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tv   FOX and Friends Saturday  FOX News  October 1, 2022 3:00am-4:00am PDT

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out this storm in a bathroom together. liv live in sunken gardens park in st. petersburg, florida. move into the shelter safely indoors. plenty of food and water and dagen i want to. george morrow from cap ♪ [the star-spangled banner] ♪
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♪ ♪ ♪ ♪
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will: remnants of ian continue to devastate the southeast. >> videos and photographs don't do the devastation any justice. >> it looks like a bomb exploded frankly. >> we 've been through irma, wilma 15 years ago, this is something i have never seen in my life. >> i need you to get up in there and i will hand her to you and you need to hold her. >> i don't know what else to do. >> only thing we can do is pray. will: a shelter in place warning issued in florida after a possible levy breach with potential to unleash 15 foot floodwaters into areas already devastated by hurricane ian. pete: that warning sent to eastern sarasota county, one of
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the hardest hit areas by the storm when it made landfall as a category 4 hurricane this week. search and rescue efforts underway is 30 people confirmed dead. 7 deaths alone in florida. more than one million people in florida without power this morning. will: en making its third and final landfall searching inland as a post-tropical cyclone. waves forcing the years off its legs and collapsing into the water, the death toll from ian is still expected to climb. raymond: coverage on the latest with rick reichmuth standing by. good morning. >> reporter: good morning. we are at an emergency staging site in lee county where the county is 75% without power. the national guard is going to
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transport this larger location to a distribution site for food and water and to put in perspective we are in the mainland area of fort myers where destruction is widespread. we did a survey yesterday where we put out boats into homes, homes taken off their pilings, cars obliterated, gone, getting to this location is difficult but this mainland does pale in comparison to what we see on fort myers beach, you see from overhead the destruction, almost all of that wiped out by ian's wrath and we are told the initial more sporadic search for survivors in the rubble, they become more methodical and will continue today. further in the gulf, sanibel island still remains inaccessible so the causeway leading there was wiped away, we watched military helicopters, rescue helicopters fly in and out of that area, the mayor of the beloved community made this comparison. >> one of our public works people, one of the first
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responders out there said he was at hurricane katrina for 6 months and this is much worse. it is fair to say, and we are informing residents this is a long-term recovery process and this is not a place that is habitable at this time and likely won't be for a while. >> reporter: concerns north of where we are reminiscent of katrina as well, residents and eastern sarasota receiving that text message 3 hours ago of a potential levy breaker could bring 15 feet of floodwater into that area. the automated text from the county want residents to shelter in place if it is safe to do so but still a lot of people without power in here in lee county, without water an issue governor dissenters brought up yesterday, there was a major water main break and that caused the issue of people being able to obtain safe ranking water, in an hour the national guard will be opening
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up this site, the line going down the highway, people hoping to get basic supplies. there was a man we met with yesterday in fort myers, he was a having a tough time after surviving rising floodwaters. volunteer came from miami, dropped off some goods, some food, started eating it right away, he said he was hungry at that point, he had survived this ideal and was trying to make sense of it. rachel: stay safe out there. sheet mural just rick reichmuth making sense of it. >> you can't make sense of it where you are, don't understand what the roads are and everything you' re recognized is completely gone, quite amazing. look at this map, fort myers is where we saw that storm surge, the south side of this storm but the northside's where we saw all those heavy rain on the west coast of florida and the east coast of florida, rainfall
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totals in daytona beach at 24 inches and to the north of port charlotte, we are concerned about this levy. and not largely populated, one piece of this, different for the levy break we saw in katrina, not a huge population area broken into two pieces, one piece is a separate storm developing here. a lot of rain toward the mid-atlantic and delmar vote and long island at the second piece of that back here in parts of west virginia. going forward throughout the day we will see this continue and the seaside we will see a spread into southern new england. this moisture from what was hurricane ian now just a storm bringing continued rain and flooding to parts of the northeast.
