tv FOX and Friends Saturday FOX News October 22, 2022 3:00am-4:00am PDT
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labrador retrievers. they were fake cats. poor maverick. >> cute. >> terrified. >> i don't like black cats either. >> and finally come see your buddy at the spokane comedy college. come for the comedy, stay in washington for the contact high. you'll get one. >> that's it ♪ ♪ o say can you see ♪ ♪ by the dawn's early light ♪ ♪ what so proudly we hailed♪ ♪ at the twilight's last gleaming♪ ♪ whose broad stripes and bright stars ♪ ♪ through the perilous fight ♪
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♪ o'er the ramparts we watched ♪ ♪ were so gallantly streaming ♪ ♪ and the rockets' red glare ♪ ♪ the bombs bursting in air ♪ ♪ gave proof through the night ♪ ♪ that our flag was still there ♪ ♪ o say does that star spangled banner yet wave ♪ ♪ o'er the land of the free ♪ ♪ and the home of the brave ♪ [cheers and applause]
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will: nice job, america. welcome to "fox and friends" on saturday morning, your national anthem and your photos. i was informed it would be inappropriate for me to begin ranking your photos but i will say the second best photo in that montage i think was the baby with the massive smile. rachel: we love babies on this show. pete: let's be honest, number 2 or even number one is herb. 110 years old, "fox and friends" view or from amherst junction, wisconsin. 110 years old, found that a trucking company in 1935. you are wisconsin. rachel: i know a lot of people like herb, hard-working good
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people who start companies and employ people in their communities, the winters are harsh in wisconsin but you will never meet nicer people. will: one hundred 10 years old for herb, 28 years old for rachel campos duffy. happy birthday. rachel: you guys are so nice. i read an article that a woman peaks at 35, it was so depressing. >> i was told a man peaks at 25. after that everything is downhill, physically you begin -- it will: i peeked a long time ago. oh boy. happy birthday. todd: i got to sleep in today. usually i have to be on the show at 4:00, six:00 a.m. is nothing. rachel: we are happy to have you.
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will: i don't know what the record is for oldest america live but herb has to be in the running. here is a less celebratory record. september marks the end of the fiscal year and marks the highest amount of illegal immigration encounters on a fiscal basis in recorded history with 2.3 million illegal immigrant encounters, september, 220,000 encounters, the second-highest month of the year after april. rachel: those are encounters. millions are got aways getting detained because a lot of people come in and want to be detained and send, taxpayer paid for flights to where they want to go. these numbers are astounding, this is the most dangerous border in the world. these numbers point to a failure in our administration.
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todd: one of these things is not like the other, fiscal year 20 in fiscal year 19 and the biden years, not like fiscal year 2,020 one was good but fiscal year 2022, government runs on this fiscal year, that is bad and you will hear a lot the next couple weeks about what the biden administration has accomplished, this crisis at the border is there singular achievement and this doesn't just happen. it happens purposefully because obviously what we have been talking about for weeks and months and you have no consequences for the smugglers and the cartels and third, what is the incentive to not come? the incentive we are giving these migrants to complete a dangerous and ill legal journey is when you come here we will give you a ton of free handouts that our own citizens don't get so why would they not come?
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will: there's a fascinating op-ed that the image of the biden administration is biden's above bills. rachel: did pete coin that term when the haitians came? will: i won't he is the first ever to coin the term but let's give him credit. you visited what is being termed a bidenville in new york city but you also said the border is dangerous but what is truly terrifying is if this is exacerbating a country that is dangerous and we know the answer is yes. look at these stats. the known suspected terrorist encounters. i want to put this in context. in september 1998, suspected terrorist on the southern border. the graphic is not correct, fiscal year 17, fiscal year 17,
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it is a 5-year period, total is 26. if you quadruple it, the number we have in the september of suspected terrorist encounters. rachel: why wouldn't you if you wear a terrorist come through the southern border, easier than flying here or anything else. we have the election around the corner. quality of the candidates, i have been impressed by the quality of the candidates on the republican side, the most impressive candidate i have seen us carry like who is running for governor in arizona, a state that has to deal every day like your home state of texas with what she calls an invasion. she says she will declare it an invasion if elected. >> before i get settled after i take the oath of office we will
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issue a declaration of invasion on the border and take back control of the border from the cartels that president biden ceded control to and secure the border, stop the fentanyl from pouring across and people from being trafficked across the border. rachel: carrie lake, tough, knows how to talk to journalists who try to give her gotcha questions, also beautiful but does she carry around barbara walters filters with her? every time i see her she has the lighting i want in this studio. what is up? will: her filtering is perfect but what is ironic, wasn't she propped up in the primaries by democrats who thought she would be too far right? a boatload of money into her race thinking we will get her in and a democrat. all over her, do the democrats have egg on their face. rachel: did that happen? i did not know that.
