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tv   FOX and Friends Sunday  FOX News  July 10, 2022 3:00am-7:01am PDT

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fox. be sure to follow me on facebook, instagram and twitter. "unfiltered" with dan bongino starts now. [♪♪♪] ♪ [playing of the star spank gelled banner] -- [playing of "the star-spangled banner"]
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♪. ♪. pete: there it is. we asked, you delivered. yesterday was k-9 anthem day. today is the felines. they got their shot, they delivered. we have a squirrel in there. rachel: i will be hoppest,
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pictures kept coming up, that is really cute, super cute. when the pictures coming up, i asked the producers did we about to msnbc to get these? this is a dog channel and a baby channel. it worked. pete: halfway through i looked at you, this is a stretch. i don't i this the viewers will like it. joey: those are perfect. rachel: did dave give you that? on your own? joey: i have my own dad jokes. pete: thank you very much. no stock photos in there the a all. those are all viewer photos. yesterday, when i said send cat photos. i was inundated, i forwarded over to ariel who put this together. rachel: my mom is cat person.
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pete: gwen, one of our cats, storm and trooper. joey: cat people are surprisingly pretty normal. rachel: the cat people. [laughter] joey: they're normal. pete: curled up like a bunny. joey: you don't need a cat for that to be cute. pete: good job, good job gwen. rachel: funny. we had a conversation with will last weekend. we were having discussion about babies, he could never run for office because he said not all babies are cute. in the course of the conversation, there are some kids that so unequivocally cute gwen. pete: that is very nice of him. will would win when he ran for office. he says the real deal. there are some babies that are not cute. rachel: i love babies. pete: very cute babies my brother's son micah, who is sleeping at our house, he is the
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model baby. he could be jesus. he is a force lan doll. he is absolutely beautiful. very catholic. >> so much catholic here. joey: some are not that cute. i don't have two fingers to hold them. >> let's move on. pete: we're glad you're here. it is sunday morning, july 10th. i just have to keep note. it is summer. enjoy it every single day you've got. rachel: absolutely beautiful outside. we will get outside. it is national pena colada day. pete: is it really? in the 6:00 a.m. hour? rest of show should be fun? rachel: i proposed we start in the 6:00 a.m. before that we have to go sadly, get to the news before the pena coladas. there is a lot of news. joe biden is going to saudi arabia and he feels the need, by the way going to saudi arabia basically to beg for oil because he doesn't want us, america to be energy
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independent as we were just i guess a year ago, two years ago. he wants to beg the saudis and he feels the need to explain why he is going to saudi arabia, because he had lot of not nice things to say about saudi arabia. he wrote an op-ed about that. pete: did he write it? , come on. rachel: his staff wrote a op-ed he signed off from his basement somewhere. he says from the start my name was to reorient not rupture relations to the country that has been a strategic partner fore80 years. saudi arabia has helped restore unity of the six countries of the gulf council and stablizing oil markets with other opec producers. i know many disagree with my decision to travel to saudi arabia. my views on human rights are clear and longstanding and fundamental freed adopts are always on the again today when i travel abroad as they will be during this trip. just as they will be in israel
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and the west bank. as president it is my job to keep my country strong and secure. i have so many problems with what i just read. mostly with the omission of china and the human rights discussion but i will let you guys take it from here. joey? joey: is this an equivalency of saudi arabia to israel? you know, also, listen it is a greenup point of view, hey we have to work with people that don't treat peep the way we treat our people. rachel: of course. joey: you can't be a hypocrite. you can't condemn it when it is convenient and sober it when it is convenient. that is what people appreciated about trump. i never felt trump tried to sell us on a bad bill of goods who he was working with from north korea and saudi arabia. if he thought he would get something done to benefit the american people. he never used words to paint himself in a corner he couldn't get out of. when you get in office, virtually virtue signaling when
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you're there of to do the job. pete: that is great point. that is like a permission slip. joey: can you imagine trump writing an op-ed to explain himself to anyone. rachel: to anything or anyone. pete: exactly right. i feel like great when saudi arabia is working with joe biden's experts. my experts are working with them to stablize the market. it is going great so far. you're right the entire tripp is begging for oil. it has no strategic significance, when donald trump went to saudi arabia he did on his first overseas trip, it was part of a triangulation none of us saw coming had israel's benefit in mind. created a whole new renaissance in the middle east, partnership with israel, recognition of jewish state which had not been codified at all by the gulf states. in this case they're working on an iran deal which thankfully has failed. they're trying to work with
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russia as intermediary as they condemn russia with war in ukraine, at the same time empowering iran for a process. apologize for going there in the first place, using terms like israel and the west bank which itself is totally loaded language. israel would reject that. they're trying to move the consulate, excuse me, emba out of jersey undo everything donald trump did. joey: because donald trump did it. that is what is so frustrating about it. rachel: saudi arabia is not only evil dictatorship he is going to beg for oil from. he is also going to nicolas maduro in venezuela. in latin america, leaders are saying, why are you doing this, you're quote, nourishing satan by buying oil from venezuela. we have don't need to do it. we have -- it is under our feet which is what donald trump had to say yesterday in alaska. pete: absolutely. meanwhile he is also yelling at gas station owners saying lower
quote
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your prices even they they make a like a penny a gallon what they actually charge. you mentioned it, april. donald trump was in anchorage, alaska. he talked about joe biden's war against energy. >> we also wish issued the first-ever leases for oil and gas production in the region, never happened. unfortunately the biden administration canceled those leases. now our entire country is paying a very steep price, not only at the pump, all over. as our great fishermen will tell you the soaring cost of fuel is a disaster for alaska fishers, risking putting them virtually out of business. we're no longer energy independent or energy dominant which we were just two short years ago. we are a nation that is begging venezuela and saudi arabia for oil. please, please give us oil. [booing] we have more liquid gold under our feet than any other nation
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in the world but we're begging them for oil. rachel: he is so right. you talk about all the different repercussions. saying it is impacting fishing industry in alaska. impacting so many industries. not just restaurants and grocery bill. across anybody who uses oil which is used in everything and gas. it is absolutely disrupting our economy. pete: when you plug in the electric car. rachel: exactly. joey: most frustrating thing about this is the dishonesty from our administration about the oil and gas problem. when they trudge out and say 9,000 leases. don't tell the truth about the leases. the idea we're producing more oil than we ever had. we were already on a trend, in 2020 happened nobody used anything. demand is not comparable to where production was before. production has to go up. there are a lot of things that are dishonest about it.
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there were six liquid national gas terminals waiting to be signed. three were already built. that is one of the cleanest exports we could do. the different things they have done to stifle, slow down, take investment out of, he promised to do it with oil and natural gas. turn arounds and says it is not our fault. rachel: joey, why is it less environmental sense to get it from saudi arabia and venezuela than just get it from our own country which doesn't probably, absolutely has higher standards in terms of -- joey: with all due respect my people in georgia can't afford to worry about the environment today. but if you give them an opportunity, they will pay it forward for tomorrow. that is the problem. this way with immigration. this way with the environment. with democrats it is all or nothing. with conservatives we want to take stepses it by not bankrupting ourselves. rachel: putting ideology ahead
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of people. we'll see this in other stories we cover today. that is the legacy of the democrats. they put ideology over regular people. willing to impoverish you to put their agenda forward. pete: joey, everything you just said makes more eminently qualified to be energy secretary of the united states than granholm is. joey: sure. pete: wild protests at a presidential palace to lead the sri lankan president to resign that is the presidential palace? rachel: that is where they're partying it up. this is another story putting ideology ahead of people. the prime minister agreeing to step down once a new government is formed. the president says he will resign on wednesday. joey: ashley strohmier here with the unbelievable video. reporter: it is pretty crazy. the unrest over the economic crisis reached a literal boiling point yesterday with leaders set
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to resigns after tens of thousands of demonstrators all over the country stormed the president's office to protest the nation's crippling economic crisis. some protesters finding their way to the president's pool where they jumped in for a little bit after swim there. another group barging through police barricades and setting the prime minister's private home on fire. the prime minister tweeting, to insure the continuation of government, including safety of all citizens i accept the party leaders to make way for a all party government. to make way for this i will resign as prime minister. she she lang cans stopped receiving oil services. citizens faced severe food shortages fired shots in the air during the process.
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at least 39 people, including three police officers were hurt. back to you guys. rachel: thank you, ashley. the leader of this country said we'll do all organic farming. they banned all getter leader that was not organic anything synthetic. the farmers couldn't transition well. crop yields dropped, pandemic hit t was all of this. people who were encouraging him to do this the protection of human health, said these synthetic fertilizers would hurt peoples health. the protection of human health and environment should take immediate precedent over any concerns about reduced crop yields and consequent shortages of food supplies. look how that turned out. pete: to your point, no incrementalism all or nothing and people suffered. joey: what is frustrating a bunch of republicans to signed
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on, take the excise tax to conserve so we hunt and fish. 58 republicans signed on to it didn't take the time to read it. the name of the bill sounded good. when you govern that pace, democrats sign on bills, they don't take time to fifth how to affect actual constituent. from 30,000 feet, this is fantastic. get rid of coal, liquid natural gas, whatever. it leaves people in dire situations in this case an entire country. rachel: yeah. all right, we'll turn now to your headlines. former japanese prime minister shinzo abe suspected assassin expected to be charged for murder. they found number of firearms similar to the weapon used to kill abe during a campaign speech on friday. the assassination raising security concerns for police, saying a lapse in protection allowed the shooter to get too close. abe's funeral will be held for
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close friends and family. a vigil will be held tomorrow night. a retire three-star general, gary valaski is us is spended a mentorship program after tweeting out a sarcastic comment to first lady joe biden. i didn't know that was illegal. pete: apparently. >> first lady's original treatment, for 50 years women had the right to make our own decisions about our own bodies. today that right was stolen from us. very less ski said finally know what a woman is he deserves a promotion. pete: i want that guy leading troops. rachel: it has since been deleted. by the way his credentials are amazing. it is unbelievable. pete: that is what hunter biden said about joe biden. can't use that on tv. rachel: he is not getting canceled. lightning doesn't just brighten up the skies. [laughter].
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that is why we love him. as one tree in ohio gets struck and burns from the inside out, fire fighters were called to the scene on tuesday to see the tree trunk glowing with red hot flames. i can't read this. keep thinking about hunter biden's comment. pete: yeah. rachel: according to the forestry and natural resource department, the temperature of the lightning flash was five times hotter than the sun causing the tree to explode from within. that is crazy. unbelievable. and those are your headlines. pete: some movie stuff right there. we can't report what hunter said about joe. you can look it up on the internet. not you kids. just the adults,. rachel: not the kids all right. pete: still ahead abortion activists hitting the streets of d.c. for the women's mare. their message for joe biden. as aoc gets called out for mocking justice kavanaugh for getting chased out of a restaurant. joey: this exhibit is supposed to honor a founding father.
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visitors of thomas jefferson's estate calling out bias against the president of the united states. ♪ from prom dresses to workouts and new adventures you hope the more you give the less they'll miss. but even if your teen was vaccinated against meningitis in the past they may be missing vaccination for meningitis b. although uncommon, up to 1 in 5 survivors of meningitis will have long term consequences. now as you're thinking about all the vaccines your teen might need make sure you ask your doctor if your teen is missing meningitis b vaccination.
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♪. pete: welcome back. pro-abortion activists marching to joe biden's front door yesterday demanding he declare, a quote, a public health emergency following the overturning of roe v. wade. rachel: and as supreme court justices face continued harrassment aoc mocks justice kavanaugh for getting chased out of a restaurant. joey: alexandria hoff is live in washington with more. reporter: good morning, guys. yeah, protesters wore green bandannas. they have become a symbol of the pro-abortion movement. thousands marched in the rain to the gates of the white house yesterday demanding president biden do more following supreme court's returning issue of abortion to the states. some reportedly tied themselves to the gates of the white house there the crowd also turned up earlier in the week outside of a d.c. restaurant where justice brett kavanaugh was receipting. he was forced to leave out the back of the building.
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congresswoman alexandria ocasio-cortez has mocked this moment, tweeting, poor guy, he left before his souffle because he decided half the country should risk death if they have an he can topic pregnancy within the wrong state lines. that is all unfair to him. the least they could do let him eat cake. reacted to that. he can topic pregnancies are not denied treatment. they are not viable pregnancies. modern medicine cannot transplant a viable pregnancy to a outter us. that is didn't set well with the deputy editorial page editor of "the washington post" either. ruth market is pro-shows but shares this, pickets at justices home primarily justice kavanaugh are beyond the pale. as i written before, row testers can make their views aptly known at the court. they are if anything
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counterproductive. shut down d.c. has put a bounty of sorts conservative justice, offering 50 or $200 force their locations. white house stance does not support the intimidation of justices, but did not go so far they should not be targeted in public spaces. >> alexandria, thank you so much. interesting with aoc, remember she was cowering and scared and different building. pete: not in the capitol. >> not in the capitol during the january 6 riots. she had to get mental health. there was all the self, what does she call it, self, i don't know, mental help, self-help. she was so traumatized. she insisted she was so scared, not just scared of the writers but members of congress on the republican side, she and the "squad" insisted having a metal detector before they could even enter in to vote. they're still there. i mean, for her to say that
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about justice kavanaugh and mock someone who had an actual threat on his life at his home with somebody with weapons is unbelievable. joey: not world of reality. world of virtue. a world of outrage. a world let me craft this way it needs to be to get people stirred up. as far as veterans y'all can have ptsd. we don't need it anymore. aoc take it, run with it. we don't need it. pete: good point. donald trump said now they're tearing down statues of confederate generals now, but tomorrow they're coming for george washington and thomas jefferson. he said it. he was right. not only right in the immediate moment. what we're in the middle of right now, a slow motion cultural revolution as they attempt to tear down any reverance we have for our founding fathers what they gave us. latest example of the cover of the "new york post" this morning. the pursuit of wokeness.
