Skip to main content

tv   Tucker Carlson Tonight  FOX News  December 30, 2022 5:00pm-6:00pm PST

5:00 pm
january 23, 6:00 p.m., i have a new show on fox business called the bottom line with dagen mcdowell and myself. you're going to love it. you don't want to miss it. it's going to be great. that does it for us tonight. don't go away. tulsi gabbard is in for tucker carlson and that's coming right now. ♪ ♪ >> tulsi: good evening and aloha, everyone. welcome to a special edition of "tucker carlson tonight." i am tulsi gabbard standing in for tucker. i am so grateful for having the privilege to wear the cloth of this country, currently serving in the u.s. army reserves. my first deployment was to iraq. in 2005 i served in the medical unit in the camp that was about
5:01 pm
40 miles north of baghdad. one of the things that struck me when i first arrived at that camp in 2005 was this big sign at the main gate that read "is today the day?" i saw that sign almost every day for the year that i was there, a reminder that any day could be our last. i was confronted with just how true this was as i worked in a medical unit every day, experiencing the high human cost of war. and it caused me to reflect. what am i doing with my life? am i making the most of every day that i have to do my best to be of service to god and to others? the question on that sign is today the day, it's just as relevant to everyone of us now here at home as it was to us in iraq so many years ago. i spoke to tucker recently on my podcast, the tulsi gabbard show, about this most important topic.
5:02 pm
here's part of our conversation. >> tucker: moving toward death had pretty high speed and one of the first things to go is my sight. i can't text without my glasses on. >> tulsi: i've been feeling that way since i was very young. moving towards death at a rapid rate. >> tucker: we are. the root of all wisdom is knowing that. >> tulsi: exactly. a >> tucker: i feel like people who are aware of death are way happier and lighter because they are not denying what's biologically intrinsic. you can't get away from it. >> tulsi: if you acknowledge the reality of death and then it's not just something like "okay, i'm going to set my clock. it's going to come at this time that this place at this age," then you realize how precious life is. >> tucker: yes! and you are not in control. >> tulsi: look at the problems we have in mainstream media, the problems we have with leaders, just about every sector in our society, they are chasing the wrong things whether it's money,
5:03 pm
power, attention, so-called love, affirmation, fame and all of these things just come down to this refusal to even take a moment and ask the all-important question, what is the purpose of my life. >> tucker: [laughs] i know. and what comes after. i totally agree. how could you miss that? >> tulsi: now, as we look to the year ahead, we are reminded about what is most important in life and in death. there we find hope and inner peace in god's unconditional love for everyone of us and that true happiness is found in service to god and to others. now, with that in mind, we want to end the year and start to show by highlighting some incredibly selfless americans. i will begin with a man in buffalo, new york, who rescued two dozen people during the recent deadly blizzard that struck the city last week.
5:04 pm
the man's name is jay and he is a mechanic who last week around 6:00 p.m. ventured out in his truck to help a friend trapped in the storm. along the way he picked up a young man an elderly woman. his truck wasn't drivable. it got stuck in the snow and then he ran out of fuel so he started going house to house knocking on peoples doors, asking for help, asking for shelter. every door he knocked on, local resident said no, they refused to let withey and his passengers inside their homes so they spent the night in someone's car. the next morning the situation was even worse. the elderly woman needed to use the bathroom and in the midst of a blizzard there was nowhere for her to go. so in desperation, withey looked at his gps and he noticed there was a school nearby. he then made a decision that would save dozens of lives. he used a spare set of brake pads to break into the school, setting off an alarm, continued on and soon more than 20 people
5:05 pm
and a few dogs were packed into that school. these are people who had been trapped in their cars and might have died if withey had been broken into the school and invited them in. when the storm cleared he felt a little bad so he left this note. "to whomever it may concern, i'm terribly sorry about breaking the school window and for breaking in the kitchen. got stuck at 8:00 p.m. friday and slept in my truck with two strangers just trying not to die. there were seven ultimately people stuck with out of fuel, i had to do to save everyone and get them shelter and food and a bathroom." he signed the letter "merry christmas, jay." local police are celebrating him as a hero and we are glad he is in a warm place and able to join us tonight. jay, i was moved to tears as i
5:06 pm
heard and read about your story. it's these moments in life not many people go through boat when you're in the midst of a life-and-death situation, what choices you make, what motivated you to continue on after being told no over and over at peoples doors. >> just the will to survive. the chance to help people. i knew there was more people stranded like i was. i wanted to try to get to as many people as possible and get them the safety that i was lucky enough to find. >> tulsi: and how are you feeling? in that moment when he didn't know if you would live or die, you chose not just to go find shelter for yourself but you chose to do all that you could for others. >> yeah. i mean, i am no stranger to helping out anyone.
