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tv   FOX and Friends Sunday  FOX News  November 20, 2022 3:00am-4:00am PST

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nation." also on twitter, facebook, una gram and rumble as well. i check my tv guide. "unfiltered" with dan bongino is ready to start. thanks for ♪ ♪ [national anthem] ♪
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♪ [national anthem] ♪ ♪ [national anthem] ♪
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will: straight to a fox news alert, at least 5 are dead, 18 hurt after a gunman opens fire inside a club in colorado springs overnight. rachel: the shooting happening at club q, a gay bar. the club saying they are, quote, devastated by the senseless attack on our community. we just heard from police. >> we have numerous homicide detectives on scene. they'll be processing the scene. this scene is going to take some time to get through, so we will be here for many, many hours to come. pete: officials still working to identify a motive, but the gunman is in custody and undergoing treatment at the hospital. we're expecting another update from colorado springs police at 10 a.m. eastern time. will: now to another fox news alert, moscow, idaho, police are shedding light on the
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gluesome -- gruesome murders of four college students. rachel: police still have not identified any suspects. pat: ashley strohmier joining us hive are. >> reporter: new information this morning, police honing in on the details of the victims' final moments now clarifying that a surviving roommate actually made that first 911 call just before noon last sunday. that roommate's identity has not been revealed, but police do not consider them a suspect. investigators were seen yesterday measuring tire marks near the crime scene after a clarifying that two of the victims took a, quote, private party ride home, not an uber as originally suggested. it is also not clear who drove that private vehicle, but police do not believe he is involved. fbi agents and prosecutors were also seen near the crime scene yesterday as the investigate hits the one week mark. the parents of one victim joined lawrence jones last night with these memories of their
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daughter. >> our daughter was a three-time dean's list member. her grades were amazing. she competed with everybody. she loved competing. she was just a highly driven person who -- >> had many goals in life. literally, through and through, her family would teach the her about this kind of stuff happening, mom, did you hear about that, she was very well versed. very well. she would think someone was following her and call me, and i'm like, kaylee, call the police. never mind, they just turned in to 7/heaven. she was aware, you know? , very aware. >> reporter: phone records show kaylee called her ex-boyfriend and longtime friend jack multiple times on the night of the attack. her family says that isn't unusual and insist on his innocence. finish police are hoping to turn
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the up any new clues as there was no sign of forced entry anywhere in the home. moscow police are set for a police conference at 3 p.m. 356bg pacific time. will, rachel, pete, back to you. rachel: thank you, ashley. what a disturbing case. we're not getting a lot of details which could tell us that's a good thing for the investigation on one hand. we're not getting leaks and maybe somebody not guilty isn't getting pointed at. i think that's a good thing. one thing that confuses me is they're saying someone made a 911 call at 11:58, and they requested aid for an unconscious person -- pete: one of the roommates in the home. rachel: exactly. and that's not how i would have described a stab wound death. pete: i think there's probably a lot of shock too though. rachel: maybe. pete: it's an interesting point when you point out police conducting an investigation but
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not immediately rushing to say this is a person of interest or a suspect, but how often does that happen when someone -- then the entire community descends on that community, and they have to prove their innocence. we shouldn't be trying people through the media. doesn't seem like there are new leads, but someone got away i somehow. maybe that's part of the lead too. finish. will: could the victims, kaylee and her friend -- rachel: christy. will: maddie. rachel: i'm sorry, christy is her mother. will: kayis lee's parents spoke out asking the public to take a look at this timeline and see if they can help put this together. >> i think we need to post timeline because it's a maul community. this is, like, 6-7,000 people.
