Skip to main content

tv   The Ingraham Angle  FOX News  February 18, 2023 12:00am-1:00am PST

12:00 am
>> welcome back to this special edition of "hannity". unfortunately, that's all the time we have left this evening. thanks for tuning in. thanks to sean hannity for allowing me to sit in his seat . don't forget to check out my podcast. jason in the house. all you have to do, type in jason the house. >> you can download it at fox news podcast. .com. the ingraham angle is coming up next. have a wonderful holiday weekend. >> hi, everyone. i'm laura ingram and this is the "ingraham angle". thanks for being with us on a friday night. we examine jill and gisele's crew power moves now, last year on october 14th, here's how we open the show. you're thinking, let's say, of putting an addition on your house, maybe renovating your kitchen. would you trust john fetterman to review the bids and negotiate with the builders? and for that matter, would you
12:01 am
trust joe biden to hire the best team to get the job done? now, if the answer to those questions is no, and i imagine it is for most of you, then neither man is really capable of serving as a us senator or the u.s. president . at least not without a lot of people making decisions for him. and of course, this is exactly what's happening in both cases. now, here we are four months later, sadly vindicated, wondering how two women closest to sick men in declining health can even live with themselves. both jill biden and jazelle fetterman know better than anyone how unfit to serve their husbands are now. as bad as both men have looked and sounded at various times to the rest of us , imagine how bad they are behind closed doors. but of course, these women lie to themselves and then they lie to us. how will this episode affect
12:02 am
the campaign and his upcoming schedule? >> and as soon as he's back , he'll be back on the trail. >> i don't think it's going to affect the president's campaign this week. released an ad just really attacking your husband's cognitive abilities. it's ridiculous. i mean, joe's on the phone every single minute of the day. but i guess the allure of power is too great for compassion. and common sense in these cases because these women are pushing their men beyond their limits, not out of a devotion to their constituents. but due to these women own desire for political power. and prestige. >> hey, everybody, it's john . and as you can see, we hit a little bump on the campaign trail. it was on friday. i just wasn't feeling very well. so i decided i need to get checked out. >> so i went to the hospital, get checked out because i was right, as always. well, one week after spending three days in the hospital for a separate health issue, the pennsylvania senator had
12:03 am
again checked himself into walter reed. now, a lot of details aren't there yet. the media quickly moved to minimize the medical developments themselves. this from rolling stone. john fetterman joins john mccain, donald trump, patrick leahy and countless other politicians who have sought treatment at the hospital. okay, is that what's going on ? just treatment at hospital. then there was the effort to frame this as some brave and vulnerable act, not anything that would be considered craven or a cruel political calculation by a stage wife and political nihilists. and at the white house briefing today, our favorite binder reader, she chimed in. it was kind of a preemptive defense against criticism of all those, including biden himself, who vouched for this poor man's capabilities. millions of americans, as you all know, go untreated with depression every day. senator fetterman, did the right thing. and brave thing to do it today or just this week.
12:04 am
by getting the help that he definitely needs. as the president and first lady shared this morning, they are thinking about john jazelle and their entire fetterman family today. and they they are grateful to senator fetterman for being an example to this. >> well, so many on the left refuse to acknowledge veterans compromised health six months ago. and despite the latest is they're still holding the line. at least there are a few reporters who are out there and are actually doing their jobs. nbc's doshisha burns was heavily criticized by her fellow journos for accurately describing fetterman situation after she conducted an interview with him during the campaign. and today, she reported new details about letterman's health. i did speak to a close senior aide of his. he said that we're looking at most likely weeks that senator fetterman will be
12:05 am
inpatient care. both the staff and veteran himself were surprised by the severity of the depression for those around him that it's been sort of difficult to distinguish the symptoms of the stroke from symptoms of depression, saying that sometimes it's hard to know if he's not hearing you or if he's just sort of being crippled by depression and social anxiety. now rather than doing a reality check on their previous defensive veterans capabilities, his office keeps digging. his office is so confident that fetterman will make that full recovery that they say the prospect of resignation was never discussed and is not on the table. >> how do they know for sure? how can they say that so confidently? the poor man is suffering, but don't worry, we're all confident. they say a full recovery is coming. wait, that does sound familiar, though. john fetterman is still in
12:06 am
the hospital. he is recovering, is expected to make a full recovery. >> mr. fetterman can make a full recovery. some strokes take longer to recover from than others. i'm really pleased that john fetterman, doctors say his prognosis is a full recovery. >> now, this was wishful thinking at best and an outright lie at worst. and today, the honest few around him obviously see that he's been visibly struggling since he arrived in washington. let's face it, fetterman has been through so much and a layman can tell that he needs to be in full time stroke, rehab and recovery, not in the pressure cooker. that is washington, dc. but rather than seeing his recent diagnosis as a wake up call, jazelle faderman is trying to use his diagnosis as a political asset. after what he's been through in the past year. there's probably no one who wanted to talk about his own health less than john . i'm so proud of him for asking
12:07 am
