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tv   FOX and Friends Sunday  FOX News  September 18, 2022 4:00am-5:00am PDT

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high blood sugar, which can lead to coma or death, may occur. movement dysfunction and restlessness are common side effects. sleepiness and stomach issues are also common. side effects may not appear for several weeks. you are greater than your bipolar i. ask about vraylar and learn how abbvie could help you save. ♪. ♪. pete: we really appreciate the u.s. army air force band ceremonial brass quintet. they are playing those magnificent men in their flying
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machines. see how long they can perform that, flying birthing people. as we honor the air force's 75th birthday we are grateful for the air force. they drop us off places and they drop bombs on people and they were preceded i was correct, u.s. army air corporation 1926 to 1941. we transformed into the air force in 1947. rachel's father a master sergeant in the air force will join us. rachel: yeah. will: that is great. i think sean went up in an army fighter jet. rachel: i think national guard. maybe it was national guard. will: i have had the honor going up with the air force with luke air force base in arizona in an f-16. in awe of what those men do, the fighter pilots, the entire apparatus of support behind them. absolutely amazing. meanwhile 50 days until the midterms.
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last night donald trump was out campaigning in ohio for senate candidate jd vance. this is what he had to say what is at stake 350 days from now. >> the choice this november is simple, if you want to continue this national catastrophe vote for the radical left democrats do it. go ahead. you won't have a country left. [booing] if you want to stop the destruction of america, really reinvigorate that good old-fashioned american dream you must vote republican. this is the year we're going to take back the house, we're going to take back the senate and we are going to take back america. in 2024, most importantly, we are going to take back our magnificent white house. we're going to take it back. pete: probably nobody will hit the campaign trail more than
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donald trump on behalf of candidates he supports in the republican party. one of those places is in ohio where he was last night. he will also be doing that in pennsylvania, showing a lot of support for dr. mehmet oz running on the republican side against democrat john fetterman. we're 50 days out. we're about to go straight into campaign season. they have been debating whether or not they will debate. there is one debate between the two of them, with a lot of parameters based on fetterman's health. whether or not he can hear the questions, all of that. they're going back and forth about that and other things in the pennsylvania senate race. here is john fetterman and dr. oz. >> i'm sure all of you know this i had a stroke. dr. oz reminds everybody that. the issues now that's left, the only issue is a lingering issue of auditory processing. sometimes i might miss a word or sometimes i will mush two words
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together and create one that doesn't exist. i genuinely hope that you don't have a doctor in your life making fun of that. >> dodging questions of entire campaign. it was sort of shocking more and more, average voter is saying what is going on here? they reject john fetterman's big government policies jokes around our neck, dragging people down. people trying to make ends meet with the biden economy. rachel: there is fetterman again in the sweatshirt pretending if you're one of the working class. if you follow his history at all. he is a trust fund baby. he is sort of criticizing, not sort of, he is criticizing those who are concerned show concern for the effects of his stroke and i think he is kind of running out the clock here. he basically, i mean there is a lot of early voting that goes on nowadays. he can push that debate further and further out.