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thomas jefferson's legacy dissed in his own home. i hold it up. we hold these truths to be self-evident all men created equal. the words written by thomas jefferson our third president. an imperfect person himself. we all are. recent visitors to monticello where his library is, beautiful thing to see, take your kids to, noticed the whole tone how thomas jefferson is described has changed. and it is overwhelmingly negative. you go to visit the legacy of thomas jefferson you learn about what a terrible person thomas jefferson was. here is a sign that greets visitors at monticello when you arrive. is all men are created equal being lived up to in our own country today? when will we know when it is? here's a quote from a visitor, william bails of chester, virginia, wrote in an online review about visiting
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monticello. half of the comments on jefferson were critical. even my 11-year-old daughter noticed the bias. so, they're not just doing it in our classrooms and our textbooks, doing it in the places we visit, how we describe our founders,. rachel: if you go to the gift store, not limited to mon at that sell low. i visited many of these homes. i did a a series america's first ladies. i picked up on all of this, reorienting, reconstructing of the history to basically make sure that the idea that they had slaves is on the same level as what they did for our country, which is interesting because there were slaves you know in the middle east. there were slaves across human history. i get that. it is a terrible history. we should talk about it but we should not feel guilty or ashamed of our leaders when we go and visit the people who brought us the constitution, the declaration of independence. you leave feeling that way. joey, before you go, when you go
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to the gift stores you will find prominently displayed ibrahim candy, all the books on anti-racism are on display there. joey: guilt forthright. listen, if you go to monticello, mount vernon, you can't visit places without seeing where slaves lived and impact they had. these were great men as far as ideas, they built this on the back of slaves, we honor that, we talk about that. that is different than rewriting the importance of jefferson, washington, whoever it may be. why have monticello at all if you only use it for grievance. rachel: yeah. joey: celebrate the little part of mostly men that was exceptionally good and understand that none of them were perfect. i tell you what? none of their leaders are perfect. go down the line -- pete: good point.
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rachel: socialists. joey: we have a statement from a monticello spokesperson, our goal is to present an honest inclusive history of monticello in all aspects as well as jefferson's contributions to the founding of the country. that is all good and well f you go there, take a tour, all they tell you how terrible this person is, people will quit taking tours. rachel: you come away thinking how terrible this country is. pete, one of the things i love about your book, you go back to the source, where all of this is coming from of the boards of these, the boards of these living museums if you will, the homes of these presidents are being populated this is a very diabolical plan on the left. they have taken their donors on the left and they have populated the boards of these estates with leftists and so you have rubenstein a private equity billionaire from the carter administration who, by the way pledged extensive investments into china this is a way to deflect -- look at all this money i gave, i'm on board with
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1619, i'm telling the true history of america and it is terribleness and enslavement of people how it is not perfect. don't look over here all the money i'm making in china has real life slaves with the uyghurs. joey: don't look over here at all the amazing things thomas jefferson unleashed as well for generations of people. the beautiful words he wrote, even if he was a flawed person himself. you red that statement, you read the statement, inclusivety, the buzzword they use. we fall into the trap. good ernest historians take care of monticello, you're right, we haven't included enough about the fact he was a slave owner. let's include more of that idealogues come in with the money, let's make it all about that. pretty soonerrest intentions of good historians become an agenda, 177was no good, we talk about 1619.
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kids are coming through thinking thomas jefferson is a bad guy. we understand the flaws, we get accused of white washed, we know, that is the real deal. makes it about america being an evil place is when you get into the realm much cultural revolution where you are right now. these boards are have been taken over by leftists, we're not paying attention. rachel: while we were sleeping. don't walk away thinking thomas jefferson is bad, you also think america is bad by default. all right, still ahead education is top of mind for moms around the country as we head into the midterms. our mom panel how school issues could sway their vote. ♪ - i'm norm. - i'm szasz. [norm] and we live in columbia, missouri. we do consulting, but we also write. [szasz] we take care of ourselves constantly; it's important. we walk three to five times a week, a couple miles at a time.
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stiffness, swelling. and for some...rinvoq can even significantly reduce ra fatigue. that's rinvoq relief. with ra, your overactive immune system attacks your joints. rinvoq regulates it to help stop the attack. rinvoq can lower your ability to fight infections, including tb. serious infections and blood clots, some fatal; cancers, including lymphoma and skin cancer; death, heart attack, stroke, and tears in the stomach or intestines occurred. people 50 and older with at least one heart disease risk factor have higher risks. don't take if allergic to rinvoq as serious reactions can occur. tell your doctor if you are or may become pregnant. talk to your rheumatologist about rinvoq relief. rinvoq. make it your mission. learn how abbvie could help you save on rivnoq. ♪. rachel: welcome back to "fox & friends." the midterm elections are less than four months away and
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education is on the top of many parents mind. could think become the new swing voter in november? here to discuss our panel of moms. charissa meyer, lisa engleman and maribeth emrik. good morning to all of you. i will start with canneriessa you have a child with special needs. so do i. if you have a child with special needs no group suffered more during the pandemic than child with special needs who could not get services and very affected by disruption to their routine. >> parents are key cogs in the childhood education. the educators failed in 2 1/2 years, they have not informed parents, parents have not been informed in many things. as a mom after child with special needs, excuse me and a nurse, i want to know there are services and programs in place, post-covid mandates.
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and you know, children have been socially isolated. it has been, it has taken a real toll on their mental health and substance abuse, other issues, emotional issues. last year the american academy of pediatrics, we have a crisis with mental health issues. they're unaddressed. where is the funding for that? where are we fiscally telling schools accountable for programs we need post-covid to get kids back in order to address some of the mental health crises. the whole notion calling kids out, my son has special needs. does my teacher in the classroom call him out? do we have to call kids out? no. i tell my kid we're all treated under god as in his image, we're all created in his image. that is something when we went to school was the golden rule. treat others how you want to be treated. rachel: absolutely. >> we're calling out gender and race, to me it is identity politics. why are we calling people out and not accepting each other's
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differences? rachel: let me get to maribeth. she has a child with special needs. >> sure. rachel: charissa, brings up good point, where is the money? the public school system is flush with cash. a lot of it is going to identity politics programs, not to the children who actually need it, particularly those with special needs who have been so desparately affected during the covid period. >> absolutely. that is on top of the again today. we have a teacher crisis in america. i want to know where the money is going. i want to know when they are going to fund education. it is critical we retained qualified teachers. are they going to cut the budget? where is the budget going to be? and, specifically, how are we going to retain those teachers that we need? rachel: that's a great point. >> right. as she mentioned what are we
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doing to keep the services we need for our children? rachel: lisa, you are taking matters into your own hands. you decided to run for school board. how is that going? why did you do it? >> i ran this past november and i got close. i lost by about 500 votes. we had a very unique circumstance that happened in our school district. three weeks prior to the election, fox news broke the story our school board president, former school board president i should say allegedly sent inappropriately text messages to student. after that story broke, other girls came forward. a matter what the other ladies are saying. it is so important to get out and vote. know who the candidates are. not necessarily what political party they belong to, but do your research. do these candidates fall in line with what i'm thinking? do they follow my vision? do they represent my child? i had a child that needed
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learning support as well. i think sometimes school districts try to strong arm the parents to sign this paperwork where they don't agree with the plan in place, for their children. so again you know, we, we know parents are so busy. we trust our elected officials to have the best interests of our child. sometimes they don't. rachel: you did the right things. i think a lot of parents are looking running for office if they can't find the representation that they think is worthy of their children and their tax dollars. all three of thank you for joining us. i think the mom vote is going to come out in full force in november. it will be ladies like you who make the difference. thanks a lot for joining us this morn. >> thank you, rachel. rachel: all right. coming up pay and benefits cut for members of the military who aren't vaccinated. dr. jenette nesheiwat has family members who served. being unvaccinated poses no risk to army readiness. she sounds off next. ♪
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symptom improvement, and helps prevent flare-ups. like no other copd medicine, breztri was proven to reduce flare-ups by 52%. breztri won't replace a rescue inhaler for sudden breathing problems. it is not for asthma. tell your doctor if you have a heart condition or high blood pressure before taking it. don't take breztri more than prescribed. breztri may increase your risk of thrush, pneumonia, and osteoporosis. call your doctor if worsened breathing, chest pain, mouth or tongue swelling, problems urinating, vision changes, or eye pain occur. can't afford your medication? astrazeneca may be able to help. if you have copd, ask your doctor about breztri. ♪. joey: more backlash over vaccine mandates as the army cuts off more than 60,000 national guard and reserve soldiers from pay and benefits, preventing unvaccinated servicemembers from participating in military duties. here to react, fox news medical contributor dr. jenette nesheiwat. good morning, doctor. >> good morning.
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joey: okay, let's be plainspoken here, what we're looking at 60,000 servicemembers, reservist national guard members, work during the week, drill on weekends, first ones deployed when something goes wrong so their readiness is really important. is having a vaccine mandate or not having a vaccine mandate is that detrimental to their readiness? >> not with this specific covid vaccine, joey. i have massive respect and appreciation for our military and i think from a medical profession this expulsion is completely unfounded. they fought for us through wars, pandemics, national disasters at at border, this is how we treat them? no one should lose their job number one stop the spread of the virus, number two, doesn't stop you from picking it up. keep that into consideration.
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joey: we have agraphic here, 13% of army national guard, 1% of the reserve are not fully vaccinated. that is where the 60,000 service member comes from. we can't afford to lose, 10, 15% of a section of our service, we don't know what the next war is, national guard, we don't know what the next natural disaster is. >> you're absolutely right. the covid vaccines we have now, they're not i can like measles, mumps, polio, tetanus vaccine that can stop disease and stop debilitating complications. we can't do that. we can't force these obligations after vaccine that doesn't work the way the other standard vaccines work. we have over 30,000 servicemen that have applied for exemptions. zero have been granted. that is absurd. medicine, all aspects of medicine, we have to have alternatives, exemptions for allergies. published in jamma, study showed higher instance of heart inflammation in young, healthy
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soldiers. we need to take that into consideration. natural immunitity -- joey: that is the big one. that is the thing that bothers me. it bothers me natural immunitity is not recognized. dr. rand paul done a lot of that. my opinion, general, secretary of defense, this is more you will listen to what i said than this is the best policy thing. he made this announcement a year ago. he is sticking to it to stick to it. >> we need to shift our paradigm toward policy predicated on science fact, data. not politics. joey: thank you for your expertise. >> thank you, joey. joey: turn to chief meteorologist rick reichmuth who is back here with us for our fox weather forecast. rick: i got here just in time. it is spectacular out here. if you are in the northeast, absolutely perfect summer day. temperatures are great. not so much down in the southeast. take a look at the map. a lot of heat across the central part of country.
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3 degrees in far go at 5:47 in the morning. heat is building for a lot of the coming week. 60 in chicago, 68 in new york city. we have showers across parts of the southeast. area needs rain. we've seen drought building over last couple months. we have severe drought in a few spots over the next seven days. take a look what happens. a lot of rain coming in. good if you're certainly a farmer you need some of that rain out there. joey, have you seen what is going on out here? joey: no, i haven't. looks like a bunch of games i could lose here in a bit, i don't know. rick: probably will beat all of us. a big carnival. joey: we rolled out the red carpet to welcome you back from kentucky. a prep school costing $57,000 a year asks students about their sex, political believes, parents income. so much for reading, math, science. what is going on inside of america's classrooms right here
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after my car accident, ♪ i've been everywhere ♪ wondnder whahatmy c cas. ♪♪ so i called the barnes firm. i'm rich barnes. youour cidedentase e woh than insurance offered? call the barnes firm now to find out. yoyou ght t beurprpris
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great. polly prep country day schools, diversity, equity, inclusion survey, belonging to that as well, that is new one, asked students to identify their political beliefs and wanted their thoughts and feelings on their race and ethic backgrounds. chose students to choose sexual orientation. again fifth graders. ask what gender they identify as man, girl, woman, boy man, transgender boy man, gender variant, non forming, not listed, preferred not to answer. here to react turning point usa contributor, author of front lines, finding my voice on an american college campus, isabelle brown. thanks for being here. does this surprise you at all? private schools are paying $50,000 a year to send the fifth graders and these are the types of surveys they get? >> thanks so much for having me this morning. i'm so excited to be joining but not so excited to be talking
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about the insanity happening in the american education system at every level. you know it wasn't long ago when we only started seeing these issues on college campuses. i talk about that at length in my book. we've now seen indoctrination trickle down into every aspect of the american education system, public, private, otherwise. it hardly surprises me at all that a 60,000-dollar plus a year school, private university prep school that is supposed to be preparing students for success is now teaching you about sex and race and your orientation, rather than math, science, everything else you need to succeed. pete: the survey asks kids about their parents incomes. here is what poly prep said in the "new york post," we did the survey working to improve our culture of inclusion and belonging, assessment is part of that process. always about diversity equity, inclusion, belonging will be part of it.
