tv FOX and Friends FOX News February 3, 2022 3:00am-6:00am PST
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vast number of troops there unfortunately, we don't see that today. and we need to make sure that we keep our eye on the ball. china is the real threat. and not ukraine at the end of the day. >> carley: that's right. chad wolf, thank you so much for joining us. we so appreciate it? >> thank you. >> todd: with that great to having you back if only a day. >> carley: good to be back. "fox & friends" starts right now. >> president biden heading to new york city today to meet with law enforcement facing a full scale crisis. >> the visit comes as 30 officers across our country were shot? january. >> thousands came to honor the life and memory of nypd officer wilbert mora. another satisfactory blue through the streets of new york city. >> how many more officers have to lose their lives before this system changes? nypd protects us but who protection tremendous. >> it was just showing the crisis of our southern border. 70 arrested dressed in camo because they want to evades
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capture. >> i blame president biden. he should come here. >> controversy joe rogan. >> won't change policy based on one. >> freedom of speech is being threatened. they're being censored or or intimidated into censoring themselves. >> jeff zucker resigned yesterday apparently after flailing to close a relationship with a colleague. >> there is a million reasons to get rid of jeff zucker. did he a terrible job and ran that network into the ground. ♪ joy ♪ when you call me ♪ i'm lifting it up ♪ being ♪ >> ainsley: good morning, cincinnati. beautiful shot. i have never seen that and i have been there. is that a big about billboard? >> steve: they turned out certain lights in a building to spell cincinnati. apparently one or two got turned
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off in the night. >> brian: pretty cold. cincinnati going to be leaving soon a date in los angeles. where it's nicer and the homeless have been asked to leave and find a mommy, home at least for a week. >> steve: i was told that is the sequential center in cincinnati. good morning, cincinnati, 6:01 here in the east. and ainsley, welcome back. >> ainsley: just went away on a girl's trip with some of the moms at my girl's school. seven moms, no kids. we had fun. we stayed in our pajamas most of the time. >> brian: really? >> ainsley: we had matching pajamas one of the moms got them. they had hearts on them. soft long sleeve button up and have rainbow hearts. >> steve: would that be all of your best friends that we hear about daily. >> ainsley: what's great we are in a new school this year because she is in kindergarten k through 12. a lot of those moms were there
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for pre-k. some are old friends and some are new friends. >> brian: pajama gram offered a situation i understand feels just as good for you as it does for him. that's part of the phraseology. >> steve: there were no hims there. all girls. >> brian: that we know of. >> ainsley: a few workers stopped by, what you are all in matching pajamas? what is going on here? >> steve: today we have dispatched pete heg set down to tampa. you know a couple of days ago we were all talking about tom brady e is -- if you are going to have breakfast. why wouldn't you want to eat at a place called mom's place much? that's where he is today. good morning to you, peter. >> pete: good morning. the producers called and said pete, can you do a diner. yes, if we go to tampa please. please warm weather anywhere. it works out great. there is this guy wears number 12, plays for the buccaneers -- or played for the buccaneers who says he is not going to pray anymore. we wanted to get a sense from
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the folks. there is a lot of tampa buccaneers gear already in mom's place in tampa. how do they feel about it? is it a spirit of gratitude for the super bowl he did bring here or grumpiness that man, he could have given us one or two years. he did say he was going to play until he was 45. we are at mom's place. tampa, florida. the food is beautiful smells wonderful. throw everything in the omelet. definitely going to be trying that then we are going to talk a little bit about the state of the economy. the state of brings. in fact, i was talking to george the owner here your recommendation ask him about the supply chains fascinating things that business owners are going through. ask him about it this hour as well as thoughts fans who will probably be chiming in on the goat. i will ask them if they often wear marching pajamas as well. >> steve: all right. great. pete, we will be looking for that he is absolutely right about the supply chain. i was in a grocery store in
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northern new jersey yesterday. there was no chicken and no ground beef. none. the cases were closed. i said to somebody in the produce where is everything? they said the truck didn't show up. >> ainsley: we all have the same stories. the grocery store i went to needed kleenexes totally out. >> brian: yesterday if you were in new york city and had a television and had a chance to see fox news the overhead shots and saint patrick's cathedral as we had another officer laid to arrest after his assassination by a cop killer two fridays ago. this is officer mora, and obviously, all of the vips spoke from the mayor to the cardinal. most importantly it's family. he was not married. his sister spoke on what type of person he was. and what he hoped to have happened. why he wore the uniform and what he set out to do before he was gunned down when he answered a call for -- about a domestic dispute over in harlem. listen.
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>> many how many wilberts, how many jasons? how many more officers have to lose their lives before this system changes the nypd protects us. but who protects them and who looks after their lives? >> 73 officers have been intentionally killed in 2021. >> there has been six shot, two killed here in new york city. overall ambush attacks which this was were up 115% nationwide. >> carley: the police commissioners said he was three times a hero one for his life of service. also for sacrificing his life, and also being an organ donor because there were five recipients. it was wonderful to see some of the tributes and hear from some of our leaders who want to do something about all the crime in our city. the president is coming with the a.g. with merrick garland to meet with eric adams and meet with our governor and their topic is crime. they are promoting anti-gun violence. >> steve: exactly right,
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ainsley. heavily promoted visit by the president united states. he is going to start out arrive late this morning. he is going go to one police plaza. that's the cop shop the h.q., you know he is going to go there because they power worked a the pavers in front on tuesday e is going to watch a meeting of the new york city police department brass and other law enforcement agencies. over the last five months they have been having this meeting every day. the president is going to watch that and then is he going to go to a community leader meeting at a school in queens. ultimately, we already know what is going to ham. is he coming here to talk to eric adams, former law enforcement officer who is now our mayor here. and eric adams is going to say, mr. president, we are having a terrible problem with gun violence and we need money. joe biden is going to say i'm going to try to get congress to do something and i'm going to give you as many federal resources as possible. the problem is they are talking
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about stopping the guns coming into new york city. the problem is they have got to stop and do something about the guns that are already here. what are they going to do about the guns in somebody's closet or underneath a seat in a car? that is what they need to get tough on right now. >> ainsley: criminals are the ones causing all of this crime. we defund the police who is going to be around when they arrest these criminals when they do use their illegal guns or doing all of this nonsense. alvin bragg, this woke d.a. he is -- he is refusing to prosecute these criminals. then you have what joe biden said in the past, that he wants police funding, it should be redirected. kamala harris says reimagine public safety. bill de blasio cut a billion dollars from the nypd budget. and then when you look at retirement that says it all. these police officers don't want these jobs because. >> steve: not worth it. >> ainsley: that's right. not worth it retirement went up by half across america. resignations increased by nearly one fifth in one year.
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nypd retirements nearly double. >> brian: the president of the united states to be serious he will crack down on d.a.s to be tough on crime and embarrass from acting from gascon to alvin bragg here in new york city will happen. he will tell eric adams to make sure you stay in front of me and i will back you up that we want judges to have their own discretions to decide if a would-be suspect is a danger to the community so they can act on our behalf and crack down on crime for example resisting arrest. you may think people are moved by the sea of blue and retired and active in their dress blues but not everybody. including washed up actress susan sarin did you know. she tweeted this out because no one is hiring her. she is quite bored but has horrific opinions like this i'm going to tell my kid this is what fascism looks like because she didn't like the sea of uniforms so if all these crops were this needed for crime that day, she was tweeting this after friday's showing of officer rivera's funeral, doesn't that mean they aren't needed any day? let's let her live in new york city or any city without any
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cops. she should be asked to do that. she should be barred from using 911. >> steve: apparently the #abolish the police was added over the original screen shot. of the original screen shot was actually a tweet by writer and podcaster danny hyfong turn out last friday. when you see that sea of blue, do you see fascism? a lot of people see people who have dedicated their lives to public service. and it's that thin blue line that keeps us safe each and every day. is that fascism? you look at fifth avenue in new york city? is that a fascist demonstration of looks like 10,000 people? >> brian: what twisted mind says that? >> steve: that's a life of service. come on. >> ainsley: when you are in this city and you see the sea of blue on fifth avenue in front of the
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cathedral your heart hurts because you know why they are there. they lost a fellow officer. but then you lost -- are so grateful to them. you want to shake all of their hands. you want to hug them. >> brian: not everybody. >> carley: i don't understand it. >> brian: some actress got fired last week for saying something stupid. susan surah dumb she saved her money from bull durham. i'm not really sure. how do you feel about her? let her know. she is on social media. 11 minutes after the hour. >> carley: 11 migrants wearing camo at the border. shocking photos as we learn how much of your tax dollars are being spent on the will will secret migrant flight. >> brian: more artists leave over joe biden. why the company says they will not bow to boycott pressure. that is fantastic ♪ will i like me better when i'm with you. ♪
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. >> carley: fox news alert. u.s. forces carrying oa raid in northwestern syria overnight. this is new video of the aftermath. first responders at the scene reporting 13 people were killed, including 6 children and four women. pentagon press secretary john kirby calling the raid successful. saying there were no u.s. casualties. the target of that raid was not immediately clear. this morning a new twist in the wake of jeff zucker's resignation from cnn. the former executive and his girlfriend broke ethics roles by
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securing instrumental roles former new york governor andrew cuomo. he failed to disclose a relationship with allison gollust. she previously worked for the disgraced governor before coming to cnn this part of the probe into chris cuomo. a major winter storm is underway impacting as many as 100 million americans. many are waking up to a similar sight as this in branson missouri a foot or more show of know is expected to fall. 20 straights mexico to maine are going to see some form of snow, sleet, or freezing rain for the next day or so. travel, of course, becoming difficult for as thousands of flights are canceled. flight aware reporting over 4,000 cancellations today patriots head coach bill belichick praising tom brady calling him ultimate player and winner.
