tv Tucker Carlson Tonight FOX News March 1, 2023 10:00pm-11:00pm PST
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s and cancercine. before treatment get tested for tv. tell your doctor if you've had an infection, flu like symptoms, sores, new skin symptoms, sores, new skin growths have had cancesome serrf you need a vaccine, preus, a rare, potentially fatal brain condition. maybelyour doctor howe possible. maybelyour doctor howe possible. some serious allergic reactions and lung inflammation can occur . feel unstoppable. ask your doctor how lasting remission can start with stelara. janssen can help you explore cost support options. >> good evening and welcomee le to tucker carlson. tonight, one thing ware havend e isarned after many years in yoe news business is that every once in a while you've got eat s to eat some crowom to admit thas despite your best intentions, you were completely wrong.t >>are compleg about something. . >> tonight is one of those times for nearly four years now, we've been under the impression, an impression we regularly communicatedunicatt o yoto you, our viewers, that actr jesse smollett was the greatest
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b.s. artist since bill clinton, that he was a transparent rake's race. uzu who fooled the dummies ind b the national media but couldiel not foolmedia, us . that's what we thought. we thought jussie smollett was a liar. you remember his story. >> it did seem unlikely. late one night in subzero temperatures and a snowstorm, jussie smollett decided to venture out for a sandwicideh in downtown chicago when he wase as people are accostedd by two physically enormous trump supporters from africa who somehow recogniz twoe him despite his ski hat from his part in a little known musical drama series called empire, because campy musical dramas are apparently huge, nigeriuscle ahead trump voters from nigeria. >> so they knew him instantly right away.tw >> these two crazed african right wing maniacs also correctly guessed that h jesse smollett had voted for hillary clintoe d von and they v that. >> and so, as trump votersot seo often do, they begin pummeling i him about the face and screaming, this is maga country. this because that's one of the things people typically say
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about downtown chicago. it's maggertis country then because they were still angry. they're always angry. these nigeriany're racists pou bleach on jesse smollett through a noose around his neck and then ran off into the night howling with demented glee. >> you're so jussie smollett described it. >> when i see the attacker masked and he said this magnequench punches me right in the face. >> i was juss t jumpedmaga. >> and then i looked down and i see that there's a rope around my neck. e going to be ho yeah, they're going to be honest with you. we had some questions about that story. it just didn't sound rightund to us. somethinrighto us, sg was off cr nigerian trump votersum assaulting liberals in downtown ac chicago. >> how common is thicosting hisv >> chicago has 50 aldermene an and not a single one of them d is a republican . chicago is not had a republicancan mayor in 80 years. donald trump got 12% of
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the vote in chicago. we didn't really seem like mega country, but boy, were we wrong . no at only chicago, a right wing donald trump stronghold. are o last night, the qanon army came for lori lightfoot. >> lightfoot, of course, is the mayor of chicago and a consummate neo liberal. she's the one who preventednted chicago cops from chasing criminals on because chasing criminals is racist. she's the mayor who in chicagohn even further and further into debt for a good cause to payto for the department of climate and environmental equity. and in fact, lightfoot'stivist t commitment to equity is so profound that she banned whiteht reporters from talking to her.kn she took down not one but two statues of christopher columbus, who was a racist. thi >> so you would think if anybody would be safe in chicago, which is roughly 100% democratic party voters, it would be lawrence-lightfoot. >> oh, but no.lightf according to lori lightfoot,ootl the extremori e maga republican, the ones who tried to bleach jussie smollett, activated
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their sleeper cells around the city and they showed up at the polls en masse, which means lots of them at once. lo tsand the effect was to make loi lightfoot, the first chicago mayor inlightf 40 years, to los reelection. as lightfoot put it lastyears tt at her non victory party, these maga republicans hated her nott dicause of what she did, but because of who she is d,. she >> asked directly whether her defeat in the democratic primary had been unfair, lightfoot answered thidefeat sha quote, i'm a black woman in america. >> of course, now one ofof the m the many tragedies here and there are so mananrey layerf tragedy is that lori lightfoot insightful. she's always been saw this racist insurgency coming for years. , she was in twenty , twenty one mayor in recent months. >> there have been questions raised about your your yotemperament and your reaction to criticism. tribune editorial use the term, erasmo, of, well, how much oft e this do you think might have to do with the fact that you'rte and spec a woman and specifically
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a black woman? >>ifly a bla about 99% of you? >> yeah, because the thing is ,t there are no women in chicago.he it's a n entirely male and right wing city. mea and so alll ci opposition to loi lightfoot derive from her race and gender. it's not that people were angry about violent crime in chicagotn thatg never crossed your mind.a nogo.at nev here insteader c is her explanat from last night's concession speech. >> obviously, we didn't wit nigh ny, the election today, but i standb here with my head held high and a heart for a i'm grateful that we worked togetherr to to remove a record number of ord numbguns off our streets, re homicides, and startedou making real progress on public safety. >> obviously, you didn't win. >> that's true. you got like the bad littlee ber mayo yr you were. >> but according to the chicago police department, we're also happy she was mayor because she
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made the city a lot better. >> here's what the police said in a statement, quote, over the past three years, record l robberies, burglaries and thefts hit record lows in chicago. >> each of these crime categories saw decreases not seen for the last fifty years.a oh, it's a lot safer than it's ever been in 50 years. >> is that true? well, let's check the same police department's own statistics. and here they ar here ie from 2019 to twenty twenty three in chicago. robberies went up, not robberi down, actually up 27%. >> theft nearly 40% murder. >> kind of a significant category. 59%. how about motor vehicle theft. is that upup or down. oh it's up two hundred and seventy percent. if if you average all that outsp that means all crime is up 33% .pe there were three hundred more murders by gunshot in twenty , twenty one than there were in 2019. were there were two thousanind more shooting victims. >> there were 30% more overall shootings.
