tv FOX and Friends Sunday FOX News August 21, 2022 3:00am-7:00am PDT
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this. rachel: why? pete: great to see you. will: no. will: great to see rachel. rachel: did i miss something? will: the minute the show ends yesterday starts campaign with the producers. "fox & friends" instagram poll which by the way isn't really accurate. pete: very accurate. will: turns out yesterday, do you think it is representative of the audience? it is representative of instagram and therefore -- rachel: young people watching our show and then disses the instagram followers. will: that is one segment of our audience, rachel. you should be the most upset. why know why you're defending pete when he is the winner of yesterday's dance competition. rachel: i lost the dance competition? how did that happen. will: you took the crown off even to your own demise. rachel: that is not right. pete: one hundred% right.
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instagram had you way ahead and me behind and then i check instagram. i appreciate that, america. my skills are marginal. thankfully better than will's. rachel: -- pete: rachel has moves. will: the biden administration is dancing all over the moves of illegal immigration. the biden administration is pushing i.c.e. to deport more illegal immigrants. the story goes, deportations according to "the los angeles times are down over the last thee years quite dramatically, actually. i will share with you here "the los angeles times headline. says the follow, throughout the spring white house pushed i.c.e. for more deportations on the dedicated docket, focuses on families including many
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asylum-seekers who crossed the border. the department in may of 21 dedicated docket sped up immigration cases for several years about one year. some in the administration saw it as a way to deter people entering the u.s. by quickly executing deportation orders. since then more than 60,000 immigrants entered expedited process, only deserved here, only 11,000 receiving deportation. pete: here is the only. will: according to internal data only 150 have been deported through july. rachel: that is their big push? will: 150. pete: that is the push. i was watching football yesterday, like analogy, happy all the tackles your punter have made after punts because your special teams have not been able to make tackles but your punter. putting on wind owe dressing that they're doing something about the border.
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that they care about the border? no. us because of political pressure, leak to a "l.a. times" reporter, then when you leak beyond the headline 150 people have actually been deported. what i'm saying by the punter, they let them all into the country. they gave them a paper says please report. when we check in the 60,000 in the docket. 60,000 is joke of a number when you look at wave of people, 11,000 actually received deportation orders and we got rid of 150? it's a joke. it is window-dressing. rachel: 150 is what happens when you're standing at the rio grande for about 30 minutes. pete: great point. rachel: again this idea that we need to speak to just how insane it is and hypocrisy of it, you don't have to deport people if you don't let them in. you could do remain in mexico. they don't come in. we don't i think overload our court systems or even do this
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charade pretending like we're giving people papers, that we think they will come back, you say 150 people. pete: here is the doozy, the administration official couldn't speak on record but of course spoke to the "l.a. times" sounding tough. this is not a joke. this is actually real. this administration official says the white house wants day tent factor. they want removal. sure they do. rachel: i'm surprised, will, i know this is all pretend, why are they even bothering with this? will: everything. redefine a woman, redefine recession, redefine deportation. everything is a word game. everything is political spin. they have been successful with dedining reality. redefine immigration. this is humanitarian crisis. according to the del rio sector chief, he said since october more than 200 illegal immigrants have died in that sector alone.
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yesterday agents recovered the bodies of three more illegal immigrants from the rio grande river. a stack reminder how dangerous i illegally crossing the river is. do not risk your life. 200 in one sector. three in the river of just one day. pete: that is the humanitarian policy. we were talking about kids in cages separated from their families, doing a process to provide for kids and protect them from predators to people dying in the river on a daily basis, hundreds over very short period of time around no one says a peep. rachel: you know what's worse than drowning in the rio grande? in being caught in a truck and being cooked alive. will: oh, man. rachel: 110, 15-degree weather when you're in the truck is 115.
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will: 18 wheelers in mexico, full of mike grants in mexico, most of them from central america. rachel: i want to get to this clip from tom homan, if you talk to tom homan once he was getting really heated, i'm sorry i was getting really heated, he was talking about this, exactly this, this humanitarian crisis but he had come upon when he was on duty had come upon a truck with a child who ended up dying. so our law enforcement is traumatized by what they see. they get angry at these policies. here's tom homan talking about how inhumane the biden administration policies are. >> it is killing migrants. since joe biden become president over 1200 migrants died on u.s. soil. that is unheard of in the history of this nation, over 100,000 americans. his policies are not humane, they're inhumane. when president trump, down 83%.
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40-year low how many americans were not dying of fentanyl, how many migrants weren't dying, how many millions cartels were not making or suspected terrorists not crossing the border. every day this does is treasonous and i'm upset. pete: will said it exactly right. it is a word game from them. they want the headline and move on. the borders are open, they know it. will: congresswoman liz cheney is laying into republican leadership after her landslide primary loss. rachel: her criticism becomes as moderate republicans say president trump's endorsement could be hurting gop chances of a red wave. pete: they always say that. alexandria hoff joins us live from washington. reporter: good morning, on tuesday tuesday came in 37 points behind her challenger harriet hageman in the wyoming primary.
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hageman had president trump's endorsement and cheney is most prominent trump critic. with her loss she says trump has a strong hold on a portion of the republican party adding this -- >> it says that people continue to believe the lie. they continue to believe what he is saying which is very dangerous. i think it also tells you that large portions of our party, including the leadership of our party is very sick. reporter: harsh words there. there are other trump critics within the republican party who fear the former president's sweeping win rate in primary endorsements will only tank republican chances of victory in the general. the argument is pretty obvious these candidates may not pull in moderates and independents. as for congresswoman cheney, she also chairs the january 6 committee and indicated in the same interview there is a possibility former president trump will be called to answer
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questions. >> what about trump before you wrap up, will you ask him to testify? >> i don't want to get in front of committee deliberations about that. i do think it's very important as i said in the first hearing or the second hearing you know, his interactions with our committee will be under oath. reporter: topic of exchange of power, "the new york times" reported something interesting that when newly-elected president bidenterred the oval office he found a letter there from his predecessor and aides say biden called it far more gracious than he anticipated. ray well, will, pete. will: thank you so much for that. you know i have a lot to say about this. four hours, we have four hours to work this out. i'm trying not to say it all in one monologue. rachel: go for it. will: first of all i think that it's really important as we have this conversation with each other to begin to think of what's happening in the united states of america not so much in republican-democrat terms, not to think in left and right
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terms, i think they're telling you if we will listen they will tell you what a divided america truly is. liz cheney a great portion of the republican electorate is very sick. i hear this with the same ears that i heard the former cia director michael hayden this week say there is no, he says i was the former cia director, he retweeted in his experience never been a more nilistic dangerous movement globally, globally than today's republican party. the former cia director, goes, you're right. this is not just about the left looking at the right and going you're out of control. there is a protected establishment that includes some of the right, that has a real antipathy for americans, average, middle class americans. rachel: because the divide is not left and right. the divide is between the elites and the rest of us, the working
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class and those who aspire to go up the chain and those who want to hold on to power and be the small number of people who tell the rest of us what to do. the divide is also those who feel unprotected by our government and their affinity and their attraction to trump they feel like he is the one who will actually stand up to people like liz cheney. i just want to say one thing too, she said it, that the republican party is very sick. this is one of the greatest moments of projection i have ever seen. she has one of the most unhealthy reactions to donald trump and it is tied up in a lot of daddy issues as well. she needs probably to take this time off after losing by 37 points which is pretty embarrassing, stop advising republicans what they should do, maybe lay on a couch somewhere and get some help. pete: i agree with you because she can't. because the the business of the
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cheney family is politics. she lost by 37 points. will run for president, will get .05% of the vote media will fawn over her. rachel: is it money or politics? pete: it is both. the in and the out. the cheneys are in, just like the mccanes, bushes, what trump did to all of them put them on the sidelines, ended their political career. they no longer represented the outs, people who voted for them and didn't realize the deception for all that time. so she lost by 37 points because she is that disconnected from voters. ultimately this whole argument that i can't stand it, and it's persistent, we have to find candidates who will match the electorate. that code is for mitch mcconnell everyone else saying candidate we can control, candidates who play by the rules, candidates except the establishment line in washington, d.c. will: yes. pete: if you did that, ted cruz
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wouldn't be in the senate. he was too extreme for texas. josh hawley wouldn't be for missouri, he would be too extreme for missouri. they reject candidates they can't control and willing to fight for the outsiders. rachel: definition of extreme has gotten much wider today. if you pray the rosary you're a extremist. if you go to school board meeting to fight you're an extremist. talk about words and redefining them. will: that is the key where i want to go with this, what is extreme and what is moderate. what are the arguments they're making. the anticipated red wave will not happen in november. they're saying trump endorsed candidates winning primaries cannot win the general election come november in places like maryland and connecticut. they're saying they are too extreme in moderate states. i want to read you the quote. former u.s. connecticut representative chris shays. he says it can't continue. one thing that will happen a lot of trump candidates who won the primary will lose the general election. a lot of unhappy republicans who
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hold office who believe the senate is now in jeopardy and stay democrat. rachel: do you believe that? will: this is the thing what does that mean to be moderate versus extreme? this is the issue what i'm saying to you. donald trump redefined the republican party. he won the left union vote. that is what he changed. people sitting in pittsburgh, philadelphia, ohio, who voted democrat their entire life vote the donald trump. why is that extreme? it is not extreme on the left-right continuum. not extreme on a republican-democrat continuum. it is only extreme in the inverse out, establishment. and that includes a good chunk of the republican party, the cheneys as you point out. my point is this, what does it mean to be moderate? what does it mean to be centrist? only means you're willing to do what is always been done. pete: that's right. what is means to be moderate today, critical of donald trump. in the eyes of the media a modern republican is dismissive of trump, dismissive of trump voters, willing to work with
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democrats, which means allowing crazy left-wing you teachian schemes to go forward. you're compromising your principles if you go forward. i agree with you completely. the republican party hasn't shifted right. it brought in people on the left who were democrat. rachel: exactly. we actually brought in hispanics, asian, african-americans who are much harder to get, even some of them are turning to the republican party because they realize the other side is the party of elite. will: i'm super passionate as we talk in the morning this is what is happening in america. this is the crux of it. we'll talk about this again throughout the morning. turn now to your headlines, starting with a fox news weather alert. heavy rains causing massive flooding in utah. city of moab is warning people to stay away from areas where homes, businesses become overwhelmed by flash floods. so far no injuries have been reported.
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download fox weather app on any tv connected device. chinese president xi xinping called him to plead with to prevent house speaker nancy pelosi to visit taiwan. "washington post" said president biden that congress is separate from the executive branch and he was powerless to stop it. white house officials voiced concern over potential visits with the speaker. china tried to mess with the plane as it tried to land in taiwan. rachel: the congress people in the plane were praying. pete: wow. rachel: nancy found -- in her plane. will: little league player taking first steps after waking up from a coma. the 12-year-old, easton oliver sustained serious head injuries falling out of his bunk bed in the middle of the night. this video posted to ethan's instagram, with the caption god is good as he started showing
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signs of recovery. plus he was still able to watch his baseball team in utah play first ever little league world series game. >> oh. will: those are the headlines. pete: reminds you they are kids but great baseball leader. will: kneed reminder that last night, this guy. rachel: what did you do? will: athletic performances that may not have been up to expectations yesterday. rachel: wow, born to kill gang member caught sucker-punching a stranger appears in court as the governor takes credit for landing him in jail. new york city councilman joe borelli says the governor is delusional. new college aims to stop wokeness in the classroom. the founder talks about his mission to change higher education. ♪
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was free on no bail at the time of the attack despite his lengthy rap sheet. ashley strohmier joins us live with this story. reporter: story out of seattle, will, a disabled man who used a walker and suffered from mobility issues was beaten to death with a metal pole by what police say is a cereal criminal. 48-year-old aaron folk is allegedly the man caught on video beating the man earlier to death. but folk was let back on the streets days prior by judge phillip thornton releasing him without bail for felony harrassment charges, the judge asked folk, not to commit any crimes. folk kept beating victim after he fell unconscious fracturing his skull. he died four days later in the hospital. a homeless man was arrested after trying to set someone on fire. 31-year-old raul batista was attempting to leave a grocery
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store without paying he was confronted by a store worker. he sprayed the employee with lighter fluid, tried to set them on fire before running off this is the same type of scenario as a new york taxi driver who was killed last week for chasing down a group for not paying a fare. in the case of the homeless man who sucker-punch ad stranger landing him in coma is moving forward. that convicted sex offender was officially freed without bail before being locked up at the direction of kathy hochul was described as imminent threat to the community at a parole hearing. andrew is on lifetime parole. the nypd charged him with attempted murder before the bronx d.a. downgraded the charges to misdemeanor assault and harrassment. will. will: thank you, ashley. governor hochul is taking credit for having him put back in jail
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after released. >> i took action in my own hands. after minutes ago the person is now in custody at my direction. people of new york need to know as governor i will stand up and protect them. will: due back in court on tuesday. here is react is new york city councilman joe borelli. you heard the governor. you saw what happened here on the streets of your city. what's your reaction? >> governor is absolutely delusional if she thinks she deserves a pat on the back or victory lap for putting this guy in jail, directing nypd and parole officers to do that. she should be hanging her head in shame. it shouldn't take the governor of the state of new york to personally intervene to put people behind bars. she is the titular head of the democratic party in this state. they as an organization are 100% responsible for the reason this particular man was not remanded without bail initially. this is a career criminal. someone who is the worst of the worst sex offender this is not
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innocent high school fight between two kids. this is someone who is bad, bad man. democratic party here in new york state, have given us bail reform laws. given us, throw them away prosecutors who try to downplay every case. they give us judges who actually don't want to put people behind bars. they're responsible. kathy hochul is responsible for the problem, not the solution here. will: joe, really quickly i want to ask you this, you know, what is funny, we talk about new york city, joe, but this is not a new york based news program. this is a national based news program. there is reason we talked about new york city. report shows crime is happening in seattle, everywhere. i want to put this to you, new york is symbolic of something happening across the nation. brought up prosecutors, judges, many of these same prosecutors are in place based upon the fund-raising of people like george soros who also put these same prosecutors and judges in places like dallas or austin or tampa as well.
