tv FOX and Friends Saturday FOX News August 27, 2022 3:00am-7:00am PDT
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>> kat: we don't have time. bald eagle in the tsa. i'm going to the airport after this. i have phobia of the tsa. just because like they can touch you wherever and there doesn't even have to be a reason. but if i saw a bird like that, i think i would make it. >> judge jeanine: that's it for us. see you back here on ♪ ♪
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alert, blackout pages of the affidavit used to search mar-a-lago have been released. will: some details we knew but also a whole lot more questions. kevin is live in washington with more. >> reporter: a lot of questions. let's be clear, last night we said with good reason that the affidavit would be heavily redacted and present uncorroborated allegations presented in such a way as to frame the argument the former president was up to something by having those documents at mar-a-lago and we got a look at the affidavit and there's not a ton of detail because as you said it is really read acted heavily. half the pages were read acted. a lot of sharpy. the fbi believed there might be evidence of obstruction, the
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criminal investigation began after the national archives sent a referral to the doj in february. president biden insists he is not sure if the former president had the right to declassify all the materials at his home. >> did he declassify them all? >> president biden: declassify everything in the world, i can do it all? come en. i'm not going to comment because i don't know the details. i will let the justice department take that. >> reporter: critics argue nothing that has been disclosed so far rises to the level of needing to treat a former president in this way. >> they do not have probable cause in them. it's not sufficient based on what we know to justify the search warrant. if you have to take 38 pages to
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convince a judge there is probable cause you may have a problem with your case. >> reporter: donald trump is reacting on truth social saying in part affidavit heavily redacted, nothing mentioned on nuclear, total public relations subterfuge by the fbi and doj or close working relationship regarding document turnover. he had this which a lot of people thought was creative. make america great again, heavily rejected. the trump legal team resubmitted its paperwork asking the court to appoint a special master, the third party, eileen cannon could then appointed to oversee the doj handling of the evidence. we await her decision.
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will: let's bring in matthew whitaker to give us insight on this. what do we make of this? it tells us mostly things we already knew, where are we? >> reporter: one of the biggest challenges is that we haven't moved the ball far down the field from where we were. there is a desire and it should be required based on what doj has done previously for transparency and merrick garland owes the american people more than they are showing. i'm concerned because they released this affidavit somehow they are off the hook from providing more transparency. doing this search warrant 90 days before the 2022 election and resting on that on the attitude we can't talk anymore
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about this case because it is an ongoing investigation does put their thumb on the scale, very concerning to me and donald trump is right about the nuclear issue. we've seen these leaks out of the department of justice that have colored this case, none of it is supported in the affidavit. we need the department of justice to come clean and explain to the american people why this step was taken when it appears this had been meandering between the archives, the fbi and the trump office for 18 months, doesn't make 18 -- months after the release of the affidavit. carley: rachel: what anything force them to release more information? they released this, it is all redacted, no probable cause, what could be done at this point? >> reporter: the only thing that could add pressure to the department of justice to
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provide transparency is for a judge or district court judge who supervises him in the south florida to put pressure, to say what you are providing isn't enough transparency or to have it come from the top which president biden, to engage in this case or suggest anything is wrong about this case. will: if anything we have gleaned from this affidavit in my estimation is how much it relied on the concept of classification. you are the perfect guy to ask. i'm a little surprised. it is my understanding and i want you to correct any misgivings that the president of the united states is essentially the determining factor of classification. that he can at any time at the trump camper made this argument, declassify anything. it it is and administered a
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function designed for those under him in the executive branch. is that true? >> exactly right. two things at play. is it that executive power including classification, he was elected by the people and pretty obvious statutes that do not include the president in classification crimes for example. includes lower officers, contractors but the president of the united states for the most part, that is why possibly the department of justice mentioned obstruction in this affidavit. there is no committal case to be made against donald trump. he did nothing wrong. the more we learn about this case the weaker it gets. all it was was the national archives wanted the fbi to get these documents. pete: there are those who hear
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the conversation i just had and say president biden made this estimation, you can't just go i declassify everything or think it in your head or portray it with your actions. is there a procedure that somehow supersedes the constitutional power invested in the president that he must follow to declassify that donald trump might not have followed? >> president obama and president bush both set up and ability to not follow those regulations. and exec of order that was in place for donald trump. it would be imprudent to wave a wand and declassify everything under the sun to president biden's point, donald trump declassified certain types of documents, that is certainly effective and would declassify those documents. will: great perspective, thank you so much. we are fighting about paperwork.
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rachel: the national archives used the fbi, i think it is the other way around, the fbi used the national archives as their cover. you have the national archives saying up against donald trump, had its use said has the power to declassify this. they are the same people, in the constitution, who trusts these bureaucrats, and interesting tweet yesterday or the day before the administrative state, these bureaucrats can never trump a sitting president. will: not within the executive branch. there's a separate action of power, legislative and judicial, when it comes to classification, all entirely within the executive branch so
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you are right, national archives do not set higher than the president of the united states in the classification laws of the executive branch. rachel: unelected bureaucrats. pete: you have seen a general warrant, open opportunity to search anything related to the trump presidency. you talk to folks about them. if you look for one crime and find another you are allowed to pursue the next crime and that is described as a fishing expedition in the more documents we see -- still had, facebook ceo mark zuckerberg says his company helped suppress the hunter biden laptop story thanks to a warning from the fbi. a former intel official says this could be considered election interference and we break it down. will: janice dean is in sarasota springs for the traverse stakes next. ♪
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on our team, you should be on high alert, a lot of russian propaganda in the 2016 election, 5 to 7 days, being determined whether it was false. the distribution was decreased but people were allowed to share and consume it. >> did they say you need to be on guard with that story? >> i don't remember if it was that specifically but it fit the pattern. will: it is an absolutely stunning story that in my estimation should lead every news program at every hour that the fbi went to the largest social media platform on the planet and told them to in essence if not directly censor the story that could swing an election, did swing at an election, look at any paul, how
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they would have voted in the united states over the hunter biden new york post story. you just heard mark zuckerberg use loose language about we turned down the distribution. that you could still share but no one will see it. and then the question is was it tied to that story? don't think so. i don't recall that story specifically but it fit the profile. rachel: the casualness with which they talk about overturning an election essentially, changing of an election, the interference of our government, our police, federal police into an election. this is as you said should be the number one story and there is polling that shows after the election in november there were polls taken, many people didn't know about this story for obvious reasons as were asked if you did no, i wouldn't vote for joe biden or wouldn't vote at all, 10%, 12%.
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pete: zuckerberg amid facebook, the big bosses big tech censorship. that's not the news today. the news is that the fbi requested it. will: the other part of the news we learn from ron johnson and whistleblowers the fbi declined to pursue or look into the hunter biden laptop, evidence of criminality that hunter biden hasn't denied a, it is sitting in their lap, they are not investigating it but what they are doing is going to facebook and saying be on the lookout for russian disinformation, former intel leaders who wrote that letter saying it is russian disinformation so you need to suppress it. with 10 seconds of research they know isn't disinformation, they can confirm the e-mails on the laptop. that is what john radcliffe on tucker last night, the director
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of national intelligence, things have turned around at the fbi. >> i was surprised to hear mark zuckerberg say that. what the fbi told him was the opposite of what my conversations with the fbi director at the time were about. it is election interference to the extent these allegations are true that fbi agents were knowingly putting bad information out there, absolutely. the troubling part about this is the fbi is the primary domestic authority for enforcing election security and making sure people don't interfere with the american voters in american elections and if they are engaged in it they have a problem and that is why so many americans mistrust the fbi at the current time. >> give us a statement, the fbi routinely notifies
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private-sector entities including social media providers of potential threat information to defend against threats but the fbi cannot direct companies to take action on information. really quick, want to know as the fbi was interfering with this election meanwhile they also put in prison people who protested interference in this election and continue to. probably expending more energy on that than they are in getting to the bottom of what was in that laptop. wears the forensic of the big guy getting 10%? >> the first story we talked about at the top of the hour to this one, what are they targeting? they are targeting donald trump, hunter biden and hillary clinton, business dealings and bleach been get no examination. will: this was discussed on real time with bill maher, it revealed to us how in the dark so many in this country remain.
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>> answer this question. the question was it appropriate to bury the hunter biden, he is saying that is what they did as what they did, they buried the hunter biden story before the election because they were like we can't risk having the election thrown to trump. we will tell them after the election. >> we know that is what they did? >> of course. >> you know for a fact? >> you only watch msnbc. pete: it is illustrative. i think if we took a poll, you said this, american said if they knew this information, 75% said it could have affected their vote. rachel: that was a recent poll. that's a significant chunk of the country that still don't know the validity of the story. this story is huge.
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the fbi interfered in the 2020 election. rachel: truly police state kind of actions. it should be the number one story. >> it only -- pete: you talk to people on a regular basis the believe donald trump is a russian agent. they don't care. the narrative is more important, specifics, the retraction on page 825, an interesting, hunter biden, the son of a president, not significant. rachel: it is not just corruption of hunter biden. if the laptop is true and now we know the laptop is true the information in the laptop suggests our president could be compromised by the communist chinese government, our number one enemy. this is not just the money story. this is a story of the highest
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level of being compromised. practically treasonous. will: the best story a journalist could follow unless you work here or somewhere else they are not interested in won't look into it. rachel: we will turn to some other headlines. a teen is in custody accused of savagely beating and after eddie off teddy new york police officer. put the officer in a coma with fractured skull and brain bleeding. 's family says he is awake but remains in critical condition. three teens are suspected in the attack and the teen in custody of facing assault and robbery charges. wall street tanking yesterday with the dow jones finishing the day down more than a thousand points. the plunge coming after federal reserve chair jerome powell says the interest rate would go up as the nation struggles with soaring inflation. that is the biggest draw in two months, the s&p also tumbling
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three points, the biggest drop since june. that inflation is sitting americans hard as a new report shows 20 million households are behind on household energy bills, that's going to get worse as the winter -- >> the inflation reduction act, we were good to go. rachel: it is worth talking about. speaking of climate prince harry raising eyebrows for rolling up in his electric vehicle to take the private jet from california to colorado. the royal climate activist was heading to aspen for one day charity game of polo. will knows about polo and sent a separate range rover to pick up his polo and previously flies private security. will: your electric car to your jet, like a salad before your big mac.
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pete: and send your big mac to get your golf clubs. will: we are no stranger to horse race. rachel: we have one thing down, the fashion. janice dean is live at the traverse stakes in saratoga springs where the hats and horses are top-notch. what do you have? you look gorgeous. >> janice: we made a detour to come to encounter in saratoga springs, the owner of this beautiful boutique and christine who designs these amazing hats, i have a predicament, so you need to show me what we've got and how to look good. show me the way. >> you look great. and that goes great with that hat.
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this is something to think about. we love blue. i love this. >> it is very feminine. >> janice: saratoga, the traverse is saratoga's derby. >> we will say yes to that and then we have, look at this lovely dress with all the fruit. with this. >> this is the trend this year. a big hot trend. >> janice: for saratoga or in general? >> in general. the people are telling us it is a good fascinate her. >> janice: which address should i wear? the pink? the blue? the fruits with the fascinateor hat?
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i don't know what we are going to do. this is a big predicament but i love a predicament we have here. we will head over to the saratoga race track and see what outfit i picked. how fun is that? i love you ladies. will: i have a strong opinion about this. not that one. >> janice: you don't like this one? will: i think the pink. >> janice: we are feeling the pink. pete: i like allowed one. rachel: i like the blue. maybe we will do a poll on social media. pink or green. thank you. pete: looks phenomenal.
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still ahead, president biden announced his billion dollars student loan handout, how much it could cost you even if you paid off your loans. will: a christmas classic. >> you will shoot your eye out, kid. will: a christmas story is back. you can see ralphi.e. and the rest of the gang in a brand-new sql. ♪ when hurting feet make you want to stop, it's dr. scholl's time. our custom fit orthotics use foot mapping technology to give you personalized support, for all-day pain relief. find your relief in store or online.