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what is the benefit to the child to express their gender, sexual orientation, political beliefs in fifth grade or is this about something smells. >> i love that the words inclusion and belonging are always used by the radical left because in reality the mirror needs to be held up. they're advocating for exactly the opposite of inclusion and belonging. asking fifth graders to identify who they are physically attracted to or why their skin color determines identity and success in the classroom as they grow up only creeds individual camps of the other students feel isolated, alone, and called out. it is absolutely disgusting. we're seeing it across the country, not just in new york. chicago public schools for example, is giving out free condoms to fifth graders to encourage sexual behavior and activity. pete: excellent. you're exactly right, all through the k-12 system.
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if your kids go to a country day school, you're more likely at this point they're sending them to a democrat camp. isabelle. thanks so much. appreciate your time. >> thanks for having me. pete: you got it. you know stacy's mom has got it going on, stacy's mom, what about her birthing parent? how classic songs might sound if they were given a woke tune instead. ♪. liberty mutual customizes your car insurance, so you only pay for what you need. [ sfx: submarine rising out of water ] minions are bitin' today. ♪ liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty. ♪ minions: the rise of gru, only in theaters.
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♪. joey: welcome back to a brand new hour of "fox & friends." we're outside. the weather is perfect. guys, i don't get to host very often but when i do i want it to feel just like this. rachel: really? i like it hotter.
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joey: i don't like it hotter. pete: they brought the arcade to us today. is it national arcade day? joey: i hope so. pete: oh, we just decided to have an arcade? that is even a better reason. it is outside. joey: basketball game over there, you're ready for that? pete: i have the speakers, the jordans. pop a shot. ski ball, cruising. joey: car raising game. i got that one. you guys have the others. i take the car racing. rachel: we have interns not working. pete: they're not interns. college associates. dignified now. i prefer interns. >> tell you what. they have a good work ethic. we'll talk about that a little later. joey: all the people that do stuff for me all the time, those are college associates? rachel: yes. joey: i call them yes, sir, yes, ma'am, i call them my bosses, giving me stuff.
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fantastic to be here. pete: we miss will but we love you. that's fair, right? rachel: it is. joey: nobody can replace will, nobody can replace you. somebody has to sit in the seats when the two of you need a day off. i'm honored i'm one of the couple guys that get to do it. pete: great job. rachel: while these guys are playing arcade games. my kids are in wisconsin where i'm going right after the show, frankly. there is sean. this is what we do in non wisconsin. this i'm heading up to the cabin. pete's been there with his kids several times. he knows, it is good clean, all american fun and that's what we do up there. i can't wait to get up there and see my kiddoes. i've been working hard here. look at that. pete: got to say. i'm glad they showed the last video. sean is a great water sportsman and you choose that clip? rachel: i know. my kids posted this.
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i know, my kids posted it so i put that up. i tell you, he is 50. he can still barefoot ski. he is -- pete: i've seen it he is good. i tried off your boat, barefoot skiing. i got up two seconds and wiped out. rachel: water skied to close to the shore and yell at by my neighbors. pete: joey, barefoot skiing -- joey: took my joke. i can't barefoot ski. i might have to bare bottom ski. lean back. rachel: you can tube like the kids. joey: i can do more things you realize. put a life vest on like a diaper and bob a little bit. i'm going off the rails talking about water sports. rachel: that is us by the lake. pete: got times. joey: we'll move on to some important topics here. a leaked department of the
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interior report leaked to "the washington examiner." shows 161,000 unaccompanied minor children are expected to cross the border this year. here is my thing, guys, i come to any numbers, whatever is leaked probably much higher than that. rachel: great point. joey: these are estimations. what we're dealing with here is a border crisis. i don't know if anyone knows that, or in d.c. knows that, other than a few republican congressman like chip roy keep telling the biden administration. the biden administration says there is not a crisis. they say the border is closed. they say a lot of things not true. 161,000 children unaccompanied -- rachel: alone. alone. that is human rights crisis. joey: how many children will end up in obama's cages? rachel: when i went to uvalde i went to see one of these detention centers, they are guarded like this is the highest security prison. you cannot get near there. the mayor of the town isn't
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allowed in there. what we do know happens are some of those children who have been raped along the journey will end up in hospitals nearby having babies. you will find out that many as we've seen video abandoned by cartels in the desert when they are no longer going to -- they're a problem, they leave them to die in the desert, wandering alone. many are thrown over walls. we've seen footage of that. i had dps, pete, send me video of 3-year-olds coming by themselves, no adults. this is a crises. joey: there is image last year, i believe a mother, might have been a father, young child that drowned. i kept looking at that i have 3-year-old daughter. i cried. empathy is not what we're lacking. common sense and the gall to do something about it is what we're lacking. there, i don't think there is a person on this network who doesn't believe we need migrants to come into the country, part
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of our country, to make this country stronger, to have a ladder to climb you have to have a somebody on every rung. you have to have people to do everybody job. migrants will be part of that equation but to do it the way our government is choosing to do it, i will not assign a party to this, keep those people coming across the border in the shadows, on purpose, you're not part of the american dream if you're not american. you're not part of this amazing system of government if you're not in the system. so what we have now is not migration to make our country better. what we have right now migration to take advantage of our country, take advantage of those people. pete: yeah, it is dispiriting, you mentioned cameras inside of the facility, if this were the second term of the trump administration, congresswoman and men would be lining up outside of the facilities of childhood centers -- joey: crying in front of cameras. pete: exposing inhumanity of children being abandoned in the border and in custody of united
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states. this administration is all about what you can't see, if you can't see it, there is no headline if there is no headline there is no problem. if they could they would get rid of fox news because we're only ones that are covering it anyway. that number on the banner, 161,000 estimated one year alone unaccompanied kids crossing our border. it is more than a crisis. it is an invasion. some are starting to suggest that the state of texas could declare it an invasion and have constitutional rights that come with it. governor greg abbott on saturday tweeting about what is happening. he said this today the texas department of public safety began arresting illegal immigrants and returning them to the border with mexico. biden's border policies are crushing local communities up and down the border. so he hasn't yet gotten to the point where he declared formally an invasion but starting to see texas dps -- rachel: what is he waiting for? pete: i'm not going to be apologist for doing it or not
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doing it. i think he should. you heard dan crenshaw on it with us, if you do that the federal government challenges it, texas dps agents arrested and deporting, arrested by the doj in the process. you almost want to have the standoff because of the crisis at this moment. not a lot of reasons for excuses. >> see what is happening to these communities. by the way aoc, you're right, crying at the gates of this and then i haven't seen her since. since trump left, suddenly, the numbers have quadrupled or more, she is not there. she doesn't care. it is so obvious phony she is. unbelievable. but, again i think you have to get back to the why? why are they doing this? why are they opening our border? why are they allowing 161,000 children to come under total danger to get here alone in the hands of traffickers? why are they destroying our
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communities? we talked with this with tom homan, a lot of non-profit groups, pro-illegal immigration, many funded by george soros with the open border type philosophy that he has. and they are the ones running this agenda. you have to go why are they doing it? they want this permanent underclass to you know, fund the life-styles of the rich and famous? is it they think they will eventually get them out of the shadows and make them all citizens? i don't know what the reason is but i'm one of those people that keep asking why because none of this makes sense to me earnings certainly idealogical. i try to be an honest broker. i try to have grace when talking politics. i think there are honest players. across the spectrum in congress. a lot of people in congress don't have experience but have very passionate opinions on it. those are the problems we sometimes. i think a lot of people in congress don't understand the true effect of illegal immigration. i have an uncle and a sister t
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borned and front-ended by illegal immigrants in my hometown, never had a driver's license, never taught how to drive a vehicle because my town is 78% hispanic, majority of those are probably first generation but their parents weren't, turned tide, import illegal immigrants to the politics we have, most of the first generation americans are not on board for this anymore. they look at their mom and dad, see how tough it was for them, coming here illegally, living in the shadows. you know what? there has got to be a better way. they come here. illegal immigrants. kids they have are american citizens. i went to school with bunch of them in my town. they are tried, true, patriotic americans, they look what their parents went through. they say that isn't right for my parents or our country, let's do this a better way. that scares democrats they lose monopoly what they consider to be a class of voters. pete: they certainly made that
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gamble. rachel, instead the hispanic vote trending in a different direction, they did not expect. to another topic. part of the aspect of that migration or illegal immigration the is prospect of work for many people. joey: yeah. pete: some has to do with questions why more of our own citizens are not working or working as hard as they had in the past. we're about to enter a recession. i don't know formally if we had two quarters of negative gdp or not but it is forecasted we may. you know what happened under covid. we're looking at inflation. looking at energy prices. everyone is hit hard. an op-ed in the federalist which caught our eye which tries to bring a better explanation why this might be and why some of our work ethic has decline the. here is a portion of the op-ed. the decline of american work ethic will exacerbate the oncoming recession, here is quote by andy puzder. hard to deny the reality some
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americans have gotten used to not working. live off welfare rather than return to the workforce this is not a criticism of people genuinely in need of government assistance. we're a rich nation, we do help those in need. but the able-bodied should work for society's benefit, their personnal benefit, their dignity, sense of self-worth. president clinton and newt gingrich believed in this requiring work requirements to great effect in the late 1990s. those who work should. pandemic welfare aided the current inclination to work. rachel, this is something you're pretty hot on this morning. >> everyone should read this article. what he is basically saying is we can eventually fix the economy but we now have a generation of people who have gotten used to not working. if you don't learn to work in your 20s, i saw this in my own family. i have relatives who live in spain under socialism in spain. there was deep unemployment
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there. some of it was, you know, because there were no jobs but also young people got used to not working. i have, there are a lot of young men in that generation who now just have learned to live with less. they don't know, if you don't learn how to work in your teens and in your 20s, you never learn how to work. right now all these jobs that teenagers used to do, lawns, pools, even babysitting, ask young moms today how hard it is to find a babysitter. when i was a kid, that is all my did. my parents didn't buy my clothes in high school. i worked hard on the weekends. i had my own money. you learn how to work. we're losing that. we're saying you're a teenager, your job is sports, being on a sports teams. these illegal immigrants will do the lawn work or do the pool or or babysit our kids this is not the way america was a generation ago. joey: i have a lot of thoughts
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on this. viewers understand my personal story is different than other people get a job like this. pete's your different as a veteran. rachel: rachel's you're -- joey: i was born in a 19666 sing gel house. my dad laid brick and. my whom cleaned houses. she was disabled. had car pal tunnel. she had surgery after surgery, social security disability. she fought to get back to working. she did the jobs she could do to have dignity to bring it into the house. when they say able-bodied, able-bodied means something different than it did 20 years ago. i'm able-bodied for the job i do. it is my choice. it is not about income. it is about dignity, self-respect, purpose in life. mike rowe talks about this. my dad brick, block making, had more authority and impact on people's lives with 8th grade education than people with four and six-year higher
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education. because of the passion behind the work, necessity of it. we haven't just devalued the american dollar, we have devalued hard work. we taken a lot of dignity respect, plumbers, welders, electricians, those jobs we need. there is a lot of value in that. we could change our education system to make the people learn the skillsets, have the opportunity to run your own business successfully doing a little bit of work. four year education, free college, how about providing education at the public school level how to do some of these trade skills? rachel: taking away some welfare benefits that were massively enhanced during covid. so even though the republicans removed some of them, a lot of them are still in place, pete. people are just learning to live on less. there is this gig economy. they kind of are floating through life. that will have a huge impact. pete: for sure. joey, beautifully said. you're exactly right. it comes down at the end of the day to hard work and work ethic,
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which as parents we instill in our kids, the way we speak to them, the way we treat them, the example we provide for them, as you talked about your father. that is hing worry about the little kid. we're good at giving them great opportunities. how do i give them hardship, learn to work for a living? joey: opportunity is only good as the person taking advantage of it and mentality, passion, work ethic they put into it. this country gives you in return more than you put into it but you have to be willing to put into it. pete: andy puzder, kcke restaurants, parent of hardee as and carl's junior. rachel: no one wants to work. pete: great point. turning now to a few additional headlines, 16 minutes at the top of the hour, beginning of this family of a man beaten to death by a group of teens are still in shock over the senseless loss. we must warn you, this video is
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disturbing. the attack caught on camera shows the group of seven teens smiling as they chase down an beat the elderly man with a traffic cone. the victim's niece saying yesterday she can't understand why anyone would do this. how about no good parents? she says, quote, we all can't stop crime. police are offering 20,000-dollar reword for information on the attackers. a fire in nantucket causes extensive damage to the ledge edge dairy 338-year-old veranda house hotel. bystanders without safety equipment ran into the bed and breakfast attempting to rescue guests before the fire department arrived. local reports in nantucket, say the building partially collapsed. other buildings caught on fire. officials say two firefighters were treated for heat exhaustion. and the nea, this is a teachers union, wants to replace the word mother with birthing
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parent in official contracts. but we asked, what would this mean for classic songs about mom? hits like, stacy's mom. rachel: that is good thing. pete: would be stacy's birthing parent. hey, mama, by kanye west, mother's little helper by the rolling stones would look very different if the nea gets its way. look at possible list of songs in a woke world without mother stacy's birthing parents, got it going on. men straighting -- menstrating little helper. hey, birth are person. gestational parent told me not to come. birth-giver said. no artist suggested these changes so far but we think it's
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coming. rachel: shania twain, feel like a woman, feel like a birthing person. joey: man, i feel like a woman, they, i feel like a them? rachel: you're right. pete: feel like a birthing person. >> menstrating person. pete: why of all the words we choose that one as the definition. >> rachel: i tell you the world has gone crazy. joey: i'm only 3/4 of a them. pete: you're not crazy. they're crazy. >> that's right. pete: when they call you crazy, you're not crazy out there. >> feel like you're living in alice in wonderland. watch this, police taking down a woman or a birthing person after she stole a car with another birthing person's kids inside. the shocking story coming up. joey: bringing the fight to biden's doorstep. activists demanding biden do more for abortion rights like
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declare a public health emergency. planned parenthood clinic director turned pro-life activist abby johnson reacts with us next. >> by the way -- ♪ >> tech: need to get your windshield fixed? safelite makes it easy. >> tech vo: you can schedule in just a few clicks. and we'll come to you with a replacement you can trust. >> man: looks great. >> tech: that's service on your time. schedule now. >> singers: ♪ safelite repair, safelite replace. ♪
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♪. [shouting] rachel: the womens march taking to d.c. streets once again, this time, demanding that president biden do more for abortion rights including additional executive action for a declaration of a national public health emergency. here to react, former planned parenthood clinic director, now pro-life activist abby johnson. abby, what is your take on these protests? >> i mean, look, rachel, like they can't figure out what they want, okay? originally they said we don't want the federal government to tell us what to do or can't do with our bodies. the supreme court said, we won't tell you what you can and can't do with the bodies. take it back to the states. then they said, no, that's what
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not what we want. we want democracy. supreme court says, you get democracy, you can make decisions at state level. no, that kind of democracy, right? biden is very restrict what he can do at this point this has to be fought out at the state level. they just don't like the way things have played out. and so now they're protesting. what they should be doing, is working to help women that are in crisis. rachel: right. it is interesting. they say they want to help women and yet they're throwing molotov cocktails and trying to get all kinds of funding removed from pregnancy health centers that actually help women in need. >> that is absolutely right. so you know we have over 3,000 pregnancy resource centers in this country. they outnumber abortion clinics now four to one. these pro-abortionists, what are you doing to help women. we have 3,000 pregnancy resource centers. where are they, because we want
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to burn them down. that is completely ridiculous. we love women. we want them to join to us help women in need. on facebook, my organization, love line, needed to help a single mom of six children get a new car. we, in 45 minutes raised over $10,000 to ten this mom get a car. they could do that, they could be doing that too. we would love for them to join us. instead they're sitting outside of the white house doing nothing. rachel: message to poor women, abort your child. not let us help you find a way to make a family or help you to have this child and raise it. how important is it to the pro-life movement? you're a unique voice in the pro-life movement because you've seen this process, this procedure up close. how important is it for people to know your story, to know what you can see behind the curtain? because we talk about abortion in terms of euphemisms, choice, and life, not really what you know? >> well, i think that if people
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really saw abortion for what it is i think that more people would be against it. i think one of the reasons that abortion continues to escalate in this country, i think one of the reasons so many people are protesting against overturning roe v. wade you don't see the victim of abortion. you don't see this child being dismembered in its mother's womb. you don't see the body parts stacked on top of each other. if people could see the barbarity of abortion if they could see how terrible abortion is, more people would be against it. >> you're such an incredible voice, abby. your humility, and your story and the way you turn something so tragic in your past into something so positive. it is truly inspiring. abby johnson, thank you for joining us this morning. >> thank you. rachel: all right. from combat to congress, up next meet the veteran on a mission to flip her indiana district red for the first time since 1931.