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new york just becomes a symbol. >> yeah. a lot of politics around the country is downstream from what happens in new york. we get to test out the most progressive policies first. often times we see how badly they fail. will: right. >> in the case here with bail reform. one of the first states who implemented this sort of policy where people cannot be remanded on cash bail. new jersey across the hudson river saw what was happening, actually changed their bail reform package before it was passed, have a bit more after responsible system. not here in new york. we're full-throated progressive websters who don't care about the victims. 500 people were assaulted in new york city last week. i hope kathy hochul calls the nypd or everyone of those victims that make the fronter page of the "new york post." will: new york, sanctuary city, going to rent 5000 hotel rooms to illegal immigrants coming on buses from texas. i give you the last word on that
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topic. we can look at new york as an inspiration or as a warning. >> it pains me because percentage of my paycheck will go for this but frankly before this was happening people around the country on watched cnn, msnbc, were unaware there was even an immigration problem when it was happening to small border town states. part of me is relieved to some people waking up to the realization there is a real cost and a real problem with housing people who come here illegally with support system or no whatever. will: right. the real stock, now that it has arrived on your doorstep as well. joe, thank you so much. good to talk to you this morning. >> thank you. will: coming up biden inflation putting american families in a pinch. it costs now $300,000 to raise a child. three mothers join us next to share how they are making ends meet. ♪.
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♪. rachel: as inflation hits record highs a new report finds it will cost $310,000 to raise a child but to our next guest growing a family is priceless. joining us mother of three, a mother of seven, gina, and mother of one, briana howard. welcome, ladies great to have you on this sunday morning. start with you, briana, how is your family adjusting to this new inflation biden economy? >> yeah. we're finding ourselves being much more thoughtful on the way we're spending. when i go to the grocery store i'm not mindlessly shopping but i'm planning, not necessarily always getting things that we want but what is kind of on sale. we done things like cut out gym memberships, saved on the cable bill, being a lot more
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thoughtful on the way we spend our money. rachel: thoughtful, not even sometimes the healthiest. i had moms tell me on some of these interviews you're saying i have to buy the cheaper things. maybe i would have bought something more healthier. in your case ending a gym membership you do what you need to do to get by, but not necessarily what you want to do or what is healthy for your family, fascinating. go to you, tina how is your family adjusting to this new economy, this new normal? >> well, you know, we have the same problem. we have to be very careful with what we've spent. i didn't plan it this way but i've been a parent for the last 30 years and what i noticed now, this year we had to stop and evaluate whether our children would go to camps, which camps they would go to, what sports they would participate in the fall. that will actually affect the long-term out come of the educational opportunities they have during this time of life. rachel: yeah, tina.
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i heard a lot of moms tell me that they're worried about sports programs, the costs and fees for being in, also the gas money to drive them to practices to games many parents are now having to take that into account on a decision whether they want the child to be in a sport. finally, amy, your thoughts? >> like the other two ladies that spoke, we're more intentional and bundling trips with gas, sports and all those things but i think the thing that hurts us the most is our commitment to buying local. during the pandemic we made a concentrated effort to support our local businesses and go out for dinner locally and do those kinds of things to keep our communities afloat and now those opportunities just aren't there anymore. we're not going out for dinner. we're not being able to go to the local market instead of the cheaper national chain just because we can't print money
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when there are things we want to buy that we can't afford. rachel: seems like the big corporations and the little guys in mom-and-pop stores in restaurants are ones getting hurt. make one more round, briana, do you think the biden administration is doing enough. >> no, i don't. i voted for biden in 2020. i'm very disappointed in the way that the economy is, the way that our society is and i think that more action needs to be taken. it needs to be done quickly. if the election was today i would not vote for joe biden again. lauren: amy how about you? we passed inflation reduction act which is printing, spending more money, your thoughts? >> printing and spending more money never makes inflation better it just doesn't. we had bad times in the country before. it was hard after 2011 and hard
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after 2008. light always gets better but the light isn't there now. rachel: tina, you said i will not let this inflation and this economic situation get in the way of acknowledging that my children are priceless. >> yes. we believe children are a gift and such a joy for our lives and for the lives of our community but our family is struggling and millions of other families like ours are struggling under this pay more get less economy and it has to change. rachel: you ladies aren't going to let the economy get in the way of your children. maybe you just want the government to get out of the way a little bit. thanks for joining us this morning. really appreciate it. >> thank you. >> of course. rachel: coming up president trump's legal team could file a major motion as soon as tomorrow following the unprecedented raid at mar-a-lago. former acting attorney general matthew whitaker joins us live as the case unravels. plus an intense fire erupting
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just go to vroom.com, scroll through thousands of cars. then, tap to buy. that's it. no sales speak, no wasted time. go to vroom.com and pick your favorite. ♪. will: former president donald trump teasing a major motion is coming up in response to the raid on mar-a-lago and it could come as soon as tomorrow. rachel: trump believes the unprecedented search violates his fourth amendment rights.
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pete: former acting u.s. attorney general matthew whitaker joins us now. thank you for being here. let me read a truth social post the president put out last night to get to you respond, and here is what donald trump posted on truth social. i hear the great agents and others in the fbi are furious with the fbi leadership with respect doing politicization to the president who had their backs, me, who love a lot. they dot not like to be used by people they don't respect. not thrilled in the leadership at doj similar with comey who was forced by them to withdraw the exoneration. what do you feel about this particular what are your feelings inside of the fbi, doj, about this raid? >> yeah, good morning. glad to be with you. i was there when president trump at, the department of justice and the men and women of law
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enforcement including the fbi and all of the do jkom points did love -- components loved president trump and admiration. what happened to the fbi, especially the leadership of the fbi continues to trouble me and many others who spent time at the department of justice there has become politicization. we've seen senator grassley have lots of whistle-blowers that are complaining about the two-tiered system where they go after republicans but on the left, obviously there is less including, hunter biden investigation that continues to languish. so it's very troubling but i know the men and women of law enforcement know what president trump did for them while he was president. rachel: matthew, it is interesting, i heard reports there were whistle-blowers that were talking to senator grassley. i think back to the afghanistan withdrawal when we had lieutenant scheller really put it all on the line. i think really drew attention to
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what was happening and the dissatisfaction within the military putting himself sort of as a sacrificial lamb be of that, speaking the truth can be one of the most revolutionary things you can do in this environment. why have we not seen more agents step up more publicly rather than quietly accept what we hear from grassley what they're complaining about? >> there is a chain of command issue. they have a lot to lose if they pop their head up in this current environment. both jim jordan and chuck grassley had over a dozen fbi agents come to them and complain about this problem, especially at the washington field office. those members of congress will have to deal with it and demand answers from director wray. so far we have been stonewalled, at least publicly from hearing anything other than the company
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line from the fbi and you know this mar-a-lago raid i think brings it all into the sunlight and we're going to ultimately through this process that could start as soon as tomorrow, you know, we could learn a lot more about you know, sort of who is putting their thumb on the scale in order to get trump, ultimately undermine the justice department. will: matt, really quickly, just 30 seconds here, what do you think will happen in the coming weeks? you've been the head of this organization. you've seen a raid. you know that usually means impending action. what do you think will happen? will they indict trump? >> yeah, i don't think so, at least not in the near term. we're in the nine-day window where no overt criminal law enforcement efforts are taken. so i think it will go quiet. this hearing is interesting, this motion to be filed as soon as tomorrow, we could learn a lot more about the case with more detailed inventory list and we're certainly the fbi is going to have to put up mower information and we'll learn a lot more about this case.
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will: matt whitaker, great to talk to you this morning. thanks so much. >> good to see you all. rachel: thank you. turning now to some headlines starting with a fox news alert, a massive fire breaking out overnight at the weeknd's concert concert, the weeknd is an artist. fans were leaving the show when large flames engulf ad vehicle in the parking lot. the fire department says they were able to contain the flames quickly. no injuries were reported. the barber responsible for shaping hairstyles of countless lawmakers including my husband is laying down his celebrated scissors after more than half a century. joe who will call it quits in august after cutting hair on the ground floor of congress since 1971. back then a cut costs 75 cents. it is still pretty cheap compared to the -- [inaudible]. cost 75 cents back then, but members of congress on both sides of the aisle means
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visiting his shop is walking into one of the last bipartisan spaces on capitol hill. i have gone into that barbershop and that is true. will: i wonder what percent of congress use him? rachel: when i was down there. i was there. will: write a book. rachel: i nursed my baby in nancy pelosi's office in paul ryan's office, i had to do that because there wasn't a space. there is lots of funny stories there. [laughter] will: chief meteorologist rick reichmuth is back on fox square today. he was up in the catskills for fun from an alpaca farm. pete: did he bring any four are you friends for us. rick: for us or for you, pete? pete: i'm a sharer. rick: all in on alpaca as pets. rachel: i don't think you have to talk him into it.
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he jumps full on. he loves this idea. rick: i like it. i like it. there are a lot of good benefits. i also brought back some gifts, i will give them to you next hour for this, because of this. you notice where i am, we have a carnival going on you want to watch going on. the end of summer is going on unfortunately. i don't like the end of summer. we have a carnival. we'll talk weather but i ate up all my time talking about alpacas and carnivals. will: we'll talk about later, rick, thanks. pete: joey jones joins us live but first having faith in college. a new school combating wokeness in classrooms joins us live. ♪. ime-out. one dose of ubrelvy quickly stops migraine in its tracks within 2 hours. do not take with strong cyp3a4 inhibitors. most common side effects were nausea and tiredness. ask about ubrelvy, the anytime, anywhere migraine medicine.
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taxpayers. yet another bus arriving in new york city. don't know if it is one or more. we'll cover it, bring it to you this morning. all right. crt and woke agendas make their way into higher education one school wants you to have more faith. hilda guard college is a christian liberal arts school opening next fall in southern california. matthew smith is the founder and join us now. matthew, that is wonderful to see. tell us about hilda guard and why you're starting it. >> good to see you pete. this college is devote towed the classics, we offer a single degree where students study greatest works of philosophy, science, politics and math, we provide it with concentration in entrepreneurship where students study the meaning of work and gain industry experience in
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non-profits and arts. we're not just another college. we think universities need a reset. so we offer a single degree. we cost a quarter of that of the tuition of a average private university. we're free of federal funds for student tuition. pete: kids will leave with actual knowledge and without being saddled with student debt that is the idea. by the way when do you open, and how do people check out this college? >> classes begin fall of 2023 our application opens next month. you can go to www.hildegard college, get updates on the news to support the school. ultimately encourage your friends to have their children apply. pete: exactly what we need. an alternate ecosystem that overturns the cabal, the cartel, that is higher education at this point. matthew smith, congratulations on hill today guard, exactly
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what needed in our country. >> thank you, pete. pete: great stuff, without all gnat ecosystem you don't have the opportunity to take on a current system which is corrupting an entire generation, saddling it with debt. biden generation believes going green will lead to world peace. her astonishing plan straight that he ahead. the tempur-pedic breeze° makes sleep feel cool. because the tempur-breeze° transfers heat away from your body... ...so you feel cool, night after night. for a limited time, save up to $700 on select* tempur-pedic adjustable mattress sets. hi, i'm eileen. i live in vancouver, washington and i write mystery novels. dogs have been such an important part of my life. i have flinn and a new puppy.
