tv The Ingraham Angle FOX News February 9, 2022 7:00pm-8:00pm PST
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when everything has been constructed around it? >> laura: this is what showtime thinks we all need after two years of suffering through covid. more divisive racial hate mongering. it's new docu series features the biggest names in the industrial complex. america has not emerged from her racist pass. >> american whiteness is ignorance. >> white people, we're not your property. white people today do they feel any responsibility for slavery? >> symbols and monuments, those are mementos of racism. >> it's about obliterating systemic and institutionalized racism. >> laura: is this what self-righteous liberals mean
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when they wear those goofy stronger together t-shirts? do we build back better by tearing down history or do we obliterate racism with racist appeals? >> when you have an overwhelming white teaching course, we have a very racially teaching course, you inevitably have the reproduction and dissemination of racism and white supremacy. >> schools are just incredibly efficient at reproducing racial inequality. >> laura: lord only knows how many of our public schools have bought into this new racial spoil system which is often guided by very handsomely paid diverse active consultants. racial introspection, in history, math, they want you to believe it's everywhere in the
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schools, in societies, in the science labs. solve for x, sounds like coded bigotry to me. now, to the left, racism is so pervasive it's even in the air we breathe. >> our residents are in some of the most -- many are dying of a higher rate of covid because of the environmental racism. >> the toxic legacy of environmental racism has plagued our nation for far too long. >> laura: now, showtime, i guess, hopes that their audience is growing and think that maybe all those students who sat through those seminars, listened to the squad, do their allyship and anti-racism courses, that they will have shame and remorse drilled into them for the things that happened long before they were even born. but i think they are running into a brick wall in a sense, especially among young
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minorities. favorability for biden voters among black dropped, and it's even worse among black americans under the age of 35. their support for biden fell 25 points by the end of last year. i think most sensible people out there know the american dream is still out there. for people of all races. most of us know the game that's being played here. the race card is not the only one of the left go to weapons of choice against an america they have grown to despise but it's also a tool of distraction from their myriad policy failures. the fact is for decades now democrats have spectacularly failed, failed the very people they claimed to be helping with all this racial hectoring. the demands for reparations. the move to remake school curricula, make the workplace and culture only breed more
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resentment and division. so you must never apologize to those who play with racial accelerants. the nfl gets sued for racially hiring practices and they rush to meet with al sharpton, of all people, one of the most compressive forces on the planet. he's now moved from defund the police to defund the nfl. >> i told -- yes -- that's not where we're going -- we're going here to city councils and board of ordinances to have people make motions that we will withdraw public funds until diversity. they will be hauled in front of a city council and asked where is your diversity? >> laura: so they are remaking city councils. you get it. diversity through extortion. well, he knows that game well. now that the reverend is demanding is just more over racism but given the choice
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between standing up for an american institution and caving to the money hungry race artists, roger goodell, he picked the latter. >> we want to try to see the outcomes. we want to see black head coaches in the nfl. coaches of people of color. and eventually gender. if there are policies that we need to modify we're going to do that. and we'll absolutely do it. >> laura: here's some advice. giving in now will only encourage them to demand more. that's what they do. the radical left can never be says ated. no amount of apologies or donations will ever be enough. it never is. he even asked -- joe to apologize, they still swept in for mortal lones of flesh.
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the cultural marxists getting rich all racism, they don't care what you said 10 years ago, five years ago, 30 years ago, they just want more money and they want more power. a fat book contract maybe, a lucrative visiting professorship and a lifetime job guarantee anywhere they go. because if you ever fire or discipline them, naturally, they are going to scream racism. this atmosphere of egg shell walking and nonstop racial recriminations drives people to their individual corners. it breeds distrust. it separates us. but then again that's the whole point, isn't it? the left doesn't want us to get closer to each other. they only thrive when we're at each others' throats. and that's "the angle." joining me is the author of the new book "25 lives," and a prager u personality, vince.
