tv Outnumbered FOX News October 19, 2022 9:00am-10:00am PDT
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brian. >> thank you. over an hour from now, we are going to hear from president biden, his going to tell us his decision to release another 50 billion barrels from the reserve. the emergency oil reserve. less than three weeks ahead of the midterm election. his critics are calling it a desperate attempt to drive down the gas prices as the economy emerged. the biden administration released roughly 165 million barrels, bringing the total to 180. draining our emergency oil stockpile to its lowest levels since 1984. however, white house press secretary, karin jean-pierre is putting this spin. >> gas prices have fallen not too long ago. the
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decline of summer fastest in over a decade. every month the typical two driver families save about $120 at the pump compared to where we were in mid-june. everyday americans save $420 million at the pump compares to mid-june. >> that's code for stop complaining. we don't feel your pain, stop it. >> you have it so good, america. you have it so good when it comes to gas prices. what are you complaining about it? i love how she runs through those numbers but forget a month ago gas was $0.20 lower than today. we are still at $ $3.85 gallon. go ask that truck driver, how that's working for him? not a good story. >> the diesel prices of the truck brings all the goods to us.
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>> it flows through the economy. everything gets more expensive which is surprise, surprise, why inflation keeps beating expectations. it is higher because of this problem and you have not solved it joe biden. >> katrina, i love a good deja vu if it is a shoe sale. biden's deja vu and his decision to tap the oil reserve. >> i feel like he's trying to change the narrative because he does not have a talking point, he's trying to change it before the midterm election. he's going into our reserves. they're called reserves for a reason, it is for emergency. this is a way to change the fact that our economy is doing so poorly that inflation is the main issue. the american people care about and as a mother, i care about education, crimes, inflation, putting food on the table and not about, you kn know -- deflecting the
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narrative about what's important for the american people. >> kayleigh, how important is it for the president to say i understand what you are going through? >> extremely important. that's what we were told. at this time i pause they would do far better in the polls. look, prices are up globally, that's no excuse, i feel your pain and your hurt, i am going to work to fix it. that's a lot better than the white house's fact sheet which is a fairy tale. they repeat the same points. gas price is about $0.30 above when the war in ukraine began. let's talk facts now. $3.85 is the national average. what was it when biden came into office? oh, it is $2.39. there is a 62% increase. inflation. we can compare that. 15 million we have taken from our strategic
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national reserve enough to cover gas prices for one day. 24 hours. be ware biden because when you look at where gas prices, 18 states, they're above the national average, 29 vulnerable house districts point out, feeling those $118 prices that i feel when i go to the pump. >> congress mike mccall from texas and senator cotton told me the over arching deal is not just gas prices, it is going to be heating our homes. >> much of the country kansas city had its first hard freeze the night before last. much of the country is getting ready to enter that zone. can you imagine pay double of what you are paying now to heat your home? >> great point. >> all right, emily. i appreciate again the double down, the deja vu and the good spin coming from the elector of the white house. >> are you kidding? >> we are out of pages inside her binder now. we are going to need some new materials. now, the president gone back into the
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basement, he's at the beach. he can't help anybody from there or maybe that's a relief because this is not going away. >> no. maybe the pages in her binder can be used to heat someone's home. [ laughter ] >> what's going to happen when people default on those bills and people run out of options. the vulnerables are at risk at death for this winter. i blame squarely at our president for hiding and not doing what needs to be done. we know and the reports have suggested that the administration have been releasing 26 million barrels from that strategic reserve after the fiscal year started in october 1st. that's dipping into the 33 million congress allegated. what was supposed to be the point? 42.5 million and 39 million the following and $38 million in 2026? you
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know what we learned in your hour, harris? it will be three times more expensive to refill the reserves. here is why americans need to care. first of all, we are not going to be able to heat our homes this winter and that's terrifying. secondly, the fact that we have to pay three times the cost to refill the barrel and thirdly, the white house continues to your point to deflect and blame the oil company's fat cats. behind the scenes, they're apparently in talk of them. which is it president biden? i am sick of that narrative. i want my president to do something that the elderlies are warm this winter. it is not true. >> so -- brian and what emily was talking about in terms of refilling those reserves, that's absolutely
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on purpose. where this administration is hoping it will be and this is part of peter ducey's reporting is toward of that goal of 2050 and not needing that fossil fuel. that's a fantasy because we'll be catching up for many years of where we are now. >> can you think of a worse time to be in the situation where we are in right now with the strategic petroleum reserve? >> see and it want to cut us off like opec? >> you want that thing full of -- we got exactly the opposite. by the way -- the numbers that you quoted and you are hearing from the elector there, the assumption is always americans can't do math and they can't interpret the numbers. you look at what she's saying, you know what i know none of that is right and i know there is contexts there and you are afraid to give it to me because you think i am just plain done. >> i feel like i am saving
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$420 million a day. >> you have not feel that. >> katrina, don't they know, we got our phone and we can do math. >> homes around the nation, when you are in people's homes, they are authentic and they tell you what's on their mind. they're not stepping on their tippy-toes around issues. they're concerned to your point, emily, heating their homes and the cost of maintaining a home had gone up and inflation anding food and education and crimes. these are the issues. that's what they need to be talking about but they have not done much to help it. there is not much to say. >> now, the day is half over in much of the country, they have 19.5 days. the senate race is tightening in pennsylvania. the democrat john fetterman is coming under fire. the movie with morgan freeman, we are living in his movie, apparently.