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or high blood pressure before taking it. don't take breztri more than prescribed. breztri may increase your risk of thrush, pneumonia, and osteoporosis. call your doctor if worsened breathing, chest pain, mouth or tongue swelling, problems urinating, vision changes, or eye pain occur. can't afford your medication? astrazeneca may be able to help. if you have copd, ask your doctor about breztri. rachel: welcome back to "fox & friends." we start this hour with a fox news alert. breaking now, several buses of illegal immigrants are arriving in new york city's port authority. pete: exactly right. this is an additional bus from the one we reported on near the end of last hour. again the media wants to dub it migrants. these folks broke our laws, crossed our border, they are illegal, came to our country seeking, claiming asylum and they are being facilitated by the city of new york city, after being bused by the state of texas dealing with the problem
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you won't address. rachel: this is welcome wagon. pete: this happens every time. this is greeting line. welcome to new york city. this is the hotel room. this is facilitation. rachel: nice, four stars. will: new york city eric adams administration, seems to be the same man in most of these videos, leading welcome doors outside of port authority doors, introducing all the illegal immigrants to a sanctuary city. pete: we point this out, new york, eric adams and others made issue this happened. this happened in the middle of the night for flights under this administration without us knowing. we're finally seeing it in the open and new york city is embracing it. we see a few children but mostly has been -- rachel: young men. pete: mostly young men. rachel: over 95% are young men. will: bring in staff sergeant, joey jones, retired marine bomb technician, serveed in
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afghanistan. joins us on the couch. tell us what you're seeing. >> appreciate the formal title. i counted, i didn't see the entire video, two children, one or two women, the rest were men. that is an important thing to point out. we need to point out semantics. legal an illegal is not a semantic. that's a fact and but the media will treat it as a semantic. the reason they're able to call these legal is they come across the border illegally, our administration intercepts them, does paperwork now they have legal status. pete: correct they claim asylum, therefore they have legal status. >> a guy few up in a town full of hispanic immigrants, most of them illegal, they came there illegally, doesn't mean there are not dreamers or first generation americans which is the majority now, there is infrastructure in fraudulent identity. so much easier for them to get a fake identity, report back two years, three years, whatever the court date is to stay here
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illegally. that is one thing we don't talk about a lot. administration puts it out there everyone will do the right thing, means they will get deported two years after being here. if i came here illegally, not take a chance, two years building a life i built why take the chance getting deported, change my name on a paper 50 bucks down by a van on river. that is a humor. i grew up in daulton georgia. 90% of the carpet is there. what do the people who work there, work under a name and social security number, irs catches up for them withdrawing one dollar, scheming system around go to different carpet mill under a different name. come back so to the same one under different name two years later. if there is a system like that in place why would you take a chance showing back up to immigration. rachel: doesn't the biden administration know that? >> 100%. 100%. rachel: they know that. >> americans know that.
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that is the problem. americans live, my town of dalton, georgia, as much a border town of anywhere in south texas, everything is subtitles, 7% hispanic in downtown -- 78%. here is duality truth of it. i love those people. i went to school with those kids. i call them brother and sister. i understand the issue both sides. the people hurt worse this type of policies, people come here illegally, live in the shadows. they negative have a chance to really experience what it means to be an american. so if you think that you're providing empathy and opportunity for people coming here, listen this is what happens. a young man comes here. lives with three or four others. works for 20, 30 years. majority of his paycheck, goes back to, in my town mostly mexicans. there are a lot of nationalities here now coming currently because of other factors, my family was mostly mexican. most of their money bows back there. they would have a family in mexico, a family here.
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two guys worked for my dad, emanuel, ismael. was born here, two year college, american citizen. ismael was their dad's son from first marriage before they came here. he didn't speak a lick of english. they worked manuel laying block because he could have a job to translate for ismael. there are conservative values i appreciate, love those men but ultimately they're breaking our laws by doing it. their dad put them in that situation. these are the complexities of this issue regular americans experience every day. so the idea we don't have empathy or understanding for the people coming here, that's bull. what we do have is an understanding how much harder it is because our government can't get their act together, create a immigration, system, build a wall, so people coming here have a chance partakes what it means to be american. will: not only that, see the world through prism of empathy is see the world narrowly through only one set of eyes.
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on other side of empathy, american who didn't get the job or american middle class has been on a downward spiral for years. you can't look look at the world through empathy. rachel: or the family left behind in mexico or honduras. always talk about family reunification there is that separation as well. will: joey, while you're here we want to move on to other topics as well this is stark headline. chinese leader asked biden to prevent pelosi from visiting taiwan. chinese leader called joe biden, hey, can you stop this, according to "the washington post" joe said no. these requests in the jewel 20th calls to biden described by a senior white house official who spoke anonymously said if followed a myriad of warnings of chinese officials made to u.s. counterparts what china made do retaliation if pelosi might visit taiwan. biden told xi, he couldn't oblige. i don't have any power over that branch of government.
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what is fascinating, apparently the flight coming in with nancy pelosi they were terrified. the chinese messed with the flight in some way. chinese air force. rachel: couldn't land. pete: rachel pointed out they were praying, nancy pelosi was praying. >> fox news alert. >> couple leads buried in the peace, nancy pelosi says in the quote to "washington post" that those, any attack on her doesn't represent the president, it represents someone within the administration who is disgruntled by her trip chose to leak to the press about her trip. it acknowledges saying tom cotton broke us for it the administration probably leaked this. so that is one thing. that is what i hone in on. listen the american people know i'm not an expert on chinese policy. i did take two semesters at georgetown to so i have a background. rachel: chinese language? >> no, u.s. chinese relations. >> was going to test you. >> i'm still learning english. i don't learn other lange warns.
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i'm learning -- rachel: with 70% of hispanics in your neighborhood, hometown. >> paqito. my point, what i can relate to, understand this absolute divide between the president of the united states and a speaker of the house within his own party, how important it is to do americans right on this they should have a monolithic policy and be locked in step with it, because this is a big deal. this is a big threat. nancy pelosi says, this was support for my trip was bipartisan. what she doesn't say, it was bipartisan after it leaked and china made threats. i would like to know how the republicans felt about it two weeks before when it was an inside the beltway idea for her to go and if they felt it was responsible, appropriate, effective, the right thing to do. if it was provocative. what is the bigger picture we don't get a chance to see? was president biden -- rachel: you know what it is, joey, before it got leaked as she was going, you said correctly, only democrats were on the trip.
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you know why? her son was on the trip. her son was on the trip. she didn't want republicans saying we have another hunter biden situation. there is so much in this. how we were so much on the brink of a terrible -- listen, twice in the last six months on this couch we've had sort of like nuclear alert, remember with we reporting on ukraine. then this very precarious situation. this is dangerous stuff. why the heck was her son on the trip? >> i don't have a problem with the president of the united states, speaker of the house, the pentagon, making a strategic decision, if we don't show something, china will escalate, this will be helpful. i will not criticize that but you tell me the president and pentagon saying this is not helpful but speaker of the house decides to do it anyway. then it leaks i guess in an attempt to prevent her from going, the rest of d.c. says, whoa, whoa, we can't let china bully us from going, thousand we have a problem we created, right? this is not about not standing
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up to china. it is about knowing how to play chess instead of checkers. this is about having a competent government who sees two steps ahead rather than reacting to china's threat. those are two very different things. it is important americans to understand criticizing nancy pelosi including myself making this trip, not about provoking china. i don't care if we're strategically provoking them. we'll have to stand up to them one way or another anyway but if we're doing it as reactive, literally inside at this time for at&t politics who is the leader of the democrat party. that has nothing to do with taking care of us. that has something to do with take are care of them. pete: absolutely right. let's go from war, to peace, world peace. the best plan for peace, our energy secretary spoke to a news outlet, jennifer granholm was talking about energy and her future and talked about its potential to unleash world peace. here is jennifer granholm who famously laughed at having a policy. here is a quote, if we want to
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be secure and energy independent that means we have to produce my own energy. my counterpart in ireland, energy minister there no one ever weaponize the access to the sun, weaponized to the wind. perhaps a move to clean energy will be the greatest peace plan the world has ever known. joey, she says by harnessing the sun and the wind we will harness so far unachievable opportunity foreworld peace which we haven't really managed to get in thousands of years. >> i envy people who live by the moniker ignorance is bliss. i envy someone who can have her head so far in the clouds she probably believes the words she are saying. she believes they are applicable to 2022 not 2052. listen, majority of conservatives are not married to combustible engines. not we have nostalgia working on carburetor and need the gas around we have to afford anything we can afford.
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combustible engines was not government handing out edict with that horses are bad, let's replace them. it was innovation. a couple wars help get us there. that is how couple wars helped us get there. instead of what could be better for our country bringing in technology. the problem with comments we're going to have peace through green energy, my understanding what is happening in ukraine, half the europe was dependent on russia for oil, russia might not have invaded to begin with. rachel: that's right. >> look at complexities about afghanistan, china built a pipeline through afghanistan. access to energy, chief, affordable energy is power, and there is peace through strength. rachel: that was the green new deal war for sure in ukraine. that was completely about that in terms of how -- >> she calls this inflation reduction act a green energy bill in her comments there so she understands. rachel: she has massive investments. she has big investments in ev vehicles and batteries there is
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some conflicts of interest there as well. i want to get to this headline in the guardian, i think this is a really dangerous thing happening. in australia, the bank of australia has refused to give loans to people purchasing fossil fuel cars and this, i think coming here already has, when my husband was in congress, joe which, there was something called operation choke point which was the weaponization of bank loans because if the biden administration didn't like your business, whether it was selling firearms or payday lenders they were going to sic the doj on you for investigation. what do banks do, i'm not going to give them a loan, i'm not going to bank with them, with those types of industries. what is your thought on this kind of weaponization of bank loans and this pressure coming from government? >> we have something called credit unions here in the united states, locally-owned banks, that will become an important thing for us. we already see it in the firearms industry. if you own a firearm company, sell parts and pieces not even
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the main part of a firearm, the online sales is getting harder and harder to do because most of those platforms are turning their back on the firearms industry. it could easily happen to the cars, to the auto industry. they could weaponize our economy against easily accessible transportation and energy. think about that i don't know the full extent of the economy in australia. i apologize, i'm not a linguist, not a economist. we will move forward i come up with something. the idea what is happening in a pro-western country, models what we made success around the world, australia, the idea that could make its way here with our culture and government is pretty easy to say. rachel: through operation chokehold already attempts to do that. >> going back to granholm, nobody ever weaponized wind and sun. what that is a dog whistle for people that promote nuclear. that is the actual, clean affordable, easily obtain energy we have available right now.
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you want to know this is well-kept secret in d.c., everybody knows it, the biggest culprit is stopping advanced nuclear energy, industrial complex they don't want to lose stranglehold on the economy. they call it a defense economy to bring privatization into the nuclear market. thankfully by work by republicans, staff members on capitol hill, we have a bill passed last year, year before, will allow government material in reactors to be used to test innovative private sector nuclear technology, from it we'll probably have an opportunity to get, affordable and clean nuclear energy which ask france, works out really well. will: partner in green energy movement also opposed to nuclear energy as well. if you're looking for uninterrupted energy supply you would be in support of one that is not at competition with other nations so you support nuclear energy. >> shows hypocrisy.
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will: clearly haven't been able to harnesser the sun yet. really quickly, bank of australia chief said, this is fascinating chosen to 2025 the change to electric vehicles needs to happen quickly, we believe it can with the right supporting policies in place to bring a greater range of more affordable electric vehicles to australia. i think you're right, credit unions, small banks, you got to get loans. they have to get loans from the federal government. have to be insured but, you know, this will solve the question, is capitalism demand driven or supply driven? demand says i need car loan, internal combustion engine car loan. >> talking about cutting out access, access to money for people who can only afford the cheapest form of energy. who will this hurt? rachel: they want us in subways, they have want us in buses. they want to have cars and jets the rest of us we have to use public transportation. >> it will hurt families that can only afford the cheapest mode of transportation, a gas
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engine car. hurt businesses that need to buy diesel cars and trucks to provide services. >> try catching a bus 15 below in wisconsin. pete: that is not great. really not. >> i can't run that fast. couldn't if i tried. rachel: i see you run bionic. >> we have trus, lisa booth, i'm batting clean up because they will knock them all out of the park. rachel: thank you, joey. we'll turn to headlines. actor gary busey brought up on sex charges in new jersey friday. the "point break" actor is facing four charges including attempted sexual assault. his representative did not immediately respond to fox news with comment. the department says the investigation remains ongoing. congresswoman liz cheney is laying into republican leadership after her landslide and embarrassing primary loss. >> that people continue to believe the lie, which is very
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dangerous. i think it also tells you large portions of our party, including a leadership of our party is very sick. rachel: in that interview cheney also indicates there is still a possibility that former president trump will be called for questioning by the january 6 committee. fox news's emily compagno comes out with some hero dogs at k-9 hurricanes heroes second annual charity event. they gave away, get this, $200,000 for paws for honor to help out even more hero dogs. good. >> families, kids, husbands, fathers everybody for taking care of them. [inaudible]. this makes it a lot easier when you're not alone and you don't have to worry about all of that stuff. rachel: both organizations are dedicated to providing vet
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veterinary care for retired four-legged friends. emily, good job. pete: nicely done. across the aisle, nearly half of college students wouldn't want to live with someone with different political beliefs, mostly democrats actually. would not dorm with republicans. growing division on college campuses next. will: summer is not over yet. we're celebrating the end of the season with food, a fair and a whole lot of fun on fox square. ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪♪ voltaren. the joy of movement. ♪♪ 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
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♪. will: political division at american universities reaching a fever pitch. a new poll shows nearly half the college students wouldn't share a dorm with someone who supported the opposite presidential candidate in 2020. uc berkeley, off campus housing co-op is barring white people from common areas. here to react, university of alabama student, president of the free thinking project, cj pierson. good to see you this morning. start with the first, who won't room with someone of the opposite political belief? >> oh, it is obviously democrats. it's one of those things where they love to talk about
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diversity, equity, inclusion until it comes to them actually having to be diverse, equitable and inclusive to people who don't think like them this is another textbook example of such. will: we saw so many democrats don't want to room with someone who supported trump. have you seen that, that type of mentality a lot? you go to the university of alabama, cj. i'm curious, what is it like on that campus? >> thankfully here in god's country at of the of alabama we don't have that problem. i think that one thing about me is that i very much vocal about my support of president, have been, will continue to be. should it be something that people actually should have to hide? we live in america which is supposed to be the greatest, freest country in the world. if you have an issue with talking to someone because of their political beliefs differ because of you the problem isn't them, it is likely with you. will: let's go ahead take what
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started small and blow it up even bigger, here we go to uc berkeley, people don't want to room with someone of a different political belief, someone with a different race. sounds like a story from the 19, i don't know, '40s, but no in reverse. a off campus housing project at uc berkeley for people of color, they are warned following, here are the house rules. guests are allowed in common spaces, be mindful in there are in the room beforehand white guests are not allowed in common spaces. no white guests, cj. >> that is exact racism. exactly the type of stuff that martin luther king, jr. worked against we should judge people by content of their character and color of their skin. if you replayed the worth word white with black you would have protests. joe biden would condemn what it is blatant flagrant racism.