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how insulting is this whole racket to you personally? >> well, laura, your mother-in-law was straight up. it was right on the money. the statement in my new book 25 lives i started by saying since its inception in 1800, because of jim crow and the confederacy, the democratic party has been the evilist institution on the face of this earth and this is why. it's because they lie. they say their racism is the cause of all of our problems and that's a lie. people who believe in white supremacy must also believe in black infor ort. as a black manic tell you i don't believe in white supremacy. as an heir of jesus christ and a son of god, have i never met anyone superior to me. i have brothers and sisters. they have all have talents and that's all i need, people will talent given to them by god. we have to elevate and if we elevate each other's talents we
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elevate each other. all of society becomes elevated but the democrats won't hatred and they want envy. they want strife. they live on all. they have always had it from slavery, civil war, jim crow, now socialism, they want us to hate one another and they live off of the hate and this issy call them an evil institution. my book talks about 25 lives that they give. it talks about the people and what they do wrong, how they drive all of us against one another and this is just another example. this is racial propaganda. >> laura: i want to go back to this showtime fiasco. i think it's racist, this so-called docu-series. this is what they call one of their comedians heavily featured. >> whiteness -- they use the privilege that comes out of the concept to give access for other people who don't have that privilege. >> if your black friends aren't talk you about how white people are it's probably because you are a white person, not a person who happens to be right and they are also not really your black
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friend so remember that. >> laura: some of these folks are incredibly privileged. they make an enormous amount of money for spouting illogical nonsense, and travel the country, selling these, you know, racial hectoring and all of these kinds of ideas that obviously aren't helping a single person get a better job or a better opportunity. so how do you reason with someone like that as a young person? >> it's very difficult. we're in a day and age now where oppression is currency and you can get a large amount of fame and support for spouting these lies and this propaganda. i did so for quite some time and it's just ridiculous. as far as reasoning, i say look at the results of the policies that they advocate for, of the campaigns they are running, allowing drug abuse in our streets. specifically near california. progressive policy has been the bane of the existence of lower income people in the communities of color in the state. so you have to look at the results here. i'm hearing a whole lot of talk
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about racism and what that does is it takes away from the true parts of these issues, like class, like two-parent household, like resources, like education, and when we sit and look at these issues and look at the disparate impact we take away from the actual solutions at hand and actually addressing these problems. it's truly disgusting to watch the showtime special. >> laura: they are changing the topic because they are fielding minority communities every single day in this country and they know it. they know that more minority voters are seeing the light on this as well, and i think they are freaking out. vince, over at msnbc today, a fordham university professor proposed something for a family meeting. >> you need to sit your family members down and explain to them the threat that the republican party faces to american democracy. walk them through the white national road we're on with this
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particular party. they are more than willing to take the entire country off of a financial cliff, an environmental cliff and civil rights kaliyev, you name it. >> laura: vince, apparently nothing has changed in the united states since the segregationist south and maybe since the early days of the civil war. >> the democratic party has been in charge of the black community for 220 years. i was born on a cotton plantation in tennessee. my father was a share kroerp. he brought us out of poverty and after college i started working in the prison. i know the democratic party very, very well. they run every crackhouse. every prostitute house, every failing school. every big city mayor, every big city police chief, every judge and jury is run by the democratic party. if you don't believe me, go to any ghetto in america and walk around. see if you see any white republicans anywhere. you're going to run into black democrats all over the place and most black preachers and most
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black civic organizers, they are the conduits for the democratic party. this is them. this is the democratic party. and all they do is ferment hate. that's what she did and they live off of it but black people aren't crazy. they understand. when cane was angry because god jetted his offering, he said if you do well, will you not be accepted and if not sin waits at the door to master you, but you master it. they don't know this. they are already defeated. >> laura: the left is racial -- racial izing every day activities a woman said she changed her approach depending on who she's talking to. i use one emo have i for
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professional settings and the black brown one for friends and family. i just don't have the emotional capacity to unpack race relations in the professional setting. kamala, you think of the underground railroad and rosa parks, and now we're at emojis. >> right. it's completely ridiculous, and when you view the world through the lens of racism, you will find it everywhere. it's how i used to view the world and every cross look and color emoji had racism in it and that's how they operate and we really have to do we have kuwait from that because it's a disservice to everybody who learns this sort of ideology. there are young children now being taught in school that their race matters more than who they are as an individual. what their interests are, their dislikes, their merit, their character and if we continue on this route we'll have a generation that's completely crippled by this narrative. who areas what color your emojis are and you should question anybody who looks at you and tries to convince you of your own victim hood and you should ask, what do they get from me
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being convinced of this? and when you've answered that question you will find that you should not be on their side. >> laura: how much do they make from selling victimhood and racial liesing everything around. vince, it's wonderful to see both of you tonight, and there have been new developments in the story we brought you last night. the u.s. capitol police may have been spying on congressman -- he's here with us in a moment with those updates, plus stick around, actor mark wahlberg right here "the angle", raymond arroyo talks with him exclusively about his new movie "tattoos." wow! stay there.
