tv Jesse Watters Primetime FOX News August 17, 2022 4:00pm-5:00pm PDT
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adorable baby hippo. what makes a show end besides a baby hippo. followed closely by the mom as he made his appearance at the cincinnati zoo. took a nice dip in the pool. congratulations to fritz and momma. baby hippos. tomorrow on "special report," no hippos but we will have results of new polls. thanks for inviting us into your home tonight. that's it for "special report," fair, balanced and unafraid. "jesse watters primetime" starts right now with will cain. hey, will. >> bret, they are very cute but not well known hippos very dangerous. >> bret: very dangerous. thank you for the warning. >> will: thank you, bret baier. ♪ ♪ >> will: welcome to "jesse watters primetime" i'm will cain. well, yesterday was the day that joe biden sold out american taxpayers and weaponized the irs against his own people. but he will tell you that today is the best thing ever done for america. >> and i'm about to sign the
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inflation reduction act into law, one of the most significant laws in our history. let me say from the start with this law the american people won and the special interest lost. >> will: now while he sits there smug, clapping, chuck schumer and jim clyburn by his side telling you this is the biggest win in history, the only one who is going to suffer from so-called inflation reduction act is you. on top of not actually reducing inflation, biden is now, of course, as you know, adding 87,000 new irs agents to the federal government. effectively doubling the irs. they are adding $80 billion to the irs budget over the next 10 years and get this, 57% of that is going to enforcement. now the white house and democrats tell you the plan is to i can majeure that big corporations and the 1 percent pay their fair share of taxes. but, like everything else in biden's new bill, it doesn't actually do what it says it will do. in reality, you are going to be
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audited and robbed blind. according to the house g.o.p. analysis, americans that make $75,000 or less are going to be subjected to nearly 711,000 additional irs audits thanks to joe's big plan. now, look, that makes up 60% of additional audits from the legislation. those who make half a million dollars they will only get 95,000 more audits. the irs is coming for you and biden is ready to make sure of it. don't believe me? look at this video of the irs teaching students at dixie state university what it's like to be an agent. under this scenario owners of a landscaping company vehicles purchased from moneys not reported in business. after under cover interview using a wireless mic the irs agent sell find that dodger who is selling his business has two sets of book. >> will: an under cover agent
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the landscaping company. they are coming for the little guy. they are coming for you. hey, all over big cities, businesses, big and small, are being smash and grabbed and being taken advantage of by the armed robbers. irs looking at all these videos hey, let's get in on the action. but the difference is these 87,000 irs agents are going to have to a recent irs job posting wrote that applicants has to be, quote, willing to use deadly force. why would the irs need to use deadly force? but, they don't have to do that. they can just send you a paper in the mail forcing you to pay up. now, a lot of small businesses run mostly on cash. daley i, lawn degree mats, barbershops, all of them are now staring down the barrel of an audit gun. think about this. why is joe biden hiring 87,000
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new irs agents? it would be in part helping out theist and by extension helping out the democratic party. the union that represents the treasury department employees, the national treasury employees union through its pac gives nearly 100 percent of its donations to democrats. see what's going on here ever double the size of the union and union democrats. i scratch your back you scratch mine. the irs union love the inflation reduction act. why wouldn't they double the size? >> but why, again, is joe biden hiring all of these agents. what are they there to do? they are there to get to work and we have seen time and again operates and how it gets to work it protects the wealthy. the powerful.
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without thinking about you. the ultra rich and powerful don't play by the same set of rules as you and me. they have inside access to the system and protection from the left. and they always use it to their benefit. people like nancy pelosi and pauly p. and hunter biden flaunt their corruption in our faces without fear of any real consequences because they know that the rules do not apply. the pelosis can make perfectly timed stock trades, no one will bat an eye. hunter can make millions and millions from clearly corrupt businessmen and countries, use his dad's connection to get rich. give 10% to the big guy. he can be reckless. he can lose laptops, can he smoke crack. can he sleep with hookers. do you really think hunter is worried? definitely not. he may be investigated by the federal government but he is not worried. he knows the irs and the federal government isn't coming for him. is he sleeping like a baby. in his free, $20 million south carolina mansion. but now if you own a pizza shop
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or bodega you might not be able to fall asleep so easily because something a lot scarier than the boogie man is coming for you. the ultra rich? not concerned. not concerned in the slightest. case in point. billionaire bill gates he, by the way, bill gates is the inflation reduction act big money champion. listen to this. it turns out gates met with senator joe manchin multiple times in person and on the phone when joe was ready to pump the brakes on what they call now the climate change legislation. magic how it changed from the inflation reduction act to a climate change bill overnight. now, gates was privately lobbying manchin to get this pass and agreed to all of it in the name, of course, of mini green new deal. manchin didn't want to hurt jobs in his state. he turned on the charm and promised the world all green new
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energy job when biden collapses the coal energy. biden got gaetz on board. it's just a name but in reality that's not what it's meant to do. the whole act is a employee bike oil salesman sold you a magic elixir, a way to push forward climate change fantasies all for mother earth. right, nancy? >> 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: lay the inflation reduction act on the altar of mother earth or the planet will get angry says nancy pelosi. mother earth will be happy because sacrifices have been made. you, on the other hand, not so much. this bill isn't designed to help you, no, no, no. isn't not actually going to reduce inflation. democrats will even tell you that themselves.