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that would be better for him. pete: that is what he is trying to do. rachel: go ahead. pete: one thing to make fun of someone's health cruelly. there is another simply point out the fact are you up to the job? that is what mehmet oz is doing. without the health piece, probably the most extreme candidate on the ballot in this election cycle fetterman. he is a hard leftist. doesn't want to talk about it. rachel: important to talk about health, we're already dealing with the commander-in-chief, with joe biden and we see what happens when you hide a candidate and then figure out that he is mentally deteriorating. there are serious consequences. our country was in big trouble. here's a tweet from by the way, fetterman making fun of dr. oz and doug mastriano, saying they're not from pennsylvania. pete: that they're from new jersey. rachel: "jersey boys." pete: how it goes all the time. will: 50 days to the midterms. we'll keep you up to date about all the battles as we head
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towards the finish line. we told you the story out of utah the last couple weeks, there was allegation of racism against byu made by a duke volleyball player. that story has fallen apart. no evidence supports the claims of the duke volleyball player. pete: not a single piece of evidence. will: it didn't stop the mainstream media running with the story better part of the week and 1/2. assume its conclusion, assume its certainty. as we talked about, i believe, i tried to point out myself, that type of conclusion and certainty based upon something that we now know is not true, has a price, has a cost. the implication was utah is full of racists. by extension mormons are racist. how do i know that is the offspring of this type of certainty? look what happened last night at the oregon-byu football game. i want you to listen to some of the chants by oregon ducks fans
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when they were playing byu. >> [bleep] the mormons. [bleep] the mormons. will: you can hear i think that is the student section at the university of oregon, chanting f the mormons. you know, i mean, i'm obviously there is no direct connection we know of. we don't know if the students buy into the bju-duke story. you breed that mentality when you tell people a lie. pete: utah governor tweeted religious bigotry celebrated in oregon. insert a different religion, think about how you would feel about it or how society would react to it. f the christians? f the muslims? can you imagine the response. that is the equivalent to this chant. their constitutionally protected from chanting such foolishness
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but we usually don't tolerate and wouldn't tolerate that in other second circumstances. based on a fraudulent story. rachel: look how easy it is to find footage of people actually you know, being bigoted and saying -- will: great point. rachel: there is the footage, right there. you know they have scoured every tape to find something from the game the girl claims, the volleyball game. there is nothing. it is not hard to find this footage. they haven't found it. so here is what is important to me. first of all the young lady who lied, she should be shame walked off that team. what she has done is incite, not just you know, not just smeared the people there, but she incited as i think you rightly point out, will, more bigotry and potentially violence. you never know where this can lead on other people. she has to be punished. pete: she is being celebrated as
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a victim and protected by the university. rachel: america we cannot allow that to happen. cannot allow that to happen. pete: you should be ostracized for lying about something like that. she is still celebrated there is absolutely no proof. will: i will say, i think there is an absolute connection between creating this environment that has been created over the last couple weeks and what you just saw on your television screen. it is not isolated. pete: no way. will: this happen ad year ago at usc, playing byu, obviously before the story came out. it is interesting in that for some reason you said, replace it with any other religion. it's somehow more acceptable to people out there to be offensive towards mormons. they're considered an out group, therefore safe to be offensive. pete: similar to jews with anti-semitism. you can whatever you want for them, for some reason it is impossible to put your finger on. rachel: i grew up of mesa, arizona, outside of
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salt lake city is the biggest community of norm moms. there is always interesting affinity between catholics and norm moms. our religions could not be anymore different. i have always believed that that affinity is that both catholics and mormons have a very deep history of religious bigotry in this country and, i think what you saw there is, is a sign of that but i, i think you're right. i think it is connected to what that little girl lied about. pete: will, you did interview with byu students yesterday. we had a couple of byu students on the program yesterday. here is a reminder what they said. >> from our source we knew the night of the game they had pretty solid evidence there was hardly any credibility to richardson's claims. possibly she heard something at one point. but the breadth of the story she put out there couldn't have been true. >> they said it was repeatedly done throughout the game. clear as day, it wasn't
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plausible. will: how quickly the hoax fell apart when they looked into the investigation. rachel: it's a big lie, big lie meet. pete: media lie. will: that has a name and issued apology. to all byu fans and students we want too apologize. we don't support any hateful speech towards one religions. we are ashamed for those who participated. that was oregon pit crew. mourners joined leaders to say the final good-byes for queen elizabeth ii. some are trying to ban saudi arabia prince from the attending the funeral because of the murder of jamal kashoggi.
