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tv   FOX and Friends Sunday  FOX News  February 26, 2023 3:00am-4:00am PST

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and facebook. you looked at the tv guide before you came out here. "unfiltered" with dan bongino. >> i get you all messed up. brian: he's a strong guy. let' ♪ ♪ ♪ [national anthem] ♪ ♪
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[national anthem] ♪ ♪ [national anthem] ♪ ♪ rachel: good morning, everybody. it's 6:00 a.m. is that too loud? will: you came out of the gates
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hot. [laughter] rachel: just trying to bring some energy in the here. it's 6:00. a little cold outside, but it's nice and toasty in here. good to see you. i saw will coming up on what i thought was a good health habit, he was eating a baa manna, but then i found out he was drinking last night, so concern. [laughter] pete: yeah. will has, not that you're going on the able to geolocate his hotel, but he has a fancy new piano bar in the lobby of his hotel. which sounds awesome. will: when i old you about it -- told you about it, i didn't think be into it. rachel: sounds very billy joel. pete: i can go both ways. [laughter] rachel: he's business in the front and party in the back. pete: piano in the front, nascar in the back. boom. let's do it. will: you wake up on a sunday morning, you start your day off healthy with a banana, you get your soul right. that's what we're going to do this morning.
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we have a concert series starting this morning, faith and friends concert series. pete: i would have gone with fox and faith. that's what i would have gone with, but faith and friends is good too. rachel: you know what? pete: you like faith and friends? will: it's ours. meaning morning show's. you've got to keep the friends part. rachel: yeah, keep the friends going on. good morning, everybody. pete: yeah, good morning. keep sending those pictures in, friends@the foxnews.com. all origins, all from our viewers every single saturday and sunday morning, pretty cool. rachel: ray next week on a sunday send in something that's patriotic and has faith component to it. since we're doing faith and friends. pete: well, this is a story in "the new york times" today which we all -- i don't want to speak for my cohosts, but i maintain very low expectations for "the new york times." every once in a while they provide a glimpse into the
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reality of the disaster of biden policies whether intending to do so or not. before we get to the story, we're getting new numbers from cbp, and yet again we're on the cusp of breaking records. and the reason this story is so important is the human side behind the numbers. that's over a million, fiscal year 2023, that that means beginning of october to february, which means we're well on pace -- will: i think the record before was 800,000 for the same number of months. pete: is that what it was? we're breaking records. these are known encounters, not the ones we don't know about that that got away. the problem is getting worse and worse and worse at the border. what the new york times is breaking down this morning is a story about the result on kids, on agers, on unaccompanied -- on teenagers, on unaccompanied minors crossing the border which is record numbers, is and what the article reveals is that biden's, what is it, k concern the dhs, hhs has created a
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part-timeline -- pipeline to facilitate kids into this country as fast as possible with almost no overwatch of where they go, and they've become basically biden's indentured servants. 12, 13, 14, 15-year-old kids who are supposed to be going to school. some are, most are not, and they're working for tiny amounts of money across the country in the middle of the night, some in very harsh conditions, mailing that money back to their families or to muglers, and they're supposed -- or to smugglers, and they're supposed to have these sponsors, and 85,000 of them can't be found. missing indentured servants inside our country. rachel: well, the number we have been given by people like tom homan is they lose track of about 40% of the children who come across the border. just this week they found a 9-year-old, by the way, by herself wand wandering in the desert. and we had seen glemses of this
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this before. -- glimpses of this before. remember the story about the assistant principal who was trying to raise funds so so one of the kids could pay off the cartels? and then there was the case of they found children working in a slaughterhouse in three or four different states. and, by the way, they're the people that came and cleaned up the slaughterhouses, which is one of the worst jobs ever. so we knew this was happening. but if you ever wondered how, you know, xavier becerra from hhs, the kind of inhumanity, the way he thinks about these children, wait til you hear this. will: so you're exactly right, pete, the role "the new york times" has played here is putting a human face on what can be record setting and yet sanitized numbers. rachel: yes. will: so you're talking about a black market for labor, a black market for child labor. here's what the new york times reported. the federal government knows that these children are in the united states, and the department of health and human services is responsible for
