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tv   Tucker Carlson Tonight  FOX News  March 3, 2023 5:00pm-6:00pm PST

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casual friday in polo. how about one day i do like a golf shirt with a blazer over it, no tie. is that what you guys want to see? you want to see casual waters? studio is nodding. all right. we could give you guys casual. that's all for tonight. dvr the show. tucker is up next. remember i'm watters and this is my world. ♪ ♪ ♪ >> tucker: good evening and welcome to "tucker carlson tonight" on a friday. last fall, a democrat called tony deluca got reelected to the pennsylvania state house while dead not just dead inside like most politicians but actually dead, not breathing. and not only did deluca win after having been dead for a full month but he won in a landslide. tony deluca got more than 85% of the vote. now by any measure that is
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embarrassing, pennsylvania democrats elected a dead man. they knew they were doing it. they did it anyway. this would seem to defeat the idea of representative democracy, which is that you vote for people so that they can represent you. but party leaders in pennsylvania were not embarrassed. they were proud, quote: well we are incredibly saddened by the loss of representative tony deluca they said in a statement. we are proud to see the voters show their confidence in him and his commitment to democratic values by reelecting posthumously. in other words, electing a guy who can't possibly represent you is not an offense against democracy, it's the essence of democracy. now, it's not a typo. they put that in a press release and actually makes kind of sense when you remember it was also in the state of pennsylvania that democratic party leaders backed a senate candidate called john fetterman long after he had suffered a massive stroke and could not longer talk or communicate clearly. here he is during one of his rare public appearances last year. >> you are running for a seat
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that could decide the balance of power in washington. what qualifies you to be a u.s. senator? you have 60 seconds. >> hi, good knight, everybody. >> if you work full time, you should be able to live in dignity as well, true. and i believe they haven't had any business being businesses subsidized by not paying individuals that just simply can't pay to their own way you are saying tonight you support fracking you always supported fracking there is that 2018 interview where you said quote i do not support fracking at all. how do you square the two? >> oh, i do support fracking. and -- i don't -- i don't -- i support fracking and i stand and i do support fracking. >> tucker: that debate as you
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well remembered was considered shocking by almost everyone who saw it but not by democrats in pennsylvania. they didn't even seen mildly ashamed running a candidate who couldn't speak. fetterman's own life a former illegal alien called gisele candidly told reporters how she deals with her brain damaged husband quote you just like ignore him when he is speaking. democratic voters love this because they always love it when women attack and diminish their own husbands. it makes them feel like it's normally alone it's totally normal to hate your husband. they took gisele's advice and elected fetterman to the senate. in a party where no debate is allowed not like you can have a senator who can use words or let alone a president who can think. we naively assumed that joe biden would be in trouble during the 2020 primaries when he misidentified the state he was standing in or mistook his sister for his wife or made about 100 weird and disjointed statements that suggested regular amphetamine injections were the only thing getting him through his rallies.
