tv FOX and Friends Sunday FOX News November 13, 2022 4:00am-5:00am PST
4:00 am
serious allergic reactions and an increased risk of infections, or a lower ability to fight them, may occur. tell your doctor if you have an infection or symptoms, had a vaccine or plan to. ♪nothing is everything♪ now's the time to ask your doctor about skyrizi, the number one dermatologist prescribed biologic. learn how abbvie could help you save. ♪. pete: rachel is digging this tune. her body language. a little sway. port canaveral, florida. it's a good song. sun's rising. now you're out of port canaveral. you're stuck with will.
4:01 am
[laughter]. will: funny thing is i was looking over on the screen, i want to be on a cruise. pete: doesn't that look nice? will: i'm sitting here. good morning. rachel: i don't want to be on a cruise ship. i like to be in florida. pete: it is. it looks beautiful in there. we hope lots of folks in florida are tuning in across the country, we have three more hours on the sunday morning. still veteran's day weekend. great vets joining us this morning. had a great event. i moved from new jersey to tennessee. i went to colton community church in new jersey. had an awesome community vets event. rachel: do that every year? pete: do it most years. reflective what communities do across the country. a lot of patriots in new jersey. they hide out but they are there. rachel: they come together at pete's church. pete: it was a great day for everybody. rachel: taking time after a hard day's work to be with the old church community. pete: by the way the pastor there will be featured in the
4:02 am
next "fox nation" series i'm doing called the life of jesus. we went together to israel for 10 days, following the life of jesus coming out of christmas. rachel: he didn't take us. will: we all three stayed up late. you had wonderful spiritual moment giving a speech. rachel: young america's foundation. pete: you told me look at you, you're running down to d.c.? rachel: you were talking to veterans. i was also talking about freedom to the young americas foundation. pete: very cool. what was the subject of your talk? rachel: i talked about the chinacation of america. i talked about the biggest threat to our freedom. will: i stayed up late as well, watching the longhorns lose to tcu. we all have our priorities. rachel: we're trying to save the world, pete, will just wants to talk about sports. pete: no, he is saving the world in his own way. he wants to save texas. will: i turned down to watch
4:03 am
ufc. i turned down a invitation to go to ufc. had to go to bed. another buddy had a birthday party but i stayed home and i watched longhorns. rachel: will can't even save hess fantasy football. pete: no, 0-9, lords of the plains. he has another shot. rachel: is that the name of your team? will: yeah. real quick, lord of the plains is it reference to the comanche empire in the end didn't go so well. i should have known when i picked the lord of the plains. rachel: pick the tight ends. pete: the tight ends are rolling this year. we have news. we'll yet to it right now. overnight this is tough one, fox news projects democrat senator catherine cortez masto will keep her seat in nevada. >> that will give the democrats control of the senate since
4:04 am
vice president kamala harris is the tie breaking vote. rachel: alexandria hoff joins us. reporter: this was a race without a whole lot of showmanship there was no debate. there is this understanding it could come down to nevada and it did. democratic incumbent democrat catherine cortez-masto is projected to keep her seat in the silver state, defeating republican challenger and former state attorney general adam laxalt. this ultratight competition took four days to decide. over 75% of voters utilized early or absentee voting there. with this win, vice president harris serves at tiebreaker in the senate. whether or not she will have to will be determined by runoff election in georgia. that takes place december 6, voters once again decide between republican washing walk and democratic senator rafael warnock. the balance of power remains in the democrats. last night from cambodia, president biden shared this. president biden: tell you what, congratulations to senator
4:05 am
schumer we have majority again. focusing on georgia. i'm not surprised by the turnout. i'm incredibly pleased. reporter: in the house the republicans are poised to secure a 218 majority. they need seven more races to do so. almost two dozen have yet to be called. governors race in arizona still in limbo as the vote count continues. republican kari lake trails democrat hate key hobbs by more than 34,000 votes right now. state wide. 260,000 ballots to be published. pete: 268,000 still need to be processed in arizona. will: so that stat, that stat a stunning stat, buried in her report, nevada called in favor of the democrat candidate catherine cortez masto, 75% of the vote early or mail-in balloting, a stunning stat. okay, so you mentioned this earlier. most of the world doesn't
4:06 am
