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tv   FOX and Friends Saturday  FOX News  October 1, 2022 4:00am-5:00am PDT

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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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i want the after -- pete: the aftermath of hurricane ian leaves florideans picking up the pieces. search and rescue efforts in the sunshine state are underway. 30 people confirmed dead and 27 deaths in florida alone. more than 1 million people in florida are without power. will: ian making land fall in south carolina yesterday and battering the east from the atlantic side as a hurricane surging inland as a post-tropical cyclone. several piers including this one on polly's island collapsing into the water. rachel: team coverage with meteorologist rick reichmuth standing by. thank god we have him today but we have alexandria hoff on the ground in fort meyers. good morning. >> good morning, there's a line of ambulances that are ready to be deployed as the day goes on and it's a somber reminder on the highways and yesterday you'd be driving down and coming from
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fort meyers beach and fort meyers beach almost completely washed away and recovery efforts are more methodical and will continue throughout the day. the hope is more people not in contact with family will be found alive and officials fear the death toll is likely to grow. a bit further in the gulf, sanibel island completely inaccessible by road and governor desantis said yesterday the pilings holding up the causeway, that single route in and out remained in tact but what was built on the sand bar washed aid way. military helicopters were flying in and out of the area and boats and the mayor of the community noted a grim comparison. >> i can tell you one of our
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public works people, that's one of the first responders out there, he said that he was at hurricane kansa katrina for sixs and this is much worse. honestly, it is very fair to say and we know and we are informing the residents, this is a long term recovery process. this is not a place that is habitable at this time and likely not for awhile. >> residents in sarasota county received an automatic text message early this morning warning them to shell merri bowl place if it was safe to do so due to a possible levy break and saying there's no imminent levy break at this hour. there's heavy machinery deployed throughout the communities and it's become a distribution site for food and water.
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this entire county, lee county is still without drinkable water right now and the impact of that can go beyond what the national guard can supply with jugs that they're giving out. the sun sentinel reporting that 67 babies, infants from a local hospital had to be transferred elsewhere because their care could not be sustained without drinkable water. pete: that aspect of clean drinking water is a tragedy. alexandria hoff, thank you very much. let's go to meteorologist rick reichmuth tracking ian up the east coast. >> yeah, go to florida and the rain fall foal and the storm surge came on shore and all the pictures of that aftermath in fort meyers area, that was largely from the storm surge, which all pushed upright here, right there is fort meyers and charlotte harbor and that's where all the storm surge came in. the water, the rain side of this was on the north side of the storm, on the left side. that's where you see this --
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that little purple bullseye is rainfall totals from 18-24 inches and concern about the potential levy failure and parts of i-75 are closed because of water, a river that's flooding. a lot of flooding that's going to go on because so much rain fell in florida that that takes a awhile for that water to dran out and a lot of rivers in flood stage for maybe a few weeks and report stage for probably next four, five days at least. this is what ian looks like now. this is kind of ultimately the center of that storm bring really heavy rain across parts of west virginia and still flood threat here in some higher elevations and all that water running down into the ravines and pulling water into the southern parts of new england and this stays fairly gloomy with us for today and tomorrow
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as this storm kind of slowly dies. by monday afternoon, most is fully out of here. i want to show you a couple things. hurricane season and it's a really great scenario, this storm to tell us we have not had an active hurricane season this year and it's not been so active like we thought and a perfect example and takes one, one hurricane can come in a hurricane season and changes everything for people. this will go down as certainly one of our historic storms. 30% of hurricane season remaining about the next month in general is when we will likely see more activity and in the month of october, today's october 1, this is where they start. usually just we get waves that come off of the coast of africa and now we start looking a little bit closer to home. a very active month and one were month we have to get through. pete: if they start low columbialy, are they likely to
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be less intense? >> not necessarily. in this storm, we saw it rapidly intensify and talked about that last weekend. if you remember last weekend, hey, we're probably going to see this one rapidly intensify and it happened for a few days. our definition of rapidly intensifying happened a few times with this storm, went from a tropical storm to a cat 4 in a short amount of time. rachel: guys, i thought about aalexandria's report and those babies and imagine going into labor in the middle of all this. babies don't wait for hurricanes. people dealing with a lot through this life. pete: prayers for them and all of the groups and first responders going down there. such a critical part of the response. will: prayers and more. fox corporation donated $1 million to the red cross and hurricane ian relief efforts and provide aid, meals, and more to those impacted.
