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tv   Tucker Carlson Tonight  FOX News  March 3, 2023 10:00pm-11:00pm PST

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the difference between finding a place and finding the perfect place. >> our service comes at no cost to your family. >> connect with us today. one day i will rock that swimsuit. >> your one day is closer than you think from fresh meals to one on one coaching. jenny craig is weight loss made simple. orld. >> your one day starts today. good evening and welcome to tucker carlson site. >> a on a friday last fall, elee a democrat called tony deluca got reelected to the mostsylvaniaania statehouse whie dead, not just dead inside likey most politicians, but actually did not breathing and noa wit only did deluca win after having been dead for a full month, but he won inn 85 a landslide. >> tony deluca more than 85% of the vote.
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now, by any measure, that is embarrassing. demo democrats elected a dead man. they knew they were doing it.to they did it anyway. this would seem to defeat the idea of representative democraceoply, which is that you vote for people so they can represent you. but party leaders in quo pennsylvania were not embarrassed. they were proutel wed, quote. well, we're incredibly saddened by the loss of representative tony delucdeluca ta. e th he said in a statement, we are h proud to see the voters continue to showim their confidence in him and his commitment to democratic values by reelecting him posthumously. >> in other words, electing who can't possibly represent you is not an offense against democracy. it's the essence of democracy. that's not a typo. they put out in a press release and actually makes it kind of sense when you remember that itd was also in the state of pennsylvania. the democratic party leaders back to senatedidated john candd john fetterman long after he had suffered a massive stroke. he could no longer talk or communicate clearly. or
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>> here he is during one of his rare public appearances last year here balae, running for a t that could decide the balance of power in washington. youwhat qualifies you to be a s senator ? you have 60 seconds. >> hi., good night, everybody.yo if you work full time, you true. should be able to live in dignity as well. true. and i believe they haven't have any businesses being being we b can't have businesseeis being subsidized by not paying individuals that just jus simply can't afford to to pay their own way. >> you're saying tonight that sp you support fracking, thatpofrac you've always supported fracking, bukilwayt there is tha 2018 interview that you said, nt quote, i don't support fracking at all. >> so how do you square the twor . oh, i do support fracking and i don't, i don't i support fracking and i stand and i do support fracking. >>t debate, as you wellveryon
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remember, was considered saw eing by most everyon who saw it, but not by democrats in pennsylvania. they didn't seem even mildly ashamed to be caught runningerm a candidate who couldn't speak for letterman's own wife, a former illegal alien called jazelle, candidly told w shals withs how she deals with her brain damaged husband. quote, you jus wt like ignore hm when he's speaking. now, democratic voters love this because they always lovatte when women attack and diminish their own husbands. it makes them feel like they're' not alone. >> it's totally normal to hate your husband. and of course, they took gisele's advice. they elected john fetterman to the senate in a party w or nd debate is allowed. it's not like you need a senator who can use wordo s oe for that matter, a president tha who can think. now, wt bie naivelden woy assumt joe biden would be in trouble during the twenty twenty primaries when hee misidentified the state he was standing in or mistook his sister for hisabout 10 wife or e about a hundred other weird and disjointed statements that suggested regular amphetamine injections were the only thing getting him through hihiugh hisi
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. biden senility seems slieemeo ot and was obvious, but whaict we missed was how much the democratic party had changed. hee biden's campaign was never about joe biden. ce anyonhe could have been anl or sharp, older, young, alive,wh or dead.r of the candidate himself wase of irrelevant. what mattereficed was the powerf the office. democrats just wanted the seat c . the details of who occupied it ve didn't matter to them. and as if to prove it, diannes. feinstein has been a senator from california for more thananh 30 years. she's now eighty nine , the oldest member of congress, and she is sadly completely outr of it.re last month, shtiree learned tha. her staff had announced her>> retirement from the senate. she had no idea.en'te th watcath this. >> i haven't made that decision. i haven't released would anythi. it will be my plan.know you put out the statement. i didn't know they put it out. so, yeah, it is what it is . >> we put out your statement. an