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it is time for fun in the sun. don't miss the me and pete, and joey ski balling on fox square. stay with us. ♪ from prom dresses to workouts and new adventures you hope the more you give the less they'll miss. but even if your teen was vaccinated against meningitis in the past they may be missing vaccination for meningitis b. although uncommon, up to 1 in 5 survivors of meningitis will have long term consequences. now as you're thinking about all the vaccines your teen might need make sure you ask your doctor if your teen is missing meningitis b vaccination.
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♪. pete: scored on himself. one nothing. in air hockey. we'll have a rematch. this morning we have our own boardwalk style arcade here on "fox & friendses." >> first up. let's see who has what it takes for some skee-ball. pete: rachel, says she is a good bowler, has a good shot at
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skee-ball. nine balls. check the score. i pride myself as a skee-baller. all right? got two 4 thousands. can't swear on tv. [laughter]. this is not chuck e. cheese. >> 5000. pete: four thousand. 5,000. i'm a skee-baller, see it, joey? rachel: 5,000. joey: cheering for rachel. pete: rachel, i'm sorry. good try. points for effort. >> sorry. pete: did not like that. >> thank you to our friends for competing in more boardwalk games all morning long. back to you, joey. joey: rick next. i'm coming for you. "countdown" to the midterms is on our next guest wants to flip her indiana district red which
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has been blue since herbert hoover was president. jennifer green is a former military commander hoping to transition from combat to congress helping found a non-profit for at risk youth. good morning. thanks for joining us. >> good morning, joey, thanks for having me today. joey: this district, d-plus four. pretty even split. leans democrat. has a freshman democratic congressman. you have think you can take this seat. why is that? >> i believe this race is clearly about the economy and about hoosiers deserving better. we have a very unique opportunity. people see all across our districts the failed leadership continues to exude from our current congressman and the biden-mervan agenda consistently input into our system and we see how those failures impact our pocketbook. joey: you're absolutely right. the absolute most important issue from poll after poll is the economy and inflation.
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we have other issues that a lot of americans are concerned with. one is national defense, national security. we look at our military. we see leaders pointing towards social issues rather than readiness. you're serving in the military. you have illustrious career in the military. what do you think you can do in congress from that path or what needs to be changed? >> i saw speaker pelosi tear up the state of the union address on february 20, 2020, that is clear divide on national level. it is clear to see our enemies look in to say there is point of weakness there, a house divided cannot stand. as a regular citizen, military commander at the time, gravity of that failure and that action, the words it spoke to the international community, us as a national community, it was just devastating. so when i get to congress, my goal to provide unity. when we're serving in combat. we don't care where you come from or who you are. what your background is.
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if you have a good idea, we'll take it. that is what i want to bring to the table. i want to support good ideas. i want to make sure we have a good economy. stop reckless spending, so we control inflation. i also want to be able to provide good schools, safe neighborhoods, just continue to provide hoosiers who deserve better authentic leadership to be able to move forward and fest forward in the devastating times our current congressman created for us. joey: you're talking points are on point in my opinion. i think that is what voters are looking for. thank you for your service. good luck with your run for congress? >> thank you, god bless you. joey: same to you. back over to the skee-ball championship. pete: skee-ball champion. talking points are on right. rachel, your skee-ball need some work. she will practice while i read these headlines right now. we begin with this. an 8-year-old victim of the highland park shooting wakes up from a coma to find out he is paralyzed from the waste down. cooper roberts is conscious and
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no longer needs a ventilator to breathe. still in pain, facing a long road to recovery. robert the one of dozens injured in the mass shooting at a july 4th parade including his mom and twin brother. cooper woke up asking to see his brother and the family dog, george. we're happy he is alive and awake. god bless him. new york state ethics report says former governor andrew cuomo did use campaign funds to push his five million dollar covid memoir. someone paid him five million dollars for that. the report also finding como bullied the state's joint commission on public ethics into approving the book without properly vetting it. cuomo's executive chamber, quote, successfully coerced the ethics board into speeding up the book's approval process. hmmm. a brave mom in new mexico springing to action after a woman stole her car with her two kids still inside. this video showing the police finally nabbing the carjacker
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after she abandoned the car, took off on foot. the mom held on to the hood as the car sped off, banking on the wind shield, screaming before being thrown. she told "the daily mail," she felt no fear about being safe. the carjacker, who had three outstanding warrants with h facing three charges. thankfully it is new mexico, not new york. he would be let out on bail. rachel: that is mama bear. she felt no fear at all. turn now to chief meteorologist. rick reichmuth. pete: speaking of no fear. rachel: you looked like you had no fear with the line. rick: you didn't see what happened. i had to go around and i fell. joey: moment before of the harness has you, right, you're like you're going to die?
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telling you it is scary. pete: unlike the tv moment you're 3:00 feet away from us that i have to look at the camera. rick: people need to show what is actually happening. pete: there is reality. rick: take a look at the weather map. we'll show you what is going on. we have a beautiful morning out here across parts of the northeast. 73 degrees in fargo at 8:00 in the morning. it is hot. severe weather across parts of country. one batch of storms is moving across right now. behind that we'll see another one develop. see that moving across parts of eastern north dakota. that will move later on across minnesota a little enhancement to that disturbance, maybe severe weather, certainly a tornado or two, strong winds and hail. we need rain and there is a lot of wind and drought. every day there is chance of rain, by the end of this five to
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eight-inches piling up in some spots. guys, back to you over there. pete: thank you, rick. joey: thank you, rick. we're going back to biblical times. rachel and her kids took a trip to the life-sized replica of noah's ark in kentucky. a live -- look inside next. ♪ ready? alexa, ask buick to start my enclave. starting your buick enclave. i just love our new alexa. dad, it's a buick. i love that new alexa smell. it's a buick. we need snacks for the team. alexa, take us to the nearest grocery store. getting directions. alexa will get us there in no time. it's a buick. let's be real. don't make me turn this alexa around. oh my. it's painful. the buick enclave, with available alexa built in. ask “alexa, tell me more about buick suvs.” this is john. he hasn't worked this hard to only get this far with his cholesterol.
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♪. pete: one of the most intriguing accounts in the bible. a life-sized replica in kentucky lets visitors feel like what it was like inside of noah's ark. rachel: it is one of most beloved stories in the old testament. i took my kids to kentucky to see it ourselves. it is summertime i went ault the way to kentucky with the ark encounter. here is brian to give us a tour. you guys ready? >> yeah. rachel: it is really astounding you see how big it is. tell me about it, how did you come up with the scale? >> the scale comes up in the bible the actually dimensions god gave to noah. they have a cubic. convert that into feet.
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510 feet long, 85 feet wide, 51 feet tall. three different levels. those are the biblical dimensions. over a football field in length. it's a very huge structure. rachel: we're entering the. >> biblical teaching animals from the biblical world. rachel: they are god's creatures. >> they are. ♪. rachel: oh, look, there is a flock right there. you see the flock? ♪. >> she is an 8-year-old red kangaroo. this is the largest species of kangaroo in the world. >> when you said the ark encounter was interact i've you are not kidding. there are camel rides? >> right here. rachel: tell me about the animal encounter? >> shows different things. some like african safari type things. other type shows. we're in the ark now.
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as you see to me, when you come inside, it feels even bigger. ♪. rachel: she has a question. >> how long did it take for noah to build the ark? >> it took him close to 90 years. rachel: that is how long he trusted god. what does that tell you about noah? he was faithful. >> that is good, absolutely. >> how old was noah when he -- [inaudible] >> 600 years old. can you imagine being 600 years old? >> whoo. rachel: virtual reality experience. i love anything virtual reality. >> basically you're in a time machine. rachel: i love it. >> you go back in time. you see the flood of noah's day. rachel: we're at the ropes course. >> ropes course. getting outside. zipping along zip lines. rachel: with your family. >> family. team building. rachel: you can do this, right,
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patrick? >> [laughter]. see that smile? rachel: that smile is why we're here. we have an amazing time at the ark encounter. faith, family, fun. we're going to leave but are we come back, you guys? >> yes. rachel: all right. let's go. >> we had so much fun. we had beautiful weather in kentucky. the kids loved the zoo, loved the rope lines. got a little information. only thing i didn't get to do, i want to go back into, 3 d glasses, whole theater, like a movie of it. pete: i did that. >> how was it? pete: we took the family on rv trip to the ark encounter. it is phenomenal. a great representation. it is huge. it is an exact replica of noah's
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ark. the dimensions are described in the bible. they were able to recreate it. phenomenal what they have done there in kentucky. ark encounter.com. rachel: that is where you get your tickets, ark encounter.com. it is super fun. got to ride a camel. joey: new destination for annual family trip. only thing, noah could have left a couple species of animals off the boat. he was a faithful man. snakes would not make it to my ark. pete: that would have been the moment he played god. you're off the boat. joey: what did you say, god? i didn't hear that. did you make sign of the cross. rachel: every day you're a little more catholic. pete: it is cool. makes the bible come alive for kids. rachel: it is really awesome. it was really awesome. we have dr. marc siegel next. stay with us.
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vo: call 211 or visit 211.org 2-1-1 get connected. get help. ♪. pete: autism is on the rise in the u.s. with one in every 30 americans kids being diagnosed according to a new study. a 53% increase is a sharp rise
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from 2017. so what do parents need to know about this surge in diagnoses? fox news medical contributor dr. marc siegel joins us now. doctor, thanks for being here. so what do you make of this study showing this increase? what is the why behind it? >> well, pete, you know, this was pre-pandemic, so i want to start with that. and it is because parents were more on the lookout for resistance in routines, not meeting your glances, emotional withdrawal, obsessive behavior, all of that could go into what is being diagnosed with autism spectrum disorder. we always wanted to know early on because interventions workers specially with intelligent kids. they can actually compensate for this overtime. by the time as adults function completely normally. i know one that is a computer engineer. intervention from parents helps a lot. one takes his son to a baseball
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game every year to a different city. the problem with the pandemic, pete, we don't know about it. with everyone locked away and not going to school, we lost the ability to screen kids for this, to intervene early and i predicted that statistic you gave will end up being a lot worse. that was one of the huge, huge, downsides of closing the schools. pete: interesting, you're saying this study was pre-pandemic and ultimately mostly the increase is a result of raising of awareness, parents are identifying it earlier, hence the higher numbers? >> exactly right. raising awareness is a big, big part of it but there is also probably something women are exposed to in the womb we don't yet know about that could be causing it and a third thing is all of the bombardment of internet, of social media, of iphones, all of that leads to an inability to socialize. i predict that not only aren't
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we picking it up from having closed the schools, i think the process of isolating kids from each other made it a lot worse because they didn't learn the emotional cues. pete: so the isolation combined with a lack of identification can exacerbate things we can otherwise get in front of you. we may not know other reasons as well as the emergence, increase of autism. dr. marc siegel, as always, thanks for breaking it down. we appreciate it. >> pete, great to see you. pete: great to see you. coming up we know hispanics are cooling on democrats. looks like asian-americans are too. the polling numbers showing a shift. that is next. ♪ what's guy fieri doing at the neighbor's house? it's sliiiiiiiiii-der sunday! we've got cheeseburger sliders on king's hawaiian pretzel slider buns. sliiiiiiiiii-der sunday!