conduct elections the way we now embraced. pete: they're not foolish enough to. will: this is covid movement retained. we're still voting still not on election day, not in person. we're moving to massive mail-in balloting, really the bulk of our election. not yet but we're on the path to that. rachel: 100%. will: when critics we suggest that might not be healthiest way to conduct democracy, you don't want more people voting? you don't want as much of your populace taking place i would ask this in return f we decided you know what we'll do right now, we'll do internet voting, all right? all you have to click on to a website and click. is that where we're headed? rachel: probably. pete: that is where they want. rachel: they would love that. will: i'm here to tell you that, more doesn't necessarily mean healthy. everybody voting. you think everybody is invested, is everyone familiar with the candidates? do they know the issues? i think that there is a minimal
4:07 am
effort in going to the poll, that reflect as certain level of investment. pete: investment. will: skin in the game. will: i think we're going to ask ourselves some point not-too-distant future. what is the threshold of investment? a click? because we're headed there. rachel: this idea we would vote months in advance without the same information when we go to the polls. you recall with, just in 2020, how many people voted before they found out about the hunter biden laptop. now granted media and big tech suppressed that story, a very important story as we know, as our president is about to meet with xi xinping and chinese intelligence knows exactly what is on the laptop even if some americans at that time didn't but that said, you know, there were still, the number one google search was how do i change my vote right after that story came out, even though it was suppressed, people got it. people should go in with the same information.
4:08 am
i believe that it is not about necessarily putting in the effort, i think there is just a beautiful, civic, unity moment, we talk about how divided we are, have a national holiday on election day. let's let people, as you said yesterday, vote the whole weekend and then up to election day, the weekend before. let's use paper ballots. let's have i.d. cards like they do in mexico and every other country takes their election seriously. let's have paper ballots to track it, to feel confident about it, feel confident in our democracy. pete: you're right. when i was deployed to iraq, our job was to secure elections in iraq. people were trying to blow up polling stations. al qaeda tried to blow up polling. the purple finger? i voted once. i can prove i voted already. if i got ink on my finger i can't vote again. simple is better when it comes
4:09 am
to elections. the civic engagement of that moment is really significant. will, you're not saying i want less people to vote. that is not the point. will: no. pete: what you're saying voting should not be as simple as ordering a amazon package. there is a lot more at stake what you should be considering. whether its weekend all go together to the polls, all learn together what the result is, most importantly, have faith in that result. you want to see a threat to democracy? it is what we're watching in arizona right now. as we don't know whether people are cheating or not. but all i know is there are 265,000ballots still haven't been counted. it is sunday. is it cut for kari lake, will it not? katie hobbs is in charge of the elections there. hopefully it is aboveboard. charlie kirk says so far it looks like it is. he pays very close attention. looks like the next few dumps of ballots will be the test.
4:10 am
if kari lake can go into arizona fix the election system i think could about give us hope, republicans go on the offense to make this simple. simple is better. it means faith in the system. rachel: those changes will have to be done very soon. the reason i say that, there is new generation of people voting who think this is normal. pete: the new normal. rachel: think this is normal, the way it is done. if you wait 10 years to draw the, they will say, voter suppression. so i just think, i just think you're right -- pete: i'm for the purple finger. i'm done. purple finker. >> i'm not opposed to that. will: i'm thinking about, i'm thinking about a lot of things. i'm thinking about man on the street jesse watters does, you ask percentage of american people to name the vice president of the united states, what do you think the percentage of people name the vice president of united states. rachel: but they still have right to vote. will: i'm not taking everybody's right to vote away. i want everybody to have the right to vote. i want you to understand what
4:11 am
you're voting for. pete: here is the ballot, fill it out in front of me. here is the cheat sheet who you should be voting for. you're done? i've been watching. good job. give me your ballot. i hand it in. >> that is ballot harvesting. will: racist or the good guy? rachel: totally. pete: that is how machine politics works. rachel: what i told you last week with young fox interns tried to vote for the first time in new york city, they said, is this your address right here? come on. will: move to this story. i think it is the cover of the "new york post," it is here. cowardly lion. broadway boots, language interterp from the hit show. pete: any other reason they booted him? will: he filed suit. pete: because he is white. will: "the lion king," reportedly inappropriate to have a white sign language interpreter. rachel: the director sent email to the sign language interpreters, yes, here is what
4:12 am