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rachel: when do you expect this weather problem to be over so people can get down to rebuilding? >> this piece of it will be gone by tomorrow though some of it will linger into the day monday. we are not out of bad weather in the northeast but florida is looking good, the search and recovery efforts, cooperating. rachel: thank you. will: here's some news, the fox corporation has donated one million dollars to the american red cross hurricane relief efforts, 8 and resources like shelter, meals, medical supplies and more to those impacted. rachel: fox is double matching employee donations to the hurricane relief efforts. rachel: our thoughts are with everyone including our own teams in tampa and orlando and thank everyone at the fox news channel and fox tv station teams across the country who
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have been covering this disaster. if you would like to join in fox's effort please visit red supercross.org/fox on the bottom of your screen. pete: a bit of positivity as we move out of the storm. unfortunately for many of those in power relief is not equally distributed because now our focus is on equity. in other words racism and that is what vice president kamala harris sees in how we distribute resources to recover from this hurricane. listen to what i think amounts to a stunning language coming from a fireside chat from kamala harris. >> lowest income communities that are most impacted by extreme conditions and impacted by issues that are not of their own making so we have to
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address this in a way that is about giving resources based on equity. rachel: the ron desantis response director has this to say in response, this is false, the vice president's rhetoric is causing undue panic, fema individual assistance is already available to all floridians impacted i hurricane unit regardless of race or background. will: she went on a claiming what she means by equity. it is almost sleight-of-hand. kamala harris emphasized equity and what i mean by sleight-of-hand word is i think a lot of people when they hear that, the casual viewer almost equates equity to equality and kamala harris distinguished the two, she said equity is not equality. what she went on to say is we want to distribute funds
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essentially according to -- don't know how she defined it, underprivileged communities, in essence what she is saying is brown and black, when she is saying is hurricane relief needs to be distributed by the color of your skin. rachel: that says if you are in a community of color you're in a low income community which is condescending to begin with. rachel: or there are no white poor people. >> it is one was grateful to get food, was he white or black? we don't know, doesn't matter, we don't care. they started don't know how many years ago, remember when i started hearing equity in thinking that sounds like equality but is not the same thing because people use words intentionally. it is the idea of equal outcome. will: she literally says we start at different points, how do we get to equal outcomes? >> a marxist far left wing view that we can never actually achieve that. in this case it is moments like
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this of desperation that demonstrate the lunacy of their ideas the best. okay, we are going to give aid based on equity, you look a little rich and double white. i know you are in trouble but this person who's issues are not of their own making according to kamala harris, you get the 8 instead. it is absurdity, not leadership, it is racism. rachel: distanced opportunity, these kinds of tragedies are times you could bring everyone together. this was a president who ran on the idea of unity and instead using this tragic situation, this natural disaster as a way to further divide the country and confuse people on the ground which is why desantis's people had to go don't worry, i promise we are going to get relief to the people who need it. imagine if you are a white person in florida or rich and going am i going to get my property -- am i going to get
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my food, my children going to be helped out as much is somebody else? this is a terrible thing to inject in the middle of this. we see these natural disasters -- obviously about lives but politics does get in and we see leadership and political careers are made or broken on these events and i think in this case being slow to respond to run desantis and this comment they deserve and f on the biden kamala side of the ledger, ron desantis seems to be getting to work. will: it is intentional use of language, intentional point of view. i don't think it was intentional when kamala harris said one of our greatest allies, north korea. watch. >> need to get to go and get where you need to go. i do believe that we should
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have rightly believed but we certainly believe certain issues are settled and that is why i do believe we are living in real unsettled times. the united states shares a very important relationship which is an alliance with the republic of north korea. in the north we see a brutal dictatorship, rampant human rights violations and unlawful weapons program. rachel: she was also at the border and she was using binoculars to look over to find north korea but it is right there. >> she's looking at a border so that is an upgrade for the borders are. and the reason we are showing these clips is bill maher who has had a penchant for illuminating the obvious in front of many liberals and