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so that's not a safer city.h actually that's a much city that people are fleeing for their very lives. what's interesting is thatth makepeople in charge of making police safer are still working to make it much more dangerous . the top prosecutor in the city, lori lightfoot's ally, kim fox,a is rejecting thousands of felony cases every year, just not prosecutinndf felonyg crimen in 2020 two , for example,ad chicago prosecutors had a total 2 0,000 feof twenty thousand feloo come in the door.ut and out ofthey r thoseej they rd out of hand .2,003 two thousand they pursued outths of twenty thousand cases, just nineteen hundred two indictment ,not to conviction, to to indictment charging people. ose and those numbers are not an ana anomaly. they're similar for every othely ry year of lori lightfoot's historically disastrous tenure. pe of the as mayor. and what's happening?op what people are fleeing chicago, as noted becausean they don't want to get killed. >> and you can see that in the home prices where homee ar prices highest in america of the twelve highest priced home
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markets in america, nine are in florida. >>rkets because people are fle. they're the opposite is true ofr chicago. v the median home price is lessic than the median home price in the country as a whole. in fashionable chicago, the median home price in h chicago, two hundred and seventy thousand dollars. wh who did this? well, it was a group effort, but lori lightfoot was the mayor. but it's not her fault. know whose fault ibut itt is ?s, >> businesses and residents, pedestrians. they made themselves easy targes targets. >> watch. i'm disappointed that they're>> ant doing more to take safety and make it a priority. d a for example, we still havetw retailers that won't institute plans, like having securitymakig officers in your stores, making sure s that they've got cameras that are actually operational, locking their merchandise at night, chaining high end bags. these purses seem to bene something that is attractinged a lot of attention on these
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organized retail theft units. >>ft wait, what did she justd se blame the stores for gettingan robbed? how is that different from saying? well, you're wearingsaying y ha' top . >> of course got you r got. i mean, it's not different, actually . it's blaming the victim. it's disgusting. when was like to be a mayor of a city, blame crime victims for being victimized. >> you just saw lori lightfoot do it.. so crimema is no longer punished by and large in chicago unless you disrespect lori lightfoot's authority. >> and in that case, up straight to jail. >> watch now. i direct to superintendent brown to order all police district to give special attention to these parties. and this is how it's going to be. we will shut you down.will willill cite you. and if w ae need you, wewill will arrest you and we will take you to jail, period. >> we will take you to jail. we'll arrest you and take you to jail, not shoot somebody.
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>> if you break lori lightfoot's covid. but of course, covid law didn'tu apply to herse because why would dictators follow their own edicts? >> and so lori d foote immediately broke the stateicts. stay at home, order to get st ay-at-a haircut. and when she was busted getting her haircut, not a very goode haircut, we'll have to say. , ed >> she blamed, of course, everybody else. >> i'm the public face of the city. mtimen national media and i' the public eye. and , you know, i'm a i'm i'mero a person who i take my personal hygiene very seriously. as i said, ver i felt like i ned ha have a haircut. i'm not ableircut, i'm not to d. >> and so i got a haircut. y. so now lori lightfoot is gone. o who comes next?w, we have no idea. we don't live in chicago.don' we're not having to speculate on the state of local politics in that city. all we know is the moste knflamboyant, horrible mayor in the country was punished. chiche system worked.