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grant, for tens of millions of americans making under $125,000. this is a game changer. will: president biden kicking off his midterm push, became himself a big pat on the back for his newly announced student loan forgiveness plan but it doesn't come without a cost in dollars and in human cost. joining us is spencer hudson who is using the g.i. bill, the benefits here in to cover college expenses and kyle welch, accounting professor at george washington university. we have the student perspective and the professor perspective. let me start with you, spencer. you earned the benefit you are using to go to college. many of your peers will take on mountains of debt that others are expected to pay for. >> i wanted to clarify using my father's g.i. bill, it is not mine. will: that is my fault, still earned, a benefit your family accrued, points still taken.
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when you look at that, the debt and loan forgiveness? >> it is not really fair. doesn't help a lot of people. it is not fair to people who decided against college because of debt, not fair to people who are working their way through college currently, not fair to people who have recently been able to pay off their loans. only helps a very small subset of people because this isn't going to be repeated, this is a 1-time thing in order to gain votes in the midterms. this is going to be a yearly thing. will: you are not just a professor, you are an accounting professor, break this down. who to does this help and who does this hurt? >> it is funny hearing about this because this is kind of like the equivalent of bringing
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a sixpack of beer to an aa meeting. everyone in education has a consistent far on this and that is the cost of education, no one will argue the costs are where they should be. rising costs in education are not helped by handing out checks like this. talk to any economist, anyone familiar with the numbers, they are being inauthentic saying it doesn't have a negative impact on inflation. this is bad and is not going to improve the problem. we have universities the keep increasing costs and haven't changed anything, haven't evolved with the times. they have more information on your phone than any university out there. the problem is they haven't evolved. people understand that and others think they write checks
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for these things. pete: the massive endowment of these universities, why shouldn't they be held accountable for the debt their students accrue as opposed to taxpayers? >> another aspect of the problem that is really bad, you get a big mac with one patty you go back and say order a big mac, this might not resonate with some people but it eliminates unhappy customers because it says the government will take care of it so if you have a problem at a school, and you don't go and fix that degree and that school and complain about it because the government took away it doesn't change the problem. we need people to change the problems. instead of looking at the end of the arm for a helping hand, it is not the way it should be. universities need to evolve and change how we need universities to act more like amazon, cosco,
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walmart instead of the monarchy. pete: actual business with customers. you said this is about midterm elections, you think peers who got this loan forgiveness will say i need to vote for more free stuff? >> maybe. i'm hoping they will have the foresight to realize this is a 1-time thing and chances are won't go through. if it does it hurts far more people than it helps. everybody who decided to be fiscally responsible and go to community college, everybody who went to college locally, everybody who is working through college, everybody who recently paid off their debt, slap in the face to them, we willingly know what we were
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doing, k taking out loans, we all know what we are doing, we are taking out loans and it is not the governments job to pay for everything. we know what we are doing. pete: we are taking out loans and we know we have to pay them back. i will channel your dad and say make your bed, spencer. i can see it. all right, take care. spencer, later in the show, will and i are going to go off the wall in the government's involvement in higher education. still ahead the doj releasing the mar-a-lago rate affidavit but half of it was redacted so what did we learn? miranda divine is here to break it down. california wants to end sales of gas powered cars by 2035. a utopian future just 13 years
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earlier in the year, did americans get any answers? let's ask miranda divine. good morning. here is your affidavit, 21 of 38 pages, heavily redacted. what did you learn? >> we didn't learn anything to justify this monumental depart from precedent which was to invade, read a former president's home and rifled through the first lady's closet and maybe the reason in the redacted material seems to be legal to an fro ongoing about the presidential records act. not a vast criminal act, if there is some sort of top-secret material that is
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detrimental to america's national security, the worst way of saying that is to keep on for the doj and fbi to keep leaking to the new york times and washington post about wild suppositions about what may or may not be in those boxes the fbi carried away from mar-a-lago. donald trump claims he declassified everything. devon nunez is saying this is all to do with the russia collusion hoax and the fact that donald trump wants to ensure that material is preserved and history realizes how the fbi was weapon eyes against his administration and crippled his presidency. i think it is very disturbing, there doesn't seem to have been a good reason to take this extraordinary step and we see all over the fbi is targeting
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trump people. we have trump's former personal attorney, rudy giuliani was rated by the fbi in the early morning, his devices seized. a year later they were returned to him and the new york times was told, not him, the new york times was told there would be no indictment on him and they spied on him for two years and it is extraordinary and other people, james o'keefe also rated, no charges. victoria tens ling and georgia jennifer, attorneys, rated, no charges. it cost people enormous amounts of money coming enormous stress, damage to their reputations. why is the fbi doing this? is it to intimidate? is it to unethically survey a people to surveilled trump and continue spying, that has gone on since the beginning of his presidency?
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will: i want to ask about this. you've been all over the hunter biden story, mark zuckerberg has told joe rogan the fbi directed censorship of, quote, russian disinformation, your thoughts? >> he sort of stumbled over saying, asked mark zuckerberg was this to go down the hunter biden laptop story, and in the days and weeks before we published that story, the fbi knew had the laptop since december 2019 done nothing and mark zuckerberg was not being truthful when he pretended it was twitter's false, facebook
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was the first one to suppress our laptop story the morning we published a few hours after we published the communications manager, andy stone, democratic operative came on twitter and said basically to stop the spread of our story pending fact checking which was done within 5 to 7 days but wasn't told to anybody for 22 months. facebook and mark zuckerberg left that claude over the new york post for two years. will: it would be interesting to find out about their credibility going forward. great to talk to you this morning. still ahead, arizona border patrol agents seizing on a fentanyl in one car to kill 42 million people. why are we seeing so much of this deadly drug across our southern border, we break that down coming up next.
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pills, enough to kill 42 million people. this, the latest major bust as the deadly drug continues to pour across the southern border killing tens of thousands every year. what really is fentanyl? why are dealers cutting other drugs? eric sandberg is here to explain. great to have you. we have been discussing this a lot. why would you cut drugs with fentanyl when fentanyl could kill your customer? aren't drugs addictive enough? >> it keeps them addicted and keep them coming back. we have a big math problem in san francisco and when you cut it with fentanyl, people feel better, they have enough to make them more hooked on the drug they are taking.
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it is an effective way of keeping your customer base. if they die, there's always more coming to take their place. it is a brutal crime, and a brutal business they are in. neil: rachel: so much callousness and disregard for human life. here is some statistics i thought our viewers might be interested in. 60% of all drug deaths, we are talking about serious stuff and look at the numbers of deaths in 2021, 72,000 people died from synthetic opioids. let's go to weed. the highest levels of drug use and hallucinogens on a record. some people are blaming it on the pandemic saying kids were
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locked down, young people lockdown and using a lot of drugs. i have to believe a lot of this is the normalization of drugs through legalization of weed in so many of these states. >> i one hundred% agree. it has become normalized. it is part of our culture. it is okay to do it. the point is the cannabis that we have today is far stronger than yesteryear. looking at what was a benign party drug is pretty serious and a lot of young people are taking it and brains are developing and it is not healthy. rachel: you see trucks go by and it is like you are buying a taco. it's not the same thing. and the dummies make it seem like candy. it is disturbing to parents and
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scary and you talk to rehab counselors they will tell you what is a gateway drug. is that what your research tells you as well? >> definitely. younger and younger people are taking it. this is the norm, what people do these days and they always have. this isn't something brand-new. the problem is it is stronger and if you do get it from an unreliable source, this is something we are seeing in san francisco, you get it on the street and get it from a friend you don't know where it is coming from. this is something we are seeing over and over again, a toxic mix and kids are suffering, adults are suffering. rachel: making it harder. president biden's student loan
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handout just the latest crazy plan pushed by his administration, does the president think this is monopoly money? we go off the wall next our to explain the real cost. ♪ ♪ ♪ voltaren. the joy of movement. ♪ - [narrator] every three minutes, a child is born with a cleft condition. without surgery, some will die. those who do survive face extreme challenges. operation smile works to heal children
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people with plaque psoriasis, or psoriatic arthritis, are rethinking the choices they make. like the splash they create. the way they exaggerate. or the surprises they initiate. otezla. it's a choice you can make. otezla is not an injection or a cream. it's a pill that treats differently. for psoriasis, you can achieve clearer skin with otezla. for psoriatic arthritis, otezla is proven to reduce joint swelling, tenderness, and pain. and the otezla prescribing information has no requirement for routine lab monitoring. don't use if you're allergic to otezla. otezla can cause serious allergic reactions. it may cause severe diarrhea, nausea, or vomiting. otezla is associated with an increased risk of depression.
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tell your doctor if you have a history of depression or suicidal thoughts or if these feelings develop. some people taking otezla reported weight loss. your doctor should monitor your weight and may stop treatment. upper respiratory tract infection and headache may occur. tell your doctor about your medicines and if you're pregnant or planning to be. otezla. show more of you. something stronger than i'm used to ♪ >> great song, my brother loves that song. mammoth beach, new jersey, year of our lord, 2022. second to last summer weekend.
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it is winding down, hit the beach if you can, hit the lake if you can, go camping. go crazy. summer is not over yet. rachel: i saw new jersey beach. i've never been to a new jersey beach yet. i have a pool so i don't go anywhere. i'm a home body. >> two weeks ago they brought out snakes for pete and a chicken for rachel. the rats are coming. if i russelled those bushes right there, ragai raccoons areg out. >> i love that you're ever vigilant two weeks in a row. three duns -- three
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dozen pages of the affidavit. will: kevin cork is live in washington. good morning, kevin. >> good morning, guys. presidents of both parties have long battled with the national archives over the pace of re-patuation of presidential materials -- re-pate reigns repf presidential mate materials andr have they use add criminal probe to get into the documents till now. we got a chance to see the affidavit and as you've pointed out throughout the morning, half the pages were in fact redacted but the fbi believes there may be evidence of obstruction. that investigation pointed out began after the archives allegedly sent a referral to the doj back in february. as for what he thought with the declassification of materials found at mar-a-lago, the current
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occupant of 1600 pennsylvania avenue, joe biden smirked and offered his famous, come on, man. >> he had just declassified all the documents? >> i want to just know i've declassified everything in the world. i can do it all. come on. i'm not going to comment. i don't know the detail. i don't even want to know. i'll let the justice department take that. >> critics argue nothing, nothing at least so far seems to support this level of aggression toward a former commander in chief. junior high school un-redacted parts do not have probable cause in them and it's just suspicion based on what we know and if you have to take 38 pages for probable cause, you may have a problem with your case. >> as for the former president
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himself, he was on truth social yesterday and tweeted this or posted this: truth this. not sure how they say it. affidavit heavily redacted and nothing mentioned on nuclear. total public relation by the fbi and doj or our close working relationship regarding document turnover. then there was a statement people really enjoyed this, make america great again. heavily redacted of course. now, all that's not to overlook the obvious, which is, yes, there's been this ongoing fight over the right to take their time in returning documents to the archives and the truth is most out going president haves that battle and we learned late last night the trump legal team resubmitted its paperwork asking the court to submit a neutral third party that could be appointed to oversee the handling of all the evidence and we continue to await her decision on that.
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guys. will: thank you for that report, kevin. >> it was about a week ago that the former director of the cia re-tweeted the publisher of the financial times. the publisher of the financial times said throughout his career, he'd never cover add movement as nihilistic and dangerous as today's republican partim not the taliban and most dangerous move of his career is today's republican party. that was re-tweeted by the former director of the cia and said i agree. now there's the latest iteration of this where painting your political opponents essentially as worse than al-qaida is par for the course among democrats. president biden saying make america great again. and the philosophy is fascism. what we're seeing now is either the beginning or the death nail
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of extreme maga philosophy. it's not just trump it's the entire philosophy that underpins i'm going to say something like semi-fascism. rachel: and the press secretary was asked about this and here's what she had to say about it. >> look, i was very clear when laying out and defining when maga republicans have done and you look at definition of fascism and you think about what they're doing in attacking our democracy and taking away our freedoms and taking away our rights and voting rights and that's what that is. it's very clear. rachel: isn't it interesting to hear the party of lockdowns. lecturing republicans about taking away our freedom, it's fascinating. will: yeah, is it possible to be a semi-fascist? it's like being semi-pregnant.