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♪ ♪ if. rachel: joy. that is joy by bastille, and we are starting the 8:00 hour here in the middle of fox here with an outdoor arcade. it's a boardwalk-style arcade. pete: just for the heck of it, hurt? not national arcade day, just got some kids out here, get some games and let's have fun. rachel: and we have been. yep. joey: weather's going to be perfect, so roll out the games and have some fun. pete: just for the fun of it? if how many do you think i can make? i got one, two, three -- i've got eight basketballs here. how many do you think we're going to make? joey: at least two. pete: two?
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joey: yeah. at least two. one, brick -- pete: touch is so hard -- joey: get that second one, you can do it. there we go, two. [laughter] three? pete: oh, my goodness? lee out of eight, the kids are going to be ashamed. yeah jee hall of fame numbers. [laughter] pete: played yesterday. it was so difficult. we're, like, adult kids. rachel: yeah, we are. we have a lot of fun. we have way too much fun for this to be a job. yeah jee adult kids with a lot of kids of our own. pete: i'm going to an arcade tomorrow for my son's 12th birthday. it's a throwback arcade. rachel: so pac-man? pete: pac-man, super mario brothers, whatever i want. joey: i take my kids and they just get consumed with the idea
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of getting the most tickets. [laughter] your not enjoying the game itself. pete: i absolutely agree with that. joey: take tickets out of arcades. fix america. rachel: actually,ing i like that your kids want to win, that is the american spirit. [laughter] i love american capitalism. all right. well, i also love american energy, and that is why the story is so interesting, because president biden is going to saudi arabia to beg for oil from the saudis. he's also begged for oil in venezuela, other countries that hate us. joey: anywhere but alaska. [laughter] rachel: that's right. but he doesn't like to get his energy in alaska. he feels pressure because he has said a lot of bad things about saudi arabia because of the killing of the journalist khashoggi, and so now he has to explain if why he's going to saudi arabia.
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and he wrote an op-ed or, as you talked about earlier, his staffers wrote an op-ed, and he signed it, put his name on it. and this is what he said in this washington post op-ed. from the start, my aim was to reorient -- with the strategic country who's been a partner for 80 years. saudi arabia is now working with my experts -- his experts, experts who brought us inflatioe are many who disagree with my decision to travel to saudi arabia. my views are clear and long-standing and fundamental freedoms are always on the agenda when i travel as they will be in this trip just as they will be in israel and the if west bank. as president, it is my job is taupe -- to keep our country strong and secure. pete: yeah, what could go wrong? [laughter] owe biden's experts -- joe
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beaden's experiments -- joe biden's experts putting their heads together with the oligarchs of saudi arabia. and what a signal of strength that before you go overseas, you have to write an op-ed to rationalize going there because you can't admit why you're going there which is to beg for oil and contradict everything you've said in the past and,, by the way, saudi arabia's no friend of ours. i've got no lo for them. but strategic partnerships create by the trump administration to elevate israel and its status in the middle east, now they're trying to get an iran deal, that's not working. it's all upside down. joey: and the way that's written, hey, listen, it's okay i'm going to saudi arabia even though i think they're bad, because in his mind israel's fight for sovereignty means that that they're oppressing the palestinians, so he's equating two countries that, in my opinion, are in two very
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different places to say, well, you know, we're very friendly with israel, so i can get oil from saudi arabia. pete: great point. rachel: if you are so concerned about the saudis, and i'm with pete on this, no friends of the saudis, why would you give them this leverage over us by basically killing american energy? if why would they do this? donald trump was asking this in alaska. he says this is a war against alaska energy workers. >> -- issued the first ever leases for oil and gas production in the region, never happened. unfortunately, the biden administration canceled those leases, and now our entire country is paying a very steep price not only at the pump, all over. and as our great fishermen will tell you, the historic cost of fuel is a disaster for alaska fishers risking, putting them virtually out of business. we are no longer energy independent or energy if dominant which we were just two
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short years ago. we are a nation that is begging venezuela and saudi arabia for oil. please, please -- [background sounds] we have more liquid gold under our feet than any other nation in the world, and we're begging them for oil. pete: energy independence was a bipartisan idea for decades. donald trump finally delivered it, and now because of their worship at the altar of climate change, they've completely reversed that and made us dependent on saudi arabia. so here we go hat in hand to beg, and they try to create every other rationale. donald trump is entirely right, we can coit cleaner, more efficiently and right here in america if we'd just unleash it. we know that. a. rachel: yeah. and create jobs, by the way, family-supporting jobs. these are great jobs, and we're not doing it. joey: energy if independence, a border wall with, there are a lot of things that were
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bipartisan until republicans became successful trying to accomplish them. pete: the embassy, moving it from tel aviv to jerusalem. congress passed that for 40 years, donald trump said, i'll do it. guess who's trying to undo it right now? rachel: and they said armageddon was going to happen if we did it, and it didn't. it was a brilliant move on the part of the trump administration. you talk about bipartisan issues, crime used to be something that we all could agree we wanted less of, and unfortunately, we've seen a rise in crime across this country with woke prosecutors and in big cities in particular. the crime rate and the murder rate in chicago is skyrocketing, it's through the roof, and it's now become very personal for a friend of ours at this network, gianno caldwell, who so tragically had to burr bury his brother christian yesterday. we were there with lawrence and
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gianno yesterday. here's a little bit of sound from the funeral. it's heartbreaking, but we think it's important that you hear it and also we want to honor gianno's brother who he loved so much. >> people shouldn't fear going to sleep thinking that maybe a bullet is going to come through their window, but so many people do. i'm downtown chicago, and i'm turning, looking behind my back when downtown chicago, that was one of the safest places to be. yet there's people being murdered downtown chicago, on the gold coast, in the loop. just last week there was a mass shooting blocks from the mayor, where the mayor's office is, where the governor's is. this has to change. and if christian is, if christian's life is the push forward for this, then that's what we're going to have to do. but his life and legacy will mean something, brother. his life and legacy will mean something. and i'm going to work tirelessly to insure that it does. pete: we have no doubt that he will. showed a lot of courage
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yesterday and clarity in talking about not just what happened to his brother, a life tragically taken too quickly, but also across chicago and across the country. and you know what he said? i'm going to fight to get justice not just for my brother, for everybody else. but my other mission is to pull every one of my siblings out of chicago as fast as i can. and you know what? gianno will do that because host a determined guy who's fought his way up in life and is doing amazing things. but there are generations of people that are not capable of making that move, and it's democrat-led cities and policies that have hem stuck amidst violence. joey, we talk about post-traumatic stress mt. military context. when you're living in the gray, in a heightened sense of awareness, it wears on you day in and day out, and that's why gianno talked about the dullness or the numbness -- actually, lawrence jones talked about thie
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possibility and ever plate, that is consequential. gianno's doing the right thing. we see those image process yesterday. look at that, a white casket, young man. it's tragic. joey: fox news will not soon forget christian. christian's life will mean something, already does mean something. i don't have the same issues in my little town that they face in chicago, but through gianno and the tragedy of his brother, i'm connected to that in a way. and just as a member of the fox news family. but even beyond that, when lawrence talks about the numbness within the community, that means acceptance. that the means those people don't feel like there's any help coming. and i saw this yesterday morning, but i want to reiterate. when you talk about p ptsd, i went to war twice, a lot of things happened. two things stick with me. both of those instances involve is children. first responders see that every day in places like chicago, and
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when they give up, the city is lost. and when we talk about defund the police like the police are victims, sometimes we frame defund the police which it is negative, but we frame it in a way that mix it easy for people that -- that makes it easy for people the to understand what we're saying. but talk about fire departments, talking about emts, the burdens shared who respond to a 9-year-old on the ground bleeding out who was shot in the car while her mom with was driving to the goesly store. if you have gun violence, you have drugs run rampant, you have neighborhoods that cops don't go in. and those first responders have to go there anyway. and when they give up, when they no longer have hope to get up and do their job, then it's truly lost. rachel: lawrence jones actually last night was talking on his country -- show, "cross country," talking about lives
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being cut short. >> what's going on in chicago right now is unacceptable, and and if everybody knows it. families deserve answers, and they deserve action. unfortunately, the city's mayor, lori lightfoot, is preparing to flee the scene of the crime. lightfoot is traveling to london and paris to promote the economic prosperity of her state. the mayor doesn't understand there is no pursuit of happiness without life. meanwhile, the county d.a., kim fox, may have a domestic violence case. we are being let down by people that look like us that that a say they care about us, but when we need a hero, they are nowhere to be found unless it's election time. these kids that are being slaughtered every day won't get the chance to vote, so the big question is, when will it end? rachel: whether it's the border, whether it's crime, whether it's inflation, again, this is i'dology -- can ideology ahead
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of people, of real people's lives, pete. pete: it absolutely isful. and, joe. joe:y, you said it, at what point can does the system truly break? it's broken and it's failing, you know, across the country. but if you get a mass exodus of people willing to do those types of jobs, this only accelerates. and gang violence rampant, it's just, it's absolutely tragic. it is total ideology, pro-criminal ideology, a total mischaracterization of what law and order means and what justice looks like and consequences mean for people. it's going to get worse -- rachel: my daughter graduated from university of chicago. of i was so happy because i wanted her out of that. joey: listen, i think one of the most egregious thicks is the hypocrisy. you -- things is hypocrisy. you get us to vote for you because you say you understand the situation we're in and you're going to help us, and then you use us being in that
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situation to your benefit, not ours. when you elect a politician, when you elect them because they tell you what's broken, you don't give them incentive to fix it, right? you're rewarding them for complaining. elect politicians that are solutions-based. elect politicians that that put a plan of action in place. politicians have more breaks at hair disposal if they're honest brokers. if you mess um, acknowledge that. -- mess up, acknowledge that and and we'll keep moving. the chicago mayor has blamed someone else, run from questions. you don't say f this person, f that person and complain about rhetoric, and the people of chicago need to find somebody different. pete: i hope so. by the way, if you have any information about the death of gianno's brother, there's the chicago pd number. finish he's still at large, unfortunately. joey: all right.
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turning now to your headlines. former japanese prime minister shinzo e abe's suspected assassin is set to be charged with murder today. police finding a number of homemade firearms at the suspect's home similar to the weapon used to kill abe during a campaign speech friday. the assassination raises security concerns for police who say a lapse in protection allowed the shooter to get too close. abe's funeral will be held tuesday for close friends and family, and a vigil will be held tomorrow night. and where's the beef? well, one man in orlando took extreme measures to get the beef and the cash when he climbed through a wendy's drive-through window to steal the cash drawer. the stunned employee manning the drive-through tried to shut the window after the suspect fled -- flashed a gun but couldn't stop the daring heist. police say they still have no identify -- they still have not identified the suspect who was wearing beach attire including a
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straw hat when he robbed the restaurant. pete: it wasn't me. [laughter] joey: lightning doesn't just open up the sky as one with tree in ohio gets struck and burns from the inside out. that's pretty cool looking, actually. fire fighters saw the tree trunk glowing with red-hot flames. the temperature of the lightning flash was five times hotter than the sun. pete: what? joey: causing the tree to explode from within. pete: the lightning flash was five times hotter hand the sun? i didn't know things could get hotter than sun. rachel: yeah. i didn't know that either. [laughter] joey: [inaudible] rachel: princeton? [laughter] pete: politics major. that is a cool shot. rachel: that is awesome. mother nature. pete: and speaking of where's
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the beef, breakfast is here. [laughter] rachel: this is what breakfast looks like -- [laughter] all right. looking forward to it. all right, still ahead, a record surge of unaccompanied minors expected at the border this year. the staggering number as the chaos continues. stay with us. ♪ stand up to moderate to severe rheumatoid arthritis. and take. it. on... ...with rinvoq. rinvoq a once-daily pill can dramatically improve symptoms... rinvoq helps tame pain, stiffness, swelling. and for some...rinvoq can even significantly reduce ra fatigue. that's rinvoq relief. with ra, your overactive immune system attacks your joints. rinvoq regulates it to help stop the attack. rinvoq can lower your ability to fight infections, including tb. serious infections and blood clots, some fatal; cancers, including lymphoma and skin cancer; death, heart attack, stroke, and tears in the stomach or intestines occurred.
