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tv   FOX and Friends Saturday  FOX News  April 30, 2022 3:00am-7:00am PDT

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massive free speech night musk has ahead of him. musk in turn said check out this interview. he said it was an accurate interview. elon musk said this is the podcast and interview you need to go check out. >> harold: congrats. >> judge jeanine: that is very impressive. all right, everybody. that's it for us. have a great weekend. ♪♪ ♪♪ oh say can you see ♪♪ by the dawns early light ♪♪ what so proudly we hailed ♪♪ at the twilight's last gleaming ♪♪ whose broad stripes and bright stars ♪♪ through the perilous fight
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♪♪ over the ramparts we watched ♪♪ were so gallantly streaming ♪♪ and the rockets red glare ♪♪ the bombs bursting in air ♪♪ gave proof through the night ♪♪ that our flag was still there ♪♪ oh say does that star-spangled banner yet wave ♪♪ over the land of the free ♪♪ and the home of the brave ♪♪
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rachel: good morning, it is 6:00 am eastern time, you just heard the star-spangled banner, i am here with will and peach, good morning. a beautiful morning. today you're finally going to see where i went last week before tell a day go. i was in louisiana at the big oil platform 90 miles off the coast of louisiana. look at this. that is me being lowered into a pool with a seatbelt on, flipped upside down, knocked out a window, undo my seatbelt, swim out of the window, super navy seal. i had a panic attack just before but i did it.
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i thought sean, will, and peach will all be proud of me. >> something like this could happen on the way out to the oil rig. rachel: you have to do that, in order to go out to the platform, unless you are a member of congress in which they wave some rules but i had to do it and it was 7 hours of training. pete: you did it, will and i did not. it is going to be an awesome story. will: it is a cool experience. it's in your book and i am impressed. the whole capsule is turning upside down. don't know what that feels like when you are in it and the waters are coming up, i am sure
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you have to unbuckle and push the glass. rachel: the first time that i did it i panicked, i could see the water level going and i tried -- i'm in my seatbelt trying to get air and i swallowed water, obviously the wrong move so i learned but it was fun. i saw some things. a great story about oil. >> we are going to talk about that in half an hour but not before we get to this disinformation board that the entire country, not the entire country, half the country is really worried about. >> even those on the left can
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go how can we arrive at the ministry of truth? how did we wake up george orwell, shakers old bones and tell him we were capable of predicting the future. the biden administration has put into place a disinformation governance board under the department of homeland security. the white house spokesperson was asked about this earlier this week, not only about the new disinformation governance board but absolutely cartoonish character they have chosen to take over and tell us all what is and is not true. watch. >> yesterday you told me you were not familiar with janckoitz, what's the process for putting her in a position like this? >> she's an expert on online
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disinformation. she was formerly disinformation fellow at the welcome center, she testified before congress advising ukrainian foreign minister, any hiring decisions, the first extensive qualification. i will tell you what the board is doing, this is a continuation of work that began in the department of homeland security under donald trump. will: she's a thirtysomething georgetown preacher, the perfect person to live inside the bubble, for you and for the rest of us. you asked how did we get here. they are saying this was a creation of the trump administration, something that was created to combat foreign interference in 2018 and this
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is why conservatives and republicans should be wary of growing government, the department of homeland security created after 9/11 for all the right reasons, now grows into a behemoth the left has weapon ice, same thing here. there's an existing institution, they put a new name on it, total political hack in charge of it and it is not about foreign interference but determining which speech in our own country from our own citizens is deemed legitimate from an administration that admitted working with outside the coordinating with outside private groups determines what get centered and what doesn't, this is a logical next step. rachel: i love how you got to the point, limited government. this is what happens when you let government grow and grow, we are becoming more like china and every day, the greatest threat to our country.
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let's talk about jankowitz. she is scary poppins. i love the movie mary poppins. absolutely love mary poppins, she's no julie andrews and she is scary and i tell you what i find scary about it is what you said, she's the perfect embodiment of this generation, you say a lot of people are upset, they are generally about our age. my fears the younger generation, people who come out of the same cultural soup this woman came out of. if you look for example at college campuses these are the same people forced to take a backseat for which they were essentially lab rats and they knew they did not need vaccines
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because of their age group and took it anyway because the government said you had to, 90% of these college kids were forced to get vaccinated, did get vaccinated, this is a generation that is lost, there were no protests about body autonomies so this is the future because those -- will: half of the positions i held at 30 i realize were wrong but a generation of 30-year-olds have decided what is absolute truth in the moment. i will decide what is disinformation, should we wear masks? i will decide what is true, absolute certainty in that moment with the power of government behind it. pete: i have more the generational divide, the fight that elon musk has in front of him in being a warrior for
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free-speech within the building of twitter but in appealing to young people, jankowitz knows the media, who she is, prepare yourself, on tick-tock. ♪♪ when i have to take some lessons make it sound precocious ♪♪ in congress ♪♪ information is atrocious ♪♪ tie -- a little lie ♪♪ rachel: everyone pretending they didn't know her. everyone is claiming they don't know her. a big position to put somebody like that in. >> a terrible video but 1-liners by saying them in congress or mainstream outlet. duly elected representatives of the people should be held accountable by her for what the
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face say, don't listen to the people who elected congressman to speak for the more mainstream outlet, she's calling us mainstream but -- >> with the the image would come with epaulets and a military figure. it came in the form of a meek director of the and iai, someone like this tap dancing on your face into eternity. this is the new face of tyranny. rachel: in want of the narcissism that she even made this tick-tock video is remarkable and so i'm of and somatic of this generation. will: i will read a portion of one we don't have a graphic for. she was responding to a debate in october of 2,020, voters deserve the context of the hunter biden laptop, not a fairytale about a laptop repair shop. she's declaring what is a
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fairytale as the new york post is being censored and then there's this tweet from august 2020, unbelievably ironic, listen to this last night. chris steele, that christopher steel, provides great historical context about the evolution of disinformation, worth a listen. she is listening to the arguments of the guy who created the phony document that they used to lie and learn about disinformation as she takes the job of the chief just informant. >> what exactly does this new disinformation board to? i am sure there are surveillance powers, i don't know. the department of homeland security, i want to know what the qualifications are, what
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are your qualifications, just a quick scroll to her twitter feed reveals the qualifications are your willingness to commit to this information. >> taking part in it. rachel: polling numbers for the biden administration are dropping, take a look at the use numbers for the midterm preference. 47% of republicans, 44% of democrats, this, 47% for republicans, 44% democrats, 7% and sure. i am surprised how close some of those numbers are but some of the other numbers tucked into there are 55% disapproval by hispanics, but interestingly, 64% still approve of biden in the
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african-americans. >> that's down by 20 points and that is a big drop, you can see hispanics dropped 19, 21 points on your screen and those numbers also reflect looking at young people, we talked about their sleepless and losing support among young people and most important independents, the number on independents is where you are seeing some of the divide. and this is no right wing polling outfit, this is npr, public broadcasting, pbs, just came out, the most recent numbers so take it for what it is worth, they are probably worse than verse, these are groups the love the idea of the ministry of truth and misinformation and take part in it and traffic every day no matter how you break these numbers down they are bad for
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the regime in the white house whose hoping to have control of one branch of the government and lose the house. >> what you care about, asking people what their top issues were. if you were a republican you cared about the economy, inflation, crime, national security, the border, democrats concerns were lgbt q rights, climate change, covid, and -- >> those with the top ones? the top issues. >> you see the divide in america. there was also video that came out earlier of people going to georgetown campus and interviewed young students into overwhelmingly it was climate change. that says a lot about the generational divide. >> 10 years ago they would have run into jankowitz. >> maybe we will sing a segment in this show.
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i will try then. turning to a few additional headlines, sirens sounded in kansas last night as a massive tornado touched down, 20,000 people without power, the twister cut through residential communities causing major damage to a dozen homes and the town's ymca facility. officials report no injuries even as people ran for shelter. several tornadoes were reported across nebraska and kansas as the lord system swept piece would into the midwest and a bad day on wall street as the dow jones index fell 900 points, the nasdaq and s&p down by 3. 6%, the market and off its worst month since march of 2,020 with a major selloff, amazon and apple's report rocking the markets, amazon reporting its first quarterly loss in 7 years while
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apple served supply chain woes could cut sales by as much as $8 billion and the white house correspondents dinner is back after a 2-year hiatus due to covid 19. president biden planning to attend even after vice president harris tested positive, planning -- comedian bill maher had this to say about the confusing covid policy. >> president biden is going to go to the dinner but will not stay because of worries about covid when they serve the meal. america's covid policy in a nutshell. you can go to a restaurant but when the food comes you have to leave. >>'s audience is laughing, they didn't know what to do at first, take your mask off, you wear your mask on the way to the food and take it off during food.
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>> it made me not want to go out and eat, sometimes i just had to because i was somewhere, make me put my mask on to walk to my table and then i can take it off, but then i have to put it back on if you go to the bathroom, so some and so un-american and i felt like just anger rising up in me and the generational divide, the kids love it. >> wait until the next variant comes. >> i'm done, they are not going to have me do it again. still had president biden causing an uproar after saying this. >> all our children. you recognize that. you are not somebody else's children, they are yours when they are in the classroom. >> when governor standing up saying god gave kids to
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>> the music doesn't match the shot. it is beautiful shot. doing that in north carolina right now. i want -- rachel: you want yoga. this story is about to get rachel's blood pressure going. rachel: the president gave the teacher of the year award at the white house and listen to what he said about your kids. >> president biden: they are
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all the children, the reason your teachers of the year is because you recognize that. they are not somebody else's children, they are like yours when you are in the classroom. carley: apologize, from now on, all biden clips must have closed captions, very hard to read. when kids are in classrooms they are your kids. i toured a school once and the principal said these are my kids when they are in here and it sent, made my blood boil, sent red flags up and i do not send my kids to that school because i dislike anyone who doesn't understand that they are my kids, i'm entrusting you to teach them but they are my kids. rachel: i was on a walk with my wife this weekend played this clip. rachel: going on a walk with my
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husband. rachel: my wife - pete: my wife's my does not go to nefarious intentions. it sounds like happy talk. it takes a village type mindset or you hear the principal, sounds like investment in your child, that you care because you think of them the way i think of them. i was explaining it would be happy talk if it weren't connected to a deeper philosophical premise which peter has written about and you have talked about and that is the belief that you have to interrupt the relationship between parents and child. pete: god gave kids parents, not the government and you are hearing other administrators and officials say once they were in the classroom they are ours, the sentiment from president biden is to me to be
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fair what you are talking about. treat the kids like they are our own but it becomes to the kids your parents are the problem. they have the old thoughts, old dogmas and their bibles and that is what we need to get away from. in the classroom they are ours, their minds are captured and don't tell your parents what we might talk about here. almost the old rhetorical view of president biden saying what teachers said in a non-nefarious way and parents are awakening to the reality that sentiment means a different thing today. rachel: you laid out pete: you laid out white has a long-term educational -- will: the book comes out battle for the american mind about the 100 year takeover of the classroom by progressives, intentionally pushed god out and pushed parents out and before they could put in their indoctrination had to get of
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the things that kept people tethered to real core basic natures that founded this nation to the point where that is accepted thought, push the parent out, teach them whatever we want and we get future ministers of truth out of those who believe disinformation needs to be rampantly censored. i didn't mention the book comes out june 14th, the army's birthday, flag day, it is also donald trump's birthday. rachel: did you plan that? pete: i wanted to but -- rachel: great omen for your book. we are looking forward to it. can you preorder? pete: you can preorder to get it on june 14th. there will be supply chain problems, if you don't order it now you will not get it on june 14th.
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still ahead as the border crisis spirals out of control texas leaders say the federal government is handcuffing law enforcement. former office of management and budget joins us to break down how invasion declaration would help. e land!♪ ♪i've been everywhere, man.♪ ♪i've been everywhere, man.♪ ♪of travel i've had my share, man.♪ ♪i've been everywhere.♪ ♪♪ my name is douglas. i'm a writer/director ♪i've been everywhere.♪ and i'm still working. in the kind of work that i do, you are surrounded by people who are all younger than you. i had to get help somewhere along the line
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three years in a row. 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 >> this a historic surge of illegal immigration, states like texas can rise up and protect itself if the federal government won't do its job. i'm declaring this an invasion by bloodied drug cartels and human traffickers because texans are calling for action since the biden administration won't do it. pete: george p. demanding -- self-defense and remove any migrants who went to the country illegally.
