tv The Ingraham Angle FOX News October 7, 2022 12:00am-1:00am PDT
12:00 am
new york , bernie and sid show . and prior to that, imus in be the morning. and he leaves behind his wifnd n and two children. all of them are in our thoughtse le this eveningtonight. right. that's all the time we have left this evening. as always, thank you for beingsl with us. please setways dvr and never mis an episode. the news any time fox news .com ,hannity .com. in the meantime, let not your heart be troubles.s laur here'sa with the laura with the. angle. >> laura , shawn, bernie,as mcguirk was one of my close one of my close friends. i don't know i friends, i think. 'd be doing i don't know if i would even i'm not sure i would be doing what i'm doing now. had the relationship with imusp with and bernie and charles mccord and all of them. did an, that was my first real tv that i did was on on his when it was simulcast on the other cable network. but he he you know how thereyo are certain people who can make you laugpeople wh and then thers certain people that's him lau who can make you cry. laughinggh well, have a few bees
12:01 am
with bernie mcguirk and you will i mean, he he was likee a brother. >> quick story. a i was struggling with cancer.n i had been in touch with them. and last time i talked to him, he starts a hannity. but , it's cardinal o'connor. we did all that. yeah. oh, no. >> lau he started he he we've lost a lot of wonderful people lately and incredible americans. in was one of them. crle ameriand i just concur with everything you said. but sean thinks he's going to be missed, too. he was an amazing man.great show imus in the morning. ey are >> great show.esse and yeah, they're they're all missed. it's>> sea i did radio. i did radio because of that show. otherwise,t show i didn't. t' seventeen years in radio. went into ra yeah. that was the reason i went intoi radio because ofon the being a t on that show. so. yeah. so that's, that's where i learned it. so sean, thank you.aura: all right.wet great show.to all right. we have a lot to get to tonight. i'm laura ingram . this is the "ingraham angle" from washington. m angle"fromtonight. was the dci and bias bulleit.
12:02 am
>> that is the focus of tonights tonight's angl "e. now, every time you hear some educator or corporate oflack reference their importan efforts to promote diversity, equityt effort, inclusion, one d should come to mind. the gr now, this grouping of seemingly innocuous terms has become its own weapon against objective its merit and excellence acros ownsy the american landscape. the acronym is dii, but it's really more like bvi bureaucracy, victimologyce and incompetence. corporations spend as much as eight billion dollars a year for compliance with so-called diversity and bias experts being paid hefty sum s to oversee this woke trainingplian. and compliance. in but dci is its own cottage industry with its own side. hustle's even the rating agency. moody's has all the bureaucrats diversity lingo down pat .at. >> we're integrating denr into
12:03 am
everything we do. and programs are being implemented and deployed globally. >> globally, and for its efforts to adopt quasi quota anr programs and hiring. they then get a goldey sta getr another dii media front group. >> diversity named us as a top 50 company for diversity and ranked us as a topop three lg threeb tinku company. >> of course, if it's a stupida idea, you can bet the nea has been promoting for years.t' >> it's important to understand that not all of our implicit biases are as innocuous as peanut butter and jelly. these biases too often shapethes othelanguage we use and the ways we interact with others based on race, ethnicity, gender identity, sexual orientation and other: t, cultural identities. >> translation you may notayk so think so, but you're a rottenpel
12:04 am
racist, especially if you're not a minority. lythis cycle of socialization cn lead to micro aggressions, stereotypes, discrimination and even discrimin violence. these unintended sentiments that are embedded withine of the cycle socialization are built around a culture oare buie supremacy that we must continually acknowledge the nea. now remember: , these areo are the people who are organizing, the teachers who teach wh our kids in these type of creepythese ty propaganda style videopes all over the internet. it's painful to watch, but ih ba i had to do it. and it's wrapped up with the anti-racism and ally shipit's movements. it's a bunch of corrosive claptrap. you know what i know? educatio but it's not just found inn our educational institutions. it's now embeddestitutionsd itso all aspects of corporate life. with training videos and seminars. and i love this one ars.. it bills itself as an u unconscious bias workshop via
12:05 am
zoome. g to are you looking to start start i continue your diy learning journey? so of course it was only af time matter of time before it seeped into the practice of medicine to where grown men and women,rel real medical professionals, prostrate themselves before the dea mafia. >> canore the you help us undeh a little better this implicit bias you? so is implici i'm a doctor . a patient comes in white wha african-american. what happens in my conscious, unconscious or in the interaction that becomes a generator of the kind of inequity you're talking about inequityresearch using the impl association test finds that over 70% of all americans havelk an anti black bias. now medical schools and hospitals are on boardke as well. and it's all based s on thatigne science. you just reference on implicit bias. now, jus.t as they manipulatedne the science on covid and they, t enforce groupthink on vaccines
12:06 am
esand masks, they're doing the same here. so dgi becomes a religion like climate change. >> you mus.t believe. s no questions asked, no doubting tolerated it should be obviousdi why biden and his cabinet havete repeated the mantra so often that america is systemically racist. foey're layinglly racist the grk for complete transformation ofmd every aspect of the u.s.rica government and then american life from day one . let's remember the biden administration has emphasized that their own hiring is based not on merit or talent. >>t on first made it a priority to build a government that looks like america, including the most diverse cabinet evere d assembled, the most diverse administration in the history ofivon ry o our country. d no and i should note, we have appointed the most latinoleaderh leaders ever to the cabinete cat level position. >> laura >> so you got people to judgeu t at transportation, mayorkas at
12:07 am