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>> laura: as i told you last night troy nels, he's alleging that not only did capitol police snoop around his office late last fall they even grilled his staff when he wasn't there. these are serious charges, so much so that the inspector general of capitol police has opened an investigation. and when speaker pelosi was asked to comment on the disturbing story she deflected. >> i have no power over the capitol police. the capitol police have
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responded to that gentleman's allegation, and that stands as what it is. but i have no power over the capitol police. >> laura: she's so condescending. joining me, that gentleman, her fellow congressman. congressman, we'll get to what you and others have requested in just a moment but first your reaction to the response and the flick off of you personally? >> well, it doesn't surprise me. nancy pelosi is not going to say nice things about me. she knows that i have been a very vocal critic of the leadership of the capitol police, the intelligence section, the investigators. they had all of the data, all of the material, the intelligence section, the capitol police knew that the capitol was going to be the target on january 6. they knew the extremist groups
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were going to be there. they knew that individuals had -- that there would be violence and disruption and they held on to that intelligence and it wasn't shared. the capitol police had the intelligence. they didn't share it. and they just kept it to themselves and i've been very vocal about that i've also been very vocal about the death of ashli babbitt. the officer that killed ashli babbitt, lieutenant byrd, they conducted a very quick investigation, way too quick, and it never even went to grand jury. i believe that nancy recognizes that i'm a law enforcement for 30 years, a sheriff for eight, and i have conducted investigations before and she doesn't want me talking about january 6 because i think in the end she had a role to play. >> laura: you smell a rat.
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you demanded that the u.s. capitol police, the chief, preserve all of their records related to any investigations or investigative activity into any of you or your staff. who knows if they have preserved their records. you're just asking for the preservation now, but what might you find, do you think? >> well, what they said when the chief of police brought this to my attention, when they were inside my office, they said my door was open. i said i understand the officers should be there to check my office and make sure there are no unauthorized personnel in my office. i said, chief, when you started taking pictures of my white board because he felt there are some language or drawings on my white board that were suspicious, i said he crossed the line. the speech and debate clause in the u.s. constitution is very clear that you can't do that, and then to share that
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information with intelligence officers, inspectors, and investigators, to investigate me, as to the language on that white board, and then to confront a staff with i. i have a young staffer there, he answers the door and here you have three special agents that look like the gestapo asking him questions about the content of my wing board and the real question is, how the hell did you get that picture of my white board inside this congressional office? that's the question, and the chief doesn't seem to want to answer such questions. he won't answer it loop. whether or not congressman, it sounds almost as if they spent more time investigating you than the shooting of ashli babbitt. >> well, i tell you what -- they seem to be spending a lot of time looking at my white board and the words body armor and a handwritten map of the rayburn building. i wish they had taken the time to look at the intelligence on
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january 6, because january 6 would never have happened if they had done their job. >> laura: congressman, we'll continue to follow this. thank you. >> thank you, god bless. >> laura: speaking of nancy pelosi, maybe the clearest sign yet that the walls are kind of closing in on her, she's trying to claw back to get some credibility by entertaining legislation prohibiting members of congress from trading stocks while in office. >> we have to tighten the fines on those who violate the stock act. it's not sufficient to deter behavior. it's complicated, and members will figure it out, and then we'll go forward with what consent is. >> laura: it's always complicated when they don't want to explain it, but remember, she resisted this move for many years so why the sudden change of heart? we know she's already cashed in big time. her net worth was a meager $3.5 million when she entered congress in 1987.
