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tv   Tucker Carlson Tonight  FOX News  January 6, 2023 5:00pm-6:00pm PST

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sausage, no harder than making a burger. you want me -- what is sausage, is it veal, beef -- i don't even know what sausages but it's a lot of meat and i'm not putting that stuff together. i'm busy in the mornings. ddr the show, always remember, i'm watters and this is my world. ♪ ♪ >> tucker: good evening and welcome to "tucker carlson tonight." kevin mccarthy's continued attempt to become speaker of the house continues at this hour. the house is expected to take another vote late tonight, you will see it live here on fox of course but first and anniversary -- two years ago today capitol hill police officer called michael byrd shot an unarmed woman in the neck. at the time of that killing, he
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had a documented history of gross negligence with a firearm he left a loaded glock pistol in a public men's room at the capital which for a law enforcement official is a firing offense but for some reason he was still in the force that day. the woman he killed was called ashley babbitt to. she was a married 14 year veteran of the u.s. military, she ran a pool cleaning company with her husband in san diego. him physically she was tiny, she was also unarmed. michael byrd later admitted he had no indication she was carrying a weapon, she posed no visible threat to. he killed her anyway. under normal circumstances, he would've been fired immediately and charged with murder which he clearly committed to. but that's not what happened. after doing essentially no investigation into the shooting, nancy pelosi's congressional police force declared him a national hero and the media strongly agreed to. he went on television to accept accolades and complain about racism. he was never punished for killing ashley babbitt, he was rewarded for it.
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ashley babbitt's mother meanwhile got a very different sort of treatment. she was arrested today in washington by the capitol po police. her crime, trying to hold a memorial service for her daughter. two years later it's clear that ashley babbitt -- her death is by far the most significant thing that happened at the u.s. capitol building that day. at the same time it is the least talked about event of january 6th. why is that? because the facts about what actually happened on january 6th disrupt the lies, what they told you happen on january 6th and those lies are proving very useful to the biden administration. on the basis of a created myth about what happened that day, the biden pentagon conducted an unprecedented political purge of the entire u.s. military. the fbi and various intel agencies increased their control over the american media and most obviously the doj has been allowed to prosecute and jail
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hundreds of nonviolent political protesters whose crime was having the wrong opinions. lies about january 6th which have been relentless have enabled some of the most unscrupulous people in our country to make a mockery of our bill of rights and to steal our core freedoms. they can't talk about ashley babbitt. talking about ashley babbitt makes it very clear who the real culprits are into the real threats to this country continue to be. they are not the january 6th protesters. so instead they lie about what happened that day and they do it in the boldest possible way, without shame and with maximum aggression. here is hakeem jeffries leader of the democrats in the house telling you that five police officers were killed on january 6th when in fact the real total was zero. >> we are gathered here to honor their memory and acknowledge with deep gratitude the tremendous bravery of the hundreds of officers who defended us at this citadel of
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democracy that fateful day. as a result of the events on january 6th, the lives of five heroic officers were lost. >> tucker: five heroic officers were lost, he said. it's almost impossible to believe that adults could stand behind him as he said that because everyone in the picture you just saw knows that is not true. it's not a stilted interpretation of events, it's a flat out lied. know police officers were killed on january 6, period. ashley babbitt was killed on january 6th. chances are your grandchildren will not know that because history will likely record the lie you've just heard as true simply because it's been repeated so often. every one in authority has said the same thing in unison for two solid years. as our thoroughly dishonest attorney general put it recently, we will never forget the five officers who responded selflessly on january 6 and who
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have since lost their lives. his boss at joe biden repeated that lie today from the white house. >> these people and the people representing those who couldn't be here because they gave their lives for this did -- it's incredibly consequential. that the political talk, and its historical fact. >> tucker: "that's historical fact" says joe biden as he manufactures history, as he tells lies. they have been doing this, telling these same allies since the very first day two january 6th 2021, almost like it was a coordinated operation. remember when they told you officer brian sick nick was beaten to death with a fire extinguisher? >> he died after being hit in the head with a fire extinguisher. >> he died after being hit in the head with a fire extinguisher. brian sick died after being hit in the head with a fire extent
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which are. >> they beat him to death with a fire extinguisher. >> died after being hit in the head with a fire extent which are. >> he died at the age of 42 after he was bludgeoned with a fire extinguisher. >> tucker: that's not true, in the end thanks to the medical examiner in the district of columbia we learned the fact which is that brian sicknick died of a stroke well after the january 6 the protests, he was not beaten to death with a fire extinguisher but that did not stop there lying or slow them down. joe biden just awarded one of this country's highest civilian honors of the presidential civilians metal to officers working on january 6th and that would include the officers who opened the doors of the capitol building so-called insurrectionist's. the officers who let them inside and were rewarded for it by the president of the united states. what's going on here you may wonder? don't ask, you're not allowed to know. nor can you know about the very