5:07 pm
i don't have, you know, a sore bone in my body about anyone turning me down. i even offered $500 to anyone who would let me sleep on their floor. but just to get turned down. i wasn't bitter about any of that. it was just a blessing to find a school and to be able to get me, my two strangers in my truck, and just to be able to get more people was very humbling for me. >> tulsi: it is such an inspiring example. it turns out there was a truly powerful silver lining or being rejected out all doors. you really living the example of the real message of christmas and putting service above self. thank you so much. you're an inspiration to so many and i wish you very well and a happy new year. thank you. >> thank you very much.
5:08 pm
happy new year. >> tulsi: ul diaz arrived in the united states in 2021 on a k-1 visa before that, he was a computer science teacher in cuba earning $12 a month. he has a youtube channel with his wife who is an american. the channel is about diaz's appreciation for america and how blown away he is by even the smallest of luxuries here. here is one of his recent videos from fenway park. >> my god. wow. >> second baseman, number 33, brendan donovan. >> this is really, really cool. [speaking spanish]
5:09 pm
>> tulsi: last month, yoel diaz uploaded this video showing his very first paycheck from his time in the united states. >> [speaking spanish] >> tulsi: yoel and marissa diaz join us. thank you for being here. it warms my heart to watch those videos and seeing the country through your eyes especially
5:10 pm
because, you know, oftentimes on the news and in social media we hear people complaining about a lot of things that probably seemed silly to you but really taking for granted our god-given rights enshrined in the constitution. can you share with us or to those rights, what to those freedoms mean to you? >> freedom of speech. that was important for me. and you know, the freedom of the dream. that's something i never had a mild country. >> in cuba, you can't dream. to have better opportunities. of course cuba is communist dictatorship fence freedom of speech is not allowed. even us during our content here is success being being able to
5:11 pm
go to cuba to see her family again. >> tulsi: i can only imagine what it means to you to be freed from the fear that you formerly felt and to be able to speak what's in your heart here at home. what are the kinds of reactions that you're getting from people as you openly open your heart to other people? >> well, we get a range of reactions to be honest with you. we have people who don't like what we are saying about the cuban government and communism in general. then we have lots more people who really are receptive to the contents because it resonates not only with americans but also children of immigrants who can see their families in yoel and immigrants themselves as well so it's a range of reactions to be honest. >> it's cool. having that experience.
5:12 pm
i always put in the video, i'm talking to the american people. when i'm coming here the first time, i saw something spiritual. when you see these and you come here at my age of 38, and you're coming here, you say wow. freedom. freedom. wow. that's the american people. i never had that. >> tulsi: exactly. i appreciate you sharing that reminder because you're exactly right. these freedoms are too often taken for granted but they are freedoms that we must all celebrate and do all that we can to protect. thank you both so much for joining us. i wish you -- >> thank you, it's an honor. >> tulsi: police have finally made interest in the gruesome slaying of four students of the
5:13 pm
university of idaho. the murders were so vicious that blood seeped through the walls of the students home. fox's dan springer has been on the story. dam, what can you tell us? >> tulsi, this is the day folks in moscow, idaho, have been hoping and praying for for over a month and a half. interest in the worst crime the city has ever seen. a violent, vicious and knifing death of four college students at the university of idaho. 28-year-old bryan kohberger is locked up and facing four counts of first-degree murder as well as a charge of burglary for the november 13 fatal stabbing's of four students at the university of idaho. the arrest was made in eastern pennsylvania at kohberger's parents home, a pennsylvania state police s.w.a.t. team moved on the house at 3:00 a.m. and took kohberger into custody and also grabbed a white hyundai elantra. kohberger is a phd student at washington state university. he studied criminology and has done research on the thoughts
5:14 pm
and feelings of felons as they commit crimes. is pullman, washington, apartment was searched today. it's 8 miles from the rental home where the murders occurred. police say they can't divulge any of the evidence against kohberger until he is back in idaho. but the moscow police chief said today at a news conference he is the guy and suggested there is no one else involved. >> what i can tell you is we have a individual in custody who committed these horrible crimes and i do believe our community is safe but we still need to be vigilant, right? >> the four victims, kaylee goncalves, maddie mogen, xana kernodle, ethan chapman were knifed as they slept. police never found the murder weapon and seemed to be stumped but now the new so many were waiting for, and expedition hearing is set for tuesday in eastern pennsylvania. the judge today in the initial appearance tonight any chance of bail for kohberger and also okayed the extradition. there is still going to be that