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insuring sponsors will support them and protect them from trafficking or exploitation. but as more and more children have arrived, the biden white house has ramped up demands on staffers to move the children quickly out of shelters and release them to adults. caseworkers say they rush through the vetting process. so you've got this backlog of children that hhs wants to get out to, quote-unquote, sponsors. as a result of trying to russia process -- rush that process, the vetting is compromised. pete: and they talk to many of those staffers who are supposed to do the vetting, they say it's not possible, we don't know who we're giving these kids too. rachel: often times it's a sex trafficker. it might sound bad to work in a slaughterhouse, it is better than working for sex trafficker- pete: and you know what it's better than? the kids in cages, the total mischaracterization of the trump administration which is we're going to hold kids in a safe place until we know there's a
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safe place for them to go to. that's prudent, that's responsible, it has political downsideside because the cameras say donald trump's an evil guy. biden had the same ones, but they were -- rachel: obama did. pete: biden had holding facilities -- rachel: yeah, obama had them first. pete: here's a tweet from "the new york times" investigative reporter, to your point, rachel, about xavier becerra. hhs secretary becerra is pushing staff to get migrant kids, illegals, released faster. he often asks why it can't be run like an assembly line. he berates staff and says, quote, if henry ford had seen this in the his plants, he would have never if have become rich and famous. will: i'm going to the take it we don't have the video to play for you right now, but he goes on -- it's the a -- a very short
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video, but he goes on say this should work like an a aassembly line, it's not. if henry ford had run his plants like this, he wouldn't have become rich and famous. he pauses for a moment and says, i know, kids aren't widgets, but essentially, come on, let's fix this assembly line. s the really, for an approach, an administration that says they are guided by the concept of empathy,st the very revealing to see there is zero empathy in this assembly line for children. rachel: we'll see after this expose which, by the way, or we've all known this has been happening all along. the reason why many big corporations have been silent about this because there's a lot of cheap labor coming over the border. but we will see, will aoc show up, you know, to hhs crying? will she go to these locations in michigan, factory, slaughterhouses, will she go there and cry and really talk
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about this? i doubt can it. pete: their ironclad follow-up processes, they call in a month. and if they call the kids or the sponsors in a month and they're not there, then they're just lost. and that's the 85,000 the they're talking about, one phone call. rachel: and, by the way, i don't believe any of these numbers. these numbers are probably much, much larger. this is a spokesperson who says there are numerous places along the process to continually insure that a placement is in the best interests of a child. pete: it's garbage. and this is all a result of the fact that they will not secure the border which crypts the cascading effect of inhumanity, an assembly line where kids are indentured servants in the united states of america right now. rachel: right. and our government is totally complicit in this exploy asian, it's very sad. pete: for sure. all right, well, we've got another wonderful topic this morning. portland, in portland there are multiple places are where
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residents are saying home will-less people are just setting fires -- homeless hemoare just setting fires in their encampments, and as a result, they don't feel all that safe as a result of them starting fires next to the homes that that you can see by that that photo have more than a tendency of catching fire elsewhere. here's a resident from portland on the countless calls to cops to try to get somebody to do something about this. watch. >> fires have been happening off and on major ones, and this last one actually came to our property and set our property on fire. [background sounds] >> within 12 hours of that first initial fire that took multiple fire trucks, another fire popped up, and they had to be called again. >> my wife was screaming and propane tanks were lighting off. i don't know how many times i've talked to police because people are screaming, someone's oding
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it's just countless first responder calls. we all have to love our neighbor no water who they are, but at the point when they start setting your place on fire, it's becoming more difficult. rachel: it's just not civilized to live like this. such a nice guy, right? by the way, this story is in portland, but this is also a border story. i mean, so many of the people that are homeless and in these encampments are on drugs, drugs that come across our border. will: the last statement from that guy -- pete: but at the point they start setting your place on fir- will: no, no, no, you want to love your neighbor. i was just thinking about there's something that ties this together with the child labor we've created here in the united states of america. i think honestlyst t not disconnected from the issues when it comes to the growing proliferation of trans kids as well, and that is that there is a segment of society that that believes discipline is hatred or something or rules are a prison, right in and they think that,