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we desperately need more affordable housing, but san francisco takes longer than anywhere to issue new housing permits. proposition d is the only measure that speeds up construction of affordable new homes by removing bureaucratic roadblocks. while prop e makes it nearly impossible to build more housing. and the supervisors who sponsored e know it.
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a crucial race that could decide the control of the senate. dr. mehmet oz closing on lieutenant governor john fetterman in pennsylvania. fetterman leads down to two points, 48% to 64%. now, fetterman who presides over the state's pardon board is coming under fire for his soft on crime policies. when asked about them in a new interview, the democrats compare giving clemensy to a
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movie. >> i believe the perfect metaphor is the "shawshank" redemption. i ask people, would you want morgan freeman to die in prison or not? i never met anyone who said yeah, he should have died in prison and i would have voted to have him die in prison. they are remorseful for what they were involved in and what they did directly. they did 40 years or 50 years. maybe someone should tell fetterman that "shawshank" is a fiction movie. alexis
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rodriguez committed of beating a 17-year-old, he bragged of beating a 17-year-old boy with a baseball bat. covington killing a teenager in cold blood for heroine money. harris, it is not as if there was a unanimous vote by the parol board there, many examples of that. he was an lone vote for many of the individuals getting out of jail. >> that movie was panned a the time, it didn't as well at the box office. i don't know what he was trying to compare us to as a country because there is plenty of female characters that are strong to start here. this explains why he's not actually trying to completely revised what he said in the past. he actually thinks people believe in what he's peddling. he's willing to be that lone voice and
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represents the minority on this issue, meaning minority number on this issue. he's wrong about that. the majorities are speaking now because they become victims in so many random ways. now, he's got this revision of what he's saying. he never believed in defunding the police. he never believed in any of the things he said in the past but he didn't change that line of showing these people mercy. he never changed that part. you can't. it is in every newspaper and it is on every tape. it is everywhere. and, he's shown us who he is so he can change his words but he can't become a different john fetterman. >> no, he can't. he's trying to. we'll put this up, the fiction film that many of us watched it, i did. the reality is these images are playing out across the nation and we have this too, emily, we saw the man with the ax in new york city and we see the shenanigans on the subways. these are very
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real things. they're not moo movies we go to see. >> this is outrageous and unacceptable on so many levels, kayleigh, as an attorney who has spent more hours in federal prisons than a lot of incarcerated people, i have so many problem of this person has to rely on fiction, a stephen king novel instead of diving deep into this. the biggest problem i see here, there is actually two is that his platform should be used to affect legislation or to actually cite things that are happening for real. for example, we know the first step act which your boss enacted in 2018 was the most influential to hit prison. it encouraged meaningful participations of the incarcerated into programs.