dhs, yellen at treasury, javier basara at hhs, lloyd austin at the pentagon, of course, look, it's leftest box checkingn a uni and it's been an unmitigated disaster for you and me. for you the mayor of south bende to judge somehow has how has the expertise we're supposed to expertisto run a departing with fifty five thousand employees. and biden's at this stageexecutv with a big executive order last year that planted these s. sonous seed there's bias mitigation trainings now at the energy department. they push an oppression narrative at the state stat and of course, mayor cours p that dottie even called dgi critical in advancing the department's mission. s no my friend, so much is breaking down around us . and it's not just becauscause od
12:08 am
a supply chain, but it's the biden team that we know doesn't care, because in the end, they hope to traine th a new generation to believe that this is an acceptable wayo. of organizing society. the en we know it's not the entire point of the civilthi rights movemenlt was to promoted equal opportunity without regard to race or ethnicity. ace or ebut the democrats instee returning to old ideas of racial and gender discrimination. but they're just calling it it by e. te feedetermination but >>li the immediate feeling you get or the immediate thoughts you have about a person, anou assumption you fauci just anything you feel really stems somewhere from an experience you've had or your upbringing'r depends on the region you're from the country you're from the background you grew up and that shapes the person's's e unconscious bias. >> there are a lot of f pro peoprtunities to promote people within the workplace. people assume a woman is ofcertr a certain age or they're married and you think, oh,
12:09 am
she's going to want to haves. kids. so we're not going to give her this really tough, bi project . here's my prediction. companies that emploly these methods are going to losee goin market share. they're going to lose sales. they're going to lose customerst to companies that promote people. and they omote peop hire people mer on the basis of merit state and local governments that baghdadi will lose population and businesses are going to flee as well to states that resist this discrimination. in hospitals, hospitals thatalst implement these racist hiringeln programs will end up delivering care that is subpar. ant to let's put it this way.e your s do you want to take your sickd child to a doctor who landed her position through a dui program? posior do you want to take your sick child to the best regs doctor you can find regardless of status? cornmidterms are right around the corner and at a time when our country is in such dire shape, we need the bestobs.
12:10 am
available people in all critical jobs. it's time to reject candidates r who believe in governance through woke discriminatiorought the same people who stoke animosity and acrimony among yand acamericans. it's time to defeat the die industrial complex and all the biased bullies. and that's the angle now. >> joining me now is laura morgan. she's a registered nurseshe wa who says that she was fired for refusing to do the implicit that bias training that she was being told to do. n she's also the program manager, at do no harm, aan on organizatn dedicated to protect health heat care from the radical ideologyhl of anti-racism. now, laura , youu went wen ft fm having a six figure job tong having nothing at all. you could have done the implicit you have just done the implicit bias training and kept collecting your salary, though,t right? good ewh youy didn't you? you're right. and good evening. i'm really happy to be here.
12:11 am
i definitely could have gone inl and checked all the boxes thatok my employer wanted me to check, which was to say that i acknowledge that, yes, i have unconscious biases toward my patients and that i must confront those at the point of decision making in confronting any patient or really even anyfy of my peers. >> s peerso i don't intentionaly treat someone unfairly or perhaps even harm them. >> and ss even haro these are, u mentioned, faulty sciences, faulty ways to approach patients when there are muchoo more clinical decisions to be made. >> well, the founder of an d ad organization called advancing health equity, which provides equity, training and consulting to companies, thinksto compani differently. >> laura , watch. systemic racism can be a key tha driving force on the social determinants of health. we ask our colleagues and are
12:12 am
not on nonblack colleagues, really think aboutno think about their privilege. think about how in their respective roles, if something happen somppens ats ae you silent because silenceis com plis complicity, especially in the face of racism.ci >>sm laura , silence is complicity. u don't declare guurself guilty of implicit bias and you don'til declare yourself an ally in anti-racism, then i guess you can't be a very good friend anymore or a very good surgeon any longer. >> i guess that's it. that's apparently what they want us to believe. >> and theve idea of implicit bias and its close cousin, anti-racist ism, declares thate the entire health care system health caris systemically racis it's hopelessly so and so. all the biases must be rootedoun out.d and in order to do that, then they must beat us over the head with this constant drumbeat of d if you don't feel this way,
12:13 am
then you must be a racist and nobody wants to be called a racist. >> and these kind of ideas too e be placed in front of health care providers really erodes the dynamic of trust. that's essential whe n caring for patients while being being woke in the field of medicine means you can actually arrive at really bad medical outcomes. correct? i mean, being well, can kill you in the medical context. >>contex well, you mentioned wag to be able to take your child ps to to the best physician possible. >> and so that's really what you want to be on your health y care providers. outhe front of their mind is why is this person coming to seeinic me? what is this person's clinical problem? al proband what are the critical u thinking skills i need tado use to address that problem? and implicit bias wants you to think, no, you need to confrontt those biases that you're just
12:14 am
really not even aware of, butt that you need to have right at the tip of your tongue and be able to address those beforee you do anything else. >>ng propaganda and the field offiel medicine. we saw it in covid and we're laa seeing it here. >> laura , thank you.o descri now i want to describehe the left's midterm agenda very simply. be ready. this is what they're going tre r give more of if you elect them abortion pot, and more. january six hearings. they got nothing else. and to help with that, just three days before the midterms,f joe biden is caving tot for radical left's requests. >> no one should be in jail just for using or possessingg or marijuana. possessit's already legal in my states and criminal records for marijuana possession have led to needless barriers to employment, toession housing, educational opportunities. i'm announcing a pardon fom r al prior federal offense, federaln offenses with a simplethe possession of marijuana.