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obvious clandestine role of federal agencies that encouraged the events of january 6th. that happened. its details have never been explained. a lot still has not been explained from that day despite a committee that was impaneled for more than a year. for example, you remember the pipe bomber who planted explosives outside the democratic national committee? those explosives it turns out were under a bench at the same moment that kamala harris who had secret service protection with her, who swept the building, was there. how did the u.s. secret service miss a bomb sitting in plain sight during its security sweep? we can't answer that because the fbi still to this day refuses to release all the security footage. why? what's going on here? almost unique among media outlets, revolver news asked that question. >> the pipe bomb looks at the camera head on for some reason
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it's very frustrating because we can't see the moment the pipe bomber plants the pipe bomb but the fbi can pick out that's because the whole scene should be captured on camera 1 as well and much more clearly than camera 2. 2. camera 1 has a clear shot of both benches. if the fbi released the full tape from camera 1 we could see the pipe bomber planting the bomb. >> tucker: somebody planted bombs outside the headquarters of this country's two main political parties, that would seem to be a big story. no one ever mentions it again including the fbi pick out the bureau won't disclose any information about the suspect, not height, weight, shoe size, anything. if they wanted to catch this person, wouldn't they be telling you all they can about who it is? but they are not. why aren't they? what was kamala harris doing there, why did she lie about being there? we can't answer those questions,
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we should be able to. notice anyone in authority want to talk about ray apps, the man caught on tape encouraging the crowd outside the capitol on january 5th and 6th to commit felonies by rushing inside. what is interesting is that january 6th committee under public pressure did in the end interview ray epps and we don't have all the committee records about that interview -- we should but we don't. some have been released and what they tell is a remarkable story. in the testimony that we have come of the committee coaches ray epps on how to answer questions about his involvement. "i was in the front with a few others, i also orchestrated it. i helped get people there." epps admitted that in a text message to a relative on januarg crimes. he has never been charged for those crimes. what is fascinating is when those facts came up in his interview with the committee, someone of the committee responds this way and we are
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quoting -- i just want to understand a little more of your use of the word orchestrated to. it sounds to me like at this point when you sent this text you had turned away in part because of seeing some things you didn't agree with, is that right? like when you sent this you are already on your way from the capital because of concerns of people taking it in a different direction." is that the most leading question ever asked in the history of congressional hearing? probably. the whole interview goes on like this. keep in mind, ray epps is one of the only people caught on camera that the day encouraging others to break the law. he's one of the only ones. and yet he's never been charged. and the january 6 committee was on his side, why was the committee and its members working so hard to help ray e epps? in his interview with the committee, he said he didn't work for law enforcement.
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law enforcement! in a very specifically worded answer, clearly thought through ahead of time. the question is did ray epps work or have any contact with any government agency? that he talk about january 6th before it happened with any employee of the u.s. government? we don't know. we do know two years after january 6th, long after an awful lot of other people have gone jail after walking around the capitol building, ray epps is still a free man. he's never been charged much less in prison. why is that? lets stop lying -- it's pretty obvious why that is. of course they're still lying about it. julie kelly is one of the few reporters in america that has cover this story honestly since the first day. she's the author of the book of january 6th and we are honored to have her with us tonight, thank you for coming on tonight. you are the human encyclopedia
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on january 6th i would say, a repository of all the information, give us a very quick overview of the scale of the law enforcement response to what happened two years ago today. >> what we have now are almost a thousand criminal defendants related to their involvement on january 6 with the fbi and department of justice now is morning is that figure will double by the time they are done. they believe they have 2,000 perpetrators of the alleged insurrection and they are going to continue this manhunt for trump supporter's into this y year. you have the fbi official this week, the new head of the washington, d.c., field office say this investigation will go on for years. what is this about? this is not about making sure that people who really committed violence a small handful that day are brought to justice. this is to perpetuate joe biden
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and the department of justice and fbi's phony narrative that domestic terrorists, trump supporter's, posed a grave threat to this country. it's really shameful. it is resulted in the destruction of so many innocent lives and their families. the fbi continues to arrest people almost every week and i believe right now we have at least 100 people incarcerated, behind bars under pretrial detention or serving out excessive prison sentences for either plea deals or being convicted by a jury in washington, d.c. >> tucker: while rapists go for. you're in contact with a lot of people who are swept up in this and also researching it -- at this point does any honest person believe the feds are all over this? parts of this were clearly influenced by federal agencies, that's not a conspiracy theory,
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is at? >> it's not, that's why it's interesting in an 845 page investigative report by the january 6 committee, christopher wray's name is not mentioned a single time. they didn't even interview fbi director christopher wray, why is that? they also didn't interview the newly retired head of the washington field office who was in charge of fbi agents and informants on january 62021. >> tucker: we made a documentary about this year ago, we were attacked widely by a lot of republicans too for mentioning the obvious which is the feds had a hand in this. we'll be ever know the truth, do you think? >> we have to, we now know for a fact that there were informants months before january 6th run into the oath keepers and the proud voice, at least eight informants and the proud boys months before january 6, what were they doing? we have to find out.