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pete: fox matching relief efforts. rachel: our thoughts affected by everyone including teams in orlando. thank you to all of our fox weather, fox news channel, and fox tv station teams across the country who are covering this disaster and bringing it all to -- for us to see to help. please visit redcross.org/foxforward. pete: we will continue to cover it all morning and the response especially as the sunrises on this saturday morning in florida. pete: nine different student groups at university of california at berkeley's school of law, so the berkeley law school, they've begun this new academic year by amending their own bylaws to never invite any speakers that support israel or zionism. will: the man that wrote the op ed joins us now and uc berkeley
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law is the alma mater. great to have you on the somehow this morning. tell us about this -- show this morning. tell us about it. what does this reveal and i don't know about berkeley and the current generation of law students perhaps and what does this tell us? >> good to be with you. what it tells us is that anti-semitism on college campuses has gotten both worse and different than it has been over the 20 years that i've been following it, including during hi time in the donald trump administration. it tells us that the latest battle in anti-semitism on campus is efforts to exclude marginalized silence and jewish students that support israel and non-jewish students. it's not just a matter of political debate, it's a matter of excluding voices from campus. i want the dean of berkeley law school responded and responded to your op ed and said with what he and mr. marcus does not mention is a handful of student
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groups and over 100 oturu berkeley law did this and important to recognize that student groups have free speech rights including messages that i and others might find offensive. he says it was only nine of the 100 groups. >> let me ask you this, suppose it was the mayor of berkeley and only nine neighborhoods where black people are allowed to live and many other and would neighbor miss this is a blatant violation of the law and it's a law faculty and they need to have this explained to them. you can't close nine doors even if there's other doors and free speech and the thing about the groups and one of the groups is a queer group as they self-identify that way. rachel: it's just curious to me,
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israel is probably the country that is most tolerant of lgbtq in that region. why would they join in this with their own, you know, cause? >> you know, often time lgbtq groups take anti-israel positions even though israel is one of the most pro lgbtq countries in the region and do so as part of a broad progressive coalition and it's ironic and helpful when you think about it this way. we hear from jewish students who are gay or lesbian or otherwise part of the lgbtq community and oftentimes they feel marginalized on their campus and sexuality. they go to the identity group that's supposed to be for them and they're excluded because they're jewish and they don't want to compromise. this aspect of jewish identity and for gay, lesbian, and
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otherwise lgbtq stu students and it's a particularly difficult situation created. rachel: it's hardly marginalizing status and certainly being jewish is. pete: thank you, sir. >> good to be with you. pete: all right. fascinating story. fascinating incite into the climates of what i would suggest is about free speech. rachel: and the future of law students. pete: if you invoke one identity and you better choose which one is more important to you. will: first and only debate 234 the race for the texas governor race is in the book. governor greg abbott democrat nominee beto o'rourke, robert francis o'rourke clashes on the border crisis and gun control. >> for confiscated ar w-15 style weapons are not. >> as governor of texas, i need
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to focus on what we can get done. >> zero dollars to operation lone star and that's what it would be if we had a president enforcing immigration laws of the united states. will: abbott says o'rourke is weak on border security and the governor repeatedly dodging questions on following up on 2019 pledge to "take your ar15". miami dolphin's quarterback tua tungaviola in concussion protocol and he was slammed on the ground and looked lost. he released a statement saying he's feeling better and focused on recovering and no timetable for his return. we're gearing up for the fox
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patriot awards. is this a good one? esteemed colleague, pete hegseth. pete: who wrote that? will: what does esteemed mean? pete: i don't know but it doesn't fit me. rachel: what's the right attitude? pete: energetic and enthuse i enthusiastic. will: head to foxnation.com/patriotaward to select your tickets and once you select your ticket select on ticket master and have the option to purchase tickets to the exclusive opportunity. meet and greet and watching several shows being recorded meaning.