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and if iagt worked in chicago,h maybe it could work in new orleans. where latoya cantrell is quickly destroying one of the most charming cities in the world. mat part of us , if we're being honest, we'll miss lori lightfoot. despite all the human suffering she causedman suff part of us td of enjoyed it by embodying every one of her party's excesses over the past four years. s,lori lightfoot inadvertently helped to expose them. >> here you had a completesomeo buffoon, someone who ran aroundi bragging about having a large. we're just telling you what she said. somehow running one of the greatest cities in the world at times, it didn't seem like even lori lightfoot could believe she was mayor. she clearly didn't really care for the job here. she is now.
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3 4 f1 is a real happy, happy halloween. happy halloween. destroyer's wait. you don't want. >> and i'm happy to report. nsuw >> i'm calling out the census cowboy. ty tape, that just save the tape. save the tape. that's always our counsel from may of 2020 till now. march 1st of 2020 three . american politicians, the entire class have gone the completely insane and a lot of it is caught on video and future generations won't believe it wheson you tell them so. save the tape.. but tonight, we're goingover to celebrate. a lot of people have spent
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a lot of time over the years m trying to get rid ofay thisoulds mayor. >> and we woulay ad sat the y ap of that list, the chicago alderman, our friend, raymond lopez, who joins us tonight for an after actios,n report. congratulations, alderman lopez, on what happened lastt, i night. i have no idea what's going to happen next, but it's worth pausing for a moment. deposito say democracy work, dot not? >> absolutely. tucker, good evening. >>and before we start, let me just say our hearts and prayers are with an officer in chicagost tonight that it was shot in the line of duty in the mostcitt dangerous of american cities right now. bu nowt with what happened with yesterday's election, democracy worked and the andpendulum, i believe, is starting to swing in i the right direction. back to the middle, back towardsn the n, the mi come where the outrageous policies of. narratives and agendas are coming to an end. and i thinnck that we have one more chance in chicago, one more hurdle to reach whererc we finallyh be put this to rest ci where we could have common sense prevail across the entire city, where the law abiding citizens are the ones that werei fightingng for and that where
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the city is no longer safe for scriminals, but for the goodcio people of the city of chicago. >> you always set the most basic possible standards for governance. can you walkof bacon but can out without worrying about getting shot to death? and i think that's the placethere is one mor to start. so do you think yoe u saidchance there's one more chance? is there a candidateere a candiu think would uphold thate? standard? run yes, i thinkof we have a runoff in six weeks in the city off chicago. chicbecause nobody got the majoy of the votes yesterday. one of. which is paul vallas, the former cps school ceoicago. and former budget director for the city of chicago. he's backed by law enforcement ,supports all our first responders, and is basically billing himself as a problem solver. his opponent is a cook county. commissioner, brandon johnson, who is super left tied with our teachers union.d his and his claim to fame is being able to take away the background checks for renters. soo land that landlords don't kw who they're renting to money. i mean, just yesterday would
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not disavow looting in the city of chicago as a means as achica. so i justifiable means. we have som so i think we have some pretty clear choices in chicago. it's just up to the voters to not fall for the narratives, not fall for the race baitingin and gaslighting, but to focus on what we need to do to put ou our city back together. >> so one candidate is for restoring safe streets. >> the other won't disavowt looting. so it seems a pretty clear choice . an urman lopez, i hope you'llil come back with an update, th on that raceank . >> tha >> thank you so much. absolutely. thank you, tucker. in august of 2020, kyle rittenhouse shot three men in self-defense. there's no dispute that it was in self-defense. it's self-defens all on video. s and a jury reached thatfect same conclusion. that's a fact. he shot them in self-defense. but self-defense itself is no longer a defense. of the m it's becoming legal in thisen country. one of the men who tried to murder at a house with a guna in his hand , which is osen now video, is now suing kyle rittenhouse. how does that work? rittenhous rittee joins us to rh
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straight ahead. >> plus, our secont d gentlemen the dude is married. kamala harris, who won't kiss him without a mask on , hasharrs some thoughts about toxic masculinity. >> ladies and gentlemen, buckle up. let's take a journey through this great nation. i want to see what they saw. i want to see what changed this land. of free expression. get filthy, stinking rich for this horrible the brave. i always wanted to be that person to help somebody out when they needed a big star grab a glass and join us . anybody else been fired recently? big ideas. america is born. welcome . okay, here we go . welcome to fox nation. america screaming hey, day two , three hundred and today, 800. >> today three hundred.