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>> i want to take a moment to say a few words about the so-called inflation reduction act that we are debating this evening. and i say so-called by the way because according to the cbo, and other economic organizations who have studied this bill, it will, in fact, have a minimal impact on inflation. >> will: i thought bait and switch was against the law. it's all about climate change and how are they going to pay to make all these green dreams come true? well, they are hiring tax lawyers, 87,000 of them to go after you and take your money irs is not coming after manchin or bill gates. he drives around in a maserati he can afford to get audited. gates stopped being a real person he has so much money. >> this company needs refined is using fun guy and so then they turn them into sausage and
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yogurt. pretty amazing. >> when you say fun guy you mean mushroom or auto microbe. >> this is a yogurt. it's good. wow. >> will: yum. he can afford a team of high priced accountants. can you? and while we are at it, does the federal government even deserve to be spending all your hard earned money? definitely not. especially how has it been going through covid? they spent trillions of dollars on covid relief and billions of it is missing stolen by people all over the country because congress wanted to rely on the honor system. they can't account for where that you will money went. the billion sent to schools. the money sent to dead people. the over $150 billion sent to people who just promised they couldn't work. covid fraudsters. they stole billions and, poof, it's just gone. the federal government doesn't deserve the opportunity to keep spending your money but, hey, now they are armed, so they can just take it from you by force.
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when you are a hammer, everything looks like a nail. and joe biden just hired 87,000 hammers. just watch how he puts that tool to work. let's turn to bill hank. is he a former irs agent and whistleblower as to what exactly goes down in the internal revenue service. great to you have with us tonight. what will happen. what will these 87,000 agents do? who will they come after? if i can just say i have been watching people in washington talk about this stuff and totally divorced from reality. for example, if they want to raise revenue why doesn't the irs stop shoving money out the door to roibses. elmer's glue scam cost the government between 3 and $10 billion. the blacklick core fiasco, i ended up losing my job over it because i spoke out about it the
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blacklick core fiasco cost the government at least $2 billion. there is a lot of cases, you know, where those two come from. also, with respect to, you know, i keep hearing this 400,000 thing and, you know, if you make less than 4 million but i can tell you that if it fits the internal bureaucratic needs of the irs they will mess with ordinary taxpayers. i have spoken about before. where elderly taxpayers. some of them world war ii veterans were basically slapped around they were viewed as low hanging fruit. there is a member of cadre. i hate that term but that's what they call themselves. this cadre they actually said that these taxpayers were typically elderly, even though we had a weak legal position,
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that these taxpayers were typically elderly and therefore they could be forced into settlements. i protested internally, externally, i mean, it got ugly. but the bottom line is they pushed these people around forced them into settlements. basically a shake down. one of the taxpayers died when all of this was going around. that's as bad as it gets. >> will: bill, go ahead really quickly. >> i was just going to say -- i'm sorry? >> will: go ahead and finish your thought. >> i'm sorry. yeah. thank you. the inspector general is basically mr. fix-it for irs management the idea independent watchdog is a sick joke. >> will: now what we see 87,000 agents behave in a manner you just described as a whistleblower someone who experienced it. see the bill changed from the inflation reduction act to the climate change bill and now we
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are being told it's just for the rich when we all know it's actually for the middle class. bill henks, thank you so much for taking us inside the irs tonight. >> thank you. >> will: all right. the real reason the fbi raided mar-a-lago coming up next. new astepro allergy. no allergy spray is faster. with the speed of astepro, almost nothing can slow you down. because astepro starts working in 30 minutes, while other allergy sprays take hours. and astepro is the first and only 24-hour steroid free allergy spray. now without a prescription. astepro and go. hi, i'm debra. i'm from colorado. i've been married to my high school sweetheart for 35 years. i'm a mother of four-- always busy.
