tv Outnumbered FOX News December 14, 2022 9:00am-10:00am PST
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t 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 courtney bannock didn't
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feel the effects at first, but fellow officers heard her gasping for breath, and ran to help. we have to warn you the footage is graphic. after officer bannock got twodog drug that reverses the effects of opioid overdoses she lost consciousness again. the body cam footage picks up again, and we have to warn you the images are disturbing. >> breathe. come on, breathe. hit her again. she's not breathing. hit her again. >> is she out again? >> yes.
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>> there you go. >> officer bannock got a third dose of narcan before an ambulance brought her to the hospital. she is expected, thankfully, to make a full recovery. harris, it is so difficult to watch that video and those images. in person even more so. how many millions of families have had to experience that without the miraculous god-thanking recovery at the end? >> i mean, amen for what you're saying. the families out there who are not attended to right away, because they don't even know what's happening. maybe it's somebody in a bedroom that's tried something, a teenager, someone away from them by the time they get there it's too late. you know, having interviewed families, you know, not many people are stocked up on narcan in their house. but as we go through this opioid crisis, we might want to talk
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about, you know, what we do to prepare ourselves as families and as wider communities. i just want to talk a little bit about those 1.5 million pills that they found, fentanyl pills, down at the border in arizona. who do you think handles that stuff, you know? i mean, we do have robots to do certain things, but you think those officers are going in, and in these instances, and not exposed to the stuff. we would be wrong to think that. our men and women are on the frontlines of a war that we should not be in right now. there should never be this much of anything like this coming across the border, but there is. predominantly provided by china, an enemy that we know, but also provided by the cartels and using human beings to bring this into the country. what about the people who have been exposed to our immigrants trying to get into the country, being used by the cartels? they leave them in the desert. how do we know?
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we have pictures of that. you spend time with border patrol, they have them on their cellphones. this is a woman we found this morning. the story is so unreal, and it is real. we've got to do something about this. this young officer, thank the good lord, is going to be okay. she's recovering. that's what the reports are this morning. she's not the only one exposed to this. >> that's absolutely right. kennedy, to harris' point, we can put up on the screen now in june of this year over 72,000 americans died. what an increase going back to june 2019 where, quote, only 33 throughout died under the trump administration, those numbers decreased, but skyrocketing ever since. as harris just pointed out, we've had uniformed officers lose their lives, swat team members lose their lives, k-9s, losing their lives. the person that officer bannock pulled over had blown the substance in her face, let alone
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merely handling the substance, she was reported to be wearing gloves. the minuscule contact one needs to have that interaction be fatal is so tiny. it is so mind-boggling. yet to harris' point, it is an absolute epidemic in this country. when will it end? >> that's a great point, because, you know, the question, when will it end, the demand won't end. you know, we talk about the supply a lot. we talk about china. we talk about the cartels who are sort of remanufacturing fentanyl and putting it in substances to make them more addictive, so when people get them over here, you know, there's still demand in this country. that's not going away anytime soon. we can't be naive about that. we can't wish it away. tough talk doesn't do it. the drug war hasn't done it. when people watch that video, hopefully they're disturbed, and want to know what narcan is. when we were first having kids,
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when we were young, epipens are almost omnipresent. the same thing needs to be true with narcan. we have older teenagers, sending our kids to school. as a parent, i want my daughter to have sticks you rub on whatever god knows you're putting in your body. i want to make sure wherever they go, there's narcan available, because that's how quickly it happens, how quickly and easily someone can save their life. >> kennedy, in an atmosphere, where there are a lot of other young people around, it may not be your child who has the drug that's laced with fentanyl. i mean, if we're talking about an inhalation situation of not much of the substance, you could be anywhere and have that happen, particularly at a gathering that a young person might go to and not suspect the thing is happening. >> like the 10-month-old baby that we reported on.
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>> 100%. >> that was a perfect segueway, what kennedy said earlier, todd, as a new parent, so much of what you cover on "fox and friends," first, because there's now a requirement for narcan in school systems. an assembly member out of rockland, his neighbor lost a 17-year-old child because of this, an inadvertent poisoning, thinking it was another type of percocet pill. so he's introducing this bill to require it in middle school and high schools, and eventually even lower than that. of course combine that with a huge deficit in california, and also the refusal to spend money and invest, where the realty is they currently need it. >> we need it everywhere. to your point, it needs to be omnipresent in our lives, just like a defib machine, just like an epipen, just like a band-aid at this point. the officer in this case was wearing gloves. she knew she was getting into a situation, potentially handling drugs.