12:15 am
>> well, i t starts with marijuana, but where does f it go from there? oregon was the first state to decriminalize it. thende they legalized it for recreational use. and then a few years later,imind they criminalized hard drugs, how ine, heroin, lsd h, and even meth. how things look inooki oregon?n? well, we all know how they'ret d looking. . not good.ma joining me nowtt is matt schlap cpac chairman and dran russellca kamer, who's a medical director of partners in safetye. . matt , john fetterman, he's ini a tight race in pennsylvania for that senate seat . he has been urgingon to do s the administration to do something like what biden did today. ke what biden did todaso i gues who's calling the shots. fetterman in the white house now. >> yeah, you know, laura , tos me, this was the pollsters from the dnc who seemed to also runue the doj by the way, who went to the white house.d th and they're looking for every nichevery nichi thing that the t can do to try to kind of liked rally his troops for the midterm. and i think it's so cynicalnical because the question oestion off
12:16 am
the impact of drugs on our kidse in our societies is immense. i've spei mean, i've spent a fah amount of time in coloradoey and they were kind o f the beginning of this 10 years ago. and now colorado statistics and all kinds of violent crimes and overdoses. this isn't just about marijuana. it's about a whole embrace o emf the drug culture. and if we care about peoplee s that should guidhould e what weo and the democrats once again show it's not about helpingt's o people, it'st about winning races. >> a bloomberg actually reported some facts about marijuana legalization today. they reporteoomberg edd that ca is almost as addictive as opioids and teensadds, ratesf cannabis use disorder and people 12 to 17 grew 25% more in states that legalized recreational marijuana than leost recognize that didn't. and twenty nineteen and the two years prior, there were a total of four thousand one hundred and seventy two exposure cases nationwide and kids up to nine years old. s only doctor , this is only going toua get worse. you can kind see this trainio
12:17 am
coming down the track. your reaction tonight? yes, well, it definitelyworse wi is getting worse with the lax attitude towards all drugs in general. but i do want to say that president biden, in his pardoning of drug use ofpardonin marijuana users, i agree with them. no one should go to jail simplys for smoking a joint. that's ridiculous. and in fact, president biden ha s been very tight for legalization. so in those ways, he's been very good on the topic. on the other hand , the newhande york state, wew have a differe. situation because not only have the cannabis criminals been pardoned, but they're alsoey getting two hundred million dollar fund to start up the addiction for profit marijuana industry in the state of new york .ion fo >> addiction for profit. matt , here's van jones did to
12:18 am
try to explain what his biggest problem with marijuana is . >> black people are still far more likely to be arrested for marijuana possession than white people. what happens is if you're african-american, you're going to have more contact with the police anyway because policecaul over police black communities. so you wind up y gettingou w pin up on these charges, reducingr the the number of charges that can come against an african-american kid. >> a neighborhood is overall really goo d. th, matt , overpolicing is the problem.e problem we have in the we have in the inner city. >> that? yeah, this look, this war on the police, which really caught fire during the violences of black lives matter riots from a few years ago. it is unending. >> and the fact is drugs feed violence in a lot of thesee communities and cops are there on the front line. not every cop makes every perfect decision. i don't think any of us wouldpef in theseecus stressful situatio. what they're trying to doations is help these people. what i see i.whn pollinat i seeo is that people of color areg
12:19 am
embracing the police because they have chaos and violence in their in their communities. and this idea that that continues that somehow cops are malign influence in societyty af and feeding racismee is wrong. and one question on this marijuana thing. what i disagreae is joe bidenpl pardon these people. didn'ant commute their sentences. he didn't take people who are in prison and take them out of prison because they're not notte violent felons. he these people weren't iner prison. it's almosen't i. it's almt like it was okaymistak with what they did. and i think that is a big mistake in society. these drugs are causing people great harm and it's okay formeda politicians to speak the medical truth. >> well, dr. kammerer, lea will this or will this not lead to more deaths, psychosis and schizophrenia in some segment of the younggmen population? ts owho ends up doing pot? because it's you know, it's more permissible? welcome >> well, it's very dangerous. do for the young community. people who are young have grown
12:20 am
up only hearing that marijuana is medicine. that's probably if you were on the family feud and you said medical blank, they wouldal answer medicare marijuanaat the' because this is what they'veve been told time and time to get . what we do need is fore ed the youth to be educated, thatt this is not justic some beneficial natural substancial nae, but it is an intoxicating, addictive drug with a lot of problems. matt , dr. camer, thank you. now, have you heard this? a tech company ceo was justarred arrested on suspicion ofg data stealing data from hundreds of l.a. poll workerhundredss and sr it on servers in china. the full report moments. the plus, we got word that the fbi could finally be moving in on hunter biden. >> harmeet dhillon has all the latest on that in moments.