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prince harry and prince william both wearing their military uniforms as the queen's grandchildren stood vigil by their coffin. camilla is expected to pay tribute to the queen as her favorite horses will lead a ceremonial procession tomorrow. the uk will take part in a national moment of silence later today. catch all the coverage of funeral on fox, starting 4:00 a.m. eastern time. new york city fires another 850 teachers and aides failing to meet the city's september 5th covid vaccine deadline. nearly 2,000 staffers have now been terminated since the mandate was introduced last october. and that despite the national teacher shortage. comes as other cities and states have relaxed their covid guidelines along with the cdc. fox news jennifer griffin awarded the freedom of the media gold medal for public service award from the transatlantic leadership network honoring her work as a national security
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correspondent. >> it's been the honor of a lifetime to be a journalist. we will keep telling the truth and we will hold people to account. will: was honored for her work covering the u.s. evacuation from afghanistan, the ukraine war, and more major stories. those are your headlines. rachel: the medal of honor is our highest military decoration and there are just 65 recipients living today. one of those, master sergeant leroy petrey risked his life in afghanistan in 2008 during operation enduring freedom while under enemy fire. he was shot in both legs. he grabbed a grenade to throw it away from his fellow rangers. it detonated, am tating his right wrist. he was awarded the medal of honor by president obama. pete: i visited a high school with mass testify sergeant pietri for a great cause.
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take a look. we're here in the knoxville, tennessee with the medal of honor character development program. these blackhawks will be touching down at area schools in east tennessee. six blackhawks, nine schools today. ♪. >> [inaudible]. >> pretty cool. >> what an honor it is today for knoxville catholic high school. [applause] reporter: after a hero's welcome the students got a chance to sit down with master sergeant leroy petrey. >> a lot of guys are patriotic, but have reservations to joining the military, what would you say to them. >> i joined prior to 9/11. it i didn't join to go to war.
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but i wanted to make a difference to protect our freedoms, rights, way of life. if we don't have the volunteers, then we're going to be more vulnerable to terrorism. people ask me if i was ever afraid when i was overseas i said every single day. i wasn't afraid of dying. but i was more afraid of is, i was going to do, fail to do something, fail to train my troops on something that could have saved their lives. i was sitting there that day, hand just like that, gone, bone poking up a little bit. i could have went into shock. i could have gone into panic. but would that have done for my guys beside me? i would have, i was their leader f they saw me freaking out, panicking, who knows how they would have reacted? it was my responsible and that is what you learn as you get older is that, leadership is synonymous with responsibility. >> you said you enlisted a little bit before 9/11.
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where were you stationed when it happened? >> i was in pre-ranger in fort benning, georgia, out in the woods. all of sudden came out, yelled the at us. keep training. you're probably going to war soon. little did he know how right he was. i remember walking around for a period after that, longing around at our country, my god this is what it must have been like during world war ii. everybody put their differences aside. everybody came together as one to support our country. and each other. >> a lot of young people look at afghanistan. it was just so great to see that people and students, especially women got to be educated. i was just wondering if there is any moment while you were there that really kind of struck with you about being able to just educate an entire generation of people there. >> it really crushed me when we pulled out of afghanistan. all i can be content with i did my best while i was there. my first deployment was in 2002. i got to see first-hand a lot of
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stuff that wasn't on the news. schools being built, roads being built. women, young girls getting an education. pete: what is it like to have access and be part of a program that brings perspective in? >> it hips us learn about the amazing people, the amazing stories. how we can better ourselves? >> it impacted me, inspired me to want to join the military. >> teaches a whole new generation, a whole group of people, how to be leaders, to instill good values. >> even as army infantry officer who served in iraq and afghanistan, when i see anyone wearing that i well up with pride. >> it represents all of us. everyone who served. everyone who did serve, especially those that paid the ultimate sacrifice. it's a symbol any of us is capable of great things. not everybody gets a chance to join the military but every single citizen in our country can be a patriot. pete: guys, it was a cool thing to be a part of, leroy petry.
