tv FOX and Friends Sunday FOX News April 10, 2022 3:00am-7:00am PDT
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guard band playing our nation's anthem. look at that picture. keep mailing the patriotic photos we'll show them during the playing of the national anthem. there is a live shot from the national infantry museum at fort benning in georgia. otherwise known as the bening school for boys which i attended 20 years ago. it's a phenomenal museum we'll take you through a few more parts of it today. rachel, will, good morning to you both. you said we want to to see the museum. there is another reason why you want to see it. it was built with private money donations. continue to support it, national infantry museum.org. national infantry museum.org. another thing, while you slept, i slept, the best ranger
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competition continued. they did a navigation course last night. they haven't slept two days. they had to find points in the middle of woods using a compass and a map. that includes, woods, fields, swamps that have water moccasins in them. i did that 1/2 gas course course navigation course and i don't like snakes. will: does that mean literally zero sleep? is that an hour, two hour catnap caught while somebody else is on watch. or is that literally zero sleep, pete? i will say, in the past 48 hours i tried this hour or two hour thing. it set me back, man. it set me back. i'm still catching up. are they doing no sleep? pete: it means very little, will. depends where you are in the competition. the better you do, the quicker
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you finish, more of a catnap you can get under a tree somewhere. if you're toward the got of the pack, catching up on each event, you will get almost none. the leaders get advantage setting the pace. it's a little bit. it is really not much. rachel: i don't like camping. this looks like hell. will: that's awesome. once again for taking you through that. look forward to the morning you showing us more of that museum. good morning to everyone at home. we're happy to get your pictures. the theme of the national anthem pictures this morning was muscle cars. rachel: it was. will: a lot of muscle cars during the national anthem pictures. whatever the theme may be we love you sending in your competition. rachel: i will say will, as spring comes, summer is coming. i'm looking forward to all the boat flag, patriotic photos get around summertime. makes me happy. we'll see. will: keep them coming in. let's start with this morning.
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infighting within the biden administration. this over the border reportedly. there is some conflict on whether or not title 42 should be rolled back. also apparently conflict from the beginning about how badly and how quickly the border went bad. here is a "new york times" headline. disagreement, delay, how infighting over the border divided the white house. inside the article reads as folly. publicly mr. biden and his top aides differed from the cdc asking about the public health rules. it was entirely about the health agency to leave it in place. privately, mrs. rice, mr. klain, lifting restrictions would invite more migrants to the southwest border could be seen premature if another variant emerged. white house argued title 42 was needed to spread the virus along the border. interesting how title 42 reflects within the
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administration. highest priority, supposed virus containment always placed. now, covid whatever the latest say rant might be clearly has taken a back seat. look at confirmation of the celebration of ketanji. clearly covid is not tear biggest concern. rachel: no. will: what role in the background is the border playing because the title 42 is a pretense, guys. see what i'm saying? it's a slightest pretense of slightest bit of border enforcement. it is not about the border anymore. rachel: what it actually has done is mask how bad the border crisis is. title 42 has been used by border patrol. virtually only tool they have to send people back without getting in trouble with the feds. people actually live on the border know how important title 42 is as long as this administration is in power.
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they don't want a wall. they want to tie the hands of border patrol, law enforcement any way they can. one of the people on the left who is really like a, he is a lonely guy. let's put it that way, representative cuellar. he is a lonely guy. if you know him, my husband knows him, my sister knows him. he is a honest broker. he really believes in the idea i need to represent the people in my area. that's why i am in washington. if you live on the border you know how bad the situation is. that's why he said, quote, title 42 should not be lifted but some of us are standing up and saying this is the right thing to do for the border. we all believe in immigration reform but we don't want chaos at the border. we want law and order at the border. you have to believe, pete, that he is one hated man in his
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conference. pete: you're exactly right. there are a few. we can list them, a few democrats in the senate and the house who are with him. it is just a few because he is lonely man, you're exactly right, rachel. senate side, joe manchin who we expect to have the independence. mark kelly. rachel: only because he is up for election by the way, pete, on mark kelly. pete: mark kelly. i'm talking about joe manchin. yeah. a lot of these people are doing it because they're up for re-election. a list in the house as well with henry cuellar. you both are exactly right. title 42 has been a bandaid for the biden administration from the very beginning, to do some semblance of enforcement. i don't like we're debating it now, that they're taking covid seriously or should use that as a policy-driven by the cdc at the border when what woe should be doing is having actual border
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enforcement. instead this "new york times" article, it talks about a meeting joe biden had in the oval office in march of 2021 pulled his staff, according to the times, yelling at them, what are we doing down there? there is crisis going on. who could i need to fire? no one was fired. nothing changed. him beholdened to the far left wants open border. the left wanted to get rid of title 42 from the beginning. they kind of clutched to it it was an excuse, a bandaid the entire time. last night, guys, donald trump held a rally. you can watch him on "fox nation," "fox nation".com. he was in for the caroline for ted budd, senate candidate currently ahead on the republican side. he talked about what he would do if he was in charge of the border right now. listen. >> they even want to give illegal aliens cell phones.
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everybody get as cell phone. come on in. you all get cell phones. meanwhile biden and radical democrats are spending billions and billions of dollars trying to secure the borders of distant foreign nations. i believe americans deserve a president who will secure the borders of our nation. who will protect our citizens. who will defend our sovereignty and who will stop the invasion of our country. after we win this november, republicans should vote to remove biden's secretary of homeland security. [cheers and applause] who doesn't have a clue, from office for his blatant acts of sabotage against the laws of the united states. then we should continue to work hard until the borders are again sealed. we want people to come into our country but we want them to come into our countly legally.
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will: that is the distinction that is always lost, legally versus illegally when we talk about immigration. i don't know how we do this going forward. i would like to figure it out this morning the three of us together. there is something we hit on where title 42, is, i don't know it's a shadow game. it is not real to your point, pete. it's a bandaid. it is certainly something we need to keep in place. you rip the bandaid off. you heard from anybody, you will see more bloodletting. you will have the floodgates open. there has to be a real permanent solution, if not permanent a real solution, right? title 42 isn't our answer to our illegal immigration crisis. it is what is right in front of us at this moment, we can't pretend it is our savior or our solution. rachel: we can't pretend -- i love the video we saw people getting out of a bus, walking
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in. we put them on a bus, walk them into the country. this is what is happening. they're trying to lift title 42, because they know there will be a change in the midterms with republicans able to have more hearings, with republicans able to shine more of a spotlight what they're doing. let's get as many people as we can in now while we can, with no regard to what this does, not just to the border communities, which should be enough. these are american citizens. people in d.c. should have respect people live on the border to have to bear the brunt of this. but drug and sex trafficking is so evil, dan bongino had a segment on last night he talked about the evilness of some of these policies. i know people with adult children died of a drug overdose last couple years. i'm pretty certain that had to do with fentanyl laced drugs. my husband brought up last night on the big saturday show, what
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if hunter biden died of a fentanyl overdose maybe joe biden would have a different point of view what is happening at our border. people at washington, d.c., is not affected by the policies. that is all they care about the political ramifications, they want more people in, more people hooked on government, more power for themselves. this is a voting strategy. pete: one real quick thing, the border patrol says if you want us to catch sex trafficking you want to have agents doing interviews. only interviews can we identify what is happening. they're caught up in mass arrests, not arrests or detentions. if you're not interviewing you're not catching people running across the border. >> it is so sad. we turn to your headlines. new york city police arrest a suspect accused of shooting and killing a 16-year-old girl
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walking home upon friday. the suspected gunman is 17 years old. he faces murder charges. two other teens were shot in the gunfire. they are expected to be okay, thankfully. the victim being killed is remembered as a loving and caring girl. a straight-a student. god bless her and her family. staffing shortages and storms causing chaos at airports, including crazy lines at jfk international at new york city. flightaware reports more than 800 flights canceled nationwide. 430 delayed since yesterday. disruptions could continue into next easter holiday weekend. americans face severe weather warnings thanks to a powerful storm emerging in the west. will was very alert during his segment. he wants to get home to his beautiful family. tiger woods shoots his worse personal score ever in the masters. he is hopeful for a comeback
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today. listen. >> today was a challenge. each day brings its own different challenges for all of us and i wake up and start fight all over again. >> final pairing with top two scotty scheffler and cameron smith will tee off at 2:40 p.m. eastern time. those are your headlines. pete: thank you, rachel. we'll see, we'll be watching. i was looking at those flights too. i'm with you will. will: i was on flightaware yesterday it all looked good. it looked good. i don't understand. rachel: ensite pete invite pete buttigieg to talk about transportation. pete: epsited to be our get. kathie lee gifford talks about her new "fox nation" special, the jesus i know. will: rules for thee, not for the vp.
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shows vice president harris maskless indoors after being exposed to covid. remember jen psaki claimed otherwise. does that mean a lie? we'll show the tape. the latest mask inhypocrisy 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. this is what real food looks like mmm! fresh real meat and veggies. the food dogs where built to eat. the farmer's dog is changing the way we feed our pets. visit tryfarmersdog.com to see your dogs personalized meal plan. ♪ we could walk forever ♪ ( ♪♪ )
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get that and more with xfi complete. upgrade today. ♪. pete: back with a fox news alert. uk prime boris johnson makes a t trip to ukraine. alexis mcadams is in poland with more. reporter: pete, good morning. that's right, that trip to ukraine as the ukrainian president continues to ask for more weapons. we see nato troops on the ground as attacks continue in ukraine this visit we're talking about happened yesterday in kyiv. the cameras were rolling as uk prime minister boris johnson met with ukrainian poet volodymyr zelenskyy. he promised a new military package to ukraine. 120 armored vehicles, anti-ship missile systems. uk also behind tougher sanctions against vladmir putin.
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listen. >> we are going to ratchet up the economic pressure is. we will continue to to intensify week by week the sanctions on, on russia. reporter: now the meeting comes as hundreds of innocent ukrainian civilians have been killed a recent russian rocket attack killed more than 50 people at this train station in southeast poland. the station was really packed. all the people were there trying to escape. there were women, kids, families there. ukrainian authorities say russian forces are regrouping for a eastern offensive on the donbas region after failing to capture kyiv. "the washington post" reporting this morning there is a new russian general overseeing this invasion now. a senior u.s. official confirming the general who is now in charge commanded russian forces in syria. this comes as ukraine again tells the world they need more weapons.
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>> translator: russian aggression was not intended to be limited to ukraine alone. the whole european project is a target for russia. reporter: as russian forces move out of areaser in chernobyl ukrainian officials believe the troops were exposed to high amounts of radiation there. of the workers were watching in shock and horror as putin's troops were digging trenches in chernobyl's highly rady active red forest. we look at nato troops in action army members and polish military. they invited the military for a specific region so putin and russia could watch to see nato is united. back to you. pete: alexis, thank you very much. good on boris johnson going to see it for himself. turns out leaders can lead on occasion. back here at home, turns out rules for thee, not the vp. there was exposure at the
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white house, the science white house, makes sure every turn they're following exactly the what cdc is saying. that is what they say at least. jen psaki, we'll play the clip for a moment. we'll show you what transpired since the clip. she claimed vice president harris exposed to covid wore a mask inside before judge jackson's confirmation ceremony. now we have video that shows otherwise. here is the video from the white house inside of what was going on. member this whole inside, outside. the white house released this video. you saw a quick clip of it. we don't have to show the whole thing. show screen grab of the relevant portion as it pertains to the vice president. if you look closely. i think we -- i don't see any masks inside the oval office. that is the inside portion of what jen psaki was saying of course they were weighing wearing masks inside that came out this weekend. here is what jen psaki said to peter doocy on friday.
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the question, what did she know about that meeting, was she intentional lying about it. reporter: is there a carveout in cdc regulations for covid for vice presidents? >> tell me more, peter. i'm sure this is going somewhere. pete: cdc said people exposed to covid up to date on the covid-19 vaccinations do not go to places where you are unable to wear a well fitting mask. here at white house today, giving the new supreme court justice a big hug no mask. >> gave her a masked hug outside. reporter: yes. >> does the cdc say exposed contact can give people hugs outside. >> peter, outside, you can benefit significantly being outside. that is why we have event outside today. i will tell you that the vice president has been wearing a mask inside when there was a private greet. they were all wearing masks. reporter: not wearing masks
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yesterday at the senate? >> she was playing an important role in confirming or overseeing the confirmation of the first black woman to the supreme court. reporter: this is not a case rules for thee but not for vps? >> in fact the vice president wore a being mask inside today, when both with the president and with her staff, other people. she was outside at the event. she was socially stant for 99.9% of the event today. she had an emotional moment which is understandable. will: man. rachel: so there is emotional moment carveout for covid which is really interesting. you know. there is so much going on here. she obviously knew that kamala harris not wearing a mask inside. i can't believe she did not know that. of course all of us think it should be fine for kamala should not wear a mask. the problem this administration continues to force us to mask on
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airplanes, in airports, more importantly, people have been fired because they have refused to, or had legitimate reasons for not following covid. cdc mandates. we're going to have someone on in just a little bit talking about, trying to represent people who have been fired from their jobs. don't forget, will, i mean, again this is not an exercise in going, look how hypocritical she is there, he is there, we've seen this for two years. people couldn't invite people to their weddings, to their funerals. there are old people that languished by themselves, not dying of covid, dying of loneliness in nursing homes. these people impacted other peoples lives with their rules they obviously don't think are serious enough for them to follow. will: if you kept a exhaustive list, if you know, there is
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feeling the spirit carveout, tony, tony carveout, i'm losing track. french laundrie carveout. rachel: hair salon carveout. will: definitely hair salon carveouts. feeling emotional and, you notice how she through in first black woman appointed to the supreme court. that was designed to play upon emotion. that was supposed to put heels peter on his heels. you will understand the gravity of the moment. you're right, rachel. the takeaway from me is, just the quantity an obviousness of the lies and george w. bush bungled once, fool me once, shame on you, feel me twice, shame on me. you think the lies are relegated to covid? no. rachel: can i say one thing? here is why they did this. here is why kamala didn't wear the mask. we've seen them virtue signal with the mask, weird places getting on to helicopters and other outdoor events, nato
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meetings where they should look tough, they're wearing masks. the reason why they did this, this is the only win that this administration has. the only promise they can deliver on, is that we got the first black woman on to the supreme court and they needed the photo-op of kamala showing her pride and her emotion and so, for politics and for photo-ops they can take their mask off. this is all so insulting to the people who right now can't put food on the table for their families because they have been fired from their jobs because they couldn't follow covid mandate for lots of very good reasons. there you go. we're going to move on. organizers of a conference on disinformation in the media are now claiming they are the victims of disinformation. >> our disinformation conference has been the subject of disinformation campaigns on social media already. rachel: my daughter evita is the managing editor of the chicago thinker.
