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tv   Outnumbered  FOX News  October 26, 2022 9:00am-10:00am PDT

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♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ just happened and who you're looking at is darryl brooks, he's been representing hims in the waukesha, wisconsin, christmas parade massacre basically. he drove his car through a group of 68 people. look i said, he was representing himself and pretty much has been a dramatic and emotional character throughout this entire thing but right now he's been found guilty of first degree
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homicide on counts one, two, three, and four, intentional homicide. guilty. live f from the waukesha, wisconsin, courtroom is his reaction to that and of course outside people waiting to here. six people died that day and dozens more injured. what they were trying to say or what he's been trying to say representing himself, crying in front of the jurors during his 50 minute closing argument was to consider whether the car could have malfunctioned during the incident last november. he wanted them to consider the impact that the negative press has had on his family. meanwhile you've got the families of the victims and what they've gone through too. he didn't talk about that. this case, of course, happening
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at a christmas parade. was very jarring last holiday season. at the full-time, there was a lot of question about whether or not -- what would his motive be? we didn't really find that out this trial, but the jurors heard what they needed to hear, the judge continues to read the verdict forms right now and this could take a few memberships. ml guilty counts, six counts of hit and run still reading endangered safety charges right now. we bring you the breaking news as it's happening right now. if we get more from the courtroom, if his attorneys speak, if darryl brooks speaks because while he respects himself, the -- represents himself, the attorneys on the other side may talk. if anybody does, we'll bring it to you live. >>kayleigh: hello, everyone, this is outnumbered and i'm
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kayleigh and i have emily and harris, lisa and sean. the debate in pennsylvania was hot. it's a tight race that could change the balance of power in last night's show down between john fetterman and dr. memhet oz. is likely to live impresentations with voters. impressions with the voters. the democrat appeared to struggle taking long pauses, stumbling his way through his answers and even some of his supporters called his performance a disaster. >> good night, everybody. i'm running to serve pennsylvania. >> john fetterman takes everything to an extreme and those extreme positions hurt us all. i can make the difficult decisions as you do in the omitterring room as -- operating room as a jury john. surgeon.
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>> we need to fight inflation because it's a tax on working families and dr. oz can't possibly understand what that is like. he has ten gigantic mansions. >> john fetterman has been trying to get as many murders convicted and sentenced to life in prison out. >> he's pit a plan on he has website in the lacs 24 hours and has no experience or made any attempt to try and address crime during his entire career except showing umm for photo h ops here in philadelphia. i do support fracking and i don't -- i support fracking and i stand and i do support fracking. >> you haven't shown up on the campaign trail, you haven't answered questions from voters not once on the campaign trail, you haven't answered questions from media once on the campaign trail to show you can do it. this is the only time you come
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to talk to me. >>kayleigh: so many moments, lisa, but you look and see flip-flops a lot in politics, they're everywhere but don't see a flip and a flop and a flip in a 15 second span within fracking. john fetorman said he's -- fetterman said he's opposed to fracking, i don't support fracking, i oppose the moratorium on fracking and i'm not for frabbing and should go away but the audacity to say i do but i don't but i do support fracking. fracking. >>lisa: i don't feel bad for john fetterman and had the stroke and could have dropped out and chose noted to and obscured information about his health and only person saying he's healthy is a campaign donor and they're not putting owl the medical information. if you play the video game mortal combat, finish him. his campaign put out a memo before the debate table setting saying he's not good at debate
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and not the right format and trying to blamed the closed captioning and the media host of the debate for his poor performance but he's not healthy enough to go to the senate. look, a lot of the -- then look at the fact the media hid all this from the republic and the one reporter that told the truth was secured by her own colleagues and john fetterman's wife tried to get her fired. >>kayle>>kayleigh: she was and, harry, i have empathy and they only went to one opportunities with closed captioning and only let him debate is one person asking and easy way to clear it up, release the medical records and see what he said on that point. >> i didn't hear you say you would release your full medical records. why not? you have 30 seconds. >> no, again, my doctor believes i'm fit to be serving and that's what i believe is where i'm