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you can't go halfway on fascism. they want to say fascism. he can't say it yet and they focus group this phrase ultra maga or magism and there's a lot of kids that are excited to be on tv out here. so this is campaign season and these are the beginning of campaign attacks. when you hear her talk, the overturning of roe v wade is good and having a border open, it's a good thing. they're characterizing their political opponents as enemies and they're coming out and saying it. you maga folks are basically fascist. fascist. rachel: the same time they're using and weaponnizing our federal law enforcement and turning us into a place state. will: no doubt, listen to michael hayden as you listen to the president of the unit. this is what they think of their
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opponents in america. rachel: it's an election strategy and a way to go -- will: i think it's more terrifying than an election strategy. you have government agencies, not just the fbi but the cia targeting people, in between elections. rachel: i agree 100% but if you watch cnn, they say we're going to turn the page on inflation and talk about democracy and then taking away our freedom and abortion, exactly. there's an election strategy behind it but i don't dispute with you how dangerous this is. pete: joe biden said he's going to pass through executive action this week granting $10,000 at a minimum of student loan debt relief out there and he says it's not going to hurt the economy or cause inflation. listen.
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>> only 10% take advantage of it and not going to cause them going to be freed up and start to buy a business and things to be done and absolutely fascinating and some of the folks talking about this big spending and they're the same people that got $158,000 in ppp money including what's his name? the woman that believes in -- anyway. a whole lot of republicans. the very people criticizing it and it's just not, it's a good thing and free as lot of people up and it's going to grow the economy. pete: plenty of democrats got huge ppp loans that were forgiven and shouldn't have been. rachel: agree. pete: that's why there's been massive backlash unexpected by
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the white house and not just amongst republicans and independents and other democrats and fiscally doesn't make sense and sends all the wrong incentives and picks winners over losers and effectively most people don't go to college. if they took out loans and they've had 2.5 years of pauses on the loans during covid-19 to begin to build a plan to pay them back. other people made other life decisions and i'm not going to college because i don't want to incur that debt. i'm going the other track. will: what about the people with credit card debt out there. rachel: or medical debt. will: credit cards are very important things and maybe they're paying their grocery bills or medical bills. lots of kinds of debt out there. pete: or young liberal educated college folks are the new base of the democratic party and multiracial working republican party is not of interest to the white house. rachel: to me it's a sign they literally have been given up on the working class as a party and thrown all their eggs in the
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basket of the elites and those who are college educated and that's the new basis of the democrat party. just a personal example, we help our kids with our college and we make them have skin in the game and have student loans and her new husband they've been marry add couple of months and paying for their education and every summer he worked construction to pay off his loans and he has up-to-date and paid off his loans and she did not and she'll get $10,000 and he who worked construction all summer gets nothing. will: why work hard and pay off your debt? you've been told you're a fool. rachel: there's no reason why any daughter will get $100 but she will. sorry, vida. pete: they'll continue to have hyperinflation and continue to issue student debt. is it a one-time thing? will: they're saying it's a one
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time thing. it what about the new generation of kids that have student debt. pete: what about my forgiveness? he got some. don't i? will: what's the next pathway of immigrants. do they keep doing this. rachel: it's a massive payoff to universities and specifically to the administrations that are, you know, there are three times more administrators and diversity people running our universities than there are professors and there's a payoff to the people who are basically indoctrinating and producing the next wave of democrats. pete: they're counting on the next wave of democrats that have been fully indoctrinated. will and i go off the wall in 20 minutes and break down the educational cartel in america today. will: monopoly style. top hats involved and maybe a cane. rachel: i love this. pete: it's classy. wouldn't be the first time.
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pull some old footage. not so old actually. we're starting with a fox news alert, illegals from texas arriving in new york city in the last hour with about 50 men and women stepping off the bus at port authority. illegal migrants and sources say another bus is expected later this morning and governor -- texas governor greg abbott sent over 1500 illegal myo migrants m the southern border trying to control the soaring border crisis and go to other states that declare themselves sanctuary cities and should make them very happy. rachel: a lot of single male adults. pete: a 74-year-old woman getting sucker punched on wednesday. the victim walking on a sidewalk when the suspect punched her square in the face to fall on the ground and later taken to the hospital and reportedly in stable condition. the attack was completely
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unprovoked. washington dc ma mayor no shotso school postponed till january. she said unvaccinated kids over the age of 12 had no option to learn. her policy would be delayed to "reduce the number of students excluded from school". that decision was coming just after the vaccine mandate for dc city workers was struck down. time for the fox digital wiz quiz. we're going to test our canine with a hot dog day. rachel: dog day? fill: i did read that wrong? dog day? will: wasn't yesterday international dog day. rachel: yes.
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pete: true or false, dalmations are born white and their spots appear later in life. rachel: i'm saying true based on the movie. will: i'm a big dog guy so i say true. rachel: i tried to think back to the cartoon, 101 dalmations and i don't recall them being all white. pete: true or false, every dog's nose print is unique like our fingerprints are uniquetous. rachel: false. will: true. pete: i'm saying true. it makes sense. their paws probably not. okay. next, true or false, puppies are born with eyes and ears closed as protection against premature exposure to light and sound. eyes and ears closed.
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l. l: i'm going true. pete: i'm going false so i have a shot at the win. i feel like maybe crusty but not closed. will: they're closed for sure. rachel: i believe the eye part but not the ear part. i'm going with you, pete, and saying false. pete: dang it. rachel: never bet against will with dogs. pete: greyhounds can be cheetahs in a race. rachel: false. pete: false. will false. pete: come on. what distance? what distance? that's the key here. will: we race greyhounds. pete: i'm calling fake news on that one. i need clarification before the show is over. what kind of distance? i bet greyhounds can beat a cheetah over a longer distance but not shorter distance. cheetahs wear out. i'm telling you. greyhounds can go around that track a lot.
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will: i'll take the cheetahs on short distance but greyhounds on a longer distance. check back in at saratoga springs where fox news is standing by with the sight and sounds. pete: hi, janice. >> good morning. it's traverse red and i didn't see the size and dress that pete liked but we loved this dress. this is the dress we picked. thank you to christine moore for the beautiful hat. we're here at 153rd travis stakes happening today and i got a taste of the sights and sounds yesterday. have a look. this is the track where the horses race in the 153rd travis stakes happening today in saratoga springs.
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how long have you been coming to saratoga? >> since 1978. >> how many time haves you been here? >> too many to count. >> since covid, this is the first time we've been back. >> are you from? >> rhode island. >> all of you? >> all of us. >> oh my gosh, is this the first travis you've been to? >> he's been to traverse i've been to. >> since about '93. >> do you guys get together and go to the race s? >> we go anywhere. >> we go to churchhill once in a while. >> i've been there. >> i know, we watch you. >> we went to the preakness last year. this is way better. >> why? >> it's up close and personal. >> what do you love about it? >> the atmosphere, the people. >> what is it about this track that you think is so special? >> the history. i mean secretariate got beat
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here . there's all kinds of history. >> who will win? >> cyber knife. >> how much winning will come down? >> not going to tell you cause then my wife will know. >> did i ask you who you'll bet on? >> i don't know yet. >> got to get a picture for our friend. >> he's saying this. >> and they're off. >> hold on one second. >> you got to try the water. coming up from the ground. >> it's supposed to bring you good luck. >> don't know if it does but that's the story. i hope this makes me 20 years younger tomorrow. i'll make-a-wish because it's good luck and down the hatch.
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not as bad as i thought. i've tasted worse tequila. i think i'm done. we're doing this again next year. right from the horse's mouth. oh, hi, we're back. this is the place to be obviously saratoga springs. it's one of my favorite places on the face of the earth. i had one of my first dates with my husband here 19 years ago this weekend so obviously this is a place in my heart, and we're going to be covering it all morning long on "fox & friends" and 153rd traverse stakes and rich strike is here and you know how that happened at the kentucky derby. if you want to place your bets. text me. >> the dress is already a winner. >> absolute winner. >> huge winner. >> all right, thanks, janice. coming up, put the brakes on gas powered garmins. cars.
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>> we'll be the first jurisdiction in the world to require all new cars to be sold to be alternative fuel cars. pete: golden state vowing to phase out gas powered vehicles by 2035. the electric car is $20,000 more than the standard car with it million power stations needed to meet that demand. joining now is the california senate man who left for the great state of texas, chuck devore. great to see you, chuck. 2035 no more gas powered vehicles for sale. >> well, will, i don't think it'll happen because the costs are higher and when the costs start to be born by actual voters, there's likely going to be a revolt and there's a lot of hidden costs that people don't
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think about. for example, california's grid is already overburdened today and you put 2 million new electric vehicles on the road every year and not only will that incur a cost of about $300 million a more for the average rate payer and it'll put a lot more strain on that california grid. i don't think they can handle it or prepared for it, will. will: how is that electricity produced? it's produced with fossil fuels. meanwhile by the way -- >> comes out of a plug in the wall. will: i forgot. and probably a windmill. 20 million people are behind on their energy bills and you talk about this when it comes to california, a strained electrical grid and phasing out gas vehicles, everybody plugging in, how do you avoid brownouts,
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blackouts, a grid that's sh shut down? >> will, these problems are connected and the reason why so many million americans are behind on electric city payments and they're going up by more than the rate of inflation only part of it with the russian prices of ukraine and soaring prior to ukraine and because of biden's energy transition and they're imposing higher costs on the fossil fuel industry and makes it more difficult and expensive to take oil and gas out of the ground here in america. that's number one, number two the other thing that's happening is the more wind and solar you get on the grid, the more expensive the grid gets because you need more expensive backup supplies to be standing around for when it's not windy and it's not summer. huge battery farms and gas plants that remain idle for the day and operate for a few hours
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to bring that grid up. these cost a lot of money, l. will: they do. they cost money for the average american. chuck, great to talk to you this morning. >> thank you. will: coming up, the doj releases a heavily redacted version of the search affidavit and the trump team is ready to hit back. jason chavitz joining us next.
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probable cause for the doj? >> yeah, there's three very problematic things with the affidavit. for me, the first is that it shows that this was about getting stuff and not about national security. really national security is the only thing that i think most americans would have bought as a potential reason to go into the president's home. there's no reason the nags gnat security was imminently or future at risk. secondly, i don't see probable cause for a crime. the crimes that the fbi is charging or thinking about here can't be committed accidently, they can't be committed mistakenly, and the fbi knows that trump believes he declassified these documents and these documents are his. so even if he's mistaken about that or even if he could be mistaken about that, that's not enough to charge something under the espionage act and charging willingly and third, this goes
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to will's point from earlier is that i do have concerns about our democracy here and the constitution vets the power of the executive power in the president and not a bureaucrat and this is a vendetta to get stuff. joe biden doesn't need the documents to do his job, but because he's a bureaucrat that gets his self-worth from people following his directions. rachel: yeah, i never thought bureaucrats at the national archives could have the power to trigger the raid of an elected president and in his home and with, you know, just full access of his home and hiss wife's bedroom and closet. who knew the bureaucrats had this kind of power. >> yeah, i know. the other thing as you were saying is another reason we know this is not about national security is the ark vies was going to be okay -- archivist going to be okay with the
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president's lawyer fedexes documents as if how fedex is somehow safer as a secret service protected building overseen by a man responsible for the national security for four years, where we were very secure. rachel: yeah, in the original -- right after the raid, made it sound like there were nuclear codes or nuclear issue, nothing in the affidavit that alludes to that that we can see. >> no, nothing that we can see, as you're right. they black out several pages but the intro of the affidavit is very interesting to me because it affirms that this was about the archivist that didn't get enough boxes back. what was in the first 15 boxes had he? golf balls, a razor, a rain jacket and very old, dated classified documents and no indication any of these documents were posing any risk
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to anybody. rachel: talking about constitutionality of this, it's interesting to know it was the national archives that put trigger warnings on the founding documents including the constitution and worried it might offend people. so, again, may great points and thank you for joining us today. >> thanks, rachel. rachel: does president biden think he's dealing with monopoly money? will and pete go off the wall to explain the real cost. plus, out of this world revelation and why congress admits aliens might exist.
