tv Outnumbered FOX News November 15, 2022 9:00am-10:00am PST
9:00 am
>> the g.o.p. set the whole the g.o.p. election one hour from now. this is the party is not just one seat away from gaining control of the house of representatives. 13 races are still in play and republicans could get the one they need in the next couple of hours. house minority leader kevin mccarthy says that he will be of any for speaker, but is
9:01 am
already facing a challenge from andy biggs and there could be others. and i bet in "the wall street journal" is just as the party's need for unity now writing this "if republicans do not want mr. mccarthy to find another candidate who will run against amp and articulate a vision and process and hold a vote and they get behind to whoever wins and backroom plots to undermine the leadership or factional hostagetaking on this bill or that will play into the hands of opposition" in this, after all of our intro is "outnumbered" and you know who is joining me today my cohost harris faulkner and emily compagno, and joining is also as mercedes schlapp, and mark tepper. and it's a big deal mercedes just a little ways from now. and i couldn't agree more with "the wall street journal" and i have the privilege of speaking with lita mccarthy for a little bit and he has a clear vision. he has a plan. he has legislation he wants to pull forward and has oversight plans and if you can't get behind him, then tell me who?
9:02 am
because this conference if it's 218, 219, 220, we need unity and a contrast in a very clear contrast to what we are offering democrats. >> it's no current question it's been a tumultuous week for the republicans, there were and there's a lot of healthy conversations happening and with that being said lita mccarthy obviously is in a strong position. he's been able to unify the moderates greater freedom caucus meccas members as if you are saying he is presenting a bridge on top of that, the republicans won six house seats. they defeated six incumbent democrats. that is successful, and obviously it republicans wanted to see more of a victory but quite frankly, i think mccarthy has been able to be that unifying factor for both and i think you'll be able to government is gonna be tough that the same time, i think they're going to be able to move the party forward and look in investigations and asked how were going to stop t the bidens failed agenda and i think that's
9:03 am
gonna be a priority for future speaker mccarthy. >> and harris i think for republicans i think is important to have that unifying figure because you have brian fitzpatrick was up one end and then you have the greens over here and you have a very strong point come out from mccarthy that we can afford this kind of break and politics effectively have defections and they said that they voted for mccarthy but they are paraphrasing but if not i will will and deal will they have to find someone else they could bring someone who is not a member in other words. >> absolutely. >> harris faulkner: that is an option to do that. but i thought though that margie taylor stands on this was really taking a view at everything. 37,000 view but is not getting support from some who have supported all along lake matt gaetz of florida? i mean he certainly is in the "newsweek" has an interesting article about how he's turned on her because he doesn't appreciate the fact that she caved in and i guess from his
9:04 am
perspective. but she's looking at the bigger picture and this wasn't the red wave that republicans had hoped for. and now you have to show people that you can govern. and you've got to have something behind you and the wind at your back is some of the republican governors to made look for you to come in and help them. i think it's all hands on deck i don't think it's because you are in congress that you can't fly in any moment and go help out a fellow republican governor. and i said this on the air before, if it really is all hands on deck, that is gonna be a different vibe come 2024. you already know who you can count on. the kevin mccarthy, you correctly because you know all the details of this so well mercedes has picked up votes as he is run for things in the house. >> mercedes schlapp: yes, that's actually not historical bum remarkable right, and he works day and night to try and get republicans to the finish line. and i think that's in contrast to things are saying in the senate was mitch mcconnell obviously there is going to be my division.