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standing. >>harris: you know, the whole situation is really a conundrum because democrats had to support him in debating. he was shedding points and he wasn't saying anything. so you would hope, and hope is not a strategy and we now know that, you would want your candidate to go and fight for his right to go to the senate. that's what the plan was and you'd use monitor or whatever and talk about asha burns and i -- dasha burns and i tweeted about this last night in realtime. she told us what to expect and she was lambasted by other journalists in what i call the truth restrictive critics. i moan, those who are a-- mean, those allergic to the truth and we know the media are not covering this honest and she that's why we need to see the debate. they wouldn't let us have the facts as they were presented by a reporter. whwe have to judge for ourselves
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and i want to mention this, fetterman's campaign right after the debate put out information that over oz's abortion comments, they drew in a million in de-nations and there's -- donations and there's people out there that made up their minds a long time ago and this wasn't going to matter. political play book had an article suggesting this as well and there's so many people that haven't voted and it's early voting but a lot of people will make up their minds after what they saw last night. the republicans put in $6 million, that's according to them yesterday to support oz. they're not spending that kind of money unless they know they can make a difference. now we're within a point or so between the two men. i mean, that has got to be frightening for democrats right now. >>lisa: what struck me is you often have democrats who will cover for their own candidates. you had one delusion gnat one last night -- delusional one
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last night saying memhet oz lost this one and typical cast of characters that would support didn't. political play book said quite blunt bluntly saying this is the defense. >> a lot of democrats i'm talking to are very nervous because john fetterman is clearly recovering from his stroke. >> it was clear fetterman was recovering from the stroke. >> he's not being transparent, he's been opaque and his answer last night was to say, well, take a look at me. we took a look and our heart breaks for you, but we're not comfortable i think will be the consensus. >> i said, it's very obvious that he is impaired, his ability to communicate is impaired. >> i watched the debate last night, it was hard to watch. >>s>>sean: this is painful when your own democrats can't defend
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you in the debate. this is a job interview and both candidates stand in front of their voters in pennsylvania to ask for the job to go to the u.s. senate and the u.s. senate is what the great deliberative body and if you can't put one sentence together, you can't do the job as a senator and what fetterman did well is say i've been knocked down and you've been knocked down and i'm going to get back up unlike you. to try to pivot this point. he doesn't get sympathy because he doesn't have sympathy for the people in pennsylvania or america getting crushed by inflation and crime. and the economy as a whole, he has his boot on their neck and won't let it off with the policies of joe biden he supports. again, i think it's relevant for all of americans because again, fracking matters in pennsylvania but it matters to all of us. >>harris: you saw the breaking news last hour with the liberal da in philadelphia larry crazne r and those are showing mercy to
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the violent criminals among us. how do you respond thomas to that asjohn fetterman when yt make a criminal argument for your policies when everybody was watching you last night? >>sean: it's merciful to the defendant but the society living with all these. >>kayleigh: emily, you were watching this too? >>emily: yeah, what struck me was the human human being rhus f fetterman to think he's the best. he said i'm going to remit the forgotten people and that he has include everyone he forgot in his policies and includes
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victims, victim's families, it includes his blue collar worker and median voter in pennsylvania doesn't have a college education and appreciates family and worked hard to put food on the table and this is a person who in name only represents them but by his policies and his votes has done anything but lift up those people. when he says remember, look who's in prison, it's your grandmother or grandfather, that's the victim's relatives. the grandmother is the one mourning the person stabbed 17 time on the streets of philadelphia, the 70-year-old woman coming back from a grocery store shot. these statistics go on and on but to us they are individuals, they are real stories, and he is the last person to carry those stories with him to the senate floor. >>lisa: i just wanted to add too a lot of focus has been on how bad fetterman was because he was awful but dr. oz did a really good job sean, you've been the candidate i've prepped
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and dr. oz showed up on stage with no missteps as well and dr. that's it. last night if there's any decideds left, they're going for dr. oz. >>kayleigh: what's interesting heading out here, mark pointed out of 600 plus candidates, 16 invited biden. this guy, one of the most progressive out there has because biden is more moderate than them all though last night he was asked, hey, where do you disagree with biden and it was the pause of all pauses. you could have inserted a whole lot in the time of pause and basically he said he agrees with him, hook, line and sinker. >>sean: he's seeing oz overtake him and this is the hail mary pass to get my base energy jazzed and i'll bring -- energized and i'll bring joe biden in to do it. >>kayleigh: joe biden to energize so no one ever. up next, we turn to new york
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where crime took center stage at last night's i did bait and repose -- debate and lee zeldin pressing kathy hochul on crime in the city and why hochul does not think it's important, next.
