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tv   FOX and Friends Sunday  FOX News  March 27, 2022 3:00am-7:00am PDT

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>> only way they get access to the temporary protective status he promised. good on poland helping out our neighbors. these are apples and oranges. >> congressman peter meijer, thanks for joining us on a sunday. we appreciate you and your perspective. >> appreciate it. >> good to be with you. todd, everybody have a great day. "fox & friends" starts right now. president biden: for god's sake this man cannot remain in power. will: fox news alert, the white house again on cleanup duty following those remarks from president biden in poland yesterday. the president now back home after a three-day trip to europe. rachel: in ukraine fighting insense nice as russian missiles hit the western city of lviv overnight. pete: civilians flee the city as chaos erupts 40 miles from the polish border.
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mike tobin is live mike. reporter: they hit within the city limits of lviv, 40 miles from nato's eastern flank. 200 miles from where president biden was in poland. the first of the strange hit the a fuel storage facility in the town of lviv. resulting in ha giant ball of flames and plume of smoke. that fire is out now. the lviv mayor said five people were injured and russians were saying hello to president biden. u.s. president had tough talk about nato's border. the ukrainian president says what is needed are weapons. >> translator: ukraine can't shoot down russian missiles with shotguns, machine guns. there are too many in the skies. it is impossible to unblock mariupol without sufficient number of tanks, armored vehicles and especially without
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jets. reporter: russian forces took control of a city north of kyiv, took the mayor into custody. civilian citizens protested, greeted them with chants and flags and go home. three civilians there were killed. the combat continues in the eastern portion of the country with new shelling in chernihiv. the town of chatonov was reclined by ukraine want forces with a counteroffensive. that will give them new access to supply lines in the eastern part of the country. back to you. will: thank you, mike. president joe biden created a situation where they felt it was necessary to clean up a gap and this is no small gap. rachel: anytime you say this will this be no small gap and the gap gets worse and worse. i'm not kidding. will: this one has the potential again. this one has the potential to
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set us off on razor's edge, again we're in the situation. listen to what joe biden had to say yesterday. president biden: we'll have a different future, a brighter future rooted into democracy and principle, hope and light. for god's ache this man cannot remain in power. will: for god's sake this man cannot remain in power. pete: was he talking about putin or talking about himself? rachel: this case he was talking about himself. pete: white house says this is off-the-cuff remark, actually makes it worse reality of the statement and interpretation of the kremlin who will say this is what biden really feels. his speechwriters didn't write it for him. he said, i brief we should have regime change which is a massive escalation off-the-cuff. so yesterday what did we do? we played sound bites of what happened. then the white house's attempt to clean it up. before he was on the plane, remember yesterday morning he
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would give a major address. he yelled for a long time, then said that at the very end before he got back on the plane to come back to the states, this is the statement the white house had to put up to try to clarify. the clarification doesn't make any sense. the president's point that was that putin cannot be allowed to exercise power over his neighbors or the region. he was not discussing putin's power in russia or regime change. so the question is, what us did the kremlin believe? rachel: we have that statement, pete. the kremlin spokesperson says, it is not up to the president of the united states and not up to americans to side who will remain in power in russia. only russians who vote for their president can decide that. clearly the russians heard what the president said and interpreted it as regime. it wouldn't be exaggeration for them. we have been involved in regime
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change. hillary clinton talked about her horrible debacle in libya. she had an interview. we went, we came, we killed, talking about the death of gadhafi. jake sullivan who is with this white house was with hillary when that happened. people in other countries especially negative fair just countries like -- nefarious countries like russia, i'm worried, united states has engaged in regime change, leaders have ended you dead. countries have fallen apart like libya and it has. will: many people at home could be watching yeah, there should be. vladmir putin shouldn't remain in power. it's a big deal because president biden shouldn't be saying that out loud. he shouldn't be saying that off script. he shouldn't be laying out to russia, either his goals and motivation or goals and motivation they want to believe. vladmir putin needs to make this
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for his power in russia a war between russia and nato. a war between russia and america. he needs to convince the russian people, hey, they're here to tear us down. he can't keep this simply between a war and ukraine. there is no popular support for a war against ukraine. as you point out, pete, it represents and he escalation. it puts vladmir putin in a more desperate position. he has gone from calling him what? rachel: butcher. pete: butchers, war criminal. will: not about the truth. that is the point i'm making. pete: i would happy to see vladmir putin gone tomorrow. everyone watching would love to see him gone tomorrow. this statement is in direct contradiction this white house has been saying. we don't want to escalate this to wider conflict. we don't want nato to escalate this into wider conflict.
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first of all american troops heading into ukraine which they needed to clarify, vladmir putin needs to go, they have to clarify. that is an easy excuse, not that we should play on every calculation of putin it, it is rational excuse for domestic propaganda to make it look like russia is under siege. the russian statement is also ridiculous on its face. they say only russians who vote for their president can decide that. the russians have not voted for vladmir putin in 15 years. there is no legitimate election. >> there is no room for sloppy language. will: sloppy is the word. rachel: sloppy communications can lead to world war iii with the largest nuclear power. it is really, i have to say it really speaks to, it could be that he spoke off-the-cuff but i just think he is not all there. i do not think that joe biden is cognitively all there. i think, this was 10 years ago,
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i dope think, maybe he wouldn't have made that. pete: that is absolutely obvious statement. rachel: yeah. pete: there have been people willing to say it. if this was the trump administration there would be leaks galore about it. the janitor at the justice department would be leaking about the competency of donald trump. yet the media covers for the fact that joe biden shuffled around poland for three days, said some things, half of which he knows what he said. the implications of those words, however had global impact. will: said some things pete described. here is a series of examples as rachelle described it, sloppiness. walk. >> ukrainian people have a lot of backbone, they have a lot of guts. i'm sure you're observing that. you will see when you're there. as we made clear american forces are in europe, not in europe to engage in conflict with rush sure fors. american forces are here to defend nato allies. >> if chemical weapons were used
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in ukraine would that trigger a military response from nato. president biden: it would trigger a response in kind. >> united states has no intention is of using chemical weapons period of any circumstances. president biden: i did not say in fact the sanctions would deter him. sanctions never deter. >> the purpose of the sanctions has always been and continues to be deterrents. will: that is obviously all the examples where the white house then had to clean up, correct, clean up various statements. we'll talk about this throughout the morning because i'm trying to find the perfect analogy. we, the three of us talked about the value of unpredictability. we talked about the fact that donald trump was unpredictable, kept vladmir putin guessing. again, i don't know the exact right analogy. this is different than unpredictability. this is, i think the word is sloppiness. if i went on to a basketball court i would be unpredictable.
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my unpredictable would lead to 20 turnovers. pete: somebody getting injured. will: 20 turnovers. james hardin is unpredictable to leading to 20 points or 60 points. pete: good analogy. will: i'm with you, rachel. i'm sure it is a good analogy. all i know this is a different kind of unpredictability. this is the kind of unpredictability that harm's us, not our opponent. rachel: denial i think. pete: either cognitively declined unpredictability, combined with incompetence with unpredictability. inner dialogue what he wants to say, versus what his advisors put in the prompter, what he had to say, maybe that is what he said at the very end. no matter what it is dangerous. we didn't play the clip, how long has he worked with loud austin secretary of defense. you know how difficult to forget the name of your secretary of
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defense. rachel: did he do that? i didn't see that? pete: he couldn't remember the name of loud austin, uh, there just isn't something there. that is why they sent kamala harris first which is a terrible choice. they sent him, only made the issue worse at this point. rachel: if you look at his transcripts, we often get the trans script of his statements, the sentences are cut off, they're not completed thoughts. they are not completed sentences. here is trump by the way. he had a rally last night georgia that had. >> bush gave up georgia. obama gave up crimea. i gave up nothing. biden gave you up all of ukraine. look at the havoc and destruction they have done to our country in just a short period of time. in over a year he managed to kill, literally kill the american dream but do not lose hope because with the right
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leadership america will be back greater, stronger and more powerful than ever before. [cheering] we're going to rescue your state from the red call left. we're going to, ready? make america great again. [cheering] will: you know, i do think it is an obvious statement that he is confused. i do think that, i think that is true. i also think what he does in his talking about joe biden, in his state of confusion is he his instinct, knee-jerk, i have got to sound tough. when he is kind of lost, i need to sound tough, he keeps ratcheting butcher, god this man cannot remain in power. it is fake toughness in response to confusion and it is ratcheting up the situation. pete: i think that is a good and unfortunate explanation for sure. with the true unpredictability that was donald trump. it leaves a lot of us wishing
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there was someone really steering the wheel. rachel: you're right about trumps unpredictability but you see his hopefulness there. i used to be hopeful like that, like donald trump about america. i would say in one year what's happened i don't know if america can survive another three years of this rapid of a decline. we're talking about food shortages. we're talking about people in bread lines. talking about people can't feed their children in america, let along the global famine we might see if this continues. russia has, they produce all the fertilizer. they produce so much of the wheat in the world. so does ukraine. these are serious problems and, i mean, maybe the midterms might put a little bit after brake on it but remember the white house and the president have a lot of power and somebody who is not all there is in command right now. pete: we're talking about the border between ukraine and
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poland. the acknowledgement there is a huge surge coming to our border, title 42 is going away. every illegal across the word knows it. we'll cover that in the coming weeks i'm sure. additional headlines for you. bodycam shows arizona police on the scene of a mall shooting, police are credited with saving a 4-year-old boy giving him needed first aid after he was shot. three other people shot. the suspect described as the primary aggressor faces a number of charges including aggravated assault with a deadly weapon and felony endangerment. fast moving fire near boulder, colorado, caused 19,000 people to evacuate. the fire was fueled by wind growing to 112-acres without entertainment. the fire erupted and no damage. zero contained at this point. to march madness, two-seed villanova wins the south seed
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final against houston despite getting a 50-44 win, justin moore went down with a leg injury going down seconds left in the game. unclear if he will play in the final four next weekend. duke is headed to the final hour, with 78-69 win over number four arkansas. mike krzyzewski going to his 13th final four. clay travis will join us live later in the show for more on march madness. those are your headlines. will: looks good. still ahead, biden versus the billionaire. the new tax rates, or billionaires plural. because these new tax rates proposed are expected to take aim at rich americans. rachel: talk about a candy crush? how inflation could make easter it a little less sweet this year
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♪. will: a live look at the white house where president biden is reportedly set to reveal a new tax plantar getting america's most wealthy. >> proposal reportedly being introduced as part of his 2023 budget. pete: alexandria hoff is live in washington with more on the proposal. reporter: they brief by their calculation that it would reduce the federal deficit a trillion dollars over 10 years. "the washington post" reported that president will announce the tax on billionaires tomorrow. 20% tax rate on americans worth over $100 million. this policy would not just include stated income but also unrealized gains. the increase of value of stock one holds. in october elon musk agreed with a warning that this idea could creep down to the middle class. he wrote eventually they run out of other people's money and then they come for you. in november he spoke of
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unrealized gains again, polling his twitter followers should he sell off the tesla stock, 10% of that. they voted in favor. he ended up offloading $10 billion worth. here is senator lindsey graham on all of this. >> unrealized again is what they're trying to get. that could have ripple effect for the stock market. if you impose a tax on unrealized gains, people may get out of the stock market to go to other assets that would be harder to levy a tax on. reporter: so the top 0.01% of households would be affected by this proposal but even top democrats voiced their opposition saying it would be unlikely to pass congress. rachel, will, pete. will: thank you. that is an interesting, so first of all, the three of us talked before. we have acknowledged that there is a general belief in the inequality of the american economic system. one that left behind the average american. putting a floor on billionaire's
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tax doesn't bother me. pete: that means not on top of what they're taxed but 20% of -- have to at least pay 20%. will: various taxes but the tax on unrealized gains to me sounds terrible. i don't know how many billionaires there are? 700? rachel: a lot more after the pandemic. will: but unrealized gains, stocks go up and down. paper wins an paper losses, what happens when you have paper losses? rachel: right. will: get tax credit for that? pete: every year whether you buy or sell the gains that you make are taxed. rachel: i think -- pete: that is the idea you're saying. will: essentially proposing. doesn't matter if you buy or sell. pete: exactly. will: tax statement went up that month. i owe 20% even though i didn't make anything. see what i'm saying? pete: i do. rachel: alexandria said in the report it is unlikely to pass so why did they put that forward?
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the seam reason they want to blame the gas price on the oil companies meant to distract, you're feeling poor because billionaires have this money. as you said, will, i don't have a lot, so the billionaires pay more tax but not making the average person any better. will: exactly. rachel: it will not make your grocery bill any lower. it will not help you pay for your kids to go to camp or the movies or whatever it is that you now can't do because inflation has eaten away all your extra money. so this is just more stuff. by the way they're also proposing, hoping to have this pass, more stimulus. so again, more government dependency. more printing of money which will only spiral the inflation. will: government's appetite is insatiable. you tax every millionaire 100%
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and only fund the government for four months. 100 miles per hour of every millionaire you only fund the government government four months. as elon musk will point out, they will come after other people's money. the public generally has been feeling the heat on this for sure, on the kitchen tables items that you talk about, rachel. the consumer sentiment index gives us indication how confident people are of the economy. look on the right part of your screen march 2021. a year into covid-19. consumer index was still, after trump's presidency5. a year later it is at 59.4. it has dropped 25 points how confident people are as a consumer. how could you be confident as a consumer? rachel: inflation will only get worse. we had stuart varney on here many times. he recently said expect it to go
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up, at least inflation go up 10%. people feel it. they see how quickly prices change at the pump, the grocery store. the shortages, by the way at the grocery store, things you can't find used to be able to find in america, things are getting bad. will: charles payne talks about how rare it is for americans to be this pessimistic. watch. >> had a report from the university of michigan and this is really amazing because, between them and the conference board the most trusted confidence of reads every single month, they have been doing it for decades. people said, their standard of living gone down more than any other time except for the two worst recessions in the last 50 years. in america we expect our standard of living to increase. even in the lower income bracket, you expect during your lifetime, if i'm at the lowest, i get better. i can build a platform. my children move higher. very rare when americans say their standard of living is declining. rachel: you, by the way the
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democrat party always says they're for the minorities. minorities and women, especially single women are hurting so much right now, they are hurting so much. it is not that long ago they were living and you trump economy where women an minorities were seeing wages increase. they are taking night of it it is little things. easter is april 17th. if my kids see the segment, they go are you bringing this basket home, mom? pete: i'm not. rachel: talk about how expensive things have gotten. so cadbury eggs, we have a cadbury egg in egg in there, dou have a cadbury egg? last year, 2019 it was $2.50. this year, $4. they're a dollar more. went from 3.99 to 4.9. will: the basket is up a dollar $8 to nine dollars. pete: the basket.