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biden's senility seemed so obvious and it was obvious. what we missed is how much the democratic party had changed. joe biden's campaign was never about joe biden. he could have been anyone dull or sharp, old or young alive or dead. the candidate himself was irrelevant. what mattered was the power of the office. democrats just wanted the seat. the details of who occupied didn't matter to them. and as if to prove it dianne feinstein has been a senator from california for more than 30 years. she is now 89. the oldest member of congress and she is sadly completely out of it. last month she learned that her staff had announced her retirement from the senate. she had no idea. watch this. >> i haven't made that decision. i haven't released anything. it would be. >> you put out the statement. >> we put out your statement. >> i didn't know they put it out. >> okay. so, it is what it is. >> tucker: we put out your statement, feinstein's staff
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informs her. we decided you are leaving your job and no, we didn't tell you because we don't care what you think. you are just the senator, shut up and vote. and dianne feinstein just kind of nods and accepts it. keep in mind, this person sits on the, quote, intelligence committee in the united states senate. and it's sad really you think even a corrupt machine state like california would deserve more than this. voters voted for her, assuming she would be aware of the surroundings and keep their best interest in mind. but, no, nobody in the party cares because representative democracy means nothing to democratic leaders. they don't mind if you know they feel that way. that's how washington actually works. even by those low standards it has been a little bracing to watch the short political career of john fetterman unfold. fetterman got to washington in january and within a month suffered a mental break down so severe that he wound up in the psych ward where he remains tonight. we are not mocking john fetterman. the mercenaries in his orbit
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very much including his wife gisele should be ashamed of what they have done. apparently fetterman cracked under the senate campaign in which he was forced to pretend that the brain damage he suffered during a stroke was no problem no problem i'm fine. he was not fine. so close to the edge within weeks of getting into washington he wound up in a mental hospital as an inpatient. hhe has not appeared in public since. we are supposed to think that's not a big deal. we are not supposed to think about it. to show how completely normal it is for newly elected u.s. senators to have break down and disappear from public view that's not such a big deal fetterman somehow co-sponsored legislation in the u.s. senate. quote u.s. senators bob casey and fetterman from pennsylvania reads a straight faced news reports bipartisan introducing new legislation aimed at preventing freight train derailments like the one last month in east palestine, ohio. here is a guy getting around the
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clock psychiatric care deciding how to prevent train derailments. there are some questions here. the most obvious one is a logistical question how is john fetterman doing this if is he in the psych ward and we don't know because no one will say. fetterman's chief of staff, a man called adam gentleson is blocking anyone who dares to ask that question on social media, on twitter, for example. stephen miller of the last white house asked gentleson this adam who is cosigning and introducing legislation from senator fetterman's office while he himself is currently hospitalized and under current medical observation? oh, no answer? no answer? gentleson just blocked stephen miller in response. so, the problem with this is not john fetterman himself. once again, it's impossible not to feel sad for john fetterman or anyone else who suffers from mental illness. a lot of us are eccentric many of russ eccentric and a tolerant and compassionate society to do
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its best to help people suffering from depression or schizophrenia or whatever. the problem is a society that elevates people who are mentally ill is doomed. wouldn't a functional society elevate people to positions of leadership who are the wisest, the smartest? the sanest? who had the greatest degree of foresight and emotional self-control? yes, it would. they would not intentionally put people in positions of authority who were incompetent. they would not allow john fetterman to write railroad safety legislation from his bed in the cy psych ward. tthat pardonthe description ins. biden, of course, will celebrate this is a new glass ceiling shattered. all empowered by being governed by people who can't think straight. but this is a dead end this road. this way of thinking is destructive for everyone. it's not empowering, it's grotesque. and if we continue, we might wind up with people dressed in
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admirals outfits pretending to be women. that could happen. >> i'm honored to serve as the first female four star officer of the u.s. public health service commissioned corps. >> tucker: now, that person is obviously mentally ill. but so are the rest of us if we accept it as normal. adam carolla is an expert on the hilarious and terrifying. he joins us tonight adam thank you so much for coming on. it sounds like the standards for leadership have been inverted, like the craziest person, the least competent person, the most obviously unqualified person becomes the leader of everybody else. >> well, i mean, think about this. do a little thought experiment. all the people you just mentioned and we'll throw in biden and kamala harris as well. would you hire them to coach your small town high school football team?
