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tv   FOX and Friends Saturday  FOX News  January 14, 2023 6:00am-7:00am PST

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♪ ♪ looking for some hot stuff, baby, this evening. ♪ i need some hot stuff, baby, tonight ♪ will: jacksonville, florida. looking beautiful this morning here on "fox & friends." ed good morning. welcome back in, will cain, rachel campos duffy, pete hegseth.
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i knew it as soon as we said it, we have ping-pong coming up. .'s been -- pete's been practicing all his life. [laughter] rachel: he probably pitched this segment so he could look good again. pete: they're good. they must be pros. rachel: and i love that it's, like, disco music to the ping ping-pong -- pete: i think this has to do with what's happening next. will: and tacos on set as well. we had a conversation earlier about flour, hard, and i told you guys -- rachel: we're going to try the almond -- pete: will's into almond if tortilla, which i don't know how you get a tortilla out of a nut. look at that, look at that, i can't even lift it. rachel: come on. just try a thing. will: you've got to go quick now, pete. pete: it's starting to fall apart. will: but not bad tasting.
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am i wrong? rachel: no. no. pete: dry and -- rachel: no, no. pete: almonds are not -- will:'s here's pete's hard shells. pete: now, hard shells are awesome. will: hard shells are awesome. pete: have you had the doritos ones from taco bell? will: get out of here. rachel: taco bell is not -- pete: it sure is. if you're a norwegian. that's why you don't know any food from norwegians. so we decided almonds, out. come on, kathleen. rachel: hard shell is way too gringo. [laughter] will: honestly, that that flour's not doing it for me. pete: oh, this is the best. will: i actually think the hard shell wins morning. give me the hard shell. pete: they're good.
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will: yeah. pete: they remind me of my youth and my adulthood. will: of mexican food in minneapolis. [laughter] pete: by the way -- the. rachel: ray those words should not go together. i have been to some good mexican restaurants in minneapolis. pete: which ones, chili's? rachel: no. again, not mexican food. pete: this is a mocktail. will: in the smoothest of transitions -- let's bring in dan bonn gee mow -- i got the side-eyed dog face where utility your head. rachel: that look like, what is going on with this show? >> yeah. yeah, you know, yeah. that segment just, like, there was a highway exit offramp that went somewhere. i was actually just enjoying it as a viewer. that's right, i'm on tv, i totally forgot. i was enjoying it. and i was talking with toba
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before, hard shell, soft shell. it's not even a serious argument. soft,stst the only way to roll. and one more hinge, you know, pete's a guest on my show often, and i really enjoy doing eating on -- pete eating on the, because, you know, kill immediate will not eat on tv. i don't think anyone's even caught him chewing a piece of gum. pete, he don't care. he'll knock out -- it don't matter. pete: we love it. >> we do a whole bit on pete eating on tv. pete: we can update it. you're for hard tortilla chips into the taco meat, right? that's a hard shell. >> well, yeah, that's a nice little -- that does work well, that combo. i like the doritos idea though, the hard shell, that could potentially -- that does remind me of my childhood. rachel: corn corps -- tortilla or flour? >> flour. this isn't even a debate.
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rachel: none of you are mexican, so i'm not going to listen to my of you. >> paula's got a new recipe in doocy's book. she makes killer 'em we mad das. will: they told the us to move on to biden docs, and rachel's, like, corn corps tee yas. -- tortillas. pete: we are at the top of 9:00 on america's biggest news channel. rachel: i just am glad to hear that. pete: okay. you talk -- it's a little bit of nonsense. of let's include the answers given at the white house about what was done with these documents, dan. we want to get your point of view. here's an exchange between the press secretary attempting to answer questions. watch. >> i would refer you to the department of justice. refer you to the department of justice. i would refer you to the department of justice. we're going to refer you to the department of justice. i would refer you to the department of justice. >> reporter: if i would have had an opportunity to ask a
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question, the first one that i had on my sheet was why is president biden going to wilmington today? isn't that a potential crime scene? [laughter] pete: so, dan, what do you make of all of this? >> well, first, let's just say about karine jean-pierre, can we all agree that she's uniquely bad at? if now, that that may be a compliment. jen psaki was a very good liar. i mean, like, top tier, 99th percentile, way above the mean in her lying skills, right? karine jean-pierre's just really, really bad at this. like, what's the point, guys? why -- what i don't understand is why trot her out there, right, to go out and just humiliate herself and, oh, here are your two answers, process, refer. process, refer you to the department of justice. what's the point? why not just say -- i'll give you an example, right? the trump team, remember
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stephanie grisham? a lot of people are, like, no, i don't remember that name. yeah, that's the point. she was press secretary, the trump team didn't put her out there. she did exactly zero press conferences. karine jean-pierre goes out there i guess, i don't know, to her bizarre credit every day and just humiliates herself. she doesn't know anything, she has no ability to think on her feet. she has no capabilities for extemporaneous thought whatsoever, and yet the biden team keeps pushing her out there to just embarrass her. i'm going to refer you to justice the, we're going to respect the process. and the reason she keeps saying this is because my answer he gives off the cuff is going to be def can stating, because this is -- devastating because this is a really awful scandal for the biden administration. i never take motes for these segments, but i actually wrote some things down. you know a sensitive the compartmented information facility, right?
