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tv   The Ingraham Angle  FOX News  November 22, 2022 7:00pm-8:00pm PST

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please set your dvr so you never, ever miss an episode of "hannity." thank you for making this show possible. and unless news breaks, this is my final show before thanksgiving. we have so much to be grateful and thankful for, not the least of which of you giving us this camera every night. can't thank you enough. now i'll be cooking fried turkey for kid and family. let not your heart be troubled. laura, how do you cook your turkey? >> laura: do i need to go to this place again? you sent me a turkey frier last year. >> sean: did you use it? >> laura: yes. you don't even remember. you and i have been friend so long, you don't even remember the gift you sent me. >> sean: i send everyone gift. that's kind of the usual pattern of mine. but it is the butter ball master built turkey frier. you can use it indoors. it is safe. and it is the juiciest,
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best, most delicious turkey ever. >> laura: first of all, you said you were sending me a photo of you actually frying your turkey last year. let me just say to the audience out there, that photo never came, okay? >> sean: wait a minute. i have in the past tweeted out me frying a turkey. i will send you a picture this year. >> laura: it is all a charade. this never happened. >> sean: i gave it to you like you were a liberal wanting a handout. >> laura: what can i say. they tell me i have to go because we're running out of time. >> sean: we have a lot to be grateful for. happy thanksgiving. >> laura: i am thankful for hannity in this incredible handoff. happy thanksgiving. all right. i am laura ingraham. this is "the ingraham angle." thanks for being with us. grateful not hateful, the focus of tonight's angle. all right, once again, the
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usual suspects on the left are seething and brooding about the in herent awfulness of another american tradition. writing in psychology today, christopher ferguson notes it is the season for thanksgiving and we can look forward to some members of the gli glitteraty dumping on the holiday. we're told it celebrates genocide, news articles repeat that it celebrated a massacre of native americans. of course, that's all absurd. the only thing that makes the left in america truly happy this time of year especially is grousing about how we're all living on stolen land. >> you who call yourself an activist, an ally, an accomplice for social justice, we see you making plans for thanksgiving. >> i don't celebrate a proper thanksgiving because the cultural demolition and genocide of the indigenous people of
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this land is not something i feel like celebrating. >> celebrating thanksgiving is celebrating racist genocide. gobble gobble [bleep]. >> laura: how about celebrate taking a shower every now and then. what a shame she won't be joining your thanksgiving table. on the bright side most americans see all of this complaining as another exercise in self loathing by spoiled, entitled ingrates. most well happily celebrate thanksgiving with family and friends. as 2022 draws to a close, the angle is grateful for so much. number one. we defeated the man who was behind more covid lies than hunter biden behind prostitutes. dr. anthony fauci, always wrong, never in doubt, had the nerve to show himself at the white house. his lounge act is way past is expiration date. >> who have correct
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information, take science seriously, don't have strange layout theories about things, who base what they say on evidence and data need to speak up more because the other side that just keeps putting out misinformation and disinformation seems to be tireless in that effort and it is going to be very difficult. >> laura: more on that in a bit. with his chief nemesis at the white house, one of his targets. number two, we are grateful for all of the parents who work tirelessly to expose school boards for sexual dfwian see and racial hatred. >> bathrooms aren't safe for girls. books are on the shelf of school libraries and parents' parental rights are still being ignored. cultural marxists are hard at work to brainwash our
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children. >> focus on raising rock bottom test scores, do away with exposing minors to sexually explicit material. >> where is the math, where is the reading, where is the history, where are the strong values. >> laura: now, more responsible adults are running for school board positions, refusing to stay silent. that's great news. politicians know know that pa parent power is a real thing. third, we are grateful for defeat of the woman who speaks like she's suffering from appendicitis. >> we laid out very consistently and i think thoroughly, including in the last hearing where we walked through president donald trump's intent at each stage of this effort to overturn the election. >> laura: good riddance to bush cheney years once and for all. fourth. we are thrilled this thanksgiving conservatives