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and if the answer is no, if -- like you literally start laughing, right? you said feinstein or fetterman or even biden or kamala harris, pete buttigieg, any of these people, if you said i would like them to coach or high school football team, you would be laughed out of the small town you lived in. so, if they cannot raise to that level, then maybe they shouldn't be running the government. >> tucker: but i think they are running the government because of their deficiencies. so if you just took a cross section of 10,000 people from the phone book, assuming the phone book still exists which they don't a cross section of the population some aptitude people. low aptitude people this is not a representative sample. the senate is disproportionately stupid and crazy. like we are selecting bad people on purpose. >> well, it does dove tail nicely into the sort of
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interactiintersectionality. woke stuff and all the others. could it go the other way? if your criteria for hiring a football coach was we need the gayest, we need the darkest, we need the ones who cross dress and transgender, how would that football team's record be at the end of three years of playing? i mean, how else could this go? >> tucker: well, maybe you have hit upon a solution to the current crisis in our former meritocracy where congress passes a law forcing the nba and the nfl to abide by the same hiring standards they are imposing on say jp morgan and citibank and everybody else. why not do that and all watch what happens when you abandon the a meritocracy. >> well, it would be the greatest experiment ever. and i think it would be very informative to a lot of people. i think if you said we are going
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to do a passable team that we're going to hire by the same standards that the federal government hires, in terms of intersectionality and race and everything else and then you watched a bunch of guys bounce the ball off of their foreheads and into the first row and score no points and each game would end in a tie 0 to 0, then maybe americans would take a look at the horrible sloppy play on the court and say we don't want this in our government. the problem is that we can't do the math. we're not doing the math. the second joe biden said i'm going to -- i'm going to run with a vice president who is female and black and -- people should have been outraged by that. that's an insane statement. it's a racist statement. it's insulting statement to everyone who is in the country. i told you when i was on your show a couple years ago, i said joe biden is essentially a drunken airline pilot and we're all in the passenger seats.
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that's insane. and it seems like an extreme analogy but, is it that much different? >> tucker: well, it was actually foreshadowing of what we are seeing in america's airports now with a nearly near miss every week to the equity hiring standards being imposed on the airlines. you called that early. adam carolla, appreciate it. >> thanks, tucker. >> tucker: so, we'll be honest, a lot of problems that government faces actually are kind of complex. in some cases very complex. it's hard to know what to do if someone says fix social security? what would you do. it would be tough to figure that out. other problems are not complicated. they are pretty easy to solve. one is crime and another is homelessness. california has more homelessness than any place in the world. gavin newsom the governor spent billions on trying to prevent it but the problem has gotten worse. california now has 30% of the country's entire homeless population. so that's just a mystery to gavin newsom. we spent billions. it's getting worse. how come? what's interesting is to see the
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alternatives to this lunacy and one of them is a place called coronado, california, one of the prettiest places in the state. richard bailey is the mayor of coronado and joins us with his solution. mr. mayor, thank you so much for come on. i can't remember a more inspiring story. tell the viewers, if you would, how you solved homelessness in coronado. >> well, tucker, there are several factors that are contributed to coronado's continued success at maintaining a low to zero rate of homeless. and one of those factors is our approach. and our approach starts with a sincere effort to connect any homeless individual with the resources they need to get back on their feet. so, any time there's a homeless individual in town, we have contracted with a third party shelter provider that can connect them with a roof over their head and the resources they need to improve their life. and i sincerely believe that we have a civic and moral responsibility to help those that actually want to be helped. but we also have a broader responsibility to the larger
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community to make sure we are maintaining safe and clean public spaces that include making sure that the sidewalks are not blocked. that we don't have people shooting up with drugs and using alcohol in public spaces. that we don't have people urinating and defecating in public. we also maintain a very consistent and proactive amount of code enforcement. i think the combination of those two is what has contributed to coronado's success. >> tucker: i think the key to what you just said and something you never hear anybody say which is we do, of course, have an obligation to the least among us. and that would include people on the street addicted to drugs. twin obligation to everybody else because they live there, too. it's their city, also. and i don't know why you are the only mayor i have heard in like the last 10 years to say that out loud. why is that a hard concept? >> i wish i knew the answer to that, tucker. but i have to say this is important for viewers to understand that what is happening here in california is not normal. when you consider that from 2012
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to 2022 we actually saw the number of homeless individuals nationwide drop from 620 to about 580,000. so we saw a decrease around the entire nation. meanwhile, over that same time period, we saw the number of homeless increase by 40% in california. and that is despite us, in the past three years alone, spending $10 billion in effort to solve this mess. >> tucker: yeah. thank you for noticing the obvious and acting on it. mayor richard bailey of coronado, a truly beautiful place. thank you. >> thank you. >> tucker: so, a lot of people claim the biden administration doesn't really care about you, but that's untrue if you are ukrainian. they care very, very much and that's why the attorney general showed up in kyiv today to kiss the ring of his real boss. former congressman dennis kucinich joins us to explainemor what is going on here.