5:15 pm
hearing on tuesday and musky waves waves it before then. tulsi. >> tulsi: thank you, dan, our hearts go out to the families of those four victims of that community. there illegally awaiting closure. thank you. a lot of people are wondering how exactly this killer managed to stand four students to death in a home and then go on and evade capture for so long. in just a moment, we are going to talk to somebody who used it to live in that very house for the killings occurred. he has some unique insights on a level of planning that these killings must have required. that is straight ahead
5:16 pm
get refunds.com powered by innovation refunds can help your business get a payroll tax refund, even if you got ppp and it only takes eight minutes to qualify. i went on their website, uploaded everything, and i was blown away by what they could do. getrefunds.com has helped businesses get over a billion dollars and we can help your business too. qualify your business for a big refund in eight minutes. go to getrefunds.com to get started. powered by innovation refunds.
5:17 pm
5:18 pm
5:19 pm
5:20 pm
>> tulsi: wouldn't four students at the university of idaho were brutally murdered more than a month ago and their rented home, police didn't have any suspect at first but today police identify the killer as bryan kohberger. he is a graduate student in criminology at nearby washington state university. many people are wondering how kohberger was able to commit this horrible crime and then evade capture for so long. rabb mcqueen used to live in that very same rented home where these murders occurred and he
5:21 pm
says these killings would have required a lot of planning. rob, thanks for making time to join us. you bring a perspective i think no one else has shared just yet. how did you find out this occurred in the place that you lived when you were going through college and what ran through your mind? >> hi, tulsi. thanks for having me. i found out about this through a group chat with my former roommates, we lived together when i was working in ukraine so it was a quick group chat and it was a shock to kind of sit and think, you have that initial reaction. i used to live there. then you have the reaction of the can't believe this happened in my state. i think it's important to look at this not just in the details that we can get so lost in in a crime that so brutal and really has great is how much conspiracy theory and thoughts on speculation. really look at it and the impact of the lives in the family of
5:22 pm
those four people that were slain. the impact of the mercy of idaho and the moscow community and the impact in idaho as a whole and s is not something that only happens in the state, it's going to leave an impact for a very long time. >> tulsi: yeah, rob. you served in the united states army for 15 years. your military veteran. you've deployed a number of times and you were doing humanitarian work in ukraine when he found out about this. as you think about the halls of the rooms that you lived in, tell us what had to go in to this murder being able to commit such a heinous crime in that house. >> when you look at the layout of the house, right, it's basically older building. it's built into a hillside. if you address the surviving roommates living on the first floor, that they would have heard something, that they were there. you had to have heard it. you have to understand the structure of the house, those
5:23 pm
first two rooms are built just underneath the living room and then also built into a hillside. then you move to the second-floor of the house, you get to the main level that enters the two bedrooms, one bedroom directly across from the kitchen next to the stairs that goes to the third floor then that kitchen enters onto the back patio on that hillside so that second layer with the kitchen is where that second bedroom is on the stairs that go up and they moved to the third floor, that's not above those other two bedrooms. it's really important to understand that, we are not going to hear a lot from that basement level. once you move from the sliding glass door, you run directly into the entrance to a bedroom and then to your right you have to go up the stairs and when you think about a third floor, you have to think of it in college housing. when you move up to the third floor, it's a narrow stairway and enters into a very, very small hallway than the entrance to two rooms, the rooms at the murders took place and at
5:24 pm
another room that was unoccupied. that's really -- the layout on the complexity of getting to that part. you could either be compl completely -- not worried about the impact of what would happen should you be caught or you had to diligently plan and understand the layout of that house to move in and actually believe that space without really causing alarm and being caught. >> tulsi: yeah, rob. it's chilling to think about the footsteps that killer took to commit that crime. i know a lot more details will be coming out very soon. thanks for sharing your first-hand account of what could have happened that day in that house. i appreciate it and thank you for your service. >> thank you, tulsi. >> tulsi: dr. michael baden is a forensic pathologist. he served as his chief medical examiner of new york city. dr. baden joins us now with his reaction. dr. baden, you have such incredible experience and background on a whole host of
