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tv   FOX and Friends Sunday  FOX News  August 14, 2022 3:00am-7:00am PDT

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newt gingrich a best-selling book. and don't forget to follow one nation, and fall me on twitter, ♪ [playing of "the star-spangled banner"] ♪.
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♪. will: good morning for for exame and friends weekend. it is always 4th of july.
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it is august 14th, year of our lord, 2022. will cain, rachel campos duffy. the team is back together. good morning, nice. >> good morning. will: so yesterday, right before we came on air -- pete: read the prompter. will: pete can't because in the prompter it says pete the new "fox & friends" bolling champion. will. i don't want to do it, will the embarrassing double gutter ball. rachel: you weren't only loser. dan lost. rick fell over. will: i thought we were going to revisit this. pete: what you did was so i am bear asking. then rick falling. cameras were not rolling. before will bold two gutter balls he bowled a perfect
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strike. >> you know what is funny t was interesting for me. i was not here for the juggling contest dan bongino didn't do well in. he didn't do well in bowling. if we had a weight lifting contest he would be pretty good at that. pete: lawn darts. something like that. rachel: dan doesn't like winning. i can sense that. he is a winner. he doesn't not like winning. pete: sorry to report to you, i was on dan's show, he replayed this. not sore loser. phenomenal by the way. rachel: people, you learn things about people that you don't know. my mother worked at a bowling alley. i was on a bowling league as a kid. why my form is so good. the two champion women with us at this segment.
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i had the best form. pete won but i won for form. i was a close second to be fair. pete: very close. there is a trophy again today. will stay in my office not for 24 hours. i believe, i actually read the show. i believe it is a corn eating contest in honor of the iowa state fair. will: corn eating contest. pete: i know you're corn shucking champ. will: twice. >> best corn is in wisconsin, i want you to know. will: fox news alert. sources telling fbi the information covered by attorney/client privilege during the raid of former president donald trump's mar-a-lago home. trump's lawyer said in june that no classified material was at property. rachel: our own alexandria hoff joins us live from washington. good morning. reporter: good morning this is a lot of new information.
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to better understand this we have to go back to the spring when a source tells fox news that president trump received a subpoena from grand jury for documents. he cooperated, turned over the documents. at mar-a-lago on june third, federal investigators were told by one person there were possibly more sensitive materials in storage on the property. the fbi asked a extra lock put on the areas which staff did do that. fast forward to monday august 8th, the unprecedented raid on a former president's home. the unsealed warrant showed agents obtained 20 boxes of material including classified documents from mar-a-lago, some labeled top secret. the president said the classification is incorrect he had declassified them. the warrant included any government or presidential records created by january 20th of 2017 and january 20, 2021. it was far-reaching in scope
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that warrant. within what was taken the fbi seized records covered by attorney klein privilege that they must be kept confidential. unclear if the communication was between the president and his attorneys or white house counsel or maybe a combination. in addition some of that material may have fallen under executive privilege according to sources. many republicans like senator chuck grassley said in effort of transparency the affidavit that accompanied the warrant must be seen. >> this is such a high-profile and very strange way of going about getting documents from a former president that the affidavit is going to be absolutely necessary if we're going to have full transparency and this demands full transparency. reporter: that affidavit would lay out why prosecutors believe that evidence of a crime could be found at mar-a-lago. source also tells fox news the justice department opposed
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trump's lawyers request for independent review of the documents on the property. >> thank you very much. the president was very quick to respond all of this. he has on truth social, he wrote a tweet or is that what we call it on truth social, a post, a truth post. here is what he said, the white house announced it had no knowledge of the early morning raid on mar-a-lago or the break into melania's closet or break on the safe in locked storage where unclassified documents were held and fbi knew was recommendations, which they cracked but not with the safe cracker that they brought with them. does anybody really believe that the white house didn't know about this witch-hunt? so he is angry about this saying there is no way president biden can say he didn't know about this. pete: really hard to believe the white house was not aware of this to include joe biden. that will be when he holds a press conference whenever that will be, he rarely does, rarely
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gets real questions, how does he answer that, what information do we get? this information about attorney/client privilege and executive privilege is very significant. he is president of the united states. he has been under siege for six years. he has confidential conversations with lawyers you know what a lot of grub by hands on washington would love to get their hands on. the broad swath of investigation, no wonder trump team was fighting back, no, have an independent third party what is classified, what we get back. he has the right to have private conversations with his lawyer. that didn't happen. they have the boxes. what could they do with them? will: the item that sticks out to me as both what does it mean to have documents unclassified. i don't know exactly what the certification process entails if the fbi were there in beginning of june, took what they considered necessary at that time and everything else was
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certified unclassified, why do you need 30 officer raid, special agent raid some 45 days later? this is an interesting timeline. sean hannity was on cross-country talking about what it reveals about the real motivation. >> why the raid? why the use of the espionage act and the obscure language of the espionage act? this is now the new hoax. we've had russia conspiracy hoax, we've had impeachment one, we had impeachment two. here we go all over again. they don't want this man to ever run for president again. that is what this is a about. i don't care if you're liberal, democrat, republican or conservative, if we don't have equal justice and application of our laws, we don't have a constitution, which means we don't really have the country we think we have. rachel: equal justice is what our country is based on. we had the conversation on the couch, i spoke with people from
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other countries namely venezuela, i asked them when did you know their country was falling apart? when there was no longer equal justice. when the regime in charge basically use their law enforcement agencies against their opposition, basically turned into a police state. i think that is where we're at. the thing that upsets me is the use of this espionage act. this really highlights the witch-hunt that the president says this is because there is no way that anyone can believe that donald trump who, you know, went after the chinese in a way that we've never seen any politician ever try to make the playing field better for americans, who shut down the pipeline for russia into europe, who has done everything he can to build up this country, somehow this is the guy who is taking state secrets, turning them over, when we have someone in the white house right now who is
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potentially compromised by russia, by china, through hunter biden's dealings in this country. pete: if you live in the cartoon land, russia russia, donald trump told the documents with an intent to give them to a foreign power. russia, russia. rachel: one believes that anymore. will: no one reasonable but people do believe this. rachel: you're right. i know liberals bought this line and sinker. anybody fair-minded, independent, whatever is so crazy. pete: it is crazy. you got it. you mentioned crazy, you mentioned sad, you mentioned historic for all the wrong reasons. today this upcoming week marks one year from the debacle, the disaster was the end of the war in afghanistan as americans retreated, joe biden retreated. our planes took off. the taliban took over and 13 of our bravest souls were killed at
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abbey gate. a stain on our country. a terrible end to a two decade long war that led to cascading effects on the foreign and world stage as other countries looking at our failure, weakness, taken advantage of it since. not just what happened geopolitically. also what happened inside the country of afghanistan over the past year at the hands of the taliban who not only have legitimacy there but our equipment as well. "new york times" did a piece about the one year since the fall of kabul in afghanistan. here is part how they talked about life in afghanistan. a year since the taliban seized power, two decades of u.s. finance reforms mounting restrictions on daily life. will: inside the article, the description of where life stands today in afghanistan. girls are barred from secondary schools and women cannot travel significant distance without a
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male relative. men in government office grow traditional beards and stop to pray. tv shows, movies, removed from public airways. at a checkpoint around the police, morality police chastise women not covered head to toe. afghanistan seems to hurdle backwards in time. the country new rulers reinstituted a emirate governed by strict interpretation of muslim law. institutionalizing patriarchal customs, restricting journalist, erasing many vestiges of american led occupation and nation-building effort. rachel: first the most pressing problem in afghanistan is food. there is a massive food shortage. people are starving. you've seen the stories of families who are selling their daughters and even their babies in order to get food, which again, speaks back to what you
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were referring to. this sounds like a cultural problem as much as it is anything else. and so we can talk about you know, how poorly we exited that country but we should also talk about what kind of investment we made if so quickly things could turn around? pete: radical islam problem. i was there 10 years ago serving, it was clear who had the legitimacy on the ground and it was the taliban, not the corrupt national government that was built to look like ours, always not, always foreign to the concept of afghanistan. not to mention the food, obviously the rights of individuals. we would like to see a better life. that is not how the muslim world operates. it just isn't. killing of al qaeda leader in kabul at a safe house staying at the behest of a taliban leader. the taliban is exactly who we thought they were. people thought this is a new taliban, we can work with them
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no. this is the taliban. what they always do. it will continue to get worries. there are still americans, allies won't make their way out of the country when we left. rachel: didn't they call them our partners? the taliban were partners. pete: security around the airport. that was the milley plan. that was the biden plan. count on the taliban. obviously that one went sideways. rachel: no one fired, no one held accountable for that. will: to your point, rachel, i had think we embarked on the impossible effort reform agriculture, change agriculture, many people dismiss the idea of a culture war here in america, it shows power, governments come and go, culture dictates the destiny of a nation. rachel: that's right, will. pete: coming up medal of honor recipient dakota meyer will reflect on that terrible incident. rachel: fox news alert. the man suspected of salman
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rushdie has been charged with murder and assault. will: rushdie who faced years of death threats is off the ventilator, is talking, after being stabbed 15 times. pete: bryan llenas outside where rushdie recovers. reporter: the attack on novelist salman rushdie was targeted and preplanned by 24-year-old. he arrived with a fake i.d. he pleaded not guilty to second agree attempted murder and assault charges. the fbi raided his home in new jersey. his motive is unclear. nbc reports preliminary review of is sympathetic to extremism and iran's revolutionary guard. video emerges, showing seconds after rushdie was attack on stage at that institute in
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new york. many ran on stage to help rushdie. witnesses saw him punched, stabbed 15 times. the suspect was arrested by a state police officer assigned to the event. the 75-year-old reknowned author lived under the weight of death threats more than 30 years after he published the book satanic verses which some muslims consider blasphemous. it got him banned from iran. the ayatollah issued a fatwa or death verdict in 1989. his attack was praised in public. salman rushdie with his insight into humanity, unmatched sense for story, his refusal to be intimidated to be silenced stands for essential universal ideals, truth, courage, resilience. rushdie is in the trauma center behind me. he was stabbed in the neck, abdomen and could lose an eye.
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will, pete, rachel. rachel: thank you, brian. will: new development in the at lech baldwin shooting case says the trigger must have been pulled. the actor said he didn't could it. what it means for possible charges. rachel: threatened a bus driver because they wouldn't take them where they wanted to go. the crisis hitting american towns of all sizes next. ♪ ♪♪ i got into debt in college and, no matter how much i paid, it followed me everywhere. so i consolidated it into a low-rate personal loan from sofi. get a personal loan with no fees, low fixed rates, and borrow up to $100k. sofi. get your money right.
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♪. rachel: a major new development in the deadly shooting on the set of alec baldwin's movie "rust" that took the life of cinematographer helena hutchins. will: a new report shows the gun could not have fired without pulling the trigger contrary to baldwin's claims. reporter: mary ann raferty with the details. reporter: a test done on the recoverer in question revealed it could not have fired without someone pulling the trigger this according to fbi forensic report
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obtained by ab this news. the results of the test plainly contradict baldwin's explanation what happened. in a interview with abc news in september, baldwin insisted the trigger wasn't pulled. i would never point a gun at anyone, pull the trigger, never. according to baldwin who standard in and produced the film, rust, he thought he had a cold gun in his hands meaning it had no ammunition but was loaded with live rounds that went off, wound killing hutchins and the director. two members of crew are suing baldwin over alleged safety concerns. over 500 rounds of ammo were on the set of the movie, including a mix of live and dummy rounds. sante fe county sheriff's office leading the investigation received the bombshell report along with other documents related to the shooting later this month. will, pete, rachel, back to you guys.
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rachel: thank you. pete: all the time confirmed the fact that guns don't fire themselves. accidental discharge is very different than a negligent discharge. somebody pulled the trigger. that is how guns work. rachel: thanks for clearing that up. pete: clarify that. a lot of hard work into that one. story we were just discussing privately amongst ourselves, this is a fascinating development in the governor of texas's greg abbott to ship migrants to new york city. some of passengers, according to "new york post" on a new york bound bus became upset after change in itinerary. pleading for hours to make a planned stop. many had plans to meet relatives to travel from chattanooga, tennessee. the immigrants who are seeking asylum are not considered illegal and have authorization to travel in the united states. the state of texas gave them envelopes of the bus top they were supposed to get off at. ultimately the bus stopped in
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chattanooga. this bus was headed to new york. the migrants said, they're seeking asylum, not illegal immigrants? rachel: that is what it's a in the prompter. will: wanted to get off in tennessee. the bus driver said you can't get off in tennessee. pete: bus driver has no authority. will: right. pete: traveling through states to get off, intent from governor abbott is to send them to new york. will, they volunteered, signed a form willing to -- rachel: halfway through, no, no, i want to go to chattanooga. pete: came here illegally. from the view of the left however, they claimed asylum. as a result, because they don't have to remain in mexico their legal asylum-seekers pending a case. as a result, you could argue they could get off wherever they want. will, does that create a challenge for governors in between? you were saying in the break in between texas and new york, maybe they get off where they
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want, shipping buses to our state. will: if they're getting off in georgia, tennessee that will be perspective many, i'm sure, republican governors towards texas. rachel: governor abbott, could say has the support of many republican governors to send these people to d.c. and new york so they get a taste of what texas is feeling will lose support of republican governors if they are dropped in tennessee because eventually this bus dropped in tennessee. this story reminded me of something a border patrol agent told me when i was speaking to him. the sense of entitlement so many of these immigrants in this wave is different than what we saw decades before. he said they come here. they are, they understand that they're welcome here. just think about this you came into our country illegally. you got a free bus ticket to new york city, you're not happy. i mean i know people who can't
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afford a bus ticket to new york. by the way when they get to new york, there are services for them there as well. so again, i just think this all brings up when you bring people in illegally on this scale, there is just going to be chaos. look at images. this is chaos all over our country, not just in texas. will: one more thing, who has authority. they're not in border patrol custody. you put them on a bus, you point out, pete, bus driver doesn't have authority over them. stop every step of the way. local police departments who says yes you can, no you can't to illegal immigrants along the way. on friday of "fox & friends" chad payne in georgia talked about these reactions. >> we've been receiving information for several weeks now that buses were dropping off at the truck stop and we got a call from the store that day, hey they are doing it. sheriff loaded up, from the
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sheriff's department 10, 1112-mile ride down there. he got there almost about the time the bus was trying to pull off the lot. he noticed several what appeared to be migrants standing in the parking lot. in the middle, middle of the country. there is nothing down there except a truck stop, farmhouses, farmland. leaving them there would be establishing a homeless camp. pete: this is what you get when you make illegality legal. there is no legal immigration when anyone can claim asylum. they don't check your claim, don't make you wait, released into the country under some sort of legal status pending review of asylum claim a list millions long only to disappear wherever you want in the country. rachel: this is on the heels of a just recent press release by customs border patrol, cpb, they caught four convicted sex
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offenders, 22 gang members. they arrested a guatemalan national who was previously arrested for lewd and lascivious of a child under age of 14. i'm not suggesting that everyone on that bus is like that, obviously not. many people are coming for whatever reasons, but these are the ones we catch. will: no doubt. rachel: the ones we don't catch have these kinds of records are going to towns across the country. welcome. pete: come on in. good to be here. rachel: this is what is happening. by the way if you're not watching this network you don't know this is happening unless they're being dropped off in your town in your city. know other network is covering this story. will: that's true. rachel: still ahead a positive update to a very terrible story. author salman rushdie is off the ventilator and he is talking after he was stabbed on the stage. dr. ahmed calls the violent assault appalling. she says now is the time to talk about islamic extremism.
