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tv   FOX and Friends  FOX News  February 11, 2022 3:00am-6:00am PST

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>> todd: cynic says hillary is the source of all this drama and leaks and new press interest. also the fact that democrats have zero bench. this is probably coming from the dnc. lara trump is coming from florida. appreciate seeing you as always. have great weekend. enjoy the big game. >> ashley: thanks, laura. >> todd: you enjoy it too. >> ashley: "fox & friends" starts now. >> will: straight to a fox news alert. police in america under siege. five police officers reportedly shot in the last nine hours. right now phoenix police are on the scene of what they are describing as a critical incident. >> brian: yup, three police officers possible noble a barricade situation. this is a developing story. we will continue to follow it closely, obviously. >> carley: and in washington two deputies shot responding to a dispute between neighbors. police say a man with a shotgun opened fire at authorities. he has been arrested. the two deputies are in stable condition at the hospital.
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so, clearly the crime crisis and the war on cops is continuing and we are keeping all of them in our terrorist this morning. >> brian: a sense can i shoot a cop, no big deal. what did you do? there is a sense of lawlessness in this country that goes beyond -- you get caught up it's just new york city but it's the whole country. >> will: sad state of affairs that statistically bears the sad antidotal stories we give you here on "fox & friends." we will have continuing coverage of it throughout the morning here. the news broke yesterday on "fox & friends." >> carley: sure did. >> will: inflation number come in. it was not good news for the biden administration. 7.5% over the last 12 months. largest annual spike since february will -- every morning we get an email called the e packet. it's the first thing i read in the morning.
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inside the e packet. i think carley knows where i'm going. >> carley: i have it right here. >> will: "thriller" was released by michael jackson. >> carley: e.t. top grossing movie before my birth. >> brian: they call it george h.w. bush called inflation the thief. it just takes your money away. and it costs you more. i also saw the stat that i think 8 out of every 10 americans lives paycheck to paycheck. if you are living paycheck to paycheck. and if you are one of these people how are lucky enough that your pay rate went up 5%, i have bad news. you are still losing because prices are going up across the board. specifically, used carl's up 40%. gasoline, which is totally within our grasp to control, it doesn't matter. it's up 40%. and i think on some level democrats like it because they want to green the economy which will destroy our economy.
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energy prices overall almost up 30%. if you are paying for a house or living in a lean to under a bridge up 4.4%. new cars, if you can find them and if you are patient up 12%. when asked about this, i was struck how unmored the president seemed in trying to get his -- explain inflation. >> will: yeah. those used car privacies are an absolutely insane. if you go to look to buy a new car right now. you will be paying as much for the used version of that car as you would theoretically the new version. but, to your point, brian, you can't get the new version. the supply chain is broken. the semiconductors the chips are gone. you can't get them to the united states of america even go they are not made in america. even if they're not made in america can't get from taiwan to finish product. >> brian: i'm going to car jack these cars, sell them in two seconds for the parts or on a whole.
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go ahead. >> will: the president does understand to some extent some of the elements going in to breaking the supply chain and thus pushing inflation. he does not -- he does not like being asked about it. >> carley: the last time he was asked about it, he called peter doocy a stupid sobe was asked about it again. lester holt asked him about a nbc news interview. this time lester holt is a wise guy. >> i think back in july you said inflation was going to be temporary. i think a lot of americans are wondering what your definition of temporary is. >> well, you are being a wise guy with me a little bit. i understand that's your job. well, at the time, what happened was the -- let's look at the reason for the inflation. the reason for the inflation is the supply chains were cut off, meaning that the products, for example, automobiles, the lack of computer chips to be able to build those automobiles and so they could function. they need those computer chips.
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they were not available. so what happens, of the number of cars were reduced, new cars reduced. it made up 1. one third price laws automobiles are up. >> carley: lester holt wasn't a wise guy. he asked a very good question. his job is not to be a wise guy as the president said. will inflation skyrocketed because of the supply chain. the other reason is the $1.9 billion stimulus package that passed in martha was completely. >> brian: trillion. >> carley: trillion rather. completely unnecessary. and now they're thinking of doubling down and going back to build back better and pumping more in the economy. >> brian: thank goodness joe manchin called did a nonstarter went and had huddle this time for us to act whether it's the fed or cutting deficit or spending or how about this drilling more to attack the energy sector. we could actually do that. that's within our grasp. but all the president has, he is
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like rain man with build back better. we have got to go past this we have got spend more in order for us to prosper. which we all know is not the case. what i saw paul krugman write who is a left wing economist who somehow won a nobel prize. he said things are actually better. we just don't want to admit it look at the unemployment rate. look how many jobs we added last month. but the average american is not seeing that. you could say we don't want to admit it you can say it's spin. how can you say it's being spun when everything seems to be spun joe biden's way? if there is a little bit of good, they spin it his way. and still the american people aren't buying it. >> will: nobel pulitzer prizes have been watered down. >> brian: i would say so. >> will: i was sitting on this couch in the past month or so with my normal co-host on the weekend pete hegseth and rachel campos-duffy. >> brian: can i say one thing pete is not normal but go ahead. >> will: that's a good correction. i stand correction. pete is quite abnormal.
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>> carley: all in a good way. >> will: let's say you are a biden defender, okay. let's say you are perhaps paul krugman. what is your argument in favor of joe biden right now? what has gone well? name me a policy, name me an event. name me a decision over the past 12 month that has gone well? cnn asked that question to it viewers. and i want you to check out the result of this poll. 56% answered that question with this: nothing. nothing absolutely has gone well. >> carley: that's absolutely right. i think one of the biggest issues that the president has right now is that if you look towards the future, how are they going to fix any of these things? because all of their policies that they do sign on to, they do subscribe to. they are the reasons these problems have come to pass. if you look at crime. the only thing that they are interested in talking about is guns, the inflation, build back better would make it worse. they have absolutely no interest in securing our southern border. so all of those issues that we are facing right now are going to continue unless there is a
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real change of heart within this administration. and that's absolutely not going to happen. >> brian: here is ben shapiro, he weighed in last night. >> it turns out that when you lie to the american people for two years by saying that you can control the virus and then you can't and then the american people get tired of you, you have to actually change what you are doing. the most absurd part of this is people like akim jeff his claiming that they actually emerged victorious over this virus. it was really joe biden. joe biden did an astonishing job. sure we didn't get build back better the economy boomed in january. really about joe biden being amazing at this job. don't be gaslit. the american people are being gaslit. these folks are lying to you they knew the data a year ago. control is more important than living free. the presidency is over barring the republicans mr. blowing it in catastrophic way. >> brian: joe manchin i'm a west virginia democrat. jon tester our party is losing middle america. democrats, they are separating from him. when he goes to georgia stacey abrams wants to be the next
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governor does not show. these governors, i think, we're up to 11 know. did not wait for the white house. released a lot of their mandates to a degree. and restriction in their state without even checking with 1600 pennsylvania avenue. the democratic party is moving away from the white house. >> will: often people like carley around to help me understand what tamera like a term likegaslight means. it's a complete lie to hear their policies have allowed us to emerge from covid. it's fascinating. next up washington, d.c. i'm excited to talk about this i know brian is as well. the fight for freedom rages in canada it could be soon here. u.s. truckers could be gearing up for own cross-country trek. we go live inside the freedom convoy next. >> carley: we sent lawrence jones to sofi stadium ahead of the super bowl sunday. what's on deck, lawrence?
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good morning. >> lawrence: good morning, family. it's almost time for the big game on sunday, 6:30 eastern time. rams vs. the bengals. before that, i had the opportunity to hit the nfl red carpet for the nfl honors. what i talked with the players about, we will talk about it coming up on "fox & friends." ♪ and i feel like i can do anything. we've been coming here, since 1868. there's a lot of cushy desk jobs out there, but this is my happy place. there are millions of ways to make the most of your land. learn more at deere.com 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.
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cash cash today more than 4,000 workers in new york city face losing their job because of the vaccine mandate. most of the employees at risk are police officers, firefighters and corrections officers. more than two dozen unions are suing the city over the mandate. winter fires in southern california burning homes and
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forcing evacuations. fire officials say the laguna beach blaze ducked the emerald firewall covering 150 acres is 10 percent contained and a whittier fire named the sick si] can a more fire. firefighters quickly brought it under control. an autopsy report reveals median bob saget was positive for covid when he died but the medical examiner says the virus did not play a part in his death. instead, saget died from a brain bleed caused by head trauma. in a statement, his family said he bumped his head and thought nothing of it the actor was found dead in his orlando hotel room last month. so any time you hit your head guys, you have got to get that checked out. >> carley: what a wild turn of events with that one be. ashley, thank you so much. >> brian: 15 minutes after the hour. now we go over to canada relates to everything doing here. police threatening to arrest freedom convoy protesters without a warrant.
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>> carley: can they even do that? a court in ontario freezes access to $8 million in donations for the protesters. we have heard that before with go fund me. >> will: jeff flock from our sister network joins us live on the ground in owosso and from inside the freedom convoy. jeff, what's up? >> i will tell you if they are going to arrest people. they are going to have a big job. they better bring a lot of people to do that with. i have been to a lot of protests you might imagine over the course of my life on both sides of issues. this one is organized. the passion you see out here. pretty amazing. did you see that? they built a stage up there they are not going anywhere. they are not plan going to anywhere any time soon. come this way. [broken audio]
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>> will: i think we are having trouble with jeff's audio there. i want to see what's going on inside that convoy. >> is that better? >> jeff: little better? walking through the trucks there, i think was a problem. i was going to say they were talking about trying to tow some of these guys out. i don't know where they're going to get the wreckers to do it. this is incredible. we started with the truckers. look at this. this is a pickup truck here. tripped over the gas cans, these are people that have consume to kind and say they support this. this is not all truckers. this is canada coming out. and, you know, you talk about the loss of that money freezing some of the money, people have been contributing gas cans, making sure they have enough diesel fuel to keep running. as i said i have seen a lot of
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protests. this ones in terms of organization is pretty amazing. and there is right in front of the parliament and all of the signs. [broken audio] scene out here. >> will: quite a scene. thank you, jeff for recapping what's going on. we will check back in with you later this morning. this is a story i know you are passionate about. he and i have talked about this off camera. i am as well. i think this story is everything, carley. working class vs. elites. common man vs. authoritarian. this is people standing up for individual freedom not necessarily or specifically or exclusively against the vaccine or even mandate. this is people tired of being lorded over. and what starts in canada may soon make its way here to the united states. >> carley: i'm so glad you said that there is substack article written by a journalist spoke to
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100 trekkers she writes what is happening in canada right now is bigger than the mandate. also about a sense that things will never go back to normal. a sense that they are being ganged up on by government, the media, big tech, big pharma. that the elites, that the elites, people who have zoomed their way through the pandemic had better start paying attention to the fentanyl overdoses the suicide, crime, despair or else. she spoke to 100 truckers. she is doing the work on the ground as opposed to other media outlets saying it's about flying confederate flags and these people are racist. i have think the most infuriating thing about this is that these truckers, they're the ones following the science. because if you are vaccinated. you can give and get covid, there are also truckers. that is a social distancing job. so, it's just unfortunate this is happening. i think that justin trudeau long past due that he sits down and
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meets with them. >> brian: four provinces have loosened up. caught up what is happening in canada. shut down as a country. robbed them of recreation and robert them of school. robbed them of going to a coffee shop. you would be arrested if you do this. this began as something about truckers. the trucker was represent all in canada, and now even in the u.s. on the u.s. -- they just said i'm going to get some attention. i'm going to stop the trade between the u.s. and canada. sent first shift home two hours early on thursday are probably not going to have them come to work today honda. temporarily stop production on the assembly line during the day shift today because they are not getting any supplies. toyota sent three of its plants in on taken theriault closed for the rest of the week because of parts shortages. they have stopped trade within countries. guess what the white house is doing. they are calling up trudeau and saying break this up. wait a second. don't they have their hands full in our country?