she said. the majority of characters in "the lion king" are black actors. the content takes place in africa. through an amazing asl performer, is not a black person and therefore should not be representing "lion king." never mind that there are white people from africa. here is the deal. he is suing. i really hopes he sues the pants off of this production. i don't think anything else will change the trajectory we're on. pete: sounds like racial discrimination to me. so that was an e-mail sent from the show itself. rachel: correct. pete: "the lion king," to the asl, the sign language interpreters. here is the an email obtained by "new york post" from the director of asl to keith juan and christina mostly, two interpreters with sign language. they're embarrassed by this. with great embarassment and apologies i'm asking you both to please back out of interpreting
4:13 am
the show for us on sunday, april 24th. i don't see any other way out of this. it seems like the best solution. so, the sign language group was asking these folks, we got pressure because you're white. we don't have a better solution, rather than fighting back that is super racist. rachel: sure. pete: they asked them to give in. thankfully the sign language interpreter is fighting back. will: his name keith manage he doesn't matter whether i'm white or black this is latetant. people experiencing this woe step forward. pete: one of the stories super straight forward but yet revealing of the fact that apparently, there are large groups of people that believe it's okay to be racist in one direction. will: they don't believe it is racist. pete: even more so. they don't believe it is racist to be racist in one direction. will: right. rachel: what is interesting about the email to me that, or
4:14 am
the statement put out by the interpreters he said i wish other people who experienced this would step forward and join me. who was it that we had on the show who said, oh, lieutenant scheller. pete: colonel sheller. >> stepped forward one guy calling out in afghanistan he was expecting to have a bunch of other people join him. he was alone. that is the bigger story in this, many people are suffering from these kinds of racist policies whether it's in their work place, or wherever, and they just stay silent. the more people speak up, the more frankly that people sue, frankly money talks we'll not see a change in this culture. it will continue to go in that direction. will: i think he has a case. i think he has a case. rachel: maybe depends on the judge he gets, fox news alert. tragedy strikes at a dallas airshow. six people are feared dead after a pair of world war ii era planes crash into each other.
4:15 am
rachel: what started as commemoration for veterans ended in horror. pete: marianne after getter with the details. reporter: six people are feared dead after the midair crash yesterday. we warn you some may find the following video disturbing. two historic world war ii planes, a boeing b-17 flying fortress, bell p-17f king coke bra plane crashed into each other at the wings over dallas show. the airshow honoring veterans day, attracting thousands throughout the weekend. the crash causing a large fire and sending plumes of black smoke into the sky. officials say only volunteers with years of experience in the antique planes were onboard at the time of the crash. witnesses saying they thought the explosion was part of the show before realizing the horror of what took place. >> then shocked. can't even tell you what was going through my mind. i saw the black smoke, couldn't believe what i was seeing.
4:16 am
reporter: two highways were closed after debris from the crash fell. investigation into the crash is underway. the national transportation safety board is launching a go team after a mid-air collision between boeing b-17 p and p-17f. the b-17 was a cornerstone of the united states aerial strength during world war ii but most were scrapped after the war. the p-63 was a favored fighter plane of the soviet forces. the airshow featuring more than 40 world war ii era planes. the transportation safety board investigators are expected to arrive on scene today. will, pete, rachel. will: awful story. thank you so much, marianne. let's turn to a few additional headlines. one california hospital is grappling with nearly 1700 cases of the flu since september. flu and respiratory illness patients overwhelmingly the
4:17 am
california system where some hospitals are using outflow tents outside of emergency rooms. 9% of emergency roop patients in san diego had flu-like systems. according to county officials that is up 2% from last week. president biden currently making his way to indonesia for the g20 summit. the president had a trilateral meeting with the leaders of japan and south korea warning about north korea's provocations. president biden: for years they're engaged in trilateral cooperation on shared ten for the for the nuclear, missile threats north korea poses to our people. will: tomorrow the president will sit down for a highly anticipated meeting with chinese leader xi xinping on the sidelines of the g20 summit. "new york times" columnist david brookes triggering new york congresswoman alexandria ocasio-cortez with his latest column. he calls out the green new deal, writing, the green new deal is not a legislative package but a cotton candy media concoction.
