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tv   Tucker Carlson Tonight  FOX News  July 25, 2022 10:00pm-11:00pm PDT

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now do better when clients do better. that might be why most ofng our clients come from other money managers, at fisher investments. we're clearly different wanting we're clearly different wanting to sleep again. i don't think coffee is your answer to that. my days is going to cost anything. i welcome with tucker carlson tonight. happy monday. t trying to stay cheerful inal the face of everything that's happening to the countryk to talk about it every night. multiple disasters all at once h . but if you o had to isolate one single tragedy, it'she produced the highest casualty rate in the united states. you'll probablystate sta have te opioid crisis. over the past twenty five years, opioids have destroyed entire regions of the country, mostly rural
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areas, places populated by they people who built and fed this country for generations. hundreds of thousands of themnd have died from opioids and they're still dyingng . >> more than 100,000 drugom addicts just last year, mostly from fentanyl f fennell's imported from china, smuggled through mexico. if youmexi live here, you probab know someone who's died from fentanyl, probably someone's childly, which you may havehe forgotten in the face of all the sadness, this is the opioids epidemic was not organic. it didn't just happen one day because people sparsely populated zip codes in kentucky and vermont and west virginia suddenly felt sad and started taking dangerous drugs. no, this particular disaster was created by drug companies. that'sug c true. purdue pharma kicked it off. they did so by aggressively marketing a narcotic calledol oxycontin. they sold it tod doctorsoc and doctors told us their patients on the false claim it was non-addictive. it was very addictive. what happened next? t we'll drive throughhr upstate new york some time. you can see the human carnage. ultimately, purdue pharma faced
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a barrage of lawsuits and then c criminal charges in the end, however, not a single executive from that or any other drugan company ever went to jail. so no one was ever reallyve punished forr all those deaths. hundreds of thousands of deaths . well, for a brief moment, it seemed possible that somebody would be punished. noldld one remembers this, butes during the democratic primaries in 2019 kamala i, of all people described pharma executives as , quote, nothing more than some high level dope dealers who should, quote, be held accountable. then a few months later, she went further than that. harris suggested the drug companies were so evil they might produce a cold vaccine that wound up hurting people. quote, if donald trump tells, we should take it. i'm not taking it, harris said.r and then other democrats, including andrew cuomo, then the governor of new york , said the very same thing . but here's the amazing part. the second joe biden tookic officee talk talk like that stopped immediately. never has changed faster. kamala harris, who was months before called drug companies
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dope dealers, suddenly sounded like the chief marketing officer at pfizer . at one point, harris announced that volunteer would go , quote, door to door to promote pfizer's products. never in our history have federal officials touted a publicly held company more aggressively than the bush de touted pfizer . as a result, pfizer stock price exploded its executives billions gone wasas anyst suggestions the drug companies mightioiodr be capable of doing anything wrong ever. instead, the media and the bush administration lauded pharma executives as moral heroesme and some of their products are lifesaving. that is trueths. but the bigger truth we are now learning is more complicated than in just the past few weeks. serious, very serious. weeioquestions have emerged abt some of the most widely prescribed drugs in america, very much including the covid vaccines. but we want to begin tonight with what in anyny normal period would be front page news around the world.
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it turns out the entire premise behind the most commonly prescribed antidepressant drugs appears to be completely wrong. sa comthese drugs are known as . they're ubiquitous between 1991 and twenty eighteen total ssri r prescriptions in the u.s. rose by more than 3000 percent. the number ofs prescriptions fr the most common ssri hit two hundred and twenty four million last year. two hundred and twenty four million prescriptions in of three hundred and thirty million people. in other words, dozens ofig people who are taking ssri. you may be taking them right now. and yet for decades there have been strong indications that there is a problem with these drugs. and the most obvious is this antidepressants are supposed to cure depression. that's why they're prescribedre and over the same period that ssri prescriptions have risen0% three thousand percent. >> the suicide rate may be thete most reliable indicator of all
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of depression has not fallen in united states. in fact, the suicide rate has jumped by thirty five percent. that's a huge increase. that's a lot of dead people. the drug makers admit that their products may be part of the reason for the increase in suicide. the makers of prozac, for example, concede that young people who take that drug have an increased risk of suicide compared to those who took a placebo. >> think about that for a second. a drug is suppose to make you less sad, may make it more likely that you will killth yourself. how is thatat allowed? what's been allowed? because virtually no b one hasne said a word about one personit who did say something about it a long time ago. was the actor tom cruise all the way back in 2005. he had a very famous appearance on the today show. you may remember it. here itt i is . >> here we are today where i talk out against drugs and psychiatric abuses of electric, shocking peopleat against their will of drugging
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childreng with them, not knowing the effects of these drugs. do you know what a adderall is ? do you know ritalin? do i you know now that ritalin is a street drug? do you understand that? aren't there examples and might not brooke shieldss o is an example of someone who benefited from one of those drugs. mask the problemnd that and if you i understand the history of it, it masks the problem. that's what it does.oe that's all it does. you're not getting to the reason why there is no such thing as a chemical imbalance. drugs aren't the answer that these drugs are very dangerous. they're mind altering anti psychotic drugs and there are ways of doing itng without that so that we don't end up in a brave new world. so cruz said a few things. one maybe shouldn't trust the pharma companies and just hands your children c whatever they're producing and hope for the best two. there's no such thing as a chemical imbalance inn your brain that causes depression. he said that.