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racism is not just targeting people of color, but targeting anyone. i don't know when it became trendy to hate white people because of color of their skin it doesn't make it any less wrong or unjust or any less racist. the fact of the matter uc berkeley is doing this, state of california doesn't surprise me, part of the course for a state like california. thankfully though, i go to the university of alabama where something like that would never happen. will: second game of the season, cj. will pour it out, second game of the season, alabama versus texas. i'm very aware you will roll tide over us in austin but i guess we get a shot at you two years in a row. i'm banking on next year. i need one more year of development. then horns over roll tide, okay? >> give you a year. will: thank you. good to see you, cj. >> good to see you. thanks so much. will: still ahead a ride to remember honoring 9/11 heroes
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with an annual bike ride from pentagon to new york city. ♪ >> tech: cracked windshield? don't wait. go to safelite.com you can schedule service in just a few clicks. 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.
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♪. will: every year since the september 11th terrorist attack 9/11 foundation honored our nation's heroes with the make ride. rachel: from the pentagon to shanksville, pennsylvania, today's ride ends today here in new york city. pete: we're joined by roger flick and eric and lexy from the america's 9/11 foundation. so great to see you. so great to see all of you out there. great to see you. over 200 bikes make the ride. talk about what you're doing. >> this is very emotional ride. this is annual fund-raiser for our scholarship fund for active first-responders children.
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i've done this like 18 times. so i'm going to pass it off to the younger folks to let them talk. will: go ahead. rachel: how much money has been raised? >> over the years we've been doing this well over a million dollars. the thing is, none of us get paid. none of us make as dime. all the money we raise goes to first-responders. will: lexy, how many hours, how many miles on this ride? >> depends where you're coming from but the ride itself is 684 miles. we, if you ask me i wake up at 4:00 a.m. to get down to park all the bikes. we get up at 7:00, ghetto the location between 3:00 in arlington and 6:00 in new york city. rachel: what is the reaction? >> it is wonderful. we go through small towns, leesburg. will: virginia, or new jersey, home so some of the victims of that day. it is just so heartwarming, you see the streets lined up. you see american flags.
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you see people crying. you see the signs saying we will never forget. that is why we do what we do, to honor the first-responders and never forget september 11th. pete: eric, are people remembering where we are? >> yes but sadly they're forgetting too, but what is important to remember on september 12th, 2001, we were all americans. didn't matter race, color creed, religion, nothing, we were all americans. sadly that is slipping away. we want to just let everybody know we're here to help first-responders. to never forget victims and heroes of that day, to honor the first-responders that sacrifice daily to do their jobs to keep us safe so we do what we're doing today right now. rachel: such an important thing because in schools, some schools are not even teaching what happened that day. >> right. >> so this is such a visual reminder, in a town, parent see this go book we have to talk about this. >> yeah. >> we'll talk to anybody.
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go to america's 9/11 foundation.org. they will have get more information. will: give me a sense of the size of the convoy rolls through town, arrives in new york city, how many bikes, how many people, what does it sound like coming through town? >> rolling thunder is what it sounds like. rachel: sound of freedom. >> i have ringing in my ears, we handle support. we get all the sirens. >> coming through the holland tunnel, we shut it down, you have nothing but bikes, tractor-trailers, officers like these guys in the back supporting us making sure we're safe. >> you have 50 sirens going all all difficult syllables and sounds. pete: departments all over the country? >> we have 50 officers from probably 49 different departments or less from all over the united states. >> and we, we have fire and ems too. today representing robinson ems, he is a wilderness search and rescue dog. he is named after the k-9 that
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lost his life on september 11, turn. pete: can rachel get on motorcycle? rachel: where do i go. >> next year you can join us. pete: next year i should join. i would love that. >> put rachel on my bike. officers escort us. rachel: go back here? >> just take one. >> you got it. pete: there we go. >> there you go. pete: i love it. >> you get to take her. pete: taking time off, taking time off to do this ride? the departments are even supporting this. >> they work their butts off. every intersection, every corner, every on-ramp is blocked by officers to keep civilian riders supporting this foundation safe. pete: departments are supporting it because departments know what your foundation knows for them. >> they're respecting their brothers that died on 9/11 doing
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that. pete: wonderful. >> if folks want to contribute to our foundation for the scholarship program, go to the website make a contribution. like eric said we're all volunteers. pete: there is the web site there, america's 9/11 ride.org. they're finishing the journry with us on "fox & friends" es. rachel looking good on a bike making friends. hopefully they raise a heck of a lot of money. thank you, guys, for everything you do. will: more "fox & friends" coming up in moments. >> thank you, will. will: thank you. was holding me back. but asthma has taken enough. so i go triple... with trelegy. with 3 medicines in 1 inhaler,... it's the only once-daily treatment for adults that takes triple action against asthma symptoms. trelegy helps make breathing easier,... improves lung function,... and lasts for 24 hours. go triple...
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♪. rachel: the u.s. is announcing a new 775 million-dollar military aid package for ukraine as russia's invasion near its six-month mark. the new package brings the total committed to the embattled nation to a whopping $10.6 billion. so how can we insure accountability for how taxpayer funds and weapons are used? congressman greg stuebe sits on the house foreign affairs committee. he joins us now. congressman, thanks for being here. you supported the war in ukraine. you voted for funding for ukraine, for hundreds of millions of dollars. now this amount says 10 point whatever billion dollars. you said you haven't received one report of accountability?
Documents
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>> i voted for the first tranche which is that $10.2 billion. the second tranche was $40 billion. we have spent a total of $54 billion in ukraine. i voted against the last funding amount, there was no guardrails how the money would be spent. congress still hasn't gotten any information. i sit on foreign affairs committee. foreign affairs have not gotten information the actual weapons we transferred to get in ukrainian hands. have they been utilized? what is the status. have money gone to oligarchs in ukraine? we don't know. the administration is not answering the questions. there is no guardrails of the last funding tranche, $40 billion, more than customs border patrol, border protection coast guard combined we need to be focused on america first and not all the other issues throughout the world. rachel: is this the pentagon who is responsible for giving you this report? >> it's the state department and pentagon. they go back and forth the way
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the biden administration has done it with afghanistan botched withdrawal the state department was in charge of that process. the state department is in in charge of most of the funding in ukraine. most military transfers. mostly department of defenses and partly, department of state. rachel: if republicans take control of congress can you say with hold power of purse we'll hold funding in the state department and pentagon if you don't give us the report? is that a way to deal with it? how do you get the state department and pentagon to do their jobe? >> not only power of the purse we have taking majority, but oversight. democrats will not oversee joe biden's horrible administration. we'll be a check and balance to the decisions his administration is making. bring in their officials, die posing them, having subpoena authority. that is where the real power comes when we take the majority back to get answers from the administration who is completely ignoring republican calls for
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transparency. rachel: americans don't want a proxy war with russia as they're suffering so many families. this is absolutely outrageous. this is a slap in the face. i will move to another topic which is the border. which as you know there are a lot of problems and you point out rightly there is not enough funding for border patrol. so much is going for laces we don't know. last week a good samaritan discovered 70 pounds of cocaine washed up onshore in the florida keys. border patrol with sheriff's office recovered drugs which has estimated street value of over a million dollars. we have a massive fentanyl problem. what is your reaction though this discovery and the all the problems in the open border? >> we had enough fentanyl come into the united states to kill six times the population of the united states all under joe biden. the drugs coming across the border is absolutely
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astronomical because we have an open border. over 3.1 million illegal crossings since joe biden has been president. there is only 2.1 million people that live in miami-dade county. that is more than the all of the population of miami-dade county and another million on top of that is absolutely atrocious. we have an invasion at the southern border yet the administration wants to give money to ukraine for a proxy war. when republican get control, that is where the power of the purse we use the appropriations process, you know you can't spend any money at the department of homeland security to allow illegal immigrants to come into the country. rachel: i hope our leadership with the republican party do that with the war in ukraine. there was a lot of news into the ramp up of this war and now we're hearing nothing about the money. as you said it could have gone into the hands of some pretty corrupt oligarchs. thank you for staying on this. the american people appreciate it. congressman. >> thank you.
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rachel: pete? pete: thank you, rachel. appreciate it. we begin headlines with this. a texas woman fearing to leave her home after a potential botched kidnapping. erin mims was leaving a birthday dinner last week when she came across a napkin stuffed in the door handle of her car. she immediately began feeling sick and saw emergency attention. >> i made it five minutes, my whole arm starts tingling and numb. i couldn't breathe. getting hot flashes. my chest was hurting. my heart really fast. pete: doctors say it was acute poisoning. but whatever substance it was not enough to leave her with permanent damage. transportation secretary pete buttigieg blaming airline executives for the flight disruptions calling it unacceptable in a strongly-worded letter. that letter went out to 10 airlines with buttigieg saying
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at minimum the ear lines need to provide meal vouchers and overnight stays with guests. airlines have extreme staffing shortages after covid-19 even as travel demand at record highs. they didn't cause this problem. now he is sending strongly worded letters on your behalf, our transport tearings secretary a california boutique is prohibited customers from wearing masks after a recent wave of robberies. turns out they work great for robberies too. the store's owner says masks could prevent witnesses getting an accurate description of suspects in the event of a crime. the source says if shoppers insist on masking they can book a private appointment or buy from the website. those are your headlines. maybe we'll get there los angeles should be there. you are not allowed to wear a mask because we have to assume you might rob us. turn now to chief meteorologist rick reichmuth for the fox weather forecast. this time he will actually do
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weather. rick: nothing make senses pete, at all. there is a lot going on. temperaturewise feeling very much like summer especially across parts of south. dallas 79. texas get ready, everything is about to change. you had such a hot and significant dry spell, we're getting a lot of moisture there. a lot of flooding parts of four corners in areas of utah, much of arizona, into new mexico. look at all the moisture moving towards oklahoma and texas. that moisture in some spots we'll talk about maybe five to eight inches of rain, exacerbated a little bit by the system in parts of south texas. get ready, a lot of the drought is big improvement, temperatures cooling off across much of texas and oklahoma. send it to you inside. pete: not feeling good for will with storms around dallas. >> i am. he needs the rain in texas. you might not like it today, like it in the long run.
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pete: short run not so good for his flight but long run. iowa state fair is back in swing. before you buy a corndog, find out how inflation is impacting some of your favorite fair foods. >> not fair. pete: not fair, dave. well-done. we're having our own free fair style fun on fox square. i can barely read it. stay tune for the end of summer bash. not over yet. ♪ i had been giving koli kibble. it never looked like real food. with the farmer's dog you can see the pieces of turkey. it smells like actual food. as he's aged, he's still quite energetic and youthful. i really attribute that to diet. get started at longlivedogs.com
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when a truck hit my car, ♪the insurance companyed, wasn't fair. eight million ♪ i didid't t kn whahatmy c caswa, so i called the barnes firm. i'm rich barnes. it's hard for people to k how much their accident case is worth.h barnes. t ouour juryry aorneneys hehelpou pete: the iowa state fair is back, in full swing, rising prices, supply chain issues are making it tough for vendors to deliver than ever before. many prices for fair food are up like 30% like potatoes, hotdogs, flour, for the glorious corndogs and funnel cakes. joining us is the iowa state fair manager, ceo, gary slater. thanks for being here. iowa state fair, an american institution. we know it will go on but there is no doubt for folks both, the employees, the businesses there, but also folks attending, they're wondering can i afford
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to going to the iowa state fair this year? >> we were lucky that the iowa state fair held their prices the same to get in the front gate but yes, i know inflation has pushed up some of the popular food prices from pork chop on a stick to corndogs, to some of the ones we all know and love but doesn't seem to be hampering our attendance. our attendance is up, food gross is way up this year. everybody was glad we had a normal fair. they're excited about what's going on here. we're about to wrap up here this morning, this afternoon with a tremendously successful fair. pete: it did not put a damper on it. one of the concession owners talking to fox business, eric campbell of campbell's concessions. we don't want to raise our prices for our customers but the only way we can stay and survive in this business you have to raise prices to offset. gary, you're saying at this point, attendees understand the
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situation. they get it, vendors have to pass on some of these prices but you say attendance has been really steady. is is part of that coming out of covid? people are ready to get back out there? >> i think so. people have supported the fair and come. we've had very, very good weather. we had a couple of days of rain. yesterday was one of our biggest days ever and the food, the lines here on the grounds were pretty long yesterday all day long. so i think people are just glad to get out, glad to have their favorite fair food. pete: you have politicians showing up. wouldn't be the iowa state fair without a little bit of politics. you had them show up, next year will be a gangbuster year for politicians showing up as well? >> we hope to keep the first caucus status t drives those politicians to iowa seems like but yes, former vice president mike pence was here.