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they are demanding that canada end this blockade. >> will: they are use offing dhs to look for who may organize here in the united states of america through social media. same path they went in canada which to carley's point was to slander, to smear these truckers as nazis or racist or fringe extremists. one of the american supporters of this movement is man named karl porter. a trucker from wisconsin. he has not yet joined the freedom convoy on either side of the border. he was on tucker talking about what this is all about. >> with america being in the forefront of freedom, all right? it's in my blood. to fight for what's right. and i believe that having the freedom of choice, which our canadian brethren is actually just trying to get and receive, i think that it's a no-brainer. you know, why not stand on the forefront with those guys and show our solidarity with that country and say hey, we are against mandates. we are against tyranny of
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government. we want the same thing that everybody else wakes up and deserves. that is the freedom of choice. so, i have always been growing up my body, my choice. what he was going on now? >> brian: think about it in france trying to break it up in paris right away. and in america, look out. there is one convoy that they're thinking about starting in oregon and goings right to washington, d.c. by march 1st. another one southern california to ring around the super bowl. and this is not just about truckers. this is about freedom. this is about the hypocrisy of leaders shutting us down, ruining our lives while they go on with theirs from the french laundrie to the mask at the nfc championship game stacey abrams. that is such an in your face while the average american and average citizen is rising up saying screw you. >> carley: did you see this tweet from cnn analyst her name is julia. this is why the trucker protests are happening to begin with.
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slash the tires. empty gas tanks. arrest the drivers. and move the trucks. trust me, i will not run out of ways to make this hurt. cancel their insurance, suspend their drivers licenses. prohibit any future regulatory certification for truckers, et cetera. have we learned nothing? these things fest when there are no consequences. >> brian: does she drive a truck beare about drivers down. she wants to slash their tires. meanwhile, she just asked for more makeup to sit in that chair on a tv set while her life goes on 100 percent the way it was. these truckers who were asked to work through the pandemic. not ask questions. deliver the food and supplies needed hand over your keys unless you are double asked and boosted. they are saying we are done with this. >> will: not from nothing. but for the same crowd that asked for censorship there are limitations on free speech.
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one of them being specific calls for acts of violence. that's pretty specific. slash their tires. that's pretty specific to the limitations of free speech from the airways of cnn which we'll spend the next 10 minutes talking about censoring joey rogan. >> carley: she wasn't calling for violence. a side note i don't think slashing tires and emptying gas tanks is a good bay of moving trucks. harvard. >> will: she really a harvard professor? >> carley: yeah. >> will: at least we get honesty. i appreciate her hont towards her attitude to this movement. honesty is welcome. let me give you another example. how about some honesty in how you feel about the way our children are being treated throughout this pandemic? this is from the state of wisconsin. where i believe his name is -- it's lee snodgrass. lee snodgrass a representative there. said if parents want to have a say in their children's education she has a suggestion how they should do so. they should home school or pay
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for private school tuition out of their family budget. she went back and deleted her tweet saying it was lacking in nuances and easily misinterpreted. i wouldn't want anyone to think that parents do not have a role in their children's public education. i sure did. i encourage all parents to engage in voting for school board, join pto and meet with teachers. so she is honest. hey, she issued her correction. if you want some influence on your children's education, get out of public education. >> carley: did they learn nothing when it comes to the virginia election and the reason the race went the way it did is because of this exact issue. and parents feeling like they didn't have a voice in schools. and then the new governor comes. in is giving them a voice, saying that you don't have to mask your kids if you don't want to. you don't have to teach critical race theory, that's not going to happen in virginia anymore. and he won the election because of it. >> brian: do you know the stories are the same story? these are about average, everyday people, rising up and saying you are not going to tell me what to do anymore. especially when it has to do
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with my career, my house, my family. the truck story is the teacher story is the parent story. we have had enough. we -- there is no science behind what you were doing. the experts aren't experts. everything you told us to do 100% of it almost -- maybe 95 turned out wrong. >> will: brian, look at the parallel and how those two stories have been received. the parents get smeared as domestic terrorists. the truckers get smeared as nazis and racists. authorities, the elites the powers that be do not like being questioned. >> brian: more of average everyday people of the so-called people in power. so best of luck, your time is up. and that includes this whole covid-19 virus. these governors are wising up. it's time for the white house to do the same. and it's time to sit down justin trudeau with the truckers if you want to get your bridges back. meanwhile new york city business owners begging for help as the crime hits a decade high. our next guests are dealing with
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break ins and vandalisms and infections daily. desperate plea to take bite out of crime. >> ainsley: actress goldie hahn warn us mask mandates. she will join us on how this country is failing our children. ♪ ♪ you're unbelievable ♪ ♪
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8 and a half million people or 2,000 criminals? we will take the 2,000 criminals and you put them away. >> carley: our next guests face crime firsthand all across the big apple. debbie weiner is the co-owner of sugar sweet sunshine bakery. the co-owner and mary josephine is the owner of a business. good morning to you all. debbie, how has this crime crisis affected your business? >> good morning. we had attempted break-in over the summer where they tried to use it looked like a crowbar to get in on both the french doors and the front door. also the vest continue bull had been vandalized early on. people sleeping in it. doing drugs. i didn't even bother putting it up this year. because that is also an issue for safety for the staff if they come upon somebody in there.
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and it cost us money to have to clean the vestibule. i didn't even bother putting it up. >> ainsley: you are the owner of several businesses in new york city including innocent yesterday bakery which i love. i have been to it several times. it's a great small business. and you say that you think that the covid vaccine mandate and crime, why is that? >> i believe, listen, it's pretty obvious where this came from with the root of all of this was from de blasio. he pretty much took a city of opportunity and turned it into a city of survival, pretty much literally right now. you saw what he has done, you know, with the trash, even throwing out something in the garr intage like playing a game of jenga. you have the thrive program, which was a complete disaster with mentally -- mental health people all over the place. you had open drug use. you had prosecution he didn't
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back the blue. all these things roots now all coming up because when you look at it, that covid let people on the street. less people going to businesses. let people taking the trains, all these people pretty much the inmates running the asylum. that's the biggest problem. if you actually get people back to the offices, you get the mandates and tourism here, we will have more people out and, about more witnesses. and there will be more people that are good samaritans that are going to help to stop people from committing crimes. >> carley: i think that's such a great point. i haven't heard it said quite like that before. mary josephine there is now a new mayor, eric adams, do you have faith he will be able to fix this issue? >> well, he has to fix the issue. unfortunately, we are living in a city that's full of crime. your two other guests are saying it perfectly well, we believe last guest yes, it's
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covid-related. and if eric adams does not clean new york city, we are in trouble. i mean, rapes are up. murders are up. crime is up throughout. all of the city. you can't ride the subway. you can't ride and walk safely in the street. can't go to a cafe or restaurant anywhere and feel safe. we are back to the 1970s and 1980s. he doesn't have any other choice than to clean up new york city. if he doesn't. we are going to be living in a mess of, you know, of a city. >> carley: without a doubt. president biden was recently in new york city. he talked about this crime issue. his focus was on gun violence. getting illegal guns off the streets. part of the problem, do you think that it will solve the whole crisis. >> it's not going to stop the whole crisis. it would be a good start if we could bring back like the anticrime unit. that was disassembled early on just before or during covid. putting more police on the street and untying their hands. that would be a good start to
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let them do what it is they are supposed to do, which is arrest them, lock them up. put them in jail and keep them there. that would be a real start. >> carley: that would be a good start. richie, originally, when this crime crisis first started. the narrative was about the fact that peopling wanted to defund the police it has shifted to really focusing on district attorneys. there is a new district attorney in alvin bragg and the first thing he did was want to decriminalize a lot of things. including resisting arrest. and he wanted to give softer sentences for things like armed robbery. he has since walked that back because there has been such a focus on that. and the negative consequences of it. what is your take on that element of this crime issue and how it could effect your business? >> the biggest problem is that everyone has to get on the same page. we need adams, we need bragg we
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need seoul and banks. not just bail reform that needs adjustment. it's not the police units. more cops out there. it's also a balance of having education. the problem was when covid was going on schools weren't open. and these kids, they were learning -- you have people in high school that were learning on the streets instead of learning in the classroom. >> carley: so true. >> so you have kids that literally could figure out how to get a gun, instead of figuring out what colleges they are going to. and that's real serious aspect of it. everyone has to get on the same page with all different new york city, you know, legislatures and put this, you know, come up with a real game plan. >> carley: mary josephine, last question to you. crime is one of the big issues facing small business owners, the others we just got those numbers yesterday. inflation at a 40-year high. 7.5% over the same period last year. how is that affecting you?