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>> tucker: we do. thank you for your relentless, dogged reporting on this, we appreciate it. the one person we know for a fact was murdered, killed without justification on january bad it, an unarmed 14 year military veteran. she's the one person whose name was not mentioned during any of the official january 6th memorials. instead ashley babbitt's mother nikki witt half was arrested today by the capitol police. she was at the capital to memorialize her daughter's death. police say she was jaywalking so they put her in handcuffs. hard to believe but here is the footage. >> you're arresting ashley babbitt's mom. >> murder inside the capital, now you're going to arrest her? >> back off -- to the sidewalk.
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>> i did not murder her daughter. >> tucker: her daughter was shot to death, unarmed with no stated justification by an officer who shouldn't have been on the force with a documented history of reckless use of firearms and it's the mother who gets arrested for jaywalking at a memorial for her own daughter. i wonder how much more this country can take. aaron babbitt has suffered for two years he is the husband of ashley babbitt and we are happy to have them join us tonight, thank you so much for coming on. i have to ask you about the arrest of your mother-in-law by the same police force that killed your wife. >> i just saw that video for the first time when i was coming into the studio, my phone was blowing up. back story on that, she has been in d.c. since the beginning of august, she has been there every day living in that area, sitting outside the jail at
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night and protesting outside the capital. i'm not going to say it's a coincidence she was finally arrested on january 6th but it doesn't really smell right. >> tucker: it's beyond, on the two year anniversary of her daughters killing, it's beyond. i've asked you this before, has anyone in elected office reached out to take your side, to take up your case to get justice for your wife who was killed without justification that day? >> it's still the same. louie gohmert is out now, marjorie taylor greene, matt gaetz, i'm sure there's a couple -- paul gosar there's a couple other ones but still that a very small, very small percentage. >> tucker: looking back two years to the day after her killing, what do you make of it, how would you sum up this experience? >> for me personally, i've
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learned over the last two years it's never going to get easier losing her. it gets a little bit different every day, i'm in full force mode of continuing my fight for her. >> tucker: i hope you prevail, you can't just shoot people and move on -- erin, thank you. earlier this week as kevin mccarthy struggled to win over recalcitrant republicans reluctant to support him for speaker of the house, we offered up a suggestion for what he could do, we thought an important reform. it looks like mccarthy who was apparently on his way to becoming speaker has taken up that idea. we'll and speak to a member of congress will be quarterbacking that. plus there is a war going on in mexico, a hot war. people are trying to shoot down
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airplanes. this has not gotten a lot of coverage, it needs a lot of coverage and it suggests big changes for us you have a war on your border, things are different. that latest on that, next
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>> fox news alert live in los angeles the battle for house speaker could come to an end later tonight to pick up the house is set to reconvene less than two hours from now. 15 of the 20 conservative holdouts through their support behind g.o.p. leader kevin mccarthy during the 12th and 13th rounds of balloting, he needs 2118 votes to become speaker. if all congressmen are present, they are still short of that majority but optimism is building among republicans. >> the negotiations are going well, they are confident that we are going to get two of the six at the very least switch to present. regardless, we should be in the area tonight where we finally have a speaker of the house and we can finally get to work. >> republicans have a slim majority of 222 lawmakers so mccarthy can only leave four g.o.p. minds unchanged. this is the longest stretch of speaker votes since 1859 when 44 boats were held.
