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tv   America Reports  FOX News  November 23, 2022 11:00am-12:00pm PST

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to help you get the care you need, when you need it. we can even help schedule appointments or find a specialist. enrollment ends december 7th. call unitedhealthcare or go online today. we make it easy to enroll, too. enjoy all the benefits of the only medicare advantage plans with the aarp name. take advantage now. >> john: new at 2:00, lawmakers are heading home for thanksgiving. the president is up north in nantucket but somebody is still watching over the capitol. chinese drones. >> molly: add spying to the list of threats coming from that communist country. the pentagon warning about china's dangerous behavior. that after admitting china's nuclear powered subs are so
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advanced missiles could hit the continental u.s. from halfway around the world. >> john: and with that comforting thought welcome back as "america reports" rolls into a second hour. >> molly: i'm molly line in for sandra. the details on the chinese drones a couple moments away, but a killer on the loose in a college town, and on edge. >> john: waiting to hear from idaho police later this afternoon and the brutal murder of four students. >> molly: investigators are still combing through evidence in and around the off campus home as the community is desperate for answers. >> everyone that has been here for a while is just devastated by it. something like that is rare, does not happen often. >> i used to walk everywhere, and i try to only walk during the day now.
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>> it's kind of been scary, honestly. >> like something out of a tv show, not something that i would have expected to be experiencing so close to home. >> a lot of concern there in the town of moscow, idaho. julia parker, a member of the town's city council. thank you for joining us. we will hear more from the police this afternoon, hoping for the sake of the town, for the parents and those folks who are still there in town and very afraid of what might come next that they have some answers here and some developments. what's the general sense there in the town as to whether or not there is still a lingering threat out there, and how are people feeling by and large? >> i think in our community we are a very close knit community and we care very much about one another as well as the university students, and so it is devastating for us.
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it feels like these students who were murdered are a part of everyone's family, and so i think we are all trying to hold each other close and be patient as much as we can be and show kindness to each other right now. >> molly: julia, thank you for joining us, this is molly, i'm here working with john this afternoon. people across the country are following this case and watching what's happening there, and thinking of this small little community and people from across america are from small communities themselves. what are you hoping to hear from investigators that have been fairly tight lipped up until this point at an afternoon press conference today? >> i have faith in our moscow police department. they are well-trained and professional. i'm so glad that they have support from the idaho state police as well as the fbi and i think they are sharing as much information as they can with us. as a city councilmember, i don't
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have any other information than anybody else has, and i know that we all want information and it's really hard to be -- to feel like we are in limbo, but i do really have faith in our police department and the idaho state police and how they are handling the situation. >> john: julia, two weeks after the horrible, gruesome and tragic murders, no suspects, no weapons. as you mentioned, we have local, state and federal law enforcement all working this case. as far as we know, we may not know everything, they are not getting very far with the investigation and they went from oh, there's no ongoing threat to the community to yes, there is an ongoing threat to the community. so, what are people thinking in terms of their safety. up until this horrific incident, the murder rate there in moscow was 0, and now the town has been
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shaken to its very core. >> john: i think it is very difficult for people in our community. i think people are feeling less safe, afraid, and that we are really working to check on each other, to reach out, to make sure people have the services they need, to use the security at the university if students feel like they want help going home at night or, you know, it gets dark here really early, so if they even want to walk home in the afternoon. but i do think that it's a small town and, you know, we don't always take security as seriously as maybe we should, and so it's important to just be vigilant and make sure that we are taking care of ourselves and also checking on each other. >> molly: julia, they will not
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be sharing their families, and many other students have left to be home with their families, do you think this will drastically change your community, not just this holiday but years to come. people seem to be very concerned and will parents be frightened to send their students, their younger loved ones back to your community? >> i think in the short-term there probably will be students who don't want to come back right now, and that's ok. the university has been working to set up a system where they can do more distance education. i think that in the long run, and in the big picture that moscow, idaho is a -- is a pretty safe community. it's a pretty safe place to go to school, as safe as any other. >> john: julia, that is substantially changed in the
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last two weeks, that thought. we'll see what the police have to say later on this afternoon. we do hope that they come up with some leads. thank you for joining us and i know that it's going to be very difficult, but we wish everyone there in the town the best thanksgiving. >> thank you, keep us in your hearts. >> john: we will. there is something in the air over our nation's capitol. hundreds of chinese-made drones and national security experts say beijing could be using them to spy on us. this as the pentagon warns china's troubling behavior is getting down right dangerous to our country's security, admitting the chinese submarines can launch missiles to reach the u.s. mainland without ever leaving chinese waters. >> molly: and intel officials are stepping up warnings about tiktok used by millions of americans from lawmakers to your kids.