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pete: president biden's plan to erase student loan debt will cost an estimated half a trillion. there's other studies out to ten years, we could be on the hook for a lot more than that. we're breaking down how the government has contributed to the broken education system cartel. cartel in a little game of biden-opoly. first of all, how did we get here? we had $250 million in student loans in 2004. today that's $1.5 trillion across america in total student loans.
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will: all started in the 19 70s with sally may and the federal government started subsidizing education and we know from economics and history and you subsidize something, the price goes up and healthcare and education. in the 1970s, they started sally may to make it easier to get a college education through a college loan. pete: increasingly they got rid of the limits and '80s and '90s they opened up the amounts you can borrow and parents borrow for graduate school and the amount of dollars students were borrowing went up and cost of tuition went up. will: it's a massive boondoggle to the university system about to receive $10,000 in forgastroentforgiveness they've. the universities are sitting on $200 billion. they got recently $76 billion in covid relief funds. pete: if you ask a lot of people in universities or colleges at
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that time, much were not even in and masked up and vaccine requirements. we're going to go to the next screen. we got our board over here, biden-opoly and you know how it works and some are worth more than others and look at cost of education in america today, i thought it was high 20 years ago. i think i paid 40 grand or whatever. i couldn't believe how much it costs by my senior year. go to the university of chicago, rachel knows this very, very well and daughter graduated $81,000, one year at the university of chicago. will: like brown university, $80,000 and i did this research on vacation just a few weeks ago, tcu, $70,000. state school, university of kansas, texas tech, $25, $30,000. pete: in state versus out state it's going to cost you twice as
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much. why dot numbers matter? there's inflation and ways and reasons why the numbers go up but they're not in keeping at all as we go to the next slide with the actual inflation. so this yellow line just to do some simple economics is the actual rate of inflation over the last 50 years. the blue one, will? will: we both want to use these things so i'll do the blue line. this is the rate of inflation for college tuition. it is called hyperinflation. it's absolutely stunning on what is happening in education. pete: because when the government gets involved and is willing to subsidize and back those loans, these colleges and universities have every reason and ever incentive to keep raising the prices. it's like free money for them and then students are left with the burden of the actual debt. will: you're right in comparing to what you paid back in the day. what'd you say $40 -- pete: i think it was $33,000 when i went to princeton in 2,000. that felt astronomical.
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will: i'm sure it's almost tripled. now by the way, this is what happens when you start forgiving student loans, it goes onto the taxpayer. goes to middle class taxpayers, noncollege educated taxpayers, blue collar taxpayers, and they all end up paying the burden for this, on average $2500. pete: notice the spot we chose here, the community chest, who is that? that is the taxpayers. on average $2500 total and certain estimates we mentioned in the intro and could be over a trillion over ten years depending on -- that's not even considering how they may expand this. we talked about it early on. once you do it once, the federal government is prone to do it again and there's going to be constitutional challenges to this as to whether or not it's actual legal. what happens if you forgive loans and it's found to be unconstitutional? do you have to give it back? will: these are quotes from people who dealt with this issue through time.
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this is judith who enlisted in the national guard instead of college. that was a fear of mine is the fear of not paying for college. pete: the precedence this sets is having skin in the game. if the first loan you take out is forgiven, what does it take to you about the debt you take in the future to maybe buy a house or other big ticket items and assume maybe i'll not have to pay all that back. will: what's the message to people that worked hard to pay off their own debt and in my cases pay those who took out loans for the same thing. that's josiah with his wife struggled to pay off entirety of the entire student debt. pete: i wouldn't compare to the tea party and amazing and wouldn't expect this to be an issue that animates so directly for so many people and you watching your kids, your grand kids, you paid for your school and had to pay it all. by the way, there's always threat of bankruptcy. in fact joe biden sign add bill
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in 2005 or didn't sign it but voted for one that increased threats of bankruptcy if you defaulted on your student loans. we juiced to take it seriously -- used to take it seriously this was something you had to pay back. will: these are people getting railroaded. not unlike the irs hiring 87,000 new irs agents funding the public sector union that funds the democratic party, here it's a big payoff to democratic donors. pete: these universities could be classified based on size of endowments as giant hedge funds that hold classes. billions and billions of dollars and decide to give their money institutionally or mostly through professors or others there, goes overwhelmingly to the left wing. why not give them a few more dollars. will: few more? pete: you're throwing out the 1s? i'm throwing out the 500s. you get a loan, yours is
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forgiven. i paid mine so i don't get any. rachel, this is for you. that's a one. rachel: that's not helping me with all the college tuition i have in front of me. great off the wall as usual, guys. we begin with this: police arresting a man for allegedly trying to buy a young girl from her parents for $100,000. officials say the suspect approached the family at a florida grocery store. earlier this month with the proposal that was should being, they say this is not the first time that the registered sex offender tried to purchase a child. disgusting. back in 2018, he reportedly offer add woman $200,000 to buy her 8-year-old daughter. for the first time congress admitting to the existence of unidentified aerial phenomena in last month's intelligence authorization act. the bill establishes a joint office to deal with uaps and
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aerial object identifications and highlights these uaps didn't even be dangerous and are compelling the department of defense to look into them. this oklahoma 10-year-old boy is hailed as a hero after saving his mother who was having a seizure in their backyard pool. gavin keeney dove into the pool and grabbing his dog laurie moving her to the edge of the pool and the family dog alerted his grandpa that rushed over to help and the little boy coming to laurie's rescue last year when choking on a chip. she calls little gavin my little hero. wow, that was a family affair too. the dog and the grandpa and the son involved in saving mom. beautiful story. coming up, over 200 wounded service military members are gathered in florida this week for the warrior games and hear from two medal recipients, next.
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and find out what your case all when a truck hit my car,ade. ♪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 warrior games are back this year. over 200 wounded or injured active duty military veterans competing in adaptive supporting
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events are two medalists that made their mark. retired technical sergeant joshua smith and retired corporal tiffany johnson joining us now. thank you both for coming and for your service to this country. joshua, explain the warriors games for our audience and didn't happen the last two years because of covid and they're back and what are the warrior games? >> well, the warrior games are a competition of adaptive sports. very similar to the para limb picks. they're not paralympians and competing in adaptive sports is a big part of healing and recovery for those of us who have been injured, wounded and become ill due to the service to our country, and so when you look at overall picture, the grand scheme of things, it's the impact that the warrior games have with each one of us who come here to compete as competitive adaptive sport athletes.
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we come together in this environment to cheer each other on, even though we're competing against each other. you have myself here, air force, and tiffany with team army. >> hello. >> we actually just got done competing against each other on the volleyball court last night in sitting volleyball, but we're sitting here before we came on air, chatting and getting to know each other a little bit, i mean, immediately we've built a connection and friendship and bond because of our service in the military and being here at the warrior games and, you know, as competitive as we are as athletes, to be able to come here on this stage, you know, both of us have won multiple medals but when you look at the big picture, it's about the friendships and come rod reignsd bonds we make and share for the rest of our lives. pete: corporal, you served the country and didn't expect to go onto be an athlete. what's the impact in the ability to take part in the games for you? >> it's absolutely incredible.
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this is a highlight of my career, you know, i'm still active duty and, you know, still serving but, you know, i've appreciated being here and like you said, it's all about rebuilding your self-confidence in the adaptive sports. this is still a healing process and getting to know people from different branches who suffered from dillnesses and, you know, different injuries and actually met someone from team air force who has the same condition as me and mean as lot to be able to par piece pate and not -- participate and see others doing well in the competition and acactually healing and be able o actively heal in the competition. pete: real quick, hawkeyes the next event you'll be participating in? >> we're still competing in
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sitting volleyball. we had first prelims last night. we've got more prelims tonight and then tomorrow is the medal round. we can see each other again on the court. pete: all right, we'll be watching. do dwarriorgames.com. thank you both so much. serving up chili treats with the oscar meyer weiner mobile callet tho e cold dog.
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night and varsity football on thursday night and football is back. pete: i get chills i'm so happy. will: our stage manager was saying it's such a sports desert and babe is there. when football starts to come back, for guys, especially and some of our gals out there, it's visceral. visceral. will: i went to my son's football game. i can see it on your face it's not doing it for you, rachel, outside of a rodeo, this is america. rachel: well, listen, i do love seeing those young boys in their little uniforms. they look adorable. i'm loving it. you know what it is, football means fall and fall means winter's coming and i love summer. pete: i hear you. i understand the seasonal argument to that but the rest of us get to go like this, tick tick tick and comes right through our tv screen. that starts today because on
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fox, get this, from ireland, nebraska takes on northwestern at 12:30 p.m. eastern time. a game in dublin. it doesn't feature notre dame, feels like it should but at the same time it'll be a home game. will: they're on the pitch in dublin. will: is that the irish thing? pete: yeah, probably playing on a soccer field modified to be a football field. rachel: do they like american football in ireland? pete: we're trying to make them like it just like they're trying to make us like soccer. we're not there yet. rachel: my brother pat, who you met at the wedding, he runs an american football league in dubai and around that area. he's trying to make american football something in those areas. there you go. pete: the gospel of football spread across the globe. will: we said earlier in the show and i believe this, i think all three of us believe this
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firmly, this should lead every news broadcast this morning. mark zuckerberg of course of facebook, this isn't the news item, admitted they decreased the distribution of hunter biden story for seven days. here's the breaking news, he tells joe rogan at the behest of the fbi, listen. >> the fbi basically came to us, some folks on our team like, hey, just so you know, you should be on high alert and there's a lot of russian propaganda in the 2016 election. i think it was five or seven days when it was basically being determined whether it was false. the distribution on facebook was decreased but people were still allowed to share it. you can still share it and consume it. >> did they say you need to be on guard about that story? >> i don't remember if it was
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that specifically but it fit the pattern. pete: i think very intensally vague in the last part of answering that question because what's at issue is the hunter biden story. the fbi had the laptop and we know from whistle blowers going to ron johnson and others that they were told not to look into the laptop, even though it was easily verifiable yet, l to your point, they were willing to go -- will, to your point, they were willing to go to facebook and say lookout for russian disinformation, which they were eluding to if they didn't say it outright, maybe they did or didn't, hunter biden's laptop would have revealed a lot of damming things about the big guy and involvement in foreign entanglements and we've all pointed out would have and now based on polls had a distinct impact viewed by the election. will: i don't buy that he doesn't remember it and it wasn't about this story. i would place my monopoly money, pete, if we have video tapes or
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audio tapes of that conversation, this story specifically was brought up by the fbi. rachel: that's why a lot of republican congressmen are coming forward. i had a couple of them last night, congressman waltzes was s saying we're going to bring mark zuckerberg into hearings to get to the bottom of what you just said right there. also john rat cliff, he was at that time the director of national intelligence, he says that the fbi director told him the opposite of what zuckerberg said, listen. >> i was actually surprised to hear mark zuckerberg say that because what he r he relate thei told him was the exact opposite of what the conversations with the fbi director were about. it is interference to the extent these allegations are true that fbi agents were knowingly putting bad information out there, it absolutely -- and the
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troubling part about this, tucker, is the fbi is the primary domestic authority for making sure people are interfering we elections and if they're engaging in election interference we have a real problem and that's why so many americans mistrust the fbi at the current time and that's really unfortunate. rachel: this is a bomb shell story. this absolutely changed the election. we actually -- we eluded to polls earlier, and i had our team pull up the polls. i want to actually show you some of this. here's the poll, 35.4% of americans didn't know about this story. 4.6% said they would vote differently. there was another poll that said 17% of the electorate would have voted -- where's that at?
