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tv   The Five  FOX News  September 13, 2022 2:00pm-3:00pm PDT

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white border scandal that engulfed the clinton administration and eventually led to the first impeachment of a u.s. president in more than a century. ken starr was the one behind that investigation that prompted that entire impeachment affair. dead at age 76. ♪ ♪ >> jeanine: hello, everyone. i am judge jeanine pirro malik jessica tarlov, jesse watters, dana perino, and greg gutfeld. it is 5:00 in new york city and this is "the five." ♪ ♪ president biden throwing a tone-deaf party for the ages. on the same day the stock market had its worst day since june 2020, thanks to a worse than expected inflation report,
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biden and democrats thought it would be appropriate to hold a massive white house event to celebrate the passage of his so-called inflation reduction act, which actually does nothing to solve the problem. biden bringing 2,000 of his closest friends to the south lawn, including a soothing performance by james taylor. >> and how about james taylor? a voice that heals our soul and unites the nation and a good friend, exactly four weeks ago today, i signed the inflation reduction act into law. the single most important legislation passed in the congress to combat inflation, the soul of america is vibrant, the future of america is bright, and the promise of america is real. this will cut costs for fam families. help reduce inflation at the kitchen table. >> jeanine: but it didn't. prices of foods spiked to their highest margins in more than four decades. and biden's tone-deaf event
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wouldn't be complete without the inaccurate ramblings of good old chuck and nancy. >> whoa! look at this crowd! so, this is a great and celebratory day. >> inflation reduction act so beautifully named for all that it does. your extraordinary leadership has made this glorious day possible. that is an applause line. [applause] [laughs] >> jeanine: you know, greg, inflation rose higher-than-expected in august, keeping prices painful for all americans, and yet, it was higher, in fact, than predicted, and they are over there celebrating. what are they celebrating about? >> greg: i don't know, it is like underwear at a flea market, i am not buying it. james taylor again? why are we torturing people? they did this to the french
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after a terrorist attack. i mean, come on! at least get somebody listenable. i could make some suggestions, may be the melvin's, sleigher, misfits, something good. i am pleading with republicans coming how to get your act together, you are never going to get an opportunity like this. this is the inmates are running the asylum. nothing they say is true. if you can't beat these guys, then you do not deserve to win and it is sad, somebody wants it more. sometimes it feels like the democrats want the stuff more because they're just more ruthless, calling half of america terrorists, that means you came to play, right? they are making it so if you decide to challenge them on anything, you are considered unpatriotic. i would love to see the republicans kind of get as nasty as they are, and if you look at what the dems are doing which is elevating the far right candidates, remind you that
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politics, -- that is full-time. for republicans, politics is something you do while running your business and for the dems, it is their business. i'm very sanguine. is that the word? i learned that yesterday. i feel like the dems are now stepping it up and the republicans are on the back foot. >> jeanine: you know, jesse, meanwhile, it is schizophrenic what greg is talking about, the schizophrenic approach where they are putting all of this money into the right-wing candidates running against the democratic candidate and yet they are trashing the right wing candidate. what is the agenda here? >> jesse: they are trying -- permission to make an analogy, judge? this would be like your wife leaving you at the altar and then being like, you know what, let's go dancing and cut some cake, right? this would be like
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hillary clinton on the night of the 2016 election firing off the fireworks because they were already paid for. real people see a number drop like this and they cancel the party, but politicians can't do that because the media covers everything they do. because the media would then s say, you know, biden cancels inflation reduction act party after inflation source. so instead they have to pretend like everything is normal. and that is why this country is looking at them like they are crazy, because you are in a recession, the dow dropped a thousand points, but it does not matter if you live in fantasy land, judge. you know, doesn't matter! you can say that the inflation reduction act reduces inflation by spending a trillion dollars. you can say we are not in a recession. you can say whatever you want to be it gives me these vibes about putin. you here yesterday, they just lost a ton of territory in northeast ukraine, what was vlad doing? he was at the unveiling of a ferris wheel. it is like nothing matters if you just pretend like everything is fine, and until today, i
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thought the republicans were going to lose the senate. not anymore, with this inflation number that hits andy's senate s that are falling apart and all of the money republicans are injecting into e races, i'm a little more confident, except lindsey graham comes out today on talks about abortion. and everybody else is talking about inflation. >> jeanine: before we talk about that let's talk about the thing, we have these democrat senate candidates, whether it is fetterman, who is refusing, in pennsylvania, to debate oz, or mark kelly who fumbled the other day, yesterday i believe, and he could not give any kind of a comment on whether or not joe biden is doing a good job and he says, i don't write report cards. we have that sound? let's take a listen. >> is he doing a good job, do you think? >> hey, you know, first of all, it's not my job to give him a report card. i would say, you know, mixed reviews. >> so he held in t the an event, you would attend?