12:21 am
for five star backyard's yellowwood brand pressure treated by if he doesn't have his yellow tag, you don't want a heart attack. do they have life insurance? no, but we have life insurance, john . >> i'm trying to find something we can afford. >> fortunately, in only a few minutes, aliquot found john a five hundred thousand dollar policy for only 29 dollars a month and his wife and a 500000 dollar policy for only twenty one dollars a month . go to select cocom now and get the insurance your family needs at a price you can afford. >> select . we shop, you save. larry, check us out with on deck. we could get a small business loan fast and start hiring more help right away.
12:22 am
or loan ketanji. >> yeah, so why long can there's a better way to get a fast small business loan on deck. the online lender that makes it easy to choose your loan and if approved, get funds as soon as the same day your loan is on deck. >> it's the number one testosterone booster and it's available at wal-mart nationwide. ageless male max married with a whopping six hundred seventy six milligrams of ksm. sixty six clinically tested to boost total testosterone. not just your free testosterone, total test own setting a new standard for life after forty except no substitutions. find ageless male at wal-mart in a vitamin. hi, i'm mike huckabee, former governor of arkansas. and i'm here today to tell you
12:23 am
about a hidden health crisis currently affecting nearly every american sleep deprivation. and that's why you need to know about relaxium sleep. you see, getting a good night's sleep helps support a healthy immune system, helps maintain a healthy blood pressure, healthy cardiovascular system. thankfully, relaxium sleeps formula is clinically proven to help you fall asleep faster, stay asleep longer and wake up feeling refreshed. >> when i take relaxium sleep, i sleep better than i have in years. i wake up feeling alert like i've had the best night's sleep call today and get your very own risk free bottle of relaxium sleep. >> take control of your health . stop struggling with restless nights, sleep like you were meant to with relaxium eight under three two two zero four zero four eight under three two two zero four zero four call eight under three two two zero four zero four eight under three to two zero four zero four one on one with tucker from going against the mainstd the stakes are
12:25 am
high. >> ha ha ha ha. see, smokey, funny, the founder and ceo of a michigan softwareo company was just arrested for stealing data from hundreds of l.a. county poll workers and then storing it on servers in china. foxes. >> lucas thompson is standingluo by with all the details. mllucas . that's right. laura , the founder and ceo of that michigan software company, was arrested on suspicion of stealing data in los angeles
12:26 am
county. poll workers, prosecutors in thn l.a. said they found some of the company's data stored on servers in china. here's the back story, laura . r the company based in east lansing, one of five year twoup point nine million dollar contract with l.a. county for software to track election worker schedules, training, payroll and communications. t of on monday, the new york times reported the company had been the target of so-calleddiners election denial and reported, quote, using bret baier porting idence werevidence or n. the group suggested thatan a small american election software company, conic, hadse secret ties to the chinese communist party and had givennt the chinese government backdoor access to personal datcka ofdato about two million poll workersn in the united states . the company denied the accusations. clainew york times reported the company claimed almel were t the data for its americanored customers were stored on secure servers in the united ties states and that it hadto no ties to the chinese government. however, just one day later, the ceo of the company, eugene,a you see here, was arrested count by l.a. county officials in connectiony with the possible
12:27 am
theft of personal information about the poll workers. the new yorkt the poll times han its story since then, saying s the arrest was, quote, prosecutors in los angeles who brought the charges against mr. yuo brough said that they hn some company data stored c on servers in china.he's b can't, says mr. yu, has been the subject of, quote, wrongful" detention. e and all the data wasdata not, quote, stolen, as suggested orwy unbelievable. >> lucas , wild story. thank you. >> he's a grown man.grow he is the smartest man i know. i mean, in of pure intellectual capacity. lon and as long as he's good, we're good. well, it might not be good anymore, joe . >> federal agent s now believerg they have enough evidence to charge hunter biden with taxe sn crimes and for making a falset statement regarding a gun purchase. sourcen s telling fox news that decision is now in the hands of the u.s. attorney in delaware. it's a trump holdover named david weiss. now, when askedd for't a statement, hunter biden's team didn't address
12:28 am
the potential charges, bute potd instead focused on the leaks. f it is a federal felony forral ag the federal agents to leakn information about a grand juryab suvestigation such as this one . any agent you cite as a source in your article apparently has committed such a felony. , joining meha now is army dillon, chairwoman of the republican national lawyers association. natit, so i guess leaks from the fbi are now bad again. they've been doing it for how many years against donald trump. mueller investigation on down. so how might this all tie joe b back in the end to joe biden?id >> well, laura , i think you've hit the nail on the head.th this wholee wh issueol is reallt about hunter biden. and if there's a tale k abouista a plea deal with hunter biden,sw it's to actually draw the sting away from the allegations. and the allegations are very tha serious. and dating back to the obama years, the biden family has been engaged in serious influence, huddling with foreign countries. you know, there are ties,h indisputablefore ties, really, o