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no -- says 34%. will: 35% of people -- i saw 17%. will: 35% don't know that story exists to the fbi and twitter and facebook's efforts to turn down the volume on the story affected public consciousness by 35%. let me show you quickly and we can do this bouncing around here. how that manifests on bill . last night and rob rhinoer, hollywood director rob riner had this inter-about with the fbi. >> answer this question, was it appropriate to bury the hunter biden -- >> talking about the press? >> he's saying that's what they did and that is what they did. they buried the hunter biden story before the election because they were like we can't risk having the election thrown to trump. we'll tell them after the election. >> we know for a fact that's what they did? >> of course. >> you know for a fact that's what they did?
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i don't know what they did. >> i know, because you only watch msnbc. >> that's not true. that's not true. rachel: he's not just a director. he's a major liberal activist. it does go to show if you talk to people who are on the other side of the aisle, liberals that watch a lot of cnn, msnbc, many are like rob riner they don't even know this happened. the other part is a lot of people don't care. as long as trump wasn't elected, pete, they're fine with whatever. even if it turns into policing. pete: the same can be said with a dossier. it's been totally de-bunt and it's not true. really, really? it's been totally debunked? that's the fortification people have put up when it comes to trump and he has to be the bad guys and t institutions they'd e skeptical of and should be like the fbi are crusading for righteousness to save our democracy.
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will: sam harris, liberal podcaster, famous atheist said i don't care if it's true or a conspiracy, it's that important to get rid of trump that he saw like an existential threat like an asteroid headed for earth. >> reppete: it's one thing for o say that but another thing for the fbi to take that and turn around and say it's russian disinformation. tony, make one phone call and verify that that laptop is real and as a result you have to confront the criminality on that laptop and deal with it as opposed to not investigate it and instead say facebook shut it down. rachel: called sitting members of congress ron johnson and senator grassley who wanted more investigation saying they were per seers of -- purveyors of russian information and there are americans right now sitting in prison because they protested what we now know is an election for which there was suppression
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of very vital information that would have changed the election. all of this is very troubling, and i think it is the number one story, and i don't understand why we keep talking about it in terms of facebook. it really is as you said, pete, about the fbi and weaponnization of our federal law enforcement. pete: if you watched last night, will and i got to hang out but we missed rachel. i had a chance to sit in for greg and we had a little fun. watch this. pete: we made it, barely. do not adjust your television green. greg did not get more ridiculously good looking and taller. it's really me, pete hegseth. tonight i'm the second most handsome man on the show. we've got my buddy will cain here. you got two-thirds of "fox & friends" weekend tonight. rachel campos-duffy said she'd
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rather give birth again than spend another minute with the two of us, that's right. pete: ten kids for rachel, not really, just nine. pete wasn't the only one who hosted a prime time show last night. will: this lady did as well. rachel campos. just leave it there. rachel campos sat in for laura and apparently she got divorced. rachel: i'm rachel campos and earlier i introduced myself as rachel campose instead of rachel campos-duffy, don't worry, sean and i are still together. it was just a bit of nerves. i didn't divorce sean live on the air. i'm rachel campos-duffy in for laura ingram. rachel: i get a text from sean saying should i be worried and i didn't know what he was talking
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about and all these people started writing me on social media asking what happened. why didn't you say your last night? just nerves. will: when you guest host for somebody else, it's like sitting in their living room and trying to feel comfortable and the most nerve wracking part is the first five seconds saying hello. pete: for sure. will: you dropped your last name in the first five seconds. rachel: i didn't divorce sean. i decided to news. news. by the way, you did amazing. this is a full comedy show. pete: it was great to have will there. it was like having my security blanket right here. rachel: you were an emotional support pet animal. pete: you were my emotional support animal. will: maybe i can fly free and be on a leash when you go on airplanes and get into places that are normally secure.
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pete: travel with me where i go. it helps to have a real comedian on the show too. he brought it. thank you, greg gutfelled. gutfelld. you have the best show on late night by far. now to the fox news alert, ukraine's nuclear agency warning of a risk of hydrogen and radioactive leaks following damage to the russian power plant. russian shelling left the plant's infrastructure damaged and they warned the constant stress at the plant could result in catastrophe even greater than past attacks. they want to document the incident, support the victim by staying with them, and to not call the police because it escalates violence. police in colorado warning this guidance could increase negative
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perceptions about cops, including dismantling trust between schools and students and also being very dangerous to your health because it's horrible advice. rachel: terrible. pete: wall street tanking yesterday with the dow jones finishing the day down more than 1,000 points. the plunge coming after the federal reserve chair jerome powell said interest rates could go up as the nation struggles with soaring inflation. that's the biggest drop by the way in two months. the s&p 500 also tumbled by 3.4%. that's the biggest drop since june. inflation is hitting americans hard as new reports show more than 20 million house how olds are behind on their -- households are behind on their energy bills. have you wanted to experience new york through the eyes of the most famous pest? no. this new video game lets you take on the big apple as a rat. will: nice. racheyou like that?
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pete: the new york rat simulator lets you run around the city at shoe level collect -- no! i saw the camera coming in from the side. i'm not running offset. y'all can keep reading but no. will: this is ryan the rat guy. you're the guy that has to confront your fears here. ryan the rat guy, can rats be friendly? >> incredibly friendly. they're like one of the greatest pets you'll find. rachel: why are they so friendly? >> they're affectionate and intelligent and learn tr tricksd behaviors and rats are incredibly lovely and i only reason i don't own rats is they don't live particularly long and i'm not tough enough to deal with the heart break. pete: how long do they normally
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live will: i don't want the hairless one. pete: look at the whiskers on that thing. will: keep a handle on him? pete: does this rat have a name? >> they don't have names because i try not to name them because i get too attached. will: why did you leave, rachel. he's really fighting me. >> no, he's okay. >> i'm holding him. these aren't the big new york city norwegian rats? >> they are. they're the exact same species of rat you've find running around new york. will: god, look at this guy coming now. it's a hairless one. will: the second question, i read a book about rats one time because i'm morbidly fascinated. in new york city, i heard you're within six feet of rats procreating. >> that's more or less true.
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the amount of rats in this city is -- will: at any point in new york city no matter where you are, you're within six feet of two rats procreating. i'm done with this rat. pete: i'm giving you this rat too. he's fighting me hard. will: look at the tail on this thing, rachel. let me touch your face with the tail. little rat tail. will: ryan the rat guy by the way does birthday partis. pete: is that ariel or somebody in there? ryan, let me give you my hairless rat back. >> we have even more friends and these guys you are holding is fully grown. they can get a bit bigger than that but not by a lot. e we also have younger sweeties here. rachel: what is this? we have your classive albino. little white rat. will: i don't want the mouth on me. that's all.
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>> that's okay. he's very sweet. pete: look at red eyes. rachel: ryan, you do birthday party s? >> i do. we do wildlife outreach programs and birthday parties. will: njexoticpets.com. >> this is a china doll rat that we specifically bred. rachel: i want you to know -- will: 'til ahead doj releasing the mar-a-lago affidavit yesterday but more than half was redacted so what did we learn? we sit down with human smuggler with exclusive interview -- i'm having trouble there's rats all over me. we'll be joined next with what they faced crossing the border. s
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contributor sarah carter interviews a human trafficker to reveal the horrifying fate that children face when they're crossing illegally. >> what about people that want to buy a child because they're a sexual predator? i've heard that some people in places have very specific things that they like. >> in many cases they just have the children there and they have
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a purpose, only they know what purpose they're going to serve but, yeah. they are just going to keep them there and they're not going to be free ever again. rachel: just this monday, a young boy and girl drowned trying to cross the rio grand river. sarah carter is the host of the sarah carter show and joins us now. sara, i was on when you first broke this story about organ harvesting of children in the human trafficking cartel trade across our border, and i was just floored by it. tell us a little bit more what you learned. >> these are the horror stories that you hear when you dig down deep, rachel. it's difficult for us to tell the stories all the time. we go to the border and see the people crossing, you know, the thousands of people, bill does
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incredible work down there and see them all coming across the border, but it's the journey that brings them there. that's the real story that i want our viewers and the american people to understand, these children are trafficked by some of the most nefarious and horrific organizations you can imagine. they have no care for life, they don't care about these children. some of these children are sold to the highest bidders, sexual predators, and i have been hearing not only from this human smuggler but from sources within central america, intelligence sources as well as law enforcement, that some of these children are taken as part of organ harvesting in the organ trade. a lot of the kids being smuggled, some of them come from mountainous regions with no identifiers so means no birth certificates or cards that would identify who they are or they're traveling alone with other children and their parents are too afraid to report them
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missing so these children are taken. these stories of organ harvesting are horrific. we're hearing about it all over the globe, but it's happening here and it's happening because the border is wide open because the biden administration is also allowing this type of behavior to perpetuate. these drug cartels know that, look, when i speak to human smugglers i talk to those in central america and guatemala and people connected to the trade. they know what's happening here in america and they can see how wide open our border is, and they're taking advantage of that. i want you to think about this, they're making hundreds of billions of dollars at this. it's not like they're going to stop soon. it's up to us to put a stop to this, at least to make it harder for them and then really wacker hard on saving these children. that is an obligation we all have as human beings to take a step back and realize what's going on and once we do, it's to take that next step to save lives. rachel: yeah, i mean, it's not just that the border is open, but the policies themselves encourage panters to send
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children -- parents to send children unaccompanied to get in and stay in and then they're in the hands of the most evil people ever, the cartels. it's a shocking report. again, so many democrats, remember aoc, sara, crying outside of the child detention centers saying children are in cages. where is she now? this is absolutely the least compassionate, most cruel policies we could imagine. where are these voices? >> yeah, where are they now? they should be there crying for what's happening now with all the children being trafficked and we're expecting over 169,000, and i think that's a low number. it's much higher than that of unaccompanied minors coming into the united states. imagine all the children that disappear on that journey, and then imagine the national security implications for us as americans so this isn't a democratic issue, this isn't a republican issue, this is a
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national security and humanitarian issue, rachel, if people don't start doing something about it and working together, it's going to get far worse before it gets better, and think of all the american children that have died due to fentanyl poisoning and due to counterfeit pills on the streets. over 100,000 in the last fiscal year. that is something that we should all be concerned about, that is a war here in our hemisphere against us and against the most innocent people. rachel: sara, i know it's not easy to do the stories and they're painful to listen to. i'm sure you know so much more even than you're revealing right now with your reporting. just god bless you for telling these stories. the world needs to know, thank you, sara. >> thank you, rachel. hope to do a lot more. thank you. rachel: all right, this week on from the kitchen table, my podcast with my husband, we talk about the cruelty of open boarders and other democrat policies. download that podcast at
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foxnewspodcast.com and our guest representatives from news week will join us to discuss that. coming up, it's been a year since 13 u.s. service members were killed in the kabul calf began stan attack. afghanistan attack. we'll hear from a gold star mother who lost her hero son that day, stay with us.