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>> you may be wondering what is kamala's husband doug do all day. >> he's second gentleman. well, doug has just announceddoh a major initiative to fight america's greatest problem, toxic masculinity. >>t decing can we just talk aby masculinity for a moment? >>pricking i as being second ge changed your own view ofhanged perceived gender roles or what it means to be a man for that'si this is something i've thoughtng about a lot and something i'vea, tooken about a lot. there's too mucho much toxic of. it's masculine toxicity out there. we've kind of confused what it means to be a man, what it means to be masculine, where you've got this trope out thereo that you've got to be tough and , you know, angry and lashut out to be strong was just i the opposite. and i'm going to continue to use thithe opposi. s platform every time i get to speak out against this toxic masculinity that's out there. >> toxic
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>>amala's husband doug talks to the church lady on msnbc. see, let's just pause and let that video sink. and that's the greatest piece of tap sine we've ever played anywhere. and we don't mean to doubt doug imhoff sincerity. >> if anyone is doing his part s more than his part to fight the scourge of masculinity in this country. it's our second gentleman at the head of the blm riots2020 back in august of 2020, rittenhouse went to kenosha, wisconsin, where his father lived. we he wasnight becausetenhouse asked to help to protect local businesses from the mob of people looting, destroying locab and burning. >> as he was doingess that,appe a mentally ill child molester, joseph rosenbaum, tried to kill rittenhouse. rittenhous to kill and shnded himself and shot rosenbaum and then several and began chasing soe down the street. one of them was called gageroun grosskreutz rented a house, went to the ground. grosskreutz pointed a gun at him in response, rittenhouse shot him in the arm. >> that was obviously self-defense. wait was on camera and grosskreutz admitted that
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at trial watch. does this look like right now>>a your father beint g. that looks like my bicep being s vaporized is okay and it's being vaporized. if you're pointing your gun directly at him. yes. yes, okay, so when you were standing three to five feet from him with your arms up in the air, he never fired right? . correct. was it wasn't until you pointedgun your gun at hiatm, advanced on him with your gun. now your hands pointed at him that he fired right? orrect >> correct. so, yes, i pointed a loaded gun in his face because i wanted to kill him. and he shot me in the arm,il disabling me and prevented me from killing him.rom well, yeah, that's the appropriate use of force in the cause of self-defense. but because self-defense is noiu longer allowed in the united states , the man who tried to kill cowritten is now suing
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col. rittenhouse for preventing him from killing col. rittenhouse. >> col. rittenhouse joins us now. carl, thanks so much. for coming on . it's almost unbelievable thatell a man who tried to kile l youd and was prevented from killing to sby your act of self-defense is now suing you because heyou, wasn't able to kill you. >> how does that work? thank you for having me, tucker. >> and honestly, i have no idea. it's it's ridiculous. this lawsuit is veryand upse frustrating and it's upsetting. this is honestly, to me, an attack on our second amendment rights and our rights to self defense. >> and it's saying if you useveh your god given right to self if yf-defedefense, they're goine after you. ac you win in court, you're acquitted, rightfully so. y they're going to take you to civil court and they're going to file they're going take ye you for everythingy're r they're going to drive you into bankruptcy and drowning in a mountain of legal bills. >> that's what'sis what actually happening. we're watching this happen allie over the country. civil suits use to shut down free speech to end the second
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amendment, to avoid the bill of rights and to destroy people you who stand up against the mob f like you. who's funding this suit?undi ngsuit, do you have any idea? >> i have no idea who's fundingi this lawsuit. arl i know is that there's a powerhouse of attorneyse mark behind gaige grosskreutz. and i have mark richards. and i know we're going to win the court, but it's going to be expensive. it's going to cost a lot of fight these ar money to fight. these attorneys are very powerful. you caneysn go to give zango .cm for rittenhouse to help me takes on these lawyers so they don'to come after more people, becauses if they can come after me,e n cr they will come after you. , and >> well, of course. and they are coming after people all oveher the country. it's an undercover story. the use of the civil courtsts to void the bill of rights and destroy anyone who stands in the way of their total takeover of the country. how old are you, by the way, at this point? i'm twenty years old. >> i was 17 , engaged. >> grosskreutz pointed the pistol on my head to a loaded a loaded pistol
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and tried to kill you. and you did absolutely the right thing. and you disabledsolute r beforeu could murder you. >> and i assume at twenty you probably just kind of want to go live the rest of your one hopes long life right. >>f absolutely. but, you know, they're trying to they they don't want me to like they want me to go away. but they want to drown me in these legal that these legal bills. and they want to sue me lid pretty much not allow me to live a normal twenty year old life. thing yeah, well, you did the right thing. you know, someone pointsinterfac a loaded gun in your facehave te and tried to kill you. you have not r just a rifle, an obligation to respond. and you did.. so call rittenhouse. thank you so much forittr joinig me and godspeed. you turn this. what's happening? em our producers embedded with cowritten house during his grotesque criminal trial. the documentary is called the triais grotesql of kyle. >> it's on fox nation. so you may have noticed a lot of disasters. kind of hard to knowdisaster why suddenly affecting our food supply in the united states .