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medal of honor program. curriculum any school in america can use for free. once a year a lot of medal of honor recipient meet with the kids. in this particular school, it was medal of honor mondays. they tell stories of courage commitment, integrity, sacrifice, citizenship and patriotism. rachel: this is part of school curriculum. reporter: access it at medal of honor society, use it in homeschool, private school, public school. you have to have leadership at the school to support it. will: this is in eastern tennessee. there is an gala, an entire he ven honoring living medal of honor recipient. pete: 30 or 40 living at time. they go out to local schools. schools can use this meantime. >> very school. pete: check it out if you have access to affecting education
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for kids. character development. medal of hoon nor society. these two save the day. november 17th, i host the annual, this i think will be the fifth annual "fox nation" patriot awards at the hard rock hotel casino in hollywood, florida. it is an award show like no other, honoring every day american heroes. who never sought the spotlight but bringing it to them on that night. "fox nation" is honoring active first-responders with a free year of "fox nation." foxnation.com/patriotawards to purchase tickets. we'll see you there i know for a fact ticket are the going quick. get your hotel reservation, get your tickets. make it a party. it is more than a ward show. it is and all day thing. the shows, "the five," this show, "tucker," hannity, "gutfeld" all there in hollywood, florida. you get a chance to be part of it. foxnation.com/patriotawards. we look forward to seeing you.
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rachel: i can't wait. still ahead, attention all parents, dea warning of growing fentanyl of looking like sideline chalk and candy to your children. pete: becoming a 49-year-old freshman on the football team. will: first the u.s. air force band ceremonial quintet plays "america the beautiful.." ♪ ♪ today, my friend, you did it... ♪
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is. rachel: it's a parent worst nightmare. rainbow fentanyl disguising the drug as colorful sidewalk chalk and candy. targeting, poisoning, killing our children. even a small dose could cause devastating effects on kids and a dea agent warning adults that the leading cause of death between 18 yearlies and 45-year-olds is opiate poisoning and overdoses. that is more deaths than car
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wrecks, suicide and covid. here to discuss is former dea special operations director derek miles. so great to have you on today, derek. obviously as a mom i'm petrified that fentanyl is disguised as candy. statistics, car wrecks suicide, covid, howe much money effort mobilized towards covid, why is no one in washington paying attention to this? >> rachel, thank you for having me. well, i don't know the answer to that question. it's mind-boggling. i was just out at a rally yesterday with hundreds and hundreds of people from around america, these poor families that have lost their kids and what's really sad, rachel, these families have established non-profit organizations, they put up billboards, they have collages, they have virtual
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memorials, they do psas, they have education events at colleges, high schools, middle schools, but they're all asking where is the government, where is the department of education, where is the cdc? the dea is involved. they're working closely with the law enforcement counterparts. they're making massive seizures. millions of pills are being seized. imagine what is getting in. now the question is, where is the white house and we were outside of the white house yesterday and we just don't know the answer to that, rachel. >> derek, may i suggest, i love to know if the people you talked to, suggested maybe this is the answer, the open border. they want open borders in this democrat biden government and, if the border is open for humans, the border is open for drugs as well. also, go ahead. answer that. i have another question for you. >> well, yeah, no, look at nogales, arizona, they seized two million pills in august, over two million pills of these
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fake deadly pills. only takes 2 milligrams to kill. 40% of the pills have potential lethal impact on a kid. so it is really devastating. it is blowing up. but just imagine what is getting. >> the country, rachel. they only seize about 10%. rachel: that's right. that's right. of the other component, derek, is china. china is providing so much of the materials used to create fentanyl. our government has, our president has a very dysfunctional relationship with china. cotell china no knock it off, stop sending it there, authoritarian government. stop the sale of that stuff to the cartels but there is a, something going on. there is a conflict of their policies. would you not agree? >> absolutely. i mean it is not just the chemicals. it is not just the fentanyl. now they're making nitazine, more now powerful than fenn at
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fentanyl. there is property being bought in america. cartels are dropping off millions to chinese students here on visas. it is more complex, more of a national security issue. rachel: absolutely. god bless you, to all the parent that showed up to give voice to the loved ones, epidemic in our country. i pray our government will pay attention. i'm doubtful. derek, thank you so much for joining us today. >> thank you, rachel. >> got it. still ahead lawyers for former president trump and the justice department are heading to court this week as a special master reviews documents seized from mar-a-lago. jason chaffetz is here with what to expect in court next. ♪.