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. >> will: i'm sure it's very disappointing but the january 6th show trial didn't exactly work out for democrats the way they hoped. they thought it would give them a huge boost midterms, win over the country convince us that trump scaled the siding of the capitol and incited a insurrection. the monmouth poll shows it had the opposite effect. no one changed their minds.
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less people blame trump than before the hearings began. take a look at that in every category it barely moved the needle. but don't worry democrats didn't have all their eggs in one insurrection basket. even bad leaders have a plan b and in this case they have a plan e or f. this time it was to invade the home of biden's main political opponent. they figured they would find something, anything in there that would stolen donald trump from running for president in 2024. something strange happened. >> the media started asking questions. biden avoided them completely. he went on vacation to hide from the press. and merrick garland said he wouldn't possibly talk about the raid it would jeopardize the investigation. unless, of course, if leaks coordinated through the media. that was enough for many reporters to stop asking questions and just print whatever anonymous doj official told them. the story just didn't add up. they didn't care. it was getting them clicks. driving ratings. seeming to justify why biden's doj raided their least favorite
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president. look, at first they told us trump had some boxes that was wanted by the national archives. once we started finding out those boxes contained mementos party invitations and kim jong un love letters they switched it up. all of a sudden trump had quote classified documents. but then they didn't rely on classified documents in the warrant. they told us "the washington post" said related to the nuclear weapons and that sounds insane. i mean that is incredibly terrifying. what if trump sells our secrets to the enemies. once found out about documents they did anything. if you thought our nuclear secrets were about to land on the saudis. they held weeks and weeks of meetings of course. attorney general merrick garland deliberated whether to approve the application to serve a warrant president trump's home. weeks of meetings between senior justice department and fbi officials. let me get this straight nuclear secrets waited 18 months as it
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was negotiated by the national archives and then weeks of debate from merrick garland and days of execution until fbi agents showed up at the house showed up at mar-a-lago, right. nuclear secrets. the american people just aren't buying it because they are not morons. so, today they are out with a new excuse. anonymous intel officials leaked that this raid isn't actually about nuclear documents. instead now they claim trump has been hoarding paperwork, this is according to "newsweek," for years and years. and the feds want it all. and that's why they rifled through melania's clothes and busted open trump's safe. these documents sound even more serious now than nuclear secrets. what could they be? according again to "newsweek" the sought after documents deal with the variety of intelligence matters of interest to the former president. the officials suggest material trump thought would exonerate him of any claims of russian collusion in 2016 or any other election related charges. you wouldn't want a former
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president who has the power to declassify anything he wants to have documents that exonerate him from the last hoax pulled by democrats why does this keep happening? well, as president donald trump did something unprecedented. something no president had done before, he promised to drain the swamp. get rid of the deep state. the administrative state. permanent washington. we have been hearing about them for years. but what are they? who are they? i talked to ned ryun earlier this week on the will cain podcast and i asked him to define permanent washington. >> permanent washington are these career bureaucrats that they are not here for a couple years. they are here for decades or decade. elections come and go but they remain. politics and a lot of what takes place in d.c. is found in signifying nothing because the real power and the real decision making and real governance comes from those unelected powerful bureaucrats who are making most
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of the decisions. >> will: you can hear that full conversation at will cain podcast or youtube on your screen now though is tulsi gabbard who is a former hawaii congresswoman and someone who has talked about the existence of permanent washington as well. tulsi, great to see you don't, this concept, it's moved from conspiracy now. i think, to acknowledgment. and it's bipartisan. >> it's not democrat. it's not republican. in the acknowledgment of the existence of permanent washington, what is it, tulsi? >> when you look at permanent washington, you look at all the different hands that are involved. as we are seeing this whole situation play out over the last couple of weeks. we see very prominently placed the national security state and the mainstream media. and you have outlined some of these changing narratives and new information when they see the old piece of information wasn't quite having the impact that they wanted, it's hard not to be skeptical when you look at
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their tactics and timing to really question what their motives are. to leverage their power and influence to have an impact on these midterm elections that voters will be going to vote at in a few weeks and do what they already stated publicly is their objective which is to prevent donald trump from running for president in 2024. this is not something new. we only have to go back in the recent past to to deceive the american people for years trying to get us to believe that donald trump was an agent of russia and that he stole the 2016 election. these are the same people going after parents and patriots targeting them as extremists. as people who are quote, unquote, enemies of the state, dissenters, opponents. these are the very same people who want to censor us and control what information we can see and hear and say through their so-called ministry of truth which by the way hasn't gone away. it's still there but there by a different name. the american people are seeing
