tv FOX and Friends FOX News October 7, 2022 5:00am-6:00am PDT
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>> they believe they have enough evidence to charge hunter on tax crimes. >> this is just the tip of the iceberg. >> there's something very grotesque about all of this, the fact that this is our elite. and at the center of it. >> gas prices are high and they're getting higher. >> president taps more of our strategic oil reserves. >> less than two years, biden has given world energy power back to saudi. >> we are in battle with the media. >> ye west takes on the media. >> majority of the media has a godless agenda. >> look at the reaction on twitter from all the blue checks and the only word that comes to mind is unhinged. another word that comes to mind is fearless. >> 84 migrants are caught in the tractor-trailer. >> biden administration secretly flying migrant teenagers. >> we're being dumped on and we're not going to put up with it. >> will cain was there and
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getting food. >> brian: why would you get food? how hungry are you? >> no, not while we're in here! oh! we're at the buffet! >> ♪ if i could turn back time ♪ ♪ if i could find a way ♪ >> will: showing back up to new york this week is you guys are also authentically mad at me. all the guys on the set in the green room today, all the guys behind the scenes, audio guys, camera guys are like what are you doing? stuffing your face while history is being made? i show up and i can see it in your eyes. >> brian: disenchantment, you know, one of these things, my friend asked me to go on the stadium and heard aaron judge is a good player. you are a sports guy. you were brought up in sports. you grew up on the diamond. your mom put eye black on you at 2 years old. to have aaron judge go for two
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weeks stuck at 60 and then -- should we tell the story first? you were on the buffet line in arlington, texas, instead of watching aaron judge change the game? >> ainsley: listen to his explanation, tell us why you thought this was a good time to go to the buffet. >> will: my brothers and i went to the game. we got there, i think, in a very dangerous zone of arrival. 20 minutes before the game which we had stadium club tickets which means we could go in and get -- and it's free. let's go now, guys. prime rib. and my brother was like let's go in the fourth inning. that's terrible idea. don't want to miss the game. that 20 minutes just wasn't enough. and i looked up and the game started and he's leading off. >> brian: couple of things, could i hear how it sounded? you were smart enough to do it, to record it. can we hear how it sounded? >> will: if i have the audio. >> brian: can we play the whole thing? >> will: no, not while we're in here!
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oh! oh! i knew it. oh! we're in the buffet! not in the stadium. >> ainsley: seriously. >> brian: this is awesome. >> ainsley: this is what i don't understand. this guy is about to break a record. he's like the best batter of all time, right, and you somehow thought he's not good enough to maybe do it in the first inning. >> will: i was on saturday afternoon watching college football and also had on this chase. i thought i'm going to record judge with my phone. how many times did it not happen? it didn't happen. you got the sense it's not going to happen in the first at bat here.
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>> ainsley: all these people, they weren't a lot of people in the buffet area. was that your whole crew? >> will: there were strangers in there, not just us. >> ainsley: what did they say afterwards? >> will: we said the same thing, how did we miss this? >> brian: then judge sat the rest of the game. >> ainsley: it's a great story. you can tell the grandkids about this one day. >> brian: he has a lot of other things to tell his grandkids about. >> ainsley: you'll hang out with your grandkids more than one time. >> brian: right. can i tell that story about aaron judge? let's bring in on a totally different issue. james comer, congressman, welcome back. we wanted you to talk about what we're hearing, "the washington post" writing, that it looks like an indictment could be imminent on hunter biden, and you tweeted this out. this is just the tip of the iceberg. hunter, the biden family peddled