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we need to put the timeline out there to where just random people can look. teslas are filming 24/7, season days a week, so there could be somebody that doesn't realize he was evidence. >> their ring cams, their phones, they were out and they were recording, and hay look, oh, look at that guy that just ran across the camera. it's always those little things. >> did you get gas during the time -- >> gas stations, somebody going in to buy band-aids. obviously, they're checking hospitals for somebody going in, maybe this person got wounded or hurt in this altercation that took place that night, you know? the public -- going to walgreens at three in the morning and getting band-aids. rachel: these parents were so close to their daughter's friend that they actually consider her like their own daughter. she would go on vacation with them, hang out at their house, for them it feels like they lost
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who children in this horrific murder. we're going to bring in ted the williams who's a fox news contributor and a former homicide detective live in moscow, idaho. what's the latest, ted? >> you know, guys, we're going to really learn the latest perhaps this afternoon at the press conference that is going to be held. but when you listen to those parents, your heart just has to go out to hem. you know -- to them. you know, you seven your child or your children down the road to a college to get an education, not to have to come back and find or pick up their dead bodies. and this is what we are left with. if you look over my left shoulder here, we are at the home where this carnage took place of these four young people. that front door, there are two entrances to this home. one is from that front door
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which has a coded lock, and it was said that this lock may or may not have been on, and then there's at the back a sliding glass door. the killer would have had to come through one of those two entrances, and they would have had to have left. this is a scene where the medical examiner said there was a great deal of blood. and that simply means that there should be some physical trace evidence. these individuals, and we don't know who, but we understand they had some -- one of the, or more of the four had defensive wounds, and as a result of that, that leads me to believe that they fought back simply meaning that they may -- there may very well be some forensic dna evidence that the authorities have to work with and process. will: ted the, love to ask you with about something we talked about here yesterday on the couch. there are reports that the knife that was used in this crime may have been a k-bar knife, a
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military or hunting-style might have. there are those that have only ored does that hen lead you to somebody you would suspect has some is proficiency with that type of weapon, someone who may have been capable whether or not that was a hunter or former military of understanding the use to be able to kill four people without waking up the rest of the house? does that tell you anything if that is the case? >> well, it may very well be someone who is experienced with a certain kind of a knife. we do know from what the medical examiner has told us about the knife that it's a large knife. and, now, we know it's not a folding knife. it is my understanding that law enforcement officers are talking to most of the merchants in this area to try to determine if they sold a knife of the sort that you just described here. so that's an important, important part of the investigation because they were
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not able to recover the knife. whoever left that scene, guys, would have had to have had so much blood on them, and they would have had to have stepped in the blood perhaps of some of these young people, and that means that there should have been some prints that the law enforcement officer as should have been able to pick up. pete: ted, in your experience, kind of a similar question to what i asked yesterday too, how do these crimes get solved? is this someone sees something and sends a tip? is it dna that's cross-referenced against a database? if it doesn't feel like they have a lead right now, how to they get one? -- how do they get onesome. >> you know, it's the all of the above that you just stated. if you see something, say something. the eyes of the public are one of the tools that help law enforcement to try to put together a what happened here to bring the perpetrator to justice.
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the forensics. i'm sure that they're examining these forensics, trying to find out if they can find a dna match. they're talking, they're checking the video camel rah feeds all over -- video camera feeds all over this area to find out if that helps. it's a complex investigation, and so it may take some time to bring the person. traitor or perpetrators to justice because we don't know if it's one or more. will: ted, you're in moscow right now. i'm curious, you've probably spoken to local law enforcement. is there anything new in terms of details that we have not yet heard? it appears from far away, ted, that we're just in the evidence gathering stage and don't have any particular arrow pointed in any direction. is have you spoken to law enforcement? is there a person of interest behind the scenes? are they pointed in any one direction? >> it's my understanding that a investigator with the idaho state police have have said that
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these, one or more of these individuals were a target of the killer or killers. and so as a result of that, that's very important. they're trying to talk to relatives, friends and other people who would have moan any of these kids -- known any of these kids. so the fact that they believe that the individual was targeten us the information why they believe it, but they do believe there was a targeted individual here. that should also help them to resolve case. rachel: ted, what does it tell you that there were phone calls made from within the house to somebody, i guess, named jack, and it was coming from two different roommates? who made those calls? to the same number in the middle of the night. >> you know, it is my -- yeah. well, it is my understanding that that was not anything out of the ordinary. when i listened to the family members, the parents, the parents spoke about a jack. they felt that jack was clearly not involved.