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like, unending empathy and what, however they define tolerance is the path to enlightenment and happiness. i think all of these stories, not to paint with too broad of a brush, you end up creating the exact thing that you say you're trying to put away. rachel: yeah, no, absolutely. yeah. will: tolerate homelessness and drug abuse, you just create, as you just said, an uncivilized world. rachel: in seattle you have, you know, some of these encampments next to schoolment. i have relatives that live there talking about some of these situations. here's an 83-year-old veteran saying this is worse than vietnam. >> all kinds of dealings, dealing drugs. and i feel sick -- safer walking downtown in sigh gone when i was over in vietnam than i do here in portland. it seems like all the stuff they're doing is enabling the homeless people. rachel: you know, the other
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piece of this puzzle is on the drug front. so much of the homelessness is driven by the drugs. we have this open border. khan bongino last night on his show had, i can't remember the name of the guest, we've had him so many times, and i'm to sorry, but he, again, talking about how he believes, he's an ex-dea agent. he believes that china is absolutely causing this kind of chaos and sort of civil, you know, disruption by, you know, so many of the drugs are processed many in china and then come to mexico and across the border that this is actually a plan by the chinese to disrupt and create chaos in our country. and, you know, precipitate -- pete: the chinese are facilitating it through the mexicans, the cartels. rachel: it goes back to what you said, you know? rules are here for a purpose. pel pel well, i want to go to that. it made me think of a bible verse that talks about god's law
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is the law of liberty. when you live in sin or disorder in our personal life or society, you create chaos that actually becomes a prison for you. will: yes. i think jocko willink said discipline is freedom. pete: but when you follow god's law or the law, it creates a sense of freedom that everyone can live by, but we've flip ite. with. will: judgment is good. judgment is what keeps you from drinking bleach, you know? so this in society it's okay to say, that's not good, you know? you should judge something and say we are more civilized than to live hike this. rachel: and if there's no judgment, there's no way you can build a conscience and have personal responsibility where you're able to monitor yourself -- will: that's true. rachel: yeah. it's a great point. it is very broad, what we're talking about, but ultimately we're talking about the demise of civilization in many ways. pete: yeah.
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rachel: good morning! [laughter] pete: i only drink bleach when it helps me with covid -- the. [laughter] [inaudible conversations] will: you're supposed to bathe in bleach, not -- pete: oh, bathe. [laughter] rachel: now we know about natural immunity. that too. will: all right. a few more cheery headlines, here we go. the epa now ordering norfolk southern to stop cleaning up toxic waste in east palestine the, ohio. originally the rail company was responsible for the clean-up effort, now the epa is reviewing where the waste will be taken. what happened is several states complained after they found out they were getting the toxic waste. specifically michigan and texas. the agency says, has yet to say when the cleanup will continue. meanwhile, there are still 102,000 gallons of liquid waste, over 4,000 cubic yards of solid waste on site. if. the double murder trial of alex murdaugh is set to resume
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tomorrow morning after the disgraced legal sigh con took the stand for two days. he has also been slapped with a new misdemeanor charge for reportedly bringing contraband into the courtroom. pete: what'd he bring? will: i don't know. we'll ask nancy grace, how about that? 8:30 eastern time. rachel: love having her on. pete: how would he get contraband? will: oregon's governor declaring a state of emergency. multnomah county after a record-breaking snowstorm. officials are expecting more coldwater as part of it. parts of kansas, oklahoma and texas brace for severe thunderstorms and the potential for large hail and damaging winds expected later today. i hate hail. insurance claims on your car, it's a whole thing. and still more than 314,000 are still without with power in michigan after this brutal snowstorm. for more, scan the qr code on your screen right now to
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download and stream the fox weather app. pete: you know how fast you'd is are to be to actually scan that qr code? will: i'll give you a bigger warning next time, okay? a group of grannies in kentucky are giving rihanna a run for her money in this viral social media video. ♪ muck. ♪ ♪ rachel: to be honest, if you remember, r rihanna didn't move a lot. pete: dancing's not really her thing. will: she danced enough for a bunch of fcc complaints, i heard. the. peppy grannies in kentucky say gen-z employees helped them make the viral video, and now they're shining bright like a chi mono,
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some suggesting they outperformed rihanna. rachel: this is what happens when you hire gen-z kids to work at the assisted living. pete: doing tiktok. [laughter] rachel: the chinese are on it. pete: well done, ladies. rachel: they look amazing. pete: coming up, busted. a chinese police station discovered on u.s. soil as a top republican warns of dozens more worldwide. how this happened and the threat of communism in america. rachel: plus, the movement is growing. asbury university's revival is catching on to more schools across the country. former bachelor contestant madison pruitt shares why it's important to find faith at a young age. ♪ only you can let it in. ♪ no one else, no one else can speak the words on your lips ♪ ahhhh... with flonase, allergies don't have to be scary
