tv The Ingraham Angle FOX News February 2, 2023 12:00am-1:00am PST
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yeah.n no you no way you're dog. my >> you're the .ut you but you gave me a d a lower grade than the first time. wan well should you want me to be honest. i'll be your delivery now back again. all right. thank you much. we appreciate you but not your heart. >> be troubled. laura's next. see you tomorrow night. i'm laura ingram and this is ingram angle from washington tonight. and we begin with breaking news on a story this show has brought you from the start exactly one year ago, the grand forks, north dakota city council gave initial approval for a chinese company name fu fang. to build a wet corn milling plant just miles from a us air force base. well, we raise serious concern throughout last year and we spoke with local residents. when you contact the city council, beth wen and i know people have a what what do
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they say? >> what's their response? they they say that there's no national security concern. they've told us that they have properly vetted the fufu corporation and they see no problem with it, which just simply isn't true. >> well, just two months ago, we again sounded the alarm after the committee on foreign investment said it didn't have jurisdiction to block this mill's construction. let me put this very bluntly. the committee that congress mandated and gave the authority to protect america's national security is allowing a chinese business with ties to beijing. that means the ccp to operate mere miles from an american military installation. >> was general austin. how about meely? well, tonight, after months of pressure, the ap is reporting just hours ago that the u.s. air force has now told north dakota leaders that full fang's plans do pose a significant threat to national security,
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prompting city officials to say they'll move to stop the project once and for all. >> we're going to continue to monitor this story and highlight other legitimate concerns about the selling off of america to the ccp, but now exposing themselves. >> that's the focus of tonight's angle. the left is on kind of a sick and self-loathing search and destroy mission. they're fanatical foot soldiers . they're hard at work, undermining institutions and ideals that were once considered indispensable for a healthy, strong america. from college campuses to corporate boardrooms, from newsrooms to the nuclear family, the left picks key targets for influence and infiltration because they hate tradition and normalcy, they know they need to flatten what came before and remake it in their own twisted image. >> existential risk covid
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the racial inequalities that we've witnessed. we're going to see an accelerated attitude towards these issues. >> our laws should move away from the idea that there's one ideal family form polyamorous partners who might be in a committed relationship of three or four, but opting to work less. countries are choosing not to expand production to its max, thereby avoiding additional emissions. we are five days away from fundamentally transform the united states of america. >> you bet. after the left helped get obama elected in 2008, the once great and respected democrat party was hooked. the left's agenda became the democrats agenda from climate change to crt, from transgender ism to tolkan in the streets. and fast forward to present. how's it all working out? our college grads, better writers, better thinkers. and they were, let's say,
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40 years ago. >> do they feel free to speak their minds? >> well, some do clear . i'm worried that this might impact funding for left wing organization. >> brilliant final bottom line requires the factoring in of not just the material and construction costs, but also the architects fees and the costs of land servicing. >> oh, you're left out a bunch of stuff. i really like. >> what, for instance? well, first of all, you're going to have to grease the local politicians for the sudden zoning problems that always come up and you plan on using any cement this building. i'm sure the teams would like to have a little chat with you and i will cost you. >> that'll be quite enough, mr. noel, if only today's radicals or as smart as rodney at our top institutions of higher learning, cicero and aristotle, they're out.