12:29 am
china, russia, ukraine,omania kazakhstan, romania, the former wife of the mayor, a former mayor of moscow, transfer three point five millionr some dollars to hunter biden. that appears to be some form ofe money launderingy . r all th and so foros all of thosetions, allegations, drug abuse, we d have video fro m from the laptop. you're talking about a couple of small chargeslkcharge. to ld so thi ts is all to lead attention away from joe biden, who as tony belinsky has beenfoh saying for the last couple of e e yearyears, and he would knor former business partner is intimately involved in thesed influence peddling and money laundering and other activitiels that are criminal in nature by the biden family. and so i'm pretty cynical about these things at this time. so i don't think that these leaks are coming out forhering purposes of furthering integrity, justice and law enforcement. integrilaw enfoent, their pthe >> laura now, the author of "the washington post" today offered some details earlier. >> watchf. n wa >> this investigation wasopened
12:30 am
opened in 2018. it's been goin g on a long time . ageennthslieve and hav believed for a number of months that the they have a chargeable case against hunter biden. budet it'sn. important to rememn by aging decisions are not made by agents charging decisions are made by prosecutors at the justice department. >> now, woul d they clarify this? i mean, ifit the article was's t about trump or one of hisfo children or offer context about what? i mean, they were upset abou t what some old licensing deal that ivonka had once tha and chint a thought that wasne a big deal . meanwhile, he goes over there, makes all that money, getsdad wh a ride over with his dad when his dad's vice president comesra back . and all of a sudden webo see thu email traffic about the big guy. y g somewhatever , regarding wam some amount of money that was made there. laura , i'm old enough to remember when charging decisions were made by the fbi, james comey did that c inappropriate with respect to the emails on hillary clinton's server and so there are abs absolutely double standards at the doj and the fboldards at tig
12:31 am
on whose ox is being gored. and so, again, what the biden nt family, not hunter biden, but c hunter biden, jim biden and joen biden are accused of doing incredibly is very big and isndt international in scope. and soerna i think that nothing is going to end up happening here. it would be a gift to the biden family of hunter biden were offered the ability tof hunter o a couple of minor offenses and pay some money. offeo be pursued. it needs to be pursued by the house. if republicans tak takine back control. and we need to seeju justice do in this case because we likeneyn the ukrainian money flowing inbs the billions right now. i think you have to look at the ties of the biden family to corrupt activities in that parte of the world, that you would be a fool to ignore those facts now trying to remove certain prosecutors and install othern c prosecutors. and then suddenly we areut spending 60 billion dollars inwe ukraine. and i don't know a abl if we'ree to track wherever that money or those munitions end up in
12:32 am
the end. enemy . thank you. now, what's bide whatn doing ins to delaware that he may not want us to know about raymond arroyo has some ideas in a special thursday follies. oh, that'secia next. >> is a man we're designed to do hard things. testosterone levels are declining, 10% per decade. chemical and pharmaceutical companies are poisoning us . but you're not allowed to notice this is happening. this is a chemical warfare on our country. you have to have strong if you don't, it's not going to go well. what's wrong with our food is that it's not food and reliant on industrial processes for many of these compounds, there's clear evidence that some of these chemicals cause problems with reproduction. picking something hard to do every day will increase your testosterone. we need a renaissance getting into a healthier state, being
12:33 am
a healthier person. that's when you really start to see that no one in washington seems interested at all. it's a joke to them. if men can't reproduce, then the world is over. we're headed for a collision. attention marines and family members who spend time at camp lejeune. if you spent time on base at camp lejeune prior to nineteen eighty eight and developed any of these cancers or suffered any of these injuries, you may be eligible for significant financial compensation called camp lejeune victims to discuss your case now leaking underground tanks contaminated the drinking water with benzene and other highly carcinogen chemicals up to 280 times acceptable levels in some instances. there have been numerous reported cases of exposed personnel developing cancer and other serious health conditions. it is critical to take action and call camp lejeune victims. now, if you wish someone you know spent time at camp lejeune before in 1988, and you developed any of these cancers
12:34 am
or injuries to determine your eligibility for financial compensation. now, if you don't win, you pay nothing called 840 zero nine three three one. that's eight hundred forty zero nine three three one five . >> life asks a lot from you. why not get a little relief along the way? the power of massage chair from sharper image with improved ergonomic handle and enhanced performance, the power massager from sharper image relief. now wellness always. or m >> sheor has no idea she's sitting on a gold mine. well, she doesn' partt know that if she owns a life insurancen a te policy of one hundred thousand dollars or more , shrme and so all or part of it to coventry for cash, even a term policy, even if you' term policn find out if you're sitting on aa gold mine called coventry direct today at eight hundred four nine six. >> i'd do it or visit coventry direct. .com knew i visit dry eye drops