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access to enrich themselves, 150 reports from shady deals. we know that joe was involved in selling natural gas to china. we'll keep pushing for accountability. is this good news for people that want justice or disappointing news? >> it's a little disappointing to me but i'm not surprised. we knew that hunter biden was under investigation in delaware for tax evasion and for lying about purchasing a gun. he lied on his application to purchase a gun. look, these are small potatoes compared to all the problems that hunter biden has. there's mounting evidence, as you mentioned, that hunter biden was peddling excess to our adversaries all over the world. there's mounting evidence that he was an undisclosed foreign agent which is a major felony and there's even mounting evidence that he was involved in some type of money laundering scheme. so all of these problems that hunter biden have pale in comparison to the charges that "the washington post" mentioned. >> ainsley: congressman, why has it taken so long, this investigation began four years ago, a, and b, if republicans do
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win the house, take back the house, where does this go? >> this is going to be a priority for republicans especially republicans on the house oversight committee. we've been probing for months. the more that comes out, the worse it sounds. the reason we're investigating hunter biden is because we believe he's a national security threat. but we're also concern that hunter biden's shady business dealings have compromised joe biden. and there are countless examples of where joe biden has changed rules like, for example, changed the rules to where congress can have access to these suspicious activity reports which are bank violations that both hunter biden and jim biden have committed. we are supposed to have access to that. joe biden changed the rules. he has blocked republican oversight at every corner. this impending indictment is just a drop in the bucket. we're going to continue our investigation with hunter biden. we honestly don't care if he lied on his application to purchase a gun. we are concerned about the national security threats and all the influence peddling that not just hunter biden but the
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entire biden family had been doing for over a decade. the big question is was joe involved? more and more evidence is coming forward to prove that he was involved. >> will: is this investigation and what's coming forward with it now a predicate? and i want to hone on that word predicate in two different scenarios. one is it's the beginning. it's the predicate for something larger as you point out. something more consequential. something more important about potential corruption at the highest levels of the american government. or is it a predicate as some have offered like fox news channel's mark levine to show lauren acce semblance of fairness saying we did something with hunter biden. now watch us go after donald trump. >> it could be either. either way, it's small potatoes compared to the problems that hunter biden has. and again, we're not investigating hunter biden for political reasons. we have a pretty large amount of confidence to believe that he's a national security threat and if you look at the things that joe biden has done, for example,
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issuing sanctions on all the russian all guards except the two that happened in the past. there are examples in the energy policy that would question why joe biden has put america last and china first and you find out that china transferred $5 million into an account that hunter biden had for consulting to try to buy american natural gas for chinese energy company. it just doesn't make sense. we're going to continue to investigate this because we do believe that this administration is compromised as a result of hunter's shady business dealings. >> brian: the thing is you have a source, person part of all those deals. tony was being courted by jim and possibly joe to begin with. what you're referring to is some of the investments went into a sinister program created to undermine our influence in various developing nations around the country. you build them in airports and build them in ports, when they
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can't make the ports, you take it over. they need financing for it. this fund was helping with that program! what more proof do you need that you need to investigate this? >> yeah, we don't need any and it's even worse. according to the whistle blowers that we're dealing with is that the ultimate objective of the chinese energy company was to actually purchase the interest in the drillers of natural gas. so they were wanting to get their foot in the door on the american natural gas infrastructure industry and this would have been a huge national security risk. we're already having to depend on opec for oil because of bad policies in the biden administration. now, we would have to depend on china for natural gas? i mean, this is terrible! this is terrible policy for the american people and it all traces back to hunter biden and joe biden's brothers' shady business dealings with our adversaries. that's why we'll continue this investigation regardless of what happens to hunter in federal court. >> will: we'll be watching. thank you so much, congressman.