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todd: we talked about this, this concept of declaring an invasion would empower under the constitution the states to begin enforcing the border with their own resources. if president biden and the federal government will not why won't texas and arizona and carrie lake is saying we will take on the constitutional fight. rachel: she is someone i believe will do it one hundred%, that will make this race interesting and i think it will be the race to watch. will: a federal appeals court putting a temporary halt to president biden's student loan handout, victory for 6 gop led states blocking the plan estimated to cost $400 billion over ten years. rachel: alexandria half live in washington with more. >> reporter: the circuit court of appeals block the president's plan but only until the court makes a final
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decision and the white house wasted no time issuing a statement last night writing temporary order to stop borrowers from applying for student debt relief and we encourage eligible borrowers to join 22 million americans with information the department of education already has. this report was prompted by lawsuits brought by 6 states, one lawsuit that had been dismissed thursday by a lower court that they lacked standing. yesterday president biden visited delaware state university to provide an update on the rollout. >> president biden: 40 million americans stand to benefit from this relief, borrowers out of school, 90% making $75,000 a year. let me be clear, not a dime will go to the top 5% of incomes, period. >> reporter: only this week the
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website to apply for loan forgiveness went live. the court of appeals is expediting this case. will: that is a big story, whether you inject the economy with another stimulus, that's what student loan forgiveness would be on the verge of economic crisis. todd: it will come down to standing, what we are hearing from courts, one court said no, one said yes, ted cruz warned about the standing issue, i don't know if it is settled yet or something we need to monitor and if standing is not to be in existence, republican state ags and the republican think tank that have these have to figure out who has standing. rachel: it is not popular with the american people. people think it is a handout to college kids to the elite, meanwhile the working class and poor getting crushed by this economy.
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will: in the next 6 months that will be the only story, i won't say it is the only story but the primary story that captures our attention. when you can't figure out how to balance inflation or high interest rates, over the last 2 or 3 years, i am afraid the chickens are coming home to roost. rachel: we are going into a recession. a lot of people wondering after president biden took our economy that was booming under donald trump and was recovering after covid when he took over and now he has taken that economy and basically in the ditch. are you going to run again. here's president biden asked by ms nbc the question are you going to run? >> president biden: the reason
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i'm not making a judgment about running are not running, once i make that judgment whole series of regulations kick in and i have to treat myself as a candidate from that moment on. i've not made that formal decision but it is my intention to run again and we have time to make that decision. >> doctor biden is for it? mr. president? >> president biden: doctor biden thinks, my wife thinks that -- that we are doing something very important. and i shouldn't walk away from it. a lot of what we have done and passed has not kicked in yet. for example, we have this money to rebuild the bridges and highways et c. but it will take time. pete: todd: on the infrastructure may be you would address the
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infrastructure point if the money in the infrastructure bill went to infrastructure and not the liberal wish lists trying to get your people elected in the midterms which is an abject failure and we got all perked up when he said i would have to follow election regulations if i declare now. you have teams of people to handle the paperwork for you. that's not an excuse in any way, shape or form, his reason for not declaring is he's trying to prevent the deathknell to his party going forward on the midterms, brought them to the edge of the cliff but admitting i'm not running would be admitting i am a complete failure and any chance of preventing a red soon on he would be over at that point. rachel: the elephant in the room is jill biden, if you listen to what he said just before, he perked up and was like what did jill want me to say? we need to keep going and jill is at the center of all of this and the people, you don't touch
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the spouse but she is part of this, she knew the signs of dementia he was exhibiting while he was campaigning before he even declared probably and she persisted and you see her acting like his nurse, helping when he stumbles she is apparently berated staff allowed him to do his job and answer questions, as she said, for too long after a press conference, she is protecting him but is definitely pushing him forward. i don't think it is good for the country and don't think it bodes well, doesn't look good on her, doesn't show she cares for this man, this man needs to go back and be with his grandkids. todd: i saw him buffering on that question like a computer buffers. processing, processing.