12:35 am
made with hydrating polymers, moisturizing hyaluronic acid and revitalizing tray loafs to reduce dryness, discomfort and strain. >> i visit. we see a better way. hi, i'm mike huckabee, former governor of arkansas, and i'm here today to tell you about a hidden health crisis currently affecting nearly every american sleep deprivation. and that's why you need to know about relaxium sleep. you see, getting a good night's sleep helps support a healthy immune system. helps maintain a healthy blood pressure, healthy cardiovascular system, thankfully, relaxium sleeps formula is clinically proven to help you fall asleep faster, stay asleep longer, and wake up feeling refreshed. relaxium triple action formula was developed by renowned neurologist and sleep expert dr eric ciliberti. it'll regulate your natural sleep cycle. relax your body and calm the mind for better. sleep through the whole night. call a day and get your very own risk free
12:36 am
bottle of relaxium sleep relaxium sleep doesn't have any harmful chemicals. like many prescriptions, sleeping pills with relaxium sleep, you can expect to start sleeping better the very first night. >> the very first night after being a relaxium customer for at least three years now because i'm getting a better night's sleep, it's making everything else about my life more enjoyable. when i take relaxium sleep, i sleep better than i have in years. >> i wake up feeling alert like i've had the best night's sleep. if you're like i was and you've got trouble sleeping at night, give relaxium sleep call. get your very own risk free bottle , take control of your health. >> stop struggling with restless nights, sleep like you were meant to with relaxium relaxium is giving away a thousand bottles of clinically proven relaxium sleep today. >> fall asleep, stay asleep, wake refreshed, call today for your thirty day risk free trial at 100% moneybag guaranteed relaxium sleep doesn't need a prescription is 100% drug
12:37 am
free and is not habit forming. >> call 800 for one 730 773 800 for one seven thirty trusts. you got to relaxium see i know it's thursday, but that meanstie it's time for thursday. balis for that, we're joined by the author of the wise men who found christmas, foxris" news contributor raymond arroyo. all right, raymond, i can't believ raymond t believe e i'm saying e there's another reboot coming back to tv. >> wo. well, laura , it's sort of a reboot, okay, one eric adams d and those migrants arriving from texas will just love. where's the bar? laura: th this is actuallyis just a brandc switch and bait. and yes, that was ted lange,igia the original isaac,
12:38 am
the bartender in a cameo. and the new love boat is actually a dating show hosted by jerrya datingo'connell and his wife, r. romayne, set on the princess boat. i think i'll take an excursion if you don't mind. we already have a love island, temptation island, 90 fiancee, bachelor, bachelorette. do we need another dating show? >> well, maybe we should have given our comments the other night about generation c, the coddled complaining generation. maybe we should do the brady bunch, not the brady bunch,on. just haven't been giving us ideas. , just bratty kids. b that would actually be really d funny. don'on'tt give them any ideas. but, you know, they have to do a this because they can't recast and recreate those shows because you need real stars realy names.brit where are you going to finde wil those? that's the big challenge. you the only reboo yout i'm reay watcing to watch is frasier with kelsey grammer, which is comin thig this year. >> but we are seeing a lot of these reboots often clumsy onesv
12:39 am
like this odd couple revival. >> w stumbleivd across. spooky season is coming up. them whatos scares you the most? thousand kids coming to my door> breathing on me. what could wha be more compellig than getting the shot for the pair of kitten ears on ?ar right. don't forget to get your booster. oh, let's see those guns. >> let's see those famous fauci guns. laura , when did routine medical procedures becomeon't d entertainment? i mean, we don't dthiso this for earwax removal or planters or rl removal. why is it that why is this a focal point of entertainment?i >>nm i don't understand that. oh, wait a second, samantha. reminded me that didn't raymond narrate his colonoscopy? >> yes, but that was a major that's a major medical procedure to warn people. peoplpee do this a every other wednesday, they get. a booster. >> why do we need that segment?n i fauci.
12:40 am
yeah, i thought when fauci and they were talking aboutboose the booster lir like him kid lot cute on a little booster seat with his legs danglin wg oo of me. >> a cute, cute big sack ofrs booster. >> all right. boos's the only booster he needs. now tell us abouter he neet thee sequel, raymon, that won't endld biden's visit to delaware. e the new york post filed a freedom of info act to sees he who is coming and going from joe's home and beach house. h house.yeah, but they've been . lure after checking again and agai again an, the secret se is now saying there are noo visitor logs for those residences, no records at all.s now, here's why this important is important. remember back in 2010,0, the oba vie obama administration got around those visitor logs acrossting lobbyists at caribou coffee across the street from the white house. the question the s is , who is meeting joe at his homes? hom >> is he out joyriding with business partners of hunter or other family members? is hh huntor just jay leno? is he sniffing outrtunitie new opportune?
