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tv   Outnumbered  FOX News  February 17, 2023 9:00am-10:00am PST

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and professor of medicine nyu medical center in fox news contributor dr. marc siegel. now, we began with stunning new comments for transportation secretary pete buttigieg about the tucked stomach train spill in ohio. he is downplaying even though dangerous chemicals released in the air and a crash site about fearing for their lives. ohio governor mike to whine assuring residents the water is safe to drink and telling them the incident does not qualify for a fema response. people are still scared and pete buttigieg's attitude with the initial response, remember, it took him ten days to address it and he focused on lots of other things diversity and construction tweeting about electric cars and skipped the town hall in ohio where fuchs at the crash site share their growing health concerns. now, here he is shrugging off the disaster. >> it has involved a lot over
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the years but clearly more than needs to be done. because while this horrible situation has gotten particularly a high amount of attention, there are roughly 1,000 cases a year of a train derailing. >> emily: kennedy? >> kennedy: it is interesting because 999 other derailings don't lead to thousands of for showing up dead and waterways. families pets dying, foxes, chickens, all sorts of livestock not to mention specific symptoms the residents of this town are presenting. they were exhausted appear they go to the waterways and it is sludge. they go into their homes and it is covered in black toxic soot. the mayor seems to be doing a good job addressing their concerns, but everyone else, they feel like they are not being heard and quite frankly, they are scared because some of these chemicals and some of the
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materials over time can cause cancer. it may not be what is happening in the moment but they were terrified what can happen in three years, ten years or to their children or grandchildren. >> emily: dr. siegel tell us about the potential side effects that potentially go on elation only. >> dr. siegel: kennedy is right. you have the gas is causing and accolades and the chloride and hydrogen chloride. but the thing nobody is talking about what happens when it seeps into the environment and stays there? how would you get it out of the environment? chloride, small amounts of it over years, it leads to liver failure and liver cancer and multiple cancers, bone cancer, it is terrible. in small amounts may not even be detectable. when buttigieg says there are a thousand derailments a year, here is what is not telling you 337 this past year over the past year of toxic spills from
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trains. they are not all being tracked. i want to know what is happening to the chemicals. by the way, how can there not be a fema response with this disaster might can't breathe, irritated eyes and the government says drink the water? he's not drinking the water. why should anybody drink the water. >> emily: we do so, disappointing commit dagen that tax dollars are being used for something that is not efficient and garner no results. and here, our wish my tax dollars could help these people here. the governor there was asking hhs and fema physicians to come. apparently on their own time because the way the rule set up, the dollars, the investment, it cannot happen the way it is lined up because the boxes aren't checked. >> dagen: norfolk southern should be paying for everything. what should be happening is the role of government is to be on
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the ground as a check and a balance to what is happening and to ensure that the residence are getting information day one. that the residents are protected appear that the water is being tested and the air and the soil, day, week, month, year after year after year. and of the communication has been horrific. the derailment happened two weeks ago. the burn of the chloride happened february 6, 3 days after that. it was two days after the burn off of the chloride that the residents were told, "all is well and you can go back into your homes." on valentine's day, so, three days ago, the 14th, the head of the ohio health department said, "you have headaches? that could be from anything" a
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lot of things cause headaches. and it was only yesterday that governor dewine sent a letter that letters are so important communicating to the cdc requesting article personnel on the ground. so that was almost two weeks after the train derailment. it was a week after the train derailment that an epa letter to norfolk southern, that the residents found out it was not just bonnell chloride but three additional carcinogenic chemicals on that very train. so this vacuum of information and the vacuum of leadership has caused -- and people have been sick all along, scabs on their nose, coughs, headaches, swollen faces, sick animals, sick children. but it is the "where do you go?" you go on the internet and you start reading about liver cancer. i've been reading reports on the
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national institutes of health about glioblastoma and liver cancer that you get from bio chloride and dioxin from the burning of chemicals like this. so people are freaked out. and as the daughter of a mother who died from metastatic lung cancer, when you have an oncology team who looks at you and tells you when you say, "how did my mother get lung cancer? "they go, "environmental." that is what these people are facing. >> emily: it is so hard, natalie, with all this fear and laid out here and to feel like they are not being heard or seen by anyone in this administration, right? we have pete buttigieg coming out and empathy does not start with and also appeared for him to minimize their fear, their concerns, but they are facing with, this happens elsewhere too and also this flies in the face and so demoralizing to the sense
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that they should be seeing and reinforces this administration continues to forget average americans that are facing extraordinary circumstances. >> how condescending and dismissive was pete buttigieg's speech. he is not on the ground there. when you hear the conference, norm brockovich, she presents that water to the attorneys and asks them to drink it. if it is safe to drink, lead by example and show us there is nothing to fear. but you know what? who will you believe or your own eyes when they see the water contaminated appear they see the animals dying. someone needs to response to them because they are scared. no one has been testing, i don't believe for a dioxin a very dangerous carcinogenic a tiny fraction in your body will be there seven to 11 years and the consequences will come later and no price you can put on the value of life in this situation. >> dagen: it does not cost a dime to give a damn!