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now there's another one all over the country. how's source of beef and milk are becoming and dying. one farmer says dozens of his cows have died since august. to join us next to explain what's happening, losing weight can have a huge impact on your life. lose weight with nutrisystem, the biggest and best offer yet, 50% up all plans and 50% off a month of shaikh's act now and get a shaker bottle free. but wait, hold everything. be one of the first to call or go online and get your first month of premium meals free, including hearty inspiration's. these offers have a combined value of over $100. click right now. go online or calling it these free offers. and start losing weight today. >> if you need dental implants, we have great news. reset smile. is a dentist approved more affordable way to replace your missing teeth from home? no dentist office as it's required. just go to reset, smile .com and order your home impression
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,comfort therapy, effectively relieving pain and promoting comfort. and it's backed by the industry's boldest 100% moneybag guarantee trust. the original australian dream, arthritis, pain relief, cream. >> of all the things to pay attention to the food supply, it's got to be pretty close to the top the list.list and that's why we covered it. c when large numbers of chickens begin dying around the country now cows are dying. dyinthe culprit appears to be an outbreak of a tick borne disease called theileriae . that outbreak is believed to have begun in new jersey in 2017 and spread to northern virginia, pennsylvania, tennessee and beyond. christopher haskins is a commercial beef farmer in beautiful chatham, virginia, in the southern part of the state.r hets say os he's lost forty one cows since august. >> that's cost him 60 grand and delayed his having school significantly. >> mr haskins joins us tonight o . >> mr haskins, thank you sohi much for coming on . tell us what this is and
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how it's affected your herd. >> yes, sir.caring abo and thank you, tucker. and thank you for caring about something that's affected the agriculture industry. so about in august, we generally start caving in september of every year. o in august, though, we startng keeping a check on our cattle herd just to make sure everything is going as planned. on august, the 4th, i found a cow that had passed away. ti, i didn't think much of it at you the time. you're going to lose a cow're gn every now and then in thisfollon business that following week, though, i found another cowse that that had passed and i toldg my father, i said, you o know, that something's going on here. i'm not quite sure what it is . they weren't due to calf at that time. well, then by the third week of august, we were losing multiple cows a day and fortunately, my wife's a veterinarian and i've got some good relationship rian and with otherionships wite veterinarians in my area. so we gor rinarians t some catt.
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i had some cows having care and problems and i normallyt. never have that. maybe i'll pull one calf a year from a cow assisted assistedd birth. i hafor in twod four in two day. and so on a monday, that third c week of august, i noticed a coww that wasn't just wasn't actingwn right, staying down to the creek by herself in the shade when others out grazing. so i tried to feed this cowattae and she tried to attack me. and so thes n i knewup and someg was up. so i contacted one of the local large animal vets and told himi that i knew i had a problem in my herd. and i wawas pretty surs prete ts animal would die withins the next few hours. and if he could comet drashe w a blood sample, i sure would appreciate it, because at the moment she was in wasn't we weren't going to be ablewas in to draw blood from her being in the shape she wa s in. and so the cow died within cow of hours, the vet came out a couple of hours. the vet came out and drew the blood. the blood looked like kool-aid
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was very watery, where the cow was so anemic. nemic and he sentht that off to our local lab and unfortunately, tu i kept losing cattle throughoutk the week before i got the results. lts back .morning, and that wednesday morning, i about mentally and physically really had it, to be honest. han bits owith you. so i contacted x here iner virginia looking for somewhere that maybe could take do a necropsy for me because i knew i was going to lose an animal that day. i just didn't know when.t and that evening i lostwo mor two more animals ande i notedip that one of the animals upd tooc and took it for a necropsy in with virginia lab. ni and that nexa lat dab.y i was td by the veterinarian they did a necropsy that more than likely it was this disease, delirio and the spleen of the animal was two times the normal size and it was verm jaundiced yellow inside. and so that's when that's when we knew what was going on .
