned down. then you hop over to l.a., and i found this interesting, sean. people in beverly hills, beverly hills, los angeles, are buying gun cans. one of the sheriffs there, we've heard his name many times, sheriff villanueva, said that people are coming to the department and requesting these conceal-carry permits. so far since 2018 more than 8100 requests, they've approved 2100. just to put that number into perspective, his predecessor only issued 194 permits in four years. so you see these numbers -- >> if i could just jump in with
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something that's an important perspective to what abby just said. when you look at these cities and who their governed by politically and the policies that are there, when you look at concerted efforts for more progressive prosecutors and judges, get them into positions, this lends itself to this. can you imagine what would have happened inside that dealership, inside that business if those armed people had no choice had that gunman raised that gun? they don't know what's happening. this eventually will come to a head. i'm glad it didn't here, but sooner or later you're going to have an outbreak of shootings. we've seen that on the west coast. we've seen rampant bank robberies in past years. this isn't new. but these liberal governance policies are going to lead to a tragic situation. >> and, david, here's what i find is interesting, because i'm going to go to jackie on this. to abby's point, you have individuals buying guns because we have a second amendment in america, but in third world
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countries often they have restrictive gun laws, so what happens is the rich people actually hire private security when crime gets to be too much. is this the slow decline that america has where the poor people don't have security because they have progressive of prosecutors, but the rich people, they can buy their own cops to forward their homes and their lives? >> you bring up a great point, sean, because a lot of the councilmen and mayors do have those private security details, so crime is not impacting them the way it is you and me. here in new york city when you walk the streets, there are tons of mentally i'll people walking around threatening people. our crime has skyrocketed as well, and this is a city where they want to defund the police. and mayor de blasio just slugging it off -- shrugging it off. i find it criminal that we're looking at chicago and you've got mayor lori lightfoot last week basically saying that the stores are not doing enough to take safety and make it a
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priority. that's what she's i saying. she's saying they have to get camera systems installed, they have to have armed security in their stores, chains to hold their merchandise down, shifting the blame once again on where the problem is coming from rather than trying to address. the democrats love the term root causes. 9 rather than trying to address the root causes. >> so i want to make one last point and ask you to comment on this, david, because the party of the progressive prosecutors and mayors, the democrats. joe biden is also a democrat, and we've seen his poll numbers fall. wouldn't it make sense if president biden came out and started to criticize these policies in these community, in these cities, that these prosecutor, these mayors might change course, that joe biden has a lot more power than he's using right now to comment on these bad policies and the crime in these communities? david? >> you know, sean, i don't know to what extent joe biden really has the power or, if he does,
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will he choose to use it. he never has in the past. he uses whatever issue to push an agenda. in his administration are the far-left policies, the far-left supporters whether it's kamala harris and you look at what she's done or failed to do as a former attorney general. when you look at the fact that if you're in their campaigns, their staffers were raising money the bail rioters out of jail. we really shouldn't expect or ever expect that joe biden will go tough behind the scenes or in front of the cameras on these policies because it keeps his voting base where they need them and it keeps growing the progressive cause. remember, he said i'm going to be the most progressive president. that's what he promised and that's what he's doing. >> you know, this is real simple, if you just focus on your congressional races, your senate races and prosecutional races -- presidential races, you should focus on your t.a.s, your school boards, your city
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councils because they have a huge impact on your life, and you can make a real change if you vote for good people who will support putting criminals behind bars. thanks for the big discussion. still ahead -- yeah, yeah, yeah. new york's new mask mandate goes into effect in hours, but many say they may not follow the rules. as dr. fauci moves the goalpost again on covid. [laughter] ♪ ♪ no one can deliver your mom's homemade short ribs. that's why instacart helps deliver the ingredients. and you add the love.