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will: whole thing we're holding here, easter basket gone from 50.46 cents to $61 and 86 cents. rachel: that is a huge change. by the way if you have seven kids -- will: solid milk chocolate. pete: i bite the head off. will: i go for rieses every day. >> this is a stuffed marshmallow. this is interesting. will: how do you feel about white chocolate? rachel: i don't, i like dark chocolate with salt. will: how about this? peeps. rachel: i like one peeps. will: love peeps. pete: pay more for them this year. rachel: this is interesting. chocolate inside. pete: you're right. rachel: we're going to be wired by the end of the show. pete: still ahead, more than 30
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third district. i start with you, shuri. people are rooting for you, hoping that you eventually take on elon omar. your bio is interesting, domestic abuse survivor. concentrate on that you're a single mom. how has that impacted your race, what you want to fight for as potentially the next congresswoman of your distribute? >> yes, thank you so much, rachel, for having me. rachel: of course. >> it absolutely been one struggle to be a single mom of three and not just three kids but one of them being autistic, a special needs child. it has been with the lockdown and with the vaccine mandates and the mask mandates, let me tell you something, while the left has mandated all these unlawful things during the pandemic, they have neglected to uphold the disability act that is federally mandated for
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special needs children and my son suffered a great deal not having his iep, individual education plan ported. we gone without that and it has been one struggle having to meet his need with just, it took a lot. i ended up having to put him in a private school out of my own pocket, took loans, yet still his disability act was not met. so that is a struggle and there is a host of communities that i'm working with just special needs who have been neglected to be supported under this disability act. rachel: you bring up a great point. those with special needs, the most vulnerable were hurt the most during these unconstitutional lockdowns. i'm going to move to you, amanda. you are hispanic. no surprise from these polls, hispanic are fleeing the democrat party. tell me why you're running an why you think hispanics are so
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dissatisfied with the country right now and the policies from coming from the democrat party. >> well, i'm not hispanic but i am in a super competitive district being kansas 3 right in the middle of the country and our district tends to have very independent-minded voters. inclusive of a decent size community here in kansas city missouri. here are the most important things i can tell your viewers this morning, people in this country are incredibly frustrated. i was just in shawnee, kansas, yesterday, a couple days ago and there was a woman who was a small business owner, she said to me, a man today, i voted for democrat sharise davis, two years ago, four years ago, and her policies have been disasterous for business and for this community. while we talked about a lot of things the most important thing that keeps coming up over and
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over and over again, is reckless federal spending, the impact it had in terms of inflation. rachel: yee. >> in missouri in the midwest, inflation roughly is 8%. for an average household here that eindicates to $5,000 in additional costs for people in this community. i am a business leader. i worked in health care for 15 years. i think one of the wonderful things that, about this election cycle is that the gop has recruit ad lot of women with, who are diverse. who have significant experience and we're all problem solvers. i would like to highlight that there are some, there are some latina business leaders who are running in the united states. a couple of really great ones, monica cruz in texas is running. in addition to her, tonya wheel ann in arizona, also a business leader, would the first latina
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in arizona to be elected to serve in congress. that's both parties. so we have a very diverse set of candidates. again, the thing that is great about our candidate cycle, we're very experienced. rachel: yes,. >> we're problem solvers. rachel: lisa, you come from a manufacturing background as well, so you can speak to that? >> correct. absolutely. this year gop women, conservative women, we are going to do great. hopefully even better than the amazing example that our 2020 women gave us. we are diverse, are diverse candidates. we bring a unique perspective, myself, yes, i'm a job creator. i'm an engineer by education. most of us including myself, we're moms. we see the struggle single mothers and families are having right now. making that decision, whether they will put gas in their tanks to go to work or feed their families. people are just really fed up
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with the failed policies of joe biden while my opponent and for nancy pelosi and they're looking for a positive message, that is what we're bringing to the table, a message that resonates. we'll stand up to inflation by cutting spending, by regaining our energy independence. we're going to stand up for a quality education for our children by stopping crt and not being, not and by not being taken back when we're called domestic terrorists by the fbi. we'll stand up for safe communities for our families by not defunding the police and not having open borders. this is a winning message. this is why we're going to win. we all want the american dream for our children. that is why we're going to win. so, that is why i decided to run, to protect the american dream.
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to stop the democrats from turning it into a socialist nightmare. rachel: there is 50 of you running on the republican side. you're all moms and moms don't play, congratulations to all of you. good luck on your races. >> thank you very much. >> thank you. rachel: thank you. still ahead, president biden compares ukrainian refugees fleeing their homeland to the u.s. border crisis. former acting i.c.e. director tom homan knows first-hand there is a very clear difference and he join us next. >> tech: need to get your windshield fixed? safelite makes it easy. >> tech vo: you can schedule in just a few clicks. and we'll come to you with a replacement you can trust. >> man: looks great. >> tech: that's service on your time. schedule now. >> singers: ♪ safelite repair, safelite replace. ♪ liberty mutual customizes your car insurance so you only pay for whatchya... line? need. liberty biberty— cut. liberty... are we married to mutual?
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president biden: we do acknowledge that poland is taking on a a significant responsibility. we understand that because we have in our southern border thousands of people a day, literally, not figuratively, trying to get into the united states. will: that's president biden raising eyebrows yesterday after comparing ukrainians fleeing russian tanks and soldiers to the crisis at your southern border. tom homan, former i.c.e. director, fox news contributor joins me now. good morning, tom. you heard the president make that connection. it was an odd connection. what were your thoughts? >> well you just said it, will, to compare the two i had ridiculous. because the people in ukraine are escaping war. their country is being invaded by russia.
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they're escaping death and famine. they do what they have to do to survive. they are coming to our border for a better life i get that. president trump did it. joe biden took the most secure border we ever had, opened up to record historic illegal immigration. the difference between the two invasions are different. southern border, people coming from are a better life. immigration court records, show, nine out of 10 central americans claim asylum never get relief from the u.s. government, they don't show up to qualify. a big difference. invasion at the southwest border was invited by president biden. will: this happened over the last year. almost 14,000, 165,000 encounters in february. a 63% increase from last year. 83,800,000 so far in fiscal year 22. tom, it is interesting, one of
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the first time we heard president biden acknowledge the invasion at the southern border, acknowledge the crossings but is it also then insight how the administration views these migrants? is it always about the assumption they are refugees instead of an illegal act? i'm trying to see how you equate the two, what is happening in ukraine and what is happening in our southern border? >> i don't know what he is thinking because the facts are clear that, again, nine out of 10 simply don't qualify for asylum. asylum is about escaping fear and persecution from the home government because of your political affiliation, race, creed, but coming to the united states for a better life just simply isn't asylum. i said it many times to congress, they can easily close these loopholes that cause mass migration. the asylum rules have to change because you can easily pass that at border, when you get to court
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threshold is much higher. 90% lose. they can easily detain family groups in a residential center until they see a judge. we did that under barack obama. 90% lost their case. they went home and numbers went down. we can fix this. the worst thing we can do is what joe biden did. he sold this country out to win the election. he wanted votes from the progressive left to win the election. he voted for border barriers, believed under a secure border under president obama when he was vice president. we removed, i.c.e. removed 409,000 people a record for the agency. we went from that to historic illegal immigration. went from the most secure border in my career, to historic illegal immigration in a matter of months. not by accident, not by mismanagement. not by incompetence. that is by design of this administration. will: response to incentives put in place. one takeaway, you said, 90% of
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asylum cases don't result in, don't even show up in most cases to result in the granting of a refugee or asylum status that is the difference between what is happening in this country, what is happening in ukraine. thanks for shining a light on this morning. >> thanks for having me, will. will: rachel, over to you. rachel: thanks, will. we begin with this, a chilling photo showing moments 14-year-old tji rr sampson was strapped to a ride before falling to his death. hess lawyer says the operators were not properly trained a form u.s. attorney says the amusement park will be held liable. the football player was not properly fastened he fell hundreds of feet to his death. congressman jack for then berry, announces his resignation after he was convict of lying to the fbiably. he faces three felony counts
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allegedly concealing information from a campaign contribution to a nigerian billionaire in 2014. he said due to the difficulties of my circumstances i can no longer effectively serve. his resignation takes effect thursday. russia and ukraine to the immaculate heart of mary in st. peter's basilica, praying for all of humanity and people of russia and ukraine. the service happening in front of 3500 people. it was the annual 24 hours for the lord. those are the headlines. still ahead, are your kids constantly glued to the phones and tablets. our next guest says try a digital detox. she will explain next. ♪ and a high risk for fracture,
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♪. pete: parents, listen up. are your kids constantly glued to their phones or playing games on other digital devices? our next guest is here to help. with a new book, called, digital detox. two-week tech reset for your kids. molly is the author and mother of six and she joins us now. molly, thanks for being here. congrats on the book. talk to me why this is so
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important in your mind. >> thank you so much for having me. you know, if you're a parent today, you have a pulse screen time is a problem. a new study came out, said seven out of 10 parents are concerned that their kids devices are turning them into internet zombies. it is no wonder, through the course of the pandemic parents families were put in impossible situations. forced to work from home, day care shut down, kids forced to go to school online. as a result kids recreational screen time doubled. kids are spending eight hours a day entertained by the devices that brings out the worse in our kids unfortunately. yes, we see the mental health crisis is huge. experts say it's a problem. psychiatrists say it's a problem. teachers, doctor. pastors are saying this a huge problem but parents already know that we see it up close every
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day in our living room. they want to know what is the solution. pete: the world is at their fingertips at the age of 10 which creates all types of consequences but you call it electronic babysitting. i think it's a great way to put it. how do you do something about it? >> yeah. so, the solution is very simple. it is two week cold turkey digital detox. i did it with my own kids two years ago. i was blown away. it was so simple. started coaching other parents and families too it. results blowing our mind. parents would tell me the culture of our home has changed. i don't believe it, i believe i have my kids back. it is simple. two-week detox. after you create a long-term plan to sustain the results for the long term. the goal is not to eradicate all technology forever. for parents to get back into the
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driver's seat when it comes to digital entainment. so that is what the detox allows you to do. i wrote the book i wish i had when we started. will: it's very, very necessary and i think a lot of parents say by default, everyone's doing it, everyone's got a phone. this is the way the kids are these days. i go to events with 10-year-olds, everyone is staring at the phone like this, not interacting, texting each other two feet away. a detox at the beginning, teaches them how to use it responsibly going forward? >> absolutely. you give the kids skills they need for life. how to negotiate the boredom. how to interact socially with people. they have been deprived of those learning opportunities for so long. it is time for parents to roll up our sleeves. it sounds scary. it sounds scary because it is. i wrote the book to give parents help they need. the fact you can do it. you can do it.
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pete: molly defrank. the book is digital detox. parents, grandparents check it out. >> thank you so much. pete: russian missilessing lviv not far from poland's border where biden just visited. was it a message? the calls from from the nyfd to lift vaccine requirements because the only way you're ever gonna know is by heading into the big, wild, raging so-damned-beautiful- it-hurts world and finding out for yourself. were you born to follow a path? or were you born free? these are the things we thought about when we made the new grand cherokee. made for what you're made of. ♪ ♪ this is roundup for lawns. this stuff works. this stuff kills weeds down to the root without killing your lawn. this stuff works on dandelions, crabgrass, clover.
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(jackie) i've made progress with my mental health. so when i started having unintentional body movements called tardive dyskinesia... i ignored them. but when the twitching and jerking in my face and hands affected my day to day... i finally had to say, 'it's not ok.' it was time to talk to my doctor about austedo. she said that austedo helps reduce td movements in adults... while i continue with most of my mental health medications. (vo) austedo can cause depression, suicidal thoughts, or actions in patients with huntington's disease. pay close attention to and call your doctor if you become depressed, have sudden changes in mood, behaviors, feelings, or have suicidal thoughts. common side effects include inflammation of the nose and throat, insomnia and sleepiness.
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don't take austedo if you have liver problems, are taking reserpine, tetrabenazine, or valbenazine. austedo may cause irregular or fast heartbeat, restlessness, movements mimicking parkinson's disease, fever, stiff muscles, problems thinking, and sweating. (jackie) talk to your doctor about austedo...it's time to treat td. td is not ok. visit askforaustedo.com. ♪. pete: fox news alert, russia's defense ministry releasing footage after destroyer launching cruise missiles as fighting intensifies. will: look at that. overnight russian missiles rocking the city of lviv as crews rush to get flames under control. rachel: mike tobin live on the ground in lviv. good morning to you.