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scif information is above top secret. you have to be read into these programs. when i was doing lead advances in my last line of work and the president travels overseas, i watched them build scifs, white noise generators, blackouts, everything so the president overseas can realize sensitive compartmentalized documents, right? the fact that the they can never be realize outside a scif are allegedded to be to have been found in joe biden's garage, in his corps event glove box or whatever -- corvette, do you understand what a devastating breach of protocol and potentially the law? if that's why the answer is i'm going to refer you to the department of justice. will: hey, dan, if i asked you to look into the future and pretend we're looking back on story from a six month vantage point, do you think it'll end up being one of a two-tiered justice system we see again, or do you feel like will end up being the story of it's the
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beginning of the end for joe bidensome in other words, it will be handled seriously, and that's what "newsweek" is kind of suggesting when they had in the headline, did merrick garland just doom joe biden's 2024 campaign? do you think this is the beginning of a move against joe biden as candidate for 2024? >> you know, you teed me up perfectly. i'm struggling with two competing don't cross the streams ghostbusters thing, right? if two streams that don't cross. i hate saying i don't know which one is true. i get paid for an opinion here, but i'm really not sure. was this a sabotage hit job by democrats who want joe biden out of the race, which is likely, right? or was this an effort to cover up mistakes joe biden made that that may be illegal, unlawful and illicit in an effort to make it go away? just quickly on the first one, you don't find it a little bit suspicious that lawyers deeply
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connected to barack obama who's got an ongoing feud with biden, they do, don't let anybody -- i worked in that white house. these two men do not really like each other. biden was always jealous of obama, that's why he's doing i'm the new fdr thing now. he is a cancer on the coming presidential race, biden. there's very little chance against any competent candidate he's going to win. so you don't find it odd that people connected to obama found these documents all of a sudden? why didn't they burn 'em? why didn't they make them go away? if it's kind of weird. but then you say to yourself on the other hand, was this part of something bigger? is there a bigger story here? and here a couple of clues here. number one, why was the leak of the second tranche of documents made to ken drain 234eu from mbc? delaney? because he was a mouthpiece for fusion gps and the democrats. nobody finds it odd that this
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guy got the leak about the papers? it says to me there may be something bigger, and they needed to massage the story and leak it out slowly. a couple more things though. notice the appointment letters, the appointment letters for special counsel in the biden case, special counsel hur in the biden case has a very limited scope of duty while jack smith mt. trump case gets to rock and roll and find out everything. my suspicions here is that they did that to isolate and silo off joe biden from hunter biden and that investigation and never cross those streams. one of those theories is true, i'm just not sure which. something bigger's definitely can going on here. a white shoe law firm lawyer, guys, does not move documents out of a think tank. will: exactly. >> that is absurd on its face. rachel: yeah, you're absolutely right. and if the obamas are behind it, it makes sense with tucker carlson's theory that this is about eventually having a