9:05 am
using a lot of these senate republicans saying wait, hold on, let's get to the hurco washer race before we vote on the senate leadership component. and that is a fair argument to make and it is a fair argument considering that we left the senate. and considering that it looks for ways to the when the house. >> zero senate it won an obviously mitch mcconnell did move the money around or didn't go to places like arizona and help masters yet when to alaska we had to republicans senatorial candidates running against each other. >> i think you see more problems in the senate. >> there's no doubt and i want to get to that just a moment and emily just backing up our view is for a moment but today's conference well. so mccarthy means a majority of moments voted and he looks poised to get that. and just by way of comparison while paul ryan when he was a consensus candidate for speaker, he wants 43 counts of vos and nancy pelosi lost 42 so my point is you can have a consensus candidate is to lose the vote, so's voter loss it is not an
9:06 am
indictment of mccarthy, january is when you need to get to that to a demark so viewers understand the process. but the point of the senate is a strong one, if you've had senator marco rubio's come out and say this, we should not have a senate g.o.p. leadership until we have a clear explanation for why a 22 into campaign efforts failed. and until we have a clear understanding of the political policy directly for the g.o.p. senate moving forward those who agree with him a josh hawley, mike lee sandy loomis, lindsey graham, the list goes on they send it we should wait and see what happens with herschel walker because he could be a voting member. i think that's a crucial perspective that he is taking. and i think because in a mini conversation with average, people just like me since the election not the debbie is a and i agree with what they're writing. but average normal americans is even talking about there is an element of confusion. >> emily compagno: there is also an element for a need from the party to be cohesive and unified. not only messaging but in their approach. so that's i appreciate so much the senate's perspective because
9:07 am
he's not saying immediately that were doing this. he saying let's take a beat, wait for the results, and let's also assess what habits and develop the fare looking for it. and it's notable that many of the republican house candidates that they pick up their seat ones that at hertz with president biden a pass. i wonder what moving forward just musing here, as a strategy, as we hoped to grind to a halt president biden's horribly divisive and backtracking policies they do no service to americans that there still an element of working with an collaboration anchor memory and positivity that needs to be a motive from congress here. they heard the purse strings but they do so professionally with the average american and mine. so that is an important thing to know and no matter what happens that the contentiousness is not something to hold onto from the g.o.p. because voters need to see that we are aligned and that we have this policy that favors than that is in the best interest and is not cluttered or confused by the media is picking up on some type of fractionating, or civil war. that will only do us a deep
9:08 am
service and take us back. >> i couldn't agree more the media will come and that a vulture when they see the sights happening. mark, talking about the other side of the mile nancy pelosi we all wait with bated breath to see what her next move is. political saying this that biden had a conversation with her and i said that i hope you stick, biden told pelosi and what is that mean? [laughter] >> this is how this man talks. in a phone call after congratulating her on her caucuses unexpected victory and enacting her about her husband and the democrats familiar with the democrats and pelosi interjected in the hope but her postal indications and biting continues to say that i know it is family first but i host you stick. and he'd if she defected that. >> mark tepper: i think both parties can kind of agree that, we'll want to see some younger, fresher faces. and as a good time to kind of reassess who the key players are. and what your game plan is. so whether you're republican or democrat it really doesn't
9:09 am
matter because it is time to reassess. and, you can say that maybe the democrats can use this as a wake-up call, or the republicans because they didn't want as macy's in a house and then when the senate. but this potentially is a way for both parties to reassess and when we step back and look at things at a 30,000-foot view of the talk of a normal americans may be the biggest winner here out of all of this that is happening right now is that normal american. >> write the voters. i mean maybe 10% of the people on the far left, and maybe 5% of people are in the fireeye of 80% does he feel in the middle of the gridlock in congress forces everyone to move closer to the center and actually compromise. >> good luck with that [laughter] i don't think compromises in the horizon. >> harris faulkner: biden already said he is canada's things differently knowing things ended and he said nothing. so i don't know he's going to be two introspective? >> or whatever happens over the next few years is out the
9:10 am
president biden and they feel like they have demanded to lead but we all wish them luck and best in america. coming up the man behind the collapse of a cryptocurrency giant was also a democrat medic a donor. a big mega donor. any file for bankruptcy just days after the midterms and more in his connections to president biden's party next. president biden's party next. ♪ ♪
9:13 am