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we'll be right back. ♪ you can own your very own brand-new tracker boat, motor and trailer package. the world's #1 best selling fishing and pontoon boats are sold factory direct at bass pro shops and other select dealers. plus, for a limited time receive bass pro shops gift cards worth $500 and more. tracker boats - fish the finest.
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♪ >> tucker: it looks like every week another top democratic party official heads to the country they are care most abou which of course is ukraine. it's not united states. so nancy pelosi, our treasury
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secretary, joe biden have all gone to ukraine, now for some reason the attorney attorney general of not ukraine, but united states went to at public expense, to ukraine. what is he doing there? may be giving advice on how to prosecute more christians. we can't say. we're not talking about the bombing of the pipeline which the biden administration was deeply involved impaired no one seems to member that story. congressman, thank you so much for coming on. the sabotage of this natural ga pipeline is the largest act of environmental environmental terrorism in history. and the biden administration is responsible for it, why does nobody talk about this? >> it's an unprecedented act in
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american history in the people of the united states upper righ to know if their government ble up the pipeline for it if you look at the issues, there was a plan to destroy the pipeline before the russian invasion of ukraine and incriminating statements were made by president biden, victoria newlin , national security adviser solomon. prior to the pipeline being blown up. when you think about it, it as key here because he has to organize it and then blame russia, what it was really all about was knocking russia out o the natural gas market. one thing i want you to think about, tucker. this pipeline attack occurred off a of parts of denmark, denmark signed a rogue statute of the international criminal court and denmark has to investigate this incident for the icc in the united states
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congress has two investigate because if they don't, this is also something that that americ doesn't recognize the icc for the american people have a righ to know and thomas paine wrote in common sense that we don't have a king in america, in america, the law is king and we cannot let historic and constitutional journey just be destroyed by a group in the white house that doesn't want t recognize their responsibility to the united states constitution. no president has a right to, an active war against any other nation and less there is a vote of congress, so there are problems there with the u.s. constitution, with internationa law, and this is just beginning. what seymour hurst did his seat he tore open the curtain gave the american people in the worl to look at the machinations behind this thing that really
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are totally un-american, totall against what our country should be standing for and the president in the other people involved in this have to be hel to account. get the biden administration di this that is beyond doubt as fa as i'm concerned. it was an attack on not only russia, but our nato allies tha depended on that. why is no one in the media, which is insane, why is no one in the media following up on this? >> that is a real question that fortunately you, tucker have been hammering away at this and as someone who served in congress and was responsible fo bringing articles of impeachmen against a president in a vice president, i understand that constitution perfectly on this. there should be meetings in congress there should be an investigation. we could not permit a part
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president to get away with an act of war against another nation. 80 to hundred german ted there energy supply threatened during the winter. hello. >> but they don't want to look into a. thank you so much. great to see you. >> thank you. >> tucker: you can't let the core infrastructure and core services in a country go bad, you can't let air travel become dangerous. you have to say no. that is happening in our country . the biden administration would want to make sure the person running the faa which runs woul be confident in aviation. no, they have nominated a guy called phil washington to lead the faa. as we learned that his confirmation hearing, he knows nothing about aviation. watch this. >> mr. washington, can you quickly tell me what airspace
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requires an asp transponder? quickly, please,. >> thank you for the question, senator. him not sure i can answer the question right now. >> what are the six types of special use airspace which appear on faa charts? quickly, please,. >> sorry, senator, i cannot answer that question for. >> what are the limitations of pilot flying under basic med? >> thank you for the first impaired. >> can you tell me what causes an aircraft to spin or install? >> again, senator, i'm not a pilot for. >> what is the minimum separation for landing and departing airliners during the daytime? >> i don't want to guess on that , senator. >> he seems like a nice enough guy, but this person being nominated to run the faa, which deals with air travel. why in the world would you
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nominate a guy that knows nothing about airplanes to run the federal agency? because he cares a lot about equity. >> do you intend if you are confirmed to have this so-calle equities are as a member of you senior staff at the faa? >> thank you for the question, senator. i do think that there is a role to play for equity in organizations. i would definitely look at that. >> so to be clear, equity is an inherently evil and discriminatory concept. even if it was a good concept, it would still be irrelevant to running the faa, the transportation department, or the white house or any other federal agency but all american of all colors pay for, they expect the best person, ineligible wise person would do the job and the case of the faa safely. this is a guy that knows nothin about the airplanes running the
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faa. so into tate is despised in thi country by the people that he vahe might be the most popular person on the entire internet. he remains in prison in romania without being charged in a crime . what is going on here? we will talk to his attorney after the break.
