tv FOX and Friends FOX News January 26, 2023 4:00am-5:00am PST
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discomfort or blurred vision when applied, and unusual taste sensation. why wait? ask your doctor about a 90-day prescription and pay as little as $0. xiidra. uh-oh. not today, dry eye. >> outrage on capitol hill over the classified documents. >> dni lawmakers fueling. >> president biden today is going to discuss economic progress. more americans find themselves without jobs. >> ibm the latest company to announce massive play offs. >> this is about freedom. >> policy reversal regarding ukraine. >> u.s. is sending 31 abrat of n tank battalion. >> what is our goal? i don't see any path for ukraine to be able to drive russia out. >> willing to overlook some awful. >> joe rogan calling out the media for gaslighting viewers
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about violent riots. >> there is a real blurring of the lines in the use of the word violence. >> lighting schools on fire and lighting courthouses on fire. >> the mostly peaceful? check out the bottom of your screen food delivery guy on the floor. >> who ordered the burrito. >> i like how the referee is talking to him. how clueless do you have to be? >> i love this. ♪ baby you're a fire work ♪ come on, let your colors burst ♪ make them go oh, oh, oh. ♪ you are going to leave -- gosh, what a gorgeous shot. if you live in st. petersburg, this is what you are waking up to down in florida. the beaches, you have the salvador dolly museum there. lots of great restaurants and parks and, of course, the boating. it is going to be 69 degrees there perfect temperature. 53 is the low. >> steve: it is gorgeous there. look out you can
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islands. thank you very much, folks, for joining us on this very busy thursday. lots going on. and, we start this hour with bipartisan outrage in washington republicans and democrats both steamed as the white house continues to stonewall, this time they are not giving answers to the senate intel committee. republicans and democrats say the biden administration is blocking their ache says to classified documents found at president biden's home and also at donald trump's. >> ainsley: jacqui heinrich has all the details live from the white house. jacqui. >> senators on the intelligence committee are outraged that the depadepartment of justice and te special counsel have to determine if and when to see the documents not to determine whether there was any crime committed here but to assess whether there was any national security exposure. remember, these senators have some of the highest security clearances and would ordinarily have broad access to this stuff.
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>> every member of the committee, regardless of democrat or republican were unanimous in that this position that that we are left in limbo until somehow a special counsel designates it's okay for us to get briefed is not going to stand. >> republicans and democrats left the intelligence briefing visibly frustrated yesterday. moreover, senators on this committee don't have answers on if or when they will get the national security damage assessment that's been requested from the director of national intelligence. >> when are you going to get that damage assessment any time soon from the dni? >> i don't know. i don't understand, too, why we can't have there assessment and couldn't have it a long time ago in the case of purchase. it happened almost six months ago. >> senators on the committee have access to the same kind of classified information that
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president biden had when he was in the senate and apparently took some of that home. the white house is still not taking questions on wind's documents but they are defending the president's handling of what happened. >> usually what happens to someone in the chain of command, if they do leave with a piece of classified material that they're not supposed to have or that is not secured? >> i think -- if you do it inadvertently or do it you realize you don't have it secured in a locked bag, you know, you self-report, which is exactly what the president did. self-reported. >> yesterday, the white house said that the president does not id that we, as reporters, get plenty of chances to shout questions at him. back to you guys. >> brian: what an insult that is. right? you got a question, shout it in mexico city and never one shouted at another press conference hurricane in
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california. is that the access do you think guys are entitled to? >> most of the time he doesn't respond to those questions anyway reporters are coordinating munks themselves. trying to shout questions one after the other instead of in unison to get a better chance of him hearing it and responding because we have so few opportunities to question the president. >> ainsley: how can that work out. >> he didn't answer any of them. >> brian: barely got through nine minutes of scripted talk. >> steve: something extraordinary happened in the briefing room yesterday though. you guys have been asking questions about the documents and karine jean-pierre says talk to our lawyer. talk to the special counsel, whatever. which makes them look like they are trying to hide something. but then john kirby shows up and peter asked him a question about how you handle documents, suddenly he was free to answer. and now it seems like karine jean-pierre is not acting in the public interest but more like she is just trying to protect joe whether all we want are answers. >> yeah. i mean, i can't say where this
