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tv   Outnumbered  FOX News  October 14, 2022 9:00am-10:00am PDT

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♪ ♪ >> i'm emily compagno here with my cohost's mcenany and also joining us, kennedy, jesse deangelis and pete hegseth. we begin with fox news alert on the latest instance against police in america. state police say that they were lured to an ambush by a fake 911
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call. 35-year-old police sergeant dustin delmonte, father of two with another child on the way. he was a 2019 officer of the year, school resource officer and an advisor for the explorer cadet program. also killed in the gunfire, a 35-year-old officer who leaves behind a wife. the officer was also an advisor to the cadet program. heartbreakingly we have another shooting in raleigh, north carolina, to tell you about where five people have been killed including an off-duty police officer. 29-year-old gabriel torres, after a gunman who was just 15 years old, opened fire yesterday along a walking trail with at least two others wounded critically. the suspect was taken into custody and is in critical condition. before last night's horrific shooting the fraternal order of police tweeting "since monday,
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at least 12 police officers have been shot. the spewing of anti-police rhetoric and the failed policies of prosecutors and judges are placing our officers in greater danger. the culture of lawlessness must stop." pete hegseth, i don't think anyone could've said it better or more clearly. >> pete: your right and i could hear the passion in your voice when you were saying it. we have the faces on the wall. we had one side of the political aisle for years telling the country that those guys right there were the bad guys. they are the bad guys. they are the problem. we need less of them. when you create that type of environment, then certain types of people start to believe that it's okay to dispense with those lies, to challenge them, to tell their kids that they are the bad guys, that's what a culture of
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lawlessness looks like so you have the culture nationally with democrats and leftists have fostered intentionally after tragedies that occurred. then you have cultures inside departments. i have had good military leaders and bad military leaders. we have scared police department police departments because mayors and governors that would throw them under the bus and ten seconds which makes everyone of their jobs even more difficult and even more dangerous. >> emily: isn't the role of elected officials, figures in our country who are supposed to represent all americans, isn't their role to quell full mentation, to dispel of rising temperatures in some way to represent cooling the fire rather than adding onto the fire which we've been subjected to, as pete said, for over two ye years. >> kayleigh: a lot of those protests that have been taken up by mayors, it can seem cool. so they can pacified the progressive left but people who live in cities that been overrun with crime and homelessness, you
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look around and you hope at some point voters go, this way is not working. you're absolutely right, because it is the mirrors who are the bridge between the das and the police departments. there's a total disconnect of police departments feeling completely unsupported. who would want to be a cop right now? now more than ever we need good law enforcement officers. we need people invested in their communities. who want to keep people safe. who want their cities to be awesome. we are not getting that because the mayors have turned their backs on these police departments and the das are running the show. guess what, they are running cities into the ground and it is squarely at their feet. >> emily: that's right. kayleigh, tragedy upon tragedy is how preventable these depths are. they could've been prevented. ambushes are up nationally over 300%. every day we report on the horrific nature of a shooting or a death and they are not statistics to us. they are individuals to their
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family sent to us. so many nonprofits dedicated the families of the fallen. the detective rafael raymo's foundation. troopers united how many more have to be founded by widows and family subjected to what is final. we can't go back. these politicians can go back on their word and say i have been supporting law enforcement this whole time but it can't be reversed. the loss of a police officer in the line of duty. this is outrageous and it's unacceptable. >> kayleigh: you are right. not statistics, nonmembers. 50 officers killed this year alone by gunfire. 50 lives changed. 50 families they don't have fathers or mothers or sisters or brothers. emily, i know you probably hear about this in your local community. all of us on this couch. in the last three weeks and neighboring counties, i am hillsboro manatee county. those counties, polk county
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florida. sheriff, blaine lane, 21 years old, he goes to serve a felony warrant, a woman who had 11 felonies, four misdemeanors. the shoot-out began because she pointed a gun at these officers, it was a bb gun. he died of friendly fire in a situation that have never resulted in gunfire. a league later another officer, his name was tony nunez. same county. shock. this turned out differently. he had a bulletproof vest on and the bullet was stopped by the vest on the st. michael necklace he wore every single day to work. these are two stories just in my local community and they are happening nationwide. we had a political party that perpetuated the anti-cop narrative. i know that the president says we are not for defund the police. get cori bush in line who was asked if she supports it. she said yes essentially is what she said we supported.