4:18 am
aoc responding on twitter. perhaps david brooks should read the legislation. insulting referring to it as cotton candy. he wants me to be trump but i'm not. those are the headlines. rachel: what? pete: what is that? will: the column was brooks suggesting that both trump and the far left had been rejected in the midterm elections. i think the term he used the fever is broken. by saying so he equated in her mind aoc to trump. pete: i figured david brooks had to get something in against trump. rachel: to take a swipe at aoc. pete: exactly right. rachel: by the way he is totally wrong. his analysis is wrong. this climate tour and the doubling down on climate policies that joe biden is doing right now overseas and domestically, you know, know committing to all kinds of resources to it. she is right, she was right about that bill. all right.
4:19 am
up next, a ballot measure that requires doctors to perform life-saving care on infants who survive abortions fails in montana. the fight for life as abortion is embraced more than ever. pete: a lot of states where it went the wrong way. plus a new study claims mask mandates in schools help the fight against structural racism. the wokeness published in a medical journal coming up. ♪
4:20 am
>> tech: when you get a chip in your windshield... trust safelite. ♪ upbeat, catchy music ♪ >> tech vo: this couple counts on their suv... as they travel for their small business. so when they got a chip in their windshield... they brought it to safelite... for a same-day in-shop repair. we repaired the chip right away. and with their insurance, it was no cost to them. >> woman: really? >> tech vo: plus, to protect their glass, we installed new wipers too. that's service the way you need it. >> singers: ♪ safelite repair, safelite replace. ♪ ("this little light of mine") - [narrator] in the world's poorest places, they're shunned, outcast, living in pain. you can reach out and change the life of a suffering child right now. a surgery that takes as little as 45 minutes
4:21 am
and your act of love can change a child's life forever. please call or visit operationsmile.org now. thousands of children are waiting. if you run a small business, you need the most from every investment. that's why comcast business gives you more. more innovation... with our new gig-speed wi-fi, plus unlimited data.
4:22 am
more speed... from the largest, fastest, reliable network... and more savings- up to 60% a year with comcast business mobile. all from the company that powers more businesses than any other provider. get started with fast speeds and advanced security for $49.99 a month for 12 months. plus ask how to get up to a $750 prepaid card with a qualifying bundle. well, we fell in love through gaming. but now the internet lags and it throws the whole thing off. when did you first discover this lag? i signed us up for t-mobile home internet. ugh!
4:23 am
but, we found other interests. i guess we have. [both] finch! let's go! oh yeah! it's not the same. what could you do to solve the problem? we could get xfinity? that's actually super adult of you to suggest. i can't wait to squad up. i love it when you talk nerdy to me. guy, guys, guys, we're still in session. and i don't know what the heck you're talking about. ♪. rachel: pro-life advocates fear society is embracing abortion more than ever. this after voters in montana reject a law that would have required doctors to perform life heavy saving care on infants who survive abortions or who are born prematurely. live action president, the author of fighting for life, lyle are rose joins us now. leila, great to have you on our show. this bill was passing absolutely astounding to so many pro-lifers. overall there were other
4:24 am
initiatives you talked about were surprised went in the pro-choice direction. what is the message to pro-lifers. what are the lessons from this election for the movement? >> thanks, rachel. i think the biggest lesson is that this is a resource war, especially when these are questions that are direct questions that are before the voters. in this election the pro-abortion side spent over $400 million, million, almost half a billion dollars in direct misinformation campaigns, lying to voters about what these referendums would actually do. the pro-life side in comparison spent, the gop spent $11 million total on pro-life messaging. so the outspending was over 35 to 1 from the pro-abortion side than the pro-life side. the pro-life message is winning message, if people have access to it if people hear it. we need resources to keep up with the other side. that is what the future fights
4:25 am
are going to be. rachel: 400 million to 11 million. that is not counting big tech and the way they weigh in on these issues with young women as well. i guess, leila the hope was silence was on the side of the pro-life movement. as more young woman saw their babe i about, met the baby in incredible 4-d ultrasounds, children met their siblings these ways that we would have a pro-life generation. you say there is more work to do in the culture and also in spending? >> yes, exactly. the science is on our side. we know it's a baby. the pro-life message polls very well. i mean when voters are asked as an example to support the heartbeat law to say they oppose abortion when the baby's heart to be detected just three to five weeks, the most americans actually support the "heartbeat bill." so it really depends on how the voters hear the message. pro-abortion side lied about