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>> brian: that's exactly why you don't want to focus on the fact that he had a drug addiction and loves prostitutes. that's his own problems. >> ainsley: he said we don't care about all that. that's small potatoes. >> will: when in doubt, play the race card. that is taking place when it comes to the debate over the southern border of america but mayors within the state of texas like the mayor of el paso. >> brian: a democrat. >> will: a democratic mayor of el paso to ship illegal immigrants to the north to cities like chicago, washington, d.c. and new york. new york's mayor eric adams says, oh, that's because all of these cities, d.c., chicago and new york have black mayors. here's what eric adams said in a television interview. he said keep in mind these are three cities where we have black mayors. this is undermining our economy and is undermining our attempt to recover in our cities. these three cities were targeted. this is in a television interview and the host just then asks, you think these cities are
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being targeted including new york because they have black mayors? adams says i don't know if it's black mayors or northern cities. something is wrong. we have thousands of cities in this country. why are we specifically targeting washington, chicago and new york? i could offer you a potential answer, mayor. you're sanctuary cities and three of the largest cities in the united states of america. >> ainsley: if you want to get attention of other people, if you're going to do this, you have to ship them to the larger cities that will definitely get more attention. >> brian: here's an example of how wrong mayor adams is. and every day that goes by, i have less hope that he knows what he's talking about and doing. here's more proof. nothing to do with black or black mayors or anything. it's northern cities and big cities to get the maximum publicity for a problem that this federal government doesn't want to address. in new york city, we've gotten about 9,000 illegal immigrants. to new york city from el paso, 7,000. >> will: again, democrat mayor of el paso. >> brian: democrat mayor of el
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paso sent 7,000 here. and new york city has gotten 3,000 from governor abbott and chicago 1800 from el paso, 920 from governor abbott. there goes your argument, mayor adams. >> ainsley: and mayor adams, some of these migrants that have been brought to new york have come from the biden administration. >> will: yes, yes. >> brian: which leads us to the next story which is -->> ainsley: this next story is the small town in new york. >> brian: by the way, this is earlier today. so this -- in newburgh, there's a small airport in westchester airport, there's a small airport and in montgomery, there's a small airport. and they are landing on private jets that we're paying for, taxpayer dollars. >> ainsley: they're young. these are kids. >> brian: from the border, dumping them in these cities where buses are waiting and they put out to n.g.o.'s and sponsored families never telling the local government. well, paul artetta is the deputy police chief of montgomery and the mayor, mayor is steve busha,
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the mayor of that city, he gets word at an airport that kids are landing at an airport and he thinks, oh, my god, is this child trafficking? so they quickly get the cop cars and the mayor goes out there. they're trying to find out, pull over the bus. and they find out this is from joe biden's government. this is a federal government program without telling the local government we're putting illegals in your town. your town that they said is a norman rockwell painting, we're dumping illegal immigrants. they may be the best kids or worst kids, we have no idea. kids deserve a break, i get it. not coming here illegally. they'll be part of a school system and didn't give anybody a heads up on it. it happens on a regular basis. hey, governor, where's your outrage? >> will: this is who you spoke to a little earlier. brian? >> brian: we had somebody contact us, they saw something suspicious. plane load of children getting off on the tarmac and entering a bus. we finally got through to
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washington, d.c. and they advised us that this was sanctioned by the h.h.s. and office of refugee resettlement and stretching the federal laws to their convenience and we're being dumped on and we're not going to put up with it. we hope there's no more flights coming into the airport because we can't handle it. there's not enough security there. there's not enough resources in our community, the taxpayers cannot absorb what they did to us. >> ainsley: they said this happened last friday night. it was carrying 25 minors ranging in the ages between 13 and 18 years old. they were quickly shipped off to 12 different locations including three children -- not three, including children's homes and shelters that are scattered across the tristate in new york city suburban areas. >> will: all the hyperventilating about greg abbott and ron desantis and no attention of what's being done by the democrat mayor of el paso and joe biden. >> will: joe biden began doing it first. a year and two months, he was
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doing that. the secret flights to westchester and one went to jacksonville. >> will: political stunt, inhumane, human trafficking. >> brian: right. martha's vineyard, what's the difference? martha's vineyard, they land, they sat there. we said there's your illegal immigrants. nobody knew once they arrived, everybody knew. here, nobody knew to the point where they had to pull a local sheriff had to pull over the bus. that's how clueless it is. so there's no difference. >> ainsley: let's hand it over to carley with headlines for us. >> carley: i sure do. we'll stay in new york. once again, a homeless man charged with murder for allegedly stabbing a man to death on a subway train in brooklyn. was free on bail after a similar attack. the father of another victim who was stabbed last year is ripping a judge for letting alvin charles out with just a slap on the wrist. that man's son thankfully survived. charles was set to appear in court in that case later this month. the department of justice charging 11 pro life protesters
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for allegedly blocking access to an abortion clinic and keeping staff from entering. seven of those activists are facing conspiracy charges. they could be hit with up to a $250,000 fine. and face up to 11 years behind bars, if found guilty. meanwhile, zero arrests have been made in the months old attacks on pro life centers by radical pro abortion activists. residents in southern california capturing a massive dust storm on camera yesterday. the extreme weather event reducing visibility at times to about 0%. residents were actually told to seek shelter for several hours because of dangerous driving conditions and poor iair qualit. many drivers were left stuck as walls of dust stopped them from being able to move. national weather service said wind gusts topped more than 30 miles per hour. and here's the birthday that everybody can celebrate.