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>> i would consider. i would look at it. >> jeanine: he was fumbling right there. and it is his party. when we've got this, how come the republicans are not jumping all over this? >> dana: i think they are pure i'm going to give you some good news for you do not have to be sanguine anymore. last tuesday, when we came off of labor day, he did feel like the democrats had the wind behind their back and it was like wow, they are doing great. by friday, all of these other polls have come out, actually, republicans are hanging in there pretty well. they have less money than the democrats and yet they are still able to hold really study. people don't really focus until after labor day. and then the white house, you schedule events based on the calendar, okay, the jobs numbers coming out that day. they didn't know what the inflation number was going to be but why did they schedule the inflation reduction act on the same day the inflation is coming up? that makes them look ridiculous. and everybody that is out there, a great event, lots of fun, beautiful in september, a lot of
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those are staffers, okay? that is not americans that are dealing with this or looking at their 401(k). here you have the white house, the juxtaposition is really strange, they are popping champagne for a bill that will take working people's money and give it to rich people so they can buy electric vehicles. and then there is the student loan debt. we know how that is going. and a lot of these races are tightening and people are forgetting, remember what happened in new jersey? there was not a single poll in all of new jersey, and that republican came this close to winning. and that hasn't changed. think about youngkin, think about education, crime is a big issue, the border, you have the democrats saying maybe our polls are not as good as we think they are because their oversampling democrats, so i'm not saying or republicans are going to run away with it, but i do believe they are in better shape than we thought a week ago. >> greg: i feel less sanguine. [laughter] >> jeanine: you know, jessica, the truth is the dems seemed, as
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dana said, they seemed to be in good shape, had a good summer, they had a legislative success, but the truth is, you know, the inflation is five times higher since biden took office. prices of food has not gone down, even though the price of gas is going down, so how do they play this going into november? >> jessica: well, i think the optics of today were absolutely abominable, and i feel very bad percent of joe manchin who is going to be on with bret when we get on off air and talk about the act he supported and they had to work really hard to get him on board with it and he is going to have to talk about the dow ticker versus the president talking about this so i would have rescheduled especially since it was majority staffers. thursday might have been a better day for this. the races were always going to tighten. that is just what happens. people wake up and start paying attention. i know, dana, you saw the piece in "the new york times," one of the posters did an evaluation of
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the races based on the mistakes that were made in 2020, so wisconsin was supposed to be a win by like eight points and it ended up being one point, and when he redid the tables, the dems pick up one seat, it was the fetterman seat, that is still a pick up, i would be plenty happy if we ended up with one extra seat, i would be overjoyed if we ended up with a couple more, and i think it is feasible somewhere like ohio, for instance, but when you see some of these results, mandela barnes of nine points over ron johnson, i don't believe that. i think it is going to be a really close race. i will say, to jesse's point about lindsey graham, just, i guess, waking up and saying, oh, i should go out by myself and say we are going to have a national abortion ban, when i saw it previewed last night on twitter, oh, no, this is going to be terrible because he will be helping out women in these states with these highly restrictive bands, but no, it is even worse than that. the highly restrictive states get to keep their policies and he is just going after blue states, or people with more
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lenient policies, and there has reporting after reporting about the spike in women that are registering, how angry they are, that is democrats, independent women, add republican women. mitch mcconnell's face said it all when he got asked about it and he was -- [laughter] >> dana: can i say, lindsey graham did not go alone. >> jessica: he does not have the votes behind him. >> dana: that's fine. if he introduced this very bill every year for 20 years. >> jessica: it used to be 20 weeks and he has gone to 15. i understand -- i don't want to hear from them at about abortion, certainly a man who has not had kids about abortion, he should never have done this. >> greg: some men have no opinion on abortion. okay, you have no opinion on -- can we pick something? >> jesse: vasectomy's beard >> greg: about war? we send boys off to war for generations. i know what i mean. >> jessica: i know more than