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kareem's brother kansas city dakota took hisown life this mot his brother's grave. his mother shanna chapel joins us now. thank you for being here. i can't imagine. first of all, tell us about kareem and share his story on who he was. >> kareem was somebody that was very out going, very helpful. he was very thoughtful and caring. he loved being a marine, loved his job as a marine. he was perfect in every way. pete: every one of us was impacted at some way. i remember the shame and the anger when that blast occurred and we heard about those deaths. obviously exponentially more impactful for you and your family. how have you managed this past year? >> it's been a very, very rough
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year. they say time heals but the pain today is just as strong as it was the day i found out. so i'm still waiting for time to heal me. it's affected my family very strongly too, especially my oldest son. pete: that's the oldest son, dakota, who took his own life at the grave of his brother. what do families -- go ahead. please. >> he actually took his life at the park by our house where he used to go with his brothers when kareem would come home on the weekend from pendleton, he and his brothers could hang out and go to the park and swing and play at the park as if they were kids again and across the street from the park is a permanent memorial for kareem. he killed himself across from that. pete: how much of how it
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happened is apart of the impact, meaning the taliban was on security, we were retreating. it was chaos. how much of the chaos of that moment impacts how you feel about this? >> how i feel about what has happened to both my sons? pete: what's happened to you is unimaginable. but people are lost in combat for missions that we know are well planned and things happen in combat. in this case, it was chaos and it was poorly planned and we were in the hands of the enemy. does that make it even worse? >> yes. it makes it worse cause this was preventable. if this -- it was an evacuation. had it been handled the right way, my son, i can speak for my son, would still be here. pete: i have to ask you, there's reporting in the last two days of the daily mail, a marine injured in the blast that killed your son, claiming that the cia
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had told them about the person, the suicide bomber and had been identified two days prior as a potential suspect. they asked for permission to shoot a sniper, this potential bomber and they said, let me get a military judge to see if it was legal. there's a possibility that the person that set off that suicide vest had been at least in part identified and they were not allowed to shoot. your reaction? >> yeah, i heard the same thing. i heard it a long time ago so that's something that i had always wondered if he'd been seen, how come he wasn't allowed to be taken out. they knew what the suicide bomber planned on doing, why wasn't he allowed to be taken out? flthere hasn't been any questios that i've had throughout all this hasn't been answered. pete: where do you lay the blame for the chaos and the death of your son? >> on this administration. pete: all the way to the top? generals, pentagon or across the
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spectrum? >> all the way to the top. pete: i certainly know a lot of our viewers feel the same and we cannot mourn with you more in the loss of both of your sons, the generational and family impact cannot be understated. god bless you for having the courage to come on with us and we'll do everything we can to remember the legacy of lance corporate kareem nikoui. thank yous for the sur courage o come on and share this story. >> thank you so much. pete: appreciate you. watch the fox news digital series examining the consequence on the withdrawal from afghanistan on foxnews.com. 13 service members, warriors, killed a year ago in the bombing in kabul afghanistan. we remember and we honor them.
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>> i want you to know, i've declassified everything in the worship god. i'm president and can do it all. come on. i'm not going to comment because i don't know the detail. i don't even want to know. i'll let the justice department take care of that. will: heavily redacted mar-a-lago search affidavit finely released. see it on your television screen a. good 60% behind big, bold,
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black redactions the the paper sensor revealing it was a fight over handling classified documents. if then president trump declassified documents, what was the point of the raid? in a reaction, fox news contributor and former utah congressman jason chaffetz, great to see you. there was a focus on classified documents. if president trump had the power when he was president to declassify the documents, why was mar-a-lago raided? >> i think the whole thing was absurd when they handled it and how they handled it. if it was so urgent, why was it 19 months after the president left office. every president has the highest security clearance in the land and headset have access to any classified information he may be in possession of or looks at. it's absurd to suggest that
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these documents were not secured. the entire preps is secured by the -- premise is secured by the united states secret service for goodness sakes. if they have a problem with that, talk to the secret service. the president can unilaterally while president declassify the documents. i think they need to come clean on the whole matter. this does not make sense, a mere couple months before the election and the duplicity on how they deal with this. i tell you what, if it was a biden or clinton, they would not deal with this that way. will: it's important that you know the inner workings of washington and you've been in congress. is there a procedure that the president must have followed to declassify? can he by his actions by removing a document from the white house, by his actions deemed a document declassified? does he have to follow a specific set of steps? is this a question you can answer, anyone can answer, short of the supreme court?
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how do you declassify documents? >> he literally can wave these documents clear of classification. it literally can be that simple. i will also suggest that handwritten notes and things that are of his personal effect, the president can have access to that. there is a better, smarter, more professional way to deal with this other than going in with a raid while the president is not there searching through melania's closet and whatnot. it doesn't have to be that way. when i issued subpoenas, when there was information that we needed, guess what, the fbi, the department of justice did not act like it. they didn't go in. they gave out immunity agreements to clinton. the clinton people. will: how does this end, jason? with an indictment? >> no, i don't. i don't think they have enough information there. it would be fascinating to see what they learn but the president had classification certification.
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he could declassify them and he has a security clearance, and they were in a secure location so i don't think there's any way they make a case, but we'll see. this department of justice, nothing would surprise me. will: jason chaffetz, thank you for joining us. had a la late night and up ear. thank you for joining us on "fox & friends". >> thank you. will: rachel, over to you. rachel: at least one person is hurt after a shooting at a county fair in arkansas last night. police say they don't believe the shooting at the washington county fair was random. but the suspected shooter has yet to be caught. fair officials have not said if they will open for their final day later today. deleted screen shots from the children's national hospital show that hysterectomies being offered to kids as "gender affirming care". the operator of the libs of tiktok account sharing her conversation with hospital staff
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about those judger reigns reign. >> what's the youngest age you'd do it on? >> i'm not sure, but i have seen younger kids. i'm not, you know, due to hippa i'm not allowed to say that but it's been younger kids. rachel: hospital officials denying they offer sex change surgeries for kids. a live look at the kennedy space center with nasa's most powerful rocket ever is poised to launch on the artemis 1 mission on monday. the unpiloted rocket will orbit the moon for 42 days and land in the pacific ocean. nasa hoping this mission brings them one step closer to landing humans on the moon by 2025. those are your headlines. coming up, back to school fashion that won't break the bank. the best deal on clothes and accessories to keep your kids in style. plus, college football season
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sky high. one recent survey found parents can expect to spend more than $660 per child this school year. rachel: that's a 27% increase from 2019 so what can you do? will: what can you do indeed? here with big tips. pete: we're saving on back to school clothes and accessory,. >> hey, it's expensive to get your kids back to school. i have tips and great outfits with kids that are very inexpensive. pete: you brought a bus. >> the first thing is ethan. look for labor day deals. jc pennys offering 20% off of their already low prices through labor day. ethan is my little guy. he's wearing a graphic t from the collection that was $6. his jeans were $20, and his shoes were originally $40 and got them for $25. jc pennys really helping families save a lot of money
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this back to school season through labor day you can really go to their app, get coupons. even when i was buying all the outfits for the kids, we were able to save and i asked the cashier and he pulled up the app and helped zuckerberg save 20%. rachel: i love this layered look too. >> for eva, her dress -f $10 and paired with a jean top that was $16 and shoes $19.99 and love the detailing and stitching on the side and silver in the back. rachel: jc penny also? >> yes. their exclusive brand. will: who's next? >> come on out, guys. lana, ariyah and rocca. for the girls i got sparkly leggings, $6, and lana bold shirt and backpack with the lavender stitching over here.
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here administer. ariyah i love her graphics. for the girls sparkly leggings and rocco got camo pants and mix and match this school season with looks from jc penny. pete: come on over here, guys. >> there's great mix and match deals and aiden has bold backpacks and coming out with sofia. pete: it's a pop it. >> a pop fidget backpack. i got them both at marshals. look for bundles and these are all from tj maxx. what i love about this one from ashton is his backpack, launch box and headphones were $19.99 and whole outfit less than $15. will: really? >> come on out, girls. over here is olivia's skirt,
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top, and headband $16.999 and love backpack $24.99 from tj maxx. >> and never goes out of style. will: i love it. >> olivia, last but not least adorable forest day of school outfit and pants and shirt and hairpieces, $12.99 from marshals and adorable backpack as well, $24.99. it is just what you want to do is realize also you don't want to buy your whole season's worth of clothes for back to school. buy it slowly, get what you need, get a few basics, mix and match, find the sales, get the apps. rachel: another way to save money: uniforms. i love them. pete: they can also be very expensive too. rachel: there's ways to get around that too, but these are great sales. tj maxx, jc pennys, look for sales and shop in increments. >> yes, and i have one more, quick. if you go to facebook marketplace, you can actually -- people give away clothes that their kids just like have grown out of. i've given bags of my kid's
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clothes they've grown out of. will: thank you, lenore. thank you to the transportation education for bringing this school bus to fox square. they're hiring drivers, attendants, and mechanics. head to educationalbusjobs.com. pete: thank you to all the -- kids being protected by the entire football team. rachel: i love it. pete: you're well protected. will: all right, coming up, two summer staples are coming together: hot dogs and ice cream. oscar meyer is here with the new cold dog. will: hot dog flavored ice cream? pete: i guess. we'll try it. we're live from sar springs new york. >> today is the day and 153rd traverse stakes in saratoga springs and talk about who might
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♪ ♪ if i am invincible, unbreakable, unstoppable, unshakable. ♪ they knock me down, i get up again. ♪ i am champion ♪ rachel: good morning, america. that's your shot of the morning, chattanooga, tennessee, and that's champion by carrie underwood. so good to be here. 9:00 in the morning. will: fourth hour of "fox & friends" with rachel campos duffy, pete hegseth and will cain starts right now.
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those boys are a little older than peewee, but ready to take over later as we have a punting competition in honor of kickoff of college football today. pete: that's right. i think they are pop warner, and they're excited to be here to put on some drills for us. as you said, will, it has begun. summer may be ending, rachel, and we do bemoan that, but with the death of football -- rachel: comes -- the death of summer, comes football. pete: which is what we've been waiting for. and today, by way, on fox college football starts. nebraska takes on northwestern live not from chicago or nebraska, but from dublin, ireland, on the pitch right here on fox. you can get your football fix. right after the show almost. rachel: also later on we're going to have the oscar mayer wiener mobile, and the boys are going to tray what's called a
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frozen -- pete: the boys are going to try? rachel: i have a segment to do, so you're going to have to to tell me how those frozen hot dogs are. pete, you told me what a nice dress i have on. this is a judge jeanine hand me down, one of the perks of being part of fox is you get to -- fbi raids melania's closet, i got to raid the judge's -- pete: nice. i heard it's a mice one. rachel: it's a really expensive one, and that was very nice of her. she gave it to me when i was going to have my ninth child. she gave me a couple dresses. [laughter] that's a true story. thank you, judge jeanine. i'll raid your wardrobe any day. pete: and also a correction from earlier in the show. we thought will actually got one question in the quiz about dogs, and he didn't. he called it fake news in the moment, and he was correct. what's faster, a cheetah or a
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greyhound? we said cheetah, we were deemed correct. but if you check the internet, cheetahs can go 75 miles an hour, greyhounds can go 50. will: there you go. pete: so will cain corrected. 5-5. reign ray -- rachel: learn something every day. will: and now a fox news alert -- rachel: pages showing many details we already knew, but it also leaves us with a whole9 lot more questions. pete: whole lot of black in there. alexandria with of is live in washington. >> reporter: it does give us a bit more of a timeline, and it shows that concern was raised for the department of justice january of this year when former president trump's team turned over 15 boxes of documents which the department reviewed many may and claimed contained classified records mixed in with personal notes and publications. the 38-page, heavily redacted document justifies the august
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8th search of mar rah lag bow -- mar-a-lago. >> the unrecontacted parts do not have -- unredacted parts do not have probable cause. it's not president justification. if you have to take 38 pages to try to convince a judge there's probable cause, you may have a problem with your case. >> reporter: the affidavit did not show the exact contents of the classified material they were noting but did reveal some could contain compromising details on porn surveillance -- foreign surveillance. yesterday president biden was asked about former president trump's claim that he add had declassified everything in his position. -- possession. >> i'm president, i can do it? i'm not going to comment because i don't know the details.