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starting tomorrow new york's statewide mask mandate goes into effect, but a number of republican leaders say they won't follow the rules. county executives in four counties are saying they won't enforce the mandate, and this morning outgoing new york city mayor bill de blasio defended his mandate. take a listen. chris: why not allow the new mayor to impose that mandate if he's going to do it? you're sticking him with it. >> no. every time we've put a mandate in place, it has worked. we're at 71 of all new yorkers pullly vaccinated. we're -- fully vaccinated. that's because we use incentives and mandates. >> that was a great question. meanwhile, dr. fauci moves the goalposts about the definition of fully vaccinated. >> preliminary data show that when you get a booster, for example, the third shot of an mrna, it raises the level of protection high enough that it then does do well against the
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omicron. if you want to be optimally protected, you really should get a booster, and i think we'll be continuing to evaluate what the official designation is. >> david, hold up. so i think what struck me the most about what he said is that we could be redefining fully vaccinated. let's say now you have to get a booster to go eat in restaurants and it comes to that. let's say there's more variants, which there are going to be. where do you draw the line? >> maybe the good news is they're going to run out of alphabet, then fauci is in a lot of trouble. [laughter] it's no laughing matter that what he's doing is moving the goalposts for political reasons. other side of this, do not forget that fauci's also talking to other countries. so it's not just americans who are being punished by fauci. they don't follow the science, abby. the science, when it comes to
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children, when it comes to adults, those who don't have co-morbidities. look, anything can happen to any of us, but early detection, response, therapeutics, fauci is playing a game of moving the goalposts. had he been involved in the army/navy game yesterday -- [laughter] we'd still be playing the game because nobody would get to the end zone. >> go ahead, sean. >> the video of de blasio, the question was why are you doing this before you leave office? de blasio didn't answer. he's like, well, mandates work and incentives work. well, that wasn't the question. why don't you let the next mayor put in what restrictions he thinks are appropriate. but i think what's interesting is dr. fauci himself has said that about a third of people who are getting the omicron virus are fully vaxxed. they actually have the boosters, and they're getting sick or infected by the omicron virus. and kathy hochul, the governor of new york, when she put this
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mandate in place herself, she's the one who said the 20% of people who are unvaccinated are the ones that are causing the problem. that's actually not true because fauci himself are saying people who are fully vaxxed and boosted are still getting sick. my problem with all this is it's becoming really confusing. why can't we get simple data? who's getting sick? the vaxxed, who's getting sick who had coronavirus themselves and recovered and who are the unvaxxed getting sick? we don't have those numbers, and we've spent billions upon billions of taxpayer collars on covid -- dollars on covid and research but we don't know these numbers? it's idiotic. >> what's idiotic beyond this is they not only move the goalposts and change the definition, they don't collect the numbers, sean, when you look at it. they talk about mortality rates, they never talk recovery rates. i talk to hospital administrators. they have these numbers. so they're refusing to do the
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job, and it's deliberate whether it's fauci, biden or others, it's about forcing compliance. they want a compliant nation. we have multiple lawsuits being overturned about biden with the osha mandate, cms, you have the united airlines lawsuit against united airlines, you have other lawsuits. the attorneys general are fighting for our survival of the country. >> yeah. jackie, i do want to get to you, but just to follow up, david, on what you say about compliance. actually, snl took a moment last night to kind of hit back at fauci and these mandates. take a listen here. [cheers and applause] >> do people still think i'm sexy, or are we done with that? [laughter] with covid cases on the rise, or people still have a lot of questions. is it safe to travel? can i still use this as an excuse to get out stuff? if to help out with these queries, i once again invited members of the cdc to act out