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she was suspecting of the situation, and still had that happen to her, because it was inhaled. imagine if it's your daughter, somebody in a school setting, where they're not expecting it. they touch it. they inhale it. we need an epipen in every situation. this is no longer an overdose situation. we need to call this what it is. it is a poisoning. >> yes. >> on the point of the border, if this were the same number of deaths were in a terror attack, the actions by our government would be swift and drastic. yet in this kind of a situation, where we know why it's happening, and we know how to stop it, close off the two-year open border drug highway that joe biden has created, we do nothing about it. it is a travesty and thousands, tens of thousands, of people are dying. >> i'm going to say something pretty unpopular, i'm sure. or if it were a hate crime. >> oh, yes. >> then you get that kind of federal response. none of it is right. all of it needs adjudication and prosecution, all of that, but some doesn't get nearly the
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amount of attention as other categories of crime. you know what i'm talking about. >> i do. as an american we also simply need leadership at the top, which we've been sorely lacking. it's interesting that on joe biden's campaign website, still live, by the way, behind the donation button that you have to click off to see this, he said that his priority in tackling the opioid epidemic and substance abuse disorders was to defeat trump and then protect obamacare. at the end of a long bullet list, at the very end, he promised to stem the flow of illicit drugs like fentanyl and heroin into the u.s. especially from china and mexico. a promise not kept. >> promise not kept? a promise avoided. i mean, we were talking about just last week, he was going to arizona, refused to go to the border. so he refuses to look these border patrol agents in the eye and say thank you for your service. what are you going through? what's the re reality of your d? he refuses that. we know where this is coming from. i'm a new mom. >> congratulations, by the way.
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>> thank you. she turns 1 next week. but to hear you talk about these things, what you have to think about as a parent now, and i'm going no way, no way this is our new normal, that i got to think about narcan in addition to epipens. no way. yet it is our reality. sounds like it's going to become our new normal, because these failed policies, this open border agenda has made it so. it could have been avoidable. >> that's right. officer bannock, we are praying for your full and swift recovery. every officer, every american, encountering this. joe biden, i hope you're watching. coming up, congresswoman nancy mace taking a far left activist to task at a hearing on extremist rhetoric, and exposing the left's double standard. that moment next. ♪ i got into debt in college and, no matter how much i paid, it followed me everywhere. so i consolidated it into a low-rate personal loan from sofi. get a personal loan with no fees, low fixed rates,
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>> republican congresswoman nancy mace has turned the tables on a transgender rights witness, and it happened during a house hearing on extremist rhetoric. you know, she's from the great state of south carolina. and mace used the witness' own past violent tweets to call out the liberal activist hypocrisy. just watch her. >> only a few weeks after the attempted attack on the supreme court justice on june 25th, one of the witnesses tweeted out the following in response to a decision on abortion. the six justices who overturned roe should never know peace again. it is our civic duty to accost them every time they're in public. they are pariahs. since women don't have their rights, these justices should never have a peaceful moment in public again. do you believe your rhetoric is a threat to democracy? >> i don't believe that's a correct characterization of my
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statements. >> did you not tweet that, that you thought the supreme court justices should be accosted? >> what i'm saying is -- that's not an accurate characterization of my statement. >> i'm sorry, you have 140 characters. do you get characterization with that or can we go with the word accost? doesn't have another meaning. >> doesn't feel like there's a gray area, what she was tweeting. no one thought to vent those tweets before they called her in to be a witness, and vented her rhetoric before she allowed her to be a teacher at one of our higher institutions of learning. we have to do our own research before we allow our kids to go into these classrooms. not just harvard and ivy. it's elementary schools. that's the mentality in classrooms. that's what we have to think about that, though,. >> think where she is
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reflexively, blame the congresswoman, not other hen tweets, gets caught, and that's who you want in the classroom? >> but it's the congresswoman clearly taking her comments out of context. the other thing with the left, it's only bad and only wrong and only a threat to democracy when you disagree with them. but it's happening on the left. i worked on capitol hill for over 10 years. the threats that would come in to members for congress i worked for have been happening for years, but we're just not posting them online all the time or don't have the legacy media at our disposal to cover for us. i don't understand it. the divisiveness is happening. poor staff work on the part of that democratic staffer who didn't think to vent her tweets that would come back to haunt them in that conversation. >> the missteps that cassie points out, the fact that democrats put this person up there, and second that this person didn't have a prepared answer for that. i think that highlights a much bigger concludes, that the left
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is not embarrassed by this. they have no shame when it comes to doing this, because in their view of democracy it is a very one-sided view of democracy, and the intimidation of conservatives is just part of the democracy that they espouse. there's no shame there. there's no embarrassment. even though logical people, you would assume there would be, you were unprepared, didn't vet this through. i got the impression they knew exactly what they were getting, and they don't care. >> they also have enjoyed -- we didn't know this until recently, until elon musk bought the platform of twitter -- but enjoyed complicity in their journey. >> one step further. it's not that they didn't vet her. they love it. harvard law school enjoys having her as a professor. >> she's not a professor. >> thank you, thank you. i promoted her accidentally. so to your point, it's part of their fabric. i love how the congresswoman called her out.