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you do. >> jeanine: get the last word. fox news alert. fox news alert. ken starr, former fox news contributor and special prosecutor whose investigation led to the impeachment of president bill clinton, has died at the age of 76. david spunt has more. david? >> sad news, ken starr, 76 years old, well known as independent counsel probing the alleged cover-up of the affair of former president bill clinton and white house intern monica lewinsky back in 1998. he released the starr report, that is how many in america knew him, that eventually led to the '98 impeachment and eventual senate acquittal of been sitting president bill clinton. interestingly enough, both men, clinton and starr, shared the "time" magazine man of the year that year. his defenders said five with a straight shooter doing his civic duty as he saw fit under very difficult circumstances.
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he was born in 1946 in texas, raised in san antonio, the son of a preacher, interestingly, i am looking at his career here, he clerked for chief justice warren burger, supreme court, reagan justice department lawyer, federal appeals court judge, he had an impeccable resume, in 1990 he was a finalist for a supreme court seat that actually went to david souter. he was president bush's solicitor general. eventually arguing three dozen cases before the supreme court. most people know him for the starr report in 1998, it concluded the president's involvement in whitewater and other matters "may constitute grounds for impeachment for perjury, obstruction of justice, witness tampering, and abuse of power," and judge, we know that after leaving the public spotlight, he went to pepperdine university's law school, then became president of baylor university, before leaving in 2016. he actually resigned after some
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pressure involving a scandal involving some student athletes, but ken starr, 76 years old, all the way from clerking for the former chief justice warren burger, to sitting on the appeals court, judge starr was well known in many circles. we are told he died after some complications and he will be remembered fondly by many across the country. >> jeanine: david, thanks so much. >> you are welcome. >> jeanine: coming up next, the supreme court hitting back hard after kamala attacks it on its legitimacy. ♪ ♪ breakthrough heartburn... means your heartburn treatment is broken. try zegerid otc. it contains the leading medicine to treat frequent heartburn, uniquely designed for absorption. get all day, all night relief with zegerid otc. when tired, achy feet make your whole body want to stop,
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♪ ♪ >> greg: the supreme court not taking kamala's attacks lying down after the vp dissed the high court and said the decision to overturn roe has made her worried about their integrity. >> i think this is an activist court. we had an established right for almost half a century, which is the right of women to make decisions about their own body. as an extension of what we have decided to be the privacy rights to which all people are entitled. and this court took that constitutional right away. >> greg: chief justice john roberts bashing kamala's criticism and defending the supreme court's legitimacy. >> the court has always decided controversial cases and that is
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the role of the supreme court. and that role doesn't change simply because people disagree with this opinion or that opinion. simply because people disagree with that opinion is not a basis for questioning the legitimacy of the court. >> greg: all right, so this is obviously i guess referring to abortion, so i'm going to go to the guy first. [laughter] no, what kind of politician, jesse, would attack an institution like the supreme court? this is a threat to democracy. is she aware she is putting their lives in danger? >> jesse: you know, after someone tried to kill kavanaugh she better watch your words. i am not usually a word policeman but they have studied death threat against canon, this judge in the special master cas. back off a little bit. >> greg: i think letter a equals b, you said bad things and people died, it's on her. >> jesse: i would never say that but i might. if you listen to what ruth bader ginsburg said, the court that decided roe was an activist court. this court is basically kind of course correcting here.
