tv The Faulkner Focus FOX News December 14, 2022 8:00am-9:01am PST
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two that will launch in april of 2023. >> dana: congratulations and really inspiring and for people out there who don't listen to podcasts, i encourage you to listen to proof. incredible work. >> bill: two smart ladies. dig and see where the story leads. >> dana: those two can't get any compensation from the state under georgia law and they have freedom now. harris faulkner is next. here she is. >> harris: we have breaking news today. america bracing. but is america ready for what's about to happen on the southern border? former president trump put into place a measure to slow down the caravans and the groups, the large groups of illegals with title 42, keeping many of those illegal immigrants south of the border in mexico while our border officials could catch their breath and try to process people's claims to be here. now title 42 is ending in a
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matter of days. our own national security is on the line. i'm harris faulkner and are you in "the faulkner focus." one week is left before the pandemic-era policy goes away. the biden administration so far is using it -- that particular policy to send people back to mexico quickly but that ends on december 21st. pressure now is building on the biden white house to keep that in place and offer up a better solution long-term on the border problem. we're looking for more money, $4 billion in additional funding. the white house also reportedly considering ways to slash numbers. numbers of asylum claims and reasons why people say they want to be here while also creating a narrower pathway to citizenship. one potential plan is creating
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humanitarian parole which would allow people from particularly venezuela, haiti, nicaragua and cuba to apply for asylum inside their own countries and then be flown directly to the united states and fanned out wherever the administration would want to put them. homeland security secretary mayokas made a stop in el paso, texas yesterday as he was facing growing criticism for not taking the crisis seriously. he won't even call it that. 20 house republicans call for him to resign or face impeachment. >> secretary mayokas remains in office america becomes less safe. if it's not already abundantly clear mayokas has foresake en his sworn oath to protect the homeland. i don't know when it will be clear. >> impeachment is not a tool for incompetence or a tool for negligence, it is a tool for willful action to harm the country and we see that each and
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every day from mayokas. >> harris: the numbers are already staggering, 500,000, a half million illegals just since october. that was the brand-new fiscal year 2023. 60 days that's what we get. that's more than all of the fiscal year 2020. look at that. look at those numbers. we'll have texas attorney general ken paxton in "focus" coming up. let's check in first at the white house with peter doocy. because, peter, i mentioned the white house wants $4 billion for all of this. we need a line item detail of what they will spend it on and they are still planning, as far as we know, to keep title 42 on the chopping block. >> bill: it is interesting, harris. even though officials have said the pandemic is over, it sounds like they would be happy to have this pandemic-era tool for expelling migrants on the books if it wasn't for those pesky
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courts. >> we are required by court order to lift title 42 by december 21st. that's the court order that we have been given. the department of justice is going to lead that effort and what happens next. so i won't get ahead of that. >> this is the concern from a group of republicans and democrats in congress. dhs is almost completely reliant on title 42 to control migration from mexico in the northern triangle. vast majority of people encountered by u.s. border patrol along the border in october 2022 were expelled under title 42 rather than processed under title eight. there is also now an acknowledgement from biden officials that if title 42 goes away, national security could be impacted. >> so the team has been working very hard to insure that we are taking steps to be able to manage the expiration of title 42 and to put in place a process
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that will be orderly and humane. we believe that in doing so, we can protect our national security concerns. >> we do hear a lot of that. orderly and humane. there is no real consideration publicly that they'll do anything to keep people out more. they are trying to figure how to kick people out differently. the big focus just seems to be the people that get in are treated orderly and humanely. >> harris: peter doocy, thank you very much. ken paxton, texas attorney general knows all too well what's about to happen. ken, thank you for being in "focus" today. first of all, what is the state of texas doing to brace for this, to prepare? >> well, i think i have to applaud our governor. he is on the border with our state police doing inspections, slowing the progress of people coming across the border to send a message to mexico hey, you can do your part. if our president won't do his job of enforcing immigration laws, we'll do our best to keep
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the flow of traffic coming across the border to a very slow pace and hopefully have some impact on the mexican government to stop this inflow of illegals to our country. >> harris: you are going back in time. former president trump had already shored up those relationships and went so far as to threaten tariffs on mexico. we know how critical the relationship is to the process of keeping our border side safe. >> look, we have always had a great relationship with mexico. we love mexico in texas. however they're not doing their job of preventing people from coming through their country and coming to our country. normally you expect the president of the united states to do that job. he is not. he has done just the opposite. he has invited people to come here and so we're forced to take action at the state of texas. i applaud governor abbott for doing that. >> harris: i want to get into the governor's direction to the texas department of public safety to begin inspecting those commercial trucks.