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>> i mean, it's disgusting that, you know, we're just trying to get by. the restaurant industry obviously for us, it's very difficult, that margin of profit is so, so small. you have inflation now topped with covid. topped with the mandates. i mean, it's really, really, really difficult just to make it and, you know, somebody at the top has to do something and we have to start inviting tourism back here. we have to get people back into the city. we have to make new york city more inviting. so i mean, if we at least have inflation that's going on. at least if we have customers that we can serve and more business, then maybe we can offset it a little bit. but everything is being affected. >> carley: we hear you loud and clear and understand and sympathize with you. thank you for joining us this morning and speaking out we appreciate it? >> thank you. >> carley: still ahead, biden is deflecting blame for tragic
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afghanistan exit. rejecting a new army report claiming he ignored writing on the wall. joey jones joins us live to react coming up next. ♪ ♪
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>> that army report, investigative report come out about the lead-up to the withdrawal from afghanistan, interviewed many military officials and officers who said the administration ignored the handwriting on the wall. >> look, there was no good time to get out. but if we had not gotten out they acknowledged that we would have had to hut put a hell of a lot more troops back in. >> i want to clarify are you rejecting the conclusion and claims in this army report. >> yes, i am. >> brian: rejecting a pentagon report about what did you. president biden rejecting the findings of a new afghanistan report pullout. really? this is the in charge of the
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kabul evacuations blame the white house and first lady being a distraction out of the chaos. they all wanted special favors to get their people out. here to react retired marine bomb tech joey jones. i'm outraged by this. does he really think he can go ahead and contradict the pentagon and not expect the pentagon to answer back? >> >> sure it does. nothing infuriates me more president mr. president don't you think the way did you that thing you did was really terrible? he goes i had no choice. i had to do it. i had to pull out. he doesn't say i had to do the way did i it deflects over to a completely different issue. americans understand that every american sitting at home understands the difference. i think what makes this so is troubling for me moving forward because we can go back and armchair quarterback it. that is done. august of last year is done. the ramifications are still running rampant all over. you talk to people that i'm familiar with organizations about pineapple express still trying to get people out or make sense of it all. but, moving forward, we have who
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knows how many military leaders involved with -- sworn affidavits in this report. and they are going to continue to do their job knowing the commander-in-chief says that he doesn't agree with their sworn affidavit? >> brian: very simple. why is millie still on the job. why does that again zi still mackenzie still have ajob. they went in front of congress and said we told the president these options. we told him this would happen with the troop level that we h and then it actually happened and he said they never told me. why is that okay? that's not okay. either you fire them or admit, mr. president you are a flat outlier. >> sometimes you do put yourself in a were core. that's the where the president is all of the men you just named are being attacked from all angles for how they did their job in afghanistan. then they go and say well they did that way because the president told them to. the president has no recourse to fire them because if he does, he admits he was wrong on all accounts. he has no choice but to try to hope and pray that through the
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midterms americans forget about this. that's the only option he has on this issue to not literally lose the midterms and his re-election on it. >> brian: here is rear admiral peter vastly could be the next chairman of the joints of staff. talking about jill biden and being a distraction. even the vatican was a distraction. they wanted their people out. quote: there was all goodness in this but the lesson learned it was a distraction from the main effort they kept saying get my people out as they were coming directly to the individuals on the ground trying to accomplish the task. can you imagine this in the first lady says get mr. and mrs. jones out at the same time you are trying to get our troops out in a small airport? as the taliban convened and you emptied out your embassy. when they warned you to get out. emptied out your embassy in a matter of three days. we have to worry about who jill biden knows. >> i had a buddy go there army operator, special operator worked for the cia. he has been on this network but i won't name him.
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he went to afghanistan the week after the bomb went off and killed 13 heroes. he was there until a few months ago. he was there for months and months. when he came home he looked at me and said i have been places and done things where i knew the united states government wouldn't have my back. this is the first time i have been somewhere that i thought they were working against me. that gave me cold chills. >> brian: that's exactly what we have heard over and over again. >> exactly right. >> brian: up until the last few weeks they said they got their act together. they clearly didn't. this is just starting. he thinks we are going to forget about this. >> no. >> brian: we're not going to forget about this. check in with janice dean for weather many. january scblan good morning. take a look at it temperatures are going to get quite warm considerably speaking for february for much of the country today and start to deal with colder air next week. we will talk about the good news, right? temperatures in the 70s in dallas, 84 in los angeles. 79 in miami. even new york city 53 today. we'll take that for sure. california record heat. it happened yesterday. it's going to be ongoing through
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the weekend. we're going to smash rorldz san jose, sacramento and fresno. big deal as well of course for the big super bowl game on sunday temperatures in the 80's. we do have a clipper system a strong one going to dive across the northern plains, upper midwest and great lakes. going to bring snow and blizzard conditions unfortunately and going to drop those temperatures as well. snow still to come for some of these areas. and then over the northeast, yesterday i was talking about the potential for a winter storm for the i-95 corridor. right now it's looking like not a big deal. so that's also some good news this weekend. a quick look at the warm temperatures this weekend and then we're going to start to see those temperatures come down again to more seasonal levels. but some good news here. not a big storm for the northeast, which is great news and a nice taste of spring for a friday brian kilmeade. back to you. >> brian: we will take it. it will be a lot nicer in california. meanwhile. >> janice: thank you. >> brian: thank you very much, janice. i thought your mic was down. my fault. i didn't mean to keep talking.
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the rams and bengals are getting ready to play so we sent lawrence out to los angeles. we didn't tell him about the time change. he joins us next with a look at the nfl honors. there he is on the red carpet. >> ♪ ♪ (vo) what makes my heart beat? having everything i want in the place i love. jamaica. heartbeat of the world. let's go! my asthma felt anything but normal. ♪ ♪ it was time for a nunormal with nucala. nucala reduces asthma attacks it's a once-monthly add-on treatment for severe eosinophilic asthma. not for sudden breathing problems. allergic reactions can occur. get help right away for swelling of face, mouth, tongue, or trouble breathing. infections that can cause shingles have occured. don't stop steroids unless told by your doctor.
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>> will: second straight year aaron rodgers named mvp. fourth time winning the award at last night's nfl honors. >> carley: guess what? our own lawrence jones was at that ceremony hitting the red carpet he spoke to some of the biggest names in the league all ahead of sunday's big game. >> brian: joining us from outside sofi stadium enterprise reporter lawrence jones. were you able to get any interviews? >> lawrence: charter guys, good morning, family. big night. got talk about predictions for the nfl honors also the big game. this is what they had to say. >> we're at the 2022 nfl honors on the red carpet. we're going to talk with some players about what the predictions are going to be. who do they think are going to win the big game. >> that's a good question. haven't figured it out yet.
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i expect the hometown team to win. i think there is going toen so much l.a. love this year. the rams they put it all in this season to win it all. i think they are going to do it. >> i wouldn't be surprised if joe burrow pulled it out. >> i will know that saturday night after i call everybody on every team that i know. >> tom brady said he is done. who is the next goethe? goat?>> let's see. it's only been a week. >> not retired taking time for myself. >> lawrence: he did. if tom decides not to return, who is the next goat? thinking about patrick mahomes and the career he has. mahomes. >> mahomes is the first people i think of. >> what's your advice for the young people here. >> just stay true to how are. >> just chasing dreams to matter. what keep believing in yourself. >> the dream you have for yourself is bigger than anything else. >> one last thing, how about them cowboys? >> how about them cowboys? >> and brian, as you can see,
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there is still some distance between us and the players. kind of annoying but it was great to be back out. will, for you, brother, i did press jerry on our cowboys and said is there a problem with the coaching, organization? do we need to do better in the number one franchise in the world as you know will cain yet we don't have any wins. >> will: what happened what did he say when you pressed it? >> he said that he felt like we have the team to do it but they got to step it up. it was a disappointing season. also talked to emit smith he said if jerry wants him to come back and coach the cowboys he is will to do it as well. >> brian: do you want to talk to by himself should carley have not been on this segment? >> carley: at least he directed something at you? >> lawrence: i'm so sorry, carley. you know, you know the chemistry between the cowboys something big. bill will i was so disappointed to hear you say that zach did not give you an interview. >> lawrence: he didn't.
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every other cowboys came and stopped by. sometimes we were the only ones they spoke with because they understand how to read the room. dak didn't. >> carley: love your suit. always killing it with the fashion. >> lawrence: i couldn't let the brothers outdo me on the red carpet. i had to bring the energy. >> carley: you always shine the brightest. >> brian: next time bring a bull horn. how far away tape measure? >> carley: that looked ridiculous. >> lawrence: crazy. >> carley: countdown the kickoff all. paula deen is on deck whipping up winning recipes for your super bowl party. ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ at lowe's, you never have to be finished with your finishing touches. with aisles of ways to refresh and restyle. for whatever style you're feeling. at prices you're really feelin.
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they're going to double and triple down there and make a statement. >> will: mayor and governor photographed nfc championship game free breathing although apparently holding his breath. >> carley: los angeles mayor. that's such a 5-year-old excuse. >> will: i was holding my breath. >> carley: i didn't do anything wrong. i was holding my breath. >> brian: is he getting away with it. also the mayor of san francisco london breed she said she couldn't help herself. >> will: we already know what's going on with mayor london breed. she could have possibly been feeling the spirit. i don't know if tony tony tony was playing in luxury suite. >> brian: came on and took mask off. >> carley: this is the most expensive super bowl in history. and then i was reading an article that said ticket prices have dropped over the past 48 hours by a thousand bucks. wow, that's great. so i almost sent the article to griffin frank who is one of our writers, he is a huge bengals
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fan i looked up the prices they are still like over $3,000. >> will: i think it will be a fascinating test for the nfl. ratings great for the nfl all season long. these are not necessarily two marquee dreams that drive national attention. i know it's los angeles. los angeles is not a professional football market. no huge star power. joe burrow is eamericaing star. if the nfl if the rams and bengals rate, the nfl is absolutely unassailable. >> brian: it is stunning to get 30 million people. i don't know besides our show gets 30 million viewers on a regular basis or when lawrence jones his show is on saturday at 10:00 eastern time. that gets 30 million, too. but besides us three, lawrence, "fox & friends," your show and the super bowl, nobody else is getting 30 million viewers. >> lawrence: that's right. you all give me a great lead-in to the 10:00. at's "fox & friends" love. i was on the red carpet. talked to a are the nfl greats
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for super bowl 56. got a prediction. later on in the show legend on this program. joe theisman sim will be hear. great players ended up right here. >> will: can't wait to hear how got to speak with later in the show. >> brian: lawrence, quick question. >> lawrence: yeah. >> brian: lawrence, are you living life on east coast time or have you 3:00 in the morning? 4:00? >> lawrence: brother, don't get me started. i'm faking until i make it i'm still on east coast time. >> will: you have a little bit of sleepy face. i have noticed it. how late did that award show go? when did you leave that award show on west coast time? >> i left the show about 6:00. so, i caught most of the show on
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the tv. it was just the red carpet getting out of there. >> will: you could get a couple hours sleep. >> lawrence: just a couple. i got four hours in which is basic. carley you know this, if you can get four in i'm good. >> carley: lawrence, he is so cute. he does wear his -- pete hegseth, does, too. you can tell when they have just woken up and recently you were on the 21st floor and you had the biggest sleepy face and the whole show team and i were talking about it. >> lawrence: you called me out on it you said lawrence, you look like you just woke up, brother i said yeah, i did. >> carley: all right. see you in a bit. >> brian: let's talk about what's going on. right now in this country a fascinating period because the white house is sitting on its hands democratic states are realizing we can't do this when it comes to the covid environment. if you see nationwide the cases are dropping off a cliff like israel said. like the u.k. told us, how south africa warned us that this comes in hard. these symptoms are not severe.