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her to react is president of the center for new england america, russ, something that has begun to come up in popular conversation the last couple weeks, talk to me about the language. an invasion. what does that mean? what does that invoke in the constitution and what powers does it give the state of texas? >> this is something we have been calling for since last year which is the constitution gives texas and other border states provisions where the governor retains commander-in-chief authority in the event of an invasion. it was not meant just for foreign nations but provided for smugglers, militias, indian nations. the reality is we have a cartel controlled border right now, on marco state on the southern border, this crisis isn't just happening. the cartels are causing it
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because they control all of this where they commit to border patrol to suck up time of the border patrol while they claim high end value across the aggressive border with drug smuggling and things like that. the constitution didn't leave governors defenseless when the federal government did not stand up under it to authorities under article 4 section 4 to guarantee against invasion and this is why this is something that is not immigration law the news incumbent on these governors to invoke their authority to do it. pete: article one section 10 in part of the united states constitution. seems to me as you mentioned the result of conflict of the fact the federal government is doing nothing about the illegal immigration problem and border states like texas step in, focusing on the drug cartels. for this to be an invasion it
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is not simply illegal immigrants crossing the border that allows texas to invoke this but allows us to focus on the drug cartels, is there precedent? there is an example. >> we think the level of illegal immigration we are seeing particularly in title 42 where we are not able to send half the people that are coming back from the border, that in totality with the cartel is a factual situation that constitutes an invasion and the founders would have agreed with this, we are thankful the attorney general in arizona said this is sound legal doctrine and the governor in arizona should invoke it as well so the key is the use of the word invasion in that legal construct that gets you out of federal immigration law so
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everyone thinking about this in a federal immigration law construct is not thinking about a properly. it is a separate body of law, constitutional that states have retained, states shouldn't have given all their authority to the federal government, they didn't, they retained this to protect their people and if governor abbott is going to say he's doing everything he can he is leaving this on the table. pete: if this is successful tactic then i assume texas can enforce its own immigration law, take the place of enforcement we are hoping to accomplish. >> they would be interdicting and removing illegal immigrants and returning them to the border and could do that in two hours based on what we could do in the trump administration. this will unilaterally secure the border away promised and not delivered by these governors. pete: fascinating insight,
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thank you. coming up, license to drill, rachel tags along with numbers of congress to see one of the world's largest oil platforms, they are calling on president biden to make energy independence again coming up. >> making it harder for energy independence years from now which means we will be more dependent on foreign nations for our energy supplies, that is bad for america. we've been coming here, since 1868. there's a lot of cushy desk jobs out there, but this is my happy place. there are millions of ways to make the most of your land. learn more at deere.com allergies don't have to be scary. spraying flonase daily stops your body from there are millions of ways to make the most of your land. overreacting to allergens all season long. psst! psst! flonase all good. when hurting feet make you want to stop, it's dr. scholl's time. our custom fit orthotics use foot mapping technology to give you personalized support,
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>> with gas prices climbing and the biden administration trying to blame it all on putin, calls for american energy independence are getting louder than ever. rachel: that is why i joined the 7-member congress as they toured one of the world's largest offshore oil platforms. here's what i learned, take a look. rachel: we are heading 80 miles off the coast of louisiana to the largest oil platform in the gulf of mexico. >> it comes through a number of wells and exported off the shore. >> this operation can produce 140,000 barrels a day, 3 million cars it can fuel. >> we will meet a delegation of members of congress who are here to check out our offshore oil industry. >> just landed on the platform and going on the tour.
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>> appomattox we have 20,000 vote we use, power generators, water over that hot air turned into steam. we use that steam to generate more power. rachel: it is created from the process you are doing? >> free power. what most impresses you when you come out here is the cleanliness of the water. people say this is not done in a clean and efficient way it is like blue caribbean water. >> drilling the wells -- the oilers here. the gas is dry and separating.
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>> the cybersecurity threat is very real. >> can just access the from the internet. >> seems like there is so much going on. it is amazing. >> they are running 24 hours. >> we have people keeping us flooding, mechanics and electricians, operators getting oil out of the ground, it takes a lot of skills. >> hundreds of thousands of jobs created by this industry. >> this is high-tech, the pays really good, working on a red on a rig, servicing the industry generates billions for the federal treasury. >> first time you've been on a tour like this what is your first impression? >> phenomenal. this puts a spotlight on domestic energy production.
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>> amazing technology. american workers, american energy. >> our adversaries would love to make us dependent and that is why independence is critical. >> others like us you could supply off america's oil and natural gas and export to our friends around the world. members of congress to come see this. the biden administration to come here. a lot of the things they say against american energy are not true. >> people questioning what we do, we would love to host you for a visit and starts with an understanding of what we do. it is a wise thing to have energy independence. >> would we be energy independent, what would you want? >> the most important thing is predictability. >> only one resale since 2,020, we don't have a 5-year plan in place that would dictate going forward. >> the biggest concern but the
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biden administration is doing is they are making it harder years from now which is why we will be more dependent on foreign nations for our energy supply. >> i learned so much, to see how massive that platform is, the next generation of this platform which will come online at the end of the series of third of that size and almost -- almost as much oil. the footprint is getting smaller and smaller, this is american technology. it is the greenest -- has the lowest emissions of any other kind of -- >> powers itself. >> uses its own steam to create its own electricity. >> how big is the platform? a football field? how many of these studios we are in?
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>> i would say fox square 3 of these may be. it is huge and massive. what is interesting is how small it is getting. i had the tour from the people i got the tour from, steve scalise, he's been on the strip and bringing members of congress, mostly republicans are the only ones who want to see this, i feel like he could run this platform, he knows so much what is going on it is so proud of this technology as we all should be. there is nothing more that our enemies want than -- >> stop doing this. how far off the coast? >> 90 miles. i don't know. may be -- i know it is not -- under an hour. under an hour. took a while to get there but it was really cool.
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had to do helicopter training, fascinating stuff. from now on any helicopter, i am getting the job because i know how to get out of a helicopter. will: i never did. i am superjealous. really cool thank you for sharing that. we have more questions throughout the morning. pete: we will show more of that helicopter training. will: a few additional headlines, the new york post reporting president biden use the alias of a kgb spy from a tom clancy novel when talking to his son over email. the president started using the name peter henderson in 2016. henderson is a fictional spy who infiltrated the us government in the tom clancy novels. sean hannity is the longest-running primetime hosting cable news history, the
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legendary fox news host breaking the record last week passing larry king's previous high mark of 20 years, 6 months and 14 days. sat down with lawrence jones on his remarkable career. >> i am upfront, i am a conservative, i like donald trump, i like this candidate, i am honest about it and all these other people are out there claiming they are journalist, all they are giving his opinion, talk show hosts like me except they are not honest about it. >> you can catch the full interview lawrence jones across the country tonight at 10:00 pm. talk about the secret sauce you know what you're getting into and rightfully so. should twitter moved to texas, what do you think? will: no. i will talk about why it.
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>> on fox square temperatures warming up a little bit across the eastern united states.
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it will be a nice weekend. current temperatures 40s, 50s, even 60s and a big cold front bringing showers and storms, they will be sweeping across illinois into indiana. a chance of that severe weather. 70 degrees in chicago today, a little cooler, those are your headlines. will: could twitter moved to texas? one rancher is offering elon musk free land to make the move when he takes over, jim schwerner tweeting he can have 100 acres north of boston, jim joins us now. first question, why do you want twitter to move to your province?
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>> texas has always been about free-speech, we are very conservative in this state, i like what elon musk is doing, when he bought twitter he talked about the reason he bought it was he believes in freedom of speech. i believe that is important. i felt it is my turn to give back to the community so i will give 100 acres if you wants to take and bring headquarters to twitter. pete: your contribution to the cause just north of boston close to the freeway so if you were looking to build headquarters, already have tesla headquarters in austin. it makes sense. >> that is right. has tesla plant is 30 minutes from here, 30 minutes north of austin and it makes sense. this is a high-tech mecca of
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the united states, two great universities just east of us, university of texas just south of us so we have a good workforce. it is time. pete: my fellow cohost will cana skeptical about this because he's concerned like other texans have been that those from california who follow twitter, elon musk might do something about the corporate culture but what about thousands of left-wing californians landing in texas? >> we have a lot of californians coming here and hope they won't change the culture, they left california because they didn't like the culture there. we have a governor fighting cancel culture, governor greg abbott, governor perry, secretary perry, the governor is my cousin, senator from texas, we have a lot of
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politicians making sure people understand how important texas is and why we are so successful. pete: the offers on the table, $100 for their taking, hope they are watching, thank you very much. coming up, inflation hitting some parts of the country more than others, the region seeing the worst of it coming up. .
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matching your job description. visit indeed.com/hire ♪ ♪ ♪ boom, crash, sound of my heart ♪ the beat goes on and on ♪ boom, crash. ♪ makes you feel good ♪ come on to me ♪ boom, crash ♪ ♪ will: good morning and welcome to "fox & friends." will cain and rachel campos-duffy and pete hegseth. that's probably right down the fairway of music that would be
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in your general remarks hegseth. pete: this song? i feel like maybe more you. i know this song but never on my play list. will: pop culture efemale artist play list. pete: ileana morris smith for sure. rachel: female pop star very racey insta grams is what i figured out. [laughter] pete: only one of them. and it's really racey. rachel: even i like her. pete: britney is free and now she is really really free. rachel: she has a hot husband. oh they are getting married. pete: baby daddy because they are not married. will: talk sports. i have no idea what you are talking about. you thought i was taking a shot earlier when i asked you how big the oil flat form was couple football fields? i could see your face this is not about sports.
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rachel: don't try to trip me up. pete: visualize the football field size? rachel: yeah -- no. [laughter] pete: what's 100 meters. think of a football field if you are calling artillery or anything else and that's how you think about it pretty standard cultural reference. rachel: it is if you like sports. will: how far away is the target? it's about three football fields this isn't about sports, lieutenant. [laughter] rachel: i will be like it's like four fox squares. pete: four fox squares that will do it. welcome to the 7:00 a.m. eastern time norfolk, is that still eastern? virginia? will: as eastern as you can get. pete: 7:00 there as well. 6:00 a.m. in god's country. we are glad that you are here. speaking of god's country because we are talking about texas and what they are doing there. there is new data that's come out. new statistics that have been released by governor abbott there about the operation, operation lone star which they are say something a multi-agency state level effort.
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this is what texas is doing on the border. and we will talk more about the efficacy of this in a moment. these are new numbers that they are releasing about what they as a state have done. almost 240,000 i illegal they use migrants. i choose illegal apprehensions. 14,000 criminal arrests. almost 12,000 felony charges. almost 5,000 weapons seized and 342 million lethal fentanyl doses seized by dps throughout the state. it's important to note. if texas had not stepped up and we could talk about the limits of their effort as well. if texas hadn't stepped up. these numbers would be zero across the board because the federal government isn't doing its job. that concertina wire you be even seeing in these shots put up by the state of texas is it perfect? no. it's at least a barrier or attempt to do something where the federal government isn't doing anything. will: do you know what i find fascinating what's going on chaos on the border? first of all, on one hand you have people like the members of the squad who are now insinuating that border
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enforcement is essentially racist. and that's no surprise honestly. i think underlying the illegal immigration debate for decades now has been this presumption of racism. so, let's take that. then let's also take into the fact is this a republican? democrat thing? the chaos has gotten so out of hand all of that is increasingly obviously nonsense. meaning, it doesn't matter if you are latino or white or black, you see the chaos at the border. and increasingly, it doesn't matter if you are republican or democrat. what matters is do you live in reality? for people on the border like democratic mario alan da roman of eagle pass, this is reality. listen. >> see the migrant impact it could be even more than double. it's scary for us. it's mind boggling. you know, we are very concerned. and i don't know why up there in washington they keep saying that
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we're ready for it. no, we are not. i invite anybody from washington that wants to come to eagle pass and see what we are going through here to please do so and not just to come and take pictures along the river. you know they are invited to come and actually see what happens here on a daily basis. so if title 42 expires, they -- president biden doesn't do anything to stop that trust me, we are going to see things that we have never seen here in eagle pass before. will: democrat, latina, not unlike democrat henry cuellar can see reality, rachel. rachel: many of the sheriffs. a lot of the sheriffs along the southern border also democrats saying oh my goodness, this -- and she actually says this is scary. she said this is scary. and she also said this policy is mind boggling for anyone who isn't living in these areas, she is going why are you guys doing this? i am going to tell you why they are doing this fox news reported on this last week. there is a secretive soros
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funded group that is actually advising this administration. that is where these policies come from. remember, george soros is the open society, you know, they're all about, globalists no border society. i think they are trying to destroy our country because i can't imagine why else you would want d.a.s who don't enforce the law and put criminals behind bars. this is unsustainable. i tell you what, if you live on the border, you feel absolutely abandoned by your government. pete: it only doesn't make sense if you believe in borders. and that's where the logic breaks down for everybody else. rachel: correct. pete: on the left if you are envisioning this borderless society this chaos is inevitable transition to future utopian border. mentioned numbers from governor abbott and bus loads which are now by the dozens to washington, d.c. had you great interview will earlier with russ vote. conversations people are having if everything is on the table then why shouldn't the state of
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texas effectively say we are being invaded which constitutionally some say would give them the right to actually enforce and deport. which the actual government right now refuses to do. i think that's a part of the debate that conservatives and patriots and others should be having including pressuring governor abbott to say are you really doing everything you can. will: i agree. pete: you might want to face this constitutional. rachel: why doesn't he do that? will: i don't know. rachel: it's texas for god's sake. >> the twitter universe hasn't moved in yet. it's still red. the people want it why isn't he doing more? will: i don't know. maybe he feels like he can't win the constitutional challenge that would follow. i don't know. i want to go back to something you just said. so, maybe it's -- i need to have this debate clarified or maybe we all do. so, in other words, where we are today, when it comes to illegal immigration and the chaos at the southern border really has nothing to do with race. we know that right? rachel: of course. will: can you try to paint it as like a white supremacy versus
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latino thing, clearly we are beyond that. rachel: yeah. will: it's not republican democrat either we are seeing democratic politicians saying woe, this is insanity. this is unsustainable. rachel: even from outside the state. bill will debate is truly what? those that believe in open borders? will: i think that's what we have gotten to. we are not importing voters anymore. that feels insufficient as an explanation. will: i agree. pete: ideological commitment and dedication that no person can be illegal and that borders themselves are effectively. will: that is who is left on this side of the debate that embrace what is is happening today. pete: they are controlling massive levers of the white house and outside organizations to your point and nongovernmental organizations as well. all happy to facilitate this transfer a lot of it based on the fact that america is built on stolen land anyway from their point of view. who are we to say this is our land anyway. remake it all. we dive into the radical nature of how they think. that's how they rationalize.