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i have heard you talk about it. we have some up on the screen now. why this would be needed. there is a quote here, we hope that frequent enhanced commercial vehicle safety inspections will help deter cartel smuggling activity while increasing the safety of roadways. it is similar to governor abbott's order in the spring to inspect all trucks. it caused major traffic jams and disrupted the supply chain on one hand there was criticism that way but we didn't have 15,000 to 18,000 people projected to come across our border illegally. >> our governor is forced into this position. not something he has done lightly. i know that. something he has done out of necessity to protect our citizens because joe biden won't do it. we've had, as you know, the numbers on fentanyl overdoses, the crime numbers, the cost to our state and other states is massive. and it is getting worse.
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as you know, you have just discussed title 42 going away, it is only going to get increasingly worse and so what are we supposed to do, sit on the sidelines and watch people die? that's what the biden administration is willing to do. they encourage it. >> harris: attorney general, what is protecting us right now with our border patrol, national guard, homeland assets, everything out numbered and overstretched right now. what is protecting us from our enemies coming over and making hay of a situation. they could send terrorists across the border. >> nothing is protecting us. they are encouraging the cartels to bring as many people as fast as possible and they've knocked down all the laws. they have put them to the side. the ones trump was enforcing whether it was remain in mexico, catch and release, building a wall. they have discarded all of that and now the consequences are going to come not just with
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higher crime but higher risk of terrorism and at some point it is not unlikely that we are going to have an impact as it relates to terrorists coming across our border. it's too easy to get across and we're encouraging it. >> harris: what do you mean by the word impact? >> we know people are coming from other countries that want to do great harm to americans and we're making it easy, not hard. that's unfortunate. the disregard for the interests of the american people by the biden administration is shocking and sometimes hard to explain to people but it's what they're doing. >> harris: 150 countries are coming from far away, as far as nigeria and other places, 150 countries. there is no way we can vet them all. what do you make of the white house reports that they are considering maybe limiting some of the asylum claims, but then the back door on that is they will fly people all over the country even more so if they can fill out that paperwork in their
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home country. >> the only thing i believe is what they actually do. what they've actually done. i know what they've said. from day one they've encouraged the cartels to make themselves rich in importing drugs and people, human trafficking and encouraged that by saying you can come in and claim asylum. they fought us. we tried to have the laws enforced and they've said no, we don't want to enforce those laws. i don't believe anything they say until they actually do something that matters and works and we know what works. we saw donald trump do many things that worked and now they've discarded every single one of those laws and policies and said we'll do it our way. our way is to invite everybody here as fast as possible. >> harris: it is so interesting. when you do look back a couple of years former president trump was eviscerated for his words. but we needed to look at the actions. now we have a white house that speaks more words and doesn't do
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enough action on this issue at all. you talked about fentanyl. quickly before i know i have to let you go, another border state, we're all border states now because of fentanyl. senator blackburn has said that over and over. in arizona they seized more than 1.5 million fentanyl pills in a series of drug busts since last thursday, attorney general. it comes as we're seeing new frightening video of a florida police officer exposed to fentanyl during a traffic stop. look at her. that police officer. forgive me, look at her. she is a female officer. i couldn't see that from where i was sitting. she was left choking, breathless, collapsed as a result of possible exposure to fentanyl. the officer was taken to a local hospital. we are told she will make a full recovery. they laid her out. attorney general, when you look at this, what are we up against?