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>> emily: absolutely right. erin brockovich, those are based on real cases with real deaths and generation decades long to fight with these corporate companies and with people requesting and seeking any type of attention to remedy to at least acknowledge to your point, that is priceless to even acknowledge it. when i saw this town hall come our way back in '80s? coming up the shocking moment caught on camera when a woman fiercely fought off an attacker who targeted her in her apartment complex gym. that is next. ♪ ♪
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♪ ♪ >> a florida woman fought off an attacker inside her apartment
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complex jim and it was all caught on camera. nashali alma fought back from the very beginning, pushing him away when he initially confronted her and punching him after he chased her. the attacker pinning her to the floor. he told deputies he intended to rape and she kept fighting. she intended to escape. she is encouraging women to be cautious and always fight back. >> i was really fearful in my head. and i have got to fight him and do something. he was equal to me. he was not bigger than me or anything more than my size. and i took my advantage to my own hand. my mom told me don't let anybody approach you or touch you if you don't know them. as soon as he approached me, i knew i had to push them up or do something. >> emily: brave woman, natalie. in addition to everything she said, they were so many things that women can utilize and take to heart to find themselves in a
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terrible situation, yelling, screaming, taking defense classes offered in communities knowing pressure point so even if there is size disparity there is a way to combat peer at the bottom line is, fight back. >> natalie: you absolutely fight back. this reminds me as a reporter, i did a self defense piece. i wonder if i would be able to have that muscle memory, flight or fight kick in to do those moves because it is so important to defend yourself and make a lot of noise. it is so sad we have to talk about something like this. a generation ago, we were able to leave our doors unlocked but now worried we will be attacked in a gym because so many of the cities are unsafe. that is what the government is there for, the law enforcement to keep us safe and fundamental duties but instead, they are focused on social issues. >> emily: if you checked our purses and the city, we have a lot of stuff in her purse, right, in terms of weapons we can use and self-defense protection measures.
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something like that scenario, you might have headphones in and out expected to be attacked because you are supposed to be protected from the public pier that is a hard situation and thank god she saw him coming because he could have approached her from behind. >> dagen: watching that video, it is very easy to think what you would have done and how -- and this will come out wrong but how easy she makes that fight look, but she is in an extremely narrow space. and also, there seems to be barbells or potential weapons in that space. and she did an absolutely incredible thing protecting herself and fending him off. but every woman in every space in this country has to think when you walk out of your home, how am i going to defend myself. and it's not whatever, pepper spray or i have joked about it,
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but i'm serious at times. i carry a hammer in my purse. it's not to pull the hammer out but my purse is heavy enough i can smack somebody in the head with it as they come at me. but rape in new york city is up 25%. an assault a woman here, the assailant, they will be out of jail -- they won't be held on bail. they will be out on the street before you get out. you are not protected by the city and the state here. you have to protect yourself. >> emily: rape is up and prosecutions and convictions are down, dr. siegel. >> dr. siegel: the cdc released soul in teams, female teens, burroughs is up to 14% of all girls who have been victimized by sexual assault. 10%. 1 out of 10 have been raped. i hate to say this but this is not a time for it.