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will: i think you are right, by the way. that's been in the background of this debate for a long time. u.s. is just a simple belief we don't believe in borders. and if you don't believe in borders, then you really don't believe in nationality. you don't believe in the existence of nation state. so you don't believe in the united states of america. rachel: exactly. pete: you don't think america is good anymore, right? that's what we are teaching kids. rachel: there is definitely that philosophy and that's why i brought this up secretly soros group biden administration, that's definitely the philosophy of that group. but there is also profit incentive. there is a lot of ngos i'm sorry including the catholic church which i'm very ashamed of that are making a lot of money off of this entire process. there are people who are getting a lot of funding from the government in order to deal with the migration. pete: sure. rachel: chaos. pete: like the vaccine stuff multiple incentives and layers to it as well. will, you had an interview that caught the eye of elon musk. will: i did.
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thank you both. so the news item that put this back up at the front is that twitter's chief content moderation executive. chief legal counsel and charge of essentially censorship. she makes $17 million a year. $17 million a year. what occurred to me when elon musk bought twitter and this is a celebratory moment for free speech. but it's the beginning. because, the problem with censorship is culture wide. it's in the cube biblegs of twitter. in those employees talking about moving to texas. it's everywhere. so i had a conversation with coo one-time coo of paypal. a founding member of paypal along with elon musk david sacks about the really nature the size and scope of the fight that is in front of elon musk on the will cain podcast. watch. >> elon will be able to find enough staff to run twitter and, remember, twitter has got something like 8,000 employees and nobody know what is they all do. how many employees does twitter
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really need? you start with the fact that elon probably only needs 2,000, 3,000, at most 4,000 employees. he can spare, you know, half the company and he does not need to staff 8,000 employees he can make that company work with 2,000 employees that gives him a lot of flexibility. will: that's why he can buy it it's a debt purchased buy. a leveraged buy out. it's so fat. these people are living -- they are not -- live in aspen, they work from home. what do they do? what do all of these employees do? by the way really quickly in response to this interview many elon musk pointed to interview and said accurate interview. rachel: really cool. pete: huge endorsement for the weu8 kaine podcast. what great interview to have. even that response, accurate interview is a news worthy item in that he is responding to a statement like that which is i
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think elon musk should slash the company he in half. will: no doubt. >> if you are one of those young twitter employees you might be going oh boy. i might lose my job. somebody who maybe should lose their job is alexandria ocasio-cortez she says a lot of things that make people scratch their head. here is her talking about elon musk and twitter and saying i'm tired of having to collectively stress about what explosion of hate crimes is happening because some billionaire with an ego problem unilaterally controls a massive communication platform and skews it because tucker carlson or peter thiel took him to dinner and made him feel special. elon musk on twitter a lot responding not just to will cain but to aoc. stop hitting on me i'm really shy. great response. by the way that's a reference to every time aoc gets criticized she claims.
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will: her critics are hitting on her. rachel: critics are after her, they want to date her. will: i will give aoc a tad bit of credit. she did respond to elon musk. rachel: what did she say to that? will: you said in set up referring to elon. she never used his name she clearly is talking about elon. rachel: of course she is. will: i was talking about zuckerberg but okay. rachel: she is a good troll. pete: she deleted that email -- excuse me tweet. she is welcome to the program any time if she would like to explain that side of it. but, important and significant development. he also posted i know he covered it on "fox & friends" during the weekday his political diagram of where elon musk falls on the political spectrum and how it's really all about the left going so far left and pulled him to the right. watching elon musk and bill maher and joe rogan and others
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who would never characterize themselves as ideological conservatives coming along to the reality of what they're up against as people who believe in just simply free speech or small l liberalism as it used to exist. will: or that you define a woman. pete: or that you can define a woman. will: people in charge of disinformation. the same people who can't define a woman. pete: you are not allow to define a woman as it has been defined 2,000 years. will: disinformation. rachel: cool stuff on your podcast. will: thank you. rachel: love it turning now to your headlines overnight. 6 people shot at popular bar in new orleans. police say no one was killed but four women and two men were injured in the shooting near the garden district. witnesses say a black car drove by the venue and fired close to 50 bullets. police have not released any information about possible suspects or motives. the committee for hillary clinton's 2,016 presidential campaign is seeking to block special counsel john durham from
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obtaining certain documents perkins coie. the argued certain privileged documents should be withheld based on attorney-client privilege. over the last month durham and his team have requested the document to further their investigation into the clinton campaign. perkins coie is the law firm that the dnc and the clinton campaign used to fund the now infamous anti-trump steele dossier. now, usfl where two star quarterback also go head to head this weekend. the undefeated birmingham stallions and new orleans breakers squaring off in prime time tonight. before that kicks off, the tampa bay bandits and houston gambler also play what many believe will be a defensive slug fest. the bandits and gamblers ranking at the bottom of the league in offense. you can catch both of those games tonight on fox. pete: you might be part of the birmingham stallions secret sauce this year in that you flipped the coin for them on
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their win. one of their wins from this season? rachel: absolutely. will: we have a helicopter ready to take to you birmingham after the show. [laughter] will: still ahead, inflation hitting some parts of the country more than others. we will break down the region seeing the worst of it. pete: plus, a little puppy love on fox square. it's national adopt a pet day. a new furry friends where looking for their forever home. stick around. ♪
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pete: april worst month for stocks since 2020. stocks surging 9% as key inflation surged 5.2%. as it turns out. inflation is different across the country and hitting the mountain region, the south and middle america the worst. here to break it down former cke restaurant ceo answered puzder. interesting to note.
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go the to mountain west those numbers are closer to 9 and 10. andy, why is that? why does inflation hit different parts of our country differently? >> a lot of it has to do what people are consuming in those areas. a major element is fuel, is gas and with the united states not producing as much oil as it used to, and our failure to put in pipelines to make the transportation of oil less expensive, you are finding that areas where it's hard to get energy to are going to see greater inflation. inflation, as you said, core inflation was 5.2% that excludes food and energy. energy was up over 30%. pete: yes. >> if you are in an area consuming energy and more expensive to get the energy there, your prices are going to go up. anybody that's been to hawaii knows that gas is very expensive there because it's hard to get gas there same thing with the midwest. it's harder to get west to the center of the country than it is to get it to coastal parts of the country.
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pete: interesting. andy, that might explain not just the northeast but also the west coast. why then do we see those almost $9, $10-gallon gas prices, $8, $9 that we have seen in california. why are the prices then so high out west? >> well, the prices across the country are up significantly because of bad policy. we have had 15 or 16 months of really terrible economic policy. in california, they have had a decade of terrible economic policy. and it's been driving up gas prices, it's been really driving up the price of everything. in california, you do see, you know, even $8, $9 in certain areas for gas. it's generally around $5 or $6. you have to remember our was was already very high in california. because of these terrible economic policies before the pandemic. and before the recent price increases. so, even though gas is up very, very high there, it's all due to -- california, i think they have the third greatest energy reserves in the country. they have got a lot of oil in california. they can't get any of it their
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environmental policies prevent them. they have a high gas tax. they let oil be produced. people keep consuming it and therefore you find very high prices. pete: only got 20 seconds left, andy. you have made clear and i have heard others say it as well energy drives inflation the most. what is the second biggest driver if you had to identify what it would be? >> i would say food costs right now. food and energy are both excluded from the 5.2% preferred inflation measure that the fed has. but food and energy effect everybody. and they are up -- they are really really hitting people's pocketbooks. this is very difficult time for working and middle class americans. pete: no doubt. andy puzder thank you for breaking it down for us. >> thanks, pete. pete: the white house still denying joe biden's involvement with hunter biden's foreign dealings. well, we have got strong evidence to the contrary. will and i will break down the biden's business tree. at the big wall coming up next.
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♪ ♪ rachel: welcome back to "fox & friends." nato and european allies are gearing up to hold military drills in finland as russia's deadly invasion of ukraine continues. the exercises would be one of the largest displays of force from the west in decades. matt finn is live in lviv with more. matt, good morning. >> good morning, and that exercise will include aircraft, tanks, artillery and armored assault vehicles. u.k. defense secretary ben wallace says she's exercises will see troops join forces with allies across nato in a show of
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solidarity and strength. saying the security of europe has never been more important. and in the u.s., the department of defense john kirby breaking from facade and fighting back tears as he certainly calls out vladimir putin saying it's, quote, b.s. that russia's invasion is about nazis in ukraine or russia is defending its own interest when russia has never threatened by ukraine. >> it's hard to look at what he is doing in ukraine, what his forces are doing in ukraine and think that any ethical, moral individual could justify that. it's difficult to look at the -- sorry. it's difficult to look at some of the images. >> and an update on trevor reed, the former u.s. marine freed from a russian jail in a dramatic prisoner swap this week. the 30-year-old is now back in
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the united states. good morning america. that her son is in high spirits at the facility where is he being treated. that he is telling stories and flirting with the nursing staff. back to you. >> thank you, matt. >> sure. rachel: all right, pete? pete: thank you, rachel. the white house, including joe biden still denying involvement with hunter's foreign dealing. >> heard the president say over and over again he has never spoken to his son about his business dealings. has he ever spoken to his son's business partners about his son's business dealings? >> again, nothing has changed about what i said yesterday. the president does not get involved in the business dealings of his son. will: but, evidence shows strong links between hunter biden and joe biden and their business deals. let's take a look. behind us, you see a web, a web of perhaps deceit and corruption that begins to tie all of these
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shady dealers, pete together. pete: that's right. we are calling it hunter biden's business tree. this is but one branch on a big tree that isn't just hunter biden's. it's the biden family and joe biden. here is a name you probably don't know fran person. he went by the nickname franny by the biden administration he was so close to them. went on 49 of the 50 that joe biden went on as vice president. he was a top adviser from 2009 to 2014. is he inside the obama-biden white house. he leaves. why does he leave? eventually he became president of the harves group. it's a d.c. based company founded by a chinese executive which, william, you are going to talk about in a second that has ties to officials at the highest levels of the chinese communist party. when he was the president of the harves group, he visited the white house seven times in 2015 and 2016. he says it was all personal, will. but he included he went to a white house holiday party with none other than the next member
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of our tree. will: fran, franny, wanted hunter and joe to get to know bo zhang. bo zhang is a princeling. a young man whose family founded and owns the harves group that pete is laying out to you. this is a real estate development fund in china. this is a man who according to fran would be good for the bidens to get to know for future business dealings. bow zhang's parents again own the harves group. founded the harvest group and his father-in-law is a governor in the chinese communist party. so you have a connection not only to a shady business never china but one inevitably has a connection to the chinese communist party. pete: this is how you get access to the u.s. political power and access to enrichment inside china as long as those doors open to you. brings us to one more name anne marie mull do you know.
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you remember the firm rosemont seneca partners? she used to work for sherwin and hunter biden at rosemont seneca partners before joining wind's team in the white house in 2014. so she is with rosemont seneca and hunter and then joins the white house, takes a bunch of meetings, including facilitating what fran was doing on the business side. will: i think what's challenging here is you have to do two things at the same time. keep the entire picture of connections in your mind to see what exactly is going on here while diving into the details of who these individuals are let's keep going. pete talks about rosemont seneca. here is rosemont seneca. eric schwerin the name you have come to know who is associated with rosemont seneca. a former president. this is the investment fund hunter biden was placed on, had a deep connection to. and eric schwerin had a deep connection to the biden's finances throughout joe biden's vice presidency and into the
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present tense. eric schwerin sends email to hunter your dad is worried about future earnings he could use good news today. he has handled tax refund checks for the biden administration. this man, who last we heard visited the white house 19 times, now it's revealed visited the white house when joe biden was vice president 27 times. pete: to include visiting the white house just a few months after sending that very email that you mentioned and when he went to the white house? who did he meet with? the big guy. directly with the big guy. it wasn't just staff. it was meeting with the vice president himself. so, again, revolt to your point can you get lost in the details but it's the revolving door of political power providing access to people who have access to funds and enreach egg opportunities to opportunities overseas all hoping no one learns of those relationships because they like to say personal business or things not tied to business. do we know what they talked about inside the white house? we don't. but presumably it was not just
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yoga. steve ricketdy rickety, visited by sherwin in 2016 at least twice. makes the connection to the current white house as well. the guy who is the chief of staff for biden right now connected to eric schwerin at least knows him or knows of him. how would joe biden have no knowledge whatsoever of these business dealings when he is meeting the son of the chinese communist party holiday parties and other places everyone around him is aware of it as well. will: the story is was joe biden peddling his name in influence for money? was hunter biden the conduit to peddle joe biden's name and influence to companies that wanted to affect american policy for money? maybe this last name helps to begin to tie again the whole picture together china, u.k., russia potentially and mexico.