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fox news is turning 26 years old today. our network first appeared on american tv's on this day in 1996. and after 26 years, fox news is dominating the ratings. this week, we trounced the competition in the key 25 demo. we couldn't have done it without you. all of our friends at "fox & friends" would love to express our deepest gratitude. thank you all for your incredible support. that's why we love the patriot awards. >> ainsley: coming up soon in florida. how many years have you been here? >> brian: i started filling in in 1996, got a contract in 1997. i'm right on 25. >> ainsley: that's awesome. from the beginning. lots of changes. >> brian: right. i think you were in third grade. and you were in fifth. i think. >> ainsley: 1996? no, i was in college. >> brian: you were in college. yeah, so i knew how great this place would be. with just a basement.
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i use this analogy. it was like walking into yankee stadium i imagine when they were the highlanders. you saw the framework of what would be this 28 -- now they're going for their 28th championship. you saw how hard everyone is working. craziest thing that stuck out with me, every negative headline they would frame and put on the wall. that's an attitude. it's almost like everyone is like let's get more negative headlines and it would fuel the whole fox attitude. >> ainsley: at cnn, they said we'll squash you like a bug. they made it larger and put it up in the newsroom. that newsroom in the basement. brown carpet and like remember? >> brian: right, i don't remember the carpet. >> ainsley: i spent a long time there. seven years of overnights. that's where i lived. >> brian: thanks. it's all about the loyalty of the viewers. they're not just watchers. they become supporters. appreciate it. >> will: no doubt. >> brian: still ahead. >> ainsley: the september jobs report set to be released in 15 minutes. stuart varney will join us on
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the couch to break down the numbers real time. >> will: first, i like doing it. i don't know what i'm doing here. i'm leaving. >> brian: no wonder pete complains all the time. ye west takes on his bad rap. >> battle with the media like the majority of the media has a godless agenda. this whole like ye is crazy and all these things. they don't work. >> brian: the rapper sits down with tuck er carlson to talk about the media, his support of president trump and more exclamation point. >> will: fox news correspondent geraldo rivera reacts next.