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reporter: good morning. airstrikes came to the western part of country. once again they hit within the city limits of lviv. just 40 miles from nato's eastern flank and 200 miles from where president biden was at the time. the first of the strikes hit a fuel storage facility here in lviv resulting in giant flames and smoke. the following strike hit a industrial area. the lviv mayor said five people were injured and russians were saying hello to president biden. the u.s. president had tough talk about nato's border and vladmir putin. president biden: we will have a different future a brighter future rooted in democracy and principle and hope and light. for god's sake this man cannot remain in power. reporter: ukrainian president said what is needed are weapons. >> translator: ukraine can't shoot down russian missiles with shotguns, machine guns. there are too many in the skies. it is impossible to unblock
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mariupol without a sufficient number of tanks, other armored vehicles and especially without jets. reporter: now northeast of the capital city of kyiv there is new shelling in the town of children any of. that is an town where american names hill was killed. that is the town isolated. the main bridge in and out of town was blown out. the very serious combat there. east of the country, a town where ukrainian forces with a counterstrike claimed they have retaken that town and that will open ukrainian forces up to some new supply reports in the eastern portion of the country. rachel, pete, will. back to you. pete: mike, thank you very much. quick question, mike, set offing aside the strikes we saw in lviv last night, have you seen an indication what putin said which is phase two will will be a concentration in the donbas area, have we seen ships and russian forces? have we seen intensified shelling there than other
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places? they say a lot of things that are not to be believed. have we seen any indications that might be the case? reporter: there is certainly increased fighting in the donbas region where russians said they would refocus their effort. that has picked up with the effort. russians said they were done with phase one of the operation. they will refocus energy to the eastern portion of the country. then airstrikes came west. to your point can't believe what russians say that was inconsistent with what they said. pete: mike tobin, thank you very much. >> thanks, mike. pete: you heard reports of two strikes in the western part of ukraine which we haven't seen as many there. there is speculation to those cruise missiles were meant to send a message 200 miles away from where joe biden spoke. we covered it last hour. we'll cover it again on the show. a huge escalation from the president in speaking off-the-cuff that there should be a effectively regime change
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in moscow. that vladmir putin needs to go. it was a comment that was not in the script. probably making it even more significant because it is an indication how biden really feels. and the question is, does russia use it as a justification alongside him slipping up and saying, 82ed in airborne troops will go into ukraine as justification to escalate? let's hope not. words -- rachel: this is not the time for sloppy language. so much is on the line right now. you're right, pete, this is an absolute escalation and certainly the white house came back later, the staffers and they tried to clean this up but the message is out there. putin, his, his people, are letting their people, who many of them aren't very happy with this invasion. letting them know look, see, they want regime change. this is the americans interfering in other peoples national politics and that never
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goes well. people feel very, prideful of their own national identity, their own national trajectory. they don't want the americans coming in and saying hey, we'll do regime change like in libya or whatever. i don't know if that will turn the russian people into you know, suddenly supporting the war but it is not a good look, will. will: no, it wouldn't be a very hard sell to convince then whoever you need to convince the americans are your true enemy. the americans are the ones behind this fight. the americans are looking not just to take the fight to ukraine but the fight to russia. it would not be a hard sell when joe biden gives you the material. rachel: yeah. pete: what you said last hour is so important, ultimately, this is the worst type of escalation because it, there are, viewers out there, we feel the same way, all right, joe, go at putin. it's all the escalation and rhetoric with none of the changes in policy would ever
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make it real, not that i want that, but you're just giving excuses to vladmir putin. that is all you're doing with a statement like that. it might make you feel good but doesn't make the situation better. will: it is not leadership. that is what dan bongino pointed out last night on "unfiltered." >> you can always count on joe biden, always, to screw something up especially on the world stage. that is unfortunate. president of the united states with europe on the brink of world war iii, what does president biden appear to do? called for regime change in russia. white house had to do damage control. the president told troops they would be going to ukraine. clean up on aisle three. these are dangerous gaps when the world needs leadership. let me quote joe biden himself during the last administration. the words of a president matter. they can move markets. they can send our brave men and women to war. they can bring peace.
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yeah, you think? your words matter too, joe. rachel: he is so right about that. your words can bring peace and they can also bring nuclear war. this is serious stuff. you know, i brought this up to you guys before. obviously i have a husband who was in congress, who will be here a little later in the show, i brought up before i thought it was cruel that jill biden during the campaign, knowing that her husband was not cognitively up to the job put him on this. he had some embarrassing moments but this is now different. these are not embarrassing moments. these are dangerous moments. i wouldn't do that to sean. i also went do that to my country. we don't have room in a situation as dangerous as this for sloppy language, for miscalculations, for misunderstanding. because this is the difference between world war iii or not. it's serious stuff. yeah, i'm sorry as a political spouse i lay at jill biden as well. will: we're all sitting here
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during commercial breaks, during clips, trying to debate what is it going on? is it senility. attempt to sound bluff at the moment? pete: angry blustering. will: angry blustering at the moment of confusion. it is sloppy. it is a drunk brawl room brawler's fight. not calculated even if unpredictable boxer. this is something that neither the opponent or the seem understand what is happening next. that is clear by the way. the biden administration doesn't know what is coming next. they have to issue corrections and cleanups within hours. rachel: i'm sorry to keep going back to this, there is one person that knows. you know your person better than anyone else. pete: that is book to be written in the future. a giant coverup how they managed this guy politically. rachel: no one knows better than her. sorry, wanting to be first lady is not a good enough reason to
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put somebody who is not cog nfl at thisly up for the job in a position like this. you can see, i still am in shock about the day we were on this couch, the three of us, russia announced they were putting nuclear arms on alert. i felt like i was getting thrown back to the '80s. this is a very dangerous tinderbox situation. pete: sure is no doubt. let's get to another story. did you guys hear, embryonic stem cell -- volodymyr zelenskyy speaking at the oscars or not. i don't know if it is ratings thing, virtual signaling thing, but the oscars i believe are on tonight. used to mark on your calendar. now you say definitely not watching that. ratings plummeted all over again. they announced a new racial gender sexuality quota for future picks.
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rachel: isn't that how you watch films? you decide what gender? will: can you name one of the movies nominated for an oscar? pete: yes, only i looked at the list. i think there is a movie called "dune." i never heard of it until i read it on the list. made hundreds of millions of dollars at the box office. the point is we don't know. but their wokeness has driven ratings down. on the covid side they have got certain vaccine mandates for some of the nominees and attendees but not for the performers and presenters. so some people there have to have the vaccine and other people do not. it made us think of mayor eric adams here who has said if you're key reother spring, if you're a performer, you don't need a vaccine -- kyrie irving. if you're policeman or firefighter nurse, we went undo
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that. that holds on to you. the fdny is calling on the mayor. the union of the firefighters is calling on the mayor to end nicolas maduroness. we think people work for new york city should have the mandate revoked for them. we were responding to covid emergencies without masks, without testing, without vaccines. we were fully exposed. we eventually exposed our families. many of our members came down with covid. if we're not here police, fire, making the city safer, no one can come in and attend these games and eat an attend theater productions. it just seems to me like the most obvious of double standards right now. rachel: it is super elitist by the way. if you're a performer. if you, if you're on broadway, if you're on a basketball court, getting paid millions of dollars, you don't have to have the vaccine, you about if you're fire worker, firefighter, a nurse, a teacher, you're out of a job. we'll not rehire you back even though we're letting those people do it. i wonder was that a threat? was that the union saying maybe
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we shouldn't secure these locations if we're not -- i don't know what that meant but i kind of wish it would be that way. will: while everything has changed over the past two years and we have swung back and forth on covid policies there has only been a few through lines. they have been through lines, fear will be our primary motivator. fear will be our primary source of power. it will be a through line we will always follow unscientific, fear-based, mob-manic, persuasion techniques followed by the authoritarian mandates of dr. anthony fauci. it will be whatever we do is hypocritical and not apply to the elites. that has been an absolute through line, from politicians eating at fancy restaurants, maskless parties at bars, from the mayors of various blue cities to this moment. as the way covid came in is the way it will go out, only applying to some people. and here are some of your first-responders who have been
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terminated under these vaccine mandates while your performers, either at the oscars, or barclay's center in brooklyn are allowed to return to their jobs. >> it is unprincipled. it is really shameful. it is definitely a double standard. it's unfair to us, all the work we put through during the pandemic and it's been hard on us. we haven't had the luxury of finances since november 1st. we weren't being paid. >> our livelihood has been stripped from us and it should be stripped from them as well. what is good for them should be good for all. if they're exempt we should be exempt. we should get our jobs back. >> i would ask the mayor what science he is following when it is clear that it is the money that is being followed? rachel: right. i interviewed those ladies yesterday. the woman that just spoke, is actually, they're trying to raise funds to help the people who lost their jobs. meanwhile the millionaires are on the basketball court and performers on the stage. it is absolutely outrageous.
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you don't know how mayor adams is getting away with. it is elitist. he was lobbied by some of industries. pete: he was. he admits he was lobbied by a former city council president who lobbied on behalf of the mets and yankees whose season coming up. they would have had a bunch of players. will: i don't begrudge kyrie irving should return to the court as firefighters. rachel: nurses everyone else. so much elitism. turning to headlines, a construction worker is killed in a crane parking lot collapse in boston. he was doing demolition on the garage while doing construction. the garage colapped and the man in the crane fell nine stories to the ground below. no one else was hurt. they believe collapse may have been caused by a falling
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concrete slab. new data that shows kids are scoring worse in math and reading compared to before the covid lockdowns. a study by a education software company, renaissance learning shows literacy scores are down, get this, 19 points on average. student scores in the first year of the pandemic were already lower than prepandemic levels. the vice president of renaissance learning says data suggests quote, a multiyear recovery is necessary. it is our own will cain's birthday tomorrow. we have some surprises for him today starting with this. will: oh. rachel: happy birthday. >> happy birthday, dad, love you. >> happy birthday to the best dad ever. will: thanks, fellows. thank you, guys. very, very nice. this is my -- rachel: happy birthday, will. will: my second birthday on the show. my first one that we sell it braked. pete: did we forget the last
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one? will: i don't remember. not a big deal. rachel: they made up for that. will: thanks to the producers last stage, putting that together. reaching out to my family. appreciate it, guys. pete: what are the plans? will: fly home at some point today. i don't know. pete: extra cocktail on the plane, or two. will: maybe. and a nap. pete: i wasn't warned it was your birthday either. i would have had a gift. rachel: celebrate again next weekend. pete: get a gift. rachel: i was told when i got here. will: i'm glad you guys didn't. you both do well, put pressure on me, i'm terrible at it. even if you told me now, i don't know when your birthdays are, by the way, you didn't know mine. pete: never tell you mine. will: i would never live up to your gift giving even with months of planning. pete: you will find out. we got it. rachel. will cain deserves a gift. we love him that much. he will get one. rachel: you look great for 47.
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pete: i wasn't going to give it away. rachel: are you guys secretive about your age. will: i don't care. rachel: i gave my age. a little older than yours, too. pete: all right, don't go anywhere. it is still will cain's birthday. medal of honor recipient dakota meyer is coming up. will: do we need a new twitter? elon musk is calling for a new social media platform with better free speech policies. that is coming up. ♪ i've been everywhere, man. ♪ ♪ crossed the desert's bare, man. ♪ ♪ i've breathed the mountain air, man. ♪ ♪ of travel i've had my share, man. ♪ ♪ i've been everywhere. ♪ ♪ i've been to: pittsburgh, parkersburg, ♪ ♪ gravelbourg, colorado, ♪ ♪ ellensburg, cedar city, dodge city, what a pity. ♪ ♪ i've been everywhere, man. ♪ ♪ i've been everywhere, man. ♪ ♪ i've been everywhere. ♪
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♪. president to a path the west is now stronger and more united than it has ever been. holding one single inch of nato territory. we have a sacred obligation. [applause] we have a sacred obligation under article v to defend each and every inch of nato territory. pete: joe biden wrapping up his trip to europe warning putin against targeting any nato areas burr our next guest brought supplies and aid to the poland-ukraine border this month. marine veteran, medal of honor recipient dakota meyer is here
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this morning. we herd joe biden repeatedly say that they will defend every inch of nato territory. putin heard that too. they said to 82ed in airborne troopers said they're headed to ukraine. in a major address seemed to say regime change is at hand when you see the troops at border that we have there, how does that complicate the situation in your mind? >> it is about time the united states speaks that we have some, you know, some firm, some firm lines but what you see is, you see the white house backing off of it, right? so you don't know who it is, who is inside of this administration doesn't want to have guts, doesn't want to stand here to draw the line, make decisions because they're scared of putin, right? it is kind of crazy that we're, we are worrying about what putin thinks as the united states of america and leaders of the free world. so i think at some point if we are going to go in, if -- there
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is no assisting ukraine. there is either going after and stopping putin or staying out of it completely and that is the only option. pete: you're saying it is the worst of both worlds. saying things that sound strong, then the white house immediately walks them back, that we're not doing them. there is huge implications of further escalation if that is what someone was arguing for. if you say it, not do it, it only makes the situation worse? >> 100%. we need to sound strong. if there is a time the united states of america needs to sound strong, it is right now but every time you hear the president come out, finally, finally they have had enough. we'll be the united states of america that i remember, right afterwards, the white house had to roll this back which is absolutely insane. you see when america is weak there are secondary, tech air think effects. i have china, north korea, two days ago, saying they're finally
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ready with war against us. this is what happens when the united states of america looks weak. this is not the ukraine. it will be the global issue of all these other countries, next, i will bet you, i will bet you in the next few weeks, couple weeks, iran will say the same thing. pete: they may. your words carry a lot of weight. you've been there in ukraine and poland seeing the situation. you say there is no supplying ukraine. whether or not we take on putin. so far we pretty much supplied ukraine and putin has had to admit that he can't take kyiv and adjust his strategy. help me, walk me through kind of your view of that? >> we've supplied ukraine to a point, right? we haven't fully supplied ukraine. one of the dynamics that known is talking about that makes it really hard to supply ukraine is there is no airspace, right? usually we do a lot of drops
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from the air. now we have to get it going over land which makes it so complicated when railways are destroyed, when roads are all destroyed, when you have to get all the way over there. that is making it so much more complicated than usual. we supplied ukraine a little bit. not enough. not like the humanitarian crisis going on inside of these cities right now, the people need basic food, essentials to live. you see them target communications about to happen. when the communications go, that is when everything is going to go bad. at the end of the day i go back if we are going to do this, we don't need to send troops in ukraine. we need to go stop russia. pete: without divulging anything, at that you don't want to, i've seen videos of u.s. vets on the ground in ukraine. what is your estimate or sense how many guys have volunteered to go into the fight? reporter: i don't know. i was in poland over, i was
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right on the border and there were some. just flying over, the planes had so many, so many american veterans you could see going over there, all trying to help. there are so many incredible people. -- our allies, we actually went into ukraine and did some work, for the sake of allies so many people are volunteering to go over and help. pete: dakota, on behalf of fox, thanks for the role you played helping get benjamin hall out of that country and bless everyone else still serving. have a good one. >> you too. pete: it is the end of the american dream according to donald trump. >> in over a year, he managed to kill, literally kill the american dream. pete: sean duffy on biden's missing leadership in the white house. that is coming up next.