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mr. president, call your members into the white house. pretty powerful place. look at them and say done with this. enough officers have died. >> emily: correct me if i'm wrong i've yet to hear from our nations president or vice president this week on this tragic statistic. 272 shot. jackie, in addition to everything my colleagues have said, this fomented culture was absolutely amplified by the mainstream media, by casual displays of pigs in cop uniforms by pro athletes by colin kaepernick. this is somehow acceptable. acab spray-painted everywhere. it became excepted culturally to be anti-law enforcement. you can be neutral that's what you choose. the downright outrageous violent rhetoric has had real-life consequences and while we can't lay blame at particular people's
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mouths, rhetoric does matter. words matter. actions matter. that's what's led to this current culture in these irretrievable deaths. >> jackie: and inaction matters. when the president says everything's okay and we are not defunding the police. and we don't have a problem in this country, that's also a problem. democrats doubling down on defund the police is one issue. the people doing nothing is another issue. what do people want in this country question like they want to feel safe. they want to be able to send their kids to school, put food on the table, a future that's brighter than yesterday. one of those things is being taken away from them. several are actually but when it comes to crime it's being taken away and when it comes to these officers, no one wants to be a police officer. we should be investing in the police. you can pursue criminal justice reform without taking power away from the police. coming together and finding the middle ground to make it happen. the problem with society and so many issues as we have become so
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extreme, so polarized, so at opposite ends. really who suffers is you, me, the americans walking on the street scared in their communities in these police officers and their families and their children. >> kayleigh: officer lane and fifth grade wa wanted to be a sheriff and he lost his life pursuing the dream. i wonder how many boys and girls think they want to be a police officer when they see what happens. >> emily: instead we have a president, commander in chief, who says give me a couple days, man. when someone shouted. instead of standing by those men and women in uniform, instead of encouraging young children to want to serve, to be those heroes in uniform day in and day out with their lives in the line for our protection. here on this couch, we are grateful every day and we mourn the losses of these officers. our prayers are with their families. coming up, new labor department data show inflation is not going away anytime soon.
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just wait. until you hear how presi president biden -- who president biden is blaming now. that's next.
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>> we've got an election in the month. voters have to decide. democrats are working to bring down the cost of things and talkative out around the kitchen table. republicans win, inflation is going to get worse. it's that simple. >> kayleigh: make no mistake, voters will decide. november 8 coming fast. president biden on the latest inflation report. the numbers state for themselves and his spending initiatives are what put us here in the first place.
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the spending bills at up to nearly $3.000000000000. according to the latest labor department data. consumer price index is at its highest level since 1982. americans are feeling the pain in their pockets. prices are up across the board for travel, food, energy, gas. according to president biden, prices have always been this high. okay. here he has during his trip to l.a. stopping for lunch, as gas prices approach $7 a gallon. >> reporter: have you seen gas prices around l.a.? seven bucks a gallon almost. >> president biden: nationwide it came about -- he came down about $1.35. >> kayleigh: the talking point from the white house seems to be that's always been the case. i want to play one more sound bite from the president. he says this has been going on for years. take a listen. >> president biden: americans are squeezed by the cost of living. it's been true for years.
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>> kayleigh: jackie, we haven't seen inflation like this in 40 years. >> jackie: you're being very kind. i take issue with president set about gas prices in california, yes they are typically higher because of all the regulations and also because of the summer blend where prices go up. they've never been this high. he shows he doesn't have a grasp on pricing or what's happening across the country or anything that's going on when it comes to the energy market. bring this back to inflation. the energy industry is at the heart of it. people are suffering this forty-year high number and we know it's persistent, embedded, it's not going away. we've got a lot more pain co coming. the fed raises rates and then he spends more. 3.9 trillion, i don't think that includes the forgiveness of the student loans so i think it's even a high. it's difficult to estimate what that cost is going to be and now we are in a situation where the fed is trying to play catch up
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and here's how it plays out. rates are going to continue to go up, the housing market is going to stall. slowly but surely corporate profits are going to come down and you're going to see layoffs, and when inflation is higher or relatively. even if it drops a little, if you don't have a job, you're in real trouble. >> kayleigh: right before that pandemic when we left office they were going up. the pandemic hit, you had to close down the economy but real wages were going up for all categories of americans. his talking point seems to be this is happening globally with inflation. i don't think that makes anyone feel better. we are suffering but it's happening in england too. >> emily: suffering is suffering. almost 8 out of 10 americans are worried that the income they make doesn't keep up with expenses.