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rob gronkowski paying tribute to his friend. not putting down the football just yet as he. instead of gronk he is throwing it to david beckham and his family on the beach. they both play football just different sports. >> that's right. both retired. they get to hang out. >> carley: car. >> ainsley: what a dream both so handsome. >> carley: beautiful women, gorgeous families. >> steve: what a life. >> brian: i hope things turn around for him. he finds happiness sooner or later. >> steve: if you are on twitter, some people are the border patrol union in the big bend area down in texas, posted some images that are really an eye opener, why are all these migrants wearing camouflage, huh? apparently so many times we have heard the migrants come across. they look for the border patrol to to surrender themselves so
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they can get into the system. these people obviously did not want to be picked up. in all, the border patrol in big bend picked up 70 illegallies in 36 hours with the help, they tweeted out. the texas department of public safety. and as you look at those people in camo and wonder why were they trying to hide and then you hear the stories of people who had been wicked up in the last couple of days from places like ukraine and russia and syria. and it's like, you know what? those aren't just women and children trying to get. in those are people who bought camo for a reason. we don't know the reason. >> carley: i don't know why you would wear camo if you come in you get to stay. i don't know why you would hide. the transportation of illegal immigrants into our interior on secret flights costing you $340 million that at least was the first nine months of 2021. up until september. congressman mo brooks got this
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information and here he is. >> now more than 100,000 that are being transported in one shape, form, or fashion the total cost not just the flights but also the detention or the places where they live. the healthcare exceeds over $2 billion. there is no end to how much damage the biden administration seeks to do no end to how much money they are willing to spend, our money in order to pack america with millions of illegal aliens. >> brian: the other shot we showed you with guys in camouflage, maybe they didn't want to get caught. 70 migrants were caught there love to see those background checks. you think about all the money we are spending. what about the money that's going to ngos, congressman lance gooden weighed in out of texas. is he has been all over this. he actually believes the u.n. is henning supply and ferry these people forward. i would love to see an investigation into that he went on to tweet this out. the biden administration is working with nonprofits like
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catholic charities by the way. u.s. corporations and international agencies to operate an illegal immigration network that spans from south america to every community in the united states. taxpayer dollars should not be subsidizing a mass invasion of our country, you think? it's put a stop to the corrupt operation. the a.g., we don't hear enough about what is happening in arizona. mark lebron very much wants to replace mark kelly as senator. is he trying to put his republican efforts to do that. so, but if you want to get people's attention. tell people in arizona, and the rest of the nation that you care about what is happening at the border. he weighed in. >> president biden instead of going to new york city and sending the vice president to central america to study the root causes. come here to the border and understand firsthand the destruction his administration has brought on arizona. ultimate hype of hypocrisy that you literally have the president of the united states willing to risk our sons and daughters to secure -- the president is willing to risk our sons and
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daughters secure the ukrainian border and meanwhile millions of drugs, pounds of drugs are flooding through our southern border. millions of people and our country is less safe and more dangerous as a result of the biden administration's failure to secure our very own border. >> steve: he makes such a good point. why all the emphasis on ukraine and not on the mexican border with the united states? regarding the $340 million spent to ferry migrants in to the interior of the united states, extraordinarily, you know those images we have been showing of people getting on buses and airplanes, we don't know if it includes that money. we don't know if it includes the money given to federal contractors or now that's down in brownsville. and an ngo paid for the taxicab for those people. and then paid for their airplane ticket to places like houston and atlanta and elsewhere. so we don't know. and then the airplanes. remember we showed you the video from august up in west chester
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county. that plane operated by a private contractor working with -- has worked in the past with cia and whatnot. now working for the department of homeland security. we don't know if the cost of that flight is included in 340. it could be -- who knows how much it could be. the big question is where is all of this money coming from? >> ainsley: from your paycheck. >> steve: okay. can i vote on that? >> brian: the other big story -- there is many. like 10 number one stories today. one of which what is happening with joe rogan. joe rogan a podcaster. lasts at least three hours. at which time he has had a couple of doctors on that people didn't like what he had to say even though they are imminently qualified from dr. malone to dr. mccullough. they are available to listen to. i never thought it was bad to listen to other qualified people have differing opinions from the cdc and fda because they have gotten so much wrong and especially anthony fauci to. date the latest thing is
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throkdowns work. turns out your life has been totally destroyed for no reason according to johns hopkins is that misinformation or new information? that's what joe rogan attempted to do with this podcast. learned about the topic and horrible idea asking questions to experts about it. you may love the sanjay gupta interview. you may dislike malone interview. that's programming that's intriguing. good news for those people who want to see rogue on the air. ceo of spotify that gave $100 million to do exactly what he is doing said this. i think the important part here is that we don't change our policies based on one creator. nor do we change it based on the media cycle. our policies have been carefully written with the input from numbers internal and external experts in this space and i do believe they're right for our platform while joe has a massive audience, actually the number one podcast in more than 90 markets. he also has to abide by those policies, keep in mind, too. not only is the administration watching this they want more
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than just a disclaimer on his joe rogan's podcast. >> ainsley: our freedom of speech is being threatened here. he is saying shouldn't i be able to talk about anything i want on the show. >> brian: just ask questions. >> ainsley: it might not be. sanjay gupta going to say one thing. isn't it nice to make a decision about your body listening to various different opinions? >> steve: sure. is he making these comments on a podcast with the platform called spotify which is a private business. they can do whatever they want. >> ainsley: true. >> steve: that's why there are all these artists, a number of artists who have said the ultimatum is from neil young. either neil young or joe rogan. well, it was an easy -- it was an easy pick for spotify because mr. rogan has got 11 million listeners. and spotify's music side isn't making as much money. rogan and his podcast are a cash machine, revenue for the podcast
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up 627%. and that is good news for free speech. ultimately, it's a business decision. and in this case, the fella who runs the company, daniel is going with what's making him money right now. the big question is if taylor swift and madonna and everybody starts pulling the plug, we then change and say okay, we are going to have to do something different. right now he is standing behind his number one money maker which, if you are running a business, that's a good call. >> ainsley: is he getting support from celebrities. i know rock supported him. troy aikman, jewel did, most recently kevin james the actor that you are friends with that you have interviewed a bunch. cat, the celebrity tattoo artist. >> i know joe rogan knows tattoos he will know exactly where to go. the president of brazil weighs. in i don't know if joe knows me the way i like my country i like free speech. where does he make money on
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downloads. what does he also have advertisers? if you start going after the advertisers. they coca-cola, if they start going after the advertisers and jen psaki goes after them you have got to do more. that means the government is going after a business subtly. anthony fauci find other people to condemn him and talk about the danger of it. can you see him being neutralized in a short period of time if we do not say something or do something even if you disagree with his ability to ask questions which is nuts. i think you have to make a statement here. this is a watershed moment. >> steve: ultimately it comes down to what spotify wants to do because he works for spotify. >> brian: if spotify gets pressure from the government that cannot stand. that means they are putting their hand on private business to crack down on something because they didn't like the messaging. that's a scary situation. >> steve: here's the thing. the reason he we know what
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mr. elk had to say about joe biden because he had a post earnings call. he said that right now spotify ended the year with 180 million paid subscribers but the stock dropped 20% after hours on weak guidance going forward. apparently the future uncertain for spotify. let's see what happens. all right. it is exactly 6:28 here in the east. it's also 6:28 in tampa where you tampa buccaneer fans are saying goodbye to the greatest of all time. pete hegseth woke up early to talk football, politics, and breakfast in tampa. >> pete: that's exactly right. at tampa we are at mom's place. come on out here. we are going to talk to the people in the shadow of the bucs stadium. what do they think of brady hitting the road. of course we are going to get some-what is this kitchen steakk omelet.
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♪ (delivery man) i'll that's for you.hotel. (mail recipient 2) it's opened. (delivery man) yup, i got another one here that's just the same. (mail recipient 4) why? (delivery man) sms, unencrypted texts, they're just like these. they're open. (mail recipient 5) what are you talking about? (delivery man) like if this was an unencrypted text... i just read it. (mail recipient 6) just like this. (delivery man) every text you send is just as open as your letters! including pictures! your texts are open! . >> carley: police may bring in the military to deal with the truckers protesting vaccine mandates. ottawa's police chief says it may be necessary to clear demonstrators who have been blocking major roads for the last six days, freedom convoy participants say they will not stop until trudeau ends the mandate. now go fund me is pausing the
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group's page after it surpassed $10 million. go fund me says the page is under review to make sure it complies with its terms of service. the ladies of "the view" silent on the drama surrounding co-host whoopi goldberg but they had plentd to say about supreme court justice neil gorsuch. >> whoopi will be back here in two weeks. okay? the supreme court justice, neil gorsuch is hanging out with the who's who of conservatives this weekend when he speaks at an event for the federalist society. >> carley: on monday goldberg said the inhumanity to man and not about race. she later apologized for that comment. and billionaire paying a dutch city to dismantle historic bridge to make way for 48 a $5 million yacht. he is getting a central section of the 145-year-old structure removed then reassembled his yacht sunday construction behind
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the bridge and is nearly ready to go but it's too big. the bridge route is the only way to sea to get the wind under his sales. what a ridiculous situation. >> steve: that is the definition of rich. >> ainsley: what is that going to cost him? >> carley: going to space get a bridge removed because your yacht is too big. >> ainsley: blow it over the bridge. >> brian: he does not have to lick envelopes enemy. he has resigned as ceo of amazon. >> ainsley: now he has his boat. >> brian: i hope he finds happiness, too. pete heg set, thanks so much, carley. pete hegseth is talking politics at a colorado diner joins us from mom's place in tampa. pete? >> pete: good morning, brian, steve, and ainsley. always great to see you guys. great to be in tampa not just the weather but the folks as well. one of them is george. you are the owner of mom's its place excorrect? >> correct. >> you said business has mostly recovered. thankfully staffing has been
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good for you because you have a lot of loyal staff you have had for a while. you ever facing challenges as a small business owner. what are you up against right now? >> right now the biggest thing is the supply side of getting things like bacon, sausage, paper products. and then the second part of that is the price of everything has increased so dramatically, that i spend a lot of my time instead of doing managerial work is actually finding quality products to bring in. so. >> pete: the price of bacon, if you would for our viewers, the difference that you are facing right now. >> sure. recently, before covid, we used a 15-pound box of bacon used to be approximately 28, $29. and now it's in the 70-dollars range. >> pete: tripled. >> correct. >> you said normally you don't have to raise your privacies and do you so every six years or so. but you had to three months ago just to reflect reality. >> just to cover the cost of the
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rising pies. and now, too. inflation is taking a small hit on us, also. >> pete: interesting. more time trying to find suppliers than you are actually running a restaurant. >> correct. i spend a lot of time doing that now. >> pete: george, you run a heck of a restaurant. >> appreciate it. >> pete: we appreciate it we promised we would find bucs fans. we have pete and mike and mike. so, i could remember that not too bad. tom brady is out what's your year all feeling about the goat leaving town. >> grateful. fun ride while it lasted two years. i wish weekend have one more but we respect his decision to retire. >> pete: you do. >> very grateful and appreciative. thank you to the people of boston for your sacrifice for giving him to us. [laughter] >> pete: that sounded really sincere. [laughter] and' a little bit sad. thought we would have one more
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year but that's right. we had one great year and another really good year. flags fly forever. it. >> pete: championship flags. >> exactly. >> same here. it was nice while it lasted. it was something that, you know, i don't think any buck fan ever expected would happen. the fact it did happen flash in the pan championship. what else can you ask for? >> pete: i can say as a viking fan when brett favre showed up on our doorstep those were the two most enjoyable years i had as a fan. although didn't get us to the promised fan still fun. heading down to one more steven matthew a season ticket. we are walking so far because he sits in this booth every thursday, am i right? >> every thursday. >> season ticket holder. what do you think about tom not being here next year. >> great he showed up. upset it didn't last a little
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bit longer. >> pete: you wanted one more year. >> i think he could have gone a couple. one more year would have been nice. >> pete: you are here with your mother as well. hawk's nuts by the way are, what? >> a small family owned company that produces boiled peanuts. >> pete: boiled peanuts. i didn't know about them. i tried them they are fantastic. >> pete: what is one challenge your business is facing right now. >> being able to get supplies. everything we get is either back ordered or twice as expensive as it was six months ago. >> pete: gas prices brought up will diesel for the truck is like paying a mortgage these days. >> pete: back to you in new york. we will keep talking to the people about what they think about tom brady. you heard it a lot of gratitude you take the moment you get when you get them. >> brian: a problem with your reporting. he saved criticisms and solved a problem. i have a huge problem with your reporting. >> steve: tell mr. bacon that.