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>>harris: the suspects are still out there they're probably going to do that more than once because that's how they do. the issue of surging crime is now a top concern for voters across america, especially in dem-led cities like new york
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where violent scenes like you one you saw ragaini playing out on the streets and city subways where you get trapped and can't get away from it all. it took center stage at last night's governor's debate between incumbent democrat kathy hochul, remember she slid in after kicking off andrew cuomo, and her republican challenger lee zeldin, congress from new york. let's watch. >> my opponent thinks right now there's a polio emergency going on but there's not a crime emergency. we are halfway through the debate and hasn't talked about anyone locking up anyone that credits a crime. >> anyone that credits a crime under our laws especially with the change they made to bail has consequences. i don't know why that's so important to you. >>harris: let's do kayleigm mhfact check. >>kayleigh: yeah, you heard the urgency and angst and people are dying. that's how new yorkers feel and with her it was very vanilla and
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mundane and there's a line in the debate that sums up the entire debate and goes viral and for her, it was i don't know why that's important to you when lee zeldin brought up locking people up and it reminded me of a mccullough moment when he said parents don't have a part in children's education. you can't make a statement in the debate when the number one issue is crime and the images are heart breaking. >>harris: that's a fact and, emily, stack the facts in new york city. when she says they're adjudicating the cases against criminals. i mean, her pants are literally on fire. >>emily: i'm glad you play that had clip because she said in the same sentence bail reform and consequences, that's exact opposite of what we've been seeing on the streets. i echo your point, kayleigh, she lacked passion orem wow. think
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or humanity and to impugn zeldin and imply he was a bit disconnected from what new yorkers want or need to me was the laugh of the century. he's been down in there, sleeves rolled up acknowledging the pain and fear going on here and by the way, when you've lost the new york times, their headline today reference that had specifically saying the governor's race is suddenly too close for democrats comfort and talked about the fears about crime. right there in the by lines and they get it and why doesn't hochul. allison talked about those that need to be protected in the city. she gets it and share the stories of how she has in the past being a former new york police officer inspector and running with lee zeldin. why do she and lee get the people that need protected are all new yorkers and hochul for some reason still doesn't get it. why are you so uninterested in it? i'll tell you why, it's everyone that's been dead at your hands violently on those suckway tracks that -- subway tracks that you refuse to acknowledge. >>harris: lisa, talk to me
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about how this works because new york is as blue as my dress and it is not as close but it is the and the fact that numbers would be moving away from democrats at all is news worthy. where do you look, and you've worked on campaigns before, where you do look for the answers to how tight this can get because last night the disconnect between hochul and what new yorkers are feeling, and i live in jersey, i don't live here but i work here and see the crime myself. how do you calculate that for the side of republicans? should they be julying in with money? sending their high pro file people? i mean, are we at the point where if this state flips, it changes the game across the country. >>lisa: you're right, new york is a state where democrats outnumber -- registered democrats outnumber republicans 2-1. but this is the kind of election cycle we've seen read waves at nrcc during 2010 which was a
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monster election cycle for republicans and we picked up over 60 seats. that's what's coming and the red wave has been here, but now people are finally starting toking a knowledge it and if you're any of the races on the margins, you could get swept up over the line in a wave election like this. so lee zeldin is one of the candidates that could make it to the finish line in this kind of environment, and what world in politics do you dismiss one of the top concerns to your voters? i mean, it's insane to me. we pointed out majority of new yorkers, crime is one of the top issues if not the top one and she's sitting there saying why would you care about this n issue? i don't know, if you're lee zeldin maybe because there was an attempted stabbing on your life in july. and a drive by-shooting outside of your house earlier this month where two people were shot when your twin daughters were at home and maybe that's why he cares about this issue, but this is the kind of election cycle where lee zeldin can make it to the finish line. if you're in new york and a republican, you've got to turn out. >>harris: also, you mentioned
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allison expozido was on last hour. lee zeldin handout picked her and her dad was the former chief of police nypd and we got to sit down with her and one word seemed to stand out and it was smug. it's what you're talking about, watch. >> crime is an absolute issue for new yorkers. up state, down state, in the cities, out of the city. last night you saw an out of touch elitist smug kathy hochul with her -- the way she was smiling and jo the shots she was throwing oturu the congressman -- at the congressman you'd think crime isn't up and new yorkers aren't afraid and we'd be energy independent and our children weren't suffering in schools. >>harris: sean. >>sean: but crafty to say crime is not my fault, it's your fault because you didn't vote in favor of the assault weapons ban in dc. >>harris: these are people getting pushed off platforms. >>sean:ly the bun violence
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happening in the city, those guns are already illegal and enforce the laws on the books. you don't need new laws. she's not enforcing the current laws and one thing because new york is as blue as your dress, kathy hochul was start to say, listen, you care about trump, abortion, and january 6. she can't coming back to the themes and trying to get the voters to forget about her record and look at the republican party, which republican all you democrat voters, you hate them, disregard all the crime and pain in the city. >>harris: do you think hate for trump is enough to get people in new york who when zeldin was closing he said you want to know why people are moving out of the state ofny new york, it's because they don't feel safe. they don't feel safe going to dinner, they don't feel safe going to buy food or when their kids are at school. i mean --->>harris: he hit down a list of thing people say in the schools. >>sean: taxes, schools. >>harris: i don't know if trump is the surveys.