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pete: you need a ticket to the big show to go to the pre-parties as well. can we put the shot back up of the auditorium. it is almost completely sold out. if you do not have a ticket. click on it right now. if you have a ticket, go in and sign up for additional preshow partis. it's getting tight. this thing is thankfully looking forward to it. rachel: every seat is a good seat. it is beautifully designed so that you didn't get a front row seat and preshow parties and we're looking forward to it. pete: as an esteemed weekend host, i'll read the remainder of what's in the esteemed. rachel: i like it. will: google esteemed during the break. pete: you know exactly what it means. fbi whistle blower paying price for standing up fur conservatives and why one man
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risked his entire career to stop excessive swat raids and dozens of agents say they have his back. rachel: thank god. as the sun comes up, the east coast is waking up to the aftermath of hurricane ian. we'll stay on top of this story all morning long.
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rachel: welcome back to "fox & friends". bias in the bureau and 12 year fbi veteran and whistle blower and stripped of his badge and escorted out of the field office. his crime refusing to participate with excessive use of force and 30 ex-fbi agents are standing up for him. here is meyer, i read everything your client said about excessive force of american citizens and misdemeandemeanors.
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>> yeah, in fact the secret service or intelligence community i used to work in take very well and they don't like oversight of their operations and that's why we have a whistle blower program for the fbi and he's shown there's problems and now the director needs to step back and pull people back and put steen back on the job -- steesteven back on the job while oversight authorities find out what's going on here. rachel: i saw some of the american citizens committed misdemeanors and some not even in the capitol building and treated by the fbi and the force, the frightening way that they were escorted out of their homes and gun blazes and we found out about last week and help a pro life activist and guns pointed to his head in front of his seven children and his wife. i look at all of this and sounds
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like the stuff of cuba. i mean, this is what they do to political dissidence in cuba. there's no way this is happening without christopher wray knowing that this is happening. what should happen to him? >> well, i think what's happening now is the appropriate oversight authorities have been flagged. michael horowitz, the inspector general for the department of jus dis-is at his disclosure and office of special council was sent the disclosure and now the oversight has to begin and if there are violations of law, rule, and regulation have taken place, then the director needs to be held accountable. the problem we have here and this is with the fbi, has been in meltdown before. we all went through this in 2016 where we dog figure out what tht the fbi was doing in its investigations and we paid a price on both sides of the political debate for that indecision and that inappropriate behavior within the borough.
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i don't think the culture has been fixed and now they're taking it out on individual special agents and three cheers for drawing a line in the sand and standing up for the values that the fbi has traditionally proported to stand for. rachel: this is not a police state and we should not treat american citizens this way and i wondered while we were seeing these raids and fbi participants and as we can see right now and that's happening so this has been reported and these whistle blowers have been reported and what they found to gop lawmakers we know that. is the way they're being treated the repu repercussions on takiny their badge and do they have to wait till after the mid terms for something to happen assuming the republicans take control or can something be done now to put an end to this? they shouldn't have to wait.
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i thought we had whistle blower laws protecting them. >> congress is weighing in on that and the problem with the fbi whistle blower laws and i helped advise members of congress when they were originally written and we thought they were great rules and on paper they are. the problem is the fonctionnaires within the fbi have administered that program long and drawn out and one client made a disclosure that was deemed to be accurate for the justice department and she's been taking that battle on and five years it's been going on and she's been trying to vindicate this. fbi whistle program is broken and why congress needs to be involved directly and congress is the entity that can fix that and congress trying to figure out its role and the other oversight authorities engage and we have to be really, really cranicraig yous and if -- couras
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and if you have a spouse and children and a family, that's a burden on your shoulders and whistle blowers are heros and heroins. rachel: yeah, he certainly is a hero and he's given lot of americans some hope through the very dark days. again, i think our country is looking more like cuba and china every data committee and not for clients like yours, i would have lost hope. many americans are praying for him and hoping for the best in this situation. thank you for joining us this morning. >> thank you and have a good day. rachel: on the move, latest bus load dropped off in the big apple as blue cities rush to house their new residents and all eyes on ian as the storm moves through the carolinas, south carolina congressman ralph norman here with the latest.