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she says the conference leaders had a meltdown when they were asked tough questions about hunter biden. she is 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. ♪ you're a one-man stitchwork master. but your staffing plan needs to go up a size. you need to hire. i need indeed. indeed you do. indeed instant match instantly delivers quality candidates matching your job description. visit indeed.com/hire cal: our confident forever plan is possible with a cfp® professional. a cfp® professional can help you build a complete financial plan. visit letsmakeaplan.org to find your cfp® professional.
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when opportunities come your way, be ready to say i'm in for what's next. ask your doctor about enbrel. ♪ >> one darkly humerus but inevitable measurement of our success is that our disinformation conference has been the subject of disinformation campaigns on social media already. so yeah. congratulate yourselves for that. will: that is the "atlantic"'s editor-in-chief calling out coverage of his own disinformation conference after university of chicago students challenges panellests on the media bias including hunter biden duffy. we have the editor of the chicago thinker. good morning "evita." >> good morning. will: i don't know if he was referencing you, the chicago thinker, or students in
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particular how was the disinformation conference the subject of disinformation? >> yeah. i mean, will, unlike my leftist peers at the university of buffalo this week who shouted down a conservative speaker for you know, just being conservative and he had to be escorted out by police, the chicago thinker came to the disinformation event to be respectful, to ask honest questions. because of our simple questions about media bias the establishment, who was of media who was at that event had a complete and utter meltdown. we asked anna apple obama we asked about the hunter biden story. jeffrey goldberg, editor-in-chief of "the atlantic," that we're waging a disinformation campaign on social media. jonah goldberg has been having a fight with our staff on twitter saying our reporting is trollish. what i really think this has shown the establishment media is
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fragile. they have been challenged by a couple of college kids asking them questions and they can't handle it. so they're smearing us as disinformationists. when in reality we know that what they constitute as disinformation, isn't disinformation information they find inconvenient. in this case information deeply embarrassing for them on social media. will: i don't know, you're way too young, evita, to remember the princess bride. i don't think that word is what you think it means. they know what it means, they're using it as a cudgel for anyone that disagrees with them. when we come to expect college students, shout down anyone they disagree with, from what i saw at least in the clips, these were straightforward questions. what was that environment like in the room, when you were there? all the students, most of whom i think attended university of chicago sitting there, listening asking questions, does that reflect what happened during the
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conference? >> the students that were there, most of them were in agreement with speakers. they gave them softball questions. that is exactly what the speakers were expecting. they weren't expecting the chicago thinker students to come in to give them hard-hitting questions. like i said respectfully. what we've taken away from this entire conference, will, is that, they're not interested in rooting out disinformation. they're interested in taking back power and controlling the narrative again and shutting people down by taking algorithmic control over social media platforms. the chicago thinker thinks that the way to root out disinformation having freedom on the internet. having digital freedom, asking questions, having real conversations. but i guess that is not how "the atlantic" or the university of chicago, any establishment media think we should root out disinformation. it is disappointing. will: yeah. it's weak. used word fragile.
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you're exactly right. it is so incredibly weak to be confronted with disagreement, respond in this fashion. evita, thanks for talking us to us early this morning. thank you for being on "fox & friends." >> thank you for having me. will: a weird cloud sparking conspiracy theories online. state troopers looking for crash. we'll tell you what really happened coming up. a new york city woman fired for not taking the covid vaccine, filing a class-action suit after mayor eric adams made an exemption for only athletes and performers. her fight for everyone who lost their job coming up. ♪. allergies don't have to be scary. spraying flonase daily stops your body from overreacting to allergens all season long. psst! psst! flonase all good. ♪("i've been everywhere" by johnny cash) ♪ ♪i've traveled every road in this here land!♪
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♪. rachel: welcome back to "fox & friends." a former yankee stadium waitress fired for refusing to get the covid shot. she is calling foul on new york city mayor eric adams after he lifted his vaccine mandate for only athletes and performers. virginia ames to file class-action lawsuit that the mayor is not following the science. wants the order to drop unless it applies to all city employees. virginia joins us now with her lawyer. virginia, james, thanks for joining us this morning. i will start with you, virginia. >> good morning. >> good morning.
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virginia, you were a waitress at the stadium for 17 years. now you're seeing that if you were an fancy millionaire athlete for a performer would you get an exemption but not you who needs to put food on the table. how elitist is this policy? how does it make you feel? >> oh, it's heinous. what mayor adams has done is show us that the workers and employees don't matter. because we're not millionaires, we have no value, no worth and mostly that we are dispensable. rachel: absolutely. james, you're representing here. looks like de blasio's own former advisors that this was a very capricious exemption. it would be probably overturned. does that give you a lot of confidence with this lawsuit? >> rachel, absolutely. every new yorker should be offended by this executive order 62. what it is saying if you have
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$1.5 million like steve cohen, the owner of the mets to contribute to the mayor's campaign your players are exempt from a citywide mandate. it's an insult quite frankly to my client who has worked 17 years at yankee stadium. in addition it is also an insult to all the city workers the policemen, firemen, the health care workers, the sanitation workers, who have been terminated from their jobs because of their refusal to vaccinate. rachel: makes no sense at all what they're doing. virginia, just yesterday at the white house there was a ceremony celebrating the new supreme court justice, again violating their own covid rules, kamala harris not wearing a mask even though people are fired for not wearing their mask. people that work in airline industries, other industries. what do you want to say to these leaders directly about this hypocrisy and also, i just want
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to commend you for fighting for ebb else. you're not just fighting for your sell, virginia. >> no, that is correct, virginia. i'm not doing this for my own selfish gain. i want to fight for people that committed suicide because of sheer isolation and depression, we suffered because of the lockdowns and mandates. i'm fighting for any city worker in this country hanging on by a thread. it is my mission to help somehow to stop all these draconian mandates. enough is enough. we are tired. we are starving and we just want to live our lives in freedom and peace. >> i mean that is the american promise, isn't it? that you condition go to work. that you can live your life. , that you're free. what is the direct message to mayor adams and to everybody who is having these covid rules impacting your ability to feed
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your family? >> all i want to say is i'm standing up for everyone who, and everywhere who is standing on their square such as i am and choosing natural immunity over these vaccines. everyone has the right to choose. if you choose to do it, that's your prerogative. i choose to rely on my natural immunity. may i see the panacea for disease is not found in a needle. >> yeah. natural, you've been vindicated many times over with many studies on the fact natural immune is as good if not better than the vaccine. virginia, congratulations to you for fighting. you're a hero for so many people. we appreciate you joining us this morning along with your lawyer, james. we wish all the best of luck in this situation that is truly unjust. thank you for joining us this morning. >> thank you.
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power to the people. rachel: power to the people, amen for that. turning now to your headlines. will: thank you, rachel. the final instagram post of pittsburgh steelers quarterback duane has kins shared hours before he died, it reads quote, it is what it is. will keep you at peace. some are calling a chilling final message. hsakins was sadly hit morning hit by a dump truck crossing multiple lanes of a highway. he was just 2 had years old. comedian chris rock jokes about the oscar slap. the desert sun reported chris rock said i got my hearing about it, i won't talk about it until i get paid. he made the remarks in california friday. telling the crowd, quote, life is good. for crying out cloud. cloud watchers going crazy over this formation in the sky. it materialized over alaska's
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lazy mountain igniting conspiracy theories even prompting an investigation from alaska state troopers. say it looks like everything from a falling meteor. many say it was contrail from a jet. that is weird. those are the headlines. you know what, i got the perfect guy to bring that too. check with meteorologist adam klotz in meteorology school? >> i'm not saying it was an alien will. i'm not saying it. i'm not saying it. look at the forecast here on fox square, things fairly comfortable this morning. a bit of a roller-coaster across the country, cool on the east, cool on the west, look at the middle of the country. 50 degrees early this morning in kansas city.
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there is winter weather out there. i will bring you across portions of pennsylvania, across new york. higher elevations. light snow currently following. out west we see rounds of snow over the next couple days. winter weather alerts are in place until thursday evening. will, those are the weather headlines for now. toss it back to you. will: looks pretty good to me. i don't see why flights should be canceled or delayed. thank you, adam colonel allen west was shouted at how he tried to deliver a speech america is not racist. he is living proof that the company is exception hal. he said this was an embarassment for the college ahead. chip wade is here with the latest and greatest tools for your next home improvement projects. he is next. when hurting feet make you want to stop, it's dr. scholl's time. our custom fit orthotics use foot mapping technology
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works creative.com. so many things out in the market that revolutionize everything for you. pete: great stuff. well-done. the war against the attack ladder might be over. that might be perpetual. developments there for sure. exactly right. chip wade, thank you so much. we appreciate it. we have another hour of "fox & friends" coming up in just moments. [ sprinkler & birds chirping ] these are the mowers i was telling you about. and right now, you'll find everything your lawn and home needs this season. [ food sizzling and happy family chatter ] at great prices for the season. stop by lowe's now, for your happiest spring. ♪simply irresistible♪ ♪ ♪ ♪simply irresistible♪ applebee's irresist-a-bowls are back.
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your record label is taking off. but so is your sound engineer. you need to hire. i need indeed. indeed you do. indeed instant match instantly delivers quality candidates matching your job description. visit indeed.com/hire ♪. ♪. will: some shots this morning of fort benning georgia, where our friend, co-host, pete hegseth is live from the national infantry
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museum. giving us a tour all morning long. welcome to "fox & friends." there was a time when patriotic songs were popular. john mellencamp knew how to make a patriotic hit. rachel: that is popular in my house. will: when is the last time outside of toby keith you heard a patriotic song put out rated on the charts? not just something for "fox & friends" morning, but was for the popular culture at large? when ever that time was, it was john cougar mellencamp. who is in fort benning georgia, walking around to give us an idea of the museum down there is pete hegseth. what is up, man? reporter: i showed you the last 100 yards which is the main exhibit when come in. there are tons of exhibits. i gravitated toward this one, global war on terror, afghanistan exhibit.
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no item was spared. i will take you around what is on display at the national infantry museum in fort bening in, georgia. this triggered off 9/11 this is a ranger, jumped halo, high altitude, low opening into the hills of afghanistan. you are emersed into this particular exhibit into the streets of iraq. look at amazing creation. this is the unit, 100 101st airborne, i will be hunting for the sons of saddam hussein. owe was killed by a tow missile in 2003 in mosul. looking at streets, what bad guys might have looked like, saw a few bad guys in our time over there. going through the exhibit, struck by the photo, huge photo on the wall of iraqi street. i looked a half second, that was
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samarra, iraq, where i was deployed. i was walked on the streets many times. it was golden dome blown up by al qaeda in iraq, triggered sectarian violence in that country. i was there in the town talking to iraqi leaders. bringing a lot of stuff back. the humanitarian side of what u.s. troops did in iraq and afghanistan. outreach to the people of those countries trying to make connections. technological advances 20 years of war from medical, communications to optics. looking right here at an eod bomb tech remote-controlled mini-tank that would deal with explosives because soldiers didn't have to. around the corner here, now you're in the his of afghanistan. this is a mortar team, light infantry team setting up mortar position. i want to show you detail on this. guys who have been overseas appreciate it. look at the spit bottle right there. you didn't get into a vehicle
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without a dip spit bottle in iraq or afghanistan for years, guys. squad leading the way up the hill. selfishly. where did we live, what did we eat for those many years? take a look, bring it in close here. if you served in iraq and afghanistan you know about ripits not commercially available here in the united states. we drank gallons and gallons in the mini cans. pogs were used as currency. i don't know how many boxes of cereal i ate in the afghanistan. brings a lot back. this is a portion of this, one small fraction of this display, one small fraction of the entire museum. a captured isis flag bringing us close to the present time, captured by rangers. this right here is accurate depiction of what the current army ranger would be outfitted
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with, top to bottom. re-creation, the latest and greatest technology. much of which was developed as we improved the way we fought throughout the wars in iraq and afghanistan. the guys that run this thing have been in the dirt in those places. they know how to do it right. they have recreated every potential detail. this thing was started, national infantry museum started off private donations. they still run off of that. national infantry museum.org. think about giving a donation. it was rated number one free museum in america by "usa today" and it lives up to it, guys. will: i see why. rachel: no question. will: it is translating across the television screen. nice job, really cool stuff to take in down to the detail, the guy to tell us about that detail. i believe you on the dip cup. get back in place.