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this president is lying. would it be acceptable in a partner, friend, family member, colleague, boss. would you accept someone downright lying to you, downplay your suffering. the realities of the dollar not going as far as it would with a bleak economic outcome? no. why are we supposed to accept it from our commander-in-chief? ceos are warning that "the forecast looks bleak. we are prepared for bad outcomes." yet in california when given the opportunity to be asked about it, the first question to him was about the c quesadilla he hd for lunch. regular americans are worrying and they are trying to save and prepare for their future so stability can remain. we have a commander in chief totally out to lunch and a press corps deciding to ask him about it. >> kayleigh: to say the republicans made it worse. when you came in inflation was 1.4%. and now. that's on you. >> pete: looks like of rental
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ventriloquist. every day costs will go up, not down. he did say we have an election in a month. he is right. you know what they did? they begged saudi arabia for political purposes to pause their dip in oil output. the only rationale would be to benefit him and benefit democrats. isn't that election interference? isn't that meddling? didn't you go through hole impeachment because of a phone call with a foreign government? talking to saudi arabia begging them to hold off to nove november 10th. it's the only thing he can point to. he has destroyed domestic production. they are completely responsible for all of this. $4 trillion of made of money. what you think is going to happen? he's pointing fingers at republicans. >> kayleigh: the administration said it had nothing to do with the timing of midterms. right.
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kennedy. you have the president going on this trip to the west coast. colorado, oregon, california. notably he's passing over nevada and arizona. it seems if you're in a vulnerable race, you're allergic to the president. >> kennedy: democrats in those states do not want the president's help right now. they want to do everything they can to run from him. it's so disingenuous. talks about, there's a recession. they're having a hard time in england. there is a global recession. all that is as a way i abdicate my responsibility. it's happening out there. therefore i don't have to tackle it and then he pivots to "it's not my fault." those are not answers, not solutions. that's what people want. they want reassurance. not that they're crazy, they are being gassed like crazy and being told you're crazy if you think the economy is bad. your wages are shrinking. prices are going up. your economy is horrible on that's what matters. he has to stop shifting blame
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and removing himself from responsibility completely because that doesn't do anything for the lowest income americans who are hurting the most. that's who inflation hurts the most. not rich people. people who have lower wages to begin with. >> kayleigh: we are told his greatest attribute is empathy. it seems to be excuses. coming up, disappointing report card for american higher education. it shows china's universities are rising in world rankings and america is falling behind. that's next. veteran homeowners, prices are going up fast. the grocery store and the gas station alone are taking a big chunk out of our paychecks. fortunately, you've earned the valuable va home loan benefit. the newday 100 va loan lets you borrow up to 100% of your home's value, not just 80%. and with home values near record highs, that could mean a lot of money. let newday turn your home's equity into cash.
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chinese universities are on the rise. among the top 100 universities, the number of those in the u.s. fell from 43 to 34 between 2018 and 2022. according to rankings from time's higher education. number of chinese and overseas during that time. neck rose from two to seven. u.s. and united kingdom are in the top ten slots but the u.s. isn't losing its competitive advantage due to factors like declining research, covid lockdowns, cheating scandals and changes in testing standards. pete, i think something else is going on. i thought of you and i saw this quote. the from the founder of -- saying china is coming out of poverty. america still benefiting from the meritocracy we were for generations. being replaced by a pervasive sense of victimhood. this shift in america from a hardworking meritocracy and who versus into the --
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>> pete: the classic learning test was an alternative test of the s.a.t. they have gotten rid of reasoning on the s.a.t. because reasoning is racist. people aren't getting the right outcomes from certain tests. you change the test as opposed to something you measure. he simply fit it into common core, all part of the plan to begin with. this guys trying to do something about it. creating tests. the classical christian environment. it's a growing movement that i wrote about the book that focuses on teaching people how to think. hubby freethinkers. with liberated mines. i don't believe any of our universities in america and the top ten of the best in the world. they are indoctrination factories. i wouldn't hire a kid out of harvard today. there is no reason to. he or she is most likely not a freethinker and has been coddled and event told what to think as opposed to how to think. basic values they would