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is coming from if she has been instructed to refer every single question or she prefers to refer every single question because it might be easier for her. i couldn't tell you. john was asked a question by our peter doocy about process and he answered it. and we have had questions directed at karine about process, that she has refused to answer and have, you know, sent us elsewhere and then, of course, we don't get answers from those places either. we were happy to have john as a guest in the briefing room. >> steve: he did a good job because people want answers. now, it seems like everything she answers is talk to the special counsel, whereby as a month ago it was the hatch act. so it does, does, to my earlier point it looks like she is not really there offering up answers. it's more like let's protect joe. >> ainsley: thank you, jacqui. peter doocy asked how hard is it to walk out of a scif where can you go read the classified information with classified materials? how easy is it to walk out with
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it. >> everyone knows when you walk into the scif what the requirements are. they know what the requirements are when you go out. you can't take your personal devices. you can't lee with materials. and then peter said well what happens in the chain of command if they do leave with a piece of classified material and they are not supposed to if it's not secure? he said well if they do it inadvertently and they realize this, then they have to self-report. he says that's exactly what president biden did. >> brian: which is crazy because the self-reporting. >> ainsley: lawyer called the national archives. >> brian: discovery six years after it was there. 16 years on the senate situation. so, any type of laudable behavior by the president of the united states is truly overstated. by the way he stumbled his way through a nine minute press conference yesterday to announce the tanks. at one point he says we are sending aid to counter ukraine's brutal aggression. that will work welling. international incident when you are supposed to be granting tanks which you said you would never do. >> ainsley: don't you want to
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know what is in the classified information. they are refusing to land it over to the intel committee. highest security clearance. they read a lot of classified information and they are not allowed to talk. >> steve: we heard apparently cnn, i think i read this morning cnn had got a general idea of what the mike pence stuff was about. and it was about planning for a foreign trip, okay. that's all we want to know. is general stuff. but, is it something embarrassing that they are trying to cover up? and it is it does appear to be a cover-up. every time talk to the being special prosecutor. even though john kirby had no problem with it. jonathan turley the white house untethered from any legal or justification. use of investigation to stonewall the public and the press. >> brian: other thing to keep in mind you have senator tom cotton
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and senator warner both say unacceptable and will not stand. threatening to grind the whole senate to a halt. totally stop confirmation hearings and everything else that the senate may or may not do. stop all the business until they do this. senator warner brought up too, which is questionable for him to bring up if you are his special life coach we were able to see top secret documents when it came to the russian investigation with president trump. we were both able to see that. his interpretation of what he said publicly is for another time. but why are you stops now? it doesn't make any sense. so they are outraged, very curious with a 51-49 senate and democrats leading the charge if they realize the white house are over their skis. for mark levin who actually understands hear from a legal perspective what they can or can't do. he said this about what we have discovered so far. >> bottom line is. if joe biden can walk out there and scif and the senate documents how do we know other senators haven't done this as well. i may mistakenly interpreted as
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saying this is no big deal everybody does it. quite the contrary it. is a big deal. what bothers me is that donald trump is tweeted one way and every one of the orioles is treated another. the whole case against trump is ridiculous. the more of this we see the more preposterous it is. i have a suggestion, sean, just get the longest piece of crime tape you can and wrap it around washington, d.c. most of these guys have done exactly this. >> brian: about the senate documents. to say get the senate documents you can't leave with the documents if you take notes, you have got to leave them with the documents when you go back in they will be there. he is saying for joe biden to take them 16 years ago or 10 years ago or 25 years ago, he had to stick them in his pants or sock or shirt. he had to sneak it out. unless we all have been lied to and senators are allowed to walk out and sandy berger just overreacting and every senate in front of the cameras in front of the cameras so clear you can't leave including rand paul
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yesterday. >> steve: i believe sandy berger wound up going to the national archives is a repository for all the presidential documents. that is where he wound up -- >> ainsley: just lawmakers, just senators and congressman. are they -- they are the only ones that get to go in the scif. if you are the president though, we saw joe biden when he was vice president holding that folder said classified documents looked like he was in the oval office. >> brian: the white house is a scif when you are there. the building is a scif. that's where it is. the folder isn't the problem. what is inside. >> ainsley: photographers in the room when he was holding that information. >> brian: i know. >> steve: obviously, members of congress, if they have got certain clearance, they can look at it. their staffs, if they have got top secret clearance can look at it. so it's, you know, it's a tiny sliver of washington can look at this stuff. but there are so many documents. and that's what people are said in the past. maybe some of these things should not be classified at the level they are but they're.