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instead, what he's doing in advocating and pardoning for those horrible cross examines, means it is going to repel the public the other way. instead of getting people on board, it is going to repel them the other way. right now in typical federal fashion, the bop has botched it. and yet he's referencing a fictional character? the reason why americans should care is because our tax dollars pay for their incarceration and the fastest growing incarcerated are veterans and females. those are two members of the population that we should care deeply about as americans. for him to cite the most violent among us, and that legislation reduces sentencing if that's how you feel about those specific examples. don't reference fiction about something you
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have no idea about. that's so deeply crucial and fundamental and important to our society. >> katrina, it is an important point. i met a beneficiary who was a lovely young man committed a crime that was non-violent. he had tears in his eyes, he got to go home to his family on christmas' eve. >> that's different because as you are speaking, i have chills. it is heartbreaking to see these victims. it is devastating to think but like you mentioned, i do believe people have the opportunity for second chances. we have to put things in perspective. i don't think him being soft on crimes is going to bring people to vote. when i am speaking to families around the country, what mothers are worried about the fact that they're going to work and their kids are not safe in school. we are worried about armed guards. we should not have to worry about these things. as i travel around too in cities that i used to feel so
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comfortable, new york, i would walk around myself at night. now, i am always watching my back. it is something that people needs a serious problem in this country now. >> especially in his state and especially in the stay of philadelphia. >> right. >> especially in the democrats-led city in that state. as emily was talking, something dawned on me. we keep on talking about how he asked if the character should be allowed to live in the "shawshank redemption," who would want morgan freeman to die? >> and you know you have people who are legitimately going to public officials saying help us out here, help us solve this problem. do the right thing and do the logical thing. you got fetterman coming back to them and say, i got a movie for you. let's go there. why
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do you think people look at politicians like fetterman and others in these cities thinking we don't believe you and we don't trust you. >> nancy pelosi is laughing off the generic ballot. republicans up by 2.2%. we'll see how that plays out. coming up, more personnel changes in the vice president's office, kamala harris is reportedly hiring her third chief speech writer after a massive exodus staffer putting an end to the word salad. probably not. that's next.
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left the president the past 21 months. word salads like these have become so common. >> when you see our kids and i see they are our children, they are the children of our country and our community, our future is really bright if we -- if we prioritize them. and, they're for prioritized and the climate crisis needs to address it. >> we invest additional $12 billion into community banks. we know community bankses are in the community. you need to get to go. you need to get to be able to get where you need to go. a significant of the passage of time. so, when you think about it, there is great significance of the passage of time. >> oh, brian -- somehow i don't think hiring another speech writer will help her because i am pretty sure you got to get to go where you
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got to go -- what's probably not in the speech. that's her add-libbing. >> this is me in the golf course just shanking them all over the place, give me a new caddy. i don't think you can fix this with the new speech writer. she does not know what she's about. where is the wind blowing? if you don't know what you are about, you can't give a great speech. you say nothing at you will and you say these word salads. >> not only she knows what she stands for and she's not a good leader. she can't articulate concepts she gets behind these voters. there is dirt everywhere. >> and every kamala harris. >> i see it a little different. i am going to take a stab at his name, dave cavell, he actually used to be the speech writer
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for john kerry and formally a speech writer that helped out in the latter stages of the obama administration. if she's trying to find her voice on climate, this may be the guy. i think she knows who she is, she just can't sell it. she goes to south of the board because she as the vice president has not been to the border. she goes and says do not come and then the white house makes sure to clean it up. that may actually be who she is. she may be the person who would tell people do not come because we can't handle it because we don't have a wall. her state has a wall. she may be exactly who she's showing us to be and maybe americans is deciding that's not who they want, maybe she's deciding them on biden perhaps she can't sell
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it. >> this stuff does not believe that she believes in anything. they see that she goes where the wind blows and whatever will favor with voters is all of a sudden she will get behind whether it is marijuana or pros and cons. her staffers know that. in addition, they talked about reports of aggressive leadership style or lack there of, at chaos, when they pitch against each other, that may be why she lost an average of one staff member per month. >> it is extraordinary, nothing like this is happening in pence's office because people are like their own boss. imagine taking job in the charlie cr crist's campaign. there is not a worse job in the white house than kamala's speech writer. maybe the person to wake up joe biden constantly
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and make sure he's with it before he does two speeches a week. you make a really good point, it may be the office's environment. 22 staffers, that was a lot of people who said they felt an abusive environment. people feel missttreated. they sayt all starts at the top. >> irony, katrina, number one, i don't know what the speech writer would be able to cite for her. clearly, she just babbles. we have to rely his experience as carrie of the speech writer in the obama administration. it is just the recycling. it is the small democratic machine of everyone patting themselves on the back and patting each other around after 25 people working for
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the same administration over and over again. is it because they can't recruit new and fresh blood. no one sees she's an absolute absence of a leader? >> the fact that she has this turnover is indicative of the type of person she is. as what i want in a leader, someone that stands in their truth. i don't have to agree with you, i want you to stand in your truth and have the guts to speak it so i can believe in you. that's why i love desantis, i love that. i feel confident in that. i don't feel confident in her. >> definitely. >> who does she listen to? is she ever going to -- she does not listen to the person around here. >> now it is john kerry. >> there we go. let them circle down the drain. just ahead, "the new york times" wants to share their opinion but it is not a conservative one. a former editor slamming the paper
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here is two former new york times employees who are not taking it. one resigns over the fallout of the 2020 op-ed. he was shutting out conservative voices to keep local subscribers happy. tom cotton's op-ed, "send in the troops," calling for a military response to the violent protest erupted after george floyd's murder. days after the op-ed published, the times attached and an editor's
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note, we have concluded that the essay fell short of our standards and should not have been published. we could attach that note to pretty much 95 op-eds of "the new york times." tom cotton says -- he salsberger set me on fire and used it against me. i felt what all my colleague treating me like an incompetent facetious. >> we know this is how the left act. he should not be so bewildered.
