tv FOX and Friends Sunday FOX News January 29, 2023 4:00am-5:00am PST
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tell your doctor if you have liver problems or mental health concerns, and if you are pregnant, breastfeeding, or considering pregnancy. some of the most common side effects include injection-site reactions, fever, and tiredness. if you switch to cabenuva, attend all treatment appointments. every other month, and i'm good to go. ask your doctor about every-other-month cabenuva. ♪. will: welcome to "fox & friends" pete: mount pleasant, south carolina. will: beautiful shot. brought in by florida georgia line. just a moment ago, novak djokovic won the australian open tennis championship.
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we were talking about it. i think i want to talk about this, but i think i'm not into tennis. will: here's the deal. i don't think it was a story about tennis. novak joke kitsch djokovic was not allowed toly because of vaccination. he comes back a year later to win the tournament. what did costs ourselves a world. cost ourselves australian championship, a moment of greatness with novak joke kitsch. what other moments did we lose? what other moments of productivity? what did you lose? what did i lose? mandatory restrictions that didn't work on entire globe. this man did what probably could have been. it isn't about tennis. i wonder what else this mandate, this an sanity cost the world?
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rachel: think about how many kids, our education system, pete, isn't great to begin with. they were on a december path. think how far back they were set. will: yes. rachel: i reviewed in the last hour a military man, decorated at the top of his game who was demoted because he refused to vaccine. these are the things happening. by the way, 4,000 people in the lawsuit that he is filing. so, your point is so well-taken, how many businesses were lost. will: yes. rachel: failed, might not start up again. how many kids, how many military. it goes on and on. pete: there is never any reckoning with that. rachel: not allowed to talk about that. pete: there is overcoming and a reckoning with what djokovic did, i was able to come back. a lot of people weren't. will: yes. pete: and aren't. celebrate what he was able to do, recognizing not emblematic of most people who lost kids or lost businesses.
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>> never forget what they did to us. if you forget they will do it again. i think we should not be as gullible next time. pete: nice. will you properly hijacked the show. will: novak djokovic. pete: back down to the border where we have more information this morning talking about, what are known as known got-aways. we now know the number is nearly 300,000 nongot-aways, slipped past border patrol agents in less than four months. in less than four months. now we learn that northern border apprehensions are rising as more illegal immigrants try to enter the u.s. from canada. why not? will: this is fascinating. we always talk about the southern border. this is a story of illegal immigration. appropriately our focus is on the united states mexican border. look at the numbers from what is happening up in canada? it is best told over time. go back to 2016. you have border encounters, something like 2,000, 3,000,
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4,000 through 18. in 2022 explodes on annual basis up almost to 110,000. this year, fiscal year starts in october. looking at four months. this year you're looking at 42,000, encounters at the northern border. so far so you're well on pace to exceed 2022. pete: let me guess. that is probably not just canadians fleeing just trin trudeau. these are people say don't ply to mexico city. fly to ontario. rachel: don't go up to panama, go up to canada. there are a lot of people, over 100 countries people are flying to. might be easier to fly to canada. will: that was the point. when i was in el paso weeks ago, live on camera for "fox & friends," seven illegal immigrants crossed the river literally right behind us. where were they from? cuba. if you're cuban, fleeing a boat
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to florida. yet they were coming through the american southern border. what you learn, these people are coming from all over the globe. if you're coming from all over the globe, middle east, asia, what is the difference, fly to ontario, mexico city, get across the border. pete: especially if the process is more moaningable, more orderlily on northern side. rachel: less dangerous. think of the cartel. pete: think of the size of the northern border compared to the southern border. it is massive. the numbers are not there yet. it gives you a preview what could be. rachel: new hampshire governor chris sununu is sounding the alarm. listen. >> we've seen a lot of northern border agents shifted down to the southern border because the administration will not put in additional resources needed to take care after crisis there. we talk about a southern border crisis. god bless governor ducey, governor abbott they're on the front lines doing everything they can. it affects all 50 states. place like new hampshire, we