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♪ joey: all right. dhs is bracing for a record surge in unaccompanied minors at the border this year. leaked day reveals more than 160,000 kids are are expected to try crossing the border alone in 2032, a significant increase -- 20322 -- significant increase from last year. former border security section chief joins us now to react. good morning, lacey. >> good morning. joey: so is there a specific reason that they're coming across unaccompanied? what's the story behind this? why are these kids coming here unaccompanied? >> well, listen, a story behind each of those children, and not everyone comes here for the same reason. but i do want to point out that, you know with, unaccompanied minors does not mean an orphan. i think sometimes we hear that
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phrase and we think that they don't have a parent back home, but a lot of these kids are sent by their parents to the border to cross without a legal guardianing with them, and sometimes the parent is stuck on the mexican side and they send their kid through because they think that their kids can get access to the united states easier than they can. so these are not orphaned children that are living on the streets, they're children whose parents or guardians have decided that the in the circumstances warrant with them sending them through terrible circumstances, actually, terrible circumstances to get to the border. joey: you know, if these kids come across unaccompanied, you have a chance to find parents here in the states, are they subject to prosecution for booming -- abandoning their child? anything that would deter in our legal system, that would punish and deter them from allowing their child to go on in this dangerous journey? >> no. if the parent is here with lawful status here and they requested their kid be brought
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here, then they're not charged with any sort of child abandonment. but i tell you, there should be some criminal prosecution for the smugglers and the cartels to bring the kids here. you know, cartels make terrible babysitters, and that's exactly what they're tasked to do when they bring a kid here without any parents or guardian to take care of them, then the cartels are in charge. and we know children suffer sexual abuses and physical abuses along the way when they're just put in the hands of these terrible bad actors. joey: you're running for arizona attorney general. aren't there laws available to you, state laws? what do you think you can do as attorney general to help at least arizona with the border patrols? >> yeah, absolutely. the arizona law allows for the prosecution of the drug crimes at the border. we mow that the movement of drugs and humans are done in concert by the cartels, so the
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prosecution side of the house to take down the cartels. and, you know, human trafficking is huge. some of these folks brought across the border, including children, are brought here for sex trafficking and and labor trafficking, not just because they want to make a better life here. it's terrible what's happening at the border, and the attorney general can weigh in by helping to prosecute a lot of the crimes that are happening in concert with the movement of humans. joey: lacey cooper, candidate for arizona attorney general, thank you so much for joining us and good luck. >> thank you. joey: all right. still ahead, it's not just hispanic voters who are turning out on the democratic -- who are turning on the democratic party. while more asian-americans are ditching the left ahead of the midterms. plus, i've been sharpening up by skills with air hockey, and it didn't turn out so well earlier. i'm going to battle rick to see if i can face pete. ♪
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whose resumes on indeed match your job criteria. visit indeed.com/hire and get started today. ♪ ♪ rachel: we are back with our own boardwalk-style arcade right here on fox square, and this time i'm facing off with rick reichmuth for some air hockey. let's put one minute on the clock. joey: if it's the okay with you, rachel, i think i'm going to face off with rick real quick, and we'll see what happens. [laughter] the forecast, by wins. oh, i don't need 60 seconds. [laughter] he got one on me. it's right there. come on. i mow, i know.
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i'm just going to -- >> oh! joey: hey, tell that kid to come here. ooh, i got mad at it, i'm sorry. pete: oh -- the weatherman. [laughter] joey: i got you. timeout here. rick: we need two minutes. pete: 2, 1, and the winner is joey jones. [laughter] joey: that was fun. i didn't score on myself. if. pete: by the way, thanks to betty's bounces. we'll be competing in more boardwalk arcade game all
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morning long, and now we'll toss it over to rachel. rachel: thank you, guys. keep on playing. ist just do this interview. all right. president biden not just at risk of losing the hispanic vote anymore, but the asian vote too. even cnn admitting, quote, that the dip in dramatic support among asian voters or looks to be about three times as large as it is overall. so what could this be all about? let's ask our panel of asian-american voters. a virginia mom and former california congressional candidate, elizabeth. i'll start with you. what do you think is main driving force for this very precipitous drop in sport for president biden? >> -- support nor fried -- president biden? >> i think, first, the asians realize the democrats are not their friends because they see there are children being discriminated against for college and high school admissions sponsored by the
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democratic party. secondly, most of the asian parents are culturally conservative. they are not onboard with the radical gender ideology taught in schools by democrats. thirdly, that asians realize that the democrat party will remain silent about the skyrocketing violent crime existence asians. why in concern against asians. why? the hashtag stop asian hate only applies when the perpetrators are white. but to chinese immigrants like me, there's something even more personal. to us, cancel culture and lawlessness that's happening here is the replay of cultural revolution that we experienced 50 years ago in historic china, and we don't want it to destroy
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america. i think that the asian voters are highly motivated, and we will defend our life in america with our vote in november. rachel: wow. you bring up some excellent points, xi. elizabeth, one thing that xi did not bring up which i believe is also part of it, the economy, jobs, the inflation rate. and so many small business owners are asian just as they are hispanic small business owners. how much of what happened over the pandemic and also the many policy decisions that we see that are precipitating or that are causing this inflation that we're seeing right now have to do with asian displeasure with this administration? >> i think asian-americans are absolutely furious about what's happening with our economy. not just asian-americans, but i think americans as a whole. as we look at, you know, as we mentioned, a lot of asian-americans are small business owners, and during the pandemic many of them felt that
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they were attacked as, you know, as -- their businesses were being destroyed unnecessarily. and asian-americans are such a big proponent of freedom and focusing on the values that this country has given to many of the immigrant withs that have come here, first, second, third generations. and when you see bad policies coming out of california, coming out of washington, d.c. with president biden that is destroying the fundamentals that has allowed their families, their children to succeed, they are coming out en masse. and they are going to vote, and they're going to help win this election so that we can bring sanity back to california, back to this country and get our economy and our livelihoods going again. rachel:, and i, are you seeing -- xi, i mean, we see parents organizing, people unhappy, but do you actually see movement and organization within the asian community to make a
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change in this next midterm election? what are you seeing on the ground with political organizations? >> absolutely. i think more and more asians for the first time in the their lives leading in america, getting involveed in the primary. they're donating, they're organizing, they're holding rallies supporting the candidates that that they think will help them with their values and their lives. rachel: well, elizabeth, you did take your hand at politics, you tried to do your part. you've also worked on the hill. xi, you've been such an important voice reminding us about the cultural revolution and so many of the parallels to what we're experiencing right now in america. i want to thank you both and have a wonderful sunday. >> thank you. rachel: all right. still ahead, aoc joining the chorus of activists mocking justice kavanaugh for getting chased out of a restaurant. but the safety threats don't just stop at dining.
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$200 offered to tipsters who share locations of the supreme court secrecy it ises. that's up next -- justices. that's up next. ♪ ♪
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♪ pete: par-left activists still raging over the abortion ruling, they're now offering cash to tipsters who share physical locations of supreme court justices. rachel: and that public bounty
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offer comes after protesters swarmed justice kavanaugh while duning at morton's steakhouse last week. the restaurant, which defended a customer's right to eat in peace, has been flooded with fake reservation vegases and phone calls -- reservations and phone calls. pete: here to talk about it, marjorie danon seltzer. thanks for being here. because this type of reaction surprise you given how invested they've been in abortion for so wrong? >> no. there's just been a cap on the conversation that roe v. wade got tamped down, and now we're all getting to have the the conversation after 50 years of not being able to let our deeply held convictions be reflected in the law. but i think what we're seeing here in this story and as a pattern of abuse and violence is a direct attack on the independence of the judiciary.
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assassination attempt, these intimidation attempts of every supreme court justice who voted to overturn the roe v. wade. this is an attack on that independence and, therefore, democracy. so going after the institutions, the institution didn't deliver what they wanted. the pro-life movement is experiencing a part of that pattern. all over the country over 52 documented instances of abuse and harassment and violence against pro-life pregnancy centers, churches and leaders in pro-life organizations across the country. it's the incredibly unhealthy for our democracy. rachel: i just had a guest on in the last segment who is a chinese-american and talked about the cultural revolution and the need to tear down institutions in order for that ideology to take home. somebody who's a proponent of that who's come from a socialist mindpoint is aoc. this is what she tweeted. poor guy, talking about justice
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kavanaugh. poor guy, he left before his souffle because he decided half the country should -- if they have an ectopic pregnancy within the wrong state lines. the least they could do is let him eat cake. so many things wrong on so many levels with that tweet beginning with the fact that it is not -- you can have an abortion or an ectopic pregnancy is not really considered an abortion. but also, of course, what she's saying is green lighting the abuse of justice kavanaugh. >> oh, yeah. and if hers is the only democratic voice we're hearing, where is the president, where is the attorney generalsome when the independence of the judiciary is being threatened, democracy is being threatened, and they're either encouraging it or silent about it. and those across the country, pro-life people and pregnancy centers as my organization has documented, it is not going away, and there needs to be real leadership. we need to dis-- we may disagree
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on a lot of things, but we have to agree that the institutions of our democracy must be protected, and this administration is happy to see that undermined just because of a difference, because of a difference of opinion that we should be arguing out in every legislature in the land and in the congress instead of having to defend ourselves against violent attacks and harassment. joey: marjorie, real quick, right now today it's supreme court justices, but we've seen some of the other attacks out there, you know, have there been any threats against yourself or people that you work with, and do you see that coming? >> oh, every day and among my colleagues as well all over the country. we will not be intimidated, we will not be harassed into silence. you know, i just have to say the reason that every european country except for 3, 47 out of 50 european countries have a limit on abortion most of them at 12 weeks, is because they see
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it as humane. we're just catching up after 50 years, and it is not -- no form of violence is okay. we were tamped down in terms of our ability to have that discussion, and it's happening overnight. there's only democratic institutions can keep the civility and keep us on track in terms of the love that is at the center of this movement and the justice mercy that is at the heart of our founding documents. that's the way forward. and this violation has to be stopped. we -- violence. we need to hear from the president of the united states and his attorney general about what they plan to do to stop the violence and harassment. pete: your exactly right. they only defend the institutions when they serve their interests, otherwise they need to go. marjorie, thank you so much for being here, and we celebrate with you end of roe v. wade. thank you so much. joey: stay safe. a. rachel: she's a human rights activist. she's been toiling in the fields for a long time. good for her. pete: a few additional headlines beginning with this: the family
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of a man beaten to death by a group of teens says they're still in shock over the senseless loss. we must warn you, the video we're about to show is disturbing. the attack caught on camera shows the group of seven smiling teens as they chase down and beat the elderly man with a traffic. cone. the victim's niece saying yesterday she can't understand why anyone would do this. she says, quote, we all can't stop crying. police are offering a $20,000 reward for information on these attackers. and speaking of attacks, newly released audio reveals the new york city bodega worker, jose alba, was trying to defuse the situation before he was forced to kill his attacker with a knife in self-defense. alba, who's now facing murder charges in our upside down world, is heard saying, papa, i don't want a problem, papa. at the attacker, a felon with a long history of violence, storms behind the counter.
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the city's d.a., alvin bragg, facing outrage from the public after a charging alba with murder. alba was released from rikers after his bail was significantly lowered following public outcry. he faces up to 25 years in jail if convicted. let's hope he's not in charge. if. well, a retired three-star general, gary volesky, is now suspended from a mentorship program after tweeting out a sarcastic comment to first lady jill biden. the first lady's original tweet saying, quote: for merely 50 years, women had the right to make decisions about our bodies, today that right was stolen from us. volesky replieded saying: glad to see you finally know what a woman is. [laughter] the tweet has been deleted, and the military's trying to can hell -- cancel him.
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rachel: is she a queen or a first lady? pete: is she a woman? all right. making america fashionable again. former president donald trump stopping a rally in anchorage when he spotted two supporters wearing shirts he wanted to add to his own wardrobe. >> i love that shirt. i want both of hem. them. take those shirts off and give them to me right now. [laughter] pete: let's see those shirts again. no confirmation on whether trump took home -- the. rachel: okay. so you guys know i like president trump, but even i think -- [laughter] joey: really? rachel: that is too much. that looks like a fashion crime. you have to, you know -- pete: you have to admire it. rachel: and they got on stage. pete: and they got on stage. iowa ray that was probably the
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point. joey: let's turn to rick like reichmuth -- reichmuth for our weather forecast. rick: have you met our producers on the showsome if this were a saturday, by the way, tomorrow we'd all be wearing it. well done. take a look at the weather map, show you what's going on. we've got warm temps again across the central part of the country, south dakota, nebraska and areas of texas. we've got so much drought going on, the heat is going to exacerbate it a lot, unfortunately. we cough some -- do have some severe weather in areas of north dakota and minnesota, essentially this afternoon looking for the threat of maybe a tornado or two with, definitely some hail, definitely some strong winds. that's the beginning of that storm that you see there. quick down across the southeast, a rough week ahead, a lot of moisture coming in across the
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southern gulf and the carolinas. watch out for that. all right. rachel: thank you, rick. coming up, shining a light on autism the, how a 13-year-old boy is inspiring kids with disabilities with his new line of sandals. ♪ ♪ my a1c stayed here, it needed to be here. ruby's a1c is down with rybelsus®. my a1c wasn't at goal, now i'm down with rybelsus®. mom's a1c is down with rybelsus®. (♪ ♪) in a clinical study, once-daily rybelsus® significantly lowered a1c better than a leading branded pill. rybelsus® isn't for people with type 1 diabetes. don't take rybelsus® if you or your family ever had medullary thyroid cancer, or have multiple endocrine neoplasia syndrome type 2, or if allergic to it. stop rybelsus® and get medical help right away if you get a lump or swelling in your neck, severe stomach pain, or an allergic reaction. serious side effects may include pancreatitis.