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many of our local, state, u.s. senators and representatives have been here throughout the fair. you know the big thing is, that to work on that pork producers tent or beef cattleman's tent, pouring that lemonade talking to those constituents. pete: we'll see if next year donald trump shows up in his helicopter he famously did, walking off, giving rides at the iowa state fair. gary, real quick, signature food at iowa state fair? i know you have a lot of them, you don't want to play favorites but what was the hit at the fair this year. >> of course i have my favorite, this year, the new food contest was won by one of our really, really fancy concessionaires, the rib shack called the finisher. a bake potato about as big as a watermelon i think. all the toppings of brisket and mac and cheese and other things
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on top of it with toppings of sour cream. just a wonderful finisher item. pete: getting hmms across the studio, sounds delightful. gary, congratulations at the iowa state fair. we hope to check it out next year with you. >> thank you very much. love having you here. pete: we'll be here more "fox & friends" in a moment and more illegals. , for all-day comfort and energy. find your relief in store or online. breakthrough heartburn... means your heartburn treatment is broken. 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 record label is taking off. but so is your sound engineer. you need to hire. i need indeed.
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they got me with a snake which i didn't like, that the teddy bird but a chicken, rachel legitimately fled in horror. >> i am legitimately afraid of chickens all my family members who saw the said that look like you. alicia acuna another latina says she can do anything and heels, i run away from birds. >> that is not accurate nor is it justice. i was standing here with the birds with the chicken. it was in a hawk or a bald eagle. >> you were where pete was sitting. >> the chicken was at no point within the sitting feet radius of you and secondarily you held the python to pete's face like this. >> then my face went into the
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python space. rachel: i can handle the white bird but it's a chicken. why can't we get a picture of that creepy chicken. will: his hair was going this way. pete: you were threatening my life and will was holding a chicken. rachel: i wasn't sure -- i was shocked you were afraid of snakes. >> what's more believable he's at afraid of pythons or you're afraid of chickens. rachel: i touch the python. >> but you're not afraid of pythons but the chicken came up and he ran away like this. >> what is your greatest fear will. will: i said i don't know my greatest fear but i was trying to think yesterday what animal you could bring out the made me react like that and the best is rat, and they said you have them every day. rachel: we have to be careful where we leave her food behind us because there's a planter
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there and the rats can come up and get it and they are there. will: there was a horror movie where a giant rat took over town in your receipt horror movies where they take the cages and i know we need to move on to the news have you seen the cages that they attacked somebody's head and they put the rat in the cage and the rat nibbles on your face. pete: what kind of horror movies did you watch. rachel: can i say one thing i knew some of you personally who had a bat come in the house and the way they found out the back was on their ear, that creepy or what. >> that's how you turn into a superhero. pete: another one is camel spiders, they are like giant tarantula like spiders that live in the desert and afghanistan and they show up in your bunk in the poisonous and when the wind in your room can you go to sleep? >> no. >> i lie awake with one eye open.
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>> that's what dan bongino said. pete: if you put a pull and ask people what their greatest animal fear pythons, snakes are the top a lot of people sympathize with you. rats, spiders. i'm around 97 with chickens. rachel: i don't know what it is i get a weird sensation that comes to the bottom of my feet, it's chickens, eagles, hawks, owls. >> we will be be here but the investors or rather the ancestor of the bird is a dinosaur. rachel: see. will: birds are into dinosaurs then she went on to eat chick-fil-a. >> i don't mind eating that. will: if you see images on your screen throughout three buses
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arriving from new york city to texas, jumping off 139 illegal immigrants in new york city, the ill illegal immigration story continues throughout the nation and this comes out that the los angeles times seemingly one could guess through leak from the biden administration saying the biden administration wishes we were deporting illegal immigrants this is what the new york times is saying. throughout the spring they pushed ice for more deportation from a program called the dedicated daca focuses on families and asylum-seekers who cross the border, launched by the department of homeland security in the department of justice in may of 21 the daca speeds up immigration cases from several years to about one year, here's what you should pay attention to. since then more than 60000 illegal immigrants enter the process 11000 got deportation orders, then according to data 150 have been deported through
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july. pete: very successful, about the same amount they got off the bus. rachel: that's exactly right. the amount that was deported to the daca of 60000 people in 11000 receive notices and 10850 of them threw them in the trash because they don't want to be found. it was never about doing it legally because their first act was an illegal act and they knew it would afford them years and the biden administration wanted it this way because they got rid of not just the wall but remained in mexico and all of the things that were the actual deterrent. when the administration official in the same article says this you know it's garbage. >> there is someone in the administration that we will remain nameless, the white house wants deterrent factor in removal. rachel: can you tell they have a welcome wagon. >> i'm glad the bus was happening when i read that instead of the quote, that's what they want them coming off
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the bus. rachel: these images aren't what inspired these are only playing on fox, people can see that but these images are all over latin america, think about should i take this dangerous journey with the baby like that, that's a pretty nice luxury bus, those people that come off the bus many are going to four-star hotels and right into the arms of social services. by the way also remember a lot of people getting rich off of this, not illegal immigrants, nonprofit organizations are driving these policies. you're not seeing in the news that millions and millions of dollars on taxpayer dollars are going to the nonprofits, sometime churches and lutheran catholic services, catholic services, lutheran and social
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services in array of left-wing groups they're getting rich and this is what we see. by the way you do not have to deport them if you had remained in mexico. will: you called it a dangerous trip this is del rio sector since october more than 200 deceased illegal immigrants have been encountered in the del rio sector alone, yesterday they advised three more migrants from the rio grande river, this is a stark reminder how dangerous illegal worry crossing really is purdue not risk your life. tom homan was talking about this and he laid out the number over a years time, 200 and that sector three in one day. listen to this. >> since joe biden became president over 1200 migrants have died on u.s. soil, that is unheard of in the history of this nation. 100,000 americans his policies are not humane or inhumane they are killing people. when president trump had illegal immigration on 80% when it was
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at a low how many americans were dying of fentanyl how many migrants were dying, how many millions were the cartel not making how many suspected cartel were not make it across the border what is done is treasonous and everyday i wake up i'm upset. rachel: you see how upset he is that's because tom homan has been on the scene opening up where he found migrants who were cooked alive, he is angry about it because it's been traumatized, he told me that and that is what our law enforcement has to do with all the time. >> the reason images on the bus are important it's the ones we can actually see. thousands and thousands of the dead of night and trust them united states buyer federal government. have you ever been to the port authority in new york? >> i'm surprised they don't want to get back on. >> is not luxury it awaits but is not there. you don't want to be hanging onto port authority. all the way to new york, back on
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the bus. >> it looks like guatemala. >> with a fascinating conversation "fox & friends" which would like to continue. i made the proposition to you guys earlier, it really does understand my belief was happening in the united states of america to see it through the lens of the left and the right is not republican democrats and establishment in the people and if you want to pull it down recently was happening in the news and capitol hill you can make the argument it is simply a break on how you feel about donald trump's personality. that is what is driving most motivation and jared kushner lays that out this will air on life, liberty and the. >> president trump is a fighter he has always been a fighter. a vodka and i played golf and i was joking the way that he drives his enemies so crazy they
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always over pursue him to make mistakes and trying to get him. what is happening is the same thing being done by the same people in the same way, they are leaking to the same sources, manufacturing fabulous claims shortly thereafter, they did this with the russian investigation in ukraine but i talked about how president trump with the remarks he was going to make for a very important speech on the middle east and he was remarking about all the different things he accomplished in the looked at me and said, jared being the president is easy dealing with all the animals and the crazy investigations that importantly takes us away from so many things that we want to be getting done. but president trump did a great job with park, totalizing and keeping his promises to the american people. >> he drives his enemies crazy. >> it's just that simple. rachel said earlier we will talk about this training in just a moment. liz cheney is suffering and sam
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harris the self-described intellect, from trump arrangement syndrome. no more complicated they have pdf. >> there is a lot of rejection going on. i think her hatred toward donald trump is very unhealthy and its diplomatic the liberals out there. it is not healthy he is occupying way too much space in their head. if it's a little more later the father's legacy was probably blown up when donald trump came on the scene and said those are stupid words, why did you lead us on their end with the iraq war and the people to put us in a situation on trial if you will. now here is liz cheney saying donald trump in front of the ua six committee even though she knows that doing that will not just further divide the country but spiral into something that looks like latin america where we take the people who were in power before and put them on
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trial in this will be repeated, she knows this is going to rip the country apart. she is hell-bent on doing and i wish she would work out her problems in a different way. >> instead she will have to make askew with them as well. she may have lost by 37 points which she did but she will continue her antitrust crusade as you said will and what depresses liz cheney in cheney so much as the end of the political dynasty the cheney, bushes, mccain, a lot more aspiration there even inside of the family, those dynasties assume political relevancy based on being in the and club in washington, d.c. acceptable republican. now cheney's were the most hated republicans. now the muslim by democrats. they were described as hilarious. correct they now hate trump.
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i think on the spectrum of left, right were in and out, you said something at the break which i will credit you with, the only thing extreme are the people take issue with on donald trump the disposition or personality. >> not his politics. >> if you look at his policies that are labeled extreme they are quite mainstream on both the republican party and former democrat party as his running democrat voters. were also having cut a conversation about establishment figures like mitch mcconnell that candidates who trump has backed are not electable because due to extreme. familiar rhetoric about ted cruz can't win. here's a list of the trump back candidates that mitch mcconnell would not have but the people have chosen. the connecticut senate race dan cox and marilyn, carrie lakin arizona. rachel: michael's, tim michels in wisconsin.
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blake masters in arizona, none of them received gop support. in fact they receive democrat support. donald trump's record in primaries, i think i wrote it down and forgive me i think it is two 09 and 17, 1209 and lost 17. democrats see this as a good sign so to establish republicans, they are saying all of the trump back primary wins will lose the general election they're not modern enough, this is former connecticut representative, he says the following cannot continue one of the things that will happen, a lot of the truncated into one the primary will lose the general election and unhappy republicans who hold office at believe the senate is staying democrat. democrats. >> even further left, democrats are funding some of these guys that's argument meaning the trump back republican candidates, they say and electable general. this is a conversation earlier they think, the establishments
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including republicans you can only elect moderate. my question what is a moderate. my question if donald trump has redefined the publican party and brought in union voting or democrat union members in pittsburgh and ohio. rachel: and blacks and asians. >> in refrain free trade and treat china the enemy that it is, what is extreme policy, the only extremity perhaps is how you feel about his personality. it is a disruption to the way things are done, that is defined by washington, the ministry of state, democrats and the good chunk of the republicans, those of the people defining what is moderate probably the same group of people who are thinking that we need to mix up the genders. what they believe is moderate versus what is extreme. >> is a great point and i don't think they could divide anymore is left and right, you can see that that the political stop where the alignment is with them and where the ally ship is, you
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see the cheney's and the obama's have a lot more in common with the bushes and the pelosi's. they're altogether. in a class divide is those of political and economic power, the elites versus the rest of us, the reason why they're attracted to donald trump even though as you said his personality is not everyone's cup of tea but there are people in our country who do feel powerless who are so frustrated when they see our government passed a bill that says inflation reduction and they know in elitist climate bill that will make them poor and make the donors of the democrat party richer. >> not just powerless insulted they have been called deplorable and violates cheney very sick. >> a moderate is a person washington willing to be complicit within the way things
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are done in the what does it mean to be a trump support or conservative or a member of the future of the republican party willing to fight and stand up for the things that you believe it in the culture today says our radical but they never were and they are not radical, stand and fight, that was the lure to trump. forget about all of that the guys fight, you never back down and he's willing to call the state and stand for the core values that is a big differentiator. a lot are the moderate who don't want to not be liked i want the media to like me. rachel: the main thing that they withdraw him you are racist. he stood there and said i don't call i'm not going to stop my policies. a bunch of hispanic started voting for him. so crazy. one last thing the role of the media if the democrats don't get smashed it will be because the
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media didn't in-kind donation to the democrat party but more so than ever. pete: grew the base with democratic voters, grew the base with latinos in the large african-american vote and that's not moderate that is extreme. we begin with your headlines. this headlight in incredible rescue happening on the hudson river off new york city after yacht catches on fire, take a look at the video. seven people on board with the fire ignited someone nearby pulled them to safety before the 48-foot boat took on water and sink. the cause is under investigation. kids playing in the youth basketball league are still required to wear a mask even with no state or local mandate a fighting mask mandate sharing this photo saying there's no excuse for these mandate critics pointed out the danger for kids physical activity with mask where, this is l.a.
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will: that was the darkest moment watching my kids play basketball with a mask on. rachel: the same thing for me. why more of us did not stand up, i took my kids out. still ahead house republicans want answers on why the nih is just now to the wuhan lab, congers man james coomer joins us next. pete: climate change is not only responsible for extreme weather but according to the left also obesity, migration and cannibalism. we will go off the wall to break down the leftist claims. ♪
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>> after three years of the pandemic the national institute of health is cutting off some of the funding to the wuhan lab to the stonewalling. rachel: republicans on the house oversight wanted it to go further slashing all funds to the eagle health alliance saying overnight and accountability are coming in 2023. >> oversight committee ranking member congressman james coomer joined us to discuss.
