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tv   Outnumbered  FOX News  January 18, 2023 9:00am-10:00am PST

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♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ >> you know it's only going to be sunny. [laughter] "outnumbered." i'm harris faulkner here with emily compagno, also here cheryl casone, janice dean. [cheers and applause] >> and this is the first time. >> you don't think i know that! i have been begging for years. >> a long time listener. [laughter] >> harris: i love it. also bringing us sunny weather today -- >> absolutely.
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it's all about her. >> i appreciate it. [laughter] what's there with the newest of elements in president biden's document scandal. "the wall street journal" is reporting that the department of justice allowed biden's lawyers to search for classified documents in separate locations without any security clearance, and without the fbi oversight. we know the doj was at biden's delaware home. we don't know how long. did they observe the searches? where they in the kitchen drinking coffee talking to everybody else? perhaps, more importantly, why did the president's attorneys get to search for his own records? there are so many unanswered questions. republican lawmakers are determined to get the answers. >> i'm dying to know why $1,000
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in our high-priced attorneys, who are cleaning out biden's office in the first place, after five years of those documents sitting there. what drove that? there's a lot of talk. was it subpoenas from the hunter biden investigation? the white house was too nervous to have a federal agent at least alongside the attorneys, because that could be construed as criminal activity. we are not seeing any appropriate firewall between what's representing personal and personal misconduct that he may have conducted in the years between his vice presidency and presidency, and then now as president. that is an abuse of taxpayer dollars. >> harris: the congressman they're dropping new information and questions. janice, what about the subpoenas in the hunter biden investigation? >> janice: think you have to be equally outraged about trump having classified documents and biden. i'm glad the mainstream media is
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actually talking about it with president biden. i saw his smirk earlier when they were reportedly asking questions. that really bothered me. does he not think this is serious? he thought it was serious when trump had classified documents. i think there's more to learn obviously. i'm offended we didn't find this out before the election. >> harris: i'm not surprised. it wouldn't have helped. you do what you do. let's talk about those attorneys in the hunter biden investigation. when you put those things together, it's troubling. think about it for a second. you and i wouldn't get to dodge the doj and fbi. trump didn't. you started where i'm going to go, janice. the former president, he got rated. but this president gets "we want bring in the fbi, you don't need clearances." so what you are telling me is that anybody who touched those documents under the purview of this president was not held to the same standards as anybody else would be for classified
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documents. you need to clearance. >> emily: writes, are they somehow protected? there are so many questions that keep being raised, including that dovetailing. why were the president's attorneys allowed to search those documents after special counsel was named? usually, when special councils are assigned, when procedures have commenced, everything is put on paused, there is a caution tape put around the lock. everyone is hands off. it seemed as the business went on for normal, as a minimum of november second-january 11th. if that's the question, how many other people had access? what are inside of them? hunter, that investigation multithread -- there seems to be a lot of interest in those documents for various reasons, including the conflict of interest. what we put in the intro, where it shows biden holding that code right there. >> harris: and it says "classified documents" on it. >> emily: gillian turner pointed out, hard sheets are
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used for classified documents when officials need to tilt them around. technically, officials should not have the documents on their person outside of a secured room. an official who is not the president, if they were photographed carrying that, they would be reprimanded and/or punished as it violates national security policy. that right there is indicative of the president's cavalier approach to it. >> as you look at the garage, the mess, there's classified documents in the garage. >> emily: and if a navy sailor is in jail right now for taking a photo, doing something that rakes the law, breaks national security policy, why is our president not called out? >> time to lose though smirk, president biden.