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and three, these drugs masked the real problems you're suffering for a real reason.nd the drugs can't d fix provocatie statements. how did the country respond to this? well, everyone in the media agreed tom cruise is crazy. >> he's got a cult. shut p up a lot of people thougt that we may even have thought that. but thent inf more informationt coming out that made tom cruise look a little less crazy. 5 in 2015, researchers from the scientific journal bmj found that, quote, some birth defects occur two to three and a half times more frequently, nt a lot more frequently. among the infants of women treated with ssri early in pregnancy. well, that's a huge problem. ignoredor in the same journal in 2020, researchers found that f quoteou post ssri dysfunction is unrecognized and can be debilitating both psychologically and physically. let's kind ofsica k a problem t. if it steals your drive , maybe it's stealing your soul. r no, ignore it. only cult members care.
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then last year, researchers in sweden found that, quote, therez may be an increased hazard of violent crime during ssri medication in a small group of patients. it may exist across age groups and throughout treatment period and it possibly persists for upr to twelve weeksor after treatmet discontinuation. so, you know, if you stop taking the drugs, you may be impotent, infertile, violent, but atbu least the drus cure the chemical imbalance in your brain that causes your depression. that was the sellingn. point. >> what a great piece of marketing. now you've gotar a chemicalke imbalance in your brain. >> you need these drugs. and so hundreds of millions of prescriptions every year forem these drugs. well, in what seemed like news to us last week, we learneds that actually ssri don't cure a chemical imbalance in your brain. so the acronym ssri stands for selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors.
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the theory was has been for thirty years the depressed earspeople have an imbalance of serotonin in their brains. they have a chemical imbalanceom . ife you give them more serotonin, then they become less depresseds and happy. they're less likely to kill themselves right. but it turns out that serotonin deficiencies are notcien the ren people get depressed. that's just a guess. it's now officially science. this new finding comes from university college london. just completed a long and huge study on the relationship between depression b and serotonin. it was published in the journal molecular psychiatry. here'sre's the lead author of tt study, joanna moncrieffe said about the findings, quote, i think we can safelyy say after a vast amount of research conducted over several decades, there is no convincing evidence that depression is caused by serotonin abnormalities, particularlyedonin by lower levr reduced activity of serotonin sh >>at what that was the whole premise of the drug, which virtually the entire american
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population was taking on their doctor's advice, whether b the drug companies made billions off those drugsil. so first we were told that ssri would save lives. a now we learn they don't actually work as intended. in fact, the whole idea behind the drug was completely wrong. and yet and here's the bests part. people are ignoring thiss news and the drugs are still being prescribed. how can that happen in a country based on science? well, as it turns out and this is the real pointoi that happens all the time on this channel, just the otherse tony fauci, you know, less than tony fauci admitted in public that actually we have no idea what effect the koven vaccines might have on women's fertility on their menstrual cyclesfe. >> wait a second. remember one suggestion thater gecould get bounced off ofco twitter and facebook as a conspiracy theorist? well, it turns out it's true. there's tony fauci. there's been. a number of
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studies. "new york times" just did one about mental strainingaf cycles and how thatfe is affectd by vaccines. >> yeah, well, the menstrual thing is something that seems to be quite transient and temporary. that'son the point. that's one off the points we need to study more are we need to study t it more , study morea it's just like human fertility reproducing species, the most important event in mostve people's livesnt. we need to study it more . but it's too late.we we just forced millions of women to take that drug. >> sorry. so how did they release a vaccineva and then make it mandatory when they didn't understand the longhe term effects of the drug? that's a very good question. here's deborah berk's. she is the former white house covid response director again on fox news. >>. i knew these vaccines werero not going to protect against
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infection and i think we teeoverplay the vaccines and it made people then worry that tit's not going to protect against severe disease and hospitalization. it.. will . but let's be very clear , 50% of the people who died fromro omicron surge were older, vaccinated. what stops quote, i knew these t vaccines were not goingha tost protect against infection really. deborah burks. but somehow i d you forgot to mention that as people were being fired from their jobs for not taking on the premise that if they took it, they would never be infected. you get criminally charged? >> soon, we hope. and then there's the effect covid vaccines on the elderly, the population most at risk according to the lancet, no less than vaccinated people. ranja biden's age are 80% more likely to become sick after taking the kofod shot as compared to unvaccinated people. we o unin what, 80% more likely toa become sick afterki taking a sht