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feinstein staff informs her we've decided you're leaving d becao, we didn't tell senat you because we don't care what you think. you're just the senatoorup andr shut up and vote.pt and dianne feinstein just kindei of nods and accepts it. int >>el keep in mind, this personss sits on the , quote, intelyo agents committee in the united states senate. and it's sadorrupt, really. >> you'd think even a corrupt machine state like california would deservvote votede more th. voters voted for her assuming she would be aware ofbut, n their surroundings and maybe keep their best interests in mind. ody inartybut no, nobody in they cares because representative democracy means nothing to democratic leaders. >> and they don't mind if, younu know, they feel that way. w so that's how washington a actually works. >> but even by those lowwatch standards, itht has been a little bracing to watch the short political career omafh john fetterman unfold. fetterman got to washington inba january and within a month suffered a mental breakdown sore severe that he wound up in the psych ward where he remains tonight. and we're not mocking john fetterman. ve course, we feel for him
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sincerely. but the mercenaries in hisuc orbit very much including his wife, giselle, should be ashamed of what they have done. campa apparently, fetterman crackeigde under the strain of a senate campaign in. she was forced to pretend that w the brain damage he had suffered from a stroke wasn't actually a big deal . no problem. >>aso i'm fine.'m so bu ct helo wasse not fine. w he was so close to the edgel hol that within weeks of getting to washington, he wound up in pb a mental hospital as an inpatient. he has not appeared in publics since. nod we're supposed to think that's not a big deal t . suppo ab're not evense supposed to thinkou about it. >> and just to showmal it how completely normal it is for newly elected us senators to have mental breakdown, to disappear from public viehad that's such not a big deal thato fetterman somehow just co-sponsored legislation in the u.s. senate, quote senator,e us senators bob casey and johnts fetterman of pennsylvania reads a straight face newsylvaad repoo joined a bipartisan group ofrtne senators on wednesday introducing new legislatiogin aimed at preventing future freight train derailments like the one last monthrailment in en palestine, ohio. >> s et o herepa you have a guye
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getting round the clock ho questioc care, deciding d how to prevent train derailments. there's so many questions here a ,but the most obvious one isoh a logistical question. how is john fetterman doing this he in if he's in the psych ware and we don't kno ww because no ble will say veterans chief of staff, a man called adamocwh jentleson, is blocking anyone who dares to ask that questione on social media,mi on twitter,no for example, steven miller of the last white house asked jentleson thiso is cos quote, ah who is cosigning and introducing legislation from senator fundaments officehc ? well, heur himself is currently hospitalized. and under current medical oh oh, no answer. gentnswer. jentleson just blocked steven 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 or eccentric. >> some of us are verya eccentric in a tolerant and compassionate society,
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should do its best to helphelp people suffering from problemsnr like depression or w the whatever .r the problem is that a society that elevates people who arewout mentally ill is doomed. >> wouldn't a functional are society elevate people to positions of leadership orst? the wisest, the smartest, the sanest, who have the greatest degree of foresightl and emotional self-control? >>ye yes, it would.sition >> they would not intentionally put people in positions ofow authority who were incompetent. they were not allowed john fetterman to write railroad safety legislationsych from his bed in the psych ward that is part ofthis the description. >> insane. biden, of course ia ne, celebrag this is a new glass ceiling shattered as if we're allo empowered by being governed end 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.in it's grotesque.ue ,
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and if we continue, we mightndin wind up with people dressed inon admirals outfits pretending h to be women. that could happen. >> i'm honored to serve as the first female four star u officer of the u.s. public health service commissioned corps. y me >>nt now, that person is obviously mentally ill, but so are the rest of us . carol if we accept it, as normal. >> adam carolla is an expert jou on the hilarious and terrifying. he joins us tonight.s thanks so much for coming.toniyo it'su so it does seem like the standards for leadership have been inverted inverte, like the craziest person, the least competent person, the mosty obviously unqualified person becomes the leader of everybody else. >>ell, well, i mean, think aboui this. doment. a little thought experin all the people you just h mentioned and throw in, biden will throw in kamala harris as well. >> would you hire them to coach your small town high school
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football team? and if the answer is no, if you like, you really, really start laughing, right? her said feinstein and fetterma or even biden orrr kamala harris people to judge any of these people. if you saithem td i would like m to coach our high school sootball team, you would be laughed out of the small town you lived in. so if they cannot raise to thatn level, then maybt.erunnin they shouldn't be running the government. but i think they're runningovere g a government because of their deficiencies. so if you just too sectiok a crossll section, ten thousand people from the phonebook, assuming phone book still exists,they deu they don't. but it's a cross section of the population. you would get some high uplo to people, some low aptitudew people. this is not a representatives samplenot like the u.s. senate,i for example, the white house,sp it's disproportionately stupid e and crazy, like we're selecting. bad people on purpose. > well, it does dovetail