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it's strange that the liberals are so angry because those supreme court justices, the three that trump appointed, those were supposed to be crookeds. that is why they have so much rage inside them, he was never supposed to get those appointments. notice the democrats, anytime they disagree, they attack as illegitimate, trump is an illegitimate president, if you disagree with anything you are an illegitimate scientist, illegitimate businessmen, illegitimate doctor. the court is now illegitimate. you can't do that. the democrats all about defending institutions, then the next day on "meet the press" you can't just slander them. >> greg: that's true, judge. we took a lot of heat for criticizing the fbi, and yet she can just go right after the supreme court, which is basically the super concentrated version of the fbi with 90% more fbiness. >> jeanine: well, aside from all of that, i won't even address it, but the supreme court where members of the supreme court, there were protests in front of their houses or weeks on end,
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attempted assassination of supreme court justice, all of this ginning up of hate and anger, this is what the left is trying to do, they are trying to break down the institutions as illegitimate. all of the cornerstones of america, whether it is law and order, whether it is the courts, whether it is the constitution, all of that as illegitimate if they don't like it and we are going to protest even though there is covid because we have a right to protest but you don't. it is really the them versus us, and that is what they are doing. this is like all written out, it is like there is a playbook. president comes out, there is the others, they are not the people we are on the side of, they get a decision they don't like, as far as they are concerned, the court is an activist court, the court is far from an activist court, it is not an activist court, the court is, as jesse said, righting a wrong, that ruth bader ginsburg herself, a true feminist, said was not -- there was no anchor in the constitution for this
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right. you know, the most interesting part of all of this is whether or not the week is something they are going to investigate and going -- >> greg: jessica, speaking of the leak, it is such a historic leak and yet the media has no intention of really looking at it which makes me think a liberal did it. was it you? you can confess here. >> jessica: i wish. no one is watching. i think people are pretty interested in it. there is a game of misdirection going on when the leak happened because republicans didn't want to talk about the meaning of the decision. they didn't want to talk about the implications because i think mitch mcconnell, smart republicans knew this was not going to end well for them. i happen to think that it was a conservative that did it to hold kavanaugh and everyone, but essentially justice roberts, in-line, to keep those numbers there appeared to the point about it being an activist court, i think justice roberts to some degree actually thinks that it is because he didn't
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side with everyone else. he thought they were going too far. he only agreed with part of the opinion. and i read this great "washington post" article that basically said, can we just admit that judicial activism means decisions i don't like? and that everyone just throws it around when they get a bad one? but this happens to be a really bad one because it did on to a constitutional right that we have had for over five decades, and i know that ruth bader ginsburg didn't like the decision, it was a 7-2 decision, with conservatives on there, and it was a privacy decision, so yes, there should have been a codification of roe on a national level, but this isn't just a liberal problem. >> greg: dana, is it really a constitutional right? just between you and me. a bunch of b.s. >> dana: no. the thing is also, the supreme court said, congress, you can pass a law. but instead of kamala harris saying here's what we are going to do, i am going to lead the effort, we are going to pass a law, we can make fun of if you want, but lindsey graham at least introduced a law and you can pass that and see what
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happens, and also you can let the states do it, but they are not doing any of that, they're just blaming the courts. imagine if you are chuck todd on "meet the press" and you are asking her a question about this and you say let me just show you a clip and you show a video of schoolhouse rock, how a bill becomes a law, congress can pass a law and the court checks it off, they do not ever want to do that, think about the eviction moratorium, they knew that was illegal and they tried to do it anyway, doing the same thing on student loans, it's going to happen again. one thing i think all of us will find is inflation will be the top issue, abortion will be an issue, and one of the way it is an issue as it surged a ton of money, especially small dollars come into democratic campaigns, and yet still as i mentioned in the a block, republicans are still holding strong, have to deal with the issue, they cannot pretend abortion is not going to be an issue in the campaign but an activist court is not the problem. they try to pass a law, and theu will not have to deal with all of this. >> greg: i stopped listening after you said "imagine you're
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chuck todd." >> dana: i am chuck todd? >> greg: i started to get very nauseous and sad. >> dana: think of all of the questions you could ask people would be willing to come on your show. >> jeanine: questions you don't ask. >> greg: think about all of that rogaine i have to get. up next, liberal workers at "the new york times" kicking and screaming over a possible return to the office. ♪ ♪ age is just a number. and mine's unlisted. try boost® high protein with 20 grams of protein for muscle health. versus 16 grams in ensure high protein. boost® high protein also has key nutrients for immune support. boost® high protein. ♪ do you want some more? wait till you see me on the downhill. see you at home. enjoy it. with the advanced safety features of a lexus es.