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will: devastating impact of hurricane ian leaving florideans picking up the pieces. rachel: families heading back to their homes when more than 1 million residents are still without power and airports in the orlando area theme parks and the orlando area theme parks continue the reopening process. pete: lauren blanchard is on the ground in naples, florida, with more. good morning, lauren. >> good morning, rachel, pete, will. we are here on gulf shore drive in naples, and you can see what kind of devastation they're dealing with and take a look at what's on the ground. it's this thick, slugy mud and imagine many of the first floors of these buildings, it's inside their kitchen, their bedrooms,
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inside hair home. it's going to be an extensive and costly repair. behind me this is essentially a parking lot and destroyed cars are congressman up and down the naples area and a lot of property and damage lost and there's damage in fort meyers north of where we are and it's absolutely heart breaking up there and it's unthinkable and water rescuing continue as they continue to search for people. we know at this point 30 o confirmed deaths because of ian and 27 of those alone here in florida and expect the authorities have that number rising and check this out, it has been our own steve harrigan
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helping others walk in the flood waters without the danger of tripping or getting swept up. ian really causing some travel nightmares. take a look at i-75. it's really in the north port, port charlotte area. that is where a 14-mile stretch of highway has flooded till the water recedes and it's virtually impassable and the cleanup is bringing a massive and costly one and according to 19th flood reservice connected and have hardest hit area, lee county, 28% of hopes have flood insurance and here in collier county, that number is closer to 41% and in orange county, home to orlando where we saw a lot of rain. 98% of homes are not covered for flooding and a basic home insurance policy does not cover flooding and that means an overwhelming number of homeowners will need to apply for federal aid and that's going to slow things down and a it's a lengthy process and most florida airports have reopened here in naples and this will be reopening today and closer to
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fort meyers and it was a really heart breaking destruction and that airport cannot open at this point till they've been able to get power, water, check for damage, and at this point just with so many utilities just wiped out there, it's going to take a really long time. meanwhile as you mention some of the theme parks here in florida, they are opening and that's disney, universal. at least some parts of the state trying to get back to normal but, guys, this will be a costly and lengthy rebuild and repair in so many areas. rachel: yeah, it sure .s by the way, i'm surprised at how quickly some parks are opening. it's been surprising. pete: thank you, lauren. after slamming, florida hurricane ian re-strengthsenned and took aim at carolinas yesterday packing powerful winds and rain. rachel: residents are waking up to assess the damage. will: here with the reaction, south carolina congressman ralph norman.
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congressman, thanks for being with us. tell us how your state has weathered the storm. >> you know, our prayers go out to florida. we didn't get hit like they did. it hit georgetown, which is about 60 miles northeast of charleston yesterday at 2:00 p.m.. mainly we had wind, had a lot of water, and had piers, i think four piers across the state that were taken out along the coast, but nothing like florida did. the real damage that we have, we had about 200,000 people out of power and it's down now to 63,000, but we're a farming state and you've got over 25,000 farms and number one crops are cotton, soybeans and corn, and the damage will be there and the extent of it. time will tell as we move forward but the flooding on the highways is pretty bad and lot of trees and we're finally getting our power back on. rachel: congressman norman, you represent the people of your area in the federal government.
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can you assess how the response, thus far has been from the federal government and also maybe your remarks on what kamala harris said about some of those resources being distributed by equity. >> rachel, first of all, the governor mcmaster did a great job, the emergency crews that were out all during the night and really all during the storm were just great. of course governor mcmaster declare add state of emergency. no evacuations but they did a great job. as far as kamala harris, what an insult to say it's based on equity and the color of your skin. it goes along with everything else this administration has been doing and saying. where was she out visiting the devastation in florida? where was she -- when is she going to come out of her office and do something? it's inflammatory words so it doesn't surprise me. pete: yeah, she's too busy talking about her new strategic
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ally, the north korean republic. congressman, thank you for your time and god bless the folks in your state. interesting angle on the agriculture there especially including some of the shortages already. an act of sabotage and explosion at north stream pipeline that connect russia and europe. will and i and rachel have been dissecting it all morning and we go off the wall to figure out who done it. that's next. rachel: we keep an eye on ian's aftermath with team coverage as the storm batters the northeast.