5:25 pm
different kinds of crimes. i'm very interested to hear about your perspective on what we know so far. >> well, it appears from what we know so far is they've got the right person for the information they already have. and very important will be to examine the motives and red flags that would identify why he did what he did. this will require looking into his psychological history, his legal issues, his academic history. in his academic history, when he was a student at desales university in pennsylvania, near where the police found him, he advertised for criminals to
5:26 pm
interview to discuss how they did their crimes, which he said in the advertisement was approved by the desales university board of research. and what he wanted to do in this advertisement is to find out why the criminals which he interviewed anonymously would pick a target, how they would locate the target, how they would go about doing whatever criminality there was going to be, how they would make their escape, and how their feelings were after successfully getting away. he was interviewing successful criminals, some of whom hadn't been arrested, purportedly in this research project. which is bizarre. bizarre he would think of it. bizarre that the university
5:27 pm
would approve it. i am sure that type of activity together with this whole criminology interest will help identify what motives he had and whether there were red flags that were missed that could have prevented this. clearly as it was just said, he somehow had entrance into that previously into that house because he was able to go through it knowledgeably. there may be a number of other red flags that would have come about by examining his behavior before he killed the four people. >> tulsi: yeah. just listening to you describe his line of questioning these criminals, it makes my stomach
5:28 pm
turn. the numbers of red flags and it seems may have been missed. who knows. that could have been noticed and action taken to prevent this. thanks for your expertise on this, dr. baden. i know we'll be looking forward to hearing from you further as things develop. thank you. this year, the stock market saw its biggest decline since 2008. they were in ukraine ensured that a small number of stocks in one industry did very well. that is straight ahead. in my ozempic® tri-zone, i lowered my a1c, cv risk, and lost some weight. in studies, the majority of people reached an a1c under 7 and maintained it. ozempic® lowers the risk of major cardiovascular events such as stroke, heart attack, or death in adults also with known heart disease. and you may lose weight. adults lost up to 14 pounds. ozempic® isn't for people with type 1 diabetes. don't share needles or pens, or reuse needles. don't take ozempic® if you or your family
5:29 pm
ever had medullary thyroid cancer, or have multiple endocrine neoplasia syndrome type 2, or if allergic to it. stop ozempic® and get medical help right away if you get a lump or swelling in your neck, severe stomach pain, or an allergic reaction. serious side effects may include pancreatitis. gallbladder problems may occur. tell your provider about vision problems or changes. taking ozempic® with a sulfonylurea or insulin may increase low blood sugar risk. side effects like nausea, vomiting, and diarrhea may lead to dehydration, which may worsen kidney problems. ask your health care provider about the ozempic® tri-zone. you may pay as little as $25.
5:30 pm
hi, i'm katie, i've lost 110 pounds on golo in just over a year. as a mom, it has been life-changing. my daughter had lost 20 pounds, my son had lost probably about 40. we're just a lot more healthier as a family in general.
5:31 pm
5:32 pm
5:33 pm
>> tulsi: the military-industrial complex made out like bandits with the afghanistan and iraq wars but that wasn't enough. the focus has shifted away from the war against islamist terrorism to new cold and hot wars. the military-industrial complex has done incredibly well this year thanks to permanent washington hawkish foreign
5:34 pm
policy objectives especially in ukraine. as a result, this year northrop grumman and is up 41%. lockheed martin is up 37%. raytheon is up 16%. meanwhile, the s&p 500 is down 20%. nasdaq down 35%. this is why the military-industrial complex, whether it's here in this country or in russia or japan or germany or elsewhere, why they have a vested interest in remaining in a constant state of war. they all make money. with greater profits comes more power and influence over politicians and leaders. meanwhile, the needs of everyday citizens here in the united states and in every other country around the world are being neglected. their resources being sucked d dry. aaron is joining us, he is with the gray zone, aaron, you have done and do such incredible work and speaking the truth about the cost of war. something that as you know very well is too often measured only in the sense of how many lives have been lost.