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traditionally hold in this country. i think we are a lot worse than that study represents. history is not over. there are other people trying to do it right and surpass us. there's no reason why 50 euros or 100 years from now they would look back and say remember that america that was big and strong and wealthy. no longer the case. >> kayleigh: it is true and you have judges saying we are not going to hire students from yale. free speech was anathema to the people aspiring to be attorneys and judges. that is something to do with the rankings. cultural obsession with not having alternative viewpoints. >> kennedy: you can't. to pete's point, they are propaganda factories. they absolutely are and they are basically roman subjectivism. how to why you feel? what does this mean to me? where can i get a seat space as opposed to objective and objectivist thinking. knowing that there is something true, noble and real in the world. all reason and logic are the
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foundation for that. that is the foundation for math and the hard sciences. but we've essentially abound on those. in california, eighth-graders are at a fifth grade math level. they did not learn anything over two years of lockdowns and the pandemic so that exacerbated an already global environment. i have a 17 euro who is now applying to college. i look at this. she looks at this and we wonder, is coleridge worth what it used to be? is it the same thing it was when we were kids, when we're looking forward to a four-year experience. >> kayleigh: it's a great question. emily, i question this move away from testing. i agree that there's flaws in testing, s.a.t. and these tests. the american bar association think we are not going to go with the lsat. were not going with s.a.t. scores at a 30-year low. china has a national college entrance exam, ten nine-hour test. there is a difference in rigor. >> emily: the bar exam i was
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subjected to, three days for california. this doesn't surprise me. the knee-jerk reaction to everything is eradication. let's do away with it. let's not offer an alternative that's objectively and subjectively valuable and raises results and raises that measurement. no, let's do away with that make everything easier. we have seen that in every single industry in every single challenge that has presented itself in this book america. pete, if i may ask you, we know you published "battle for the american mind" about the misinformation about american youth and you moved your family to tennessee in part because of the abysmal education system and the gem you found there. >> pete: giving your kids your foundation in education is the one thing you can do. reorient around that as best you can. otherwise you are outsourcing the most precious years of your
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kids life. socialist camp once they go to college. i can't count on institutions to deliver anything we believe in. china is studying geography. we are studying gender studies. >> kayleigh: we would be remiss if we didn't talk about covid. 9-year-old he raised two decades of progress in math and reading. >> china is after us. they want to be the world's superpower. they didn't stop learning during covid. they weren't fighting about the nonsense we've been fighting about. it's going to be a top issue in the midterms for parents who want to get their children back on track and they are going to bring it to the forefront. china is as you mention very rigorous. we brought the bar down. and when he was firing a teacher because kids are saying classes too hard. it should be harder. >> kayleigh: i love that guy.
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better life and follow them pursue their dreams, my daughter is an equestrian, my son is the best voltaire, my youngest son is a golf player. this made more sense. >> emily: give my kids a better life. >> pete: higher education has a cartel. same thing with hollywood. if you had to go there in order to pursue his bay change. you can create content from anywhere. you can choose your quality of life and where you want to be paired with what democrats and gavin newsom have done to california, why would you want to be there if you don't have to. other smug, self-important people. move or you want to be for quality-of-life and create content. we live in a whole new world. >> emily: you policies, economic policies have a real economic impact. there's a reason why these guys are moving outside of las vegas
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where the attraction of the policies there are very important. mark wahlberg talked about the studios there. creating content. the reality is for an entrepreneur, for anyone with any type of economic aspir aspirations, nevada is the place to be over california. >> jackie: it's so close, he can just go there. nevada happens to be one of those days without a state personal income tax. talk about florida all the time but there's that aspect of it so i'm not surprised he wants to start these ventures and then you add the quality of life into it and makes total sense. these are celebrities. people who are fleeing policies are not just hurting them but hurting everybody else. they are speaking up for everyone in the community when they make a statement like this so i'm glad they are doing it. i'm glad they are showing everybody that that's okay. we saw during the pandemic. we have seen and after.