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russian spies living among us. we'll talk to one of the best-trained kgb agents ever to live in america. his secrets of a double life and russian operatives working today coming up. ll be there. >> woman: i have a few more minutes. let's go! >> tech vo: that's service that fits your schedule. go to safelite.com. >> singers: ♪ safelite repair, safelite replace. ♪ you know liberty mutual customizes your car insurance, so you only pay for what you need? like how i customized this scarf? check out this backpack i made for marco. only pay for what you need. [ kimberly ] before clearchoice, lmy dental health♪
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and where the physicians doing the world-changing research are the ones providing care. there's only one mass general brigham. ♪. >> look at the havoc and look at the destruction they have done to our country in just a short period of time. in just over a year he has managed to kill, literally kill the american dream. but do not lose hope because with the right leadership america will be back greater, stronger, and more powerful than ever before. [cheering] pete: donald trump ripping into joe biden's leadership failures while rallying thousands of georgia supporters last night. will: fox news contributor, former wisconsin gop congressman sean duffy here to react. >> what's up, guys? i miss him so much. he is so right, i mean this has
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been a disaster presidency but also he is so hopeful. we can come back. with the right leadership america will come back, the economy, we'll be stronger. your hopes and dreams will till be alive. they might deal dead but they will come back. >> really feel that? pete is keeping us separated here. pete: i'm sorry. i will connect you. >> rachel and i were fighting before the segment to -- rachel: pete was stirring the pot. we'll talk about that later. we played this clip earlier, sean. and i used to be that hopeful. i can't believe how far, how bad things have gotten in just a year. got three years of this. >> one good thing is, if republicans win in the house or the senate, just one of them, they can stop sew many bad things, right? they can't stop the executive orders. they can't stop the bad leadership. can't stop woke filing the military. they can stop the bad legislation. that is one hopeful thing to
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stop joe biden. you're right. three years is a long time. but again i think the american people can hang in there. as you always mention, rachel, it wasn't that long ago we knew how good it can be. we saw how great the economy was under donald trump. i was talking to the guy this morning at the coffee shop, it is like, listen, if you had an employer who wasn't paying you well, listen, if you don't give me a raise i will go down the street because the next guy will pay me better with a signing borne news. there is that much competition. donald trump was lowering taxes, getting tariffs on china. rachel: now no one wants to go to work. >> that is a different problem. will: a lot of problems cannon fest in three or four years's time. they can come on the cultural level. without putting a name on it, try not to answer my question with the name of a person, if you sean duffy were trying to
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correct this country in three years time frame, running for office, what three big ideas would represent the return of america? >> i feel like i'm a witness on the stand. this is the way i want you to answer this question, sir. [laughter]. will: i want to know what gets us back on track? >> i think it is very simple. again you have to have smart regulations. you can't overregulate people. we still need regulations in america. you need smart taxes. we have to pay taxes but you can't overtax people. and then, listen i think china is the greatest threat that we face. i'm okay with tariffs on china. again smart tariffs to make sure, we have american business leaders that have sold this country out. they believe in padding their pocketbooks. they don't care about their communities, their workers and their country. they care about themselves. how do we go back? there is a real threat we face in this country. if you outsource everything to china we'll be like russia where russia outsourced everything to the west. in a flip of the switch we
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destroyed their economy. we have given china same power. how do we take that back? we have to address them as a real economic threat, potential military threat. you do those three things what donald trump had done, people come back home. we're the best workers. the most fish end, effective, hardest working group of people in the world. you have to set up an economy that makes sense for businesses to come back here and invest. pete: i know another one you would agree with because you have a fox business and "fox nation" summit on it, energy independence, that is huge that we've lost. tell me about the summit. >> on that point, we might have more regulation, a little higher labor costs, if you have lower energy costs you can make up for that, right? that makes sense. we have a ton of energy. we're doing a summit on tuesday. we'll talk about how energy markets work with charles payne. the impact of energy, not just at the pump, but electrical
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costs, heating costs. we'll talk about the policies that got us into this place, get us back to energy independence, more supply, lowering the costs at the pump. putting more money in the pockets of americans. will: duffy family is helping american independence. fighting during the commercial break, whether or not sean can get, what, an ev? rachel: electric car. >> listen -- pete: i'm with rachel. >> make one quick point? this was not about electric. this was -- looking at tesla only for the safety reasons. looking eight months ago. will: right. >> i think they're safest vehicles, best technology. now all of sudden we have explosion in gas prices and joe biden is pushing evs, rachel is like, hell no, we're not get an a ev. we like gas. we drive a suburban, ford f-150. 14 mills per gallon. it is expensive. a lot of kids. i can't drive a prius.
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rachel: we cannot fit in prius. will: have a debate from the kitchen table podcast. rachel: we have actually had it. will: ev versus 36-gallon f-150. >> musk to moderate the debate. pete: i have a title for the podcast. the green new duffys. >> after the crypto debate. with. rachel: you started crypto fights. you started green energy fights, [laughter]. will: good podcast. go at it over -- pete: congrats on the summit. is it live? >> live on "fox nation" on tuesday. we'll air later in the week on fox business. rachel: energy so important, having an impact on national security as well right now as well. shah, sean. we'll continue the fight later. >> we will. i think i will lose this one. rachel: still ahead, eye in the sky. how new york city can use drones to take a bite out of crime in the big apple.
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rachel: welcome back to "fox & friends." new york city mayor eric adams is reportedly using a fleet of drones to help law enforcement as crimes like this robbery are on the rise in new york city. in fact last weekend alone 29 people were shot. that is a 383% increase from the year before. ivan is the cofounder and ceo of
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easy aerial which manufactures some of the drones that the city could use. he joins us now. welcome, ivan. you are in talks with the nypd and the mayor? >> we are in initial talks, yeah, about deploying a fleet of drones for the city. rachel: and they are in other countries, in the caribbean? >> our company already does this with other governments. integrating with city infrastructure. they're operating exactly the same way. we're talking about with new york city. rachel: this is huge. tell me how this could help with the crime? >> so, look, technology, definitely, is a force multiplier for the law enforcement. something like this can provide, in essence better information for better decision making. and this is what we are actually doing with these drones. we're providing an eye in the sky in a matter of minutes anywhere in the city. rachel: i could see this, we see these on television car chases so dangerous. i suppose if a drone was going
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overhead, tell another police officer down the way we'll meet an avoid some accidents. how else could this be helpful? >> rachel, one of the major benefits is actually threefold. so you save costs. you make it safer and you can be quicker with easy drones. keeping people out of harm's way is the reason we're doing this. rachel: right. one of the things i would say, we just did a story on mayor adams who fired a bunch of police officers because they were not vaccinated, didn't rehire them. i'm afraid they can replace people, or cops or is this to enhance what they can do? >> it is a force multiplier for law enforcement. this will help, not replace law enforcement in the city. something that gives them a better understanding over the situation, and lets them bake better decisions.
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>> here is a crime stats. 5% increase in transit crimes. 45.6% increase in robberies. shootings are up. increase in shooting victims obviously. any other things you want to tell me about? why nypd, other law enforcement should have this giant, by the way it is huge, drone? >> one unique thing about our drones we make them independent of any pilots and people who need to be next to them. they can be deployed remotely from roof stops. they can be controlled from a single command center. this is a unique thing to us, where we don't need to increase people who have to be trained and operate the drones. they can actually autonomously deploy immediately on any -- rachel: this could be at the police station and controlled from the police station to go over wherever it needs to be? >> exactly. rachel: wow. >> it is actually, we call it the zero responder because it will be in the air before any
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law enforcement shows up. it will give them situational awareness they need. rachel: that is amazing. wow, we need it now especially as crime is up. thanks for joining us this morning. >> thanks very much. rachel: all right. pete? pete: thank you, rachel. turning now to a few additional'd lines, authorities release more details surrounding the death of foo fighters drummer taylor hawkins. authorities said there were 10 different kind of drugs including marijuana, anti-depressants and heroin in the hotel room where he was found dead. he complained of chest pains to the hotel staff shortly before passing. world health organization is calling on governments to scrap all time limits on abortion. the organization releasing guidelines claiming preventing abortion at any point violates the rights of quote, women, girls, or other pregnant persons. thank you, world health
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organization. the guidelines recommend governments allow abortion for any reason and scrap the need for women to see a doctor to approve their abortions. rachel: can i just add? pete: please do. rachel: who also said down syndrome was a birth defect instead after chromosome variation. they are encouraging abortions. i have no idea why we're paying so much money to them. they are owned by china. they do china's bidding. we pay for it. pete: derail the headline also. one more headline, tesla elon musk asks whether a new social media platform is needed. given that twitter is the defacto town square, failing to ad here to free speech principles, undermining democracy, is a new platform needed? musk's earlier poll found that twitter did not adhere to free speech principles that seems obvious. those are the headlines. will: should be higher than 70%
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clearly. but buy it, elon. pete: inside that echo chamber, that is a good number. will: turn to chief meteorologist rick reichmuth for the fox weather forecast. hey, rick. rick: good morning, guys. thought you had a little bit of spring? sorry, winter is back here. here are the temps. 8 degrees in fargo, 24 in chicago. 40 in new york. we'll be lucky to get to go freezing in new york. part of a system that brought severe weather this week. cold air is behind it. moving behind the great lakes bringing lake-effect snow towards cities of philadelphia and new york. we'll see the cold air that come i along with this. temperatures in freezing range. 32 in boston, portland, 32 as well. across parts of the west. we have much moisture across areas of the southwest this winter, which is the rainy season. rain coming in over next couple
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days. starting this evening that is great news. that system dives back in across parts of the south. we have another severe weather outbreak. this is tuesday looking like. wednesday looking like. wednesday potentially a big bull ace eye to the south. pete: thanks for being a debbie-downer rick. rick: sorry. rachel: on tuesday i will be doing a live book signing with shannon bream. she is signing the books but i'm going to be there with her. her book is called, "mothers and daughters of the bible speak." it is out on tuesday. i will be moderating her live signing event. this book has great stuff. there is appetite for this. her last book is run away best-seller. will: who is favorite mother of the bible? pete: how about esther? will: she was going to do this to me.
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-- pete: just went with the one woman of the bible i could think of that at the moment. ruth, naomi. rachel: or mary's cousin elizabeth. will: top five list? you go first. >> they love the book. pete: her first book was an absolute smash hit this is a great follow-up to it. it would make a great gift. i think the website was up there. we can put it up one more time. or not. rachel: or not. we're happy to see shannon's book out and ready. but the former president wasn't so lucky with his book. listen to this. >> we have no paper. we have no ink, no leather on the outside cover. we have no glue. we have nothing. >> yesterday, he said he wanted to reorder an additional 300,000 copies of his book because it was selling so well and then he said got no ink, know blue.
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will: u.s. men's soccer team could be one game away to go to the world cup. we have alexi lawless about tonight's match with panama.
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♪. will: the heat is on. the u.s. men's national team
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will take on panama tonight in a crucial match that can punch their ticket to the 2022 fifa world cup in qatar. joining us is fox sports analyst, former soccer player alexi lawless. great to see you this morning. help me understand, we talked in the past, i'm a soccer fan, here are the stands canada 25, mexico 22, u.s. 22. costa rica 19. tom three teams are in. place four is playoff. how important is this match for usa? >> will, my good men, so look, this is all in the context of the, in my estimation the biggest single failure in u.s. soccer history which the u.s. men's national team in 2017 not qualifying for the 2018 world cup. a win tonight, for all intents and purposes the u.s. will qualify again for the world cup, bring us back to where we belong. you smell that? you can't smell anything there?
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i smell, it's a combination of anxiety and nerves and angst and fear and that is because of what happened. this is a very good team we're talking about with the u.s. team. arguably the best collection of players we've had in history and incredible depth. they're playing against panama. we had incredible success at home wherever we played including here in orlando. they should take care of business. the head coach and these guys shut get the win tonight, basically unless crazy happens have one foot into qatar. maybe tonight after all the results find out able to win tonight, and guarranty the passage to qatar in november for the world cup which you can see on fox. will: all intents an purposes in. need a win tonight. real quickly, were you disappointed? you have all the high expectations. talk about the talent on expectations, were you is
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disappointed with 0-0 in mexico? >> the u.s. goes to mexico. always a different place to play, and incredible stadium, get a point, 0-0, the american soccer community keeps disappointed with that part of me was, i've been around a long time, maybe are we being greedy? that is how far we've come. a wonderful reflex. wonderful reflex. will: should be. we're usa. >> damn right. will: we're usa. ent you can tru. >> man: looks great. >> tech: that's service on your time. schedule now. >> singers: ♪ safelite repair, safelite replace. ♪ when we found out our son had autism, his future became my focus. lavender baths calmed him. so we made a plan to turn bath time into a business. ♪ ♪ find a northwestern mutual advisor at nm.com (johnny cash) ♪ i've traveled every road in this here land! ♪ ♪ i've been everywhere, man. ♪ ♪ i've been everywhere, man. ♪
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>> for god's sake, this man cannot remain in power. >> president biden returning home from europe to a white house in cleanup mode. the administration this morning trying to walk back one of biden's biggest statements from last night, the one you just heard. calling for regime change in russia. >> biden's comments falling, well, to put it mild lirks flat oversea as russian rockets strike a ukrainian city, lviv.