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will: fox news alert author salman rushdie is now breathing on his own after being taken off a ventilator following friday's gruesome stabbing after a public appearance. 24-year-old suspect hadi mat tar pleading not guilty to second-degree murder. joining us now to discuss is muslim scholar, independent women's forum visiting fellow, dr. quanta ahmed. great to have you own "fox & friends." niche reaction to the attack. >> this is utterly appalling both as an american and muslim. this was more than attempted murder, this was fanatic, islamic sympathizer as the investigation unfolding attempting to conduct a ritual
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slaughter. there is no doubt in my mind that this attack was motivated to fulfill the fatwa from 1988 of ayatollah khamenei to execute salman rushdie for his words which the ayatollah deemed as islamophobia. will: seems not insignificant detail to me that the attacker is 24 years old. it says something, i would think about an ideology, perhaps indoctrination. where did he get this idea? >> of course we will learn more as facts emerge but 24 means he was not born when the book in question was published. a lot of times even the author himself, salman rushdie, felt it was safe to move around with less security. so his social media we are being informed was showing sympathies to shia islamism. that is not a slur on shia muslims. that is the ideology that informs the iranian theocracy
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now and sympathy to the iranian revolutionary guard corps. that is the proxy war force of iran that conducts so much terrorism and that proxy that our administration in the united states is not asking iran to exclude from the iranian talks. we're not sanctioning iran for the iranian revolutionary guard corps. remember there was a assassination of cast keep soleimani, leader of iranian revolutionary guard last year by president trump because of his terrorist activities. will: i know this because you and i were having a private conversation earlier. i know you see this as part of a larger picture of the increasing scope things that have been taken off the table that we can discuss. we've seen now numerous assassination and assassination attempts when it comes to perceived islamophobia. we have in this country an
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increasing number of things we're told are not covered under the umbrella of free speech. you see this as part of a growing trend. >> i'm very worried, now we see the event here in our state just a few hours away, a symbolic assassination almost occurred. we're very grateful to the doctors who are saving the author's life but we are increasingly stripped of language to speak about it. we know that when some of our most vocal members of congress who like me are muslim make overtly anti-semitic remarks to criticize them is now labeled as islamophobia in the united states. that is barrier the democratic party themselves have not confronted. we're living in a culture where identity rules above everything. people are afraid even to label for instance the execution of four muslims in new mexico by
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another muslim which is probably a sectarian killing as something related to these ideologies. without language we will be rendered as speechless as potentially iconic author almost became recently and we're so glad to hear salman rushdie can actually speak that he is not on a ventilator and able to speak f we give up language, only language that islamists say okay is allowed. one last thing, islam itself, the koran itself does not prosecute blasphemy if there is a crime. it is considered between man and his maker. for the maker to prosecute, not for mortals to prosecute one another. that's the teaching of islam. will: fascinating, i think accurate point on the cultural movement within the united states to take more and more things off the table of free speech and whether or not it's a religious edict or secular edict
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classify more and more things as blasphemy. a concerning trend in the united states. great to see you dr. ahmed. glad to have you own "fox & friends." >> my pleasure. will: coming up, history of harry styles. new backlash over a course one college is offering and another questionable class students are enrolling in while tuition of course continues to soar. ♪.
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♪. rachel: welcome back to "fox & friends." with the price of higher education soaring students at three universities will learn about the life of harry styles, tree climbing, and hand puppetry. here to react, senior fellow at american federation for children, cory deangelis. great to have you in studio. my husband is a three-time world champion speed climber. the tree climbing i was already with. honestly these are crazy classes. this is a time with inflation. liberals are begging us to pay the student loans. what is the message to can consumers of higher education? >> this is a total dumpster fire. if you want to do tree climbing stuff, fine, why should the taxpayer fund all this nonsense? in the u.s. we spend $300 billion per year with state and local governments towards
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higher education. federal government spends $100 billion a year. one the federal government shouldn't be involved in student loans at all. people want to go to college, get skills actually worthwhile they should do vial tearily with private loans and we should defund the universities. absolutely ridiculous. we spend so much money on it. if you think higher education is a dumpster fire, k-12 is worse because you don't have a choice where to take your kids education dollars. rachel: you're so right. first of all many of these universities are sitting on massive endowments which they didn't by the way at all to help parents and students during the pandemic. but if people had to pay for it themselves, if it wasn't subsidiesed by the government these classes would go away. we would have people getting real skillsets in a very competitive world market. >> that is how it should work out. these are adults we are talking about. if they want to spend money, 50,
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$60,000 a year that is worthless going forward, brian at george mason university had it right in his book the case against education, the main benefits of higher education is getting a piece of paper shows future employers you're able to jump through the hoops for a few years but should the taxpayers pay for that? they're not getting real skills? i don't think so. we're spending way too much. way past time we defund the universities. rachel: chinese kicking our butts in math and science which is not hand puppetry. move to another topic because this one has me really steaming. the philadelphia school district is now requiring masks, not just for the first 10 days of school, for everybody, but now they're saying pre-schoolers and kindergarteners for the whole year! >> totally bonkers. two weeks to slow the spread turned 2 1/2 years to flatten a generation of children. masks have little to no benefit
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reducing transmission and spread, catching the virus. we've been through this for a long time. these are low risk group of population, kids. we're still masking kids. families should have that choice if they want to do that for their own kids but shouldn't have the blanket rules where everybody has to do so regardless of their decision. this is another great argument for school choice. of course all these battles whether it is curriculum, masking in person, versus remote, these are symptoms of the larger issue which happens to force millions of kids into one size fits all government-run school system by definition isn't going to work when families disagree what they want for their kids, whether it comes with curriculum or masking. rachel: it really hurts and traps low income kids the most. their parents maybe can't stop working to homeschool. they can't afford private schools unless we have this kind of legislation and again you're masking preschool and kindergarteners as they're trying to learn to speak at precisely the demographic least
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likely to get the infection. >> school choice is an equalizer but pennsylvania spends over $21,000 per student per year. the private school tuition shun on average in the state is only $12,000 a year. why not have the funding follow the child directly so families can provide the education provider their family needs. rachel: save the taxpayer a ton of money. cory, thank you fox here. >> thank you, rachel. rachel: we reached out to the school district of philadelphia but didn't hear back. will? will: thank you, rachel. two people are dead and 17 others are hurt after a car plows through a fund-raising event for 10 house fire victims in pennsylvania. the same driver is accused crashing again killing a female passenger in a nearby town. the suspect taken into custody. officials are still investigating whether he intentionally drove into the crowd. house speaker nancy pelosi says republicans opposed to a
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massive tax-and-spending bill voted against mother earth. >> how can they vote against the planet, mother earth? mother earth gets angry from time to time and this legislation will help us address all of that. will: how can they vote against the planet? mother earth gets angry. house democrats passing 739 billion-dollar bill on friday without gop support. really deserves more. that is amazing. pete: mother earth, one or the other. rachel: rachel wants credit. will: much to the delighted of chief meteorologist rick reichmuth went on a python hunting adventure and good with mother earth. rick: there is too many pythons in the everglades. i went on a hunt. we spent overnight hours in the everglades in back of a truck hunting for pythons.
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we found one. there it is. don't want to miss the whole story coming up at 8:30. that python tried to strike while i had it in my hand which is pretty terrifying. 8:30. don't want to worry. pete: wait, hunted for pythons with your hand? thank you, rick. pete: big boost likely coming to social security checks. another indication inflation not going away. how much more retirees could receive coming up next. try zegerid otc. it contains the leading medicine to treat frequent heartburn, uniquely designed for absorption. get all day, all night relief with zegerid otc. 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.
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♪. pete: as inflation hits 40 year highs social security checks could get the biggest bump since the early 1980s. a welcome reprieve for recipients but another concerning sign for our economy and inflation. personal finance expert at tally, author of, launching financial grown ups. that is book i need to read, bobby rebel joins us now. thanks so much for being here. >> thank you for having me. pete: there will likely be a big cost of living ad mustment for social security checks. how much and how do we measure that? >> we won't know until october.
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estimates run as high as 10%. that could be very significant. that aid as you mentioned so well, seniors are already feeling the pinch though it is something definitely needed. we will not see that hit, social security checks until january. the good news, though, pete, you don't have to do anything. it will hit automatically when it happens. pete: 10% increase the amount you get in monthly payment. >> maybe more way things are going. pete: it hits in january. >> yeah. pete: but not necessarily an increase for seniors because everything costs more? >> no. that is what is kind of stinks here. you're not getting a raise. i love it if people feel better, feel like getting a raise. more after reprieve. you're guesting relief from high inflation prices people are paying they're seeing everywhere in their lives, whether it is grocery shopping, filling up the gas tank, whatever it may be. this is catching up. pete: this is not even getting into how the government will actually pay for all that additional money they're pumping in. that is whole other subject.
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>> that is whole other segment we can definitely come back. the government does pay more. pete: for sure, 10% more. real quick, home buying in america, the least affordable it has been in how long? >> in, gosh, maybe a few decades. really tough. pete: more expensive today to buy a home than in a long time. >> that is. that can be hard on a lot of people. live your life first, if this is the time to buy a house, focus inward. you can't worry about mortgage rates. first of all they might come down. we've seen them come off the recent highs. that is something encouraging. think what you do can be the best buyer possible. if you're for example, paying high interest credit card debt. think how you improve that, that improves the credit score, get as better rate. tally is great resource to help you pay down the debt. paying 20% on your credit card. think how you can be the best
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buyer you can. focus on yourself. be strategic what you buy. pete: control what you can control. >> control what you can control. pete: social security highest increase in 40 years, worst time ever to buy a home in 40 years. >> good news for sellers. appreciate it. pete: lara trump joins us live pete: lara trump joins us live top of the hour. it's so easy. and more customers today are relying on their cars advanced safety features, like automatic emergency breaking and lane departure warning. that's why our recalibration service is state of the art. we recalibrate your vehicle's camera, so you can still count on those safety features. all right, we're all finished. >> customer: thank you so much. >> tech: thank you. don't wait--schedule now. >> singers: ♪ safelite repair, safelite replace. ♪ ♪ ♪ elon musk says tesla's full self-driving software is “amazing”, it will “blow your mind.” but does it work?
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♪. rachel: good morning. it is 7:00 a.m. and that's your shot of the morning. we're going to be out there, you guys doing all of those things. will: i haven't turned around. rachel: that is behind us right on fox square. pete: i think i need to get one
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of those. >> that is pretty cool. pete: my kids played football, slash basketball in the regular tramp. will: i priced them out. when we moved and we got a home with a backyard we were going to buy one, we went with the cheaper version. pete: is it springier? will: safer and springier. that thing i bet that is four or $5000. rachel: wow? pete: what? rachel: you have to calculate how many hours of babysitting will the trampoline provide. will: tons. pete: look like a 100 bucks a pop for a babysitter. will: zip it up, you can't come out? rachel: i've done that with toddlers. babies in. zipped up. don't let the baby out until you call me [laughter]. will: in a cage? rachel: this is a more fun cage.