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>> this reminds me back when i was selling real estate and donald trump decided to run for president, i remember my clients, i can't have him working as our president but we love him. people were afraid of localizing their true feelings. you can't be in the middle, extreme to the right or left and people don't feel they can be authentic. this goes back to and this is what i tell my nephew and niece and my son. tell me who you feel. i am not going to hold it against you. it is important for the people in this country that they can be authentically themselves. that's what the home is about, feeling free and feeling comfortable with yourselves. nowadays, you have to be so careful of what you say. barry wise
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resigns and he wanted to publish an op-ed. here is what barry wise said happened at the time and they denied it. here is their claim. >> there was a discussion about the piece and whether or not we should run it. one colleague, a senior colleague said to a more junior colleague who was pushing for the piece, do you think republicans really care about minority rights. >> wow. >> the more junior colleague says i think tim scott cares about the minority rights. the more senior colleague said, let's check with senator schumer before we run it. >> he never ran it in "the new york times." >> so also not shocking and i agree with katrina on this and you said it too, kayleigh that the way conservatives have been treated in legacy media because that's what new york times is, it does not shock me. it should not shock
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anybody. what it should do is point to the issue that they are not doing their job. their job is to make sure anything on the right side of speech and anything on the left side of the speech that's protected speech and not hate speech is the speech that we all speak and it is protected by the constitution. these are not threats. these are not things of hate speech. that should be the line of delineation for what makes it in the the paper or coverage. anything else is political opinion. yep. >> let's be clear about that. they're not being paid a little extra carbon the side not to run something by senator tim scott, if they are, we got bigger problems. it is most likely political. there is no room for that. there is no room for that for the journalism we say we need. if we want to rewrite it and make it all about what somebody thinks or does not like or likes. we can start there. >> they are that type of
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journalism, both of these things happen in 2020, in 2015, as we reflect on this momentous results when trump was elected, we aim to rededicate ourselves to the fundamental mission of the "times," that's to report america into the world without fear and reflecting all political perspectives, except tom cotton and tim scott and except republicans. >> turns out, they did not dedicate themselves actually. i was in minneapolis at this time, we needed some good ideas and different ideas. we needed some debates on how to deal with what was going on. the fact they shut it down was a lost for that state, the city of minneapolis. >> that's so true. >> number two, liberals in the past, this is what you got to remember. liberals actually defended the right for everybody. we could have debates in this country. even if you are conservatives and you
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disagree, they would debate and talk in public with their ideas. they're trying to get the better of each other. that's what we should be doing with "the new york times" and the base of this country. that's what we lost. >> they're not doing it, emily, bennett who resigns, they think their mother jones is on steroid. >> digging into that statement further, what's the subscribers expect. "the new york times" is catering to them because they saw an explosion of subscriptions in the wake of that progressive political left. >> hundreds of millions. >> oh, we got problems. >> i grew up in the bay area, during a time where i felt like i benefited from the liberal-hippy existence. all speech were celebrated. i did see and exposed to that progressive and every opinion is valued and now i don't recognize home when i
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go back because it is 100% censored. the free press is supposed to be the arm of the people, right? here is at the new york times that said one senator is not good enough to be published and yet let's call another senator before we publish something before his permission. >> on the other side of the political isle, let's get permission and one may say inclusion. >> that's also money. >> schumer's permission to run senator scott's words. >> absolutely. >> look, they claimed it did not happen but the op-ed never rigged. why a growing number of young people are saying good-bye to the golden state. ♪
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no information of what joe biden is up to with biden's son dealings. and doctor's vaccines. part of a jam packed lineup is just ahead. i am john roberts. join sandra and me at the top of the hour. welcome back. california dreamy may be a thing of the past. the golden state had the highest rate of young professionals of about 8,000 young people moving out. i was one of them except i am not so young anymore. >> you are still young. >> we saw well over 1,000 leaving annually. the state is facing homelessness and crimes and high taxes under governor gavin newsom of who katrina, i could not speak worse enough. he was the worst mayor of all time of the mayor of san francisco and in his current