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>> tiktok is a national security threat. when american's information is going over chinese server which is 100% owned by a company in china. >> if you are a parent and you have a kid on tiktok, i would be very, very concerned. all of that data that your child is inputting and receiving is being stored somewhere in beijing. >> one fcc commissioner says tiktok is much more dangerous than it seems. >> at the end of the day, tiktok is china's digital fentanyl. people think it's just a fun application for sharing dance videos or other funny videos, but that's just the sheep's clothing. underneath of it, it operates as a very sophisticated surveillance app. >> molly: is the white house taking the threat seriously n fred fleitz r joins us in a few minutes but jennifer griffin is live at the pentagon with more on this. jennifer. >> molly, u.s. lawmakers on the
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senate intelligence committee have raised alarm bells how recreational drones made by dji, a chinese company, could be used to enter into fly zones in washington, d.c. the story was first reported by politico. only legislation for counter drone technology will expire on december 16th, led to a congressional debate whether new legislation is needed to track the aerial vehicles. geo fencing restrictions keep them out of certain locations but private users are manipulating the recreational zones to enter no fly zones near federal buildings. no evidence the chinese government is operating the drones but lawmakers say the concerns are real. during a meeting with his chinese counterpart on tuesday, defense secretary lloyd austin addressed beijing's dangerous behavior in the pacific, sending dozens of war planes to test the reaction of taiwanese defenses. >> the secretary emphasize the
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need to responsibly manage competition and maintain open lines of communication. also raised concerns about the increasingly dangerous behavior, increases the risk of accident. >> on tuesday, while visit i think the islands of the philippines, vice president kamala harris issued veiled criticism of beijing. >> we stand with you in defense of international rules and laws. >> fbi director chris wray raised eyebrows, confirming the chinese government had set up listening stations here in the u.s. to spy on chinese dissidents, stalking and blackmailing those who do not agree with the communist party regime. >> it is outrageous to think that the chinese would attempt to set up shop in new york, let's say, without proper
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coordination. the reason this is so important is because we have seen a clear pattern of the chinese government, the chinese communist party, exporting their repression right here to the u.s. >> the fbi recently unsealed charges against ten chinese intelligence officers for a variety of criminal efforts to exert influence in the u.s., all 56 fbi field offices have scores of investigations open into the china threat. molly. >> molly: jennifer griffin, thank you very much. happy thanksgiving to you. >> john: bring in fred fleitz, america first policy institute and former chief of staff at the national security council. fred, good to see you again. play a little more of the fbi director from the congressional hearing. this time talking about tiktok and the potential threat to national security. listen here. >> we do have national security
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concerns, at least from the fbi's end about tiktok. they include the possibility that the chinese government could use it to control data collection on millions of users or control the recommendation algorithm, which could be used for influence operations if they so chose or to control software on millions of devices. >> john: tiktok was described for young users as digital fentanyl, and really is the perfect trojan horse. get young people hooked on it, they use it and collect mountains of information on them. >> it puzzles many americans where the u.s. government would want to ban an app which is full of young people dancing and tons of cat videos, but the fact is that this is a trojan horse surveillance program. and senator warner said something remarkable and fox news sunday over the weekend. said donald trump was right when he tried to ban tiktok, all the
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data is going to the chinese communist party and the company that owns it will not reveal the algorithm on how the information is manipulated to get certain information to americans and possibly maybe one day to blackmail them. >> john: not just the united states either, 1.5 billion users on tiktok. it's the most downloaded app of 2021. i'm sure it's probably right up there this year as well. so, it's -- folks outside the u.s. as well. you mentioned bite dance, the chinese parent company, it and tiktok have said oh, we are not collecting data and funneling it to the chinese government. any reason to believe them when they are saying that? >> they are not, they say the data will be kept in singapore or the united states, they have revealed chinese engineers can access all of this data and we know every chinese company is subject to the control of chinese intelligence and the
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chinese communist party. china will tell the companies what to do and you can be sure they are all over this data. >> john: so what do you have to say about the latest security risk that jennifer griffin was outlining about the chinese-made drones and the company dji, flying around washington, d.c. in restricted air space, apparently the chinese government according to jennifer is not behind this, but has to be some connection here. >> i've done some speaking about this. drones are a security threat. drones bought in the u.s. are supposed to be geo fenced so they cannot fly over sensitive areas but the electronics and the program can be tweaked to go anywhere, and of course if the drone was made in china not subject to u.s. regulations, that drone could fly anywhere. and it's not just drones over sensitive areas. we are also looking at fleets of autonomous drones that could attack individuals, possibly politicians, military targets, it is an enormous security