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various plays. cdc presents: going to a restaurant. >> hi. i'd like the christmas dinner at your restaurant, please. >> sure. i just need to see your vaccination card. >> i actually can't find it. >> you mean you lost the little 1-inch piece of cardboard they gave you? [laughter] >> i'm afraid so. >> then urbannished from society. -- you are if banished from society. >> that's not right. you can get a replacement card. i think. [laughter] >> i forgot that he was nominated as sexiest man alive, by the way finish. >> i think i blocked it out. >> why? [laughter] >> jackie, you know it's bad for fauci when snl takes a swing, even if it is fun. >> i think it is bad for him and for his credibility, at least that's the way i see it. but he's probably going to watch that, and it's going to make his head and ego even bigger, if you can possibly imagine that. here's the problem though, something that i'm thinking about as fauci is now saying you need maybe a booster to be fully
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vaccinated, what's fully advantage i nate -- vaccinated going to be as we roll into the new year? my vaccine passport says on march 9th it expires, so what does that mean? do i need another booster? do i need a full round of vaccines over and over again? the way it seems right now the government is going to be telling me i have to put shots in my arm for the rest of my life -- >> jack key, you can never be fully vaccinated. as long as there's a variant, an option -- remember, booster doesn't have a number. it's booster to the nth --ing. >> hey, david, i want to go back to saturday night live. i thought that was the lightest touch on fauci. it was kind of cute and a little slap in the face, right in but later on in that opening segment they were flamethrowing marjorie taylor green along with ted cruz, so the politics hasn't changed at all. they are horribly liberal and,
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frankly, i don't find them funny at all. again, go after conservatives and light touch on fauci. you could do some great stuff on fauci that would be really funny and powerful, but they don't -- [inaudible conversations] >> their ratings show how bad they are. >> yeah. and just a quick comment, too, to follow up on snl. someone who kind of agrees with this is dr. oz. we have a quote from him here which says dr. anthony fauci has lost the faith and the confidence of the american people. it's time for a new face talking to the american people, one that is more trusted. i believe anthony fauci should be held accountable for misleading, whether willfully or unintentionally, the american public and the united states congress. so, sean, do you think that the biden administration would perhaps maybe take a ten back, see that fauci has lost the trust of the american people and maybe choose someone different? why is it still fauci? >> no. listen, they're not going to change gears. they don't want to take a chance
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they could get someone other than a fauci that's going to do all these crazy mandates. remember when donald trump did his health records and his doctor disclosed them and they went on dr. oz to do it? i thought that was awesome. president trump did that with dr. oz because a lot of people trust him, and i think he will be a force to be reckoned with as a senatorial candidate in pennsylvania. >> and he's actually saved lives, not tried to destroy americans' lives. >> yeah. guys, we'll see what happens with dr. fauci. he definitely has an a image problem. and someone else who has a similar problem is vp harris, so she's vowing to travel more. will it help amid reports of a staff exodus? we'll discuss when "the big s&p sunday show" returns. ♪ the players gonna play, play, play, play -- ♪ and the haters gonna hate, hate, hate, baby -- ♪ i'm just gonna shake, shake it off ♪♪
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>> my name is mike tobin. i've been at fox news for 20 years. i got into this business because i wanted the action. my job is chaos x there's plenty on the supply side. i want to get out on the front lines of the biggest thing that is happening. i want to rope it in and get it to the viewers -- in case anyone fires at us. when i went to iraq, my instructions were just go there, cover it, see what they see, experience what they experience good, bad, ugly and bring it home. jumping on helicopters with the paratroopers -- hold this position -- those are real bullets. [laughter] i'd be dumb if i wasn't scared sometimes. i always hoped i was bringing a little bit of comfort to the families. if they saw the report and saw their loved one or saw a guy that knew their loved one, they knew they wer were okay at leasr that moment in time.