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others in the mainstream press made an observation on real time with bill maher about kamala harris and her lyrical utility. listen. >> i got to tell you, not giving it. he waited a very long time, he's like dracula, oceans of time. i've crossed oceans of time, once you have that real estate and wake up in the white house and your office is the oval i don't think you give it up, to take the nomination away from the president, what i could say is replacing the vice president because -- [applause] >> does not very popular anywhere and didn't seem to work out and i don't know, that has been done before on a ticket, she's a bad politician. pete: it is interesting to hear
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him say president biden will be on the ticket in 2024. rachel: i don't believe that. pete:'s cognitive decline is undeniable. will: the only scarier proposition to bill maher's point is behind it sits someone who believes we should use equity as distributing filter when it comes to a hurricane meaning the best insurance policy president biden ever bought was kamala harris. rachel: an interesting way of looking at it. i don't know. to me the wheels are coming off on president biden's presidency and his cognitive decline as you called it but also i don't know if kamala harris, people running president biden -- i believe there are people running the show, i suspect
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they will be behind kamala harris as well in terms of making the decision. will she continue to make these gaps? of course she will but the idea is bill maher believes the if president biden is the nominee -- the drag on the ticket will be kamala harris. >> they play too much of the race and gender card, the first black female vice president cannot be pushed off the ticket by an old white guy. you should be able to do that politically speaking based on performance but because they play that game they are stuck with a liability even if she has been an insurance policy because she whatever challenge and it is no good at her job it is going to be equally difficult to get rid of her if you wanted to. >> larry elder believes democrat black women who are very important constituency in the democrat party will revolt, they simply will not vote, they will see this -- if they push
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kamala harris off the ticket. bill maher said what you said, he said the democrats are in a box because of identity politics, they have to either nominate a woman, person of color or death eskimo. is what he said. pete: president biden firing back at vladimir putin after the russian president escalated nuclear threats following the annexation of four regions of ukraine. >> president biden: america is fully prepared with our nato allies to defend every single inch of nato territory. every single inch. so mr. pruden, don't misunderstand what i am saying, every inch. pete: yesterday pruden signed an annexation order that says russia will defend that territory by any means necessary. the man accused of killing
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north dakota teenager kaler ellingson is facing murder charges, shannon admitted to killing dating-year-old after assuming the team is a republican extremist on september 18th. he was arrested and then released on $50,000 bond with no house arrest or curfew. the original charge of vehicle or homicide was dismissed after being upgraded to murder. rachel: i don't like hate crimes but if you are going to use i can't think of a better case. pete: the dow jones plunging is the stock market tanked, investors rattled by repeated rate hikes by the federal reserve in an attempt to tame soaring inflation, the dow jones and the s&p 500 and the nasdaq hitting a new lows posting their lowest finishes since 2020. a little boy receiving praise for donating his piggy bank to help those whose lives are appended by hurricane ian. >> what are you doing with your piggy bank? >> sending it to people in need in florida because they have a
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hurricane in their office windows go down and they had a hurricane, their house might go down and they might have nothing. an electric scooter, people need this. >> i love you. >> i love you too. will: dominic's parents are doing their part, they set up a collective drive at their business, you can see dominic leading the fundraiser. those are your headlines. it is a reality. rachel: it said reality. not will's fault. will: reality would mean all different -- pete: i thought you would say what is virtual reality? but good for them, good kid. coming up the fbi raided donald trump's home over classified documents last month but that wasn't the case when bill clinton was allowed to store
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secret white house tapes. greg jarrett calls out the hypocrisy. >> we can be in in the carolinas after turning towns into swamps, live coverage all morning long, stay with us. ♪ but now, i can disrupt eczema with rinvoq. rinvoq is not a steroid, topical, or injection. it's one pill, once a day, that's effective without topical steroids. many taking rinvoq saw clear or almost-clear skin while some saw up to 100% clear skin. plus, they felt fast itch relief some as early as 2 days. that's rinvoq relief. rinvoq can lower your ability to fight infections, including tb. serious infections and blood clots, some fatal, cancers including lymphoma and skin cancer, death, heart attack, stroke, and tears in the stomach or intestines occurred. people 50 and older with at least one heart disease risk factor have higher risks.