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pete: do the rest of the exhibit. rachel: i don't mean to be negative, i love the museum, i couldn't help looking at all the equipment, technological equipment on that soldier. how much of that was left behind for the taliban in afghanistan? it just made me mad thinking about it. it is an incredible museum. boy, i have gotten a lot of feedback on my social media saying i had no idea. i have to take my kids there. i have to imagine that after pete showcased this so well for us, that people are already planning those summer trips. will: i think so. looks like a good one for you and your family. get to this. we know, we talked about the hunter biden investigation. by the way the doj is looking into hunter biden potential corruption. we talked talked about it yeste. all the biden family connections. one watching dog group says we need to expand, expand the investigation include the entire
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biden administration and biden family. why? the national legal and policy center has filed a complaint with the doj. it said the following the department of justice fara unit should investigate penn, university of penn veins and the penn biden center to determine whether explicit or implicit conditionings attached to the $67 million in donations and contracts from china. or general understanding, either forgo criticism of china and its policies to espouse certain views of the country. what is being referenced there is, joe biden has a policy center, i believe including a building at the university of pennsylvania. rachel: yeah. will: named after him. and from, i believe, over several year time frame millions and millions of dollars, i'm going to rough the numbers here because i don't have them right here in front of me but i believe $67 million, half of which, roughly half of which was given anonymously came from
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china to fund that joe biden branded area of the university of pennsylvania. rachel: just have to think, common sense, right? why would china, why would people in china care about the joe biden center at the university of pennsylvania? just, it just, it's so be obvious there is some smoke here. that this needs to be investigated. frankly i mentioned this yesterday. there is absolutely no reason. maybe it is happening, let's hope it is, if not, should be happening i hope members of congress are pushing for this. there needs to be a financial audit done by the fed on intermingling of money between this hunter biden and his father because, pete and will, i don't know about you, i would love if my kids paid my bills for me. if half of their, you know, whatever they made came in to my
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account but that is just not a normal relationship between a grown man who is almost 80 years old and his son. this is not normal arrangements. china giving money to upenn doesn't make sense. your child giving you money, paying your bills. here is a quote from hunter biden, this is a text that he sent to his daughter uncovered in the infamous "laptop from hell." i hope you all can do what i did be pay for everything for the entire paneling for 30 years. it is really hard. don't worry, unlike pop, i won't make you give me half your salary. pete, this is not normal. obviously there is smoke here, it needs to be investigated. pete: not normal. usually parents giving money to the kids. other way around. turns the out everyone has a clinton foundation. everyone has a fund on the side
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looks legit at the top. look at my fancy, i didn't know about this, shame on me for not knowing. biden center at university of pennsylvania that has tens of millions of dollars of anonymous donations right during that time when hunter was, when his dad was vice president and hunter was doing all of his influence peddling, where did that money come from, where did it go? did it all go to the right places. at this point it is so blatantly obvious, all the evidence in front of us, basically acknowledged by "the new york times" and "washington post," it feels like we're at the beginning of a wave of some level ever actual of actual criminality and investigations that lead to something real. peter schweizer who wrote the book, "red-handed." he has to be bored while rest much us are catching up to it. here is what a portion he said
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on "brian kilmeade show." >> grand jury meeting since 2018. took a hiatus with covid. they're back in action so to speak. they have been looking at hunter biden and it is pretty clear they will probably recommend an indictment with hunter biden. so the train is leaving the station. the media does not want to be so flat-footed. the second thing going on frankly, brian, the democratic establishment is starting to turn on joe biden himself. they look at the poll numbers. they look at where things are going to happen in november. they do not want this guy thinking that he is going to run in 2024. i think also you're seeing the democrat establishment which translated means, certain elements of the mainstream media are starting to turn on joe biden and that's the reason they're finally pursuing this story. will: let's hope they pursue it to find any potential corruption in what is revealed from this laptop. let's move to this as we sort of talk about things expanding. you know, obviously is in the united states of america the
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first amendment which protects the freedom of speech but there is also well-ingrained in the united states of america, a culture of free speech, tolerant of other viewpoints. we honor you should be free to say what you say even if i disagree with it, that has totally deteriorated the culture of spree speech. we talked about yesterday where you hear certain lawmakers in the united states well, about the vaccine. vaccine misinformation i believe senator klobuchar put together a bill, proposal, we're going to come down on vaccine misinformation. but it wouldn't be more than that right? look where the culture of free speech is going. let me introduce you to gretchen smith. gretchen submit is an air force veteran. she brought herself up from poverty. posted it on linkedin. coming up poverty asking other people to pay for your debt. i'm not responsible for your student death. i grew up in poverty in north carolina. i ate from a garden. i was a name on a community
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angel tree for christmas. bout clothes from yard seas. if i was lucky on rare occasion, ski city, i joined the air force. may have had it to college. i made it happen. okay. that is what she evident posted about her experience. rachel: american dream. will: not expecting other people to pay for your student debt. linkedin censored that post. took it down. >> when i first saw this story, i was telling our producers, i thought something has to be wrong here. first of all what she is saying is not controversial. i agree with it 100% we should not be paying for aoc or anybody else's student loan debt. there are programs for people who are poor to help them get through. i took out loans. i worked my way through. i feel much the way she feels but again, why is she being censored. this is an absolute, this is being censored should tell you how huge this algorithm is, what else it is capturing for
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censorship. i will leave you with this before we go to pete, i was talking with my husband yesterday, rachel, if i had the power to take all of my opponents points of view never made it to social media, they couldn't advertise on social media, they couldn't put their point of view, i would win every election this is what they're doing. this is about power, using friends in big tech to create algorithms and certain categories that they can say is disinformation or hate speech so they can get away with this. pete: gretchen smith posted this code of vets organization. here is what linkedin said to code of vets. the explanation. your post doesn't comply with our policy. your post foes against our policy on hate speech. it has been removed. only you can access it. gretchen smith responded to that. here is what she said the air
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force vet. i was locked out of linkedin for the exact post below. it went viral. maybe that is part of the reason why. this is the second time this platform targeted me. i'm frustrated and disappointed. freedom of speech has been secured by our blood, sweat and lives. this has got to stop, secured by women like her, who signed up to join the military to defend it. maybe that it went viral, it was not positive about erasing student loan debt which is a big priority of the far left. it is absurd. we're leaping to make the connections why this would be, why they would have done this. maybe an algorithm thing. i don't know. you're right. if you want free college, come here to fort benning, join military, get free college paid for later on. we asked linkedin for a statement. they didn't respond, guys. will: of course, of course. real quick to point up to on this, rachel, most likely an algorithm. they don't have the human capacity to sit here to look at
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everybody's post. some human programs that algorithm to say catch this, flag that. just for the record there are thousands of you watching who have experienced something similar, right? this is one example. this is happening all the time, all the time. it is being met with -- i know it happened to me for what it is worth. you don't get a response. nobody comes back to you. there is no linkedin or facebook response. maybe fox news covers it. it causes enough of a stink or someone else covers it. this is happening to thousands of times and that right there is the deterioration of the culture of spree speech. rachel: it only goes one way. it only goes one way. again, think about how this is skewing elections. think about how this is skewing perceptions about what's popular and what's not policywise. this means that every republican is facing this gi-normous uphill battle trying to get their message because as twitter said
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themselves, we have, we have a responsibility to decide whose voices can be heard. this is a very dangerous era. i want to commend, you interviewed my daughter, other people on this network interviewed kids from the chicago thinker. they did more last week to bring attention to the regime of censorship and this collusion between democrats, big tech and the media, make sure they win by simply silencing their opponents. will: all right. turn to few additional headlines. authorities identified three family members killed inside of their georgia gun range during an overnight robbery. thomas hawk was the owner of the shop. his wife, teenage son was also killed. georgia bureau of investigation said 40 weapons were stolen. plus the store surveillance video. suspects are still on the loose. lady gaga dog walker speaks
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out the man accused of shooting him due to quote, clerical error. i am deeply concerned to the events that led to his release i'm confident law enforcement well rectify the error. he also asked the man who shot him turn himself back in. general any from the block got a new rock. announcing second engagement to ben affleck. jennifer lopez posting a video to instagram with initial announcement. lopez and affleck were first engaged 20 years ago. they split up in 2004. they reunited last spring. those are the headlines. are you into that? rachel: i love it they're back together again. i love it we covered it in the headline news. thank you. i think it is wonderful. after all the bad news coming out of hollywood with will smith and the slap i think this is -- will: true love story.
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rachel: not buying it. will: i just said true love, what are you talking about. pete: give it four months. four months. rachel: four amazing months for all of us [laughter]. i'm happy. by the way she looks fabulous. pete: that's a fact. good for them. >> she makes over 50 look amazing. thank you, jennifer lopez for that. woke students shout down a conservative lecturer because they claimed america is not racist. >> you as a black man -- [inaudible]. rachel: oh, my goodness. lieutenant colonel allen west gave that speech. he calls their display, an embarassment. he is next.
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[inaudible]. [shouting. >> no justice, no peace. will: lieutenant colonel allen west joins us now. good morning, colonel. >> good morning. will: tell me a little bit about that environment. what was it like? we see the clip, how were you met with a speech entitled, america is not racist. >> good to be with you, will. i'm part of the speaker group with young americas foundation. i talk to conservative students on these campuses about these many different topics this topic was about race and american exceptionalism. prior to me even getting there, the posters announcing my coming were ripped down. i was on "fox & friends" early on wednesday to talk about that. but you know i've been in combat. i was not concerned but i was concerned about the safety of the students there at the university of buffalo. but the fact is this, y'all just had a segment talking about free
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speech. you know, as i explained to those students, i was born 61 years ago in a blacks only hospital. i grew up in the same inner-city atlanta neighborhood that produced martin luther king, jr. my he will americantry school was across the street from ebenezer baptist church. if you want to talk about race and exceptionalism, a man born 61 years ago in blacks only hospital, rose to the ranks of lieutenant colonel, his dad was in segregated army, became a house of representatives. the kids don't want want to be victims. they don't want to hear that. they are radical and i'm glad we exposed them. will: substance of your speech, lies testament to, i believe america is very exceptional. there is simply the reception of your speech. we talked really early this morning with evita duffy from the university of chicago, at their disinformation conference, somebody for example, from "the atlantic," it is far beyond
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the pale to deal with question that challenges me. here is this, with your speech at university of buffalo. i don't, i don't know how we're supposed to, i don't know how we tolerate this, colonel, and the other is called disinformation? respectful questions, disinformation. this, tolerated clearly because it is proliferating on campus after campus. >> without a doubt the university of buffalo should be ashamed what they allowed to happen. the fact that a 22 year military veteran, former member of the house of representatives, just so happens to be a black man had to be escorted out by police. i remember the days when black students had to be escorted on to college campuses. now because of radical militant black students i have to be escorted out there. is something that has to change. college, university environment is supposed to be free and open sharing of thoughts, perspectives, ideas. the progressive socialist left, fear, inintimidation, coercion,
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ultimately violence. they suppress thoughts, free speech, cannot happen here in the united states of america. will: what a statement. i remember a time when a black man had to be escorted on campus to police. university of buffalo, all members of ub community have right to express views regardless whether others may disagree not to prevent speaker's freedom of expression or interfere with university operations. work to do. lieutenant colonel allen west. thank you so much. >> my pleasure. take care will. yes, sir. will: still ahead president biden's top general said the afghanistan withdrawal may have led putin to invade ukraine. retired marine bomb technician joey jones on the message the white house needs to send to stop other adversaries from making a similar move. ♪
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rachel: back with your headlines. a mother is pleading officials let police arrest her son in san francisco. she was telling the "new york post" she wishes the police would arrest her addict son. mayor lond done breed's policies give her son option to decline treatment and have access to free drug paraphernalia. twitter's new majority shareholder elon musk tweets out a poll if twitter should convert their san francisco headquarters to a homeless shelter, since no one shows up for work any way. he is causing a lot of trouble in twitter. a prom proposal has one pair ready to rock and roll on the dance floor. take a look. see a child or even a dog-
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>> want to go toprom with me? >> yes. [laughter]. rachel: oh, i love the way she said, yes. that heart-warming video is my favorite video of the week, she is being promposal, partners of special education class, throwing a prom for the exceptional students with special needs. we love you in oklahoma for that. handsome young man, what a wonderful thing, showing compassion and love for those with special needs and those are your headlines. pete? pete: very cool, i thought you asked someone to prom. i didn't know about the promposal. joey jones is with me. we'll ask him about it. rachel, thousands of dollars sometimes. thank you, rachel. rachel: got it.
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pete: as war in ukraine rages on a top military advisor that the withdrawal from afghanistan may, may have led to putin's invasion of ukraine. >> biden's precipitous withdrawal from afghanistan, did that play a role in shaping putin's decision to invade ukraine. >> from the intelligence i read it is not clear. i think it is certainly is possible but i also know that putin had aims on ukraine long before the end of the war in afghanistan. pete: it's possible. retired veteran, fox news contributor joey jones. before we got to prom posa ls, defacto acknowledgement the way it ended in afghanistan might have sent signals to other people. >> i said consistently six weeks before the war started i'm reserving judgment, armchair
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quarterbacking the biden administration move, so much information we don't have. i just spent a couple days with some very important members of our intelligence community. most retired that were kind of enlightening me on how they knew this was coming and how accurate they were in telling the administration hey, this was coming. my problem with the biden administration, the decision making they have done, posturing is a big part of war, especially with russia. i think all of this builds up to an era of how this administration handled foreign policy the day biden took office, led to president putin deciding this was a good time to do this. you can't omit the afghanistan withdrawal from that. i've never been a general. i can't tell you what it takes to be a military leader to be 60,000-foot view decisions. as former troop on the ground some things make sense and some things don't. our afghanistan withdrawal did not make sense t left a lot of people vulnerable. essentially made us look like we were in retreat on the world stage. you can't say that didn't have a
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factor in this. how much of a factor, i don't know you and i can figure that out. pete: it looks weak, looks incompetent, and foreign leader thinking about doing something, all the wrong signals to send. speaking about the opposite of weak and incompetent, very come pet tent, the army rangers. final day of the best ranger competition. you and i are covering it together with abby hornacek. america's to be ranger airs on "fox nation." give me your ideas as you watch the competition. >> as a man reason i'm thoroughly impressed. i been around more as retiree from the service. i know they're silent professionals and good infantrymen. i didn't know the way they train, hone in skills. more importantly, what is special about this specific event, every army ranger can do these events.