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social media has a lot to do with it. the anger of society male objectification of society. what she said on tucker carlson she was taught if someone comes to her without an explanation, where are they coming from? she is already on the alert pier that gave her an advantage, i think, and i hope i am right he was not expecting this. this potential rapist was not ready for her to fight back. i'm so happy to say this and more needs to be said that you need to be prepared for it. >> emily: the journal in washington, there was a woman, a jogger attacked in the public bathrooms and she had one of those trackers on that shows your route or whatever. during this brutal assault in the bathroom she had a mantra, "not today, not today." she repeated it and shout at the end looking at her tracker, it was like a scribble, a redline scribble and she was all over the place, just like we saw in
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this horrendous video of her depending herself, defending off her attacker. she survived and able to run away and call the police. the bravery of these women, the wherewithal in these moments were so many of us freeze and aren't able to do anything here at the bravery of these women is absolutely outstanding. >> kennedy: to your point, these two women who were attacked were strong and fit. you have to do yourself a favor of maintaining your fitness. you always have to be in a position where from the shoes you are wearing to the awareness around you, you are able to escape. if you are not able to escape, to fight and defend yourself. it doesn't matter how old you are or that kind of shape you're in now, get yourself back in shape so you can always defend yourself. to your point, the pressure points, know what they are. what she did if she pulled his beard hairs out and used enough force to pull hair out of his face which shocked him and he let her go and she was able to run. but know what those vulnerable
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points are so if you are being attacked, you can go right here or in the eyes and take one of those classes. because you never know when it is going to happen. there are freaky people out there like that. for a long time when crime went down in this country, we assumed that things had kind of stabilized peer that is not necessarily the case. there are bad people that mean to do you harm. whatever you do, make sure you can fight back and have the wherewithal and the skills and the preparation of a hammer. >> emily: if you have any questions please google in your area what defense classes are offered, online video and whatever you can do, know your resources. coming up, students from new jersey begging for help to stop the bullying in their school after one classmate was tormented so badly, she took her life. >> i am also so many other reasons that people have called me over the years. and you guys -- [indistinct]
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she is scared. >> natalie: it should not have to come to that point. those are parents concerned new jersey. they are outraged because their children are going to school surrounded by bullies and the school district is doing nothing about it. the outcry stems from the tragic death you might have heard about, 14-year-old adriana who was tormented so viciously, relentlessly by classmates that she chose to in her own life earlier this month. now fellow students are begging for action to finally be taken to stop the bullying and put an end to the dangerous environment in and out of the classroom. watch. >> my name is danielle. and i'm also so many other names that people have called me over the years. and you guys -- i'm sorry. [indistinct] [crying] i have tried so hard.
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i have tried so hard, just trying for you guys to listen to me. i am so scared. and i am going home feeling threatened by so many people here. there are some people here -- >> i've been bullied every single day since i left school in sixth grade. [indistinct] you know why you are here. i have had stuff thrown at me. apparently, it has been bad. >> kennedy: this is so hard to watch. >> it is. i can't imagine -- you can't imagine feeling so unheard and so unseen these poor children -- i can't imagine what the parents
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feel. >> dagen: turned that sadness into rage because the school district did nothing. and after this child killed herself, the superintendent who did reside over the weekend publicly tried to blame that child's parents. he talked publicly to the daily mail and revealed details about her father's life. and they knew this was going on. and the acting superintendent has come out and said, "this is all a communications problem here that the families, that we need to do a better job of communicating about the good things that we are doing. and we all get upset, i think, when you you are my friends. but i was bullied growing up and