after my car accident, president biden's party next. ♪ ♪ i wondered what my case was worth. so i called the barnes firm. when that car hit my motorcycle, insurance wasn't fair. so i called the barnes firm. it was the best call i could've made. atat t bararnefirmrm, our r inry a attneysys wk hahard i could've made. atat t bararnefirmrm, to get you the best result possible. call us now and find out what your case could be worth. you u mit bebe sprisised ♪ the barnes firm injury attorneys ♪ ♪ call one eight hundred, eight million ♪ i was injured in a car crash. injury attorneys ♪ ♪ cai had no idea how much my case was worth.llion ♪ i called the barnes firm. when a truck hit my son, i had so many questions about his case. i called the barnes firm. it was the best call i could've made. your case is often worth more than insuran call the barnes firm to find out i could've made. what your case could be worth. we will help get you the best result possible. ♪ the barnes firm, injury attorneys
9:14 am
9:15 am
sam bateman founder of ftx filed a bankruptcy just days after the midterms and it turns out that he funneled millions of dollars to liberals and the far left. >> this is bigger than brady made off, but unlike many made off, who is getting rich off a ponzi scheme the democratic party was getting rich off of ftx. and ftx came onto the scene included 2019 and it spent $20 million to put jacob biden in the white house in 2020. and the guy running ftx the second biggest democratic donated the midterms after source of course spent $40 million to get democrats elected. in "the wall street journal" reports that ftx was cracking into customer's account using the funds for the stuff. and then when customers wanted to withdraw their money, a lot of it was gone. >> mercedes this is been what's called a classic bank run and there he used to be worth
9:16 am
north of $20 billion has now been declared bankruptcy and ftx and is the connection to the hedge fund of new u.s. criminal investigations and the question remains now as he donated almost $140 million to this democratic recipient is to be fair at independence as well and 92% were democratic candidates what is going to happen as these regulatory's investigations ensue? and what were the democrats do when it is their bank accounts or refuses donation nation? >> mercedes schlapp: you can see many of these democratic candidates get nervous and return some of their funds. and they're going to their funds back to -- or nonprofits because they don't want to get close to this guy. and now this founder, he basically said that he was giving -- he was a bipartisan giving to bipartisan candidates and that's obvious and that the case. i think the money trails but we need to follow here. we know democrats are famous for pushing like arabella advisors when they create the shell kind of companies and they pushed the money through there to find
9:17 am
candidates in the bit interesting to see where the money trail leads us, and how they are spending the customer funds and this is why an investigation is needed. in this case. with hopefully with the house majority coming in like that could ensue. kaylee would talk a lot about how the democratic party is the first to come to the table and to cry dark money. contributions and tech money, and it turns out i was always that they are the hypocritical recipients and most of it. they want with even their own party come of might because make no mistake the daily basis is far less of you to get in their headliners this year point "taking ftx ceo sam bateman's free money was already a controversial subject now is looking downright standardless" but democrats aren't speaking up so in the far left of your party is coming you out, there is some hypocrisy here. >> kayleigh mcenany: i was at the republican national committee will be recalling it over harvey weinstein either return the cash? but even "the daily beast" says that this is a little different because very rarely do you have
9:18 am
money itself and the sorts of it and how was obtained, the sows of the money coming under scrutiny is not just a corruption of the person who by all means that the money in a fair and aboveboard way. so i'm interested to see if there's money back and also if this guy's going to pledge $1 billion with the bd. for 2024 and he said that that was not a hard ceiling so that is just evaporated overnight from the offers. >> is such a great point between the difference in the legal and then ethical is that they will be folly for quite some time. >> kayleigh mcenany: charlie had some great breaking news reporting and fox business has been absolutely understood from the beginning you covered a lot of this in your last are what we should take away? >> harris faulkner: you know, i think you need to nail on the head mercedes. whether it he spent the money the democrats? i mean the democrats really hurt by this. and i don't know -- because my head is in a turnabout sandbank meant so much because he will figure it out, video-footer at the right time to figure how to do it the right way next time or
9:19 am
who do it differently we don't know he is a billionaire and he will roll like a billionaire. the democrats, they are dirty in this process. and you're right, they could give it to charity -- but what of the money is gone? but i think the light shines brightest on them because of the dark money pushback that they've always given. fascinated, want to know more and i say let's not take eyes off of it and people started to squirm and make sure you catch that on camera. >> attorney on the panels i will say to one of them that usually the government does have in the care of the money was spent. though, remains to be see if they hold their responsibility and accountability to say but here it is. we will find it somewhere, let's return it. >> harris faulkner: but i'm saying if it's gone if they really given it -- i mean i don't know if you can quiet back if you're feeding the hungry? but i do think his work finding out where the trail leads and where it got hot and i will be with some of the democrats. >> and other than so many
9:20 am