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summer. the workers expressing their distaste after the times gave employee branded lunchboxes this week as a return to office perk. delete college campuses across the country like nyu and georgetown have some form of indoor mass mandate in place. dana, i heard a little chuckle there, was that at the lunchboxes? >> dana: if i was at t "the new york times" and sent me a lunch box, you are not getting the point. a thousand employees saying inflation is killing them, oh, keep that on the front page. that might be something. i think that inflation obviously has taken a bite. also i think commutes are an issue, our infrastructure has not kept up. people are realizing, wait, if i can be home and get there in time for the little league game and doing my job just fine, why do i have to be in the office? i am actually a proponent of being in the office, i think there's a lot of benefit to it, but i understand where these people are coming from. my last point is, another problem is the open plan office.
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people are going crazy because they can't stand listening to all of their colleagues conversations and the noises and everything. companies go back and forth, individual offices, then they go to open plan, individual offices, open plans. bloomberg when he ran for president and he was going to make the west wing open plan, and i said oh, he is going to lose. >> jessica: perhaps that is why he lost. rag, you hate listening to people in the office. >> greg: i do. obviously it is jesse's staff that drives me crazy. it is hard for the near times to write about downplaying inflation now when their whole staff is rebelling inflation and think about the js people show up to and die, right? these people want to stay home because they feel unsafe and might get covid? talk to a blogger or deep-sea fishermen, they show up, arts and culture editor says i feel healthy if i stay home, they should fire him come as an employer you cannot forfeit the right to require people to come to work, right? the problem is we have expanded the idea of health to encompass so many things from gun ownership to the use of gender
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pronouns, now anybody can say i don't feel healthy, and by requiring me to come to work, kind of puts me at risk. this is a luxury protest. these people do not make life work, right? they are not truck drivers, electricians, plumbers, could you imagine a plumber working from home? you a n would need like a zoom snake, or people would have to come to you with your clogged plumbing, carry your toilet to the plumber. that would not work. >> jessica: no, it wouldn't. judge? >> jeanine: the interesting thing is there is more unionizing now because they are saying, look, you are asking us to do more. you are asking us to spend money on gas, on lunches come on clothing, everything is more expensive for us to come to w work, and that is not in our contract that we have to come to work, nobody ever thought to put it in a contract. usually, you got a job, you came to work. like dana, i think we all need to be here, but you know, i kind
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of get it. but the unionizing i think is going to create a real power struggle with management. but the unions -- you have to think about it -- it is not management's fault we are in this mess. you know, it is china's fault we are in this mess, because of covid and now people got a little lazy, they got a little comfortable, whatever it might be, i don't know, but it is a shame because management now saying look, you get your to work at goldman sachs or you get your butt fired. and that's okay, too. >> jessica: i think that is okay. >> jesse: two types of people, those that enjoyed the pandemic protocols and the rest of us that wanted to get back to normal. just so happens all the people that liked being locked down are in academia and in the media. they are shy people. they enjoy submitting to the government, and they like the self-righteously judging other people who don't submit to the government, so that whole concept of being home alone felt comfortable for them because it is a big scary world for a lot of these introverts and they are
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trying to lock in this permanent mall mentality and the rest of us are looking at them like a bunch of weirdos. i mean, you need a lunch box to show up to work? come on. >> jessica: to spend a day in your mind would be interesting. >> jesse: oh, you have no idea appeared >> jessica: i think i do. up next, the media accused of a double standard when it comes to covering california's energy crisis. ♪ ♪ so how many vaccines have you given to people? me? about 1000. walgreens...millions. ♪ i cannot miss her big debut. with your booster, i think you'll be there. for every twirl. i got a shot so my sister won't get sick. way to go, big bro! so while we're here... flu shot, as well? let's do it. when you need to talk vaccinations, our pharmacists are here ♪
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♪ ♪ this... is a glimpse into the no-too-distant future of lincoln. ♪ ♪ it's what sanctuary could look like... feel like... sound like... even smell like. more on that soon. ♪ ♪ the best part? the prequel is pretty sweet too. ♪ ♪ i left headquarters after hearing a plane hit the world trade center. this can't possibly be an accident. look at the sky. it's beautiful. i had in my mind that this was an attack right away. you saved so many lives that day. where were you when the towers came down? i hear this loud noise. i look up and it was the north tower coming down. and i can just remember the huge antenna imploding into the building. i looked up and i said, i'm not going to outrun this. i dove under an apparatus there on the corner of west and vesey.