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i'm glad you brought up hunter biden. that's what bothers me. he was in that delaware home, with the corvette and a box of documents just laying around. >> paying -- in grand a month allegedly. >> getting paid millions to do lord knows what for china and for ukrainian companies, where he had no resonates parents to be on the boards of the reese mona, for example. that's what bothers me, the cavalier attitude, that home with hunter biden -- but still, hunter biden had no problem using his name for influence, to make money, to get himself appointed to places he never should have been. and we aren't talking about that enough, i think. >> harris: you mentioned, posthumously, his other son bo. there's not an investigation into anything he did come about hunter biden -- i don't know. he's like a magnet for it all. he must love the look of himself with ill repute women, drugs,
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everything else that's rolled out on youtube, hoping he's better now. >> that 50k a month is quite a return on investment for the property purchased. [laughter] that's the question, is it 50k for the big guy? is that where "the big guy" stuff comes in it? there's a couple points that stand out to me. on this fbi front, we know the fbi has a tremendous skill set of rating president's homes. they were able to do so with regard to president trump. the doj, when they are faced with a similar situation, the president, you would think they would do the same skill set to write a joe biden. that was not the case. when it comes to documents themselves, you and i know this as lawyers, emily. as you get further in your career, and your billable hour per rate rises, your time and documents, boxes decreases. some low-level attorney does
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that for you, clerk, paralegal. it's fascinating in this case why these top-level attorneys were doing the on the grounds document w work. if that's a red flag to me that this is not normal. i don't know one partner at -- >> harris: that's fascinating. >> -- at any of these law firms behind us that would be there. >> who should have been there, and your legal opinion? >> the fbi. [laughter] one quick question about the documents. we know a little bit about the ones that were found at that center. if you were talking about name recognition, $950,000 to use his name. some of them were top-secret. intelligence papers on those governments you mentioned, those countries, ukraine, china. what does that mean when you hire very expensive attorneys to go collect the papers? you probably aren't ignorant to
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the fact that are less about what is in those boxes. >> i think you know around the time that the searches were done that the heat on hunter is really picking up, and you want to know what is out there potentially that could hurt hunter with regard to a ukraine, china, and that is why you are hiring the top level attorneys to come out to find out what the information is. >> do you that penn/biden sensor, that was in a document marked "personal," along with those funeral arrangement papers. why were those top secret documents related to ukraine -- >> wrapped like that? >> -- and how did they make it to the center and the first place? we always say who stands to benefit. the biggest question of all is why now? because they have been sitting there, rotting there, risking our national security for -- >> we heard from former president obama, his ethics
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advisor, we quoted him last hour. i am big on what the former president will say. if he didn't know these papers were taken, ones that he could have declassified himself because he was president. this messes with his legacy. i don't know how you stay silent. >> i'm glad you mention obama. if he does the magical waving of the declassification wand to the biden documents, boy, doesn't that said the president for trump to say "i did the exact same thing that obama did, we are both presidents, none of this stuff is now classified, both of us are off the hook." obama is in a tough spot if he tries to help out joe biden. >> and that is a different trump you might face as biden two years from now. coming up, business of political elites are preaching climate change at the world economic forum in the devil switzerland. that's not the kind of faith i was looking for, but okay. [laughter] preach on. despite many of them -- a conference, they flow to a course on private jets.
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>> now to davos, switzerland, where the rich and powerful elite fly in on private jets, dining on cheese with tiny flags, and then preach how we all need to reduce our carbon footprint, drive e vs, and dig gas stoves for the sake of the planet. president biden's claimants are john kerry -- pointing this out. >> it's so extraterrestrial to think about saving the planet. people would think you are a
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crazy tree hugging lefty liberal, and there's no relationship, but really, that's what we are. >> and if you aren't buying with the climate warriors are selling, it's because of disinformation by right wing -- >> right wing groups have done a really good job of disenfranchising -- and also, you guys are great at punching the terrible and taking a punch. you have to learn to cothings. one is preempted when they are going to punch you, you've got to know they are going to punch you and say "why are they punching us?" when they hit you, hit back, don't take it. >> don't take it. todd, here is the massive hypocrisy, it's getting hard to swallow when it's rubbed in our faces. we are learning from john kerry they are so elites, they are literally extraterrestrial. [laughter] the equivalent of those private jets flying around in the davos
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group, that's roughly 350,000 cars at the same time. last year, the shortest they flew was 13 miles. and he said he's busy, that's why he needs to fly in a private jets. >> the more we point us outcome of the more they taunt us, throw it in our face. one other thing that i found fascinating, this attack on hate speech and disinformation, not only do these elites watch and bam what they call hate speech disinformation, but they want to define what falls in this category. when you are a kid and your mom is like "you can have half but your sister gets to cut it in half," if you are going to play this game, you need to have that sort of dichotomy. if you let the elites not only make the rules, define the rules, enforce the rules, it will be the elites versus the rest of us, what we have now, and this goal of having control over the entire planet. i know this sounds like a science fiction novel, and five
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years ago i wouldn't believe i'm saying this, but this is where we are, and it's sad. >> no more aliens for the conversation. [laughter] >> a perfect example, the elitism, the spear throwing warrior mentality, when they are cutting off their own noses. i drive a classic muscle car. the engine is a coyote luminaire. i get better gas mileage than most of the cars out there. i walked out to my car the other day, there was spit on the windshield, because some ec eco-warrior took it upon themselves to show me what a gas guzzler i am. they didn't check under the hood and they have no idea what they are talking about. to me, that sums up all of those elite -- >> i'm glad you weren't in the car. i'm serious. you think about all those people who try to go to work, you have people in the middle of the entrance to the freeway. this happens. a lot of things are going on right now. i'm glad you are not in your car. what is going on?