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jeff cooper is a long-time benefactor to the biden family, again, another big finance executive who once joe biden became vice president of the united states, hunter biden mysteriously got yet again another influential job. jeff cooper is the man who have you seen a picture of joe biden, hunter biden, and mexican billionaire carlos felony and other mexican authorities as hunter and jeff cooper were working on energy deals in mexico. pete: there is the photo right there. will: joe biden is the picture. what kind of influence are we peddling under the guise of american power? pete: can you imagine a jewsier story for intrepid young "the washington post" reporter to try to unravel the web with all the power all the intrigue. international power, wealth, yet they cover almost none of it and it's left to the "new york post" and shows like this to try to put the pieces together. will: in short, hunter is doing business all over the globe with shady businesses and shady countries and at the same time taking many of these executives to the white house to meet with
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his father. pete: his father is saying i don't know anything about it i have no idea. at some point maybe he will have to answer that question differently as more evidence comes out. thanks for indulging us on the biden family tree or a portion of it. all right. up next. that hero soldier in texas who died saving illegal immigrants at the border will be laid to rest today. congressman tony gonzales joins us next to break down the horrific impact of biden's border crisis. ♪ for everything. which reminds me, thank you for driving me to the drugstore. earn big time with chase freedom unlimited with no annual fee. how do you cashback? chase. make more of what's yours. ♪ ♪ how's he still playin'? aspercreme arthritis. full prescription-strength. reduces inflammation. don't touch my piano. kick pain in the aspercreme.
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rachel: welcome back to "fox & friends." the national guardman bishop evans who died saving illegal immigrants will be laid to rest today and remembered as a hero. ing a flag was presented in honor of his service. congressman gonzalez joins us now. congressman, so great to have you on the show today. i'm so happy to see that you and congressman mccarthy are recognizing this young hero. haven't heard a lot from the administration. i notice that they laid the capitol policeman who was -- who died during the -- or shortly after the capitol riots was laid in state because that certainly served a narrative. not much out of the administration will about this young man who is the victim of their policy j thank you. thank you for having me, rachel. bishop 70s a hero.
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we should all learn his name and hear his story, here this man jumped into the river just trying to save two people. they turn out to be drug dealers of all cases nonetheless it shows hisselfless sacrifice. a friend of mine greg brock house reached out and reminded me bishop evans grew up in san antonio. he went to elementary school. i had the opportunity to connect with his former principal. his former principal said he was a loving young man he would run up and hug him all the time. this goes to show this is what the border crisis looks like. right? it effects every day people. bishop evans served in iraq. he served in kuwait. he was a patriot. imagine that, he sur overseas war come home to be killed over the southern border due to biden's failed policies. rachel: liberal press is blaming governor abbott saying there wasn't enough equipment and there wasn't enough training for the texas guardsmen now having to deal with all the migrants coming across this river.
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>> really sad to see them deflect. we should all be honoring this man. i put together a house resolution kevin mccarthy and i gave the flag to the family. today they are laying him to rest. but i put together a house resolution, elise stefanik also on that trip with us was the first one to sign off on it. and a lot of republicans have. i have got one democrat that has signed on this resolution. there is nothing controversial about it. it just highlights the man's life. and that's henry cuellar. i'm going to shame them all. we will get all 435 members of congress to know who bishop evans is and we have to realize he is one. we have got to make sure there isn't another bishop evans that passes away. rachel: god bless him. i want to talk a little bit about mayorkas. he was on the hill. had a hearing. jim jordan asked him directly are the policies of will biden administration causing all of this basically invasion in our
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southern border? he said no. i want you to listen to this flashback of a migrant saying why he came over. >> would have you tried to do this when donald trump was president? >> definitely not. >> so did you come here because joe biden was elected president? >> basically. basically. rachel: your reaction? >> yeah. jim jordan has been a leader on this and in the judiciary committee they have uncovered quite a bit. you know, it's very disappointing this administration. you know, i'm starting to believe they don't have a border policy. the danger is it's getting everybody killed. not only migrants it's getting americans killed now as well. you know, i look back at it you had the vice president visit guatemala last june and they wanted to talk about root causes. which is valid. but this is what i have been told. and guatemala in particular i had dinner with the president of guatemala late last year. and when he told me goes tony, i don't want your foreign aid. i want your foreign investment.
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right? completely agree with that i just notify the state department is one of the actors in this the state department canceled guatemala was coming up to meet with businesses to try to bring investment to their country that way their people don't have to flee. the state department canceled that meeting. so. rachel: why? >> no one knows why. you know, everybody pushing to try to get some answers. you know, you are talking about root causes but yet, this is what i was told. i was told they don't like guatemala's politics. right? next door is nicaragua who is a socialist, basically a socialist country. they give them no agreement. rachel: love them. >> guatemala is a little bit more conservative and all of a sudden they don't like their politics. rachel: one of the root causes is the violence because of gangs and evil drug cartels. they are making hand over fist, millions of dollars because of this trade, which means that the biden administration is complicit in exacerbating the root causes for people wanting
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to leave those countries. congressman, you are a wonderful voice, a firsthand witness of what is happening in texas and along our southern border. and we appreciate you always giving us the right information on that issue. >> thank you, rachel, happy to be on. rachel: all right. take care. pete? pete: thank you, rachel. appreciate it turning now to your headlines. police continue to search for suspects after a california high school baseball player was shot dead thursday morning. the teen was shot in his car in what police are calling an ambush attack about 30 miles south of los angeles. a second teen was also shot and survived but his condition at this moment is unknown. the police have not yet released specific information about a motive or possible suspects. and indiana's attorney general is now suing black lives matter for fraudulent activity. the filing is the latest in a.g. todd rokita's investigation into the group's finances and use of
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donations. rokita tweeting blm has concerning patterns of behavior and will do what it takes to get to the bottom of it on behalf of generous hoosiers who have donated to them. the organization under heavy fire and scrutiny after secretly buying a $6 million california mansion which leaders are said to call campus. but they never publicly disclosed the information which you're supposed to do when you are a 501(c)3. the new york mets making history last night against their division rival philadelphia fillies. watch this. >> the o-2 pitch. swung on and missed strike three. got him with a slider. five mets pitchers have combined to no hits the philadelphia fillies. pete: yesterday's historic game is only the second no hitter in mets history since santana threw
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his no no. 159 pitches with five different pitchers to beat the fillies 3 to none. a lot of producers and here at fox happy about the season so far right, dave? [cheers] pete: going to go down in a blaze of glory. we will see. still ahead, it's adopt a short-term pet day. so we are bringing some puppy love discriminating against felines to fox square. we are pawsitive you will want to stick around and meet these puppies. ♪ you ain't no friend of mine ♪ key indicators of brain performance. more brain performance? yes, please! neuriva. think bigger.
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♪ had let the dogs out ♪ let ho let the dogs out ♪ who, who, who, who? pete: we are saving that one for a segment. today is national adopt a shelter pet day. rachel: that's right. animal shelters around the country are slashings adoption fees to encourage you to take home a new furry friend and to celebrate we had some of our own adoptable puppies right here on fox square.
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will: here to show us his best tricks if you decide to get a puppy today. good morning. >> absolutely, good morning. how are you guys doing? will: good, thank you. what should would he be looking for here if we decide to make the leap into adopting a pet. >> five tips that we kind of brought together for you guys today. the first one is time. dogs who have been adopted whether it's from a shelter or a rescue group need time. so imagine being in a shelter and being put into a quiet home with maybe one or two people or on a farm outside of the city. so time is the first thing. exercise is the number two exercise really important shelters organizations they don't get to come out and do, this they don't have adequate exercise. making sure they get up to speed and be able to become a dog. will: so much bad behaviors because a dog needs exercise. >> exactly. rachel: great point. when people adopt. i think the family matters and the dog in terms of making sure that they are compatible. >> absolutely. yeah. that's kind of the third thing
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is routine routine another thing. dogs domestic indicated animals do well with routine. wake up in a certain time. feed certain time. walk, certain time. go potty certain time and it will help them out: going to be training. so training is really important. training is one of those things you get a dog shelter who am i where do i go? who is in charge. training is big, obviously, right and then the last thing is going to be leadership. dogs really need leadership when they come out of the shelter and come out of an organization they are like oh, hi. leadership is really big. so teaching them hey, i got you. i'm in charge. i will show you what you can and can't do. will: i'm the alpha. pete: introduce us to some of these dogs. >> you can introduce some of the dogs here. all these dogs are going to be adoptable here in new york city. will: animal shelter start with this gal. >> gore did it that 5 years old.
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chihuahua. rachel: i see chihuahua in there for sure. what about this dog here? >> petrie. he is about 8 months old. >> 8 months old: always looking for treats. that's what i have learned. will: that guy down here is young as well. >> sammy. rachel: six months? how much bigger do you think that dog will get? >> he is growing. >> still growing? >> about 30, 35 pounds, might be 45. >> wow. how about this? this is another young right right here. >> 10 months. he is an exercise one for sure. will: beautiful pets out here this morning. can you check them out. these are from bideawee here in new york city. national adoption day. i have only ever adopted dogs or
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stolen/adopted. a long story. rachel: we will have to talk about that. pete: adopt a cat. >> today is dog day though. >> adopt a pet day. >> oh it's pet day. pete: you could adopt a cat. >> senator ron johnson joins us by the way at the top of the hour so stay with us. ♪ home to any possibility. 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 wealth is breaking ground on your biggest project yet. worth is giving the people who build it a solid foundation.
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♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ pete: we're back in kitty hawk, north carolina, with the sun is now up and we're all getting up together. we are glad you are here with us on this third hour of "fox & friends weekend." it is saturday, april 30th, year of our lord 2022. as those of us who are watching just moments ago, it is national
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adopt a pet day today. it's also national honesty day. you are very hospital. >> i am. national military brats day and national hairstylist appreciation day. rachel: oh, boy. i do love my hairstylist anthony. pete: you do. rachel: it's your day, anthony of i love him. pete: sometimes jlo look. you have so many different speeds. rachel: listen, probably the number one people ask me about is fox hair and makeup and wardrobe. we do have the best in the business. i get to work with two of them kara and anthony and they rock. pete: national sense of smell day. we are going to enjoy our chick-fil-a in a moment. national pool opening day as well. if your pool ♪ open. you should only it by today and a bunch of other ones. will: big day. rachel: yesterday was the father-daughter dance at the -- our lady of the lake catholic
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school. sean had three dates last night with other women that i gave birth to. and so i think -- maybe we will throw a picture up later on in the show. will: we definitely should. pete: definitely. will: share dad on fore-daughter dance. all of those days that pete just laid out. obviously a big day here on "fox & friends." bring in wisconsin senator ron johnson who joins us. senator, great to have you on the show this morning. >> good morning, guys. will: let's get right into it. when it comes to the disinformation governance board. this is the newest invention of the biden administration. it is terrifying as the "new york post" has branded our newest disinformation truth seeker nina jankovicz, it is scary poppins. take a quick look back for you in the audience at some of her greatest hits. ♪ ♪
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will: making up to that voice this morning and senator, we introduce you to what do you make of our newsest information governance board and its leader? >> well, she is concernly sing a snappy tune, can't she? i believe it's completely unconstitutional. this should frighten every american. there is a reason that freedom of speech was mentioned or, you know, guaranteed in the first amendment in our bill of rights for our constitution because free speech is fundamental to our freedom and our liberty. political speech is the most protected speech and that's exactly what the men and women now apparently of dhs, 240,000 people are part of the department of homeland security and now they have got a disinformation governing board?
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this is completely wrong this has to end. this cannot be established. we ought to be fighting this foote and nail. rachel: senator johnson, i agree with you on. that was what does it tell you about our culture. the fact that they even attempted to do this? that there are young women like this that are willing to take a position like this and act basically as the, you know, the ministry of truth in a chinese style kind of department within the homeland security? >> it tells me that the radical left has completely taken over the democrat party. they want a one-party state it was unbelievable to me when mel burr on msnbc msnbc elon musk was going to bring some measure of fair and balance to twitter people could dial up and dial down certain political speech and we wouldn't know it until after the election.
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that's exactly what happened with hunter biden, chuck grassley my report. the hunter biden laptop. that's exactly what the left has done. and they are either oblivious to their bias or this is their plan. this is how -- by the way, we now know what fundamentally transforming america looks like. rachel: amen. >> it's called destroying america. pete: under the guise of destroying misinformation. narratives or stories or information that you don't likes a the ruling regime. one of those examples you just pointed to is hunter biden and the "new york post," which i'm holding rights now, which was -- which by the way. this new chief misinformation czar nina jankovicz believed from the beginning was disinformation, misinformation which we now know the laptop was real. the emails are real and they are telling us a lot. including a new name a lot of our viewers are learning this morning and we are as well fran person, otherwise known as franny inside the biden white house. worked for vice president biden for many, many years.