people being so disappointed financially know the gambling type, what say you mark? >> mark tepper: look, if you're one of those people was a crypto vest and you are defrauded, and you are a democrat you just voted democrat last tuesday, knowing where your money went and where it ended up how do you in two years go back to the balls and vote democrat? so i wonder how many people who have lost 67 figures in the crypto market and now going to rethink their mind-set with regards to how this all went down and how dark it was and how messy this all was. >> right, and i think you shine a light there many of cockroaches that were scattered so hopefully if there is illumination that comes out of this is to the betterment of the american people in the voter moving forward. [laughter] >> i live in new york so -- coming up with the tech company scaling back many silicon valley employees are losing their perks and they are not happy about it
9:25 am
♪ ♪ harris faulkner: what? is not even friday yet. welcome back. elon musk working from home and now is getting away from free lunches for employees who survived the chopping block on twitter's quarters in san francisco. he said that to dispense $30 million a year on food services and that "badge and record show peak occupancy was 25% average occupancy of the 10%" there are more people preparing breakfast and eating breakfast don't even bother serving dinner because there is
9:26 am
nobody in the building. but the move to rapid criticism for the form of twitter would've guessed? a democratic activist who tweeted "he fired three quarters of the employees and now he is planning to starve the rest of them? oh mercedes" >> this is worse than biting student loan forgiveness program. look harris, i think that it is a former woke company that is going broke in elon is trying to save it. and that is really the result of this. >> mercedes schlapp: were you talking about the fact that since offices francisco alone that hardly anybody was going to work and are spending a ton of money on the property itself and why not make these fundamental changes so i did come in the sink and he's making a statement and is trying to make sure that they going to make not going to make bankrupt but it's good to be painful in these twitter employees who are snowflakes can and do it so we welcome the
9:27 am
change we want to see twitter really become this platform for free speech and this platform to make sure that it actually can't survive when it's being mismanaged by a bunch of liberal, woke management types that are now gone. >> harris faulkner: so mark, this may be frugal of me but i want to be the first time but what happened to the 30 million of people who weren't eating the food? i'm hoping was feeding some people but he would be doing that but the previous exact what were they doing with that cash? >> mark tepper: good question. obviously you have a pale bit of staff. and whether people show their but not yet appear to steph and i hope the step of storing up to cook the food even though they have to actually cook no food. so, this whole complaint from these twitter employees is falling on deaf he is something anyone else feel sorry for them. i think these are some of the most entitled employees in the tech space right now. and, when you think about
9:28 am
everything elon is doing he's like the cpl of flight for different companies right now. and he is working 23 hours a day, he's busting his. >> harris faulkner: i think is 24 i think he sleeps in an oxygen chamber. next is what i think. >> mark tepper: to this mercedes point of this company going rogue they've lost money and they've had negative free cash going out for four consecutive quarters. i mean yes they are in a recession it may be a coming out or going back and but this company is in a recession at the struggling at a need class class costs revenues. >> harris faulkner: so emily's let's get to the snowflakes are mean these people still have jobs or make it work for home or whatever it is that they choose to do but why complain about food that they're not even eating? >> that's right that's why such a travesty anyone who owns a small business they know that overhead is this important think it's only right that you audit and say $50 million being spent going to waste with the addition
9:29 am
of food given us with questions and on the san francisco? especially since there's a lot of regulation on that sign on seattle realm eating kitchens has a dump therefore because the city wouldn't let them give it to the homeless. but back when i was a practicing attorney in san francisco i would literally visit my friends at google to enjoy the free salmon lunches. we went all the time, it was fine because it was allowed and we would hang out and enjoy it. literally, it was like a mission to start mail every day with a cupcake tears and everything. so, my point is that the golden era of that tech bubble is not only stale but it is so outdated that it is also a fantasy. so for those tech workers to hang onto that and think that is real life rather than a golden era of what was, that was over ten years ago that we were doing that. so i think is important for the final point that the former ceo jack dorsey waited and he tweeted that said this is my bad, i grew the company too fast
9:30 am
it's not about elon musk, it's a constellation of factors a and i wish the employees would be a more forgiving and rational about it. >> i wonder if this thinking back interest to get the food and then go back to work from home? >> emily does make a really important point these big tech facilities is that going to a theme park some of them. and never been but i've read about them but the report to get that bloomberg were getting their days of rest so you sense on a monday and attitudes that you get the day off to relax from like quieting out biting story? and it's true. a computer that you get these lavish meals and evaluate the doing you compare that to steelworkers and first responders and the meat-packers into teachers who do their best and they show up for work and many of them when you look at them during the pandemic they don't get lavish meals or days of rest on tuesdays. >> harris faulkner: you mean they don't get the meat they packed. that's purchasing. >> exactly.