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hey this is not a one off situation. it's just a serious escalation of this dangerous trend we have seen of the politicization of public institutions that exist to serve the public good but are, instead, being leveraged for power and political gain by those in power. >> will: tulsi had it explained administrations come and go. appointees come and go. class of bureaucrats underneath. those bureaucrats remain. they remain with their primary motive to retain power. you know, here you and i are, tulsi, you are a democrat. i have political leanings that take me towards conservatism. here we are and i don't want to ignore left and right it seems we would be very naive to not realize that the more profound biden america is an establishment class vs. populism vs. the people. >> that's right. that's exactly right. will, you hit the nail right on the head. and those who exist in what is
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often called the deep state, the permanent washington as you refer to it, they are people who believe that we, the people, exist to serve them rather than them existing to serve the people. and so they will stop at nothing in order to protect their power. that is that permanent washington and dangerously they have got the national security state as their enforcement arm to do so. >> will: why would they not, tulsi, we are just the people they are the professionals. great to talk to you tonight, tulsi, i always own joy talking to you. >> likewise, will. >> will: cdc admits they are screwing the pooch on covid. and you have heard this, perhaps, wyoming says goodbye to liz cheney. ♪ you
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>> will: cheney lost her primary last night by are you ready? 3' points. total landslide. those keeping track at home 8 out of the 10 republicans voted to beach is trump have now either retired or lost their primary. not a winning move. during recession speech she put her loss into historical perspective. >> the great and original champion of our party, abraham lincoln was defeated in elections for the senate and the house before he won the most important election of all. lincoln ultimately prevailed. he saved our union and he defined our obligation as americans for all of history. >> will: snoop dogg does not like me has called me the white devil. i cannot be snoop dogg. nor can she be lincoln. only thing in common with honest abe they won't be president any time soon that doesn't stop a
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girl from dreaming. >> the "new york post" reporting that liz is whispering about a 2024 run. she couldn't snag 50,000 votes in her home state. on what world, what planet does anyone think she is material for president of the united states? enter savannah guthrie. >> are you thinking about running for president? that's a decision i will make in the coming months, it is not something i will announce this morning. something i will be thinking about and make a decision in the coming months. i will do whatever it takes to keep donald trump out of the oval office. >> will: liz is wasting no time on the ladder. cheney will be launching an organization, quote: to educate the american people will the ongoing threat to our republic and to mobilize the unified effort to oppose any donald trump campaign for president i see she is starting her own lincoln project. maybe she is more lincoln than we thought. but it makes sense.
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hating trump is a great grift, the lincoln project, i couldn't believe the stat was real. raised more than $90 million. liz has gotten a taste. cheney will be leaving '$0 million richer than what she started how is that possible on a salary of $174,000 a year net worth gone from approximately $7 million to maybe it's a range here $44 million. six years out of a salary of $177,000. maybe she is already the lincoln project. pam bondi former attorney general of florida and she joins us now. pam, great to see you this evening. >> you that. liz cheney and eight others who voted to impeach donald trump will no longer be in congress. what do you think this says about the direction of the republican party unmatched in
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american history. president trump has had about 200 wins and 98 percent win record this cycle, 98%. that's what it says. so liz cheney didn't just sawfer defeat. she suffered a massive massive defeat when two years ago she won by 70%. that's crazy. what has she done in the last two years instead of being in her own state of wyoming looking out for the people of wyoming embracing the america first agenda she has been sitting in washington, d.c. probably costing up to millions of dollars with this witch-hunt against president trump detractors have said republican party owe cullive personality around donald trump and liz cheney violated that owe cullive
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personality. i think they are missing the larger picture. we just had a conversation with tulsi gabbard about what she and i have in common. there has been a repositioning of the republican party under trumpism. you know looking to bring jobs back home more humble foreign policy. opposite of what liz cheney and her father represented which was a neocon version of republicanism. >> yeah. and, will, right now, it's so basic. i mean, americans miss their -- they are desperate for the america first agenda which is what donald trump brought to this country and look, they are in wyoming they are putting gas in their cars every day though are seeing the crisis at the border. they are seeing the crime rate go through the roof. and people miss that now we are ponged well for 2022 and 2024 great to talk to you this evening. >> you too, will. >> will: in part about liz cheney but in the end it's about