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pete: that tramp has springs underneath, not inside. will: you remember as kids we jumped, your legs go through with the spring side? that doesn't happen. rachel: you have ones like flat to the ground so kids can't get hurt. will: that ask where you keep your snakes and rats. rachel: we have a snake segment. pete: hunting for pythons. good morning, everybody. rachel: i know i keep saying that it is great to be back. here we are, we have a fox news alert. sources telling fox that the fbi seized records containing information covered by attorney/client privilege during the raid at former president trump's mar-a-lago home. will: trump's lawyers said in june that no classified material was present at the property. pete: alexandria hoff joins us live from washington with the details. reporter: go back to june a source tells fox that former president received a grand jury
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subpoena for classified documents he allegedly tooked from the white house. source says he cooperated turning over those documents. while at mar-a-lago on june third a separate source told fox news federal investigators were told by at least one person there were possibly more sensitive materials in storage on the property and fbi asked an extra lock be put on the areas which the staff then did. fast forward to the past monday, unprecedented raid on a former president's home, unsealed warrant shows that the agents obtained around 20 boxes of material including classified documents from mar-a-lago, some labeled top secret. the former president said the classification is incorrect because he had declassified them. in fact the warrant included any government or presidential records created between january 20th, 2017 and january 20th, 2021. the scope there is really, really broad. within what was taken, the source says the fbi seized records covered by attorney/client privilege that would mean they must be kept confidential. unclear if the communication was between the president and his
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attorneys or white house counsel or maybe a combination. in addition some of the material may have fallen under executive privilege according to sources. many republicans like senator chuck grassley say in an effort of transparency the affidavit which accompanied the warrant needs to be revealed. >> this is such a high-profile and very strange way of going about getting documents from a former president that the affidavit is going to be absolutely necessary if we're going to have full transparency and this demands full transparency. reporter: that affidavit would lay out why prosecutors believe evidence of a crime could be found at mar-a-lago a source also tells fox news the justice department opposed trump's lawyers request for independent review of the records on the property. a lot going on here. still a lot left to learn. rachel, will, pete. rachel: thank you,.
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pete: for direct reaction let's bring in fox news contributor lara trump. thanks so much for being here. we've been covering this monday. the most revelation which alexandria, that the recent documents that could have been taken out of mar-a-lago. as you look at this week, the fallout from it, what are the biggest takeaways we should have this morning? >> well, unfortunately i think the more information comes out the more questions people have. americans are really upset right now. i can tell you eric and i went out to dinner, we couldn't get two bites into our food before person of a person, table after table got up to tell us how outraged they are about what is going on right now in america. what happened on monday truly changed i think the way a lot of people see this country, the way they see our department of justice, the way they see our entire country functioning. this was unprecedented. everyone has said that. the fact that you had cooperation in full by my
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father-in-law's law team, the fact they were given everything on the fbi side they had been asked, they wanted, given, there was cooperation, everything was fine. all of sudden raid a former president's home. i think it makes people feel insecure where we are in america right now. they see this, man, if this can happen to donald trump think about what they can do to me? unfortunately less people feeling very upset right now. man are they ready to get out and vote. they're ready to vote in the midterm elections. they're ready for 2024 to roll around. we can't function in a civilized society when you see things like this happen and it is very clear to anyone paying attention this is fully politicized situation. this is all about preventing a guy hot establishment and swamp in washington, d.c., has hated from the very beginning from ever getting another shot at the white house. that is what it all has been
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about from the beginning. rachel: no question, lara what the fbi that they're biased. i think about for example, things they're not doing. we still don't know who planted pipe bombs on january 6th. where is the fbi on that? another thing i want to get your reaction to, how you feel about congress' reaction to this? i do think people are looking what happened to your father but also looking to go to congress to say how outraged are they? because that is going to be an indicator how they're going to fight if and when the voters give them a majority in november? >> i mean, rachel, it's a great point. look, we have to get to the bottom of this. i think, no matter who you are in this country, whether you're a republican, democrat, or independent you know, anybody that has been championing this behavior by the fbi and what happened on monday needs to stop and think because it will come for you too. just because it happened to a guy they might not like,
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donald trump, doesn't mean that the shoe couldn't be on the other foot in an instant. and it happen to somebody on the democrat side. you can't function in america like this. so, yeah, i think that is a huge point, rachel. we need to make sure that the people who we're voting in november, in the midterm elections are individuals that want to get to the bottom of this, that believe in fair and equal justice in america. that are willing to make sure that we are investigating these other situations like you just pointed out that sort of just get swept aside. funny how hunter biden is on air force one, obviously has so many crimes he committed fully exposed on his laptop. we have a lot of questions about national security based on that laptop. no one doing anything about it yet mar-a-lago gets raided? we need to know we'll get to the bottom of this, that people will be held accountable. that there will be full and complete transparency for the
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american people. will: lara, i want to follow up earlier about something you said to the fact in your estimation everyone in the trump camp were cooperating with the doj and fbi. pete and i laid out a timeline as we went through a series of events. clearly there was tension between president trump and the national archives that brought in the doj at some point. but in june the doj with the fbi was at mar-a-lago and saw, apparently took some documents away. we're curious what happened in your estimation between june and raid? why did the tenor change, off the top of my head, 30, 40 days or so, what changed in that time frame? >> gosh, will i would love to know. i think everybody would love to know that. i spoke directly to the attorney that had been working hand in hand with the doj on this and he told me our last communication on june 3rd everything, everybody was very happy with
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where things were. in fact my father-in-law showed up and said anything you need let us know. everything seemed well, there was no problem. there was no question they were given anything they needed. a lot of us are wondering why did it need to happen this way? why couldn't they have asked for more if that is what they happened? heck donald trump hundreds of miles away in new york and new jersey. there was no rationale for any of this. there was no reason to think anything would be destroyed. they had been cooperating fully the entire time. i think that is the problem a lot of people have with this, to understand that part of it, say what happened? and it very clearly seems like something occurred within the fbi or the department of justice, something happened they said, man we have a moment right now where we could go in, we could get this search warrant, based on where they went in mar-a-lago hard to see it
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anything other than than a fishing expedition. when you need to go through melania's closet. you go through basically the entire house looking i guess for anything. if you knew you needed a specific document why do you go through the entire place? that is what it looks like. i wish i had an answer to that question, will. unfortunately i don't. will: go ahead. rachel: i want to follow up on this really quick, because i heard some republicans come out strongly but most of them have been pretty mild-mannered, let's wait and see. they called for transparency. i want to know what your father-in-law thinks of the republican response to this, to these actions? because as you said this is not just about donald trump. this looks like an attack that could happen to any american especially those, you say oh, this could happen to any democrats, i don't think so. we've seen that conservatives are being targeted.
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investigations, investigations against you know, that don't fit the narrative of the left get tucked under the rug and then they find time to go after donald trump. they find time to go after republicans, you know, voters all the time. >> yeah. well i haven't talked directly to my father-in-law about the response or maybe lack thereof for some republicans but what i can tell you he has an incredible memory. he doesn't forget anything. if he decides to run in 2024 i think he will win. you can bet your bottom dollar he will not forget the people that stood up and called this out for what it is, said very clearly, this is not america. we need to get to the bottom of this. this should never happen to any american, let alone a former president of the united states. ant he won't forget the people that maybe didn't say that and kind of kept quiet and just wanted to play it safe in the background. these people ought to be standing up and shouting from
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the rooftops as well. this is your country as well and your constituents want you to do that. they want you speaking out to make sure the country is fair, equal, just for every american. pete: another rubicon of our republic was crossed this week directly impacting you, everyone that supported donald trump again in 2024. lara trump, thank you so much for your time. appreciate it. >> thanks, guys. pete: amazing. will, i'm glad you asked the question. what happened? she doesn't know. attorneys don't know. lawyers are not allowed inside. video cameras are turned off. they can go anywhere. boxes are gone already padlocked. what are you looking for? will: i'm thinking through this as an attorney or almost like an investigator, you're trying to piece together granted limited information. clearly the trump camp and the national archives got sideways that's clear. national archives doesn't have
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great authority. that went sideways at some point evidenced by they brought in the do why, right? they go to the doj. we want more of this stuff, we can't get it. they get a subpoena. the doj get a subpoena. the funny thing the subpoena is executed in june. so the fbi goes in, seizes documents, takes some, working with limited knowledge, takes some, okay for rest of this, would you secure it a little better, put a padlock on it. donald trump has personal interaction, nice to meet you, whatever. yeah, we got it. from that point to not a very big point of, not a lot of time passes compared to the fact this has been going on for 18 months. in the next 30 days something happens to the fbi where they go now, we got to do something now, right? unbelievable it is nuclear codes. you wouldn't have waited 18 months. what happened in those 30 days between when they go, hey, we got what we need, lock the rest up, we got to get in there asap?
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what happened in that time frame? rachel: will, that's why i brought up the question with her, until the american people, specifically the people who represent them put pressure on, i mean massive pressure on this administration, to give answers we're not going to know. they're going to stall and stall and stall. like they have stalled and stalled on all of these things. i brought up the people bops. why don't we know that? why don't we know that? that is a very important piece of that puzzle. they keep flooding us with more stuff. then we move on to the next thing. that's why, you know, i like the mild, just so much mild-manneredness from the republicans. it doesn't work. they have to be forceful. and the people have to be in all those town halls in august, this month, when they have off pressuring their members of congress to say, get us the answers that you want because if not, the other side just gets away with it. pete: yeah, they really do.
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it's tiresome. yet we intend to let the same kind of get along, go along people. you got media. by the way we'll talk a little bit, sure we will later in the show, media saying unelectable republicans can't win. it is fighters who are willing to fight that the voters want on the base and have gone on to win as opposed to the vanilla types let d.c. go along. will: turn to additional headlines for you. start with this fox news alert. 41 are dead after a massive devastating fire inside of a church in in gizsa egypt. 5000 were gathered for mass. the fire sparked a stampede. feared many of those killed or hurt could be children. terrible story. the investigation for a missing teen keeley rodney is still ongoing after a week after she disappeared from a party in the tahoe national forest.
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authorities received more than 1000 tips but there has been no sign of the 16-year-old or her car. california, nevada, federal law enforcement officers have been conducting searches and deployed dive teams in a nearby reservoir. anyone with conversation is encouraged to contact the player county sheriffs office. 50,000 was raised since friday after a rideshare crashed into popular irish pub injuring 15 people in arlington, virginia. the crash causing a huge fire that caused the building to be structurally unsound and cannot be reoccupied. all money raised going directly to the bar and its employees to restore the damage, to relief financial setbacks. the cause of the crash remains under investigation. ontario premier doug ford sent social media buzzing after he swallowed a bee on live tv.
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watch. >> holy [bleep]. i just swallow ad bee. [bleep]. i saw that little bugger. i'm good, he is down here buzzing and right now. bad, he went right down the hatch. will: that is not the craziest thing ever. my memory,. rachel: what? what? what? pete: i know who you are thinking of. will: that is his brother, you're telling me. i'm off base. >> tell us what it is i have no idea what you're talking about. will: like drugs. ford later this video will likely be played over and over again. pete: what exactly what his brother did? will: i'm over my skis. my memory is not right. i don't want to answer your question, rachel. hunter bidennesque. rachel: okay. hunter bidennesque. you can use your imagination.
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all right. coming up, critics are labeling the smithsonian's new exhibit on latinos a disgrace. new calls to stop spending federal dollars on what some say is a marxist portrayal of history. plus a record 70% of americans safe life will be worse for the next generation. two congresswomen and grandmothers, their push to get america back on track. ♪.
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♪. rachel: welcome back to "fox & friends." critics are slamming the smithsonian's new latino exhibit, calling it a disgrace and claiming it does not paint an honest truth about latin american history in america, such as the united states stole 1/3 of mexico in 1848. cubans came here seeking opportunity the and not escaping tyranny? and the texas revolution was a defense of slavery. joining us now is heritage foundation senior fellow mike
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gonzalez. so many socialist lies told in this museum taxpayer-funded. >> rachel, good seeing you again. it's a travesty. it's a travesty. everything in it was a lie. i spent an hour in it. i was dumfounded how they're canceling the real experience of hispanics, experience of cubans, of mexican-americans, of puerto ricans t was lie after lie. they only celebrate not just leftist personalities but far left personalities. presents the marksest oppressor versus oppressed view of the world. it just cure rates grievances against the united states. i warned about this unfortunately for years. i told republicans not -- the thing, rachel, this exhibit, it's a preamble to a latino museum which republicans, some republicans allowed to be created in 2020. it cannot be funded. this cannot be fixed, rachel.
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rachel: first of all you say people were misled. i can attest to that. i'm against doing these kinds of racial-based museums to begin with. i think we should be integrating all stories of african-americans and hispanic-americans into a chronological story of american history. that said, i was on that board at one time, mike gonzalez, i got off because i could see what was going to happen. i have called also on republicans not to fund this. how were they tricked, is it too late to take back this funding and reverse this. this is, this is a travesty? >> it is not too late. they can just say, specifically, none of these moneys that we're passing go to creation of the latino museum. this could not be fixed, rachel. you know, they will always turn this into a place that incubates grievances against the united states. they want to change society and the use these museums to do it.
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republicans who were taken in by this admit at least to themselves the error and not fund this anymore. democrats too. this is just an attack against the united states. this is not what we need at this point. rachel: so when they, when if and when republicans take over congress in the midterms if they do have a that majority they can simply defund it and museum goes away? >> the museum doesn't go away. the act has been passed. it just doesn't fund it, cannot pay for bricks. cannot pay for architechs, cannot pay for anymore exhibits. the thing is they presented all of life, said cubans came here for economic reasons. that is not true. that is really outrageous. they came here looking for liberty. it was like that with every group by the way. rachel: mike, i was going to say, celebrating trans sexual activists, i didn't know that was part of latino history. on top of that, denigrating
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christianity the foundation of our culture and our families. it is outrageous. congress needs to do something about it. i really need to appreciate you, and a few others written a great piece i believe in the hill, is that correct? >> "the hill" newspaper. rachel: "the hill" newspaper online. look at this article. i hope every member of congress does. this travesty needs to be defunded. thank you, mike, bringing attention to it. >> thank you, rachel, bye. rachel: thank you. by the way everybody, catch the kitchen table podcast, that is a podcast i do with my husband. this week we have kash patel on. he is going to be talking about how republicans can make their investigations better when they take the majority. what needs to happen there and also sean and i tell our love story how we met on our second podcast this week. check out and download both of those. coming up sources say documents seized from mar-a-lago fall under attorney/client privilege. a former associate white house
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it's time for the biggest sale of the year, on the sleep number 360 smart bed. it's temperature balancing, so you both say cool. our smart sleepers get 28 minutes more whose resumes on indeed match your job criteria. restful sleep per night. all smart beds are on sale. save 50% on the sleep number 360 limited edition smart bed. ends monday ♪. will: fox news alert. sources telling fox news those records seize by the fbi during the raid in mar-a-lago were covered by attorney/client privilege and back in june the former president's lawyers certified no classified material was even at the property. former trump white house attorney joins us now. great to see you this morning. i'm fascinated by both of these details. let's start with the idea that the documents that remained at mar-a-lago were certified unclassified in june. what does that mean?