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was prevented from getting sick. >> how is thishi not the bannerg headline? it's being ignored? st >> well, as one scientist wrote in the journal of virology, quote,, the study showed that immune function among vaccinated individuals eight monthsim after the administration of two doses of the covid-19 vaccine wasng lower than thatst among the unvaccinated individuals. so it's not just thatbo your natural antibodies were more powerful in the vaccine. we've known that for a long time, though they lied about it. turns out a vaccine appears to depress your immune system this is massive implications not just for covid they're all kinds of horriblethro diseases. you can get the suppressed immune system. re the journal food and chemical toxicology found the same thing, quote, vaccinees induces a profound impairment in type one interference signaling which has diverse adverse chconsequences to human health. what the ? >> and yet these people on tv
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blindly admitting, oh, well, weo should do more study on that after we forced it on the entire american population on billionsns peoplei globally. and this might explain how joe biden got covid after gettingve every available shotryll and telling just a year ago that vaccines conferred total immunity. >> the various shots that people are getting now cover that you're okay, you're not a going tore you're not going to get covid if you had these vaccinations. hey, folks, guess you heard the story. i tested positive, but i've p beenos double vaccinated double boosters. >> so one is the response to this is great sadness, ofau course, because even people who didn't vote for joe biden believed his administration. in and when t they said this becaue they were acting in the name of science, people wereeo afraid of covid in some cases with great justification. some people were at riskusti of dying from covid and they reached out and accepted us drug on the promise, told toy them repeatedly that it would
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save them. and you have deborah bercovici. i knew itt didn't really work. so the question is why is no one being held accountable? whyse is the party that promised to hold big pharma accountable ignoring this? they're not saying a single word about any of these liesti from the pharmaceutical industry, which is making billions and there's more . there's more . it turns out that alzheimer'sme drugs, the most widely prescribed alzheimer's drugs, don't actually treat alzheimer'ssheim. you know, does. that appears to work because in twenty , twenty two , nothing's too weird to be true. but that's not what they're prescribing. in 2014 in the journalin alzheimer's and dementia, fo researcher jeffrey cummings found a 99 percent failure rate of alzheimer's treatments in the pipeline for production. >> butn he suggested that further treatments would be more successful. well, how does that work? because the new medications coming through, it would effectively target the proteins that formed so-called sticky plaques in the brains of people who suffer from alzheimer's, just like a lack of serotonin
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cause dght to depression. sticky plaques in the brain were thought to cause alzheimer's to interest in a subject. you've definitely read that. so these new drugs came out. they're very expensive. did they work? they failed to new alzheimer's drugs. one from the drug company genentech, the huge biotech firm genentech, the other from biogeniopp were supposed to tart sticky plaques and they did. but here's what they didn't do to fix alzheimer's. they did nothingheim to affect alzheimer's. incidentally, the fda approved fbiogen's despite a 10 zero vote from the fda's own adviser committee to reject it. >> what so it turns out that the assumption about stickyim plaque causing alzheimer's is likely wronger and the people running our public health establishment knew what was w wrong but ignored the fact it was wrong. and again, no one is being heldio accountable. the entire population trust the sciencen . ce if you want to make people distrust the science and go to
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the witch doctor rather than the pediatrician to treat their kids flu, this is how youn you lieev and then you never admit it. apologize or hold the liars accountable. so the claim that sticky plaques caused alzheimer's originated in a twenty six paper in the journal nature . it was written by neuroscience professor sylvaine lesnik recently at vanderbilt a university. neuroscientist called matthew schreck took a closer look at that. twenty six paper. soso did science magazine where they find we're quoting shockingly blatant fraudulent data. according fen donna wilcox, who works on alzheimer's with university of kentucky, was a bit of a molecular biologist, reported that, quote, data might have been changed to fit a better hypothesis. >>ho holy smokes. so how does the nih, whichio is working with your money on your behalf tolt keephy the nation healthy, how do of tthey respond to this? well, they awarded thatra same scientist a new grant tont study alzheimer's and theti democratic party from his new best friends, haven't said