5:35 pm
do we have boots on the ground? but there are other costs of war that impact the people they go go -- that go far beyond that. can you tell us what you are saying? >> thur there's a reason why the weapons companies stocks are up. a recent dinner held by the ukrainian government in washington. they are doing very well off of this war. meanwhile, its taxpayers who are footing the bill and have no say in whether they want to spend tens of billions of dollars in his dangerous proxy war against a nuclear armed power. the problem is that washington right now is consumed with proxy war fever so the leadership of both parties, chuck schumer and mitch mcconnell, there is no difference between them. there is complete -- behind having a proxy war with russia. a time when we have inflation, fears of a new recession, we have recently -- joe biden with the help of both parties denying sick leave to
5:36 pm
striking railway workers by forcing them to go back to work. we have both parties behind a proxy war and reject any call for diplomacy to the point or even the nation's top military officer, mark milley, chair of the joint chiefs of staff, when he recently called for diplomacy both parties basically ignored him and said let's continue funding this proxy war with no regard to bonds glasses in ukraine and here at home. >> tulsi: yeah, aaron, they reveal their own hypocrisy when they say all of these words about how concerned they are for the suffering of the people of ukraine and yet they rejects any efforts, as you mentioned, general milley calling for diplomacy, reject any diplomacy accurately or not taking any steps in that direction themselves and this is one example of exactly why. thank you, aaron, for continuing to be a courageous voice of truth and holding those powerful accountable. i appreciate it. >> thanks, tulsi. >> tulsi: for years we have been hearing about the decline
5:37 pm
of polar bears. so-called experts claim that these bears are starving and dwindling. recent studies paint a very different picture. in fact, polar bear numbers seem to be the highest they've been in six decades. chris horner has been on top of this. he has studied it. he's "the new york times" best-selling author of "red-hot lies," how global warming alarmists use threats, fraud, deception to keep you misinformed. he joins us now. chris, tell us what's really going on here because so often all we hear is "the world is going to end in a year" or other saying all of that is just crap, don't believe a minute of it. >> for yourselves, as a segue from the previous segment. the polar bear has been the mascot of what you would call the climate industrial complex, from its infancy as the global warming movement. it was the cover and of -- of the iconic in an ironic way time magazine 2,000 cover story
5:38 pm
"be worried, be very worried about global warming," showing the polar bears and save saying they were disappearing. it was lucrative and a great marketing strategy that didn't fare very well when it collided with reality which was numbers have recovered. all populations except the one that's the subject of a recent media blizzard are stable or increasing so they have been for many years for the bears have been doing great. no idea why there's a sudden claim that their populations are collapsing. i'm sure it has nothing to do with severe winter weather stealing the headlines or fund-raising objectives. it's quite something that they can spin back to the bear, i suppose, as a last resort. >> tulsi: who is making money off of all this? you talk about a climate industrial complex and obviously those bears, they look adorable. who wouldn't want to help them and take care of them? who is exploiting this situation and want to they get it?