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michelle obama run for president, for the mom me for the -- nominee for the or democrat party. >> i'm waiting to hear though, rachel, i'm waiting to hear the democrat response. because if the democrats come out instantly after this hit and scream conspiracy theory, then i know it's true. [laughter] everything we've been told is a conspiracy theory, i washed -- watched your show today. all morning republican conspiracy theories that have come true. the vaccine thing, right? you guys had a segment, the off the wall, which i love, all of these things were called conspiracy theories. so if the response to this segment is that this is a conspiracy theory, folks, take that check to the bank -- [laughter] rachel: such a great point. tell us what you've got going on on your show tonight, because it's always good. >> i've got this guy on, he's "a great resumé, he now has a show on fox business, his name's sean duffy, great guy. he comes on and he talks about
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this as well, something going on with the internal counsel. i've got phil kline, former a.g. of kansas, who's got an amazing theory on why these who special counsels were appointed in the biden case. dr. amonoif on how to improve your brain, and congresswoman bow bert about the disgrace of eric swalwell being on the intel committee. mr. fang fang. this guy needs to go. sean's amazing, he's got his new show launching on fox business coming up with dagen mcdowell which i'm stoked about, and i promised i'd be a guest mt. opening week because i love sean. rachel: yeah, he's super excited about new show, and we hope everyone will tune in at 6 p.m. weekdays starting next week. pete: he's going to be busy. rachel: i know. [laughter] pete: it's going to be great. dan, we love seeing you. thanks, brother. rachel: great stuff today. >> and pete's on tonight, of course, with hot takes -- pete: and there's no tie, as
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always. >> there's a rule against ties on the show. pete: thanks, dan. >> see you later. pete: as always, dan, very interesting -- rachel: oh, yeah. he always -- yeah. if you want more of that -- pete: i didn't realize the difference between the scope of the special counsels. that's a detail you're not going to catch unless you're really paying attention. more investigative reports in my down time. rachel: or listen to dan's podcast. we given with a fox news alert, another line of duty tragedy in southern california as a sheriff's deputy is killed in in a shootout. deputy darnell -- pictured on the right, was just 30 years old. he was a husband and a son and, tragically, we're now learning he was going to be a father. calvin's colleagues escorting his flag-draped remains to the medical examiner's to office. the suspect was shot and is in critical condition. this deadly shooting comes just
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weeks after another riverside county deputy was killed by a criminal as well. if. a group of at least 10 masked thieves mere chicago are caught on camera steeling 6 luxury cars right off the -- stealing 6 luxury cars right off the lot. the manager says they made off with three audis, two mercedes benz vehicles and a maserati. one of hose cars has been recovered, but the car thieves are still on the loose. so it turns out that friday the 13th was a lucky day for one mega millions player in maine who is the winner of the $1.35 billion jackpot. it's it's the second largest prize in the game's history. friday night's lucky numbers were 30, 43, 45, 46, 61 and gold mega ball 14. those are your headlines. what a lucky person that is. pete: quite lucky, yes. all right, coming up,
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dr. robert redfield reacts to the cdc's new safety concern, they're finally trickling out, you know, bad side effects that are happening over the pfizer covid vaccine. will: but first, search warrants executed in the case of a missing massachusetts mom, ann walshe as newly spaed reports show -- surfaced reports show her husband threatened her lifec nearly 1hy0 years ago. h oma criminal defense attorney reacts. and now i'm sending mixed signals... to your garage. but, if you haven't bundled your home and auto, unpacking this isn't going to be too much fun. so get allstate. this is going to be great. taking the shawl off. is he looking at my hairline? is plaque psoriasis making you rethink your everyday choices? otezla is a pill, not a cream or injection that can help people with plaque psoriasis achieve clearer skin. and no routine blood tests required. don't use if you're allergic to otezla. otezla can cause serious allergic reactions. it may cause severe diarrhea, nausea, or vomiting.