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and abraham kennedy and nicole, hannah jones, they're in so much so that suny just announced it's making a course in racial equity, mandatory for graduation because the left knows that objective merit hurts their own dimwits. they're working now, working overtime to kill standardized tests. of course, standardized tests are rife with cultural and racial bias. it's a poor measure. >> it's an unfair measure. and the sat and act need to be eliminated. >> why are we using standardized tests at all? because the goal of these tests was never education. >> it was always exclusion. and even when we're long past covered , a lot of colleges have complied. but it gets worse now. the left wants to normalize cheating and an op ed, a princeton student named emily santos recently called for
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the dismantling of the honor code system, claiming it's a barrier to social mobility and a more equitable society. now, she likened princeton's rules against academic dishonesty to our criminal justice system, which, of course, professors across america, including at princeton, have branded as racist. >> there are many causes for the racial disparities in our criminal justice system from arrest all the way through sentencing by police officers. but there are also a lot of race neutral factors that prosecutors in particular take into account that can have racial results. >> do you think any of these people pause to consider where this attack on merit and standards ultimately leads? well, when it even infects our health care system, the consequences can be deadly. and i mean, literally, it turns out that med schools are imposing a sprawl calling diversity equity inclusion agenda that insulates certain
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groups from accountability, from the admissions process to residency programs. standards have been compromised and the results are unfair and downright dangerous. >> let's think about it this way. >> do you want your cardiologist to be objectively well-trained or do you prefer someone who graduates from med school or lowered standards because they check a box? it's gotten so bad at yale university that the more wrong you are about key medical issues, the better your chances at landing a plum position. meet the new dean of the yale school of public health. >> she checked three boxes. she's a woman. she's a liberal, and she unapologetic, parroted big pharmas nonsense. there is ample evidence that universal masking decreases infection rates by somewhere between 60 and 90%. >> we know that the durability of those antibodies from natural infection is not strong
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once we can get vaccines in the arms of little kids. we'll see that a number of hospitalizations for zero to four year olds drop zero to four year olds. natural immunity does doesn't work. wrong, wrong, wrong. the woman's either a complete dolt or she's playing one for the promotion and status. but again, to the left, nothing is sacrosanct. they don't care if your education is compromised. a kid can't read and write and they sure as don't care if your health is compromised as long as it means more power for them. so no wonder the public has lost so much faith in the health care industry. the hippocratic oath has been replaced by a hyper political one. of course, the left could do none of this without the help of the media whose own credibility, whether that's shot. and again, totally self-inflicted. this week, former washington post bigwig len downie finally admitted what we've been saying for ages. increasingly, reporters, editors and media critics argue
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that the concept of journalistic objectivity, he writes, is a distortion of reality. they point out that the standard was dictated over decades by male editors in predominantly white newsrooms. >> of course, just like as 80s, a mukaddes honor codes, they're all racist. so is the word objective in newsrooms, he continues. reporters and editors believe that pursuing objectivity can lead to false balance or misleading both sides ism and covering stories about race, the treatment of women, lgbtq+ rights, income inequality and climate change. now, what's key here is they have already concluded there is no room for debate on any of those issues. i just mentioned because that would compromise the modern left's orthodoxy. zero debate, zero dissent. so do you see a pattern here? it's just like during covid and just like in college
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classrooms, emotions and identity, not facts, ruled the day. reporters making themselves the stories. >> did peter jennings ever do that? i don't remember it. >> let's face it, it might have sounded harsh at the time, but trump was right when he called him fake news. >> while the attacks of fake news, the idea that there's some kind of conspiracy brewing within places like the new york times or "the washington post". what i found was extraordinary care. >> it's very, very troubling and very dangerous. >> the ones that president trump calls his fake news, we're actually getting it right now. >> are you, max? wasn't the media wrong about the muehler investigation? wasn't trump supposed to be in jail by now? weren't the russians supposed to be defeated by now in ukraine? and wasn't every one in florida and georgia supposed to be dead of covid? remember, they said that inflation was temporary in response to the siren songs of the hard left, even mainstream
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liberal organizations are giving up any claim to truth or objectivity in the hopes that they can cling to power. but of course, they're more of the more obvious. their biases become, the less americans trust them, and the more power will flow away from them and toward a rising populace. a movement that prizes accuracy over ideology. and that's the angle. joining me now is miranda devine, columnist for the new york post, fox news contributor, author of the laptop from . >> miranda, your response to the media's decision to essentially throw up their hands and say we never claim to be objective. >> that's not our goal here. well, i mean, it's absurd. it is true that they haven't been objective for quite a long time. as soon as donald trump came on the scene, they gave it up. but journalism used to be about following this story wherever it would go .