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how do you certify documents as classified or unclassified? >> i think what this means is that the president really did believe that he had declassified all the documents which he has the complete ability to do. i know there has been a lot of talk well he has to go through the bureaucratic procedures, maybe i do, some random attorney in the white house counsel's office does but president of the united states does not. these document the might have been marked classified but if the president says they're not classified they're not classified. should he have written down? yeah, we wouldn't be here, it would be a lot easier but we don't have to. that continues to go toward the president's state of mind that he does not believe this is sensitive national security, sensitive information and that he believes that this is his. will: may, legally, this may be the source of litigation or a fight in the end but is that how
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it works? can the president say these are declassified they are effectively declassified, do it by actions, taking them away from the white house, does that declassify them because he is the president of the united states? >> well i would say that the action proves what he did. so if in his mind he says, i declassify these, but he doesn't do anything about it, he leaves them where they were, i think it would be harder for him to say he declassified those. but here he says, that you know, written in his mind, standing order, whatever, that he declassified these and then he took an action. he took an action which is that he took them with him. i think that proves that what he did was declassified them. now presidents often "times" use executive orders. i've written dozens and dozens of executive orders. executives orders are not necessary. as obama said i have a phone and a pen.
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presidents can do things informally. they can amend executive orders just by saying so. so the executive order practice is certainly useful but not necessarily. will: really quickly, may, very little time. i have to follow up on the attorney client privilege. what can you tell us about that and what documents may be covered under that privilege? >> remains to be seen. maybe these are discussions about other investigations or investigations that haven't even started yet. but if there are attorney/client privileged information i would say trump has a huge defense and also offense. so defense, i would say, suppress everything from the search. you can basically invalidate the search and have a more structured process. and then offense i would say this is a violation of his fourth amendment rights this is an unreasonable search and seizure and he should go on offense there. will: fascinate conversation, may, thank you for bringing that perspective this morning. >> thank you. will: this week marks one year
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since the biden administration chaotic withdrawal from afghanistan. up next pete and i go off the wall with what happened orange where we are now and the questions that still need to be answered. ♪♪ it was time for a nunormal with nucala. nucala is a once monthly add-on treatment for severe eosinophilic asthma that can mean less oral steroids. not for sudden breathing problems. allergic reactions can occur. get help right away for swelling of face, mouth, tongue, or trouble breathing. infections that can cause shingles have occurred. don't stop steroids unless told by your doctor. tell your doctor if you have a parasitic infection. may cause headache, injection site reactions, back pain, and fatigue. ask your asthma specialist about a nunormal with nucala. >> the day you get your clearchoice dental implants makes every day... a "let's dig in" day... >> mm. >> ...a "chow down" day... a "take a big bite" day... a "perfectly delicious" day... >> mm. [ chuckles ] >> ...a "love my new teeth" day.
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♪ ♪ elon musk says tesla's full self-driving software is “amazing”, it will “blow your mind.” but does it work? this happens over and over again. 100,000 tesla drivers are already using full self-driving on public roads. i'm dan o'dowd. i'm a safety engineer and tesla full self-driving is the worst commercial software i've ever seen. tell congress to shut it down. paid for by the dawn project. ♪♪ pete: this weeks marks the one year around versery of the biden chaotic to put it mildly
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withdrawal from afghanistan. will: what questions need to be answered. let's go off the wall to find out. we are on the one-year anniversary chaotic to be kind as pete mentioned disasterous withdrawal from afghanistan. august 15 the taliban takes over in afghanistan. it was a day that we all remembered because of the tragedy as well that followed in its wake. pete: that's right. they rolled into the town on main streets, largely unopposed as the president fled and cascading after that was leaving of our embassy. we abandoned bagram airbase. 20 years after attempting to build a force that would fight them off. intel agencies sid sings to 12 months how long the government would last against the taliban. turned out it was just weeks. from the taliban takeover we went straight to kabul's airport. will: you saw people hanging on to the landing gear of planes
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taking off. american citizens, siv holders trying to get out of afghanistan as the taliban takes over. pete: this was 10 days from august 15 to august 26 must have felt like 10 months as you watched with us. i talked with vets and many others scrambling to get allies out of that country, through abbey gate, on to passage on to an airplane of safety, counting on the taliban to be the exterior security for that entire operation. precarious to begin with but then on august 26th you had the killing of 200 people through an explosion at abbey gate, 13 of which were american troops. will: we honored those 13 troops numerous times over the past year. we should continue into the future that leaves us now with the present. where are we now with afghanistan? the united states still has not recognized the taliban government. most world governments have not. the chinese by the way tried to work with the taliban as one can expect. but as of today the taliban is
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in charge of afghanistan. pete: completely in charge of the country. there is a food shortage. there is a lack of administration of basic services. rachel pointed that out earlier. and as it comes to the quality of life it has gotten worse for everyone unless you're part of the ruling class of the taliban. will: so "the new york times" is reporting on the quality of life right now in afghanistan. what you looked at is essentially "back to the future." this is afghanistan before america arrived. this is women's rights being rolled back on the streets, what they refer to them as morality police walking up and down the streets making sure women are fully clothed. men must again grow their beards. life in afghanistan is like it was in the 1990s. pete: the way i described it arriving afghanistan felt like biblical times with ak-47s and cell phones. as we attempted to nation build entirely foreign environment i can't imagine what it must be like now. totally backwards back to where
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it was. women completely covered, not in school. reality police looking for any small infraction. no musical loud to be played this is hardcore islamic governance. this is not a new tall 2.0. this is the same taliban. we got indications they are willing to work with al qaeda. will: 20 years to build semblance of information. one year to revert back to islammism. questions where are we now? what is the engagement of the united states government with the taliban? as he mentioned on the world stage how does anyone deal and work with afghanistan? pete: there is this tacit agreement if they worked on humanitarian issues and willing to conduct counterterrorism with al qaeda we could maybe work with them in the united states. then al-zawahiri, the top al qaeda terrorist was killed in a safe house that belonged, they believe the interior minister of the taliban very recently. so al qaeda seemingly welcome in the capital.
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doesn't look like counterterrorism. will: why did we go into afghanistan in the first place? because it was a safe haven for terrorists. recently in the past month it looks to be once again a safe haven for al qaeda. what do we do? how do we protect americans? how many americans are still in afghanistan? we don't know the answer to that question. pete: we were told from the the podium as it unfolded there were dozens. now we know hundreds, actual interpreters merv made it out. those people are still being hunted. killings past year of any opponents of taliban regime. will: not just the united states government, the world stage has to deal taliban, should you recognize them as the government of afghanistan? one willing to work with the taliban of course would be the chinese communist party, looking to make security deals with afghanistan. pete: absolutely. anti-american axis is well at work whether it is china, russia, iran, in this case china
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trying to use afghanistan, dirt poor country, for its own purposes whatever those may be. will: the same when you come back to the entire timeline, past, present future what we attempted to build failed over 20 years and what happened in a few short 12 months time. pete: absolutely right. rachel: wow, guys. excellent off the wall. i want my money back. wow. all right. thanks, guys. will: thank you. >> turning now to your headlines an australian tourist has been dubbed the barbarian by the italian media, driving his moped through ancient ruins of pompeii. he was charged with unauthorized access. he claimed he had no idea he could drive across the 2,000-year-old site. so far no damage was reported. w.h.o. holding an open forum to remain the monkeypox virus after critics said associating the virus with africa could be
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stigmatizing and discriminatory. new names for the variant likely will take immediately to avoid causing offense while a new name for the disease and virus is being worked on. sophia zero is looking back on her major milestone becoming victoria secret's first model with down syndrome. the 25-year-old joined the company's love cloud collection campaign along with 17 other women. she told fox news digital she is very happy and very grateful to be breaking barriers and now she is encouraging others to dream big as there are no limits in life. let's turn now to chief meteorologist rick reichmuth for our fox weather forecast. rick: rachel a beautiful day along the east coast after it has been so hot. show you what is going on. 70 in new york, 70 in chicago, 64 in raleigh. enjoy the temperatures it will heat back up for sure.
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the heat will be coming back. rain across parts of south texas potentially could be subtropical, probably not. we'll see three to five inches of rain there. areas of the four corners continuing to see active monsoon season. we'll see rain and possible additional flooding throughout the day. rachel, back to you. rachel: thank you, rick. we're making the most of last days of summer with some of the best toys for kids. the toy insider shares her favorites for backyard fun live on fox square. ♪ when tired, achy feet make your whole body want to stop, it's dr. scholl's time. our insoles are designed with unique massaging gel waves, for all-day comfort and energy. find your relief in store or online.
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♪. pete: summer may be winding down unfortunately but time to make the most of kids last days of vacation. will: we have all the backyard toys that will keep them outside until the street lights turn on. rick: toy insider joins us at end of summer. love when you're here. >> i love being here. remember the days you were making a fort, you pulled out linens out of the closet? no more. this is the air force tiki hut. you take a regular fan, 30
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seconds it inflates. six feet across over four feet high. will: how do you get in? >> you go underneath. go underneath. 30 seconds to inflate it, then you shut off the plan. it goes right into a little storage fan. rachel: you have to wash the blankets. >> no you don't. you can sleep in there. will: not hot. got a fan going. >> easy peas sy. easy peasy this is rod and connection system, easy for parents to put together. this is lightweight. kids love climbing this. confidence as they build, as they climb this around. pete: look at that, nice. >> great indoors or not. will: brave little one out there. pete: no helicopter parents. no children harmed. >> let's talk about the -- howe
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awesome is this. look there, is no springs. no springs for little fingers to get caught in or feet. we have this gorgeous net. the pad something really think. you have great accessories, like the basketball hoop. this is perfect for the backyard. this is called our squared jumbo trampoline. it is 13 by 13. lots of jumping room. i love the shape. fits nicely in the backyard. pete: that is beautiful. rick, what are you doing, man? rick: i have no idea. >> you are surfing in the air. i don't know about you, i never tried a surf board in the water. you're doing exactly what you are supposed to do. getting a great workout. rick: actually i am. >> this is from fly bar. hang it on a tree or porch over a swing set. the happeneds are adjustable. it grows with you. feels like you're surfing in the
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air. great core workout. great on the legs. it is awesome, right? if you're little you can sit on it, use like a regular swing. rachel: how much is this? >> this one is about 129. rachel: not bad. >> it is great. wouldn't come here without a great set of wheels. there it is from roll play. this is our flex cart xl. they are having a great time. really sturdy made. this goes five miles an hour forwards. it also goes in reverse 2.5 miles an hour. the front folds down when you're storing it. the see is adjustable. we start with a younger child. we can move the feet up. rachel: is it a bumper car? >> it is not a bumper car. rachel: it is not a bumper car, boys. >> wouldn't be surprised to see them try it out that way a. will: perfect fit. can i get out of here? >> this is ton of fun. pete: neat a chiropractor.
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rick: impressed with your flexibility. rachel: no split pants, boys? will: everything held together. will: laura, this was lot of fun toys. everybody outside a little bit longer. >> great to be here. rick: thank you. coming up i just got pack from hunting pythons in florida. i will give you up-close look what it takes to catch them, just your hands, guys. will: "crocodile dundee." can't wait. pete: strong hands. i believe in him. rick: we'll be right back. ♪
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matching your job description. visit indeed.com/hire ♪ ♪ ♪♪ will: it's still summer. don't let any school tell you that summer is over. right, rick? back to school next week. next week is first day of school for my kids. we're with hanging on to summer. rachel: hold on to summer. my kids, i think this should be a law, that school shouldn't start until after labor day. will: i like that. pete: not how it works in the south. kids are in school. will: your kids are already in school? pete: some of them. the idea of being in school in
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august feels crazy to me. will: but on the flip side, you get out before memorial day. pete: late swriewn in new jersey in some places. it's a flip side. but i agree, august should be summer. you should cling to the summer, get out to the beach, get out to the lake, whatever you do and just soak it up. rachel: or even this backyard stuff. if by the way, the trampoline, my kids have always had a trampoline, they called it jump oline. because you can jump on it. [laughter] can i get on the jumpoline? pete: my neighbor, verily and josh with lane, they had this super dangerous, i mane, that's how it was, 6 feet high, springs exposed, no net. rachel: no innocents when we were growing up. [laughter] pete: all so coddled.