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nicely into the sort of intersectionality and al the stuff and all the affirmative action hire. col bud t could it go any other way? i mean, if your criteria for the hiring a football coach was we need the , we need the darkest,s we need one to cross dress and transgender, how would that football team's record be ati me the end of three years ofelse playing? >>s i mean, how else could this go ? well, maybe you've hit upon a solution to the current crisis in our formerr meritocracy, where congress and passes a law forcing the nba and the nfl l to abide by the same hiring standards they're imposing on , say, jpmorga morgn and citibank and everybody else, why not do that? u ab and we can allan watch what happens when you abandon wel the meritocracy? >> well, it would be the greatest experiment ever. and i think it would be very informative to a lot of people
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. i think if you said we're going m, we'rementetball tea going to hire by the same standards that the federal government hires in terms ofhins intersectionality and race yand everything. and then you watched a bunch of fuys bounce the ball off o their foreheads and into the first row and score no points in each game.end in and in a tie zero to zero, then maybe americans would take a look at the horrible sloppy play on the court and say, we don't want this ino our government. the problem is 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's female and black and other peoplerage should have been outraged by that. that's an insane statements and a racist ting and insulting you statement to everyone who's in the country. s on youi told you when i was os show a couple of years ago, i said joe biden is essentially a drunken airline pilot. theand we're all in the passenr
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seats. that's insane. likand it seems like an extreme analogy, but is it that muchowif different? >> well, it t wawes actually foreshadowing of what we'ramerica'e seeing in americas airports now with the new near miss every week, thankweek ts te equity hiring standards now being imposed on the airlines. >> so you call that early. adam carolla, appreciate it. thank you.st, >> thanks so we'll be honest, a lot of problems that. government faces actually are kind of complearx, in some casen very complex. >> it's hard to know what to dos if someone said fix social security, what would you do?r pe >> it would be tough to figure that out. but other problems are noto solv complicated. they're pretty easy to solve. anothand one of them is crimems and other is homelessness. so california hasnethan anymore homelessness any placen probably in the world.t but th gavin newsom, the governor, spent billions on trying to prevente proble the problem's gottene worse. california has 30% ofwe s the country's entire homeless population. >> so that's juspet a mystery to gavin. >> we spend billions.
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it's getting worse.es how come? what's interesting is to see the alternatives to this lunacy. and one of them is a placelen th called coronado, california, one of the prettiest cities in i the state. richars thd reilly is the mayorf coronado and joins us tonight with his solution. >> mr. mayortion , thank you so muchiring for coming on .st i can't remember a mor veieould inspiring story of yours, if you would, how you solved homelessness and vornado. >> well, tucker, there are several factors that have contributed to coronado's continued success at maihose maintaining a low to zero rate of homeless. si and one of those factors is our approach. and our approach starts with a sincere effort to connect anyto homeless individual with the resource g s they need to get back on their feet. so anye time there's a homelesst individual in town , we have wit contracted with a third party shelter providera ro that can connect him with a roof overd their head and the resources they need to improve their life . retsplitysincerely believe tha we have a civi tc and morao o bl responsibility to help those that actually want to be helped. bu a at we also have a broader
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responsibility to the larger community to make sure we are te maintaining safe and clean public spaces that include u making sure that the sidewalks are not blocked, that we don't have people shooting with drugs and using alcohol in publichave spaces that we don't have ver people andy in public. so we also maintain a veryement. consistent and proactive amount of code enforcement. and i thine combin thok those the combination of thosed two has what is whatto is contributed to our success. >> so i think the key to what you just said, and it's something that you never hear anybody say, which is weth do, f course, have an obligationdd to the least among us ,ic and that would include people living on the streetted d devoted to drugs. he buret we have a twin obligationc to everybody else because they live therit alse, too.ly my >>or is their city also and i don't know why you're the only mayor i have heard in the last 10 years to say that out loud. >> why is that a hard concept? >> i wish i knew the answer to that, tucker, butun i have to say, this is important for viewers to understand that what is happening here in california is not normal.