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but then my animals continued t to die. di one in october the 12th. >> unbelievable. track it. haskins, thank you so much, from chatham, virginia. like to keep track of that stuff, and i hope it doesn't spread much farther than it already has. and i hope you come back withup. an update. if it does . . thank >> i appreciate it. thank you, sir. yes, sir. thank you. >> so people are living all over the streets of major american ae cities. you're supposed to ignore it. drug addicts dr mostlug addy a lot ofesult of them are mentally ill, both as a result of drugs or were driven to drugs by mental illness. but the problem is it'sth wreckinge our cities.s. in st. louis, a man calledexecut deshaun thomas just executeded man on the side of the road. police believe john thomas is also homeless. >> watch. i didn't hear anything. maybe it seems my , you know, but yeah, there he goes. there he g
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i don't know. he just put a magazine is still trying to get. w >> so this is one of a the biggest problems that we have. and almost nobody ha has as any idea what to do about it or any will to do anything. a of >> dr. marc siegel has a sensedo of what we should do, and hector joins us to tell what it is . ft >> doctor , thanks for comingl, on . i took her. you know, first of all , itcots with somethin connects to something you started the show with when you were talking about chicagog you because chicago is sixty five thousand homeless and they're overflowing the shelters into o'hare airport where there's s and a lot of violence is going on . and crime in l.a., there's don't fifty thousand homeless that don't have shelters. in new york , they are sheltered. almost seventy thousand are shelters. and i'll tell you in a minute why shelters mak r. u why e a difference . as step one i , i havehave three steps for what thredemocrat mayors could actually do if they're listening three steps. bue stt as you said, mental ill is a big part of this, 13 times
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more likely to become homeless if you were in prison, domesticl abuse, you lose your houseos, yh lose your job. that's what we're dealing with here. and a mental illness is really highpgrade w up. ide shel so whatet do you do? no. one , you provide shelters. you've gotto have to have extee shelters. but that's not enough, affordable housing would be nice and l.a. does not have that. that's why everyone fleeing l.a. and so we need affordable housing. >> number two , we community service here. we need the community to getcomm involved and not just give somebody a place to live, but how about something to do, a bridge to jobs, maybe job give some payment, something to give somebody wor their self-worth back . and the third idea is we needmet to address this mental illness., one third severe mental illness . we nee.d clinics on wheels in at cities that come and take careak of our homeless and deal with the mental illness part. and in prisons, by the way, i told you at the beginning, prisons are heavily involved in this. we need prisonprisons are heavi, because 85% of prisoners are suffering from drug abuse.
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and i'll tell you, there'se is o one state that's going to surprise you that actually has a handle on this. it's rhode island. they do a lot of reform in rhode island. hom so the homelessness problem, ifu i democrat mayors arr e listenig ,get them housing, get themet te medical carem and give them something to do tucker. >> dr. marc siegel for saying. thank you very much. thank you. youthe fentanyl epidemic hass killed hundreds of thousands of americans. one mother who lost two of herns sons to it joins afterll join the break with a message for congress. looks like you've been sleeping well. god , he's back to my pillow guy and you're looking good. >> still feeling good. well, just when you thought it couldn't get any better, we've got the best pillow over mypillow 2.0. oh, so soft and smooth.
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the two five four nine nine one . again, that's eight hundred three to five four nine nine one . rebecca kiessling lost both of her sons. if you can imagine that, son tyr to fentanyl. her 18 yeaher r ol20d son cayler we'rher twenty year old son caleb. both were poisoned ionedn 2020 n they took what they thought were percocet pills. but they want fentanyl. yesterday, rebecca kiessling testified in the house of representatives. shday she testife point out that our government isn't doing anything to protect america'men >> if we hle from this. >> if we had chinese troopsp al lining up along our southern border, with weapons aimed at
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our people with weapons of mass destruction aimed at our cities, you well know you would do something about it. we have a weather balloon from china going across the country.e nobody dieved and everybody's freaking out about it. it. but one hundred thousand die every year. 0 diand nothing's being done. not enough is being done. numbers are going up, not down. you're welcoming drug dealers across our border. you're giving them protection. you're not protectingvi our children. ng >> rebecca kissling joinsming o us tonight. >> excuse me. thank you so mucn.h for coming on . you certainly madey made the pot to the congress. >> do you think they heard youan ? more than half o half off them l but i was really appalled atoric some of the rhetoric that i heard honestly from the democrats saying that hav
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they've heard a lot of feara mongering. are you kidding me? like a hundred and ten thousan?d died in 2020 one , like, we have a reason to be afraid. china is going after our children. we've got rainbow sentinel now b in candyow boxes coming to this country and now they're mixingno fentanyl with sentinel with a horse tranquilizer so that narcan won't work. so it can't be detected by fentanyl strips like they're trying to kill off are t ryour population and you're goi to accuse me and the others testifying that we're fear mongering. los so you lost both your sons to poisoning by a foreign government and you're a fearmonger. the you know, what was your reaction? >> i can't even it's hard evenir to believe that happened. >> what was your reaction to that's so disgusted? well, i was really upset?>> i wh guy from the cato instituto e who testified that the the