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the friendliest interview environments you could imagine and i will not try to put myself at the front of this line, but every president i can think of put himself in front of an adversarial press. i remember off the top of my head donald trump in front of press conferences on a continuous basis all of them adversarial, president obama, adversarial. you can do this while being challenging and president biden needs to be challenged. he is challenged even when talking to jonathan kpart. rachel: people around him know he can't handle it. not like they will ask a tough question about the economy and doesn't understand the economy. is not functioning right and they know that and that is why they are protecting him and mentioned donald trump, he would have freewheeling
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hour-long and they were questioning his mental state but somehow we are not allowed to talk about what we are seeing. todd: when asked what your wife would do in a situation it is natural for her husband have some reticence, usually that is over issues of where are we going to christmas or what is happening on thanksgiving, not are you running to be the leader of the free world, and answer he should have by now at the ready regardless of mental limitations. rachel: is jill in charge or is it his chief of staff, who is running this operation? will: police arresting two suspects behind a disturbing attack on dc metro bus earlier this week, the victim says she was beaten after asking young people not to curse in front of children and says the bus driver wouldn't stop despite her screams for help. it is unclear if there will be any consequences for the bus
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driver. steve bannon promising to fight back in court after being sentenced to four months in federal prison for refusing to appear before the house january 6th committee. tucker carlson discussed his next move. >> the judge laid out a number of areas of appeal. at the end of the day i've got to go to prison. rachel: he will not play -- the phillies take a lead over the san diego padres. at lcs it didn't take long for philadelphia to get on the board. as leadoff man kyle shorebird --schwarber hits. >> back it goes! todd: on the visitors side left fielder crowfar lost his cool after striking out on a close
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check swing call, phillies secure the win and it continues tonight with game 4 beginning at 7:00 eastern on fox and the fox sports apps. later we will talk about the battle of the brothers with aaron, that was that bad call. will: they were trying to get him since before he was born. he's having one heck of a playoff, 480 foot bomb, all over the place. only lost to adam klotz. rachel: he knows sports. will: you are right. we are not bringing that up. don't bring it up.
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rachel: still -- all right. still ahead of female volleyball player spikes so hard it leaves a girl -- will: transgender female. rachel: head and neck injuries. they are forfeiting all other games, the unfair advantage coming up. todd: more than half look for a second job to make legals meet, the consequences of the biden economy next. where there's a pet there's always...this. that's why we have innovations like the maytag pet pro laundry pair. so you and your favorite sweater can forget about all about those hairy situations. shop maytag and more exclusive out of the blue innovations at lowe's.com. the new subway series menu. the greatest sandwich roster ever assembled. tony, the new outlaw's got double pepper jack and juicy steak. let's get some more analysis on that, chuck. mmm. pepper jack. tender steak.
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from a field trip after a week in dc. so fired up, this monument, this museum and this memorial, the washington monument. todd: i'm worried he will make a run, not this year. will: a lot of things he would have to avoid. do you really have -- john federman is a candidate, you can do whatever you want. this is something i believe but this will be the major issue the coming months, they write in a headline recession signals are flashing bright red, to hear president biden and other administration officials tell at the economy is unlikely to hit a recession anytime soon
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and if we do experience such an economic slowdown it will be in the biden administration's telling brief and gentle like a soft summer rain but don't bank on it, judging by almost every other economic measure wall street forecasts the us is headed to recession and probably soon. rachel: the biden administration tried to change the definition of a recession because they didn't want to admit what was happening but the red lights are flashing. we are heading there. this is going to spell disaster for the biden administration in a few weeks when we go into the midterm elections. here's a survey how inflation is impacting american workers, 8% looking for a second job. 14% considering a different job. something else on people's minds, you get to late october you think about thanksgiving and the meal going up from
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$53.31 to $67 and $0.78 this year, i had to pay $700 to fly my college student home. it used to be you could get your kid home for 250, $300. everything is expensive and that is included in the price of thanksgiving. will: we are in a recession by any indicator. the overall point is well taken. everyone is curtailing spending for some reason, to some degree. that has the cumulative effect of leading us into a recession. not as much demand, or as much money circulated in the economy which is what the fed wants. what does biden pivot to? the economy is in a recession but look how strong the job
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market is. watch out for this, the scoop according to job creators network, biden inflation is a recipe for disaster. the numbers don't lie. if you talk to any hr manager or employer three things are highlighted, job postings are not posting as much as they did. open listings are being removed, they are not filling these jobs in the last point put a smile in my face, that jen z wish list for i need a unicorn in my work place and work from the beach 5 days a week, employers starting to push back against that and say this is a work place, you have to come here and do the job and if you don't like that we don't need you. there are a lot of people that want your job. todd: not to be the doomsdayer,
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l3 sign points to about to be getting much worse, wall street that and down the hatches and we are in this trap where inflation is out of control but the only way to control it is raise interest rates and once we raise interest rates we are talking every piece of bad debt out there in the economy, bank failures, we are talking not just a slow down but 2,008-two thousand nine stuff, bad moments. don't know if you looked at your 401(k) but we are down 25%. will: for people like us this is our retirement, we are not getting a pension. were not in the pension world, social security will be at 76% if we get that. that is our retirement entity those numbers dip, we have a little bit of runway but tough to see. rachel: the immediate problem for most americans is 20 million are behind on utility bills.