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but it falls quickly. i'm talking about the last variant. look at the states that are rolling to a degree back on mask mandates. >> will: california, connecticut, delaware, illinois, massachusetts, nevada, new jersey, new york, new jersey, rhode island and washington. all rolling back their mask mandates. meanwhile, the federal government and the cdc still advising people to remain masked. joe biden was asked about this. he was asked about the cities and states beginning to loosen their mask mandates and why and when the federal government will follow suit. watch. >> i committed that i would follow the science. the science has put forward by the cdc. and the federal people. and i think it's probably premature. but it's, you know, it's a tough call. >> brian: democrats. >> carley: you would think same week his approval rating has hit 39%, clean-up is lower than donald trump, bush and obama's
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approval rating at this point in their presidencies, you would think that now that we know that what 56% of americans say that the president has done nothing for them, he would read the room, recognize that people want to move on with their lives. most people have either had covid, are vaccinated, have made the choice, whether or not to get vaccinated. there is nothing more that the federal government can do about this. that he would say okay, now is the time that i'm going to give the american people some goodness and roll back the mask mandates on planes and get rid of these ridiculous vaccine mandates for police officers and nurses and essential workers who risk their lives during the pandemic are now struggling to make a living because of it. >> brian: this is outrageous this connecticut governor followed the new jersey governor and releasing restrictions. yesterday, i read you the quote ned lamont said. we gave people enough information they can make their own decisions. but listen to this. >> i believe it's time to end the statewide school mask
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mandate and allow each and every school board to decide what is best for their schools. from a public health if he has been, you have earned this freedom. >> brian: thank you, we've earned the freedom. isn't that great? we did everything we were supposed to so we earned it. and if we are bad for a day punish us because we didn't earn it then. >> will: i suspect in that statement you are beginning to hear the set up for the celebration to be announced on joe biden's date of the state of the union. that interview he went on to say it's a bit premature. what you are seeing is some of these governors wait 20, 30, 45 days. in other words, announcing the r08 backs now but actually being implemented in march. my suspicion is that's when you will see the federal government moved as well as joe biden can announce some type of mission accomplished during his state of the union and give us our freedom back. >> brian: will, like he did in july when he said you can go have cookouts and all of a sudden in comes delta okay, everyone put masks back on.
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get vaccinated. this is a pandemic of the unvaccinated. you ever wrong, it wasn't. and it isn't. because, yeah, get vaccinated. that's the wise thing to do. if you are not, it has no, sir to do with the transfer of the virus. we later found that out. the president knows he has dialed back on saying that he doesn't say that as much anymore. he knows as a country we basically made our decision. 64% on a whole in the 70s from 12 and up. now he says yeah, we almost got a shot for those zero to 6. the only problem is two shots they say aren't effective. we are going to try three. really? continue to practice on our infants until you get it right. no, i don't think so. if two shots isn't right. you don't give them three shots. what are they doing with this experiment in their beakers and lab coats? i really don't think the problem is 0 to 6 when you look at the statistics of people who have susceptible to getting this virus. >> carley: yeah. that's so true. did you hear about this going on in california? not just the super bowl. there is also going to be
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another big event. and that is the oscars. apparently, if you go to the oscars, you do not have to be vaccinated. the rule is just that you have to show a negative code test. but, if did you go to the movie theater to watch those movies, there is a vaccine mandate in place. similar to how there is a vaccine mandate in place in new york city. i recently went to a movie theater. had to show my vaccine card. didn't have my vaccine card with me. so i couldn't go to the theater and see a movie. i had to leave. >> brian: you had to had leave. >> carley: i know unbelievable. >> brian: very few people in the theater. basically it's like a home theater. i have been to the theater two or three times. like six or seven people there. you could hear the murmurs. >> will: another example of the hypocrisy. a movie goer prove their vaccine status. movie maker exempt from that requirement. takes us full circle to where we began when talking about governors of california who do not have to obey by the same rules that they issue for you.
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matt whitaker acting attorney general and he talks about this hypocrisy. >> this is what liberals do. is they find something inconvenient. you still have to have a vax card and i.d. to get a five guys hamburger inside a restaurant in washington, d.c. they are still applying this to the working class people. the people that have to drive the cabs and actually do the work and i'm sure people serving at this as gala are going to be masked. so this is a fake coming around to our way of thinking. >> carley: so true. there has been some of this rules for thee, not for me situation that we even -- do you remember the mayor of austin, texas, he said he gave a speech and he told all of his residence not to travel during the covid and i think he was even on vacation at the time somewhere. because his daughter was getting married and then there was that local elected official in los angeles who had just voted to
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shut down outdoor dining and then after she cast her vote to do that. she was caught at a restaurant outside. >> brian: by the way they also shut down outdoor dining in california as we discussed. we have to do an after action report on covid-19. and i think there is so many people that should be called on the carpet. one person through it all is -- that has kept everything going is john -- i happen to know one of the things he self-made billionaire wabc carries my radio show. brian kilmeade show, and got a chance to know him. and he started working it there. he efnedz up buying it. he has a bunch of franchises, buildings, a bunch of investments. he has watched the economy greater. now he is watching as he is watching his stores be ransacked by would be criminals who are just taking things off the shelves. to so now he has got to hire private security. got to put them in their cars
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outside. put them in some cases under cover and stop people from stealing from supermarket. here he is talking about the money has to come out of his pocket because of the wild, crazy new york city. >> we are hiring more and more security. we hired a lot of retired cops. do you want to stay in business? you want to keep the store open? do it -- the other thing we are doing is we're putting less in the meat cases. in other words, we replenish more often. >> will: fascinating to watch people begin to reconcile themselves to this rise. not just petty crime. what begins with petty crime becomes major crime. you have begun to see some on the left including al sharpton recognize that toothpaste is under lock and key at cvs. i noticed this a few months ago you have to flag down a star employee. >> brian: used to be just razors and old spice can i get a little
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deodorant. >> carley: it gets so frustrating to have to flag down an employee just to get toothpaste and deodorant you buy stuff on amazon and stores go out of business. >> brian: the people still want to smell like old spice. old spice is you smell like the sea. >> will: old spice is, i mean, brian, i don't know what you are doing, you strike me as like an ax body spray type guying. >> brian: more brut. >> will: not ax. going old school like me old spice. >> brian: guess who advertised it joe namath in a towel. >> will: let's do this another couple minutes. >> brian: and gavin will have a coronary, an aneurysm. >> will: small crimes that people are beginning to notice that exist from san francisco to new york city of larceny, theft, have thats at the sized
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obviously into rising crime rates when it comes to murder and serious violent crime. and, you know, whether or not you own a store, and whether or not you are a citizen in new york and san francisco. you are looking for someone to not just blame but someone to solve this problem for you. you spoke with a restaurant owner. talking about where are our leaders? where is accountability? speaking of brut and old spice? beginning to look like the 1970s, watch. >> pretty obvious where this all came from the root was all de blasio. he pretty much took a city of opportunity and turned it into a city of survival, pretty much literally right now. >> you can't ride the subway. you can't walk freely and safely in the street. you can't go into a cafe, restaurant anywhere and feel safe. i mean, we are back to the 1970s and 80s. >> putting more police on the street and tie untying their hands that would be a good start arrest them, put them in jail
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and keep them there. >> carley: feels like everything is so backwards and so difficult to be a small business owner when it comes to, you know, all these vaccine mandates and the lockdowns and then after when we thought that these business owners were going to get a break because there was break in covid. then the crime wave hit. it's been so unfortunate. there is a new mayor in new york city eric adams, he is trying, but he has every single card stacked against him when it comes to how liberal the other leaders are in this city. i don't know if he is going to be able to make a big dent. >> brian: we had the president here, he had a chance to use the power of the presidency and him shoulder to shoulder to press the city council as well as the state legislature to change the bail reform at first and then put pressure on the a.g. and d.a. and he didn't do it. so i have no sympathy for him. he only talked about guns in front of the president. when the president leaves. then he starts talking about cracking down again. so i don't know how all in he
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is. >> will: ashley strohmier myer has additional headlines for us. >> going to start with a fox news alert. police in america under siege. phoenix authorities saying several officers hurt in an active situation. it's involving someone barricaded in a home. they are on scene right now. we will continue to follow this closely. plus, in washington state, two deputies were shot responding to a dispute between neighbors. both incidents happening back-to-back within the last nine hours. and now to our southern border. border patrol says they have arrested migrants with affiliation to the violent ms-13 gang. three salvadorian were arrested in the rio grande valley. one of them tested positive for covid-19. cbp says one of the three was removed in the u.s. in 1994 after convicted of aggravated sexual assault in new jersey. and get this: mcdonald's is coming to a met that verse near you. mickey d's filing for trademark to set up a virtual restaurant
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in the metaverse. they can order food "avatar" in the virtual fast forward joint and food will be delivered to users in real life. multiple patents have been filed it could be some time before the mega bites become real bites. >> brian: what's new about that? >> will: i don't know what any of that means by the way. >> carley: over my head. >> brian: he do that now. >> will: this is not real world. >> brian: don't we eventually need to have it in this world and delivered to our world and our house. >> will: now are as confused as the rest of us. >> brian: we are just -- not going to eat. >> will: you are not real just an "avatar." are a car order it in the metaverse and becomes real food that you can eat in real life. >> will: this is going to be like that d.c. internet moment. >> carley: what's the internet? >> will: today show 1992 what is the internet? >> carley: exactly right.