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i don't even want to know. i'll let the justice department take care of it. >> reporter: former president trump writing, they missed a page, and responding on social media with, quote: affidavit's heavily redacted, nothing mentioned on nuclear, a total public rage rain subterfuge by the fbi, doj or a close working relationship regarding document turnover which we knew was taking place since may. due to a paperwork era record -- error, the trump legal team did have to resubmit its request for a special master in this case. guys? will: thank you, alexandria. a. rachel: wow. really feels like the fbi has become the misforce -- police force. the whitmer kidnapping, what happened there, interfering in elections as we saw here with, you know, mark zuckerberg and the fbi telling him defensive
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things. this is just -- it's getting to be too much. pete: yeah. and basically what we saw in this redacted affidavit was not any of the why. whatever the rationale was was in black. we got a little bit more of the what, which we already pretty much knew prosecute warrant which was more or less -- from the warrant which was more or less -- this is a review of paperwork. very little consideration for the weight of the office donald trump held. his ability to declassify and the ongoing discussion that he'd been having with these archivists about whether or not they can get a love letter from kim jong un, all of which became the predicate for a full-on, general search of the president's home. and in light of everything else we now know about the fbi from the last four, five years and the comments form orer agents still make on the media all cutting in one direction, as you said, very difficult not to look at this and see it as a political fishing expedition against the guy they do not want
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back at 1600 pennsylvania avenue. will: it's really possible that merchandise of that redacted material -- inside of that that redacted material there's something incredibly salacious. if it is it is, let's just take for a moment the hypothetical there's something in there incredibly salacious, nuclear secrets. whatever it may be, it really is subservient to the question of whether or not those documents are classified and whether or not the president has the power to to declass fay -- declassify those documents. you're right, motivationally, it's actually what you said. but substantively it's about whether or not the president can declass pie those documents and -- declassify those documents. rachel: i would say the dig bigger story here is what is happening to our democracy. ultimately, this is the biden white house raiding the home of his political opponent. will: right. rachel: i mean, it ises a massive story along with what we
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just heard about mark zuckerberg and the fbi interfering in the 2020 the election. i would think that, you know, the left keeps talking about democracy, democracy. yeah, you know, our democracy -- [inaudible] we can't be a police state. pete: no, we can't. and speaking of dark days and difficult news, a year ago today it was really the beginning of the downfall of the credibility not just of this administration, but of the united states on the world stage, and that was the disastrous withdrawal from afghanistan and the loss of 13 lives that were spoor -- entirely preventable that never should have been in that spot, lost their lives reaching over barbed wire and were hit by a suicide bomber which, we're now learning, had been identified likely by the cia two days earlier, but the snipers there were not allowed to shoot because of lawyers and hesitations on the wire. earlier this morning i spoke
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with shannon chapel, she's the mother of one of the 13 killed. pulling people up from that barbed wire. said this was preventable, and that bomber -- listen. >> this was preventable. it was an evacuation. ed had it been handled the right way, my son -- i can speak for my son -- would still be here. he's been seen, how can he wasn't allowed to have been taken out? the suicide bomber, why wasn't he allowed to be taken out? there hasn't been my question, all of this hasn't been answered. will: let's bring in now a retired general who's now a u.s. senate candidate for new hampshire. army veteran, of course, served 10 tours in afghanistan. general, great of you with us this morning. here we are the one-year, sadly, one-year anniversary of those tragic events in afghanistan.
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what are your thoughts? >> well, thank you, will. i really appreciate it, and my best to rachel and pete. i've got to tell you that i think we all are reflecting now, and it's a time of remembrance, and it's also a time that we're all seeking accountability. we're looking for responsibility and transparency and truth, and we just haven't received that. and you can hear it in the voice of that mother who is looking for that. and that's the responsibility of leaders. and the leaders at all levels from biden to the national security council to the secretary of state, defense, the chairman of the joint chiefs of staff, all the joint chiefs, general mckenzie, the centcom commander who ultimately was in charge of this all the way down to the two-star admirals and general that were on the ground failed, failed our service members. unnecessarily put them in harm's way. and, you know, giving up bagram was the beginning of this, letting the 7,000 prisoner
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prisoners out which, you know with, likely the bomber came from. and, you know, this is something that we must reflect on, and we must have accountability at the highest levels because, if we don't, then we're not going to have any faith in our leadership when we send our sons and daughters into harm's way. our service members did every tour i was there and every tour that i wasn't there did their job with honor. and they are the ones that we should be lionizing. and the generals, including myself, should be held accountable for things that we don't do policy and and strategy wise that protect our service members. and this was something that was avoidable. but worse, no accountability, no transparency, no responsibility. a year has gone by, and let's not forget four days after that the attack with a drone strike
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on an innocent family -- rachel: right. >> -- that was called righteous by the chairman of the joint chiefs of staff and mckenzie. i can tell you, you know, if i had done that as a commander or any of my subordinates had done it, i'd be talking to you from a jail cell today. rachel: so true. it's so so true. pete: so true. general, i mean, there's no way you don't look back, we don't look back and study what happened at the end of this war without doing a case study of absolute failure you talked about, of chaos, disaster cascading down. we can talk about the civilian side of it, but when you teach that at a military academy in the future and you turn to those future officers and you say and no generals were fired, no one was held accountable, there's a failure of generalship inside the military. yes, we can talk about white house and politics, we also lost are a war over 20 years and no one was fired. what can be done inside the military so that an ethos of
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excellence is reestablished? >> i said it on active duty as a general officer holding myself accountable, rain i said it in retirement as well. we are not picking our senior leaders well. it's a system of nepotism, organizational nepotism, go along to move along, circle the wagons when something bad happens and look to blame subordinates. we've done it in afghanistan, we've done it in africa particularly in the niger ambush. we'll discipline a private for losing a weapon but do nothing to a general who loses a war. and all of these guys have done that, they haven't won anything. and i believe and what i want to do when i get to the senate is hold them accountable and establish a different system in which we pick our generals and our admirals and not leave it up to hem to take care of their buddies. rachel: boy, is that needed.
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and, by the way, the world is more dangerous now post the afghanistan fall and defeat than it was before. i've never seen a more dangerous time. really great points you're bringing up, general. really appreciate you joining us. >> general don bolduc, senate candidate, new hampshire. >> thank you. god bless you all. rachel: likewise. will: to my knowledge, there's been no after-action accountability review. to your point, i would think there's been no real review many retrospect. pete: no. and what he said is right. if you lose a rifle as a private, forget about it, the whole base is locked down until you find it. you lose a war and nothing. and it's an institution built to protect itself, follow the political prerogatives, go along with the political correctness, the woke stuff, the social justice sufficient -- stuff, you move along just fine. they want to actually focus on killing bad guys. rachel: the only person i know as far as i know is lieutenant
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colonel -- right? pete: yeah, for speaking the truth. rachel: god bless him. as you said, i'm not very optimistic that the culture will change -- pete: by the way, lieutenant9 colonel sheller has a new book out telling his side of the story. look forward to having him on the program at some point. will: as you always do, "fox & friends" viewers have created a memorial and shared photos honoring the 13 service members killed in kabul one year ago. like to show vow -- you some of those. here's a photo from anne marie and scott from clifton park, new york. they placed a flag tribute outside their home. rachel: next is a photo from lisa who made this sign and a wreath after hearing the news that 13 american troops had died. she says it has been in her front yard since and that it will continue to be so. pete: and lastly, here's a photo from shannon and mitch, gold star parents from florida, they
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made a memorial with each of those lost down the main road in front of their house asking people to honk as they drive by. the goodness of patriotic americans. they see something tragic and heroes who should not have been lost, and they will not forget. rachel: by the way, many of our mainstream networks never even covered it. will: so the goodness of average americans, i'd love to pick up on that. some civilians out there, some veterans. some active duty members, some in the government and bureaucracy. i know this because on the latest will cain podcast, i had a deep conversation with lieutenant colonel, retired, scott mann, green beret, who put together one year ago operation pineapple express, something we covered on this program but we haven't really gotten the full story. he has a new book out entitled operation pineapple express. we got together for an hour on the will cain podcast. and let me just tell you, these
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are guys -- like jason bourne virtually, cyber, but ultimately on the ground organizing operatives, most of hem special forces in the afghanistan military, to get out. to get through the crowd in kabul, to get to kabul, to avoid taliban checkpoints and, ultimately, for the vast majority climb through a sewage ca mall to a 4-foot hole in the fence attica bull airport -- at kabul airport. and then, by the way, you have to have enough logistics that an 18-year-old marine can be on the side and go, this guy's cool. all of it was put together by guys out there who just said we have to do something. i hope you'll check out that story because it's the not only fascinating and exhilarating, it's emotional as well. rachel: and they had to do it because our government didn't want to do that. pete: check out the will cain podcast, check out the colonel's book. will: yes. pete: it's a movie worth being made eventually. guys at home on their laptops
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while working full-time jobs in the middle of the night trying to coordinate through what's app to people on the ground. people on the ground many some ways disobeying orders to do the right thing or at least going outside of the scope of their orders to pull people many who served alongside us. incredible story. all right, two words you never want to hear, socialism wins. that's what an aoc-backed or candidate won. the warning for america coming up. rachel: but first, we're relishing the summer with the oscar mayer wiener mobile, up next. ♪ cheap shades and a tattoo and a yoo-hoo bottle on the floorboard. ♪ her pick song on the rah yoid -- radio ♪
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>> chili cheese -- pete: can we try it in. >> of course. you have to decide is it stupid or is it genius? will: all right. pete: it looks exactly like a wiener. a little mustard on there. bill: will: it's a popsicle. >> there's actually no meat in it, but hopefully it's exactly like the oscar mayer -- pete: it's stuck to the plastic. will we go. will: all right. really frozen. pete: tastes like a hot dog. will: tastes just like a hot do. you're supposed to answer the question, stupid or genius? genius. pete: have a hot dog and wash it down with this guy. thank you for joining us. where are you guys going to be tomorrow?