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have northern border. when agents get diverted we see a big increase in smuggling, traffic on the northern border, whether drugs, illegal activity coming over there. our states have to put more resources up there. will: i remember that was last summer on "fox & friends weekend" t was really foresight he sold us this was happening. he told us the type of people coming over the northern border do not want to be caught. they are often involved in illegal activity beyond simply illegal immigration. rachel: i don't expect to see kamala harris going to that border either. if she is not willing to go to the southern border i doubt she is going to go at this time of year to the minnesota, vermont vermont -- pete: no, no. by the way when you look at the number on our screen, 293,000 known "gotaways," known illegal crossings, not even unknown illegal crossings, just the known, we're on track to double
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the previous record which was 600,000 in a year. meaning over a million, a million people we have no idea who they are or why they're coming here, the ones who don't get caught, potentially in this fiscal year crossing our border. rachel: if you're not watching fox news, you probably don't know this is happening by the way. pete: probably deft don't. or you think it's a good thing. on to other news, the minnesota state senate where all bad ideas come from passing a sweeping new abortion bill, poised to become one of the most radical pro-abortion laws in the nation. rachel: pro-life activists and lawmakers are slamming the bill and democrats refusal to protect unborn life. will: brooke joins us to tell us more. >> reporter: critics of minnesota's abortion bill say it is the most extreme. it has abortion legal anytime
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during pregnancy. those gathering in the capitol at st. paul as the high-stakes vote took place. senate minority leader mark johnson responding to the bill, today we're not codifying roe v. wade, or doev gomez, we're talking about youth sterile ages, late-term abortions for vast a ray of preproductive services. republicans proposed many amendments to the bill to add protection to the unborn but all were eventually shot down. >> minnesota has pioneered the limits of viability and if a child can survive outside of the womb, i think it is a reasonable and moderate place to say that that child deserves a shot. >> reporter: left-wing of the senate gave no room for negotiation. >> we don't need the people in this room, the people in this chamber, to be telling pregnant people what kind of care they
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can get, when and why. with that mr. president i move the a 1034 amendment. >> reporter: state senators passed legislation by one vote. governor tim walls is expected to sign it into law. will: brooke, thank you for that report. it is described as one of most extreme laws enshrined in state law that is pro-abortion. rachel: exactly. will: saw in the report, late-term abortions, youth sterilization, what type of things, what type of examples will they allow soon in minnesota? >> reporter: when the governor signs it there are no guardrails here. republicans were trying to amend the bill before it was passed to add some type of guardrail for example, you know, preventing any third trimester abortions but, by one vote democrats passed that bill and the governor is expected to sign it. there are some other bills like this in states like colorado, maryland, new jersey, oregon, vermont. this just goes to show after the supreme court overturned
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roe v. wade the decision on abortion really goes back to the states. will: no guardrails. pete: no guardrails at all. this is by the way the manifestation of the democrat party's view on this issue. if they have their way there are to guardrails at all, abortion on demand all the way up to birth. will: question, clarification that i asked you, brooke, is something i think everyone of the state legislators, every state is pressed upon. aadopt the position of pro-abortion what you mean. pete: defined it. on demand. will: partial-birth, on demand, late term? slain when you believe life begins. >> so anti-science and as feat fetal we know, early '70s when roe vs. wade was decided it is unbelievable they are going in this direction, because the vast majority of americans want at least some limits.
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third trimester that is like infanticide. i had a premie. i understand what a third trimester child looks like from the womb. it looks like other ones a tiny bit smaller. it is unbelievable. will: rachel, for most of us this is philosophical, religious issue, highly principled. to the point the what american people believe practicality an politics of it, the american people do not except no limit, no guardrails any access all of the time abortion like you described. it needs to be clarified. what is it exactly you want democrat? rachel: good point. pete: pro-abortion lobby is as strong in minnesota as anywhere else. states around it wisconsin, iowa, will have restrictions on abortion. that will make minnesota a sanctuary abortion state. those organizations bern fit from that as well unfortunately tragically in minnesota. rachel: thank you, brooke. really appreciate it.