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we've got winter around the corner. heating costs going up. people can't feed their kids. you are seeing record numbers of people, we will be seeing bread lines. i'm not trying to be a pessimist or scare people, but things are really bad if you are working class or poor american and when the biden administration says no big deal it is such an insult, a slap in the face. will: and nyu professor is canned, students in his class told him the class was too tough. one former student says you can't stoop to kids demand and lower the bar, she explains next. ♪
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will: f is for fired, a professor fired after complaint that his class was too tough. jones says deans must use -- not coddle students for tough love. it is more important than ever to dedicate ourselves to the high standards of education. joining us to discuss, new york post columnist and nyu student ricky schlade. $80,000 a year. you say you saw this type of coddling the professor was talking about. >> there's a sense that you have a right to a good grade or post pandemic that your mental health is more important than your academic success and your achievement and for a class like organic chemistry where these are future doctors, to filter out people who can't handle fat, that is a
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frightening prospect that will lower the bar and pave the road for the kid. will: the reason i'm sitting here today his eye was not coddled in my organic chemistry class. i hadn't at plus. i didn't have a professor who was going to call me and i decided to take a different career path. that to your point is what this class is all about. you don't want bad doctors, bad engineers, bad scientist. do these kids not get this? >> there's a sense if you're paying the hefty tuition bill you are entitled to a good gpa and good job down the road and we've been taught that we have a right to that. and why you validated those complaints because they said in their letter to this professor they fired they need to be mindful of people paying tuition bills which is the parents. todd: more from nyu. this is about the quality of teaching. he was hired on a 1-year contract to teach organic chemistry and wasn't successful.
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is organic chemistry classes resulted in among other troubling indicators a very high rate of student withdrawals, student petitions signed by 82 students, course evaluation scores that were the worst. they are treating him like he is a newbie. he was a professor for decades, in his 80s, renowned during his time at princeton. my fear for this is he is in his 80s, he can walk away, has all the money he needs, what about the chilling effect on the 30-year-old nontenured professor with a couple kids who need this job, they will came to this woke -- >> he literally wrote the textbook for his class. he's an expert in his field and he doesn't want his job back, he's leaving but he is speaking out and writing this op-ed because there's a generation of professors coming up who feel the inmates are running the asylum and we see gpa going up and don't have objective measures were who should be the future doctor, who should be
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trusted with pressure of someone flatlining in front of them in an operating room. this is a high-stakes job these kids are signing up for. and getting through one high-stakes class with a great professor should be something they are fortunate to do. todd: a bunch of people left the course, that's the point. you don't want todd piro as your surgeon, you want him anchoring "fox and friends" at 6:thirty a.m. on saturday morning, thank you for being here, interesting stuff. a texas city putting the brakes on busing migrants after the biden administration sends migrants back to mexico but didn't biden criticized trump for doing literally the exact same thing. we will unpack that next. this was no bear. it was like a bearsquatch! dad. what's a bearsquatch? it's a cross between a bear and a sass... it's made up. he's usually sleeping. he'll never sleep again. ♪
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>> el paso, texas putting the brakes on busing migrants to blue cities in chicago, venezuelan migrants back to mexico. the continuation of donald trump's highly criticized title 42 rule the biden white house has adopted. joining us is el paso councilmember claudio rodriguez. good morning. how does the mayor feel about title 42 under trump?