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and the rules are the rules. all right. meanwhile, let's talk a little bit about this. we have on this program and this channel talked a lot about crime and consequences. and it doesn't seem like there are many these days. and one of the numbers that caught our eye is the amount of crime and in particular, murders that are committed by juveniles. there has been a 30% increase in homicides by juveniles acting alone. but, when they get. >> ainsley: nationwide. >> steve: nationwide. when they get together, more than one kid. 66% increase in homicides committed by multiple juveniles. that's why the "new york post" this morning has the headline teenage wasteland right there. shocking 161 murder suspects in 2022 were minors at double the number from 2019. so you have got to wonder what is going on? >> ainsley: even we have our own meteorologist here adam klotz sitting over here next to brian.
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>> steve: exhibit a. >> ainsley: showing us how he was beat on the sunway trying to defend this older man. three teens that allegedly pummeled him they were on the subway train and the police officers took them. they were written up as juveniles in this report and then they were turned over to their parents without being charged. this all goes back in 2019 it went into effect. andrew cuomo developed this new law called raise the age. and it means if you are 18 and older can you be charged as an adult. the taylors on the sunway and many teenagers across the city just getting off easily because they're under 18 now. in south carolina, when we were growing up. we called it going to juvi. if you were a juvenile you would have to go a facility and they would try to rehabilitate you. and you had an opportunity to wipe your record clean depending on what you had d the sentences
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have significantly lighter. 5,000 juvenile arrests and last year there was 3,500 dramatic. a lot of the business owners taking things into their own hands. one on this show francisco mart at a. small business association. he is one of the people combined with other business owners to take action. watch foam like he is there we have to fight for our store. we owner, we have no corporate. that's how we have to be fighting. a lot of our employees they get assaulted. i told alvin bragg it shouldn't be like that. it should be if you commit a crime, you got to be prosecuted. it doesn't matter the amount. to do something like to upgrade the charge on the people who
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attack the workers or the store owner to be at least a felony. we are not feeling safety now. >> steve: they are not feeling safe and as he says he owns three bogdzs, little grocery stores. he can't afford all the shoplifters, he has to hire somebody to sit there to say put that down. that's the state of how we are in new york city right now. meanwhile, we have got some other news on this thursday morning. a coroner revealing lsu student madison brooks' death was caused by traumatic injuries. 19-year-old sophomore was allegedly raped in a car before she was dropped off on the side of the highway in the middle of the night. the four suspects charged in connection with with the rape had been arrested. a judge shows video one suspect, quote, callously laughing at brooks. some legal experts believe that remark may have jeopardized the case. we will keep you posted. meanwhile, dow chemical company is delaying off about 2,000 employees. the move apparently will save
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the company $1 billion this calendar year. dow will also shut down select assets as part of its cost cutting plan. the company is the latest major firm to announce job cuts as recession fears loom large later this year. a california judge is reportedly issuing a preliminary injunction blocking a controversial state law on covid from going into effect. the law would empower a government medical board to discipline doctors who give or support opinions that are not in line with the consensus about covid-19. the bill was set to take effect later this month before a group of doctors filed a lawsuit claiming it interferes with their duty to give educated medical advice to their patients. here is one of the best stories of the day. kansas city chiefs quarterback patrick mahomes says is he ready to go for sunday's afc title game after spraining his ankle in the divisional round.