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and what they've done is they've, you know, used the tools of journalism which were supposed to ferret out the truth, and they've turned them into weapons to crush dissent. they have a preordained narrative and now they don't follow the story. they just shape the facts. to fill that narrative. and it's so destructive. i mean, the the fourth estate has always had special privileges, special access to the people in power. and we were supposed to be one of the checks on power. but now what's happened is that various of these very powerful media organized these corporate big corporate media organizations like the new york times and jeff bezos as washington post, for instance, cnn, cbs, they've just become part of the power structure there. they're totally perverting what
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journalism is all about that doesn't actually commit journalism. now doesn't. this explains their approach to the mueller investigation, to the laptop from . your whole book was devoted to this. they couldn't let themselves believe in russian collusion wasn't true. or hunter biden's story was real, because to do so, the finger would be pointing back at them and they can't do that. isn't that what's going on ? here? >> it is laura and the columbia journalism review, which is certainly not a conservative rag that this week very good and very detailed, long for part. paice went into great detail and excoriated the new york times in particular for running the russia hoax, quoted bob woodward as saying he tried to tell people that it wasn't true. all these media outfits just continued on with it because it was too good a story to give up
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on . >> it fitted so beautifully into their narrative that basically donald trump was an existential threat and he had to be gotten rid of by hook or by crook. and that's what they did for his entire four years, basically in cahoots with the intelligence community, crippled his administration. and now we left with a public that just has no faith in the media anymore. so i don't really see how we can come back from this. >> now, miranda, we have some breaking news tonight. "the washington post" is reporting that hunter biden's lawyers sent a series of blistering letters wednesday to state and federal prosecutors urging criminal investigations into those who accessed and disseminated his personal data. so i guess that means the guy who fixed the laptop and why is he going after people who disseminated the laptop story if it was all russian disinfo? >> yeah, well, that's
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the point. i mean, this is such an open goal. basically, hunter biden, through his lawyers, has admitted that, yes, the laptop is his it's not russian disinformation. those fifty one dishonest intelligence officials told us it's his laptop, which we've been telling people for more than two years. and finally, they've admitted it with is kind of ridiculous attempt to go on the offensive. i think john mccain is that guy who i spoke to this afternoon for our story tomorrow. put it best. he said, when you're over the target, the flak becomes even heavier. and so i think that there's panic in the biden chaos and rand, we really appreciate it. thanks so much. and now on to a dramatic and gruesome story out of south carolina. the double murder trial of alex murdaugh, a once prominent attorney accused of killing his wife and his youngest son in june of 2020 one . now, the elder murdoch had
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a sordid past facing dozens of other charges, including money laundering and alleged theft of some eight point five million dollars from clients at law firm. now, prosecutors have argued that these murders were tied to those financial crimes, but they've had a tough time establishing a motive beyond his just callous response to their deaths when police actually arrived. >> you're going to see body worn camera of him at the scene when law enforcement arrives, watch his expressions. listen to what he say. listen to what he's not saying. use that common sense. does this seem right, which is something similar to the law? >> well, for its part, the defense led by famed south carolina power player dick harpootlian, they allege multiple holes in the prosecution's case, including how seemingly close murda was to the deceased as well as the fact that he had no blood on him when the police arrived. >> did you see what appeared
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to be blood on alex murdaugh team? i did not own his own. no, his shirt. none on his shirt? no, no, his shoes. i did not. how would you describe his? they are clean. clean. how would describe his arms? they were clean. how would you describe his t-shirt? clean. how would you describe his shoes clean. how would you describe his shoes. >> they were clean. >> and the latest twist in the case has to do with a cell phone evidence that both sides believe helps their case for those details, we go to fox news correspondent jonathan serrie, who has been inside the trial since it began. >> jonathan , prosecutors say cell phone evidence places alex murdaugh at the scene of the crime. the defendant openly wept as the court watched a video from his son , paul's iphone, showing the family kenneled just minutes before he and his mother, maggie , were fatally shot. >> go for bava.
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prosecutors asked a family friend to identify the three voices you hear on the video. >> you recognized paul's voice. yes, sir. you recognize maggie's voice? yes, sir. you recognize alex voice? yes, sir. 100%? yes, sir. can you point out alex murdaugh the person whose voice you recognize in this video in this courtroom? please stand right here and great. >> please let the record reflect. he's identified the defendant. investigators believe maggie and paul died around eight fifty p.m. when they stopped responding to phone calls and texts. but maggie's phone continued to record movements, suggesting another person carried the device to a location half a mile from the family. home where investigators found it. the next day, however, the motion that was recorded on maggie's phone occurred at a different time than motion recorded on the defendant's phone.