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rachel: okay. >> but it was nothing for jack to call in the middle of the night or for these individuals to call and reach out to jack at any times of the night. so really it may be something, and it's certainly something that law enforcement is going to have to run down, and they're going to have to make a decision as to whether it's going to be a part of their investigation or to rule it out, but that's part of the investigation. will: one more quick question, ted. you mentioned there is a belief that one of the victims was a targeted individual, and i know that there are those that have suggested if one individual, for example, might have been attacked in a more aggressive way. that would indicate who was the targeted individual. do you have any idea who that may have been? >> no, i don't have any idea. and i have to somewhat dispel -- now, my friend, michael baden, who's one of the premier forensic pathologists addressed that. and that is normally, this
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appears to be a rage killing. and if it is and was a rage killing, then the person who was the target would probably have been stabbed more than the other individuals. but i can tell you from what the medical examiner is telling us that there was multiple stab wounds about the bodies of all to four -- all four of these individuals. but again, as i've said, law enforcement knows a great deal more than they've let on, and and hopefully we'll be able to get some answers here maybe in the afternoon at their press conference. pete: we believe there will be updates, as you said, ted, later this afternoon. thank you for the update. we appreciate it, ted. rachel: thank you, ted. >> my pleasure. pete: that feels like the most likely scenario, one or two of them were targets. then once you do that, someone else make -- wakes up or notices, you have to cover it up by killing more. will: it's the horrible. we'll have more on that breaking
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news throughout the morning as we start your headlines, additional headlines with this: one person reportedly dead and 27 others taken to the hospital after a terrifying bus crash in massachusetts last night. the bus was take thing students back to brandeis -- brandeis university. it's unclear what caused the accident. >> overnight the united nations reached a new climate deal that would help pay for climate damages in poor nations. the u.s. and the e.u. were pushing for china to contribute to the fund and block them from benefiting from it, but that could be complicated as china, the world's biggest emitter of greenhouse gas, is still considered a a developing country and, therefore, eligible to receive that that funding. pete: so we're going to pay them. rachel: yes. they're the ones doing all the emissions, but we have to pay them because the u.n. says they're not developed. will: today the is joe biden's birthday making him the first
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president to hit 80 years old while many office. he is expected to celebrate with a family brunch today. the president's granddaughter, naomi, got married in a private ceremony on the white house lawn, the first grandchild of a sitting president to tie the knot there. and those are your headlines. rachel: nice venue. will: oh, yeah. pete: yeah. rachel: now to a fox weather alert. hundreds of rescues underway as a monster storm slams western new york with up to 77 inches of snow. pete: the lake effect snow paralyzing the region leaving residents stuck at home behind mountains of snow. at least 3 individuals are dead from the storm, all related to clearing the snow. will: meanwhile, buffalo neighbors came to the rescue of bills players, snowed in ahead of their game in detroit against the browns. you can see the bills' stadium almost unrecognize bl after it was hit by the massive of storm. so let's turn to rick reichmuth for our fox weather forecast.
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i read 6 feet of snow? rick: 77 inches. you're 6 feet tall, actually, will's a little bit taller than that, that's like 70 inches -- will: 3 inches higher than me. rachel: wow. rick: which is absolutely incredible. you get a foot of snow, and you can barely walk any place. you have 7 feet of show, and there's not a lot you can do. water temperatures in the lakes have dropped around 5-6 degrees. that's good, the next system will have a rougher chance of getting energy that it needs to get kind of snow, but we still have some ahead today. today's really about the digout and tomorrow. by tomorrow all of the snow is over, but we've got one more day to get through, but this isn't as bad as it was. when you get the wind moving over the length of the lake, that's giving it the energy it needs. once it moves cross wise across the lake, it doesn't have as much distance to gather up that moisture to dump the snow like we've seen. not as much snow as this storm
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begins to wind down, but you notice the western side of the lower peninsula of michigan, we're also seeing maybe a foot, foot and a half of snow. take a look at the future track of this storm, syracuse, kind of between syracuse and watertown, probably the one spot that's going to continue to get a lot of snow, maybe a couple of feet right there, but there's not a lot of population in that area. that little bull's eye. maybe some spots around 8-12 inches still of additional snow, but that's a lot better than the 77 inches. by tomorrow fully gone, but today the clean out. guys? pete: that cleanup's going to go on for a while. rachel: and it's going to be expensive. are. rick: and dangerous. pete: rick, thank you very much is. all right. still ahead, donald trump can get back on twitter, elon musk making the announcement last night as the social media site continues to evolve. rachel: as joe biden tells us the economy is improving, some americans are going for chicken