9:31 am
>> harris faulkner: coming up prince harr harry and meghan mao getting a prodigious human who writes a world whether that is to be famous again? no diameter is only an hour show. the same one, president obama once got both some people are questioning what exactly the royals did to deserve such an honor i just want to know they do. ♪ ♪
9:35 am
♪ ♪ >> it seems like the left just loves to love on themselves. this time prince mary and megan marco are picking up a prestigious human rights a world picking up the ripples of hope up there wondering what exactly they did to deserve this honor including robert f. kennedy jr. whose families charity gives out
9:36 am
the award. this edition it it to harris faulkner whose also -- and he said that he was baffled in the world about the decision. past winners include former president obama who faced a similar words, jersey when he got the nobel peace prize in 2009 just eight months after he took office. paris? >> harris faulkner: i just want to know what they do and i do understand that when, before they -- i don't know what do you call a vacation if you are in action and the throne, but when they walked away from that royal cachet i know that they did a lot. because their family does a lot. and they were attached to a whole mechanism that feeds and cares for people all around, not just the commonwealth but around the world. so since stepping away from that, and i know that they have a foundation and i don't know much about it but is it me because i don't understand what they're doing, because i have a lot of face time on you know celebrity platforms and that sort of thing? or is it that they're not
9:37 am
showing is enough of why they would get this award? i still want to know how to gain access to the united nations. why? just tell me why? >> that such a great question as well because as harris points out the purpose of the titles as part of the crown and part of that machine in the family as they call it is the charitable endeavors. they had a seems as if the second they live all they've done is eat pricey deals with the likes of netflix and podcasts and such so they are really -- but it sort of a different point of contacts have been dedicated to charities and lifting up others that this award usually entails. >> yes, they reason was they divided the type of moral courage that their father once called the one essential vital quality of all who seek to change the world but what moral courage leave it behind and trashing the royals who made you guys by the way? but you look at the pass recipients of the world like nancy pelosi and hillary clinton and these are the group of
9:38 am
winners? in rfk jr. of my favorite line of the daily mail he however think that it's an encouraging step up from anthony fauci in 2020. [laughter] >> hit rock bottom with that when i guess. >> you said it was just a lunching. >> and they would background get out here. and mark interesting is when you get to that common theme that with those titles that are supposed to be a separation of the family and state you're supposed to be above politics but since then however, meghan and harry have enjoyed wading deep into american politics and weighing heavily into the conversation and some argue without really knowing what they're talking about in another example of another piece of evidence leading to the question of why they're getting this award? >> and also being hypocrites. >> mark tepper: there flying around and had jets and meddling in american politics and things like that. i don't understand what were giving out awards for just for the sake of given awards are. it's like a woke participation trophy. it just seems like this is kind of the culture. this is a culture that's been created is that you no longer
9:39 am
have to produce any tangible results and you can get an award. and i could tell you my son's baseball team over the summer, three kids on the team combined to throw a no-hitter. and at the end of the game to game ball was not given to any of those three kids. it was given to the kid will play catcher for the first time ever. and it's like what you just giving away something just for the sake of giving it is the purpose? it loses its meaning. >> ... meaning it loses its value does bring up woke let's see what megan marco have to say about being will? >> the word whelp? i know i'm saying woke and am fully realizing food spoon feeding the click paper here is why because woke by definition means alert and justice and society especially racism. now what is loaded or wrong with that? and when you layer a woman into that seemingly anna dime's definition it for many almost
9:40 am
disgusting. outrages stated say but why? what is so scary about a woman have an opinion as strongly as a man does? >> it seems she knows so much more than we all do? >> i know i feel like she's my therapist or something is the weirdest thing. the first well i just want to say that the only show to watch is that fox nation pages award when you actually give the award to everyday americans that is what members. but on that point but on megan's book, first of all, she doesn't even say what woke us. she represents woke along with the hollywood elite has so many of the democrats were focused on fundamentally transforming this country on indoctrinating our children and gender ideology and critical race theory and that is why the american people they do not want to listen to megan. she is the ultimate big victim in all of this and i hate to say it but us women, i don't know about you all but i'm not afraid
9:41 am
to give my opinion and why even try to pretend that women have to have to be victimized or we because she actually thinks that this is the way to go. i think that we can be the strong bossy woman that we are. >> that's right. we will be right back, and in we will be right back, and in case you miss it is next.
9:44 am
when a truck hit my car, we will be right back, and in case the insurance company wasn't fair. i didn't know what my case was worth. so i called the barnes firm. i was hit by a car and needed help. i called the barnes firm, that was the best call i could've made. i'm rich barnes. it's hard for people to know how much their accident case is worth. let our injury attorneys help you get the best result possible.