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members of the 2018 congress have not been sworn in yet since that can happen until the speaker is elected. we will break in when news breaks out, stay with fox news channel and continue to follow tonight's events on capitol hill, the house is set to re-convene at 10:00 p.m. eastern, 7:00 p.m. in california. i'll see you back here on fox news at night, now back to tucker carlson. >> tucker: we spent all week telling you about the fight on capitol hill over who's going to be the next speaker of the house. the presumption was kevin mccarthy was going to get the job in a group of his colleagues said not so fast and for a couple of days they held him off. during that period, kevin mccarthy decided to make some changes in the way he is going to administer the house and its priorities. one of them is something we have been talking about and certainly thinking about for quite some
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time which is the creation of a committee modeled after the famous frank church committee in the 1970s that will look a lot more closely at the influence of the fbi and the various intel agencies on domestic politics, they aren't allowed to interfere in domestic politics but they clearly have been. may be congress can get to the bottom of that, they are the only ones that can. kevin mccarthy is going to do that it looks like he's going to be speaker and his plan we have just learned is to appoint one of the most honest and dogged members of congress, thomas massie of kentucky to head that committee. the new church committee run by congressman thomas massie who joins us now to announce it. thanks so much for coming on. >> it looks like i will probably be on that committee but i can't say that i will run it. i will say while we've seen this drama on the house floor behind the scenes along with those people who withheld their vote
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for kevin mccarthy until they got that transformational changes in the house and the way the house works, we were working with to make sure this church committee a suggestion you had done thank you for suggesting i should be on it i don't know if you are clairvoyant or just made the future happened but it's happening. we were making sure this committee wasn't going to be fenced in and it wasn't going to be a show committee. we wanted to make sure we have full jurisdiction. if we stumble on something at another three letter agency that they don't say that's out of your jurisdiction or if we find out there's more than a violation of the first amendment -- if there are other civil rights being violated, we have secured a guarantee that can go wherever the evidence leads us. >> tucker: everyone who has attempted this and if you have attempted it but frank church certainly attempted it and the congress attempted it again in 1976 with their special committee on assassinations, those committees bumped right
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headlong into a wall of secrecy and it drove a lot of them, a lot of those members crazy. are you prepared for this awesome task? >> i think we are and we have been laying the groundwork for that. dan bishop my colleague from north carolina and jim jordan we have been talking to the intel committee which has the authority to get all of that information. a lot of this is going to play out down in the skiff. you are going to have to trust the people put on this committee and i'll tell you what if there's something fishy going on i will come out and tell you but a lot of it will be behind closed doors, classified information. if we find anything illegal or unconstitutional, we will bring it forward. >> tucker: in your specific case i believe you and i am so grateful you are doing this and i really hope if you find anything like that and you can tell us about it you will. thomas massie of kentucky, thank you.
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congress is continuing to send billions a month to ukraine, that war is more important than any other war. there is a new war that really will affect americans and it's in mexico. the mexican defense force, the mets and army now battling the sinaloa cartel in response to the arrest of the son of el chapo. the mexican defense forces appear to be losing, watch. [the gunfire] [gunfire]
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[gunfire] we should have identified in the clip you saw people cowering in the commercial airliner that plane was being shot at by a 50 cal from the drug cartels. biden is visiting the border this weekend he is no plan to deal with any of this but it will affect us. doug mcgregor has been following this for months now, he joins us tonight. thanks so much for coming on this -- if a war breaks out in a country there would be coverage of it, there hasn't been -- why? >> we are lucky to get this glimpse the media doesn't bother to cover it.
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we need to understand what this war is about to. in 2020, we arrested -- the mexican minister of defense a general in california. on charges associated with drug trafficking. human trafficking and a whole list of crimes. ultimately we turned him over to the president of mexico, who promptly released him and we dropped the charges. one of the reasons we dropped the charges as we were promised more cooperation but it hasn't been forthcoming. so what we are seeing here is not an effort to enforce the law, not an effort to do anything good, it's a fight between a cartel, the sinaloa cartel and the mexican army. they are fighting for turf, fighting for cash, fighting for influence inside mexico. they want the son of el chapo presumably so they can give it to the president of mexico and he can create the illusion that by turning him over to us that
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there is cooperation with mexico. there is no cooperation with mexico. president op is irrelevant, he'a mouthpiece for the drug cartels. >> tucker: if the president of mexico is a mouthpiece for the drug cartels and the government has allowed millions of foreign nationals to stream over its territory to our country along with fentanyl that has killed hundreds of thousands of people in this country why is mexico not our main enemy? >> that's a good .2 mexico right now in central america writ large because of the criminality is an existential threat to us. it's the only truly existential threat to the country. they reach into the united states -- all of your major cities there are networks there that reach back into mexico. that's why they are powerful and that is a war that will eventually have to be fought because at some point we will shut down the border because things will have gotten that
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bad. when we do that, we will immediately be at war with the drug cartels because we cut off their income. we are going to have to fight inside the united states as well as our border. that's going to demand the united states army because our border patrol is not nearly as well-equipped. they are outdone to come out performed in every sense, every category in military power by the cartels. what you saw is a good demonstration of just how powerful those cartels are. >> tucker: you are saying we could see scenes like this in our country. >> absolutely, it's inevitable. >> tucker: the last time the president suggested deploying the u.s. military to the border the pentagon scoffed at him. i think unconstitutionally but they did. do you think the pentagon would be willing to fight the drug cartels? >> the fact that you are raising the question is a sadden tragic comment on the state of civil-military relations.