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♪ how to you like me now? ♪ now that i'm on my way -- >> welcome back to "the big sunday show." our border czarina, kamala harris, attempting to save her image in a new interview with the san francisco if chronicle. the vp saying, and i quote: i love people. i've always felt that my responsibility as an elected leader is to go to the people especially when their needs must be addressed and they must know that they are being seen and heard. well, we haven't seen or heard much from her on key issues. but if the vice president wants to be taken seriously, maybe she should stop doing this. [laughter] >> slow down, everybody. [laughter] >> no. [laughter] finish -- can i get a witness? [laughter]
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>> you know, okay, to be perfectly honest, guys and girls, i don't care about her cackle. if she wants to cackle away at something, it's a deflection, it's a device that she uses. but here's where she's not going. the people that need to be seen and heard live in yuma, they live in el paso, they live along the borders. and now the borders, really which are every airport around america where they're balkanizing america with illegal alien,. >> i found it interesting that she did this interview with san francisco chronicle because i don't know if she really needs to fix her image there. i think there are probably a lot of her supporters. but you hit on the head, david, my first question is where is she going to travel? is she going to go down to del rio and visit with the family,
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the innocent people who were just killed because a human smuggler blew through a traffic light running away from dps as they carried 60 illegal immigrants in their car or the yuma, arizona, where the mayor just declared a state of emergency because he says there have been 6,000 illegal immigrants walking the streets of yuma, a 2600% rise since october. so you kind of look, you step back and see all that she's done, and i think it comes from the fact that she's uncomfortable. she's uncomfortable because she knows that she's not not perforg for the american people. >> is it uncomfortable, sean, or is it economy -- incompetent, deliberate or a little bit of both? she ran up the numbers when she was attorney general to make it look like she was tough on crime. when she gets into the vice president presidency, there are key issues that are obvious to the american people, so she doesn't miss this.
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>> listen, i think she's unsuccessful, she's unimpressive and, frankly, david, i disagree. i think those cackles are wring-worthy myself -- cringe-worthy, myself. when you tell the american people when tough problems happen they go to you to make sure you're going to take care of them but then you op don't take care of the problems on your plate, if you go to people in pain, why isn't she at the southern border? why isn't she talking to little girls who have been sexually assaulted on this horrible trip or the families of migrants who have lost a loved one on that horrible truck to our country? she's not going any of those places. did she go to waukesha, wisconsin, after the christmas parade massacre and say i'm going to go to the tough places and talk about tough issues that are outside of maybe my political comfort zone, but i want to talk about crime and how crime is impacting the american people and the american family. and i know that i have supported some of these policies that have
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kind of gone in a little different direction. i didn't intend that, i care about you, and we are going to change course, america, and i'm going to be here for you. she doesn't do any of that. she doesn't even take interviews. again, when you want a reboot politically and you go to your home paper but then you say these things that don't match your record, this is a complete dud because, again, it's not what you say to your local paper, t the performance that you have as a leader. and if you don't lead with confidence, people don't trust you, they don't believe in you and, therefore, your numbers don't get out of the 20th percentile range. >> and politicians do live on their polls all too often, sean. not a slight on you. in a "wall street journal" op-ed they write: kamala harris needs to get serious, that's one, orange county register the problem with kamala harris, in axios, burnout, money concern drive harris turnover. it's not that she's being
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attacked by the right, she's being attacked by the fair media. one year in kamala harris says she won't be distracted by ridiculous headlines. to be fair, i don't want ridiculous headlines. i think it takes away from the serious issues, jackie. but kamala harris certainly has not been made the economic czar, but the policies that she's not taking on that sean and i have talked about, that we've all talked about on the border has an economic effect on the country. so, mine, is she -- i mean, is she the woman that broke the glass ceiling, or is she incompetent? >> it depends who you ask, right? i mean, she's a woman that says she loves people and she's trying to feel their pain and suffering. i try to look at how people -- forget the bigger issues, the border right now, how does she treat her staff and the people arounder? you not only have to be a leader in the country, but i you have to be a leader locally to your
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team. she's had two staff members that just walked away and a former staff member before she was vice president who called her a bully and said that she basically gave them or subjected them to a constant amount of soul-destroying criticism. that's not a leader. that's not a woman encouraging women to do better. and to your point about what's happening at the border, look, you've got a vice president right now that isn't really saying why she's not acting. number one, it could be that because she likes the policies, she wants to dilute the demographics of this country, and so leaving the borders open is a great way to make a significant impact which this administration already has. the other piece of it is some say she's so worried about herself, saving herself above everybody else that she doesn't want to, you know, touch this border crisis because he wants it to be joe biden's problem and not her problem in case she wants to move forward politically in the future. either way you slice it, we have a lot of problems with vice president. >> look, she's essentially failing upward or at least