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laura , jonathan , thank you so much. >> and remember, do not forget, set your dvr night, 10:00 pm so you never miss us . you want to do that. otherwise you might come on , end up missing stories about what's coming up next. armed with their new majority, house republicans took aim at something the angle warned about nearly three years ago. oversight committee chair james comber is here on that. plus, why is the doj allowing biden's personal attorneys to run the show over all those classified documents? we're going to explain it next. >> for this amazing jj never miss a beat day sunday in the pga is working on the weekdays living like a freak de weaponizes de de de de de . hey, it's nice to see things like day to day and fight day
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on in this fight after 9/11, wea did a heck of a lot of stufft re that in the moment felt reallyal good . s late but then later on , yearsr, later, come this comes the waste, fraud and abuse. and we're seeing some of those things creep in during this covid crisis as well.said now, i said that on april 3rd, e twenty , twenty . and even now three years lateru ,there are still news storiest about rampone fraud and abuse, theft from this, what, five trillion dollars in covid relief funds that weret now this i s dispersed. buck now, this is just a dropet in the bucket. it is an example, five pointn ci four billion covid aid may have gone to firms using just the suspect social securityas numbers. a new york woman was sentenced i to forty five months in prison d
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for nine point two million and covid relief fraud rel and e owner of a blimp company justhaf got five and a half years for stealing eight million and covid. joining me now nows th is that man who ran today's hearing, houses oversight committee chair james colmar. now, congressman, again,, more than five trillion and covid aid was earmarked for people who are really in need. how big do you think this fraud will actually total up to in the end? >> it'll exceed 20%. so we're talking over a trillion. it could be more this pandemic spending will go down in history as the biggest theft ofl american tax dollars ever. arit's a disgrace. there are very few peoplethe ex who are actually trying to measure the extent of we'rd we're starting today.ca you know, in the new republican majority, the first hearing, the house oversight of
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committee, was dedicated to waste, fraud and abuse. bu e t think about this, laurer over the past two years, the democrats have not had a single hearing in sup the oversight committee, which ab fraud and abuse over pandemicd. fraud. >> not a single hearing. well, and i know the feds ares r now saying, okay, republicans, you've got to look into this. ri but when i was reading thisth report ine "the washington post", that'was exactly what i thought. what h what have you beenav doing for the past two years? i meanpast t, they say that thirty six billion with small business programs thats was gone, 60 billion in potential fraud for unemployedfo insuranc. claims. i mean, this is just bueiburn seeing. on but i have to tell you, had a james clyburn on msnbc, he had a few thoughts on all i your investigations. >> but i think the here are ver very necessary. unnee really a waste of time. we saw that time and time again when they were in power beforeen and i think that will be the end result this time
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as well. but then o a lotf of money will have been spent and wasted and a lot of time when we could be devoted to improving people's lives. al about the mueller investigation, all the ridiculous impeachmentculous hearings and everything else that was donase to harass president trump? i don't think so. trump?he's symbolic of the washington democrats. they don't care about how much money they waste. all they care abou.t is spending more money. and he's been in leadership foru the past four years.s during al of this waste, fraud and abuse during all of this waste, fraudc and abuse with respect to pandemic spending and neverol bothered to really dove into the situation to try to stop it, to try to clawk back some f the funding. port i mean, these reports have been published for months and months and months, yet they refusebouti to do anything about it.w an we want to try to see if there's a way to claw any of this money back , to hold people accountable and try th it doesn't happen inne
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the future. the worst thing i learned todaya is that small businessadminist administration administered the fauci loan funistered d then has.ot pay they do not pay list for whatever reason. the sba didn't utilize that dodt not pay list uti. h woun it wouldn't have taken anything to have incorporated that into i their softwarenc. therefore, just about everyery e single american on the do not pay list and you get on that list for back taxes, for not paying child support, for beingf convicted fraud. >> just about everyone on that,u list got big ptpst loans, shelld it out. >> congressman colmer, thankthan you for what you're doing. we'rk e going to cover it and continue to cover it. >> nowno, forgetw, white privil. what about liberal privilege? ge when a republican is raided by the fbi, it's leaked to thewy "new york times", washington post. then we get dramatic pictures of all the documentsork times," "w splayed across the floor. but what happens to a democrat? we don't find out about untilt t months later and they allow their private counsel to dictate the timing, not just seahe searches, but the releasrchee of the informatn . r the timeline.co the first batch of biden's