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doing i will with will doing it in real life. >> brian: i have no inhibitions i feel as though i'm saying everyone. >> will: no one knows. >> carley: play it back in 20 years. >> brian: i could have pretended to know. >> will: did you for a moment that's the point. >> brian: sorry about that. president macron refusing to take the covid test before meeting with the kremlin. over fear the russians would get his d.n.a. did anyone trust russia? look how far away they stayed away from each other. ask general jack keane that as critical race theory classrooms shining a spotlight on those willing to risk everything for standing up for those right. slow him down ♪ real cowboys get customized car insurance
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>> brian: welcome back. french president emmanuel macron and vladimir putin force to sit at a at an enormously long table. because macron refused to take a covid test not over the test itself but fierce the russians would get ahold of the d.n.a. can anyone trust that country? let's bring in fox news strategic analyst retired four star general jack keane. i was struck by that story also by the fact that they have a different perception of how the meeting went. what about you? >> yeah. well, i mean, it really shows up the pettiness and arrogance of putin here. i mean, he is insisting that macron take pcr test upon arrival. what macron's medical team did was they gave him a french pcr
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test before he departed and then upon arrival he took an antigen test. both of those were obviously negative. he goes into that meeting, putin knows full well he is told by his team that macron is good to go. he has taken two tests. but putin establishes that social distancing the stick in macron's eye. that's what i mean by the arrogance of putin. you are not going to take my test, he acts kind of childish here and the pettiness of putin. very much on display. >> brian: massive military exercises in belarus and the black sea, also by crimea. ukrainian officials say these are unprecedented. some fear that they're going to use this, these exercises to go right into the ukraine through the north. what do you think? >> well, the coherent invasion forces are not in belarus. that's a hodgepodge of units there for training exercise. they came from all over russia,
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largely. and they don't have the forces necessary to sustain an invasion. i'm not saying they couldn't come across the border and demonstrate. but in terms of trying to take the capital city and most of ukraine, i doubt it i think what still makes the most sense when you look at what putin's options are. obviously he is going to decide what he wants to do. but, a military movement into ukraine by land and also he has naval infantry on amphibious ships where can he approach by the sea. both of those -- both of those options, i think, are pretty realistic in terms of him taking a portion of ukraine but not taking the entire country, which, one, he hasn't done in the past and, two, he hasn't prepared his population for the increased casualties that will result in something on that kind of a scale. >> brian: i'm tired of seeing the ukrainians with wood guns. plenty of time to get them guns, my goodness, embarrassing. 25 minutes after the hour. other bib toll pick is
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afghanistan. president of the united states disputing what his military -- his pentagon gave and after action report of afghanistan to a degree about what took place leading up and through this disastrous operation and evacuation. listen to the president when challenged about the conclusions of that report which shows he made one bad decision after another bad decision. listen. >> that army report and investigative report that's come out about the lead-up to the withdrawal from afghanistan. it interviewed many military officials and officers who said the administration ignored the handwriting on the wall. >> look, there is no good time to get out. but if we had not gotten out. they acknowledge that we would have had to put a hell of a lot more troops back. >> in i want to clarify. are you rejecting the conclusions or the accounts that are in this army report? >> yes, i am. >> brian: your move, pentagon. that was unbelievable. he discounts his own-out pentagon's report about what
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took place in the lead-up to the afghanistan evacuation. what's your take? what's the next move here? >> no. first of all, a much better answer. it's unlikely he has read the report. he is getting some snippets in it from an interview and he doesn't like those snippets. but, much better answer would have been look, i haven't seen this thing. let me get into it and i will make a comment, even a public comment of some sort in terms of what my reaction to it is. and then i think he should have expressed some confidence. he says look it, any one of our military institutions they take a hard look at themselves. they try to get the facts out so they can understand what took place and they just call it the way they see it. and that's what this is about. i mean, lessons learned reports are not designed to point fingers at other people. in this case the military was trying to warn the state department and the national security team that the collapse was coming much faster than anybody thought it would be. i know for a fact, brian, that
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the on scene commander of our forces in afghanistan, before he -- before he pulled the plug on bag yam airfield and late june. he does it around the 4th of july. but he stops and says the administration: do you still want me to close bagram airfield given everything that's taken place? it takes him three or four days to get that answer and the answer was yes. so that's why there is some certain criticism ignoring what was taking place and pretending that a disaster was not in the offing. >> brian: showing almost no integrity he denies it happened and happened to be a prison on that air base as you know full of terrorists. out and about and may have played a role in killing 13 americans. inexcusable for him to say that didn't happen my humble opinion. general jack keane always great. thank you. >> good talking to you, brian have. a wonderful weekend. >> brian: you too. speaking of the weekend saturday at 8:00 and again at 11:00 one nation take root.
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trey gowdy and harold ford tell us what matters most. helping out out with the super bowl hall of fame maybe one of the best bengal ever anthony munoz and jay glazer and talk to adam carolla as well as tyrus will do the news dull. a quiz at the end which the country is required to take. meanwhile straight ahead she is back again. hillary clinton set to speak at a major democratic event stirring more rumors about a 2024 run? rnc chairwoman ronna mcdaniel joins us live. ♪ complete hiv treatment for adults who are undetectable. cabenuva helps keep me undetectable. it's two injections, given by a healthcare provider once a month. hiv pills aren't on my mind. i love being able to pick up and go. don't receive cabenuva if you're allergic to its ingredients or taking certain medicines,
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♪ >> carley: guess who is back, back again? hillary clinton will reportedly jump back into the spotlight to speak at the new york democratic convention, stirring all types of rumors about a potential 2024 run. let's bring in rnc chairwoman ronna mcdaniel. good morning, ronna. what do you make of this? do you think hillary clinton is going to run for president again? >> i mean, how desperate are the democrats if hillary clinton is the best can you do? let's recycle the worst candidate we have ever had in our party's history because joe biden is actually turning out to be such a bad president that we got to go back to hillary? their bench is so weak that they're going back to hillary clinton. i think she is probably looking
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at it because biden is in a lot of trouble. a fox news poll said 60% of americans said they wouldn't vote for biden again so the democrats are desperate and they are looking to hillary, i guess. >> yeah, that's right. we had that poll there 36%. only 36% say they would reelect biden. 60 percent said that they would vote for somebody else. so that does leave the door open for somebody. although president biden says that he is going to run for president again and vice president kamala harris is going to be his running mate. >> that's great. go for it we hope they run again. that's going to make sure that we elect a republican in 2024. look what they have done to this country. our country is struggling. americans are worse off than they were just a year ago. with invasion, with rising gas prices with an open border with a drug crisis. with what we are seeing in russia. on every single level, biden has been a failure and the american people absolutely are looking for a change in leadership. we are going to see it in the midterms with republicans taking
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about the house and senate and take back the white house in 2024. >> carley: there is a big situation unfolding in home state of michigan. there is the trucker convoy and on one hand these truckers are fighting for their freedom, their medical freedom. they don't want to get vaccinated. they are sick ever the mandates. on the other hand they are blocking a bridge and some ford and g.m. plants have had to shut down as a result. what do you make of this situation that's unfolding? >> yeah, this is right across the river from me and i live in the detroit area. the ambassador bridge. listen, i think americans need to recognize this would have been us if joe biden had his way. if the vaccine mandate had gone through and the supreme court had approved it, this is where we would be. the biden administration said they weren't done with the supreme court blocking their vaccine mandate. they are still going for this, which means we could be in the same position if the biden administration gets their way. people should not have to choose between their job and their medical freedoms. these truckers were frontline workers. they have kept us going through
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the pandemic. they have kept working. day and night. and they should not be demonized by canada and certainly don't want to see this happen in our country. if the biden administration had their way, this is exactly what we're going to see. >> carley: one solution to this problem would be for possibly president biden to put some pressure on justin trudeau to meet with these truckers and come to some form of agreement. but it doesn't look like that's going to be happening any time soon, huh? >> well, i think so. and i think it's really sad that trudeau won't meet with the truckers. but i think it's really rich for joe biden to be calling on trudeau to change things when biden would have the exact same policy here. so, we need to treat our truckers well. they worked so hard and to see them being demonized in canada or in the u.s. is just unacceptable. but this is where the democrats are they are doing this to all these frontline workers as they are trying to enforce these mandates and split our country. and they're walking away from freedom and agency and medical freedom.
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>> carley: you are right about the vaccine mandate that could have hit businesses here with over 100 people. that's why the supreme court is so important. ronna, thank you so much for joining us this morning. >> thanks for having me. >> carley: all right. you bet. super bowl sunday is this weekend. and our very own lawrence jones joins us with super bowl champion joe theismann for a preview. hey, lawrence. >> lawrence: hey, carley, 9 big game 56 coming up sunday. the great joe thism has predictions for you. that's next on "fox & friends." questions about botox®. botox® prevents headaches in adults with chronic migraine before they even start, with about 10 minutes of treatment once every 3 months.
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how bout sushi? i just had sushi for lunch yesterday. indian? ehh, maybe... how bout seafood? you know i don't like seafood. [collision beeping warning] [silence] how bout tacos? tacos. automatic emergency braking — one of six advanced safety features standard on every 2022 chevy equinox. find new technology. find new roads. chevrolet. not only do centrum multigummies taste great. they help support your immune defenses, too. find new technology. find new roads. because a healthy life. starts with a healthy immune system. with vitamins c and d, and zinc. getting out there has never tasted so good. try centrum multigummies. >> brian: as america gears up for the big game we're turning to the best for our super bowl predictions. who could that be, will? >> will: not lawrence jones who
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is outside sofi stadium, who i love. who i love. but he is going to go to a -- i don't know even know how to introduce joe. a washington football team. washington commanders. washington redskins quarterback. i don't know, joe. i don't know how do we introduce you? >> it's multiple choice right now. we're the commanders though. this group of young men are the commanders. >> i was a washington red skin. and that's what this ring symbolizes. >> brian: i know. >> brian, usually you get to wear this ring but now it goes. >> will: oh. >> look at that. >> brian: feel like you just broke up with plea. [laughter] >> lawrence: joe told me brian, it wouldn't even fit on your ring finger. these are man hands right here. [laughter] >> brian: can you please talk about the super bowl at one point and stop harassing me? do you have any expertise to share except for taunting? how dare you? [laughter] >> i got 15 yards for tossing.
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looked at lawrence funny. >> lawrence: he already made me change. i was more casual before. i had to go put my suit jacket on. >> brian: joe and i do this for 20 years, right, joe? we have done a super bowl hit for 20. next year at the fox super bowl we'll be out there. but, meanwhile, tell us what's up, lawrence. >> lawrence: joe, tell us about the super bowl, what's your predictions for the big game. >> normally i would save my predictions but i actually said it about a two days ago. i like the rams in this game. the reason why cincinnati certainly could win. they are very capable of doing that when cincinnati beat tennessee had a great defense. i don't think their offense was much much of a complement. in kansas city case their defense struggled a wee bit. they are a close game. offense disappeared the second half. they are playing a much more complete football team. that he was why i like the rams. i don't know if they will cover the number. >> lawrence: what about joe burrow it seems like every time the kid gets sakdz he gets right
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back up. i love his swagger. >> i do too. >> lawrence: and hunger he has. >> i love the young man 100 percent. one of the things so wonderful when they asked about the necklace he said are those real diamonds he said i make so much money for them not to be real. he was a swagger and congressiness about him. he has belief in teammates and vice versa the team believes in them as well. zach taylor their coach has done a terrific job. >> lawrence: one of the last questions. washington redskins, changing their name. where did you stand on that. >> it had to happen. a time in society where there are so many different kinds of changes going on. >> commanders i like that. people traditionalists we wore the redskins won championship. now young men's time to go out and do something. walk around saying commanders, just let it get comfortable on your lips. let if flow out and you will goat enjoy it, i'm sure. >> lawrence: thanks so much, brother. i appreciate it? >> nice ring. >> will: that ring is getting
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more comfortable. >> brian: lawrence, tradition has it on camera you have to give it back once the segment is back. give it back. >> lawrence: okay. all right. >> will: oh, no. i told you these man hands, guys. >> access scary. >> will: lawrence, i heard those sirens during your interview that weighs jerry jones sending the cops. in break your cowboys fan cards putting on a super bowl ring from the washington redskins that's what happened. >> lawrence: i know the things we do for tv carley, you know about it. >> carley: awesome stuff. all right. >> brian: good job, guys, thanks so much. >> carley: and it over to ashley. >> ashley: banners are popping up all around los angeles blasting district attorney george gascon. they say progressive d.a. has unleashed crime and death on the city. the displays of disapproval come as a series of emails reveal
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that gascon's staff solicited prescreened questions from a group of public defenders for a town hall event in july of 2020. and aloudoun county chair of supervisors says she is appalled at the woke d.a. hired -- d.a. convicted of sex offenses. she says prosecutor made false statements about how the man got hired. an investigation showed the d.a.'s office hired the convict without completing a thorough background check. well, the prosecutor refused to comment specifically about the convict's hiring. now, to the olympics. snowboarding icon shaun white saying goodbye to his competitive career on thursday night. finishes the men's half pike competition. gold medal winner has competed in five olympic games. he announced his retirement last week. and a 15-year-old russian figure skater is anxiously awaiting to see if she will be able to compete. it was after failing a doping
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test in december. camilla is appealing a ban based on the test and may have to go forfeit a gold medal won last week in team competition. and those are your headlines, guys, back to you. >> carley: that russian figure skater was like the story going into the olympics because she is supposed to be the most amazing figure skater ever. it's amazing she failed it in december and we are just now finding out about it? thank you. >> brian: you were really all other this story. >> will: that's good because we weren't. >> carley: you guys really held it down during the football -- the super bowl interview with lawrence. >> will: footballs? [laughter] >> brian: because we talk too much on that. why don't you toss it out to janice and we will call it even. >> carley: thank you. let's check in senior meteorologist janice dean with our fox weather forecast. good morning, janice. >> janice: good morning to everyone. let's start off with california. because they are breaking records when it comes to heat.