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>> i'm doing good, you know. afc championship week ready to go. few days of treatment and rehab. get on the practice field and test it out. >> steve: great. meanwhile tickets for the nfc title matchup cost an average more than 2,000 bucks as you can see right there. they are on track to be the most expensive in conference championship game history. sunday's clash between the san francisco 49ers and the eagles will kick off at 3:00 sunday afternoon only on fox. and, of course, being from kansas city, the kansas city chiefs are favored at our house. >> ainsley: i will pull for them just for you. >> steve: thank you very much. >> ainsley: j.d. vance responding to president biden's economic agenda. >> brian: but, first, opening statements get underway for the double murder trial of alex murtaugh. two pieces of evidence prosecutors say link him to the killings of his wife and son. ♪
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>> ainsley: opening arguments underway in the double murder trial of a alex murdaugh who bre down in court yesterday you can see him crying. prosecutors laying out the case for why he killed his wife and son. the defense says not so fast. >> you're going to hear that there was gunshot residue on alex at the scene. hear there was gunshot residue on the seat belt of the car he was driving. the key piece of forensic evidence that you're going to hear in this case is the [inaudible] >> what you heard from the attorney general as facts are not, are not. they are his theories. their conjecture. >> dnc in south carolina for a long time. joining us now former fbi special agent nicole parker.
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good morning to you, nicole. >> good morning, ainsley. >> ainsley: first, what's your reaction to what you are just hearing gunshot residue on the car clothes blood splatter on his clothes what does that proof. >> that is very solid evidence. they will be looking at that very, very closely. >> how do they do that? how do they make sure that that -- that they found that on the seat belt? how does gunshot residue how does that work? >> so they are going to be taking samples of everything that was found. they sent it off to a lab and they do analysis on everything, all of the evidence that was found. the gunshot residue is very, very important in this investigation. obviously his wife and his son were shot with two separate firearms and they are going to be looking closely at the evidence that was seen directly after the crime had occurred. >> ainsley: why would that be? wouldn't that mean usually if there are two different weapons, it would be two different people. >> not necessarily. i mean, you can be one individual and use two different
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firearms to kill two different people. >> ainsley: all right. what about the cell phone video. his son was actually snapchating on the property during all of this. what does that show? >> absolutely. that shows that he actually had said that he was not anywhere near the kennels when the murders occurred. but the cell phone videos show something completely different. the fact that he was on the video with his wife and his son just minutes prior to their murder shows that he absolutely was near the crime scene. >> ainsley: they can tell that by the pinging, by the towers? >> correct. so there are cell phone towers that ping. the fbi, in particular, uses something called cast. they are able to identify which towers they are pinging off of at exact times and locations. and that is rock solid evidence in these types of investigations. >> ainsley: why do you think he would do this? if you think about, you know, his parents, most parents could not e. in never do this to their
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child or their wife. >> i absolutely agree. this is absolutely horrendous. but what you want to be looking at is everything that occurred prior to the time the crime occurred. what were the stressors going on in his life? there is a lot of circumstantial evidence in this investigation and homicides can be proven with circumstantial evidence. you know, the prosecution is wanting to make that very clear to the jurors that a lot of times the csi television shows seeing direct evidence. in this case highly circumstantial evidence. you are going to want to look at what was occurring before the incident, before the murders occurred and what occurred directly after the murders occurred. many. >> ainsley: really rocking south carolina. they are a prominent family. i went to college with his son john marvin one of the nicest guys. sitting behind his dad. his dad is saying he is innocent in all of this. hopefully we will get some answers. thank you for coming on with us. >> my pleasure. thank you. >> ainsley: as president biden is set to deliver remarks on economic progress major companies across are laying off
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>> ainsley: we are back with headlines twinning with divine intervenezuela. a nun stops two thieves from stealing scrap metal from the roof of a nonprofit in new york. sister mary jo northeast was praying when she heard loud banging noises. she saw the ladder leading up to the roof. she kicked it down and the two crooks were forced to jump down. >> this is god's property. this is god's mission. how dare you do this? i pointed my finger and i told them get out. and he ran away. the building that we're in is special. it's a dining room, it's a place of safety. why would someone want to hurt that mission? >> ainsley: she is amazing. sister mary enforcing the commandment thou shall not steal. she quote prays every day for