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this means the pro-life movement has a lot of cultural work to do. cultural work and also information work. as you talked about, we talked about the science of it. there is just this understanding who we are as humans. do we stand with those who are multiple -- who is more voiceless and vulnerable than an unborn child. there is a lot of work that needs to be done to counter this, the propaganda, frankly coming from the other side, that uses euphemisms effective like choice, women's rights. but doesn't seem to care about the rights of the voiceless and the unborn. i was at the right-to-life march as you guys know. i go every year. here is a clip. >> we have a daughter who has down syndrome. rachel: so do i. >> prebirth diagnosis we had a lot of encouragement to terminate her pregnancies from
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doctors a genetic counselor. we felt very strongly we didn't want to. we were sad that we were encouraged that way. >> she is the light of our lives. so incredible, such a gift from god. i just hate to think that other people would be scared and grieving and cave to that pressure. >> i had a miscarriage. then i got pregnant with my son. sorry. rachel: it is okay. >> and i have some complications they said i think it is best if you abort your child for you and your child. i was like, no. the goal is to make it unthinkable. it was unthinkable for me. there is no chance. will: there was a lot of, there was a lot of analysis after the midterm elections why the anticipated red wave did not happen. many people think that abortion had something to do with it. that there was a political backlash to the supreme court striking down roe v. wade. i would offer you up in the wake of that, i think the left and democrats got to define the
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narrative what that meant. so look, if we go out on the street, do a man on the street interview, what happens if roe v. wade goes away? a lot of people go abortion is illegal. pete: yeah. will: maximalist position, don't realize it goes to the states. my point is, back to this idea of what is happening in minnesota, the burden needs to now be shifted. the burden shifted. you need to explain your point of view. rachel: yeah. i think that's fair. i think that's a good point. pete: i was going to -- because when they're pressed on their point of view, because of the power of the eye borings lobby, they can't -- abortion lobby, they can't say anything other than nine months. almost every democrat when pressed what is the limit abortion is acceptable? all the way up until birth? they don't want to answer it. but they don't want to reject it either. will: yes. for years -- pete: that is very extreme
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position. will: for years in essence they were on defense. if a pro-life person says i want to do away with roe v. wade. i don't think it is constitutional, whatever may be, because they were defense, divert into pro-choice stuff, right? but if you're attempting to craft a law, you have to be on offense. you have to say your point of view. you have to advocate for what you want to happen. i just think, i think democrats are on dangerous ground when they have to actually, when they can't do this, dodge with pro-choice, good luck explaining to the american people that you want partial-birth abortion. rachel: they won in minnesota. pete: minnesota is the thing. they don't crack out of st. paul minneapolis bubble of left-wing lutheran liberalism. rachel: i want to go back to what the women said in the clip. it really brings it down to practical level. when women are pregnant, my advice to them, especially somebody who had a special needs
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baby like one of the moms said, other one had complications. they told her to abort her baby, so important for pro-life doctors to stand up. so important for women to choose pro-life doctors see you and your baby as patients. you are both patients in this situation. both women sadly had doctors who advised them to abort their babies. these babies, they're crying think about the idea they could have followed that advice. we need to get to the place where it is unthinkable to do that. in any case that is important. there is a role for the medical community. there is a group of ob doctors who are pro-life, trying to counter a lot of pro-choice propaganda infiltrated into the medical schools. there is a lot of persecution against pro-life medical students right now. pete: unfortunately all to thinkable in minnesota. other states have similar
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fights. turning now to a few additional headlines this morning, new reports reveal notebooks found in the fbi's search of biden's wilmington home may have referenced classified information. the notebooks, which biden wrote in while serving as vice president reportedly have information on his family affairs and experiences in the obama administration. match those up with the laptop, see what is going on. stand your ground a florida police chief issues a warning to thieves after a homeowner shoots a burglar. >> once you expect that if you're brazen enough to enter into someone's residence, it is not yours, with intent to commit an unlawful act there may be repercussions. we live in florida. more so we live in polk county and most people armed. will: in is how you end crime. that is it right there. pete: that is it.