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you're absolutely right, the whole point of twitter is that we get what we see. you're not able to qualify, unless you put a string -- i wonder if all of those extremists that have been kno pe clinics, what tweet did they read? did someone interview you, and say how are you galvanized to do this? how are you influenced? when i was a managing attorney, i got death threats, i got to call federal protective service, but what can you call off a tweet? remember, this was after justice kavanaugh attempted assassination. >> and the deafness when senator tim scott had a racial slur trending, and then ma tr.
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you want to talk about mischaracterization. it was pretty clear, too, a racial slur against a sitting member of the u.s. senate. >> i remember when paul pell pelosi,and the outrage. the you never know when someone feels inspired by you. it jostles them into action, because when someone reads these people should be accosted, we should accost them, that only means one thing. that doesn't mean getting sassy with them and waving your finger. it means physically assaulting somebody. this is incredibly responsible. it should be condemned from every side. you know, it's not just happening on the left or on the right, you know. this sort of justified violence, especially in terms of the conversation we're having about abortion right now, people feel justified in hurting and killing
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other people. things like that, from someone in a position of power, of academic power, that makes everything so much worse. i love nancy mace. i'm glad she called that woman on her context. >> yes. >> and characterization. that's the characterization. that's it. thank you for saving it up. >> congresswoman mace opens up a wide door to have a conversation about what is protected speech is and is not. we'll do that on another day. coming up, the media coming again to the vice president's defense, saying kamala harris is more effective than she looks. oh, my goodness gracious! she said that out loud? okay. they call her formidable for a contender in the white house. formidable.
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♪ ♪ >> the vice president can always count on her defenders in the media. this time "washington post" columnist eugene robinson came to the rescue after he was asked about kamala harris' viability as a presidential candidate. during that q&a with readers, robinson responded, quote, if vice president harris is not having an impact, it is mostly perhaps entirely because she's in the guilded prison known as the vice presidency. she's a much better and effective politician than her current position allows her to demonstrate. she will be a formidable contender for the democratic presidential nomination. apparently it was opposite day, todd, because i can't think of a
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more hyperbolic entirely wrong statement, because, let's be specific about this, vice president harris has multiple jobs actually. the vice presidency isn't a guilded prison. it is an honor to serve at the pleasure of the people of the united states of america in that role, and including one of her titles, which is southern border czar. she actually has a wide potential to show us exactly the kind of leadership that she is, which i guess we've learned she is not. >> point beautifully well taken. i'll just add this article is clearly laundrying of kamala harris for 2024. we don't know what joe is going to do yet, but if it's not joe kamala harris is going to be one of the people on the list. they got to make her look good, and that requires a major laundrying or resuscitation effort. it's true, it's a thankless job, we need to acknowledge that, but all other vps have done the job and held serve. every time kamala harris opens her mouth it's a word salad. that's why every time she opens
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her mouth she loses a point. spare me the misogyny and racism thing. we attack joe biden for not able to string sentences together, and he's white and male as they come. >> that's right. kennedy, here's the thing, too, the question t, she said assumig biden runs again, wouldn't it make sense to drop vp harris and find another running partner, because she strikes me as having little impact, not an inspiring leader, and there are numerous high-profile dems, creating more enthusiasm for the ticket. >> mike pence did a lot in terms of vaccines during the pandemic. you know, he was taskedded with a very, very big job, essentially coordinating the pandemic counter effort. he did that very well. you know, let's go to another loser, vice president dan quayle. >> ha-ha-ha! >> also a very effective vice president.