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♪. rachel: the special master appointed to review documents seized in the mar-a-lago raid requesting lawyers for both the doj and former president trump to appear in a brooklyn federal court this tuesday for preliminary conference. will: it comes as the justice department asks an appeals court to intervene and restore access to classified documents seized in the raid. reporter: fox news contributor, former congressman jason chaffetz joins us live in the flesh on the set. >> great to be here. pete: what do you make much the latest developments, jason? >> you would think the department of justice would want to get it right. their need for speed seems toe be a overriding factor instead of overcoming the appearance of impropriety, that they're fair and both sides get to be represented. they are fighting that. that is telling into itself. they are arguing the department of justice that they have to get out this soon. these documents are somehow mysteriously a national security
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issue. they're not. they're protected. they were protected by the secret service when they were in the possession of donald trump. so it is hardly an argument. it's a different argument that they made when anthony weiner had the laptop, remember of huma abedin and state department documents where they had such classified information, not even me, chairman of the oversight committee could look at these types of documents. so the inspector general wouldn't even tell us what department and agency they were from they were so classified. they treat this totally separately, differently and it is wrong. rachel: have you seen anthony weiner's laptop had information even you as the chairman of that committee was not privy to? >> absolutely could not. hillary clinton had emails. some of those emails went to huma abedin. she couldn't print them off. she sent them to anthony weiner. he printed them off, highly classified. james comey had to open before the election the investigation again. there have been other cases like
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this, what is so disturbing how differently the department of justice treats the trump case as opposed to clinton's. rachel: no more equal justice. it is really awful. will: since we had this on the couch i just learned, i didn't know, leading scorer for a season of byu football. you were the placekicker this story is something i think you are capable of touching on with direct personal experience. that is, we saw in the wake of the byu-duke story that turned out to be mostly a nothing burger what followed is this when byu played oregon last night in college football. >> [bleep] the mormons. [bleep] the mormons. [bleep] will: jason university of order gone has apologized. that student section apologized. those are oregon students. we all think it is connected to this story that dominated the news last week. but it is also nothing new.
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something you've seen and experienced in the past? >> first of all the polegy i think was sincere and it's very well-accepted from those of us happen to be the members of the church of jesus christ of latter-day saints, sometimes referred to as the mormons. kind of used to the religious bigotry, everybody from catholics to jewish religion, anybody pretty much engaged in religion is on the receiving enof this. it is sad, you think it would be a moment -- you get taunted as a team, you get that, when it transitions to a religion, it's a little step too far. i hope it is a teaching moment. i hope they -- rachel: do you think it is connected, do you think it is connected to the lie that was told? >> the proximity and timing, it is kind of hard to bypass that. i hope it's not. you know, you had the situation with south carolina pulling out of a game with byu, with, but you know, maybe get the evidence and then in this case there was no evidence. there is no video like that.
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rachel: right. >> there was no -- they interviewed 50 people, couldn't find a single person, not a teammate that could corroborate this stuff. it was an unfortunate story. tom homa athletic director of byu dealt with it the same day. move on. there is no room for religious bigotry in this country at this time. will: jason on "the big sunday show" today 5:00 p.m. eastern time. tune in. jason, thank you so much. >> i'm headed down to get a cheeseburger by the way. rachel: it is national cheeseburger day. >> every day in my life is a national cheeseburger day. will: smart man. still ahead, welcome to a world of pure imagination. president biden thinks there is imaginary money factor, in a way there is, they keep printing it, but it is funding his agenda. pete and i go off the wall to show you the effect of funding biden's policies.