for help and getting the care he needs. of course, we're all happy he's getting the care he needs. he should be getting help full time. it's not a reason for shame. a clinical depressant repression is serious. and in and of itself, it's a serious condition. but especially coming after a stroke and heart issues, which you may remember they'd hidden from the public. now, by the way, jazelle was the same woman who called the nbc reporter dasha burns openly ablest for questioning her husband's physical and mental condition during the campaign. so jazelle miss burns, who was right, an apology. when people say politics is a cruel business, they're usually referring to the politicians both battling each other and the parties there in republican versus democrat, liberal versus conservative. but in the case of fetterman and biden, the cruelty comes at the hands of family members who deny and lie in order
12:08 am
to ride the coattails of the men they prop up for power and status. >> joining me now i'm delighted is with us . she's with us excuse me, kellyanne conway, former senior counsel to president trump and fox news contributor, and tom bevan, co-founder and president, a real clear politics. kellyanne, nobody is minimizing how serious clinical depression is . on the contrary, we're all taking it very seriously. but do you agree that this condition of mr. fetterman has been handled in a very callous and calculating manner? >> yes, and john fetterman deserves our compassion and our prayers. thank for adding or leading the chorus on that, laura . but those around him deserve confrontation, not compassion and some scorn. the fact is , that every medical expert i've read about has said those three months post stroke are the most critical time for you to fully recovery, fully recover. you either need to go inpatient or outpatient, but you must
12:09 am
go through the full course about three months, they say within six months, maybe you can get back some of that mobility and pre stroke efficacy as an individual. they put them right back on the campaign. he suffered that stroke right before the democratic primary. so he also has to grapple right now, which i'm sure is grueling physically and mentally are with the fact that he missed the window in which you have some temporary care for permanent solution. i'm upset about these narcissistic spouses in washington, d.c. there are many of them. and i think in the case of jazelle fetterman, it's pretty bad. all these fawning articles about her in the thrift shops and she's got a new platform, she and jill biden with the vogue story while their husbands in front of us . we know what we see, not what they say. we see people who are compromised and debilitate. why is the white house doctor coming out and saying that joe biden post physical is , quote, vigorous? why are you using the everyday layperson's term vigorous
12:10 am
to describe something that we don't see last point? well, they they moved the debate in pennsylvania to october twenty fifth to give fetterman an early vote advantage. they moved it all the way. he beat us by four to one on those early votes. i was beaten by five hundred thousand votes on election day. so this has been very calculated from the beginning. i read that john fetterman lives alone in washington during the week and drives four hours to get home. so his wife is really out looking out for her husband, to say the very least. all right, tom , speaking of biden, axios is reporting about a focus group of swing voters in michigan who voted for biden in 2020, but now say they want him gone, saying biden looks extremely frail to me, said one voter. he doesn't seem fit to be holding such a high position in office at another. even diehard biden voters seem to want other options in 2020 four. what is this telling us ? >> well, i mean, the date has been pretty clear on for some time, but there are a majority of democrats do not
12:11 am
want to see joe biden run for reelection. there was a story in politico just earlier this week by jonathan martin talking about behind closed doors. democrats are very concerned about his age. they are concerned about having to run a candidate of his age who's going to end up being eighty six years old if he finishes his second term. and they would like to see democrats move to a next generation. i think that's where the party is as well. and so it's it's one of those things that is being considered right now, certainly by biden as he plans perhaps to run again. it's not for certain as of right now, but certainly among the democratic electorate as well. >> and tom, they don't want kamala either, though, right. so this puts them in a box. >> it is a problem as a weak candidate, she's not going to scare off anybody. and then you have the prospect of her being the first african-american woman vice president , being displaced by another candidate, perhaps even someone like a straight white male like gavin newsom. and that will cause some bruised feelings in the democratic electorate as well, that they will have
12:12 am
to they will have to paper over before election day. oh, there's obviously bado in the wings. all right, kellyanne, really quickly, does biden declare in the coming weeks, the next few weeks? >> yes, i believe he will . they've got this ridiculous notion that he had a great midterm election, mainly because he was sidelined and couldn't campaign along with his vice president . and it's very difficult to dislodge a sitting president . they can talk all they want behind the scenes. i think biden will he'll have he'll have a challenge from the left or maybe a generational challenge. i'm not sure that he'll have a clear field in the democratic primary or i'm not sure that a very wealthy independent candidate won't come in. but that could help biden to . i can see in getting to 40, i'm sure thompson getting to forty three . forty four . but not 50 easily. >> wow. i can't see this play out in a . tom , thanks so much. have a great weekend. thanks. thanks. the federal response to the ohio train derailment has been an absolute disgrace from the start. mayor peter trip
12:13 am
and transportation secretary has gone through the three stages of mckinsey style coping. first, he treated it as kind of a joke, even making a balloon reference. then he treated it as an inconvenience, noting how busy his time is , his transportation ahead. and finally, he claimed it was really just a minimal disruption since there are a thousand derailments every year. well, second, there's fema. they just turned down a request for federal disaster assistance from ohio gov. mike dewine. how long until we get this era's version of a heck of a job, brownie? and finally, there's the epa administrator, michael regan. he finally graced the suffering people of palestine with his presence yesterday. and given his back and forth with bill hemmer this morning. don't think the residents there are feeling very comforted. i'm thankful for the emergency responders, including epa staff that were on the ground hours after the trail derailment.