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haines city police chief referring to friday's incident where a homeowner was forced to shoot a felon who was one of two burglars that broke into his home. if you enter, we are armed. will: wonder if i should go in there there? do they have guns? could i be harmed? pete: psychological impact. young singer stopping miami heat basketball practice with this powerful performance of "the star-spangled banner". >> ♪ home of the brave ♪ rachel: that is a little person. pete: eight-year-old. see her receiving lots of praise from the team. i love it. i love it. i'm sure they were practicing before the game.
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she is rehearsing stops the practice. we will talk to her later during the 9:00 a.m. hour. she will give us a special performance. one player was holding it out there. she is, no, no, let me finish. rachel: i like a girl like that. i'm looking forward to the 9:00 a.m. hour. can't believe we get to see her and hearer sing. will: we started segment 19 minutes ago talking about novak djokovic winning the australian open. here is video. he was highly emotional, sitting out one year ago because he did not take the covid vaccine, was not allowed into australia. deported from australia during the tournament. here is one year later, australian open. rachel: very principled athlete. he was an example to a lot of people. pete: imagine, patience, discipline it took to maintain the principle as your athletic
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career in real time passing you by. come back to triumph this way. that is pretty real emotions there. beautiful. will: congratulations novak djokovic. still ahead is the u.s. two years away from war with china? an air force general's urgent warning about in his estimation, the imminent threat of the ccp. rachel: plus a 13 hour "flightmare." the severe weather prompting a planeful of passengers to turn back around. ♪. heavy duty pulling power. ♪ to conquer the high road, or the off road. ♪ the gmc sierra heavy duty. premium and capable.
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doug, what do you make of this general's assessment? is it accurate? do you agree with it? >> i think it is excessive. china is a very serious challenge to america but it's important not to treat war as inevitable. a number about european countries did that before world war i. that accelerated the slide towards conflict no one wants a war in this case. it would be horrible for both countries so we don't want to treat it that way. rachel: what would be the red line to cross us over there. a move towards taiwanese independence? is that what would cause it? the general view if china is willing to put up with a certain amount kind of separatist activity but any move they saw as going towards independence would force them to act and most policy mangers i think are convinced china would take military action then. that would be the danger move. that would be potentially be a red line for conflict. the u.s. would have to decide if
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it was willing to go to war with a major conventional power nuclear weapons. rachel: are we ready for that? >> i don't believe so at the moment. a lot would depends what our allies would do. frankly we need a conversation with the american people are they prepared for a real war where american aircraft carriers could be sunk, planes could go down, ships would being sung. this would not be iraq. this would not be afghanistan this would be the real deal. rachel: how worried are you the military is focused, they are distracted by woke policies, identity politics, even climate change? >> i think the challenge here, what the u.s. government and u.s. military do west best is deal with major crises other countries cannot deal with. you're right, there are a lot of distractions if we want to be prepared for war with china you have to focus on that. it is not the middle east. it is not europe, europeans are much better able to deal with. we have to focus on this.
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they want to make this a very conscious decision. not something you sleep walk into. this would be extraordinary conflict. rachel: there have been war games obviously been played. how do those turn out? how does america turn out in those war games? >> a lot of them the u.s. loses, even when the u.s. wins it is catastrophic cost. there was reason one had sinking of two u.s. carriers. you have 5000 sailors own a carrier going down. losing lots of aircraft. we can't go into this assuming we would win. we can't go into this assuming the chinese would back down. this for them is existential issue. it's a long ways away from america. america is as close to china as cuba is to america. imagine china defending cuba from the united states. rachel: no. what you're say something truly alarming. do you think that the biden administration is taking this seriously? >> i think they are. i think they recognize danger here. it is good frankly we're getting
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communication again between beijing and washington. we have have to talk. there have to be dialogue here. because, again, it is easy to see major powers kind of sleep walking into a conflict, making assumptions that the other side won't get involved. both countries and both ghosts have to know what is going on what their interests and red lines are. rachel: i'm not as confident as you, doug. i feel like our president is compromised by the chinese that concerns me in this situation. but i appreciate your analysis, you combing on the show to share it. >> happy to do so. rachel: thank you. coming up, paying off the cartel. a school's assistant principal under fire for apparently trying to raise money to clear a migrant student's debt. unbelievable story. plus as the cost of everything reaches new highs, we brought a self-sufficient farm to fox square. what you need to know to build one in your own backyard. oh, dear, there is chickens.