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led by ron desantis stood up to disney and woke corporations when they turned on middle america. things have gone so far into the toilet for disney after it injected into gender fluidity issue, this week we learned the company was firing its ceo and bringing back the retired ceo bob iger to try to fix things. fifth. despite ballot harvesting, early voting, everything else the democrats did to try to game the system, republicans won the popular vote in house races for the first time since 2016. now, that happened in part because we saw an exciting new generation of populous candidates running across the country, including hispanics and african americans. six. for the second time in 12 years, liberal house speaker nancy pelosi is going to be forced to give the gavel to a new republican speaker. now, we're going to miss
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her of course, i can't say otherwise, especially her press conferences and her sordid antics. >> as a catholic i recent you using the word hate in a sentence that addresses me. >> my whole mission in congress is about the children, for the children. you're in the arena, you have to be prepared to take a punch, have to be prepared to throw a punch for the children. for the children. >> laura: well, the good thing for nancy, now she will have a lot of time on her hand to do other important work. like pouring through footage from police body cams and her home security system the night her husband was viciously attacked. if anyone can get answers there, nancy can. seventh. we have huge gratitude for the fact that the court finally ended the scourge of roe v. wade. this issue was never
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something that should have read into the constitution, now it is properly left up to the states. we can all thank 50 years of hard work on the part of the pro-life community that never gave up, never gave up on standing for life. this outcome was worth it no matter what the political fallout, period. eighth. on the thankfulness list, can't forget red state governors that stand as a beacon of sanity and common sense to the rest of america. state like illinois and california bleed population and breed crime. mississippi, georgia, tennessee, doing it right. led us by opening up in covid and are leading us still. governor desantis' 20 point re-election win was a stunner. florida is no longer a swing state, that's because of him. neither is texas by the way, nipping to democrat anytime soon.
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governor greg abbott, lieutenant governor dan patrick both cruised to re-election. ninth. thank you to lee zeldin's strong run for governor of new york. the gop flipped four seats in the empire state with more to come in 2024. now, this was a big step and everyone should send zeldin a campaign note for campaigning as hard as he did. in the golden state, liberals felt the heat when we won 11 seat in the house with one more that still hasn't been called. next, the governorship of california and the statehouse races. we have to start somewhere though. and culturally on the gratitude scale there were bright spots as well which leads me to number ten. more adults finally see the inherent evil in butchering children's reproductive organs, messing with their hormonal makeup. we're seeing hospitals like vanderbilt transgender health clinic
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pressured into stopping surgeries for children. and states are taking action to ban these surgeries for minors in their own areas all together, alabama, arizona, they've already had bans in place on gender affirming care, and that's for kids and many more plan to follow suit. if we're successful stopping these, quote, surgeries on children, we're going to hear fewer painful stories like this. >> i was 12 years old when i first start to experience gender dysphoria. pretty much the medical professionals kept pushing the idea that transition is the only path forward to treating this for you. >> laura: 11th on the thankfulness list, now seeing some on the left wake up to the reality of and danger of tiktok. >> donald trump was right. tiktok is an enormous
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threat. if you're a parent, you have a kid on tiktok, i would be very, very concerned. all of that data that your child is in putting and receiving is being stored somewhere in beijing. >> laura: by the way, mike pompeo said this in 2022 on "the ingraham angle." we're even seeing cultural victories at the box office. we are thankful for top govern gun. maverick was the fifth top grossing film, bringing 1.44 billion at the box office worldwide. this movie was at its core a tribute to the reagan era when we had no hesitation calling outcomism and standing for the usa. >> captain pete maverick mitchell. let me be perfectly blunt. you are not my first choice. you were here at the request of the admiral,
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aka ice man. he seems to think you have something left to offer the navy. what that is i can't imagine. >> with all due respect, sir, i am not a teacher, just want to manage expectations. >> laura: and finally on a personal note, i have an enormous amount to be grateful for jacqui heinrich -- two teenagers and one on the cusp. make life worth living day-in and day-out. my friend that love and support all of us as a family unconditionally. my crew, all of them. i love each and every one of them. it takes a lot to put on this show every night. and i'm just the one you see on camera. but we all together make it work. i am so grateful for all of them. finally, i am grateful for all of you, the viewers, who have been with us from the very beginning, stay with us night after night as we try to inform and entertain all at the same time.