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>> the overnight strikes sending an oil depot and food warehouses up in flames. rachel: mike tobin is live on the ground in he lviv. mike, what is the latest. >> reporter: the latest, rachel, will and pete, good morning, is once again air strikes have come to ukraine's west, perilously close to nato's eastern flank and close enough to president biden as they were interpreted as a message, the first of the strikeses was here in the city limits of lviv, they had hit a fuel storage facility, resulting in a giant ball of flames and a plume of black smoke that could be seen for miles. the second round of strikes hit an industrial facility. lviv's mayor said russians were saying hello to president biden. president biden stopping in poland, said that russian president vladimir putin is a
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butcher. >> you're dealing every day with vladimir putin. look at what he's done to these people, what does it make you think? >> he's a butcher. >> reporter: meantime, russian forces have claimed control of slabutkich, north of kiev. they can control a town but they'll have a harder time controlling the people, as the people came out demonstrating in front of the russian armor with ukrainian flags chanting go home. the russians p ran them off with stun grenades and gun fire, three people were killed. the ukrainian president repeated his request for more weapons. >> ukraine can't shoot down russian missiles with shotguns, machine guns, of which there are too many in the supplies. it's impossible to unblock mariupol without a sufficient number of tanks, other armored vehicles and especially without jets. >> reporter: ukrainian forces continue to counter strike. now they have claimed --
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reclaimed control of a town in the east, that gives them control of a few key highways that will be vital for reply. back to you in new york. >> thank you, mike. so we mentioned a moment ago this moment from yesterday in warsaw when president biden went off script. it was most certainly off-script, meaning not in the teleprompter. >> we know it wasn't. >> we know it wasn't because we know the white house had to clarify it in the moments after and this specifically is what he had to say that is, well, leaving everyone today wondering what's going on. >> we will have a different future, a brighter future, rooted in democracy and principles, hope and light for god's sake, this man cannot he remain in power. >> seemingly calling for regime change. the white house was forced to put out this statement, the president's point of was if putin cannot be allowed to be exercising power over his neighbors in the region, he
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wasn't discussing putin's power in russia. rachel: he actually did say that. >> the most important and busiest job inside the biden white house is the person who has to listen to every single word he says and then be prepared to attempt to put out a statement to clarify. in this case, that clarification as you pointed out, rachel, makes no sense. because he said as clearly as you can see for god's sake, this man cannot remain in power. that was the last line of his speech. so he had begin a whole speech on a teleprompter, that was effectively the last line before he walked off stage. he was gruff about the whole thing. what makes it more dawning russ, it's boffs it -- dangerous, is because it was off the cuff. if you heard him say off the cuff, this man cannot he remain in power, that's probably an
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indication of biden's inner feelings which the teleprompter and his advisors are trying to keep trapped in, but ultimately he he's got a microphone, he's over there, he said it and it could have huge ramifications as far as escalation. we talked about tough talk. a lot of americans want to hear that when you see this type of war of aggression but tough talk like this that isn't part of a policy change which a lot of people don't want to see a policy change, per se, isn't helpful. rachel: it's dangerous, in fact. even though the white house came back and tried to clean it up, here's what the kremlin had to say about it and they're saying it's not up to the president of the u.s. and not up to the americans to decide who will remain in power in russia, only russians who vote for their president can decide that. we know that the russian people have not had a fair election for putin in a long time but people still have national pride and
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nobody wants to think had that some other country, the united states or anybody else is going to come in and pronounce regime change. and again, this sloppy language if in this very dangerous situation is dangerous and, will, we've been debating all morning, is it that he is just not -- is he in cognitive decline, is this him speaking extemporaneously or is it him trying to be a tough guy? will: both. i think it's instinct wally where he goes when he finds himself in moments of conclusion. i don't know if it is his car -- confusion. i don't know if it's in his inner feelings that he wants regime change. i don't think we can find anything deeper than whatever interests his mind in that one moment, that one moment in time and that is an indication to me of sloppy, unpredictable,
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cognitive lack of control and that to me is the key. we've had the discussion throughout the morning, unpredictability is a strategic advantage if your opponent is always wondering what you're going to do next. we talked about that with president trump. but it leaves your own team wondering what will you do next. the damage is less to vladimir putin and more to the united states of america. pete: he gets to a moment where he is not sure what to say and he knows he doesn't want to sound weak so he tries to sound rhetorically stronger, he labeled him a thug, a war criminal, a butcher. he defaults to i know the world sees me as weak, i can't remember the name of my secretary of defense, even though i've been working with him for a year and he standing right next to me, that also happened on this trip so it has to be care fide time and time again -- clarified time and time again, which only looks weak,
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including had him walking around in a mask while out in the open. it only sends a message of weakness. the three day trip has been nothing but confusing. here's avideo clip of administrn officials having to correct what biden said on this trip. watch. >> people have a lot of backbone, they have a lot of guts and i'm sure you're observing that and you're going to see when you're there. >> as i made clear, american forces are in europe, not in europe, to engage in conflict with russian forces. american forces are here to defend nato allies. >> if chemical weapons were used in ukraine, would that trigger a military response from nato? >> it would trigger a response in kind. >> the united states has no intention of using chemical weapons, period, under any circumstances. >> i did not say that in fact
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the sanctions would deter him. sanctions never deter. >> the purpose of the sanctions has always been and continues to be deterrence. >> so we bounced around throughout the morning. i know that i personally have been trying to perfect the analogy of what's going on with joe biden. actually, this is what it might be. you know what it feels like to be insecure and feel out of control. maybe it's a moment when you stumble when you're walking. what do you do as you stumble, you pop up as quick as you can and you go i've got this. i think joe biden is constantly feeling mentally the insecurity of his moment. i do think he recognizes some of the things going on. rachel: it must be scary, actually. >> it must be scary. it must feel confusing so his instinct is i've got this, i want to walk talker stick my chest out, i want to appear brave. when he does had that, he's living in a moment of insecurity and he over-correct to he's a
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butcher, he over corrects to dear, god, this man cannot remain in power and the problem is, it's not joe biden's confidence that we need to be worried about. we need to be worried about what his over-correction puts us in a position of. it's not calculated. is it's sloppy and unpredictable. rachel: this is a moment where language matters, where communication matters, where precision in your language matters because we're talking about nuclear war, we're talking about potentially world war iii. the leader of the free world, our president, went over to europe and he was supposed to make things better. in fact, before he got there, we were all kind of talking about maybe he was going to have some -- we're going to have some peaceful negotiation. we had polish mayors who are overwhelmed by all of this influx of refugees and their inability to handle just the sheer volume of it, saying please, work towards ending this war. there are even refugees from
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ukraine who are sad about what happened to the country and want the war to end. others want to fight to the bitter end for their country, others want an end to it. we were hoping that joe biden might find a way to bring about peace. by the way, that was what the pope was calling for. he invoked, john paul the second in his speech, a saint and then we get this belligerent language, sloppy language that i feel is escalating this and i'm waiting for the democrats who spent four years saying how dangerous donald trump was to come out and finally admit that the world was safer under donald trump, that this is the most dangerous period of time in my lifetime. >> are you waiting for that? don't hold your breath had. rachel: i know it's hard for people to admit when they're wrong but it's about time because this is a dangerous situation. >> this would have been the tenth moment inside the administration, had it been the trump administration, where the
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thoughtful d.c. folks would start whispering about the 25th amend. rachel: yes. >> that's when the conversation would start under the trump administration. would he lead us into world war iii. look what happened under there. an uncritical press and lockdown on staff who know about his cognitive decline means that probably won't happen. rachel: what's the kabal that put this man in place, you guys are all responsible for what's happening right now. >> it's unfortunate, really. speaking of responsible for what's happening, you've seen inflation skyrocket, everything you're paying for costs a lot more in the last year and-a-half and that's reflected in new numbers from the consumer sentiment index which measures how confident consumers are about the economy. if you look at the number on the right, that's march of 2022. that's one year into covid. that's a couple months into joe biden. it was -- excuse me, on the other side. they're reversed. it was high on the left in march
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of 2021 and on the right of the screen, that's today, it's dropped over 25 points. and of course it has. people look at everything they're spending money on and realize something is causing this. it's not just vladimir putin and russia. it's policies that have been put in place that make it harder for me as an average person. rachel: it's energy. it's printing money. it's giving out quote, unquote free money to people that's keeping them out of the workforce and out of the labor market and, you know, we have donald trump by the way saying, hey, i want to reprint my book which has been very successful and i can't do it because america's like a third world country. we can't even get the glue. listen. >> one of the first things we must do when republicans retake congress is stop joe biden's inflation nightmare. you're being destroyed by inflation. whoever heard of this word, supply chain. i did a book, our journey
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together, right, nice book. and you know, it sold like crazy. we needed 300,000 additional copies, more than that. we went to the printer, second biggest printer, supposedly. he said circumstance we have a problem? what? we have no paper, we have no ink, we have no leather, the outside cover, we have no glue, we have nothing. i said how done does that -- how often does that happen? sir, it never happened before. we have no glue, we have no nothing, who the hell ever heard of this stuff. rachel: i never heard of supply chain problems until joe biden was elected. it's not just glue, it's candy, will. >> the price of your easter basket, three weeks away, the price is set to go up. the cadbury egg up to $3.99 right now. peeps, if you like them, these two do, 219 two years ago, --
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i'm sorry, 399 two years ago, 499 now. >> the basket you're holding, $8 in 2019. now you'll pay $9. >> you don't like peeps? >> you don't like peeps? >> i'm not a -- here -- rachel: i do love things. >> we should start something on "fox & friends." we should call it the peep challenge. rachel: let's go. >> you don't eat one at a time. i want to see if i like them. >> okay, try them. >> it's a marshmallow covered in sugar. the peep challenge is you have to fold five into your mouth at one time. rachel: what happened to you since you turned 47, you don't do competitions with peep anymore. >> that's not my style of competition. [laughter] >> let's not talk. just do the show. rachel: go ahead, pete.
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you've got this. you sound like joe biden now with the mask on. all right. >> oh, man. rachel: big two hours still ahead. are russian spies living among us? up next, one of the best trained kgb agents reveals his double life and the secrets behind putin operatives working today. >> plus, hunter biden could be hauled a before congress. rachel: sure, sure. >> if republicans take the house in november. congressman darrell issa on the push to subpoena the be -- thepresident's son, coming u. ♪ kes to make dentistry work for your life. so we offer a complete exam and x-rays free to new patients without insurance - everyday. plus, patients get 20% off their treatment plan. we're on your corner and in your corner every step of the way. because your anything is our everything.
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>> before he was your typical american citizen, our next guest, jack barski was russian bornal lbret detrick, recruited by the kgb. as ukraine faces an assault of putin's forces, russian spies are lurking abroad and in our country. here with a look back at his double life and what his undercover job would look like in today's war is jack barski. thank you so much for being here.
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fascinating. you worked as a double agent. you did espionage on behalf of moscow. how much is that done today, both in europe and in the united states? >> it's done everywhere. but i'm reasonably sure it's in a different fashion. the illegals in the kgb era were the elite of the elite. there was a mystique about us. we were the most highly trained and there were very few of us but to find us was nearly impossible. nowadays, i can guarantee you there are more russian agents in this country and in western europe than there have ever been, simply because it's possible. right. the world is much more open and during the cold war the soviet union was closed and there
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wasn't a whole lot of commercial interaction and so forth. nowadays, we have students in this country, we have businessmen and so forth and a country like russia, they pretty much know who is going abroad and why they're going and where they're going and i guarantee you a lot of them are talked to by russian espionage agencies and asked, can you help us out. so what you wind up is sort of a small army of would-be spies who are not well trained but can be successful. like for instance, the red-headed lady butina who did reasonably well, she befriended folks in the national rifle association but she was a rank amateur. she communicated via social media. there was no training. >> interesting. jack, as it pertains to both
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ukraine and the united states then, if the intel networks for russia are so robust, then was bad intelligence given to putin about how easy it would be to go into ukraine or did he disregard it or did they get it wrong? what happened there? >> okay. let me tell you. there's no way that russian intelligence didn't know in great detail what russia would be facing. not so much the fsb but the military intelligence of russia is one of the best in the world. they're not really that well-known but they are the best of the three. the gru and even the fsb and fcr, the other agencies, i good guarantee they had insiders in ukraine, lots of them. there's no way that they didn't know that there's an intrinsic
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intrinsichey dread for everythin among ukrainians. there's no way they didn't know it. there's two choices here. either they were afraid to tell or they did tell and putin dismissed it. it could be a mixture of both. vladimir putin had a history, a long history knowing that he is the smartest man in the room and just like ignoring the advice from his people. on the other hand, if you know that you get punished for giving bad news, then you just maybe not talking about it. >> i have to ask just a question that i have. how does a former kgb spy end up in the united states and what do you make of what russia is doing now? >> well, i wound up here like everybody else. i got on a plane and eventually
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i got off a plane. and the reason that i was sent to the u.s. was my language ability and overall ability to operate as a lone wolf in enemy territory. now, what was the second part of the question, please? >> well, does that mean now you're an american citizen? did you give up your allegiance to russia and say i want to be in the united states? how does that work. >> of course, there's only one answer to that question can. i am today legally, intellectually and emotionally an american. i was born in germany. i don't consider myself german anymoment -- any more. it was a long, long way to get there. that's it. that's me. >> the second part of my question is what do you then, from your perspective, from what you know, what do you make of what vladimir putin has done for over a month in ukraine? >> well, we as a country have not paid enough attention to
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what putin has been planning for a long time. he wants to establish greater russia the way it once started and he has been pretty open about it. he has stated in public that he doesn't consider ukraine a sovereign nation. ukraine and russia should be united. and you know, we had a period when we had an administration that thought, you know, we could play very nice with vladimir putin, that was the obama administration. reset with russia. naive. not paying attention. and so this is where we are at now. >> fascinating. jack barski, his podcast, the agent is available on all streaming services. jack, great to have you on our team. >> thanks for having me. thank you. >> the white house honoring a woman who praised osama bin laden two years after the
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september 11th attack. dr. carol swain says the embrace of communism and anti-americanism should spend a chill down the spine of every freedom-loving american, and she's next. >> tech: cracked windshield? make it easy and schedule with safelite, because you can track us and see exactly when we'll be there. >> woman: i have a few more minutes. let's go! >> tech vo: that's service that fits your schedule. go to safelite.com. >> singers: ♪ safelite repair, safelite replace. ♪ we gotta tell people that liberty mutual customizes car insurance so you only pay for what you need, and we gotta do it fast. [limu emu squawks] woo! new personal record, limu! only pay for what you need. ♪ liberty, liberty, liberty, liberty. ♪ ancestry's helped me really understand my family's immigration experience and what life must have been like for them. and as i pass it on to my daughter, it's an important part of understanding who we are.