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♪. will: staff at a rhode island high school getting asked to help pay off my granted student cartel debt. mount pleasant high school assistant principal writing in an email, quote we have a student who came to america with coyote. which is a group that helps people. this group gives you a time frame to make a payment of $5,000. our student snead the our urgent support to raise another 2,000 dollars. here to discuss radio host wpro in rhode island, matt allen. good morning to you. >> good morning. will: i hope it is not a rhode island thing, cartels, coyotes here to help other. >> i got this email sent to me by activist, local activist on
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friday, i weren't into is this real. reads like any corporate train on i.t. security. all red flags are up. you think this can't be real. what happens is you read it. then you get the statement from the school department that says that the principal actually retracted it, rather than saying hey, this was a hacked email, this is fake, it actually went out. we're retracting it because there are other ways we can help our students. so i spoke to the union president on friday and she was, she didn't know about it until i told her about it. checked into it. it was legitimate. the email wasn't faked. now there is investigation going on what is going on here. her major concern here is a child being trafficked? somebody raising money to bring someone in illegally? i've been doing this for over 20 years, will, and i have never seen a story like this locally ever. will: to your point on retraction, therefore the veracity of the email, here is a statement from the providence public school district to fox.
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the school principal had the it retracted when she learned about the email. providence public school district is investigating. you bring up a good point a student possibly being trafficked here? everyone, here is the thing about it, everyone's heart breaks for a child being extorted, right? >> sure. will: how does the teacher internalize some information she received, regurgitate it back out that coyotes are a group, organized to help people? >> well this is the thing, right? this is like the major issue i think in the united states today as a parent. you want to make sure that the people, assistant principal. you want to make sure that people are in charge of your children have good judgment. that they're not blinded by some political ideology. this school district has been taken over by the state. it is, an educational dumpster fire right now. so they're doing a lot of changes, bringing a lot of equity type stuff in the schools. a lot of controversy what they're doing there.
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my concern is that we idealogically driven people who go into these positions think they can save the world through their interactions with children and this one may be, depending what the investigation says, may be just that. where somebody thinks it is appropriate to crowd source human trafficking. i mean, what are parents in providence supposed to think about the judgment of people in charge. this is note some teacher's aide. this is the assistant principal. that is unbelievable. will: a really good way you described this, a profession has become full of people who think their job is to save the world, not educate children, who have incredibly poor judgment layered upon idealogical blinders. you laid it out wonderfully, matt. so glad to have you on the show. >> it is a privilege. thank you, guys. will: fox news alert, a unit disbanded after five officers belonging to it are charged with the death of tyre nichols.