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>> this is probably to me the greatest harm of all. i know families that have lost children that had no idea they were taking fentanyl laced into other things. we are losing over 100,000 americans every year to overdoses. most of those are fentanyl related. and i don't know. when i see these families, i know it could have been prevented if the biden administration would have kept up enforcement. a trade the biden administration knows they are making. it is a horrible trade. i hate seeing these families every month, every month in my state that have lost family members that we shouldn't have lost because we aren't enforcing our laws and protecting our borders. it is the saddest meetings i have as attorney general. >> harris: this is political. how do we get the white house's attention? for a while the governor of texas and others were sending people. you saw the governor of florida
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to places where democrats couldn't ignore it. they are still in the majority until january. >> we'll have to be creative in congress and creative as governors. we have to be creative as attorney generals and file lawsuits. congress will have to start exposing this to the american people. >> harris: attorney general from the great state of texas, prayers for the border. thank you, sir. ftx founder sam bankman-fried behind bars in the bahamas. amidday -- amid additional questions. bahamas wants to know, too. voters venting about the president's performance while he considers a 2024 run. >> he worries about other people's borders, ukraine's borders but not the united states borders. i find that appalling. >> probably f minus. >> harris: that's lower than an
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he awaits justice here the feds are already saying staggering $8 billion customer deposits are missing and sam bankman-fried used the money for his benefits. the white house refusing to answer any questions about whether president biden plans to return political donations that he allegedly got from bankman-fried. >> covered by the hatch act. limited on what i can say. anything that is connected to political contributions from here, i would have to refer you to the dnc. even his opinion or his thought about the contributions, donations, i cannot speak about that from here. i am covered by the hatch act which i'm happy to say over and over again because we believe in the rule of law here. >> harris: we should have her recite it to make sure she understands what it is.
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"new york post" op-ed argues that sam bankman-fried still believes it was a mistake and mocking him as harry plotter adding, the crypto con embezzled billions for dem donations and real estate. will cain, under cover of the hatch act and so much other stuff like i don't know and i don't remember coming out of the white house. different times. their words matter now and actions matter more. >> yeah. there will be an attempt to claw back to find the billions that are missing from those defrauded ftx crypto investors. the people who had their wallets raided. there will be a law enforcement investigation attempt to find the money in real estate wherever it may be. we know it is also in the coffers of the dnc and politicians who hold office. this is the real shame of sam bankman-fried being arrested
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before he could appear before congress. and then you ask questions about what did that money serve? did it accomplish his goal, which was to manipulate the regulatory environment to buy an insurance policy that one day he would be able to get away with all this? money isn't spent on nothing. we need to answer those questions. where did the money reside, can you get it back and what did it buy? it didn't just buy fancy homes. >> harris: that's an interesting point. i just want to revisit the hatch act for just a moment. we have the definition we can put on the screen. restricted employees quote may not engage in political activity while on duty in the workplace wearing a uniform or official insignia or government vehicle. for example, may not wear, display or distribute partisan materials or items. may not perform campaign-related chores or make political contributions. she is applying the hatch act. your thoughts.
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>> i don't know that's the escape valve she thinks it may be, harris, in avoiding these questions. everybody starting with sbf but not ending with him has to answers questions about the intertwining of this charged criminal enterprise and our political process. if we might, i find it fascinating how so many people were defrauded here. you think about how this happened. there is a greater lesson when it comes to our political topics. one, there is fear of missing out. how did billionaires and everyone fall into it? nobody wanted to miss out on crypto. you can have a guy that looked like that on your television screen walk in and make them think he was the guru of the next big thing. the more important one, what is virtue signaling but a projection to hide reality? virtue signaling is very popular and powerful.
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this guy would give away everything, billions, right? and when you virtue signal on anything you can hide your own personal flaws, but also hide a scam. apply the same analysis to all the other big virtue signals of our day. did blm not cover up a scam underneath mansions built? how much money made in the pharmaceutical industry under the campaign that everybody must be vaccinated. climate change. how many frauds are hidden under the idea that someone is doing something for the greater good. people believe they are virtuous by adopting these eideas but others who are ready to take advantage. >> harris: when you say you aren't sure if from the white house press lectern she can use the hatch act, you know attorneys will figure it all out but what we do know is it's not
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in that binder. an honest question about is the president considering what's happening right now on the ground doesn't actually get into the hatch act. let's move forward. president biden reportedly very frustrated with the fixation on his age. "politico" is reporting that president biden, who just turned 80, has vented about it to his allies saying, quote, you think i don't know how bleeping old i am? recent polls have shown that americans don't want biden to run again in 2024. citing his age as a major reason. a progressive group that launched the don't run joe campaign released its first ad. >> i'm concerned with joe biden's low polling. >> with his low popularity he is way too much of a gamble. >> if he runs the election is at serious risk. >> we can't afford to lose. >> don't run, joe. >> don't run, joe.