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and ascended to the presidency, and probably would have been a two-termer if it weren't for ross perot. ias a communicator and a leader, she's fared worse. not because it's a guilded prison, you know. it's, like, wow, what a lovely florid phrase, but it doesn't capture her ineptitude. >> if i was in her shoes, i'd be furious, because she's marginalized her to a victim who can't defend herself. why would anyone want to believe she could defend the country? like thank you very much. she's saying she's in prison because she can't get policy done that would work, like the guy in the white house now. that goes beyond defense. she changes staff the way most
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of us change shoes. or is that my own? i love shoes. >> with kamala harris, are you going to be an empowered powerful woman or let people make excuses for you and turn you into a victim? how do you sell that when last time when people thought you were powerful and empowered you only got one delegate. did she even get one? yeah, she didn't even get one. >> wasn't it eleanor roosevelt who is a victim is yourself. you talked about the ineptitude, the hallmark of her service since she began, which why it's so mind bog lick why the media continue to prop her up. it shows on the cover of "vogue" and "elle" and "los angeles times" she's been worshiped by the media. this latest exclamation by the wapo columnist is a cherry on top of an apologist media that refuses to see the reality my
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colleagues have articulated of her utter incompetence and failure at any attempt at leadership. >> she's the definition, the picture in the dictionary, of failing, because everyone has propped her up, put her in light, given her great kudos for her cool converses, all that. as you pointed out, the voters had an opportunity to choose her. they rejected her. they were for the impressed by her. they were not moved by her. they didn't feel she was up to the task. i love that everybody is bending over backwards, no, no, she's the future, and the voters are, like, no. >> she was the ag of california. if she can't convince you of her skill set, who could she hire that could do a better job than an attorney general? >> also a u.s. senator. she should have colleagues in congress who can help her move -- >> you mean friends? >> yes, that would potentially make the country, particularly immigration, better. interesting the silence is
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deafening. remember, what made her furious wasn't the marginalization, it was that she was put on the cover of "vogue" in converse. >> i can't get over the image of dan quayle. >> coming up, classrooms descending into chaos, students hitting and biting their teachers. it got so out of control in one district, 50 teachers have just called it quits. that's next. veteran homeowners: need cash? at newday you can borrow up to 100% of your home's value to pay down high rate credit cards, personal loans, even car loans. veterans get more at newday. >> tech: when you get a chip in your windshield... trust safelite. this couple was headed to the farmers market... when they got a chip. they drove to safelite for a same-day repair. and with their insurance, it was no cost to them. >> woman: really? >> tech: that's service the way you need it.
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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. >> welcome back. chaos in the classroom is driving educators to quit. 50 teachers and other staff from one florida school district have just quit in the last two years over bad behavior. the head of the brevard county
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saying one teacher was hit in the face with a tape dispenser, another left with the bite mark the size of an orange, while another had to remove all the furniture from the classroom after students kept chucking them. the county sheriff wayne ivey says kids behave this way because they know they will get away with it. watch. >> teachers are distracted. they can't do their jobs anymore. they are spending more time dealing with students disrupting the class than teaching those that came there to learn. quite frankly, they're not worried about getting in trouble. they know nothing will happen to them. they know they're not going to be given after-school detention. they're not going to be suspended, expelled, or like in the old days they won't have the cheeks of their ass torn off for not doing right in class. >> all right, slow down, pervert. instances of shocking behavior happening in classrooms across the country, leaving america's teachers bloodied and abused. harris, if you're the parent of
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a good kid who wants to learn, because this is a problem, not just in florida, this is across the country. they do not exp discipline kids anymore. their hands are tied. >> i don't know if teachers are ready for combat. this is a dangerous situation. let's take it back to the parents. who's is tolerating this at home? are they replicating something? are parents having discussions? are parents feeling under threat by these kids? the police department can tell us a lot in terms of what's reported. i do have a real concern that this replicates itself in other places. so keck, to answer your question, i would go to someplace like arizona where they, you know, they will give you massing funds, and i can move my kid to whatever district i want. my second home is in arizona.