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as now new information is coming out, we are learning about that connection and that connection to hunter biden in a feedback loop to the white house. just for our viewers real quick, who is fran person, franny, he worked from 2009 to 2014. for as an adviser to the vice president of the united states. then he went on to become a founding member of president of harves group which is owned by the chinese communist party and people there. and then he went back and visited the white house in 2015 and 2016. and at least four times potentially more. and got hunter and what is it called? rosemont seneca tied in with the white house as well. a lot of details there. confusing for even those of us that cover it when you see people so close to vice president biden, meeting inside the white house, working with the communist chinese, it's a plot like you would think so-called print media would want to cover. yet, they don't and then they censor the "new york post" when they try to. >> well, and let's face it, meetings inside the white house,
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whether it's with the vice president's staff or the vice president himself kind of a big deal. this isn't the only individual. you also have eric schwerin the financial adviser to hunter biden. convicted felon he knew exactly what he was dealing with. dealing with patrick ho who he labeled the spy chief of china. so chuck grassley and i tried to warn america. we had this report showing this vast web of foreign investments and entang dwellments a lot of them with the chinese communist party. again it was censored by the media. by the big tech social media giants and we have seen polls that had america known how compromised this president would be he would not be president. but now he is. he is compromised. and you have to really be wondering when he passes the nord stream two pipeline or the sanctions on the people constructing it. when he cab said the china initiative, which is the department of justice project to
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investigate theft of our intellectual property by the chinese government. what is going on here? what exactly or to what extent is president biden compromised and how does that compromise our national security? rachel: you know, senator, one of the things that i really appreciate about you is how honest you are and how you lay things out so clearly. the two policies that you just mentioned are so important, our intellectual policy rights being violated by the chinese government that the biden administration is doing nothing about, it's the most perplexing policy decision on his part. it only makes sense, senator, in the context of him being paid off through hunter biden in this scheme. >> no, it is doing our nation a great deal of harm. that's what the radical left is doing. you take a look at our open borders, 40-year high inflation. record gas prices. rising crime because of low bail -- no bail policies. defund the police. again, we know we do -- we now know what fundamentally
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transforming america looks like. it's not pretty. it's fundamentally destroying this nation. and i hope americans are awakening to this fact. this is dangerous. our nation is imperil. we must sweep democrats out of power come november 2022. rachel: yeah. will: senator ron johnson of wisconsin. thank you so much for joining us this morning on "fox & friends." rachel: thank you, senator. >> have a good day. pete: national honesty day so we had a honest senator. rachel: you had the most honest senator on this morning from the great state of wisconsin. pete: great to have him. turn to few additional headlines this morning including this: a murder suspect and sheriff's deputy in alabama go missing on their way to the suspect's court appearance. the pair was last seen 9 a.m. yesterday after leaving the detention center. the vehicle was spotted later in the morning in a parking lot. no side sign of the sheriff's deputy or the suspected killer. investigators are reviewing surveillance footage hoping for clues. political science have issued an alert to look out for the
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suspect and the deputy. and retired nfl player jack brewer filed a police report on msnbc host joy reid for putting children in his mentorship program in danger. he joined "fox & friends first" this week after reid claimed black children associated with his organization were subjected to child abuse for standing with governor antioxidants. humiliated me. i don't want her money or nbc's men i do want to hold them accountable. >> reid tweeted this misuse of black boys is tantamount to child abuse. i would really like to hear the back story on who these kids were and how they wound up at desantis event given how antiblack desantis is using black children this way is extra
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sick. given the background, the question is will she apologize or respond. rachel: who has done more for black children jack brewer or joy reid there is not a comparison. pete: heavy dose of background on that one. phenomenal. rachel: he has them in his own home is he helping them. pete: going to prisons, unbelievable. headline or maybe a tease. i don't know, could elon musk move twitter to the lone star state? jim offering the new twitter boss free land if he is willing to move the company. spoke to him earlier on the show. >> i like what elon musk is doing. the other day when he bought twitter he talked about the reason he bought it is because he believed in free speech. i believe that's really important. i felt like it's my turn to give back to the community and so i'm going to give 100 acres to elon if he wants to take it and bring the headquarters to twitter in sweaterner texas.
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he was great on the show see if he takes him up. zanesville a little skeptical. rachel: doesn't want any more silicon valley. pete: fan of jim. will: he had the aggie helmet. i forgive that. that's a friendly rivalry. i'm not a fan of the idea of importing 2,000 far left censors into the state of texas. rachel: already liberal. will: 2,000 is the minimum. reduced overhead. 8,000 twitterer employees. i'm sure there won't be 8,000 much longer but importing people. i'm just telling that you button of censorship exists in the ciewbleg as much as as it does in the senior vice president's office. that's what i'm worried about. elon musk has a culture. pete: if you want to change the culture, will, just like in any other scenario, move location. so you go like living in the house with your ex, that your exlived in. don't want to stay there. not that i know anything about that. okay?
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but you -- you don't want to stay there. okay? you can't live in the carcass. you got to move over to a new headquarters. will: i could do a lot of things with this analogy. i could go a lot of places. pete: i wasn't sure i was all in. rachel: honesty day. pete: it is national honesty day. rachel: i just love this. will: leave a lot of things behind in that old house. pete: new house for new beginnings with new employees. rachel: can i give you an example? pete, you are on to something, kind of. you know, when i -- before i lived in wisconsin, i didn't understand gun issues. i'm a military brat but i never had a gun. i lived in cities a lot growing up so i didn't understand that i moved to wisconsin and you know, the second amendment was theoretical and then i saw gun culture and part of who these people are and why it's so important to them. i'm really now hard core second
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amendment. it's possible. will: okay. on that note i will take jim up on supporting his offer if we can put into place a two-year -- we will call it naturalization period. in which case. rachel: i love that idea. will: see if your new home culture seems in. and then you can start voting and, i don't know. it still make please nervous. should but i can't. rachel: the word carcass keeps coming to my mind. pete: true, i'm not going to keep coming to that subject. analogy holds. rachel: i love it. will: coming up. the left pushing for open borders but then ignoring the crisis their policies leave behind. tomi lahren covered the border for years and she is here live. rachel: license to drill. tag team members of congress to see one of the world's largest oil platforms. why they are calling on america to make america energy independent again. you don't want to miss it. ♪ girl, you really got me going
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rachel: i visited the gulf with seven congressman and women to get an in-depth look at how the u.s. can achieve energy independence. here's what i found. >> we're in the gulf of mexico, we are heading 80 miles off the coast of louisiana so the shell appear mat talks oil platform. the largest one in the gulf of mexico every day 180,000 barrels a day. >> we are going to be meeting steve scalise and a delegation of congress who are here to check out or offshore oil industry. >> we just landed on the platform. keep going on the shore. >> on appomattox alone we have 20,000 chain links borings. >> borings are what keep this
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thing afloat. power generators generate a ton -- pass water over that hot air [inaudible]. >> use that steam to generate. rachel: the steam is generated from the process you are already doing? >> one of the things that most impresses when you come out here is the cleanliness the of the water here. people who say this isn't done in a clean and efficient way. it's like blue caribbean water
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>> we have people that are keeping us floating. mechanics, electricians, power, making sure pumps are working. we have operators ha are actually getting oil out of the ground. we have a day terring crew that take on a lot of different skills. >> hundreds of thousands of jobs created by this industry. >> this is really high tech. the pay is really good. if you are working on a rig, if you are servicing the industry, but also generates billions of dollars to the federal treasury. >> first time you have been on a tour like this for both of you? what is your first impression? >> this is the -- being here puts a spotlight on domestic energy production. >> this is amazing technology. it's american ingenuity, american workers producing american energy. >> our adversaries would love nothing more to make us dependent. that's why independent is so
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critical. >> a facility like this and others like it, you could supply all of america's needs for oil and natural gas and be exporting to some of our friends around the world. we should see more members from congress on both sides of the aisle that want to come and see this. frankly we should see people in the biden administration who wanted to come here. a lot of the things that they are saying against american energy are just not true. >> people who are questioning what we do, i say come on out. we would love to host you for a visit. it really starts with an understanding of what we do. it's a wise thing to have energy independence. rachel: if you had your wish list so we could be energy independent, what would you want from government? >> the most important thing is that we have predictability. there has only been one lease sale since 2020, and that was was overturned. we don't have a five year plan in place that will dictate how lease sales will go going forward. >> biggest concern about what the biden administration is doing is that they are making it harder for america to be energy independent years from now. which means we are going to be more dependent on foreign nation for our energy supply.
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that's bad for america. pete: what really stuck out there is no -- so much uncertainty. rachel: so much uncertainty. not just bad for these companies but bad for us. these are billion dollars -- the massive amounts of investment. and the companies don't actually make their money back for 10, 15, sometimes even 20 years. so you have to have these leases in the pipelines so they can go and explore and hopefully find something. will: i love we have invested here on "fox & friends" to understanding how oil and gas makes its way from underneath the surface of our planet to your gas pump. but also want to leave time for this because in order for rachel to be on that platform which you are watching. she had to go through some helicopter training. helicopter. rachel: crash training. will: there it is. rachel is in a capsule simulating a helicopter hitting the ocean. rachel: i'm strapped in with a seat belt. will: turned upside down and kick the window out.
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rachel: hit the window out with your hand. i love that you know i'm a big james bond -- will: is that you on the right? >> that's me on the right here swimming out. the first time i had to do it i was panicked. but, you know, but then i was james bond after and i got out. will: it doesn't have walls immediately. rachel: it fills quickly the and the first time i was panicked this is really awesome. i didn't think i could do it at one point i thought we had this whole crew out here. i can't get on a helicopter tomorrow unless i pass this course. a lot of pressure. i did it, thought about you guys, thought about, you know, our navy seals, you know, maybe have a new career. will: maybe. pete: that's why you train though your instinct is going to be panic at any moment like that. rachel: they said if you take helicopter training course, your chances if you actually survive the crash go up 80% of surviving after taking it you are right. training the instinct comes back. i want to tell you, so great these members of congress came out to see the oil platform no
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democrats on this trip i asked how many not a lot of democrats come tout see something that they are opposed to that create amazing jobs, family supporting jobs for so many people in the region around the country. pete: so amazing for all of them to be in that helicopter training with you, right? will: we all need to understand as rachel's point not just her trials and tribulations but, where does this oil and gas come from? pete: very cool. will: inflation hitting every industry already wedding. budget tips to i do in 2022. pete: speaking of weddings. is engaged did you know that joins us live on set. ♪
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to learn more, go to now4gmg.com and talk to your neurologist. o. pete: sirens sundayed last night as a massive tornado cut through residential communities in kansas. officials reporting major damage to more than a dozen homes and the town's ymca facility. fox weather meteorologist zanesville on the ground with details. will? >> good morning. the images of this tornado striking this community are both mesmerizing and terrifying this morning we are getting our first look at the damage left behind. i have just arrived moments ago here in the community. i'm going to switch my camera angle because i want to give you a little bit of a walking tour. you mentioned the ymca. that's what we are seeing on the here. windows blown out of that building, that's why it's so important to stay away from windows during a storm like this. this very likely could be part of the roof here. across the street it's just 'much more of the same.
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major power lines that have mr. splintered in half and taken down. we still see in the distance here this home that has just been leveled. the utilities are still on. the water is pouring out of the pipes. cars tossed in the difference like they were toys. the command center has been set up a little bit down the road here like half a block. the damage survey is still continuing here this morning. these are still considered very early hours of all this to make sure that everybody is accounted for. amazingly, we have no deaths to report. but just look at the metal that's twisted around this three. all right? this is part of a trust system . much more to survey here this morning. fox weather is on the ground he a and we will continue to bring you the latest throughout the day. back to you. pete: will, great port report. thanks for bringing it to us. praying and thinking about all the folks in kansas affected. will, over to you. will: thank you, pete. today 22-year-old texas national guardsman sergeant bishop evans will be laid to rest after
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losing heir life migrant smugglers are drowning in the rerow grand. tomi lahren has covered the border for years and she joins us now. good morning, tomi. >> good to be here. i'm glad that "fox & friends" is honoring somebody who was selfless enough to lay down their life. especially to save people who not only have no legal right to be here but were trafficking in drugs or part of an organization trafficking drugs into our country to kill millions more americans. so i'm glad that we're honoring his life. i wish more networks and more politicians did the same. but, you know, his life apparently wasn't so noteworthy to a lot of folks which is unfortunate. will: apparently his black life didn't matter as he was laying down his life literally to save somebody as you pointed out who was breaking the law. i can't help but put it in context how much attention was given a year ago to the false story of in that case border patrol agents supposedly, quote, whipping migrants. >> right. that's because they don't understand what a split rein is and don't understand anything about horseback riding or anything about the border. of course, their first instinct
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is to demonize those who are willing to lay down their life and a lot of times humanitarian efforts. i have been to the border several times we have talked about this. those border patrol agents yes, their job is to secure our border. now they are really not even able to do it. their primary goal is to keep everyone safe, including their fellow agents but also the very migrants that are coming into our country and a lot of agents are -- have incredibly taxing job. especially now they are being inundated completely overwhelmed. the lack of appreciation sand support certainly doesn't help that. will: so quick to demonize and then not aapologize for getting that story wrong and no willingness to lionize this particular officer. i want to move is to something else. you mentioned border coverage. you live lived in los angeles now you live in nashville. you know what's going on in that city. the d.a. in los angeles, george gascon is, quote: causing havoc and mayhem. now there is a recall effort. i believe, tomi, it's up to over half a million signatures or it must -- organizers must collect
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half a million signatures and up to 350,000 signature curse right now to get rid of gascon. >> second attempt. so it's very difficult. when it happened with gavin newsom, when they reached those signatures and that threshold. it was amazing and i had high hopes. i think as unpopular as gavin newsom is gascon is even worse. i think it's going to be successful. a lot of californians don't want to put their name on anything. they are very quiet. they understand this man is ruining their city. they understand the failing policies of not only l.a. but california are destroying their lifestyles but a lot of folks don't want to do anything about it until it affects one of their family members but i think that might slowly be changing because it's unavoidable at this point. will: until it gets into their neighborhood and it is. it is spilling over into every neighborhood. the crime, homelessness, every issue that gascon has direct control over to beings some extent your quality of life it's not limited to the neighborhood over there anymore. >> right. will: everywhere in l.a. >> the felons are celebrating him that should be reason enough
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to recall this man. saying his name we will get his name tattooed on us they lo that guy. what does it say that you have a leader that the felons are intrasmght the criminals the monsters are celebrating this man and then the decent, average californians living and just want to live, work and already unaffordable place they have to deal with the lack of leadership of someone like this. so recall baby, recall. watch out for voter fraud and recall the man. will: or move to tennessee and texas and south dakota and everywhere else in the country. all right, don't go anywhere. stick around because i know you want some wedding tips on how to control the budget coming up here in just a moment. >> called eloping. i have already spoiled it. will: maybe she won't stick around but you should for the final segment. don't go anywhere republican candidate josh mandel will be here. ted cruz will be here as well live but, first, stop hitting on me. i just want to let that sit there for a moment. elon musk firing back at aoc after the congresswoman criticized his twitter.