5:39 pm
>> right, they are adorable from a safe distance. there is something called the bootlegger coalition. seeking industry. people, as i like to say it was innocently practicing law in washington a very long time ago. energy company as director of federal relations briefly and i learned their business plan was designed around something they have socially cooked up and that was enron. world's second-largest gas pipeline outside of gas promenade bought the world's largest wind mill company. i'm using them as an example because they were among the chief bootleggers. enron set out to work with their friends and set up value by making the public by their stuff or coercing you to buy it, mandating you, knee capping the opposition and that continues and that's produce this many,
5:40 pm
many billions of dollars every year renewable energy industry voc an awful lot of firms are in on. in fact a lot of them make quite clearly when there is a stimulus bill unless you give us this money will go out of business and the answer obv obviously iso out of business. if you require subsidies to exist, he shouldn't get them. this has spawned a massive industry. government is a big part of that industry, sadly. >> tulsi: chris, i think on this issue, like in so many others that we talked about. all people really want is the truth. tell us what's really going on and let us make decisions accordingly about what's best for us in the country. thanks for taking the time to join us, chris. great talking to you. happy new year. >> happy new year to you. the bears are doing great. >> tulsi: good. is this year ends, we have to ask who the big winners and
5:41 pm
losers of 2022 question reveille of comedian tom cotter who is going to break it all down for us coming up next. 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. ♪
5:42 pm
5:43 pm
5:44 pm
when a truck hit my car, the insurance company wasn't fair. i didid't t kn whahatmy c caswa, so i called the barnes firm. i'm rich barnes. it's hard for people to k how much their accident case is worth.h barnes. t ouour juryry aorneneys hehelpou
5:45 pm
the insurance company getenwasn't fair.ity y cablele. i didn't know what my case was worth, so i called the barnes firm. llll theararnes rmrm now the best result possible. ♪ call one eight hundred, eight million ♪
5:46 pm
>> tulsi: is 2022 comes to a close, it's worth taking the time to look back on who were the big winners and losers of the year. elon musk escorted big win for free speech. he bought twitter and then he reversed the bands on several accounts and he released the twitter files. the documents exposed the security state censorship of american citizens and politicians and so much more. meanwhile various cnn personalities ended up losing big in 2022 as their ratings dried up. brian stelter was shipped off to the big potato farm upstate. what other winners and losers were there? comedian tom cotter is joining us now. he's got a short list he's going to walk us through. thank you so much, tom. >> great to be on with you and thank you for your service. big fan. winners come a little unorthodox. sam bankman-fried, number one. you know he's going to walk. he's arty out on bail.
5:47 pm
he built people out of billions of dollars. couldn't he do something about the hair? couldn't get a haircut? it's ridiculous. he's under home confinement for he's got access to a pool, tennis court, home theater. how do i get sentenced to that? you know he's going to walk because he already greased everybody. another winter, nonconventional, sam brinton. the guy who identifies not just as a woman but is it kleptomania equipment because he steals people's luggage. his whole wardrobe is filled with designer clothing he's never purchased. i think he has been treating airport baggage carousel's as buffet for quite some time. he's actually a genius. dr. phil said if you're arguing with your spouse, try to see things from your spouse's point of view so whenever i have an argument with my wife i put myself in her shoes and her stockings and her bra and panties. >> tulsi: more than we needed to know. >> it dawns on you this is why
5:48 pm
she's irritable. i get it. dr. phil's a genus or maybe sam brinton is a genius. who knows. if he goes to prison, which prison? we don't know. losers, there's so many. >> tulsi: that's a good question. >> pardon me. >> tulsi: that's a good question. which prison would he go to? >> he is going to get beaten up either way, we know that. pelosi, big loser. she lost her job. her husband on the car accident. the guy she hired to hit him with a hammer didn't work out so well. and now she's got to sit around unemployed during her eyebrows by her hair line waiting for a house to fall on her so someone could steal her ruby red slippers. my guess it would be sam brinton. female athletics took a big beading because now they have to compete against genetic males who identify as women. they have more bone density, more muscle mass, lung capacity
5:49 pm
competing against women in athletics. that's not fair. where's the fairness? women should be allowed to take steroids. soon you're going to have them swimming against dolphins and cheetahs and kangaroos. i've got so many others. >> tulsi: thank you, tom. i wish we had more time. well chosen. thank you so much. be appreciated. our own personal tucker carlson. the reporter simon overcame great prejudice and rage from white house press secretary karine jean-pierre. >> asking about the origins of covid. >> i hear your question but we are not doing this the way you want it. it is. i am done. simon, i'm done. simon, i'm done with you right now.
5:50 pm
i'm trying to answer your question. go ahead. i tried. you wouldn't let me. i just tried and he would not let me, sir. you're calling is going to ask a question. no. i literally just try to answer your question. and you shut me down so now your colleague is going to. thanks, everybody. >> tulsi: to the people of the show, simon is a hero and inspiration. simon is the "tucker carlson tonight" winter of 2022. he's africa's hardest hitting and most prominent reporter. simon akiba joins us. congratulations on this honorable designation. i've got to say the noble profession of journalism has been hijacked by a lot of people who seem to care more about clicks and being invited to a fancy white house parties than they do about actually asking real questions and holding the powerful accountable. i'm curious to know what drew you journalism.