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my kids are too old for that right now. that's what i would do if i could do that. otherwise you have to take that video and go to the school board and start showing it. that gets the attention of the doj. they like school board meetings. >> they do, like spying on parents, the real criminals here, todd. harris makes the best point of all. that is, you've got young kids. you don't want them to subjected to this. school choice is going to catch on more and more. hey, if you don't care about your kid, then leave them in the classroom to hurt each other. parents whose students are serious about learning, they should be the ones who get to that i can that money and go to a school who's going to serve their needs. >> this all goes to the number one obstacle of that. it's the teachers unions. they don't want that. think about the teachers for a moment. is there any group that's more under siege? now they're getting attacked by the kids. they don't have a union that represents them. i mean, let's be brutally honest. teachers unions act in the unions administration's best
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interest. they try to get them money. my mom was a member of a teachers union for years. she was, like, they don't do anything for me. what do they have to fall back on? hope that one day they can teach at a school where learning is the focus. only way you get to do that is to this point. you can take your tax dollars and go to the school where you want to go. but there's a problem with this as well. the it does create a situation where the good schools get really, really good, but the bad schools get atrocious, even worse than they are now. what are we creating? we're literally creating a prison where the inmates are running the asylum. >> is this because so many bad apples from the big apple move to florida? florida is a place, the schools were open, great, you know, the lockdowns didn't exist there. but now we're hearing it's because of so many transplants. >> i think the train wreck was unfortunately being cataloged and predictably at this point. remember, in january of this year, so almost 12 months ago, when a partnership between
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usc -- sorry -- and the brookings institute, the public health initiative came out, and the title was "the kids are not all right," including the american academy of pediatrics said there's an absolute mental health crisis in this country made so much worse because of the pandemic of having our kids be kept at home, lack of socialization, and then there's no accountability on the other side. mental health visits to the emergency departments skyrocketed, self-harm, suicides, has been cataloged as increasing incrementally and skyrocketing. when everyone came back to school all of a sudden, then, yes, the behavioral issues were commonplace, right? the cops were being called to public schools over and over and over again. everyone has been shouting about this the whole time, but without the accountability now i don't see an end to it. to your point, the criminal justice system has to get involved. the administration has to stop
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villainizing parents. >> give teenagers with a backpack, send them with a knife and a bottle of water and say go earn it. >> florida is a voucher state. there is school choice. these are kids left behind, teachers are told to focus on equity, not on reading, writing and arithmetic, and don't have the support of parents who will say i will make sure this is handled at home. you'll see the disparity across the country. >> i'm curious in those areas where they have defunded the police departments, they said they were going to do some nonpolicing spending, like social workers and so on and so forth. my mother was a social worker for many years across two states. why not put resources in the schools and have extra counseling and extra help? i just have to say this, not everybody with a mental illness ends up in a mob like that. you know, i don't want to paint everybody by the same brush, but
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if kids need help we need to get it to them, because if this is the outcome -- >> the public schools have $180 billion from the federal government. >> where is that money going? >> they have spent less than 10% of it. maybe some of that money should go to getting kids help and discipline they desperately need. >> there you go. >> we will be right back. in case you missed it, that's next. if you have diabetes, then getting on the dexcom g6 is the single most important thing you can do. and it's covered by medicare. before dexcom g6, i was frustrated. all of that finger-pricking, my a1c was still stuck. (female announcer) dexcom g6 sends your glucose numbers to your phone or receiver without fingersticks, so you can make better decisions in the moment. (earl) my a1c has never been lower. (female announcer) dexcom g6 is the #1 recommended cgm system.
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>> president biden wants another $4 billion from congress to deal with title 42 being lifted, but will throwing more money at the problem really fix anything? texas democratic congressman henry queller will be here to discuss that. the breakfast club, a group of republican senators, plans to put more pressure on mitch mcconnell to address conservative concerns, but will it have an effect? senator cotton will join us. a successful supermarket sells food past its date.
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all of that coming up at the top of the hour. ♪ ♪ >> welcome back. it is time for in case you missed it. police are on the lookout for a real-life hamburglar. the thief took off with more than two dozen chicken mcnuggets and two mcdouble cheeseburgers. todd? >> even if he's caught, he's back on the street, terrorizing a burger king, taco bell, wendy's in short order. that said, i do respect his food choice every time i go to mcdonald's and get a burger. i add mcnuggets to top it off. third thing, if we can take the
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video again, i want to point out as a baseball fan and astros fan, he's wearing an astros jersey, known for cheating. what do you expect? >> that's the first thing i noticed. >> astros jersey. >.>> so bitter, kennedy. >> do you pay for your mcnuggets? >> i do. i've never stolen a mcnugget, except from my child. it's all about the kids. >> not a misdemeanor yet. >> all right. i just feel bad he's stealing perishable food. to me indicated that he was hungry, or someone around him was hungry, not selling something that has a resale value on the street. despite how cheap they are to get, i feel bad. >> i buy people food all the time. >> i'm not justifying it, but i
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feel sad. >> blame mcdonald's for the hamburglar marketing. >> oh, my gosh. okay. next up, a new study revealing generationational differences of calling out sick. gen zs and millennials were likely to call out sick, where as gen-x and baby boomers were more likely to work through their sickness. i'm an x. you know, before the pandemic, i thought i could push it. now if you get sick, you could make other people sick. i'm more likely to stay home if i feel something. >> yeah. i'm an x too. i agree that now i'm more sensitive. in the past, i would have worked through everything. now i'm conscious of not transmitting everything. >> i have a contrary point of view. there's no more ferris bueller on this. you're expected to be on zoom. sick days are done, unless you're at the doctor.