9:45 am
♪ the barnes firm injury attorneys ♪ ♪ call one eight hundred, eight million ♪ >> republicans on the cusp of taking control of congress as members decide who will believe the g.o.p. into the future and speaking of the future, donald trump expected to be the first candidate if there was had in the rate for 2024 later on today. we've got all the latest political news for you. as a amerigo to click to reach for drugs or the knife to treat gender dysphoria children as young as 13 have had vasectomies which should government should be involved? we got a report from dr. marc siegel and will talk to arkansas lieutenant john governor about it. we've also got congressman henry and what was to happen on the border and chris rufo on muslim americans protesting what they insist are inappropriate books in schools. i'm job robert sanders and ossie at the top of the other for a jam-packed ame "america reports"
9:46 am
♪ ♪ >> is a emily approved song. [laughter] welcome back its kind for encasing may say, united flight attendant had to be hospitalized after running with an angry passenger on a flight from san francisco to chicago. and as the plane was about to land, a woman stood up and screamed at her toddler had to throw up. when flight attendants told her to sit back down thinks that a little ugly. >> man we are landing. step back. step back -- >> while three were taken to a chicago hospital for observation including three year old not clear if that was the child who allegedly had to throw up, police and the fbi are
9:47 am
investigating. emily, i don't think could possess someone to act that way i get affected by biotech the flight attendant. >> absolutely and i've had my share of traveling around the world where we've all gotten motion sickness and travel sickness and also my share of enjoying beer and wine we also get another type of sickness. but my point is if you do not have a vested build of all men name? they are a choice in your lap and that's what happened. in this the first time is disgusting but that's what you do when you step into an airplane and you are landing. i have sympathy for her frantic mom but i have zero sympathy for assaulting a flight attendant over not just on a piano a lap get it done. >> i was sitting by a chamfer for mom and her son did get sick and it landed right near me but this mom wiped it up like a plow she didn't panic i was really impressed at how she handled it. >> is so stressful to travel with her toddler anyway as you all know, and there's no need to assault anyone and at the end of the day carry your own bag just in case. because you always have to be
9:48 am
prepared as a mom as you know. >> absolutely here as you note to. >> harris faulkner: yeah i traveled with mind is who they were newborn and my husband and i love to travel so i just carried my own gear. and i cared enough for everybody, i had one of those porta potty things they put the bag again you can set it up anyway so if you have to throw up you could do it in that. and it was self-contained. you take the bag that you throw it away and you just have to be prepared. i do feel for the mom because she panics. and i don't know what was going on and i think it was a bigger back story that goes to why somebody who is an adult panics over a toddler. because toddlers pick up stuff all the time. i mean that's what kids do. i mean from both ends unfortunately sometimes. but i am, i do have a heart for someone who really felt like she didn't know what to do. and i feel for that child because the child is a panic artist is apparent. in mark, we didn't see the real up to the take so?
9:49 am
>> mark tepper: who knows what happened, because we have no idea what really happened by. hood is stressful right but it's not that stressful. chill out, take a deep breath as a vomit bag in the back of the seat in front of you and neck were all talking about bring your own. >> bring your own. >> all right it is not your imagination some popular kids toys may nuke smaller business holiday season as retailers and cash-strapped parents adapt to inflation. toy companies like while we and nga and entertainment have begun producing miniature versions of the popular toys and sending them at a slashed price and nga who makes a popular brat style will soon introduce more than 200 toys priced under ten bucks in the coming weeks. cared still be more affordable that's a good thing. >> yeah will have more definition of choking hazards though. and i'm not joking about that because some of the things that become smaller and then makes the category of soil very different so kids cannot go who used to have tons of fun with
9:50 am
whatever, when it is finca sides then i can be playing with that because the choking has in his right on the package. it has to be look how tiny they are. >> it's true toys are getting cheaper and i look at her toy and i said this is literally just practice. >> mark tepper: i've heard a call to inflation because people are skimping on what they can expand and they want to offer them something smaller something less expensive but we actually saw this giant amazon during last prime day where their sales were no better than any other regular game and in fact they were selling more lower-cost goods as opposed to like laptops and tv so fumes like consumers are trying to tighten the belt buckle and that's what happens we have to tighten the belt buckle. >> is a sibling of the supposes to people who are really feeling the effects of inflation. and those who have a smaller budget because i love it's making these toys that could see and don't know anything about a price point in saying that they want something it enables them to have something that will happens. i hope that this administration doesn't ignore this for what it is which is not everyone can get