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pete: our next guest is shining a light on autism with his candle company, shane and pepper. 13-year-old shane suffered a stroke as a newborn and was later diagnosed with cerebral palsy and autism. now he's inspying or -- inspiring other kids with his new line of candles, raising money through the eagles autism foundation. shane and his mom marie and his dad brett join us now. shane, first of all, thank you and congratulations for what you're doing, very cool. i've got a couple candles here on set that smell great. you're 13 and you've got a candle business? tell me how this happened. >> thank you. so it originated back in 2016 e when i had raised $17,000 for my
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amazing service dog pepper. pete: hence the name shane and pepper. you were able to do but, marie, started a business in 2020. as a mom watching what your son is doing, it's got to be incredible. >> it absolutely is incredible. i mean, he's breaking the stigma, you know? he has a disability, and he's taking it to the next level to bring that awareness for all those who have unique abilities. pete: and, shane, why'd you choose candles? what is it about creating candles that you love? >> well, ever since i was little i loved christmas lights and candlelights. they always bring me calmness, and i wanted to spread that calmness and joy to the world. pete: that is a great reason are. i'm telling you, i've got happy tails in front of me -- [laughter] it smells great.
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>> that is a great one. rachel: makes you happy. pete: it does. to watch your son both thrive and love what he's doing at the age of 13 and then give back to a foundation, $5 of every candle that's sold goes to the eagles autism foundation, what a neat opportunity as a parent to see your child live it out. >> yes. i mean, it's -- he's bringing awareness for everything, you know? he's partnered with five different organizations, and he donates back to the eagles autism awareness candles are one of them, you know? he's bringing light -- >> change to the world. >> exactly, change to the world which is what our nation needs right now. >> and our nation needs happiness right now, because we're in a dark time. [laughter] pete: we do. we do need happiness across the board. and i'm smelling beach paws, and it's making me happy right now.
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shane, what an honor it is to meet you. congratulations on your company. the web site is shane pepper.com. the candles are great. shane, i'm keeping this one, all right? i appreciate everything you do. [laughter] god bless you both, all of you. and dad brett as well. we appreciate you. all right, still ahead, helping our nation's heroes, how the horses, how these horses are healing our first responders, coming up. ♪ this isn't just freight. these aren't just shipments. they're promises. big promises. small promises. cuddly shaped promises. each with a time and a place they've been promised to be. and the people of old dominion never turn away a promise. or over promise. or make an empty promise. we keep them. a promise is everything to old dominion, because it means everything to you.
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joey: angelic cloud formation with the sun peeking through in st. petersburg florida. if you are there you are in a good place. if you're in manhattan you're in a good place. wauconda "fox & friends" 9:00 a.m. our july 10, 2022. we have an arcade, horses, we have a real hero joey jones on the show today in rachel campos-duffy. we're glad to have you with us. rachel: is an america beautiful. another beautiful place, this is west point we were at west point it was in west point. we thought it was interesting having you on joey because your military experience and you had your kids and you know stuff about all of them and i went to west point i interviewed three women who were amazing cadets and i thought i only have one kid to make it there west point.
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she is organizer beds always made, she is so on it. i brought up west point and i said do googling going into her freshman year and she called me back she said wisconsin and she said it's really interesting is central equal my only problem is the uniform. they look very manly. i said maybe check at the naval ones and she said she liked those better but she liked what west point was doing better. if you're hung up on the uniforms maybe are not west point material, what do you think. >> that is tough. some sometimes the kids are to have it don't need it. they need the reformation. also it looks a lot more like st. petersburg and west point, there is that. >> she can use a lightbulb moment for a lot of kids there
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like they want to go to west point, 14, 16, something goes off but if you want your kid to go to military ninth grade is when they start. kids in six and seventh grade organization doesn't matter for west point but my nieces are fifth-grade and ninth-grade and they were arguing whether my fifth-grade niece test count for getting into college. she says it counts. rachel: those women told me they started thinking about and ninth-grade. maybe we can get some adjustment for that. >> that is morgan and harper are going to get on me if i don't say their names today. rachel: pro-abortion activists are marching to president biden's front door yesterday demanding more from that he declare a public health emergency following the overturn
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of roe v. wade. >> a supreme court justice phase continued harassment, aoc mock justice kavanaugh for being chased out of a restaurant. the socialist at work. live in washington, alexandria. >> many of the protesters yesterday were green bandannas as being a symbol of the pro-abortion movement. they marched in the gates of it demanded that the president do more to preserve abortion access. according to the white house the president enforce peaceful protests and condemned any intimidation of the supreme court justices but the administration wouldn't go as far as the conservative justice should not be personally targeted but the pro-choice deputy editor for the washington post the markets rose on friday at the picket at justices homes targeted brett kavanaugh are beyond the pale as written before the unnecessary protesters can make their views amply known as the court itself and if anything counterproductive. this came after a wednesday
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incident were justice kavanaugh had to escape out of a back exit when protesters turned outside of the state house where he was eating. alexandria ocasio-cortez mock that moment tweeting this, poor guy he left because he decided half the country should risk death if they have an apt topic. under pregnancy within the wrong state line. then he offered a clarification with this. up topic present these are not denied treatment because they are valuable presidencies as modern medicine can't solve the problem of plenty defeatist to the uterus, they do much better without this blatant disinformation another reaction to aoc was provided by commentator matt walsh didn't you cry about having a near-death experience because people were trespassing in the building you weren't even in the group shut down d.c. has ticketed the targeting of conservative justices to another level putting a bounty of sorts on offering cash in exchange for tips on their location.
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rachel: thank you so much for that report. interesting with alexandria ocasio-cortez, she's totally minimizing the fact that it's against the law to intimidate a judge and he had people outside of his home threatening his life, somebody tried to kill him or somebody in his family and here at a restaurant getting threatened and she somebody during the january 6 claim she got ptsd she was traumatized, she wasn't even in the capital. it is all very much in line as you mentioned thinking she's about tearing down institutions when they don't work for her ideological advantage. >> what you protesting your washington, d.c. the so-called right to abortion has not stopped. if you want to get an abortion on washington, d.c. you can. if you live there you can if you
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travel there you can it's an unfortunate reality but as part of our federal system the states have the prerogative it went back to the states as part of the democratic process yet they demagogue it because the climate change is the pro-abortion lobby as far as the amount of power over the i interviewed abby johnson from planned parenthood and here's what she had to say how this abortion debate is out. >> biden is very restricted to what he could do at this point this is gotta be thought out at the state level. they just don't like the way the things that played out so now they're protesting, what they should be doing is working to help women that are in crisis i think what are the reasons that somebody people are protesting the overturning of roe v. wade is you don't see the victim of abortion. you don't see this child being dismembered in his mother's womb you don't see the body parts stacked on top of each other. i think you people could actually see the barbarity of
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abortion, if they could see how terrible abortion is more people would be against it. >> and that's why she talked about it. rachel: we talked about euthanize him and not really the reality she is behind that curtain as a buddy who worked in those clinics. >> every story is its own story but one thing that is consistent if you are a human being and you see a child in danger you want to help that child and people that are pro-life the majority of them had witnessed something like this and in their mind what they sell was child in danger. that's when she saw. these are children to me, the three of us that's what we believe a number child is a child. if you are prosecution and i try to be on things, those children have rights to, constitutional rights even the supreme court acknowledged that in row versus wade because what they tried to do and they did very badly is set up a perimeter the unborn
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child had protected rights in the first trimester and that's obviously not what they were supposed to do they tried to fix that and made it worse and is the longer the law of the land it was a bad chance doing what they thought they would do at the time and that's with the state legislature has opportunity under the law to decide where that limit is or what it looks like to them if it would happen to go to the state legislature there is an election in november and if aoc thinks this is what the majority of america wants why isn't she a major enter missouri, mississippi, alabama advocating for what she wants. i'm sure these groups are welcome there. rachel: if you want help women in a difficult pregnancy, why would you throw them cocktails at the only organization trying to help the women why would you shut down their choice to have a baby and for other people to help people that want to have the baby speak to thankfully will have real cocktails on the
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program. rachel: we actually do. a great transition. you are exactly right. he who controls the present race the past or controls the past controls the future. is that right. joey: you know is a big fan of piña colada's, thomas jefferson. >> were talking about the past and were talking about thomas jefferson and the new york post his pursuit of woking's, jefferson's legacy in his own home. you could go in see how the jeffersons designed his library, where he read and wrote the famous words in our country's history we hold these to be self-evident that all men are created equal. if you go there today and take a tour the story you hear of thomas jefferson is not about that it is about how terrible thomas jefferson was because he was a slave owner. all of us acknowledged parts of the past good and bad but they
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made it a one-sided point of view that makes thomas jefferson a bad guy in his own home and the post is writing about it. rachel: is not only hearing about the inflation, they want to feel good about everything there's a reason and i went to james madison and experience of the very similar to this. the sign says if all men are created equal being lifted up today, when will we know when it is so after you leave the museum tour which makes you feel guilty and also great about america in the end and how to be a racist, how are not to be a racist book. all of these books that are damning of america and suggested that were still racist country are in the gift shop.
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pete: i think, that harris wrote that because this is a same thing over and over in a fully understand it. this is an interesting topic. it's really a matter of perspective. i have no problem whatsoever with building up and telling the story of displays that lived and worked at monticello. explaining that none of this was possible without the force labor, you can go into that and you should. it is a part of our story if you want to tell the story tell the whole story. if you are tearing down thomas jefferson you're not doing it for the truth of history you're doing it because you want to tear down his work. the book you were talking about he goes on to say the constitution is stupid. i can't remember i believe that's what was, they go to see and edit all these other networks it's outdated in the second amendment doesn't mean the supreme court and the 14th amendment means everything that they want.
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if you want to tear down thomas jefferson's work, if you want to tear down the constitution of this document then start with demand so there's no respect for it and that's really what's at stake here. we don't need the true story of these individuals with purity. we need to know the part and that was collected into work that is provided the best and freest country this world has ever seen and that's worth memorializing the faulted individuals who created it. pete: absolutely right. online reviews of people who went there and wrote about the experience that they had at monticello. jeffrey tucker the founder of the libertarian studio, someone asked if jefferson had built a machine in the house and the guy said no he never built anything he was a tinkerer he helped build the country and not to mention the university of virginia. whatever staff members came up to the last segment i just went to monticello two. the same thing.
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the historians give you the two words told almost only the bad aspects of thomas jefferson in his own home. you talked about this earlier the funding to the people behind the foundation that runs it many time to the 1619 project, then committed to telling the worst story of america and now they doing it inside of the homes over founding fathers. >> those founders and the donors it is not a coincidence it's a volatile plan on their part to populate these positions that have influence over how america tells its story. i would've read one more review this is wesley stevens from tulsa oklahoma. he said the entire focus was on thomas jefferson's mistress. they are trying to rewrite history to make it seemed like the founding fathers were terrible in moral creatures, that just happened to start a country. this is what do i get.
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this is the fox nations tour of first lady i got a little bit of the first lady and i went into many of their homes and there is a pressure on the staff that is working thereby virtual with their donors to give this protective. pete: they start good faith by saying we have included enough of the realities of the top, let's include that, fair enough within the agenda setting and it becomes all about then tearing everything down. a spokesperson for monticello had this to say in response to the robot. our goal is to present an honest, inclusive history at monticello. in all aspects of the contributions. as well as jeffersons founding contributions. rachel: that tells you everything that you need to know. pete: as well as. rachel: conservatives have made a lot of fundamental mistakes, you, will and i talked a lot
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about how we got this. and one of them is conservatives are very focused on elections which is a good thing but they allow institutions in really important places like historical fight to tell that story in the left has been really smart and populating those faces and really telling the story of america. i think it's good to have a big impact on generations to come. pete: anywhere you read a statement this is diversity, equity and inclusion, and alarm bell should go walk. i am all for equality and inclusion, that goes without saying, what they're saying is something else that is code for set of principles and theories that is invested in elevating one group and take it out another and taking debtor country. rachel: it's a cultural revolution when our guest in another hour said to the chinese-american, this is what
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concerns are the most about what is happening in america. joey: you said countries made a lot of states and conservatives made a lot of states you have to judge when they lived and how they lived that's not a hard thing to understand that's what they taught us. if you wanted say conservatives are making a steak will treat headlines and see what's happening. turn to your headlines a protester into a party in the compound as a nation's economic crisis reaches the boiling point. thousands of sherlock and finding their way in joining us jim, cricket, this happening hours before protesters search the prime minister's home the prime minister agreed to step down once a new government is formed and the president says he will resign on wednesday. president biden's age is becoming an uncomfortable issue for many in the white house. the new york times reporting some white house aides see his aides as a sensitive topic in
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some quietly watching out for the president. the aides increasingly become an uncomfortable issue for him, his team and his party the teachers union wants to replace the word mother with brooding parent. an official contract. we asked what would this mean for classic songs about mama. like stacy's mom, hey mama by kanye west and mother's little helper but the rolling stones would look very different if the naa gets this way. take a look at the songs and awoke world without mother. stacy's brooding parent, a brooding person, gestational parent told me not to come and they said knock you out.
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joey: the national education association spewing utter lunacy. nobody suggested these titles so far but knowing the direction we are going is probably not wrong. rachel: it is coming. those are your headlines. rachel: when you look at the test scores coming out of america it is so depressing that these are the things that they focus on. pete: johnny can't read but we're going to tell johnny his mom is not his mom and they are a person or their dad could be a birthing person. that will make them smarter. we can keep going down this. rachel: still ahead. johnny depp, and rachel by the way, i'm not talking about
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myself. johnny depp and amber heard are back in the headlines as the aqua man actress to declare a mistrial read we will ask nancy grayson back in really happen. pete: having more fun in the sun with their very own arcade and fox square. stay tuned for the final battle for the totally gender neutral "fox & friends". ♪ your shipping manager left to “find themself.” leaving you lost. 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 from prom dresses
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to workouts matching your job description. and new adventures you hope the more you give the less they'll miss. but even if your teen was vaccinated against meningitis in the past they may be missing vaccination for meningitis b. although uncommon, up to 1 in 5 survivors of meningitis will have long term consequences. now as you're thinking about all the vaccines your teen might need make sure you ask your doctor if your teen is missing meningitis b vaccination.