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instead of turkey this thanksgiving to help save money. the brutal spike in the costs for this year's holiday dinner. ♪ -- never leave. ♪ and we can lay like this forever, it's fine by me ♪
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♪ >> it was clear to me, and i think to most people in those meetings, that the united states is as well or better positioned than any country in the world to lead on the economy in the years ahead. and our approach, i believe, is working. inflation at the grocery store is coming down. prices for things like clothes and televisions and appliances are going down as well. pete: well, that's joe biden claiming the economy's going to be just fine, the approach is just great, and the question is for you, how's it going? not just thanksgiving, the meal and the ingredients and the gas, ourline tickets, all of that, but you probably are watching your 401(k) too, if you have one, shrink in realtime, which is really impressing when the whole idea of a 401(k) is for your retirement savings to grow because the overall economy and its impact on the markets has gone from 126,000 --
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will: 30% down. rachel: do you remember during the trump years people would say i don't -- i've met people who would say i'm not a big fan of donald true but, boy -- donald trump but, boy, i love e my 401(k). [laughter] that's the opposite of right now. will: look at gas prices right now year-over-year. it's $3.68 a gallon right now, that's projected. a year ago $3.39. look at two years ago, $2.11 for gas. rachel: that's right. if you're having people come over for thanksgiving, the meal is more, expensive. first, let's talk about the airline prices, because with you were just talking about the gas and the diesel fuel for the airplanes. my daughter to fly out to see is us for thanksgiving was $700. a lot of people are going to sae to bring her, then she goes back, then i have to bring her back for christmas break. so these prices, a lot of people
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aren't going to have some of those family members around the table because of that. here's some of the ingredients that go into a typical thanksgiving the meal -- pete: apple pie. rachel: i'm sorry, into an ap apple pie. eggs, 30 up. butter, 236% up. flour, 24% up. sugar, 17% up. spices like nutmeg, cinnamon, 10%, almost 11% up and then apples, 6%. that's an expensive pie. pete: it sure is. when you listen to joe biden say we're many a better position, we were talking off the air yesterday, it feels like something is going to break at some point. you look at ftx, you look at crypto and then you look at gas and you look at shortages of diesel, i don't know what it is, housing, i don't know, but it feels like something big could happen. and if you're at the white house celebrating your birthday with weddings, maybe a little insulated from the way average people are feeling? [laughter] like, there's real uncertainty
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out there. will: look at "the new york post" headline this morning, thanksgiving feast if inflation has shoppers choosing chicken over turkey, references individuals going and buying the whole chicken -- rachel: sure. will: i think it's $5 sometimes for that whole chicken that you can get? a lot of grocery stores -- pete: the rotisserie chickens. of. will: that's what we're talking about, isn't it? pete: sometimes you walk pennsylvania and you go, it's over, that's lunch. rachel: john mclemore yesterday, he mentioned to me i think a lot of people are going to fry chicken maybe this year because they can't awe afford the turkey. pete: well, some political cartoonists have noticed, and here's one right here. biden and harris serving spam. rachel: yeah. pete: happy thanksgiving, everybody. rachel: but this is not a joke. so the number of people who are first-time users of food banks has shot up, and in many playses even the -- places even the food
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banks' shelves are bare because they're having, you know, they depend on donations of people in the community, and now the people in the community are strapped. it is just a cycle. and i think what will end up happening if this continues to be, as you say, if something breaks, people are just going to become more and more feint on government, on food stamps and, frankly, i think that's something the left likes. will: one more political cartoon, and this is looking forward just a bit, but santa coming. pitts9 burg post gazette, is this a bad time? extremely. headlines in the newspapers, 401(k)s down, inflation, heating oil, everything up. could be tough. pete: santa's going to need to step up. rachel: that's why these midterms were hard to understand. usually americans really vote with hair pocketbooks, and -- their pocketbook, and they saw in the inflation, they realize they were lied to about it being transitory. now we're into the holidays, and
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i'm surprised that the democrats haven't had to pay a steeper price for purposefully impoverishing people -- pete: i just think they were really good at gathering votes, gathering ballots. rachel: yeah. maybe conservatives need to get better at hard vs.ing ballots as well. -- harvesting. pete: it's all legal, go for it. rachel: i like voting on election day. it's going to be hard to get used to it. coming up, the drive to go green, talking about that, leaving thousands of white collar workers in the dust. the backlash michigan's democrat governor is now pacing for promising jobs but not delivering. will: plus, agents stop human smugglers in -- a dps agent in texas stopped a human smuggler in a high-speed chase. the wild video as the crisis at the border continues to spiral out of control.