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will: i have an eighth grader that has a terrible hair cut. reminds me of my hair cut in 8th
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grade. i'm going to go vanilla ice, ice, ice baby. i had the hair dried up and back. >> i will pay you $20 for a picture. will: how about i do it tomorrow on "fox & friends"? >> there you go. pete: that was yesterday on "the five" this is your shot of the morning. the proof will cain's high top fade rocked with intensity. rachel: lookings like you are wearing a hot dog on a stick uniform. wail. will: you there were, too rachel. you remember those bold colors. coca-cola shirt. >> really accurate. rachel: other than the hair cut i would say you haven't changed a lot. you still look young. will: i think that's actually older than eighth grade. >> was that specifically because of vanilla ice? i want vanilla ice's hair? will: i can't think to that
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particular moment. pete: don't hedge. will: definitely a time yes. yes. stop, rachel. [laughter] pete: did it well though. rachel: did you get the line in there. >> no. rachel: the sensible will. pete: clearly has an opinion on it brian kilmeade who also. brian: thank you. pete: by the way, brian, i believe there might be throwback hairdos that you have as well that we may or may not have to show the viewers. there you have it young brian kilmeade. will: side by side now. rachel: he hasn't changed much either. pete: a little lengths in the back. rachel: growing pains to me. does that look growing pains to you? will: who did you model your hair after? brian: i didn't really watch that show. i looked in the mirror and said way to to make it unique. i will say this a couple of things. rachel and pete, how great is will at promoting his life? hi, everybody on "the five" see
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me later check me out in the morning? this whole network is going to disturb will cain's career. little bit join me sunday. will: "fox & friends" promo. by the way i talked about you on "the five." pete: i heard that. will: i talked about him. rachel: you would never know i have a podcast too. on this show we only promote the will canel podcast. will: i said the reason that kilmeade allows hegseth and i to fill in for him on "fox & friends" because he believes we are not a threat ever like any good quarterback make sure your backup quarterback is a weaker version of you. [laughter] brian: so you are my colt mccoy? will: who does that make you? brian: backup quarterback in the league? i will say this. that is not true. i see you guys as much more talented. and i don't want to let down the audience. i'm about the audience. rachel and pete, will is about him. and you know this. and that's why when i'm out, i don't want to let the people
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down. i want people more talented than me. there goes that theory. okay? i'm going to knock that right out of the park. that was something that will be punished under this new disinformation czar that we're going to have. will: this whole segment is disinformation. calling me selfish. where is nina jankovicz. i want nina jankovicz in here singing a broadway tune about all of your lies. [laughter] brian: that could be great. by the way rachel and pete did not deny anything i said. rachel: that's interesting. we actually didn't. so, brian, let's talk about somebody else who is really into themselves. and that would be alexandria ocasio-cortez. [laughter] pete: we lost will. brian, we got will kicked off the segment and for the record, we actually do side with will on this one. brian: that's the biden administration, disinformation you are out. you are gone. rachel: this is how diva he is now. is he refusing to do the segment. he is behind the camera. [sighs]
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pete: tighten the shot. [laughter] pete: push i had button you want. modify it over there get brian out of the segment. pete: now it's your shot, will. brian: you can't kick me out i'm on a satellite. does he know that's not a satellite? will: let's do this show. rachel: aoc as now he, brian, everything she is criticized says she deflects the criticism by saying i'm so hot that you're just saying this because you are so into me. and recently she tweeted -- can you relate? will: go ahead. rachel: the tweet that she just put out i'm tired of having to collectively stress out about what explosion of hate crime is happening because some billionaire with an ego problem unilaterally controls a massive communication platform and skews it because tucker carlson or peter thiel took him to dinner and made him feel special. in response elon musk tweeted he
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tweets about will too. that's good on your podcast. that's awesome. this is what he tweeted about aoc. stop hitting on me, i'm really shy. what do you think? brian: that's awesome. number one, he has been active all week. you would think at a time in which he is pulling off this $50 billion deal and while tesla stock is dropping and this -- there is mania around here you kind of lay low. this guy dove into it is he commenting on your intriewl and your podcast, will in all seriousness, that's true. and he goes after aoc. so he elevates her. but he does it in a humorous, controlling way. that's the fun interaction. number one, people like seeing, we're talking about it people at home around the country are saying did you see what elon musk did. he makes it come off like every man. number two, kind of interesting on the platform. when is the last time we saw something interesting on that platform or even from a.o.c. the time she broke covid rules excuse me broke new york covid rules in florida and went down
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there and started partying and tested positive a little bit later on. pete: that's the indictment he made of twitter to your point boring place the people with the most followers don't tweet anything interesting at all. he is flipping it on his head. making loot of people wonder what is the background of elon musk? this is a really interesting guy who has done interesting stuff. thankfully brian kilmeade delivers with a special on fox nation entitled "who is elon musk?" what did you discover when you did this special? brian: so much. number one, there is that special quality because just coming off that benjamin franklin special on pbs. this is our benjamin franklin. i wonder what electricity would be like? i wonder if post office would be effective? it's cold in here let me come up with a wood burning stove. i wonder if i could make a car? i wonder if i could make a rocket ship. i'm tired of traffic i want to build a tunnel. at the same time he is taking on massive debt. paypal, convincing banks to go with him as you talked about will in your podcast.
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convincing huge banks to have paypal be their payment system or at least include them in. that is not a guy that says i want to be richer. that's a guy that wants to matter. i'm not saying is he perfect. we have his personal life in there, too. go ahead judge him. what is trying to do is get the most out of life. he realizes he got this great brain and he is trying to maximize it. i think that should be lauded and studied. not judged and feared. will: who is elon mask. who is vladimir putin, who is volodymyr zelenskyy get these right when most important people are asking that question. what's coming up on one nation tonight? >> well, my theme of one nation and i think it's hopeful it is the rise of the radical rational. and i just think that's where we are heading because of these people on the fringe. i think we're going to be rational people u.s. ambassador -- the swedish ambassador to the u.s. are they going to join nato this month? karl rove takes on the
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disinformation haven't seen before. rick wolf on the violence in youth sports. will and pete and rachel. have you seen this before. it's getting percent worst and scott welch has seen it with his parents, too. that's all coming up between 8:00 and 11:00. rachel: thank you. pete: thank you, brian. great stuff. brian: sorry, will. pete: i will help him in the break. rachel: this is all a joke. we love him. just joking. thanks to inflation, weddings are more expensive than ever. we have advice on how to save for the big day. even tomi lahren is sticking around for it. ♪ we hit the bike trails every weekend shinges doesn't care. i grow all my own vegetables shingles doesn't care. we've still got the best moves you've ever seen good for you, but shingles doesn't care.
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rachel: welcome back to "fox & friends." the average cost to say i do in 2021 was $28,000. but, with record inflation, couples tying the knot are expected to pay even more. my daughter evita is getting married this year and so is tomi lahren. so we are very interested in this topic. i feel like it was made for me. >> yes, absolutely. let's talk weddings. rachel: what are your number one tip on how to save? >> so my number one tip on how
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to save is actually to hire a wedding planning professional. obviously yes you are paying for a wedding planner a few great things come with that one is that we have vendors that we have great relationships with. so we are able to provide you with the reliability, the know how, the research all up front. we get really good negotiated pricing with them. they are looking for us to partner with them over and over again. beyond that using a planner means i can take your $500,000 dreams, figure out exactly why that feels so important to you and those elements and create a pragmatic way to make it happen within your budget. rachel: the venue i selected for my daughter's wedding cape with somebody to help plan the wedding. thought that was amazing. if you hire someone outside the venue i know it ranges from place to place what the average cost. >> full wedding plan tore do it from the moment you get engaged i would say ranges between 7,000 and 15,000. rachel: all right. >> you got to tell me though weddings,s are they overpriced? do they see us prides coming and see you canner on our forehead?
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i'm getting that impression. >> such a reputation in the industry but i do online wedding events too so all my costs are the same. rachel: flowers are outrageously expensive. i am really interested in what you suggest you can replace the traditional expensive flowers with. >> absolutely. there is always something to splurge on. if you are a bride and flowers are my number one priority we will talk flowers. something you feel like you want to compromise on we will talk about different alternative centerpieces i am very into candles. rachel: nice ambiance. enchanting vibe to the room without breaking the budget. i love candles. i love uplighting. other kinds of lighting incorporated. and it's a fraction of the cost. but if you are like okay, i want some floral, splurge on the bouquet. do it for the girls and the guys. rachel: that's what i'm doing. we got to get to the cake because there is a way to save money on cake which can be a pretty expensive item. >> there can be. so, we love a beautiful wedding
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cake. especially this one by lulu's of cars dale. and they can be really expensive. they can range anywhere from $6 a slice to $15 a slice. you can do a smaller more symbolic cake. so you are not going to lose that moment of getting to cut the cake with your partner and having the cute feeding moment at the wedding. rachel: what's everybody else eating? we can do whatever they want. i have had clients that want to do apple pies mcdonald's. cinnabons doughnut wall anything you want for dessert. rachel: i'm pretty traditional on this i think i'm going to splurge on the cake. >> you should. rachel: about choosing. let's talk about the beverages? 30 seconds. >> beverages are super important. so if you have a venue that allows to you bring in your own beverages that means you are going to save a ton of money and go to costco and go to all the right places to get that bar and you will be able to have whatever brands that you wanted on there you don't to have the do the ones that the venue is making you choose. >> probably the most important part is the alcohol let's be
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honest. >> let's be real. rachel: thank you so much. this is awesome advice for any bride. so, great. rachel: all right. we have a big show still ahead. senator ted cruz, congressman ken buck are here and we're going to have you stick around a little bit more. >> let's do it. ♪ your love ♪ is lifting me higher ♪ than ts at lowe's. experience all the deals at springfest. lowe's. home to any budget. home to any possibility. this is vuity™, the first and only fda approved eye-drop that improves age-related blurry near vision. wait, what? it sounded like you just said an eye drop that may help you see up close. i did. it's an innovative way to... so, wait. i don't always have to wear reading glasses? yeah! vuity™ helps you see up close. so, i can see up close with just my eyes? uh-huh. with one drop in each eye, once daily.
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the full benefits of turmeric. the brand i trust is qunol. ♪ ♪ ♪ rachel: good morning, everybody. it's 9 a.m. here on the east coast in new york city. i'm here with will and pete, and you're looking at a shot of a bunch of gorgeous kids who are testing out the best toys for this summer. we're going to head out there and play with them in a little
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while. will: i can see it already. rachel: i can feel summer coming. pete: why isn't this a horse race? will: you can see it, you and me having a joust -- [laughter] it's happening. it's what we're doing, isn't it? pete: it is what we're doing. and, by the way, if you missed last summer, will took over as camera operator on the program which is one of the things i've always -- i've talked to dave, our stage manager, about the camera, i want to run the camera. i want to strap on the body armor, so this is a request -- rachel: apparently, you don't have to ask permission. will: he's going to have to put on the harness -- pete: come in, focus on you guys moving around a little bit, make all the viewers dizzy because i don't know how to operate it. dave, do you think we can do that? >> yeah. pete: it's approved by our stage manager, so maybe sometime tomorrow or -- will: real quick, dave, while we're talking about stave
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managers, did you guys see -- i know you did -- the nfl draft last night? rachel: oh, yeah. pete: i heard about it. will: i think i actually saw it in our rundown, this actor came out and gave, like, a 2-minute speech. you can say a few things and announce the pick, but he was feeling it, he was feeling the stage, feeling the moment. it wasn't great. rachel: oh, it wasn't? will: and the stage manager comes out and goes, read the card. [laughter] pete: i saw that picture. i bet there's a lot of times our producers have wanted to to come out and been, like, read the package. the package right here. will: like right now. rachel: so last night i was not watching anything related to football, i was actually giving a speech at national right to life in new jersey, and i asked sean if he wanted to come with me, and he said, rachel, you are not the only lady in my life, i are have the father/daughter dance.