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there is liver side at 90 today. breaking records all week like all time february records and heat advisories for southern california including the big game forecast as we get into the 80's for sunday. so that's going to be great -- great news for folks that are going to be heading there. it's going to be warm. so a lot of shorts, i'm sure. here is your forecast today for much of the country, a nice, brief warm-up. we will see some cold air arrive this weekend and into early next week. a strong clipper system for the northern plains and upper midwest. that's going to bring not only snow but blizzard conditions for some of these areas. so we will be tracking that with fox weather. and then the system we are watching for this weekend for the northeast, it looks like it's going to be a weak one. we could see a little coating of snow but not too big of a deal clean-up is great news. all right. happy friday. will, carley and brian. >> carley: all right. thank you, janice. you won't want to miss this. will's friend paula deen shows us her best super bowl snacks ahead of the big game.
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>> brian: right. she does not like us. in the classroom next guest willing to risk it all to stand up for what's right and fight to keep critical race theory out of schools ♪ ♪ one way or another ♪ i'm going to win you ♪ i'm going to get you ♪ one way or another ♪ i'm going to nucala reduces asthma attacks
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♪ ♪ >> todd: the leftist teachers and school boards push critical race theory in the classrooms. fox nation canceled in the u.s. a to risk everything to stand up for what is right. speak with the head school wrote out a letter specifically reprimanding me in their world questioning reality of race is the mix characterized my comments would my be tolerated. >> i was going to burn my career, well i figured i'm not going to teach anywhere again. >> todd: joining us now, paul, great to speak with you this morning. so, you taught at a very fancy private school, $57,000 a year school. a story something i've personally experienced. schools are telling parents they are teaching one thing while
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quietly teaching their children something else. you brought that to the forefront. >> yeah, when i spoke out at my school my wanted to give my students a chance to see a teacher as a authority figure. challenge the orthodox we are being presented as knowledge. one of the reasons i got attempted canceled was because it was the fact that and what i think is important is for the children today that are experiencing this in the classrooms to realize that, you know, the teacher doesn't have the right to tell you who you are. your identity is anchored and it belongs to you, and you should be comfortable with your parents support to tell the teacher. the teacher and my identity is none of your business. >> todd: you know come up all that is one issue. the most pronounced issue which happens to be race, i happen to agree with you you decide who
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you are and it's much deeper than exist on the liberal surface. but what do you make of the subject matter of dan bongino's theory at large, canceled the usa, this tendency, this effort to disappear people essentially who don't toe the mainstream corporate whatever line? >> you know, it is funny, i watch the episode yesterday when it came out. i was really impressed. they did a great job telling the story. and it made me think about cancellation in general. and i know that a lot of people in the country right now that are doing their job and one whether you are a teacher or no, you know that something is wrong and you can't speak up. and really, you know, may be trying to protect your reputation, and that is totally understandable in your
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livelihood and security. but being canceled your already cancel because you were canceled on the inside. so it is great to step up and really make that choice to act according to your conscious. >> todd: yeah, that is fascinating. the censorship that we see is only censorship but what we don't see is how many people censor themselves out of that fear. you did not -- we appreciate hearing your story on this series. thank you for joining us on the series, paul. >> thank you for having me. i really appreciate it. >> todd: actress goldie hunt joining us this hour say mandate for kids has gone way overboard. ♪ ♪ lowered their blood sugar
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that is a great idea. >> todd: can we do this with cincinnati. >> please. >> todd: i was watching "the five" and was getting his due, bill hemmer is having a big moment. a huge cincinnati bengals fan. >> he doesn't have much to celebrate. >> todd: he has not appeared bengals plans, not much over the years. and they are very proud of the sideline chili. this is what i mean, it is spaghetti. [laughter] spaghetti with meat sauce. >> i've never had it before though. they did eat it live on "the five" and it seems like reviews, right? >> todd: they didn't eat it on "fox & friends." >> carley: cheese on top. >> todd: eat the whole bow, not on television and pete hegseth would have that inhaled in 30 seconds. >> carley: i think we will have it later on the show
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because you, will, will be joining us that is following you. >> todd: in fact, we can just leave. so much chemistry between you guys. >> todd: do you remember how yesterday show ended at 8:30 eastern time, we got the number of inflation, 7.5% and even the members last week and president biden was very happy to say 400,000 jobs but i would argue needs more, 8 out of 10 americans living paycheck to paycheck, that paycheck doesn't go as far because now your dollar is not worth as much. it is 7.5%. so groove .5% and it seems as though joe biden says this is transitory, he probably wants at back. a year ago when he said that. >> infect he doesn't like to be asked about that in particular,
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was inflation is inflation transitory but now that it does not, but does he have to say? what he has to say, nbc news, stop being a wise guy, watch. >> i think it was back in july you said inflation was going to be contemporary and i think a lot of people are wondering what is your definition of temporary? >> i know you are being a wise guy and i understand that your job, but at the time, what happened was, let's look at the reason for the inflations, the reason for inflation is the supply chains were cut off, meaning that the products, for example, automobiles. the lack of computer chips to build those automobiles so they can function here they need those computer chips. they were not available. so what happens? the number of cars reduced, new cars reduced and it went up one point one-third inflation because the prices are up.
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>> todd: wasn't at the same deal last year when he came out and said that peak of the prices he said last year in december? i think you will see a change sooner, quicker, more rapidly with his speech haphazardly, more than people think. so it is a bump in the road. this pump in the road is a greater. >> carley: and drill down on those prices come up her across the your wallet and used car parts is up 45%, gasoline 39.9 and energy prices 27%, electricity and new cars, and i think one of the most frustrating things that happened yesterday, president biden was making a speech in virginia and on the side there was a sign near him while he was making the speech that said lowering costs for american families or something like that on the same day that inflation numbers came out. maybe put that sign up on this very day. >> brian: he bit build back better then. >> carley: he said he was
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going to do everything in his power to lower castes prices. the white knight to come in and lower gas prices while the reason we are in this issue are having this problem is because his own policies. it is not just killing the keystone pipeline but because the oil and gas industry is so afraid to start projects, which is increasing concerns, less gas circulating in the country. president biden, his solution to this is to call on russia, one of our greatest adversaries to pump more gas. are you kidding me? when we have the power to do that here. >> will: another failed promise, and other field executed strategy. like saying i'm going to shut down covid, which clearly didn't have happen. as we were playing that biden clip, i don't think it is superficial and there's not a complete senate in that clip. everything is a sentence or fragment interrupted.
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every thought is incomplete. everything therefore come i think reflects his policies, unfinished, incomplete, incoherent. i think the american people have noticed not just the messenger or the message but the policies as well because cnn asks their people in polling, what do you approve of? 56% say nothing, nothing at all has met their approval. >> brian: 15% of the economy coronavirus, 6% disapprove of personality traits. and he goes on here that is why the real clear average is below 40%. you have to ask yourself what can he do to reverse it? one thing is stop firing people. let's be honest, that guy, the president need support. there is no expertise of supply chain, he has shown that an foreign policy is supposed to be where he drive stockwell. the situation with the economy, don't tell me that is going well. the chief of staff puts him in
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an odd situation and he goes to virginia where he gets protested with "let's go brandon chants embarrassing for the administration. then lester whole two days afghanistan report and makes him totally inept and terrible. he probably didn't read the reports. so this guy needs to use stats. by the way, these numbers new chief new chief of staff president george w. bush, and a car left, barack obama went through three in his first term. it wouldn't be a disaster. so find out what the squad things and make the policy. nobody is happy with that except the squad. >> carley: speaking of poll numbers if you look at real clear politics average that came out yesterday, he is at 39%, the lowest of any president in recent history at the time of the presidency. but if you look at the month by month where his polls were, he was hovering around low 50s all the way until august.