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takes more, 19-mile run, compresses 72 hours with little sleep, little food. it is about your determination. not about how well you can shoot because you can shoot well you wouldn't be an army ranger the can you do it, climb a wall, jump out of helicopter, drag your buddy, apply life-saving steps to randy a dummy to make sure it stays alive in scenario. do all the things back-to-back, physically stressed mentally stressed, honing in skills, staying focused, seeing 102 rangers do that for two days, it is impressive. sit around moan and complain who our military leaders are. if rangers see at captains, lieutenants, sergeant majors and generals, our military is in good shape. pete: exactly right about that real quick, you've been around a lot of elite athletes. these are on par -- >> 100%. i spoke to nfl teams, college teams, been around those folks,
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nascar drivers. they have everything it takes. they chose to put those skills to use in our military. that is something we should be proud and thankful. pete: proud to spend the day with you. one more day of filming. fox nation, america's top ranger. covering it like a major sideline event, like reporters, as it should be. there was a late lead change last night as they compete on the land course. joey, thanks for being here. >> absolutely. pete: "countdown" to the elections, and will 2022 be the year of moms? panel says school curriculum is top of mind. that is next. shifting gears, a new car hand help you save on taxes. we'll tell you how, as the new york auto shows rolls into the island of manhattan.
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or donate at mercyships.org. new projects means new project managers. you need to hire. i need indeed. indeed you do. when you sponsor a job, you immediately get your shortlist of quality candidates, whose resumes on indeed match your job criteria. visit indeed.com/hire and get started today. ♪. rachel: moms know best. this midterm with elections approaching the mom vote could be this year's deciding factor thanks to key issues like parental rights in schools and the surging price of food and
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gas. "qunnipiac poll" shows 26% said inflation is the most important issue. that blew all the other issues away. let's bring in our panel of the moms, jeanine downey, kenisha king. i will start with dr. downey. after 9/11 we had rise with security moms. is this now the era or coming on of inflation moms? >> i am worried about inflation. thank you for having me on. i'm really happy that biden released some of our oil reserve. we have 45 million barrels of oil in reserves. so by doing a million a day, that is 180 million for six months that will bring down gas prices some. so i think that is fabulous. that is one of the things i'm concerned about. i'm concerned about the supreme court overturning roe vs. wade, what that means for young people in america, young men. i'm slimmed after 233 years,
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there is someone on the supreme court that looks like me. reflects my values. i'm worried about educational issues. i worry about not teaching history. i do strongly believe critical race theory is not a thing unless it is taught in law school. i'm worried about voter suppression. worried about gun violence. worried about supporting the lgbtq brothers. i have a litany of things i'm worried about i'm looking for in terms of this election rachel. rachel: absolutely. six months is not a long time. probably need a more long-term energy solution for america. keisha, what is driving you in this midterm. >> well certainly the inflation is a concern, because you know, we're making sandwiches, and lunches every day. we're driving our kids to school, picking them up from school. making dinner too. when we go to the grocery store, go to the gas station, those are certainly issues and things that we think about every time you
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swipe your card and you look at what you got in your cart for what you're paying for it is getting less and less and so i am really concerned about you know, how high prices are going. seems like everywhere from the grocery store into the gas station. >> yeah. you know when the prices are high, when the inflation is so out of control like it is right now, it means moms when they go to the grocery store can't make the healthiest choices for the kids. they might have to say no to a vacation or sporting activity, because they can't afford gas drive kids around. it is painful for moms to make those choices. go to you, samantha, what is the message you would send, give to a politician running right now in this midterm, if they want to get the mom vote what is the one thing they need to focus on? >> you better stand up and hear what the moms are saying. we want parental control over
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our children. the state, the government, we are not going to have anyone else decides our families run the lives of our children. so that's number one. if they can't hear that, as fast as they go to washington, is as fast we'll rip them out of washington. in new jersey they just passed a law that k-2, they're going to start pushing transgender identity and all this kind of nonsense. if you want to be winnie the pooh have at it. keep it out of my home. not your place to teach my children anything. if i was in a work office environment i mentioned one thing about sex or flirted with someone the wrong way i could sue or be sued in an instant. but yet we want to bring it into our schools, to our youngest and most vulnerable of children? no way. that is my issue. if you can't stand up and fight for parents, for, for us teaching our children and for medical freedom, you're bye,
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bye-bye. that simple. rachel: samantha it is curious coming out of a pandemic where our kids were you know, basically set back by about two years instead of catching them up they're focusing on gender fluidity and crt, so many issues that are not reading, writing basics especially for the very young kids, kindergarten through second grades. it is pretty much outrageous. really appreciate you moms being here. you have great power speculatives. i'm sure our politicians are paying attention. because they know of the mom vote will matter in the upcoming midterm. thanks for joining my. great voices. still ahead, the great one, mark levin joins us live. plus buying a car could save you on taxes. that's right. the car coach lauren fix is live on fox square to tell you how next. e ♪.
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coach lauren fix will explain. good morning. >> good morning. all the cars get 7500-dollar tax credit. some states offer 2,000, and your company might offer more. will: save money. >> not for everyone. make sure you do the insurance, check everything out. want to bring you what is coming up this wednesday at the new york auto show, we open for media days, world car awards i'm one of the jurors, 102 globally. this is the kia ev-6 we drove this in california. 310 miles of range. 34 miles per gallon. 10-year, 100,000-mile warranty because it is kia. price is 52,000 but get as low as 40,000. will: with the the rebates. >> something to consider. show you this. will: adam has it in the car. mustang lech vick. >> mach e, i am a mustang girl.
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my daughter's name is shelby. this is the first edition. this is grabber blue. these all sold out. they're selling these things as fast as they can. really great car. safety is standard. all in the center screen. 310 miles of range. this particular vehicle is $59,000. start at 42. get all-wheel drive. sporty handling. 0 to 60, 5.2 seconds. that is pretty fast. will: it is fast. seat warmer is fantastic. >> world car of the year. will: award winners, hyundai kona. >> suv winner of 2021 for north american car and truck of the year. the budget friendly option. you can get an electric vehicle, all you want. all -- will: i thought this was crassover, not an suv what is the difference? >> a crossover means a car chassis with suv flexibility. suv is more off-roadable. will: right. >> the truth is, this is, lines
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have blurred. nice thing about this vehicle is it is budget friendly, around $38,000. you can load it up how you want. we drove them in kona. we don't forget. great car. this is luxury vehicles. >> this is luxury when you look inside of it. >> this is bmw. saw this during the super bowl. this is the ix. all-wheel drive vehicle. it is really impressive, details, leather materials, nothing but top of the line. enclose you into this spectacular car. the screen is what impresses most of you. 610 morse power -- horsepower. 320 miles of range. $95,000. they start at 83. this is bmw's first electric suv. it is impressive. quality of materials. luxury. zero to 60, 4.6 seconds.
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will: this is the real treat. 2023. >> first time ever on tv. you can't open the door. will: no, i can't. >> you can't, no you can't. i will show you, first car ever with facial recognition. put fingerprint here. looks at you. noses it is you. the doors unlock. inside the most spectacular blue interior leather stitching. will: want me to get in? i don't know how to push all the buttons. >> should have set it up for you. you press your fingertip on the little dot. it unlocks the car. i will do that for you. may not let me do it. will: fingerprint start. >> it flips over with your control. this is not for everybody. everyone doesn't need a new car. this genesis gv-60 is fantastic. i have to show you alternatives. will: scooters. >> electric scooters. i brought you the jettison electric scooters. these are really cool. they start at $399.
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is -- is it still eastern time in georgia? no, it's central time -- will: no, it's eastern time. rachel: well, it's 8:00 for pete over in fort benning. good morning to both of you, by the way. pete, i know they've been bringing you coffee over there. we have to get our own breakfast. you guys give me a hard time -- pete: i've got everything. rachel: you guys give me a hard time about how i get the breakfast order wrong. will hasn't even gotten breakfast yesterday. i did it -- today, i did it yesterday. i'm about to put him on a scooter and send him himself to go get it. it's 8:00, where's our breakfast? will: let me tell you manager about scoot ors -- [laughter] it's impossible to look cool, but they're fun. you just don't want to see your buddies. will: i will take you down the street. i knew you -- i could feel this
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coming. it's sunday, so place open a little bit later. rachel: yeah. by the way, that that's -- that scooter is what they want us all to be on. pete: you and your buddy adam klotz looked very cute. [laughter] very, very cute. and breakfast, i leave for one weekend, and the breakfast order gets messed up. when rachel orders, i'm leaning over her phone like, come oranges come on, come on. she gets it right eventually. rachel, you were also not wrong, pretty close. we are eastern time, but we're right on the alabama worlder, so when you cross over -- yesterday i drove over -- drove over a bridge, and i was in central time. so very, very close here at fort benning. you showed the shot of the the the intan friday -- infantry squad where all 7,000 lost in the gulf war were lost.
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in just about 10 minutes we're going to have a full-on tour of the museum. and i'll just mention as we talk so that none of us complain, army rangers are out there on day three doing -- i don't know what they're doing, obstacle course, they're about to go jump in victory pond if to get cold -- will: it was super cold on that a scooter. [laughter] rachel: i'm going to tell you, pete, you look so happy out there. i see beautiful jen there as well. i'm just telling you, you have to come home. you can't stay in fort benning, georgia. you have to come back to the couch -- pete: looks a little bit like beautiful jen, but she is beautiful abby hornacek -- rachel: oh, i thought that was jen. [laughter] will: i did pick up that you were in alabama. [laughter] we're just going to move on from that. rachel: you know, i saw that beautiful long blond hair --
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pete: i get it, i get it. they look similar. i'm out here with abby hornacek and joey jones who are out on the course. not jen -- rachel: well, now you better get home. will: he is coming home, and we're all going back there in two weeks, i think, for talladega. we'll all be back right down there in two weeks. for now though, one of our big stories of the morning. u.k. prime minister boris if jobson. -- -- johnson making a secret trip to ukraine. alexis mcadams is in to poland with more. >> reporter: good morning. this all comes as attacks continue in ukraine. here in poland we saw intensive nato training exercises between the united states army which they have thousands of u.s. soldiers stationed here in poland as well, and this all comes as ukraine continues to ask for more weapons from nato
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allies. u.k. prime minister boris johnson, you can see the cameras rolling as he met with ukrainian president volodymyr zelenskyy, the prime minister pledging new military assistance including 120 armored vehicles and also new anti-ship missile systems. they're also guaranteeing financial aid as russian attacks continue. the u.k. has been tough on putting more sanctions into place against putin. listen. >> we are going to ratchet up the economic pressure, and we will continue to intensify week by week the sanctions on russia. >> reporter: and the sanctions have been going on here for weeks. the meeting does, rather, come as hundreds of innocent ukrainians have been killed. this recent russian rocket attack that killed more than 50 people at that strain station, the station -- train station, the station was packed with
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families and kids as well. horrendous images still coming out of ukraine. russian forces are regrouping for a new eastern offensive on the donbas region after failing to capture kyiv. "the washington post" this morning is saying there is now a new general who's overseeing the russian invasion, a senior u.s. official confirming that general now in charge also was in charge of the commanding the forces in syria. now, this as ukraine, again, tells the world they need more weapons. u.s. congressman mc mccaul talked to aishah hasnie in -- listen. >> the ukrainians have out-surpassed everyone's imagination. we were told four days and this would be over, and now we're going into the second month of this conflict, and they're in a lot of respects winning. what they need are weapons. >> reporter: the russian forces have moved out of areas near chernobyl, the troops were exposed there to high amounts of
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radiation because the workers at that plant saw images and saw out of the window that station as putin's troops were allegedly digging up trenches near the iley radioactive red forest. that is one of the big concerns this morning, talking about those troops being exposed to radiation and what concerns could happen from that. here in poland we did see nato troops continuing they are training, hay tell us they invited the media there if all over the world so moscow could closely watch. and the russian statement media yesterday was just saying this was a provocative situation, they weren't happy about it. it is a yearly exercise that does come as a pivotal time as ukrainian troops fight back very strongly. back to you. pete: alexis, thank you very much for that update. appreciate it. great to see a leader leading prosecute front in boris johnson the streets of kyiv. real quick, as we transition to the next topic, rachel, you
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mentioned my wife, jen, which made me think of a story that relates to the next story. jen and i happened to be in the rose garden when amy coney barrett was confirmed, and remember that so-called superspreader event? we were there for that. and there was a event that happened recently where a number of people mt. white house and elsewhere contracted covid from nancy pelosi. so the protocols and the media hysteria around that, you would think, would be peggedded to to match. but, of course, the double standard clear as day, and we've got yet more evidence of that. we're going to play a clip real quick of friday, eventually, of peter doocy in an exe change with jen psaki where she says everyone was wearing a mask, the rp was wearing a mask -- the vp was wearing a mask inside. now we have video that shows that's not the case. we can show the screen grab of vice president harris inside the
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oval office which is confirmation that while she was meeting with the president of the united states -- i don't know if we have that or not, could you put it up? while she was meeting with the president of the united states, there she was with other leaders definitely not wearing a mask inside the oval office. the question is when jen psaki answered this question on friday with peter doocy, there's kamala harris right there, there's joe biden, did she know that maxes weren't being worn inside? lot of questions. here's peter doocy. >> reporter: is there a carve in cdc regulations for covid for the vice president? if. >> tell me more, peter. i'm sure this is going somewhere. >> reporter: the cdc says for people exposed to covid today on their covid-19 vaccinations do not go to places where you are unable to wear a well-fitting mask, so why is she at the white house giving the new supreme court justice a big hug with no mask. >> you mean outside?