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will: you're looking at dramatic footage of in nordstream pipels blown up and leaking gas into the atmosphere. pete: joe biden calling it out and saying it was not an accident. >> it was a deliberate act of sabotage and the rus russians ae pumping out disinformation and lies. we're working with our allies to get to the bottom of precisely what happened. will: what exactly did happen? what are these pipelines anyway? let's go off the wall to find
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out. the in order stream 1 and 2 pipelines. this is a important story with hurricane ian and it's equally as important with gop politics and war and these pipelines, nord stream 1 and 2 connect russia to europe and russia to germany and supply 35% of oil and gas energy to europe. pete: that's exactly right. ronald reagan and donald trump warned european countries should you build these pipelines and become dependent on russian oil, that will create leverage in the future for then the soviet union and now an aggressive russia over the decisions of the mainland of europe because the pipeline skirts goes effectively through the water and skirts land routes that means russia has control over whether or not
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europe has power. what's why our colleague rachel has often called this the green new deal war. energy is at the heart of the leverage that russia has over the actions of europe. will: before we leave this wall behind, i want to point you over here. there's nord stream 1 and 2. one has been in operation all though it's been turned down. as recently as just a few weeks ago, it was turned down i believe from 20% capacity to just about 0% capacity. pete: they've been trying to ramp it up to the point they've maximized the leverage on shutting your energy off. will: turning it off and not supplying europe with the natural gas. nord stream 2 is the fancy big expensive pipeline that's not been online and it's been the subject of overt threats from the president of the united states. that leads us to this: who is to blame for the act of sabotage? pete: that's the big question and we've all three been debating and discussing based on evidence available of course putin over here is blaming this
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guy and this guy over here is blaming that guy. the question you have to ask yourself is who benefits who benefits from the destruction of a pipeline build with russian money. by the way a private russian company through the swiss and effectively already leveraged to the max. one particular perspective, german marshal seen yore fellow said russia can intimidate europeans through an act of sabotage. some believe by bombing the pipeline, there were russian submarines in the area but could have been american submarines in the area and we'd never know. by bombing did they send a signal to europe it's going to be a cold winter and help try to attempt to fracture the alliance. we don't know? will: that argument goes like this, the argument that russia sabotaged its own pipeline goes like this, they constrict the supply of oil and gas going to russia and driving up the global price of oil and gas and have existing contracts on the black
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market, the one that skirts sanctions with china and india and drive up the price and make more money and russia needs money from oil and gas to continue to fund not just its war in ukraine and the general economy. pete: correct. will: that's the argument for russia blowing up its own pipeline. pete: that's part of it and also vladamir putin if it was russia saying winter is coming, europe. you're dependent on our energy supplies, we dramatically blew them up after turning them down. your people will go cold this winter at which point leaders in europe have to decide whether they pull back on a strong stance on russia in order to heat their homes and find additional energy sources. i don't know if that's the answer but that's part of the argument of what the leverage might be of vladamir putin rachel: question, why do you have to blow it up if you can turn it down as they did with the first one? pete: great point. will: rachel is asking a question off camera. this is why it's important to
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answer this question. it's a potential act of war. the response to this sabotage leads us down a very potential dark path, especially when it involves nuclear weapons. now, we don't know, we can only follow incentives and the evidence. then the question is where does that lead us? could america have bombed this pipeline? first, it's important to point out joe biden essentially said we would shut down nord stream. pete: that was the clip we didn't show because they said how how do you shut down a pipeline that you don't control? he said we will shut it down months ago. this might be a way in which you'd shut down a pipeline. will: last wall on who's being blamed here. to rachel's question, if you wanted to constrict global supply and control price, you can turn it down. russia so could turn off the tap and bomb their own pipeline and russia did that a few weeks ago and turned off the supply to europe. why does he need to bomb his own
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pipeline? pete: he's in a much more t tenuous position than in the past and an ex-ed one fifth of ukraine and declare it had portions of russia and seems to be upping the ante and believes in a stronger or weaker position and bomb ago pipeline might send shock waves to european capitols and send them to the table. why does he think he'd benefit and the united states would be sending -- if the u.s. did it and putin knows that and we're willing to escalate further in the process. will: moments after the pipeline was bombed, a foreign defense minister tweeted thank you, usa. does he have direct knowledge of what happened but odd he thanked the united states of america for sabotaging this pipeline. again, was is the united states? was it russia? why is question so important? because we're dealing with
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nuclear brinksmanship here in europe. pete: we're all affected by the immediacy of which the elites in our country always yell russia, russia, russia with a 100% certainty without any particular evidence to back it up and i'm going to step back and say show me the evidence. in the days to come, we should prudently attempt to identify that evidence, figure out who do it. that's pretty important to know that. will: very important. pete: when you assess the situation in ukraine. all right. still ahead, rachel, feel free to chime in. rachel: sorry, i know it's man plaining but i did have a question. pete: florideans struggling to pick up pieces after hurricane ian but people like our next guest are ready to help. how houston's mattress max is stepping up after the break.