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will: we are hanging on to summer also, we're going to have a clam bake, a seafood boil. i think rick reichmuth is down there. rick: we always have our teeth too after all of that trampoline jumping. hey, so the seafood boil, i've got math9 corey here -- matt corey, this is beer, potatoes -- >> lemon p water, spice, all that that stuff. rick: we're going to be eating this later in the show. going to be good. pete: various forms of seafood, rick? rick: we've got shrimp, we've got scallops, we've got -- >> potatoes, corn, sausage, lobster tails, crab legs. rachel: wow. lobster tail on fox and friends weekend in. [laughter] that's a weekday kind of thing. will: that is. we're more of like the sonic
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burger. pete did -- it's 8:00, by 7:20 pete and i had sonic burgers for breakfast. rachel: you guys ate without me? will: they're right there. rachel: oh. who bought those? pete: the long island city sonic burger is providing us with a special item that we'll reveal in a moment, but it would told to me that -- it was told to me that they sent burgers for the show that nobody was going to eat -- will: so we ate them. if. pete: there's another one in there. the man suspected in the attack of author salman rushdie has been charged with attempted murder or and assault. rachel: rushdie is now off the ventilator and is talking after being saabed, get this, 15 times. will: bryan llenas joins us from outside the hospital where
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rushdie continues to recover. >> reporter: the attack was target and preplanned by 24-year-old hadi matar. he purchased a ticket to the event and arrive a day early with a fake id. he pleaded not guilty. the fbi raided matar's home in fairview, new jersey, and local nbc reports a preliminary review of his social media shows he's sympathetic to shia extremism and to iran's revolutionary guard. new video merges showing just seconds after rush aredie was attacked, more than a dozen audience members including a doctor ran on stage to help rushdie. witnesses saw him punched or stabbed about 15 times. the suspect was arrested by the state police officer assigned to the event. the 75-year-old renowned author lived under the weight of death threats for more than 30 years
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after dedepublished "the satanic verses." it got him banned from iran and a bounty was put on his head after the eye tole a la issued a fatwa or death edict in 1989. in a statement, president joe biden said, quote: salman rushdie with his insight into humanity, with his unmatched sense for story, with his refusal to be intimidate or silent stands for truth, courage, resilience. rushdie was stabbed in the neck, abdomen and could lose an eye. will, pete, rachel? will: thank you, brian. earlier in the show we had a fascinating conversation with a muslim scholar who was talking about two things. one, this is somewhat illustrate thive of growing not just islam phobia -- islamism. it takes if further conversations off the table under the guise of islamophobia
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with -- by the way, i think it's worth noting it also happens if you criticize george soros. you are accused of anti-semitism. rachel: yes. will: it's a culture in america of reduction in free speech, and it also illustrates the wasn't just an attempted murder, this was a slaughter. this was a statement. watch. >> make no mistake, this was more than attempted murder. this was a fanatic, probably an islamist sympathizer, the investigation is unfolding, attempting to conduct a ritual slaughter. there's no doubt in my mind that this attack was motivated to fulfill the fat a what from 1988 of ayatollah khomeini to execute salman rushdie for his words which the ayatollah deemed as islamophobia. rachel: she also made some great points about language. if we start to take some
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language off the table, we just are left without vocabulary to denounce these types of attacks and what is behind these attacks, the ideology behind it. also wanted to note online a lot of people are calling for the biden administration to stop their talks with iran because of this, of this stabbing and the fatwa behind it. pete: government there is calling for someone to kill him, and who had a radical shia muslim beliefs did just that. islamists have a very long memory. rachel: very true. will: meanwhile, complicated developments around the story of texas governor greg abbott sending illegal migrants to new york city. not all of them are making their way to new york. this is according to "the new york post." some of the passengers become upset saturday when the driver announced the changed itinerary. pleading for hours to make the
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plan stop -- which went to tennessee -- they had planned to meet relatives or travel from chattanooga. the immigrants who are seeking asylum are not considered illegal and have authorization to travel in the united states. the state of texas gave them envelopes with what bus stop they were supposed to be on. ultimately, the bus did stop in chat mooing georgia. pete: think about this -- chattanooga. these are are illegals. they're on a bus paid for by our taxpayers, and they had the audacity to say i'm going to call the cops on you. i'm the illegal, yet i'm going to call the cops on you because you won't let me get off where i want after you paid for my bus ticket and allowed me to break your laws by running across the border. that's where we're at today on this story. rachel: yeah. and, by the way, never mind that whenever they get to whatever their destination, there's going
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to be lots of services for hem. they're going to be using all of our hospitals and the school system and so forth. but, you know, this speaks to what a border patrol agent, a longtime border patrol agent told me on the ground -- rachel: we're looking at a receiving line in new york city. as illegals get off the bus -- rachel: exactly, that is the message. and that is why this border patrol agent told me the people who are coming here illegally now are different than the ones that came 15, 20 years ago when he came because he said that they are just more entitled. they know they're being welcomed in. they know the red carpet's being rolled out for them by the biden administration, and you can see it right there. look at chaos. yeah, they're being welcomed. but this creates all kinds of chaos -- will: i am taken aback, rachel, by the celebration. rachel: i agree. will: this is hi fives and -- highing fives and thumbs up --
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high-fives and thumbs up. pete: this is the way the left celebrates a borderless world where no person can be illegally, anding, of course, they automatically believe their claim of aasylum is legitimate. it doesn't matter anyway, because it takes three or four years for it to be processed, at which point they may disappear. it is a dark contrast. texas is trying to say this is what we do every single day in a different environment. new york's clamoring for help -- rachel: note how they're mostly young men who probably should be in their e own countries making their countries better. but look at them coming through, as you said, being received through a welcome line. will: so this past weekend congress passed the inflation reduction act, so-called. literally after it passed in "the new york times," pneumonia mouse media organizations started calling it this great
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achievement for reduction are, whatever, control of the climate. rachel flagged this earlier, this is an absolutely stunning clip from nancy pelosi talking about republicans who were opposed to the, quote-unquote, inflation reduction act. >> how can they vote against the planet? mother earth? mother either -- earth gets angry from time to time, and this legislation will help us address all of that. [laughter] will: how can they vote against the planet? rachel: well, and more earth. so what you just did, all these billions and billions of dollars that are now going to all these climate boondoggles, that's actually a sacrifice. will: yeah. rachel: to mother earth. honestly, i think these people believe it like this. the elitism of it, because this bill which focuses on climate, so they sold is it as inflation reduction, immediately after it was signed they high-fived each other because they knew they just passed the green new deal,
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essentially -- will: you're exactly right. it's turned into religiousity. rachel: of course it is. [inaudible conversations] will: how could you vote against mother earth? if getsing angry sometimes. pete: avenge me, mother everett. how dare you sin against her says the gospel of john kerry and al gore. rachel: and the people they're going to sacrifice on the altar of this climate change, mother earth, whatever, are american working families. because inflation is terrible. this bill should actually be renamed the inflation riggs act -- creation act, because that is exactly what it's going to cause. and i have to tell you, the elitism of this, i went to the store, i went grocery -- they're touting that the gas prices are lower because, as you mentioned, pete, yesterday less people are driving because it is so expensive. but the food prices keep going
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up and up and up. and i was shocked at my bill. i can't imagine how many children today, working class, poor families are eating worse today than they were a year ago. they're going to be eating less nutrition, they're going to be eating bo log that sandwiches and mac and cheese, and they are going to take our money and put it on the altar of climate change. pete: they sure are. i wonder, here here in new york city, what percentage of the power in new york city is produced by oil, gas or coal. i don't know, 80, 85? 90, 95? what they're effectively trying to do is provide subsidies for all these alternative energies, crowding out, pushing out the overwhelming majority of the souse -- sources we get.
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will: including nuclear. rachel: here's a recent poll about who inflation is hurting. so 58% of black households say that it's giving them financial hardship. latinos, 56%. native americans, 69. whites, 44%. asians, 36%. it's hurting the very people that they claim that they represent. and they don't care. i look at someone like aoc, probably one of the ones cheering the loudest after this inflation creation bill was passed this past week, she lives in an apartment, no children, over a whole foods. the people that were taken, were polled in this, the working class people, they don't shop at whole foods. they can't afford even to shop at wal-mart. will: i think defund the police is one of the dumbest political mantras and traditions they could have adopted over time. now they're attempting to outdo it, i think, by saying inflation is theoretical. was it rashida anesthetic --
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pete: it was transitory -- will: and then you have people like tiffany cross on msnbc saying it's not actually, despite the poll you just showed that shows 58% of black americans, despite that, she still says it's not a real problem, it's a white people problem. watch. >> a part of the challenges i have in the mainstream media, and you hear things like, oh, the economy's doing better. and for many of us, the economy's not the stock market. it ain't doing better for us. when you have these conversations, it feels like a disconnect between us and the community. we feel left out of the conversation. will: i believe she said i'm worried about getting shot on the way to to the grocery store. rachel: later on she blames it on colonialism and 500 years of, you know, slavery and white people. oppression, that's what she
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said. pete: is and bonus, cherry on top, you get 87,000 more irs employees who, if you audited every single millionaire in america, if you taxed every million mare at 100% today, you would fund the government for six months. their going to go -- they're going to go to the middle class of america. they're going to have to, to the people who work hard for a living. those agents are coming for you, and they're coming for me. i might as well just call my attorney right now and get my taxes 2019, 020, just go back and look at them. will: yesterday we asked you instead of it being dubbed inflation reduction act, what should it be named to reflect reality in anna says the rip off the people act. mike e-mail, you can't fix stupid act. what was the one yesterday? i loved the acronym was crap. rachel: the act proproanymore
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was crap. you know, this climate bill, the chinese have officially said we're not entering into talks with you about climate. make china number one act. pete: worry about -- will: they also aren't going to help on fentanyl, which they weren't doing anyway. rachel: and, by the way, zelenskyy has reached out to the chinese. he wants chinese money now after we just gave them a bunch of money. so chinese are everywhere. [laughter] will: turning now to to your headlines, at least 41 people are dead after a massive, devastating fire inside of a church in egypt. nearly 5,000 gathered for mass, potentials say the fire sparked a stampede and many of those killed or hurt could be children. harriet hagly is taking command of the -- hadley is
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hoping to take wyoming's only congressional seat from they nay who has lost -- lynne cheney. hadley is holding a steady lead before the primary election on tuesday. one of sonic's most popular limited run items, the pickle juice slush, now back on the menu. it's not made with real pickles, but fans wait all year long for the signature mix. it's only available through august 28th. we got our hands on a few to try today. pete: the pickle juice slush. we want to thank the long island city sonic. they hooked us up. i didn't know there was sonic in the new york city area. there is are. rachel: there is. pete: what do we think? rachel: i love dill pickle chips, so i was a little curious about this. pete: i'm willing to be honest, i'm saying pretty good. good sweet -- will: they put enough sugar in
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pit -- you still have that mouth pucker of a salty pickle, but -- rachel: it's oddly not that bad. pete: it's oddly good. rachel: yeah. i was not expecting to like it. [laughter] will: this reminds me like the lime otter pop a little bit. it because taste like a green -- pete: i don't know about that. the otter pop? will: the icy one you push up the plastic? rachel: it coats your mouth though. your whole mouth feels like -- will: you've been eating a bunch of -- rachel: this could be the perfect pregnancy drink. maybe that's how they should -- will: exactly right. pete: i did sonic the other day. will: i had it a couple hours ago. pete: huge development in the alec baldwin shooting case. a new report says the trigger
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must have been pulled, but the actor maintains, the -- rachel: but first, sean duffy, jackie deangelis join us live. ♪ ♪ you can't stop the tears from falling down ♪♪
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will: fox news alert, a delegation of american law makers are visiting taiwan just 12 days after a visit by nancy pelosi that angered china. the five-member delegation led by ed markey of massachusetts will meet senior leaders to discuss region regional security, trade that, investment and other issues. the american institute in taiwan said the institute represents the u.s. government. chinese war planes have been crossing the mid ifpoint to the taiwan strait on a daily basis even after the conclusion of military exercises with at least 10 doing so on sunday. taiwan's defense ministry has said. pete, over you. pete: well, we move to a fox news alert. the record ors seized during the raid on mar-a-lago were cover by attorney-client privilege. and back many june the former
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president's lawyer certified no classified material was even at the property. here to discuss,s fox business reporter jackie deangelis along with fox news contributors sean duffy and former assistant u.s. attorney andy mccarthy. thank you all for being here. we'll talk about your upcoming show in a moment. andy, new information. privileged documents, attorney-client privilege, what do do you make of the reality of those documents being taken somewhat does it tell you? >> well, i think, pete, that it shouldn't surprise anyone because this was not a narrowly targeted search warrant. they should have known which classified information, classified information's closely held, so they should have been able to tell which documents marrowly he were interested in. instead, they did something closer to a general warrant which allowed them to take every shred of paper that was generated for the four years of the trump administration, so it shouldn't surprise anyone that
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it's potentially got attorney-client privilege and maybe even executive privilege. pete: can he get that back, real quick, andy? what's recourse for him to say i should have it back? >> you know, pete, he could make a motion under the rules of criminal procedure to get his property back. i'd be a little leeried to do that if i thought they were investing me because if -- investigating me because if you take a position and then they charge you, you're kind of locked into what you said. so if he doesn't absolutely need that material back, i think i'd lay low and see what they do. pete: sean, we're a week out. this is still a story that is gripping us because of the scope of it. what's your biggest takeaway a week later? >> my takeaway is, pete, they actually got what they were looking for. fbi was looking for documents that was covered by executive privilege. how else were they going to get them, but for this raid?