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a word about it and said they're finding new ways to send your cash to their donors. here's a new trains admiral. >> so we really want to to to base our treatment and to affirm and to support and empower these youth not to limit their participation in activities in sports and even limit their ability to get gender information treatment in their state. >>re so whatever you think ofr the transyo question, kids struggling with questions about gender identity, notis the first thing that person says, the salient point that person makes is that a drug can fix it really with drugs. so the same people who had no clue what ssri did and then push them for decades, the same people who are making toddlers take the covid shot despite the obvious risks and no data whatsoever to support giving it to doctors. the same people p who tracked useless alzheimer's drugs to
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the elderly are now telling you that kids with gender identity disorders must have more drugs. and the administration that promised to hold big pharmapo accountable cheers them up. maybe at this point we should acknowledge that drugs are notoe the answertog to every human problem. people are more than just a collection of chemicals that can be manipulated to produce a desired result. they're human beings. they have souls if they're sad or sick or alienated from other people. t it's just possible that pfizer is not the solution. now, johann hari has been e saying this exact thing for a long time, shouting into the darkness, being ignored, having books attacked's and reviews. he's written a whole book abouto this exact subject, loston connections, uncovering the real causes of depressionn and the unexpected solutions. we've talked about this before and we couldn't resist invitingg him back on the eve of his vindication. johann hari, thanks so much for coming on . you've been saying for like a decade now that drug are not the answer to depression.
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>> how do you greet this news that you were right, drugs can give some relief tove some people. they gave relief to me for m well, but we've got to be really honest with people. o everyonef watching knows they have natural physical needs. you need food, you need water. you need clean about those things away from you. you'd be in real trouble real fast. e rebut there's equally strong evidence that everyone has natural psychological needs. ed you need to feel you belong. you need to feel your life has meaning and purpose. you need to let people see yoult and value you. and this culture we is good ats, lots of things, but we've been getting less and less good at meeting people's deep underlying psychological needs and that is the reason why depression has been hugely rising. and the issue i haveth hav is no much with the drugs. the drugs give some relief. they cause some severe side effects to some people over time. for most people, but not pff everyone, the effectsec tend to wear off. but my issue is that so much w with the drugs, my issues with the story we tell that accompanies the drugs. right. we're giving people and in an
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accurate map of their pain. to my doctor and iwa was reallys depressed and i was a teenager, i was told of your pain is just a malfunction in your brain, right?er you're lacking serotonin allor you need to do is drug f yourself. and for me personally, i needed to figure outig i had been severely abused when i was a child. .i had a lot of work to do inal processing that on realizing thatat i didn't deserve to be treated that way. actually , it was only one did i found my way out of depression. right. and so my issue is because told to distrust my brain, you know, i was told everyone watching your pain makes sense. your depression and anxiety areu not malfunctions. they are signals. they're telling us something now. not everyone was abused. evidencele scientific ,benign causes of depression and anxiety that in my bookth lost connections and two ofem them are in biology, although none of them are a chemical imbalance. but most of them are factors in the way you think about loneliness. depression and anxiety doubled in the last two years as we all
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became much lonelier. now that'sh completely common sense. your grandma would have understood that immediately. gee, grandma,, do you think if? you're really lonely you're more likely to be depressed and anxious? we'ven got to return tomm more common sense understandings of depression, anxiety, most importantly because they lead us to the real solutions foro s. exam, here in britain there was p a huge program of encouragingro depressed and anxious people when they came to the doctor to first try taking part in gardening programs turned out tort i be twice as effective p as giving people drugs because it was dealing w with theiras r loneliness. when weing understand what's really causing depression and anxiety, we can get to the real solutions. and that's what that's what's so important. your pain makes sense. wewe need to stop results that pain and start listening to it because it's telling us somethingng we really need t> hear. i agree completely. no heart. thank you tgr soo much. great to see you tonight, chasek tucker, thanks. s. the central facts of human lifed
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is that it ends in a society t that has no answer for what happens after death is absolutely certain to make everyone crazy neurotic. so everyone's crazy,. well, the administration is trying to downplay the fact that we're heading intoow i a recession and they're downplaying it by just changing the definitionan of the term kid of amusing, kind of scary, ulcerated blend at summer sale is on now. cool off with this hot c deal unblended yet to impact the power of a big blender on the go and it crushes right through ice. just dropping your favorite , even frozen fruitwa and make a smoothie any time anywhere. blender cleans itself just out a drop of soap, water and blend recharge quickly with any usb port from la mike lindell. and i want to give each and every one of you one last