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do they not pressurize the cabin for john kerry? [laughter] he sits down and gives a speech about et? what's going on? if he thinks that there are better conditions for his dreams on a different planet, go there. [laughter] >> go there and take everyone with you. janice, let's travel back in time while we are on the et train to a john kerry told us in 2019 when he was defending why he gets to fly in a private jet. >> on the issue of pollution, i understand we came here with a private jet, environmental way to travel? >> if you offset your carbon, it's the only choice for somebody like me who is traveling the world to witness battle. i believe the time it takes to get somewhere, can't sail, i have to fly to meet with people to get things done, but what i am doing the most full-time is working to win the battle of climate change. >> he is ridiculous. he's the worst offender.
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it reminds me of the hypocrisy during covid with gavin newsom, "we can't go to the restaurant with masks on 6 feet apart." then he's in that fancy french restaurant with no mask on. we see you, we are not dumb. rules, but not for me. john kerry, we know what we are up to, your private jet, we see you and hear you. oh, my goodness, these people, and especially since we are in a time where people can't afford stuff. paycheck to paycheck, working different jobs, filling our cars up with gas. >> and electricity if you live in california in the summer. >> we've all heard enough from john kerry. >> and that tongue-in-cheek bill that was passed in wyoming about only having gas card vehicles, the point the senator was making his "you can't tell us what to do when 70% of our employees
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and -- residence in wyoming are employed by this industry," andt to ban gas stoves, you are not accounting for the transition. when they fly private jets to switzerland and -- a lot that they eat which they say is bad for the planet. then overnight -- that's not feasible, let alone being horribly offensive. >> we all want to save the planet. this is about everybody. >> the transition. >> and having the sustainability as a country, as a world to get there. couldn't plug in their cars in california, because -- mostly depended upon fossil fuel. let's have a whole conversation about how we get there. >> to answer your question about wyoming, because we did talk about that on ""fox & ""fox & friends" -- several thousand people in the gas industry. and their consequences if you go electric vehicle in the state, five years from now?
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no. it was a little tongue-in-cheek. they admit that. what they are saying is that they are sick of being told how to live their lives, and in particular when it has such a detrimental impact on the economy for a state like wyoming. really quick about davos, it could be a zoom call. >> about that? >> he is saying the technology has evolved, could have done it on zoom, carrie could have flown commercial and taken the train. it's a lot cheaper to get to switzerland. >> do it via zoom! your voice! the president of ukraine. we took him live via zoom. >> just a thought for next year. [laughter] >> cheryl nailing it. coming up, carjackings are so bad in washington, d.c., that even the democratic mayor is trying to crack down on the issue. the city council is passing legislation to soften the penalties for that crime and a whole host of other violations. that, nextd nu.
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>> there's been a frightening spike in carjackings, and it can happen to anyone. running an errand, a delivery driver, an uber driver, like what happened in march 2020 -- carjacked a driver with a stun gun, who later died from his injuries. >> what's going on? >> call the cops. >> they are going through his phone? ]shouting] >> she is stealing their car. they stole the car. they stole the car. >> oh, my god! they stole the car, these girls.