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rachel: good morning. we begin with live pictures of a new migrant bus arriving in new york city. it comes in addition to two other migrant buss that arrived in the city earlier this morning. two more are expected to arrive later today. this is texas capturing the thermal imaging video of nearly 40 illegal immigrants crossing into the u.s. crammed inside a
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train car. dps saying they're from mexico, honduras, guatemala and el salvador and would be referred to border patrol. democrats pointing fingers after failing on a bill that would help stock trading and the bill was introduced tuesday and several members could not vote on the legislation because of discrepancy. speaker nancy pelosi says the bill didn't come to the floor because it did not have enough votes to pass. major conflict of interest there. will: now to fox news weather alert, in florida, collier county sheriff and the naples police department warning residents that 911 is down. officials tweeting the alarming but saying it'll be fixed as quick asly possible. rachel: good samaritans nationwide are pitching in to help victims of hurricane ian as quickly as possible including hhouston's own mattress max who
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opened his doors after hurricane harvey and katrina. we're joined by mattress mack now. or mack. >> i've been called worse, rachel. call my mack. that's fine. rachel: all right, mack, we just love what you're doing and i looked at the supply list of things that you're sending out there. it's just so practical, clorox, sheet rocks, knives, brooms, tarps, nonperishable food items. talk to me about how things are going in terms of the relief efforts on your part and what other people can do to help. >> we've had a tremendous response of texas bringing different supplies we had our first truck in florida right now going to see where to drop off the supplies at. then our people are going down there to do the actual physical work helping people muck out their homes and get them redone. we've been through this in houston many times before of
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course so the relief efforts are tremendous and people of texas are very giving during hurricane harvey people in florida and across the country helped us and now it's time for us to re-sparreciprocate and people ae bringing things from 9:00 a.m. till 9:00 p.m. and another truck loaded up and another 20 trucks, some generous contributor gave us $100,000 to the florida relief fund yesterday and we're also raising money as well as getting supplies and we're going to send people down to do the physical work in florida and help out the residents down there. been devastated by the terrible storm. will: hey, jim, i'd love to know, obviously you stepped up in the wake of so many storms. what was the first, when is the first time you did this? i'd love to know the inspiration for you stepping up time after time when it comes to the natural disasters? >> probably hurricane katrina in no orleanss and had nothing to do with houston and thousands of residents from katrina fled to houston to get away from the weather and storm and there's a
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big billboard outside the store saying louisiana residents sleep here free because there was no hotel rooms and we had about 2000 people from louisiana sleep her for -- 200 people from louisiana sleeping here and team members liked it and i like it had and we live by a slogan that we all have responsibility for the wellbeing of the community and we try to live up to that each and every day. pete: what items are in most demand that you're supplying? >> that's a good question because we're not on the ground right now. we're on the ground in florida and we'll be there around the tampa area, punta gorda area in the next few hours and we'll talk to people and it's the standard hurricane list of clorox, water, shovels, tarps and heavy duty trash bag -z due to the cleanup and once we get on the ground, we'll know more of what they need. i asked the people of houston to
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bring to us and we'll get it down to florida. we plan to do this for the next two or three weeks and we'll send a lot of people to do the heavy lifting and cleaning up the homes and helping people get their lives back on track. will: mattress mack, thank you so much. coming up, the tomorrow is hitting north carolina leaving more than 327,000 customers without power. we'll have the lieutenant governor maratk robinson next.
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pete: we begin this hour with a fox news alert as the aftermath of ian devastates the southeast. >> videos and the photographs don't do the devastation any justice down there. >> it looks like a bomb exploded down there frankly. >> we've been through irma, 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 have another dog.

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