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oh man. always look for the grown in idaho seal. ♪. pete: memphis police department permanently deactivating it is scorpion unit of the death of tyre nichols. this comes as the footage showing multiple tactical failures by the five former officers involved that could raise questions about ault of the previous cases as we learn they're set to be arraigned in
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mid february. former nypd inspector paul murrow joins us now. paul, you've been great on this. we'll break it down a little more. one of the questions came in mind to me, why isn't there dash-cam footage or anything we were able to see before lunging into the window? not that it matters, what happened, happened but the context would be helpful too? >> so the potential camera footage that you would get he have the incident has got to come from one of two places, right? either from the body kamala as that the officers themselves have on them or maybe a dash-cam. in this instance, remember they're in an unmarked car. this is a sort of semiunder cover unit. they were in a version of uniform. this sort of hybrid unit has become something of the standard. they deploy this way in new york as well. so an under cover car, very often doesn't have a a dash-cam. there may not be senate minority leader tom daschle cam to view. it is also incumbent for officers on a job, whether they
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pick up job they saw it, incumbent upon the cops themselves to activate the body cam. it is not always on. there are protocols when you put it on. when they put it on here is one of the questions i think a lot of people have, but that said, if they didn't put it on until later in the incident, may not be any camera footage to review. pete: may not be any to review. >> that's right. pete: tactic of approaching the vehicle, it's a hybrid unit, lunging in, grabbing, is there protocol for that? or were they just being aggressive? >> i mean it looks way overaggressive, right? so the very, sort of quick shorthand for police work is generally ask, tell, make, right? you ask for compliance. you tell if you're not getting it and you legal standing and then you make if you have to. they went right to make. i don't see any portion here where there was an approach that was, not anything but defcon 5 right away.
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from what i've seen in the footage, they approached the car. they're screaming. they yank him out of the car. no effort at any sort of de-escalation. the only person who seems to be de-escalating is tyre. it speaks of an approach here infor instance i can to the unit. there is something in the culture of the unit. i will not talk about memphis pd writ large. i don't know that. that is something that will be obviousry looked at. in light of the way they do the initial approach, the way entire encounter was handled, aftermath, fist pumping and lack of, a culture developed in this unit is exactly what you don't want in police work. pete: lack of supervision. do you know how many guys were in now the disbanded scorpion unit, the type of oversight they would have had? >> in a unit like this, you need a lot of oversight. when you have forward-deployed units in sensitive situations you need close supervision from
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the front line supervisor. in this case it would be a sergeant. these are police officers. reportedly there were 40 officers in the unit, broken out into teams of 10. i don't know how they deployed in the field. this was a lot of cops to be in one place on, apparently was not an operation. they just seemed to have encountered this. so you got five of them in one place. i don't know what the supervision over the 40 officers was but that is definitely something that needs to be looked at as i said a unit like this you need close supervision. pete: we hear one of the officers saying, he reached for my gun in a bodycam footage. were they playing to the cameras at that point knowing something had gone wrong? >> very good question. if you watch the videos, it is hard to see them all, they're broken up, broken into various pieces but putting them chronologically hard to see at various points in the end who they are talking to. there is one snatch of the video that does appear like one of the
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officers seems to be trying to explain away what has occurred. he might have some intimation of the fact they went too far. they know they're on bodycam, that is astounding they felt free to do this while they know they're being filmed. he seems to be explaining himself at that point. i'm sure the prosecutors will look closely to the bodycam to see if at any point if tyre reached for the gun. i didn't see that. i have well tell you that. they left body cams on. a lot of footage talking about it afterwards. they're fist bumping, congratulating almost celebratory. the optics are bad. the culture seems to be alienated from the rest of the police department. pete: if he hadn't died, they would have said resisting arrest, that is why this would have happened? >> they could but this is all on bodycam. people remember this is very, very rare. bottomedky cams are default.
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so much focus on the event rightly so demonstrates how rare this is. pete: paul, thank you so much. thank you for all you have done for the country and community as well. >> thank you. will: pete: let's toss to it to will for some headlines. will: start with this, one person dead, four others including two children are hurt after a shooting in west baltimore. the mayor not mincing words about the city's spiraling violence. >> i see a lot of folks, really at this point i'm talking to folks that look like me, that black men in baltimore, i see a lot of folks trying to be acting like they tough but they really weak. only weak people shoot somebody when you know children are right there. will: police say two men were shot at the scene. the gunman fired at a woman driving by with her two kids, causing their car to crash. both the driver of that car and a two-year-old were hit. and a 6-year-old was injured by the crash. the shooter is still on the loose. "flightmare" for the books. after a emirates plane flies for
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13 hours just to land at the same airport it took off some. do people pay for this? this is a thing. not for these people. historic flooding in new zealand forcing emirates from dubai turn around halfway through the trip when the auckland airport had to shut down. standing water overwhelming runways and tarmac forcing planes to divert. 3:00 people have died from overwhelming rainfall. one is reported missing. emirates flight goes back. controversy in the lakers celtics, lebron james losing his mind when he thought referees missed a foul on his winning drive to the objective. they did. he was fouled. bringing a photographers camera to the referees on the thought they saw he missed.