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classified docs were found on november 2nd before the election. fbi search the fbi search was in mid-november, but the public in didn't learn about it until january . d a bhis morning we learne the latest search at joe biden property, this time at hisid delaware beach house.. no but to no one's surprise, biden's personal attorney bothib announced when iegt began in a surprise statement this morning and then he announced when it was over, claiming, well, nothing to see here, no classified material. well, it helps having c thise months healassifd start, i guess. yet despite all of this,sel' the white house counsel's s totl trance is still claiming total transparency, did not disclose that. the fbi also searched for wash the president's private officei here in washington. i think do the american people have bee a right to know about that? i think we've been pretty i transparent from the very beginning with providing informatiot occuthrougn as occud throughout this process.probab you know, we havly thouse relea probably thousands of words of statements from the president's personal attorney in the whiteun house counsel's office about the process that has been
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undertaken herat has be. >> what a wanee.tran we've been very transparent, countless hours, thousands off hours. trs is theansp kinarencyd of transparency they're talking about. >> what is the currenthe numbe r of documents bearing classified the prgs that have been foundd n at the president'sesident' resif and offices? i would refe yr yoouu to the whe house counsel's office. just declined to commentd to on that description. let them know the answer. >> thousands of pages. joining us now, attorney davidee under represented former president trump during a second impeachment. nt secondavid , he just says ts of pages, but how unusual is this that the feds ares to bs allowing biden's attorneys to basically run the whole show here? >> well, running the whole show i is very unusual. think,f couri think as a matter, there should be a cooperative l relationship betweenriking i the lawyers and the justice department. but what's most striking is the point. you made the contrast to the way how this was treated with the trump situation mar-a-lago the exact opposite . everpment way development was ld
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to the media.ous there was this tremendous raidrd on the property. and also the timing contrast herehere wt th. we know that the classified documents were found november 2nd. it doesn'toesn't seem coinciden that it was concealed until thatr the midterm elections. thd then quite a long time after that, that contrasattn th extraordinarily with what happened in the trump situation they were tryings we situation. the lawyers were called out fore it and so on when they were trying to cooperate with theent, justice department. i don't think it's coincidental, quite frankly, icthat we have a justicelisa department. the second in command is lis ma, monaco is an acolyte ofn andrew weissman, who's still writing articles about the muelleing writr investigatin and so on . this is andrew weissman is thean most ethically bankrupt prosecutor i've ever dealt with . think it'swhole crewcally baros. >> i don't think it's coincidental that lisa monacomo is running the shonaco'sw. y >> well, to have learned today that they searched the beach house. right. say regular people don't follow house,, that rig say closely.e they think, wow, they're being really thorough.
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this is great. , this iso biden's being very y and very transparent, but you have to kind of follow that timeline that we just laid out this november 2nd to february 1st. this is still going on , but it seems like it's a choreographed show . t that's my whole point here.med h itor seemed choreographed oh, to elicit this response from the public of, oh, wow, thank you for cooperating and being so transparent. trump would never have gotten away with anything like this. >> no, you're absolutely right. and that latter point, of course, and the problem also is that in between we've heard assurance after assurance that this is the end of it and there are no more documentcuments s a on . listen, frankly, i don't wa believe that there was anys ansa sinister plapresidenn by eithers president biden or president trump with respect to the position of anysihese of thesehe documents. >> but i think now that they've gone so far down the road in making criminal accusations against president trump, i think they neetr td to take a step back and consider how these things happen. as tha matter of course, that doesn't make itr