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will: dancing yesterday we're ready at the -- pete: very nice. will: off the wall to a world of pure imagination n president biden's world there seems to be unlimited imaginary money supply to spend billions of things the federal government cannot afford. pete: it comes from the money tree, will. let's go off the wall to take a look at some real world price tags in biden's money factory. if you're like us, you mostly lost track of the amount of bills and the amount of money being spent. so let's break down a few different aspects. first the border. they're not spending money on a border wall, we know that but they did attempt to tell us, again to stay in fantasyland they're addressing root causes. $300 million have gone to something called the central america local. it's a community program meant to address root causes in those places but will, it is not just even $300 million. will: no, because it doesn't include this money here scheduled to be sent to
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el salvador, guatamala and honduras to fight covid-19. it isn't on this wall, worth pointing out the cogs of illegal immigration protected over the number of illegal immigrants come to the united states it now more than it would have cost to build the border wall. pete: this is, that is exactly right. laughably high and low amount of money when you contract fact our immigration illegally has skyrocketed. they want to tell us in a willy wonka type of way we're addressing it with root causes with pile of cash we're sending to central america as more and more people leave those places. will: this is the hard number now of golden ticket of imaginary money being spent. number two, comes in the form of electric vehicles for everyone, $900 million for evs. part of one trillion trillion infrastructure law that was passed, infrastructure law passed november. $900 million will get you a lot of charging stations. pete: remember nancy pelosi
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famously said you pass the bill to find out what is in it. this is from the infrastructure law since passed. we're finding out they want 500,000 charging stations across the u.s. paid for by taxpayer dollars. this as states like california in the future you can't even produce a gas powered car. this number is still a little high, will. doesn't feel a lot of people will jump on those charging stations. will: that may be high, but we're in the child's play wing of willy wonka's money factory now. we're dealing with millions. step into the chocolate factory billion dollar wing, $15.2 billion spent since joe biden took office to help ukraine. pete: that's right. when you consider recruiting challenges we have in our own military. readiness shortages that we have a lot of questions about the efficacy of this $15 billion, where it is going, when it lands in ukraine.
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whether it will create an outcome that is beneficial to the united states of america. no real clear end state in that battle. they're happy to keep pumping money. will: we're in the bs. remember willy wonka and chocolate factory, the kid eats candy, gets all blue, pops eventually. warning we're headed in that direction. now $500 billion in golden tickets to forgive student loans. pete: you remember this one, utterly unfair announcement everyone who didn't go to college, work hard for a living, decided not taking on a lot of debt paying for loan forgiveness for people who decide towed take on loans they couldn't pay for. $500 billion. this in fact is low estimate from many places we heard as well. it could be even higher. i don't know where the money comes from. it's a golden ticket, will. will: golden ticket. someone did this earlier on the infrastructure bill. get out the big quotation marks.
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pete: this number is smaller. will: dropped by one billion dollars on this golden ticket for inflation reduction. $499 billion of it on climate, energy, health care spending and tax credits. pete: this is the inflation reduction act which won't reduce inflation and isn't about inflation. it's actually a gigantic climate scheme bill that is going to be paid for through corporate taxes, through 78,000 new irs employees, changes in drug prices, in fees, this is the green new deal, wrapped up in something supposed to address inflation of course will instead, you print too many golden tickets, will, do they lose value over time? will: i don't know. is it like printing money over and over? pete: how many golden tickets in willy wonka, were there five? will: i think there were five. pete: five but if you had 500 golden tickets it wouldn't be
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that cool to see willy wonka factory. maybe 5000, 500 billion. maybe it starts to lose value and things start to get more expensive. will: maybe there is a money tree. maybe a money printing press. pete: maybe we're in recession. maybe we're not. will: maybe it is all imaginary. there is your willy wonka tour to joe biden's money factory. pete: looks good. will: rachel over to you. rachel: we begin your headlines where a firebreaks out over a huge skyscraper in central china forcing dozens of evacuation. video of the blaze on social media shows the 42 story skyscraper burning on friday. thankfully no injuries were reported. it took more than 200 firefighters to extinguish the fire. the cause is currently underinvestigation. national down syndrome society holding new york city buddy walk. the event held in person for the first time since the start of the covid-19 pandemic.