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those though two thugs still on the loose. former president trump responds after meta says it's going to allow him back on facebook and instagram. trump taking to truth social facebook lost billions of dollars in value since deplatting reinstating my account. such a thing should never happen again to a sitting president or anybody else who is not deserving of retribution. the meta president for global affairs says americans should be able to hear from those who want to lead them. the college of southern nevada now introducing cannabis related courses for students. the college will offer certificate programs for roles like dispensary associates, manufacturing agent and cultivation technician. this comes as the legal marijuana industry continues to grow across the state. once students complete that certification they will gain access to an entire network of employers. winter storm blanketing parts of the midwest snow. seven inches detroit. forcing school districts to cancel the classes for a second
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straight day and what better way to spend a snow day than checking out this fellow. a family in minnesota built that incredible 30-foot tall snowman, look how big he is. and it's become a major draw it. took over 40 hours to build. and some of the snow comes from their neighbor's property. those are your headlines. now let's check in with fox weather meteorologist amy freeze good to have you this morning. >> i read an article one in four americans have never made a snowman. >> ainsley: what? they must live in florida where they don't get snow. >> getting robbed. winter is making up for lost time. we got about a half foot from this latest storm that came through the northeast. new york, west virginia and maryland all picking up significant totals. the northeast is starting to get active. three storms in six days. the last of this is kicking out of maine right now. you know it's a mess along the i-95 corridor and new york city snowless. a few flurriys, a trace. not measurable snow. go down history books for long wait. 9 million americans are under
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winter be alerts as this storm exits but another one is waiting in the wings. it will be coming down from canada. so the great lakes they get a little snow today from what is exiting but reinforcement is coming in from the northwest. off lake erie and in western new york, maybe 1 to 3 inches from this round. but this fast-moving storm sneaks in and brings three or four more inches. tomorrow indianapolis a fresh dose of snow to make it through your morning commute. steve, ainsley and brian back to you. >> ainsley: you have to think about it. did you great. >> thanks. >> ainsley: thank you, amy. >> steve: mean be while this morning dow chemical company joining several other u.s. firms announcing major layoffs as recession fears continue to grow later this year. >> ainsley: thousands of more americans finding themselves without jobs, unfortunately. but that's not stopping president biden from going out and promoting economic progress and planned remarks later today. >> brian: well, our next guest was a venture capitalist before he went to capitol hill. ohio g.o.p. senator j.d. vance joins us. senator, great to see you. first off, we see the numbers on
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labor think are extremely strong. the word is they are slowing. when we get these stats on different companies people are getting concerned. give us the big picture how it feels in ohio. >> well, one of the big problems we have, brian, is that a lot of people just drop out of the labor force entirely. so a lot of the jobs numbers look pretty strong in part because you have a lot of people who have dropped out of the labor force entirely and then, on top of that, of course, you still have the continuing inflation problem that's making a lot of people feel like they can't afford the basic necessities. the economy not doing great. most ohio families feel it. they are strung gling at least to make ends meet if not to get a job all together. because of that, there is still a lot of frustration out here. >> steve: absolutely. senator, clearly, joe biden is doing a speech today because is he trying to change the subject. he doesn't want to talk about those documents that they found by the corvette or anything like that. he wants to say hey, look how good the numbers are when you look at the core numbers and i'm
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doing a good job. those evil republicans like j.d. vance they want to raise taxes, gut social security and medicare. >> you know, it's the classic distraction technique. this is what they do when they have don't have anything to talk about. it reminds me a little bit of the obama economy of say 2011 and 2012. where they constantly tried to tell the american people the economy was strong but it was clearly that most americans just weren't feeling that prosperity. and, of course, that eventually led to the election of donald trump in 2016. so i think these guys have to not celebrate too much for the top line economic numbers that very often don't tell the real story between inflation and labor force dropout we have a very rough economy. if you talk to businesses as well, they are worried about hiring, they are worried about making the investments that will make their company more efficient over the future. that's how you lead to long term economic stagnation. unfortunately, that is the story of the biden economy right now. >> i know that 400 million in