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>> don't know how the mayor felt about title 42, title 42 was lifted pretty early on at the beginning of the biden administration. that is when we started having the issue in el paso, northwest of texas which everybody from south texas, really getting hit by the crisis and in may that is when it went to el paso and we saw the surge in venezuelan migrants. rachel: el paso is known as a blue city, how did they feel about the fact that title 42 had been enacted? >> the city of el paso did a great job keeping it local, el paso taxpayers, the general fund was funding the state. i started reading the alarm and
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they started paying attention, and don't appreciate harder and property taxes going towards paying for busing and sheltering and handling an issue that is not belonging to the city of el paso, the federal government. rachel: since biden and acted title 42, 4,500 venezuelans have been sent back. another controversy with the mayor of el paso, he said in an interview that the president of the united states pressured him not to declare an emergency, videotape doesn't lie. >> did the white house ask you not to declare a state of emergency? >> absolutely not. the chief of the us border patrol does not support declaring a state of emergency at this point. we may have to do that. we may have to do that which at this point the white house has
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asked for us not to do that. >> reporter: he clearly lied but the question stands, is it a state of emergency in el paso? >> yesterday i took a ride downtown where the gatherings of all the migrants were happening. what i saw was a fence with a bunch of porta parties inside, left over clothing and trash but i did not see a single person there. however, our airport is the one saturated with migrants, i am receiving messages from my constituents saying the airport is inundated with migrants. rachel: they are using it to launch 2 other places? >> yes. rachel: you have been an honest
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broker throughout all this and i'm sure your constituents and the good citizens of el paso appreciate that. thank you for joining us this morning. >> thank you for having me. todd: police searching for possible human remains after digging up a mercedes sports car found buried behind america mansion in northern california. landscaping cruz doubled on the car, turns out it was reported stolen in the early 90s by the old owner of the home who has a deep criminal past that includes fraud and overturned murder conviction, he moved out in 2014, died in 2015. in north carolina school board votes to forfeit its girls volleyball teams against the rival after one of its players was hurt by a transgender athlete's hard strike, the injured player reportedly suffering from long-term concussion symptoms after a blow to the head, the board issuing a statement saying county will not participate in any volleyball games, varsity
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or junior varsity against highlands due to safety concerns. law enforcement officials say her akkadian cost a total of 114 deaths, many from heartedly county, making landfall late last month and the state is on a long road to recovery. local real estate group is doing its part, giving off 15,000 sandwiches to folks picking up the pieces. that is good to see. baseball hall of fame catcher johnny bench, and joe neath, those are your headlines. let's go to meteorologist adam klotz for our fox weather forecast, the only individual to defeat me in fantasy football so far this year. kudos to you. >> i have lost several games. football looking like fall out here, fall festival coming up, it is feeling like fall, 52 °,
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tractors to the streets protesting the new tax plan that targets cows. the plan is an important step towards new zealand's transition to low emissions futures and delivers on a promise to price agriculture emissions from 2025. at the protest, groundswell, bryce mckenzie coming from us. it is hard to make sense. going to target burps. as i understand it, agriculture is 50% of carbon emissions in new zealand. how do you tax cow burps? >> don't know how she is going to do that. that is what it is all about. 50% of emissions, it actually methane is quite different and
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has different metrics than carbon and methane is what they are taxing by cow burps and far it's and parts. that is a short-lived between 9 and 11 years. if you have a certain number of animals and 9 to 11 years time those animals, you are not adding to warming, you are still sitting at the same as 11 years ago. we think it is ridiculous. todd: you can't measure car -- cow burps or far it's, you measure the livestock. you are reducing the numbers of livestock under the care of your farmers. i can't help but separate this from the world economic forums move to reduce the amount of meat that we eat. this story is directly tied to the push to have us eating bugs
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in the service of reducing methane. >> it is hard to believe what the solution might be. what they are asking is 20% reduction, beef and lamb farming and 6% reduction in dairy farming. it has nothing to do with the gas, they decided how much livestock they want to deliver to the system and the loss of food security and the fact the price of food is going to go up is a big concern. todd: the livelihood of farmers all on the line to reduce cow burps. wish you the best of luck in your protest and thank you for jumping on "fox and friends" with us this morning. >> thank you very much. todd: a record year at the border, not a celebratory record.
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- [female narrator] five billion people lack access to safe surgery. thousands of children are suffering and dying from treatable causes. for 40 years, mercy ships has deployed floating hospitals to provide the free surgeries these children need. join us. together, we can give children the hope and healing they never thought possible. it's a mission powered by love, made possible by you.
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give today. ♪ she works hard for the money, so hard for me honey, she works hard for the money so you better treat her right ♪ >> we're having a fall fest with fall prompts and if you've been to a store, it's not just a store, it's an experience. you got things swinging in the sky and apple poppings in the front. there's a lot to deal with and in light of donna summer's song here
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