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>> pete: you do. did you know that joe biden solved the supply chain crisis for christmas. he saved christmas, didn't he? [laughter] >> pete: that's how everyone feels here, too. >> brian: i will go for a seconds source. >> ainsley: tell him to keep making the boiled peanuts they are good. i have had them. >> pete: this is the first i have had them. they are good. >> steve: mom's place down in tampa. he will be there throughout the morning. meanwhile, parents are call out a georgia school district after it posts and then deletes a controversial critical race theory syllabus. are officials trying to hide their agenda? kind of looks like it. maybe not.
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to its ingredients or taking certain medicines, which may interact with cabenuva. serious side effects include allergic reactions post-injection reactions, liver problems,...and depression. if you have a rash and other allergic reaction symptoms, stop cabenuva and get medical help right away. tell your doctor if you have liver problems or mental health concerns, and if you are pregnant, breastfeeding, or considering pregnancy. some of the most common side effects include injection site reactions, fever, and tiredness. if you switch to cabenuva, attend all treatment appointments. with once-a-month cabenuva, i'm good to go. ask your doctor about once-monthly cabenuva. >> ainsley: georgia's largest school district in hot water after posting and deleting controversial syllabus on the district's website. heritage action obtained a copy of the syllabus that noted students will bridge the schools from a.p. language to a.p. research.
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analyzing the value of using different lenses in social criticism. critical race theory. feminists, marxists and psycho analytic. the school district says the syllabus was never use ford an actual class but parents are still very concerned. here with the reaction. gwinnett county mitchell and jessica anderson. thank you, ladies, for being with us. >> thank you. >> thanks for having us. >> ainsley: jessica, i know heritage action uncovered all of this. tell me what you found. >> when we started looking at gwinnett county public schools. we found that the syllabus had numerous instances of referencing critical race theory as the lens to a student who could look at and understand history, education and all of the curriculum in these a.p. classes. so that sent a red flags for us. we know parents want more for their kids. they don't want to see critical race theory infused in the curriculum. that's why we pointed it out and unfortunately, instead of a discussion, gwinnett county public schools took it down.
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quickly tried to defend the actions, said that there isn't crt here. we issued a foia to better understand really what's going on in the largest public school county in the state. >> ainsley: you say you shouldn't have to submit a formal request to see your child's syllabus. you have a middle schooler and high schooler. what's really being taught in these classrooms? >> well, would he don't know. and that's the thing. transparency. i have been on this from the beginning. i helped start a protest when they took [inaudible] out of school. really what happened with covid is the parents woke up across the country and started paying attention. we started to looking across the table at what their lesson plans were and started getting more involved. and we have known that critical race theory is being taught but we didn't know how to prove it how do we get ahold of those? why aren't they public? what do we do to find out? we know that it's been there. and now this is just one more step to show hey, it's an admission of guilt. they took it down after three days. we have known the influences there. but we haven't been able to get
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our hands on things. and actually, the chairwoman has on her page how she agrees with critical race theory and how she wants it taught. so, we know it's there. >> ainsley: jessica, can something be done about this? are there leaders going after these school districts? >> yes. first off, parents like sherri are the exact reason we got into this work to arm them with the facts and show them how they can submit foias, but the process is so much larger, that's why there are state representatives in georgia right now that are introducing bills which would provide transparency, back to the parents so that they don't even have to issue a foia. that they will know what their children are being taught. that they will have visibility into the curriculum. and they many be able to hold these cool officials accountable. we want kids to be able to learn. look, i'm a mom, too. that's what we want. we don't want to think our kids are being indoctrinated when they go to school. >> who is pushing ccrt in your
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schools. >> it startle at the top. the thing is you cannot use racism to eradicate racism. and when it starts from the top down, i mean, this is really a college course, so it's not something where you go to school and they teach a course in it. it's something that is -- they are taking down our monuments. it's really a cultural piece that is really being into our communities. and you can't just put your finger on it in one place. >> ainsley: i want to read a statement from gwinnett county public schools. they said this syllabus was committed to college board by a teacher as part of the a.p. course. during the summer of 2017. however, the actual class syllabus provided students that year and subsequent years, did not include any reference to critical race theory. cr. >> it is not taught in the class. and is not part of gwinnett county public schools curriculum. ladies, thank you so much. jessica, sherri, great to see you. >> you as well. >> thank you. let's check in with our senior meteorologist janice dean for
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our fox weather forecast. deja vu, right, janice? >> janice: here we go. groundhog was right. look at the snow reports over 1d indiana and over a foot of snow in michigan and this is still going. and my concern is the ice. because it is happening from texas all the way up towards the ohio valley. eventually getting into the northeast and even parts of the mid-atlantic tomorrow. winter weather advisories as far as south as corpus christi, texas, all the way up towards bangor maine and ice storm warning which is the most concerning. ice accumulating ice on the roads and the power lines. we are going to see, you know, potentially millions of people without power with temperatures below freezing. and very dangerous driving and traveling conditions. here is the snow fall over the next several days into the northeast. that's where we will see most of the snow. the ice, the ice ainsley is what i am so concerned about w. affecting thousands of miles here from texas to the to me. including. so big cities on the i-95 corridor tomorrow. keep you up to date.
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fox weather.com if you want the latest forecast details. keep you up to date during "fox & friends" as well. back to you. >> ainsley: that ice can be so dangerous. thank you so much, supply delays looming trouble. threatening canned beer. two brewery owners are going us live with the impact? ♪ ice cold beer never broke my heart ♪iz do it fast. [limu emu squawks] woo! new personal record, limu! only pay for what you need. ♪ liberty, liberty, liberty, liberty. ♪ only pay for what you need. i don't just play someone brainy on tv - i'm an actual neuroscientist. and i love the science behind neuriva plus. unlike ordinary memory supplements, neuriva plus fuels six key indicators of brain performance. more brain performance? yes, please! neuriva. think bigger.
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steve while americans stock up on beer for the super bowl here next weekend, the aluminum shortage is brewing trouble for small breweries. beloved american beers are being taken off the shelves because of can shortages and so hard to get them. our next two guests are brewers who say they have never seen their industries this bad. rob martin at itch witch ale brewery. the founder from ipswich, massachusetts joins us left and brewing co-founder joins us from chicago. guys, good morning to you. >> good morning. >> steve: rob, it's too early for a beer right now, isn't it? >> it is right here in ipswich but it's not somewhere else in the world for sure.
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>> steve: good answer. listen, i wouldn't blame you guys for drinking at 6:53 in the morning right now in the small beer brewery business your number one problem is getting the cans to put the beer in. because ball corporation same company that made my grandma's mason jars, they make your cans and they have changed the rules on guys like you. right, rob? >> that's absolutely true, steve. we purchased from ball, or we did purchase from ball. they changed the minimums, we used to have to buy 25 pallets at a time. they would store those pallets for us -- we are up in the northeast. they would store them in saratoga and we could could complete the pal lets as we need them. now we have to buy 100 pallets of each different style of beer and take them all at once and store them ourselves. for us it could be a thousand pallets that we would have to store. >> steve: so you are not doing that you are buying cans and you
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are printing your own labels. brent, i understand you have the same problem. >> steve: somebody just sent somebody a message to say hey, you are on tv. you got the same problem with the cans. but you also experienced the same problem with everything costs more than it did a year ago. >> oh, yeah. from cans to labels to ingredients, it's gone insane. we have also run into the same situation of not being able to source cans. >> steve: so what are you doing? >> well, we pivoted. you know, originally 8-ounce small cans for certain styles and the manufacturers just stopped using those or stopped producing those. we had to pivot to 16-ounce cans suppliers, because we weren't able to get our blank cans from the suppliers we had used from day one. >> steve: sure.
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on, ultimately, despite what we have heard from washington, d.c., the supply chain crisis is still going on and impacting small businesses like yours. >> it certainly is, steve. our price structure is going from 10 cents for the actual can itself up to about 16 cents. because we're going to labeled cans as well. we had to invest in additional equipment that we didn't have before. it's really tough. and it's particularly tough because we can't raise our prices enough to cover the increased costs whether it's cans or grain or the labor costs. the consumer just won't stand for it. >> steve: absolutely. we need our beer but some people will look for somebody chief meteorologister. thank you both for joining us live. >> steve: we are taking a break. lara trump is going to join us here in a couple of minutes.
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and out of the hospital. don't take entresto if pregnant; it can cause harm or death to an unborn baby. don't take entresto with an ace inhibitor or aliskiren, or if you've had angioedema with an ace or arb. the most serious side effects are angioedema, low blood pressure, kidney problems, or high blood potassium. ask your doctor about entresto. >> carley: president biden heading to new york city today to meet with law enforcement facing a full scale crisis. >> the visit comes as 30 officers across our country were shot in january. >> thousands came to honor the life and memory of nypd officer wilbert mora. another sea of blue through the streets of new york city. >> how many more officers have to lose their lives before this system changes? the nypd protects us but who protects them. >> the images showing our crisis at the southern border. 70 migrants arrested dressed in camo because they want to evade
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capture. >> president biden should come here and see firsthand the destruction. >> the spotify ceo controversy surrounding joe rogan. >> streaming giant won't change policies based on one person. >> the freedom of speech is being threatened. they are being censored or intimidating into censoring themselves. >> jeff zucker resigned yesterday apparently after failing to disclose a relationship with a colleague. >> there is a million reasons you could get rid of jeff zucker, he did a terrible job and ran that network into the ground. ♪ you'll be my soft and sweet ♪ you be my glass of wine >> brian: looking forward in that city to trying to find a quarterback. there is some reports that they have an opening. i saw like there is an ad in the tampa bay tribune quarterback wanted for a team with good foundation with a wonderful coach two years ago was the best
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in football. now they are a top 6 team. but, you know, you don't have to be 44. you could be younger. will train a 38-year-old even though they are a little green around the ears. >> steve: why are you reading the want ads? >> brian: looking to find out what tampa needs. >> ainsley: backup? >> brian: gail gabbard. >> blain. >> blain gabbard the quarterback that started ahead of kaepernick that got him so upset in the off season that he took a seat on the bench? if we could google that, ted. >> steve: if we could the reason we started this hour of "fox & friends." >> brian: don't worry about it chris chulo, you do it, okay? >> chris: absolutely. >> steve: the reason we started that hour of "fox & friends" with that image of tampa that is where we dispatched pete hegseth he is having breakfast with friends as you can see in that aerial shot.