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>> don't run, joe. >> harris: wow, i got it. it's pretty clear. >> yeah. it's a reality, joe. i don't know why you should be so offended by the fact of the reality of your age. look, more concerning than the number, the arbitrary number, is the obvious decline in mental acuity that anyone can see. i don't know it should be graded on a curve, harris. i don't know we should be doing -- he is doing well for 80. it is a nation of 300 plus million people. are you doing well? >> harris: that's the point. there are plenty of older people doing fabulously well. they don't have the pressures of a white house. his job is specific and health and age do matter. by the way, 82 if he were to take office, 86 if he were to complete that second term. >> wow. >> harris: those numbers are really high. >> we want the best. don't we want the best among us
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to be able to lead us? it's not the best for any arbitrary descriptions of you meaning not the best for your age, not the best for your race, not the best for your gender but simply the best. >> harris: we got it. will cain, thank you so much. great to have you in "focus." a new development in the brutal murders of four university of idaho students. it has been one month now and detectives are still pouring over hours of surveillance video after a new tip has just come in. will this make a difference? i will bring in my friend and an expert, nancy grace.
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first psoriasis, then psoriatic arthritis. even walking was tough. i had to do something. i started cosentyx®. cosentyx can help you move, look, and feel better... by treating the multiple symptoms of psoriatic arthritis. don't use if you're allergic to cosentyx. before starting...get checked for tuberculosis. an increased risk of infections some serious... and the lowered ability to fight them may occur. tell your doctor about an infection or symptoms... or if you've had a vaccine or plan to. tell your doctor if your crohn's disease symptoms... develop or worsen. serious allergic reactions may occur. watch me. ask your rheumatologist about cosentyx. >> harris: detectives in the murders of idaho university students have a brand-new tip in their case. there is a car that can be seen on gas station surveillance video. remember, it was november 13th
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those murders happened. it was a scene that was described so bloody they weren't sure if maybe even the perpetrator's blood was among what they found. that's been part of the science that they are trying to crack. learning new details now on what it was like for the police in moscow, idaho for the police captain in particular, when he arrived at the scene. >> it wasn't chaos, but it was very, very somber. like i said. that's a community of college students that live over there. many through word of mouth knew what had happened. they were standing outside. there was a lot of crying. there were friends trying to find out who exactly was inside the house. some family members that arrived on scene. it was incredibly hard for the community. >> harris: let's get the very latest on the developments from matt finn in idaho. matt. >> we're standing just steps
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away from the crime scene and also this new piece of possible video evidence. there is body camera footage from an officer who stopped some students in this field here questioning them about underage drinking. you can see the students have some plaid flannels on and officer asking them questions. if you look closely in the background of that video there appears to be four people walking by. you can get a glimpse of them. those four people were coming from the direction of the crime scene, of the murder house which is right here. it is possible they were walking right down this pathway. of course, that video and possible piece of evidence is very important because police want to know what those people may have seen or heard or if they were connected to this crime in any possible way. it is important because those people were walking by around 3:12:00 a.m. on the night of the marreds.
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police say the homicides happened between 3:00 and 4:00 a.m. the new piece of video evidence is important and they're investigating it. this is a really busy area. from home you may not be able to tell. there are homes and structures and apartment buildings and there is a fraternity house and fraternity row in this area. the four people walking by could have been innocently out on a saturday night drinking and partying but police are looking into it. police are continuing to ask the public to be on the look out for the 2011 to 2013 white hyundai elantra. >> harris: nancy grace is here and why she is the great person to come to on this. you had a perfect trial conviction record on these types of crimes. what do you make of the newest details, the gas station
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surveillance video? >> i would like to point out several things about the video surveillance taken from the gas station. that gas station is about 1.2 miles from the murder scene, 1122 king. it is at 3:45 in the morning. the car is speeding. who is out at 3:45 a.m. speeding? and this is significant, harris, very significant. in a town of less than 50,000 people, less than 30,000 people, the driver has not come forward. why? they know we're looking for them. now, this car was traveling down a side street toward highway eight off 95. i would submit that that trail needs to be followed and searched very carefully because i've seen over and over, harris, a perp will throw the weapon out the window.