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>> tucker: approximately to hundred 50 years, everybody in america agreed sexualizing children they could,. even criminals don't like child molesters. all of a sudden, out of nowhere maybe as a reaction against tom who knows, actualizing children became a mandate you have to this is true across the west, particularly here in the u.s., but also canada.
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a lot of it is occurring in school libraries. an 11 -year-old who lives in th state of maine and is in the si grades woke up at a school boar meeting to read aloud from the book called nick and charlie. >> i was in the library and thi book was on the stand. at like to read your page. >> at my back over my hips as i asked if we should take our clothes off and he said yes before i finished my sentence. he's pulling off my t-shirt, laughing when i can and do my shirt buttons. in reaching into his bedside drawer for a. again, where rolling over, obviously you can see where thi is going. i don't know if it's because we are feeling especially emotiona or just tired or if these past couple of weeks have been too much. this reminds me of the first time we had sex we were both sleep back terrified and we
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didn't know what we're doing. but it was good too. so good. >> that's a little kid. the library and didn't care. the library and asked if he wanted to check out a graphic novel version of that book to thank you so much for coming on. knox, first to you, what did yo think when the librarian asked you if you wanted to see that picture version of that book? >> the only thing that went through my head was i was so uncomfortable and i was just so angry. i didn't believe it was actuall happening. >> tucker: kids know when something is keeping. parents know to come about so many of them are intimidated by saving anything because it's unfashionable, you don't want t be the uncool parent. why did you decide to bring thi to public attention?
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>> it was something that had to be done. i heard about another book that was in the haskell and i asked my son to get a hold of it. i didn't think anything of my middle school sun and when i go the one that was in the high school, it was disturbing to sa the least with i found in there. it's just really disappointing to find out how our education system is failing our kids. >> how did your neighbors in th other parents in your town respond when you raised a fuss over this? >> f first, a lot of people didn't have an idea that it was going on in our communities. but now that they have actually seen it and seeing an 11 -year-old speak about that at the school board meeting has
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really set the stage and placed this right in the lapse of all of the parents across the country now. it's really amazing the support we've gotten through the community and now honestly across the country. i get messages privately still, hundreds of them day saying thank you for speaking out and they are worried about the cancel culture. there getting canceled or disciplined by their bosses or the losing businesses as owners. and you've got to learn they ar terrified to speak out. >> you to earn, we appreciate your bravery. knox, for an 11 -year-old, just amazingly self-contained. thank you both. >> of course. >> thank you, tucker, we appreciate you having us on.
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>> tucker: we talk about climate, but how is the actual environment doing? wills and dolphins are washing up dead because of windfarm construction and now may be the biggest environmental disaster of all is called red tide that' covering 100 square miles tonight in the gulf of mexico. is when algae grow out of control. the toxins kill fish in long large numbers. it also makes it hard for peopl to breathe, it's also true that red tide may cause als, lou gehrig's, so this is a short huge problem that's widely ignored for some reason. we are happy to have him join u tonight. thank you so much for coming on for eight you did this amazing documentary terrifying documentary on red tight and i think most people aren't aware of what a threat it is.