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pete is mr. -- what are you doing in the back? >> ainsley: making pancakes. >> pete: come on, we are making pancakes, guys. this is what we do here at mom's place. they let me in the back making pancakes helping out a lot of folks. brian i will help you out with that. blain gabbard. not a crowd favorite. don't want him to replace tom brady. new chapter. wilson. aaron rodgers, too. they think they have a squad that could make another run at a title, another flag, they just need a farrakhan. 38, 39, 40-year-old quarterback has a couple years left. they are into it. that's why we are here after the mom's place in tampa. two things, first of all, we hear from the pontiff carrots us what's good for the bucs. what do the fans think hit up will tate tailgates. what did he give them for two season and should he give him some more the greatest of all of
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time. install businesses facing. florida took a very different covid approach are they still being hit with energy costs and supply chain issues? we're going to talk to the people live all morning live on "fox & friends" from tampa bay, florida. it's so wonderful to be in tampa bay, guys. i feel for you a little bit in new york and my pancakes are overdone as often happens. >> steve: pete, you are down in florida. why don't you make mickey pancakes, you got a big thing of pancakes you make the round thing and then you do two little things to make the ears. that's what they do a lot of down there. >> ainsley: that's what the dads do. we are a good hour and a half from orlando. probably better in orlando than tampa, it's a mickey cake. >> steve: zoom on in. what do you think? >> steve: not bad, very nice good job.
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>> brian: pretty low bar. >> ainsley: wait until you see bubbles and flip it. >> brian: chris chulo working the crane camera and joel couldn't do it. blain gabbard started over colin kaepernick, so ticked off took a seat on the bench ended up kneeling and a national craze of kneeling. now you have a chance to start again. 5 minutes after the top of the hour. president biden is heading to new york city to meet with mayor eric acams. he says he is joe biden's favorite. they are going to be talking about the crime crisis. steve steve president's visit comes one day after thousands of officers pay respect to no, police detective wilbert more raft. >> ainsley: peter doocy live at the white house the president is pressed to do more about all of this out-of-control crime. peter? >> peter: yes, good morning. when president biden goes to new york today. the loved ones of people who were recently murdered in new york are going to be paying very
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close attention. >> what happened to my daughter don't happen to nobody else. >> he needs to change all the system. >> and take out all these guns. >> and to and then, president biden is going to announce measures that officials here say are new. but they are similar to things that we have heard before like cracking down on gun dealers and so-called ghost guns. but he is going to be landing in a city mourning the locals of another nypd officer wilbert mora just laid to rest as some in law enforcement are starting to make the case that maybe the most dangerous thing to men and women in uniform is a specific brand of a progressive talking point. >> job has always been tough under normal circumstances. but when you have politician after politician.
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piling on, telling the community again and again you can't trust law enforcement. spills over into deadly violence. that's what is being played out today. >> pete: we have been hearing from white house officials lately. they like to say that they support additional funding for local police departments through the american rescue plan. but any money from the american rescue plan is just leftover covid stimulus. because, when they were pushing the american rescue plan, they were not talking about reducing crime. they were just talking about crawling out of the darkest parts of the pandemic. back to you. >> steve: peter, thank you very much. that goes to show you they gave these localities so much money. a year later, they still have plenty of it. but, to his -- peter's earlier point talking about politics. yesterday they laid to rest an officer out in los angeles. a fellow by the name of fernando. he died last week while house
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hunting with his girlfriend in a gang related robbery. and his lieutenant eulogized him and talked a little bit about the woke narrative fueling an anti police climate in california and he says it's gotta stop. >> the system and the community that you worked so hard for failed you. you express your concerns to your family many times about how criminals were not being held accountable for their actions and how it's frustrating for the police and much more heart breaking for the innocent victims. your murder will not be in vain and the violence must stop. enough is enough. you share with me your worries over the anti-police climate, the refusal to hold criminals accountable and awoke narrative that only seems to make things worse not better. but despite those concerns, fernando, you always carried on. because you are, father than loyallest. it is my promise to you i will continue to wear my badge proudly and continue to serve
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and protect in your honor. >> ainsley: keep hearing same messages at funerals, family members and loved ones standing up to with messages to all of these soft on crime leaders we have to do something about this so we don't have to bury any other police officer. >> brian: the county sheriff out there really said i'm looking forward to 2022, most of these policies put in place by people elected in 2018 and 2020. this will be the first time we have had an election since all hell has broken loose and crime with this d.a. gascon and maybe they will have a chance to elect normal people that care about the people that put them in office. also bringing up, too. christina the mom of the 19-year-old killed because she was working in a burger king by some lunatic. she said she wants to tell the president what is happening. what happened to her daughter. she said we need to change a lot of laws. we need more police. there is just so much crime. my biggest fear is president biden is going to just sit there and just talk about guns, which
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means he only cares about the politics, is he not going to team with eric adams to put pressure on city council. pressure on the democratic legislature to get rid of no cash bail and to worse these days to enforce crime or be removed. if you really want to save your midterm elections, mr. president, fly out to california, demand that the san francisco d.a. in los angeles d.a. meet you somewhere, maybe in sacramento. where you have an emergency session on the need to reconfigure and get your mind around actually cracking down on crime. do the same thing with kim foxx on a zoom call that we all can see over in chicago and philadelphia with that guy. all single -- all individually taking down allowing crime to run rampant in the streets. >> wouldn't even have to fly to california. he could do it here today in new york. have a total reset and make it very clear we, in the united states, are going to start to throw, we are going to have d.a.s and judges. they will throw the book at people who commit crime. let's bring in lara trump, fox
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news contributor. she is joining us from florida where it is much warmer than here in new york. good morning to you. >> good morning, guys. >> steve: joe biden is coming to new york city. is he going to say we have got do more about guns when, in reality, they need -- he is going to try to stop the flow of guns into new york. there are already millions of guns in new york. and he needs to do something about the guns here. >> yeah. well, i think we all know this is basically a photo op. for joe biden. the reality is he is cratering in polling. we know that on every level america feels worse under joe biden. i bet there is a bit of a panic going on at the white house. how can we salvage anything? what do we do now? we will send him to new york city now that there are two more cops that have been slain and murdered. because of the high crime rates all across america under his watch. the reality is, don't forget, joe biden and kamala harris, guys, campaigned on defund the
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police. they are at fault for part of this sentiment all across the country against police officers. and if joe biden actually wanted to do something from a federal level, how about checking out our southern border, joe biden. how about the fact that gang members are pouring in over our southern border. illegal and lethal drugs are pouring in over our southern border. contributing to the crime situation. guns are probably pouring in over our southern border as well. so we could start there at fixing that problem. that is being totally ignored. so we all know what's going to happen. is he going to come in. it's going to be a photo op. they will try to salvage something from him and sadly nothing is likely to change. >> ainsley: susan sarin did you know is very progressive. she took part in black lives matter very outspoken about police brutality and she qui
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posted this. i'm going to tell my kids this is what fascism looks like and she added so if all of these cops weren't needed for crime that day doesn't that mean they aren't needed any day? and it's a picture of thousands of police officers on the streets of fifth avenue in front of saint patrick's cathedral for the original funeral last week. what's your reaction to this? >> i mean, obviously, ainsley, this is absolutely disgusting. and just flat out dumb. my 4-year-old knows the need for police officers in america and obviously susan sarandon didn't get that memo that you need them. i dare her to try to go live in any city, any town, any place in america without law enforcement, good luck. these men and women put their lives on the line every single day to protect us and keep our cities, our country by and large safe. they don't know if they are going to come home at the end of the day. so, yes. there was a big to do in new york city, susan are a san done
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and it was warranted because this is absolutely crazy to see the war on cops fin in our city. nothing to do with fascism. she might want to look up the definition of that word. what an idiotic thing to say. you know what, guys? sometimes people will tell you who they are. you just have to listen. maybe that's what we saw with susan sarandon and whoopi goldberg this week. maybe we ought to pay attention to who they are. >> brian: no but joe rogan is the problem we all know that said he didn't run on defund the police technically he didn't. if you listen to mcdonald argue more about -- she writes today if you look back on what joe biden has done, he says october 16th the national peace officer's memorial service. he says quality and justice is denied too many communities black and brown and too many families grieving unnecessary losses for their sons and daughters and their brothers from police violence. most of the stuff he talks about is about police violence.
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the trauma black america experiences every single day from police shooting when you know the black-on-black crime in most of these major cities are the major issues, that's what the president is focusing on. she believes, and the part i'm arguing the villeification of the police is the main reason there is chaos in our streets in 22 major cities. your thoughts? d.a.s are a big part of that as well. joe biden can't have it both ways that's what he was trying to do there. he was trying to act as though he cared about the war on cops but yet appease part of the radical base of the democrat party that says that all cops are bad and they are out to, you know, target certain groups of people in this country which we know is not true. they are out there to protect and serve every single american. you can't have it both ways. you can't vilify cops on one end and say oh, we're having this situation to support cops. that's not how it works.
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look at the way donald trump stood behind every single police officer in this country and you see it whenever joe biden goes anywhere. the police are not excited to have him there. look at when donald trump traveled anywhere and continues to travel anywhere. the police are standing at attention, they are happy he is there. it is a very different feeling. people know who support them. they know that joe biden does not have their back at the end of the day. no matter what kind of show he tries to put on. >> steve: well, is he going to be here in new york later this morning. let's see what he says. we will carry it live here on fox. laura, thank you very much for joining in. >> thanks, guys. >> steve: all right. speaking of trouble with law enforcement. carley joins us right now with the tough news out of tennessee. >> that's exactly right. we are starting with a fox news alert. a tennessee deputy is shot after pulled the drivers over. williamson county sheriff's office says the driver took off when the deputy tried to pull them over. the driver then allegedly shot at the deputy hitting him at least once before crashing. the sheriff's office s to be ok.
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but the traffic stop gone wrong makes it 34 officers shot in the line of duty this year. shocking new photos coming from the texas border 70 migrants in camo clothing apprehended near the big ben sector 36 hours in del rio, two toddlers ages 1 and 4 are found traveling without parents or guardians. then in the rio grande valley the chief tweeting this picture announcing the arrest of a convicted murderer and child sex offender. the u.s. army announcing american soldiers who have not yet been vaccinated against covid will be discharged immediately. secretary of the army calling unvaccinated soldiers a, quote: risk to the force. service members who are discharged are will not receive involuntary separation pay and may have to pay backbone newses. the army says 96% of active troops are fully vaccinated.
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did you hear about this? los angeles mayor eric garcetti has an excuse for going maskless in this picture after getting caught breaking the rules. listen to this. >> people ask for a photograph. i hold my breath zero percent chance of infection. to me, it is injured by that. >> garcetti and san francisco mayor london breed posing for this picture alongside magic johnson at sofi stadium. the home of this year's super bowl. california governor gavin newsom also getting caught maskless, not once but twice during the game. but don't worry, guys. he wasn't breakings rules. because he held his breath. three years in, that's a new one. >> steve: i want to hear from dr. fauci ladies and gentlemen across the world hold your breath and you don't get covid. >> carley: don't give him any ideas. >> brian: outdoors impossible to
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transfer it. >> ainsley: probably not the best policy to have if you are a public figure and taking pictures and you are a proponent of the mask and you only take it off and hold your breath for pictures? >> steve: i haven't breathed since october. all right. carley. thank you. >> brian: it would be great at the super bowl if everybody took their mask off at once. >> steve: don't breathe. >> brian: kick out 80,000 people? thank you, carley. 90 minutes after the hour. the u.s. will deploy troops to eastern europe as tensions between russia and ukraine intensify. how will russia react? that story next.