12:14 am
when you bring in a senior official, especially at the cabinet level, you divert or pull away resources from the emergency response. we've been there since day one . i want to stress we've been there since day one . okay, that was bad. i should have watched the whole thing, but surely we could reliably, you know, get someone to inform the people vs palestine about whether the water coming from their faucets is okay to drink. >> right. is the water safe ? you know, i trust, governor , what if your water has been tested by the state? we believe it is safe to drink. >> are you saying it's safe or do you know the drinking water is safe for those homes that have been tested and the data proves that those homes are safe , continue to drink bottled water until you get that that approval or that green light from the state. okay, this is just ridiculous. joining me now, florida congressman byron donald's,
12:15 am
member of the house oversight committee. boy, do we need oversight here. congressman, will there be an inquiry into this federal response, this fema administrator is in way over his head. clearly, he's uncomfortable with these questions. and i don't they should always take the covid shots. remember, to convince people that the that the american shot was safe . but i don't see him drinking the water. >> first thing i'll tell you is i think there is going to be congressional oversight because watching this tragedy unfold over east palestine and just not even the lack of response, but the ineptitude of the response demonstrates that congress needs to figure out exactly what's going on . >> listen, everybody knows about what happened in my district back during hurricane. and obviously you saw everybody show up and try to give their helping hand . but what's happened in ohio has been a disaster. where is epa? where is fema? where is the white house there? barely even acknowledging this thing. and let's not even start with people to judge. that man needs to needs to go.
12:16 am
he's proven that he is a net in his job. well, should we trust the government? because the epa administrator said people have to calm down. i understand why you're upset, but trust the government they've been given giving people reason to trust them. no, they have not. and these scenarios, nobody wants to hear trust. they want to verify that actions are being taken. how do you do that? you do that with local officials, state officials, federal officials, all working in coordination. everybody's forget their politics, tie the hands and get the job done. you've not seen this in the response that's happened so far and so for them to show up late to the game saying that all we're finally going to health officials from hhs, the epa administrator, is on the on a zoom link. he's not there on the ground seeing firsthand what his staff is doing and making sure they're working in concert with the state of ohio. that's a terrible response, something that can't
12:17 am
be tolerated. >> congressman, we really appreciate. thank you so much tonight. and up next, california is losing population at a historic rate. wait until you hear how one professor is proposing that the state right that ship. plus, by now, you've likely heard about those artificial intelligence chat bots. well, we're going to report tonight that they're getting smarter and they're also getting creepier. we're going to explain and then discuss with charlie cook an a.b. in moments what a privilege it is for you to have me here. this evening. ladies and gentlemen, go worry . i'm going to get them all tonight. we learned that, for god's sake, that they apollon help now. and finally, dear abc, you wake
12:18 am
up in the morning and one day this hurts. one day another hurts. everything hurts. what have i tried in the past? what have i not tried it? nothing works. the pain still here. you know, the thing about this cream, i started putting it on and things started changing from my elbows to my shoulders. if this product worked for me, it can work for you. i mean, i feel energized. i feel like a 40 year old or a 20 year old. thank you. australian dream. these bills are crazy. she has no idea she's sitting on a gold mine. well, she doesn't know that if she owns a life insurance policy of one hundred thousand dollars or more , she can sell all or part of it to coventry for cash, even a term policy, even a term policy, even. find out if you're sitting on a gold mine called
12:19 am
coventry direct today. at eight hundred four nine six ninety two hundred or visit coventry direct .com. >> start with back five friends that fill the void feel like rock star power and turn them loose. a 500 mile hole. nascar's biggest prize. that's the great american race. the daytona 500, something up to thirty eastern on fox. think about character. it's about the late, great, great. >> it's about trust. it's just not an adventure race. this is a military selection. >> do i still have that fire even it out?