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today, her net worth is estimated to be as high as $250 million. how how did she get so rich? here now is missouri senator josh hawley. senator, a lot of this is about the appearance of a conflict of interest, and business insider investigation into stock trades, i think ranked nancy pelosi as borderline for a number of her trades. what does the public need to understand about her, it looks like change of heart? >> what they need to understand is that her record of self-dealing has finally caught up with her, laura. the truth is, nancy pelosi has got rich off of using her position to enrich her family. it has to include spouses because nancy pelosi's husband who, for the both of them, have done much of this trading. we're talking about more than $1
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million in trades each year. she's grown very rich by using her position. she's become the post child for self dealing in congress and it's time to put a stop to it. >> laura: pelosi kind of struggled to find excuses for not acting sooner to restrict these kinds of stock trades. watch. >> -- no disclosure. it has no reporting of stock transactions and it makes important decisions every day. i do believe in the integrity of people in public service. it's a confidence issue. >> laura: senator, it's kind of akin to, well, he didn't have to do that chore, like the supreme court doesn't have doing anything like this. i thought this was all about restoring trust under democrat leadership. isn't that what they promised? >> you know, i've got three little kids at home, laura, and they are more responsible by a long shot than nancy pelosi.
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it sounds like a 3-year-old saying, my brother didn't have to do it. it's absolutely ridiculous and she knows it is. the truth is she's been dealing for herself. she's been enriching herself for years in her long seemingly endless time in the united states congress, and she's never wanted to actually put any limits on it. she's never wanted to be accountable, and now her record has finally caught up with her and she can't deny it any longer because the facts are playing for everybody to see. so let's end stock trading in congress. we ought to call it the pelosi -- because she's the one who made it so clear. >> laura: i think that's a great idea. we need to start getting creative the way we name our bills. i want to give you someone from your neck of the woods. missouri congressman cory bush. she's not backing down at all on the phrase defunding the police. she says that's 4 not the problem. we dangle the carrot in front of people's faces saying we could get it done and democrats deliver which we haven't totally
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delivered. is this another instance, senator, of pelosi empowering the far left and catering to them, and now they can't put the genie back in the bottle? >> you're look at the real leadership of the democratic party in congress. these are the people with the ideas who are setting the agenda and the agenda is insane. it's to take away protection from working people. by the way, people like cory bush, they have private security that they use, that they hide behind, while they deny public funding for police, to folks who can't afford private security. that's the real issue, that i think is at the heart of this and this is, bit way, a democratic party, as they want to defund the police and take away protection for working people they are also giving crack pipes to criminals using taxpayer dollars. i mean, this is the most pro criminal administration in american history. it's outrageous, and i can't wait for the american people to get a chance to weigh in at the ballot box.
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>> laura: it's time for a seen and unseen exclusive. for that we go to raymond arroyo. >> this is an intensely personal movie for wahlberg. it's a true story of a fighter turned priest. it's kind of an inspiring tale that some ways connects to mark wahlberg's personal struggle with law and the redemption he found on the far side of suffering. we talked about film, faith and much more.