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>> carjackings in d.c. are up for a fifth straight year. what's the d.c. council do in their infinite wisdom? they approved legislation to reduce the punishments for carjackings, and even d.c.'s democrat mayor doesn't agree. if believable >> anytime there is a policy that reduces penalties, i think it sends the wrong message. the reason those minimum punishments are in place, the reason they are in place, a minimum punishment for the ship rape, because she was being raped to death and her arms were being tied off, and that person just got off. this person was abducted, strangled, {flush raped, and murdered, otherwise without
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three strikes, he would have been out. and bless his family, may they find comfort and peace in the wake of the violence that democrats are bringing to these cities. >> these are monumental moments in our history that now are being undone for the sake of politics. and where does it get us? don't cry too many tears for her and her struggles as a leader now. talk to her about defunding the police, and how she got to be where she is now. i applaud when somebody has a journey, and has the sophistication to admit they were wrong, but now she's begging. latoya cantrell of louisiana -- new orleans i should say, the mayor there, same thing. "can you help us out for mardi gras?" need money, this, that, and the other. by the way, bowser, they are vetoing -- that's what they did,
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they are vetoing. she fought so hard she is willing to vote against what the council is doing, but it won't matter. she's legitimately outnumbered because of her own political choices. it's a revenue story, is what you are saying in a way. cities like new york, we had tourists come for christmas obviously, but overall, tourism was down in new york. >> janice, and your prior book, you talked about your personal stories, reducing the reduction in punishment only covers so many patient burglaries there is an extremely large, over 80% of sexual assaults, home invasions, rapes, a lot of home invasion burglaries. the statistics had a point of requiring those minimum sentences so the rest -- this burns it all. >> i lived in houston 20 years ago, i was a victim of a home invasion. the fellow came into the window, i was sleeping. he woke me up. i was able to talk him out of
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really doing harm to me by saying "i have jewelry, money, a car, please take that." i convinced him to take the jewelry, went out to the living room area. he took my wallet, and then we heard a loud noise in the parking lot. he ran out the door, and i knew god was looking after me. they did not catch him for a long time. it was his first victim. he rented up and started raping other women. he's probably on the street again. they start off with small things, which employs them to do worse things. we do not punish them, if we don't push them -- but don't put them in jail and punish them, and it's going to be worse. >> i'm sorry that happened to you. >> it's important to talk about it. telling somebody to take care of themselves and be prepared. >> because as he said, there are
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further victims, and that's hard to look at as well. i have -- >> i have survivor's guilt because i wasn't able to stop it somehow. >> we pray for those other women. >> absolutely. todd, harris was articulating earlier, now that we've seen this disconnect between the city council and the mayor, seattle went through their own version, where the city council was so frankly socialist, the city including the mayor, they tried all kinds of things to stop, but that's what happens when they are voted in. they actually have so much more power than the mayor does. credit, this doesn't go into effect until 2025. i'm praying this stops, but at the end of the day, hopefully the mayor does not win this fight with the city council. >> congress and president biden could put a stop to this. d.c. is not a state as far as the purview of the federal government at this point. i was come back to this: government's only function is to keep my family and me safe, to
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keep janice and her family safe. all of our family is safe. think about how far government has gotten away from that goal. not just in the area of crime, but almost every aspect of our society. when it comes to crime, the focus of these cities like new york, chicago, now we are talking about this horrific situation in d.c., seems to embolden and empower the criminal. it's not getting any better. it's just getting worse. we need to go back to second chances are great, but in a crime where we are talking about carjacking, don't get a second chance. you should know that -- unity been jail so you don't do it again. >> violent crimes. we have to go. day, but more "outnumbered" in just a moment. without another pill upsetting my stomach, i get powerful, effective and safe relief.
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>> off story that we have been
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following closely on "outnumbered." remember the adjunct professor at hamline university who sparked controversy after showing a painting of the prophet mohammed. she warned students many times that they did not have to attend the art history class if they felt uncomfortable with that. however, the university got a complaint, and did not ask her to come back. now, she is firing back, suing the university for affirmation, and religious discrimination. emily, can she win? >> absolutely. part of defamation, part of the requirement is you have to prove that you lost opportunities. she is arguing, rightly so, who will hire her now? the university has essentially defamed her professionally, so who will hire her in an institution that she -- you could argue without having this be a big mark on her record, unfairly so by the way, because she did everything right to be the utmost professional
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possible, per the university. >> we have been following this story. the "everything right" list, including with flyers and information. this is what is going on in the art history class, the information that will be shown. the school had an opportunity to back her up with that. when this is released, maybe invite students. they had options. speak a little most titles set up, like they knew they were going to do something with this. she'd offer the fact that you don't have to look, and all of a sudden they are victims, like "i am subjected to this, it's going to affect the rest of my life." good for her. sometimes we have to hire lawyers to get things done because nobody else will do the job. >> art history class, other religious figures were also shown in that class, and to your point she laid it all out, said these images were going to be
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shown. the one student that complainant had the opportunity to leave the class and not attend, because they knew it was coming, and they chose to stay. the university, because we talked about this story, the university handled it terribly. now they are going after her, now suing, i hope she wins. i'm not a lawyer, i will say that twice this hour, but go lawyers go. [laughter] >> you have a lot of fans, lawyers. [laughter] >> never heard that phrase, have you? >> never. [laughter] >> free legal advice on behalf of this instructor, because i'm curious. talk to me about the parts of defamation. where does she go with that word? where is the legal ramification? >> i will do you one better. even -- appropriate, even on the
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issue of mohammed. if you have seen the statement from the universe of donta hall from the university themselves, they have basically admitted that this is one big vehicle above. they don't want a defamation case to get to the courts. this that will be settled quickly. in response to your question, they need to prove that she was not a public figure. that qualifies because nobody knows who this lady was. she can prove she received harm, lost economic opportunities, and that everything was false. to your point, the fact pattern you just went through, her doing everything right i think helps her in the false aspect of this. this ain't going to trial. >> like lawyers. [laughter] i like you both. [laughter] >> to surrender that the university said at the time that the propensity to offend, the risk of offending one student outweighed academic freedom. that tells you all you need to know about this institution and the strength of that case.