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>>sean: thi that's a hail mary pass and think about trump and abortion and not my record. you see these waves crest and come over late. you're seeing that right now. the momentum is massive and you're starting to see a lot of polling flip and going the democrat to toss up and toss up to republican and we'll see people win races that we didn't know were competitive. >>harris: we'll cover every, every hot moment right here on fox news channel. don't you dare turn away. just moments ago, dvr us too, moments ago all darryl brooks was -- i should say the suspect in the christmas parade massacre as redrove his car through 68 people. darryl brooks was found guilty on all counts in that waukesha christmas parade attack. you know, we want to talk about the victims, the six who were dead, the dozen more who were injured in all of this. we wondered if we might hear from him but so far not yet. he was crying in court today, he
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represented himself. there were some bizarre moments in the trial. just watching him plead the case of the negative press on his family in front of the jurors was one of the oddest moments. real quickly, emily, when you look at this case and when it happened last year, it barely got any coverage in mainstream media and nobody even responded to the fact this was a christmas parade. there were children there. >>emily: that's right. it was such a tragedy and i'm grateful to us on this network for having this conversation on that time and being un-relenting in our coverage and, yes, he was charged with all of the counts of intentional homicide for the poor souls lost there in addition to 70 other additional counts as you mentioned he represented himself during the trial and engaged in a lot of bizarre moments and taken out of the courtroom actually to calm him down. he accused the judge of treason and objected every time someone called him mr. brooks, which is his name. >>harris: what are they supposed to call him? >>emily: exactly.
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exactly. there are many questions that arise out of his -- >>harris: does that mean he'd have success on an appeal because he represented himself? you're shaking your head, sean. it's one thing people ask about this and at one point the judge felt unsafe and that's where they took him out of the courtroom. >>emily: with all of the procedures put in place to ensure he was deemed fit to stand trial to represent himself, those safeguards should not but in place and everyday incontrovertible to his guilt and if it gets to the appeal level, he'll remain guilt. >>lisa: i hope he rots in hell. >>harris: well, there's hell on earth for him now. more outnumbered in a moment.
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>>emily: more americans living paycheck to paycheck and forced to take on roommates or move
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back home with mom and dad even if they have kids of their own to make ends meet. 18% of u.s. adults say they've been living rent free with family and friends in the past six months. that's up from 11% during the same time period last year. kayleigh, part of me love that idea and my parents are my best friends and i love any time i get to spend with them, but this reflects a sad disappointmenting alarming trend. >>kayleigh: yes, in college obama was friends and my peers and friends moved into their parent's basements and my peers, many of whom have kids, are moving back with their parents. why? because of joe biden. there was a gap in between called the trump years where poverty was at lowest point since 1959 and median income was 50% higher than under obama's tenure and men gains among income, black, hispanic, asian
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communities and foreign born workers. move under your parents under biden and obama or have wage gain with republicans. >>emily: as we track, and i know you've been covered on faulkner focus, there's a looming fearful future just around the corner because of these policies that will hit those communities the hardest. >>harris: all right, i'll start with feelings and get to the facts. people that i'm talking to right now, you know, you're talking to voters, voters voices for the faulkner focus are telling me for the first time in their lives, they're saying these words: the american dream is for other people. that's heart breaking. that should be something that we can all go for. you know, people from other countries are breaking in trying to go for their american dream. i want to get to numbers and david azman from the business network and i were talking yesterday, fox business, about the 7 million men who are learfield img the job force. some are being supported by the
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women in their lives and some of them on unemployment so on and so forth and you talk about the diversity lanes. black men in particular, they were engaged in the work force, they wanted to be part of the work force. we're seeing men in particular sit down. why is that? i mean, it takes everybody to make that american dream come true in your household. we work together on that as a team. whether it's your brother, sister, mom, dad, husband or wife, whatever it is. if people are sitting down and just kind of acquiescing to the american dream is for someone else, that changes us as a country. >>emily: and you have thoughts specifically. >>lisa: i mentioned before the red wave has been here and fundamentals for a red tsunami looking at inflation and record gas prices and historical norms of the president's party losing 29 seats in the first election not willing to add a president under 40% in the approval
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ratings yet the media in some pollsters in the left try to tell us somehow abortion and a non-consequential issue with tram and financial woes and pain that families are facing, i said on your show that democrats back in july that democrats rued the day they spent tens of millions of dollars to get more conservative candidates elected in the position because a tidal wave is coming and i've said it and will be proven right on november 8. >>emily: to lisa's point it doesn't matter what democrats say because americans feel and acknowledge their own realities every day living in communities to try and soften inflation. >>sean: when i was newly married i called my parents the rents. i rentals now sadly this is true for so in young adults and again, to be dependent on your parents or the government, it's a lack of freedom. nobody wants to be dependent on anybody. you want to live your life where you want and the fact you can't afford rent and food and a family in this economy is just -- it's really sad.