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>> mark, you are a man of prayer. i know you said your faith is everything to you. you go to mass each week. why did it take you so long to do a movie with faith at its center? >> it was about finding the right story to tell about the right time. these movies are not easy to get may. it took six years to get made. but it's one of those things, since the pandemic, lots of things have happened to me personally. all the uncertainty in the world. dealing with mortality, losing my mom. losing my other sister. losing so many friends. >> this is a priest i have never heard of. he was a guy who was really lost trying to find his way. eventually makes his way to the priest hood. and he loses mobility over his body. complete control over all his muscles. and that ends up being the basis for redemption in some ways. . >> it's probably the most unpredictable movie ever. obviously, he tried to become an actor and then he went into the
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priesthood. nothing better than showing somebody the movie who has no idea what they are watching. >> you and everybody else. >> you shouldn't pray for an easy life but the strength to ignore a difficult one. >> you can't say i ever gave you nothing. >> i skipped over thanking you and went straight to the source. >> it plays almost like a comedy at the top and then it sort of pulls you in. you see all of the wounds in so many ways. >> what did you see of yourself when you first read this script and first came across this story? >> wow, so many things. obviously, my past. but also my presents, and looking for my purpose, you know. obviously god has continued to bless me and put me into the situation, not to continue to grow and work on mark wahlberg,
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the person, but to do his work and finally give me the skills and tools to go out there and articulate it. >> i would say your story and his are ultimately redemptive stories and they are hard won redemptive stories. >> yes. the scene of the prison was important to me. it's about not giving up. it's about not giving up. >> he's pretty harsh. he speaks their language, you know. that's easily could have been his life, he was on that track for quite some time. with all the stuff going on with your family and everything else, god is not going to give up on you, and don't give up on yourself and he's challenging to turn around their lives. as long as you're breathing you have an opportunity to redeem yourself. >> i love the line where somebody says the church doesn't need the word of god to be
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preached by a gang. >> he didn't come to save the righteous, he came to save the sinners. we're all weak. >> do you think we as a people, as a society, are too quick to judge and drop people into boxes, and cancel them over one offense, one problem, one moment in their lives. >> yes. especially when you have stuff in your own closet that you have to worry about. for me personally, i know, i have made a lot of mistakes in my life but i've been focused since i was 16 or 17 years old turning my life around, and that's a daily task that i have to continue to work on. we all have our moments. it's not my place to judge, and i know that all the work that i'm doing is to hopefully, hopefully, when it's my day to be judged, that, you know, i get a pass, i get to go -- >> go through the turnstyle. >> absolutely. >> it was a fantastic story i read where you had tattoos on various parts of your person,
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and when you went to have those removed you took your kids to the appointments. why? >> well, here's the thing. i mean, the first tattoo i got my mom was, oh, my god, you're going to regret that. i said, okay, i did regret the first up with because it didn't really mean something special to me but every other tattoo had a special meaning. i had a rosary around my neck. i still thought, i'm not supposed to mark my body. i was trying to really also get them removed. for personal and professional reasons. so i took my children, my daughter now has two tattoos. my 18-year-old. >> wow. >> so it didn't work. got to figure those things out for yourself. >> that's okay, she'll take her grandkids -- >> it took seven years. >> they keep burning it off. >> very different from sitting there having a cold beer. four beers later, you know, you
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got the tattoo. >> seven years is a long time. >> why is father stu needed now, this story? why do you think this is the moment, whether it be through providence or your own efforts, this is the moment that it premiers? >> people need to have faith and hope. young men need to know what it's like to be a real man. and there are many -- you could literally list a million reasons, and, just turn on the news, everywhere you look, there are reasons for people, encouraging people to have faith and have hope. i didn't know that we would be releasing this movie in a pandemic. i just knew that i needed to make this movie. and this was my calling and this was my mission, and now it's kneed more than ever and hopefully it will do something important people and help a lot of people. >> is this a turning point in your career? >> it's certainly a turning point for me in my life. >> there is much more to this conversation. look, father stu was written and
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directed by first time director ross. she's created an oscar worthy masterpiece. this thing is incredible. mel gibson and wahlberg turn in terrific performances. i watched it with my daughter. we were in tears for the last 20 minutes. it premiers on good friday. >> laura: my goodness, i got tiered up. great job interviewing. we want to see more of that kind of conversation on tv. hope and redemption. raymond, thank you, and the entire interview with wahlberg is on fox nation right now. raymond, thank you. fantastic. >> still ahead, a current teacher risks her job to give behind-the-scenes look at the sickening racial curriculum in santa barbara, california. plus we speak with a mom who is turning the fight for her kids' schools into a political run. stay there.