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thank you for being here. what can you do it seems insane that you would fund this even if you take the majority with the white house away it is, can this change? >> the first person were to have before the committee is going to be peter daszak who is the ceo of the eagle health alliance. if you go back over the past two years since i've been a top republican on the house oversight committee we've been demanding more from that the nih terminate funding altogether with eagle health alliance, terminate funding with the wuhan lab, remembering the very beginning dr. fauci and doctor collins denied the any taxpayer dollars were going to the wuhan lab, this is been shady from day one and they continue to backtrack either not going far enough, they came out this week and said we're not going to fund eagle health alliance were wuhan lab with anymore advocate tax dollars, are you kidding me of course you knocking to fund tax dollars from the wuhan lab, we
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want you to go further they said the eagle health alliance who is the company at the center of all of his covid-19 controversy. >> let me see if i understand completely, the funding for the wuhan lab right now is paused, they're not getting any money from the united states of america but it could come back, is that the current status? >> the company the national institute for health is eagle health alliance they turned around and gave it to the wuhan lab now the nih is saying no more money is good to go to the wuhan lab but we're going to get money to the eagle health alliance to continue to do whatever. eagle health alliance has never been transparent with exactly what type of research they were doing at the wuhan lab, we requested information, we requested all the documented all the correspondent between eagle health alliance and they provided nothing, the fbi under
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joe biden supposedly wanted for 90 days and said they were going to investigate the origination of covid-19. they never, to our knowledge on the house oversight committee the eagle health alliance never turned over any documents to the fbi and this is unacceptable. for the nih to come out and say we are just going to pause the funding and we are going to continue the taxpayer dollars eagle health alliance, company that has not cooperated with anyone who is serious about getting to the origination of covid-19, that is unacceptable behavior by the nih. rachel: what peter daszak and eagle health alliance is outrageous however, he's a subcontractor to the government. dr. fauci is an employee of our government he works for us and he lied about the involvement of taxpayer dollars at the wuhan lab on the most serious economically devastating incident and tried to take the american government in the american people off the chinese,
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there is e-mails, why is he still employed. i believe he is the highest paid employee in our government why is he still there, he lied. >> this is another result of democrat leadership in washington the fact that dr. fauci is still there it is unacceptable, not only did he lie about taxpayer dollars to the wuhan lab but he lied that they were conducting gain-of-function research at the wuhan lab. it is essentially mad science, there is no doubt to most same scientist in the world that covid-19 originated in the wuhan lab, our federal government led by dr. fauci in the nih national institute for health, they continue to deny that there was any possibility that covid-19 originated in the wuhan lab. >> i can't wait to see peter daszak in that. >> ranking member seem to be chairman if they when james
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coomer and top on the list, a lot of people on the list to provide oversight for. you are right, congressman thank you so much. p coming up the media stunned that latinos could actually be republicans. we will show you the new data predicting a red wave next. . . research shows that people remember ads with young people having a good time. so to help you remember that liberty mutual customizes your home insurance, here's a pool party.
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hispanics, they really understand that we're not part of this woke culture radical left environment. they actually leave their country, most of them to come to america to live the american dream. so we're seeing more hispanics turn into the republican party because the only party here in america that supports the american dream. rachel: you're of venezuelan descent, hispanics, understand on real level, not history for them, what centralized and corruption in their own governments. >> we saw it in venezuela, cuba, mexico. mexico is full of corruption. radical left took over. there is centralized government. there is no middle class. here in america, that we must preserve the american dream. rachel: you're in florida. venezuelans cubans know the dangers of socialism, dictatorships, as we mentioned
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corruption, what is interesting we're seeing in the southwest, mexicans, 60% of all hispanics they used to be real stalwart democrat voters but there is a shift there too. why do you think it is happening with mexican-american voters? >> yes. we can see that the mexican community is one full of faith, god, faith, family, freedom and their understanding of democrats are pretty much taking our faith away, religious freedoms, taking christian principles away. we're seeing a big shift in the mexican-american community here in the united states. rachel: so what percentage do you think is the economic component obviously hispanics being hurt very bad through inflation and so many things happening economically but the things like your kids coming home with trans ideology in school, what, how do you see that balance? what is impacting more in your opinion? >> so i would see a 60/40%. 40% focused on religious freedom
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and conservative principles, christian principles, faith, family, freedom and then the other 60% is the economy. we saw now that joe biden just hired 80,000 plus irs agents, his response is oh, they will not affect the hispanic community because the hispanic community is not capable of making over 300,000 a year. this is really a threat. it is at risk. the middle class is at risk. hispanic community understand that, that the democrats want to destroy america. rachel: the hispanic community is very aspirational. this message of dependency and this normalizing this kind of economy does not sit well with them. we're exciting to see what happens to you on tuesday. last word to the democrats who you say are in denial? >> yes. so i truly understand as a venezuelan american i understand that the radical left want to deour country. we saw it in venezuela.
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americans need to wake up. venezuela was destroyed with radical left, centralized government took over, created more departments, created more irs agents per se, they really destroyed the country. we need to fight the radical left to come back into the american dream. this is a great country a country of opportunity to preserve it. rachel: i remember when bernie sanders said the american dream was more likely to be found in caracas, venezuela. eating those words. >> unbelievable. >> carolina, thanks for joining us. we wish you luck in your race on tuesday. >> thank you very much, rachel. god bless. rachel: god bless you too. still ahead extreme weather is not only thing caused by climate change according to the left and media. >> a new study showing how climate change, specifically higher temperature is making our children more inactive and more obese. rachel: might be that we looked them down for a year or two. up next, pete and will go off the wall with more climate
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change blame game. we'll start with the obvious it is extreme weather. you know if we pass a few bills we get our hand on the thermostat of the climates to make sure there are no more extremes. watch. >> the existential threat of our time, the climate crisis, the crisis manifested in natural disasters of epic proportions. the american people the urgency. >> we're like the world will end in 12 years if we don't address climate change and your biggest issue is -- [applause] your biggest issue is how are we going to pay for it? >> so this decade, this next eight years decides whether or not we blow through 1.5 degrees or whether we in fact achieve our goal. >> climate change, wreaking havoc on our planet with the most vulnerable suffering most of all. our world is on fire again. and these historic weather
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events are no longer historic. pete: thanks former prince. used to be global cooling. will: it is on fire. pete: now we have nine years left now. used to be global cooling 2019. we're ticking down. then global warming. then climate change. anything that happens too hot, too cold, raining too much, not raining enough, we're always to blame for it. we're gods in control of the weather. will: that is when you play to the extremes a little much, too much, climate change, too little, it is not supported by the data, it is just simply not. we're at a all-time low for human life loss when it comes to global disaster, hurricane, floods, all-time lows impact on humanity. pete: same predicts made in the '70s and '80s, world impending doom, ice caps melting, everything on fire. didn't seem to come to fruition.
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will: look at this, extreme weather according to abc news leads to a rise in heart disease. rise in heart disease may be explained by extreme weather conditions, subset, study not clear why weather shifts correlated with more heart attacks. pete: heart attacks, extreme weather. extreme weather another one. historic things the left blames on climate change. mass mig graduation. here is vice president harris talking about migration. >> we're focused on addressing both the acute factors around the root causes of migration. i believe this is an important distinction. we must focus on both. first, the acute factors. the catastrophes that are causing people to leave right now. the hurricanes, the pandemic, the drought, and extreme food
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insecurity. and then there are the long-standing issues, the root causes, and i'm thinking of corruption, violence and poverty, the lack of economic opportunity, the lack of climate a adaptation and climate resilience. pete: sorry you had to listen to that. by the way we heard the same thing about extremism in afghanistan. taliban and al qaeda picking up because of extremism, can't grow crops. will: not their fault, it is climate. not the economy in nicaragua, but the climate that makes sense. heart disease, mass migration, obesity, also makes sense. obesity also at the mercy of our climate. watch. >> new study showing how climate change, specifically higher temperatures is making our children more inactive and more obese. the study published in journal, temperature, found today's
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children are 30% less a robe i cannily fit than their parents were at their age. fewer children are reaching world health organization recommendation of 60 minutes of exercise a day. pete: saying because it is warmer outside kids are not going outside? will: could be because you had a national lockdown for a good chunk of the last couple years or videogames or whatever. pete: it is not your kids playing xbox for six hours, multiple trips to mcdonald's which i'm guilty of, climate change. parent it is not your fault, keep them inside. will: thought we couldn't be more absurd, heart attacks, climate change, obesity, we only got started. people are out here eating people because of the climate. pete: [laughter] will: headline from business insider, scientists suggest the climate crisis could lead to considering eating human flesh, canallism because of the
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weather. pete: wow. business inside ir, cannibalism could be a way to pave for the future which supplies of major food stop peltz are wiped out f we're looking to human corpses as food sources we have a larger problem on our hand. it will mean we failed to mitigate the climate crisis. will: nine years to humanity. we have to start eating people couple of years. we're two or three years from eating people if we don't eat people if we don't pass massive climate change legislation -- pete: three, four years of eating people. what other option will we have. will: add it all up. we will have heart attacks, eating each other if we don't pass climate change. pete: perfect enemy, ever present, every solved, we have to do everything in our power to address it and politicians get to blame everything on it.
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will: look, man, pass bills, if you make mother nature really angry. the planet doesn't like it. pete: you're looking tasty right now. still ahead because summer is almost over doesn't mean food and fun need to end. we'll show you how to bring the flavors of fairs and carnivals to your home. will: i mean you got better alternatives than me right now. ♪. every year we try to exercise more, to be more social, to just relax. and eating healthy every single meal?
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treat together, klondike bacon bar. will: my god. i want many. >> make little breads and kind of eat that and -- rachel: the bacon is the bread? >> exactly. rachel: you need to give one to will because pete wants to fatten him up. pete: make minis right here. >> make griddles like this. taking this big cut hickory smoked bacon, place it on top. put it back in the freezer. rachel: what is this? >> white chocolate. it is almost like glue to it but add white strips. vanilla. that is bobob version of it. >> this is the klondike bar and bacon. works so well. that is thick cut bacon. will: no state fair complete without something fried. >> take a chop stick, half a
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banana, pancake batter works best for frying. pancake batter with eggs and milk. do a quick fry. we'll top it with ready whip. what i love about ready whip is perfect to add fun to all desserts. add sprinkles. serve it like that. just like this. pete: just straight to your mouth. >> here you go. here you go. we'll combine two of my favorite foods from all the fairs, cotton candy and popcorn. so easy to make it. cotton candy popcorn. add a bit of white chocolate inside of the popcorn. with left over popcorn, add white chocolate in there mix with strips of cotton candy, makes a beautiful sweet kettle corn with a cotton candy twist.
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rachel: there is always left over popcorn. >> constantly. residual heat from the melted chocolate melt the cotton candy. >> that is the greatest stuff. >> i will fatten you up, rick. rick: it is working. good job. rachel: later in the show we'll have a cotton candy competition by the way. will: we are? what does that mean? i didn't know that. rachel: there is a judge. >> deal. i will be nice to you. website, book, what can we tease for you this morning. >> klondike.com has a lot of recipes. right brand.com has a lot of recipes. the smoked bacon. george duran.com. you find a lot of stuff. pete: remember who gave you the time for the promotion when judging the contest. rachel: always got an angle. >> rick is eating it all. i like that. >> more "fox & friends." ♪
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♪ ♪♪ ♪ calling out around the world -- ♪ are you ready for a brand new beat? ♪ summer's here and the time is right -- ♪ for dancing in the streets ♪♪ will: end of the summer bash right here on fox square in the fourth hour of "fox & friends." welcome in, will cain, pete hegseth and rachel campos duffy. always love hanging out with you on these sunday sunday mornings. pete: august 21st, i don't know
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why we're doing the weekend bash this weekend, because we still have another weekend. maybe it's a reminder to go visit your county fair or state fair, check it out. as you pointed out on the kitchen table podcast, squeeze every drop of summer if out that you can. i think that's what we're doing. rachel: sean is actually back in wisconsin enjoying this last week with the kiddos, and then he has to -- will: you know, obviously, school really interferes with the idea that summer should go on, but in your mind, when is summer over? rachel: after labor day. pete: agreed. rachel: and school should not start until after labor day. i'm going to run on starting school in september, after labor day, and for the state of new jersey, i'm going to bring back plastic bags. pete: really? where are you running? rachel: i don't know, but i like plastic bags. [laughter] i just want everyone to know i am not ashamed to say, i like
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plastic bags. i don't like going to a grocery store, and people don't know this new jersey, they don't give you a plastic bag -- will: as long as we're on this, unpopular items, you bring back styrofoam cups? they're amazing. rachel: is it the best? will: i can't explain it, it just is. pete: please bring back -- i mean, it's fine, but you know what's even worse? please bring back plastic straws. rachel: yes. will: gosh. pete: you get it in a plastic cup which is twice as much plastic as the straw, just do that for us. [inaudible conversations] rachel: i just want to say somewhere in brooklyn, somewhere in brooklyn there's a girl named aoc whose head is exploding right now -- will: i'm sure she's watching. [laughter] that's fine that you want to delay the start of school until after labor day, but when do but
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get out? rachel: i think everyone should get out by the first week of june at the latest. will: june, july and august is summer. pete: good luck in the south. by the way, today is national senior citizens' day. so not just you, dave -- [laughter] all of our senior citizens out there, it is your day. we love you and we appreciate you. rachel: absolutely. pete: and you, dave. you're not a senior citizen. but you were,head be great. rachel: they're the people who solen ear and and do all kinds of great stuff in their community. unfortunately, a lot of them in the biden economy have to go back to work. so let's hope in the future old people can actually retire properly. pete: absolutely. hear hear. all right. now to the daughter of a senior citizen, daughter of dick cheney. congresswoman liz cheney is laying into republican leadership after her landslide primary loss. will: her criticism comes as some moderate republicans say
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former president trump's endorsement could be hurting the chances of are -- a red wave in november. >> reporter: good morning. cheney came in 37 points behind her challenger, harriet hageman, in wyoming's congressional primary this past tuesday, she had former president trump's endorsement. and cheney, as we know, is trump's most prominent republican critic. she says her loss shows trump has a stronghold on at least a portion of the republican party, adding this: >> as people continue to believe the lie, or they continue to believe what he's saying, which is very dangerous. i think it also tells you that large portions of our party, including the leadership of our party, is very sick. rachel: harsh words there. >> reporter: there are other trump critics who fear that the former president's sweeping win in primary endorsements will only tank republican chances of victories, the argument, of
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course, these candidates might not be able to pull in moderates and independents. former president trump has offered four end endorsements against ten republicans who voted to impeach him following january 6th, and congresswoman cheney if chairs the investigating committee. she indicated there is a possibility of trump being called in. >> what about trump, before you wrap upsome will you ask him to testify? >> i don't want to get in front of committee dhixes about that -- deliberations about that. i do think it's very important, as i said in the first hearing or the second hearing, you know, his interactions with our committee will be under oath. >> reporter: on the topic of exchange of power, there's something interesting that the new york times reported. former president trump left a letter for president biden in the oval a office, and aides reportedly called it biden -- said biden called it more gracious than he had anticipated.