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tell us what red tide does to people potentially? >> there has been read tide across the west coast of florid and they produce various neurotoxins that people and tha by getting stinging in the eyes and sometimes respiratory distress. sometimes they poison shellfish. we have looked at other types o harmful blooms and found that they have a toxin that not only causes a cancer, but also can cause als. that is something we are monitoring very closely with th in lake okeechobee, florida. >> there is a consensus that al has to be one of the scariest diseases that people get, so anything that could cause it it would seem likes would set off alarm bells and people would be completely freaked out about it. i don't get this sense that the
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response to this is very urgent. >> fortunately it's a rare disease, but we have found the tocsin increases your risk of being getting als. our colleagues at dartmouth and our colleagues in florida have found if you are close to these bacterial blooms that the risk goes up, this is completely avoidable, people should stay away from the bacterial tides i they have asthma or serious neurological conditions, just stay indoors and stay away unti it's clear. i think there is a real strong consensus of scientists that this is a problem we can actually solve just by cleaning up the water a little bit. i think it will go a long way spread. >> it's nice for somebody to sa that out loud. we appreciate you coming on. thank you. >> thank you very much. >> tucker: as we told you, a man we've interviewed on the
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show, probably the most per popular person on the internet. he has been wanting for months in romanian prison. he has not been charged with a crime. what is going on? you know what's going on. we're going to talk to his attorney straight ahead.
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♪ no. ♪ -no. -nuh-uh. ♪ yeah. oh. yes. ♪ oh yeah. yes.
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isn't this great? yeeaahhhh!! ♪ yeah, i could do a cartwheel in here. oh hey! would you like to join us? no. we would love to join you. ♪ you know what the number one best-selling book in the world is? it's the bible. it's been that year after year, after year, after year. it's the number one selling book in all of history. why? because it's god's word. it's god's word from cover to cover. every word is true. do i understand it all? no, but i believe it all. and if you put your faith and trust in god, whose word never changes, you'll never be disappointed. see god tells us in his word that he loves us, and he sent his son from heaven to this earth to take our sins, that he died and shed his blood on a cross for our sins. if you've never trusted jesus as your savior, do it right now. just pray this prayer with me. just say, god, i'm a sinner. i'm sorry. i want to turn from my sins. i believe jesus is your son. i want to trust him as my savior and follow him as my lord.
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amen. if you prayed that prayer, call that number right now that's on the screen. we've got people that would like to speak with you, pray with you but if you don't have a bible, tell them and they'll send you one. god bless you. after my car accident, wondnder whahatmy c cas. so i called the barnes firm. i'm rich barnes. youour cidedentase e woh than insurance offered? call the barnes firm now to find out. yoyou ght t beurprpris
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♪ call one eight hundred, eight million ♪ ♪ >> tucker: entry tate became the single most popular person on the internet globally by talking about masculinity, the personal responsibility of men have, et cetera et cetera. he also became really hated on the left for some reason. back in december romanian authorities through him and his brother in jail where they remain. they have not charged him with anything. tate is under investigation for human trafficking. they job eigenstate department may or may not have had a hand and this, but they are thrilled by it in any case. what is going on? and how long is this going to continue? isn't that a human rights violation? teaneck landi and is andrew tates leaguer.