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>> reporter: yeah. >> she was outside -- >> reporter: does the cdc say people in close contact can give hugs outside? >> we know outside you can benefit significantly, that's why we had the event outside. the vice president had been wearing a mask inside when there was a private greet. they were all wearing -- >> reporter: -- wearing a mask yesterday? >> she was playing an important role in confirming or overseeing the confirmation of of the first black woman of the supreme court. >> reporter: so this is not a case of rules for thee but not for vp? >> in fact, the vice president wore a mask inside today when she was with the president and with her staff, other people. she was outside at the event, she was socially distanced for 99.9% of the event today, and she had an emotional moment, which is understandable. will: you can actually hear him talking, trying to get underneath her on that ice.
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i mean, she was a little flustered. she always finds her way to spin the answer. it was false, clearly. that was not true, what she had to say, as pete said, you saw the screen grab of kamala harris there in the oval office unmasked. and so, to me, the big takeaway -- there's several. for me,s it is the blatancy and obviousness with which the lies come forward and just do not think those lies -- i don't think anybody does at this poinr confinedded to simply being about covid. rachel: i mean, look, she said it right there in her statement, she said it was an emotional moment. let me translate that into political speak. the translation is we -- kamala harris wanted an emotional photoshop moment -- photo op moment to capture this first african-american as supreme court justice and she is the first african-american vice president, or half, and so they
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wanted this moment. she didn't want to wear an obedience mask for that moment because she wanted to be able to show her emotion because this is, like, the first and only thing that joe biden has delivered on in the administration, so they had to capture that moment. and so there's an exception for that. the problem is there's no exception for working class people who have actually lost their jobs because of their covid mandates. i interviewed an i -- amazing woman morning named virginia. she's a waitress. she worked for 17 year years at yankee stadium. and here many new york city she was fire pd, but there's an exception for other famous rich people, athletes and performers, and she's really upset and feels very angry that working class people like her were not given that exception. take a look. >> what mayor adams has done is show us that the workers and employees don't matter, that because we're not millionaires,
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we have no value, no worth and mostly that we are dispensable. i'm fighting for every city worker anywhere in this country who's hang on by a thread, you know? it's my mission to help somehow to snap if all these draconian mandates because enough is enough. were tired, we are starving, and we just want to live our lives in freedom and peace. pete: good for her. good for her. you mentioned the emotional side of it, rachel? rachel: yeah in. pete: the other side is jen psaki saying she was of playing an important role. it's the important role caveat that -- and it's workers at yankee stadium who are delivering drinks, they're not so important. remember yesterday we talked about the haves and the have nots? that's exactly -- what a stark, arrogant example of that. rachel: can i just say one thing? if at the end of the interview,
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she said power to the people, and i said, amen to that. she's not just standing up for herself, she's standing up for thousands of people who had legitimate reasons to not take that vaccine. they are americans, they have that right, and she was let go and fired, and she said people are starving. on top of being fired, you have the inflation. it's just too much. pete: exactly right. well, guys, as we've been doing all morning, we're continuing to get an inside look at the national infantry museum and soldier center funded in large part by donations. take a look at a tour we got here at fort benning at the national infantry museum just a couple days ago. watch. here we are at fort benning, georgia, home of the infantry. i i was here in 2003 for my officer basic courses. it's great to be back. and as we say in the infantry, follow me. >> you're now sitting in america's number one free museum, history museum, according to usa "usa today."
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our goal is to honor and educate. the exhibit here is called the last 100 yards. so it covereds 18 battles in our nation's history from the revolutionary war to the war on terror where it showcases how 18, 19 and 20-year-old infantrymen went against impossible odds and still made it happen at various times in our country. follow me. the battle of yorktown, last major engagement between the british arm and the american continental army during the american revolution. the result of that battle leads to the strengther of -- surrender of the british. who do we have to a hank for that? if american infan the trymen. we have never suffered as many casualty as we did at antitam. 23,000 soldiers, one day of fighting. during the first world war,
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chemical weapons, machine guns, tanks, use of aircraft, you go on and on and on, it still affects training. pete: now on korea. >> captain millette gives the command, follow me, let's go. he made a bold move -- pete: i keep hearing that word, bold. >> this was an operation in operation iraqi freedom. right when the ied threat was spiking in iraq, they covered and completely rebuilt by general dynamickings and donated it to us. the gallery that talks about the eight battles. what's unique about this is we put soil from all eight of those battles embedded in a soil ceremony. so you have today's generation of warriors walking on the soil of the previous battles.
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pete: that's really special. >> this is our latest monument, the global war on terror this 2017. every soldier, sailor, airman, a a ma -- marine, who's passed away -- pete: a couple names i might recognize. i was in afghanistan in 2011-2012, and this one right here, george olivera rah, one of my specialists. i'll never forget when he was killed by enemy fire. october of -- and another maim i see up here is -- [inaudible] navy seal, killed -- it's amazing. >> behind each one of those names is a story. it means a lot. we graduate 17,000 soldiers a year. so it puts it all in perspective
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for them. i think everybody realizes once. they come here, it's not the service and sacrifice of just the past, it's the sacrifice for the future. pete: i want to thank the general and the command sergeant major for showing us around. they've been great hosts here at national infantry museum. dud you hear that, the soil from all eight of those battlefields was spread across that green so that when new infantry recruits graduate, they're walking the ground of their predecessors in the infantry connecting them to the past of the army founded in 1775. that's how you maintain an ethos and and a love of country, is by taking the current generation and connecting them to what men and women did before them. they do a great job here. i mentioned it b i'm going to mention it again, you can donate at national infantry i museum.org or come visit. it's just an hour south of
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atlanta. it's free. it's been named the number one best history museum in america, and i think -- i know you will not be disappointed. will: haven't been disappointed watching it this morning on television. thank you so much for bringing that to us. really cool. pete: you got it. will: special. a massive bust in california including 20 pounds of deadly ial, enough to kill 4 million people. a warning if the orange county district attorney about how dangerously easies it is to get. that's next. and still ahead, the great one, mark levin takes on the border crisis and the latest on hunter biden's rap poppe. -- laptop. ♪ if. ♪ ♪
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when it comes to tech, ♪ everyone wants the next best thing. now with xfi complete from xfinity, you can get updated wifi technology with the new tech upgrade program. plus, protection from cyber threats at home and now on the go. so staying up to date is easier than ever. you look great by the way. right? unbeatable internet. made to do anything so you can do anything. only xfinity will upgrade your tech after 3 years for a more reliable connection. get that and more with xfi complete. upgrade today. rachel: orange county, california, reporting that that the largest -- reporting the largest drug bust in 16 years with more than 1,000 pounds of
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drugs seized from a minivan belonging to two suspects including nearly 190 pounds of cocaine and 20 pounds of fentanyl. so our next guest warns, quote, fentanyl is cheap, it's easy to get, and it is killing our children, our coworkers and tens of thousands of innocent americans who have to die -- who don't have to die. orange county district attorney todd spritzer joins us now. todd, it's so great having you on today -- >> thank you, rachel. rachel: explain to people this bust. how many people can be killed by just this seizure? it's really mind-blowing. >> it really is. i mean, we have the traditional drugs of cocaine and methamphetamine which, you know, we're used to interceding on the street level. but fentanyl is now the scourge of all drugs in america today. in fact, rachel, 40% of counterfeit drugs contain fentanyl. the amount of fentanyl that can
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kill a person is the amount of fentanyl you can just put on the edge of abe lincoln's nose on a penny. so it can wipe out half of new york city. 20 pounds that we recovered can kill half of new york city, half of los angeles and orange county, california, my county, one and a half times. it's. cheap, it's manufactured in china,st it's imported and then processed in mexico, and it's brought into the united states unlawfully, and then it's distributed throughout the united states. rachel: 100,000 people have been killed by it, and you'd think if this was covid, you know, we'd have all kinds of media coverage, and we're struggling to get information out about it. it's enough to kill, by the way, everyone in the states of north dakota, south dakota, alaska, delaware, and wyoming combined. now, coming up in may we're going to see title 42 taken away which would, i think, cause an,
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motion or at least border patrol is telling us to be prepared. are you prepared for even more drugs to come through orange county? >> well, you talk about the deaths, and one of the things, you know, i think it's very, very important for the american people to understand something. that, you know, because these are illicit drugs that people are taking, street drugs, a lot of times there's not a a lot of attention because people have the attitude, well, you know what? this person's taking xanax, oh, well, it had fentanyl, they're dead, they shouldn't have been talking -- taking it in the first place. these are poisonings. the drug dealers are intendly poisoning people. so in orange county i am now going to charge these drug dealers if they have a prior conviction for selling fentanyl, i'm going to prosecute them for murder. iowa ray right. really quick -- >> the federal government, if
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you're distributing drugs and it contains fentanyl, the federal government can get a mandatory minimum of 20 years many prison for killing somebody. so we are, we are cracking down on these drug dealers hard. ray a ray can you explain, very quickly, because i don't have a lot of time, exactly why the drug dealers are putting pental into their drugs, you know, and hurting and killing their customers? >> i mean, any other person who's in business who manufactures a commodity would never want the enuser to be, you know, displaced, right? it makes no sense. these people don't care. it's bad, it's cheap, but because they can get these smaller quantities into the united states to create -- and it's so powerful, they're willing to kill the end user if it means they can exploit it and make money. it's simple economics for drug dealers. rachel: yeah. and it's causing so much sadness and so much pain for so many
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families around the country. thank you so much for joining us this morning. >> thank you so much. rachel: keep up the good work. a new report warns that china is building up its nuclear arsenal. former navy seal latham sadler says this is par for the course, and he joins us next. plus, the great one, mark levin, is live next. can't miss that. ♪ pments. they're promises. promises of all shapes and sizes. each, with a time and a place they've been promised to be. a promise is everything to old dominion, because it means everything to you.
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>> biden is willfully opening the floodgates to a tidal wave of illegal immigration the likes of which the world has never seen before, no country, no country has this ever happened to. he's deliberately inciting a mob of millions and millions of foreign nationals to illegally infiltrate america's word --
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borders, violate our laws, trample our sovereignty and settle in our country. will: former president donald trump ripping into his successor's handling of the board crisis as dhs braces for 18 thousand migrants a day when -- 18,000 migrants a day went the biden administration ends title 42 next month. pete: mark levin is the host of "life, liberty and levin," and he joins us now. mark, thanks so much. we always love having you. want to get your -- can we've been talking the all morning, rachel, willing and i, about the idea that that title 42, a band-aid to begin with, right? this administration has used it as an excuse to kind of enforce the border, but it's in replacement of an actual board policy. your reaction to how the biden administration is approaching this issue at this point. >> well, you know, there's a clause in the constitution, article ii, clause five, it's called the take care clause. it's been litigated in the
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supreme court since marbury v. madison, it's been litigated -- it is definitive, the president is to, quote, take care that the laws be faithfully executed, unquote. a president doesn't have a choice about what laws to enforce whether he likes the laws only. he's the executive, he's to execute. he doesn't write laws. his administration is the most radical administration in american history. it is rewriting our immigration laws, it is ignoring or effectively suspending existing immigration laws. these are impeach if bl offenses. i don't immediate to create impeachable -- need to create impeachable offenses, i don't need to say, ooh, he used this word rather than that word. this administration is proudly destroying american sovereignty. when you're talking about 18,000 people a day, you multiply that by 30, you're talking about half a million people every month or so. that's the size of a substantial
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city. where are these people going? where are they going to eat? are they going to get jobs? are they going to be on the well pear if rolls in are they going -- welfare rolls in are they going to be using our public services? are hay going to get health care in they get free education as a matter of supreme court precedent, and they get free health care initially as a matter of supreme court precedent. what else are they going to get? how many of these people a hate us in how many of these people are criminals? how many of these people are bringing communicable diseases in how many of them are drug traffickers? how many of them are sex traffickers? biden doesn't care. my attitude about this is, this is the greatest crisis facing the united states of america today. the consequences of this for generations to come, it's unimaginable what's going to happen to this country of. you cannot is -- have a country, a civil society, a unified culture when your border is wide open. there's not another country on the face of the earth that's
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doing what we are doing, and this is intentional. this is the defunding of i.c.e. and the defunding of the border patrol through the back door. do they get paid? yes. but they don't get paid to do their jobs. they're literally prohibited from from doing hair jobs. those are the orders coming down from on high. so what's going on here? what's going on here is this is part of the american marxist attitude about america, white dominant society, it needs to be changed. people coming into this country from central and south america are actually the indigenous if peoples. people coming from overseas if they can change the white dominant if society, more the better. why do i say this? because it's the same administration pushing critical race theory and all the other agenda items on the radical left. and i would note but for a few democrats on the border, the democrat party is either celebrating this or utterly silent about it. what has schumer said about it? nothing. what has pelosi said about it?