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awaited the dust cloud. right here. right here. i was in my house in the south tower, came down, and i received a phone call from a firefighter. he said to me, frank, it's really bad down here. i said, i know. and he goes, no, you don't understand. nobody's come home. and i had to get off the phone, tell my three sisters my brothers, that steven wasn't coming home. he ran through the tunnel to the towers. and that's why we started the tunnel to towers foundation. all these men and women have inspired us. every time i'm here at the american response monument that represents the 12 horsemen that rode into afghanistan, they were told, you take this mission, you're not going to come home. true american heroes. they never forgot what happened on september 11th and meeting them when they came home. it just sent chills up my spine because i knew what they went through. we're so proud at the tunnel to towers. for taking care of catastrophically injured service members. gold star families.
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well, if you're a fallen first responder anywhere in america and you die in the line of duty, we're going to pay off your mortgage. and if you don't have a home, we're going to build you a home. we got to support our first responders and our military. they support us. they protect us. and we have to protect them and their families. as well. by giving $11 a month. you're joining us on our mission to do good and take care of gold star families. catastrophically injured service members and first responders. go to t2t.org now. it's all around us again. the inflation buzz word. as if inflation magically goes away and then suddenly returns. but inflation never really goes away. each year - by some measure - the dollar declines in value. well - here's something else that doesn't go away... gold and silver. rosland capital - a trusted leader in helping people acquire precious metals. gold bullion, lady liberty gold and silver proofs, and our premium coins,
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my how that has changed from last year when texas suffered a winter storm. that was all governor abbott's fault. >> congresswoman alexandria ocasio-cortez, one of the architects of the climate legislation, responded, "the infrastructure failures in texas are quite literally what happens when you don't pursue a green new deal." >> it didn't work because they bought the wrong ones! >> governor greg abbott seized on the issue with wind turbines and blamed renewable energy and even slammed the green new deal. >> senator ron johnson was saying it's unreliable, wind and solar, they are unreliable! emily, has there been a lot of fact-checking of this? >> this was about renewables. it is not about renewables. >> dana: you miss brian stelter. >> jesse: i reached out of him >> greg: i reach out to him to do free training. >> dana: a pass? >> greg: another example of media manipulation.