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hoping to fail upward maybe as the first woman president which the democrats would love, and they'd love to check that box. and, look, this is going to be so much more on kamala harris. but mark my words, guys, he is going to try to stay out of everything -- she is going to try to stay out of everything because if she'sing absent, she can run on being ab sent. we saw that with barack obama. you don't cast a vote, you don't take a position, you simply absent and then run with a supposedly clean record. next, the patriarch of the murdaugh family now accused of stealing millions from his former client. ♪ ♪
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♪ ♪ >> welcome back to "the big sunday show." the patriarch at the center of of the murdaugh murder mystery is now charged with more than 20 new criminal counts i accusing him of defrauding his former clients of millions of dollars. alex murdaugh first gained national attention when he found his wife and son murdered, a crime for which no arrests have been made and no suspects named. and since then he has amassed almost 50 criminal charges. this is the most bizarre thing i have ever heard. we talked about this case a while back, and i think my inclination is to go to you, sean, first, because you can put on your prosecutor hat. what is alex murdaugh thinking right now as he's slapped with all of these charges. >> i'm screwed. i'm going to jail.
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this case is bizarre. we're talking about a lot of crime in this christmas season, and i think we're doing it because there's a lot of crazy in america, and this is a perfect example. he tried to stage his own death. for what reason? i don't know. but then -- i don't know if he's going to end up being a suspect in the death of his wife and his son, but this guy has a lot of problems, and he's got -- he got away with it for so long because he was a prominent lawyer in the community, and people knew him. he had a lot of money. and that powerful and influence -- power and influence carried him through these crimes to the point that he's now charged with all of these allegations. and i think that underscores the point that, you know what? even though you powerful p have money and people know you, that doesn't mean you don't do bad things, and i think every police department has to remember that and give the same scrutiny to, you know, wealthy and powerful people as they do to the average guy on the street. and i think this is an example where that doesn't always happen. and had it happened earlier, this guy would have been behind bars a long time earlier.
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>> yeah. you mentioned that staged murder. he did that so that he could reportedly -- this is what they're saying -- so that membered get his son who is still alive a $0 is million -- 10 million life insurance settlement. jackie, what have you found the most interesting thing about him? because there have been so many twists and turns. >> there have been so many, and i think this was a case that really was outshined when the country was focused on gabby petito and all these twists and turns were happening. we don't have that much detail about this case, but the more we start to dig the about the patriarch of this family and dig up about him, obviously highly motivated by money. so you bring up the insurance policy, the $10 million. he stages his own death for that, allegedly. now you've got these indictments that he possibly bilked investors out of $6 million again, allegedly again, and i
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take those two pieces and go right back to the beginning and say to myself what do the mother and the older son's death have to do with this? was this something of a revenge kind of crime? was he involved in it in some way? was it motivated by money? and remember that older son was also involved in this boating accident that killed this young woman. so you sit back and say when this is all unraveled and we do know what actually happened, it's just stunning. >> who has time for all of this, by the way? i mean, where does he find the time? david, look, we've had so many weird cases, i don't want to just overgeneralize by using the word weird, but you just think about what happened with jussie smollett. of all of the cases this year that have been mind-boggling, where do you think this one ranks? >> in a weird kind of way, maybe it's good that weird isn't racist so we can actually talk abouts case. all these charges, all these
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twists and turns, this is something that you would get in a lifetime movie of the week if we ever get an answer to who killed who when, where, what. hollywood, if you're watching, there's money to be made in writing this real-life script into a movie. but i've got to tell you, this has so many weird twists. i think the family overall had an environment that was dangerous. maybe they were in many ways just as weird. we don't know. but these allegations, these twists, these fake bank accounts, the fraud, it's power, per vision, narcissism, it's just -- i'm just going to stick with weird. [laughter] >> yeah. and it is odd because he looks like such a normal guy, and the family looks like such a normal family. so i guess -- >> i don't know, i'm looking at those eyes, jackie -- >> maybe not in the mug shot. [laughter] you can never judge it by the mug shot. everyone looks a little crazy in those. all right, guys. we'll be continuing to follow this story as things evolve is. and i'm just going to say, sean
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big four, our picks for the biggest stories that everyone will be talking about next week. my story is about how mother nature is making the supply chain crisis even worse, we've all been talking about what's happening california in los angeles and long beach the two largest ports in the course we cannot get our ships into unload as fast as we would like them to now at inclement weather and essentially what were being told ships coming in are being told to meander or go back out farther because look at how tall the ships are when there is very significant wins they can be damaged and there could be accidents and problems so essentially 30 ships on satellite image are committed to the ports while 60 ships remain much further out.