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threat that our military intelligence agencies are grappling with. >> john: and what about the listening stations that fbi director wray was talking about. dozens in the united states, many more around the world. why isn't the biden administration doing something about it? >> the reason, john, the biden administration thinks china is a competitor. look, france is a competitor, italy is a competitor, japan is a competitor. china is an adversary. using every political, economic, method to knock the u.s. off so it will be the leading global power. it's not playing by the rules, it's abusing diplomatic rules, that's not a supplies, it's cheating at economics, engaged in a very aggressive intelligence information, through tiktok, just par for the course. >> john: a lot to chew on there, including our turkey and stuffing over the next couple days. fred, thanks for your perspective, appreciate it. >> good to be here, happy
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thanksgiving. >> john: the same to you. molly, you know, it's extraordinary, i don't want to say how addictive, but how compelling using tiktok is for young people. it's all my 11-year-old twins talk about. oh, this on tiktok, that on tiktok, doing a tiktok dance. >> molly: and hard to imagine what the chinese government would want to do with all of that stuff, a great point the concerns have been raised for quite some time. >> john: concerns are one thing. see if they do anything about it. >> molly: they have been talking about it long time, and the influence in the united states. air raid sirens in ukraine, explosions reported in several regions, including odesa, kherson and kyiv, killing at least three people and a newborn baby. the blasts continuing to cripple
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ukraine's energy infrastructure, knocking out power, that's forcing ukrainians to hunker down without heat. >> john: and breaking news, in colorado, the shooting rampage suspect had a hearing in court, our first look at the man of the grave club -- >> molly: and a shooting at a walmart in chesapeake, virginia. a live report on that.
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>> john: fox news alert, deadly shooting rampage in colorado springs. the suspect appearing before a judge by a video link from jail moments ago, you can see in the background the accused killer wearing a yellow jail uniform slumped over in a wheelchair. the suspect's face, a bloody pulp. >> molly: a number of possible murder and hate crime charges after the suspect opened fire in a nightclub killing five and injuring dozens more. >> john: we are learning more about the suspect. a brand-new court filing, defense attorneys claim the 22-year-old is non-binary and uses they/them pronouns. >> molly: garrett, what else did you learn from the hearing today? >> this was a preliminary hearing, so fairly brief, but it is the first time we have seen the suspect, anderson lee aldrich since saturday night's attack. the 22-year-old attended the hearing over video from the el paso county jail.
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you can see them slouched over, a badly bruised face. the suspect spent the last several days in the hospital after two men hailed heros stopped the alleged gunman's rampage by beating them with the suspect's own handgun. so far the suspect is facing five counts of first-degree murder and five more counts, additional charges could be filed over the next couple of weeks as well. investigators are still trying to pin down a motive for the shooting. in a court filing last night, the suspect's attorney said they identify as non-binary, which would make the shooter part of the lgbtq community which up until saturday had viewed this nightclub as something of a safe haven. we have also learned the suspect changed their name more than six years ago after being bullied as a teen in texas and lived with their grandmother due to his
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mother having a number of run-ins with the law. the family still has not spoken publicly and the next hearing for this case will likely be in the next few weeks. molly. >> molly: the defense not sharing a lot there, thank you very much. john. >> john: molly, a mass shooting rattles a virginia community the day before thanksgiving. according to a local hospital there, eight people are now dead after a gunman's rampage inside a walmart in chesapeake. police say the gunman killed himself after the attack and confirms, the police confirm the shooter was a store associate named andre bing. griff jenkins is in chesapeake near norfolk. what can you tell us about the alleged gunman? >> good afternoon, john. his name is andre bing of chesapeake, 31 years old, he's been a walmart associate since 2010 and his position currently was the overnight team lead. he has no criminal past and
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obviously now is the alleged gunman that they have identified. meanwhile we are learning more about exactly what transpired inside this walmart shortly after 10:00 p.m. 911 call came in at approximately 10:12, 2 minutes later, 10:14, first officers on the site, 10:16, they entered, we know bing entered a break room with one handgun and multiple magazines and the victims, at least three bodies were found in that break room. we also know some were taken to the hospital, we got an update from the hospital from the chief medical officer, what he had to say, take a listen. >> we have two individuals who passed away, individually, we have two in our intensive care unit in critical condition and then one patient who is in good