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you and the team have been talking about this is so unprecedented, but actually, this is a precedent, pete, you have an fbi and a doj that lied to a fisa court, that surveilled a president-elect at trump tower. they leaked documents, fake documents, about the russia collusion story. democrats impeached him twice. so what's happening here is i think democrats are seeing that you have polling that's solidifying. democrats are going to lose the house. they only is have a couple more minutes -- months on january 6th. so they're partnering with the fbi. listen, we need more, so go get documents that couldn't be accessed my other way, and let's do it under the auspices that donald trump took secret documents and is holding hem at mar-a-lago. really what i want is the documents covered by executive privilege, attorney-client privilege. that's how we're going to to get 'em. a question -- the question is the answer. pete: jackie, if not for the
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raid, we'd probably be talking a lot more about the so-called inflation reduction act. on the business side, what do you think that bill ends up doing? >> well, the timing of this is interesting, pete. i think the inflation reduction act is something that is on americans' minds right now especially as they're paying more for everything, for goods and services across the board. we did see a little bit of a pullback, but these are still very high, inflated, record numbers. and i think the significance of it will play out over time. americans will see that they're spending more, they're being taxed higher whether it's not directly within their tax bracket. they're going to see it impact them in other ways. for example, the expansion of the irs. and americans are going to see less of their paychecks sticking to their bones. this also seems to be a pattern like we're seeing with the rule of law in this country to go in a certain direction where government takes control, government wants more of your revenue because we have no other source of revenue, and they
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continue to pass these aggressive spending bills and tell the american people you have to pay for it. that's what's happening here. pete: what a week. a former president, future are political opponent is raided, and there are 87,000 new employees prepared to raid you if you didn't stick to the letter of the law the last couple of years. we'll be watching you guy guys "the big sunday show," today. you'll be joined as well by tammy bruce. don't miss it. thanks, guys. coming up, a grim outlook on the state of the country as a record 70% of americans say life will be worse for the next generation. two congresswomen and grandmothers join us on their push to get america back on track. that is next. ♪ ♪ psst. psst. ♪ ♪ [allergy monster attacks]
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rachel: we have a fox news alert. a get delegation of american law a make hers are visiting taiwan just 12 days after a visit by u.s. house speaker nancy pelosi that angeredded china. al sand a drink ya of is live in washington. >> reporter: hi, rachel. new information just coming in about this surprise visit. democrat senator ed markey of massachusetts leading the delegation made up of four democrats and one republican. group landing in taiwan reportedly within the last hour. of course, the visit comes just 12 days after house speaker nancy pelosi made a stop in taiwan, and that visit angered the chinese. war planes have been crossing the taiwan strait on a daily bay access since her visit, 10 flyovers just today. now, the delegation will meet with leaders to us u.s./taiwan relations, trade and investment, global supply chains, climate change and other significant issues of mutual interest. and this news, again, coming in,
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and is we have yet to hear a response if from president biden who is right now on vacation in south carolina. rachel? rachel: alexandria, thank you so much. here to react are two gop congresswomen, michelle steel and diana harsh barger. dell come -- welcome to you both. this is clearly a very provocative move. your reaction. >> well, this is, you know, i'm part of the china task force, and i didn't get an invitation. i'm not sure who the republican is that went with them on this trip to taiwan. you know, it'd look a whole lot better, just like the speaker didn't take any republicans, if they had advised us, we would have been willing to go and talk with them and talk to their leadership about the trip. rachel: congresswoman, my understanding is that the sole republican invited was -- [inaudible] congresswoman steel, your
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thought thises. this is a very precarious time. again, a provocative move and perhaps not as bipartisan as congressman harshbarger would have liked to have seen. >> china is the biggest threat for the united states of america. and since when china dictates that u.s. officials where to go and where not to go? so they have just nothing to say. and i'm glad that people are visiting, especially congress members are visiting to taiwan. it just come cans from biden administration's am i by guyty that they're -- ambiguity that they're not clear. so we really have to make it clear that we support taiwan, and we are not listening to china. let's not make, you know, chai a ma think that they are the biggest power in the whole world. we are. rachel: all right. well, interesting perspectives. we'll see what the reaction from
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the chinese will be at the close of that trip. i'm so glad to have both of you on today, because what's interesting to me is that you are both grandmothers in addition to members of congress. and it's a fascinating perspective. it's something that i think is wonderful to have, that kind of diversity on, in congress because you have wisdom and this care for not just your children, but your grandchildren. i think you have a longer view because of that. so i want to talk with you, or i'll start with you, congresswoman harshbarger, about this poll. 70% of voters are predicting life will be worse for the next generation than it is today. your thoughts. >> well, i don't doubt that. that is why i raised my hand and said pick me in 2020, because, you know, the greatest privilege of my life, iowa chel, is being a wife, a mother and a grandmother. it teaches you patience. it gives you perspective, and it shows you how to prioritize everything in your life. and, you know, i've been a
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pharmacist for 36 years and a business owner, and i've taken care of people at a local level, and i've seen what overregulation of the government can do to small businesses and just american families. the bottom line is this, i do believe that. i have grandsons and i've mentored young people my whole life. that was middle schoolers, and if you could teach middle schoolers for 24 years, congress isis nothing. [laughter] we need more grandmas to stand up and say, you know, we're taking our country back. that's what i did. rachel: more grandmothers and more sunday schoolteachers. i'm all for that. all right. congresswoman steel, your thoughts, what concerns you as a grandmother who happens to be a member of congress? >> you know what? i came to this country when i was 19, never -- running for public office. since my mother was actually abused by tax agency was the
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reason i decide to fight against this government abuse. and, you know, i achieved american dream. i came to this country, you know, when i was 19, and i i want all of my grandchildren, my children and grandchildren to achieve american dream was the reason that i came here. you know what? we just passed $700 billion of reconciliation. out of that, 225 billion is going to be tax increases, and $250 billion are going to be used for environmental impact. you know what? we really have to stop raising taxes, doing the inflation. this is not really time, and this is not really good. rachel: i'd like to play -- >> so i'm stopping -- rachel: great. i want about to play this clip. this is from another grandmother. she's a retiree, and here's what she's going through in economy. listen.
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>> i thought i'd be flying all over country and the world right nowment i retired and started volunteering for gooding will, the state of arizona. you know, food kitchens and things like that. i don't -- i'm not at a liberty again to pay for travel back and forth to volunteer when i'm not getting paid. i need some compensation now. i'm going back to getting a resumé put together so it can be current and attractive and hireable. i need to to go back to work. rachel: do you find, ladies, that is reality for a lot of retirees? i don't have a lot of time, but i'd love to get both of your reactions. i'll start with you, congresswoman harshbarger. >> well, this is the sentiment all across the country, people are having to go back to work. this is a generation who says i'm going to get up, i'm going to work, i'm going to pay my bills, and i'm not going to
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depend on the government to take care of me. that's the sentiment, and that's why we're here. we honestly, you know, i was the first one in my family to graduate from high school or college, and i know what hard work mean. and we want to stand up for those americans that have no voice or say so when it comes to their future. and this is unbelievable, that someone as a grandmother has to go back to work, can't do what they want to do. i could be sitting on the front porch at the farm playing with my grandson, but what a did i do? i'm here in congress trying to bring common sense to an uncommon government. so that's why i'm here, and michelle steel is a dear friend, and we share the same sentiment about our country or we wouldn't be here. rachel: yeah, well, you're part of a growing number of women, grandmothers who are deciding to step up and serve. we thank you both for joining us today. hope you're inspiring other women and men to have a third act. thanks so much for joining us this morning. >> thank you.
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>> thank you. rachel: all right. it's time for where where's rick reichmuth. ♪ ♪ pete: where is he? he's right here. and you went to the everglades, and we sent youd to do some python hunting in the swamps there. and you survived. tell us about it. rick: i did. well, we've got to see this. it was ea amazing. middle of the night in the everglades, three in the morning, 10 miles keep deep in on a levee in the dark, absolutely spectacular. take a look, and we'll talk about it next. rachel: okay. ♪ ♪ rick: every year there is a python challenge to try to eliminate the pythons that are here in florida. i've got amy here. you are a python hunter. you're going to help us try to find a python. >> let's do it. welcome back rick all right. ♪
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♪ rick: how are you doing this? >> their body has a sheen to it, so we're looking for that sheen. they're going to be out hunting, and that's what we're looking for, for hem to be on the move. rick: how many pythons are in the everglades? >> it's estimated between 100,000-30,000. rick: what do they eat? >> marsh rabbit, possums, raccoons, bobcats, panthers, deer and, very importantly, birds. rick: 10:00, amy, we've been at this for two hours. >> welcome to my world. never mind, it's an alligator. rick: holy cow. >> back up, please. this is a between water snake. rick: if you were out here in the swamp at night, would you live? >> yeah. rick: an alligator's -- >> i mean, i'm not going to guarantee it.
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rick: all right, so what is this? >> this is a brown water snake. very mad right now. ♪ >> pythons are invasive to florida. they're not suppose to be here, and they're an apex predator. they are a huge problem and are changing the entire system here in florida. rick: really? >> it is very bad. >> python. stocker. stop! rick: what? >> yep, i got it. muck. [laughter] >> grab her tail. pull her out. ♪ rick: oh, my god. >> you got her. and she's not a happy camper. this is about a 10-foot python, and it is gorgeous. do you want to grab her? rick: i don't know if i do.
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[laughter] something about this seems fully wrong. [laughter] ♪ rick: rachel, will and pete, back to you from the if everglades. [laughter] all right. i wasn't watching that. you can learn more about amy and buy her python products, she takes it, she skins it, she cans it, python huntress.com. rachel: i want to change my title to python huntress. rick: well, you have to --
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rachel: i want to go do it. will: is she a private contractor hired by the government? rick: she is. there's 100 people, and hay get paid by the pie pythons they catch. we brought manager many -- will: no! [laughter] rachel: are you going to stand on the couch and try the it? will: all right. oh, by gosh. rick: no, no, no -- rachel: they won't bite you, right? >> no, you're fine. how you doing? will: you tell me how i'm doing. rachel: it feels so weird. what do they do with pythons? be honest. rick: they do all the investigation and then they kill it with a nail gun -- the. pete: don't panic, it makes them
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angry. [laughter] [inaudible conversations] rick: jungle bob, talk to us. pete's really afraid of snakes. [laughter] pete: rachel, take it -- [inaudible conversations] [laughter] rick: i want no part of this -- rachel: are any of these poisonous? >> no. this is a python, two corn snakes and here's a rat snake -- [inaudible conversations] >> all the pythons are gigantic and going to strangle you. will: why are they not biting us? he's around your neck -- >> he's choking me. rick: the thing that i was --
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[inaudible] pete: they just punched the python. rick: rachel, i'm -- rick: they're saying stuff in my ear, how do people find you? >> we're coming from jungle bob's reptile island, all these are quality safe. rachel: what does this? >> anywhere from $50 all the way up to -- rick: at some point you're not going to be able to keep it. >> that's a full grown one. that snake there is 30 years old. rachel: what do you period it? >> frozen rodents. rachel: all right.
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>> mice and easy. will: it's going around me. so strong. rick: by the way, thank you to. amy:my also for taking me out that night. pete: she saw the python, she jumped out and ran at it. a wild one that will bite you. rachel: still ahead, former education secretary dr. bill bennett, he'll join us live. let's keep the snakes for dr. bennett. will: i've got the rat snake on. pete: school shopping, we've got tips on how you can save -- i'm trying to read, i've got snakes around me. [laughter] back to school week series, i'm outta here. [laughter]
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rachel:ed today we are kicking off our back to school weeklong series. this is this is the most expensive back to school shopping series to date. will: with parents spending $34 billion for grades k-12. pete: money saving expert andrea
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shares her tips. >> thank you for having me. i know parents are feeling the pain, so when it comes to your basic back to school supplies, don't go with the name brands, right in you're going to safe huge. staples, true red, they have an amazing selection. they have curatedded their so much 22 deals of 2022, so their composition and regular networks, 35 cents compared to over clash 3 for the name brand. and if you want the name brand markers, which actually probably do work a little better, only 50 cents per pack. and here's a way to save more, go to a coupon site like coupon cabin.com. they have deals for 10 off 50, 20 off 100, and you're getting free shipping. rachel: and that's the other tip, you can do it online and save gas. >> exactly. and a lot of retailers are offering free shipping. clothing is big. obviously, go through the
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wardrobe and hen make your list. when it comes to your basics, uniforms, t-shirts, again go with the store brand. walmart's wonder nation, you're looking at under $5. land's end, you pay $22 percent same thing. this is big. i think you're going to love this one, ray e chel, swapping. a site where you can swap kids' clothing. they send you bag, fill it up with everything that doesn't fit or they just don't like, you'll get credit which you can then use to buy like new clothing, and we have bran names, crew cuts from j.crew, land's end -- rachel: so these are gently used? >> gently used. some might have the tags on them. if you're not a member, you pay $4 -- rachel: and check your -- [inaudible] >> exactly. they have a code right now, back 2 school with the number 2 -- pete: we're pretty much out of
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time. where can folks learn more? >> i have all these savings tip- rachel: great tips, great time. awesome. >> thank you. pete: all right. big final hour ahead. hopefully no snakes. stick around. ♪ what would you say. ♪ ♪ . . . when hurting feet make you want to stop, it's dr. scholl's time. our custom fit orthotics use foot mapping technology to give you personalized support, for all-day pain relief.