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>> we're back with your headline. a fast moving wildfire near boulder, colorado, forces 19,000 people to evacuate. it was fueled by wind, growing to 122 acres. no structures have been damaged. at this point there's zero containment. mayor eric adams says new york will start to remove all makeshift homeless encampments throughout the city. he said he plans to go block by block and district by district to identify and disman the tell encampments on the streets. he didn't say where the people would be relocated. officials cannot force residents into shelters. young adults are saying less is
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more when it comes to their phone. market research agency can tore is finding -- cantor are finding people in late teens to early 20s are returning to low tech phones from the '90s to, quote, switch off a. mom of six and author of digital detox, mollie defrank, had a different idea and she joined us earlier. listen. >> the solution is very simple. it's a two week cold turkey digital detox. i did this on my kids a couple years ago a. i was blown away by the results. i felt like i got my kids back. >> her comments of come as phone company motorola is rereleasing the razr flip phone to meet renewed demand. maybe it's real. fox of corporation and our viewers have raised more than $12.5 million to support the red cross relief mission in ukraine. they're working around the clock to deliver food, hygiene and
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shelter to refugees. you can help by delivering redcross.org/foxforward to donate to the cause. and those are your headlines. rachel, over to you. rachel: outrage is brewing for the white house initiative on asian americans, native hawaiians and pacific islanders for on norring a late maouct who praised osama bin laden in 2003, saying, quote, i consider osama bin laden as one of the people i admire. to me, he this the category of malcolm x, patrice lulumba, fidel castro. arrogance must be stopped. here to he react is the co-author of black eye for america, dr. carol swain. it's always a great having you on the show. welcome. i mean, had this is a pretty brazen selection. they're not even hiding their sympathies for communists.
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>> no, they are not. and i believe that this is the most anti-american pro-communist administration in america's history and that we all should be concerned that this has been done out in the open and if you look at president biden's foreign policy, it seems of to be geared to empowering china, communist china and we see human rights abuses in the u.s. with the january 6th protesters. we have americans being denied their human rights, right here in america, when it comes to due process. and so we need to stand up and take note that this is becoming a country that's anti-american, from the very top. we have people in office that should be tried for treason. rachel: you're right. i mean, every day i think we're looking more and more like a communist country, there's a
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culture that we're breeding and you're right, many people, including those in the january in particular who haven't been given their dues process and are still being held as if they were -- you know, as political prisoners, essentially like they do in cuba and other countries, in china. carol, what does this tell you about where we are as a country and what we should do? i saw this. i didn't know whether to laugh or cry. what do we do? >> well, i can also tell you that this started during the obama administration. they started honoring people that should not have been honored. and so it started back then. it continues under democrats. i think democratic voters out there, people who support democrats need to take a long, hard look at their party and at our country because the united states of america, the country that i have loved all of my life, it doesn't seem to exist
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today and i think that if we want to get our country back, we are going to have to awaken to what's taken place and we're going to have to do things differently and as a rise chan s a christian, i can say there is not a political solution to what ails america and what ail as our world, that we need to return to our judeo christian roots because at the end of the day we have people who are immoral, who empower pedophiles. we see what's happening with the u.s. supreme court of, that there are no standards, no moral standards and this race agenda that we talk about in our book about crt, it is destroying our nation. do we want our country back? if we want our country back, we need to stand up and take note and it doesn't matter which political party you're in, you're not going to like living in a communist regime. rachel: amen to that, came. i agree, we're in a spiritual
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battle and the first step is admitting that we have a problem and that what has happened over the last couple years is not normal, is not america. carol swain, you're a voice of truth and justice and we appreciate you for joining us this morning. >> thank you. rachel: all right. well, we reached out to the white house for a statement about honoring this communist and we did not hear back. all right. cleanup on aisle 5 at the white house after president biden made this comment about vladimir putin. >> for god's sake, this man cannot remain in power. rachel: congressman darrell issa unpacks ought the clarifications needed, -- all the clarifications needed, next. why is guy fieri in the neighbors' kitchen? it's slider sunday! sliiiiiiiiii-der sunday! these chicken parm sliders on king's hawaiian rolls are fire! slider sunday! i want that. everything's better between king's hawaiian bread. mmm!
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>> we will have a different future, a brighter future, rooted in democracy and principle, hope and a light. for god's sake, this man cannot remain in power. >> there it is, joe biden sparking he global backlash with that remark about putin's regime, sending the white house into immediate damage control. >> clarifying quote, the president's point was that putin cannot be allowed to exercise powers over his neighbors or the region, he was not discussing putin's power in russia or regime change. right. here to react, retired u.s. army captain, congressman darrell issa. congressman, great to see you this you morning. we've talked at length about
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what might have happened there in that moment. can you help shine light on what you think the ramifications are, maybe in russia, how will that comment land? >> well, i'm sure in russia they were asking who has the football at this time, if that man is saying that. you know, presidents are held to a very high standard of accuracy when they say things, particularly in a prepared speech. and in this case, this was supposed to be a prepared speech that certainly was not in the speech, no speech writer would use terms like that for the same reason as when the president was asked about chemical weapons and he said we would respond in kind. we have banned chemical weapons, would not use them and any response would be based on the illegal use of chemical weapons by putin which he's already done. he used these phosphorus burning agents that most civilized countries wouldn't use any
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longer. so what's happening in russia, in russia they know they have a president who is as inconsistent in what he says he's going to do as he was in that 65 minute speech or conversation in which he told putin how terrible the sanctions would be and then putin invaded anyway, feeling that it wasn't that terrible. >> i wonder how seriously vladimir putin and those in russia take joe biden's comments or do they discount them as also the off-the-cuff, unplanned ramblings so many here at home do as well? i want to take some time, congressman, i want to get to this topic with you. you have sent a letter to some of the ceos of big tech companies, saying preserve your records, we want to know what went on in the fall of 2020 when it came to suppressing the hunter biden story as well as your colleague, congresswoman elise stefanik said this, we will subpoena hunter biden, it should consider every american
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that they did they this, it came at the cost of our national security. what can you do? should republicans take back congress, what can you do to find accountability on this story? >> well, one of the reasons i sent the preservation letters is that those notices, if you then destroy evidence, are in fact evading congress and suppressing evidence. we've had that in the past, obviously we had that with hillary clinton, her attempt to destroy all the evidence of her illegal activities. but the other part of it is that because this involves so many companies such as facebook, twitter and so on, they took down the new york post, there was clearly a conspiracy to, if you will, cover up the wrong-doing of the president and his family just before an election that he had to win and did win. so the investigation is clearly warranted, not just because
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hunter biden seems to be a petty criminal, taking advantage of his father's money and perhaps a sharing money with his father, it's because if we have this kind of coordinated effort just before an election, what we have is american collusion to affect the output of an election. that can't happen. we've got to make sure that our press is free and fair and right now when it comes to new media, free and fair doesn't exist. when it comes to one of the oldest newspapers in america, the new york post, was founded in 1801, they were suppressed and that's something that every american should be concerned about and the judiciary committee and other committees of congress are going to have to investigate it thoroughly. >> i am tempted to explain it potentially as hide mind group think, they all acted in concert so quickly but to your point, they all said the exact same thing as well, they quoted
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russian disinformation, the same thing our intelligence, many within the intelligence community were saying as well, leading you i would hope to the exact type of investigation that you talking about. where was the coordination coming from? i would love to come on. if you having very quick, i would love to hear it. >> clapper and brennan received the same letters. they were clearly part of the coordinated efforts for the intelligence community to tell people there was no there, there, when there's was a there, there. >> can't wait to find out the truth, to expose the truth. congressman, darrell issa, thank you so much. let's turn to rick reichmuth for the fox weather forecast. good morning, rick. >> it's going to be really cold. it's going to feel solid winter across a lot of the northeast tonight and into tomorrow. take a look at this. right now, feels like 34 degrees in new york, feels like 14 had in buffalo, can't believe i'm showing a wind chill map here in the last days of march. all part of that same system ultimately that brought the severe weather this week, now
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we're watching the center area of that low pressure move across parts of the northeast. watch what happens for us tomorrow. high temperature, not getting above freezing. tonight we look at temperatures into the mid-20s for the mid-atlantic and parts of the northeast. will: that's why i moved back to texas. march is spring. it's not winter. march should be the beginning of spring, not 30s. all right, man. i'll see you later. >> it's the most painful when it's late march doing this. it hurts worse than any other time. will: april as well. happens in april up here. rick, we'll see you. up next, another pre-- for me, another pre-birthday surprise, my birthday is tomorrow. they're treating me today. who baked me a cake? oh, really? other than my biggest fan. there she is. [laughter] will: that's paula deen and that's coming up. before discovering nexium 24hr to treat her frequent heartburn... claire could only imagine enjoying chocolate cake. now, she can have her cake and eat it too.
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♪ i want to put on my my, my, my, boogie shoes and boogie with you. rachel: it is will cains' birthday tomorrow. we have a special surprise today. >> it isn't the first time this be next guest surprised him. rachel: boy, does she love
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will. >> first time at a diner. let's bring in celebrity cook and part-time girlfriend. [laughter] pete: of will cain, paula deen live from her kitchen. >> that's all i can do is be part-time. [laughter] >> good morning, paula. >> hey, sweet willy. happy birthday. >> i'm happy you made it for my birthday. >> you know it. i wouldn't miss it. rachel: he's turning red. pete: he's blushing. rachel: even through his makeup, you can see him blushing. >> what you bake? >> i baked willie my favorite yellow birthday cake. it's in my southern baking book. i think you can see it right there. it's a yellow inside, willie and a chocolate outside as you can see. and i've got sparkly candles on
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it for you. here's the big question. what time did you tell me you were going to be here tonight? i can't remember. [laughter] .[laughter] rachel: we were supposed to do a birthday slumber party at paula deen's house. producers put the kibosh on it. >> why? are they scared of me. >> what's your favorite thing about will, willie? will: okay, all right. >> i think it's his innocence, pete. pete: me too. will: it's definitely my innocence. >> i can embarrass somebody and have a good time, you know, messing with them, i'll take full advantage. pete: well, you sure did at that diner. >> when you surprised me at the diner, rubbing my face. pete: there it is. rachel: look at that. [laughter]
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>> oh, my gosh. [laughter] rachel: hey, paula. >> that was fun. yes, rachel. rachel: do you like when will or willie says yes, ma'am to you? >> no. rachel: no? [laughter] rachel: what do you prefer he callyou. >> hey, girl. >> correction noted. paulina. >> or sweetheart or honey or darling. >> darling. i'm a big fan of darling. darling is nice. well, darling, i can't wait. i'll be there before sundown. and i can't wait to cut into that cake. >> i'm going to be here waiting on you, honey. [laughter] >> with more surprises. more surprises. >> even the balloons behind you, paula, say will. you are all-in. >> of course. we're in this to win it, willie. will: i am flattered, i'm
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beyond flattered. rachel: what can willie expect for dinner, besides the cake? >> it's a toss-up. i think i might make him ox tail. >> i've never had ox tail. >> it's a very romantic dish. rachel: this is the best segment we've had in a long time. >> you can say anything and these two are turning it into something more. rachel: we're just going to think about ox tail a little bit more. >> you just think about ox tail. yum. [laughter] >> i will be there, darling. rachel: paula, we love you. >> we do. >> i love you too, rachel and pete and my sweet willie. happy birthday. >> will: thank you so much. pete: by the way, we don't just want to watch paula here on fox and friend, check out at home with paula on fox nation. thank you so much for wishing me happy a birthday. >> i would not miss it, darling. i would not miss it.
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[laughter] rachel: that was a nice birthday present for us to give you, wasn't it. will: you called me out on calling her yes, ma'am. you did, you did. rachel: that's such a southern thing. elon musk says free speech is nowhere to be found on twitter, is the billionaire getting ready to launch his own social media platform. we'll talk about that at the top of the hour. ur windshield fixed? safelite makes it easy. >> tech vo: you can schedule in just a few clicks. and we'll come to you with a replacement you can trust. >> man: looks great. >> tech: that's service on your time. schedule now. >> singers: ♪ safelite repair, safelite replace. ♪
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>> for god's sake, this man cannot remain in power. >> it was not in the speech. he came, he saw and he confused. we start with a fox news alert, joe biden returning home from europe to a white house in full cleanup mode. the administration this morning trying to walk back one of biden's biggest statements from last night, calling for russian regime change. rachel: biden's comments falling flat oversea as russian rockets strike the ukrainian city of lviv.