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will: so the chinese communist party suspected of running several secret police stations inside the united states. rachel: security experts say the chinese government operates these stations to keep tabs on chinese nationals in the u.s. accused of harboring communist -- anti-communist beliefs. >> reporter: congressman mike gallagher issuing a stern
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warning yesterday. he spoke to protesters yesterday in new york city. watch. >> how, how have we allowed this to happen on american soil? the answer, in my opinion, is that we have been blind while the ccp has been very cunning. they use muscle and threats instead of persuasion. and like the mafia, they aren't afraid to make people disappear. >> reporter: gallagher giving those remarks from a suspected former chinese communist party police station. the safeguard defenders human rights organization says there are at least four chinese police stations currently operating inside the u.s., two in new york city, one in los angeles and another in an undisclosed location. the ccp is also suspected of setting up stations in dozens of countries across the globe. gallagher also writing a letter to fbi director christopher wray saying in part: while i welcome recent news reports that the fbi has conducted a search of one
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such station in new york city, i remain concerned other stations may exist. the fbi appears to be late to the game acting in response to open source information only after it was publicized by safeguard defenders and concerns were raised by members of congress. the cia says u.s. officials are confident china is considering giving russia lethal equipment to help in the war with ukraine. the cia director speaking to cbs as part of an interview that will air later this morning. listen. >> we're confident that the chinese leadership is considering the provisions of lethal equipment. we also don't see that a final decision has been made yet, and we don't see of actual shipments of lethal equipment, and that's why i think secretary blinken and the president have thought it important to make very clear what the consequences of that would bement. >> reporter: meanwhile, secretary of state antony blinken is set to travel to central and south asia this week
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where he'll meet with russian and chinese counterparts. guys? will: brooke, how cothese chinese police stations work? they are there to police the behavior of chinese nationals in the united states? >> reporter: absolutely. the ccp has set up a few of these police stations in the united states, as we mentioned in the report, and dozens around the world. and what they do is they monitor chinese citizens in these countries, you know, spreading propaganda. and it's really an intelligence and influence operation in the countries that their police stations are set up in. so it's crazy -- pete: this wases in chinatown many new york city, so they might have agents of the chinese government who operate in the shadows, and if you're saying or doing things the chinese government doesn't like and you're from china, they can intimidate you, disappear you -- >> reporter: totally. they're threatening even families of chinese citizens that they have sent to the united states. the fbi director, christopher wray, he has warned of the chinese threat here in the united states for months and months, since the last
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administration actually. the fbi actually opens one counterintelligence investigation into chinese surveillance operations in the u.s., once every 12 hours. that's crazy. rachel: so if there's other sayingses, why are they still existing? if -- stations? if here's what i don't understand, the fbi will raid the home of a pro-lifer who was praying in front of an abortion clinic, but they're not entering into every single one of these chinese police stations on our land? >> reporter: i don't exactly know what their timeline is in terms of going into these other police stations, but congressman gallagher, i spoke to him friday before this event he held yesterday, he said that he plans to roll out legislation to give the fbi more tool toss aggressive ily tackle the threat because it's something that republicans have been sounding the alarm on and also even members of the biden administration. i mean, the doj did dismantle a china unit, but the cia created its own new china mission center. there is kind of a balance and a struggle maybe within the administration as to how important this threat is.
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some biden administration officials say climate change is the greatest threat to national security, but then you have burns and fbi director wray who do sound the alarm on this threat as well. pete: i'm sure the chinese communist party calls them information centers, travel help centers. will: thank you, brooke. rachel: thank you, brooke. some members of the administration are rah really suspiciously soft on china, starting with the big guy. so there's that as well. but i did, i was telling pete earlier, i did meet a young chinese student who went to a liberty speech that i was giving, and he spoke out. but after the speech he said to me he would look around to make sure -- because there were spies. this was in wisconsin, and i'm like, oh, my goodness. he was, like, absolutely. they're tracking us, and if they catch me doing something, my family back home is in trouble. pete: that's the point. that controls the actions of that individual. rachel: yeah. all right.