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wills are so weak. >> oh yes. >> actually welcome to flach has the same feel as the office and parks and rec as that. it's a love letter to the community at its heart. we love you if you're looking for a big taste of small town life. welcome to flach. you're welcome . one full hour thursday on fox and watch any time on fox now or hulu, go join the heartland . how is it going to 5 together wm
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learn more at feeding america dog and so recession is not just a state of mind.of it is a measurable condition into an economy falls.by and here's how it has always been defined by economists. recession is two consecutive quarters of declining real gdp in the first quarter of this year. gdp went down this week. second quarter gdp numbers will be released. what will they tell us ? well, here's a hint. the white house just released a statement, quote, whilele some maintain the two consecutive quarters of falling gdp constituteco a recession. >> that is not the official definition nor the way economists evaluate the state of the business cycle. >> really what we thought we would talk to someone who has seen a lot of business cycles then inn business of economics, romney is executive chairman and co-founder strive asset management, which is a fascinating new company. he joins us tonight.
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thanks so much for coming on . so you're in business. what doines you think of this new definition of a recession? >> look, it's like a george orwellt who said it bes, right? the best way to control a society is to control itsst language first. and just like diversity is , conformity include exclusion. war is peace. now,pa apparently a recession is something other than two consecutive quarters of gdp decline. now the thingng tell you, tuckel is most sophisticated investors in the market have alreadye quietlyma accepted the fact that we are in a recession regardless of what this administration says, investorsmp pay attention to companies earnings. just look at wal-mart'ss r disastrous report earlier todaye where they slashed their profit expectationsyec for the future. so investors aren't really going to pay attention to what the administration says t h they know what's really going on . but the thing to pay attention to here t is that it's not just the recession that matters. we are also facing rampante nine plus percent inflation. and in the market yound can either have recession without inflation. you could in principle have 95% inflation without a recession.
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it's. a double whammy for us right now. we're facing both. e and meanwhile, the people in charge of this administration are focusing on changingngin the language that tells you a bit about whereke their priorities are. so the wal-mart statementr: t suggested they said recession is the reason thatha their earnings will be shortsss but they suggested that maybe real recession is higher thanl nine percent. what do r you think the real the actual experienced number g is for people? well,iv i think if you look at who the everyday customer is at wal-mart relative to a rangehe f other businesses that may be more insulateded by other forms of government subsidy or protection, this is where the everyday american shops. right. so i think that you have to look at this as a sophisticated market observer. you've got to look at wherees the real harbingers are and where the real prioritiesen the experience ofal the everyday american. and i think that the real experience of inflationn actualg combined with inflation that's driven by actually high energya prices in this country suggests that actually the experience of most americansamer is even worsg than the numbers suggest. but this administration is just fixated the band-aid solutions t
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like focusing on the language we use to describe it rathero than addressingha the problem. of course, the background of a man who addressing problem. we will see you again. appreciate coming on tonight. thank you.mi >>thank you. tha so we've sent many billions ofe dollars to ukraine becausehe our border security is so importantcu unlike ours. but now the government oft ukraine is trying to impose censorship in our country. is anyone who disagrees with the policy toward ukraine is working for putinra. that's their new position.l we'll speak to someone after the two people. in fact, you've lined up on zelenskyy blacklist. amazing story after the break. hollywood actor alec baldwin, actor alec baldwin. authorities say that actor alec baldwin shot and killed a woman on the set of his upcoming film. russ, alec baldwin always seems
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to be in the spotlight for good or bad is backed back . >> brian kilmeade, who is alec baldwin? go inside the actor's rise to stardom was determined. he was unrelenting and the controversies made their way to the public's deep trouble. and alec baldwin is everything for alec baldwin's voice. 70% daughter with some uttering and homophobic slurs for many actors. if you behave badly again and again and you capitalism that 70% death, it would be the shooting down of alec baldwin up on fox station. everyone on mike huckabee, former governor of arkansas, part time musician but longtime customer of relaxium sweet. and i'm here with my good friend and country music legend larry gatlin.