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the overnight strikes sending an oil depot and food warehouses up in flames. >> that's right. let's go straight to jeff hall who is live on the ground in lviv. good morning, jeff. >> reporter: yeah, rachel, pete and will, the mod in lviv is shifting after the latest missile strike in town. for much of the conflict this city has become somewhat of a safe haven for people who have been caught in the middle of the war in different regions of the country like into the east and to the south but now it finds itself in a similar position after officials say at least five people were injured during this latest attack. officials here tell us they believe the russian army is responsible. our sources on the ground say that they think an a oil depot was the target. it took firefighters around 14 hours to put this fire out. we should mention, this all happened when president biden was in neighboring poland. yet's strike pales in comparison to the level of destruction we
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continue to see in cities like mariupol, where tens of thousands of people remain trapped from the outside world with very little just to stay alive. ukrainian president zelenskyy says they need more help and more he resources. >> ukrainians can't shoot downs russian missiles with shotguns and machine guns. it's impossible to unblock mariupol without a sufficient number of tanks and jets and other armored vehicles and jets. >> reporter: cities continue to get bombarded and shelled. what's making it difficult is that russian forces destroyed a bridge, a main artery between the city and the capital of kyiv so a lot of the way for people to get out is being cut off and nothing is coming in. back in lviv, we should mention people continue to go about their daily lives.
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there's a buzz in the city, people are walking, walking their dogs, they have children out, cars are going about as normal as possible. the mayor, when he spoke last night, believes this was a way for vladimir putin to say hello to president biden. rachel, will, pete,. >> not the friendliest greeting. thank you, jeff. we noticed with president biden with increasing frequency and increasing intensity, his nature to commit a faux pas, commit a gaffe, say something you shouldn't have said, for example, as we reiterated throughout the morning, what he said yesterday in warsaw, let's take a listen. >> we'll have a different future, a brighter future, rooted in democrat saint principle, hope and light. for god's sake, this man cannot remain in power. >> calls for essentially re-p gem change which was -- regime change which was not in the script and forcing the white house to say this, the president's point was putin
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cannot be allowed to exercise power over his neighbor and the region, he was not discussing putin's power in russia or regime change. simply unbelievable. >> i said at the top he came, he saw, he confused. that's michael goodwin if in the new york post, laying it out. yesterday on the show we were talking about how he was soon to give a major address which in the middle of the day yesterday he gave. why was he giving a major address? because they recognize that the two and-a-half days before that were full of misstatements and confusion. so they were going to put him on a big stage with a big teleprompter and try to clarify everything. be in that speech, what did he do? he clarified, u.s. troops are not going into ukraine after seeming to say that they were. he clarified about chemical attacks, after saying we would respond in kind and then in the last line of his speech, forget what he said for almost an hour of that speech, he alluded to the fact that vladimir putin needs to go. only undoing everything else he
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said, undoing every other aspect of the trip and just piling confusion onto a situation where if it needs one thing, if zelenskyy needs one thing, it's clarity on what the actual next steps are so that other things can happen after that whether it's winning the war, whether it's suing for peace, whether it's all the things that come from that that. when you create more discord and russia uses it as propaganda, you only make the situation r worse and that's got to be what the white house was thinking when they were flying back to the united states, here we are, back at square one after trying to make it better. rachel: i think a lot of people were hoping that maybe he would come and with his leadership skills maybe bring about some peace negotiation, mover this thing -- move this thing, bring it more to a close. here's a montage of some of the gaffes. >> ukrainian people have a lot of backbone, they have a lot of guts and i'm sure you're observing it and you'll see when
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you're there. as i made clear, american forces are in europe, not in europe, to engage in conflict with russian forces. american forces are here to defend nato allies. >> if chemical weapons were used in ukraine would that trigger a military response from nato. >> it would trigger a response in kind. >> the united states has no intention of using chemical weapons, period, under any circumstances. >> i did not say that in fact the sanctions would deter him. sanctions never deter. >> the purpose of the sanctions has always been and continues to be deterrence. rachel: before we move on, i really quick want to mention this whole total mask one day, inside, outside, it just is beyond the fact that it doesn't make any scientific sense at all, it just projects weakness at a time where we already have a problem with that in this administration. let's put that aside for a second. we've been spending the show
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kind of debating, was this a gaffe? was this a statement that joe biden made about, you know, that could possibly escalate this in terms of suggesting regime change in russia or is this a man in cognitive decline? and sometimes he some of the best conversations we have are off camera. i want to bring the conversation that we were having about 45 minutes ago off camera on camera a because as upset as i am about this because i think this a very dangerous situation. i was hoping for peace. i see an escalation, from butcher to war criminal to regime change in russia, this could set vladimir putin off and it could end up in world war iii, nuclear engagement. i don't know what it means. i feel sorry for him. this is a man in cognitive decline. this could be really carry.
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care scary. he looks scared sometimes. >> when you said it projects an image of weakness, my thought is what's going on here. the analogy we used an our hour, certainly a guy if he walks along and trips and if he feels frail or insecure, the response more often than not is to bow out his chest and say i've got this, to project confidence, to recognize a moment of vulnerability and then project masculineity and i think joe biden is aware. i think he's aware of his situation. and i think -- rachel: his decline. >> i think he feels confused often and knows it and i think that he is searching for that moment to regain his confidence and it comes across as be lidge.
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he might feel i'm mass emascula. he has people stay on script. staffers are telling an 80-year-old man who has been in politics all his life how to do his job and he is looking to re-establish who am i. rachel: he says that sometimes. >> he says i would go to ukraine but i'm told i can't go to ukraine. that moment, that's why i think the speech was tightly core h choreographed for that reason. it's all of the bark without any of the new policy change, with all of the ability for putin to use it to lie to his own people that this is a wider war against the americans, they're sending troops, they want me gone, they're coming at you. he is using the rhetoric. we saw putin saying this is not about me, this is about you, the russian people, i'm standing in
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their way. this will feed into the propaganda. we have to understand how he will use words like this. rachel: that's why we needed not sloppiness, we needed precise communication in a dangerous, volatile situation that the whole globe finds itself in right now. >> we find ourselves in a moment where speech and communication is constricted. you have to know by now, we probably all experienced the level of censorship that will take place on big tech platforms. elon musk has noticed. he says maybe we should do something about it. he tweeted that given that twitter serves as a public town square, failing to adhere to free speech principles, it undermines democracy. he posted a question, would you consider building a new social media platform, elon musk, he was asking that, one that would consist of open source algorithm where adhering to free speech is gave top priority, where
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propaganda is minimal and to that musk said i'm giving that serious thought. >> we discussed earlier does twitter have a strangle hold, do they have too much of a lead. rachel: there's getter. >> there's other places, other alternatives. if anybody can do it, it's a guy that can land a rocket right side up. this guy has the platform to do it should he want to create a true free speech platform. >> i believe he would be faithful to the concepts of free speech. >> there is getter. if all conservatives left twitter and went to getter. there's a lost conservatives, i'm guilty too, who are still on twitter. maybe that's the answer a. maybe we don't need elon musk. maybe a it's time just like with the guy who started the razr company to get back at harry, the day from dollar caller.
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it's maybe us conservatives going to conservative sites until others decide to change their thinking. >> you truly do -- a razr company can reflect your values. a social media should reflect the one value we should share which is free speech. that should welcome all points of view, even those we disagree with. .>> let's bring in clay travis to join in on what we said. what's your take on musk. >> you guys made a lot of good points. i think about this issue a ton. the one thing i would say is, elon musk decided that he was going to send rockets to space better than nasa and he did it. and then he decided prior to that, hey, you know what, this whole combustion engine, we need to he replace it, i'm going to create an electric vehicle and he managed to do that too. i'm not putting anything past elon musk. what i think he should do is not
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try to build a new twitter clone because as rachel mentioned we got getter, parler is out there, there's all these companies that are trying to compete with what twitter does. what elon musk should do is buy twitter and reinstitute he free speech and the marketplace of ideas on that site because i think the challenge here is getting people to leave something that they're already using and have the same sort of social currency that twitter has right now is very difficult. i think twitter is fine. what we need is a re-establishment of freedom. i believe tucker carlson said men and women are different, these are biological realities. we're living in an upside down world when you can't say factual truth without having your account locked and so i would just like to see a true first
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amendment absoluteist, someone who is going to buy into the marketplace of ideas. elon musk to me should buy twitter, he he's got to money to do it and reinstitute its meaning and be message. >> that would be a step forward. my only counter point, not a counter point but maybe describing the depth of the problem, it's not just a twitter problem, it's a facebook problem, a youtube problem. >> that is true. >> all of social media. >> we'll take one platform that can be an actual -- >> give us one, that would be nice. >> hey, clay, okay, you and i both love sports. pete loves sports, he loves basketball. rachel is a huge sports fan. i could give her this question. i'm going to give you the country that we were he debating off camera. saint peter's plays north carolina tonight. the winner makes it to the final four many as a 15 seed it's one of the biggest cinderella stories in tournament history. would you rather see, clay, the historic storied rivalry of unc,
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duke in the final four or would you rather see the cinderella story continue? and while you're at it, by the way -- >> that's a great -- >> while you're at it, which one would rate higher. i think i know the answer to that. i want to see what your answer is. >> unc, duke, i'll take them in reverse, would rank higher because people claim that they want cinderellas. what that really want is big brands they're familiar with. >> that's what i was telling pete earlier. i think a 15 seed plays a little different, 15 seed against duke, that would -- >> it's the greatest underdog story ever in college basketball history, maybe in college history, if saint peter's pulls off the upset and goes to the final four. a lot of people who are casual fans will look at it and say there's no way duke is losing to saint peter's, i'm not watching that game on the same level i would a rivally like duke, unc.
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unc just spoiled coach kaye's final game, came in and beat them. that would be an opportunity for coach kaye to get revenge one last time at duke, unc. as exciting as it is, to the elite eight, saint peter's i don't think there's any doubt, it's the greatest story in the history of the ncaa tournament because we've never seen a seed this low advance this far. if they pulled it out, they're eight and-a-half points underdogs against unc, the story is better, the audience would be smaller in terms of how many people would buy in, how many casual people. i think it's interesting. >> what do you think? >> yes. >> i think that unc is going to win. >> what do you want to see, clay? >> unc is playing too well. >> what would you rather -- >> i would rather see unc, duke too. because it's coach kaye's good-bye. >> i would rather see saint peter's but i recognize the vast majority of america would rather see -- >> what would rachel want to
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see. >> rachel: i want to see clay back next week, we'll do royal family, reality tv and a hair and makeup segment. is that cool with you. >> i don't know about hair and makeup. i will kill reality tv and royal family. that's my wheel house. i know nothing about hair and makeup. rachel: if we can do meghan markle and the royal family -- >> did you watch love it blind? >> i did watch some of that. rachel: that's the most garbage reality tv. i love it. >> very romantic. very romantic. rachel: you're coming back, i'm picking the topic. >> okay. all right, clay. >> you say you know nothing about makeup. does that mean you're not wearing any makeup right now? >> 100%. i never wear makeup in my home studio. this is all natural, baby. whether it's good or bad, this is all natural. rachel: these guys can't say that. >> i have more makeup on than rachel. >> you should check out
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outkick.com. rachel: thanks a lot. come back. >> have a good sunday. >> we're late. i want to say your husband earlier off camera said to me, hey, you get dress casual on your birthday and he said this was very, very casual or he said it was a step down from a suit. i've been googling it all show, since that moment. i don't think it is. i think it's in the same category as as a suit. >> a blazer. >> what are these? >> slacks and a blazer. they're pants. rachel: they look like a little different. they're not suit -- that's a midwestern word for -- >> i think looks great. rachel: i think you look nice but it is more casual. >> is this more casual, what i'm doing or a suit with no tie. rachel: he wears gucci shoes. you don't have fashion next to lawrence. i'm sorry. sorry. [laughter] rachel: all right. still ahead, air strikes rock he
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--lviv. we'll have more, next. gramly award winners for country are hosting a special concert to raise money for ukrainian refugees, they'll join us live with a special preview performance, next. ♪ is now a good time for a flare-up? enough, crohn's! for adults with moderate to severe crohn's or ulcerative colitis, stelara® can provide relief, and is the first approved medication to reduce inflammation on and below the surface of the intestine in uc. you, getting on that flight? back off, uc! stelara® may increase your risk of infections, some serious, and cancer. before treatment, get tested for tb.
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>> joe biden meeting ukrainian refugees for the first time during a stop in warsaw, poland yesterday. aishah hasnie joins us live from krakow with the growing humanitarian crisis. >> reporter: ukrainian refugees are responding to the president's visit in poland and also his remarks, particularly those about vladimir putin. yesterday, the president met with ukrainian refugees for about an hour in war diss saw saw, he wasasked what he thought is when he called putin a butcher. >> you see this and you're dealing every day with vladimir putin. look at what he's done to these people. what does it make you think? >> he's a butcher.
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>> reporter: this morning, there was a rally in krakow with protesters chanting "close the sky" refugees are taking in the president's passionate speech last night, particularly when he said putin cannot remain in power. the white house of course walked that back. refugees across europe already heard it and it resonated big-time. >> i agree with president biden because i think that putin is a terrible person, he's a killer. such a person cannot rule any country, especially a big, like russia. >> i'm very pleased with biden's speech. he is one of the only world leaders that cares for our security and the security of poland. >> reporter: back here in poland, pete, some mayors in those border towns are actually now expecting another huge wave of refugees after that attack in lviv yesterday.