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booking.com booking.yeah ♪ ♪ he's a cold hearted snake. ♪ look into his eyes. >> you keep putting it next to our heads, i'm done. i didn't know it until i saw the video go she was pointing the head of the snake at our face. rachel: it was so fun. >> she was taunting. rachel: i was shocked, pete, that you're such a tough guy, you go to war and it's like you're a veteran. >> every day of the week i
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would much rather walk down a in street in faluja than look at a wild snake animal. rachel: i wanted the tongue to go -- [laughter] >> that's it. you were putting a snake in my face and i rase leaning this way -- was leaning thisway and ricky face over here. rick went hunting for i pythons with his hands. he loves animals, is very comfortable around them. i was excited for the segment until the moment he rounded the corner with the snakes. >> the guy bobbed the, i don't know, jungle bob, i said this won't go well. will: it took me a minute, pete. i thought they were fake. i thought they were rubber snakes and then i saw one of them move. rachel: you know what's interesting about this, rick fell yesterday, he has tollly redeemed his -- totally redeemed
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his manhood with the python hunt. >> he took down pythons with his hands. >> he ran into the bushes with the lady who does it for a living. rachel: the hunteres. .>> they jumped into the woods after a 10-foot wild one that will bite you and suffocate you if it. rachel: yeah. the grossest part, he says you -- by the way, you can go to jungle bob's shop in long island, you can buy the snake and then have you to buy frozen rodents. >> to feed it. rachel: yeah, to feed it fro zone rodents. >> -- frozen rodents. >> speaking of not that, but a he seafood boil, rick's out on the plaza. you're not cooking snakes. what are you doing? >> you can eat the python, by the way. it's not that good. i'm not going to lie. we've got seafood boil going on. we put in some beer a little earlier, we've got potatoes,
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lemons, we've got corns, we'll put in sausage. onions. when do we put in the seafood. >> the seafood comes up next, we do clams, lobster stale, crab legs, scallops, mussels. >> at 9:50 we eat. rachel: saint patrick banished snakes from ireland. >> they don't have snakes in hawaii either. they brought in mongoose and got rid of the snakes. >> neither of you are helping my post traumatic stress. >> feeling it from the snakes. >> i love it. i feel alive. >> most people want nothing to do with snakes. rachel: it's biblical. >> i'm biblical. >> we start with a fox news a
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alert, tensions between the u.s. and china set to he's escalate further as ed markey leads a delegation to taiwan. alexandria hoff is learning new information from washington this morning. >> reporter: new information coming in, democrat senator ed markey led the delegation and joining him, republican congresswoman matowa, a delegate from american ssmoa, they landed within the last hour and will be there until tomorrow. the delegation will meet with senior leaders, to discuss trade and investment, global supply chains, climate change and other significant issues of mutual interest. this comes 112 -- 12 days after a visit from nancy pelosi, china responded to the visit by sendings missiles, war ships and war planes into the skies and seas around taiwan for several
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days afterward, the chinese government objects to taiwan to having official contact with foreign governments particularly with high ranking leaders like pelosi. planes have been crossing on a daily basis after the conclusion of the military exerciseses with at least 10 doing so on sunday, that is today, so just 10 having done so today and that is according to taiwan's defense ministry. we have yet to hear a response from president biden on this because this was a surprise visit. it is all new. right now president biden is on vacation in south carolina. guys. >> thank you. rachel: thank you. we have a fox news alert, sources tell fox news that the records seized by the fbi during the raid on mar-a-lago were covered by attorney client -- privilege. >> bill bennett joins us now. great to see you this morning.
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>> thank you. >> i want to go straight to this issue with you, bill. you've been around, you covered and been within administrations for quite some decades. if i listen to alternative media today, oh, classified documents, no one is above the law, right, the rule of law applies to everyone, i'm curious. when it comes to classified documents, famously president nixon said if the president does it, it is not illegal. is that not truly the standard when it comes to classified documents. the president has the ability to at any time declassify anything. >> the president does. there's a procedure that the president must follow but the president can declassify these documents. we cannot exaggerate the importance of this situation and the deadly seriousness of it. this is a former president of the united states. very possibly the candidate for president on the republican side against joe biden or whoever it is in 2024. and if you look at the various
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acts that are suggested being violated, one of them is the espionage act. accusing a former president, a future candidate for president of espionage. everybody is talking about the daft, the after -- the affidavit, the affidavit will clarify what justified the warrant. i'm not so sure. it could be general and very vague. sober authorities like andy mccarthy have said, look, this is beginning to feel very much like a fishing ex pee pee digs. -- ex be pee expedition. they went down there to get whatever they could to use against former president trump. many people believe it's about january 6th. the larger picture, very quickly, is a crisis of legitimacy in this country. the liberals, the progressives feel that donald trump is not a legitimate person, not a legitimate candidate, wasn't a legitimate president and his followers, not much better.
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conservatives on the other hand believe that by the actions of this government, it is delegitmized itself. the fbi is not what the fbi should be. maybe we'll get clarification from the affidavit. i'm not so sure. let's wait and see. >> very well put. great insight. i'm going to move to education, something where as the education secretary you know a lot about. the current education secretary tweeted about the shortage of teachers and blamed it on something interesting, this is secretary miguel cardona saying to address the teacher shortage issue which exists in america we much address the teacher respect issue, we must stop normalizing with providing teachers without adequate resources to be successful. is this a respect issue. >> certainly not a resources issue. in some cases it's a respect issue. parents during covid looked over
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their's shoulder and said why are they doing that. teachers earn parents' trust. we used to say, trust but verify. there is a lot of teachers out there that parents trust but there's a new kneeling the land and that is -- new feeling in the land. that is we have to look at the teachers and find out what they're teaching. parents are much more vigilant. i don't know if you noticed the poll, i don't know if you want to talk about this but for the first time in my memory, republicans have more confidence from the public in education than democrats do. miguel cardona, the secretary of education, what he's talking about is something he and his unions are responsible for. they have reaped and the teachers have sown the results of that catastrophic falling behind during covid. there was no reason for these kids not to be in school. they need to get back in school, we need to regain lost ground, math, english, history, science,
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we've got to put it on and put it on very seriously. and parents will now exercise great deal more choice as they are doing around the country in terms of where they send their children to school. respect has to be earned. it's no longer a given. rachel: wow. excellent points, bill bennett. i want to mention this as well. i'm really concerned about the fact that so many kids today because they're learning all this woke stuff are not getting the basics, and so we're talking today with you the earlier subject, we all see this as unprecedented and we know the constitutional issues around it. this seems normal to the next generation because of what they're not being taught in school and also of because of what's unfolding before us. are we losing the next generation? will they be normalized to this kind of extra constitutional actions by a ruling party and everything else that's happening because we're not teaching the
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basics? >> are we losing the next generation? it depends. it depends on the efforts of parents and teachers. but teachers must gain the trust of parents again that was lost during covid and if they want to regain it, they need to explain to parents what it is they're teaching and what why they're teaching it but you're seeing parents move if in other directions from the government's schools and i'll tell you, the burden of proof now is on these schools to suggest we are teaching the things students learn but the question you asked, rachel, is a good one with. we have lost this generation? not yet. it depends on our efforts. rachel: it depends on school of choice really, right? >> well, largely on school choice. but i think that's a very important instrument of the parents now that they didn't have before, especially in states like arizona where the money is essentially in the backpack of the student and he can take that money wherever
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they want, private school, home school, public school, whatever. school choice is a powerful instrument. there's a culture in the classroom which pete knows about very well from the book he wrote which in many cases needs to be overcome. i wrote a book several years ago with some other guys about education, meet with the teachers, parents meet with the teachers. what are the objectives? what are we learning this year? what are they reading? i want to see what it is you're going to ask my child to read and to talk about. we need that vigilance. otherwise, we may lose an important part of this generation. >> it's great advice. i think i'll take that advice in the next couple weeks as my kids go back to school, what are the objectives, what are we learning. >> yes, what are we learning. >> thank you so much. really appreciate it. >> you bet you. >> battle for the american mind has been in the top six of the new york time's best sellers list for eight weeks.
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rachel: it's ayou macing. >> it's an amazing response. we promoted heavily for the first two weeks and stopped. it was number one for a month, number three, number four, number five, and now it's number six on the new york times list. it's gone viral in communities of education, the explanation for what bill bennett talked about, what a happened during covid, how it's deeper than that. it is important to talk to the teachers. they're hand a cussed by the system -- handcuffed by the system and by the unions. this explains what we can do about it. thank you to everyone who purchased it. i appreciate the feedback from people who said i switched schools, or starting school, things like that. it's what's necessary to save our republic right now rz so many people saying they are taking their kids out, home schooling, looking to move to go to a different school because the ones near them aren't meeting the standards you're talking about in your book. your book i think is like a
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little mini revolution. >> i don't know about that. but i like to put my shoulder to the plow a little bit and so many fronts in which we fight. education, we've missed for so long. republicans and conservatives now have an opportunity based on the disaster of what the unions have created. rachel: absolutely. >> happy for you. proud of you. major new development in the deadly shooting on the set of alec baldwin's movie rust. a new report shows the gun that was used in the shooting could not have been fired without pulling the trigger. contradicting baldwin's claims that the gun pulled its own trigger. rachel: marianne rafferty has the details. >> reporter: an accidental discharge test done by the fbi has revealed it could not have fired without someone pulling the trigger according to an fbi forensic report obtained by abc news. the results of the test plainly
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contradict alec baldwin's explanation of what happened. in an interview in december, baldwin insisted while the trigger wasn't pulled, i didn't pull the trigger. i would never point a gun at anyone and a pull the trigger, never. according to baldwin who starred in and produced the film, he thought he had a cold gun in his hands but it was loaded with live rounds, killing the cinematographer. investigators say more than 500 rounds of ammo were on the set of the movie, including a mix of live and dummy rounds. the sheriff's office which is leading the investigation received the bombshell report along with other documents relating to the shooting earlier this month. will, pete, rachel, back to you guys. >> rachel: thank you. >> thank you. >> just never seemed plausible that it happened to go off. some action was taken. rachel: is that you how guns
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work? >> the in the minds of a lot of liberals it is, guns don't fire themselves. turning now to a few additional headlines, starting with a fox news alert. at least 41 people are dead after a massive devastating fire inside a church in egypt. let's hope it's not intentional dozens of others were injured in the fire very early this morning as nearly 5,000 gathered for mass. officials say the fire sparked a stampede. and house speaker nancy pelosi says republicans opposed to a massive tax and spending bill voted against mother earth. >> how can they vote against the planet? mother earth? mother earth gets angry from time to time and this legislation will help us address all of that. >> how can they vote against the
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planet? mother earth. nancy gets angry from time to time. don't mess with me. nobody circles the wagon or punts the ball -- that was an old circle the -- chris berman, remember, nothing? >> i don't remember that. >> it's a prime time show. the buffalo bills. bills rookie punter blasting a punt 82 yards against the indianapolis colts in buffaloes' first preseason game. he sent the ball from near the 10-yard line to the back of the end zone, as buffalo wins. chris berman used to say on nfl prime time nobody circles the wagons better than the buffalo bills. >> i've been a football fan my entire life, i never thought i would be the parent of a punter. >> are you? >> yes, one of my friends is
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punting. >> fantastic. >> i wanted to raise kids who would be punters. rachel: why. >> not many practice to be a punter. the punters still get d-1 scholarships and every team needs a punter. >> like every other sport, there's a lot of specialization because people realize that, hey, you've got to get a college scholarship, learn how to punt, let's go. rachel: is that what he did. >> he's a soccer player, wants to be on the football team. he place wide receiver too, and he's like i'll punt. it's also not cool. >> why not. make a tackle too. >> run down. rachel: he can make punting cool again. >> pat mcafee made it cool. he has a radio show now and a lot of things. rachel: well, still ahead, a battle over border busses aztecs as aims to -- as texas works to share the burden with blue
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cities. one leader shares his message, next. stay with us.
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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. >> battle over the border surge as texas govern for greg abbott pledges to send more busses of migrants up north, despite
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pushback in d.c. and new york city mayors. our next guest says if texas towns can endure thousands crossing the border every day, blue cities should be able to handle a smaller influx of migrants. the mayor joins us now. as you hear the outcry from the mayors of new york city and washington, d.c., what's your reaction. >> i think like we said it, if we handle, they can. at the height of the crisis we have usually 1,000, housing at least 1,000, 2,000, then we had about 1,000 coming in and it's a matter of logistics, it's a matter of making sure that your community is safe and of course the immigrants too. if we did it, they can do it too. >> what they talk about, mayor, we'll put the numbers on the screen, 360 migrants sent to new york city. they talk about -- by the way, let's compare it to your city, 132,000 illegal immigrants in
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mcallen between february 21 and november of '21. pretty fascinating to put those numbers side-by-side. they talk so much about the drain on resources. i would imagine you have a lesson to teach them about the drain on resources. >> we did get some federal assistance this time. however, it's an issue that we shouldn't be involved in, in man power. that's something that really affected us. we have the responsibilities for our city in mcallen, water and sewers and police protection. we do what we can to assist the federal government. we're going to protect our residents no matter what. it's a matter of logistics. it's a matter of doing the right thing and we're glad that this is happening, and i'll tell you why. because the ultimate destination of the immigrants is not here. the bussing is voluntary. it's a win-win situation.
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>> so you say you're glad this is happening and it's drawing attention to this, to the issues that you're dealing with. what then would you like the take-away to be, what would you like to see? what do you need to happen along the southern border? >> well, i think it's not just the southern border. it's not a border issue. as you can see, new york, d.c., different areas, it's a national issue. so what i'd like to see is for washington to finally -- you know, after the midterms, nothing is going to happen right now, really talk about immigration and what they can do. take care of the guest worker program, hit the harder issuesrh as this. if we can take that away from this and be productive, our country can be much better. >> all right, thank you so much for joining us this morning on fox and friends. >> certainly. >> please go check out the will cain podcast, i've had conversations about this and what we can do to improve the southern border along with a fascinating conversation on friday with hall of fame pitcher
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john smoltz. as we were talking from the field of dreams in iowa, he said to me i lost my father this morning. we brought that full circle about what that meant to be in that location as the famous baseball were played on that ledgeened life. still ahead, the afghanistan one year later, a medal recipient reflects on the takeover and the chaos the biden administration left behind. whooping cough, it's not just for kids. whooping cough is highly contagious for people of any age. and it can cause violent uncontrollable coughing fits. ask your doctor or pharmacist about whooping cough vaccination because it's not just for kids.
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♪ >> it's been one year since troops were withdrawn and abandoned in afghanistan and 13 u.s. service members lost their lives. since then the taliban is turning back the clock and has seized complete control of the country. trey yingst joins us live on the ground in kabul.