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there are consequences to these policies. >> emily: kennedy, you have such a southern california presence as well as washington oregon. >> kennedy: go, bruins. the lake tomorrow wahlberg, they are lucky. they can move to a different state. people are stuck in california and they can't move. to get out of the state. it used to be a place where the industry was concentrated. to your point, it's now diffuse. it's not necessarily concentrated in one place. there's still a lot of great people in california. they would love to live the california dream. it's an absolute nightmare now. everything from the bullet train to the sanctioning doctors who have conversations that are nontraditional with their patients. they are being censured by the
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california medical. tenant dearer have these conversations that is the overbearing nanny state and they are lucky they got out. the thing about the pandemic, people want other parts of the country and went "oh, there is so much here, so much to love. what am i doing on the coast?" >> emily: the political elite see that dumpster fire and they don't care because all they see our voters in their own political operations. to kennedy's point, what is left behind in rubble are those minority communities, vulnerable and disadvantaged who can't rise up out of it. holmes deeply steeped in equity but homeowners and have the money to renovate. he looked terrible. they are unable to do anything other than stay there. governor gavin newsom doesn't seem to care. >> kennedy: overtaxed, no return on your investment. you go on the streets and you
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get mugged biggest crime is horrible. covid lockdowns, church shut down, your place of business shutdown. top states to move to our florida, texas, north carolina. the ones moved away from our california, new york, illinois. the commonality is blue. we talk about defund the police. this is defunding liberalism and i love it. people are marching with their feet. i am not giving tax dollars to fund liberalism. >> emily: those populations changed. coming up, climate activists pull another shocking stunt, throwing soup all over vincent van gogh's most famous painting. the abcs of ckd a is for awareness, because knowing that your chronic kidney disease in type 2 diabetes could progress to dialysis is important.
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>> brand-new numbers on the economy, just in. we have a reaction. president biden's white house blaming oil companies for high prices. the head of one of those companies joins us live to respond. the political panel weighs in on key races to watch. come join us.
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"america reports" at the top of the hour. ♪ ♪ >> welcome back. it's time for "in case you missed it." a fishing tournament made headlines a couple weeks ago into fishermen were accused of stuffing their catch with lead sinkers. >> [bleep] [bleep] [bleep] [bleep] [shouting] >> kayleigh: they have been charged on multiple felony accounts including attempted grand theft, possessing criminal tools, misdemeanor charges of unlawfully owning wild animals. the prius, $28,000. if we indict these guys on felonies but not the guys who are killing people.
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>> emily: horrible double standard aside. this is a real thing. they should be prosecuted for this. imagine if this type of betting and gambling admin ablation had occurred and any other industry. people would've been up in arms. it was so traceable. weight is coming out. these guys have been champions in prior tournaments. i'm glad that they were finally caught. >> kayleigh: who does this? it's crazy. >> pete: a lot of people. [laughter] >> kayleigh: do you? >> pete: i love something like this. the high ethos of integrity. we do it right, we do it well and if you're going to cheat we are going to hold you accountable. we need more of that. >> kayleigh: we do. >> kennedy: kind of brilliant. i was surprised more people hadn't done this before. then i realized it was $28,000.
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when i go to the state fair, action of a bunch of weights in my cargo pants so a weight guesser is off by a pounds. >> emily: billion. >> jackie: maybe i am the outlier. they went to incredible links. i don't think they should get the prize money. felony charges seems like a lot. there's a lot more going on and we could prosecute other crimes in court. >> emily: there is room for multiple prosecutions. one of the reasons it was suspicious, everyone else donates their fish to the food bank and these guys wouldn't. >> kayleigh: and they don't want people eating lead. good for them. climate activists crazies at it again. young protesters throwing soup at vincent van gogh's "sunflowers" which hangs in
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london's national gallery. the protesters glued themselves to the wall below the famous painting. these claimant crazies, what is going on? >> kennedy: we need to show voids inside of them so they realize the heaviness of their crimes. i'm so sick of these people. they make me want to drive a v-8 and eat meat. every time i see them, all i want to do is get the gas guzzler with a lettuce wrap cheeseburger because i can't eat the bun. they make me want to do the opposite of whatever they believe in. they are empty headed. >> kayleigh: it is counterproductive. who says "i threw tomato soup. i am in!" >> pete: i thought it's terrible. then i read there was glass on it. it did nothing. they will wipe it off with windex and van gogh will be fine. in addition being stupid, they are not effective. >> emily: they did damage the frame and the wall. i would've loved to see a security guard tackle both of them. they've never understood what it means to be accountable for their actions.
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childlike and childish. they are 12. if i had done that. you know what would have happened? >> kennedy: i would've gone the wooden spoon. >> jackie: i think the van gogh guys are worse. their intent is bad. destroying a work of art. i think this happened with the mona lisa. but there was plexiglas there. you can't destroy it. they are trying to make a statement but again wokism, we live in this culture where the statements statements that are rewarded in some way. people feel encouraged to do them. luckily they weren't able to destroy it. >> jackie: grew their hands to a prison cell. >> kayleigh: and virtual reality make the virtual work space and actual reality? meta rolling out its most widely available vr glasses. the price tag is $1500. the goal is the complete corporate transformation in a fully virtual workplace.