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beaten up. and you hide it from your parents. because you don't want to upset them. now, it is worse today. so the school doesn't do anything about it. the bus drivers don't do anything about it. and you have the cdc information about the rise in suicidal ideation among young women and depression. but it is so much worse now because of social media. and so, you get bullied and beaten up in school and it is videoed. then they put it out there. >> you go home and get bullied on social media and it is relentless. you know i have two teenage girls and one was bullied. i went to the school and they did nothing. and it is not just that school. it is not just for school. it is across the country. dagen's right to does social media but also the pandemic. kids forgot how to treat each other. schools have advocated the
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responsibility to discipline schools who her mother kids and children's are so wounded from the pandemic. such mental peril and despair appear they have $190 billion from the federal government, they have not provided adequate resources. shame on every school creating victims like this. >> dr. siegel: and its goals as much as boys. 56% of boys according to the sea to sea over the past year expressed deep sadness, 1 out o. and bowling has a lot to do with the social media and a green complete with the pandemic made this worse. when i talk to cdc, they talk about schools, but everyone already has made the point i was about to make which is schools are sitting there not listening to parent spirits appearance come in and say, "my kid is in trouble, mike it is wounded, i'm worried about my kid." the school pushes back. there has got to be more
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communication on every level when a child is hurt. when your child is wounded, you know it as a parent. >> dagen: they have to remove kids like that from schools. they don't do that. they don't suspend students but they keep them in the classrooms appear they continue to be problems here they continue to bully pure the whole system is completely screwed up especially in publix schools. >> everybody knows who the bully is bullying is not new but an outlet you can be selfish because on social media and it can be so painful and everybody compares their lives on social media. i'm so glad that i didn't grow up with it and i feel for these kids. at the same time, you can't take away the responsibility of parents but look how hard it is, with their economic situation you have both parents out of the home working hard and everybody has to produce and feel like they are behind so you don't have enough time to invest in your children of the time it takes to build up their
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character. both of my parents worked first generation immigrants and work so hard and i'm so grateful i had a model that said even if you were bullied and i was called "alien" and made fun of my name. and my mom said, "nothing matters except who you are the faith in something greater than you. you can do anything you set your mind to. i'm so great that i have an example but so many people don't. >> dr. siegel: to your point the kids are at home. they are on social media or iphones all day long and no interaction. there is no centering. >> dagen: but why don't the school stop it? it is not one bully but groups of them. it is groups of them beating up young people. and everyone sees it. it is all over the internet. when you go to school, my child has been beaten up. it has happened with people, not just you, but other people i know well. and they don't do anything! anything!
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so you get more out of it. ♪ ♪ >> dagen: "the new york times" striking back against woke hollywood a-listers and some of the contributors who slammed the paper's coverage of trans people and wrote letters to the paper. stores including cynthia next, gabrielle union and tommy, accusing the paper of using bayous, french theories and dangerous inaccuracies. and it is reporting about the trans community. the executive editor of the time took a tough stance against the members of his staff who signed onto those letters writing this,
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"we do not welcome and will not tolerate participation by times journalist and protest organized by advocacy groups or attacks on colleagues on social media and other public forums." kennedy, what is the issue here? they go in these letters and particularly this letter which included some of these celebrities and they write about stop printing antibias trend articles and any narratives. and they aren't bias. we read a lot of the "times" coverage by journalists, there is one, i have read all of this coverage. they pause puberty. is there a cost when students change gender identity and parents don't know? the battle over gender therapy. it is incredibly balanced, but this is -- they are trying to
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shut down, end, to sit and in a debate. >> that is right and they tried to end journalism through groupthink. that is what this is. a group of people who think the same way and try to use bully and force to change journalistic standards at "the new york times." but it is very interesting because there have been media organizations who kowtow to this kind of groupthink and bullying. they have changed and lowered their standards. i'm glad "the new york times" is standing up and saying no, we will ask these questions because we are very interesting focal point in terms of what we are doing to our children who are having questions about their gender. there is a difference between them i choose to go buy a different name. i choose to identify with a different pronoun and surgically altering the body of a person under 18 in early adolescence, which can have catastrophic