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then it just dipped down dropped because the afghanistan withdrawal purity hasn't been able to recover since peer that is why you see people like stacey abrams, beto o'rourke campaigning and they don't even want to touch him. >> will: beto o'rourke is antigun. i love guns but came up with the wall back? >> brian: meanwhile canada police are threatening to arrest convoy without a warrant. >> carley: over $8 million in donations. >> will: this time with givesendgo. the sister network joins us live in ottawa from inside the freedom convoy, jeff. >> that has been a real important thing for this convoy because the funding of it has been the key, very well organized to the point, i'm standing in what is a child care area where the kids aren't here yet but this is what they have
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set up peer they have everything for smoking meat over here. and we are right in front of paula deen. an exit/entrance for members of parliament. i watch people come out after debating and some of the parliament members who were in favor of the mandates, no one accosted them nobody chased them in the bathroom or anything, this has been a very peaceful, in my view, peaceful protests throughout. occasionally someone starts a little trouble, but generally this is a peaceful movement here but has gone well beyond the truckers. as you see and you often hear the tones of french because there are plenty of french canadians. >> yeah. >> why are you here? >> to get our freedom back. i don't want to raise my kids with masks so that is why we are here. >> what do you make this
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morning? >> bacon and eggs. we have plenty of eggs. >> it sounds like you are here for the long haul? >> i've been here since day one, 15 days in ottawa right now. i'm with my wife and kids. >> you feel really deeply about this to make that kind of commitment. >> yeah, we are all in this together, people don't realize, we struggle in this we need peer convoy for the that. it is too much. the pressure to get to get vaccinated, there is something about it that just don't work. >> are you vaccinated? >> that is personal information and none of your business. >> okay, that is a fair answer. you just don't want to be mandated. >> yeah, and all of the mandates. >> got it, i appreciate it. i will let you get back to breakfast. thank you. you can walk up to pretty much
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anybody here and they have something to tell you. their passion, hearing that canadian flags as i see this gentleman right here. tell me why you are here, sir. >> i'm a 60-year-old grandfather fired by his job canada motors canada and they pulled all nonfacts people to sleep. they cut us off. my 31-year-old son has lost his job purity will be in april. he is told he is gone because he's not faxed and my daughter who is pregnant in the fall and being asked to fax had to leave early and give birth to prematurely after government harassing her to take the vaccine. so my family has been impacted and hundreds of thousands of dollars. my son-in-law has his own business consulting business and losing tens of thousands of dollars for the government has decided to punish their people and i'm here to stop it. >> you feel very passionate about this. >> i will die to protect my family and my children from
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overreach by the government. i am here for peace, for love and satisfaction of people living in a country in unity. and this justin trudeau does not deserve the title of prime minister. he is an insult to canadians. i just want to know how far justin trudeau would go if someone took the photo off of his table peer that is how far i will go, justin trudeau, mark my words, justin trudeau. >> sir, i very much appreciate you sharing your story. i can see the emotion. >> thank you. >> no one can say it better, perhaps, then the spokesman for this group. that is a guy i walked up to and i hadn't talked to him before. that is what we are seeing out here. >> amazing stuff, absolutely stunning interview. and i think everyone on this couch sympathizes with what
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canadians are going through and not to mention what is also taking place in the united states of america. i'm curious when you talk to people there in ottawa, what does victor look like? when did the trucks go home? when would they say mission accomplished? i believe deeply in the abstract they are talking about. i don't want to live with masks and qr codes and i don't what you taking food off my families plate. but i'm really curious at a substantive hit level, what does victor look like for the protesters? >> i wish there was one voice that they could speak with but this is a diverse group and not just the truckers stating, cross the border and the end of the vaccine mandate. the mandate needs to go away. this has brought people together that feel passionate about this governor might government across a host of issues. i think the trucks go away if you do a end of the mandates. but that is not just the federal
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government here. it is the end of the province as well. so it is complicated. >> jeff this is not just in ottawa's story. the fact is they stop border crossings at windsor, montana, emerson, manitoba and across north dakota. so this is affecting america. this was an ottawa trucker story mode but now it is a canada/north america freedom story. don't you agree? >> the power of these trucks and truckers, yeah, he is playing out all across the border and of course, i cover the auto industry for years and so much cross-border traffic can't take place right now. this hearkens back to the 20s and farmers, remember the farmers -- well, you don't remember the farmers but i read history. the farmers bringing their play house in the streets of washington. that is somewhat you are seeing here. and the trucks, truckers may be
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trying to tow it out and make them leave? good luck with that. we are talking hundreds of trucks. if you have ever seen a big rig towed by a record somewhere, that is not an easy thing. especially with maybe thousands of people saying "we don't want that to happen." they have a lot of short hairs here or not to too graphic. >> carley: what are they saying about the canadian court freezing $8 million that was raised? how much will that affect this protest? >> that there are those who are suspicious of the government to start with, and then you've got the first freezing and the first returning of the money on to go find me. and now this one as well. this is tremendously well organized. and that comes with some money, that just doesn't happen. but this has been a grassroots. people showing up here, bringing gas, bringing food, you know, showing up at their families.
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so, i don't know that that is going to stop it. just freezing that money come i don't think that will put an end back to this because people will come out of their homes all across -- i talked to a guy today who drove 14 hours to be here from canada. i don't think freezing that money will have a big impact. >> stunning, excellent report, great to talk to you and great to hear those voices from canada, thank you, jeff. >> will: the best thing to do is call a press conference, this is what our demands are out when it clear so there might be the pressure to go on justin trudeau to answer the question as opposed to thousands of trucks blocking bridges. he can marginalize this is no place. put a face on it and let's see upload leaders. >> will: but it is of the people, the movement of the workers, of the common man and those voices, that passion, to me is what you need to hear and
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is what justin trudeau needs to hear. >> carley: i know we have to move on but think about what that man says about his family, his daughter was pregnant who was forced to get vaccinated or told to get vaccinated sun fire to, daughter fired anyone of food on the table and justin trudeau, calling those people with unacceptable views. does that seem unacceptable view to you? >> brian: it was unacceptable justin trudeau and we are thankful he did not wear a black face. it is the little things to be thankful for. for the second straight year aaron rodgers is named nfl mvp. the green bay packers quarterback for time winning the award in last night in a foul and honors. >> carley: that is right, lawrence jones as the mic at the award ceremony hitting the red carpet with the biggest names all ahead of sunday's big game. we went joining us outside so if i stayed him, lawrence jones, hey, lawrence.
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>> lawrence: hey, good morning, the big game for the super bowl lvi got the opportunity, even though some of the players about the big predictions and advice for young people, take a look. >> with the 2022 nfl honors on the red carpet come i want to talk to the players about what the predictions will be in who they think will win back the big game? >> that is a good question. i haven't figured it out yet. i expect the hometown team to end. so much that l.a. will love this year. but the rams, they put it in the season to win. >> saturday night, after i call everybody on every team that i know. tom brady says he's done. who is the next? you don't believe him, do you? >> it's only been a week. >> i feel like a -- wide open. >> he did. oh, man stay true to who you are, man. the dreams that you have for
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yourself is bigger than anything else. if you can't remit, you can't do it. >> a lot of greats, god is great to get you to this place. >> cowboys. >> he had bring up something. we deftly have the potential but we've been saying that the last 20 years. >> right now we have people with the skill. what we need is in depth, and depth hunger. do we have to get these cowboys in? >> one last thing, how about the cowboys? how about them cowboys? >> lawrence: guys, we will play a little bit more with jerrod jones, what do the cowboys need to do to improve? we will be here all weekend and fox "fox & friends" and catch live central p.m. eastern. we when you were doing interviews, and i want to be
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here. >> this is why i love lawrence and hate the cowboys. you took a story about the rams and the bengals and made it cowboys. what is going on here? >> lawrence: i try to be fair and balanced but i'm not fair and balanced when it comes to the cowboys, okay? i can't. >> carley: your team. thanks, lawrence, good job here at the of california apparently being homeless in san francisco. is it really roughing it questioning >> i mean if we are going to be realistic, we will be homeless. this is literally by choice, literally by choice. why do i want to pay rent when [bleep]? >> carley: wow the next guest say people are being paid to live on the street. netflix included.
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>> you can be homeless pretty leap here. if we will be realistic, they will payment be homeless. this is literally by choice, by choice. why would i want to bake rant? i'm not going [bleep], [bleep], amazon prime and netflix. now, it is like the cops are your neighbors, you know? >> brian: they are paying me to be homeless? san francisco man breaking to the next guest not only paying him to live on the streets, but he also sells fentanyl to kids. san francisco reported 650 drug overdose's this last, nearly three quarters of them related to speed. michael shellenberger the author of "san francisco, run cities into man behind the video that you just saw. he joins us now.
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amazing interview, amazing revelations and admissions there. what did you learn from that man in the streets of san francisco? >> well, he really, not much might interviewed people from my book san francisco with storiesd people are attracted because it offers the most generous welfare assets and you heard him mention $620 a month in cash welfare and $200 a month in food stamps, people that come to food stamps often traded illegally for cash. they use all the money to buy drugs. he did confess also he sold fentanyl 215-year-old and 16-year-old and it's, behavior. i think we've had a romantic view of the people in the streets, and certainly the proverbial mother escaping and has been with two kids who doesn't have underlying drug or
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mental illness problems, but a lot of folks that we have been attracting to california or people that are escaping the law are drug addicts and are seeking really to take advantage of the system. >> brian: michael you live in san francisco for years, and the perspective that you always had. and you admitted one time you looked more to decentralization of drugs. and what has led to your transition? in this moment where you see san francisco and i think probably titled your book "san francisco"? >> in a word chaos, violence, crime, addiction, the drugs out here are killing people. people might think the wrong idea about me, but i'm actually quite passionate to people addicted to her drugs. i think they are suffering from chemical slavery. i don't think we have to choose
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between masts incarceration and mask homelessness. there is a better alternative that is three keys, psychiatry and probation. the radical left to run san francisco much of california, even doing policing psychiatry and probation is considered to oppressive in a way of making people suffer more and it is foals. i think the point is we can be more like europe. we can use those tools that requires moving forward and a new mentality. in some ways, i kept the same ideals i had in the 1990s. i don't think addicts ultimately need to go to prison for long periods of time. i think they need to go to rehab and if you are suffering from mental illness, you need to go to psychiatric help here that is not the same as living on the streets. >> brian: not to be too cute, but it looks to be the policy of san francisco is a different piece. it is not permissive but
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actually incentivizing this behavior, encouraging this problem. and i guess that is too cute, one more p to add to your solution which has become a sick society in san francisco. mike, thank you for highlighting it it we will check out "san francisco" the book. >> thank you for having me. >> brian: goldie hawn sounds off against the mandates for children. she joins us live for the warning for leaders. but first, from master sergeant to mastership commitment to the army to a chef who served at the white house.