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>> i know people love lawyers, and i to all -- i do too, but i love the weather best. [laughter] i love a sunshiny day. america watched her perform with her brother donny, and now marie osmond says she wants her seven children to have careers of her own, and have no plans to leave her kids and inheritance. more next.
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>> six people shot and killed including a 16-year-old girl and her 10-month-old child. investigators are saying that a targeted tact by a cartel or gang members in a known gang house, it happened monday in a small california farming community. blames the unsecured border that allowed the cartel and those gang members to freely move about and let that'll happen. the sheriff will be joining us live at the top of the hour. a big show coming up. we have glenn youngkin, larry kudlow, and more. join john roberts and me live as "america reports," top of the hour. ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪
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♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ >> get what you need. [laughter] >> welcome back. we watched marie osmond grow up as part of "donny and marie" and she has been working since she's a kid. said that they will not see any of her hard-earned cash once she is gone, tells "us weekly" "to me, the greatest gift you can give your child is a passion to search out who they are inside and to work." all inheritance does is breed laziness and entitlement. i do not not help my children. i want them to pitch in and learn. you don't -- even when you pay for your first car and only get half of it, you get a job, learn the self-worth that that gets you. >> janice, i love the advice so much. >> i totally agree. i told my boys that they can live with us until they are 50. [laughter] even though i'm not going to necessarily give them money, what ever you need, we are always going to get that to you.
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i am someone who worked when i was 14, loved -- my dad was a worker, my mom loves to work. instilling those values is easy to do growing up, and i salute her. i think that's fantastic. i don't think i will tell my kids how much i have in the bank. i think it's important not to let them know how much they might inherent at some point, but good for her. that's good. i think you lead by example as a parent, right? i'm a hard worker. my husband is a hard worker. they see us being that way. i think that instills good values into them. >> including both of you, in terms of your dedication to service. >> and everything to a janice said. this is something i think about more now that i have kids, the legacy i want to leave for them. there's an underlying premise to a janice is saying and i am thinking, that we don't want our kids to have to struggle. we don't want them to be in a situation where they have to do something crazy to afford rent,
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and hopefully i will be in a position to make that possible. i also want them to have money to do research and figure out how to do investing. that is something i wish i had done earlier on. when you create a trust fund for somebody, you create an incentive to laziness. that is what marie osmond was pointing out. in the culture and world we have right now, where quite frankly so many people can't do jobs, and even if they try to do jobs, they aren't really trying. i think we need to undo that, need to make work cool again, make the ethos that comes with work cool again. this is one little start for marie osmond. [laughter] >> we are making work cool. [laughter] an attorney. [laughter] >> if you keep saying that -- [laughter] >> i don't know! >> it is attorney day. [laughter] >> minus faith-based, divine assignment that i want my children to discover. i try to model for them that they find it through the power
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of prayer, when you are living in the divine assignment you know that you what you're doing, it's not just arbitrary steps you are taking. my dad raised us to believe that the greatest gift we give our fellow man or woman is that of love and faith. you give that to people who will offer you nothing more than your company, a blessing in their lives. i do not think that a trust fund will necessarily give you the muscle, the heart, they had muscles to be able to fight for others, necessarily. maybe i'm not seeing it. i was not raised with a trust fund. [laughter] i was raised by a warrior and a great mom. i want to pass those faith-based things onto my kids. >> bill and melinda gates have done a similar thing with their children. they actually came out and said -- and this is billions of dollars on the line. they said they will not just leave it all to the kids, they will leave a lot of it to charity, because they wanted to make sure that the kids work hard like they did.