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>> bring in the dog. >> you can't fake a fever. >> that's ferris bueller's number one rule. hey, gen z, you're soft. >> that's right. >> i'll do a sports reference. ben simmons, he's literally been injured with -- nobody knows what the injury is for two years. michael jordan, the flu game. we were the flu game. won a championship. that's how the gen-xers participate. gen zers, i bent my leg. >> you're okay? >> i'm fine. >> just want to check. >> i'm a gen-xer. i'm tough. >> finally, that time of year again, and thieves are taking advantage of millions getting their holiday gifts at home. a survey shows 260 million packages worth nearly $20 billion stolen in 2022.
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with personal experience and a grievance, cassie. >> they're, like, stealing refrigerators off porches. they're so brazen. they know cameras are on them. when you have soft on crime das, kids who fear no consequence in school, this is the result of that. they're, like,, oh, whatever, amazon will replace it. >> are you giving a refrigerator to for christmas and it's getting delivered at the end of your driveway? >> it's huge, brazen packages. >> todd? >> send it to work. fine folks at fox handle it. now i'll get a letter from hr. sorry. >> emily? >> yes. everyone should have at least one doberman, a big sign up saying they support the second amendment, and should support the second amendment, and have something on your porch, a locked box that fedex and delivery people can put it in to
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so how many vaccines have you given to people? me? about 1000. walgreens...millions. no way can i miss her big debut. with your booster, i think you'll be there. for every twirl. i got a shot so my sister won't get sick. way to go, big bro! so while we're here... ...flu shot, as well? let's do it. when you need to talk vaccinations, our pharmacists are here. ♪ ♪
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♪ -i say to you, love your enemies and pray for those who persecute you. -i don't feel any different. -i don't need you to feel anything to do great things. (upbeat music) -jesus, if you do not renounce your words, we will have no choice but to follow the law of moses. -i am the law of moses. ♪ >> oh, my god, i love your skirt. where did you get it? >> it was my mom's in the 1980s. >> vintage, so adorable. >> thanks. >> that is the uglyest f-ing skirt i've ever seen. >> oh, my god, i love your bracelet. where did you get it?
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>> the truth hurts, so when it comes to the decisions your friends make, should you tell them how you really feel or stand down? atlantic piece raising the question and pointing out the dilemma between offering honesty or unconditional support. kennedy this so real. you are with someone and then not with them, and oh, gosh, i hated that guy. a real friend tells me how they feel. >> a real friend will tell the other person how they feel, too. >> a real friend. >> you have to balance it. sometimes you have to be unconditionally supportive, when someone needs to be held up, and sort of nurtured back to health and other times you have to bottom line it, i love you too much to let this go. you have to cut this freak loose. >> you support your friend in his or her decisions where to take it, but you can always be honest with your support as well. >> i can honestly say i have
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never had this go right. but i have never regretted my decision to tell a friend the truth. but it doesn't always go well. sometimes you get fired as the friend because they didn't want to hear it from you. i've never regretted it. i knew it was the right thing to do but yet to see it go the way i thought it would. >> take it home, todd. >> the article points out, the risks of calling out the behavior or calling out is high, you can lose the friendship and the risks of not calling it out are kind of low. you get to maintain status quo. >> there's an element when the person marries the person, i support you, but again worth the risk so you can sleep at night knowing that person knows what you see. >> they have all the information going into it. our house, remember that -- "he's just not that in to you," episode of "sex and the city," what does max think, he's so black and white, the guy is not
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treating you right. >> i think with love but truth. >> i guess i was max. >> yes, yes. the best character to be, the whole point. >> it can be lonely, but all right. >> no, we are all with you guys. and we are honestly very grateful that you joined us today. thank you so much for watching. don't forget to dvr the show, here is "america reports." >> john: we will be grateful if you continue to watch. waiting a major decision from the federal reserve whether interest rates will go up again to try to rein in inflation, the smallest since march, but some critics say the higher rates will have unwanted side effects. >> sandra: they worry the fed may go overboard. what does it mean for you, your family, your wallet, larry kudlow will break it down. >> john: begin "america reports" this wednesday
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