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tanks now president zelenskyy is begging us for fighter jets and long range missiles? how do you feel about this? i know you are quag full report on security assistance. tell us how you are involved. >> what i have said here whether you are supportive of ukraine funding or not supportive of ukraine funding, we should know where the money is going, right? we know we have a corruption scandal in that country right now. we just need to better understand our a are american tx collars being spent on the things that the ukrainian president is telling us they are being spent on. if you zoom out a little bit, my biggest concern here -- i understand people are on different sides of the issue, but my big concern here is biden has not articulated a vision what we are doing in ukraine. what is our goal. how is american policy meant to achieve that goal and because of it feels sometimes like we are just shoveling money over there without any clear plan for what it is meant to accomplish. >> brian: a couple of things. when it comes to this i
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understand according to angus continuing deloitte is division of oil and gas audit and have to come back with a report. everybody wants to know where the money is going. clearly you know what the objective is to take that 15% that russia took and stole and grab their country back. so we are trying to get these fighters who clearly know how to fight and adapt and crushing one op. one the russians. giving them what they need to be successful, senator. what don't you understand about that? >> well, i think my issue, brian, if you look at the national state of the world right now, it's been an effective strategic quagmire six months. ukrainians have lost 150,000, more than that, maybe. the russians, of course, have lost a large number of people. but this is in a strategic quagmire. what is our ultimate objective to kill as many ukrainians -- russians as possible. or bring some sort of resolution to this conflict that hopefully allows us to rebuild ukraine and allows the ukrainians rebuild
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their country. >> brian: what wowhat do you thf you were president what would your objective be. >> what i have told everybody who will listen is i think the united states' goal here some way similar to the state of israel's goal here, which is to de-escalate the conflict because the risk of furthest can a labor relation here whether it's nuclear or further out in europe, the risk here is that we get into a situation where everything becomes uncontrollable. >> brian: let them have what they took, senator? think down the line though. you give -- let russia take 20% of a country, what about the next country? give them another 20. give them georgia. let's have moldova, we don't want to waste money. so what is -- you have got to play this out and not just look at our dollars today. what about our dollars five years from now, 10 years from now? >> you know, it's a fair point, brian. buff the counter argument to that is that we have spent so much of our munitions down, so much of our military equipment down if we have to fight a war
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against china, which i think is far more likely and frankly it's a far more dangerous opponent that's what worries me. the focus on russia comes at the expense of china. unfortunately we cannot fight two enemies at once. whether we fight the chinese god forbid directly down the road or indirectly over the next 20 or 30 years, we need to focus where the real problem is. in my view that's china. >> brian: objective to refill our coffers at the same time? >> ainsley: yes. >> brian: these are american companies. these are american companies. >> we can agree on that, brian. we definitely need to rebuild our defense industrial base. one of the things we have learned from the biden administration is that we don't have the capacity to make our own weapons. that's a big problem, something we need to solve. certainly something i'm working on in the senate. >> steve: can't forget about us. j.d. vance, thank you for joining us from cincinnati. >> ainsley: thank you, senator. >> thank you, god bless you guys. >> steve: still ahead on this thursday, actress octavia spencer speaking out on woke pop
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in a survey, 92% of current users said they wish they'd talked to their doctor and started botox® sooner. plus, right now, you may pay zero dollars for botox®. learn how abbvie could help you save on botox®. ♪ >> so, for me, could the help be made today? i don't know. should "the help" be made today? absolutely. it represents real people who made real contributions to society who were never rewarded for those contributions. >> brian: actress octavia spencer speak out against. not sure the hit movie "the help" would get made today. "fox & friends weekend" co-host pete hegseth joins us. we hear a lot about what can be made today. we're not talking about the 50's. gone with the wind, 10, 15 years
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ago. do you think she is right and from what you know of "the help" it wouldn't be made today? >> i think some of it is self-important, right? hollywood saying we do these brave things but the world couldn't tolerate it anymore because it's become soft a little bit is over the top. mini said the same thing about the office yet it's the most streamed thing on television. everybody is prepared to consume it. but there's no doubt that there's an anti historical streak in hollywood that wants films to have an agenda that is almost retribution. as opposed to a challenging film like request of the the help "i haven't seen it. my wife has. i watched the trailer it. sounds like an overcoming story of someone who is willing to speak out about what it was like to be "the help" and turns out a lot of people felt that way. a book was written and these are changing times of the '60s. challenging, confusing racist times. those stories can and should be told. i believe hollywood at some level somebody is going to make