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rachel: new information on the unprovoked attack that took the life of a lieutenant whose colleagues and loved ones are speaking out as first responders increasingly become victims of violent crime. >> flag will fly at half staff across new york city today to honor allison russo yelling, the lieutenant and 9/11 responder was stabbed 19 times while on duty and what the acting fdny commissioner calls a barbaric and completely unprovoked attack, the 60 when-year-old was rushed to the hospital where she died from her injuries, the suspect was arrested after barricading himself in a nearby building. yelling's parent speaking out
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about the random attack telling the new york post, quote, it is a terrible terrible thing that had to happen to her and is not stopping, that is the bad part, it is continuing and costing people of their lives. it seems there's no escaping it. a colleague of the 25 year veteran says first responders are now coming to this. >> the settlement out there of people who want to attack those in uniform whether they look at them as a form of authority or whatever it is if you're in uniform your target. ems certainly is. police officers certainly are. we've got to change that. >> reporter: the suspect reportedly has a history of mental illness, sources tell the post he was transported to a hospital in 2018 for being emotionally disturbed after making anti-asian threats on half facebook, the hospital he was center was located near
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elling's station, he is facing murder and weapons charges and the wake is set for monday and tuesday, her funeral was held wednesday. pete: donald trump's home was raided by the fbi where they seized 11,000 documents. but just 10 years ago a judge allowed bill clinton to keep allegedly classified audiotapes stored in his home. our next guest calling out the agency's double standard saying was okay for bill clinton to keep residential records but not trump. joining us as legal analyst greg jarrett, great piece, thanks for being here. why was it okay for bill but not for trump? >> that is how the law reads under the presidential records act. it was discovered and litigated that bill clinton had these
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presidential records including allegedly classified information and in the end the judge said, quote, the national archives does not have the authority to designate materials as presidential records, it lacks any right, duty or means to seize control of them, and importantly, the court adopted the department of justice's argument, that bill clinton as an ex-president can decide what to keep and he can keep anything he wants and the government cannot retrieve those documents. here's what the doj said. seizing the records is unfounded, contrary to the presidential records act and contrary to the principles of administrative law. now, fast forward to 2,022 and the department of justice is utterly ignoring their own legal opinion on the law and instead read trump's home to seize the documents and the
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court pointed out that you can't do that, the proper remedy is a civil enforcement proceeding under the presidential records act, the controlling statute and criminal enforcement is inapplicable and irrelevant. so the difference here is the last name of the ex-president is trump but a decade ago it was clinton so it was perfectly okay. >> makes you feel it wasn't a dispute with the national archives after all. other people and their prerogatives and the archives gave them the opening they think they needed to look for more but you pointed out why that should not be the case. we are out of time. you live near south carolina, the storm went through, how are things where you are? >> i was amazed, i did shoot some video yesterday. it came roaring through in the middle of the nights, we expected power outages and
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damage, yet no fallen trees, no lost power, mostly because the powerlines are underground, no broken branches, i checked with police, no injuries, i went out to the beach, the storm surge at its height hit during low tide so it came right up to the dune system and simply stopped but if you go north about 3 hours, garden city for example it stuck around high tide and the surge went over the system is there, out into the street, damaged homes and businesses. a lot of it is just timing and luck. pete: glad you are well, these storms can be a very different story a few hours up. thanks for pointing that out for us. coming up, tracking possible leavy break in florida as ian leaves communities unrecognizable in some places.
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dr. jeanette nesheiwat has led several rescue missions and the most difficult health risks occur in the aftermath, she explains next. it's beautiful out here. it sure is. and i earn 5% cash back on travel purchased through chase with chase freedom unlimited. that means that i earn 5% on our rental car, i earn 5% on our cabin. i mean, c'mon! hello cashback! hello, kevin hart! i'm scared. in a good way. i'm lying. let's get inside. earn big time with chase freedom unlimited with no annual fee. how do you cashback? chase. make more of what's yours.
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pete: remnants of the and continue to devastate the southeast, the shelter in place warning you should this morning after a possible leavy breach in southwest florida. with the potential to unleash 15 feet of floodwater. will: that was sent to eastern sarasota county, search and rescue efforts ongoing, 30 people so far have been confirmed dead, 27 in florida. rachel: let's turn to rick reichmuth for our forecast.