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nothing. and the media? other than fox, maybe a few others, how many media platforms have reporters staked out there to watch what's going on and what's going to go on? the sex trafficking. whatever happened to the cages? did they go away? no, there's more than ever before. the rapes that are taking place, all that's going on, the mayhem, the anarchy, the criminality that's taking place there. it's as if it's not going on, it's as if it's hunter biden's laptop. so this is a very, very serious problem. president trump, in my lifetime, was the only president really to get this under control. he followed the law, he followed the court orders, he moved money legally around to build the wall. the walls were almost done. but no country can survive what joe biden's doing to this country. will: you know, mark, i'm so fascinated by the motivation which you begin talking about there, the motivation behind all of this. and i think you're absolutely right, it's a denial of sovereignty. it is not disconnected from critical race theory. it's a denial of our past and
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our border. it's a denial of nationalism, of america, of the united states of the united states -- the idea of the united states of america. so, mark, if you play that forward and spin that off into the i ultimate goal, what does our future look like? >> this is an effort to destroy the traditions and customs and institutions of the united states one way or another. when they talk about packing the supreme court, when they're violating separation of powers, when they want to nationalize the voting system with the borders wide open, when they want to move all the power to washington and out of the private sector with the big deal plan or whatever it's called, when they nominate and now confirm the most radical justice in american history and they do it in 20 hours, there's not even a vacancy yet on the supreme court if you think about it, when you rook at the executive -- look at the executive orders that joe biden has signed, when you look at how he talks about the american
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people, we are racist, we are homophobic, does he understand this is the greatest country on the face of the earth no thanks to him and no thanks to the people who are destroying it? you look at the united states military, the social experimentation and engineering that's going on with the greatest fighting force on the face of the earth. every aspect, every institution of this culture is under attack from the classroom, the military, law enforcement, our finances, our currency with inflation, people on pensions, other hard working people who live paycheck to paycheck. do the democrats and do joe biden really seem sympathetic to the average guy in this country? not in the least are. they're full of propaganda, but they want to control the middle class because controlling the middle class controls the country. so that's what's going on. this is part of the bigger thing, i wrote about it in "american marxism." it's part of a bigger movement and, of course, when you're attacking the very founding of the nation, when you're pulling
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down monuments of abe amylin con and ulysses s. grant and others, when you're effectively book burning and replacing books with all kinds of perversion and so forth in our public schools, when you push god out of the public square and pull transgenderrism into the public square -- i'm just being honest -- you're destroying the culture. and when you have a law that's passed this florida that has as its purpose to protect little babies from sexuality and all kinds of personal sexual preferences being imposed upon them and that's considered radical and right wing and so forth, something terrible has gone wrong. and let me tell you manager, the saboteurs are not the american people, her the self-appointed elitists in this country, the politicians, the think tanks, the media, the self-appoint elitists. the vast majority of the american people aren't buying any of this stuff. rachel: it's a revolution, mark.
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it definitely is a revolution whether people want to acknowledge it or not. i want to move to another subject because it is something that's finally coming out, and that is acknowledgment by the main strime -- mainstream media that the laptop from hell is real, and we have watchdog groups saying, hey, we also need to look at u-penn which has the biden center and there were some anonymous donations from china, we need to look at that. but, you know, where is the fbi? where is the forensic audit on the biden family and the fact9 that we now know through those e-mails, mark, that hunter biden was paying his father's bills? none of us here have kids who pay our bills. is this -- there's obviously smoke here. why is it taking so long for even these kinds of financial audits to happen? >> because joe biden's a democrat. now, the bottom line is this: you look at the laptop from hell helping hunter biden, you look at that laptop, there are
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multiple mentions of joe biden, there's multiple mentions of the commingling of finances, there's multiple mentions of him getting a cut of the action. we have an eyewitness to that effect, bobulinski, who is a serious person and a serious witness. we have him complaining to his daughter about 50% of his salary is basically going to his father, that he paid for some things for his father. meanwhile, we have democrats investigating donald trump, the des moines a. in manhattan, the attorney general -- d.a. in manhattan who should be disbarred, in my view. we have this rogue january 6th committee, they proudly keep announcing they've applied more resources than at any time in american history to chasing down misdemeanors, people who were trespassing and parading on government property. that's like chasing down people who are jaywalking. do you really need the entirety of the fbi to go after these
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people? of course not. this is the narrative, this is the push, it is the same fbi that tried to take out president trump. that thing needs to be fumigated. when i was chief of taffe to attorney general meese, we had the greatest pride in that institution. i have no reliance whatsoever in that institution anymore. so it's the corruption of the media, it's the corruption of washington, and it's the corruption of the democrat party that was behind the russia collusion, fake disaster. rachel: is joe biden compromised, mark? >> well, i think he is. i alsoty he's corrupt. i also think he's corrupt. you're looking at at least 13.5 million that went to the biden family, and if you look at out, there's probably much more than that, from foreign governments, from front groups from -- it's absolutely shocking. this washington post piece last week was a joke. today basically pulled the information from the if grassley-johnson report and
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pulled the information from the laptop that was already publicly available through "the new york post" and other entities, and in the fifth paragraph they said there's no evidence linking joe biden to any of it. now, do you think donald trump would get a pass like that? of course not. "60 minutes" washington times, msnbc, cnn, they should be barking at the top of their lungs. i've been calling for a special counsel now for a long time, and the reason's quite simple. meritless garland is incapable of conducting an investigation into this. this is why the special counsel exists in the first place. they had no, no basis whatsoever for appointing a special counsel against trump. trump hadn't done anything, and he wasn't really accused of doing anything when you look at the accusation ises. here i don't know how you miss it. it's in the newspapers -- at least some of them -- it's on our network, it's in other places, it's on the laptop. finish the incuriosity is really
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quite remarkable, and merrick garland is going to dig in and, of course, the dem account accurates have not -- democrats have not held a single hearing, not one, into hunter biden's lap tom even "the washington post" admits 4.8 million went to the biden family. 4.8 million from a communist chinese front company went to the biden family, and there was a great piece in the federalist the other day by a gentleman, and he said biden hasn't released his tax returns. he's relesioned his individual tax -- released his individual tax the return, but the vast majority of the money biden had went to two s corpses that have -- corporations that have not released their a taxes. $13 million he calculates went into these companies, and not a single concern about releasing those tacks. you know, donald trump came into office a multibillionaire, and they're obsessed with his tax returns even now.
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we have people who come into office and become multibillionaires or leave office and become multibillionaires and nobody cares about their taxes. pete: absolutely, mark, it is stunning. by the way, that first answer on immigration is probably the best articulation, summary of what we're up against. you've been so generous with your time this morning. give us a preview of what's coming up on "life, liberty and levin" tonight. >> well, speaking of immigration, we give steven miller a good half of the program. he really is fantastic. and david mammoth, who was raised by, effectively, communists. he's one of the greatest playwrights in american history. my second part of of the interview, he just unleashes. i think the american people will enjoy it very much. will: we'll be watching. pete: mark, thanks very much. >> thanks for everything you guys do. rachel: thanks, mark. more big guests coming up on "fox & friends" weekend.
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[inaudible conversations] >> i thought you retired. i said, no, honey, i refired. >> she's wrapping up her own segment. [laughter] >> bye! rachel: kathie lee gifford will join us live to preview her new special airing tonight on the fox news channel. plus, american farmers are feeling the squeeze from inflation as the cost of meat prices spike and consumers and growers are feeling the pinch. ♪ ♪ when tired, achy feet make your whole body want to stop, it's dr. scholl's time. our insoles are designed with unique massaging gel waves, for all-day comfort and energy.
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this phone? more concert tickets. and not just for my shows. switch to xfinity mobile for half the price of verizon. that's a savings of over $500 a year. switch today. will: american farmers feeling the pain as inflation and droughts and wheat prices to surge more than 30% last month, and unfortunately for u.s. farmers, higher wheat prices does not necessarily mean bigger profit. here to explain, vance and keith emke. we know about inflation. higher prices don't seem to be helping. what's going on? >> well, you know, over the past couple of years wheat prices have literally doubled. we've gone from $5 a bushel up to $10 and then 12 and back to $10 a bushel.
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but never in my life have i seen commodity prices capitalized into our inputs and land as rapidly as they are right now. we still enjoy a pretty significant profit margin, but these inputs are rapidly come pressing that. mission we've ott got a very serious drought going on out here in the high plains, and so even if wheat went to $20 a bushel, there's a lot of farmers out here who are going to grow nothing, 20 times 0 is 0, and those guys are up a creek. >> 84 years ago today, 1938, was the beginning of a three-day dust storm that didn't let up, and it lasted for seven years. it's a whole drought. >> dodge city. >> dodge city, kansas, out of those records today. it was on the weather report. will: so you're telling me while we're dealing with inflation and potential supply issues because of a global market of wheat,
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because of a drought, we can't expect much relief even here in america. >> yeah. and some of those prices, you know, it is not only because of ukraine, it's this drought driving this as well. >> well, the two big inputs -- influences on the wheat market are the drought that we've got going here in the united states. 77% of the winter wheat in the united states is in some state of drought. the other big factor, of course, is the ukraine-russian situation over there, and those two countries are very influential on supplying global wheat exports. and i think russia is selling, they're still exporting wheat, but ukraine is dead in the water. will: louise, i hear you bring up -- at least my history's decent, the dust bowl. you're talking about something that goes back 80 years ago, but in the time that you two have been farming, how does this
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moment compare? what is this moment like to be a wheat farmer? [laugher] >> well, it's challenging. i will say we have had dust before, and actually worse than right now. '77 -- >> yeah. february 23rd -- >> we were going to a funeral, and we came home, we couldn't see our way home -- >> couldn't see in front of the car. >> uh-huh x. that was, our son is your age, and he was about 4 years old. >> so anyway, these droughts are part of the landscape. during the '30s down in garden city we had seven years back to back of 10.2 inches of annual precip which is desert. the drought in the '50s was shorter but a lot sharper, it lasted three or four years. but agriculture was totally sidelined during those years. we haven't seen anything like that at all. but whatever's in the past is also in our future. >> yeah. will: yeah.
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and then there's the input that you started with in this conversation. beyond the drought, there's the supply chain, the input, the inflation all the way through the chain of farming and our market because what you're talking about here makes its way to everybody's dinner table, essentially, at some point. it's going to make its way to all of our pocketbooks. vance and louise, great to talk to you this morning. thanks for bringing us the view straight from the farm. >> and happy palm sunday. will: and good job on the math, nailing down my if age so quickly -- >> texas suffered in that drought too, so we know where you're coming from. will: i appreciate you guys. my mom's from from kansas, by the way. >> oh, wow! will: take car good to talk to you this morning. >> thank you. will: the new york city vaccine mandate is dropped but only for entertainers and athletes. one councilman's plan to rehire the real essential workers, that's coming up. ♪
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♪ ♪ the stars and stripes and the eagle flies. ♪ it's a big old land. ♪ with countless dreams. ♪ happiness ain't out of reach. >> fourth hour of "fox & friends," 9:00 on the east coast. the final hour of "fox & friends." breakfast has arrived. i'm trying to make sure it's out of my teeth. rachel: me too. >> rachel and i are in new york
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city and pete hegseth is in fort penning, georgia, at the national infantry museum. good morning. rachel: good morning, pete. pete: good morning, guys. i miss you guys. i'll see you next weekend. in a couple weekends we'll be in talladega, not far from here in alabama. this morning as you noted, rachel, and it's true, i'm in my infantry heaven here at the national infantry museum. folks need to come visit it. we've had a chance to get a behind the scenes look and what an amazing insight into the history of the infantry, and he specific to my generation, the global war on terrorism, iraq and afghanistan, all that encompasses. i want to take you around a little bit of that exhibit. we know where it started, on 9/11. and they've got amazing stories of that in here too, to connect it to the why of this exhibit and then it brings you quickly into afghanistan and iraq. first, an iraqi street effectively, all the way up to the vantage point often -- too
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often the enemy had on those streets. the weapon of war they employed oftentimes, the ied. this is an oil jug that would have been hidden behind trash. often it was targeting vehicles like this one. this was part of the killing of kudai hussein, a six hour fight, beautifully recreated, a successful mission. they have damaged light machine guns over here, as well as -- this ied over here with the icom radios, they would of use radios to explode penetrators. a lot of the ieds came from iran and iranian backed militia. this is a wide shot of a city street. it took me a half second to recognize it, the streets of s samara where i served for many
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months. the street looked instantly familiar, the sights and sounds coming back to me. they have recreations of the fighting vehicles which evolved and became more lethal and more he protective of troops. every soldier encountered children and often took the time to interact with the recognition they saw their own kids there in that case. we've got the advances in technology from medicine to communications to optics and scopes. we became much more effective at fighting these wars over time and it displays that transition. if you can get this here, this is the elevation at fort bening, this is the elevation in baghdad. up there is the highest points of afghanistan. you really dealt with a different type of terrain when fighting in afghanistan and our next exhibit really shows had that. shows a mortar team, offloaded by a chinook. and the details, all the way down to the spit bottle of the
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chew. they've really spared no detail in trying to get it accurate with what it was like on the front lines. to include living conditions, guys. and the types of things we fueled ourselves with while live. living in tin cans and plywood boxes. gallons and gallons of ripits kept us fueled and going. that was breakfast, lunch and dinner often times in the field with milk that could stay good for three months in hot weather. you can imagine how yummy that milk was. it kept you going. they do such a great job. it was not tasty but it was liquid and it did get into the cereal. that unit right there was a unit i served with in iraq and there's a lot of 101st air airborne in here which i selfishly like to point out. last thing, real quick. all the way up to the modern time, an isis flag captured in syria by army rangers, you've got automatic weapons. the last thing i'll show you is
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the completely accurate depiction of a modern army ranger. this is the home of the rangers, rangers lead the way, 75th ranger battalion, latest and greatest. we'll see how we fought wars, how we learned from those wars and how even today we're improving on it and the museum does an amazing job. i would encourage people, again, come visit. just an hour south of atlanta. you can donate, nationalinfantrymuseum.org. i'm sad i have to come back to new york, i would rather stay in fort bening, not in the field. they're still going right now, still haven't slept, very limited rations and i can't wait to see them as i leave the show today and continue to cover the best ranger competition. will: now we know where your breakfast habits started. rachel: is it like an energy drink? pete: maybe it was some contractor got a big contract and it's like -- it's like red
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bull. they came in mini cans so you drank a little bit. you had to drink six of them. the taste of ripit was like bold. you had one, you protected it. will: like prison cigarettes, you traded them as currency. pete: exactly. will: thanks tore the behind the scenes look, hopefully everybody watching can get a front row seat to that museum at some point. we'll see you in a moment, pete. rachel: amazing stuff. will: let's bring in luted liet governor of the state of texas. good morning and welcome to "fox & friends." >> good to be with you. i hope here's a number i can give all of you that will be repeated over and over and over again as a headline. and that is we are facing a situation on the border by the end of the first term of joe biden nearly 20% of all americans will be here
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illegally. will: wow. >> where do i get that number? these are numbers we created in texas but mit did a study before biden became president that we had 30 million people illegally here in texas. we've been apprehended 400,000 a year for the last 20 years. we get one out of three. over four years, that's 24 million people at a minimum. in this first term of biden, last year we apprehended over 2 million. if we get one out of three. that's six that came in. we're projecting 2 and-a-half million this year. that means 7 and-a-half million will come in if we apprehend one out of three. in joe biden's first term, in his first term, we'll have more people come into america illegally than we have in the entire state of texas. there are 29 million people in texas. joe biden will let in 30 million people in his first term based on who we apprehend, one out of three. you add the 30 million in four years to the other 30 million,
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that's 60 million people here illegally in the united states. that's 20% of the population. the democrats and the left warrant to take over the done -- want to take over the country. you can take over the country when you allow in a four year period under joe biden 30 million people in here, more people than live in texas, in four years because the next thing, they'll want to give them a green card. they can't work without a social security number. they'll want to give them citizenship and the right to vote and you lost your country. wake up, america. rachel: wow. because we just had mark levine in, going over the why. he said something similar to what you're saying and you're talking about political ramifications. he was too. he also talked about the cull -- cultural ramifications. >> absolutely. rachel: i want to talk to you about the decision by the governor of texas to have busses and say, look, we're going to -- if the federal government won't do this, we're going to put people on busses here in texas and we're going to take the border issues back to d.c. we're going to drop them off on the steps of the capitol.