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rachel: apparently a lot of moderates, or angry never-trumpers, are saying we should have more moderate candidates because they're more likely to win in the general. how did that work out with mitt romneysome if. pete: not so great. that is the argument that they're making because they're ticked. by the way, eight of the end ten members of the house who voted for impeachment have been defeated in primaries, most predominantly liz cheney who lost by almost 40 points. rachel: unbelievable. pete: pretty much a political unknown who was endorsed by president trump. and as you pointed out, will, endorsements from president trump have led to victories on the -- will: 209-17, i believe. pete: this is his party. so when the establishment, never trumpers, grouses about candidates that can't get elected, all they're really grousing about are candidates that president trump supports. will: yeah. pete: and what we'll find out many november is whether they will win or not, but the argument they're making now is
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they can't win. you hear that all the time. will: because they're not, quote-unquote, moderates. dan cox, kari lake in arizona, tim michaels in wisconsin. these are examples of candidates who are offered up as an example of someone who cannot win a general election but got the trump endorsement to win a primary. so i reject, look, language matters, and that's why there's a constant attempt to redefine words. i reject the idea that some candidates are more moderate than others and that is what's defining the distinction between them. i think it truly is establishment versus, in essence, outsider. or establishment versus populist. so what we're talking about is a coalition of people including liz cheney, mitch mcconnell, the left, the administrative state who do not like a policy embodied by president trump not
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only because we're talking about other people now -- the. pete: yep. will: we're not talking about president trump and his personality. we're not talking about his tweets. we're talking about other people now. and their policy positions are, you know, bring jobs back to america. maybe not total unfetteredded free trade with china. stronger borders. these are not consistently far-right positions over decades. rachel: yeah. will: this has been a repositioning of the republican party to what somebody would have described ten years ago as more moderate. pete: working class party. rachel: maybe described as a democrat. pete: a multiracial working class party? you would have described that 20 the years as as the -- ago as the democrat party. donald trump has changed that completely, yet hay use his personally. frankly, i think it's his willingness to fight, to stand up and do what he said he would do. republicans never do that. john john mccain was a perfect example. he would get elected, go to
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washington and play nice by everybody, play by the rules, so he was loved by the press and democrats but never deliver on conservative prerogatives. he was the mom me and he lost. donald -- nominee. donald trump ran on conservative values, did it, and he won in 2016 and got the most -- rachel: interesting point you bring up because, you know, donald trump's often accused of being a narcissist. but what i think john mccain really enjoyed buzz the adulation of the media with. it really was about him. and politics is about people. and the policies that you say were, you know, republicans didn't have -- will: scrambling of traditional -- rachel: but really that's listening to to the people. these are not extreme views. it's very common sense. you look at someone like kari lake saying i'm going to to take a stand on immigration, a hard stand. that's very widely popular -- will: right. rachel: -- in arizona. can i just backtrack just a tiny bit to liz cheney if. again, 40-point loss.
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i don't think people understand -- or maybe they do, but let's just reiterate this. you have to work really hard to be the incumbent with 100% name id in wyoming and lose by 40 points. that means this was about you, this was about your daddy, this was about hating donald trump, and this was not about the people of wyoming. and politics is about making people's lives better, and there's nothing that's happened, will, many these last, in this last year that has made people's lives better. and that's, i think, the reaction. will: here's why the word moderate doesn't mean anything. pete, you're absolutely right. okay, for those that are in power, it isn't donald trump's personality, you're right. i think there is a class of useful idiots out that treats politics as a reality show and is iewbed in on the -- tuned in to the nightly coverage on msnbc. but for liz cheney, for the administrative state, for much of the left it is a threat to
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the way things are done, to, to washington, d.c. as an entity the, as the status quo, as momentum. and, therefore, it isn't his personality that represents the threat to that, it is actually the policy. it ises the ideas and the fact that he would fight for those ideas. rachel: do you remember when frank luntz who was hired to be a consultant for the republican party, they would say you need to tell people wen can't talk about immigration, or republicans are going to lose. donald trump talked about immigration in ways that that consultants were cringing at, and he won hispanic votes in record numbers over mitt romney, over george bush. this is very, a very interesting development. and it goes to show these are common sense policies people can see what's happening, and they want -- will: won more black voters than mccain and romney. rachel: yeah. telling the truth is revolutionary, and his policies are about reality. pete: less wars and a border and
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fair trade in addition to prix trade. well, let's get to world peace which our energy secretary says is just around the corner as long as we pursue all their green energy plans. listen to this. >> if we want to be energy secure and energy independent, that means we've got to produce our own energy. my counterpart in ireland, the minister will, energy minister there, has said that no one has ever weaponized access to the sun. no one has ever weaponized the wind. perhaps a move to clean energy are will be the greatest peace plan the world has ever known. rachel: you guys should add this to your off the wall. by the way, here's a tweet from steve malloy, a former epa transition team person. he says, the war in ukraine and the ensuing energy crisis were entirely brought about by clean
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energy and climate idiocy. she's lying, she's an airhead. that's what he says about that statement right will. thoughts? pete: that that's exactly right. if we could harness the sun and the wind at this point, had be great if it was financially viable. a reliable way to provide energy, great. i love what joey said earlier on the program, joey jones. he said it's not that we're wedded to fossil fuels, the reality is it has made the whole entire world just raise the standard of living for the entire world for decades. if we can find something better, we'll transition. the idea that government's going to pick winners and losers and subsidize that ad nauseam is a fantasy. and to say it unleashes world peace? i i just don't -- it's demoralizing to sit on this koch and realize those -- couch and realize those are the leaders -- will: did it bring peace to the germany as it allowed russia to
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take over the entire fossil fuel market of europe? burning fossil fuels? i would suggest it makes us weaker, not stronger. rachel: by the way, do you know who it makes richer? granholm, secretary of energy, because she's invested in some of this green energy, as are so many democrat donors. this always comes back to money. it's not just that climate is their religion, although there is a segment that is. there's a lot of people making a lot of money and willing to make you poor in order to do it. are ril. will: let's turn to some additional headlines. first lady jill biden testing negative for covid-19, and she plans to join president biden at hair delaware beach house. the first couple was on vacation in south carolina when he came down with the coronavirus. biden inflation already threatening the holidays as experts warn of soaring turkey prices. talking about the turkey. commodity strategists telling
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fox business soaring production costs combined with an avian influenza outbreak have caused a short after only turkeys. the cost of turkey production in minnesota, the nation's largest producer, slashed by 18%. rachel: they're fattening up turkeys the way pete wants to fatten you up -- will: if climate's going to end the world and we're talking cannibalism, pete's got his first if meal -- [laughter] will: soared atop the itunes chart following his appearance on "fox & friends". the power of "fox & friends", check it out. rachel: wow! ♪ may peel like you're going down now, but the story isn't over. ♪ will will be joy in the morning. ♪ there will be joy in the morning ♪♪
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will: that is so awesome. the live performance comes ahead of wells' first arena tour this fall. rachel: so pete suggested that we should make his song our "fox & friends" weekend song. will: that one right there. rachel: i love that. pete: he's a star. rachel: oh, my gosh, he was amazing. i mean, live, there's no, nobody making him sound better. i mean, he is -- his whole band, they are talented. pete: i think he may come back for christmas. he's welcome anytime. phenomenal guy off camera too. rachel: for sure. pete: how do you feel about bennifer? rachel: i'm so happy with her. reunited and it feels so good. she's reunited with ben affleck and having a second, even, you know, more glamorous wedding with him, i mean -- pete: jwoww. will: jennifer garner didn't come to the wedding. rachel: of course, but the kids were there. and jennifer lopez, who doesn't
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love her? will: jennifer garner. [laughter] rachel: i like her too. i like -- listen, i'm going to just tell you this, they were not meant to be together. ben affleck is a lot. he's a lot to deal with -- will: do you want to do an off the wall on this? rachel: i suggested this, on jennifer lopez and ben affleck's whole -- her whole love life -- pete: i don't think we have must have time for that. [laughter] rachel: it'd be off the building, right? pete: all right. i had to give her a chance to comment on it. rachel: i love these stories. pete: $7 billion worth of u.s. military equipment seized by the taliban after biden's disastrous withdrawal. our next guest was embedded in afghanistan in 2006, his warning against the new safe haven for terrorists.
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democracy army veteran bill roggio. bill, you've covered events since 9/11, both wars as much or more than anybody else. your writings are prolific about it. when you look at this number, $7 billion in equipment the pentagon assesses that the taliban has, how much of a threat is that to us, to, you know, the region today? >> it is absolutely a significant threat to both us and the region. we have to remember that afghanistan prior to 9/11 at least had opposition there with the northern alliance, and al-qaeda which was fighting along -- which was fighting alongside the taliban was focused on fighting that northern alliance. with the disastrous withdrawal -- and let me be clear, biden owns this disaster, but it is a multi-administration failure. president obama's ill-sourced surge and the timeline they gave and president trump's deal with the taliban with, but biden owns there was a third way.
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he needed to leave behind a resistance to the taliban. ed have allowed -- if the afghan government and military could have reorganized, it would have prevented a lot of this equipment falling into the hands of the taliban and, thus, its allies with al-qaeda. we left behind not just the equipment, but bases including stockpiles where these groups can train. and we have to remember that safe haven is the life blood along with state sponsorship which al-qaeda has both. they have safe haven in afghanistan -- pete: that's a great point that prior to 9/11 the taliban wasn't fully in control of afghanistan. now they've effectively consolidated. now -- you mentioned the toalalty of the equipment. here's a breakdown courtesy of the u.s. taxpayer. $92 million worth of aircraft -- 992, 4.1 million in ground vehicles and over 500 million in weapons. that's an army, a terror army
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they could have never, never acquired themselves, could only have dreamed of. and now we see al-qaeda's back in the mix as well. >> yeah, absolutely. so the irony in all this is we went into afghanistan to drive out the taliban, prevent it from supporting groups like al-qaeda. afghanistan is in a far worse state than it is today than it was on september 10th, 2001. the taliban is in full control of afghanistan, it has that significant weaponry. these numbers don't include all the munitions that are used to supply these weapons. again, the bases, the fuel that we left behind, a whole bunch of equipment that the taliban is taking advantage of. and this is a significant threat to the region and in the long term to the united states as well. pete: yeah. we left it worse hand we found it, which is not better off for us, certainly. bill, thank you so much for all your coverage and your insight on this. appreciate it. >> thank you very much. pete: you're right, that $7
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billion probably on the low side. all right, still ahead, fentanyl has become the single deadliest drug threat to our mission. next we hear from three mothers who lost their children to the end epidemic. their warning to families and desperate pleas to save america's kids. my grandma never mentioned this, but her first job was working at a five and dime, when she was only 16 years old. it's all right there in the census. see where a few details can lead with the 1950 census on ancestry. hi, my name is cherrie. i'm 76 and i live on the oregon coast. see where a few details can lead my husband, sam, we've been married 53 years.
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but even if your teen was vaccinated against meningitis in the past they may be missing vaccination for meningitis b. although uncommon, up to 1 in 5 survivors of meningitis will have long term consequences. now as you're thinking about all the vaccines your teen might need make sure you ask your doctor if your teen is missing meningitis b vaccination.