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to put this into context as you know we've been wanting our goods for christmas and worry about the supply chain and when it will get better this is certainly something that isn't going to happen. >> i would imagine if you get rough seas he of these cartons that can fall off and dump into the ocean i'm not could get my christmas present, not good. that is a good story but i've a bigger story for next week some of you know rachel and i wrote a book called the all-american christmas you leaning toward tradition and holiday. that was not enough so tonight at 10:00 o'clock were doing and all-american christmas special where we talk about the book but those who participated in, camera and discuss their christmas traditions and holiday memories check at 10:00 o'clock it'll be awesome and big tomorrow the days after. >> i cannot wait to watch this.
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>> be prepared to be amazed it is awesome. >> we love the duffy families and hearing our other fox news team members steve ducey and his family, i cannot wait to dig into that. >> one of my favorite common threads is that they have a value in tradition and family and friends and other people the most caring people i ever met. i'm looking forward to watching that i know where i'll be at at 10:00 p.m. tonight watching fox news channel. my story is in a double find after the devastating tornadoes a kentucky family photo was sucked up into the sky and dropped 150 miles away in indiana there is this woman on social media that posted a picture you can see right there on the screen on the back it says the name of both of those people in 1942. it just brings attention to the fact that we see these harrowing
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images of a mass destruction, he of all the pipes all over the place. everything pummeled to the ground. something that is just as harrowing are these images of the pillowcases lying on the ground. >> i love this, this is human kindness if you think about it people have lost so much those pictures something the matter, they find a way to get it back they cannot even mail it back because look at a town in kentucky that has number infrastructure. this is just a story of america it's a great christmas story in many ways i think that's what i really like about it. >> people in the heartland have good hearts. >> a lot of times natural disaster bring a passion and people. >> 150 miles this picture traveled it is huge and think of
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the power of mother nature how powerful and the links in which a travel. i don't usually like social media but this is a blessing you can connect to somebody. >> absolutely. >> social media is a good tool. >> is symbol of the old phrase no good deed goes unpunished. here we have a waitress with a 4000-dollar tip but then gets fired after she refused to give the cash to her tip manager and just keep 20%. >> that is a short version 19 got together and had a $100 tip night dinner the two waitresses served. i love to take people for their service in the work they're doing. this was unfair to them into the owners your explanation does not fit in our waitresses work hard
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our kitchen works hard in the business works hard but you don't get a split everything up this is socialism gone bad. >> you cannot always do evenly. i hate to end the conversation there but we have to the "fox report with jon scott" starts now. jon: utter devastation in kentucky after friday night's tornado outbreak leveled homes industry businesses throughout kentucky and several neighboring states. residents cost the region are beginning the long road to recovery. good evening i am jon scott and this is the fox river. >> kentucky governor called the outbreak the most devastating tornado in his state's history and federal officials surveyed the damage in several areas of

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