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us. the cdc admitting they completely screwed up. this story is huge. the agency's director rochelle walensky says for 57 years the cdc and public health have been preparing for covid-19 and in our big moment our performance did not reliably meet expectations. i wonder what she is talking about specifically. could it be lockdowns that wrecked our economy and set our children back decades but didn't stop the spread? could it be sending covid positive patients into nursing homes? maybe they regret telling to us wear masks despite sending a complete waste of cloth. dr. ais hereby jaw the top covid-19 doc says yeah maybe got social distancing wrong, too. >> we used to spend a lot of time talking about 6 feet of distance. 15 minutes of being together we realized that's not the right way to think about this that's not the accurate way to think about this. >> will: we haven't gotten into long term studies and risk
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reward balances of the vaccine. the cdc has a ton of work to do. after spreading disinformation for almost three years, people are confused, they are skeptical they do not trust this institution. not like they are doing things the old ways like in schools. districts across the country, philadelphia, louisville, new haven, connecticut? guess what, kids are going to be forced to strap a mask on their face to go to class this fall. insanity. still, we still don't understand the psychological damage and learning loss, the totality of it that these ridiculous rules inflict on our children. but we do know that they don't keep them safe. dr. marty makary is a fox news medical contributor. dr. makary, what excuse does a school district have for imposing mask mandates today? >> none, really. there is ample research that have now looked at the studies that -- schools that were open free and clear with masks and no masks. and now we have got the catalina
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study, the finish study. the u.k. davis reanalysis of the study. overwhelming. it would be unethical to do any further research right now. if you don't believe the current data, then nothing will convince you. >> will: then, you know, do you know what i can't help but notice as well many districts impose mask mandates, some of them by the way on children as young as pre-k are often in minority majority districts meaning this is disproportionately impacting black, brown, and poor children. why are they ignoring all the scientific evidence? >> well, that's the untold story of the entire pandemic it's disproportionate effect on poor and minority communities. people don't like to talk about it rich people went on zoom and just did their jobs with a little more flexibility, freedom and sometimes in their second homes. but kids in inner city, baltimore sometimes never logged on to school. we ignited a public health
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mental health crisis among children. we created part of that crisis when we forced kids to cover their masks. because of it's pretty obvious. when a child has to cover their face for two years, the child is more likely to be sad. >> will: it's o2022,the fall. and we are still preceding with this insanity. by the way wait until we get the long-term efficacy of add low deslengths and risk reward. we will have that conversation. i look forward to it, dr. makary. coming up life levies from an nfl legend. now available witht a prescription. astepro is the first and only 24-hour steroid free spray. while other allergy sprays take hours astepro starts working in 30 minutes. so you can... astepro and go. i'd like to thank our sponsor liberty mutual. they customize your car insurance, so you only pay for what you need. contestants ready?
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>> one thing i have learned in sports and playing for the coaches that i played for that you have got -- what's the goal? we are trying to win the super bowl. there is going to be a lot of outside distractions. the teams that win can stay focused on the goal and so, i have got to understand what is my goal? i want to make my community better. i want to serve the lord. and that's what i have to zero this on.
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>> jesse: tony dungy nfl legend started with a defensive back with the pittsburgh steelers 1977. first black coach in the nfl for the tampa bay buccaneers and capped off coaching career in 2006 by taking indianapolis colts all the way to victory in super bowl xli. together he and his wife lauren have led by example on and off the field. they have been married for, ready? 40 years. fostered more than, are you ready? a hundred children and spent their entire lives mentoring and shaping future generations of leaders. and they have a new book out right now uncommon influence saying yes to a purposeful life. where they share lessons on preparation, team work, and prayer and tony and lauren dungy join me now in studio. let's get it out of the way right away. who wrote most of the book? [laughter] >> we split it up evenly. >> jesse: 50/50. >> joint effort. >> jesse: you didn't do a little bit more work?
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>> no. we kind of discussed the chapters that we were going to take ownership for. and wrote away. >> jesse: but your chapters are better than his chapters? >> i like my chapters. [laughter] so i love self-help stuff. i'm not sure this is what it is. but, tony, tell us about growing up and how you were able to overcome okay obstacles and what the key to success was. >> i was blessed with the parents i had. they were both teachers. they grew up in depression and segregation era. their message to us was keep your eyes on the lord. don't let anything stop from you going after your goals. and that's the way we were raised. >> jesse: perseverance. how do you recognize when god makes himself or herself clear in your life? how do you see that and take advantage of it? >> god is with us all the time. and so we start the day in prayer, talking to god. we have a strong relationship with him and he guides our path.