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and rb queen's only thirty nine ninety eight full size for thirty four . ninety or twin and twin except for only twenty nine ninety eight . we have limited quantities and once they're gone they're gone. so order now all we need is a whole lot of our music monday makes a monday night forget the lyrics and just so bloody if you want to get your music now it doesn't matter what you see, what's inside them to make me music monday? oh no. he's on fox watch any time on hulu. >> so we sent we begin by administration. we have sent billions to ukraine tote protect their borders even as we have opened our own to the world. why are we doing this exactly? well, as joe biden has told us repeatedly, during his
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winston churchill imitation, we're doing it to protect democracy. but of course,e the irony here is , is not democracy in anyde recognizable ukrainian government has banned media outlets that are hostile to it. they've also shut down opposition parties. they arrested the main dopposition. that's a democracy. so becausecr weac allowed that o happen, if we funded at all. now the ukrainian government has decided that they can impose censorship in our country. the ukrainian government hasuk issued a blacklist of so-called russian propaganda. american. that list includes rand paul , senator rand paul of kentucky, tulsi gabbard, who's serving in the u.s. military, and glenn greenwald, among many others. gso we thought we'd speak to a couple of them starting off glenn greenwald. >> he's independent journalist and subsect, among other places. glenn, thanks so much for coming. so you you're being blacklisted by the ukrainian government, which is a beacon of democracy. >> tellls us how this works. >> i mean, i thought president wronski had a workaround. apparently he has a lot of time
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to watch the morning show on msnbc where they sit around for hours accusing everybody they want to discredit of being a kremlin agent and teaching american liberals how to do the same. youut know, it's easy to mock,ck but it's actually quite outrageouser. it the ukrainians have a conflict with this neighboring country and russiahb are totally free to pursue whatever war policies they want. they got to fight russia. en ythe next ten years if they choose. but that's not what they're doing. they're begginghe and in a sensemy demanding that other countries, including my own, the united states, provide them with a seemingly endless supply of weaponss and money, which means we not only have the right but the obligation to debate that t that's whether that's in the interest of the american people to do so. for zelenskyy to essentially try and export the repressionnex he's imposed in his own countrya here to the united states by shutting down debate and accusing those of us asking questions of being kremlin agents, our russian propagandist is takes incredible gallkes while he's aw demanding that we turn over all our money and weapons to him at
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the same time, this is a guy g george w. bush describeduy as te george washington of our age. of i haven't heard really anybody in washington say a single wordt about this. yeah, i mean, from the beginning as you know as well as anybody, tucker, there was a very concertedff effort to eliminate all space to ask any questions. anyone who askedlity the questin of whether we should do more too prevent the war diplomatically like tulsi gabbarder or whetherk we should risk our own money p and our and a potentialot nucler exchange with russia over ukrainian border disputes called a kremlin agent or a russian asset. and this is the strategy that they're using to try and prevent us and the united states from exercising our freedom to debate what role our government should play in that war. exactly. din the name of democracy,r they shut it down. glenn greenwald, thank you so much for that. thanks. so, tulsi gabbard is also on this blacklist. she's also some of the ukrainian government.
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they should be censored. she serves the u.s. military. sheed served s the united states congress. she ran for president. now she's joining us and we're happy that she is . congressman, thank you so muchct iofor coming on . what's your reaction to finding yourself on this blacklist? >> i see the hypocrisy, tucker, the hypocrisy h of this blacklit is and frankly why the american an ppeople should care about ths is the biden harris administration and the bwashington elite from both parties are continuing to be willing tog impoverish the american people and people around the world and push us closer and closer to nuclear war and holocaust, all to protect democracy and defeat autocracy and ukraine. and all of this is happening as the ukrainian presidentng is frankly exposing that there is no democracy in ukraine. you mentioned a few examples ofs some of the things that he's doing and silencing any dissenting voices, imprisoningol political opponents, banning ntall political activity from the 11 opposition parties. frankly, taking control of all national media under his u unified information policy.