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pete. pete: great report thank you so much. let's bring in retired general david perkins, fox news contributor. general, thanks for being here. we reported all morning long missiles hitting he lviv far west, 200 miles from whereby den gave the speech and you heard -- i don't know if you could hear the refugees there in poland saying -- thanking joe biden for saying that putin has to go, that the man cannot remain in power but the reality is the white house walked that statement back as quickly as they could after he said it. there's a lot of confusion right now. what are our viewers to make of all this? >> good morning, pete. glad to be here. you know, i think the missile bomb attacks on lviv probably had a couple of reasons behind them. one is to prove putin's relevancy. he's always very concerned about that, to show he can still reach out and do that and sort of knock on poland's door. as you reported, hundreds of
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thousands of refugees have flowed west throughout ukraine to lviv and so kind of had seen this as a safe place and so this is putin's ability to show that no place is safe and kind of rattle them. lviv is also a historical and cultural center of ukraine so by attacking that, you're sort of attacking the identity of the ukrainians themselves. there's a lot of possible narratives. as we know, putin loves to establish a narrative no matter how twisted it is and work on that which is typical of war, working the psychological aspect of it. pete: that statement, putin should not remain in power, in your sense does putin leverage that for internal propaganda? does he believe that's the thinking of the white house? how might that change the calculus of this conflict? >> well, as i said, putin always has a narrative whether it's his twitted vision of history that we heard a couple weeks ago or it's his desire to re-establish the russian empire and the
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previous soviet union. the ukrainians have been very good about not playing into a narrative or he cree creating a -- creating a new one, i would recommend that's a good strategy to maintain. pete: earlier we had jack barski on, a former undercover kgb agent whose craft is intel and i asked how did putin get it so wrong with his assumptions about the invasion of ukraine. here's part of what he said. >> there's no way that russian intelligence didn't know in great detail what russia would be facing. not so much the fsb but the military intelligence of russia is one of the best in the world. either they were afraid to tell or they did tell and putin just dismissed it. pete: which one sounds more plausible to you? i mean, the terror of letting your dictator boss know that maybe his ambitions are not likely to succeed or putin overruling it and saying i know best. >> i think it's like he said, i
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think there's a little bit of both there. clearly, and i've had to deal with him around the world when you've had these strong men regimes, nobody wants to tell the boss bad news so that's always one of the real achilles heel of that type of leadership, people only tell you what you want to hear. we saw putin berating his elite intel guy when he wouldn't tow the line. i imagine there were some people that maybe not directly but were at least giving hints that this might not be the cake walk that others want it to be and putin doesn't want to hear it and dismisses him. i think the combination of people not wanting to tell him bad news and him not believing it when he hears it created a bad situation for his real understanding of what he was up against. pete: as we talked about, he tried to do that thunder run that you were able to do toward baghdad and stopped dead in their tracks and are moving to
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phase two. we'll see what happens. we appreciate your insights. thank you. >> have a great day. pete: more twists in the missing child harmony montgomery as the father's girlfriend is found dead. nancy grace will tell us what to make of the latest information. she's next. i recommend nature made vitamins, because i trust their quality. they were the first to be verified by usp, an independent organization that sets strict quality and purity standards. nature made. the #1 pharmacist recommended vitamin and supplement brand. people with moderate to severe psoriasis, are rethinking the choices they make like the splash they create the entrance they make, the surprises they initiate. otezla. it's a choice you can make. otezla is not a cream. it's a pill that treats plaque psoriasis differently. with otezla, 75% clearer skin is achievable. don't use if you're allergic to otezla. it may cause severe diarrhea, nausea, or vomiting. otezla is associated with an increased risk of depression.
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dead woman in a motel, it's suspicious. my guess is based on what we know of kelsey smalls, just 27 years old, she had been the girlfriend of harmony's father, adam montgomery. the two of them were found in a car, somebody in the car had been doing drugs at the time they were found. after this little girl goes missing. it's significant. this is why it's so critical. we no longer have the girlfriend's testimony. she is dead. because she says at the time that that she was arrested in that car with harmony's father that she had never seen harmony and about a year and-a-half of dating the father. and he had never mentioned her. that narrows the timeline. that tells me, this child is dead or missing a year and-a-half before she was pulled out of that car. now, when you find somebody dead in a motel, i think that's
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suspicious. i highly suspect based on what we know that she died of drugs. that's not good. but this is a piece of the puzzle that will be missing in the search for this little girl. think about it. she's 5 years old when she is last seen. she is already blind in one eye and the uncle sees her with a big black eye in the good eye. that's the state of affairs when this little girl goes missing. rachel: poor thing. it's absolutely horrible. the police by the way set up a 24 hour tip line, there at the bottom of your screen so if anybody has any tips that could lead to justice for this little girl who had a short life and a tough life in those short years. please i hope that they will call. in the meantime, you have on fox nation, you've had this series, the natalie holloway investigation. you're on part three of that story. >> that is very critical. this is spring break time. everybody's on spring break. we see what they're cracking
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wide open down in florida. this is about spring break. natalie's mother and i go to aruba and we retrace all the steps and a it was really nerve-racking and heart-breaking for her. we met with a lot of opposition. we were almost arrested by police, trying to find out the truth of what happened to natalie and now natalie's mother is trying to alert other people about the dangers of spring break. rachel: what does she say, really quick before we go, what do you her and you say is the most important thing you can do as a parent before you send your child on spring break, especially abroad. >> many parents don't have a passport. they couldn't get there if 24 ty wanted to. they don't have the money to get flight. you want to leave it up to foreign police to find your child. when you hear the story -- i'm actually getting chills right now. when i heard beth twite, she was describing how little police
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cared about natalie. it was very upsetting. i would not leave them to find my child. so you better be ready, parents, to go to wherever your child is, if they need you. i want to add one more thing about harmony. now the father has been indicted on serious charges and another. his then wife kayla montgomery. they're going to sit in jail and stew on lesser charges. i only pray that jogs their memory about where is harmony. so a lot's going on in the crime world today. rachel: yeah, a is going on, a lot it going on with your series. make sure everyone catches it on fox nation, part 3 of the natalie holloway story. >> thank you. rachel: prices soaring from gas to food as the white house
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fascinating including the idea to tax unearned income or tax the simple rise in your tax portfolio without having actually sold anything. maria: [laughter] maria: that is going to do wonders for the stock market selloff. that's going to have a real impact on the markets and on the economy, will. good morning to you. nancy pelosi once famously said show me your budget and you will she show me your values. so tomorrow morning, first thing, we will get to see joe biden's values. but will it be the values of president biden or will it be the values of the progressive left? we know that president biden wants to raise taxes. that will be in there. but we also don't know the extent that he will go to spend more money on climate change and his climate change agenda. that is what we are going to be talk about this morning, what else in that budget is going to
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affect ordinary americans. you know, there is a new idea being thrown around right now among democrat congressmen who are up for re-election. their idea is to send checks to anybody paying $4 a gallon in gasoline, just keep sending checks. i wonder what that will do to inflation. now that we are talking about 40-year highs in inflation both on the consumer and the producer level, will. will: i wonder too. what will that do for inflation? i should have said by the way unrealized gain, not around gain, unrealized gains, stocking your stock gain i think a 20% minimum that he would set on billionaires. we've got to talk about this as well. i believe you're participating in this right, the energy independence summit tuesday, noon eastern on fox nation. give us a little bit of that and also what's coming up on the show today. maria: well, i'm very much looking forward to few's big event.
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-- tuesday's big event. we have an energy summit and we'll take a look at all areas of energy and the massive move in the price of gasoline, how does it affect consumers, businesses and the overall economy. i will say this, at this point i'm hearing from economist st and an a lifts who -- and analysts who are taking their expectations for economic growth down, not just in the us but in particular in europe. european economy is going to see a major impact as a result of all of this, the war on ukraine, the move in gasoline prices, the inaction on the part of this administration in terms of firing up our energy resources here in america. that is going to cause a potential recession in europe and likely hit the u.s. as well. right now, we've got major analysts already expecting as little as 1% growth for 2022 for this year, for economic growth and we are going to take you to the heart of the situation this morning in ukraine. we just confirmed a live
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interview with the mayor of kyiv. we're going to talk to the klitsko brothers, the mayor and his brother who is in charge of the army there and we are going to get a sense of what's happening on the ground as the russian forces inch closer to the capital. we'll talk about that and then we will get into the securities and exchange commission's new rules, will. the climate agenda is hitting every area of the economy and business. the s.e.c. now has new rules for all publicly traded companies. we'll get into it with john barrasso, senator from wyoming. will: great booking, the mayor of kyiv. we'll be watching for sure. for king can and country it's here, a special performance benefiting ukrainian refugees and that's coming up, next. ♪
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large out-of-state corporations have set their sights on california.f they've written a ballot proposal to allow online sports betting. they tell us it will fund programs for the homeless, but read the fine print. 90% of the profits go to out-of-state corporations, leaving almost nothing for the homeless. no real jobs are created here. but the promise between our state and our sovereign tribes would be broken forever. these out-of-state corporations don't care about california. but we do. stand with us.
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four time grammy winning duo for king and country just hit number seven on the billboard 200 chart with their new album what are we rating for. rachel: they're using their success to give back performing a free worldwide concert online to raise money for convoy of hope and ukrainian refugees. so far, they raised $150,000.
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>> nice. joining us now, brothers joel and a luke smallbone of for king and country. gentlemen, thanks so much for being here. i'm a big fan. >> top of the morning. >> i loved your 2018 album, burn the ships, it's fantastic. you have a few one out. first tell us about your new album, then we want to get to the concert. >> yeah, yeah, well we were kind of fortunate in some way as, last year we were off the road like the whole world was which was very unexpected and we took it upon ourselves to go into the studio to pen a new album. the idea for us is always we want to write when there's purpose to write and we walked through so much, personally, family wise, globally, spiritually, like, man, it's time to get to work and so what are we waiting for, released two weeks ago. we're gearing up for tour this week and as you mentioned we've a got the mojave special to benefit ukrainian refugees.
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>> tell us about the special. we want time for your performance as well. tell us what you're doing for the refugees of ukraine. >> when i was a young boy, my -- i remember a friend of mine asked can i borrow $70 and i remember thinking to myself, i always heard that you don give money to people that -- to friends that are in need of money, per se, because it gets into some blurry lines and i went to my dad and i asked, i said what do i do with this and he looked at me and said something that a was inspiring. he said when people are in need, you help and so when it comes to this mojave he desert special that we've done, i think we've been broken hearted by what's taken a place over in ukraine and so if people -- you know, everybody can play a part a, everybody can do something. for us, this is our way to hopefully help people that are being displaced that are going through incredibly difficult things as we speak. >> we sort of said we're not going to put a price tag on this thing. we thought maybe 50 grand.
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for our supporters to show up with 150 grand and counting is just incredible. rachel: says a lot about your fans and both of you as well so when someone's in need, you help. this is king and country, let's get to the performance. >> wonderful. let's listen. ♪ ♪ didn't imagine. ♪ didn't believe it. ♪ a true love it gave us. ♪ a brand-new beginning. ♪ celebration, no ceremony, nobody would think this is the story of the coming glory. ♪ can you hear the prayers of people. ♪ can you see the sky begin to
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break. ♪ we're face-to-face. ♪ oh, how the world forever changed. ♪ for god is with us. ♪ oh, god is with us. ♪ all the homes. moments.♪ the body was broken as finished. ♪ so let us begin the celebration. ♪ and the ceremony, the silence on earth. ♪ with the heavens roaring, telling the story of the coming glory. ♪ can you feel your heart begin to race? ♪ can you see the tide begin to change? ♪ with all of our futures rearranged. ♪ it will never be the same. ♪ for god is with us.
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♪ oh, god is with us. ♪ oh, for god is with us. ♪ oh, god is with us. ♪ oh, for god is with us. ♪ didn't imagine. ♪ didn't believe it. ♪ the true love it gave us. ♪ a reason for living. ♪ can you feel the hope that's rushing in? ♪ can you hear the song in the wind. ♪ can you hear the choir as it sings. ♪ this is where love -- ♪ for god is with us. ♪ oh, god is with us.
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♪ oh, for god is with us. ♪ god is with us. ♪ oh, for god is with us. ♪ oh, can you see, oh, can you see. ♪ god is with us. [cheers and applause] create a season full of playfulness. your happiest spring starts at lowe's. men, you need to get off the couch and get with the program. with golo, i lost 50 pounds. it feels really good to be able to button your jacket and not worry about it blowing up. -(laughs) -go to golo.com
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to lose weight and get healthier. it's still the eat fresh refresh™ and subway's refreshing everything like the new honey mustard rotisserie-style chicken. it's sweet, it's tangy, it's tender, it never misses. you could say it's the steph curry of footlongs. you could, but i'm not gonna. subway keeps refreshing and refreshing and re... (johnny cash) ♪ i've traveled every road in this here land! ♪ ♪ i've been everywhere, you could, bman. ♪ not gonna. ♪ i've been everywhere, man. ♪ ♪ crossed the desert's bare, man. ♪ ♪ i've breathed the mountain air, man. ♪ ♪ of travel i've had my share, man. ♪ ♪ i've been everywhere. ♪ ♪ i've been to: pittsburgh, parkersburg, ♪ ♪ gravelbourg, colorado, ♪ ♪ ellensburg, cedar city, dodge city, what a pity. ♪ ♪ i've been everywhere, man. ♪ ♪ i've been everywhere, man. ♪
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♪ i've been everywhere. ♪
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rachel: happy birthday to you. will: thank you. i really appreciate everybody on the show, on set and off, putting this together, getting my family to send something in
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throughout the morning including paula deen. pete: your girl. rachel: we're sending him back to texas to celebrate the rest of his birthday. [laughter] don't tell kathleen. pete: his birthday's actually tomorrow. hit him up tomorrow. we we love you, will -- rachel: happy birth cay -- birthday, will. pete: have a great sunday. go to church. rachel: bye, everybody. ♪ maria: good sunday morning, everyone, welcome to "sunday morning futures," i'm maria bartiromo. letdown in ukraine, president zelenskyy's aides say he is disappointed by the inaction of nato after an emergency meeting does not yield air cover for ukraine, and russia's war on ukraine enters a second month. coming up, the two brothers fighting until the bitter edge, live with the mayor of kyiv and his brother, vladimir and

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