4:26 am
what these referendums actually did. you mentioned montana. people were told that women wouldn't get health care, would not be able to have medical care. that babies that were just being given palliative care, babies that were born alive and had survived you know, terrible feet tall diagnoses, that somehow they wouldn't be able to get proper care if the law went into effect, pro-life law. these were outright laws about the law. a lot would save babies who survived abortion attempts f they're hearing the lies, five, 10, 15 times, not hearing any truth about the pro-life side, people may vote the other way. we have to double down on education which is what live action focuses on. we reach people, about 15 million people a week, now, rachel. we need to double and triple that in years to come. rachel: you have done a great job stepping foot into the culture. i saw you were a guest on dr. phil's. seeing pro-life voices in those kind of venues is really
4:27 am
powerful. you're great the way you handled that. here is a state from the group compassion for montana families. montanans demand the right to make private health care decisions for ourselves with our families with the help of trusted medical teams and without interference from politicians. that is what they say about the bill. you and i both met many people who have survive it is really ad this. anyway, i certainly would take n of pro-roe v. wade. thank you, lila for joining us this. >> thank you, rachel. rachel: of course. you can catch my interview with lila rose. it is tucked away in my podcast library. you can also catch sean and i talking about the midterms that happened this week and our take on what happened. thank you very much, lila. coming up peach state payday.
4:28 am
4:30 am
what's it like shopping on carvana? it's a car buying process that lets you shop tens of thousands of cars 100% online so you can buy, sell or even trade your car from anywhere it's getting as soon as next day delivery or picking your new ride up at one of our sleek car vending machines. and it's the comfort of a seven day return policy to make sure it fits your life. because at carvana, we take joy in making every customer well happy. carvana will drive you happy.
4:32 am
♪. pete: all eyes turn to georgia as the runoff between senator warnock and herschel walker could determine whether vice president harris becomes the senate tiebreaker. millions being poured into the runoff despite a staggering $262 million already spent on the race. here with more on what's driving georgia toward being a blue state, fox news contributor and georgia native joey jones. >> i would say georgia is driving towards being a purple state. pete: i read what was in the
4:33 am
teleprompter. >> our legislature got stronger. the state is a very red state. stacy abrams legacy the machine she created to get the votes harvesting. it is not technically vote harvesting. the act of going backdoor to door making people sure you got registered voted durr voting season. the machine she built republicans are struggling up to. pete: trending in some ways towards a purple state. is that in part because demographics moved in? talk to me. >> the donor demographics have changed. hollywood moved into georgia, in 2016 or 2018, 60% of american film and television was filmed in georgia. tricounty area south of atlanta, area around the airport, netflix, amc, all the marvel movies from captain america two through a ven
4:34 am
"avengers: endgame." rafael warnock will get money all day long because hollywood is in the mail. pete: blue dot in atlanta gotten bigger. >> exactly right. the irony there, not just tremendous amount more blue voters but there is a lot more resources from out-of-state. pete: blue money. what is the prediction on the runoff? >> last night's news changes thing. people don't feel the urgency. i hope republicans could a less, of 50-50 and 51-49. joe manchin doesn't sell his own state out a lot of money doesn't get spent over one vote. there are still moderate senators to talk to. pete: good point. this will determine whether manchin sets prerogatives vis-a-vis. >> or maybe mark kelly sees writing on the wall.
4:35 am
a lot of senate races that were close. was i was on this network "fox & friends" four months ago, interviewing newt gingrich another georgia has the pulse. looks like we got the house. senate is probably not there. that was the beginning of republicans saying no we'll get the senate. this has been a four-month window over entire election window, two years we believed the senate was ours to get. that didn't come to fruition. we need to figure out what we did wrong. georgia, talking very red legislature. one of the most popular governors in the country. ron desantis gets credit for opening up florida. georgia never closed. governor kemp done a lot of good things. what i hope, writing on the wall show it, see governor kemp and donald trump on the same stage go vote for herschel walker f the republicans can capture any unity in the party they need, maybe georgia is the place to do it. pete: if that can happen potentially herschel walker and joey jones.