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will: we're back with a fox news alert. a tragic story we're monitoring, at least 5 dead, 18 others hurt after a gunman opens fire inside a club in colorado springs overnight. the shooting happened at club q, a gay bar in the northeast part of town. the club saying in a statement they are, quote, devastated by the senseless attack on our community, and we just heard from law enforcement. >> we have numerous homicide detectives on scene. they'll be processing the scene. this scene is going to take some time to get through, so is we will be here for many, many hours to come. will: officials are still working to identify a motive, but the gunman is in custody and undergoing treatment at the hospital. we're expecting another update from colorado springs police at 10 a.m. eastern time. rachel, over to you. rachel: thank you, will with. michigan's democrat governor pumping more than a billion tax dollars into the auto industry in an effort to boost production
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of electric vehicles. but it's coming at a steep cost to white collar workers. thousands have reportedly been laid off since gretchen whitmer took office. our next guest writes, quote, her actions are helping to kill the very auto jobs she claims to care so much about. joining us now, managing editor of michigan capital confidential james david dixon. james, welcome to "fox & friends." so explain these layoffs, because they were given, what, $100 million subsidy to hire blue collar workers, but now white collar workers are getting laid off almost in the exact same number. >> absolutely, good morning. i call it the okey-doke, right? in june michigan lawmakers decide to give ford $100 million. they're going to create 3030 auto jobs. those are blue collar, factory jobs. two months later, ford announces it's laying off 3,000 white collar workers, mostly in
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michigan. so we literally traded white collar jobs for blue collar jobs. rachel: yeah. makes no sense. i'll tell you what else doesn't make sense, spending a billion dollars on electric vehicles that cost $66,000, so they're out of reach for so many americans. but also makes us more dependent on china. >> it does. i mane, when you think about -- i mean, when you think about how those materials are mined and, you know, the work conditions, the human rights conditions that go into that. but my other concern is anytime you're talking about electric vehicles, you're fundamentally talking about a slimmed-down auto industry. you're talking about less jobs. and you're also talking about a future where detroit's built-in advantages in building cars doesn't matter anymore. rachel: that's right. you're seeing a slimmed-down work force because it doesn't take as many people to produce a car, so there's less -- an electric vehicle, so there's less people working many these
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blue collar jobs that she claims she wants to save. but, by the way, needs a lot of tax dollars and subsidies to keep going. i'm glad you brought up the human rights conditions, because we talk about the dependency on china that these batteries are, but we don't talk enough about the child labor, the slave labor in africa to get the lithium or the cobalt needed for the lithium batteries. these are kids as young as 7 years old. this is outrageous, and i don't think it's talked enough about. >> no, jamie holt, my colleague, she's done a great story talking about the real trade-offs involved with evs. when you read most media accounts, you would think it's just a simple matter of evs are clean and internal combustion engines are dirty. but like everything, there's real trade-offs involved. and then you factor in, you think about, you know, things like cobalt, lithium, you know, if a birth lands in lithium,
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that -- if a bird lands many lithium, it's not going to survive. it's not necessarily cleaner either. rachel: sounds pretty toxic to me. james, we'll have to have you back and maybe even your friend to talk about the child slave labor involved in electric vehicles. i think it's fascinating and needs to be exposed. >> that would be a blessing, thank you. rachel: thank you. up next, the american bar association doing away with a key piece of the admissions process for up and coming law students. >> harvard law schooling? >> harvard won't be impressed that you aced history of polka dots. rachel: i love that movie. the woke change to to getting a law degree, up next.