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>> reporter: this at another layer of concern. look at the maps, you can see what is going on, a very thin line of incredibly heavy rain developed from this storm and in some cases it was over 2 feet of rain and with 2 feet of rain that puts a lot of pressure on some of the rivers there and there is this one leavy they are concerned about in manatee county that we have to watch closely, largely agricultural area, not a huge population but that river is at its record flood stage right now. never been higher than it is forecast to stay that way for a couple of days, it looks like at least, certainly a tense situation going on right now. take a look at this, this is the next 5 day forecast in the fort myers area, overall humidity has come down, overnight temperatures in the 60s, daytime highs in the mid 80s and no rain coming in so
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overall for the search and recovery efforts going on right now, weather conditions looking quite good. rachel: sunday, 87 and sunny, that is so helpful. pete: the ongoing storm is dangerous, our next guest says most fatalities happen after a natural disaster. will: dr. jeanette nesheiwat has led medical eat officials across the world, she joins us. tell us about the after affects, wise it so dangerous after the hurricane? >> a traumatizing experience, you nearly lost your life, lost all your belongings, it is a shock to the body and you are in distress, you're stressed out, you don't know what to do, don't know where to go and that is where you make poor decisions, the ptsd kicks in, the infection set in and a lot of things that i see, i've taken care of hurricane katrina victims and i remember them
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coming in, the victims coming in with ulcers and wounds and infections, you see the firefighters and these victims walking through the water here and what happens in that water, you get cuts can you get scrapes, filled with sewage and chemicals and debris and glass, rusty metal and that sort of thing and you can get infections in your skin and you can develop upper respiratory tract infections, pneumonias, you could have asthma exacerbations, upset stomach, gr, intestinal issues and a lot of people using generators are not using them properly, you can see patients with carbon monoxide poisoning which is serious, it can be deadly and again the mental aspect of this, the emotional trauma is truly devastating and something we have to look at equally compared to the fiscal and medical aspect. rachel: you went through hurricane andrew, i think of elderly people who lost their medication in this ordeal. i think about parents who are
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probably suppressing some of their stress in order to keep kids calm. this is absolutely devastating. what can people do, what should people be thinking about loved ones who have family in florida as they see their loved ones go through this, what can they do to help alleviate that? >> reporter: it is traumatizing and you are right, i worry about the most vulnerable groups as we most vulnerable groups during the pandemic, the seniors, those who need their blood pressure medication or their cancer medication or their asthma inhaler but the best thing you can do is heed the warnings of local officials and if you have a neighbor, may be a senior neighborhood lives alone check on them, we have distress hotlines for seniors specifically for seniors and mental and emotional distress if you are feeling unwell but the best you can do to be prepared is number one put your medications in a plastic bag in case it gets wet, we don't want it to get damaged and you could
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be days without them and that could be a problem if you have high blood pressure a lung condition. always make sure you have a ready to go kit that will include your id, some money, your charger, your cell phone, dry clothes, snacks and water, these are things you can do to prepare in advance and if it is recommended to evacuate you want to do that but beautiful to see the community coming together, supporting one another, you see these incredible organizations, the cajun navy, fema, the army corps helping out, the red cross, samaritan's purse, these organizations coming together to provide food, shelter, medical and mental support as well. pete: don't be hasty if you don't have to and allow time to make a rational decision. will: you have been at these natural disasters. rachel: and hydrate. >> hydration is important.
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rachel: law student groups have a joint message, no guest speakers who support israel are allowed. alumnus who is a civil rights lawyer because that hate out next. ♪ (customer) save yourself?! money with farmers. (burke) that's not wrong. when you bundle your home and auto policies with farmers, you save yourself up to twenty percent. (customer) that's something. (burke) get a whole lot of something with farmers. kinda creepy. ♪ we are farmers. bum-pa-dum, bum-bum-bum-bum ♪
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caplyta treats both bipolar i and bipolar ii depression. and, in clinical trials, feelings of inner restlessness and weight gain were not common. caplyta can cause serious side effects. call your doctor about sudden mood changes, behaviors, or suicidal thoughts right away. antidepressants may increase these risks in young adults. elderly dementia patients have increased risk of death or stroke. report fever, stiff muscles, or confusion, which may be life-threatening, or uncontrollable muscle movements, which may be permanent. these aren't all the serious side effects. in the darkness of bipolar i and ii depression, caplyta can help you let in the lyte. ask your doctor about caplyta, from intra-cellular therapies. pete: welcome back. rachel: welcome back to "fox and friends". we will move on to a topic that has my blood boiling a little bit and you will see why, house