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right, but it also doesn't makem it criminal conductis a g by president trump. >> i mean, i thinkoo your pointr is a good one . equal treatment for both thank y parties. >> that would be nice.l inte david , thank you.ll artificialitietos seeks mov to distort reality and not only at the moviesie. >> and a biotech firm is trying to resurrect some long extinct creatures. raymond arroyo will be here to tell us what could be next for us . >> seen and unseen. this is going to be so fun. can't wait. it sounds like a blast. how are you getting excited yet ? >> of course you know me. i'm a poor literally anything. >> even if it might be a little boring. >> what? boring, greasy. tell her yet we are not listening this so much to do. zip line, ice cream, virtual reality, a zoo. and just wait till you go inside. i guess you'll just have to see it for yourself. fox nation presents for the man
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the fight. this together. it's so good to have. >> think about character especially. >> right, right, right. it's about trust. it's just not an adventure race. this is a military cilacap. >> do i still have that fire . even it our well they will play by our rules. special forces world's toughest test wednesdays on fox and watch any time on hulu. >> well, is here we are the big
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moment of truth. wow. incredibly. wintersun pretty amazing, isn't . >> let's do this. it's not like you vote . miles told you. sometimes you just got to think bigger. it sure is good to be back . it's time for our cnn. unseen segment where we exploreh the cultural stories of the day. >> and for that we turn to fox day and news contributorfo raymond arroyo. all right, raymond, now thiss ar artificialti intelligence stuff it's totally transforming our world. >> it's even wiping away age.l,a sounds good to me. well, at least on the screen, laura , i mean, you rememberked a few years agabo we talked abom that scorsese film, the irishman, where a seventanry five year old robert de niro was made to look like a thirtyti year old, though his stiffff boy didn't quite get the memo. well, nowellw a company called
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metaphysic is going to die. tom hanks and robin wright for new robert zemeckis film. what makes this technology n re different is this aging will happen in real time.al filr like a filter or one of those tom cruise deep fakes. e >> icon fact, the company responsible for those deepy de fakeeps, it's the same companytg that's perfecting this new technology. snatch it's kind of a high techers. boa worrchers to me. >> it feels that way anyway.o re well, i guess if we're worried that there are no real movie stars anymore, right. you can just resurrectct that. going fo keep the old guys. keep going forever. as long as breathing. >> yeah, well, it's sort of an a.i. fountain of youth. the good news is you and iof will never have to retire. laura , we'll just go on and on . the bad newse is weca may not be here to see it and be sayingy things we agre ne with .e to >> so i don't like that side of it by left technology is technology is also getting into the resurrectio n businessbusiness. . a dallas firm, colossus
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bioscience a irm,, has raised more than two hundred million dollars to bring back somea extinct species. >> nowbi their, this is a bit of their corporate pitch. sten to this. >> how do you accomplish the seemingly impossible task of recreating a life solife b far beyond our reach? yor u go big. ke we believe in our duty to takece the life science breakthroughs. we through built our mission upn and put them to work in service of reversing what humanity did to the dodo. our efforts on siloed and our vision isn't limited to theitedt dodo, the dodo, the dodo. dodo well, i read about this fragment. athey raised one hundred fifty million bucks to genetically engineer the dodo bird, which dd what?o extinct in the late sixteen hundreds. >> we have a colossus. laey're alsoo tr trying to recre the wooly mammoth, laura , and then they plan to release these creatures back into the wild, reviving these ancient creatures in a lab has been tried before and it's
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always such a big hit with the kids. okay, laura , this is what i think we're going to seewecrei a little bit up, because you know what?they're they're creating these things. they're taking preservedtaking which was the jurassic parke ju storyline and camminrag filling it with living relatives that are close to these. go >> yeah. what could go wrong?t co they don't know what they'reul w creating. well, callrong. me crazy, but ae know a lot of people do, but i will say thatwill s the velociraptor is the single most terrifying creature that was ever in a movie. okay, and that is that that scene of the velociraptor coming. watch