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consequences, obviously. if they choose at a later point, they don't want to reside in that gender. if you tried to go back and unring that bell, for some people, it is impossible. those are consequences we are discussing now. and "the times" is right to continue those discussions. >> dagen: karen wrote an article in the post about this and broadly speaking, emily, she says, "this letter the pieces in question are utterly benign and soft peddled the issue about kids. but the bigger picture is with "the new york times," they are accusing it of bias. and it is actually very evenhanded, the coverage. and if "the times" and all other major publications and media organizations don't stand up on this, then they came on the next
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issue and they came on the next issue and they cave on the next issue. and then speech, the freedom of it dies. >> emily: we have seen leading up to this, the op-ed and so i think here for once, sure, they are pushing back. and the larger conversation and these transgender topics is exactly the fundamental nuances that kennedy is turning to articulate here. therefore, the coverage and the conversation deserves the attention, the nuance, the addressing of everything in between because it is not so simple as a one sentence sound bite that the celebrity and self-proclaimed activists are advocating for appeared to your point about looking in the headlines and carol markowitz said this is behind coverage, se underwent a 12 week investigation into j.k. rowling's writings and found nothing that was transphobic. in fact, i found x times 20
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senses of support. here are her comments that are articulated, opinion and decision on nuanced aspects within this issue. because people can't see the forest and the trees, they knee-jerk a woke reaction. they have a spotlight attention on themselves and the lineup of starlits there. they only want to hear them so shall. they refused to get in and engage on the details. they don't have the delicacy required for something so fundamental. to your point, irreversible as these things in this topic are. >> dr. siegel: i'm studding this as a physician for fox. gender dysphoria is a medical question what to do about it? this is to your point and to your point, this is a conversation. it is physicians not overstepping. it is not doing something that is irreversible early on. it is involving therapy, family, and an open conversation involving the child, the teen,
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parents, physicians. when you see something this rigid, you know you are dealing with pure politics, not health care. >> dagen: to quote carol markowitz, natalie, the science must now be settled. they just want to come again in discussion, debate and dissent appearance before we hear opposing views and the covid debate. we ignore the fossil fuel debate. we have to hear both sides so people can make a decision for themselves and i want to read glenn greenwald's tweet because this sums up my take on this, the reason the and movement come seated to support the causes because we have enough people change their mind and not because we want to pretend there was no opposition and for debates over it. we should have debates.. we should have debates.. >> dagen: boom! ♪ ♪ they customize your car insurance, so you only pay for what you need. with the money we saved, we thought we'd try electric unicycles.
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>> i ohio governor mike dewine said the area safe to drink and water safe to drink. what are people in east palestine thinking? is it time for pete buttigieg to look for new work? joining us at the top of the hour. president biden breaks the silence on the balloons and other identified options but are we spending millions to take out -- lieutenant chief kellogg is here. yesterday, a political stunt and so hakeem jeffries trip to the border today, just a political stunt? tom homan ways and purity woman who fiercely fought off an attacker in her apartment complex gm joins as purity crime in america coming your way. john roberts, sandra and i will see at the top of the hour for the friday edition of "america reports." >> welcome back from her breaking news at the family beloved action movie star,
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bruce willis. he has been diagnosed with dementia. more specific diagnosis comes a year after his family announced his retirement from acting due to aphasia, which causes speech and communication difficulties. so dr. siegel, her breaking news, but what exactly is this family dealing with? >> dr. siegel: this is a very bad disease that affects the front of the brain, as you might imagine. we knew it was affecting his speech but it is also affecting more where it affects the ability to make decisions, multitasking to processing information all at once to speak as me know. not as affected as memory as you see with disorientation. so he likely has that. >> but it is the same family, correct? >> dr. siegel: of younger people 40, 60 and the most common kind of dementia. it can, genetically so you have to look at that. it has a bad prognosis.