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>> we're going to be in boston next week. we're wrapping up here in new york, we're going to be in times square giving out rest of these prosen treats. will: there you go. rachel, back in to you. rachel: thanks, guys. >> we really proved that socialism wins. [cheers and applause] anywhere, we are not going anywhere, and we will not stop until we see a socialist place across this city. [cheers and applause] if. rachel: our next guest escaped socialism in venezuela. danielle dimartino joins us with a message for america. xi, i'm going to start with you. these are young people who are outing socialism, socialism wins. tell us what it really means to live in an authoritarian state
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like that. enter i just want to say it's so ironic, 36 years ago i ran away from socialism. when i left china, come to this great country for freedom. today so many americans abandoning freedom. they have no idea what socialism is about. i lived under mao's socialism. when the government controls everything, make all the decisions, big and small. they decide how much grain, meat, cooking oil i could have. what i should learn in school, where i should live and what job i should have and how i should think. in the socialist society i lived under, there's no choices, there are no freedom. and that's what people do not know. socialism becomes such a diluted word, and it's intentional. i can tell you china is a socialist country, cuba is a
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socialist country and so is north korea. they are socialist country run by communist parties. and what's the difference? what the difference between socialism and communism? not much. socialism is the initial stage of communism according to carl marx. -- karl marx. rachel: thank you for reminding this. daniel, tell us about your experience of living under associatism. >> i think my experience is should scare americans. i used to have a middle class life like most people watching do, and we went from having cars, having a home, going to school ever day to not having electricity, to me having to line are up for food, to the government telling me which day of the week i could go to the grocery store. that is what socialism did to venezuela. and the voters don't understand that in new york, and that's why kristin gonzalez won, but the scary part is she does know what
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she's sporting. the organization that supports her sponsored a protest because they brought lee people who work for the maduro reseem. -- regime. so these people claim that they want to turn america into den the mark, but then they meet with venezuela's dick today for, not be -- dictator, not the danish prime minister. so i think that should tell you everything you need to know about who her. rachel: young people don't know what you're talking about. i think we got a taste during the pandemic, but seeing these young women take these prominent positions is scary for our future here in this country, and we're really grateful to people like you who give us a very clear picture of what that means. thank you, daniel and xi, always insightful, always illuminating. >> thanks, rachel. >> thank you. rachel: straight ahead, as classes are back in session and so is wokeness. a school board in my home state
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of wisconsin even voting to teach sex ed to kindergarteners. parents fighting back, joining us next. 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. ♪ so i climbed into the cab, and then i settled down inside ♪ ♪ i've been everywhere, man ♪ ♪ i've been everywhere, man ♪ ♪ of travel i've had my share, man ♪ ♪ i've been everywhere ♪ ♪ 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. look what i brought! liberty mutual! they customize your home insurance... so you only pay for what you need! ♪young people having a good time with insurance.♪
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pete: school is back in session and so are some new hyper-sexual curriculums like in wisconsin where one school board -- this is wisconsin -- passed a vote to teach sex ed to kindergarteners. now 5-year-olds in the school district will learn private body parts by name. second graders will learn gender stereotypes, third graders taught about transgender students, consent and body image. th graders, i've got one -- sixth graders, i've got one, will define different types of sexual activity, and high school will be taught about contraception and warning signs of abusive relationships. here to react are are ted
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barthel and michelle hughes. i hear you call it tosa, i'm sure folks want to adore the school district there. but to go with this early and this radical, what option do parents have? let me start with you, ted. what's your reaction to this new curriculum? >> well, good with morning, pete. thanks for having michelle and i on the show. yes, you're right, it's a great place to live. it's a diverse community. we welcome all sorts of people here. but this curriculum, it does have some good things in it, admittedly. it teaches kids about healthy relationships, proper boundaries and inappropriate touch. but it doesn't stop there. it goes much, much farther than that, as you alluded to in your opening piece. and the content that's bad is really bad. like you talked about, graphic and almost porn graphic images to kids from third grade, second
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grade down to first grade. gender ideology being introduced to second graders, 7-year-olds. pete: yes. >> pete, i'm a dad with a seventh grade daughter. i send my girl to school to learn how to read and write and how to do math. i'm not looking for her to come home and say, hey, dad, i don't know if i'm a boy or a girl anymore. and even if she did, pete, that's a conversation, a private conversation between me, my daughter, my wife and my family. pete: absolutely. >> do you think it's proper that teachers, adults in authority of these children, have that a influence on our kids? i don't -- to me, i don't think that's where schools are being paid to do -- pete: amen. >> looking for my -- yeah. i'm looking for my daughter to learn how to read and write. pete: michelle, if you took the teachers and students outside of the classroom at that age and they were talking to kids about these topics anywhere else
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outside of walmart or on the street corner, they'd be arrested. but instead talking about private body parts to kindergarteners is, it's desensitizing them to radical concepts. there's always been sex ed, this is a whole other level. >> thanks for having us on, pete. like ted said, there are a lot of good things about this curriculum, and there are a lot of things that parents disagree on. but the real issue is many of the topics are not age-appropriate. many of topics we, as parents, we were just asking to be taught much later. we do not believe the curriculum is developmentally age-appropriate. the creator or founders of this curriculum, it's a political organization with social justice issues -- pete: yep. >> but they're trying to push. a majority of the feedback were parents asking to be -- topics to be introduced later. the school district even did a survey with teachers, and teachers were also saying this
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is, these are conversations that need to happen in later grades, not in the elementary school level by any chance. my son is, my youngest is 11, he's a sixth grader. he will be opting out of this program. this is just too much, too soon for our young students. pete: it's creep creepy, they use so-called good things as a gateway to insert a radical philosophyover turning biblical wisdom and human history about sex and gender and just introducing it as if it's fact to the youngest of kids. thank you for fighting back. i know kids can opt out, but it was a 6-1 decision, which means les a lot of work to be done on that school board. thank you for standing up as parents. i know it's not easy. keep up the fight. >> thank you. >> thank you. pete: you got it. we did get a statement from the school district. i wonder what they'll say? here's what they said, members
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of the school district work collaboratively to help develop a reslides hjd curriculum with the intention of meeting the needs expressed by our students and community. the last time it was revised was 10 years ago, and since then everything's changed. after afro bust discussion and thoughtful deliberation, the board of education approved this curriculum. creeps. all right, coming up, unvaxxed and unwelcome, novak djokovic out of the u.s. open because his unvaccinated status won't let him enter the country. buck sexton is here next. ♪ you've got to be so cold to make it in this world. ♪ yeah, you're a natural ♪
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will: all right, fox news alert, the redacted affidavit prompting the fbi mar-a-lago raid is released, well, with a lot of black ink, this as it's revealed the national archive was willing to let trump send his letters with kim jong un through fedex. here to weigh in, buck sexton, a longtime friend of mine. we go back quite a ways. >> over a decade now. will: you look at this, i think
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65-70% of this is redacted. what are your thoughts? >> this essentially lays out the basis, the evidentiary basis for what we were already told lu reporting, right in it tells us, well, there were documents, and it gives us a timeline. so it's an affirmation, i think, of what we knew. but the redactions were always going to be in there because, one, there's no advantage in them showing it to us. two, there's the possibility that people would read them and say, well, hold on a second, that doesn't seem like it's sensitive enough. or, three, if it was really sensitive, why are you showing stuff to the entire world that obviously is highly classified even if your just describing the level of classification and some of the basic ideas behind it? so the redactions were to be expected. i think it honestly went down with a bit of a thud because now people are saying, so what are you going to do? you expect us to trust you after what the fbi has done in recent years, recent elections? you're going to just black out a bunch of lines? this is super secret, you've got
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to just take our word for it. they're either going to prosecute trump, or people are going to say-a massive blunder. will: you made the transition well. you're asking us to pill in those redactions with -- fill in those redactions with trust with the fbi. and we now know according to mark zuckerberg of facebook that the fbi came to him prior to the release of the hunter biden story and said we need you to look out for russian misinformation. did they talk about this story specifically? zuckerberg can't remember. but talk about black ink, this should be screaming from every newspaper. this is massive. >> this is a huge story. again, i think it affirms what was known at some level through the reporting,s but now we have the proof. no one can debate, this is a matter of fact. i have so many things. willing on one hand, why does the fbi think that policing disinformation is within hair mandate? it absolutely -- their mandate? it absolutely is not. this motion that because there's some foreigners who say things
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on facebook about our elections that aren't true or whatever so the fbi should be intervening? that's crazy to me. also is -- has there ever been information about an election that benefited republicans and hurt democrats? somehow the answer is, no. and in this case they're telling everybody watch out for the misinformation that was actually true. will: right. >> so are they that bad at their jobs? i worked for some of the former senior intelligence officers, former cia, nsa, the fancy three-letter agencies -- the brand has taken a hit, so it's good i do other things -- when they signed that letter saying the hunter biden laptop was disinformation, they knew they were lying, by the way. they knew that wasn't disinformation, but they figured this is necessary to stop the gravest threat to our democracy, donald trump. so they're not that dumb, they are that dishonest. will: yeah, willing to burn democracy.
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>> absolutely. will: all right. i know you're a big tennis fan. >> i do like tennis. so my main man clay is the sports guy. i do like tennis. so clay travis loves all the sports, but tennis is one that i play and watch. will: and you're going to the u.s. open which will not feature novak djokovic -- is he number one right now? he was. >> basically, at in the point, federer, nadal, djokovic, there's this debate about the g.o.a.t. many tennis. he, djokovic, could -- he already missed one earlier this year, he could be the greatest of all time based on grand slam win, but he won't get the shot that kept him out of the australian open and now the u.s. open. will: because he's unvaccinated. >> because he won't get the shot. so this is beyond stupid. and everybody knows it. but we sit here, we're supposed to keep playing by these rules.
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why? because fauci hasn't ridden off into the sunset and gotten his $10 million book deal for a book nobody's going to read. this is bizarre. no one will defend it, but i understand at this point, will, i think there's a bitterness for so many people who pushed the policies who were wrong. they just want to make you obey anyway because they're not as smart as they thought they were. will: and they're committed to this insan i. might as well ride out the hand. >> it's a religious belief. it's something along the lines of thinking that joe biden is a good president or recycling is going to save the president. it's really not based in reality. will: clay travis and buck sectorton show noon to three every day. pete: it's the not going to save the the planet? will: what? pete: recycling's not going to save the planet? that's news. buck, good to see you. thanks, will. joe biden appeared to apologize to white house staff yesterday after answering too many questions. listen.
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>> thank you so much, mr. president -- >> i'm sorry. [laughter] i shouldn't do that. i'm not allowed to do that. finish. pete: i took control, i'm not allowed to do that, said the commander in chief. critics were left wondering again who really is in charge in the west wing. and almost 40 years in the making, the 1983 holiday classic, and it is a classic, a christmas story, it's going to get a sequel. and actor peter billingsley are return to -- will return to his role as the beloved ralphie. >> stuck, stuck, stuck! >> how about a nice football? >> football? football? what's a football? >> no, no, i want a rifle!
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>> you'll shoot your eye out, kid. pete: really by's obviously going -- ralphie's going to be old now, but his thoughts have to come through with that voice. the sequel comes out november 17th and a grown-up ralphie dealing with his own kids and holiday dream, makes sense. but when you try to make a she sequel on a classic, it's a risky move. but we'll all be watching, and that's what they know. all right, don't miss tomorrow's jam-packed show, kash patel, maria bartiromo, sean duffy and tyrus. plus, we're boeing to try our hand at a little bit of -- we're going to try our hand at a little bit of sumo wrestling. but first, we're kicking off college football season with a punting competition on fox square, coming up next. ♪
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started here with some -- pete: kicking camp, you might say. here to teach us the best, we thought it was punting, it may end up being kicking -- will: oh, or really? i was prepared to punt. pete: cord, thanks for being here. el us about amity, tell us about the squad. they've been with us all morning. >> this is the 11u football team from amity. these kids are the first team i had for the second year, and we run a different team, different type of offense. we run a single wing. pete: okay. >> it's more appropriate for youth football. pete: yep with. >> so these kids have had a really good year last year, and we hope to have another good year -- will: a lot of running the ball, jamming it down the defense's throat. >> exactly. [laughter] will: oh, there we go. the boys are lining up -- pete: yeah, we're catching it. will: what are you, punting or kicking? >> we're kicking. will: really? >> yeah, sorry.
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will: give us some tips. rachel: like little versus big? >> kicking's off the tee -- will: giving us a few tips. >> you want obeys yourself off. it's usually different -- to pace yourself off. two steps, bring your feet together. if you're a right kicker, two to the left, and you point your toes right to the football. one, two, and what you want to do is you want to follow through. 30-degree angle with your toe and the top of your foot. pete: so it's not point of your toe. tough in heels. rachel: it will be a little tough. will: one more, pete. let's see your form. pete: how many times have we seen on television? kickoff, you know -- >> there you go. you're a natural. pete: all right, natural.
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look at that. we're going to compete next, but thanks to amity and coach for bringing the squad out. and rainbow lettering uniform and apparel for the amity squad. will: stick around. what do we have coming up? we have, who knows, because they won't put it up there. we can talk about amity # 1u football all day long. more "fox & friends" coming up next. ♪ never giving up what we believe in ♪
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you can stream music and you can answer phone calls. the audiologist was so incredible she's full of all kinds of little helpful hints i love it. they're a game changer for me. i feel like i can take on anything. it feels great to be in control of my hearing. better hearing has never been this easy. try lively risk-free for 100 days. visit listenlively.com mom: hey! cheap flight alert! daughter: hawaii! can we go? dad: maybe. i'll put a request in monday. sfx: shattering glass. theme song: unnecessary action hero! dad: was that necessary? unnecessary action hero: no. neither is missing this deal. with paycom, vacation is yours to manage. unnecessary action hero: not to mention benefits, scheduling, payroll. it's hr in the palm of your hand. dad: wow. unnecessary action hero: ask your employer about paycom. and make the unnecessary, unnecessary. dad: approved!
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about two years ago i realized that jade was overweight. i wish i would have introduced the fresh food a lot sooner. after farmer's dog she's a much healthier weight. she's a lot more active. and she's able to join us on our adventures. get started at longlivedogs.com before treating your chronic migraine— 15 or more headache days a month, each lasting 4 hours or more you're not the only one with questions about botox®. botox® prevents headaches in adults with chronic migraine before they even start—with about 10 minutes of treatment once every 3 months. so, ask your doctor if botox® is right for you, and if a sample is available. effects of botox® may spread hours to weeks after injection causing serious symptoms. alert your doctor right away, as difficulty swallowing, speaking, breathing, eye problems, or muscle weakness can be signs of a life-threatening condition. side effects may include allergic reactions,
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[applause] pretty nice. all right. will: should i drop it like -- pete: you better not. will: all right, coach. pete: we got a winner? >> will. pete: will? [cheers and applause] ♪? >> i say if you take out a loan, you should pay it off. i don't rely on the government to pay my debts. >> i think a certain amount of loan forgiveness is good. >> i don't support it. >> why can't we educate our young? why can't we foot that bill? >> for somebody with loans, it sounds amazing. like, who's going to fay for it? >> i think any amount of forgiveness is beneficial.
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