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speaker nancy pelosi asked about illegal immigration. here is what she had to say hispanic legal immigrants are doing? >> the best thing we can do for our economy is to have comprehensive immigration reform. we have a shortage of workers in our country and you see even in florida some of the farmers and growers saying why are you shipping these immigrants up north? we need them to pick the crops down here. rachel: this is what nancy pelosi thinks immigrants are for especially those coming from the southern border who tends to be latino, they are from picking crops, they are for cheap labor in the fields and in the homes of the rich elite like herself. i think kind of the impression i got is from the way they treated those illegal immigrants in the so-called sanctuary island of martha's vineyard, it is not just words,
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it is actions. pete: no republican has said those words or could say those words, she can say that and get away with it, she's defending rampant illegality, there are plenty of legal work programs that exist, she's defending rampant illegality that desantis is pointing out. here is the twitter account for the republican national committee of latino whos responded, nancy pelosi thinks immigrants should be picking crops and democrats show you their true colors, believe them. pete: the open advocacy for illegality, the open advocacy for illegal labor pool which presumably then nancy pelosi is saying woods be the wage loss because that happens with illegal immigration. and the labor pool, she's against minimum wage, against the working class and against legal immigration and sovereign borders, she's also racist,
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this is a racist statement or anyone else with our beside their name were to utter the entire news cycle would trump hurricane coverage to say look at these racist republicans. but i guess since at the voting booth if you vote d you get out of jail free card when it comes to racism. that the belief and you don't need to have just this one nancy pelosi sound on tape, the president of the united states has done this throughout his career. president biden has played montage of racist statements. pete: we played one from kamala harris, a racist statement. we want talking about equity. it is acceptable in modern-day america to be racist towards white people. i'm talking about president biden being racist toward black people saying -- whatever the case may be.
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>> the first articulate clean black person he ever met was obama in politics. this reminded me way back when donald trump, don't know if he was running are already in office on the view they had a discussion about trump being such a racist and one of the guest hosts said who does he think cleans his toilets? i was like are you kidding me? that happened on the view i presume that person wasn't reprimanded except conservative television as well, you can say anything when you are a democrat or a liberal but i will say this, it is very revealing, this is, i like that rnc quote out there because that tweet, it is revealing, this is what they think of black and brown people and under the guise of compassion we love these illegal immigrants, don't want them living on our island unless they are working in our homes, trimming our hedges, preparing
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our garden party and serving cocktail, that is what they think. pete: plantation pelosi, they believe they find their virtue. or on twitter. rachel: when people are illegal and work in the fields i've spoken to people like that and they will say they don't have insurance if they hurt their back, they are screwed, if they are white or their grandmother is sick they don't get time off, they don't have the same rights so enough of this fake compassion talk. if you care about labor laws which they care and have the big labor department and union people they should be protecting american laborers and limiting illegal immigration because that is where people take advantage of labor. pete: our next guesses on the ground helping those in need, the ceo of team rubicon joins us.
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>> we have a lot of downed trees over the past three days and a lot of debris and flooded homes and wind damage and some standing water but the community is, you know, coming back ask we're happy to be apart of that recovery. >> so there's been 26 deaths in florida that we know of. based on what you're seeing on the ground, are you expecting that number will rise?
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>> yeah to be honest, that would be an uninformed estimation on my part. i can tell you in each of these storms, this is one of those times that highlights the importance of following emergency manager orders. one of the things we're specifically seeing here is the immense size of ian. you know, it's absolutely incredible storm and the density of populations here. as an example, last year for hurricane ida, they evacuated 1.5 million people under orders to evacuate. it's 3 million for ian so you begin to understand between the size of the storm and the number of people that fatalities could be a real possibility. rachel: art, we're so proud of what you're group is doing and thankful and you're just such a great example of how americans come together and help each other out in these really terrible natural disasters. thanks so much, art dela cruz. >> thanks for having us. rachel: our team coverage of ian
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and all the damage left behind connells all morning long so please stay with us.
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pete: we begin with a fox news alert as remnants of ian continue to devastate the southeast. >> the vi videos and photographs don't do the devastation any justice down there. >> it looks like a bomb exploded down there frankly. >> we've been through irma and wilma on the east coast 15 years ago. this was something i've never seen in my life. >> i need you to get up in there and i'm going to hand her to you and you've got to hold her because we've got another dog. >> i told [inaudible].

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