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gubernatorial role. tell me, however, about the democrat party in general which continues to reduce every issue that americans care about like we have been talking about higher taxes and covid restrictions and inflation and economic difficulti difficulties, they reduce it to the issue of racism as former president obama talked to the hispanic national association, he said it is all about quote, "darker shades,". >> he goes and speak to the association and he brings up race. he's a harvard grad so my parents came here during the castro regime. you are also grouping hispanics and latinos together because they're all different. we all take pride in our culture and we all celebrate each other but to group everybody together and bring
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it back to raise this ignorant. what hispanics people care about is god. bringing back god into the school system. they care about the economy and being able to feed their families. they don't care about race. we don't see color. it is about celebrating each other and diversity. that's where he missed it. >> in this california, those realtors cared the most about clienteles fleeing california because of high taxes and complete focus on what everybody don't care about. >> people are leaving california because of the taxes because it is so incredibly expensive and florida is a free state so a lot of people are migrating from california. i had a lot of investors who owned multi building and they sold their buildings because of rent control. that's another huge issue. people are fleeing california for different reasons. with egoaround the entire nation and we focus on areas that experienced
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tremendous amount of growth. people wanted a better quality of life. >> one of them being florida as a magnet for all the reasons katrina stated. >> if you want to leave your life the way you want, you are going to stay in california to do that? you are going to go to texas and florida. that's what young people are doing and that's what they care about and they ought to. >> as well as big ceos too like elon musk. people bringing their corporations that having an impact on employees and jobs. >> when you are rich and you are hiring people, you have the resources to do that and change the trail of tears behind you because you are taking tax revenues with you. it hurts the people who stay but the crimes is so high, homelessness leads the country in san francisco. those democratic leaders are going to have bigger problems to solve than the tax revenue leader. they got
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to work with what they have now and solve what's going on in the ground. i want to say this about young people particularly leaving california. things are very expensive there and not just a 40-year high inflation, it has been that way. that does not change. the american dream is challenged out there because of the prices of homes. you would know about this, katrina. there is a sense of earth moving out from under their feet, changes being made as the grid gets pressured put on and we can't plug in that car, imagine how long it is going to take the average 21-year-old to save for a $60,000 or $70,000 electric vehicle and told that you can't plug in because of fossil fuel grid issues. >> kayleigh, we don't have to tell you why florida is the magnet. >> they're number one and highest business formation speaks for itself. [ laughter ] >> catch katrina on "fox
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♪♪ >> this is good. >> we have the thing that when kayleigh is able to travel post baby, the girls are hitting vegas. >> yeah, we are. >> we are. >> you ready for that dance floor? >> gold leaf -- >> yeah, all right, ok. >> better be invited to that one. >> last but not least, meghan markle is complaining about the acting gig that made many say catapulted her career, the duchess of sussex was once a briefcase model on "deal or no deal" she says she's grateful
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for the idea, it's about beauty and not brains, and felt objectified on stage. lightning round. >> i'm all about women embracing their femininity, you are beautiful and smart but she knows what job she signed up for. it was clearly, they hire beautiful women. if you want an opportunity your intellect is showcased, choose a different job. >> why don't you be a contestant. >> 100 million%. and as a former nfl cheerleader, unlike her i did not have union membership and benefits. save it, meghan, 16 years later, get out of here. that's the reason she's a princess or duchess, that's where she got her start. >> sounds lick a good gig to me. held a briefcase and got paid a lot of money. i'm like i'm fine with that. just give me that job. >> 100%. >> also signed up to be a duchess and that lasted, what, a
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year? just saying. >> if you don't succeed tear it down? >> she's torn a lot of things down. >> there you go. >> back to vegas, we are on, after the baby. thanks for watching. and when you can't catch us, dvr us, you play it over and over and over. "america reports" now. >> john: harris thank you so much. brand-new bombshells about hunter biden from a whistleblower potentially making ties between the president and son's business affairs even tighter. new documents indicate president biden was aware of his son's business dealings even suggesting the president may have been involved in some of them himself. >> sandra: iowa senator chuck grassley has been investigating hunter for years and says the fbi has evidence to potentially charge him with crimes. senator grassley's take on the new stunning claims when he joins us life coming up. >> john: begin "america reports" at the whi
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