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>> we are in a battle with the media like the majority of the media has a godless agenda. this whole like ye is crazy and all these things, they don't work because the media has, you know, they've also watched travesties happen specifically to me. >> ainsley: in his exclusive sit down with tucker carlson, ye west is calling out the media's agenda and sharing his friends' reactions to support for former president trump. here to react is "the five" co-host and correspondent at large, geraldo rivera. >> good morning. >> ainsley: we love having you hear. what do you think of that interview? >> ye did a great job. it was news making. kanye west, you can get away with a lot when you're an artist and say you're evolving. i remember when kanye said
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george w. bush didn't care about black people because of hurricane katrina. he's gone from that person in 2005 to this person who is pro life. i didn't know that. many of the people in this building and many of my friends, your friends are pro life. i have absolutely no problem with it. i mean, it's unusual because he hasn't expressed that view as far as i know before. the fact that he's anti-fat, you know, again, he's a fashion designer. he has all the right to do that seemed a little insensitive the way he brought it up. he talks about the media and very, you know, condemning tones. so i don't know really what kanye is really all about. is the kanye from "keeping up with the kardashians." he's done nine fashion shows. will adidas stay with him with the white lives matter sweatshirts and slogans? black people, many that i see on social media at least, i would
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guess the majority think that he's betrayed them in some ways, that he's a traitor. i go back to what i started with, ainsley, that as an artist, i give him the benefit of the doubt and i let him be whoever he wants to be today. if today he wants to be pro life and pro trump, you know, and anti-fat people or whatever it is, that's kanye, he does his thing maybe in six months or year, he'll be back to the one who said george w. bush doesn't care about black people. so yeah. he's in a tough spot but he's so creative and he's such a restless artist that you never kn again, i salute tucker for booking it. >> ainsley: definitely very interesting. when you hear someone is interviewing kanye, you want to hear what he's going to say. you don't know what you're going to get. >> never know. exactly right. >> ainsley: talk about the doping of america that's on fox nation. >> i've been in this business over half a century and i kind of chronicled from the very beginning the war on drugs when
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president nixon declared the war on drugs when, you know, new york was a shooting gallery and people were nodding out and the heroin epidemic and it was back in those days. i kind of chronicled the dope fight in america from those days, from heroin to cocaine to crack to meth to the pills, you know, and finally to fentanyl, the worst of all, where so many people are dying, overdosing and, you know, we have this carnage in the streets. whether or not we're doing any good and how it will impact that fight that president biden has now decided to pardon everyone who has been convicted of possession of marijuana, you know, that's been a fight that's been decades in the making. i salute it, but what effect will it have? let's see. certainly, fighting the war on drugs has not yielded the result that we wanted. a drug-free society where drugs aren't, you know, a cancer on
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how our children are being raised. >> ainsley: in order to fight it, you have to close the border in some capacity. >> i agree with that. >> ainsley: thank you so much. >> my pleasure. >> ainsley: have a great weekend. you're doing "the five" tonight. >> yes. >> ainsley: staying in town to see the kids? >> yeah, my little grandkiddies. >> ainsley: oh! still ahead, september jobs report will be released at any minute and experts warn hiring likely slowed last month. stuart varney will break down all the numbers. there he is! come on in, stuart! (bridget vo) with thyroid eye disease... i hid from the camera. and i wanted to hide from the world. for years, i thought my t.e.d was beyond help... ...but then i asked my doctor about tepezza. (vo) tepezza is the only medicine that treats t.e.d. at the source not just the symptoms. in a clinical study, more than 8 out of 10 patients taking tepezza had less eye bulging. tepezza is an infusion.
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>> good morning, we are back with some headlines starting with this, the uvalde texas school district hires and fires a former d.p.s. trooper. the governor ripping the school for failing to vet the new hire under investigation for her response during the deadly shooting that claimed the lives of 19 children and two teachers. >> school district had full information about the status of the person they chose to go ahead and hire, and it's up to the school district. not d.p.s. not anybody else to have to own up to the poor decision they made. >> many parents are furious after the trooper said she would