4:36 am
real quick, almost out of time, veterans day service. thank you for your service. >> to all the veterans, don't be passive this is live force living. we lost guys and gals and owe it to them live our life well. military brings and makes us a better person. we talk about the wokeness, changing of standards. don't get vindictive. don't get negative toward the later, younger generation right now. mentor folks. our country invested in you, gave you the opportunity to serve it. bring that back to your community. pete: you're a living example of that. joey jones. by the way if you want more of him, "the big sunday show" at 5:00 p.m. with a great crew there. joey, good to see you. >> yes, sir. pete: coming up harris faulkner will be live in studio. but first, ahead of joe biden's meeting with chinese president xi xinping tomorrow, will and i go off the wall with some of the communist party's
4:37 am
4:38 am
- [female narrator] they line up by the thousands. each one with a story that breaks your heart. like ravette... every step, brought her pain. their only hope: mercy ships. the largest floating civilian hospital in the world. bringing free surgeries to people who have no other hope. $19 a month will help provide urgently needed surgery for so many still suffering. so don't wait, call the number on your screen. or donate at mercyships.org.
4:39 am
i started screening for colon cancer because of my late husband jay. i wish he could have seen our daughter ellie get married, on the best day of her life. but colon cancer took him from us, like it's taken so many others. that's why i've made it my mission to talk about getting screened and ask people to share their reasons why. i screen for my growing family. being with them means everything to me. i screen for my girls. they're always surprising me. i screen for my son. i'm his biggest fan. if you're 45 or older and at average risk, it's time to screen. today, there are more screening options than ever before, including cologuard. cologuard is noninvasive and finds 92% of colon cancers, even in early stages. it's not for those at high risk. false positive and negative results may occur. ask your provider if cologuard is right for you. everyone has a reason to screen for colon cancer.
4:40 am
if you're 45 or older, get started at missiontoscreen.com ♪. will: president biden is preparing to meet with chinese president xi xinping tomorrow at the g20 summit and covid-19 and its origins is one of the most pressing issues here at home. pete: presses issue here at home. probably won't even come up when
4:41 am
he meets with xi xinping. there is a lot more shady business happening overseas in the communist regime in china. let's go off the wall to see a few. hopefully joe biden is talking to his good buddy xi xinping. you might remember this in october, will. this is at the third congress that he provided over and something happened. will: this is the former chinese leader hu jintao being escorted out surrounded by security guards. escorted out somewhat to his confusion of that third congress. what most people think this represents, people, is the final consolidation of power for xi xinping. pete: there may not be another congress if it is a box checking exercise for xi xinping. seemed like he had been critical. you can't be critical hauled off and not been seen or heard from since. and which means, xi xinping has a grip on power for as long as he wants. not unlike the soviet union. will: intrigue in communist, authoritarian government is
4:42 am
within the palace walls. the factions within. if you go outside the palace walls you start to look at things like this. the way citizens are kept in check. the way citizens are kept in control and here we are, 2 1/2 years later. you have to think covid-19 isn't about a pandemic. it is about control. pete: it is almost staggering to think, 2 1/2 years later as you said, china has maintained the covid zero policy which is they don't want a single transmission. as a result they're willing to lock their citizens down indefinitely with limited food and water, inability to travel, up and until this day. there have been some protests will. just like that leader that was hauled out of the congress, the congress, if you protest, you're putting your own life in your hands. will: that is china's treatment much its citizens and rivals at home. how is it treating its rivals on the world stage. this is where you have to pay a bit more attention. this is where, pete, my
4:43 am
attention immediately focuses this is some of china's actions in foreign policy. buying u.s. farmland, 191-acres owned by chinese companies f you're a chinese companies you're directly connected to the chinese communist party. pete: absolutely. will: it is just the way it works and most concerning to me, pete, for example, buying a ton of acres in north dakota, not far from a u.s. air force base. pete: that is not the only place where they bought farmland, significant land near u.s. military installations as if we shouldn't be raising alarm bells about that. whether farming or mining, china is diversing its sources and increasing its leverage over us. you own land in the united states, you have leverage and the communist chinese know that. will: this has always been the real point of contention. maybe we'll find out with joe biden in his meetings with xi xinping, maybe perhaps a red line, threats against taiwan. this has always been, china maintains chinese territory.