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thank you. and that's the angle. joining me, florida congressman byron done aldz, charlie hurt, washington times opinion editor, fox news contributor, and charlie kirk, founder and president of turning point usa. charlie hurt, let start with you. what should the american public be most thankful for this season given all of the challenges we are seeing before us? >> well, first of all, i have to say, laura, that was a beautiful tribute. anybody that doesn't wake up every day and count their blessings the way you just did is missing out on a really wonderful way to go through life. but speaking about politics, i have to say the thing that i am most grateful for, i think that americans should be most grateful for, we're starting to see in the last couple of years a shattering of this democratic strategy of what they call identity politics which is really basically old time segregationists who use racial differences to pit
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people against one another in order to make political gains, and democrats have been doing it a long time. what we saw with lee zeldin in new york and we saw with ron desantis in florida and donald trump along the border, that racist tactic that democrats deploy effectively is getting shattered. i think that that is a magnificent thing for this country on so many levels, not the least of which that it is a disgusting tactic to begin with. >> laura: and congressman d donald, kevin mccarthy went to the border which was a brilliant idea to deliver an ultimatum. watch this. >> secretary mayorkas testified under oath that yes, the border is secure. i'm here to tell you it is not.
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if secretary mayorkas does not resign, house republicans will investigate every order, every action, and every failure will determine whether we can begin impeachment inquiry. >> laura: congressman donalds, impeachment of mayorkas, will the result be a border that is enforced or is it more political gamesmanship? >> to be blunt with you, i think if you move that way with mayorkas, sends a straight signal to the biden administration. now, they're going to talk tough, say there's nothing to see here, but this is the right move. we cannot waste time any more when you have 200 p ,000 plus coming across the border. the country can't take it. we have to get to business and take care of this. when it comes to spending bills in d.c., we have to make this a staple of
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anything that get approved from house republicans. if we don't stand strong on funding with respect to homeland security and making sure that the biden administration actually secures the border just going after mayorkas is not enough. but a great first step from kevin mccarthy. >> laura: my concern, charlie kirk, this is like a whack a whole game. you get rid of mayorkas, he is replaced with someone just like him. not like they're going to put steven miller in charge of the border, that's not going to happen, right? that would be fun, wouldn't it? so what happens next in the biden administration if the republicans go down this road? >> look, i think congress need to fence in funding. they need to isolate which fights they want most. new congress has to understand the invasion on the southern border is effecting not just our sovereignty but children when it comes to fentanyl, wages of millions coming across the southern border, when it comes to
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how to hold us accountable, i love going after cabinet officials. trying to hold that fourth branch of government accountable using the check and balance, using oversight abilities. usually the cabinet officials get a free pass. you name a name of people that allowed this to occur, this is a great use of time. don't just do mayorkas, merrick garland for weaponization of department of justice, department of education, and their collusion with national education association and national school board association to then call moms and dads domestic terrorists. can't forget about any of these things. this incoming congress has a mandate brought by parents that gave them a 5 million person popular vote victory, despite what the media tells you, overwhelming popular vote victory to hold the fourth branch of government accountable. >> laura: and charlie, this news breaking moments ago. axios reports the colorado
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shooting suspect is nonbinary. you kind of get that from early reporting on his background, but charlie, leftwing activists have been spinning this as a murder that was spurred by parents and their concern about gender fluidity and transgenderism pushed in schools. in fact, we find out it is a nonbinary individual who carried out allegedly these heinous murders of innocent men in this club. >> well, proud to say i don't know what nonbinary means, but i do think this is right in line with everything the democrats do in terms of turning voters against one another based on race. there's no tragedy that occurs that democrats don't seize on, try to weaponize, turn into some political advantage for themselves. it is really, really disgusting.
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i think that if republicans take control and focus on issues that matter to people like the border, like schools, like crime, focus on serious issues, they're going to find voters very grateful to them for doing that. >> laura: congressman donald, essentially what was going on in all front page reporting on these horrific 34murders at this club, people like ron desantis were kind of in some way kind of tangentially responsible for pushing the in ept ly named don't say gay bill, that that was the hate fueling these types of attacks, targeting of gay men, especially at this club. then we find out the fact are absolutely opposite of what they were saying. but they spewed the bias before we learned the fact
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here, congressman. >> look, i'm not surprised. frankly i am sick of immediate when they do this kind of stuff. instead of waiting for the facts and letting the f facts lead you, they push their narratives. vast majority of the time they're wrong, and go on as if nothing happened. we were getting a sense of what was happening with the situation because i promise you, if the shooter was somebody that fit their narrative, their face would have been all over the place, name would have been all over the place, it would be in all of the social media accounts. when the facts from the ground do not support that, they started getting very, very quiet. now we're seeing the rest of the story. i am sick of it. the american people of sick of it. our country can't survive this, laura. we have to get to facts and facts alone. that s not supporting the left agenda. >> laura: common sense, pragmatism. that would be nice. panel, thank you, happy
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thanksgiving to all of you. dr. anthony fauci just delivered what was billed as his final appearance from the white house podium. the man who fauci turned into his nemesis during the trump administration, dr. scott atlas is here with his final farewell himself. stay with us.