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well, coming up, president joe biden refusing to visit east palestine, ohio, following that toxic train derailment. but goya foods is on the ground. the ceo joins us live with his efforts to help. getrefunds.com can see if it may qualify for a payroll tax refund of up to $26,000 per employee. all it takes is eight minutes to get started. then work with professionals to assist your business with its forms and submit the application. go to getrefunds.com to learn more. (vo) if you've had thyroid eye disease for years and you can't get any shut eye because you can't shut your eyes, it's not too late for another treatment option. to learn more visit treatted.com. that's treatt-e-d.com. chevy silverado factory-lifted trucks. where will they take you? ♪ ♪
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rachel: president joe biden facing backlash as he still has no plans to visit east palestine, ohio, where people are struggling in the wake of the toxic train derailment. but one american company is stepping i town up to the plate. goya foods is on the ground in east palestine providing food and beverages to the community. the see you joins us -- ceo joins us now. bob, always great to have you on the show. and as usual, you're always first in line wherever you see tragedy and despair and a need for help. why did you jump in so quickly when other companies didn't? >> well, thank you, rachel, great to be with you.
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yes, we tend -- we try to be always there. we were just sending product by air to turkey which is, you know, so tragedy thetic -- rachel: yes. >> 40,000 people. and the thing with east palestine was a little bit different, 4700 people. but kind of a forgotten people because, you know, we're not valuing life, we're valuing some lives over others. and we just, i just felt compelled. you know, we need to reach out and help these people because they are not forgotten, you know? their lives are important. irregardless of their voting bloc. so we sent product. i contacted, actually, the police and then these wonderful people, jamie necessary bit at the weigh station, the presbyterian church, and they said, hey, we could use -- people are serving water, but we
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could use food that has water in it so you don't have to add the tap water. rachel: sure. yeah, that, of course, makes sense. look, you're a ceo, you're also a tax-paying citizen. what do you think about the fact that, you know, you saw that president trump was there, president biden just announced that he's not visiting. how important is it for our leaders to the actually see these places with their own eyes and see the people and visit with them and see what's going on? >> well, you know, i believe over the last two years we've just unraveled so much, we're moving away from god, we're not valuing life. and it's more than incompetency, it's we're not valuing people. and it was the governor's, i was reading where the governors dewine and shapiro made the decision for this controlled burn, you know? it's -- i believe the states are the firewall between communism, you were just talking about the chinese police stations, the communists are already in this
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country. it's the firewall between communism and democracy. and it goes beyond incompetency. these governors and the hack of backup -- the lack of backup from the buttigieg and the president and the whole administration is just shameful. and, you know, we're serving toxic water now, they sent toxic water outside of houston. and so it's not just, like i said, it's not just with incompetency, it's the disdain for life, devaluing life, and we're moving away from god. rachel: yeah. >> and we're moving in the wrong direction. rachel: well, the kind of service and work that your company and you as the leader of the company by always jumping in and being right there regardless of the politics around it, regardless of what the media or the environmentalists who have also failed this community, the activists, you are a beacon of god's light in this country.
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so we thank you for joining us this morning, bob. always great to have you on. >> and by the way, rachel concern the. rachel: yes. >> -- you know, the decision for this controlled burn was made by shapiro and dewine, and after a day they said, hey, the water's fine, go back in. and that was an equally bad decision, terrible decision. rachel: yeah. these people were not served well on so many levels, and i hope that things change for them and they start documenting all the things that are happening, because they deserve to be compensated for what happened to their town and and their property values and everything else. bob, thank you so much for joining us this morning. >> they need to be treated with kill the anity. god bless you. rachel: amen to that. to coming up, the effort to oust a woke prosecutor clearing a major hurdle. the hope that st. louis will become safe again is now in the hands of a judge. plus, the dangerous journey for kids on their way to school in one blue city. what can be done to clean up the
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plus, 0% interest for 36 months on select smart beds. ends monday. ♪ >> so if you don't want to enforce laws, don't take a job as a prosecutor. what we have in the city of st. louis is a servant attorney who was illegally, unlawfully, willfully neglected her duties. will: the effort to oust kim gardner clearing a major hurdle.