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it was held virtually in 2020 and 2021. the event kicked off with incredible video presentation in times square. they showed off 500 photos of the competition winners. the society goal to promote acceptance and inclusion for people born with down syndrome. what a beautiful cause that is. they are 100% as human as any other baby. and child and so, we are so happy that the down syndrome association is doing that event in times square. coming up florida's lieutenant governor jeanette nunez joins us live to discuss her state's effort to combat the border crisis. but first he is trading his military gear for a college football uniform. meet this 49-year-old army veteran that made the team as a freshman! ♪.
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the insurance company enwasn't fair.ity y ca i didn't know what my case was worth, so i called the barnes firm. llll theararnes rmrm now the best result possible. ♪ call one eight hundred, eight million ♪
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i d d so my y quesonons eouout hicacase.y y son, ♪ call one eight hundred, cacalledhehe bars s fillion ♪ i d d soit was the best call eouout hii could've made. call the barnes firm and find out what your case all could be worth.uld've made. ♪ call one eight hundred, eight million ♪ ♪. pete: from the front lines to the night shift, to the football field this north dakota army veteran is flipping the script. by not just going to college for the first time, but making the football team. the 49-year-old freshman is
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older than the coach by a year, and his teammates are 30 years his junior but that is not stopping him from making the cut. let's bring in army national guard member, north dakota state college of science nose guard, ray rochelle. thank you so much for joining us this morning. first of all thanks for your service. you're still, a sergeant i believe in the army national guard there in north dakota. you're going back to school, while also working the night shift by the way. you decided you wanted to play football. is this something you always wanted to do? >> honestly i mean, what kid doesn't want to play football his entire career but honestly i had true aspirations when i was in high school, had a little problem with my attitude and everything else. college really wasn't in my book back then so. pete: this was not just gifted to you. you had to try out to make the cut too? >> oh, yes.
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we had agreement during fall camp if i couldn't make the cut or anything, if i was falling behind, i would graciously bow out of program. pete: physically, you're a big dude, strong, asset to the team. i'm getting older myself. i bet recovery takes a little more time than some of those 19-year-olds? >> i'm sure it does but who doesn't get bumps bruises playing football any at the same time take care of myself, stay in shape,. pete: cool. you bring perspective to the teammates, sole one serving this country, going back to school, what is it like having a role as someone he would other on the team? >> it's a bit tricky at times because it is kind of hard. i, sometimes they get the attitude i want to trite them like children, but at the same time i have to remember they are young adults. we all lived a life and want to
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play sports. pete: what did you do in the army? what was your job in the army? pete: >> i'm a sergeant. crew member. pete: excellent. how long a career, how long do you stay in? >> in between, 16 1/2% years now. i plan to stay in hopefully until i'm 60. we'll see. pete: good for you, serving your country, continue to. you're going to get your college degree. you're still working as a mechanic on the night shift, playing football. how is the squad, real quick, before we go, how will you guys be this year? >> we're going to the national championship and win it. pete: you heard it right here, ray rochelle, prediction of a national championship. we'll follow it. give them hell, sergeant. >> appreciate it. pete: you got it. we're honoring the air force's
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75th birthday this morning. here is the u.s. air force band ceremonial quintet playing "america, the beautiful." ♪ ♪ that's a lot of cash back. are you gonna stop me? uh-oh... i'm almost there... too late! boom! earn big time with chase freedom unlimited with no annual fee. how do you cashback? chase. make more of what's yours. 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. nothing's tougher than a mahindra tractor. except a bigger mahindra tractor. pound for pound, this one's still tougher...
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♪ ♪ ♪ ♪. rachel: good morning it's 8:00 o'clock eastern time and that is the u.s. air force ban

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