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>> laura: all right. just when you thought it was safe to return to prepandemic normality, the dooms day groundhog himself popped out of his little hole to report there will be at least six more weeks of covid. >> the real danger is in people not vaccinated. that's where we expect if we see a problem this winter, it will be among those people. my message and my final message may be the final message i give you from this podium is that please for your own safety, for that of your family, get your updated covid-19 shot as soon as you're eligible to protect yourself, your family, your community. >> laura: brought to you by pfizer. joining me, the one man that stood up to fauci, dr. scott atlas, former covid adviser, senior fellow at the hoover institution. wasn't this a fitting
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farewell for dr. fauci, although he said it might be the last time he stands at the podium. don't we know now that those people that are getting covid tend to be people who have been vaccinated and triple and quadruple boosted, least everyone i know getting covid had three, four, sometimes five shots. >> yes, laura, it is very fitting to hear this constant mantra of almost nonsensical utterings by dr. fauci. you know, we know by now data shows the vaccines, although they have pretty good prottechs for high risk people against death, they do not stop spread of infection, don't stop you from getting covid. and the risk benefit ratio for people other than high risk is very different. you have to decide if it is appropriate to take an experimental drug if you have low risk of serious
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illness, particularly children. in fact, anyone that recommends that children, healthy children should get the vaccine, an experimental drug, injected into them, there's a question about medical ethics there. are we as a society going to go down the pathway of even if you believe that it stops the spread of infection, which would be contrary to science, are we going to use our children as shields for infections? this is uncharted territory for what's supposed to be a civilized society. >> laura: and what we know now about the trul ltrue lethality, even though the age of 70 in the progression done recently, it was infinitesimally small for those not of high bmi, hypertensive disorder, diabetes. you have to have multiple comorbidities most cases, overwhelmingly most cases for this to take place,
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yet he still is pushing these multiple shots. i find the whole thing to be borderline insane at this point. >> it's frightening to have people in power that don't know what they're talking about that use fear to sway the public instead of data. you don't often hear it, you may never have heard dr. fauci use data. this is very frightening. two-thirds of people in the united states who died from covid, two-thirds have greater than or equal to six comorbidities. healthy people do not have significant risk from serious illness from covid, that's a fact, not opinion. it is proven the world over. i think we should talk about dr. fauci's legacy if i have a minute because he has a very important legacy. number one, he presided over the biggest failure in public health history over two different presidential administrations. number two, his policies were implemented and those
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policies shifted the burden of the illness from the affluent to the poor, and incurred massive harm on our children, psychological damage, long lasting damage, an obesity crisis, and we haven't seen tip of the iceberg on that damage to children, and again, worse on low income and poor kids. thirdly and perhaps most importantly, dr. fauci, dr. berks, his underling and many other people at the cd and talking heads on tv have destroyed trust in public health. we have a huge challenge as a country to fix what happened in his wake. >> laura: and dr. atlas, ralph baric and gain of function research debate, the reckoning with professor baric hasn't happened, given his advocacy for gain of function. but dr. atlas, great to see you as always. happy thanksgiving. breaking a few hours ago,
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a judge in the case of missouri v biden granted plaintiff's request to depose dr. fauci tomorrow about his role censoring the authorization and the covid approach. one of the authors and a target of fauci, friend of the show, joins us now. a professor at stanford school of medicine. doctor, what's the most important question you hope your lawyers pose to dr. fauci? >> dr. fauci and the entire biden administration used their power to censor legitimate scientific discussion about covid policy on the web. your previous guest, my friend, dr. scott atlas was censored, i was censored in a youtube video done with governor desantis. countless of other scientists who disagreed with dr. fauci were on the receiving end of a