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duckduckgo, privacy simplified. ♪ 'cuz, baby, there ain't no -- will: to theup tennessee volunteers. pete: is that snow i see? will: looks like fog to me. oh, there is snow in eastern tennessee. pete: show in knoxville, tennessee. look at that. rachel: there was a little bit of snow when i got in my car today many front of -- pete: out here? just a little bit. will: listen to this, an nyu professor, speaking of transitions, says snowflakes are going -- [laughter] you like that? a real big problem. he's saying fragile gen z may undermine american capitalism because of victim hood
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ideologies. he wrote the following in the "wall street journal": here they are in the safest, most welcome, most includes arive, anti-racist place on the planet, but in of them -- many of them acting like they were in an immoral world. that may undermine american capitalism. this new ideology valorizes victimhood. rachel: absolutely. i think he's spot on. but some of it is not the fault of young people. if you think about, like, is finish if they're not going to take riskses because mig they say or do, they'll be reported for if racism or sexism or, you know, what, some sort of phobia, homophobia. people are more likely, i think, to not express themselves and not take riskingses because they are -- risks because they are afraid of this environment. pete: it's not their fault at all, the root cause. they've been inundated with this particular world view that
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reinforces, yes, victimhood, but it incentivizes victimhood. rachel: yeah. pete: what grievance box can i check, because the more i check, the more relevant i am because we're e elevating -- and that becomes its own form of group think. so they think they're fighting the man, but they've actually become the man. the most radical thing you could do in that generation is be, you know, is marry young, have a bunch of kids, christian -- rachel: totally countercultural, yeah. pete: that's the new countercultural as opposed to what they're reinforced to do which is not going to work well in -- will: gen z is 11 to 26 years old right now, according to one quick -- it's, honestly, our fault. that's the children of gen-x, you know? rachel: earlier in the show, we had c.j. pearson on, and he wrote an op-ed about harry, the
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royal, who wrote the book "spare," which, if by the way, is selling a gazillion books. he told over a million books in one day. he is sort of that new role model of victimhood. here he is this royal prince, he's sort of a beta male k and he's being presented literally by cnn and other outlet ares, they're literally saying he is the new standard, the new role model for young men. and in the young c.j. pearson is going, that's not the kind of role model that young people of this generation need. pete: no, you're right. the more they can get out into the world -- if you can't get out in the world, you should be taught real, brutal honest history, most of which is tragic and oppressive across the spectrum, and you'll realize how good we really have it here right now because of the sacrifice of so many people, mistakes made, sins had. nothing's perfect, but getting that perspective, i think, can help rip them out of this -- rachel: but it's nice to see a
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professor at least acknowledgin- pete: at nyu -- rachel: yeah, that we have a generational problem. will: the cdc sounds the alarm between the pfizer vaccine and strokes. dr. robert redfield used to head that health agency, and he'lleo reacn t next. the first of them . three generations, who all bank differently with chase. leon's saving up for his first set of wheels... nice try. really? this leon's paying for his paint job on the spot... and this leon, as a chase private client, he's in the south of france, taking out cash with no atm fees. that's because this family of leons has chase. actually, it's león. ooh la la! one bank for now. for later. for life. chase. make more of what's yours. (music throughout)
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most relevant items. it would certainly provide some motive for potentially her being missing at this point. it certainly looks like the police have used that fact and that detail to take him into custody at this point, and they've used that as part of their investigation. will: when you look at this and you see how he's behaved after, after the alleged crime, which we're still trying to figure out what the exact crime is because she's missing, what do you think sticks out you about the way that the husband has behaved? >> one of the things that i don't understand from what i've read and gathered so far is how much he's spoken to the police. it seems like from the onset they just hammered home many of these details with him, and he's just willingly answered questions. he is no rookie and no newbie to criminal investigations, knowing that he's about to be sentenced on a federal crime. he's wearing an ankle monitor. so why did his lawyer, why did
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his legal are team allow him to answer so many questions on the at the beginning of the onset of this investigation. he had a right to remain silent, he had a right to require the police to to get warrants and subpoenas to search his computer and find out about hose google is searches, but for some reason, he decided to turn over a lot of details. will: he's wearing an ankle monitor right now. hey, todd, i know this couldn't be applied any direct way to this case, but, you know, from a distance, isn't it always the husbandsome. [laughter] >> i don't know if it's always the husband, but i guess the other part of this is what's his motive? why did he want her dead? if doesn't sound like she had some large lie insurance policy. there's no money, it doesn't seem like, at the end of the rainbow. i can't really figure out the reasoning as to why he would want her gone. so i guess the more hay do investigating, the more they dig deeper, i guess we're going of to find out who would want her