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♪ rachel: welcome back to "fox & friends." with america's fentanyl crisis accounting for nearly a third of all drug deaths across the nation, we're honoring the many lives lost this national fentanyl prevention and awareness day, that's today. advocates and family victims are with us today including lori who lost her son a think, emy who lost her son in 2020 after he connect with a dealer on social
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media at only 14 years old, and andrea thomas who lost her daughter, ashley, in 2018 to just half a pill. they join us all now. good morning. so wonderful of you on, again, i send my deepest condolences to all of you, and thank you for speaking out and perhaps helping other parents avoid the pain and loss that you have suffer. andrea, i'm going to start with you. tell me a little bit about andrea. >> about ashley. ashley was a 32-year-old woman that was a mother of a 7-year-old son in 2018 when she died, and like you said, ashley died from taking a half a pill. ashley was one of ten that the same distributer killed in 2017-2018. ask that's what we're looking at today in america. rachel: she's just beautiful. tell me how you're using this pain, this moment of suffering to make things better. because all three of you are
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doing things in your own way. >> well, ashley is one of hundreds of thousands of people that are dying from illicit fentanyl. this drug is purposefully made to be deceptive and highly addictive. and together across america hundreds of affected families are coming together for events across the country to reach the public and warn them about the dangers of illicit fentanyl. and we're also reaching out to the presidented today to ask him, we are pleading with him to address the national security crisis that fentanyl has brought into our country. as affected families, we can address can prevention, we can go out will and bring awareness, but we can't stop the flood of fentanyl that is coming into our country. rachel: you bring up a good point. >> it's a public health crisis, and we need him to address this. this is one of most -- this is the most serious thing that's going on right now in our country. rachel: right.
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>> people are inundated with issues, but it's hidden as people are vanishing every day. 300 # people a day we are losing to fentanyl. rachel: such a great point. we need to do something at the border to stop the flow. amy, tell us about alexander who was only 14 years old. >> alexander, like you said, was only 14 years old. he was a very curious kid, deeply, deeply wanted to learn about the world around him. very anxious about starting high school that fall, kept asking me every day that week, mom, do you think i'm going to like high school. he was a little historian, loved to learn about history, loved his grandmother very much, was very close with her. and unfortunately, you know, he got bored during the pandemic. his curiosity led him to experiment with drugs, and it got hold of him. twice he told us he needed help. we called the next day for help and that night he took pill that look his life.
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rachel: oh, dear. amy, what's your message to parents, and how are you trying to make what happened to you go wider? >> well, here's the thing, my message to parents is that we are living in a time where you do not have to have a traditional drug problem or suffer from substance abuse disorder to die from drugs. these kids, these 12 to 17-year-olds is the fastest growing demographic. they are dying because they are inexperienced users, they're being deceived to death by these drug dealers who they believe are their friends. these dealers are grooming these kids through social media channels, making hem peel important, filling that void -- making them feel important. so it is really important that people understand this can happen anywhere. and, you know, those that are suffering with substance abuse disorder are dying the same way my son died. they're also being deceived to death or given fentanyl under the wise of a different drug, and then it takes us down a
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really bad path. so they need help too. rachel: yes. and it's next level now because they're making it look like candy. i saw photos, i couldn't believe it. it's just, it's so crazy. lori, tell us about archie. >> i just wanted to thank you for being here today, and my heart goes out to the other mothers on the panel. no mother wants to wake up and have to find the news that their child has been taken. and this is something that is taking america. this is biggest crisis, i think, that we've ever faced as a nation. my son was 19 years old, and it was 2014. so this is really when fentanyl wasn't even talked about. it was a substance that was laced, and he had no idea that he was not going to wake up and that he was going to die. archie was beautiful, blue eyes, kind-hearted and full of life. and our family is devastated.
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my husband andy and my son augie, we deal every single day with our hearts broken. and we refuse to not tell others across america -- my plea today is not just to parents, it is to the public. this is something that we need to do as a country. we need to -- we have so much the dea is bringing in all of these, these, you know, drugs that they're stopping, what about the drugs that they're not stopping? rachel: right. >> that's getting into all of our family members. and it could be your nephew, your cousin. and i tell you, i started this campaign -- billboard campaign, it's in times square, and i did it with two other parents that lost their children along with 16 other faces. and i'm, you know, just because of this day it's in manhattan, i'm asking people to, please, go and look at that billboard on
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the corner of broadway and 43rd, west 43rd street, please, and look up. i ask the mayor, i ask a.j. duff, i didn't hear from anybody in new york, but we have to work together as a nation. and i'm pleading with our administration to do something. we have to do something about this border. it's need -- flooding. it's killing our families. we're losing our nation of young adults. rachel: yeah. your billboard is giant. those beautiful faces looking down at everybody in times square. there's a message on it, it says that fentanyl is the new f-word. it certainly is. we need our politicians who have opened our border to these drugs to take a look at all of your faces, grieving mothers, and also your beautiful children on that billboard and across this country. i thank you so much. the voice of mothers is powerful, and hopefully it will break into these hearts of our politicians. this is, as you say, the number one crisis in our country.
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thank you for joining us this morning. god bless you all. >> thank you. >> thank you. rachel: learn more at facing fentanyl now.org. i i want to thank andrea, lori and amy for being here. powerful message. and we, of course, remember all those lost to fentanyl today including alexander, ashley and archie, and we ask that they all rest in peace.
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♪ pete: tensions over taiwan rising as we learn new details about house speaker nancy pelosi's visit earlier month. chinese leader xi jinping reportedly pleaded with joe biden to put a stop to the trip. rachel: and a democrat member of the speaker's delegation is suggesting china may have interfered with her plane. ing. will: here to react, "sunday morning futures" an anchor omar ya bartiromo. -- maria bartiromo. quite tense. >> it's just incredible. good can morning to you, team e, great to see you. i have to say nancy pelosi did absolutely the right thing by going to taiwan after these threats from china. how could america not continue on its plans as the ccp out and out threatened that they would take down her plane? i'm not surprised that xi jinping told joe biden try to
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make this not happen, do whatever you can to stop this trip. and, by the way, the president did whatever he could to do just that by coming out and saying the military doesn't think it's a good idea. so, yeah, joe biden did what xi jinping wanted him to do. the speaker, however, kept on her plans because she probably recognized that there was no way america could come out looking strong if they changed plans after these massive threats by the ccp. look, i have no expectation of this meeting that is supposed to happen in november between joe biden and xi jinping. it will probably be more of the same where xi jinping orders joe biden around and tells him what policy he wants. after all, despite all of this bad behavior by the ccp which continues, look what joe biden has done. what kind of a policy is this, eliminating the china initiative where we were actually doing investigations of the hundreds of billions of dollars in intellectual property theft by the ccpsome now he's considering
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lifting the tariffs on china, no impact whatsoever from the fact that the ccp threatened to take down nancy pelosi's plane, the number two person in line for the presidenciesome and -- city? and there's no pushback on the fact that the chinese said no investigation of covid-19. okay, that's it. we have no evidence of joe biden even raising the issue, the origins of covid-19 likely came from a wuhan lack, but they -- lab, but they will not allow investigation there. also there's no evidence he ever brought up fentanyl. what a story you just brought us, rachel. all of those women. we're going to be the talking about all of that this morning, and we will also talk about the two systems of justice. what are they so afraid of with president trump? what was behind that raid on mar-a-lago, and why will they do anything to stop donald trump from running and becoming president again? and while all the while ignoring all of these fires that need to be put out across the country and the world; an economy
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teetering on recession, obviously, foreign policy that has put america in danger. we'll talk with senator marsha blackburn, the tennessee senate, as well as the lieutenant governor of virginia, winsome if serious is here, representative brian mast from florida, and joe pinion is trying to take out a career politician in chuck schumer. we're going to get his plans as well. the tension is rising ahead of the midterms, guys. we're on it this morning. rachel: maria bartiromo, "sunday morning futures," always must-see tv. thanks, maria. all right. will: chief meteorologist rick reichmuth is back on fox square, but yesterday he was up in the catskills at an alpaca farm. pete: he joins us now. rick? rick: i didn't bring back fans -- friends, but i brought back some gifts. you got some little bags with some stuff to keep warm this winter.
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rachel, you got an extra little gift in there because you got a puppy like mine. rachel: oh, slippers. i am in love with these. rick: rick: it's really good. socks. oh, yeah, will -- pete likes socks a little bit more. those are gifts from the farm, guys. will: pete p is liked a little bit more, rick. you've got to unveil it. [inaudible conversations] rick: this is for pete. pete: oh, my goodness. rachel: we're jealous. how did pete get this? rick: i think she thinks pete is more patriotic. pete: what is her name? rick: her name is anne marie, and i can't remember her -- [inaudible conversations] will: but it's alpacas.
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rick: it's beautiful. such incredible work. rachel: you sent me a video, and anne marie says i was her favorite, and then she gave thiy slippers. i'm not being ungrateful -- rick: even though you're her favorite, that's how much more patriotic she thinks pete is -- pete: you can use it to snuggle anytime. rachel: where can people buy this? rick: just google buck's brookalal a pacas. that one, you can't buy that. she made that specifically for pete. pete: wow. thank you so much. rachel: anne marie, thank you so much. i absolutely love this. alpaca is better than cashmere. rick: one year from now, pete, with the alpacas you're going to get, we all want gear. pete: you got it. thank you. rachel: pete, you're going to be making alpaca blankets. pete: i can't wait.
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will: after the media slammed him before putting his faith before covid restrictions, singer sean vote shares his fight in the new documentary, superspreader. >> it's fear, it's intimidation. courage is hard. principles, you have to see it -- [inaudible] christians are rising up. i'm telling you guys. this is not political, this is biblical. will: sean joins us now. welcome to "fox & friends." tell me about the documentary and about what went down for you in 2020. >> well, it was a wild time the, it really, really was. this documentary tells the untold story of really the let us worship movement and how a bunch of brave christians across america gathered together despite the lockdowns, and they
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deified all these tyrannical government orders, and they gathered to worship god. you know, spoiler alert, god moved. he showed up in the midst of it, people got healed, saved, delivered, and people got encouraged. they threw their is suicide pills down, they got freedom, and really in the midst of a dark time in american history, there was a spiritual awakening. will: tell me about that. why was it so important to e main open for houses of worship? >> well, it's important because houses of worship are essential, and, you know, we have 2,000 years of bib little call -- biblical history of worshiping through pandemic and persecution and hardship. even when things get dark canner, that's when the church needs to shine brighter. so in the midst of the trolling, the whole name, superspreader, came off of a hit piece article from rolling stone. they said we were superspreaders and if if -- and until be a
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miracle if no no one got sick. they got contact tracing, nobody got the virus, but no one has gotten covid that's been traced back to any one of our services. so they've been full of hope and life and joy, and it's something i felt america needed. will: i get the double intender. entendre. >> thanks so much for having me. god bless you guys. will: don't move, it's our end of summer extravaganza next. ♪ ♪ you can schedule service in just a few clicks. 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,
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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. ♪ we're a different kind of dentistry. one who believes in doing anything it takes to make dentistry work for your life. so we offer a complete exam and x-rays free to new patients without insurance - everyday. plus, patients get 20% off their treatment plan. we're on your corner and in your corner every step of the way. because your anything is our everything. aspen dental. anything to make you smile. book today at aspendental.com, walk in, or call 1-800-aspendental.
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it can stop irreversible joint damage. and rinvoq can leave skin clear or almost clear in psa. that's rinvoq relief. rinvoq can lower your ability to fight infections, including tb. serious infections and blood clots, some fatal; cancers, including lymphoma and skin cancer; death, heart attack, stroke, and tears in the stomach or intestines occurred. people 50 and older with at least one heart disease risk factor have higher risks. don't take if allergic to rinvoq as serious reactions can occur. tell your doctor if you are or may become pregnant. ask your rheumatologist about rinvoq relief. rinvoq. make it your mission. learn how abbvie could help you save on rinvoq. ♪ ♪ rachel: all morning long we've been celebrating the final day-- the it's not the final days of summer, but we're celebrating summer. will: our friends from if
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betty's bounces have brought with us this carnival to enjoy on fox square. pete: on the even look at this. rachel: we actually just talked about the moment this makes you sick is when you lose -- [laughter] pete: yeah. and we've all lost -- by the way, thank you to betty's bounces because you could have this in your backyard. rachel: can you imagine having that? amazing. ing. will: ring os, a little -- oh, duck can hunt? where's the gun? pete: games like this hit the bucket, it looks easy. rick: yeah, it's impossible. i was trying, no way. pete: you know you're going to lose at the carnival games, but you still play. rick: because they're going to make fun of you. pete: embarrassing. i'm not even getting it straight. look at that. rachel: all right. rick: you know what's great at a carnival? cotton candy. come over here, guys. pete: cotton the candy is the
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best. rick: obviously, we have to turn everything into a competition the here. rachel: always. rick: so, pete, you're going to start making coton candy -- will: we need instructions. if. >> when it starts coming out, go around the edge. pete: go around the edge? rick: all right, here's the rules. everybody, 10 seconds, how much cotton candy -- is it working? >> it's working, but it has to heat up. will: uh-oh. rick: how many seconds for heating up? >> 10-a 15. rick: go. pete: there's nothing in there. >> have to wait for the cotton the candy. rick: 5, 4 -- nothing's coming out. >> it's starting. pete: it started? i don't see any cotton candy. oh, there it comes. rachel:
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rachel: wow. pete: oh, i see. >> 4, 3, 2, 1 -- [inaudible conversations] rachel: rick, you're taking my place. will: rick, are you counting for me? rick: you're done in 2 the seconds. pete: you know what? have a great sunday, e go to church. rachel: bye, everybody. whoo! ♪ ♪ maria: good sunday morning, everyone. welcome to "sunday morning futures," i'm maria bartiromo. today, gone fishing. 150 days and counting, the number of days joe biden has spent away from the if white house and in his home state of delaware as ron klain and susan rice take the lead. then, tensions are building ahead of the midterm elections now 78 days away. democrats are still trying to take down donald trump and
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