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suppression campaign, in fact smearing and demonization campaign. i would like to know what role did he play in inducing social media to suppress scientific discussion online. we know that he was in contact. there's an email of him exchanging information with mark zuckerberg, ceo of facebook, where zuckerberg offers his help. much of that email is redacted so the public can't see exactly what they wrote. i wro love to know how they spoke to each other, how dr. fauci directed underlings to enact a suppression sensorship campaign that violated the first amendment of a large number of scientists, led to misinformation, the misinforming of the american public on basic fact about covid throughout the pandemic. >> laura: and professor, also because you challenged lockdown
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orders, you have said your life at stanford in some ways became kind of a living hell. now you say academic freedom itself is dead. explain how ak cademia is part of the problem in the covid debate. >> you know, look, where i work and teach the last 20 some years at stanford university, we get hundreds of millions of dollars of money from the nih. a lot of the top leadership in the medical school and elsewhere are friends with dr. fauci, personal friends with dr. fauci. what's happened during the pandemic is people that have spoken up against the lockdown policy, dr. atlas you heard, me, the famous scientist at stanford, friend of mine, we've all been on the receiving end of tremendous pressure within the university to keep us silent. there have been, at one
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point during the pandemic there was a poster campaign. i had the crime of having governor desantis tweet my picture out because i said at a round table he hosted that by protecting, vaccinating the old, we protected the vulnerable. that was apparently a terrible crime. they put up my picture. i felt threatened on campus. and leadership did nothing. we need to fix that. >> laura: and academic freedom doesn't mean anything if dissent is punished from whatever the establishment at the time is saying. but thank you for your bravery during the past few years we've gotten to know you, have enormous respect for you. thank you so much. and crypt ee fraud, sam bankman-fried faced bankruptcy court. they're going to tell us why he and even his parents are the poster children for liberal creepiness. stay with us. my name is douglas. i'm a writer/director
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>> laura: crypto creep and democrat darling sam bank man freed's company officially faced bankrupt court in delaware today. the details of his grip, especially as relates to the bahamas real estate purchases he made are jaw dropping. now, official property records show they bought at least 19 properties with a value of 121 million in the past two years. separately, one of the company's unit spent 3 $300 million in the bahamas buying properties for senior staff. the portfolio included a vacation home in which bankman-fried's parents who are both liberal stanford professors listed as signatories. when asked how it was paid for, a spokesman for the professors said they were trying to return the property to their son's company. okay. given what his father said three months ago, seems
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hard to believe. >> the most relevant thing here is probably that i'm sam's dad. i think we've always enjoyed working together, thinking together. i think from the start whenever i was youthful, i lend a hand. >> laura: joining us, victor davis hanson and miranda divine, fox news contributor, "new york post" columnist following all of this. victor, are you surprised that the 30-year-old was the product of two liberal professors in academia? >> no, i wish i was surprised, but there's something wrong morally with the zip codes between san francisco and san jose. it is silicon valley $7 trillion of market capitalization or sankity moan why yous virtual signaling of stanford university. that produced probably the greatest ponzi scheme in our own lives. his mother ran mind the
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gap, attempt to get money from silicon valley and disguise donors and import into the election. remember, this is not new. we had elizabeth holmes, a stanford person. ran an $8 billion ponzi scheme, the big hillary clinton donor. and dianne feinstein, billionaire, has a chinese chauffeur for 20 years, no consequences. barbara boxer, our senator from the same area, she was a registered chinese foreign agent, was working with a state company that helped surveil the uyghurs. and you get into the hypocrisy of nancy pelosi violating her quarantine that she championed, giving her lectures on ice cream and her 24,000 refrigerator. i could go on with gavin n newsom. tom steyer. $191 million.