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films to films like this because you can't just sanitize everything or make everything an angry approach. i think also it relates in a way to what is happening at the african studies situation in florida. not so much not studying african-american culture it's what's in the curricula. what's in the message brings me to the other big story. part 2 of the miseducation of america. it's able to be streamed right now on fox nation. pete, what can you tell us? what can you expect? >> that's right, brian. season one was explosive. i will tell you will all five episodes of season 2 will -- are going to rock you. honestly. because if you want to get sense of how we got here with gender pronouns and secret transitions and multiple sexual orientations, again, it's not a mistake. you will meet people like dr. alfred kenzi. dr. john money, the rhymer twins, groups like see can you seikus.many which you may have r
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heard from. fraudulent perverted research got us now where gender spectrums are being talked about with 6-year-olds. we talked to a lot of the experts in series one of which is douglas murray. take a listen to this clip. >> i have come across parents that say they haven't discovered until parents meeting that their child is being called the wrong gender the wrong sex or the wrong name by the teacher because child is identity in school and the school hasn't told the parents. now, by the way these are schools generally like if you give a child aspirin you have to ask permission from the parents so how's come you have to ask very basic permission from the parents on very small things and can hide from them very big things? >> pete: brian, one key thing we find is they are intentionally trying to break down the innocence of kids. hyper sexualize them as young people. groups like planned parenthood,
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amaze.org, sekus today who got funding from hugh hefner originally. interesting detail from the film. you will learn things you didn't know how our curriculum went sideways and as i said before, there is a disclaimer at the top says warning, this material is disturbing for adults yet taught to kids in school every day. viewer discretion is advised. so, i hope people check it out and then we have a live summit tonight, brian, in nashville, tennessee for the miseducation of america season 27:00 p.m. fox nation. worth watching. give you a sense of not only where we are but how you fight back. >> brian: summit in nashville. awesome get it on the stream. great job filling in for laura. iowa governor kim reynolds joins us live on her push for school choice. first, looking to save big? we have more inflation busting deals including almost 90% off teeth whitening. mega morning deals straight ahead. ♪ ♪
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exclusive access to great bargains you won't find anywhere else. back with more great gifts and stocking stuffers. if you want to shop now get a jump. this is mega meany the morning spokesperson. makeup, like my dream, actually. >> meghan: excited about the deals and can barely get the words out. >> ainsley: look how many there are. >> this is mineral makeup which is great for your skin. allergy-free, good for sensitive skin people. right? we have different. >> ainsley: look at these colors. >> meghan: some for your eyes, eye shadow, there is also lip color pallet, lip care, highlighter and contour kit. again, this is all organic and chemical free. start at $15. which is 66% off women -- younger women alike. great deal there. smart watch, this does everything a smart watch is known to do. >> steve: like an apple watch only a lot cheaper. >> meghan: like an apple watch.
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awesome. >> steve: now this, ainsley and i and meghan were talking about back in the day a place in new york that would charge you a lot of money to whiten your teeth. >> a thousand bucks. >> steve: with a blue light. >> today $29. at home set. comes with the syringe and bleach. put it in these trays. soak the tray in warm water and it model to your mouth and put the blue light on it makes it lighten 10 times faster than in a dental office. but it's professional grade, the results. >> steve: the bleach or whatever it is the go. >> activated by the lead blue light. that's an 87% savings. >> ainsley: that's great. you drink a lot of coffee you need that. >> on this fitness theme of the new year. these are weighted bracelets. you can wear them though also on your ankles. i you know i do the tracy emerson workout. >> ainsley: those are so hard. >> they put weighted weights on our ankle. >> ainsley: makes it harder. >> do it playing tennis or running or walking. >> ainsley: if i'm going to work out i'm going to do the hardest
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workout i can. while i'm in the gym take advantage of. >> it one pound. really adds. >> steve: really does. work out a while. >> meghan: wear it on the air it looks like a watch. you will get a workout doing your hand gestures, $25. so 69% off today. look for the mega morning deals icon on the "fox & friends" website and start shopping. >> steve: that's where can you go for makeup, watches, bright teeth, and some real. >> ainsley: skin serum. >> steve: gun show. >> meghan: yeah gun show. show your guns everyone. >> steve: foxandfriends.com click on the icon. joe rogan has a message for the mainstream media. why he is blaming them for gaslighting you. that's coming up. ♪
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♪ ♪ >> outrage on capitol hill with classified documents. >> a briefing by the dni and congressional lawmakers. >> the administration's stonewalling. >> president biden today is going to discuss economic progress. more americans find them -- >> the latest with massive layoffs. >> the labor force to drop out. >> willing to overlook some awful [bleep]. >> gaslighting viewers about violent riots. >> there is a blurring of the line and the use of the word
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