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the border. they are the ones threatening to invade a sovereign country. >> move forces to poland romania and germany. these forces are not going to fight in ukraine. they are going to ensure the robust defense of our nato allies. >> brian: the showdown continues as president biden sends 3,000 troops overseas. we think poland, escalating tensions with russia. the most provocative actions to date. they have over 120,000 troops in and around the ukraine border. ask author and russian scholar david sadr. do you like this move yesterday to help diffuse this crisis putting more troops into theater? >> >> well, i think that the movement of troops into eastern europe into poland and romania in particular is mostly intended to reassure those nato allies. that the united states supports them. it's very disconcerting for them to see this build up of russian
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forces on the border with ukraine because they also have a border with russia. and therefore, that's why those deployments were made. they are not big enough to make a difference. in any real strategic sense. but they -- but they indicate at least -- i mean they are symbolic but they do indicate that the united states is not -- is not backing down in the face of russian intimidation. and in that sense it's worthwhile and important. >> brian: is there a way that the russians have a face-saving measure and don't invade? is there a face saving measure out there that would avoid invasion and you would have vladimir putin be able to say something to feel as though he got what he wanted? >> look, they have already gotten what they wanted. they have made themselves the center of the attention of the whole world. and they have convinced the russian people that russia --
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the russian leadership is very important. that it can -- it can stand up for the rights, called, of russia. russia doesn't need more in the way of face-saving measures. because all they have said from the beginning that they are notl they will say is the west was overreacting. and in any case it's not our worry how they are going to save face. it's our worry to make sure that they don't carry out an aggressive attack on a neighboring sovereign country. >> brian: very true but just playing it out they are not going to back down if it makes them look bad. what's going to get them to look down or do you think invasion is inevitable after the olympics and the ground freezes. >> invasion is very far from inevitable. big difference between threatening an invasion and carrying one out. they have massed troops before and, in fact, the build up is really a continuation of what they started in april 2021.
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i personally don't think that if they are thinking clearly which, of course is always a big question when it comes to the russian leadership. but if they are, that they will not invade ukraine. because all they will get from it is destruction, blood shed, and partisan warfare which will ultimately raise the possibility of destabilizing russia itself. remember, this is not a democratic regime in russia and the -- it maintains itself with corruption and intimidation. it's not and it and the russian leaders are aware of the instability of a situation in which a small group of people, maybe 100 families, control anywhere from 30 to 35% of the national wealth. so, they are, first of all, going to worry about their own power and not about recreating
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the soviet union. >> brian: very interesting. that's going to be all part of a special we have on fox nation called the crisis of ukraine. david sadr decision impact could impact americans here at home. wants to preserve itself. they are getting a lot of attention. but they are also, in many cases galvanizing nato and galvanizing people the ukraine, david, thanks so much. >> thank you. >> brian: up next on our show, while some americans are feeling gloomy after one year, president biden and two years of covid craziness. it's always sunny down in florida and that's where we find pete hegseth having breakfast with friends in tampa. pete hegseth will be next according to reports. psoriasis really messes with you. try. hope. fail. no one should suffer like that. i started cosentyx®. five years clear. real people with psoriasis look and feel better with cosentyx. don't use if you're allergic to cosentyx. before starting get checked for tuberculosis.
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four men charged in connection with to the death of actor michael k. williams. he was found dead in his new york apartment in september. a medical examiner determined williams died of an accidental overdose. court documents say the defendants allegedly sold williams heroin laced with fentanyl. each face sentences of 5 to 40 years in prison. the u.s. black lives matter movement shuts down all of its online fundraising stream that
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happened just days after california's doj threatened to revoke the charity's tax exempt status and charge late fees to blm leaders since they never submitted their 2020 taxes. similar threats have also been made by washington state as blm still has not named anyone in charge of its $06 million bank roll. wow. former new york city mayor bill de blasio is reportedly considering rung for a seat in congress. the disgraced democrat is eyeing the 11th congressional district one month after ending his ten tenure as new york city mayor. if he does join the race, de blasio will first face off against former democrat congressman max rose. last month de blasio dismissed rumors of a potential gubernatorial run. incredible video shows a british airways pilot aborting a landing at heathrow airport in high winds. the video captured by aviation channel big jet tv shows the
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plane tilt to approach the tail of the plane and clips the ground known as a tail strike. able to land safely with all passengers and crews unharmed. scary situation there. back to you. >> steve: that is terrifying imagine being on board and suddenly we are taking off. >> and then know you have to land again. >> thank you, carley. >> meanwhile. let's happened down to the sun cheyenne state where pete hegseth serving up talk. mom's place in tampa. pete? >> pete: mom's place. guys, i made my mickey pancake added but berry eyes and nose. the right era bit deformed. i did the best i can. [sighs] >> pete: still going to be tasty. come on, i have been known as pancake pete but the design is not really something i have refined quite yet i will keep
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working on it here at mom's place in tampa and talking to a lot of sports fans today. sometimes you have to take a moment to pause and say the great quarterback of all time is retiring. no doubt. find me somebody out there that doesn't agree that tom brady is the greatest quarterback of all time. potentially one of the greatest team sport leaders of all time. when you step back and just ask people as a fan, what do you think about that? what do you think about that moment and that's what we're doing here today at mom's place. and i have got bill, bill, how are you doing? >> i'm doing great, thanks, how are you. >> pete: big bucs fan what did you make of the fact that tom brady decided to part ways? >> if you look at what tom brady has at home he his his wife at gizelle. i would do the same. i would hang out with her rather than a bunch of guys on a football field. >> pete: he did cite the family as part of the treason spend more time with the family. so you don't blame him? >> no, i don't at all. he was great. came here and won a championship. did what he needed to do and my hat's off to him.
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>> pete: super bowl jersey. always have it real quick, what do you think tom brady moving on? >> i think it's a good for him, good for his family. and he deserves it 44 years old. seven championships. won us a championship here last year. won 14 games this year. i don't see how you can blame him for retiring, right? so we're talking about it a minute ago the gap between his oldest son and the guys on his team are much closer than the gap between him and his teammates. so,. >> pete: good point. >> yeah. i think time is good. time something good. is he awesome. and wish him all the best in the world. >> pete: certainly what we are hearing from a lot of folks. now we have a buck fan who is scott, right? >> i like the shirt by the way. >> thank you, i appreciate that. >> what might happen next in tampa. >> we have a job opening now for
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quarterback. and aaron rodgers, he has been in the bad bay. come down to the good bay. why would you want to be cold in an igloo in the frozen tundra, here in the beach in beautiful tampa bay. >> pete: that's the choice tom brady made. and you are calling on aaron rodgers. >> come on down aaron. the real a rod. >> pete: pats jersey, trump jersey, sir, sorry to call you out and not give you a microphone at this point. this is our final table here. four fine gentlemen here for a bible study actually. appreciate you coming out. who is the real estate agent of the bunch here? >> mortgages. sorry. as far as businesses booming down here in florida, isn't it. >> sure is. best state in the whole country, in the whole world, florida. >> pete: he did say that earlier best state in the whole world. best governor and best state, yeah. >> pete: hard to get a new home in florida. >> huge problem no.
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inventory. so many people coming here no state income tax this kind of weather like this is our cold snap it's 80 degrees today, right? it's hard. >> pete: life is tough here in green -- did i say green bay. [boos] >> pete: that's a big mistake. tampa bay. okay? tampa bay not green bay. great to be here instead of green bay. sorry to all of our wisconsin viewers but i would rather be in florida this morning. back to you guys in new york. >> steve: always great to end a segment where the people boo you. >> ainsley: pete, i'm curious. >> pete: i know. >> ainsley: the bible study guys what are they learning? >> guys if we may ask, ainsley wants to know what are we studying today in the bible study. >> what we do typically review our notes from our church's sermon from the prior weekend. we have great family church here in tampa and last week the big talk was about fasting. so.
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[laughter] >> steve: talking fasting in a diner. >> my wife and i operate a nonprofit in tampa new life warehouse and we help people start over from homelessness a bunch of other things. we started two years ago. we serve over 600 families and these guys have come along really jumped in and helped out. it's a pretty cool thing. >> pete: thank you very much for everything you do. >> brian: what's the name of it? >> pete: thank you, guys. >> brian: what's the name? >> what's the name of it again? >> new life warehouse.org. >> pete: helping people start over who have, you know, taken a wrong turn absolutely. >> we have cool. >> brian: fasting starts at lunch. >> ainsley: all right, pete. thank you very much. thanks, guys. all right. come up. who is hunter biden mounting questions over his foreign business ties as a newly revealed email shows a diplomat warned hunter was undermining america's anticorruption efforts in ukraine. peter schweizer on that next.
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. >> steve: who is hunter biden other than the son of the president. there is mounting scrutiny over his foreign business ties. as the "new york times" is now suing the state department for dragging its feet on handling of emails regarding hunter and a new report reveals a u.s. diplomat by the name of george kent warned of his position, hunter's at. [buzzer] that writing in an email, quote someone in washington needed to engage vp biden quietly and say that his son hunter's presence undercut the anticorruption message the v.p. and we were advancing in ukraine. that's from 2016, i believe. have the bidening gotten caught red handed? what does it mean? our next guest wrote a book on the topic. joining us now peter schweizer the brand new book going to debut the number one position in
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the "new york times" best seller list. it's called red handed how american elites get rich helping china. peter, good morning to you. >> good morning, steve. good to be with you. >> steve: does it surprise you u.s. diplomat saying in 2016 when joe biden is vice president hey the vice president's son is screwing this up. >> no. it doesn't. but it also to the fact that at least certain elements in the bureaucracy seem to be much more interested in protecting the first family than american interest. because remember, they testified during the impeachment hearings that no, there were really very few concerns about hunter biden and now we know, of course, that there were. so, this is a big problem and by the way, the suggestion that email they should engage vice president biden, vice president was point man on ukraine. he had to know what his son was doing. was undermining the anticorruption efforts in ukraine. i just think it's a question that the bidens didn't really care. >> steve: well, as another guy
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by the name of peter, peter doocy asked the then candidate joe biden have you ever talked to your son about your overseas business dealings and extraordinarily joe biden said no. that's hard to believe. >> yeah. it's very hard to believe. especially when you look through the hunter biden laptop like i have and some of the emails from his business hartners and we even know now from other reporting that they did communicate about these things and even more importantly, steve, as i point out in the book, they commingled funds, hunter biden was subsidizing his father's lifestyle. i'm sure his father wanted to know or knew where that money was coming from. and, of course, that money was coming from overseas. >> steve: the u.s. attorney has been looking into hunter biden's tax problems since, i think 201. it will be interesting if they ever reveal how they are intertwined. in the mean time extraordinary news, the "new york times" is suing the department of state joe biden's department of state
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because they are stonewalling. they said yeah, the soonest we can get you that information is 2023. which is just kicking the can so far out of the realm. "new york times" is saying we are taking you to court. why is suddenly, peter, the "new york times" interested in this stuff because, you know, a year or so ago, it was only you and us. >> yeah. no, that's right. i mean, this is very interesting. the reporter behind this by the way ken vogel is a good reporter. my experience has always been is he a good romplet i think a lot of these niewms had you management that did not want to cover these stories. they were sort of putting their fingers on the scale as far as politics are concerned. and i honestly think part of the calculation is, steve, that they see that joe biden is struggling as president. he is probably not going to be here for very long. i think this represents a turn as it were as far as some of the news publications management is concerned. so i think this is an important
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development. i wish they were covering the china relationships with the bidens. this romaine i can't. important story and speaks to the panel of corruption that exists in the biden family as it relates to these overseas dealings. >> steve: sure, the big question is would joe biden be president had these news outfits done the story before the election? anyway, read all about it in peter's number one "new york times" best seller "red handed" how american elites get rich helping china win and he is in the brand new special "who is hunter biden" now streaming on fox nation. peter, thank you very much for joining us today. >> oh, it's great to see you, steve. >> steve: peter was just telling me in the commercial he was stuck in dallas yesterday but the ice storm is coming. now he is driving home and he is in louisiana, janice. >> janice: he has to be careful. i don't want him on the roads. we have an ice storm warning across portions of the mississippi, tennessee and ohio river valley. look at this mess.