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the missouri supreme court now appointing a judge that could remove the george soros-backed prosecutor from office. state attorney general andrew bailey alleges gardner is neglecting her duties after a repeat offender out on bail allegedly hit a girl with his car last weekend. georgia nay ed mundtson lost both of her legs in that collision. a gofundme account raising almost $600,000. joining us now, missouri state representative ben baker. representative baker, that's a, an incredible tragedy. she's had both legs amputated off of this incident that happened earlier in february, just not long ago. tell me a little bit about this offender, why he was on the streets and what kim gardner had to do with, what her actions, how they led to this tragic moment. >> sure. so daniel reilly was the guy that's driving the car. and come to find out he is an
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offender that should have been in jail, and that's the whole point of this in understanding that kim gardner is neglecting her office. and in his situation, he had over 50 violations of his parole, and he was still on the street. and so she never filed a motion to revoke that bond, and so this incident now that it's happened, unfortunately, is what it has taken for people to start paying attention and to really start realizing that kim barrer in has to go. -- gardner has to go. i'll will tell me about the m.o. of this prosecutor's office. this is a single incident, it's a tragic one and one that has commandeered the public's attention. but also i imagine it's symbolism. guard her is one of these sorrow process-back -- soros-backed attorneys, donations in the amount of $116,000 to soros institution's pacs supporting her. what has been the m.o. of this
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prosecutor's office in. >> since the beginning, since she has been elected it has been a string of unbelievable actions or inactions by this prosecutor. and i think a perfect example of why woke prosecutors should never have a place in our system of justice. actually back in 2020, july of 2020, i sent a letter to kim gardner's office asking her to resign. this was immediately following what happened with the mccloskey situation where you had law-abiding citizens trying to protect themselves from the mob. and instead of prosecuting the criminals that was trying to tear down the gate going into their home and the people involved in that mob, she goes after law-abiding citizens. and i knew then that if she continues on this path, it's just going to get worse. and unfortunately, that is what has happened in st. louis city since then. will and really quickly, representative baker, so a judge has been appointed. how does this process play out in the effort to remove kim
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gardner? >> so in the student that the attorney general bailey has filed, if that is, if she is found to be guilty of willful neglect of her office, then the governor will appoint someone to fill her position, the remainder of her position in that office. will: willful neglect. that's the network there for removal of -- the term for are removal of office. and as we look at these soros-backed attorneys across the country and their choices, their prosecutorial choices, it'd be hard to not at least -- i don't know about legally, but at least from a distance say in the looks exactly like neglect. thank you so much, representative baker, for highlighting this for us. >> thank you for having me on. will: all right. rachel, over to you. rachel: thank you, will. we begin with this, near wily half of new york city's public school graduates who go on to college need remedial classes,
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an all-time high of, get this, 47% of graduates need the extra help according to city data. experts say missed classes and a failure to prepare if kids for higher learning all contribute to the problem and, of course, the chinese love this. on to a fox weather alert, more than 79,000 californians are without power this morning after rain and snow hit the state. you can see these cars on a los angeles freeway were nearly underwater. some parts of southern california even getting snow in low-lying areas with rare blizzard warnings in the mountains. and we all know the famously dry l.a. river made famous by movies like terminator 2 and grease? well, here it is, flooded. the historic rainfall and snow actually giving the dry city enough water to fill the river, and i just got memories of grease. you guys remember the big car ride, the race? she takes off the scarf? all right.
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let's check in with meteorologist adam klotz who probably has never seen grease, the original. adam: i remember grease, they just need jet skis out there now. [laughter] still falling as we speak. you take a look at the national radar, and really the only activity we're seeing is from that big winter storm across southern california, now pushing into the four corners region, turning even more into snow. but, boy, did some of those areas see a lot of rain. 6 inches in a very short amount of time, but some areas getting closer to 10 inches of rain and, obviously, all of that running down into these recoveries. -- rivers. you look forward, one big system we're paying attention to, good chance of some severe weather across oklahoma likely this evening, into the overnight if hours, one of the most dangerous times for that. and wind is one of the major concerns with this one. a storm to pay attention to, because we could be seeing some big, severe weather. pay attention this evening. hose are your weather headlines. rachel, back over to you. rachel: all right, thank you. coming up, our interview with
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the great one, mark levin. but first, a former "bachelor" star is now on a mission to help others build better relationships with god. madison pruitt joins us live. ♪ ♪ the innovative new hisense kitchen suite is only at lowe's. save up to $750 on select major appliances + free delivery on items over $396. and enjoy a two year warranty. shop appliances now backed by the lowe's price promise. the ergo smart base from tempur-pedic responds to snoring - automatically. so no hiding under your pillow. or opting for the couch. your best sleep. all night. every night. for a limited time, save up to $500 on select tempur-pedic adjustable mattress sets.