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housing project in columbus, mississippi. he faced poverty, racism, and violence, but it did not stop him from reaching his dream. >> andre rush joined the army in 1993 and that is where he honed his cooking skills preparing him to be a white house chef under the president and master ice carper. >> my dad said he is the hardest working person out of everyone, you know? someone will notice you from that. >> in addition to earning three college degrees, 150 awards and culinary competition. he says confidence is key. >> if you cheer yourself up and say i am my biggest fan, i can do anything, never give up. >> and he does keep going as he copes with ptsd. he was working as a chef at the pentagon during the 9/11 attack and the combat veteran was also
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injured in iraq and lost a fellow soldier and friend to suicide. >> i have unfortunately seen a lot of people take their lives. >> now that chef works with veterans to cope with their trauma in healthy ways. he does 2,222 push-ups a day to draw attention to estimated 22 military veterans who lose their life to suicide each day. the retired master sergeant created a nonprofit, which focuses on underprivileged kids and military veterans. >> my therapy is helping people and agree with that, to let you figure it out, but you need to go and talk to somebody in some form or fashion to get the proper help, and the right avenues of what it is. >> the chef has also become famous to dedication to fitness. he has 24-inch biceps and he bench presses 700 pounds. >> have been featured all over the country and different
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countries talking about my big biceps. >> he is a man with big arms and a big heart as he continues to serve the community. >> my part is about giving people more support than anything else. that is something i'm so passionate about because i know who i am and i know the color of my skin, but there is no differentiation in anything i give to each person. we are all the same. i tell people to love equally, get back equally. >> carley: his love for fitness and cooking has been great for his mental health. in addition to his work for his nonprofit 222 incorporated his memoir comes out in april further detailing his effort to help on digital comic soldiers in other ways to get back to the community, all right back to you, carly and brian, will. >> carley: impressive guy, thank you christina. chris goldie hawn joins us live after the break why she says covert restrictions have gone overboard. her message on how we are
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♪ ♪ >> brian: calls growing around the country to ms students. the state refused to let up on restrictive policies at the expense of america's children. 15 states force mask mandates in school and the next guest says coronavirus is traumatizing an entire generation of kids and the country is failing them. >> carley: actors award-winning actress, and goldie hawn joins us now. thank you so much for joining us on "fox & friends" this morning. you wrote such an interesting piece in usa today. how have we failed our children as a nation, and what can we do to reverse that? >> we can start looking at what we are putting into schools. we can look how we are putting
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preventative, social and emotional programs in school. preventative mental, we are dealing right now with a mental illness pandemic. mental illness is something we t can actually last. it is very, very dangerous. if we don't look at it and know how to analyze it, then we will not win this battle with kids. you know, the mind is a very powerful thing. and children are not able to actually manage what is going on, with her masts, or any of the various things going on today in the world. it is very, very scary. i think that what we have got to do is start focusing in on our next generation. i mean come a more stable mental state, what we do is teach children and have been for 20 years. we teach them about their brain so they know and understand, you know, but it is and how they can manage their challenges. and this is something that we as a nation should think about.
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and also, our parents, our parents, we need more programs on parents how to parent their children that don't know what to do. we are losing our kids. i mean, i'm passionate about this. 20 years ago we had an uptick in suicide for children, ten years old to 15. an honest to god this will bring tears to your eyes. we can call it a mask problem or a problem with being isolated. we can call it a problem with radiating some things, even if social, but we've got in terms of not being able to belong to anything. so children can't process that because their development. so we have to look at our future and make our children strong and fit and able to connect to each other. so that is what we are doing. >> brian: i'm just curious and you wrote this and we are talking about a moment in time when this problem has become particularly acute. we talked about isolation, masking, instilling fear in our children.
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what is the source of the trauma, meaning what is causing this mental health crisis? >> you know, there is a thing called contagion, right? contagion is what is happening now. and our world it is a emotional contagion. which means if you are around people already angry, and there is destabilization even in the home, right, it creates a problem for children. we think that children don't actually process this. well, they process it in ways with anxiety, fear, depression and suicide. i mean, these are the things we have to look at and say who is responsible for that? we are the grown-ups. we are the ones that need to take a hold, lead the way and say "we will not let this happen to the error next generation." it is really -- when i say a nation, i mean many things, there is our media and all aspects of our technology. it is actually jumbling the
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reins of our children appeared and they are addicted to it. and yes, they create addictive voids. there are a lot of wily ways going on in terms how we keep our kids addicted. ocular now, virtual reality. virtual reality can be used for the good, right? but children are living in other universes now. and we want to bring them back, back to humanity. so, i like to look at what we are doing is putting humanity back in the person. >> brian: right. >> we go from kindergarten all the way to eighth grade. right now we are learning her children are understanding more about their emotions, how to handle them, how to understand their brain and know that they have the power to be able to make a decision for themselves for the greater good. this has been happening for me for 20 years. i'm finally speaking out. you know -- >> brian: because what has happened, goldie, what happened to the last two? this is something that needed to
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be addressed with the iphone and the blackberry, i get it. what happened the last two years, we have to stop the damage now, in my view. all we talk about his national health. where is child psychiatry? we can't continue to say, keep the kids at home, keep them in the masks and say we care about them. we have to let them live their lives. >> what i would like -- i would like because i'm not antimask or for masks. i'm very neutron that because everybody has their own decision. it is really hard when you mandate it, i get that. but it is how we handle it. it is not that it is there. there will always be bad stuff going on in the world, always. how do we handle it? how do we look at each other and gain sort of a brotherly situation where we know we are not all over the place and sort of pull arising our thoughts. we have to gain some semblance
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of belonging. and our children don't feel like anything belonging. it is a way of conscious shifting in terms of the way we look for it, the way we talk, the way we share. whether kids wear a mask or don't wear a mask. they are looking at this and what they call an invisible enemy? i mean, is this how you look at this? for her children, they go, oh, my gosh, it is invisible. that is scary. so we have to look how we speak about it. be conscious about -- it's not just us in the world, it is we. we have to go from me to you. speak to the pandemic, goldie, is one thing for another huge thing right now parents are dealing with his social media be it used to be that kids would get bullied on playgrounds and now it is coming home with you in the form of social media with cell phones and also kids are comparing themselves to other
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children and other adults they see on social media as well. what is your advice for parents doing with that? suicide rates among young girls right now is up 50%, suicide attempts. >> i know, i know, it is tragic. it really is. this is not possible. we cannot continue to just use this as a statistic. this is a real thing. so what are you do? what do you do? you get tough. you explain also in parents are not armed for this, by the way that you explain what it's doing and you have to explain this to children. our adolescents, they actually are in the most creative part of their life right now. we think it is too terrible. it is exciting everyone appeared on the idea that we can actually sit down and speak to them about the effects and the negative efs of these things, even my own grandchildren, they are very aware.
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we have been on it long enough. you are going to get off now because i want to relate to you. and you have to be aware. and the idea of parents is a whole other issue. i been doing these things now on parenting. we need more. our parents need help. so, here is the bottom line here the bottom line is that any of these programs mental health preventative program should be in school, not one day a week, every day. it should be part of their classroom from a part of their learning. why do we ask kids to learn and don't teach them about their brain? we use their brain. they know what it is, it gives them control. it gives them the ability to feel that they have agency over their decisions i'm okay? these are the things that we need to do. and parents, we have a p.r. program on our site. it is fantastic, but we need to talk about it. we need to bring this to the floor.
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you guys are the people that can do it. >> brian: and you are as well. you are doing it now. the site is at the bottom of the screen. over fear and helplessness. goldie, we will check it out. we will check it out. we appreciate you sharing your message on "fox & friends." >> thank you, guys. >> carley: thank you. >> brian: coming down to kickoff to this weekends game and paula deen kicking up super recipes for the super bowl party. paula, let me do this might have to check in with bill and tina for what is coming up at the top of the hour. >> i don't know, super bowl and the bengals are in it. >> here we go, morning guys, inflation, we will talk about that. >> the governor is from colorado and the president is taking heat with the governor's and it was one of the first to say, let's get back to normal on covid. >> as a democrat too. baby girl shot in the head last
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summer in chicago and tells us what it's like a new state law. >> and the mayor of cincinnati will join us to talk about super bowl, indeed. a little bit of freaking out and we will give him a little bit of a valiant before we start. see you then. mouth, tongue, or trouble breathing. infections that can cause shingles have occured. don't stop steroids unless told by your doctor. tell your doctor if you have a parasitic infection. may cause headache, injection site reactions, back pain, and fatigue. ask your asthma specialist about a nunormal with nucala. we need to reduce plastic waste in the environment.
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>> good morning, everyone. happy friday. let's look at the temperatures across the country. we'll warm things up for much of the lower 48. look at that. 51 in seattle. 38 billings. 53 in new york. 78 in dallas. across southern california the heat is on. we're breaking records all week long and all-time february records. the big day on sunday will be warm as well. record heat for sunday. 85 in los angeles. it will be ongoing the next couple of days. we have a clipper system moving across the northern plains and upper midwest. a strong one and strong winds behind it will be blizzard conditions for parts of north dakota and south dakota in towards minnesota. there is the snow still to come for the great likes and interior northeast. watching a weak system come up
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the coast on saturday and sunday but the good news is we're not going to see a lot of snow with this one. that's great. happy friday. we'll go to carley and will and brian. >> bill: happy friday. thank you. super bowl sunday is right around the corner and lucky for us paula deen is preparing recipes this weekend sure to win. >> bill: paula joins us now. good morning. >> good morning y'all. how in the world are you? >> doing pretty well. >> good. i am chopping my cornbread barbecue muffin cups drizzling extra sauce on them. these are easy to make, guys. i use my cornbread mix but you can use any cornbread mix you want. all you do is add two eggs and milk to it. put them in your mini muffin pan and after they're done you
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just scoop out the center of each muffin, you toss your chicken in your barbecue sauce, and these are delicious and it's really, really something easy to do. and you can -- we are calling this barbecued chicken in cornbread cups, brian. thanks for keeping me straight. >> thank you. >> look at these. see the chicken? we want to top it with a little pickle, delicious. up here i've started making my hot wings in my red pepper jelly with butter and they are so good. to me it gives it a little asian flair. i have that, i have my blt dip along with some chips and a hearty appetite.
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>> will wants to ask you a question. >> hi, paula. >> hi, will. >> how are you today? >> i'm good. when are you coming to see me? >> as soon as they allow me a little travel budget and time i'm there. orange blossom. >> i will pray for you to come down. >> look at this. >> you know i want some orange blossoms and i'll take some of these barbecue cornbread cups and i'm interested in the sauce on the wings. >> is there a question? >> i am using, carley, are you there? >> i'm still here. >> i hear the men talking. i use a mustard based barbecue cause but you can use whatever your favorite is. a hotter red sauce or sweeter red sauce.
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i do love a mustard base. >> how much does the whole thing cost? >> what does it cost you? >> a little bit of time. >> are you having to pay a cook or do it yourself? >> people at home that want to do this and if there is anything on the shelves. >> it is so reasonable. chicken, a couple of chicken breasts or a whole chicken and cornbread mix. you would do this for under $6. >> what is your favorite super bowl food? >> probably my hot wings. i cook mine in the air fryer. they are the best wings because they get real crispy. i don't like a soggy wing, i like a crispy wing. that seems to be everybody's favorite. >> are you going to pick who will win the game? >> i don't know.
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i really didn't know -- i really didn't know who was playing. i just knew who was going to be the eaters. >> that's everybody watching. all right, paula. great to see you as always. lawrence jones is live all weekend long from los angeles for super bowl. have you all ready by sunday. we have president trump tomorrow. >> here we go. inflation on the front burner. president biden vows to get it under control. how do you do that when the price of gas hits an eight-year high? i'm bill hemmer in new york city. off to l.a. in a couple of hours. >> dana: i'm dana perino and this is "america's newsroom." >> bill: is there something else going on other than the game? >> dana: did you bring something to show everyone? >> bill: now? >> dana: this is what we've been dealing with. it is a big weekend. >> bill: see what we get. >> dana: a lot of things on people's minds because we have those inflation numbers yesterday and they were very high. the price s

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