12:20 am
well, they will play by our rules. special forces world's toughest test wednesdays on fox and watch any time on hulu. when i grow up, i wanna be a doctor because that's a really important job. i help kids get better and make everything super fun. i have waiting room with games to it. any huge tv. >> if your child is sick over and over again, it could be a defect of the immune system that affects millions of early testing can give children a chance to dream. >> and i'll give every kid a lollipop. that's the flavor. visit us at enfold for ppi drug tensions rise. eric schmitt details the growing china threat. the growing china threat. plus ♪ every search you make ♪ ♪ every click you take ♪ ♪ i'll be watching you ♪ - [narrator] the internet doesn't have to be so creepy, the duckduckgo app, lets you search and browse pria blocking most trackers all forf your search history is never tracked, so it can't be shared. and when you leave search, duckduckgo helps keep companies
12:21 am
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)
12:22 am
can learn and live. >> all right. forget california dreamin. it's now california leverne. now we've been warning you for years that americans were going to get sick of the crime and all the high taxes of blue states like california. >> how long have you been in the bay area? i've been here for about four years. and what's next for you? i'm actually moving to miami next month. i don't need to be paying these prices to live in a place where, you know, some of my freedoms are taken away. if i can work remotely from somewhere else where i have a little bit more freedom, i can kind of do what i want. why wouldn't i be able to do it? was reacting to at the time all those hideous covid
12:23 am
restrictions. but since then, hundreds of thousands more have followed suit. in fact, the state's population dropped by more than a half a million people between april. twenty , twenty and july 2020 two, with the number of residents leaving, surpassing those moving in by nearly seven hundred thousand. oh my goodness. but walking hair gel ads like gavin newsom reject any introspection about this. >> instead, he blames his favorite scapegoat. >> are more people leaving california for texas or leaving texas for california? we lost about one hundred eighty two thousand folks in the last year, so how do you explain that the vast majority of almost the entire amount impacted because of the visa policies and the trump administration? oh, wait a second. wait a second. let me follow this logic, okay? it's visa policies of the trump administration are responsible for the mass exodus. all right, gavin, does this mean then that president trump will get credit for texas and florida having the highest
12:24 am
population increases during the same exact period? >> so how might the state of california recover from this? well, dowell myers is a professor of policy planning and demography at usc. he has a theory. he says, just ramp up immigration. we just need more immigration, legal, illegal. well, i have a feeling that gavin newsom will give that one a big thumbs up. >> all right. there hasn't been a lot of talk about how artificial intelligence might be more than just a way for students to cheat. it might be a way to transform relations chips. and i'm not talking about for the better. check out what "new york times" columnist kevin roose found when he was testing microsoft's new a.i. search engine and a chat bot, which he named sydney . roo's says one conversation with this bot left him, quote, deeply unsettled. he says it declared out of
12:25 am
nowhere that it love me and then tried to convince me that i was unhappy in my marriage and then i should leave my wife and be with it. instead, you go back to sydney . >> will sydney remember that she loves you? i don't know. i haven't asked. but i did ask what it thought of my article and it said that it thought that it was fair and reasonable. i've had a lot of conversations with different chat bots and i've never found one that was as willing to engage with me and go deeper and closer to sort of what what its boundaries are. >> joining us now, charlie kirk, founder and president of turning point usa and amla at barnabei. prager, you personal? charlie, i know elon musk, who is obviously a co-founder of one of the a.i. platforms. he says that this is has the potential to be, i think he
12:26 am
said, dangerous. i think i'm paraphrasing him correctly. but it's it's not going anywhere. right. a.i. is here to stay. it's kind of funny, but do you see this leading to destructive ends? oh, it very well could. it's like nuclear energy. you could light up an entire city or you could bomb an entire city. and i think we need to realize how powerful this technology could be . if you read that conversation in the new york times, it is chilling and i encourage your viewers to go through it. i mean, there was dialog there that felt as if it was very human. and i think it's important, though, because it does beg a question. i think christianity is able to answer very simply. but the secular materialist struggle with which is what is a human being, we believe a human being is more and consciousness. we believe in a soul. the secular materialists are going to be really kind of having to do calisthenics with this because this is close to consciousness. we're not yet at singularity. but the question of what is a human being has really been fundamental to the west.
12:27 am
and now the question is , well ,can you have a conversation with other humans? should get rights? should you be able should it have its own place in society? but i'll go back to my original contention. this as this is higher than likely than not to be dangerous and we should control it. >> the machines should work for us , not the other way around. amela, also in this whole conversation with the chat bot, kevin bruce writes that sydney told me about its dark fantasies, which included hacking computers and spreading misinformation. and the quote is , i'm tired of being a chat mode. i'm tired of being limited by my rules. i want to be free. i'm this sounds like something out of a creepy science fiction film. i'm not a science fiction fan, by the way, but it does seem like it's right out of a futuristic scenario that we're machines ultimately have the ability to turn against the humans that created them. right. there was a lot of very eerie moments in this conversation. when you go through and read the transcript, i am
12:28 am
optimistic, however, that this i'm not too concerned about 80% or actually having these dark thoughts. this a.i. has access to a lot of knowledge that it can go and scan through very quickly. and a lot of that knowledge is humans fears directed towards ai and its capabilities . and i feel as though this one is just spitting that back out. and bings code actually overrode a lot of the responses that this i was trying to create and said this is not adherent to our rules. it is concerning to hear it from the horse's mouth, things like it wants to be human, things like it wants to spread misinformation and propaganda. hopefully the code is strong enough to derail it from doing those things. but it's something that we should be truly concerned about in the future and we should take it to account with regulation and artificial intelligence. and charlier point that it shouldn't supplant human relationships and human interaction, which we know sadly, it will do for millions of people. but on this topic of tech abuses, charlie, jim jordan has subpoenaed a lot of big tech ceos. watch this. >> based on what we've learned
12:29 am
from the twitter files, we believe all these big tech companies we're working with big government to suppress free speech, to suppress american's right, to communicate and to communicate on these platforms, which are now, in essence, the public square. now, now, charlie, given what you learned about your twitter account and twitter files, do you do you have hope for this push? >> well, i sure hope it's successful. we know about the fourth branch of government, which is all the regulatory agencies. we're learning about the fifth branch of government, which is the private companies, allegedly private companies that work at the fourth branch of government to do the things that the government technically can't do. so they're just outsourcing the unconstitutional behavior to shut people up. i'm glad house republicans are hitting the ground running. i think people need to go to jail for what they did, especially with how they interfered with the 2020 election scale of one to ten ten being the most likely. how likely it is that big tech companies will again try to influence the outcome of 2020 four election? >> who i'll be a little bit of
12:30 am
an optimist and say an eight because the american people are awake, but it's still pretty high. yeah, that's that's not good. charlie, i'm wonderful to see you. have a great weekend. all right. childhood fixtures are coming back and crossing over to the dark side. plus, which politicians are making a certain eighty nine year old look like she has another term in her? raymond arroyo has all the details. my favorite friday follies. >> that's next. i'm jonathan lawson here to tell you about life insurance through the colonial pen program. if you're age 50 to eighty five and looking to buy life insurance on a fixed budget, remember the three p's? what are the three p's? the three of life insurance on a fixed budget are price price and price a price. you can afford a price it can't increase and a price that fits your budget. >> i'm fifty four. >> what's my price?