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gone. will: all right. todd shapiro, dallas area, was on the will cain podcast week. we broke down the taqueria shooter in houston. could he face any charges. the good guy with the gun, the hero. we break that case down, fox news podcasts.com. todd, great to have you on "fox & friends" this morning. >> thanks, will, appreciate it. will: pete, over to you. pete: all right. well, the cdc and fda are now looking into safety concerns of strokes in people 65 and older who received pfizer's booster vaccine. the cdc agency saying, quote, although the totality of the data currently suggests this is very unlikely that the signal represents a true clinical risk, we believe it's important to share this information with the public. here to react is former cdc director dr. robert redfield. doctor, thank you for being here. looking at it even from a larger level, this is a recent revelation, but the cdc sort of
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begrudgingly acknowledged risks for young men and myocarditis, heart issues. is the cdc releasing enough information to make sure people are aware of the possible risks? >> you know, pete, i think they are. i mean, he was several surveillance systems to monitor vaccine safety, all types of vaccines not just covid vaccines. and what you have here is one of the near realtime systems they have which is the vaccine safe i think data link -- safety link did show a slight increase in risk of schemic stroke in individuals over the age of 65 that received the pfizer vaccine 21 days or less as compared to people that had received the vaccine, say, 22 days to 42 days. so there was a slight signal for increased esteemic events -- as
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chemotic events. one of the -- it's actually by causing intervascular coagulation and stroke. so this is, but this is what they're looking at. they didn't see it with the moderna vaccine, they haven't seen it in other databases that the cdc has, and they haven't seen it when they looked at databases in some of the european systems. but they wanted to be the transparent, it's there, let the public know that they did see the signal. pete: you mentioned the word transparent, doctor. well, dr. fauci was on with neil cavuto on our program week, had this to say about transparency. watch. >> i've been completely, totally, 100% honest about everything. could there have been a lab leak. we keep open all possibilities. but if you look at the accumulating evidence from very well respected evolution mare virologists -- evolutionary virologieses, the evidence very
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strongly, very strongly points to this being a natural occurrence of a jump from an animal species to a human. pete: in your opinion, is he being 100% honest and transparent? >> no, i think people mow that i disagree with tony the on this pretty aggressively. i think that his approach has really been antithetical to science. normally when science has taken a, a approaches a problem, we have different high post if cease, and we rigorously debate them. this has been much more aggressive in forming a narrative which, unfortunately, nih has been very important in leading that narrative that somehow this was a spillover event. i think people know i think as a clinical virologist it's much more like lie that education happened many a laboratory. and the ultimate ideology of this pandemic was --
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pete: that's refreshing to hear, because it does feel like we've been hearing a lot of spin and narrative which makes it tough to trust the cdc which is the only place you want to -- go ahead. >> yeah, i was going to say, pete, it goes down to the original report when my counterpart in china reported this came out of the wet market. his case definition was that people had a flu-like illness that wasn't flu that came from the if wet market. so by deaf can in addition, everybody -- definition, everybody came from the wet market. and we now know this pandemic started somewhere between august and october in wuhan. it really had nothing to do with the wet market, and this has been just an aggressive narrative, unfortunately, that nih has aggressively put forth which, again, i go back to say it's just antithetical to science. people like me that have a different opinion, let my voice be herald, and they have their voice be heard, and let's argue
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it out scientifically. let's not pontificate a single narrative. pete: sounds like science to me. doctor, thank you very much. >> thanks, pete. pete: you got it. still ahead, lawrence jones will join us live coming up. but first, it's cold in new york, so we're trying out an enjoyable indoor sport, ping-pong. we're going to take a swing at it. they're very good. how good are we? you'll find out. ♪ ♪
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rachel: welcome back to pox "fox & friends". new reports indicate there's another major player in the biden document scandal, and it's the chinese communist party. university of pennsylvania's biden center where classified documents were found received more than $30 million from anonymous chinese donors. here to el us why -- tell us why penn's biden center is a dark money nightmare, we're going to bring in peter flaherty. peter, thanks for joining us. we know that the number, the dollar amount accelerated the money they were getting from china to the u-penn, accelerated as the biden, you know, center -- whatever they do -- became established at the university. if what does this tell you? why was penn taking that money, and kid they report it properly -- did they report it properly? >> well, good morning, rachel.