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again, it affects your view on do i have the american dream in is it attainable for me and so many americans feel like it's not. >>emily: yeah and time as a family together is one thing but stressed as a family is another. all right, coming up, the homeless crisis in democrat-led cities keeps getting worse and now some are getting so comfortable they have even seat up washing machines in the middle of the street. wait for it. that's next.
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>>harris: the homeless crisis is spinning out of control in particular liberal led cities and the democrat of portland, oregon, is finally working to crack down on hundreds of unsanctioned homeless camps referring to the crisis as the vortex of misery. sounds so austin powers. meanwhile over in los angeles the homeless camps continue to grow adding to crime across the
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city. now some are siphoning off the water and power and setting up washing machines in the middle of the city. how do you plug them in? >>emily: yeah, this sun surpsurprising and skid row in s angeles been there since 1976 and was a contain want zone since la city officials. port hand las become a festering
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abscess and to be named this and the red wave is going to reap that whatever ins up coming election. >>harris: did you say 1976? >>emily: yep. >>harris: the bicentennial like celebration of the nation was marked by skid row. that's heart breaking that we wouldn't -- that officials didn't love our country enough to let even that point be no more. lisa. >>lisa: i didn't have a washer and drier when i lived in new york city. a lot of peep don't have that here. everyone talks about the plight of the homeless but what about the plight of the people living around it? you've got drug addicts and criminals and people seeding these cities to criminal -- ceding the cities to the criminal and homeless and what about the people living around them and businesses trying to survive in that environment making it un-inhabitable. i'm kind of tired about hearing
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alaska the plight of the homeless and the people trying to live their lives around it. >>harris: i can't help but think of what we both have seen recently in south texas, and actually going to the border what you see with people coming into the country and you suddenly understand how pressure that puts on dem cities when they have to take them in after boasting their sanctuaries and you know why. when a few have been delivered by bus or plane, why they have reached a freak out point to deal with that issue. they can't handle what they've got going on with american st.s in the streets. it's a lot of pressure but it's a reality. we have to share the responsibility of those open boarders. >>kayleigh: absolutely and many communities in south texas, residents live below the poverty line and on top of that they're living with the tide of illegal immigration and i can't help but think of the story on outnumbered in san francisco where the kids were getting off a bus in the drug infested den of homelessness and it's crazy
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to look at. to your point, emily, the pacific northwest is changing because of the issue. a republican in oregon might win that race and said i'll declare a emergency for homeless - . washington state, political article out today. democrats putting millions into defend the incumbent there because the opponent tiffany smiley focusing on homelessness. >>harris: sean, it'll be the success of republican ifs they have it and take one or two majorities on hill house in senate that cowel really impact -- could really impact 2024. >>sean: it's on crime and inflation and we've talked about this and liberal issues sell well and package them up and sell them and people love them and implement them in a full blown scale, it's rotten and it's a cancerous society and liberals and democrats are rejecting democrats and they see when you lay it out in front opportunistic them, it's homelessness and drug use and crime on our streets. i don't want to live in a community like that ask say no
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more, democrats. >>kayleigh: where is it working out? >>sean: nowhere. >>harris: all right, coming up, ecoactivist strike again in london and leaving drivers furious trying to get to work. a look at all of this mess, e nextmu.