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wintry weather and snow. rain gulf coast. in between ice the most dangerous part of this weather pattern. winter weather advisories as far as south as corpus christy where we have our ice storm warning. accumulating rice on the roads and power lines people do not need to be driving out in this very dangerous, a crippling weather not only going to cause delays in the air but certainly cancellations, snow forecast still a strip of 8 to 12, maybe 2 feet of snow there is the ice, steve, there that is the most dangerous part of the system. we can deal with the rain and snow. it's the ice that causes crippling fox weather.com. meanwhile up next, a milwaukee police officer shot in the line of duty is given a surprise of a lifetime. how a community is rallying behind this wounded officer as his favorite team heads to the super bowl. what's the connection? stick around.
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guard for the cincinnati bengals super bowl, 16-23. i understand you are going to the super bowl next week. congratulations. see you out there. maybe we can have a cold one with bill hammer. hey, also, thank you all to the men and women. >> what is your reaction to that. >> that's awesome. i would love to be out there and to have that with them. >> that's really cool. what's the plan. when are you all going to the game? >> i don't know quite yet. they said they would let me know a couple of days. i don't think it even hit me yet. i'm very excited. i don't think all the emotion has set in yet. i'm definitely excited. >> i wanted to ask you after all that you have been through, i'm
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sure you will still put on that uniform. what does that mean to you? >> in means a lot. it just means that it will recover. they will overcome adversity, which i know is going to take a lot of hard work on my part. and i'm going to need motivation. i'm motivated to get back. i also wanted to take dedication which i'm willing to give to my recovery. >> you a shot on the shoulder and the side. have a great time with your dad. you deserve that. >> thank you, i will. >> from troubles here at home to tensions overseas, america faces a flurry of crises. while the biden administration needs to do to turn things around.
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>> he should come here to the border and see firsthand the destruction. >> major storm is underway impacting 100 million americans. travel of course becoming difficult as thousands of flights are canceled. companies respond to controversies surrounding joe rogan. >> home change policy. >> this speech is being threatened. they are being censored or being intimidated into censoring themselves. ♪ ♪ >> steve: you are looking at downtown miami. they've got one of those islands. for people who are lucky enough to live on one of those. tom brady is one. very shortly. live from new york and miami,
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where today it is currently 72, they are going for a high of 80. why aren't we there? >> i know, i know. the weather was beautiful. >> you thinking about, you put together a raft. looking for a good day to come over, this might be a good day. think about that. >> steve: meanwhile, on the other side of the peninsula is tampa. that is where pete is. he's having breakfast with friends at mom's place in so far, in about a good time and made some pancakes and some friends as well. >> brian: pancakes and friends, you can't beat it. we are in tampa bay at mom's place. good morning, everybody. a quiet crew. is thursday. a lot of people heading up the work. it's been an amazing group. we talked a lot about tom brady. we might get to that a little bit what comes next year in tampa bay from the fans. at this hour, we want to get to the economics of florida.
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the policies in florida, dealing with covid in florida, and how businesses have successfully navigated it here in ways that haven't happened elsewhere. how the supply chain and a lot of things that have happened over the last year including inflation in energy prices as well. we are going to talk to some business owners and others and industries here are just a few minutes and get the pulse of the people, of people doing the heavy lifting in the economy. what are they facing down here in tampa, florida? i'm going to hit the beach when this is all done. that's one of the perks of the job. you guys will be stuck in new york. >> brian: is too much of a risk. there's no lifeguards on duty. i don't want to see you and water over your head. >> steve: oh, he's over his head. >> ainsley: you have the rest of the day. >> brian: just promise me you are going to wait an hour after you have breakfast before you go into the pool. >> i live on the dangerous side, brian. a half-hour is all i need. >> steve: thank you very much.
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today, president biden is headed to new york city to meet with mayor adams about the city's crime crisis, which is out of control. speak to his visit comes one day after thousands of police officers gather to honor their brother in blue. >> brian: he's going to be traveling with his attorney general. peter doocy at the white house as a president is pressed to do more about crime. >> before president biden even leaves the white house for new york, the loved ones of people who are recently murdered in new york are telling him exactly what they want to hear. [speaking non-english language] >> interpreter: what happened to my daughter will happen to nobody else. i want to tell the president, -- >> there will be some of that from the president but it's not
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anything new. the president will continue to call for a crackdown on ghost gun makers as new york city mourns another officer was recently gunned down. law enforcement leadership are saying that guns may not ultimately be the root of the problem. and instead, they are speculating that it may be a top to bottom possibility towards men and women in uniform. >> the job has always been tough under normal circumstances. when we have politician after politician piling on, telling the community again and again, you can trust law enforcement, and spills over into violence. >> president biden has been saying for a long time, he does not support defining the police. some of these law enforcement leaders are saying that defining the police language is still a problem, then somebody is not getting the message. back to you. >> steve: are you hearing that there is any chance that the president will use today to come
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up to one police plaza to change his message, especially a reset on crime and biden? or is it all this going to be about guns? >> it sounds like it's mostly going to be about guns and similar to the measures they announced in conjunction with the doj in the summer. as we know, crime stats have not improved, particularly violent crime and murders with a dozen major cities in the u.s. mirroring all-time highs for homicides at the end of 2021. i ask the press secretary about this the other day. the president had spent his whole career fighting for funding for police departments. when you are president fighting for funding is not the same as funding. and new funding. it will be interesting to see how he is received by the nypd. >> he said he wanted the funding redirected. she said to reimagine public safety. you know what happened in new york city. bill cut $1 billion from the
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police budget here. >> thanks, peter a. 73 officers intentionally killed in 2021. the highest number since 1995. there's been a 56% interest over 2020. where is this exactly going? it still prevalent. just because you don't say defund the cops doesn't mean you support the cops. you should have saw yesterday and last friday, men and women who used to wear and did wear put on their dress blues and they went down and close to st. patrick's because of that turn. all therefore wilbert maura. he is really being mourned across the country. here is his sister. she spoke through a translator. [speaking non-english language] >> interpreter: how many more officers have to lose their lives before this system
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changes? the nypd protects us, but who protects them and who looks after the lives? >> ainsley: the officers were promoted to detective first grade which is the highest rank for detective in nypd. the commissioner also spoke and said that he is three times a hero, giving his life to the service and sacrificing his life and also being an organ donor where five recipients received his organs. >> steve: given what we heard in the eulogies on friday and then again yesterday, looking to the sister of officer mora, i wonder if the people who need the message are going to get the message. they've got to do something. they need to have a change, particularly here in new york city and elsewhere where prosecutors start to throw the book at people who break the law. particularly, people who break the law with crime. unfortunately, as peter just said, it sounds like most of what the prison is going to do
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today is he and mr. adams, former cop, now mayor are probably going to talk about the iron pipeline which is i-95, which is how they refer to it and how all these guns come into new york. they need to talk less about how the guns are getting to new york, and more about, that's important. but also about the guns that are here because of "the new york post" this morning has an item where they talk to a law enforcement source who says the problem is not the guns coming unnecessarily, as the guns that are here under the bed, in the closet, under the car seat. those are the guns they kill people like them and we buried yesterday. >> u.s. forces taking out the leader of isis during an overnight raid in syria. conforming moments ago that he is now dead. security correspondent jennifer griffin confirming that he was wearing a suicide vest that detonated during the raid. this video of the aftermath from
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looking at it now from just hours ago, 13 syrians died during the raid including six children. there was a prison break over the last few days in an ongoing standoff. a new statement from the white house, president biden says last night in my direction, u.s. military forces in northwest syria successfully undertook a counterterrorism operation to protect the american people and our allies and make the world a safer place. that president will speak at 9:30 about the raid from the white house. you can watch on fox news channel. we will talk to marco rubio in a matter of moments about that. in fact, is he ready now? >> steve: not yet. >> ainsley: the mission were successful, there were no u.s. casualties, but then getting more details. >> steve: a number of local residents they are set a number of civilians including children were killed on the assault. we have heard that before. apparently the u.s. commandos
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engaged in a firefight with the fighters for two hours before what happened happened. helicopter strikes bombarded the house after exit eight causing and you can see the extensive damage right there. and it is believed that this guy blew himself up as the americans came into the house. that's how they operate. speak to the special forces use loudspeakers to warn the women and their children in arabic to evacuate the area. >> brian: they do try to make sure there are no civilian casualties. think about what is happening in syria now. you've got turkey with the president's going after the cards. the cards over there fight like warriors. for the most part are allied with us. we have a presence there still because of situations like this. then of course you have the iranians in their regions to work with the russians in order to try to stabilize the government. he did the impossible.