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if it is bad news, they turn it off, if it is good news, turn it on. this goes to their central thesis, which is the two sides are not equal, right? you think it is generally left and right but they look at it as left and right. from a moral structure, it is more of a battle of good versus evil which enables them to live. did you see what charlie crist said? he referred to desantis as satan. somehow, it's worse. you can be anti-if you are an anti-crist. it worked, i think. >> dana: you cannot refer to someone as hitler. okay. green energy can be part of the mix but it can't be the only thing you can rely on. >> jesse: it was part of the mix in texas. what i remember the ice iced out the wind turbines and throws them shut because they did not spend an extra gazillion dollars on the deicing program of the turbines because no one ever thought it would be minus 20 in
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texas. in california, everybody knows it is hot in the summer. it's a little bit different and that is why the grid they are nearly shut down. >> jeanine: down. >> dana: jessica, energy is going to be an issue going forward. we are facing something in europe this winter that will focus the mind of everybody and we should be focused on that. green energy playing a role, descent to have it as part of the mix but you cannot rely on it. >> jessica: texas has been part of a large green energy success story, everyone loves to remember wind turbines they have going, even though i guess donald trump thought they cause cancer or something, but the real problem -- didn't he say that? >> dana: i don't remember that. >> jessica: anyway, what i remember from the media coverage was people were mocking ted cruz and rightfully so for packing a little bag and going to cancun and leaving his dog behind on top of it. so gavin newsom, i get it from he gave a press conference and was wearing a fleece and that was something really embarrassing or whatever, but it was really about ted cruz i think abandoning the state more than it was criticizing the
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management. >> jeanine: okay, i am not going to make this political. i'm going to talk about energy. the thing that is making me crazy is buttigieg is now interested in the california ban on new gas cars and making it national. so, guys, if california -- and for some reason, virginia was connected to it, on the ban on developing new gas cars, apparently buttigieg is thinking about nationally. isn't that wonderful? >> dana: several state legislatures across the country decided to tie their future to california, so when california does, they will automatically d. governor youngkin trying to pull that back, we will see. >> greg: fact-check: you are correct. 2019. >> jessica: thank you. >> greg: donald trump said they decrease property values, true, and the noise they emit good cause cancer. some say. >> jesse: couched it. >> jessica: about everything. some say. >> greg: that is the genius.
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>> dana: stay right there. steve doocy is here to teach us a thing or two about good cooking with his new book. there he is. ♪ ♪ i brought in ensure max protein with 30 grams of protein. those who tried me felt more energy in just two weeks. uhh - here, i'll take that woo hoo ensure max protein, with 30 grams of protein, 1 gram of sugar and now in two new flavors (♪ ♪) breakthrough heartburn... means your heartburn treatment is broken. try zegerid otc. it contains the leading medicine to treat frequent heartburn, uniquely designed for absorption. get all day, all night relief with zegerid otc.
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♪ ♪ >> jesse: welcome back. our good friend steve doocy is not just brian kilmeade's sidekick on "fox & friends," he is also a serious master chef. he and his wife have a brand-new "simply happy cookbook" out today chock-full of mouthwatering and stress-free recipes that are civil to make -- that is what he says -- but dana, greg, and yours truly contributed fantastic recipes, and steve is here to help us make the book's first recipe has "the five"'s namesake. charcuterie -- did i pronounce that correctly? charcuterie. >> steve: we cannot use the word "the five," so we call it the 5:00 charcuterie board. my wife and i were talking about
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what fox personnel we want to include, dana has been in, the judge has been in, what could you guys do? at our house, 5:00 is happ happy hour. all of america is hitting the sauce. that is why they love you. half in the bag right now. we were thinking, what would go with a little wine and cheese and stuff like that? why not a cheese platter? dana actually told me about it charcuterie board book a couple years ago. >> jesse: this was her idea? >> steve: essentially that is where it came from. i talked to everybody here, i polled the audience, i figured out what you all would like on it charcuterie board and here it is. >> dana: what was your choice, jesse? >> jesse: if i can recall correctly, what do we have here, steve? >> steve: you chose -- >> jesse: cheese. >> steve: and some pate. >> jesse: chicken liver pate. and some -- am i pronouncing
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that correctly? [laughter] >> steve: jessica, roasted peppers for you, and greg, because you are a trend trendsetter, -- >> greg: you want me to explain what i did? >> steve: please. >> greg: balance your taste buds. for the savory, i have pigs in a blanket, which everybody -- if you do not like pigs and a blanket, you are dead to me. then i balance it with -- and that i have some crushed pop rocks. what you can do is put the pop rocks -- i have to do my show after this that i do not want to throw up. you mix them together and it is quite delicious. i have done this, this is a tradition in my family going back 50-60 years. >> jesse: pop rocks? >> greg: my great, great great grandfather invented pop rocks accidentally in the outhouse. >> steve: this is something dana -- >> dana: i learned how to make a salami rose. you take a wine glass.