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we are not too far away from his voice. it's amazing the things that he will direct us to or tell us to step away from if we keep our eyes and focus on him. >> jesse: a lot of people don't have god in their lives, especially with all these phones and the tvs and everything like that. how do you get people centered, tony, to focus on what really matters? >> well, sometimes you do have to take a break and for us, we try to start the day that way. and say let's talk to each other but more importantly let's talk to god and listen and hear what he has to say. that's hard in this day and age because as you say there are a lot of things coming at you. if you are not careful you can get overwhelmed by that but taking your time and stopping and listening is very important. >> jesse: and patience, i'm sure, is important. lauren, you have adopted a lot of children. your husband is very busy doing a lot of traveling, how do you keep things grounded? >> it's a commitment that we both made and so once we
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accepted that calling to adopt and foster children, we decided to just take it on and the lord leads us, guides our path and there are days that we fall into bed exhausted and other days it's like yes, this was a good day. >> jesse: we made it. we made it over the goal line. there are critics, people out there oh, you know, we got to get god out of america. you know, we have to be a secular nation. how do you respond to those people? >> well, i know that not everybody believes like i do and i understand that. so, i'm very good at letting people do what they want to do but kind of our verses for me and my house we'll serve the lord. and that's the way you have to look at it. i think our country would be a lot better. it's not the way it is. so we have to do what we can. that's part of the reason to believe we wrote the book is to try to show people you can have an influence. you can make a difference. even when you don't think you
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have a big platform. little things matter. >> jesse: it starts with each individual right here. married 40 years. >> that's correct. >> jesse: what's the secret, lauren. >> commitment, communication, and a christ-centered marriage. that's the secret. >> jesse: all right. i will take that to heart. thanks to the both of you and especially to you whose chapters were a little bit better. >> thank you. [laughter] >> jesse: we appreciate the book out now "uncommon influence" tony and lauren dunningy. thank you so much for joining "jesse watters primetime." >> thank you, jesse. >> thank you for having us. will willing good stuff from jesse and the dungies. don't go anywhere kat timpf is here to celebrate the greatest hairstyle for this or any generation. ♪ ♪ allergies don't have to be scary. spraying flonase daily stops your body from overreacting to allergens all season long.
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kat timpf, cohost of "got fouled." here is my favorite: new york city homeowners are fed up with squatters who will not leave their neighborhood. one clean that she had enough, confronted an alleged squatter. we've got ourselves here a real new york moment. >> you better get out >> it won't happen. it just won't happen. >> why don't you do me a favor and get the [bleep] over there. >> i am an elected official. >> i don't give a [bleep] who you are. >> i will step off -- >> that's all i ask.
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>> what are you going to do now? >> your response. >> first of all, you should not be smoking weed while you are driving. that's my first thought. he doesn't care that he's continuing to smoke weed while driving. i think it's a devastating situation around new york and the surrounding area. it seems that no matter how much we pay in taxes, all the things promised aren't -- so people are grasping at straws here. >> there's a thing called adverse possession. that might be his house. [laughter] >> you have a good day. >> you have a good day >> i enjoyed that part as well.
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>> we found out that the next great american sport will be -- ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪♪ -- ♪♪ >> this has begun, and it's not just for grown men. kids can participate as well. they are spectacular. you can see them on your screen right there. is it beyond ironic? >> a lot of people say the mullet is ironic, but they really like it. they are on purpose. it's not a result of unkempt
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hair. you purposely go in somewhere or diy to shape it that way on purpose. it probably takes a lot of commitment, and i don't think anybody has that much commitment for anything just to be ironic. >> the kentucky waterfall: business on top, party in the back. that's what we are on tv. >> i am wearing sweatpants under the stress. [laughter] >> thank you, kat i'm good to see you. that's it for tonight, thank you for watching. don't forget, we played earlier -- this random episode every monday wednesday, and friday, it uploads to rumble and youtube. appreciate you being with me tonight on prime time. i will be back again tomorrow. how is the king of prime time:
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tucker carlson. ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ back ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ >> tucker: good evening and welcome. this is -- the largest employer in the world. nothing comes close: google, amazon, the commonest party of china. how many people work for the united states government? there are more than 100 countries around the world whose total populations, every man, woman, and child, who
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