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problem is demand. and that's like some ofrd on the rhetoric that i've heard sie on social media since i testified, people saying, oh, they wanted it, you know, like e they were doing something illegal. >> so they deserved to die illegal . and people didn't used to die from experimenting with drugs. co of course, i taught my children to not to do drugs.ug they hurt its. more than anybody else because their birth mothery was a drug addict.t more but they still experimented bire anyway. and unfortunately, over one hundred thousand are. and they're dying. they still deserve to be protected. it's a health issue. they deserved real help, but they deserve to be protected. from an attack by , as youattack said, a foreign nation. well, i mean, they didn't taket fentanyl. they took what they thought was percocet. take thook what tand like so ma they were poisoned to death. people tby something that was mislabeled. >> i mean, no different from the tylenol murders that tooke o place 40 years ago or peoplel put cyanide and tylenol. they thought they were takingd
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time off. e they got cyanide.ide. i mean, but the libertarian response was it's their fault. >> they deserve it. right. and that's what i'm seeing on social media. there's some people that are coldemely callous. i mean, how cold hearted can to to me like you be to speak to me like that to to say such horrible things that they deserve to die and that die i was a horriblee l mother and somebody should have called cps. >> i mean, they know nothinged about what happened and how much i tried and how i sought help for them through the school, through the pleas. i mean, they have no idea whatd i went through to fight for them. ow i soughtyeah, well, we've int a lot. >> i know personallyhe a number of parents in your position and to blame you for your children who died from poisoning is really you'd really you have to be the cato institute to do that. m souch. i'm sorry you had to hear it, becky . thank you very much. you thank you for giving me this opportunity. thank you. >> so buckhead is a
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neighborhood, the north part of atlanta. it's a very pretty placeof atla atlanta itself is very, very dangerous. it's mismanaged, so famously corrupt city. the thing is that buckhead pays. for like the whole city. buckhe deci the people of buckhead have decided, well, wait a minute, why are we paying for a city that is this mismanaged and this dangerous and that hates us and so someone but kind of decide to split and become their own town ? that's called democracy, whereou you govern your own town . owand it achieved a majorry victory. two bills in the legislature inu georgia would allow buckheadck to secedo e and become self-governing. that is passed the georgia senate committee, a floorbill w vote is imminent. bill white is the volunteer ceho of the buckhead city committee. he joins us now. bill , i think for the third ret time, thanhinkk you so much for what you've done on this. it' it's important not just for buckhead, but fos for bucr thee country to see that democracy can exist in the united states . you get to govern your owny ra town if you want. how close are you to pullingou this off, do you think?
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>> well, thank you so much for having us on. we ae ofia on the ev a historic vote in the georgia state senate. state senate. we have we have had a great champion in our lieutenant governor , bert jones, we thank him, tucker,confid and we are confident that he will bring us the votes that we need to prevail in the senate. the lieutenant governor assureiv us that he will do everythinerg in his power to help us get the bills out of the chamber this two bills out of his chamber after georgia's last afterlt. governor , jeff duncaa it's a breath of fresh air that we have a leader of the state senate who doesn't bow to the city of atlanta. we've been working on this legislation, as you know, tucker, for over two years. and lieutenant governor bartlieu jones has been invaluable inte helping keep this momentumrrow on the rails. tomorrow is our big test of his leadership. and i think he will pass thate t test with flying colors. tenant. we're counting on our lieutenant governor , byrd jones, and the georgia state senate, led by our great republicans to holicans d the cf atlanta accountable once and for all.
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i mean, this really is a test of democracy. >> you're being attacked as some sortour of hate figure because you want f self-government sincigure when d democracy become so unfashionable? i thought everyone was in favor of democracy. >> what happened? in yeah, all we'rfavoe asking forae is the right to vote.r is you know, on the mayhe twenty fourth primary last year, nine hundred and sixty thousand georgia voters voted00 and all 159 yes in all.buckhead one hundred and s fifty nine counties on the buckhead city ballot so those. so those people electeopl our georgia state representatives and they've e elsent a clear message. even in fulton county, we got 80% of the republican votes in fulton county to just let us vote. hav and , you know, they have never not let a city head movement that came before them not be permitted to have the right to vote. actually ,right to v i call on e dickins, the mayor of atlanta, to just come out here and say, let us all vote .the what's what's the problem with voting madein the bestampan campaign win because they hate democracy. they also hate you, butto
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they want you to pay for everything as they mismanage br buckett into chaos. thi >> right. i so if you win this, i think will be a sign for towns across the country. you don't have to be manageds w into the ground by criminals who hate you. you cau, youown n run your own affairs.d, >> it's democracy. so best of luck, though. thank you. for joining us tonight. for have thank you so much, tucker.d ble god bless you. thank you. well, when a community is about to secede from the city, you have to ask, what can we dobout to fix this country? f i wish you were on the wrong path. rom city, whone man has thoughtt that question. he joins us next.t now go behind the scenes of the trial that gripped the nation. we, the jury, find the defendant, kyle h. rittenhouse, not guilty. >> tucker takes you inside the real story of kyle rittenhouse. plus, unaired footage of tucker's exclusive sit down with kyle that you won't see anywhere else. the right to defend yourself from the mob is fundamental, and it hung in the balance.