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condition. >> meanwhile, we can show you some video of a memorial that has been erected here, a makeshift memorial, balloons remembering the victims here. the police are currently maintaining that there were seven total fatalities, including the gunman, unclear how many people are at that hospital as we wait for more updates. virginia's governor, glenn youngkin, very heartfelt messages today at his public appearances. he's ordered flags to be lowered across the state. we'll bring you more details as we get them. john, back to you. >> john: griff, thanks for the update, appreciate it. >> molly: more border backlash as dhs secretary mayorkas responds to calls to resign or face impeachment over his handling of the migrant crisis at the southern border. the head of homeland security says he's not going anywhere and pointing the finger back at gop minority leader kevin mccarthy. texas congressman, the co-chair
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of the house border security caucus and very familiar with the entire unfolding, ongoing crisis happening there on the border. first off, i just want to get your thoughts. this is dhs responding to mccarthy's call for mayorkas to resign. secretary mayorkas proud to advance the noble mission of this department, support its extraordinary workforce and serve the american people. the department will continue our work to enforce our laws and secure or border while building a safe, orderly and humane immigration system. members of congress can do something better than point the finger, they should work on solutions for the system and outdated laws which have not been overhauled in 40 years. your thoughts on that reaction from dhs. >> well, it is preposterous to come out and say something like that, when we have had 23 months of what's been going on down at the border. mayorkas has abandoned his sworn
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oath, he should resign right now or he should be impeached immediately. i think that, and i agree with 100% with our new speaker designate, kevin mccarthy, who i was -- who i was with, several of my other colleagues on the border in el paso. and we saw with our own eyes, i mean, we saw a tent city with hundreds of tents, probably with well over 1,000 illegal migrants just clamoring, yelling and carrying on across the river, and making demands what i could understand, and yet this -- we are told that mayor as is saying that he's got the border secure, that he has operational control of the border. nothing could be further from the truth. this man has created this crisis along with his president, his boss. this -- they own this crisis.
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the worst -- the worst disaster at the border this country has ever seen, we are being swamped by illegal immigrants. in fact, listen to this. the influx of illegal aliens so far adds up to roughly seven illegal migrants for every ten american births. they are trying to change america and they are doing a great job, and people say is this on purpose, yes, it is on purpose and we say why, why would they do this, they know they are bringing in people that would be democrat votes and if you don't believe me, over in the senate under chuck schumer right now, they are trying to give amnesty to illegal aliens, to make them into new democratic voters to give them amnesty. >> molly: it's an incredible situation, we bring these pictures every day on fox news channel, we have been highlighting this nonstop and letting the american people know it exists and is ongoing. an interesting suggestion from
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one of your colleagues, spoke with fox news and had this idea that a bipartisan idea, she thinks she can work with people across the aisle on this, hiring civilians to do the processing and allowing the border patrol to focus on other things. we know so much of the challenges that fall into the people of texas, workers in texas, the border patrol in texas, the lawmakers in texas. your thoughts on her idea? >> that -- all that's going to do is just make it, facilitate more to come across, we certainly want our border patrol, they are heroes, we met with them, we honored them, we served them thanksgiving dinner while we were there in el paso at the border patrol center. these people are working very, very hard. their morale is extremely low, recruitment is down, way down. morale is so low, 14 suicides,
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three in the last week. mayorkas and the biden administration have demonized them, thrown them to the curb, so many many times. let me tell you something. michigans are dying. 856 died migrants found on the border. subjected to robberies, sexual assaults, to murder by the cartels. numerous atrocities are documented. unaccompanied children are farmed out by our own hhs, our hhs department, health and human services, to so-called families. when i ask the question, are you doing dna checks, are you doing criminal background checks on these so-called families, no, we don't have the resources to do that. so what's happening, the biden administration under mayorkas and at the dhs -- they basically complete the last link in the human smuggling and child sex
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trade, he needs to go. >> molly: thank you for sharing your insights on this thanksgiving eve. wish your family a wonderful celebration this year. thank you. >> you too, god bless. happy thanksgiving. >> john: as families across the country come together to celebrate and give thanks, only going to be, make a brutal and cold flu season even worse. could we be looking at a possible return of the dreaded masks? >> molly: more back and forth between the teachers' union president and former secretary of state mike pompeo. why he says she's dangerous and she says he's hurting kids. charlie hurt with live reaction coming up.