9:51 am
a smaller toy but it's because of the policy. >> and at the funniest thing when you get a toy you get a big leverage toy and the kid loves the box more? [laughter] and limits are you, these little toys are much cheaper than the iphone's okay. keep the kids off the screen that's my advice. that is good advice. and finally, reliving those gaudy gaze according to a survey of caesar's as they could relieve any decade of their lives most would pick their 20s or 30s. they say that these would they happy is used in the survey also found that if they had to redo one major decision people would have saved more money, or invested earlier. emily makes total sense to me because you're 20 or 30 you meet your spouse you have kids and a lot of happy things happen in life. job it's just a lot. >> absolutely, yes and then i wonder who commissioned the study because when you to the point like that i'm saying what great commission, they told us invest? i will say that our best days are ahead of us and my mom taught me as a survivor of beck cancer that every day was a gift and every day is that treasure
9:52 am
and so, i hope at the end of my life i just feel that i didn't have a better decade but that every day which is a gift equally and super happy no matter where i am. my? >> mark tepper: hope my best days are not behind me i remember when i was 16 years old and my skull was grounded and i dad and i was like you are robbing me rob and me of my best days and he goes due to visa your best days you've got problems. you better hope your best days are ahead of you not behind you. >> that's true, you enjoy the fruits of your labor in your kids when you're older. >> i think you're so right. >> harris faulkner: what your grandmother said is so true. i don't pick a decade, i try to make this the best one. >> yeah, living in the moment mercedes. >> i will say in my 30s i cannot remember that decade because i was pregnant five times. so it was a complete blur. [laughter] i had three kids under the age of four, but i have to say, is every moment i really do try to treasure my time with the girls. i mean being able to be married
9:53 am
for 20 fears it's a blessing. and i think that is what matters is that government to give you this opportunity in this life that you need to fulfill what you need to do here on earth to do great things and that's what were going to do. >> well said and i hear you on pregnancy i remember if i'm lucky if i remember the day more are not numbered it "outnumber" in a moment. is♪ ♪
9:57 am
9:58 am
congratulations, harris. >> oh, thank you. >> beautiful. >> you all have been so wonderful supporting me through the 90 days that it took to go word to word cover to cover, and that was the fastest thing i had ever worked on. i did it mostly here at fox on the 44th floor with the beautiful view, just never went home. incredible stories of people and their faith and how they went from drug addiction to depression to, you know, those points getting a medical diagnosis where they were told it was one way and they prayed their way to walk again. danny met doug is one of my favorite chapters. it's a young woman in her 20s who ends up in a nursing home because she's so ill, she can't work, they have trached her, she meets the love of her life, somebody who is age contemporary, a medical tech there, and she witnesses so many people around her dying and said how do i see hope in this environment. not only did she have her own
9:59 am
problems but get close to older people she would get attached to and she had so much loss at such a young age and she prayed and prayed. whether she and doug got married she left the nursing home, she started to sort of push in with her faith, they started going to a church, this whole chapter is in the book and one day she stood up and she said i walked. >> wow. >> i know people think miracles don't happen but they do. >> yes, they do. >> the miracle in my life is i get to tell these stories. it's just been an amazing, amazing journey. >> and you have already started to hear testimony from people who received the book on preorder. >> 74-year-old man emailed me during "the falkner focus" and said they kept their word, if you pr he ordered i got my book. a missionary in honduras was struggling with his faith, he said we all do. he's been flipping through it and reading it and one of the favorite parts that people say
10:00 am
they have is the glossy insert of the book. it's a topic and original prayer, no matter what season in life you are, you know where to start the conversation with god. i hope people get a lot out of this. it has given me so much. >> my mom did, she watched your 10:00 p.m. show, watch it on fox nation, it was incredible. >> congratulations. >> it's out. >> here is "america reports." >> john: thank you. fox news alert, inflation slowing down by climbing, wholesale prices up 8% year over year, inflation is still hitting hard in the wallets. >> sandra: the possibility of more rate hikes on the horizon. is the cost of taking out a loan about to soar? we'll ask money man charles payne, here to break it down for you. >> we need new leadership in the republican party in washington,
164 Views
Uploaded by TV Archive on