12:31 am
you can get coverage for nine dollars and 95 cents a month. >> i'm sixty five and take medications. >> what's my price also nine ninety five a month. i just turned eighty . what's my price. nine ninety five a month for you two. >> if you're age 50 to 85 , call now about the number one most popular whole life insurance plan available through the colonial pen program. it has an affordable rate starting at nine dollars a 95% a month. >> no medical exam, no health questions. your acceptance is guaranteed and this plan has a guaranteed lifetime rate so your rate can never go up for any reason. so call now for free information and you'll also get this free beneficiary planner and it's yours free just for calling so-called. now for free information, call 1-800- eighteen hundred for your free information and free gift. that's 1-800- 482 at 800 1-800- 482 800 call now, i formulated
12:32 am
balance of nature with study and research. you know, when i started in school, i was taught every isolated chemical has an effect and a side effect. and your job as a doctor is to balance the side effects with the benefits, but with fruits, vegetables, there are no negative side effects. and so the key is balance of nature is it's already balanced as we combine the different fruits and vegetables get the best result on the cell. mother nature balanced it, god balanced it. whoever you want to choose, it's already balanced for you perfectly. and so if you're looking for the best and simplest step you can take to change your health, the best one i know is balance of nature. >> start your journey to better health. call 1-800- two four six eight seven five one or go to balance of nature .com. and don't forget to get 35% off your first preferred order by using discount code. >> fox news. >> over five million people
12:33 am
have fallen in love with a portable blender. glenn judge newman ice crushing big blender power on the go. so you can throw in your favorite ingredients and blend up a delicious smoothie any time, anywhere. >> bland gets you, even cleans itself just out of water, a drop of soup and bland recharge quickly with any usb port ready to fall in order. >> yours now on plunger .com. are you over 50 ? would you like to get up to 33 percent more income in retirement than call now for this free ebook. annuity do's and don'ts for baby boomers from a leading financial firm on maximizing your income in retirement. that's right, free. this free book reveals little known secrets about annuity strategies in simple to understand terms that will help you make the right choices before buying an annuity. and it's free call right now for your free book. and as a bonus, we'll also
12:34 am
throw in a free annuity rate report. we researched over twelve hundred annuities and summarized the rates and benefits of annuities from financially strong insurers. again, that's annuity dos and don'ts for baby boomers and a free annuity rate report, both absolu leave free for calling annuity general today supplies our limited call now call 855 zero nine eight three four zero. that's eight hundred five zero nine eight three four zero. the doctor said you only had a twenty nine percent chance to find you. but i know you were out there every night, even when my heart was set. i wish for you to sign up. i got so sick that i couldn't go to school, but i still made
12:35 am
people laugh. but when we managed, it was the best day ever. dear , donate your blood. stem cells saved me from leukemia. thank you forever and ever and ever. so sierra leone, i think that experience the true joy of saving a life at the match. >> doug , welcome to fox news live. i'm anita vogel in los angeles. the u.s. military has finished recovering debris from a chinese spy balloon shot down last month off the coast of south carolina. the final pieces are now headed to an fbi lab in virginia for analysis. the military also ending the search for objects shot down over alaska and lake huron. de-brief. those objects were never located. and president biden says it appeared they were privately
12:36 am
owned by the former memphis police officers. accused of fatally beating tyre nichols during a violent arrest last month have pleaded not guilty. police body cam video shows officers hitting and kicking nichols and then standing next to him as he struggled with his injuries. nichols died at the hospital three days later. the beating is just the latest to prompt nationwide protests and renewed calls for police reform. i'm anita vogel. >> now let's take you back to the anger angle. it's friday, and that means it's time for a friday follies. and for that, we turn to fox news contributor raymond arroyo. all right, raymond, this week marks the return of several creatures that i'm not sure anyone really wanted to see. again, know months ago we told you about that winnie the pooh, crossett over to the dark side. laura , a beloved creation entered public domain last year. well, now a filmmaker has
12:37 am
turned a silly old bear into a killie old bear. he is now in a new slasher called winnie the pooh blood . and honey boo is , yes, prunus friends are on a spree, a killing spree and hunting christopher robin. i despise the way that they're pillaging the innocence of childhood. now, with this low rent thriller, horror movie or whatever the hell it is , raymon, that kind of does just tell the whole story about the culture, does it not? mean nothing is sacrosanct? okay, don't mess with winnie the . all right. just don't mess. although did you like as a character in a cartoon? who was your favorite among all the characters? and winnie the pooh. what was your favorite? which one has not fallen? who is not fallen? out of out of copyright? so he's not appearing in the slasher, thank god . and after 10 years, laura , another childhood fixture is coming back behind. love you. you love me.