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boston took the lakers down 4 points in overtime. they got his forearm. it wasn't even close. those are the headlines. coming up a new diet trend may dramatically change your face, your face. ozempic. marc siegel on side-effects. we're bringing in a self-sufficient farm to fox square. i don't see rachel out there next to the chickens yet. let's make it happen on fox square in a minute. ♪. ♪limu emu & doug♪ hey, man. nice pace! clearly, you're a safe driver. you could save hundreds for safe driving with liberty mutual. they customize your car insurance... ...so you only pay for what you need! [squawks]
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pete: with the cost of every day grocery items on the rise, some americans turn to farming their own goods. will: help us grow more, spend less, are joe and ida defrancisco. good morning to you guys. >> good morning. will: what will we grow? >> we start tomatoes early in the season. pete: that is how they start? >> two weeks old. rachel: get on farmer stuff. >> get on beans, lettuce here. we're trying to say even in the city you can grow your own
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vegetables. a couple of pots container guarding this is lettuce you put on the porch. take one of the tomatoes here. put it in the center of like this, this will grow right up. get harvest tomatoes. will: how long do you grow before you move it to? >> probably a month. that tomato is month 1/2 old. these are two weeks old. when they're that old, transfer into that pot. pete: put a fence around this stuff, right? animals? if you're out in the yard? >> i would. the lettuce, i do a lot of lettuce on porches. i can't grow it because of rabbits. rachel: or deer. >> deer need like an eight foot fence. rachel: joe are you seeing huge increase people wanting to do this because the price of food is up especially with chicken and eggs, right? >> yes. if you really fail at this, then to find your local farmer. we have farmer harvest programs you can buy the box, a weekly box right from the farmer.
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rachel: of course. >> you do save the money, you're going right to the farm, not going through second, third hand. pete: absolutely. ida you're holding a beautiful chicken. rachel is mortified. a lot of americans -- will: what is the chicken's name. rachel: don't do that claim. don't ruin the segment! pete: how difficult is to this do if you don't have experience with chickens? >> testify driving a chickens, they jump into chicken keeping, we try to make this as stress-free as possible. if it is not for you you can chicken out. will: does that happen often? >> we have a six month program. folks fall in love with it, can adopt them. folks say not for us. we take them back to the farm for wonderful opportunities for us. >> my husband is trying to convince me to do one. eggs are so expensive. everybody is getting chickens to have their own eggs. will: how much is a chicken? >> how much is a chicken?
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goodness sakes it is experience. we do it six months. rent them as a whole package, we show up with the coupe, the feed, you don't have to figure anything out. you start from success on day one. she is already laying. it takes about 6 to 8 months for chickens to get the baby being born giving you eggs. rachel: bring them, ready to lay eggs. will: to keep eggs on the table? >> depending how you eat? some are doing a dozen a week. a happy chicken is one egg a day. pete: okay. rachel: what does it cost for you to come in set somebody up with a chicken coop? >> a 50-dollar deposit. you figure how the how big after coop. if you want four chickens more. we talk to you about it. rachel: how many eggs with four chickens? >> about two dozen a week. l-l they're living creatures. pete: you will take care of them. >> over 50% of our people at the end of the year adopt the
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♪ ♪ oh, everybody's dreaming big. rachel: good morning, everybody. it's 8:00 a.m., and that is my big nightmare, which we just experienced in the last break. i went out there and did it anyway. pete: i think they go up there and they lay the eggs up there. you open little door and pull the eggs out of the thing --
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