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tucker carlson originals. the trial of kyle, available now exclusively on fox nation. what a privilege it is for you to have me here this evening. ladies and gentlemen, go worry. i'm going to get them out tonight. we can learn to get along, for god's sake. they apologized. they apologized. now. and finally, dear abc, mom was always organized, but she started forgetting to pay her started forgetting to pay her billabout mys and she'd buy thee gifts over and over, telling the girls about my alzheimer's diagnosis. to thi >> we had our cries, but thenkn we were like, okay, let's make t a plan. hav early detection gave us timee. to adaptif y together. it's so important for you to think about what you can doct
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and making the most of what you have. >> if you or your family are noticing changes, it could be alzheimer's. >> talk about seeing a doctor together. it's another great morning. don't know the and get up and walk right into the path of the light. 911. what's your emergency like. what? what returns this monday on fox sunday on fox. the nascar cup series rolls into las vegas on a desert track. anything could happen, as bill hemmer, larsen and logan bill tell you, if you want to win in vegas, you've got
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to go for broke. even las vegas, baby nascar cup series, las vegas sunday at 3:00 eastern on fox. i just wasn't feeling well. i went in the bank one day and the lady behind the counter, she looked at me, says, you need to take what my husband takes and i started taking balance of nature. and within a few weeks i was so much better. i've taken it for 20 some years and i wouldn't go without it. i want to be like my grandma. let the hundred when you get to be eighty two years old. that's a blessing and balance of nature. i really believe it's helped me do that. >> start now by going to balance of nature. .com. >> and don't forget to use discount code, fox news, a heart. 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, select hope found john a five hundred thousand dollar policy for only twenty nine dollars a month and his wife and of five hundred thousand dollar policy for only twenty one dollars a month.
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and analysis. then at 11:00 harristown puts the headlines in focus. it's all part of our can't miss lineup weekdays on fox news channel, so we'll admit we do a ton of depressing segments except for the lori lightfoot segment, which is hearteningtheo and family friendly. but generally a lori wt ofas ses where everything's so bad in the country. the question is , how could yoah make it better? what's the good newsat ? what's the future that is bright? well, our friend chris buskirkah has thought a lot about this and he has written a brandstioni new book on that question.'s he's publisher of american greatness. wes book is called america the art of the possible. we talk to him for an hour for r a brand new episode of doctor carlson today. >> here's part of it. easy way that you can judgeg whether you're being successful or not. at best, a big picture ot o level, because you can measure all those other metrics, one atat a time a, family formation orr wealth or security or whatever is when you look att a a civilization or in our case, an
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asian, is the country capable of collective action? in other words, can it do really big projects together and achieve them? and as sort of thought through that, i realized that before you can achieve the big project , you have to have a you have to agree that bigagrt projects are okay, that they're good. yeah, yeah. cts are ey're a goand then you have to e on what that big project would be . right. and we had that sort ofco consensus in our country for a long time, like our people, i think over ideal ideologies. this allowed, say, like our project, the america project was like form of government or it was maximizing liberty or maximizing justice. those things in part, are true. i actually think the big maybican project . sixty seven jamestown until maybe nineteen forty five ,e 195 maybe before that. even, maybe you could maybe mae
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the argument that it was until nineteen sixteen was just he was conquering the frontier but it was literally just building the country and going from a place where you had these like 13 colonies sort of clinging to this littlcolonie ft of atlantic coast.ke how d and it's like how do wo we ge g the pacific and how do we take these like this this strip of colonies with a couple million people? >> it',. >> tucs a cool book. sean hannity, speaking of cool right now, tucker, thank you. how are you? great to see you.ed how a so greatre. thanks. say hi to tucker. everybody right. had a great crowd. hi, welcome to "hannity". we are back with a live studio audience coming up. wow, what a what? did y'all have caffeine before the show? you're all wired. i lovebefore they sho that. that's great. coming up, judge jeanine pirro, kellyanne conway, former congressman lee zeldin all inl s studio tonight and our great
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