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not have stood outside during the tragedy from her son was in the building. norway deploying a special vessel to inspect the damaged pipeline. the move comes after a new swedish investigation finds more signs of sabotage. officials pointing to evidence of blast that likely triggered massive underwater natural gas leak. and twitter is finally introducing an edit button but it comes at a cost. yesterday, subscribers to twitter blue were able to enjoy the feature that costs just under $5 a month. edited tweets feature a pencil icon to show other users the post has been modified. those are the headlines. send it over to you. >> brian: thanks so much. the september jobs report is in. just released. u.s. adding 263,000 jobs last month. >> ainsley: that's better than economists' expectations were of 250,000. >> will: the unemployment rate falling slightly to 3.5%. here to react is the host of
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"varney & company" and "american built" on fox business, stuart varney. good morning, sir. what do we think of those numbers? >> ok, had this number of new jobs been 300,000 or more, it would have been a very strong report. and i would expect to see the fed raise rates aggressively and the stock market come down. but what you've got is kind of a middle of the road report. 263,000 new jobs created. that's about in line with what was expected. not too strong. not too weak. the result is on wall street, futures are actually up a little. maybe they think that the federal reserve with the report like this won't be raising rates quite so aggressively. i don't think so. i think they're going to keep doing what they're doing right now. and this report makes no difference. >> ainsley: how does it compare to september? >> september, we had an unemployment rate of 3.5%, what you're saying is compared to august. the unemployment rate went down compared to august. >> ainsley: you're right. this is for september. >> this is for september. more importantly, the
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participation rate, the labor participation rate actually went down in september compared to august. that's not great news. that suggests that employers are not quite getting people back into the work force after the pandemic. the really important report is coming out next week. that's the consumer price index. if that's hot, then you can watch that market, the stock market, really react sharply. and the federal reserve will be more inclined to raise rates aggressively. but that's next week. we're talking now about the unemployment report this week. i'm going to call it middle of the road without that much reaction to it. >> will: if i'm reading between the lines, if unemployment is down but labor force participation is also down, you are essentially hiring everybody that wants to work. right? >> yes. >> will: the problem is there's more people that don't want to work is how you read that. >> there's less hiring. the jobs report showed less than 11 million openings. it was 10.1 million openings. that suggests that employers are not hiring as aggressively, that the job market actually is
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slowing down a little. at a furious pace earlier, slowing down a little. >> brian: explain this, 57,000 have dropped out of the work force. how do you explain that? >> i don't. >> brian: where do you go? >> it's one of the great mysteries of this world. we have 10.1 million. >> brian: it's not just an american problem, by the way. >> very true. maybe it's a hangover from the pandemic. we haven't quite got used to going back to the way we were. we got used to being at home. maybe people are taking an early retirement and like it. that's the only explanation that i can come to. it is a worldwide problem. people are not coming back the way they did before the pandemic. >> brian: there's no peer pressure to have people go back because so many people are saying i'm not going back. i'm going to keep my t-shirt on and not wash it until thursday. and kick my feet up. get some slippers. feed the dog. >> besides, i don't feel like going back to the office at new york city. >> ainsley: i hear wives all the time say my husband is always at home!
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>> brian: dawn doesn't say that. >> ainsley: definitely not. >> will: this is a cool thing that you're doing. go ahead. you got a live studio audience which is really interesting. october 17th, that means anybody listening right now can go watch, be a part of "varney & company." it's "varney & you" you can see on your screen live october 17th, eventbrite.com for tickets. >> ainsley: have you done a live audience before? >> not in this context. not on fox business. >> will: music? >> don't ask. >> brian: come on. are you going to have a band? >> we'll have a live studio audience asking any and all kinds of questions, we're going to try to explain what's going on in the financial world in plain english! you know? won't that be nice? >> brian: that's the way you always do it. you break it down. >> ainsley: layman's terms.
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>> brian: in plain english, i guess that's the end of the segment. that's the saddest time. i'll weep in the break. for now, i'll forge on. >> flattery in television. >> brian: go ahead. >> will: still ahead, do you remember this outburst at a yale law school free speech panel? >> free speech -- >> will: federal judges do and keep them from hiring yale law graduates. why they're concerned about a lack of respect. on my 32 years of active duty. i understand the veteran mentality. these are people who have served, they'e been in leadership positions, they're willing to put their life on the line if necessary and they come to us and they say, "i need some financial help at this point in time." they're not looking for a hand out, they're looking for a little hand up. my team at newday usa is going to do everything we possibly can to make sure that veteran gets that loan.