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so there are my three girls -- and they had a great time at the dance. i have a very bad memory, and i can't remember a lot of hinges from my childhood, i do remember my father/daughter dance. it was put on by the girl scouts, and the girls were so excited about going, about getting ready for it. so big moment. it is. pete: all right. let's talk about something that's a little bit less sweet as we transition as we do here on "fox & friends," our southern border. recently joe biden spoke virtually with the mexican president. they say they discussed border and immigration more than anything else, although things on the border have only gotten worse and continue to. once they have stepped up and tried to do their part, the statements that have the largest influx of illegals, that's the state of texas. and governor greg abbott recently released is statistics
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about what the state of texas -- it's not the federal government, what the state has been doing to try to stem the tide of the flood of illegal immigrants on the border. even the concertina wire that's put up is put up by the state of texas. the federal government is abdicating its responsibility intention aalingly, completely. here's the stats of what texas has done at the border, and then we'll give some context. almost 240,000 illegal apprehensions, almost 15,000 criminal arrests, almost 12,000 felony charges, 4700 weapons seized and 342 million lethal dependental doses seized by the -- fentanyl doses seized by the department of public safety in texas throughout the state. so is you can be critical of, whether texas is doing enough, but if texas wasn't doing anything, those numbers could be. rachel: it's the interesting you mentioned the meeting between the mexicans and joe biden, and reallyst the mexicans who are worried about title 42.
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mexicans are concerned that title 24 means more people passing through their country. they have had to absorb a lot of the impact of that just as our border communities have to endure the impact of that. many of the pa mayors and sheriffs who live along the border -- many of them, by the way, hispanic, many of them democrats as well -- are very upset about this. this is yolanda roman. she is a democrat, hispanic mayor of eagle pass, texas, and she says they are just so worried about what will happen when title 42 is removed. take a listen. >> i can guarantee you that it could be even more than double. it's scary for us, it's mind-boggling, you know? we are very concerned, and i don't know why up there in washington they keep saying we are ready for it. no, we are not. i invite anybody from washington that wants to come to eagle pass and see what we're going through
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here to, please, do so. and not just to come and take pictures along the river. you know, they're invited to come and actually see what happens here on a daily basis. so if title 42 expires, president biden don't, doesn't do anything to stop that, trust me, we are going to see things that we have never seen here in eagle pass before. will: so many dangerous side effects to the chaos of what's happening at our border. today is the day we've talked about that texas national guardsman being laid to rest, we talk about fentanyl -- rachel: drug dealers, by the way. will: right. costing lives in this country. another side e effect is a conversation we had earlier which is the sheer offenseness of the -- obviousness of the chaos. and it's not clear democrats
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versus republicans. you're seeing democrats like that mayor right there or representative henry cuellar go, whoa, must have. the conversation we're left with is there are some inside the democratic party and at the highest levels of this administration who simply believe in the concept of open borders. and and you just have to keep peeling back that onion. if you believe in the concept of open borders, you do not believe in the concept of nation a states. it means you do not believe in the sanctity or the validity or the special place the united states of america holds in history. pete: those democrats are holding those positions inside an outdated construct that they have about the debate inside our country which is that our border should remain secure. and that was a concept and a debate, they have debates about whether you secure the border first and comprehensive border reform, those are yesterday. the radical left has long used the phrase no person is illegal. will: right.
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pete: and if you believe no person can be illegal, then why would you enforce a border when people are coming for whatever reason, and how dare you classify whether their claim is worthy or not. will: everything's asylum. pete: no one's sent back. and that viewpoint leads to this kind of chaos you see on your screen right now. and it leads conservatives to say good on governor abbott, but is it everything he could do? we had a person on earlier who said, ultimately, if this is an invasion, maybe texas decides to say we're going to get in the business of enforcement and deportation, and there's a constitutional challenge because they've completely abdicated. will: and the argument is they have that power if it is an invasion. rachel: and why isn't texas using that. i want to go back to this philosophical idea. so who exactly is pushing this inside the administration? because, as you know, there are many democrats who don't agree with it, and fox news this week
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had a great article about secret meetings by nongovernment organizations that are funded by the millions by george soros. what is the name of george soros' most famous organization? the open society. again, there's the philosophical angle. but let's not also forget about the profit motive. there are ngos including from the catholic church, many who are making a lot of money from government transfers of funds to their organizations to manage this massive flow of people. some people are saying that number, 2 million, is not correct, that we probably have closer to 3 million who have already entered. pete: the ultimate irony is the people who want those open borders are claiming america's a horrible, racist, terrible place, yet where does everyone on the globe want to go? will: it's odd. yeah. the biden administration, meanwhile, is defending the existence, the creation of the disinformation governance board and their appointment nia jankowicz as of our new czar of
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truth. you might be becoming familiar with her at this point, but if not, here's a bit of her greatest hits. >> ♪ ♪ ♪ pete: there's almost nothing to say. [laughter] rachel: everybody's just kind of silent. pete: she included congress as mainstream outlets. i do think it's worth pointing out, congressmen are elected by the people to be their voice, and she's saying, no, the federal government. rachel: she's a very scary individual s and she's also very emblematic of her generation, a generation that i believe has been fully indoctrinated into this very communist form of looking at our, looking at free
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speech and calling it disinformation. we had senator ron johnson orange ands here is what he had to say about this -- johnson on, and here is what he had to say about this board. >> well, she can certainly sing a snappy tune, can't she? i believe it's completely unconstitutional. this should frighten every american. free speech is fundamental to our freedom and our liberty, and political speech is the most protected speech, and that's exactly what the men and women now apparently of dhs, 240,000 people are part of department of homeland security, and now they've got a disinformation governing board? this is completely wrong. this aha -- has to end, this cannot be established. we ought to be fighting this tooth and nail. rachel: he also said in that interview that this is about what president obama spoke about during his presidency, which was the fundamental transformation of america. this is, he says, what hay mean.
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and if you want to fundamentally transform america and you know that most people don't agree with this idea of a chinese communist-style censorship of all these policies that are so up popular, you have to censor people in order to get the transformation. and that is why they're losing their minds over elon musk -- will: ray, rachel, this -- hey, rachel, this announcement of the creation of the governance of disinformation came one week after obama gave his speech on disinformation at stanford. they met at the white house with them about this topic. rachel: and the axelrod conference on disinformation at the university of chicago. so this is all part of, this is all planned, this was all set up as a rollout. and, by the way, i think the university of chicago disrupted the rollout a little bit. good on them. pete: it's true. nina has a twitter account, and surely she would have never
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peddled disinformation on her twitter account. except she's self-rye cloughsly right at the beginning declaring what is fact or fiction from the new york post, covid to the steele dossier. she praises christopher steele, the chief disinformant, as if i even want to use this phrase. chris steele, yes, that chris steele from the dossier, great historical context about the evolution of disinfo. worth a listen. disinformation is the most dangerous word i've heard introduced into our lexicon in a very, very long time. this is the approach they want to take, and they're saying, oh, this was started under the trump administration. no, there was a different type of department that was supposed to be focused on foreign interference. but again, republicans, be careful when you start anything just like dhs after 9/11. doing it for the right reasons means someone later on will grab it for the wrong reasons and make it something that it was
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never supposed to be -- will: by the way, jen psaki said misinformation -- pete: what's the difference? will: supposedly, disinformation is intentional, misinformation could be accidental. you're just getting it wrong. they're workshopping a new one, mal-information. all stuff i disagree with. rachel: we used to have facts, and now if they have all this, as you said, orwellian words. it's a very dangerous period of time that we're mentioning, that we're entering. and, by the way, she did mention in her response, jen psaki, this was start by the previous administration. this was started by the previous administration, about a ten times in her response. and by the way, another red flag that she's just absolutely lying, jen psaki is, is she said the reason we have this is because we want to get disinformation from the cartels because of all the people coming over the border. will: right. rachel: does this sound like something the administration, the biden administration cares
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about? pete: aren't they supposed to hate everything from the previous administration? they only use that rationalization when they're pursuing something nefarious of their own. no, no, it was them. now the border's wide open. rachel: absolutely. all right, we're going to turn to your headlines. overnight at least six people are shot at a popular par in new orleans. -- bar in new orleans. four women and two men were injured. witnesses say a black car drove by the venue and fired close to 50 bullets. police have not yet with released any information about possible is suspects or motives. a disney executive has stepped down just tree months into his role -- three months into his role as chief corporate affairs office. he helped craft florida's -- the company's response to florida's parental rights bill. he left the company for a number of reasons, including it's not the right fit. disney is deeply engaged in a
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legal battle with florida governor ron desantis over the bill. now, the uspl where two scar -- usfl where two quarterbacks will go head to head tonight. before that kicks off, the tampa bay bandits and houston gamblers will play what many believe will be a defensive slug fest. the ban differents and gamblers ranking at the bottom of the league on offense, and you can catch. both those games tonight on fox. and those are your headlines. you guys know what you're watching? pete: yeah. i'll check it out. i like a good slug fest, you know? defensive slug fest. will: yeah, i'll watch it. pete: it's football, after all. business proposition of the entire thing, more football, please. what am i going to watch, another episode of, you know, csi or something? rachel: real housewives. pete: or the office, which i watch a lot. will: really? pete: yes. that's my relaxation watching. i just turn off my brain, don't
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you all -- rachel: for me, it's reality tv. pete: same for will. will: right now i'm watching john wayne gacy tapes. rachel: what your favorite reality -- pete: oh, trash tv? will: love is blind, what's the other one? it's trash. you're going to think less of me, and that's why they said that. [laughter] you think lesses of me. pete: no. rachel: actually, i like you more. i like you more. you should get to know the real will. will: still ahead, even bill maher knows democrats are in trouble. >> we have horrible inflation. do you get the feeling the democrats are tanking on purpose to get a better draft pick next year? [laughter] pete: senator ted cruz and ohio senate candidate josh mendel on the possible red wave. that's e next.
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>> the democrats, they are in trouble. the economy schlank rank is -- shrank the last quarter. we didn't see that coming. do you ever get the feeling the democrats are tank thing on purpose to get a better draft pick next year? [laughter] will: late night host bill maher sounding the alarm at his fellow
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democrats ahead of this year's midterms. pete: republicans have an early edge going into november especially amongst independent voters. so is the democrat party in peril? if reaction from senate candidate josh mendel and texas senator ted cruz whos has endorsed him in that senate race in ohio. senator, real quick, is the democrat party in trouble? just a simple question. >> absolutely. i think we're going to see in november not just a red wave, i think we're going to see a tsunami. yesterday josh and i were barnstorm thing the state of ohio, the same thing today. everywhere we go there are packed houses, there is enthusiasm, there is energy. people recognize we're on the wrong track. it is amazing, pete, this white house has managed to get everything wrong. like, every -- that's hard to do. you've got inflation galloping out of control, you've got $5,
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6, 7 a gallon gas, crime exploding, you've got the disaster of covid lockdowns that people are fed up with beyond words, you've got the chaos at the southern border x then you have the utter catastrophe of foreign policy on top of that. and i think we're going to see in november are republicans, we're going to win the house, and i think we're going to win the senate too. pete: yeah, you're right, you have to be really good at being bad if you want to get all those things wrong at the same time. josh, specifically in ohio when you're talking to democrats or maybe independents, what issues have pulled them toward the republican partiesome. >> the top one is the biden inflation tax. the inflation was created by biden, pelosi and assume iser with their reckless spending -- schumer. and the democrats like to talk about it in terms of spread sheets and charts, but as i travel the state of ohio, i'm talking to people who are really struggling. i was talking to a waitress the other day at waffle house in a town in ohio. she works 12-hour days, and she
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goes after work to the grocery store, can't afford groceries, to the gas station, can't afford to fill up her tank, and she's like, josh, i'm a single mom, just trying to do the right thing. and i think there's a lot of people like teresa all throughout ohio. i meet them everywhere, and hay feel that the reckless spending by biden, pelosi and schumer has put the middle class and the working class in this position. and i think voters throughout my state and throughout the country are going to go to the polls in droves this november to vote out democrats and bring in fiscal conservatives like me. pete: go ahead. >> -- people can't afford grits. [laughter] pete: then you mow it's really bad, for sure. josh, real quickly, before we get to november, tuesday is the republican primary in ohio. tight race that's changed a little bit in recent days. new fox news polling points out that in march you were ahead 20 -- it was all tied at the top with j.d. vance at 11%.