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every search you make, every click you take, every move you make, every step you take, i'll be watching you. the internet doesn't have to be duckduckgo is a free all in one privacy app with a built in search engine, web browser,
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one click data clearing and more stop companies like google from watching you, by downloading the app today. duckduckgo: privacy, simplified. rachel: actress amber heard back in the spotlight following the johnny depp defamation trial because her legal team is asking for a mistrial claiming that the wrong juror was selected and placed on the jury here to breakdown the cases host of crime stories on fox nation, nancy grace. so great to have you here. here's what she is saying and what to redo the quote, her lawyer say the 52-year-old sitting on the jury for six weeks was never summoned for jury duty on april 11 and did not appear in the list is deeply troubling for individuals jury duty not to appear for jury duty and serve on the jury. we respectfully request to declare a mistrial due to improper jury service.
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what you make of this? >> i think it stinks of desperation and let me tell everyone that is not familiar which is jury selection, to speak the truth and whether their impartial, long story short you get a pack that the every 100 jurors there get whittled down to 12 or this case seven you have a chance to exhaustively question them. you want to tell me amber heard didn't tell that a 77-year-old man as opposed to 62-year-old man, this is on them. they cause this era if it is an error because she has to show prejudice for injury and she is not. they had a chance to cross-examine, they cannot look and see this is not 77-year-old
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man in virginia, you can give out a jury the whole jury proceeding if you're over 70. this guy had the same last name. it sounds like a father-son situation and they went to jury selection. that'll happen it is on them. actually had a convicted felon on a jury before and i did not know what because that was one of the first cases and i didn't want to scare the jurors by saying did you have a conviction. that's a tough question you have to ask as a lawyer, they did not do it they did not ask tough questions. rachel: do you think the way that this trial fared out is that she does have good representation or is it just a matter that her case was not very good to begin with. >> i think the jurors didn't believe amber heard credibility.
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there's nothing her lawyer stated done about that but she is pretty good appellate lawyers that are working on this because it's very issue that will not resolve a new trial. this is a hail mary and will not work you could not close the error yourself at trial and then compliant about it on appeal. rachel: out of a man could take another round of this trial. nancy grace always great in your opinion. you can catch nancy on crime stories on fox nation. i never miss it. thank you nancy. >> thank you for inviting me. rachel: we love having you on. don't mess with mama bear a mother clings to the hood of her car after car jack or tried to speed away with her kid. horses healing heroes. how these animals are helping veterans and first responders. ♪
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pete: the healing power of horses helping our heroes from posttraumatic stress disorder behind the warrior ranch foundation looking to rescue horses impaired them with veterans and first responders. joey: one of our editors here at fox is the founder of what you're ranch she shared with her professional trainers along with retired army ranger palmer tina's and retired costar maddie good morning thank you for begin your four legged friends. >> we're so happy to be here. >> great to have a colleague at fox doing this. talk about what you're ranch does. >> we do horse therapy only teacher for dispense about the nature of horses in the way horses community with each other that is through body language
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simple exercise and how to communicate without horse we are stepping into their heard it's about respect and trust jeff to get the trust of that horse with horses are in the field saying who the leader is there biden each other, kicking each other they're not hurting each other because they're all 1000 pounds when we answer and that's only way that they know how to communicate. if they communicate back to us and were not leaving them were getting up in the hospital it's all about safety you only need a little bit of energy to move that horse that's what we teach you and they will mirror our energy they are hypervigilant they will listen to our energy they can feel it from 5 feet away. rachel: how does this help the veterans at the great explanation of how the horses interact but transfer that to
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how this ends up helping veterans. >> is entirely based on trust and a lot of veterans come to a need to distrustful place. you never going to pull horse whether anxious or fearful they will no. you have to build the trust in your confidence in your self-awareness. joey: paul you were an army ranger that's a lot of work and you earn that title are you humbled when you're earning the trust of a horse? >> absolutely. obviously a lot of ego comes with it you're in a special role in the military as well my brother did that but you can't go wrong with a horse thereto begged her faster than you ever be and probably smarter than you are too. it's very humbling yet to look within and you have to be
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creative and find a way. rachel: gina is over there, she is a trainer. >> she is alive she is our warrior trainer. joey: give us a couple of tips, for people out there what should they know and what can they know. >> the work safety is number one rule, basic skills when i'm at the ranch it is basically teaching them the skills to keep everyone safe. basic skills of backing up the horse making a backup at a space being able to walk forward getting them to go sideways out of your space. joey: look so easy. >> you don't need the energy. >> you need to get positive
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energy. >> you've got to be focused you are focused on that horse in that world. >> is why it's a good tool for veterans you cannot do this without mindfulness you could not be back there in afghanistan and do something with a horse in the safe manner in an arena. if your mind is elsewhere the horse is going to no there is a you're not paid attention and you're asking me to do something i don't want to do in the get to take advantage of that. joey: i know our viewers want to learn more in the people want to be involved the website is where you're ranch foundation.work. >> we have our horses cody, ranger and schmidt. what a great foundation. >> warrior ranch foundation.work. please donate you can donate there as well for sure. thank you so much. .pete: the decline on the record worth ethic in the economy. maria bartiromo reacts to the
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warning. rachel: if you like piña colada's, we all know the song. we have a celebration for you we will say cheers with a cocktail -- you picked a good day to come. ♪ ♪ pain hits fast. so get relief fast. only tylenol rapid release gels have laser drilled holes. they release medicine fast for fast pain relief. and now get relief without a pill with tylenol dissolve packs. relief without the water. this is john. he hasn't worked this hard to only get this far with his cholesterol. taken with a statin, leqvio can lower bad cholesterol
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rachel: we stopped horsing around and now were back to headlines and 8-year-old victim of the highland park shooting wakes up from a coma to find he is paralyzed from the waist down little cooper roberts is conscious and no longer needs a ventilator to breathe but is still in pain and facing a long road to recovery. robert is one of the dozens injured in the mass shooting at the july 4 parade including his mom and his twin brother cooper woke up asking for his twin brother the also with the family dog george. we are praying for you. former seattle seahawks wayne brown arrested in los angeles trying to take a gun to an airport security. the gun was reportedly in brown's luggage and was unloaded. the charging the former pro baller with possession of weapon. no word yet on how the charge will affect his future in the nfl. he was in talks with the
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seahawks earlier this year. this stunning video showing a brave mom in new mexico into action after a woman stole her car with two kids still inside she jumped on the hood banging on the windshield and yelling trying to stop the woman the mom told the daily mail she felt no fear trying to protect her kids, she is a mama bear all three are safe police catching up to the car jack or after she fled on foot she is facing multiple charges and so are your headlines. >> i have no doubt you would do the same. good for her. >> as businesses struggle with inflation and labor shortages one former ceo warning the decline of the american worth ethic is only going to exacerbate a recession. andy puzder writing some americans have clearly gotten used to not working and have chosen to live off of the
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welfare that remains rather than return to the workforce. this is not a criticism of people in need of government assistance but the able-bodied should work for society to benefit in their personal benefit. a simple notion those who can work should. pandemic air welfare enhancements still in place have aided the current disinclination to worth ethic. here to react "sunday morning futures" host maria bartiromo, great to see you this morning your reaction to that take from andy puzder, it's really interesting. >> it is, thank you so much. i think this is evident in the most recent jobs report when we saw the participation rate at pretty much the same level as it has been for several years one of the reasons we have such a low and employment rate is because people had decided not to get back into the workforce and not to get back into participating in looking for a job we have 11 million open jobs
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right now but unfortunately because of the stimulus that has been thrown at this economy in the last two years some people have decided i won't get back to work i will just deal with the at-home in the half savings and continue to cut into the savings. this is a dangerous situation in terms of the overall economy inflation is at a 40 year high but also the issue around jobs has to do with people not getting back into the workforce and not participating we will get another very important report this upcoming week it'll be a market mover were getting the cpi the consumer price index out on wednesday and x expected to hit another new 40 year high of 8.8% year-over-year even though we seen alleviating of prices in the last month of commodities. of course oil has come off of the highs as well that will probably be evident in the july number. expect a number hot number and
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another reason for markets to trade down at the participation rate were talking about it this morning we will talk with the leading economists in the country this morning and when you're getting is giving us his expectation of jobs, inflation, paying for the essentials what are the essentials food, fuel and rent soaring and the last year. when will we get a break, airline tickets as well not an essential but up the with governor greg abbott at the top of the show, breaking news on an incredible situation of the board of people coming into america and he is trying to fight back, what does the administration do they probe tested. ron johnson are here in the two senators are going to talk about what is possible in terms of policy and of course we'll talk about hunter biden we have new indications of influence peddling and we want to do what
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president biden knew what and when and why he so soft on china for he eliminated the china initiative, he is considering removing the tariffs on china and now we understand that he sold oil from america's petroleum reserve to china among other places. we will get into in 15 minutes. we have breaking news right after the beginning of the show. pete: you always get to the bottom of it. thank you so much. still ahead so far as shocking upset in t-ball over rachel who was heavily favored and joey absolutely punished an air hockey. he will take on the "fox & friends" weekend championship trophy. we go head-to-head in basketball. i'm watching joey shoot, anything can happen. stick around. ♪
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every search you make, every click you take, every move you make, every step you take, i'll be watching you. the internet doesn't have to be duckduckgo is a free all in one privacy app with a built in search engine, web browser, one click data clearing and more stop companies like google from watching you, by downloading the app today. duckduckgo: privacy, simplified. when you need help it's great to be in sync with customer service. a team of reps who can anticipate the next step genesys technology is changing the way customer service teams anticipate what customers need. because happy customers are music to our ears.
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genesys, we're behind every customer smile. every search you make, every click you take, every move you make, every step you take, i'll be watching you. the internet doesn't have to be duckduckgo is a free all in one privacy app with a built in search engine, web browser, one click data clearing and more stop companies like google from watching you, by downloading the app today. duckduckgo: privacy, simplified. joey: all morning long we've been celebrating summer right here on the fox square, thank you to our friends at best mountain. earlier in the show.
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rachel: betty bounces earlier in the show, pni face-off with ski ball and then joey and rick have air hockey. joey: ricketts not even here anymore he so embarrassed. are you cheering for me. >> now it's time to shoot your hoop. we're going to put a minute on the clock joey and i have the "fox & friends" at stake and rachel will be counting all the stocks that the best friend when. >> are you to get additional basketball? on your marks, get set, shoot. >> i do this in my basement on a regular. >> three, four, five.
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there's two. >> 5 - 2, 6 - 2, 7 - 2, 3 - 8, 19 men three, 4 - 9, 10 - 4. 11 - 4. , on, come on. >> backing it up. rachel: did anyone get more? five seconds. we know who won. rachel: i was rooting for joey. pete: i was wrote hundred rooting for joey to. we want to thank eddie's
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bounces.com. if you want this in your own backyard or your own party. joey: i still can't win even my own son beats me. rachel: up next the moment we've all been waiting for were celebrating, don't go anywhere. ♪ ety system. >> dad: looks great. thanks. >> tech: stay safe with safelite. schedule now. >> singers: ♪ safelite repair, safelite replace. ♪
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pete: beautiful. joey: yeah, here with us on how to make the perfect pina can colada mocktail -- i don't drink, so i'm loving it. it's a dessert for me, and it's fantastic. rachel: that's delicious. the national drink of puerto rico. >> yes, absolutely, it was created many puerto rico, actually, and then the world fell in love. rachel: i fell in love with it. pete: what makes them so good and how do you make it? >> it's a combination of, essentially, coconut cream and pineapple juice, and some bartenders are have added citrus to add some balance, you can add a little bit of a rum. we have a white and a dark rum, white, aged rum now is kind of a lovely, modern twist. and one we wanted to demo today is, actually with, a single malt scotch which sounds craze i -- crazy, but it's aged in rum barrels, so it's best of both worlds. joey: i actually have a bot
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bottle of that, that my friends say tastes fantastic. [laughter] >> i used to work at a rum bar, and i fell in love with this single malt whiskey -- rachel: so you like it better with the whiskey. >> i do. pete: it's a brittle simple mix, is -- pretty simple mix, is what you're saying. >> absolutely. joey: that looks good. >> coconut cream. pete: where do you get coconut cream? rachel: ray from the store. [laughter] >> yeah, from the store. rachel: if you can find it on the shelves these days. pete: yeah, that's true. >> and this is an aged single malt scotch, so a modern cocktail. joey: that does sound good. rachel: i'm about to start my vacation. i can't think of a better way to start. by the way, i had my baby, they took her off the set for the
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cocktail segment. [laughter] [inaudible conversations] joey: have a taste of this. mocktail, then i'll be many trouble. peter: naomi, thank you so much. everyone wants a rogue barkeep. thanks for joining us on this sunday. we love you, have a great vacation, rachel. go to church. ♪ ♪ maria: good sunday morning, everyone. welcome to" sunday morning futures," i'm maria bartiromo. today, dereliction of duty. extreme heat in texas, failing to stop the open floodgates of illegal migrants coming into america this weekend. millions swarming the southern border this year from mexico, guatemala and 112 other countries. every day groups of 10, 20, 500. new fox drone footage coming up this mor.

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