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he killed everybody. this guy is a lunatic. in the meantime when it comes a terrorist, that's what president trump said, i'm there to stop the terrorist and control that border. that's where they are pouring into. remember how iraq got stabilized. it became a haven for isis. i've is infiltrated across the border and almost took baghdad. >> steve: the breaking news is that the u.s. commando raid killed a top isis leader in syria. speaking of syria, it was just in the last couple of days where the border patrol stopped somebody coming in from our southern border from syria. they have also stopped people from ukraine and russia and you name the country. they are streaming into our southern border. the border patrol union and the big bend of texas, poses some images that are puzzling on twitter in the last couple of hours. look at this. it is hard to tell the people --
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they look like u.s. commandos, right? no, those are 70 illegals who were arrested in last 20 or 36 hours. they are wearing camouflage. we have heard a million times that these people from honduras and el salvador and guatemala, they make their way up to our southern border, then they just look for the border patrol to give themselves up so they can get into the system and immediately come into the united states. but for whatever reason and i don't know why we blurt out their faces, for whatever reason, these people did not want border patrol to find them. where they up to something else? i don't know. >> ainsley: either that or they wanted to hide wearing the, or they wanted to look like they were americans. congressman brooks investigated all these flights that are just dropping illegal immigrants into the center of our country are these secret flights. he said to transport them the first nine months of last year up until september, cost us the
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american taxpayer, $340 million. he said that doesn't even include all the medical aid that we provide as well. listen to this. >> it is now more than a hundred thousand that are being transported in one shape, form, or fashion. the total cost, not just on flights about the detention of the places where they lived, the health care it seems over $2 billion. there is no end to how much damage the biden administration seeks to do and no end to how much money they are willing to spend, our money in order to pack america with millions of illegal aliens. >> brian: he's got president trump's full backing. this doesn't end back there. there is money that goes for them to be transported to get accommodations. there is ngos. over that story. he's a republican from texas. he said about administration is working with nonprofits like catholic charities. u.s. corporations and
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international agencies to operate a illegal immigration network that spans from south america to every community in the united states. taxpayer subsidies should not be subsidizing a tax invasion to the contrary. it's time to put a stop to this corrupt operation. 2.4 million people that we got through apprehensions, let alone the people that don't want to get caught with drugs that they don't want to be caught with. the attorney general of arizona, we don't hear enough about people taking an active look at the border in arizona. we know that senator mark kelly is a visual on issue. >> instead of going to new york city or worsening the vice president to central america to study the root causes, he should come here to the border and see firsthand that obstruction's administration has brought on arizona. i think it is the ultimate height of hypocrisy that you literally have the president of united states willing to risk our sons and daughters.
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the president is willing to risk our sons and daughters to wrist a ukrainian border and meanwhile, millions of drugs are planning to our southern border. millions of people in our country is less safe and more dangerous as a result of the biden administration. >> steve: such a good point about the hypocrisy. all the attention to the ukrainian border and nothing about our southern border. our president is coming to new york today to address the crime problem. at what point is he going to go to our southern border to address that? keep in mind. according to our brain room, joe biden has never been to the southern border in his life except one time, he landed at the el paso airport and then went in land into texas. but he has never been there to see the problem with his own to rise. >> brian: we will see. we also know that is coming to a sanctuary city where if you are legal, you have full
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accommodations. and also, you get to vote. 840,000 illegals will get to vote. fantastic. >> ainsley: he transported 46,000 little unaccompanied children throughout the united states. 46,000 out of december 10th last year. >> steve: slowly and surely, we are getting more of the numbers and they are a extraordinary. joining us right now with a fox news alert out of tennessee. >> at tennessee deputy is while attempting a traffic stop here at the williamson county sheriff's office as the driver took off when the deputy tried to pull them over. the driver allegedly shot at the deputy, hitting him at least once before crashing. the deputy is expected to be okay. this brings the total of officers shot in the line of duty this year to 34. a major winter storm is underway in impacting as many as 100 million americans. many are waking up to a similar site as missouri where a foot or
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more of snow is expected to fall. 20 states from new mexico to illinois all the way up the man i going to see some form of snow, freezing rain for the next day or so. a traffic becoming difficult for thousands, with thousands of flights being canceled. reporting thousands of cancellations today. unfriending facebook, the social media giant loses users for the first time ever in its 18-year history. how about that? facebook reporting daily logins dropping by nearly half a million. that's a lot during the last three months of 2021. parent company meta stock plunged 22.6% during after-hours trading yesterday. ceo mark zuckerberg believes that a was caused by a tick-tock boom. he may be right about that. those are headlines. >> steve: keep in mind, it has been alleged and suggested by many conservatives that facebook has cracked out on conservatives.
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at the same time regarding tick-tock with my family, and my daughters send stuff to my wife and i, it is always on tick-tock. it used to be on facebook. >> facebook where the original. >> i think you're right about that. young people are not using facebook as much anymore. they are using tiktok. there's a lot of older conservatives who are getting on facebook because they are so disgusted with the whole thing. >> brian: that's why i'm on myspace. >> ainsley: you are the only one. you are still using your blackberry. >> steve: that's why this company bought it at one point. it is now coming up on 8:20 in the east. back to our breaking news out of the mid east. top ices leader killed in a commando raid in syria. senator marco rubio reacting to that and the rising tensions with russia coming up next.
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>> steve: fox news alert, u.s. forces taking out that man, the leader advises during an overnight raid in syria. abu bakr al-baghdadi was wearing a suicide vest and designated it as soon as he saw the commandos during the raid. >> video of the aftermath from hours ago. 13 series died during the raid including six children. president biden releasing a statement last night at my direction, u.s. military sources in northwest syria successfully undertook a counterterrorism operation to protect the american people and our allies and make the world a safer place. >> steve: senate foreign committee member senator marco rubio joins us now. this is why you leave a presence in this area, correct? >> there is a growing risk of isis and afghanistan. i think the president made the
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right decision to make this call. it's important to remember that these weren't robots that went and did this. these are americans. their families are here in the united states, and we want to thank them for their service to our country. these are dangerous missions. it's against very dangerous and evil people. ices right now is growing once again. it's trying to reconstitute itself inside of afghanistan the target not just american interest to the region but to come after us here at home. it's good to see raids like this. it's concerning that we don't have the ability to do the same thing in other parts of the world where isis can now be found. >> steve: like afghanistan? >> the president is going to discuss the rate at 9:30. you can watch a writing on fox for the folks at home. he approves ending the 3,000 american troops to eastern europe in europe in the next coming days, he said. here is senator josh hawley on why he opposes deploying these troops here. listen. >> we need to be focusing less on europe and more on our major security threats elsewhere. if we expand nato, it means that
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the united states will be providing additional security guarantees that will be more embroiled in european conflicts. this isn't the time for that. we can do everything. the united states can do everything. we've got the focus on the safety of the american people and the number one threat abroad right now is china. >> senator, do you agree with him? >> the number one threat is china but related to that thread is the idea that you can somehow go into any country you want to take it over. i don't support -- frankly, i don't know anyone who is calling for supporting u.s. troops being involved in a war in ukraine. i certainly don't support that. not even the ukrainians are asking for it. on the other hand, if we live in a world where countries can say, look, that land belongs to us and we are going to take it for ourselves, if that's the world we live in, we are back to 1939. that is what china says about taiwan and about parts of its border with india and parts of its border with vietnam. in europe alone, there are probably eight or nine countries
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who have leaders or at least movements in those countries that are arguing that they got screwed over by some treaty 120 years ago and they would like to rewrite it. if they have more military power than their neighbors will going to take it. if we live in a world where a country can say that belongs to us, we are going to going to take it by military force and an exit, then you are going to see an impact to the united states. if covid has taught us anything, it is that things that happen halfway around the world can have an impact on our economy here at home. and our lives here at home for that matter. i'm not in favor of sending military troops to fight in the war in ukraine i don't think we need to. there has to be serious consequences that hopefully deter vladimir putin from doing what i think is going to end up doing. he's got to pay a big price or other people are going to follow his example and do the same thing. >> steve: the president is sending the troops to europe amid this threat. but at the same time, he's got americans going -- and we displayed a sound bite from the arizona attorney general talking
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about the president's more interested in the ukrainian border than the u.s. border. the average american is more interested in crime, and they are more interested in inflation. the president is going to come and talk about guns today. that's going to be about it. >> there is no doubt that our borders and crisis. if you ask me, okay, we can do both. you have to do one of the other. i would say the u.s. has this and its resources to the border. the problem right now as we are not doing anything about it. they are not interested in enforcing the border or enforcing immigration law. they never talk about it. a meeting last week went very poorly with border agents. we only know about it because someone videotaped it secretly and send it out to the press. they are not enforcing the law. they are literally inviting and lowering thousands of people a day to enter the country illegally. they are facilitating as well in that sense. it's terrible for those people and terrible for this country. i think we need to do both. i think we have the capability to do both. we must secure our border.
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that has to come first. the problem with the biden administration is they don't talk about it or care about it, not to mention supply chain disruptions, labor shortages and all the other challenges we have in our country appear they like talking about big things like photo suppression efforts that don't exist. these are fake things, they don't exist. that's what they spend our time on. >> steve: until they get a wake-up call, the next election. thank you. things will change if they get the majority. it still ahead, your heating bill might be extra high this winter season pier in more ways of rising energy costs will impact your wallet. >> steve: plus, we are going to check back and having breakfast with friends. having a cup of joe right there. he said four -- could be an alka-seltzer. >> he's got to swim later. >> i had my breakfast. now we are going to talk to people having their breakfast in a moment.
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which can lead to something big. start stopping with nicorette that's a pretty tight spot. watch this. of course your buick parks itself. that's so you. it's just up here on the right. of course you know where we're going. that's so you. i kinda got a sixth sense. and a head up display. [whistle blows] [horn honks] they're here. hit the field. warm up. you brought all these players in your buick. -yup. -that's so you. it is. there's a buick that fits your life. because at the heart of every buick suv is you. ♪ ♪ >> ainsley: energy costs reaching multiyear highs leaving consumers to pay the price. the skyrocketing prices
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impacting heating bills and prices at the pumps. >> brian: from our assistant network fox business joins us live from pennsylvania. >> brian, ainsley, steve, good morning to you. a lot of people think that the sun is the future of our energy needs. unfortunately, the son the son is not shining this morning. let's start with the gas prices. we are here in the philadelphia suburbs. 353. that's more than the national average. take a look at the numbers. 341 today. a nickel from last week. up on a dime from last month and not by a dollar from last year. underpinning out of course, oil prices just two months ago, we were $65 a barrel. today we are at $88 a barrel and climbing on concerns about ukraine as well as demand and level of supply.
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similar situation with gas. that's gone up real high. janice reported about the cold weather. it's measured in the million british thermal units peered up 55% of the last two months. no matter how you cut it whether we drive our cars, we are paying more and not spending money on anything else, apparently. >> steve: a dollar more gallant than last year. thank you very much for joining us live today. meanwhile, let's go from someplace really cold to someplace really nice and warm. edited down to tampa, florida, where we are talking all sorts of things, breakfast with things live. you been in the kitchen. you been in the dining room. you are at the front door where there is a line of people out the door and around the corner. >> we have lost complete control, steve. the wonderful folks of tampa have showed up. they love their tom brady, they love their buccaneers and also our rearing to talk some politics into the economy as
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well. down in the free state of florida. i will start with holly. >> good, how are you doing, pete? >> what is affecting your life when you look at politics waiting on the economy here. >> the economy, first of all, inflation is hitting us big time even in florida. we are open. for business, but we can feel it. gas prices are the world. write down the street, over $4 a gallon. >> you mention the shelves at the grocery store. >> yeah, the grocery store. my half-and-half that i get for my husband is hard to find. it's hard to find. texted me back, we don't have that. we don't have this. my meats, the prices of chicken is ridiculous. ridiculous. >> thanks for sharing. i like that book, thanks.