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>> will: alliance defending freedom c.e.o. president and general counsel kristen wagner was one of those panelists shouted down. she joins us now along with the yale graduate, great to have you both with me this morning. kristin, you were there. you see one of the conversations i think we have to have is about a reputation and a culture that has been created, fostered at yale. and it seems to me here you have a dozen judges going, well, if that's the reputation, i'm going to change my hiring practices. >> you're right. you can't have a justice system that works without the free exchange of ideas. we know that good lawyers and good law clerks need to be able to understand and engage with ideas and people that they dislike. so i don't think it's any surprise that federal judges are taking notice when yale seems to have abandoned these principles in favor of coercing uniformity of thought which is what's happening at yale law school. >> will: yeah, the question becomes like who is responsible
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for what we just see right there on that video? is it individual yale students? maybe even a student group? or is it something that's larger? is it a culture at yale? that's what the judge is saying. he says yale not only tolerates the cancellation of youths, it actively practices it. i will no longer hire law clerks from yale law school and i hope other judges will join me as well. your thoughts? >> i think this is a culture that includes yale but not limited to yale. i would say that harvard and stanford are equally bad in their own respects. but this is evidence of a broader culture of so-called diversity capital need diversity that actually penalizes actual diversity of thought. and one litmus test, we live in such a polarized time, one litmus test to you to see if you care about that principle. imagine the tables were turned. suppose it was actually conservative students objecting to a left of center speaker using similar tactics. there is little doubt there would have been an outcry at yale and across elite institutions that these students
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were inciting violence. if you turn the tables, that would have been your answer. it still should have been your answer right now. and we need to take those political blinders off to say that this isn't a left wing or right wing issue. this is an issue about the free exchange of ideas that liberals and conservatives alike should care equally about. >> will: i'm inclined to agree with you that it's not a yale particular issue. i saw kristin's face when you said that. and i saw you tilt your head, kristin. you disagree? >> well, i agree that there is a problem across many law schools. but yale is particularly an issue. we not only see protests that are happening but actual disruptions, physical intimidation being a person that was put in the back of that police car, i can tell you it was at a level that i haven't seen in the past. and the judge was right to remind us that self-government is dependent on free speech. and that we have to start showing up, silence is contagious but so is courage. and so in this moment of time, alliance defending freedom is standing up on campuses and
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courtrooms but all americans have a role to play in this to reject cancel culture mentality because there's more at stake than yale's law school ranking. >> will: i certainly -- last note to you here, i certainly believe in the free exchange of ideas and i hear you don't really fight cancel culture with cancel culture. isn't there something to be said about also supporting it? in other words, like americans out there decide do i want to keep subscribing to disney plus or netflix? same thing with a potential employer. do i want to keep supporting something that i don't -- that i don't support. >> look, there's a very fair point here, will, is that yale has enjoyed a reputation that has caused students to enjoy clerkships with federal judges for a long time because they produce competent students. that was the reputation. now if they're producing close minded students, the market response to that is a legitimate response and legitimate response to the conversation. i don't want to be light on yale. this starts with the president of the universities. i think yale needs a new president from the top. but this cultural change isn't just going to come top down.
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it will have to be bottom up as well in a new generation of students that recognize you don't settle political questions through force. you settle them through free speech and open debate. that's what the university is supposed to be about. >> will: that's coming from a yale law school graduate. we reached out to yale law school for a comment but they have not yet responded. thank you so much. let's check in with janice dean for a fox weather forecast. >> janice: good morning, everybody. it is a beautiful day here in new york city. we're going to get up to, i think, 76 and then it goes downhill. so let's take a look at the maps. get outside today, if you can. 62 right now. 43 in chicago. see that cold air, blue on the map. that means the temperatures are going to go below freezing for a number of days. there's your 24-hour temperature change and in some cases, we could drop over 30 degrees in a matter of 48 hours. look at new york. 76 today. and then 59 tomorrow. and then into the 60's next week. there's the forecast for the rest of the country.