5:51 pm
where do you find fulfillment in your job? >> thank you, tulsi, for after having me back on the show, the most watched in the u.s. i appreciate it the recognition on the show. it's like winning the world cup. i appreciate it. >> tulsi: well-deserved. >> it's been hard covering the white house. i don't know how i was able to sustain my strength. i have worked really hard. even without money i have not received a salary for the past three years but i kept doing my job because i believe it's a place between, place of strength in the relationship between the u.s. and africa. as you know we focus on u.s.-africa relations and i
5:52 pm
believe i find fulfillment why do the right thing, when i asked her a question, what i seek the truth, when i continue to push karine jean-pierre, who is discriminated against me for months now. i find fulfillment when i continue to push, ask the right question and make sure the american people and the african people also get to have the answers they deserve. i went into journalism because i wanted to make a difference and i am happy to be here. >> tulsi: know that you are, know that you are making a difference and you are performing a great service both to the people of this country and to the african people. i hope you get paid sometime soon so that you can, you know, pay your bills and take care of yourself and most importantly so you can take care -- continue
5:53 pm
holding the people of power accountable. thank you and happy new year. will cain is getting ready to host tomorrow night's massive new year's eve special in nash-vegas. what are his new year's resolutions? he will give us the big reveal next.
5:54 pm
an unthinkable genocide took the lives of six million jews and thousands of jewish survivors are still suffering in poverty today. god calls on people who believe in him to act on his word. "comfort ye, comfort my people." when i come here and i sit with lilia i realize what she needs right now is food. these elderly jews are weak and they're sick. they're living on $2 a day which is impossible. this now, is how god's children are living.
5:55 pm
take this time to send a survival food box to these forgotten jews. the international fellowship of christians and jews urgently need your gift of $25 now to help provide one survival food box with all of the essentials they critically need for their diet for one month. when you call right now, your gift's impact will be doubled to help save lives. no vitamins and no protein so my legs and hands are very weak. oh, oh, oh let's make sure that we bring them just a little bit of hope. by bringing them a little bit of food. for just $25, you can help supply the essential foods they desperately need for one month. when you call right now, your gift's impact will be doubled to help save lives. your support will provide them with a box overflowing with nourishing food
5:56 pm
and the knowledge that faithful christians around the world care about them. god tells us to take care of them, to feed the hungry. and i pray holocaust survivors will be given the basic needs that they so desperately pray for to survive.
5:57 pm
5:58 pm
>> tulsi: apparently cnn hosts have been banned from drinking alcohol for their event tomorrow night, and for good reason but there is no ban on fox. that's exciting for kane, who will be hosting the all american new year's show. he's getting ready. we also wanted to ask him about his new year's resolutions. will is joining us now. are you getting ready, will? it sounds like a huge
5:59 pm
responsibility on your shoulders. >> to carry the all american news program. i have some help. my co-hosts on fox and friends. i've got abbey hornacek. it's true, no rules against drinking on fox, but i have to shave. tomorrow night, brantley gilbert on the stage, mechanical bull, three levels of this place right here, a polar plunge, a dunk take, all taking place right here with you, hopefully, tulsi, and america on the all america news celebration. my resolution, i told a bunch of navy seals that i would swim from the statue of liberty to manhattan. got to spend more time getting into shape, less time on my phone, read more books. those are my three new year's resolutions. >> tulsi: those are all very good and impressive.
6:00 pm
i would say i would join you for that swim but my tolerance for cold water is very low so i'll be cheering you and the navy seals on. i'm telling you, it's low. it's low. i get cold here in hawaii. >> i'm going to talk you into it. >> tulsi: we'll see. thanks so much, will. have fun tomorrow night. it's good to see you. >> thanks, tulsi. >> tulsi: thank you so much, everybody. >> welcome to this special edition of hannity. i'm jason in for sean. we begin with a fox news alert. early today a suspect in the slaying of four university of idaho students was apprehended. 28-year-old grad student was taken into custody in pennsylvania and charged with four counts of first-degree murder. according to one report, he asked police if anyone else had been arrested. at this hour, investigator

252 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on