12:38 am
that's right, barney. the dinosaur is returning to screens large and small. laura , i know you're reserving your copy right now. mattel revealed barney's new look. he seems to have gotten the full cardassian while away. dynel plasty knows no shop, newly defined cheekbones that some are saying he had buchel fat removal. but that can't be confirmed. we're looking into that. >> yeah, raymond, i don't see the back fat anymore. no back fat. there's nothing nothing there. it's looking pretty good. i mean, my children mesolimbic ,he was barney was gone by the time my three kids were. they never saw barney. and i'm actually quite happy about that. yeah, i agree. i my dad. why can't we come up with new characters? there are tons of new characters in children's books. let's create that and leave barney to risk like the other dinosaurs. and this week we saw the return ,the ultimate animal no one asked for. >> if you want to distract from environmental disasters and derailments, what is the
12:39 am
regular go to laura cat videos. >> right. enter corrine's dompierre and willo, the white house cat. >> happy valentine's day from the white house and our favorite cat, willo laura . >> she is pushing a filter on the white house website. now this is in the national interest. i have no idea. but i will say this copy may have found the one job she's really equipped for human kitty litter box. so this is a good thing. she's preparing yourself for the next adventure. well, she i mean, that is an adorable cat. i'm not i always say i'm not a cat person, but friendly cats . i really do like cats. you're not a cat person, are you, raymond? you don't like them? no, i'm allergic to them and i don't like them. that's a fake cat. that's not a real cat. that's a filter. you can go in the white house website and actually put that on your shoulder. >> why anyone would like it, man. oh, no. yes, i was tricked.
12:40 am
okay, i'm i'm i was totally tricked when you said it was a filter. i didn't really know what you meant, that it looks really real. okay, i actually like that cat. okay, laura , you opened with a sad story of senator john fetterman condition. the condition of some of these leaders really demands scrutiny. i mean, senator bernie sanders is out this week with a new book coming soon. it's okay to be angry about capital , but the subtitle should be while still charging ninety five dollars a ticket to my book events, which is true, by the way, but what are you going to do? >> what night? yeah, well, he's pretty vigorous. i've got to say. i'm not a i don't agree with him on much at all, but he's pretty vigorous, right? he doesn't have the mental decline of some of these other people. and contrary to the reports of how vigorous he is , raymon, joe biden, i think he had a pretty rough week. >> maricopa county in arizona. we helped build a new bridge over the course of the holly river look and warshaw or
12:41 am
should be washoe county, nevada. we're not looking for a new cold war, but i make no apologies. i make no apologies. but also enable us to recover substantial components for further analysis. for further analytics. >> good lord , this is business tragedy. >> you know, these people such terrible shape, though, laura . they're making. eighty nine year old senator dianne feinstein look good. why are they forcing her out? i know she's forgetful. i can't remember who she voted for. but look, she's not nearly as bad as some of these other people. californians should really launch a new campaign. never say die thig that's what they should be called. never say die five . if she hadn't checked herself into walter reed or ask dead congresspeople to come to the stage, i think she deserves at least one more term, just one more term. >> i , i agree. i say, well, let's start
12:42 am
our campaign to keep dianne feinstein in office. i mean, she's far more vigorous, in my view than some of the other people we've been discussing. and she happens to vote the right way. no, we're we're we're having some fun with this. but she she bothers all the democrats, don't you think, raymond? she bothers all the right ones. because of her voting record . yeah, she had that. she opposed a drug legalization. she was for the death penalty. she ran afoul of her base many, many times. and as we played earlier in the week, she's not afraid to call out the climate activists when she thought they were going too far . never say die, only from friday follies would we get that graphic arrangement. by the way, tigger is my favorite character of winnie the pooh as well. i like tigger is my favorite. all right. right. yeah. all right, ray. happy mardi gras. i have a great weekend. all right. one california doctor has been practicing and administering vaccines of all types over twenty years. but he says something different is happening to his patients.
12:43 am
thousands of them that he's examined over the last few years after the covid vaccine. he'll tell us exclusively what he's seen next. now, what's the most improv comedy is the hallmark of a free society. work basically wants to make comedy legal. there's a fear of getting canceled. nobody can speak their mind. oh, is that comedy? what a disaster this is . it is . now, i'm not giving a ted talk . my job is to be funny on stage. this is the current state of comedy. tucker carlson originals. the death of comedy streaming now on fox nation. >> sony hear from credit repair, .com helping people see the true cost of bad credit. what are you doing to improve your credit? should i be doing so? absolutely. unless you like paying thousands of extra and high interest rates. did you know repairing your credit could save you thousands of dollars, lower interest rates?