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southwest, showers and thunderstorms in the tail end of that cold front, we can see some flurries across the northern plains and the great lakes. so 77, beautiful glorious degrees in new york city. get out and enjoy it. i'm excited. after the show, you're coming on the janice dean podcast. >> will: i am! >> janice: we'll have some fun! >> will: i'm excited. can't wait. see you in about 13 minutes. >> janice: sounds good, my friend. >> will: she says it will be cold. tomorrow when i attempt to paint new york city burnt orange for texas-o.u., i'll just bundle up. red river rivalry. don't miss it. charity censored? a clothing company claims that facebook blocked them from advertising a florida strong t-shirt raising money for hurricane ian victims. the c.e.o. joins us next. first, let's check in with dana for what's coming up at the top of the hour. hey, dana. >> dana: send me a text so i can know what to talk about in sports when i get back on monday. good to see you. americans being crushed by inflation. new jobs report is just out. what does larry kudlow think you need to know? he'll be our first guest. arizona senate candidates
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debated last night for the first and only time. and this morning, we talked to three of that state's voters to hear who they are planning to back. plus, tucker and kanye, sitdown everybody is talking about. tom will join us. looking forward to seeing you on this friday. see you at 9:00. first psoriasis, then psoriatic arthritis. even walking was tough. i had to do something. i started cosentyx®. cosentyx can help you move, look, and feel better... by treating the multiple symptoms of psoriatic arthritis. don't use if you're allergic to cosentyx. before starting...get checked for tuberculosis. an increased risk of infections some serious... and the lowered ability to fight them may occur. tell your doctor about an infection or symptoms... or if you've had a vaccine or plan to. tell your doctor if your crohn's disease symptoms... develop or worsen. serious allergic reactions may occur. watch me. ask your rheumatologist about cosentyx. what should the future deliver? (music) progress... (music) ...innovation... (music) ...discovery? or simply stability...
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>> brian: a veteran owned company that you probably heard of is outraged after facebook removed again their advertisement for a t-shirt that was being sold to raise money for hurricane ian relief. according to facebook error message, nine lines florida strong t-shirt ad was removed because it mentions politicians or about sensitive social is issues. really? this says florida strong. tyler, were you being political? >> no, i think we were representing what every american wants to do out there. we want to support florida. we want to show a commitment to rebuild in this incredible devastation that ian has left behind. we've done this before with many other natural disasters to come to aid, physically and to bring cash and resources. we're actually boots on the ground as of yesterday working with the community cooperative handing out generators, handing out fuel. and everyone loved these shirts.
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they asked why can't i find them? why can't i see them? and the issue is a long standing issue. there's algorhythmic programs that facebook said flag certain products and advertisements, individuals, and they hinder that. they have you reach out to them and say would you please allow this advertisement to go forward? it doesn't actually make mention of any political individual, initiative, but most of the times it falls on deaf ears or do not get responses. >> brian: democratic governor, i wonder if they would have banned it. here's what meta said when we asked them, facebook. in this case, the advertiser marked the ad political in nature when submitting it for approval. because the advertiser, that's you, had not gone through the process, the ad was rejected given that the ad is in fact not a political ad, all the advertiser needs to do is submit the ad again without marking it political. did you mark it political, tyler? >> no, according to my advertisers, they did not as they have not in the previous
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advertisements. and that's what we've reached out to facebook and asked. hey, we spend millions of dollars, we're a small business. you know, i do need to understand the left and right limits, as you or your policies have never ending change, but it seems that there's a trend that anything that is deemed conservative gets flagged, gets hindered and gets stopped, and i to date have not been able to reach out to an individual until last night when i got a phone call late in the evening asking how could meta come in and help our company? >> brian: how rare is that? how rare is that for them to call you? >> we've been attempting to get a hold of a human being at metaphor the last year ever since we were flagged and banned from the platform because of advertisements that they deemed inappropriate five, six years ago that got flagged. so there is an algorhythm out there targeti i ing organizatio like ours, in my opinion,
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there's no individual to reach out to. especially when we're trying to come together and say let's help our friends in florida. >> brian: you're trying to help people. florida strong is not a political statement. until we reached out, you didn't get that call. i'm glad we could help. hopefully they get this on line and knock it off. let's hope. thanks so much, tyler. thanks for what you do. >> no, there are good people at facebook. please check out the apparel. and check out the community cooperative, see how you can help out our friends in florida. >> brian: go get them. thank you. more "fox & friends" in a moment. trelegy for copd. [coughing] ♪ birds flyin' high, you know how i feel. ♪ ♪ breeze driftin' on by... ♪ if you've been playing down your copd,... ♪ it's a new dawn, it's a new day,... ♪
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