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we talked to her a few nights ago and this is what, she said. what are they charges? how can he be in jail is if he hasn't been charged for months? >> hi, tucker, thank you for having me. in romania the procedure is a little different than what we used to, they have a procedure called preventative arrest whic is what they've essentially arrested the tate brothers in two women forebear they arreste them at the end of december and initially it was a 24 hour arrest, and then the prosecutio made an application for a 30 da extension which is granted and last month, they got a further 30 day extension that was granted and most recently that was extended again until the en of march for they have up to 18 days in which they can suspend this detention without charging them with any crime. so it's ongoing criminal investigation, but they are detained. they are rotting in romanian jail and we can only imagine what that is like. this is clearly the definition
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of human rights violation of a media member. have civilized western government said anything about this? >> this is now just being handled under romanian law and nobody else has really weighed in as far as other governments. this is sanctioned under their law. the procedure is proper under theravada, however the way it's being applied in this case is a violation of international huma rights law. this investigation didn't start when they were arrested, the investigation started in april. they rated their and they realized their accusations were false, they didn't arrest anybody they didn't charge anybody and at that point, the brothers filed criminal complaints against the two wome who had falsely accused them. many have not heard about those criminal complaints but those
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are active as another investigation in romania right now. >> i hope henceforth you use ai quotes around the words romania law. so in romanian jail, andrew tat was quite spirited figure. obviously the point is to break his spirit, have they done that? >> absolutely not very both tat others are of strong mind and o strong spirits. they are doing the best they ca under the circumstances. i think they are holding up as well is anybody could. they are praying, they are meditating, they are receiving lot of letters of support from family and friends and all of their other fans around the world. the only thing is they are extremely frustrated, they want to prove their innocence, they want to return home, they want to tell the world what is going on, but right now, because ther is an ongoing criminal investigation, we are not
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allowed to actually discuss all of the evidence that is favorable that shows they didn' commit any crimes in this case. pretty obviously set as at upcoming tina. led zeppelin, these guys were super and popular with the people in charge. >> i think you said it yourself tucker. >> it's like let's stop attending, let's stop playing. >> to all of the one-sided leak that have come out when we have exculpatory evidence, but we're not able at this point to discuss it yet and to put it ou for the world to see and for th brothers to start to get the word out. we know they tried to set them up for sexual assault heard the woman said no, that's my boyfriend. there's a lot going on here, bu seem to be believing it, we
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don't, tina, thank you for the update. >> of course. >> the documentary called super size me it inspired one man in nashville he is hoping there mc donald's diet will super downsize his body, he's eating only mcdonald's for 100 days to lose weight and he reports back it's called absolutely working. kevin mcginnis blogs about his diet he's a brave man. thank you so much for coming on. so by the way, you look fit and vigorous i will say and and non creepy way. how are you keeping fit on mc donald's, what are you doing ? ticket literally, the concept a a boxer, i wrestle in school coming after cut weight. cutting the food in half, i.e. three meals a day, but i cut them in half and i wait until that heat in the stomach that
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says you're hungry, everybody calls it hunger, i call it my incinerator turning on to get rid of all the excess and also burn off some of the fat off my body in than i have that next meal. no hours, no counting, no measuring, just comes the meals in half, eat three of them a day , when you're hungry. my belief is you will be 50 pounds down by the end of 100 days with better blood work and better health, if you don't believe me, follow along. to get really, the essential ingredient is you're approachin mcdonald's in a way i never have come, which is with restraint. how do you handle that? >> breakfast, good mcdonald's order any menu item, older the meal with a dessert, and then cutting and have for the first three or four days, map of the other have come out of sight, out of mind. you save the other half until later.
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and then each meal, only half o whatever that wholemeal would b at mcdonald's, cut in half, save the other half. after you've done it for three or four days, your stomach will have shrunk a little bit. either way is fine. to questions. are you worried this will kill you is the obvious one, and second, how does mcdonald's leftovers taste the next day? >> on the left overs, i answer that one first, definitely putting this in bits in the microwave with a cup of water s it seems it's a little bit is good for the sandwiches. you could put the whole thing and an era prior, for the fries and hashbrowns, either air frye or a dry skillet and it turns them back to almost brand-new again. as far as is it going to kill me ? i did the bloodwork at the beginning, i we will do bloodwork throughout, my belief is it's going to improve the bloodwork.
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>> kevin mcginnis, thank you for joining us. we'll be right back.
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>> we've been informed and fortunately we only have 15 seconds left in the week, say goodbye and thank you for joining us, all five days of the best we can with the one you love and we will see you on monday. >> wow. what a great audience. happy friday everybody. we made it. thank you for being here, we love having you. no we are back with our live studio audience. by the way coming up tonight right here in the studio congressmen of ohio will be here

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