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get help right away if you have swelling of your face, mouth and tongue, or trouble breathing. don't stop your asthma treatments unless your doctor tells you to. tell your doctor if you have a parasitic infection or your asthma worsens. headache and sore throat may occur. ask your doctor about fasenra. will: the american bar association caving to the woke by eliminating the lsats and oh standard size tests, both yale and harvard claiming the exams hurt diversity. here to react, a campus correspondent. thanks for being with us this morning. what's your reaction to at lease american bar association saying you don't have to do the lsat, and several law schools seem isingly ready to distance themselves from the lsat. >> will, every single law student remembers the time they took the lsat.
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it is a difficult exam for many of us, however, it's one objective way to measure a student's logical reasoning and writing abilities. and additionally, lsat will test out how individuals are able to understand complex reading passages. so getting rid of the lsat will just make the mission cycle more subjective. we all know not every school has similar academic rig gore, therefore, gpas are not necessarily the way to measure academic success, so getting rid of the lsat will not make the process easier for the candidates nor for the schools themselves. will: what's the motivation, do you think, of the aba and the schools to drop the lsatsome. >> well, the the campus reform has been looking at this trend nationally. we see that institutions have been getting rid of the s.a.t. and the a.c.t., and they cite to the fact that a lot of underrepresented minority groups do not cowell in these
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standardized exams, but that is not necessarily correct. for a lot of minority, including colluding myself, this is a way we can overcome a lot of barriers in this admission process. so the reason they want to get rid of it is probably because they do not see the benefit of this. maybe the aba should look into this standardizedded exam as an opportunity for students to learn versus a barrier to entry. will: well, that would be an interesting argument, that hay don't see the benefit. does the lsat, which i took as well, by the way, does it help identify those that do understand, for example, logic. but it looks like the argument is actually, well, let's lean more on biographic withal information. let's do our best now concern because you point out grades, grades from one school don't match up with grades from another school. it looks like a work-around into diversity, looking at people's skin color and backgrounds as a
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way to admit them into law school. >> and that is absolutely correct. and as an iranian immigrant, i always fall into the white/caucasian group, and that creates a lot of issues for individuals like me that want to compete for law school admission. however, some objective method like the lsat score allows many individuals coming from immigrant backgrounds to overcome these biases. getting are rid of the lsat will just create another barrier for individuals that do not fit to those boxes and for this reason, i believe that getting rid of it will not fix the problem with diversity. it just makes it worse. will: all right. thank you for joining us this morning on fox and friends. >> thank you so much. will: pete, over to you. pete: we begin with the crisis at the southern border. texas dps making two harrowing busts last week as illegal immigration continues to surge
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in the state. in one incident the dps stopped a driver trying to smuggle 14 illegal migrants. he claimed he was giving them a ride to the border patrol station, yep. he was later arrested for smuggling. and on the same day, another dps agent caught a trafficker with 13 illegals during a high-speed crash. of he was arrested after crashing into with a fence. got lost on his way to the border patrol station, yep. it's official, elon musk will be reinstating former president trump's twitter account. the new ceo confirming the news last night saying the people have spoken, trump will be reinenstated. reinstated. the decision comes after more than 15 million people took part in a twitter poll with over 51% agreeing to bring trump back. trump shared the poll to truth social saying, quote, vote now with positivity, but don't worry, we aren't going anywhere.
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truth social is special. interesting. and those are your headlines. do you think he comes back, rachel, to twitter. >>? rachel: maybe. pete: i think so. it might be hard to resist. maybe he'll do both, truth social and twitter. we shall see. coming up, south carolina congresswoman nancy mace joins us live. but first, don't let the cold weather stop you from enjoying your outdoor space. diy expert skip bedell is here to show us how to make the perfect she shed or he shed. i am going to have to see it for myself. ♪ i've been running hot ♪
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rachel: welcome back to "fox & friends." it's already cold here in new york -- [laughter] it really is. rick: yes, it is. if you have an outdoor space, now is the time to maximize it for those very long winter months. pete: skip is here to show us how. >> good morning, guys. fall and winter, it's a great time to put all your summer stuff away. what better to do that with than with a shedsome so tough shed, the nation's number one leading
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shed-building company available at every home depot. if you want to get a shed, you walk into with home depot, tough shed delivers it to your house, and installation is in the price. what i love most is they're built just like their name, tough. insulated windows, you've got a hey ramp you can roll your mowers up on. the hardware is so strong, 500-pound rated things -- [laughter] i'm 240, not 500, so super strong -- rachel: they could do two the skips on -- [laughter] >> imagine that. there's only one. [laughter] so tough shed. and now, listen, this is the way to go. again, home depot, hay come in many different sizes. you can see, we have another one over there. these are 8x12s, it's a ranch style shed. we're going to do something really fun. we have two hours between segments, we're going to come back later in the show.