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colleges and universities around country receive a lot of foreign money, and u-penn is no different. the they've received money from china and saudi arabia in the past. what's significant here is that once the biden center was established, the gifts accelerated. and much of the money was anonymous, as you pointed out. there was a single $14 million monomouse gift in 2018 -- anonymous gift in 018 from a source in china. the attention that this whole thing is getting now is a great relief to us, because we've focused on this issue in 2020. we tabulated the amounts of money from chinese sources, and we filed a complaint with the department of education because universities are supposed to disclose any gift over $250,000. >> and university of pennsylvania did not do that. unfortunately, to our chagrin with, the education department didn't do anything about it. if so we now if renew our call
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for the university of pennsylvania to disclose who many china gave all this money to the biden center. rachel: absolutely, we should know that. i think they should probably register as foreign agents at this point. this is what concerns me about the money going to the university, peter. first of all, we mow that it's affecting policy. -- we know that it's affecting policy. there was a call to disclose a lot of this funding from foreign and from china specifically, and they said the universities, the ivy league including u-penn said that that was racist. but it's also affecting the curriculum, isn't it? >> well, yeah. but you raise a good point, it looks like the chinese may have gotten their money's worth. 150 u-penn professors wrote a letter to merrick garland last year saying that the china initiative, which is a law enforcement effort to root out chinese espionage on american campuses, was racist. and it's the really ayalon --
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ironic because u-penn itself is very discriminatory the when it comes to asians in their admissions as are the other ivy league schools. in fact, that problem is now under review by the supreme court. so it could be that these professors know where their bread is buttered. they've never done a letter complaining about the universities' admission policies. rachel: yeah. which are racist. [laughter] in terms of the admission policies are racist, but they sure like those chinese dollars. this is a very dark web of money between the bidens, the biden foundation, u-penn. we're glad that you're getting the attention to be that you have been seeking on this finally. we hope you follow it to the very end, because i think this is very disturbing. >> yeah. we hope the special prosecutor and the house committees get into it too. that's our hope now. rachel: absolutely. peter flaherty, thank you. >> thank you. rachel: we have a big show tomorrow, joey jones, monica crowley, shannon bream, john ratcliffe all will join us live.
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plus, i went to florida and spent a day with our friend jack brewer, even going inside the prison where he is a -- he has a prison ministry there. it is a powerful story, and you can only see it tomorrow on "fox & friends" weekend. you do not want to miss this. it was, it was an incredible adventure, to go in there and see what happens. but first coming up next on the show, joe rogan puts george soros on notice. >> it's like he wants these cities to fall apart. he wants crime to flourish. if. >> yeah. >> it's almost like he's an evil person in a batman movie. [laughter] rye. rachel: good description. lawrence jones is here to react. ♪ -- make me move like a -- ♪ if. ♪ ♪limu emu & doug♪ hey, man. nice pace! clearly, you're a safe driver. you could save hundreds for safe driving
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♪ every search you make ♪ ♪ every click you take ♪ ♪ i'll be watching you ♪ - [narrator] the internet doesn't have to be so creepy, the duckduckgo app, lets you search and browse pria blocking most trackers all forf your search history is never tracked, so it can't be shared. and when you leave search, duckduckgo helps keep companies from watching you as you brows. join tens of millions of people making the easy switch by downloading the app today. duckduckgo, privacy simplified. rachel: joe rogan is putting mega-e donor george soros on blast for his crime-ridden agenda. >> he donates money to a very progressive, very leftist whether it's a d.a. or whatever politician, and then funds someone who's even further left than hem to go against them. it seems like he funds corrosion. st the like he wants these cities to fall apart, he wants
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crime to flourish. it's almost like he's an evil person in a batman movie. pete: joining us now, lawrence jones, "fox & friends" if enterprise reporter and host of lawrence jones' cross country. he happens to be in new york. >> yeah, i'm back. pete: good to see you, how are you? you whispered when that clip was plague, welcome to the party. >> will cain said something earlier this week with, that, you know, we praise joe rogan a lot, but sometimes he's late on a lot of things. i appreciate his boldness though, because it's still, you know, he's still considered a lefty. he's a free thinker, he doesn't agree with everything, but from an ideology standpoint, he falls in line with a lot of the leftist principles. you know, look, the secret thing that you'll hear even behind the scenes in television is stay away from george soros because the moment you start to put criticism on him, they call you anti-semitic the, you'll get a letter from the adl, they'll put you on their watch list.
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he's created an entire career for me. all i do is cover crime, and part of the reason is george soros and his funding of d.a.s, his open society foundation has given billions to the cause to reforming the system. you know, political action did an article back in 2016 when it wasn't popular saying that he was secretly trying to redo the criminal justice system, and as a result, cities are many utter dei cay. and it's the because of -- decay. and it's the because of his money. he bought and paid for these d.a.s. their campaigns were heavily funded by george soros, but the moment you say that, well, you're anti-semitic. but that's not true. mine, the proof is in the pudding. rachel: i heard hat brain child behind the idea was eric holder. >> well, that's his buddy. rachel: and the funder is george soros. also funding all those ngos that are pushing the open border policies because, of course, he has a group called the open society. it's a borderingerless -- borderless world that he wants.