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by the way, i love marie osmond. glad she did the spirit >> you liked one of the brothers. [laughter] >> which one? [laughter] >> had a big crush on one of the osmond brothers. i should have told you that. [laughter] i will say this, we are all hard workers, we have all known each other for years as colleagues. i think that's the thing is -- what you can give your kids. i told my parents, spend every dime. you were talking about money. don't leave it to me. do all the things you want to do in retirement and enjoy your life. you could tell the kids that you spent it all, they want to come in and support you and your husband, you could do that. >> that's a great idea. [laughter] speak of the greatest gift my parents could ever give me is time together. i would rather they spend every sense they have on time together with me now, and the second greatest gift they left me is the ability -- exactly what marie osmond articulated, the ability for me to identify my passions and put my own food on
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the table. when people phrase it as "my inheritance," so disgusting, abhorrent to me. that is their money, my income is my income, these are my purchases. it's -- the government views your money, like "that's a dollar of my lost income." >> they don't spend it. >> it's time together. >> you are right. [laughter] >> just part of this discussion. [laughter] marie, good on you. more "outnumbered" in just a moment. ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ all l debt was larger than gross domestic product? world war ii - and right now. that's a deep hole. and i don't know how we'll climb out of it. that's why i buy gold from rosland capital. rosland capital is a trusted leader in helping people acquire precious metals. gold bullion, lady liberty gold and silver proofs,
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[♪] if you have diabetes, it's important to have confidence in the nutritional drink you choose. try boost glucose control®. it's clinically shown to help manage blood sugar levels and contains high quality protein to help manage hunger and support muscle health. try boost® today. ♪♪ >> oh, we have a storm warning for you. last but not least, a story about defying the odds and fighting for what's right. it's janice dean's book "i am the storm."
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sharing the story of her battle against andrew cuomo, former governor of new york and standing up for justice during the pandemic. you can get your copy today and be sure to catch janice's fox nation special "i am the storm" available for streaming on february 8th. my favorite line in the flap, ok, stories are great and the pictures are amazing, but when i read this, when it first seemed like a futile fight ended with cuomo's historic resignation. >> during that time, harris you had me on the program, reached out and so grateful for this building and the people that work here. during such a terrible time you gave me great strength, and i felt that and that gave me courage every day to get up there. this is not my comfort zone. i did not want to go up against
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andrew cuomo, the last thing i would have ever done. you know i love talking to people outside and doing the weather, my favorite thing to do. but i saw an injustice that took family members from me and i had the platform i had your support and love and that's why i was able to write about this, and that's why i continue to fight for all of those souls we lost. we are not done yet. we are not done. that chapter still has to be written. >> you always have my support. you've been such a fighter, janice. i mean, i follow you on all your social channels, obviously we probably all do, and to see you go against people that were criticizing you and fight back the way you did was so inspirational and your in-laws are looking down from heaven and proud of you. >> god uses davids, and so you said you did not ask for this, you were not -- this was not what your passions were, but god uses, you know, you are a warrior and the warrior spirit
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is on your heart and you are representing so many voices who don't have a voice, who didn't have the platform that you did, and you could have ignored it and grieved silently and that would have been human. but you rose to that super natural challenge, to the divine path that you had set forth on you to rise and make a difference. you've made such a difference. we are so grateful for you. >> those are very kind words and i just want to say that's a small part of the book. what i was finding is other people doing the same thing, going up against something so big in their lives, they are just one small person but they believe in their cause so much they go up against a goliath. >> can i ask you a quick question? haw has your life changed. we know how cuomo's has, he is unemployed. >> he is still around, he wants to make a comeback. >> he's not the governor. >> i see the moments in my life that have led to this moment and each were building blocks to get
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here to stand on. i'm here thankful that i'm here but still have a big fight in me and advocacy is not one day, it's not a week, it's not a month, it's a lifetime. >> and i've been on set with you every day, you've been fighting this every single day. >> i love you, i love our viewers, too. >> she is the storm, in fact. the book is "i am the storm," pick it up. thank you for watching "outnumbered." "america reports" now. >> sandra: fox news alert, investigation is heating up into more than a dozen virginia high schools over why they failed to give students their prestigious merit awards in a timely manner. meaning they couldn't use them in their college application process. >> john: virginia's attorney general wants to know if the delays occurred as part of the equity push and whether one of those schools also discriminated against asian-americans in admission policies. virginia governor glen

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