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first of all, -- >> it is sad. he has five daughters and had to cut this incredible career short. at least the family says they can raise awareness about this. >> emily: this is the silver lining. sharing at the break, a family is dealing with this and it is a long-term, very tragic, disheartening, very severe illness. my heart goes out to the family. >> dagen: all the degenerative brain disorders like this, very often, and i speak from personal experience a family member misdiagnosed early on. oh, it is primary, progressive aphasia, oh, frontal temporal disorder. then they find out it is alzheimer's disease. broadly speaking, your brain is dying and it is horrific. if you have no money to take care of the individual, it is even more horrific for the family. >> dr. siegel: want to say one positive thing, they are working
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on treatments with the genetic part of this. there will be treatment for this. >> kennedy: there will be awareness and so heartbreaking. he is so loved and it's hard on the family as well. >> they have been incredibly graceful and brave. god bless them. next up, life can be hard to come especially if you are a college graduate who has to go into the office. very tough. a new survey finds recent grads are not at all emotionally prepared for "living the 9:00 to 5:00 life." they feel burnt out once a week and feel the office has damage their mental health. they plan to quit within the year. emily, do they need to spend time with old americans who went through it when they were young? >> emily: yes. i think they need a good lesson and work ethic, self-determination may be nonprivilege for one second. this is absolutely atrocious, there is nothing good coming out of college campuses recently. >> kennedy: did the pandemic
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run a soul? >> the mics before i bring it down to people are struggling decades ago. world war ii, this is ridiculous someone cannot go to a 9:00 until 5:00 job. they feel entitled and they should be a little bit more appreciative of how good we have it, especially in this country given the problems we still have and so many other places. >> should we have snuggle rooms in most offices? >> not if you want to be legal. [laughs] >> dagen: good luck quitting and a recession, have at it. try enlisting. >> that is not a bad idea. >> dr. siegel: talk about parenting my kids are look at because of their mom. >> my kids eat concrete for breakfast pure they are lucky. you have to call a babysitter. one italian restaurant in new jersey, house of spaghetti has a new rule march 8th, no kids allowed under tempe or the restaurant posting on facebook it's putting its foot down after
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a loud noise and crazy mrs. malec space for highchairs and kids running and circle around waitstaff. apparently, emily as a parent i am fine with this. i have no problem at all. there should be restaurants that it are two families and then -- >> emily: i have a reservation today at 8:00. see you there, some peace and quiet. restaurants can do what they want and voter speak for themselves, diner speaks for themselves and put your money where you would like to impose, the kids with a babysitter have a night out with adults, they were adults on cruises and resorts. >> dagen: i'm going to go and act like a 3-year-old. [laughter] >> dr. siegel: i just went there. >> dagen: applesauce thrown up the wall. how do you like me now question rick >> dr. siegel: the resort was so boring. putting a child in a high chair next to me in a time as long as they don't spit their food out. >> i wish ones would ban phones.
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they were not even looking at the person they are with so may be more cell phones band. >> we have more "outnumbered" in just a moment. stay with us. ♪ ♪ with the snapshot app from progressive. -how do you feel? -um, good? he's better than good. he got rewarded for driving safe and driving less. sorry, barb, just to confirm, this is the feel-good news of the week? this is what we found. -yay, snapshot! (bridget) with thyroid eye disease i hid from the camera. and i wanted to hide from the world. for years, i thought my t.e.d. was beyond help...
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cruelty-free foods is growing, we hope you relish this opportunity. they are saying to oscar mayer why don't you ketchup for the vegan movement. >> keep your hands off my tube steak. you don't control my life, oscar mayer, i think they can afford the repairs. pump your brakes, freaks. >> they will mustard up their own finances. i'm on a role, me stand-up hour. what say you? >> i would not beyond like a beyond oscar mayer meat, whatever that might be, i'm surprised they did not offer to convert it into an electric wiener mobile. >> the reason everyone is stealing catalytic converters, under biden's watch, gas so so expensive, it makes cars run more efficiently and no one is immune to it, including wiener mobiles. >> the cops on my block, all the catalytic converters has been stolen in a multi-block radius,
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i like peta, they are very creative at getting attention. >> cruelty-free foods. look, 20% increase in plant-based hot dogs and vegan foods over the past year. they have a point here. as kennedy says, you can't park this thing in new york, nowhere to put it. >> i hope the thieves find a place -- >> stole a couple weiners for lunch. don't forget to dvr the show. here is "america reports." >> president biden breaks his silence on shooting down the flying objects, remarks have not quieted critics, saying the president only raised more questions about the mysterious objects. >> john: illinois balloon club says their globe trotting balloon went missing. did it pop a $12 balloon with a $400,000 missile. lieutenant general keith kellogg will join us o

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