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they think i'm a mile away they'll never find it and throw it out the window rather than be caught with the weapon. that's what i have to say about that. one more thing. clearly moscow police need help. this gas station attendee combed through hours and hours of surveillance video until she got to 3:00 a.m. and found it and delivered it to them on a silver platter. they need help. i'm not saying that they are inept. i am saying this is a big case with a lot of evidence. >> harris: if you have citizens who are answering your call that authorities there in idaho put out to help us out, those citizens are combing through things and looking for specifics. they are comparing that car to that time stamp so on and so forth. november 12th is when they get their hands on that tape -- december 12th, rather is when they get their hands on that tape. that is a whole month gone by
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almost in this whole thing. the driver did not come forward and they didn't look at the trail because they didn't have the tape until then. what does that mean? >> that means the evidence could be lost and i'm very concerned about the crime scene. there is a primary, secondary and other crime scene. behind it there is an incline. i saw where the crime scene tape was around the home but a larger crime scene area. i do believe they're looking at that. i've seen many defendants drop or leave something behind at the crime scene. also a lot of headlines in the past 24 hours about the crime victims, the murder victims. four young beautiful people having their hands bagged with paper bags. that should not be a headline.
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that is standard operating procedure. that was done probably by the m.e. crew. the hands of murder victims are always bagged with paper, not plastic. and then caught with a rubber band. i suggest a rubber band does less damage when you take it off as opposed to masking tape. you can't use plastic. it holds in moisture and it would degrade any potential dna from the defendant. they fought, harris, some of them fought back. there could very well be the defendant, the killer's dna under their nails. >> harris: you're right. when the reports came from the bags people were trying to make the most out of it. i love the detail that you give, nancy why paper over bags are used by the medical examiner. you as a former prosecutor would suggest rubber band rather than masking tape. i get it. when you rip through the paper
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you can disturb the evidence underneath it. thank you, nancy grace. this case is coming through with some details finally a month later that are forensic and really changing the game in some ways maybe in terms of what they search for. i can't wait to bring you back and make sense of what pops next. thank you. >> thank you. >> harris: a war of words so to speak. well, critics say it's boiling over and boiling down to semantics after this exchange in the spring. >> can you provide a definition for the word woman? >> can i provide a definition? no. >> harris: supreme court justice jackson might have chosen not to define it but cambridge dictionary not shy about doing so. they are going woke with definitions for man and woman now. tyrus is the man of the hour next in "focus."
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misconduct. a judge could make a ruling as soon as the end of this week. fox news senior correspondent claudia cowen is live outside the courthouse. it has been so long since we talked about this. >> that's right, harris, it has been a long time. nearly 20 years. this past year we have had this evidentiary hearing looking into the allegations of juror bias. now four months after closing statements, the judge today is reopening that evidentiary hearing because she has questions about exhibits admitted before she rules on whether scott peterson should get a new trial. a huge twist in a case that continues to captivate the american public some two decades later. >> we the jury in the above entitled cause find the defendant, scott lee peterson guilty of the crime of murder of lacey peterson.
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>> in 2004, scott peterson was convicted of two counts of murder and sentenced to death in the disappearance of his eight month pregnant wife lacey and their unborn son. 27-year-old lacey vanished from their home on christmas eve 2002. >> corpse found on monday morning was that of a woman. >> peterson's death sentence was overturned in 2020 by the california supreme court as a result of, quote, a series of clear and significant errors in jury selection. scott was resentenced the life without parole. peterson's legal team wanted a new trial claiming this juror intentionally lied on her juror questionnaire and was biased against their client. >> she was a victim of domestic violence while pregnant and also a victim where she filed for a restraining order while pregnant. that should have been disclosed on her juror questionnaire. >> scott's sister-in-law says
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she is convinced scott is innocent. >> he did not have an impartial jury or a fair trial. >> the jurors did not take that lightly. it was no game for us. this was serious, a man's life. >> greg also served on the jury. >> i don't doubt my decision. scott peterson in my mind is guilty. >> i still stand and believe that we did what was right. >> after the trial, nice began corresponding with scott, who was then on death row. >> i wanted to hear his side and his emotions. did i see any of those emotions? no. did i get a confession? no, i never thought i would. >> scott peterson is now 50 years old. look at his most recent mug shot taken in october when he was moved off death row to a state prison near sacramento where he remains locked up for life without parole. now the judge here was supposed to issue her final ruling on december 2nd in court with
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everyone present. she abruptly canceled that hearing scheduled today's status conference and now we await her written ruling, which could come at any time. harris. >> harris: thank you very much. president biden signed the bipartisan respect for marriage act yesterday and what many people saw was a historic moment of unity turned to another example of political division. the president used it as an opportunity to take shots at republicans. >> president biden: we need to challenge the hundreds of callous, cynical laws introduced in the states targeting transgender children, terrifying families and criminalizing doctors who give children the care they need. we have to protect these children so they know they are loved and we will stand up for them and say i can seek for themselves. >> harris: critics fired back arguing it was neither the place for the time. >> this is a bill signing
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affirming the legality, legalizing gay marriage which most people support in this country. should people get married if they love each other? they should. not that controversial a point at this stage. here is joe biden using that opportunity to promote gender-affirming care for kids. why would joe biden be promoting that apart that certain special interest groups want him to? >> harris: that was probably in the prompter. special thanks to our performers joy, sam, cindy, look, you know, the gay man's choir washington, d.c. -- >> harris: gay men's chorus of washington, d.c. tyrus with more. it was a small flub. it was in the prompter.