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you my kids can't even watch that. none of them can watch it. well, i like the idea ofcreating creating new species and releasing them into the wild. and they don't know what's going to happen. and i don't know why they're sp worried about the dodo bird lure. >> that species seems to be doing just fine.tho be doing just fin e.hello. pleao. hello. please have a seat.se hav have a seat. >> if you have one bill ready. all right. we'll give called laura . colas i mean, noast even colossus coud bring back amtrak. joe , though they might be able to peel a few years off in time for twenty , a twenty four . >> we'll see.we'll see. all right. usfore we run out of time, tell us about that video game. sims four, which is , i guess, a controversial new update. al >> yeah, well, this is a gameavt that allows people to buildar avatars. it's very popular. the latest version of sims includes disabled add ons like
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hearing aids and other features on these avatars. dgender fluid shapewear has no been added. and so i called top surgery scars, which indicates thatsurgr a woman has had surgery to remove her . now, that feature can be added to any male sims s character or older laura . g >>am and remember, parents aretd upset because this gam ke is isg aimed toward kids and a lot ofd them are online playing it.s th >> raymon, when it was the angle about they're exposing themselves in this agseis case li, literally theira smashed the nuclear family, smashed basienc alarms go all the way to the corporate boardrooms, to the games, basi to thto everything we see.e none of this is surprising. everthat figure is frankly as terrifying as thes te velociraptor. raymond, we're going to dirrgng ourselves later in the hour. >> so, yes, later in the broadcast. okayn , raymond, thank you. ourh all right. news broke during our hour last night that nikkiou haley will soon be announcing a run for the white house. whe isn't the only twenty ,
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twenty four aspirant making waves. kellyanne conway takes us through4 making some that breakingd coun news next.ti >> media feed is one hundred and counting. i'm billli lot of bu lockwood'st caretaker and owner. when covid hit, we had the am some challenges, like a lot of businesses did. >> i heard about the payroll >> i heard about the payroll tax refund. fy. you allowed us to keep the amount of people that we needed and the people that have been taking care of us . >> see if your business may sixm qualify. >> go to get refunds.il jew .coms and unthinkable took the lives of six millionlls on the lives of six millionlls on pand fous ins of jewish survivors are still suffering in poverty today. in poverty today. in him to act on his word.it wit comfort, eh comfort. my people.
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and when you leave search, duckduckgo helps keep companies from watching you as you brows. join tens of millions of people making the easy switch by downloading the app today. duckduckgo, privacy simplified. (upbeat music) the news of nikki haley's imminent presidential rueminennn we couldn't prepare ourselves for all the 2024 goodies thatisn
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would follow.dug while south carolinawhat senator tim scott is conductingk what he's calling a listening tour that will take hi hm arount and home statehe. third, and the gop primary calendar, by the way, and then. to iowa, the first nominating state. more larry, there's hogan, this is exciting.ng >> he did nothing to stop.his covid fanatics ran rampant in his state. he announced that he is giving very serious consideration to a 2020 four run, adding thattrump trump will be the nominee. well, that's a lot of confidence from a man polling at waiman pollt for it one perc, to trump's 36% in the latest poll. well, the chief threat, the chie to trump's gop nomination will come from florida governor ron desantis most likelyr while not declared he's nipping at trump's heels. one poll t. 34%. and the battle between the two men , though mostly one sided at this point, has taken on aabm noticeable, noticeablyor
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more contentious posture over the past week. he here to sort through all this jockeyingo sort a, kellyana conway, former senior counsel to president trump and fox news contributor. now, kellyanne, to the outsidekn observer, it seems like this is really a two person race. so why so why d do you think, as this reminds me, of 2008, when john mccain became the nominee,g why are we going to see thisld huge field once again emerge? s never a two person race so long.. i think competition is healthy. we had on competition i, the rncpetiti chair race. we had competition froonm the holdouts. aker, 15 and kevin mccarthy wanted to be speaker of 15 ballots. mitch mcconnell ha ballots.d competition. we were the free tmarke pro competition party competition is what made thismae country so great and sustains it. so i welcome icountrgreat ant. it r i think it reminds me more ofhi 2016 in this ways that at thisu point in 2016, basically jebsh bush was running away with it. % he had about twenty four , 25%an of the vote and donald trump ate 1% people totally ran him off.