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and now he's turning his sights on americans, not only myself and othersd i've mentioned, but a sitting u.s. senator . the danger of this again goesth to the cost thate our leaders are willing to exact as they continue this facade of a push d for so-called democracy and defeat autocracy. the whole thing is sogal hypocritical and we need to acc hold our leaders accountable for it. i couldn't agree more . i have to ask you, since you served in washington for years, i know you're notot generallyly aligned with steve bannon or at least in the public mind, but you watched him get convicted last week of contempt of congress for notg cooperating with the january 6th committeeh ,while many others, eric holder, lois lerner have not been put on trial for ignoring subpoenas from the congress. what's your reaction to thisto? >> it shows the double standard in washington, but more dangerously, it shows how thishing administration is o willingly weaponizes
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our department w of justice to act as their own personal political hit squad and goingit after political opponents and turning a blind eye to people on their own team. this is incredibly dangerous because when you look at what's at the heart of our democracy, it is the rule of law.ty it is our ability as americans to be able to trust that these public institutions are serving the public interest and not favoring whoever's in power versus who is not in power. that no matter our political how we use, our free speech, the color ofor our skin, how we worship nonee b of these things should matter because we should have faith that our justice systemmhat will treat us equally and fairly across the board. this weaponization of the department of justice is incredibly dangerous and sets a dangerous s a precedentnd that that undermines the very foundation of our democracy. s >> you served in the congress as a democrat when "the washington post" started attacking you, i started paying very close attention took what you were saying, what it
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is like because you're a persone of principle. that's why and i hate that.ciin i appreciate. lw come on . say, tulsi gabbard, as always, thank you t. uc >> so equitable policing. that's the latest fad. whatg t doesth that mean exactlt well, it means homeless people living h in tents in front of your house on that street at chicago's greg. hello, it's me. your heart really jazz thirty seconds. wow, thattmi was fast. you know it.yo cardio offers the only personal ekg that detect six the most common arrhythmias in just thirty seconds so you can manage your heart i health from your heart rhythmm is normal. no arrhythmias in sight. i'm wondering what my doctor would say. let's find out what cardiac you
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seen this ad? it's not paid for by california tribes. it's paid for by the out of state gambling corporations that wrote prop 27. it doesn't tell you 90% of the profits go to the out of state corporations. a tiny share goes to the homeless, and even less to tribes. and a big loophole says, costs to promote betting reduce money for the tribes,
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so they get less. hidden agendas. fine print. loopholes. prop 27. they didn't write it for the tribes or the homeless. they wrote it for themselves. don't win 887 three one nine four six six to. so as his first act as president, joe biden mandated equity throughout the united states. you probably know what that s y dword meant. what is equity? well, itdi means drug addicts get to use your front lawn latrine. watch this. kalamazoo's commission meeting from michigan. >> watch. we have very aggressive, unstable panhandlers. they are aggressive toward business owners. they are following people into those parking ramps and you know, people have to clean upon where they havet right in front of your door of your business.