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i prefer the elon musk approach. the factory workers can show up, you can too. >> pete: they envision a future we all go to work wearing goggles? and then i don't get to sit next to you? i get to sit alone and pretend like i'm sitting next to you? that sounds like a bummer. >> kennedy: it sounds like it's not going to work. >> jackie: $1500 for the goggles is a lot. i have a lot of things i wanted to in this world and reality that i haven't been able to do and i would prefer to spend my $1500 on that rather than going into virtual isolation so i still don't really understand this whole concept. >> kayleigh: go into the office. you don't need goggles to sit at home and pretend that you're in the office. >> kennedy: go to the office. take a walk. we are tactile, material creatures. i think there's something wrong with it. >> emily: it's frightening to me. i don't understand why these companies think that's evolution and that's accomplishment. are they bettering society? no. it's a frightening concept.
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terrible ramifications. >> kayleigh: finally, it turns out texas tea may not be soaked texan. the hothouse company faces a legal battle over the product which is now made in the lone star state. class action after learning the texas pete's is made in north carolina. the sauce makers capitalize on consumer desire to partake in the culture and authentic cuisine of one of the most prideful states in america. emily, you are the attorney. i don't see any harm done. >> emily: it's a common theme and a lot of lawsuits. kona brewing company sued for giving the appearance that they were brewed exclusively in hawaii. there is a verifiable claim. you have to be transparent. you have to be honest in your marketing practices. they actually do have a case. >> kayleigh: who has the time to sue because your texas hot sauce wasn't from texas.
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>> kennedy: one of his nickname is texas pete? texas is a state of mind as much as anything else. >> pete: people with time to sue mcdonald's because there's not enough chicken and the chicken nuggets. >> kennedy: order the nine piece. >> pete: ten. >> kayleigh: proof positive we live into a litigious of a society. >> jackie: made an assumption that was manufactured there. he could see what's going on with the texas branding and maybe ease up a little bit. >> kayleigh: sriracha hot sauce is still the best and that's from that region. >> i like frank's. >> kayleigh: haven't had that. i will check it out. we have the roundup in just a moment. veteran homeowners, need cash? with the newday 100 loan, there are no upfront costs for appraisal or termite inspections. no upfront costs at all to get the cash you need.
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>> last but not least, senior citizens living in a dorm of one of the nation's biggest party school has filed a lawsuit complaining. you have that right. arizona state university has a senior citizen only dorm for lifelong learners and room and board as much as $1 million in some cases, but the dorm is right across the street from a bar and concert menu. last spring they posed a weekend curfew but the bar has appealed and the city of tempe is backing the bar. kayleigh, here's the thing i don't blame the senior citizens. i feel terrible for them. the issue is whoever plant that. who said that was okay? oh, yes, let's put the 90-year-old across the karaoke bar and who's brainiac idea is that? >> kayleigh: their ego. senior citizens already need their naps and i'm a pregnant woman and i got mad at my sister making tacos at 3:00 a.m. i get it, however you opened
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during covid and you live across from a bar. >> emily: for $1 million? >> why not go to chico state or san diego state? everybody saying, it's too loud. guess what, there is and liquor. >> kayleigh: god knows who else. >> don't take it to the streets, folks. >> emily: that playboy name to chico state as the number one particle school in america. >> pete: i want to learn more about the senior citizen dorm. do they go to class or audit classes? i bet they party too. >> i need white cloth for my white hair. >> maybe 4:00 p.m. but what you think will happen? do you think the bar will prevail? >> i think the bar will prevail
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and the seniors earplugs. >> your plugs are wonderful. >> pete: do they have homework? >> i don't know. they were so much. i just see college and a senior citizen on a contingency and they parted with us every night. they were the biggest party years. i loved them just like i love you guys. thanks to everyone and don't forget to dvr the show. have a wonderful show and now here is "america reports." >> sandra: thank you, emily a shooting spree rocking north carolina where a gunman went on a bloody rampage and killed five people including an off-duty cop. and other police officers among two people wounded two hours of terror in a raleigh neighborhood appeared the police had the shooter is in critical condition in just 15 years old. >> john: the senseless tragedy posed to copolice officers in connecticut who fellow officers they were killed and ambushed. a third officer was injured in

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