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i'm going to take my guys, allison, my wife, is going to take rachel, and it's going to be a she shed versus a he shed -- rachel: is that a -- >> empty sheds right now -- rachel: what's a she shed? >> well, i'm going to show you. pete: that's what she said. [laughter] >> look how lightweight this is. stone panel but they're made out of high density foam. these are amazing. in fact, i'm putting this in my house right now, it's a simulated barn wood. they make these faux beams that you see on people's ceiling, but they're made out of foam. rachel: that's amazing, a great idea. >> the she shed, you can see a little bit of the stone wall, i don't want to show you too much. bare ron design makes these great products, skip 20, you get 20% off on barron designs.com on their web site. rachel: skip, why would i need a she shed?
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>> well, listen are, sheds are great for your tools and because these are built like a house, you could have your hangout, a place to go and do artwork -- rachel: oh, okay. >> you want to to drinking wine, read a book -- rachel: oh, it's like a little escape -- i actually need that. [laughter] >> google she shed. it's a massive trend right now. we're going of fun -- rachel: so it's like i could have a family but not be with them. [laughter] >> get away from the kids and go hang out in your she shed. pete: it's a dream. where's mom? rachel: with her wine in the she shed. [laughter] >> we'll see you back in two hours. we're going to have a lot of fun. will: you keep saying that five times fast, i feel like there's going to be a mistake. she shed, she shed -- [laughter] to get it straight, she can design it however she wants, entities, lightweight -- >> we have a bunch of different products to choose from, okay?
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we already started putting some stone up -- rachel: i like the beams. >> all sorts of furnishings from home depot.com. we've got all kinds of cool stuff. rachel: i love it. this is great. all right. we have a big show still ahead. you've got to stay with us, because we're doing to see what the she shed looks like. pete: she shed. who knew? ♪ ♪ what if “just an idea” could become a family tradition? this is financial security. and lincoln financial solutions will help you get there. as you plan, protect and retire. ♪
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i have moderate to severe plaque psoriasis. now, there's skyrizi. ♪things are getting clearer♪ ♪i feel free to bare my skin♪ ♪yeah, that's all me♪ ♪nothing and me go hand in hand♪ ♪nothing on my skin♪ ♪that's my new plan♪ ♪nothing is everything♪ achieve clearer skin with skyrizi.
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3 out of 4 people achieved 90% clearer skin at 4 months. in another study, most people had 90% clearer skin, even at 4 years. and skyrizi is just 4 doses a year, after 2 starter doses. ♪it's my moment, so i just gotta say♪ ♪nothing is everything♪ 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: straight to a fox fox news alert and a tragic story we've been following this morning. at least 5 people are dead, 18 hoars -- others hurt after a gunman opens fire inside a club in colorado springs overnight. will: the shooting happening at club q, a gay bar, in the
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northeast part of town. the club saying they are, quote, devastated by the senseless attack on our community, and the police spoke in the last two hours. >> we have numerous homicide detectives on scene. they'll be processing the scene. this scene is going to take some time to get through, so we will be here for many, many hours to come. rachel: officials are still working to identify a motive, but the gunman is in custody and undergoing treatment at the hospital. we are expecting another update from colorado springs police at around 10 a.m. eastern time. now to another fox news alert, moscow, idaho, police are shedding new light on the gruesome murders of four college students. pete: police at least publicly still have not identified any suspects as the fbi arrives on the crime scene. will: ashley strohmier is here with more this morning. >> reporter: new information this morning in the brutal mores

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