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didn't get one delegate, made a lot of his fortune with indonesian coal plants. dirty coal. these people have enormous amounts of money. they're never subject to consequences of their own ideology and virtue signal to the rest of us in the utilitarian philosophy that the ends justify almost any means necessary to achieve them because they're so noble. they're really dangerous people. >> laura: let me jump in here. i think victor, it is worse than that. miranda, they work to shame other people, not just virtue signal, they shame. this kid is ripping people off billions of dollars. they forced sequoia capital today, one of the biggest venture capital firms in the world to apologize to their investors for buying into this kid's fraud. sequoia is totally
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captured by this 30 yeerld fr 30-year-old fraud whose parent are professors at stanford, we're all supposed to go like this? okay. >> well, sequoia should apologize. i mean, we heard today that $3 billion has gone missing from this company and sequoia, it was obvious to everybody that the sham bol ik can bol i can kid was not someone you trust with billions of dollars. i would never invest any money with sequoia because obviously they have no taste. and look, what victor was just saying about the parent, utilitarian philosophy, their son has absorbed that. utterly cynical. has given interviews in the last few days talking about this supposed philosophy, really a cult that he belonged to called effectival truism, which
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is all about doing good but lefty good, which is not doing good at all, it is another word for socialism. and he just laughed about it. he said oh, yes, we pretended we just adopted woke to full people we could get away with blue murder, paraphrasing. that's what happened. he donated to democrats tens of millions of dollars, regulators turned a blind eye. >> laura: and row conna was a huge beneficiary from bankman-fried. and the democrats look like they're running for the exit, don't want to address this at all. >> no. >> laura: we have to roll. thank you very much. happy thanksgiving to you both. with no suspect in the university of idaho murders, the finger pointing has gun. what one anonymous source
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says about the local police, why our next guest says that's unwarranted. mark fuhrman is here to tell us in moments. uing women,n and the elderly. and as winter approaches, they need our help more than ever. from your neighborhood to the nations, cityserve international providing food, shelter and transportation to millions through a vast network of churches. help us serve the people of ukraine this winter by donating now, go to cityserve.us to give.
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sdw .
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unanswered questions are lingering in the case of four murdered university
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of idaho students nine days ago. tonight, we're seeing frustration boil over. someone described as a source close to the investigation telling the daily mail that moscow police botched the initial investigation, saying they likely obliterated mountains of evidence by waiting so long to properly investigate. in another development, law enforcement sources tell fox that investigators may be probing whether the killer hid in the woods before entering the home and investigating the possibility of a peeping tom situation. joining me, fox news contributor, former lapd detective mark fuhrman. good to see you tonight. is this kind of finger pointing at this point, at this stage of the case to be expected given the lack of leads? >> you know, laura, i'm not sure. when i read this article, the very way this source is describing it is not the language of a police
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officer, detective, or even a forensic tech. the very idea that this homicide investigation has been done improperly would mean you have access to the inside of that residence. and you know, homicide investigation is not a timed event. i certainly appreciate that they've taken this amount of time to process that scene because they could, it was inside, it was closed from the elements, they could control the heat. this was very good, not very bad. >> laura: i want to play an exchange from what was a press conference this past sunday. watch. >> do you still believe this was done by one perpetrator, and if so, how does one individual kill four people at night and not wake up the other two roommate? >> our investigation will continue to look at all
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avenues of that investigation. i cannot disclose any of that information. i don't even know that information at this point in time. >> laura: mark, your reaction to that. >> well, i think the chief, he's a little uncomfortable that he's doing the press conference. he doesn't want to give away any information that detective or the fbi or the idaho state police are working on, so he is trying to walk the line on that. of course they're not going to release, yes, we think it is one suspect or it had to be multiple people. they're not going to release that. they have to save some information in case they do get a suspect so they can actually interrogate that person effectively. that should be absolutely the first thing that everybody should understand. they're going to give enough to help catch the suspect or suspects but they're actually going to
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keep back and hold close to the vest information that only the killer would know. >> laura: mark, speaking as a mom for a moment, if my son or daughter were at this university and i heard, well, we don't have the suspect, we don't seem to -- doesn't seem like there are many big leads, but it is safe on campus, i just wouldn't feel that way. maybe that's irrational, that's how i would feel. your reaction to that. >> i would agree but i think in the mind-set of what we've been going through for probably the last 10 or 20 years is terrorism and active shooters on campus, that's where a lot of security is geared. now, when the detective and the officers got to the scene, they realize that this crime scene and these victims were killed. >> laura: mark, thank you. appreciate your input. stay with us.
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>> laura: kamala harris struggles to think on her feet. in the philippines she kept it real simple. >> hello. hello. thank you. hello. hello. thank you. >> laura: that was pretty good. have a good thanksgiving. >> ♪ ♪ >> [cheers and applause]. >> ♪ ♪ >> greg: all right! >> [cheers and applause]. >> greg: happy tuesday, everybody. it's great to see every one ever you except for you over there. protestors attacked expensive pieces of art. no, i am not talking about my quads, though they are pricey and worth it.

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