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two gentlemen here, what's your name? >> russell. >> chuck. >> what are you facing a business these days? >> we sell hvac equipment so were looking at big supply chain issues. lead time on fans and grills, we sell them. >> how much weight on those? >> 22 or 23 weeks. >> almost half a year. what do you attribute that to? >> a lot of it is labor with people being out with the covid. factory issues, material issues, tracking issues. >> they can't get paint. they use resin or something in the paint for ev batteries or something. it's taking six weeks to get a sample. it's terrible. we used to get it into weeks. >> what do you attribute this to? >> woke. everybody thinking they are going to have ev batteries, cars. what are they think is going to power these cars?
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>> shortages, as all labor. >> interesting. gentlemen, thank you very much. i appreciate it. what's your name? you run a business that provides temporary workers like welders and skill-based trades. what are you facing right now? >> we are facing a shortage of the workers in this area right now. florida is open. we definitely have their work but we don't have enough workers. counts of florida. we are putting people to work. please leave the politics at the state line, you know. but please come down here. we've got too many openings right now. >> skilled trade, yell the jobs, you just need the workers. i love it. thank you very much. look who i found here. the cutest little tom brady in all of tampa bay. what is your name, sweetheart? how old are you? she is 2. she's a cutest little tom brady i've ever seen. i thought we would end with gratuitous cuteness.
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can you wave? >> hey, pete, i think when we talk to you, we get gratuitous cuteness anyway. >> wow, that's quite a compliment. >> when i toss back to new york, the only gratuitous cuteness i get is ainsley. >> ainsley: thank you. >> steve: great job in tampa. lots of good talking with some good people. >> ainsley: i love those segments. it's 8:39. saying goodbye to a fallen corporal, the precinct constable is going to join us with his message to leaders on the soft on crime policies. >> this has to stop. those in authority who are coddling their criminals and enabling this behavior have culpability just as those who are pulling the trigger. [applause]
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>> brian: harris county constable delivering a powerful message to politicians about violence against law enforcement as is precinct lays to rest fallen corporal charles galloway. >> those in authority that are coddling the criminals and enabling this behavior have culpability just as those who are pulling the trigger. i ask you to do one thing. and that is to have the courage that chuck had. have the courage to stand up against those who are destroying our state, our county, our city and the community that we lived in. >> brian: joining us now, i can hear your frustration, your anger, your sadness. how is it different if i talk to you five years ago, ten years ago? what is change? >> while i think the opinion probably within our community as a whole, in other words, i think
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that officers are facing many more challenges than they used to. we still have the support of 95% of the public and we feel that, we know that, but we are fighting a frown on every side here from the elected officials to those who are making the policy. as i said, it is not sustainable. something's got to give it some point. >> brian: we have a lot of people example, a law enforcement expert. one of the reasons for the rise in crime, may be the primary reason is a vilification of the cops. you said you had 95% support, yet your unofficial stat says. you also feel vilified? >> absolutely. the 5% of the ones that seem to get all the air time. the 5% of the ones that seem to have the loudest voices. so it is a constant battle against that 5%. these men and women are out there every day doing what they do. are we perfect?
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absolutely not. i can imagine a society without these men and women serving the public. >> their president is coming to new york city to talk about crime with the governor with the mayor. he's going to be traveling with his attorney general. he is going to be talking about guns primarily as a problem. our guns a problem? >> well, i've never seen a gun shoot itself. you know, so no. i don't think guns are the problem. >> brian: what is the problem? >> well, you know, in my opinion, we need to have some leadership from the top down. it can't just be words. we need to have some action. we have people saying that they support the police policy and we are putting people out on these ridiculously low bonds. we are dealing with the same people time after time for it when there's no consequences for your action, why would you change your behavior? these are the 5% i don't care about the community that we live in. this is what we need to address.
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that needs to stop start from the top down whether it's federal government are the state government or county government peered we need to address the problem where it lies. >> he said i've never said defund the police. is that enough? >> we sit here and we parse words. we try to figure out, we are not going to defund the police. where can to divert a little bit of their budget here and make it harder for them to hire personnel. we are going to cut their training back. nobody wants to be known now for defunding the police. but when you are talking about some of the policymakers, we sure don't feel the support as far as trying to address the problem head-on. we need boots on the ground and we need people in our judicial system, these magistrates, these judges, everybody, the district attorney, everybody to be able to work together to be able to make this community safer to take these threats off the street. >> brian: do you feel as though we can turn a corner? i we reach the tipping point?
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>> well, i don't think we have a choice except to turning the corner meaning i think we have one last shot right here. and i think that we need to act. we need to act together. as i said, one person with courage makes a majority. and we are a majority. we are a majority. and i said the other day that this thin blue line is it so that. people need to start speaking out and people need to lead with actions rather than just listening and having empty words. >> see that turn out in new york city. you know, the support is still there. there's a lot of pride with people who wear the uniform. charles galloway will not be forgotten, not by you, not by anyone who knows him and wants to research his career. thanks, constable. we will have you on again hopefully with good news. more "fox & friends" coming up. but first, i would like to use my power to check in with bill hemmer. thank you, bill. >> do you hold your breath when you take a picture? >> brian: yes. i was going to bring that up.
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i do. take my mask off the take my daily picture with bill hemmer and dana perino, and i exhale once you get away from me. >> i inhale to begin with. nice to see you. coming up here in a moment, breaking news, more on that raid against the leader of isis per the president is going to speak momentarily. crime in america, does this administration have the will to make it better? the lockdown did very little to save lives. how is that conclusion going over with america's small business owners? we will talk to one of them. a big morning coming up. join dana and me and we will make the most of your time at the top of the hour. about cus. that's why i love liberty mutual. they customize my car insurance, so i only pay for what i need. how about a throwback? ♪ liberty, liberty, liberty, liberty ♪ only pay for what you need. ♪ liberty, liberty, liberty, liberty ♪
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>> ainsley: good morning. let's take a look at your weather. oh, my goodness, much of the country is in a deep freeze. these are highs today in texas. 15. at dallas 26 with snow in the forecast. average temperatures in the 15. get the -- as far south as dallas, texas, where we have a wintry mix going on peered across the ohio valley, the tennessee river valley, that's where we have the icing. we could be accumulate and ice on the road. i know you hear me talking about this but that is the most dangerous weather hazard you can
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have on the road. we are going to see power outages certainly in some of these areas where we have an ice storm warning. acumen letting ice, a quarter of an inch to half an inch of ice. that is going to be potentially deadly. i do not travel. they're going to be cancellations at the airports. i know they say that a lot. winter weather advisory not only the ice storm warning but we have winter weather alerts all the way up towards maine where we are going to see some snow. rain still to come. we haven't talked about this much but we could see the potential for severe storms today including isolated tornadoes. the big highlight here is the widespread icing. that's going to exist from texas to the northeast. we will continue to keep you up-to-date. fogs weather.com. if you haven't downloaded the app, i need you to do so because we will give you all the latest forecast details when i am not on tv. >> a wet snowy icy masts. take care.
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listen to this, the ladies of the view is silent on the drama surrounding cohost will be goldberg. they had plenty to say about supreme court justice. >> we will be back here in two weeks. >> the supreme justice is hanging out with a who's who of conservatives this weekend when he speaks at an event for the federalist society. >> the holocaust was -- she later apologized. and threaten to quit over her 2-week suspension. stephen ross denying claims made against him by ex-coach brian florez. calling it false, malicious, and defamatory and a lawsuit offered him $100,000 per game to lose and claims that her team conducted a smear campaign to paint him as a "angry black man." is also accusing the nfl of racism and hiring practices. the nfl denies his claim.
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a milwaukee police officer is released from the hospital. decked out in bangles geared less than 24 hours after being shot multiple times. that uplifting moment landing him tickets to see the super bowl. he joined us earlier with what the team needs to have. >> cincinnati has always been that team i cheer for ever since i was a child because of my dad. seeing them in this moment, i can't be any happier for them. >> he says he is looking forward to getting back into his police uniform and his desire to return to work as helped motivate him through recovery. a hero and his team is going to the super bowl, guys. >> great interview. taking his dad to the super bowl. >> thank you, carly. >> from green to asphalt, the iconic los angeles memorial coliseum is now a racetrack as nascar rolls into their 2022 season. >> how is not going to work?
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drivers will take 150 laps for the bushlike clash which you can watch this sunday on fox. >> their preview of fox sports reporter joining us now. jamie, there's got to be a misprint. the l.a. memorial coliseum is not a car racetrack. it just is not. >> those photos, those videos, it doesn't look real. they actually laid down asphalt racetrack inside the iconic l.a. memorial coliseum. we are going racing on sunday. we are going to have a packed field of drivers making the final 23 cars. i can guarantee there is going to be bumping and banging from start to finish. the super bowl has been there. this is the first race for the next generation car. i understand that teams were concerns because they had some supply issues and delayed shipment parts. can you tell us more about that? >> it has definitely been a little stressful for the teams
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because of those supply issues peer the great news is they all have their race cars to be out here in los angeles this weekend. they will be ready for the daytona 500 coming up in two weeks. everybody is ready to go racing. this has been talked about now for a few years and basically for people watching this, it looks a lot different. it looks more like the cars you see on the road. a sound better, look more low-profile. a lot of people, a lot of anticipation to see these cars on the racetrack. >> it is family sitting over 100,000. how many were you expecting 100,000 people to go there? i know the rams were in making that when they made the first transition back. >> the way that the format had to lay out with that but printer get the racetrack and there, i believe there's about 55,000 seats. from what i'm told, that tickets are almost gone. they are saying 70% of the tickets that have been sold are the people that i've never been to a nascar race. that's the whole point of this. it's just to do something completely different.
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we are going to bring nascar to downtown los angeles and see what people think of it and show what we do with nascar. >> that such a good final point. l.a. for the most part is not a nascar market until this weekend when they redo the coliseum and suddenly, people are going to be going, did you see that new car? that was fantastic. >> absolutely. it's going to be a great show. pitbull is going to be performing. ice cube is going to be performing. it's going to be quite an event. we are excited to kick it up on nascar on fox. there's no point on the line. these guys are going for bragging rights. you can bet they want to win in l.a. memorial coliseum and be the first to do it in the new next-generation race car. >> you will be covering it all six hours. great to see you. >> thank you. have a great weekend. >> giving everyone a chance to win $10,000.
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cash this sunday. download the fox bet super six app now and play for free. it's very important we get rid of all that money. a hundred thousand dollars at a time this week. i'm going to watch just to see the new car. >> it looks cool. >> brian: ran to the radio. it will be seen on fox nation and hard all around the country. >> ainsley: >> bill: let's get right to it. breaking news. president biden will address the nation 30 minutes from now announcing the death of a isis leader during a raid in syria. as we get to that, we say good morning at home and good morning to you. >> dana: we are waking up for this news and this is "america's newsroom." the isa story was on our radar last week. we brought it to you here on "america's newsroom" because in a different part of syria, there was a hostage taking at a prison and they were using 700 boys as human shields. they were also training those
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