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>> small flub. tell me when he has a small smooth. i get so frustrated with our president. it just seems like he reads. he is like ron burgundy. reads whatever is on there. no feeling, no authenticity. looked like it was the first time he saw it. a lot of flubs in that. he is just reading it. i don't think he is implementing these policies. when you look at his history it doesn't support all his years of service how he is serving now. so i think he is just at the behest of whoever is writing. we always talk about the notebook. >> harris: he got the politics part right. >> this is look cory booker when they did the thing we'll make lynching illegal. we already had it illegal. this is gay marriage is supported in this country. you don't stère a big uprising of people against it. it is virtue signaling and putting a stamp on top of another stamp saying look while i'm doing while you're not doing what we need you to do.
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>> harris: that was kind of the point. it hasn't been under contention in many years but gives the president an opportunity to woke-flex. >> he var toot and completely changed the thing. you are not attacking republicans. you are attacking families who, if -- in my family if i had a situation where one of my children was having questions about their identity i don't need being attacked. we should be able to make that decision as a family. a lot of times his rhetoric comes like they are attacking the family. if i say i want my 6-year-old to wait as her parent who knows what's best for her, that's my right. i shouldn't be judged for that. >> harris: let's move to this. cambridge dictionary going woke with the latest definitions of man and woman. that's where you go to find out what you are. you go to the dictionary apparently. it formally defined it as biological sex. now it defines a man as an adult who lives and identifies as
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male, although they may have been said to be a different sex at birth. the same change is reflected in the definition for woman. twitter reactions pouring in. one calling the stupid woke madness another adding they can change the definition of the word to suit an agenda, but that agenda still cannot change biology. it has been a hot topic recently as you know. supreme court justice jackson pressed on it in her confirmation last spring. >> can you provide a definition for the word woman? >> can i provide a definition? no >> yeah. >> i can't. >> you can't? >> not in this context. i'm not a biologist. >> harris: tyrus. >> i studied biology in college. i didn't get my degree. i don't have to be a surgeon to
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know that 99.9999% of our cells are identified as male or female. groups are trying to change facts to feelings because when you have feelings -- when we lose the law of truth and fact, we're losing a part of ourselves. we lose freedoms that way. it may be a small thing. the good news is no one has a dictionary anymore in their house so, you know, you got spell check -- when you text you get the dictionary there and look it up yourself. i don't think it will have the effect they were hoping for. >> harris: what's interesting about that. people are using google more. now, though, what we're learning through the whole thing with elon musk and twitter is they can load up digitally all sorts of things that go along with your searches. >> that's what they like to do. that's what they were doing. now we aren't able to do that.
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elon musk buying twitter was probably the biggest blow to the woke and the progressive movement. they are no longer able to confuse the public with big numbers that aren't there. >> harris: woke kryptonite. you are kryptonite for whoever wrestles you these days. >> matt car doan is next. >> harris: thank you. good to know. "outnumbered" after the break. stay ahead. well here's great news for veterans who own a home. home values have climbed to near all-time highs, too. that means the cash you need is right there in your home. newday can unlock it with the newday 100 va cash out loan. it lets you borrow up to 100% of your home's value. not just part of it like some other loans. pay down high-rate credit card debt, consolidate your second mortgage and car loans, and have the security of cash in the bank. the va has granted newday automatic authority.
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they're super concentrated, so... i'm paying for clean, not water! bingo. don't pay for water. pay for clean. it's got to be tide pods >> hello, everyone. this is "outnumbered." i'm emily capano, here with harris faulkner, kennedy and todd. we begin with a fentanyl crisis gripping america. a florida police officer nearly died after she was apparently exposed to the drug during a traffic stop. officer
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