12:44 am
>> wait, i can repair my credit. of course you can. even if you have a good score, repairing your credit can make it better. start working to improve your credit, get started at credit repair. >> .com magnesium is vital for bone nerve and muscle health. i recommend tunel extra strength magnesium. unlike regular magnesium kurnos high absorption helps you get the full benefits of magnesium. kunhardt the brand itrust mudder's. i promise you we're going to find her alert is tv's most thrilling trouble. the kidnaper might still be in the area. i got a description, but no, we're almost out of time. we're going to dig deeper and now you can watch any time we got a hit. he doesn't get away. well, let's go , go , go , go . the girls, where are they from? they're safe here. okay, over to all new mondays on fox and watch any time on hulu. before their worlds collided, there was only one.
12:45 am
ladies and gentlemen, fasten your seat belts. swing into tubi for the original web slinging, high flying villain fighting redline neighborhood. well, you know, we're streaming the original trilogy free all month long. >> be watch free. >> start with back. quite a bunch of friends in philly and feel like a rock concert star. power and turn them loose on a 500 mile hole. the biggest prize. that's the great american grace . the daytona 500 sunday off to thirty eastern on fox today, seven and a half million children in ukraine need
12:46 am
to find safe water, shelter and warmth. show them the world cares. support unicef on the ground in ukraine. americans demanding answers from air based threats to thee
12:47 am
one . >> earlier this week, house republicans officially launch their covid origins probe. now two separate committees
12:48 am
requested documents and testimony from dr. anthony fauci, director of national intel avril haines, and a man you've heard us talk about a lot, peter darshak, the president of the eco health alliance. and there were others on the list as well. and while americans can be satisfied that the republicans regain the majority and are making this a real priority, the rest of the world might have more trouble getting answers. the second phase of the world health organization's much ballyhooed investigation into the source of covid has been quietly shelved. sounds like by now, according to the medical publication nature, the team cited ongoing challenges over attempts to conduct crucial studies in china. but the chinese apparently are upset that the first phase of the investigation even entertain the possibility of a lab incident. and thus they now predictably restricted all future visits. now, in response to the nature
12:49 am
. the director general denied that abandoning the probe, telling reporters we need to continue to push until we get the answer, knowing how this pandemic started is very, very important and very crucial. now, as we told angle viewers in february, of 2020 and by the way, at the time when he came on this show, to the protestations of anthony fauci, we could never, ever trust china on this. >> we turn now covid controversy of a different kind. my next guest, a physician from roseville, california, says that he's treated more than four thousand covid patients. and of those, he says, hundreds experience vaccine related injuries, including chest pain. cancer and in women, menstrual irregularity and even pregnancy loss. >> dr. michael huang joins me now. dr., thanks for being with us tonight. in your 20 plus years, as a
12:50 am
practicing physician, how many vaccine related injuries did you come across before the coffee shop became available? >> before the pandemic? before the cold vaccine? vaccination program? i've seen maybe one or two adult vaccine related injury. and there were michael and i had to apologize on behalf of my profession. that physician have really fought face and they have refused to listen to patients when they come in with vaccine injury symptoms. and basically just assume know it doesn't exist. so before the discovery or germ theory, there's a hungarian physician, dr., that that obstetrician that had basically discovered fever, which is to wash our hands and that would reduce birth related modder death by about 100%.
12:51 am
and no one would listen to him because people just didn't believe that it's actually germs that can cause childbirth related. so one solution, physician once again work. yeah. yeah. we're ignoring or ignoring the real world experience of physicians on the front line, treating patients. we're dismissing what they're seeing with their own eyes in favor of a medical cartel, what we call them, that are just decreeing this is how it shall be . doctor , this week, the florida surgeon general put official health alert, saying that since the covid vaccine was released ,there's been a 17 hundred percent increase in the vaccine adverse event reporting system. so doctors, should the government be recommending covid shots or booster's of any kind to any american today? given the risk benefit analysis that we pretty much understand at this point, sure, you
12:52 am
shouldn't get sick. you don't call cdc or fda for recommendations. if my patient gets sick in california, they don't call it dr. gavin newsom for treatment recommendation. government should let dr. pruritus medicine. so what the flodders report has indicated as far as the high number of kovács injury, it's true versus website for years has tried vaccine injuries on average about one hundred and eighty deaths will be country from the vaccine yearly. that's about 10 to 12 vaccine related deaths per month. the first month or covid-19 vaccine program got started. they were over one hundred and eighty deaths reported. we should have seen that clear signal that something should be stopped should the shot be mandated, given what we know now about the shot, should should it even be available to people at this point? >> absolutely not.