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donors don't pick nominees. nees pollsters don't. anchors don't. pundits don't. washington doesn'tpollster. gton the voters do.e and i think the mostters empowering, equipping kapone to our electorate is one person. one vote is equalizing factor. i welcome the debate.. i think if you make the debate stage, the first debate is sixs short months from now inw milwaukee, wisconsin, soeopl i think we have e a number of people in that debate stage. people can hope the fruit for themselves. they can suss out the policy su. look at th differences. but on the democratic side, they're stuck with joe joe bidestuck win. i get it now. i get i get the competition argument.e i had this debathe waye by the , with i think it was in 2012, maybe with bill kristol atit was the time and he was like saying maybe it's two thousand eight . bu. n't remember we're basically saying, you know, it's fun to have a lot of people in the race, but ifpresin a lot of people are worriedthe about president trump getting the nominationno, i'm not sayine i'm one of those people.wh you can see why trump wants the a lot of people in the race, correct? i mean, it definitely help
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sd, wit donald trump to have a big field. without a doubt. it helps thedoubt itm. >> it does.o helps him to it also helps him to run on hisd record of accomplishments. and i think, look, i think everybody should take peeir major deficitot and try to turn it intopo an asset. so people say, i want the trump policies without the trump personality. he has to turn t arouno turnd a, but without my personality, mexico, china, korea, japan, canada, trade deals, manufacturing, mining, all woul the rest wouldhave have happened vaccine through operation where she would have happenet haved. and ron desantis. i mean, the rap on him is , oh,a you have no charm. you're not very gracious to your host. you should say, look, i'm not running for mr. congeniality. these are tough jobs. i've done a great jobtough as governor of florida. we can make those casejob.s for each of them. laura , until you really faceid. the klieg lights, we don't knowe what any can m of these folks ar made of. it's super hard to wind the presidency of the unitedve states . only forty five men have done, o it one , two times.s an and look, i think haley wantst h to run to show that she can put
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at the presidential level what's happening with the party, that we havaves more more candidates and more of an r electorate that looks more like femaleamerica, more females, more candidates of color, etth cetera. i do think she's going to be the nominee ate some pointo mentioned where she got hers big. do i think she's going to begoin the nominee? no, i think that somebody will have to consider her an run against kamala harris and absolutely annihilate kamala harris. nirris in to debate.aim butht i think it's too earlyn'tn to claim the nominee. alsoow, i don't know that it'sut a two person race. t i think until you go out mix to iowa, and mix it up with the people in new hampshire, mix ite up with the people, we don'thapn i was going to happen. but the democrats are flate flat on their backs. remember, barack obama, is o democracy is on the ballot, not on the democratic side. t you're stuck with joe bidenh and kamala harris because you keep lying. everybody that they had a greabi t midterm only because they were not allowed to campaign.a m beca they put your mindus at union station.they as we know, that's not p a swint state. it's a train depot.n th he wasn't welcome anywhere. >>an yeah, well, i think they ae . i don't thin i don't think this election is a referendum on trump.
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i think republicans should make it a referendum on joe biden at all. >> well, absolutely. if a the republicans can't make this a referendum on joe biden and remind people whereo the economy was in 2019,r them i mean, there's no words for them at that point.e grea kellyanne, great to set e yout h tonight. thank you. and we have new details. ory we this is very exciting las on the story we brought you last night aboutt about those tamron, those monkeys who were stolen from the dallas zoo. now,i' i'm not going to say it. we're not monkeying around like i know we're at the beginning of really a new chapter in the hunt. biden story. new revelations keep coming. his most egregious is denying the biden name to his biological daughter. this is one of the biggest scandals in political history. there were classified documents apparently stored in the garage that would put them within the wingspan. one hundred items. we are concerned that joe biden already made decisions thatof ti were to cover hunter's wrongdoing. ng to getevery day, millions ofs
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. >> last night we told you about the disappearances of animals from the dallas zoo, including two tamaryn monkeys who were found in a boarded up house, a house owned by a local church and a tip from the pastor's family led police to the monkeys. police found birds, cats and possibly chickens at the house. the two monkeys, bella and finn,
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were unharmed and returned to the zoo last night. maybe it is a case of divine intervention. don't forget to watch us, it is america now and forever, go to my instagram, lots of new photos, including what i returned to when i got back to washington and gutfeld and the gang take it all from here. >> todd: breaking overnight, the nypd and sanitation crews clearing out the migrant camp where dozens of male migrants have been sitting for days, refusing to leave for a migrant shelter. you're watching "fox and friends first," i'm todd piro. >> ashley: i'm ashley strohmier, in for carli lloyd. the single men staying at the watson chose to transfer to the brooklyn cruise center, called a
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