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pete: the spirit of revival not slowing down as colleges and universities across the united states hold prayer services inspired by asbury university. our next guest snows the importance of faith -- knows the importance of faith and the need for a close relationship with god. former "bachelor" contestant and author of "made for this moment," madison pruitt trout joins us now. thank you so much for being on "fox & friends" this morning. you watched, like we did, what happened at asbury university, but now it's spreading to lee university, sanford university, cree carville, baylor. something is happening with young people in america and faith. >> it's unbelievable. it's truly remarkable, and i, i feel like this is something i have prayed for for this nation and for this world for so long.
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and seeing it come to pass and getting to witness it and be a part of it in such of a small way is unbelievable, and it inspire -- fires me up for this generation. pete: we cover so many cardiac and difficult things on this -- dark and difficult things on this program. is it because when things get dark, the light gets brighter? what's the reason in. >> you know, i honestly think it goes back to that verse in second chronicles where it talks about if my people will humble themselves to pray and seek my face, i will reveal myself, i heal their land. i think you're seeing young people hungry. they've been searching for so long for something to satisfy, and i think we're coming to the realization that jesus is the only one that can satisfy. and so you're seeing young people just seeking him, praying for him, fasting, humbling themselves, and god's showing up and he's moving. pete: boy, isn't that the truth? very well said. well, you've got -- you were on
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"the the bachelor," and you and your husband have been very outspoken about your religious beliefs. that's come with some criticism. how do you handle being open, public about your relationship with jesus and the criticism that comes in a culture like today? >> you know, i think for me i never really, i never really listen to what other people have to say. and for me, i consider it a joy just to count myself as a follower of jesus and whether people accept it, it doesn't matter to me. [laughter] and i think we're, it talks about in scripture, like, we should consider it a joy, suffering for the gospel and suffering for his name. so whether that's suffering on a large scale on something like television or on social media or suffering, you know, around you in your work space or in your family, we should consider it a joy to be able to suffer for his name. and so for me, i just consider it as a compliment that no matter what people are hearing
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the name of jesus, whether they're accepting it or conditioning it, they're still hearing his name. pete: a great perspective. it's one thing to read it, it's another thing to live it, and is you're doing it. you have a book out called "made for this moment." i've got a copy right here as well. talk to to us about the book, madison. >> so i actually started writing this book before i ever went on "the bachelor," which is kind of crazy. i felt led by god to start writing a book, and i was living in a small town at the time. no one knew who i was, but i was, like, okay, i'm going to start writing this book. i felt god lay on my heart that he was about to raise upped modern day -- across the world, and so i felt compelled to just start writing and just really challenge people in their faith. and then i actually ended up going on "the bachelor" and got contacted by a book agency and just knew, okay, this is the message i'm supposed to send out. just encouraging young people to stand firm in their faith and
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their conviction under pressure and no matter what temptations come their way, to be able to stay true to that faith and their conviction just so important. pete: made for this moment, and you were. madison pruitt trout, thank you so much for being with us. >> thank you for having me. pete: great to see you. of course. still ahead, former georgia football players have a message for peta after the animal rights group went after their mascot. ♪ come on, eileen. ♪ oh,e. i swear -- going around is 12-hour cough relief. and the giggles. the family that takes delsym together, feels better together. good news! a new clinical study showed that centrum silver supports cognitive health in older adults. it's one more step towards taking charge of your health. so every day, you can say... ♪ youuu did it! ♪ with centrum silver. if your business kept on employees through the pandemic, getrefunds.com can see if it may qualify
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♪ ♪ oh, everybody's dreaming big. ♪, everybody's just getting by ♪ will: you know, a few weeks ago i put out a country playlist. rachel: you didn't send it to me. will: i'll send it to you. yeah, i sent it to pete.
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