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i'll be honest with you, lieutenant governor, when i heard that, i said this is a gimmick. and will said sometimes gimmicks bring attention to problems. so what say you? >> well, i don't think it's a gimmick. i think this is -- you're seeing the first step of a constitutional showdown between the governor and the legislature and the state of texas and the federal government. because jen psaki, how dare her say in the press conference the other day, well, this is a publicity stunt, we're in charge of enforcement, you have no power. let me tell you what our authority and power is. we have an oath to defend the constitution of texas and the united states of america and to protect the lives and welfare of our citizens. and when the federal government comes in and interferes with our ability to keep our oath, then it's time that we have a showdown. i also you agree with ken paxton's comments, that with a new supreme court maybe they'll revisit the supreme court decision on the arizona law where there's was 5-3 vote that states can't set their own
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policy for immigration. what happens when you have a federal government that does not enforce the law? our founders never envisioned with when they said the federal government protected our borders, they never envisioned a president who would allow our country to be invaded. texas has to stand up as does arizona, as does new mexico, as does california, as does every state in the country. otherwise, you lose your done troy the left. -- country to the left. 20% of america by the end of the biden term will be here he'll legally with the past and the present. we can't allow our country to be taken over by people who don't share our values and principles and don't know our history and aren't loyal to our flag. they're coming here to the goodies that biden is giving out. i understand people want to make their lives better. we can't take in the whole world here. if the government, federal government won't enforce the law, then we need to enforce the law and let's have a constitutional showdown, go back to the supreme court and see what the decision is this time because the federal government is violating their
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constitutional oath. will: it's staggering. lieutenant governor, we had mark levine on the program earlier. he rhetorically asked the question where are the people going, what social services are they using, how are they being absorbed. talk about the community impact on tax paying, law abiding citizens on a flood of that many people. >> what happens is they won't answer that question. ask jen psaki where do those people go when they get here and what do they do? they can't work with a legitimate company because you have to have a social security number. you'll see biden make a move to give everyone a green card so they can work which will take away jobs for american citizens, again the citizenship and then over the years their right to vote. there's nothing they can do. i mean, that's the point. the biden administration doesn't answer that question. because when they're dropped off in some cities somewhere in the middle of the night in some jet
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or bus that no mayor or no county judge knows about, you've reported that in the past, that's really happening. when that happens, where do they go? well, they go to our schools and by the way, that costs us a fortune. we don't have enough bilingual teachers. most of the kids are two and three grade levels behind when they come here from around the world and so they come in, we spend a lot of money, they drop out and what do they do? they join a gang. do they go to work for money under the table? in other words, they won't answer that question. you've hit on the target. levine hit on the target. there is nothing for them to do and they're not supposed to get government healthcare but they do. we have to treat them when they come to the emergency room and then go to the emergency room with simple things like a cough or a cold or whatever because they have no other place to go so they overwhelm our education system, overwhelm our healthcare system. we want people to come here illegally. it's time for democrats and republicans to have legal immigration reform and it's time for texas to stand up and say
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bring it on, federal government. you want to stop us from protecting our sitens, i'm sorry. if you saw a fight break out and the border patrol did nothing, wouldn't we want to stop the fight? if the federal government will do nothing, we've got to step in and do everything we can. and let them take us to court. will: i want to -- >> it's time for a showdown. will: that's what i want to clarify. if your answer to the first question, in my conversation with ken paxton yesterday, the governor's proposal to ship illegal immigrants to washington, d.c. which jen psaki says you have no authority to enforce anyone ona bus, the point you're making which ken paxton is making, which the governor trying to enforce, is a new constitutional confrontation. if you won't, federal government enforce, we will and let the supreme court find out whether or not that is constitutional. you want to bring that back to a head. >> time for a showdown. it is time for a showdown.
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and let's do it in the courts. and that's where we're heading. by the way, i wish someone would ask jen psaki on monday, by the way, why don't you just welcome p them to washington, d.c. if it's good enough that they can go to any city in the country, what's wrong, jen? why don't you welcome them? why don't you welcome them to delaware? why not? what what's the problem? don't you like illegal immigrants, jen? doesn't the president want them in his home state? so what's the problem? because they're being shipped all over this country in the middle of the night. i get calls from -- i had a mayor, you've had the mayor on several times, he called me about 7:00 in the morning, said border patrol called me and said they're bringing hundreds to my town. we don't have the police force to handle it, we don't have the system to handle it. we sent troopers, trying to block them from coming. this happens all the time. again, the headline should be by the end of the buy accident administration, more people --
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biden administration, more people will come to america in four years than live in the state of texas. 29 million people. and we're going to -- if we apprehend two and-a-half million a year, that means seven and-a-half millions are coming in. more people than live in texas will come in in the first term. add that to the people that are already here, that's 20% of the population here illegally. what do you think that does to destroy the foundation that the principles and values that this constitution was written upon by the word of god and the country was built upon. it destroys us. will: it's an eye-opening number. lieutenant governor dan patrick, thank you so much for joining us this morning. thank you, sir. >> thank you. rachel: what's the name of that town where barack obama lives, the east coast, where he just bought that big mansion? will: it is martha's vineyard. rachel: maybe that's where they should drop them off off. will: just got to get some bus. rachel: looks like the governor
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did get busses. >> you need a boat too. rachel: right. okay. yeah. will: we'll sort that out during the commercial break. a few additional headlines for you this morning. massive fire in california's home depot is seen from space. the national weather service seeing this fire's heat signature through satellite. luckily, the fire has been contained. no one's reported hurt. the cause of the fire is still under investigation. but officials say once the flames did break out, home depot's lumber, paint and other highly combustable materials caused the store to go up like a tinder box. a group of swimmers from the university of arizona are writing a letter to the ncaa expressing concern about the state of women's swimming. they say the organizations policy allowing transgender swimmer leah thomas to compete is, quote, not a good enough explanation as to why a biological man competing in he female sports is fair. it was signed by nearly 40
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swimmers including past olympic champions. law enforcement is attending one of the largest police k-9 training seminars in the nation, the event is no cost to authorities. it turns misunderstood dogs into trained law enforcement k-9s. the project is joining forces with nonprofit leashes of valor to provide k-9 therapy dogs to first responders across the u.s. those are your headlines. rachel: martha's vineyard. martha's vineyard is where he is. sorry. sometimes it takes me a while, took mow like how many week -- took me like how many weekends before i could say nuclear. >> i'm not sure we did it just yet. rachel: i heard from a lot of viewers who said, yes. i said nuke, clear.
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poor pete, he looks very confused over there. you've got to come back. you've got to bring some order here from fort bening to the couch. well, still ahead, kathy lee give ford joins us live to -- gifford joins us live to preview her new special airing tonight on the fox news channel. a new report reports that china is building up its nuclear arsenal a. former navy seal says this is par for the course from the chinese communist party. he joins us next. your spirit is stronger than your highs and lows. your creativity can outshine any bad day. because you are greater than your bipolar i, and you can help take control of your symptoms - and ask about vraylar. some medicines only treat the lows or highs.
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the -- sadler is running for senate in the state of georgia. we saw each other at a sniper dinner two days ac. thank you for what you've done for the country. when you look at the chinese communist party and their ambitions, was do you think about. >> this keeps me up at night. my last assign plant on active duty was at the trump white house, managing the black ops portfolio and i had a global portfolio and up until that point all of my experience was middle east, middle east, middleeast and i didn't get the briefings on what china was doing. they're hungry, focused and eager to supplant us. for the first time since our country's founding we have an adversary that's larger than us, four times our size, far more focused than we are and more capable in areas that they shouldn't be and you look at our current administration, like we're in lala land right now.
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>> they look at afghanistan, how that ended. they look at what's happening in ukraine. >> that's right. >> and what's their reaction to that internally? >> they smell weakness. and the way i phrase it is wokeness equals weakness equals wars we don't want. that's why we have a war in eastern europe that china is actually underwriting. >> yes. >> and you know, look, the way we won the cold war under president reagan was doctrine of peace through strength and under president trump it was america first. you have to be strong. these authoritarian regimes, they only respect strength. and when they smell weakness, they make moves and that's what we're seeing today. >> absolutely right. well, you're in the middle of a senate primary here in georgia, the primary's in about six weeks, give or that when tak. when you talk to voters, we had the lieutenant governor talking about the crisis at the border, what issues are you hearing top of mind for most folks 1234. >> border is top of mind for
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most people. now that we have a terrorist in afghanistan, fentanyl killing our youth more than anything else, to include covid, there's no excuse to not secure the border anymore. the wall is actually part of the answer. i received those briefings in the situation room where the border patrol agents say it helps funnel folks into certain areas of the border so we can focus resources there but we also have technologies that can secure the entire thing and we've got to get serious about it and i look forward to doing that in the united states senate. the culture war right now, i mean, the woke issues of critical race theory, folks feel like they don't have a voice in washington and they want to fight for the seat here in georgia and improving to them that i'm a proveen fighter and that's why we'll win this thing. thank you for everything you've done and continue to do. >> thank you so much. thank you for having me on. >> up next, one councilman's plan to give the real essential
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workers their jobs back as new york city exempts entertainers and athletes, you know, the fancy types, from the vaccine mandate. plus, look out tiger, i took home the green jacket the last time we competed in our own "fox & friends" mini masters. that looks authentic. are my co-hosts ready for my triumphant tee-off from another state? we're about to find -- oh, they're practicing, of course. ♪ if you're all alone and the birdie birds have flown. ♪ >> 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. ♪ ♪simply irresistible♪ ♪ ♪ ♪simply irresistible♪
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waitress fired for not getting the covid spot is accusing new york city mayor adams in a double standard in a class action suit as he allows unvaccinated athletes and performers to get back to work. our next guest is i introducing a measure to demand the mayor rehire more than 1400 fired unvaccinated city works e. councilman joe borelli joins us now. great to see you this morning. tell us about this proposal, can you make the mayor rehire fired city workers? >> well, we're going to try. i mean, part of trying is hearing the voices of people like that woman you just saw on tv. i mean, she is a bone fide salt of the earth new yorker. what new yorker wouldn't want to be selling anything at yankee stadium during the summer and the minute we have an exemption for basketball players or baseball players or any other fancy performers, we lose as a city the moral high ground, the scientific high ground if you
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will to say that this is dangerous enough where we not only have to have a private sector vaccine mandate, one of the only ones in the country, but it's also dangerous enough to fire thousands of city workers. that number, 1400, is just the number today. there are thousands more with medical exemption cases pending. this is only going to get worse. the minute you have exceptions to the rule, it's not -- it's not this dangerous virus anymore, you can't make that argument. >> the exceptions being you're talking about nba players like kyrie irving or performers that come into the city. i don't think anybody begrudges those guys getting back to work, what about the common man or common woman getting back to work. councilman, seems like the damage is done. that's not to throw your hands up but to say how can we help and provide aid and a find jobs or get those jobs back to the people who have already lost their jobs? how do we get it back? >> right. and that was the mayor's rational in allowing performers, that this is part of bringing
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back the city's economic recovery. if it's good for four or five or 10 or however many athletes or performer there are, what about the thousands of people suffering under the private sector mandate like the woman we saw earlier in the clip. new york city right now has double the national average of unemployment. when you start looking at the neighborhood by neighborhood breakdown, some neighborhoods, 20% of eligible adult workers can't work in the city because they're unvaccinated. we can't just throw our hands up and say enough is enough. we have to look in the mirror for why so many people are not working in the city. if 20% of a neighborhood, of adults cannot work, that's a good sign that that's probably part of the problem why we're leading parts of this country in unemployment. >> yeah. i hope there's something. i know the resolution you're putting forward, it's nonbinding on the mayor. but i hope there's something we can do. for those people that lost those jobs, you know, how do we -- you how do we provide justice to that kind of injustice.