12:41 am
it is laura, or are doctors giving him a regular tuneup, whatever it is , ding , ding , tax payers need to know when he's spending more than one hundred and fifty days there. >> and we're only nine i months into the new year. okay, it's a very odd situation at that time. a veryhe went for like two and minutes. i mean, was itha a bathroominut break? esthroomhe went in and out. it was very funny. hehe went got the whole way thn went to two minutes, then out the very strange. >> yeah, they said he had totevi vote . whatever biden is doinis doing t home, though, laura , whatever he's doing there, what he does on the roan d, like tody in new york , toutingk, semiconductor investment, that's also a cause for concern. >> it' s great to be heresean with the hudson valley. congressman sean pat cipollone. when factories went, factories that make these ships chips shut down around the world, major computer businesses that i
12:42 am
are good in the world, then the united states , our economy has created ten million jobs, six hundred sixty eight manufacturing jobs . >> laura , ce's celebrating that ibm is investing inelebra a for semiconductors, which is great. and , you know, they are investing several millions dollars. we jus t gave out $50 billion in that semiconductor bill . so they're going t goo be theciaries beneficiaries that they're not doing this on their own. they're doing it because ot f the federal largesse. >> thank you, mr. and mrs. america, you made this happen. semi lucid on semiconductors, raymond. his bitchier. yeah, he was better than i've h he was actually not as bad as he normally is , but it's hard to say.ell. chip, sell, sell, sell, sell,s. like it's like sally sellsuld he seashells. that was a hard little did i think i would have wondered out. raymond, it'e s greato st to se. all right. shock jock howard stern is parti of a growing group ocaf americas who are now only emerging fromdu
12:43 am
their home medically sealed bubbles. and i'm talking for the first time italking the firs haln twoe what would we call this condition? our medicine cabinet tells us in momentt a texts. hey, i just got a text from my sister. my sister. >> you neighbor? sure. sure. he's seventy six year old guy who still runs marathons, right. >> sadly, not anymore. , we're o >> what yot u mean just like that? the so sudde"wn we're not about to have the we need life insurance conversation again, are we? -frog we are getting coverage so we don't getting coverage so we don't have to worry about it. >> conversation sowe are get yo? calling about the nine ninety five a month plan from colonial penn? >> i am. we put it off long enough. somei we are getting that nine ninety we are getting that nine ninety five plan today. is it time for you to call about the 995 plan? you know >> i'm jonathan from colonial life insurance company. company. sometime a reminder not to take today for granted.
12:44 am
it could be the death of someone, you know, for a health scare. that's why today could be a great day to call for free information about colonial pens 995. if you're age 50 to eighty five , you canea get guaranteedson. except his we life insurance starting at just nine dollars and 95 cent a month. there are no health questions,is so you can't colon be turned foy health reason. this is permanent coverage just pay your premiums for life longe security. nine ninety five plantday.np. is colonial penns number one most popular holiday options started just nine point ninety five cents a month. that's less thanion. thirty five bucks a day. your rate can never go up.u' it's locked in for life.ll also don't put it off. take the first easy step. take the first easy step. call today for free information and you'll also get this free beneficiary later. so call now. call 1-800- six four one three ,two, three to four year free information and free gift. that's one hundred six four one , three , two, three , two. there's no risk or obligation.
12:45 am
that number again is one 800 six four one three two three two one eight hundred six four one three two, three , two. >> call now. hello colonial penn. you know, it says out of workshop for a reason. >> i'm so sorry to bother you, boss, but they moved the world cup to the holidays. >> we let the actual world come to my holiday season. are you kidding me? yeah, there's messi and ronaldo. yeah, but that's my time to shine. i mean, i'm not supposed to compete with that. you know what? get blitzing on the phone. i got to get back up there right now. i got to go . >> i can't wait to mess with these people. crank it up and hold on tight. there's no planning for this. masters biggest breaking season you're building. pirate ship has unbelievable heart racing, most impossible blockbuster built. oh, my god. we're doing horrible.
12:46 am
12:48 am
physically. for the first time in two years, i've ventured out of the house. now, you might think all ofy be that came from someone who isrrb maybe recovering from a terrible accident, maybelent , or maybe even someone who is r newly released froelm an extendd house arrest. but you'd be wrong bu. >> that was a so-called shock jock, howard stern, this weekrnt after havinger dinner with friends. >> so what kept living the life? of a hermit? he was so paralyzed by the fearf of covid that he isolated himself from the world. rgiven e but he could be forgiven whenins seeing headlines like this. covid-19 booster's couldt prevent about ninety thousand us deaths this winter. u.s. ths winter but only if more people go but only if more peoplet them get them. >> analysis suggests, ofs ow course, that message isn't you n enough on its own. >> it needs to be reinforced by dr. doom. >> you want to go get the booster right now? can if we can, let's do it. >> i think he's nervous to give anthony fauci. he probably is . yea i hope he doesn't get it. t.