4:44 am
pete: they maintain to this day, a one china policy. there is a showdown looming. and china has upgraded their military now. under xi xinping significantly for over a decade. that include building a nuclear arsenal that is far more capable, far more targeted just like with vladmir putin. why are we in some ways limited with our options there? because of the nuclear umbrella. xi xinping knows the same thing. the willingness to potentially use puts america on our heels. will: back to america for a moment, talking about things like the farmland. it is always type of influence china can exert overseas i think is the most concerning. including capitalist system with companies like disney or the nba. not just our greed, for that matter, our greed, capitalism, the focus of freedom on the economy a conduit of china but our freedom. look at this they set up chinese police stations across the globe. lower east side of manhattan,
4:45 am
designed to control chinese nationals living overseas. pete: they wouldn't call them police stations. they call them service stations he what they call them to provide resources to citizens living abroad. what they really are the ability to monitor, oversea actions of chinese nationals. like our cia had forward-deployed locations around the globe because we're the world's superpower, china is trying to do the same thing earnings 3of those police stations across the globe. how they exert influence on the world stage. how about cornering lithium market in everyone of our batteries, phones, computers, they control 60%. they are investing just like the farmland, they are investing overseas. lithium triangle, south america, buying up mining companies. pete: part of belt and road initiative. to intertwine economies, depend on them for debt and leverage
4:46 am
against us. as our 308 tish shuns, gavin newsom every car has to be electric dependent on a battery. china knows where we get them from, and it is them. that increases their leverage around the world. will: some of what china is doing needs to be paid attention to. we hope our president of the united states is prepared when he meets with xi xinping. pete: hope is not a strategy. hope. will: rachel, over to you. rachel: boy, that was very informative. making us more dependent on china every single day. thank you, guys. will: thank you. rachel: now to a couple headlines. nike cofounder phil knight lamenting the crime crisis that has taken over the his home town of portland, oregon. watch this. >> how did we go to the portland of my childhood to the portland of today, and i think the simple answer is leadership. the leadership has led to that terrible situation. it's a state i love. i hate to see what is happening to it. >> statewide fbi data shows homicide in oregon rose 89% and
4:47 am
motor vehicle theft increasing 30%. what are the odds of this? julian lennon, john's son unexpectedly runs into his old fan mate paul mccartney at the airport. lennon sharing photos of his uncle paul on twitter. mccartney holding up his home, show lennon's new album, fittingly called jude. it was written by mccartney as a tribute to julian as a child. those are the headlines. turn to chief meteorologist rick reichmuth for the fox weather forecast. rick i was on the weatherman umbrella site where you were telling veterans to put their stories or tell their stories. i started to cry. it is amazing how many people went there, told their stories, how powerful they were.
4:48 am
rick: we sent out email to all our customers, tell us the stories of memories of vets in your life and how you appreciate the vets. we all wish our veterans a happy veterans day. grateful for them. we got hundreds of responses of people telling stories about families, parents, spouses, their children. sacrifices they may have had. they made it all so much clearer, the sacrifice not just of the individuals who go and serve but the families and how it has such generational impact, also for really providing as you land of opportunity. it is all on the social channel. go to instagram. you can read the stories. there are little highlights they post there. they stay there forever. same with facebook. it is really beautiful. really quick weather, guys, transition to this. cold air settling in this week. entire country below average temps. that will stick with us all the way until thanksgiving. get ready, winter is here. get out winter coats today. you will need them for a long period here. rachel, thanks for bringing that
4:49 am
up. rachel: of course. it was awesome. thank you, rick. >> you bet. rachel: a medical journal claims mask man in school help fight, get this structural racism, really. we'll discuss the impact of wokeness hitting the medical field next. in 99% of people over 50. and it could strike at any time. think you're not at risk? wake up. because shingles could wake up in you. if you're over 50, talk to your doctor or pharmacist about shingles prevention. hi, i'm susan, i've lost 84 pounds on golo and i've kept it off for a year. i had spent so much money on other products that when i saw the commercial for golo, the price was so much cheaper and i thought, "boy, this might not work but why not try it?" it is amazing and it works really well.