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you have the salami. and you have to layer it all around like this, go all the way around. >> steve: how many pieces do you use? >> dana: as many as i need because we are not skimping on "the five." >> jesse: how do you make a salami rose? >> jeanine: upside down. >> jesse: beautiful. >> jeanine: very nice. >> dana: that is a better one. >> jesse: we have grapes, kamala harris has never tried one of these. >> jeanine: that's right. >> greg: in your photographs, do you have any tricks like how they use elmers glue instead of milk? >> steve: the professional food photographer who made these portraits is an artist because sometimes people will take pictures of foods they make at home and it doesn't turn out well. >> steve: instagram, everyone thinks what they made changes the world and they make a picture and put it up there --
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>> steve: don't. if it looks good, take a picture. >> jesse: this looks really appetizing. >> steve: said that is -- >> steve: that is egg, jesse. >> steve: you go to the full irish breakfast, full breakfast nachos, but breakfast over waffle fries. >> jesse: that sounds good. >> jeanine: i want to talk about, i think we should put grape leaves and goat cheese and hummus, that is like a mediterranean charcuterie. >> steve: in one of our other books, the judge shared her mother's -- >> jeanine: lentil soup. >> steve: the idea behind the happy series, this is our third book, is that everybody has a food that makes them ha happy, like your grandpa's salad dressing. and you're lentil soup from your mom. and the linguine you made on "fox & friends." and of course, for obvious
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reasons. >> greg: peter doocy is in this book a lot. >> steve: he is in the lot. >> jeanine: cauliflower, rice, brussels sprouts. >> steve: there is a story in the beginning of the book where we update what we have been doing since the last cookbook came out and i revealed after the last cookbook was released, i gained a little weight, i went on keto and i went on dry january -- >> jeanine: dry january is the worst. >> jesse: everybody check out steve and kathy doocy's new book, "the simply happy cookbook," we were staying in the green room, as long as he sells more than kilmeade. one more thing is up next. ♪ ♪
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♪ ♪
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>> judge jeanine: time now for one more thing, jesse. >> jesse: greg decided to litter my set with his birthday balloon so i decided to have fun with it watch this last night. let's could some text messages. we have got mark. michael from new york. [laughter] >> jesse: we have a cannabis convention infiltration on "jesse watters primetime." >> greg: tonight have a great show wonderful, wonderful jeff norton, kat timpf and tyrus. >> judge jeanine: that's it. >> greg: that's it. >> judge jeanine: today i went to fashion week in new york city. and i was accompanied by emma waters, that's jesse's wife in the middle bill hemmer at the zhang toy show. we have a couple more pictures move it along because i don't have a lot of time. watters and me and cheryl casone is there along with anthony and
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rosanna scotto. and that's the end of that. okay. jessica? >> jessica: a retired nurse is being hailed as a hero after saving the life of a baby who stopped breathing on board an airplane. on a flight when she heard calls for doctor over the loud speaker. she rushed to the back of the plane 3-month-old. performed external rub aggressive shake of the chest instead of cpr. retired for more than 20 years. much deserved applause on board a real hero. just awesome. >> great, great end of story. dana? >> hey, it's -- can i play my thing with the dog? or -- okay. so check out this dog. a little bit jealous. they brought home a cat. i love this. look what he does to the cat. the kitten. is he like okay, see you later, buddy. >> judge jeanine: oh my god. a fish. >> dana: cat is unfazed.
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janice dean podcast. i think it's excellent. so good at radio, got a great tone approach, everything, so i did a little interview with her and that is up now at fox news podcast.com. >> judge jeanine: i heard you talking about that today. anyway, thanks for joining us today. appreciate it. that's it for us. "special report" is up next. >> bret: no hot tubs. good evening. welcome to washington. i'm bret baier. breaking tonight, we are following two major stories. first sad news. the special counsel who pursued then president bill clinton during the white water and monica lewenski scandals has died. ken starr dying from complications after surgery. we will have more on that in a moment. first, a stunning sell off on wall street following disappointing inflation news. the three major indices lost between 4% and 5 percentage points in just one day. the dow plummeting 1276 today.

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