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>> molly: could your kids be heading back to school after thanksgiving in masks? again?
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a new hss report recommends the reupping of mask mandates as the couple grapples with a severe and widespread flu season. david spunt is live in washington. so, david, this kind of sounds like some of the covid mitigation strategies actually led to a surge in sickness and now we are seeing this again. your thoughts. >> molly, in a way because we were so careful during covid for the past two years, health officials right now are seeing a triple threat, covid, rvv and the flu, add the holiday travel into the mix, only expected to make things more challenging. the new health and human services report recommends putting on a mask to make it through the next few months, when travelling or a large group, this is the season where people typically get sick and masking can help. in addition to covid, rsv, a common respiratory virus, making the rounds not only in adults but specifically children. in groups, go to daycare, heelt school, increase in rsv this
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year. because of covid, the mitigation strategies over the last several years, many children did not get exposed to rsv, so we have several years of children who have never seen rsv and because of that we have layers and more children are requiring hospitals than in a given season. >> hospitals are seeing a surge in visit, colder and more people get sick. what make this year difference in 2020 and 2021, officials are completely ready to take on the challenges over the next few months. >> i think the country is ready. we are ready to support hospitals that are getting into trouble. we have been working with jurisdictions over the last month meeting with them. if hospitals need help, we offered that and we stand ready to help hospitals get through this moment. >> right now the white house insisting they are not going forward with any mask mandates.
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however, people should have the opportunity to wear one if they want, molly. >> molly: physician organizations have expressed concerns as well, it's something we are watching and as parents as well, david thank you so much, and happy thanksgiving to you and yours. >> john: former secretary of state mike pompeo has faced the nation's top enemies from china to north korea. about you when asked to name the most dangerous person in the world he points to randi weingarten. she claims he is just trying to win the gop primary with talk like that. charlie hurt, here is what mike pompeo said, i get asked who is the most dangerous person in the world, chairman kim, xi jinping, the most dangerous person in the world is randi weingarten. it's not a close call. the if you ask who is most likely to take the country down, it's the teachers' unions and the filth they are teaching the
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kids. >> what he's doing is making it harder for teachers all across america to teach kids, to bring parents and teachers together. that's what is pathetic about what he's doing. he knows better. >> john: charlie, we have set the table, now you go ahead and eat. >> well, to be sure those are strong words from secretary mike pompeo, and it's a stark reminder that, you know, most people remember secretary mike pompeo for being secretary of state, and cia director, before that he was a congressman from kansas representing the people of kansas and speaks for a lot of people, the stuff that has been uncovered, especially saw this in virginia with governor youngkin's race and emerged when kids were trying to learn over the computer at home. so much of the stuff that kids are being taught in schools, public schools and even private schools is clearly undermining
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the vision of this country and the principles of this country. when you have a place like the university of virginia, founded by thomas jefferson, you have students there, the student newspaper calling for jefferson to be removed from the university, they are not learning the stuff from their parents. they are learning this in school. and so secretary pompeo speaking for a lot of people, it's interesting to listen to randi weingarten to politicize this, and the way the union politicizes education in the country, she tries to attack him on partisan grounds, which, and then she -- then she does what teachers' unions always do, step back and say oh, he's attacking the children. no, he's not, he's sticking up for parents, sticking up for kids and sticking up for the truths on which the country is founded. and primary season is underway, and this is just a remindser
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that mike pompeo can play in foreign policy stuff, but he can also play in domestic policy stuff. >> john: speaking of domestic policy, washington post taking aim at twitter again, that's a domestic issue, hope it was not too much of a stretch. also taking aim at elon musk saying that he is undermining twitter's ability to protect vulnerable communities by letting enterprises like the babylon b back on twitter, and a psychologist back on twitter, undermines years of work. what are they talking about? >> yeah, i can't think of a better, more domestic important domestic issue than free speech. you know, and this notion that somehow free speech, american people can't handle free speech and that it needs to be controlled by censors at twitter is a bizarre thing. i found so strange about "the
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washinton post" article. it was written, it's not an opinion piece by somebody with strong partisan opinions, it's written by three journalists, actually reporters who cover technology. and the idea that they are so afraid of free speech and they are so afraid -- not the least of which is the babylon b, it's -- first of all -- john satirical. >> it's a humor site and the idea we want to censor even humor and you have actual news reporters for a newspaper encouraging and defending that notion, it's really crazy and it's not a healthy way to go about politics. >> john: well, we'll see how twitter comes out of all of this as we pointed out before, they have lost a lot of employees. see if they can keep going. charlie, great to see you. hope you and the family have a great thanksgiving. >> and you, happy thanksgiving. >> john: down there in the
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wilderness of virginia with the bears and the snakes. there you go. thanks, charlie. molly. >> molly: a couple big decisions out of georgia. state supreme court reinstating the controversial abortion ban and allowing early voting to go forward this weekend as well. how will all of that affect the senate run-off race? karl rove coming up next. hey, i just got a text from my sister. you remember rick, her neighbor? sure, he's the 76-year-old guy who still runs marathons, right?