4:53 am
will: the "new england journal of medicine" released a study that school mask mandates stop racism. we believe universal masking may be especially useful for mitigating effects of structural racism in schools, including potential deepening of educational inequities. here to react, "new york post" columnist karol markowicz. i will ask you a open question, your reaction. >> it is interesting, sort of a throw-away line in this study. it does not talk about structural racism throughout, it mentions it quickly in the summary, almost like catnip for "the new york times" and leftist media to pick it up, look is there anything masking can't do? if it stops structural racism, maybe it fights climate change. maybe help with the war in ukraine. anything is possible. we know for sure masking did absolutely nothing to stop the
4:54 am
covid spread in this study or the world. will: so my understanding, that they believe, we'll read this from the findings, school districts can use findings to develop equitable mitigation plans in anticipation after covid-19 wave. during the 2022-23 school year. they're making argument covid-19 hits black, brown, poor families harder. mask everyone and you help fight structural racism. >> sure except the again the study did not find masking helped whatsoever. that does not exist in the paper. the thing i get asked a lot why do you still care about this? why are you still talking about masking going into 2023? my question why are they making studies up almost in 2023? the reason is because they want to bring back masking. i live in florida, i'm not worried about my governor reimplementing masking in schools. if you live in a state with a democratic governor you should be worried. this is the study is the thing they will use to bring back
4:55 am
masking for all kids in the state. there is concern this shoddy science appears not on salon.com but the "new england journal of medicine." we used to take this kind of thing seriously. wokeness broken the medical establishment, health agencies, obviously the media who picks all of this up, and runs with it if it is true. will: three quick takeaways, as you said masking doesn't work. the whole thing is built upon a house of sand, foundation of sand. structural racism as is climate change to your point is catch-all bucket you can pour anything. karol markowicz, you are a new york refugee for these exact policies. you say you live in florida but you got there for a reason and this is one of those reasons. >> that is act absolutely right. will: karol markowicz, thanks for talking with us on this under morning. >> thank you. will: shannon bream is coming up next and on "fox & friends".
4:56 am
♪ ♪ where can you go for the latest must-haves... and every season's nice-to-haves? where can you get that perfect gift for dad... and hot cocoa mustaches for the kids? where can you lose track of time, all while saving time at the same time. lowe's, actually. it's the best place to get everything you need for the holidays.
4:57 am
♪ [christmas music] ♪ ♪ ♪ weathertech gift cards have the power to wow everyone on your holiday list. offering a variety of american made products. weathertech! nice! like floorliners... cargo liner... tablet holder... boot tray... cupfone... sink mat... pet feeding system... anti-fatigue comfortmat and more. order the weathertech gift card instantly for the perfect gift at weathertech.com meet leon the third... leon the second... and leon... the first of them all. three generations, who all bank differently with chase.
4:58 am
leon's saving up for his first set of wheels... nice try. really? this leon's paying for his paint job on the spot... and this leon, as a chase private client, he's in the south of france, taking out cash with no atm fees. that's because this family of leons has chase. actually, it's león. ooh la la! one bank for now. for later. for life. chase. make more of what's yours. >> tech: when you get a chip in your windshield... trust safelite. ♪ upbeat, catchy music ♪ >> tech vo: this couple counts on their suv...
4:59 am
as they travel for their small business. so when they got a chip in their windshield... they brought it to safelite... for a same-day in-shop repair. we repaired the chip right away. and with their insurance, it was no cost to them. >> woman: really? >> tech vo: plus, to protect their glass, we installed new wipers too. that's service the way you need it. >> singers: ♪ safelite repair, safelite replace. ♪
5:00 am
♪ ♪ i got my head out the sup rooe thing on my mind ♪ will: that was one of your -- [laughter] that's rachel saying, you lost me at sports. good morning and welcome to "fox & friends". [laughter] most commercial breaks go that way, don't they? pete: yeah. rachel: might as well bring the audience in on what happens. pete: when we were in the green room, we were discussing the world cup and allegiances by country. will: yes. pete: and, you know, when folks come to the united states if they're still cheering for country of origin as opposed to the united states, and we'd like to see a rally around the flag. will: yeah. as as a opposed to -- for example, if you come
122 Views
Uploaded by TV Archive on