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that changed and now according to our polling, we're seeing 23% now with j.d. vance, you're still at 18%. a a beg number of 25 undecided -- big number. obviously a big factor was former president trump's endorsement of j.d. vance, but talk to me about your position and what differentiates you from other candidates. >> sure. well, pete, we're coming at you from northwest baptist church in toledo, ohio. yesterday we were at victory christian church in dayton, and when we leave this morning, we're going to high street baptist church in columbus and then to the cincinnati area. i am running this campaign different, i am running the campaign through churches. and it's one of the reasons we're going to be victorious on tuesday, because we have this army of pastors and christian activists trout this state who want to -- throughout this statement who want to take the country back. they look at the left just stomp thing on the judeo-christian
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background of this country, you're going to see patriots come out on tuesday to vote for me, josh mandel, because i'm the only candidate in this race who is a consistent, proven fighter for the values we hold dear, and i'm the only one who has the courage to stand up and say we must fight to protect the judeo-christian foundation of america. and the only way to protect that for our kids and grandkids is to send fighters to washington. it's why i'm is so proud to have senator cruz's endorsement. he is a fighter. he's got backbone and a steel spine, and i'm going to washington to be reinforcements for fighters like senator cruz. pete: senator, last word, 30 seconds, but there have been conservatives, multiple endorsements on this race, why have you chosen to endorse josh mandel? >> well, pete, what i look for is the strongest conservative who can win. we know josh can win, he's been elected statewide in ohio twice, but also of all the candidates he's got the strongstest conservative record. he led the state of ohio
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fighting against obamacare, fighting to protect the right to life, he's led in the state of ohio fighting government spending, fighting death, fighting for transparency and fiscal responsibility. and, listen, i think republican primary voters are tired of rolling the dice and not knowing what you're going to get. if you want someone who will be a conservative fighter, the best wayed to do that is to elect someone who has a record of standing, leading and fighting. that's why i'm supporting josh mandel. pete: well, the prize for you both, and josh specifically, is 25% undecided is a huge number coming into in this weekend that'll make or break this race for either side. josh mandel, senator ted cruz, thanks for being with us. >> thanks, pete. pete: you got it. thank you. still ahead, joe biden reportedly wants to dismiss more student loan to ares, but how could that impact already skyrocketing inflation? our next guest warns it could jump by 20%. plus, her's almost here. -- summer's almost here. we've got the top toys of the
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since the cold war. the exercise will take place in finland including aircraft, tanks, artillery and armored assault vehicles. a british commander says the scale will deter aggression at a scale, quote, not seen in europe in this century. and in the u.s., department of defense spokesperson john kirby fighting tears as he sternly called putin saying it's, quote, b. s. that that the invasion is not about ukraine or russia is defending its own interests when russia was never threatened by ukraine. >> it's hard to look at what he's doing in ukraine, what his forces are doing in ukraine and think that any ethical, moral individual could justify that. it's difficult to look at the -- sorry. it's difficult to look at some of the images.
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>> reporter: and an update on trevor reid, the former u.s. marine freed from a russian jail in a dramatic prisoner swap this week. the the 30-year-old is now back in the united states. his family says he is undergoing health checks and will likely be a few days before his condition is known. in an interview, reed's mother says her son is in high spirits at the facility where are he's being treated, even flirting with some of the nursing staff. back to you. will: thanks for that report, matt. rachel, over to you. rachel: two other americans still held there in russia. well, president biden considering canceling some student loan department as it reaches close to $1.6 trillion. but our next guest says this could make inflation even worse, causing it to increase by 20%. joining us now is heritage action director jessica anderson. jessica, thanks for joining us this morning. so let's talk about fairness. let's talk a lot about fairness. how is this fair to people like myself who had to save and pay
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off my loans or the 65% of americans who never even went to college? >> well, rachel, you hit it on the head. biden's proposal the erase the student loan debt across the country shows just how out of touch he is with the plight of the american worker and all of us tax-paying americans across the country. that 1.3, $1.6 of trillion worth of loan debt would actually trickle down and cost each of us taxpayers over $13,000 in additional taxes. that's on top of what we are paying today and the fact that of we have record high inflation, gas prices and really a very, very disturbing and frustrating economic atmosphere right now in the country. rachel: yeah. increasing inflation by 20%? i mean, it's hard to believe that people can't even put food on the table the, fill up their gas tanks, so many people on fixed incomes suffering that they would even consider something like this. it seems, frankly, just so elitist.
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so tell me, why do you think this is happening? is this because the biden administration is feeling the pinch, they're losing the youth vote and they think this is a way to pay off college graduates who might not vote for them? >> well, the progressive left and of course the biden administration, they have a tendency to cater to their very liberal elite base, and that's really what this proposal would do. it would bail out those college-educated, rich donors that have put the biden administration many office toda. it's basically a kickback. it's saying let's forgive this $1.3-1.6 trillion of debt, a pass it down to the american people, and all of my wealthy friends and kids, now they're out of debt. it's a kickback, it's a bailout, and it's incredibly frustrating that the biden administration would even consider it as inflation grows to over 8% today. rachel: yeah. if you're poor in america, you've got to be steaming mad about this. this is basically welfare for
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the privileged. >> yes. rachel: very quickly, i don't have a lot of time, but student loans were put in the care of the government by the obama administration. is this what they had planned all along? >> you hit a really great point there. it doesn't actually have to be like this, and erasing the student loan debt doesn't do anything to fix the problem that we have in higher education right now. rachel: right. >> and so this is propoling the problem, it's going to -- propelling the problem, and it's not going to do anything to actually fix the high prices that all of us have to pay to get that education. let alone, let's talk about the curriculum that's in our higher ed. so it's disappointing, frustrating, and i hope this proposal fails. rachel: yeah. you're absolutely right. some of these schools are sitting on massive endowments, and they do nothing to help families that are struggling to pay tuition and paying off these student loans is certainly not going to help that problem. jessica, great point. thanks for joining us today. >> thanks for having me. are. rachel: all right. till to come, congressman ken
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buck is pulling off the gloves. he joins us live after calling out dhs secretary mayorkas over the chaos at the border. >> my constituents want you impeached because they believe you've committed treason. hay believe you're a traitor. they compare you to benedict arnold.
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yesterday just one day after our next guest grilled dhs chief mayorkas over the administration's handling of the southern border. >> my constituents want you impeached because they believe you've committed treason. thaw believe you're a traitor -- they believe you're a ray to have. they compare you to benedict arnold. are you ashamed for what you've done to this country? is. >> i am incredibly proud of my service to this country. will: colorado congressman ken buck joins us this morning. let's talk about that moment. treason. you went directly at mayorkas and repeated something you said you're hearing from your constituents. i'm curious, is that a specific term in your mind? is that something that is narrowly tailored in your indictment of what mayorkas has done in his job? >> my constituents understand that when an nfling coach doesn't win a game for 13 seasons, 5 seasons, 3 seasons,
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they're going to lose their job. secretary mayorkas should lose his job. what he's done at the border is a complete and total failure. he has dismantled the effective policies from president trump. and the result is that we have chaos at the border. we have record numbers of illegal immigrants coming into this country, we have thousands of pounds of fentanyl coming into this country, we have record numbers of americans dying from fentanyl overdose. number one cause of death between ages 18-45, fentanyl overdose. that's disgraceful. and this secretary the acts as if he has been successful on the border. when i asked him -- what i asked him to do was to explain to my constituents why he is not acting intentionally when he is opening our southern border. will: congressman, i want to, i want to actually come back to your analogy in one moment, but let's follow up on this line of questioning about the
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impeachment -- or treason and then what it could mean in terms of the concept of impeachment brought up. i've honestly never how about this when it comes to cabinet members. how does that process work? is that something that can be done in removing, you know, an officer under the executive branch? >> it can be. a officer can be impeached by congress. obviously, the house impeaches expect senate convicts. -- and the senate convict withs. and i don't know that i can remember a more deserving candidate for impeachment than secretary mayorkas. what he has done is intentional. you know, he has these private organizations that the federal government is paying using taxpayer dollars to pay that actually recruit, allegedly, recruit and train illegal immigrants to come into this country and say the right things. will: right. >> if that's happening along with opening our southern border, along with his statement
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that he believes we should have amnesty for people who come into this country illegally, then i believe that what he has done is certainly deserving of further scrutiny. will: yeah. and, congressman, i'm correcting you on specificity when with it comes to this term because what we're talking about, ultimately, is accountability. i don't think there's any doubt that the oath of office has been abdicated, and it has been done so intentionally. so at the end of our conversation, let's push for that accountability that i'm kind of narrowly tailoring you into. i want to go back to your analogy. when a football coach loses games, he gets fired, the head coach, as you mentioned, is mayorkas the head football coach or simply the offensive coordinator or the quarterback coach implementing a policy coming down from the head coach that we would assume is the president of the united states? >> well, i think he's clearly acting at the direction and at the behest of the president of the united states, but i also think that he has to accept
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responsibility. and what he's done specifically, president biden asked him to look at the remain in mexico policy. he left it up to secretary mayorkas to decide to remove that policy. so secretary mayorkas was given certain discretion and exercised that discretion in a way that is harmful to the united states with.. -- should president biden be held accountable also? absolutely. will: absolutely. i guess we're talking about the beginning of accountability. and so we look forward to seeing where this goes. congressman ken buck, thank you for sharing with us your intentions, we hope, going forward. thank you. >> thank you. will: all right. pete? over to you. pete: all right. now to some headlines. sean hannity now the longest running prime time host many cable news history. the legendary fox news host breaking the record last week, passing the late larry king's previous high mark of 25 years,
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6 months and 14 days. he sat down to talk about it with lawrence jones. >> i tell people what i think. i'm up front, i'm a conservative. i like donald trump, i like this candidate, i like that candidate. i don't hide my opinions, i'm honest about it. and all these other people, all our failing competitors are out there, and they claim that they're journalists. all they're giving is opinion. they're talk show hosts like me, except they're not honest about it. pete: amen to that. catch the full interview on lawrence jones cross country tonight at 10 p.m. eastern time, and a huge congratulations from all of us at "fox & friends" to sean hannity. and the second day of the nfl draft saw a number of high profile players get lower on the board than they may have expected. hall is now a member of the jets, willis is a member of the titans. and ex-vikings running back ed marinaro may hold the record for
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the longest draft the announcement of all times. his speech lasted about 2 minutes before a producer -- >> read the card. pete: -- before producers told him to hurry up by telling him to read the card which happens to us all the time in our ear. and dave just did that to me. stole the show. and then they stole the prompter so i couldn't realize the card if i wanted to, right, will? come on in, bud. read the card. what does the card say? >> will cain podcast -- [laughter] pete: there always is. do we have one? i don't know. [laughter] pete: let's check in with meteorologist adam klotz. adam: hey, there, i bet you didn't know that sitting on an inflatable horse could look so cool. do i make it look cool? yeah. they agree. they really had to -- looking at the forecast, i know they're at
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least happy about the forecast. beautiful here in new york city, 50 degrees. you're looking at warm temperatures in the even half of the country and a cold front with showers in the middle of the country. i'm going to keep practicing riding this, i this i we're -- i think we're going to be plague on some toys coming up later in the show. pete: i think we are. you can join the jousting on the rubber donkeys with inflatables and water guns. what could go wrong? [laughter] still ahead, sun's out, fun's out. the hottest new toys for summer on fox square. and watch tomorrow as well, we have j.d. vance, another ohio senate candidate, larry kudlow, jason rantz and steve doocy joining us live. ♪ plunge might as well be walking on the sune ♪♪ 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.
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♪ rachel: welcome back to "fox & friends." it's finally starting to feel a little bit like shiver -- summer. will: here with toys the family can enjoy outside, maddie is with us. >> a soup iser cute -- super cute bubble machine. run around the backyard or anywhere, and the kids are going to follow him. so cute. next we have the little teichs 3
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in 1 -- this is a fun art station you can put right outside, and we have different -- yes. there you go. squash bl paints, you can, you know, do your -- all over again. pete: i like that. >> moving on, the waddle hip-hopper jousting set. you guys start bouncing and jousting, having so much fun. this is really great for that active play. all right. will: power and knock him off a. >> yes. pete: football machine, super cool. >> this is the all pro passer. it is the most reliable quarterback you're ever going to have. it's going to throw the perfect spiral every time. go ahead and -- will: really did that! [laughter] >> when you press the button, it's going to launch your football. rachel: that's so cool.
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will: don't tell him how to do it. he knows how to do it. [laughter] [inaudible conversations] >> running out of battery. we were playing -- oh, there we go. watch out. pete: hike. we swear it works. [laughter] >> bubble blaster, when you hook this up to a hose, it will start splashing -- will: do i shoot the target? >> yes. go ahead and shoot the target. >> if it were hooked up to a hose, this part would be soaking you. will: shot me in the face at point blank -- in a suit. [laughter] will: more "fox & friends" just moments away. we're wearing suits now, don't do it. no, don't do it. pete: you pulled first!
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rachel: all right, go! pete: we both went for the same thing. rachel -- oh, i got him, i got him, i got him! victory, where's my trophy? rachel: i'm sorry -- [laughter] pete: have a great saturday. muck. ♪ ♪ neil: the aftermath of a tornado right now that could have been a whole lot worse than it looks. thing was a monster is. no casualties reported, but in kansas thousands now are without power. we're going to be getting an update on just what kind of damage we're looking at. also check in with senator roger marshall, the republican kansas senator is here and only here. welcome, even, i'm neil cavuto, and we're focusing on a lot of the developments occurring, well, currently. es

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