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we have people at the top of the military establishment to pick and choose from a menu and tasks and decide what they will and won't do presumably because there's lots of money in the ukraine war and there's not a money them in the mexican war. bear in mind that ukraine and mexico are just about equally corrupt. the difference is right now they are killing more people in ukraine, but the murder rate in mexico is one of the highest in the world, 136 out of every 100,000. it leads most of the world in murder, it's not that far off but it wouldn't take much to catch up with ukraine. as you point out, ukraine means a lot of money for a lot of people in washington, shutting down the border and stopping the influx of illegals, stopping the influx of human traffic and going after the drug cartels doesn't make people money. >> tucker: doesn't ignoring or disobeying an order from the president does not constitute a felony, isn't that a crime? they are not allowed to do that, are they? >> it is essentially on par with
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a criminal act but you've got a chairman who decided to call the leadership of the chinese military and told him don't worry, if we attack you, we will let you know in advance. >> tucker: why didn't he go to jail for that? >> why is he still holding his office, why is he still a four-star general? he's not alone, one is the last time we held anybody in the military accountable for anything? >> tucker: sad. thank you. one of the first things biden did after becoming president was canceled the keystone xl pipeline. now in the middle of an energy crisis the administration is admitting to some extent that was a disastrous decision. details next.
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>> tucker: what happens when you change the population of a country virtually overnight through immigration, legal and illegal. in some places, people were born here no longer feel welcome here, it's probably inevitable and it's happening a lot.
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cheyenne kenny of turning point adjusted some reporting on the effects of this. on december 30th she went to her local dmv office and oakland, california, that's an american city in american states. when she arrived she found the dmv was out of english-language drivers manuals and had been for "about a month." >> we are at the dmv right now looking for a driver's handbook -- as you can see there's spanish and japanese, there is none in english. we're going to talk to the workers and see if you have some impact. >> i was wondering if you have driver's handbooks. >> for english? no we don't. >> tucker: we don't have it in english here, it's just america -- don't worry. cheyenne kennedy is the president of the turning point activist hub, thank you so much for coming on. just to ask the obvious question if you don't have an english
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language drivers manual, than people who speak english can't study for their driving test, is that right? >> exactly. i don't know how we are going to know how to drive if we can't study the manual. >> tucker: i was struck by this video, thank you so much for making it. it's the small things like this that tell you what's happening to the country but i was struck by the total lack of sympathy that you got from the woman at the dmv. she didn't seem that interested in the fact that you couldn't read a driver's manual in your own country at all. >> she did not care and she told me to stop filming. she seemed like she didn't really want people to know there was no handbooks in english anymore. this is a public place, we should be allowed to film and talk about this, especially because we are trying to learn to drive and we can't because we can't read the manuals. >> tucker: of course, it is your country and this is the dmv, these people work for you. last question i want to make
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sure this is exactly correct factually. they didn't have an english language drivers manual for over a month in the purportedly richest state in the country they couldn't get around to printing it or something? >> a whole month, entire month. >> tucker: i appreciate you coming on and telling that st story. one of the first things that joe biden did after he got elected to us to cancel the keystone xl pipeline. in late december at the department of energy quietly admitted this was a complete disaster for the united states of america. the department of energy determined in a report that the keystone xl project would've created up to 59,000 jobs, real jobs, not fake jobs like university administrators but people who do stuff. it also would've had a positive economic impact of the $9 billion. alex epstein is the author of fossil futures and one of the
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world's experts on energy, he joins us to assess this. thanks so much for coming on. they are admitting what i think you were saying at the time which is don't do this, this is a disaster. >> i looked into the details of the report and it's the minimum possible admission they could make. this cancellation of keystone has been a disaster. number 1 it made good on his promise i guarantee you we are going to end fossil fuel so it was really the beginning of a reign of terror on the fossil fuel industry that has suppressed investment, production, refining, transportation and they were required by law to make this report but it's a weaselly report. it tries to get away with saying there's nothing significant that even pretends the lack of heavy oil from canada isn't a problem even though it's clearly been a disaster that has cost us to beg it to venezuela and it does that instead of addressing reality at sites and obama 2011 prediction saying it would be a problem. that is like ignoring the 2008