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a teacher in santa barbara at the unified school district there made a shocking discovery recently. she found a treasure trove of woke lesson plans hidden on password protected teacher portal, and then she was brave enough to take it public. watch. >> there is a tap called specifically for white folks. under this tab, there are a bunch of links, white supremacy doesn't stop at the teacher lounge door. tactics are assume racism is everywhere every day. it has preschool lessons, to second grade. third to sixth grade. and secondary resources. black lives matter at school. lots of information here, that they are teaching to your children. >> we can celebrate the lgbt-qia, teaching on pronounce, the gender unicorn. >> laura: you want to know why parents are getting involved? it's because of stuff like that,
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that you just saw. not only do teachers and administrators think these things are appropriate for kids as young as preschool, but that they should be delivering it behind teachers' backs. we'll continue to bring you these examples and the brave faces sending then our way. how do you turn this legitimate outrage into action? my next guest, she has decided to run for office. joining me now is new york congressional candidate who is running to unseat democrat carolyn maloney. maud, now, the governor, who was not elected to anything, she'll roll back mask mandates, she said, but only for businesses. not for these poor children. your reaction. >> it makes absolutely no sense. i mean, it is -- it's really --
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everyone now knows and accepts the fact the children are at the least risk from covid so children should not be bearing the harshest restrictions, which they have been doing in new york city, and other cities across the country. we should have started with, well over a year ago, normalizing life for our kids, which would have meant opening schools properly last year, taking the masks off, getting them back into extracurricular activities and we've done just the opposite in new york city. >> laura: the kids should never have been out of school, maybe for a couple of days but we pretty much knew the truth about this virus and kids from italy's experience in the spring of 2020, but nonetheless, the governor has a rationale. >> kids are in a very concentrated setting and also adults can make their own decisions. children still need adults to look out for their health. this is all about looking out for the health of our children
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and parents will be reassured to know that we're protecting them. >> laura: i guess adults get to make decisions for kids and not their parents. what? >> it makes no sense. i dined out -- i was in a restaurant a few nights ago in new york, for a long and lovely meal that i enjoyed and i sat there unmasked for about three hours with people who are younger than me, with people who are older than me, because that's possible for adults in new york. it should certainly be possible for my 5-year-old who is in kindergarten, and who wants to play with his friends in the school yard during recess. >> laura: you're a democrat running to unseat -- >> i am certainly am. >> laura: a democrat incumbent. i want to get away, if we can, from even doing red and blue states. i think a lot of policies are just about common sense. like what works, what doesn't work. what's efficient, what's not efficient. and this is one of those issues that i think blurs all political
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lines or at least it should. is it impossible in new york to unseat these incumbents dinosaurs? how hard is that going to be? >> where i live in new york, it is often a choice between which democrat you want to vote for, because, the numbers of registered democrats and republicans in our district, i'm running because i'm mad. i'm mad that the long time democrats in congress are not looking out for families like mine. i'm running because i'm worried we're heading into the third year of covid restrictions on our children and our cities are getting less safe while our schools are closed. those are not policies that work for families. and i'm running because i know that i'm not alone. i talk to parents all over the city throughout my district and beyond, democrats and republicans, who have the exact same concerns and the exact same worries about how to get our city back on track and make it work for families. >> laura: do your mom's friends,
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a lot of them are quite liberal, do they also have concerns about pushing this vaccine on 5-year-olds and below? we had a doctor on last night who said absolutely no way. that was what he said about the vaccines for the kids. >> i've been pretty public about my vaccine position. i'm vaccinated. my older children are vaccinated. i think, you know, there is really good data that supports vaccinations being useful for reducing hospitalizations. but where i come on, it's a parent's decision. for young kids, there isn't robust data and i think reasonable people can come to different conclusions and there is no reason why that decision should be in the hands of politicians. >> laura: we've got to roll but i think it's fascinating you're taking on this challenge. we'll be following it closely. e jamaica.
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message for all you working class folks worried about inflation. >> basically the bottom half of the work force doing a lot better relative to inflation than the top half. >> laura: oh, yes, federal reserve bank in new york and cleveland both found that lower income folks are hit hardest, paul, wrong again. the tip for us tonight. gotfield next. ** >> that's where it lives, right up there, and what does that say? i do. clap away. >> happy glorious hump day, america. shout out to quasi moto and puppies and eats. who wants to have fun at the media's expense? >> now the gutfeld show presents, you can't fix t
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