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>> the fallout for last night's i did bait for john fetterman and kathy hochul and a analysis from katie pavlich and more. talking about neck and neck race with democrat tim ryan and can vance pull out of tie gain and go for a win. how long it'll take to make losses for the closures and cathy morris rogers on twin crisis of economy and energy. i'm john roberts and i'll see you at 1:00 sharp for america reports. >>emily: least like the ecoactivists are at it again. two protesters in london were arrested after police say they sprayed orange paint all across a luxury car showroom. the protesters took it a step further and set up a roadblock taunting law enforcement and
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other drivers with some even glueing themselves to the pavement. it comes after british lawmakers introduced a new bill to crack down on acti activists spark widespread disruption. lee s this follows a trend -- lisa, this follows a trend of headline grabbing protests and what struck me in particular is the clashing between mote victimses and protesters with the videos catching on compare motorists saying things like you're blocking a ambulance. you're preventing people from getting to work. one said you're preventing me from putting food on the table but those protesters don't seem to care. >>lisa: imagine being a climate activist, it makes me laugh. we're all supposed to be dead by now. in the 1970s it was an ice rage and associated press wiped out and by 1999 al gore said we'll be gone and here we are on the couch in 20226789 imagine following along and bill gates flying private probably eating steak and buying up ocean front
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property and laughing at all the losers doing stuff. if you're a climate activist, get a job and a life. >>emily: the destruction has real world impacts and we were sitting on the couch talking about the gentleman on parole that needed to get to work on time or put back into incarceration and there's real world consequences for children playing in fantasy land. >>sean: they don't believe because they really believe the world will end because of climate change in not too far off date and bill gates buys these cars and they don't understand that bill gates is one of the purchasers of the ferrari and expensive vehicles they're torching. we have this in america too and our schools, our universities are churning out these little woke activists and little believers that behave just like this, it's shameful our tax dollars are used for that cause. >>emily: thankfully the legislation in the uk passed will lead to more consequences tamped down on this. >>harris: i don't think they care, it's street credit card.
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credit card cred -- street -- cred and they're to the going to be if prison for a decade. it speaking to the educational foundation for some people to think they actually can make a difference by spray painting the ferrari store. i'm not saying as individuals we can't change the world, i'm just wondering if it comes from a can of paint from home depot. >>kayleigh: we cover this daily is do these people have jobs? they must not. but to your point, i was reading some of these more extreme groups the washington post was saying one blocked a man from getting his partner to the hospital, another one a mom had a disabled child trying to get her to school and blocked her. you're exactly right to hit where you have that there are real world consequences. >>emily: i wonder too in that moment, will they be held responsible that motorist that engages in assault. who's to say what they're trying to do to get forward and showing a tussle of a woman grabbing a
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banner and going to be arrested for assault and is the law so backwards for us on common sense and 100% get that poor person to the hospital and get the protesters out of there. >>kayleigh: yep. >>emily: more outnumbered next.
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♪ >>kayleigh: last but not least f you could pick what your last meal would be. a new study finds nearly two in three americans would choose steak. with the majority being men who are saying that. but what would the outnumbered team pick? emily? >>emily: i love steak as a final meal. i'd add to that my father's pasta, my uncle's sauteed vegetables and my mom's birthday cake and family wine and followed by lair yet coffee with cream. >>harris: how long would it take to eat that? >>emily: i eat pretty fast.
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>>kayleigh: sean. >>sean: i'm steak like two-thirds and sushi and ice, ice cold bear. >>kayleigh: lisa. >>lisa: i would also choose steak, rib buy, french fries, a dirty martini. if you're going out go out fat and happy and would have all the calories, all the drinks, all the sweets as well. maybe chocolate chip cookies. might as hell get hammered. >>sean: key lime pie. >>lisa: just give it all to me. if i'm going out, might as well in a blaze of glory. >>kayleigh: i wanted wine, i want pizza hut and cold stone and not wanting a steak house meal but got to go back to the basics and these are indeed the basics. i was surprised about steak and
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thought it'd be a carbohydrate for the top choice. >>harris: ecoactivist for this. they all want to get rid of the rest of us for eating stage >>lisa: i'd have french fries and there's carbs in the mix. then pizza. >>kayleigh: got to get deserts in there too. got to be on time for america reports today. thanks to everyone. don't forget to dvr the show. . or

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