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housing crisis by citing a 2005 prediction it would be a problem. this is a denial of reality, the by the administration wants to deny that it's anti-fossil fuel policies have been a disaster here and around the world. >> tucker: the admission is a whitewash. >> it's a total whitewash. >> tucker: that is unbelievable. alex epstein i hope we see you again soon, we appreciate that. a lot of people are drug addicts, their preferred drug is fentanyl, some people are publicity addicts, they can't get enough of your not talking about them they can barely breathe, that would include prince harry and the fake duchess from l.a. they would like more attention so they are trashing the royal family yet again. prince harry has made a bunch of new allegations, we feel guilty repeating but they are so over-the-top we can't control ourselves. we will tell you what they are after the break.
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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
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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 ♪ ♪ ♪ >> tucker: it looks like prince harry and that woman from
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l.a. he married are running out of money -- how do we know that? they are still talking about themselves selling the most boring details from their boring lives for more money. to that end, prince harry has just resorted to telling us even more about a dramatic physical altercation he had with his brother which wasn't that dramatic. "he set down the water, call me another name and came at me" he says in his new book your calm for some reason a lot of media outlets in this country are deeply invested in the details of this boring man's boring life, here is "good morning america." >> there's a quote in this book for you to refer to your brother as your beloved brother and arch nemesis. strong words. what did you mean by that? >> there has always been this competition between us, weirdly. i think it plays into always played by the past.
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>> tucker: two brothers who had tension between them, breaking news on "good morning america"! if you are from great britain and these are people who are supposedly technically the head of state of your country, what do you make of all of this? we thought it was time to check in with father robinson who was an anglican deacon from that country he joins us tonight to assess. thank you for coming on. how is this going over in your country? >> first of all, happy new year. how was it going over? we are sick and tired of harry and meghan whining and moaning and going on and on, most of us are, anyway. when i first saw these headlines i was like okay, this is annoying, they are being disparaging about the monarchy again which of course it's family to them but for us it's an institution and the fabric of our nation. i feel sorry for harry now, he's using juvenile language, he seems quite immature to be
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honest. i don't know any other grown man who talks about their private parts as their -- he talks about amounting a woman. it's kind of conversation i expect to hear in primary school. he talks about his brother as his arch nemesis, how many adults have an arch nemesis? he seems to live in a fantasy world. in the excerpts we saw megan was -- harry said she's magical because the seals sank back. these people are delusional, they need to seek help, they did a stop talking to the press, stop airing their dirty laundry and get some professional medical help. >> tucker: you are obviously a man of the cloth, what does it do to your soul if you never stop talking about yourself? >> they are not talk about themselves there's no personal responsibility.
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a few of these experts we've seen harry says it was actually will indicate to meet me that uniform. you are a grown adult, you don't have to wear a uniform to a fancy dress party if you don't find it funny you clearly chose to do so, don't blame everyone else. he goes on to say he had this altercation with his brother -- this is a trained army serviceman who said i had a fight with my brother had to seek therapy for that. you are talking about how many people you've killed in service which is uncouth, nobody talks about how many people they killed but on the other hand of the argument you are saying i had an argument with my brother tried to go and therapy about it. none of it seems to add up. he needs all of our prayer, they both do and they need something more professional too. >> tucker: you make a fair point, no one can make you wear a uniform to a dinner party, you did that. it's unbelievable.
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father calvin robinson of the united kingdom, thank you so much. we'll be right back.
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>> tucker: with fats, another drama packed week in american life and politics comes to an end, we are pleased for our participation in it. we hope you have the best we can with the ones you love and we will see you on monday. ♪ ♪ [cheers and applause] >> sean: welcome to hannity, happy friday night and -- i love this crowd already. broadcasting live in new york city, joined by a studio audience, as you can tell. last year during the election we were doing all these town halls before the election, i just remembered how much i love being

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