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that's a great question going forward. joe borelli, thank you for joining us this morning and telling us your idea. >> thank you. >> all right. still ahead, on this palm sunday, kathy lee gifford will join us to talk about her special airing tonight. and a personal story about rising from poverty to college education. maria bartiromo's about big tech's rejection apparently of the american dream. ♪ people with plaque psoriasis, are rethinking the choices they make. like the shot they take. the memories they create. or the spin 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, you can achieve clearer skin. don't use if you're allergic to otezla.
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i need indeed. indeed you do. indeed instant match instantly delivers quality candidates matching your job description. visit indeed.com/hire ♪ hey, baby, i think i want to marry you. rachel: it's your shot of the morning, that's sean and i celebrating, that was our wedding day, we're celebrating 23 years today, and nine kids and i just want to say, sean, i love you. you know, we talk about a lot of things with your kids and all these moments in life. the most important decision you ever make in your life, i don't know if you agree with me, will, i think it's true. it's who you marry. it lays out the rest of your life. we obsess about so many things. this is the most important thing. >> including your kids, you
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start obsessing about your kids. this is the decision that led to all of it. rachel: i hit the lot tri. i love you, -- lottery. i love you sean. >> sometimes it takes a couple tries. when you land in the right place, you're a happy man which i am. i congratulate you and sean. you're a wonderful example to all of us, mentor to all of us. your family is beautiful. so much congratulations, you guys. rachel: thank you. just really happy today. >> good. rachel: let's bring in somebody else i'm happy to bring in and talk about and that's maria bartiromo. she's the sunday morning futures host and anchor and she's an icon in her own right. so maria, welcome. maria: hey, rachel. congratulations to you and sean. what a beautiful thing. 23 years. what an accomplishment. i'm right behind you, my 23rd is coming up in june and isn't it a wonderful thing to be able to celebrate this great thing that is called marriage with your partner, with your
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beautiful children. thanks to the hard work and love and god's support that you have had. consistent grat. rachel: thank you, maria. we'll have to double date on that date. we'll celebrate both of our marriages. maria: okay. rachel: okay. maria: done. done. rachel: all right. >> maria, we want to ask you about the specific story because it ties to business here, big tech in particular, linkedin by the way, which is the social media conduit of business and they recently censored an article, a statement by a former air force veteran talking about her rise from poverty. she talks about growing up and now that she's made it, she doesn't think that handouts are the way or she should be responsible for other's student debt. she said i'm not responsible for your student debt. i grew up in poverty, ate from a community garden, name on a community giving tree on christmas and i joined the air force and i went to college and made it happen.
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linkedin, maria, saw fit to flag that as hate speech and take it down. maria: oh, my gosh. it just is extraordinary. this gets worse every day. the bottom line is she was not on the right side. you can have the greatest achievements in the world but if you are not agreeing with the liberal left, you are on the wrong side so you will get blown off and the media is on-board with that, social media is on-board with that, some corporations are on-board with that. shies is just out ray -- this is just outrageous. it's unbelievable this is happening. the good news is, is that the people are understanding and seeing through all of this. that is why you have things like elon musk taking a 9 and a quarter percent stake in twitter, that is why you have things like truth social, president trump's technology group, its social media company trying hard to level the playing field because people understand that these big censorship
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stories and these corporations that are leading them are not on the people's side. and we are figuring it out and we are figuring out that there is a massive conglomerate, whole group of people, organizations that are working against the american people because of their narrative. their ideology of what they believe, it's their way or the highway. it's absolutely outrageous. this morning we're actually talking about a similar humble beginnings to greatness with herschel walker. the other day, he was honored with the horatio alger award. it celebrates people who have come from nothing and were able to attain and achieve great success because of their own hard work and their belief system so he's going to be on the show this morning. herschel walker is in the lead in their georgia senate race. we're going to talk about his plans for the upcoming primary season. and the midterm elections.
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because as you know, the primary season is on. we are also talking with congressman jim jordan. we have new information about hunter biden and all of his massive dealings with officials across the world and how he was paying the family bills which he says was for 30 years. also, we're catching up with kevin mccarthy, he's in poland, assessing the damage. i've spoken with the first lady of poland. she told me she is expecting 5 million refugees to cross the border and cory mills also getting geared up for a big primary season, running for the congressional seat in florida. big show ahead, guys. that social media story, we are all onto it and we are going to fight back for what we believe in, the cons tuesday -- cons constitution and our free speech. rachel: awesome show, looking forward to it. >> great lineup. we'll see you in 15 minutes. by the way, just to round it out, we did ask linkedin to
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respond. they did not answer us because they don't feel like they're accountable to anybody and we know that. rachel: that's right. >> up next, kathy lee gifford joins us on her new fox nation special, the jesus i know. don't go anywhere. ♪ if your moderate to severe crohn's disease or ulcerative colitis symptoms are stopping you in your tracks choose stelara® from the start and move toward relief after the first dose with injections every two months. stelara® may increase your risk of infections, some serious, and cancer. before treatment, get tested for tb. tell your doctor if you have an infection, flu-like symptoms, sores, new skin growths, have had cancer, or if you need a vaccine. pres, a rare, potentially fatal brain condition, may be possible. some serious allergic reactions and lung inflammation can occur. feel unstoppable. ask your doctor how lasting remission can start with stelara®.
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large out-of-state corporations have set their sights on california. 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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snches she's a tv legend and "fox & friends" favorite. >> who did you think was here, kelly ripa? it's me. >> she is wrapping up her own segment. >> thank you. >> good bye. rachel: kathy lee gifford spent years getting your favorite celebrity personalities to open up about their beliefs. she joins us now. good morning, kathy lee. so great to have you on "fox & friends" this morning. >> thank you. rachel: go ahead. >> it's just wonderful to meet the three of you. i think you're the last three i haven't met personally. >> great meet you as well. rachel: we're so happy to have
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you on. we talk about so many things on social media, on tv, in our own lives, on the phone. we don't talk enough about he jesus. you have a special where you talk to your friends about their journey to jesus. tell us more about that. >> you know, i have a friend, he is actually my literary agent. i've done many books through the years many. the. he said the thing i love most about your books individually, when you talk to people about your faith, whether on a movie set or recording studio or wherever you are, bus he depot, i would tell these stories because i'm fascinated about people's reaction. you'll always get a reaction about the person of jesus and what he means or what you believe about him. so he said -- this is a man who is so completely different from me on the surface. he is a male, he is asian, he's gay and buddhist. and you would think that that would not be his favorite thing
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somehow. he said would you consider doing a whole book about people that you interview who don't look like you and don't sound like you but they have fascinating things to say about the person of jesus and have honest conversations with them which is the only kind of conversation i know how to have anyway is an honest one and so i said, you know, you think that would work? he said i think people will find that as fascinating as i do. so that's the latest book, called the jesus i know. i've been trying to do something with fox nation for several years since i left the today show and this seemed like the perfect marriage of company and personality with subject matter and i hope it is. i hope people come away being really blessed and i hope mostly, you guys, they come away saying you know what, i'm not going to be so quick to somebody the way i do because until you get to have a conversation with someone or get to know someone, the way jesus did, he had conversations with people that didn't look anything like him or
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were members of the jewish tribe then. but he always went to the core of who they were as a child of god. jesus never left anybody the same. and we shouldn't. we shouldn't. the lord said something to me the other day and i just thought oh, my gosh, he said cay at this they, when you -- kathie, when you meet someone, love them and keep loving them until you no longer recognize the person that you met. because that's what he jesus did. he transformed them by love and so these are many chapters of different people's stories, from kris jenner, to average people that are scientologists, sikhs, whatever, and atheists and agnostics. they all having fascinating to say about the person of he jesus.
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i hope it will bless people. >> well, we look forward to seeing it. by the way, it is a book that's coming out. there's also -- you can watch it at 10:00 p.m. tonight. it's a fox nation special as well where you get more detail on all of these people. that's on the channel tonight. go to fox nation for more of this including janice dean, by the way, who you interviewed also. be fascinating to see that. in the limited time we have left, only about a minute, kathy lee, tell us about the book a little more as well. >> it came out in december. and it has had a lovely success, i'm grateful for. so we did five interviews with different people, justin bieber's mother, my two friends called louis york, taking the music industry by storm. they have a rags to riches to faith story. these are two of my favorite people on the face of the planet. and jimmy wayne. is just all different people. and janice dean who has been a
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friend of mine for a long, long time and it's just -- i loved watching bambi turn into godzilla. we all thought we knew janice dean until she got in touch with her cam i don't know soul and what she has -- champion soul and what she accomplished is extraordinary. what you'll discover through the book is everybody's so different and i love that. and they don't think like you maybe and don't act like you or worship like you but they having valuable to say and something valuable to share because they're children of god. >> let's take a quick look at the fox nation special which airs tonight and the type of conversations you're having with people. just watch. >> knew god loved you and would take care of you wherever you lent, however you landed. >> i didn't realize that until later on in my life because i always thought -- i just thought, i'm going to do this, i'm going to move to new york.
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i don't have much money in my pocket but i believe in myself, i believe that something is going to happen for me by doing this. but when i looked back, i had to have a faith, i had to have a faith and a path that was going to protect me somehow. >> so what i like about what you've done here is you're having personal conversations about people's personal relationship with jesus and that's why you keep bringing up city verse at this. i think that's a -- diversity. i think that's fascinating. everybody's path is different. the jesus i know, 10:00 p.m. on the fox news channel. sign up now through fox nation, you get -- 50% off your plan. it's not in person but it's great to meet you. thanks for being on "fox & friends." >> god bless you. happy a -- it's palm sunday today. happy palm sunday. rachel: happy a palm sunday to you. coming up, while most eyes are
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on tiger's hunt for a sixth green jacket we're ready to tee off in our own mini masters on fox square. ♪ this is going to be the best day of my life. ♪ after switching to the farmer's dog we noticed so many improvements in remi's health. his allergies were going away and he just had amazing energy. it looks like nutritious food, and it is. i'm investing in my dog's health and happiness. get started at longlivedogs.com an unthinkable genocide took the lives of six million jews and thousands of jewish survivors are still suffering in poverty today. god calls on people who believe in him to act on his word.
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"comfort ye, comfort my people." especially during this holiday season of passover. when i come here and i sit with lilia i realize what she needs right now is food. these elderly jews are weak and they're sick. they're living on $2 a day this now, is how god's children are living. take this time to send a survival food box to these forgotten jews. the international fellowship of christians and jews urgently need your gift of $25 now to help provide one survival food box with all of the essentials they critically need for their diet for one month. your special holiday gift will provide everything they need to celebrate the holy season of passover. do you remember matza? this is the first time in over 70 years
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that she has anything to do with faith. she hasn't seen unleavened bread since before the holocaust. and now we're coming to her and saying, "it's okay to have faith." for just $25, you can help supply the essential foods they desperately need for one month. your support will provide them with a box overflowing with nourishing food and the knowledge that faithful christians around the world care about them. god tells us to take care of them, to feed the hungry. and i pray holocaust survivors will be given the basic needs that they so desperately pray for to survive. >> tech: does your windshield have a crack? trust safelite. >> tech vo: this customer had auto glass damage, but he was busy working from home... ...so he scheduled with safelite in just a few clicks. we came to his house... ...then we got to work. we replaced his windshield and installed new wipers to protect his new glass,
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♪ ♪ voltaren. the joy of movement. pete: with jack nicklaus watching into a couple million people, sounds like a choke to me. rachel: watching and coaching you and, wow -- will: trophy goes right here. bring that camera up. oh! pete: it wasn't even close. will: jack, i know you've got a couple u.s. opens, but you don't have one of these. did you think, leg hegseth, i was going to let you play that green jacket clip -- we're back in honor of the masters, adam, rachel, i don't know what you've got there, pete, but we're going to putt away for our own green jacket. we're on limited time, so we all
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go at the same time. pete: here we go. will: a off we go. pete: fort benning golf course -- will: once again, once again! game time performance! our friends from betty's bounces, for more information go to betty's bounces.com for your party supplies. rachel: bye, everybody! pat: -- president better happy sun, go to church. ♪ ♪ maria: good sunday morning, everyone. thanks so much for joining us. welcome to "sunday morning futures," i'm maria bartiromo. russia reloads and repositions as ukrainians flee. war crimes now sparking a humanitarian crisis throughout europe. coming up, gop leader kevin mccarthy is in poland weekend as the leadership there braces for an expected 5 million ukrainians to cross the border. then, war in ukraine, insulation here ate
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