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>> so according to kalamazoo, commissioner chris prae, dell equity means drug get to wherever they want. one thing a lot of people don't realize is a misdemeanor is for life as much as a felony. and so many things come with a p permanent record on somebody's record . anything from a job to a access to education. if you're here illegally or even legally can be deported. he but i really think this is the right thing. if we want to do if we want to create truly more equitable community and laws that are the punishment meets the crime . yeah, let's hope they'ree on his front lawn right now. jason rance is radio show host in seattle. he's been on this story because he lives near portland, oregon. jason rantes, good to see you t tonight. yeah, good to see you.d >> communities in portland are being terrorized thanks to an equity focused homeless plan that's helped lead to a surge
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of open air sur drug dealing th, squatting sidewalks and lawns being used as toilets and thein tents keep popping up. as of july 17th, the city had at least 660 active homeless encampments. residents arein unsafe and it's put a strain on the business communityunit. i guess in fairness, there's ata least one business that's thriving and by business i mean homeless woman charging other homeless people two hundred dollars a month to stay at an encampment called grace's oasis. it's on city owned land, but the city is an intervening. do they get the rent? the owner of the neighboring rvs storage park and dealing with stolen catalytic converters and rv break insrs-i so that might be a hint.se now as this crisis worsens, where is are homeless czar jeff for all of that? remember him? be tacklingd too this crisis. so i did some research. itit turns out he's very hard at work pretending to tackle the problem. his agency just released principles for addressingy f s encampments and it says we h shouldn't sleep until we have free housing or at least low barrier shelters which they can live rent free while still using. so all of i i it has been totaly
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useless, though perhaps he can form a supergroup with singer songwriter antony blinken. siour secretary of state.si it turns out that all of that is also an amateur musician. take a look at this, furi. do we owe to do this my way? >> the obstacle in his way is a homeless guy passed out with a needle in his arm sleeping inep a stolen sleepingin but not sleeping in his house. >>id i didn't see a single druge addict b in the background therv at his apartment. why doesn't he let them live with him? i think the equitable thing to do would be to open up his apartment to the home, would leave, let them run strongly. agree jason rents on a high note. unfortunately, we've lost the signal. thank youyou.. great to see you. and we will be right back . >> hello, i'm mike lindell not
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>> this is how i hot it is . how do you so invoke liberal take control of anything disorder's the first symptoms. so the main effect of havingnt joe biden in charge is a massive increase in violent crime across the country. ryepisode of tucker carlson say we spoke to crime expert rafael manguel about e the effects ofpo this crime on poor communities. he's just written a book about policing. it's out tomorrow. it's called criminal injustice. what's the push forle dickason gracian and deeply think it'sit wrong and who it hurts most. here's partar of our conversatin . crime is really not somethinger that everyone feels equally. and if you say you are for vulnerable communities, i don'tw see how you don't priority enforcement and incarceration of people who consistentlynts flout societal norms because the people who are going to bear the brunt of the downsidege risk associated with that policy agenda are preciselyndre the people living in low income
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minority communities that have frankly enough w to worry about. i don't think people fully appreciate just how difficult it is just in terms ofch the psychological and emotional burden of livingg in a truly high crime area and a pocketon truly concentrated crime inst the united states. places like you, the austin neighborhood on the west side of chicago or humboldt park or the southwestern district of baltimore, some of the prisonsic ,cities like detroit and louisville that that just saps an entire communities ability to be productive. you can't think about all the other things that you need to think about in the lead is a successful if you cannot take for granted that you're going to be safe when you leaveus the house. i and so that's why this is just i think so important and so w destructive when we dismantle the systems that have been proven to producethathe the kinf safety that we've seen produced over the last twenty five , yethirty years, we're now starting to see get eroded, ry
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that sort of great conversations. i'm tucker carlson. say airs 7:00on t am tomorrow, x nation. so there's one thing we know about eric swalwell of california is always moving. you can't hold him back , but he's not having weird chinese spies, which he has done.rt he's posing shirtless whilele riding camels in qatar last year, squabbles, international street cred tookal a bit of a hit. however, he s was caught spendig tens of thousands of dollars on a luxury hotel in california where his wife worked. and we thought really got all this dough and you stay that close to home, please. but he may have heard our thoughtsts. >> he is off around the world.to eric swalwell, according to fox digital swallow's campaign, managed to spend more than s 30000pe dollars on travel expenses between may and june 30th. thirty five hundred of that one city, quote, iconic ritz in paris. in france, the campaign also spent big and other destinations in france, including the cafe marlay. so rest easy. >> international women of
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mystery take hard bang bang. axwell is back in play shirtless on another level, we'll be keeping track of eric swalwellf international travels. wels havewe the data but we're t of time. we'll be back tomorrow. have the best time with the o ones you take heart.l stilla a great country.an and sean hannity is next. in fact, he's right now right here, right now. can you think of a better name than a spy named fang fang? you just can't make that. >> we wouldn't even have the best novel. you couldn't make it up all tucker, thank you. thank you for going to hannity. all right. tonight, a disturbing security alert. china buying up massive amounts of american land and cattle ranches right here in the continental united states, often very close to military installations. you won't believe how many hundreds of thousands of acres they're now owning, meaning the people's republic of china. we have a special investigation . that's straight ahead. also, buckle up because a full

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