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>> you have the funding of rewriting the district of attorneys, recreating the criminal justice system, and then you had eric holder who started the investigations of all the police departments as well. so you had already the police departments that were on their heels right now. and hen you bring in the das, disrupt the community, get them riled up. there are some people when cops get it wrong, i report on the facts, and they got it wrong, they got it wrong. but to say we've got to rewrite the entire -- well, they don't want people behind bars. they believe even if you commitment murder, you shouldn't serve more than 15 years. that's what they believe. get rid of the death penalty, get rid of incarceration in general. it's not just monoviolent offenses, it's not just people that have turned their life around, it is the everyone released. and, i mean, the criminal justice system was invented to protect society from those bad people. if they don't believe in that. ril. will: lawrence, you've been over all of the big stories many our country. you stay focused on crime, and
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lately you've been focused on what's going on in idaho. what's happening tonight on cross country? >> there's really not much to report because his court date is, like, five months out now. that's typical in criminal prosecutions, especially murders, because they want as much time to create their defense, gives more time for the prosecution as well to finish their investigation. so we'll talk a little bit about that. there's also a strange murder also in massachusetts, this husband that murdered his wife. they got him in custody, they haven't found body, but we're pretty sure based on some of the messages, the murder weapon that they think they recovered that he committed this crime. so we'll talk about that. also the strange thing with education. you know, they put us on lockdown. these kids are behind. we're going to explore a question that no one wants to talk about. maybe we need more time in school, and i think we've got to make it up. if we're behind, you've got to put more time into it. so we explore that -- rachel: i don't know. i think let's take out all the junk that they're filling it up,
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and let's just concentrate on the -- >> but, rachel, even if you take the junk out, you get school choice, the kids are still behind. so what do we do? it's an important -- will: start that the conversation tonight. [laughter] start that tonight, 10:00, cross country. thank you, lawrence. >> thank you, all. will: coming up, we're picking up ping-pong paddles. may the best friend win. ♪ baby, i like it, the way you move on the floor. ♪ baby, i like it, come on and give me some more. ♪ oh, yes, i like it ♪ oh, no, not about that. about what comes next in life. for her. i may not be in perfect health, but i want to stay in my home, where my family visits often and where my memories are. i can do it with help from a prep cook, wardrobe assistant and stylist, someone to help me live right at home. life's good. when you have a plan. ♪ ♪
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♪ ♪ [applause] will: that's you. today we're putting our ping-pong skills to the test. [laughter] rachel: that's right. and since it's the "fox & friends" weekend, it has to be a competition, of course, to see which of the friends can win. pete: cofounder of the ping pod, max joins us along coaches.
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wow. rachel: heir amazing. pete: look at -- they're phenomenal. this is the not what we're going to look like. >> probably not, yeah. [laughter] pete: what is ping pod, real quick? >> we currently have seven locations that are technology-enabled table tennis pods. that means that they're autonomous, nobody works there. you go on the app, ping pod if.com, you make an account, you get a reservation, and you let yourself in 24/7. pete: and you play ping-pong. >> yeah. rick: there's one by my house. lots of people going in there. but i didn't know it was self-manned. >> self-service. will: if you're going to go for a kill shot here, you're going to go for a winner -- >> oh! if. pete: there it is. all right. can we try it out? y'all are very good, by way. rick: are you not good enough that you couldn't return that? pete: she was acting for tv.
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rachel: i was surprised to hear there's a fast and a slow racquet, right? >> some of them are a little more sponge. are. rick: okay, let's do it. pete: we're goinged the to do the two on three but really with to on two, you guys are going to have to rotate. [inaudible conversations] i'm going observe to rachel first, right? will: we're going to rotate. pete: oh, nice! rachel: that was -- pete: that was very nice. that was you. rachel: i know. pete: why are you looking at me that way? are you going to him? will: degree of difficulty. rachel -- rachel: i didn't know how works. rick: we're rotate thing. pete: okay, there we go. we got that point.. i'm going to give you a back spin into the net. come on, lawrence! >> the ball is so small.
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[laughter] pete: it can't bounce twice, rachel. oh, my goodness, look at that. oh, man. will: thank you so much. pete: have a great saturday, everybody. rachel: that was awesome, thank you. neil: all right. now i'm for the ping-ponging lawyers, how about that? president biden at his home in wilmington, delaware, at this hour. what is not there, a batch of classified documents that was found last month and brought to light only this week. attorney general merrick bar -- garland, appointing a special counsel, and republicans are planning probes of their own including the chairman of the house oversight committee, james comer. he's here and so is former assistant u.s. attorney andy mccarthy on why this seems to keep happening and what we can do to keep it from happening

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