12:49 am
>> there's the moment. but is st. anthony cell job working? analysis of new cdc data reveal that just five point nine percent of people who are eligible have gotten h their updated boosters. seems like howard' s audience tun isn't the only one tuning himt. out. >> joining me now is dr. marty macquarrie, a professor at johns hopkins school oyf jo medicine and fox news contributohn or, and dr. jay bhattacharya, professor at stanford school of medicine. dr. b long covid, i guess would be a more apt description for memberhis has done, really sadly to so many members ofociey society who ar we still triple maston afraid of crowds and what hav e we done to people? >> it's really shocking. lura, i call institutionalizedho hypochondria. what we've done is we'vechonia. create d a group of peoplee now who are now afraid of puteracting with other other people. they want the we havble public health has taught us to treat
12:50 am
other people as biohazards and actually don't have a hardte time laughing about howard stern. i just feel sorry for him. and it's not even his fault. it's public health fault for creating this messaging that we are all dangerous to each other. ach otheand i think public healk really should work to scale t that back as rapidly as it can because it's really hurting people all across the country. >> nown., dr. macquarrie, i want you to hear what's been keeping sanjay gupta up at night. watch us . >> covid is still around.id's i think that's very clear , tha t'though, boggles my mind a little bit that we haven'tt we seen more protective measures taking place in the form of these booster's, tens of thousands of lives potentiallyse saved if we increase the uptake. >> doctor ? dr. makary, i mean, covid deaths, hospitalizations, is in fact, all of it is down, down,ru down, natural immunities out there, et cetera. what is going on , sanjay? >> well, look, we can'tt eradicate all viruseserom and bacteria from planet earth. they circulate earth a and it'sc . and i just don't understand wha
12:51 am
what he's talking about becausey almost everyone in america hasbo had omicron and there's nothing more intellectually dishonest to me than for a doctor to recommend immunizing someone already immune. the fdzing a never wanted this vaccine for omicron to be out there. the fda experts, so they bypassed the experts. they didn't have thethey dm voth discloseied on data from eight mice. they didn't disclose, disclose thec datathe public data and tn stopped buying it. they're basically saying no after the white house house e pg it hard for a month. >> doctor , about osteria: doct and msnborc doctor dusted offf 0 the old 2020 playbook. watch this. we're going to have a health system that's overloaded with we don't know wha >>t all the more reason to get a booster, something that could be arguably largely preventable, whether it's through masks and good ventilation in combination venta with vaccine or just getting people vaccinated. ge. ep awa about sharia, we're one step away from those annoyingstic stickers on the flookers on r ai the grocery store. again, these are medicaln.
12:52 am
professionals, right? >> i don't think thi the publin, is buying, laura . i think that large parts of the public, even in california, i live, are basically done with the fear mongerine g and i think what the problem is likeel when you see medical professionals like this tryingsi to pretend like it's 20 , 20 , like trying to pretend, just like dr. macara just said,d thao many people haven't had covidvi and recover that it doesn't provide protectionprovid. th many people have had the vaccine as well. raif they try to pretend like it's 20 , 20 , they loseo pr it's ailitety and it's a problem for the medical profession is a problem for public health. p public health really needs to apologize for what is done to the american people over the lastast tw two and a half y. it's really botched covid at cov a level that is almost unimaginableid. and it's harmed people all allpa across the country in ways i think we can only recover once public health acknowledges once. o mulity like so much ichn politics, thee needs to be accountability. dr. macquarrie, now you're called anti vax by a lot of
12:53 am
the same characters on television, television, if you don't want to get this special updated super dupert far booster. >> how is that fair or right? well, look, this is a modern day mccarthyism. >> it's in medicine. californiadaya just just passeda youtu can't disagree with the public health authority or you the d lose your license. the reality is the fdafd own experts said this should not ned go through. this should be treated as n anad new medication. and that's why the fdaidn' did t have them vote . >> yeah. so, again, so we're told one thing p being somet ends u something else. dr. macquarrie else. and bhattacharyya, great to see you both. when we come back , another sad goodbye tonight and a tribute i explain next. what is progress
12:54 am
12:58 am
12:59 am
up to new hampshire to help oure newspaper in a free-speech battle royale with the college.l long story short, because of judge silverman support, theywn backed down. he went on to become one ohef to most consequential jurists in the past 5n0 years in this country. he was nominated to the bench by president reagan and served as a fierce defender of the principle of judicial restraint. and he was widely respected forc hit s intellect and his passiona for the rule of law. his opinions on separation ofino powers and the second amendment and presconds freedom i think we among his most significant. and today in a testament to how beloved he was, everyone from clarence thomas to land encea kg in were at his memorial service. attorney general merrick garland whom he served on the court and becameecam a family friend spokt today service along with vice president cheney. silverman was a giant and a mentor and i never met him, i
1:00 am
would have never gone to law school and i would have never worked on the supreme court, and i wouldn't be here tonight. the country and the federal judiciary served less by his service. godspeed, judge. surface is a choice and we had very few giants like him. ♪ ♪ >> todd: a fox news alert, we were awaiting for september jobs report that will provide clues on the fed's next move and it comes as president biden continues his tone-deaf economic recovery tour in maryland today. does the economy look recovered to you cha carley shimkus? >> todd: you are watching "fox & friends first" i'm todd piro. >> carley: carley shimkus, the country is bracing for more pain as the federal reserve battles forty-year high inflation, with the price of gas shooting up
168 Views
Uploaded by TV Archive on