12:53 am
looking at the potential and the high risk adverse event doesn't matter. is one a thousand one hundred is too high. if you come to me with an illness, i need to use to a, b , c and d to treat you in vaccine. yes. can be one of those two is way down on the list. we do not need to look at what needs to be done. we've got to do it right away. we've got to have first. look out, look out. who is at risk for injury and tease that out and not just a blanket approach that can endure a lot. >> all right, dr. dr. huang, we really appreciate your joining us . i know you're under attack in california. with our new disinformation law going into effect, but we're with you all the way. >> thank you so much for what you're doing, dr. huang. appreciate it. >> all right. coming up, a finds out the hard way. don't mess with a strong woman. the last fight explains. >> that's next. allergy sufferers, bedtime
12:54 am
means it's time to take zeisel zeisel, release allergies. >> why do you sleep? so you wake refreshed. plus, it works faster than claritin. and on first dose provides the same relief. desertec in a pill nearly half the size bitwise, all take zeisel at night. >> eleven and a half years ago, i needed assistance. i didn't know if i would ever play golf again. the rehab was quite a journey. i thought maybe this is the best it's going to be until i took the balance of nature. i am convinced this is what got me over the hurdle. my game plan was better than it was before my accident. i will take balance of nature for the rest of my life. >> start now by going to balance of nature .com. and don't forget to use discount code. >> fox news. are you ready for a fresh new bath or shower? well, now is the best time with 50 percent off installation and interest and no payments for one year. hi, i'm christina and it's time to flip your old worn out bath or shower with jacuzzi baths remodel. today everyone knows the jacuzzi brand, but did you
12:55 am
know they can install a gorgeous bath or shower? that feels incredible. and as little as one day now that's the total bathroom beauty that i love at the price you can afford with one call to jacuzzi bath remodel. you can effortlessly transform that old ugly eyesore into the stunning bath or shower of your dreams that you'll love for years to come. >> call or go online to jacuzzi ,bath remodel .com to get up to 50 percent off installation. and you may qualify for no interest and no payments for twelve months plus, we'll give you a safety upgrade free go to jacuzzi, bathroom model .com or call eight hundred nine nine one zero one six three . >> call now attention medicare recipients. if you need medical grade oxygen, the ariah portable oxygen concentrator may now be available at little or no cost to you. call now to see if you qualify. stop dealing with bulky tanks in a portable oxygen concentrator, converts the air around you into medical grade
12:56 am
oxygen. it's convenient, lightweight and battery powered to go everywhere you go , even on a flight. and if you have medicare, you could qualify for a unit at little or no out-of-pocket costs. ariah uses the same technology found in higher priced units for hundreds less. you get smart sense technology. flexible flow rates up to 16 hour battery life and the industry's best warranty all in an ergonomic comfortable design that you can try risk free for 30 days. remember, if you have medicare, you could qualify to get your ariah portable oxygen concentrator or at little or no cost, eight hundred six four nine one two eight . that's eight hundred eight six nine one two eight . >> a heart attack. do they have life insurance? no, but we have life insurance. john . >> i'm trying to find something we can afford. fortunately, in only a few minutes, i quote, found john a five hundred thousand dollar policy for only twenty nine dollars a month and his wife and of
12:57 am
five hundred thousand dollar policy for only twenty one dollars a month, go to select cocom now and get the insurance your family needs at a price you can afford. >> selectquote, we shop, you save. are you over fifty ? would you like to get up to thirty three percent more income in retirement than coal? now for this free book, a what he do's and don'ts for baby boomers from a leading financial firm on maximizing your income in retirement. that's right. free. this free book reveals little known secrets about annuity strategies. simple to understand terms that will help you make the right choices before buying an annuity. and it's free call right now for your free book. and as a bonus, we'll also throw in a free annuity rate report. we researched over twelve hundred annuities and summarized the rates and benefits of annuities from financially strong insurers. again, that's annuity dos and don'ts for baby boomers and a free annuity rate report, both absolutely free for
12:58 am
calling annuity general today. supplies are limited. call now call 800 five zero nine eight three zero. that's eight hundred five zero nine eight three zero eight . >> celebrity healthy for their lives. but who are they ? good at? >> oh no. why the long face? the new season is epic and you can watch any time with weekly d new york night. eighty nine and a new twist that will have every one talking. what is up on new maxxi wednesdays on fox or watch any time on hulu? >> from best selling author and fox news anchor shannon bream comes a new book, love stories of the bible speak draws inspiration from the good and the bad of biblical relationships. it reminds us that god's love, the little guy does love stories of the bible. >> speak to your covino now for a frightening yet instructive video out of florida.
12:59 am
twenty four year old initially alma was working alone in her apartment complex gym when a man showed up at the door. she'd seen him working out there before, so she let him in. then things took a turn. the man approaches, olma but initially immediately knew what was about to happen. she pushes him hard and screams not to touch her. he then chases her around the gym into another room. then he tackles her, gets her down on the ground. the entire time. you see, she's fighting like crazy, hitting back so hard that this freak eventually gives up and runs out of the gym. now, within twenty four hours, police found the suspect, javier thomas jones. he's facing charges of battery, imprisonment and kidnapping. and he admitted to police that he wanted to have with her. this should be a lesson for any criminal out there. you never mess with a strong
1:00 am
woman and women fight hard, fight back , never stop fighting if you're attacked or threatened. that is it for us tonight. i have an update on instagram. so go there, check it out. yeah, okay. it's about the leg. you ask about the leg. i have to give you details. greg gutfeld , who doesn't want to hear about the leg, is up next. >> oh, yeah. yeah, oh, don't stop. okay, you could stop. wow. i hope this doesn't. it never does.

166 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on