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trey. >> reporter: pete, good morning. tomorrow marks one year since the taliban took control of afghanistan, since then, the country's economy has collapsed, sending millions of people below the poverty line. women's rights have decreased. we haveless also seen the security situation get more and more fragile. but when you walk through the streets of kabul behind me, there's a sense of normalcy. there are street vendors selling food that many people can't afford. the taliban is patrolling like a police force. but behind that sits fear and uncertainty for the afghan people. when u.s. forces left the country, they left behind thousands of innocent afghans who actually were u.s. allies who helped the united states during the last 20 years and they're terrified. those who remain here. we talked to one man today who was living in a safe house for months. he's worried about the lives of his family, his young children and this isn't unique. this is a common experience for afghans who worked with the united states who are still in afghanistan. we had an interesting conversation today with a taliban official and got some
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reaction about the security situation and specifically that u.s. drone strike late last month that killed the leader of al-qaida. take a listen. >> late last month the leader of al-qaida was killed in a u.s. drone strike in kabul. did the taliban know he was here? >> the islamic emirate made it clear that leadership was not aware of his arrival nor his presence in kabul and they will continue to conduct the investigation to verify facts but the fact of the matter remains that this was a grave violation of international law by the united states of america, conducting unilateral actions inside a sovereign state. >> reporter: the reality is, you can't take the taliban at their word but what i found interesting about that
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conversation, that particular official would not confirm whether or not he was killed in kabul. he kept saying there's an investigation ongoing and the taliban wasn't sure if he's even dead. we expect these remarks from any leader here in afghanistan who belongs to the taliban but u.s. intelligence officials do believe they got the leader of al-qaida but they fear he will be replaced in the near future. pete. pete: fascinating, trey. stay same really appreciate your reporting. thank you. our next guest served in afghanistan and received a medal of honor for his actions. here to react, marine veteran dakota meyer many thank you for being here. i presume you heard what trey reported. the taliban is in control, al-qaida is in kabul and america is left in defeat. a year from what happened, what's your take-away? >> yeah, i mean, look, i think we're all glad that we're not still fighting in afghanistan and wasting our time there, right.
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i think we all knew this was going to happen but it's just the way we -- the way that america left. we left our allies there which was a botched pullout and the way that we did it is not the way that america does things. we leave with integrity. we leave with power and that's not the way that we left afghanistan. and just like i said a year ago, you know, our enemies across the globe were watching and they were taking notes and as you see what's happening, what's probably worse than the way we left afghanistan is the secondary and tertiary effects you're seeing across the globe when it comes to russia and china. >> in your view, as someone who fought so heroically on the ground in afghanistan and now our enemy in the fight is in charge of the country, what should the u.s. government be doing? what should our interactions be there? >> well, i mean, first off, you don't understand why we're talking to the taliban, why we're trying to get any information from them, it's just like negotiating with
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terrorists. the only good taliban human being is a dead taliban human being. [laughter] >> that's exactly right. instead, we counted on them for our external security as we tuck-tailed and fled, pulling out a lot of afghans that shouldn't have left and leaving a lot behind. what do you know about the afghans still there, living and hiding from the taliban. >> my interpreter who was with me in afghanistan called me up probably a couple weeks ago, he's still trying to get his family out of there. his mother-in-law has been killed now because they were looking for him. him and his brother were interpreters in afghanistan. now their entire family is -- their lives are at risk. this is all because of the way that the united states of america pulled out. >> for sure. it was a demoralizing moment for a lot of us, i know it was for you as well. what's the state of morale inside the march ma -- marine
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corps, among vets and among those thinking of serving in the military. >> this administration has consistently displayed weakness. you look at the numbers. the recruiting rate is an all-time low. it's even lower than it was when we were at war for 20 years. i mean, nobody can get behind his administration. what i will tell you is this. look, we live in the greatest country on the face of the planet. look, these leaders who are in this administration are not a representation of the united states of america. we are the greatest country on the face of the planet and we have the greatest men and women who are willing to go out and do the nation's bidding when needed and a not just in the military, but with law enforcement, with first responders all across the globe and that's not stopping. >> appreciate your comment tri this morning, of course --
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commentary this morning, of course your service and for telling it like it is, the only good taliban is a dead taliban. >> that's the only one you negotiate with. >> that's exactly right. the other end of a rifle. appreciate you, man. fox news alert, five american law makers landing in taiwan in what will likely anger the chinese even further. host of sunday morning futures maria bartiromo soon joins us live. ♪ so i climbed into the cab, and then i settled down inside ♪ ♪ i've been everywhere, man ♪ ♪ i've been everywhere, man ♪ ♪ of travel i've had my share, man ♪ ♪ i've been everywhere ♪ some people have minor joint pain, ♪♪ plus high blood pressure. and since pain relievers may affect blood pressure, they can't just take anything for their pain. tylenol® is the #1 dr. recommended pain relief brand for those with high blood pressure. if you have questions on whether tylenol is right for you, talk to your doctor.
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>> we're back with a fox news alert. capitol police say early this morning a man drove his car into a vehicle barricade at the u.s. capitol. they say when he moved to get out of the car it became engulfed in flames and he fired several shots in the air. officers tried to approach the man when he fatally shot himself. nobody else was hurt. police say he does not appear to have been targeting members of congress who are currently on recess. rachel, over to you. rachel: thank you, will. now to another fox news alert. a delegation of american lawmakers making a surprise visit to taiwan just 12 days after speaker pelosi's visit enraged china. it comes as we learn president biden will be sitting down with chinese leader xi jinping this november despite the growing threats against taiwan. here to react is sunday morning futures anchor maria bartiromo. so great to have you this morning. what are your thoughts on this additional trip by nancy pelosi,
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good idea or too provocative at this time? maria: well, look, i think, rachel, the democrats have figured out that this plays well with the american people because the american people understand that china is an adversary. unfortunately, president biden refuses to call china an adversary and he only calls china a competitor. the ccp has been very clear, it wants to overtake the united states as the number one super power. there is also open source reporting that the ccp will invade taiwan within the next 18 months. but, you know, the democrats so far have shown all evidence that up until now what that they roll over for the ccp and do whatever china wants. so perhaps now they are recognizing that the american people recognize the ccp as an adversary, recognize that they're undermining america and have been for decades and recognize that they have to show
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some strength against the chinese communist party, particularly going into the people's congress where xi jinping will be reelected for another term making him dictator for life. look, let's be clear. if the ccp does become the number one super power of the world, your kids and their kids, their grandkids will of course not have the same opportunities that you had or i had and it will be a changed world. if this communist country is the largest and most dominant super power opposed to america. so this is a very serious issue. unfortunately, these trips that biden is talking about to meet with xi jinping in november, five phone calls have yielded nothing. so far, all we have from joe biden is rolling over for the ccp and giving china exactly what it wants, they canceled the china initiative. that means no more investigating of hundreds of billions of dollars of theft in terms of intellectual property on corporations of america. he's considering lifting the
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tariffs and all the while we know there has been reports of tens of millions of dollars of money taken in from the biden family from chinese -- given to them by chinese companies tied to the ccp. so it's very clear what's going on here. we have a compromised leadership in america and they need to do something to prove otherwise to the american people. we will be getting into that this morning. mostly we're asking the question about this raid and the fbi on president trump's mar-a-lago property. look, for me, all roads lead back to the russia collusion lie. it was such an enormous lie made up by hillary clinton's campaign. there was absolutely no accountability and now we find out that the very people who were involved in this raid are under investigation by john durham. so the question becomes are the documents that were retrieved from trump's mar-a-lago estate about the russia collusion lie? remember, right before president trump left office in october 2020 and also in january 2021 he
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declassified batches and batches of documents related to the russia collusion lie. what happened then? the doj released about 50% of those documents to the people. 50% of those documents have yet to be seen by anybody and i am told by sources there are documents in those batches that are a killer for the fbi and the doj that will expose incredible bias and this trick that they played on trump by making this story go viral that he colluded with russia. this is part of the documents we understand that were seized. now they will never see the light of day. why? because any time anybody asks about it the fbi can say the doj can say this is an active investigation and we can discuss this at all. -- cannot discuss this at all. forget about trump declassifying the documents. 50% have not been declassified and they will now never see the light of day, protecting the fbi and what it did to trump with
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the russia collusion lie. so we went back to the two gentlemen who blew this story open, devin nunes and kash patel. they are you my special guests this morning, discussing what specific documents are in question here and what is behind this raid of also we'll get the legal perspective from the former attorney general, my special guest this morning. finally, why was the chairman of the freedom caucus a sitting congressman scott perry from pennsylvania, why was his personal cell phone taken away by the fbi. we'll talk about that as a well and we'll get into that boone doggle of a spending package with jason smith as the democrats push through the climate agenda which will mean higher tax force most of us. we have a lot coming up with breaks news in 10 minutes time. we'll see you then. rachel: you have a lot to talk about on sunday morning futures can. it is must view tv. thank you for joining us this
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morning. maria: thank you. rachel: coming up, we're bringing the beach to fox square for a good old of fashioned seafood boil. the shrimp tastic tips for a perfect summer feast. ♪ we drink all day and party all night. ♪ means i'm going to have you on my mind. i'm a performing artist. so a healthy diet is one of the most important things. i also feel the same way about my dog. we got her the farmer's dog sent in the mail. it was all fresh. i want my dog to have a healthy and long life. the farmer's dog helps that out. see the benefits of fresh food at betterforthem.com
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seen this ad? the farmer's dog 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, 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.
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>> things are about to get steamy. we're going to bring the beach unfortunate liz to fox square instead of us going to the beach. [laughter] >> we will have a good old fashioned seafood boil. >> matt corey, owner of outer bank seafood company is here to offer us his take. .>> i waited until the last wek of the semester to start a semester long project. it was flawed. my fault. i started doing boils out of my apartment in 2012. now i'm in nine locations from new jersey to florida. you can do a take home pot or we do a full catered situation. we have all the food lined up. rachel: they hire you, you come to someone's house, they lay out
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a picnic table like this and you dump out the food. >> we set the whole table up. rachel: i love it. >> and we take away your trash. >> people can buy this, take it home, put it on their stove and they've got a seafood boil. >> do you ship these. >> that's something we're working on. anyone that knows how to do that -- rachel: that's your graduate school project. >> i don't know if i'm going back to school. >> what do you have over here and what's the actual like the grand presentation of this. >> so we're ready to dump it out when you guys are. this is our signature seafood boil, potatoes, corn on the cob, the cob,on ions. >> rachel: it steams out. >> you have to dump that ought for us. >> you've got to have a bib. >> we've got bibs for you guys here too. >> you all ready?
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here we go. rachel: oh, my goodness. this looks amazing. >> it's going to be amazing. rachel: look at that. >> wow. rachel: wow. >> what do you go for first? sausage? >> no, shrimp. rachel: i'm going right for the lobster. >> where did this concept come from, matt? >> this was actually believe it or not a family thing we did in the outer banks for years and years and years. let me hit it with a little sprinkle for you. you remember salt bay? this is boil bay. we have a homemade cocktail sauce. we have our own brewed beer with big ugly brewing company in chesapeake. >> how do we find you. >> outerbanksboilcompany.com
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and outer banks boil co on instagram. >> our next competition is about to get corny, may the best friends win with the "fox & friends weekend" corn eating competition. give him the trophy now. just give him the trophy. ♪ corn for as far as you can see around here. ♪ we're a different kind of dentistry. one who believes in doing anything it takes to make dentistry work for your life.
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your spirit is stronger than your highs and lows. your creativity can outshine any bad day. because you are greater than your bipolar i, and you can help take control of your symptoms - and ask about vraylar. some medicines only treat the lows or highs. once-daily vraylar is proven to treat depressive, acute manic, and mixed episodes of bipolar i in adults. full-spectrum relief for all bipolar i symptoms. elderly dementia patients have increased risk of death or stroke. call your doctor about unusual changes in behavior or suicidal thoughts. antidepressants can increase these in children and young adults. report fever, stiff muscles or confusion
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which may mean a life-threatening reaction, or uncontrollable muscle movements which may be permanent. high cholesterol and weight gain, and high blood sugar, which can lead to coma or death, may occur. movement dysfunction and restlessness are common side effects. sleepiness and stomach issues are also common. side effects may not appear for several weeks. you are greater than your bipolar i. ask about vraylar and learn how abbvie could help you save. ♪ ♪ will: welcome back to "fox & friends." many honor of the iowa state fair, we are hosting our own corn -- amidst the seafood boil, corn on the cob. pete: i've had a little practic- will: don't think it's an advantage, but i did get a little practice earlier this
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week. that photo is from the if field of dreams game. will, your corn eating form is awful. rachel: what is the form? will: i don't know what's wrong with it. rick: around in a spiral. rachel: you're supposed to go across. will: i go like this -- rick: 30 seconds on the clock, see who can get rid of the most corn the fastest in 3, 2, 1. all right? will: wow, that's impressive. that's really good. [applause] pete: i told you. rick: trophy. we have a winner. you, like, went straight -- will:ed where'd all the corn go? rachel: i want to see this on slow motion. will: are you swallowing in. rick: you did that in 9 seconds, pete. rachel: wow. rick: we had 30 seconds left in the show.
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i'd like to thank the farmers in minnesota. rachel: this was delicious, by the way. if really great. rick: thank you for bringing all this. this is awesome. will: les always a trophy. pete: it's sunday, go to church. rachel: good-bye, everybody, happy sunday. go to church. ♪ ♪ maria: good sunday morning, everyone. thanks so much for joining us morning, welcome to "sunday morning futures," i'm maria bartiromo. today, abuse of power. the doj and fbi under pyre for more potential abuses of power against political enemies. coming up, scott perry on why the fbi seized his personal cell phone one day after raiding president trump's home. we are connecting the dots on who ordered the search and seizure on trump, the russia collusion lies, the

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