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t>> molly: the first major poll out of georgia since the midterms shows the senate race inside the margin of error, rafael warnock is leading herschel walker, 51% to 47%, but some concern for republicans with the senate already decided. there is no momentum left to push those voters to the polls. we have karl rove, a former white house deputy chief of staff, of course, and fox news contributor. karl, thanks for being here, happy thanksgiving eve. your thoughts what we are seeing out of georgia. >> i think we are going to be mystified about the race to the end because there are some unusual circumstances behind it. take a look at this. 3,935,924 people voted in the senate race. rafael warnock won by 36,788
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votes, less than 1%. now, who are those people that gave him his victory? another way of looking at it, take a look at the difference between kemp and walker. 203,000 people vote for brian kemp, the republican governor but don't vote for herschel walker. that's the difference between their two vote totals. 52,151 of them are people who voted for brian kemp, the republican governor and the libertarian for the u.s. senate. are those people likely to come back? if i were rafael warnock i would worry about that. because that represents his winning margin. if he does not have the 52,000 people showing up and considering voting for him, he's got an issue. even more problematic is there are 132,230 people vote for kemp for governor and warnock for the
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senate, and then turn around and vote for a democrat, that's a big problem, they represent three times his victory margin and 19,122 people who voted for brian kemp for governor and jumped over the senate race, did not come out. if i were being warnock, i would be worried. said i'm voting for kemp, the republican governor but not walker as a republican senate nominee and if those people don't come out and vote for a certain, 120 some odd thousand of them and vote for rafael warnock he's in trouble. the race is turnout, turnout, and why the race is up and down and really hard to predict until the close of the polls. >> molly: i enjoyed the whiteboard. happy thanksgiving for you. >> john: the whiteboard, makes a
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great christmas gift. max gordon is in california putting electric vehicles to the turkey day travel test, on the road in santa monica. max, what's up on your trip? >> hey, john, so we are about to hit the road, we are just finishing up charging our tesla model s. of course, lots of folks are hitting the highways for thanksgiving, but more and more are doing it in an electric vehicle just like this one. now, we just topped it off and are about to begin our journey of about 350 miles from here in santa monica up to san francisco, and probably the biggest difference between road tripping in an ev as opposed to a gas-powered car, you have to plan out your charging stops. it takes longer than gassing up a car and are not as widely available, especially in rural areas. and still california is charging ahead with the ban on new gas car sales by 2035, some groups
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are applauding but auto experts say california has a long way to go before it's going to be ready for that big shift. they need more charging stations, of course more accessible, cheaper options. this tesla model y costs $66,000. guys, back to you. >> john: all right, max, keep us updated on your drip. and thanks for joining us. happy thanksgiving to you. fingersticks can be a real challenge. that's why i use the freestyle libre 2 system. with a painless, one-second scan, i know my glucose numbers without fingersticks. now, i'm managing my diabetes better, and i've lowered my a1c from 8.2 to 6.7. take the mystery out of managing your diabetes and lower your a1c. now you know. try it for free at freestylelibre.us ♪ ♪ luxury exemplified. innovation electrified.
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♪ >> good afternoon. i'm trace gallagher in for martha maccallum. soon a live update from idaho police on the gruesome quadruple murder and the possibility one of the victims had a stalker. first, the department of homeland security responding from the top house republican. kevin mccarthy with this warning about what will happen when the gop takes control in january. watch. >> i'm calling on the secretary to resign.

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