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you consider that frome 2012 through 2020 , who we actually saw the number of homeless individuals nationwid u drop from six hundredt and twenty to about five hundred ande eighty thousand. so wtie saw a decrease around the entire nation. meanwhile, over thatr of same te period, we saw the number ofan homeless increased by 40 percent in california, and that is despite us in the pastve three years alone, spending ten billion dollars, an effort to solve this mess. >> yeah. thank you for noticingd ba the obviouils. fu acting on it.ace. mayor richard bailey of coronado, a truly beautiful place. >> thank you.den thank you so a lot of people playing the bush administration doesn't really care about you, but that's untrue. >> ey carry if you are ukrainian, they care very, very much. and that's why the attorney general showed up in kyiv todayi to kiss the ring of his real boss, former congressman dennis kucinich joins us to explain what is going on . we'll be right back .wo do you ever worry we'll live
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imagine what you can make possible. learn more and sign the donor. go to organ donor dacca. so it looks, it seems every week. and other top democratic party official heads to the country they care most about, which, of course, is ukraine. it's not the united states . >> they're not pretending anymore. so nancy pelosi, janet yellen,
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our treasury secretary, joe biden, our president, have all gone to ukraine now for some reason, the attorney general of not of ukraine, of the united states , went to at public expense ukraine. what was he doing there? maybe giving zelenskyy advice on how to persecute more christians. >> both them are doing it. we can't say we can probably assume they were not talking about the bombing of the nord stream pipeline. which the biden administration was deeply involved in. nobody seems to remember that story dennis kucinich does. >> he's a former member of congress from ohio, former presidential candidate. >> he joins us tonight. congressman, thank you so much for coming on . so the the sabotage of of this natural gas pipeline from eastern europe to western europe, this is a larger to act of environmental terrorism in history. it released more carbon into the atmosphere than any manmade act ever. >> and by administration is responsible for it. >> why is no one talking about this? well, it's you're right. it's an unprecedented act in
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american history. and the people of the united states have a right to know if their governments blew up the pipeline. and if you look at the details and seymour hersh is investigative piece, there was a plan to destroy the pipeline before the russian invasion of ukraine and incriminating statements were made by president biden. victoria nuland, national security adviser sullivan, prior to the pipeline being blown up. and when you think about it, selwyn's key because he helped to organize it, then he tried to blame russia. and what was really all about is not russia out of the european national natural gas market. and one thing i want you to think about, tucker, this pipeline attack occurred off bornholm island, which is part of denmark. denmark signed the rome statute of the international criminal court and denmark has to investigate this incident because the icc will and
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the united states congress has an obligation to investigate. and because if they don't, this is also something could go to the icc. even if america doesn't recognize the icc. so no one has heard the end of it. the american people have a right to know. and , you know, thomas paine wrote in common sense that, you know, we don't have a king in america. in america, the law is king. and we cannot let our history and constitutional journal just be destroyed by a group in the white house that doesn't want to recognize the responsibility of the united states constitute. no president has a right to commit an act of war against any other nation unless you go to congress and get congress to declare. so there's problems there with the us constitution, with international law. and this is just beginning with seymour hirsch. did was he he tore open the curtain and gave the american people in the world a chance to look at the machinations behind the scene.
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that really are totally un-american, totally against what our country ought to be standing for, and that the president and the other people have been involved in this have to be held to account . the bush administration did this. that is beyond doubt as far as i'm concerned. was an attack not just on this piece of russian infrastructure, but on our nato allies in western europe that relied on that for their energy needs. so if you're a big nato supporter, keep nato together. we just attacks nato . why is no one in the media, which is insane. >> why is no one in the media following up on this? well, that's a real question that fortunately, you know, you ,tucker, have been hammering away at this. and as someone who served in congress and was responsible for bringing articles of impeachment against a president and a vice president , i understand the constitution perfectly on this. and there ought to be hearings in congress. there must be a congressional investigation. we cannot permit a president,
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whatever the party is , to get away with an act of war against another nation. eighty three million germans had their energy supply threatened during the winter. i mean, hello, yeah, that's lunacy. >> but the union party wants to sweep under the rug. >> said it's great to see you tonight. thank you so much. thank you. >> so you can't let the core infrastructure and core services in a country. great. you just can't let that happen. you can't, for example, let air travel become dangerous. >> you have to say no. but that's happening in our country every other week. >> there's a near miss and a major airports. you'd hope the bush administration would want to make sure that the person running the faa, which regulates aviation, would be competent and knowledgeable in aviation, but no any further insult to this country. >> the white house has nominated a guy called phil washington to lead the faa. and as we learned in his confirmation hearing, he knows nothing about aviation. >> watch this special washington. can you quickly tell me what
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airspace requires an ntsb transponder? quickly, please. thank you for the question, senator . i'm not sure i can answer that. question right now. >> so what are the six types of special use airspace that protect us national security that appear on faa charts? >> quickly, please. sorry, senator , i cannot answer that question. >> so what are the operational limitations of a pilot flying under basic med? well, thank you for the question, senator . >> i'm not a pilot. can you tell me what causes an aircraft spin or to stall again? >> senator , i'm not a pilot, so can you tell me what the minimum separation distance is for landing departing airliners during the daytime? mr. washington? >> i don't want to guess on that, senator . so seems like a nice enough guy, but this person is being nominated to run the faa, the faa, which oversees air travel. so why in the world would you
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nominate a guy who is nothing about airplanes to run the federal agency that oversees airplanes? well, because he cares a lot about equity. that's why watch. do you intend, if you're confirmed, to have this so-called equity czar as a member of your senior staff at the faa? thank you for the question, senator . i do think that there's a role to play for equity in organizations. so i would definitely look at that. so just to be clear , equity is an inherently evil and discriminatory concept. but even if it was a good concept, it would still be irrelevant to running the faa with the transcriptase department or the white house or any other federal agency that all americans of all colors pay for. >> they expect the best person and knowledgeable, wise person who will do the job efficiently . well, and in the case of the faa safely and said the white house guy who knows nothing about airplanes from
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the faa truly nuts. so andrew thate is despised in this country by the people who run this country. but maybe the most popular person on the entire internet, maybe because he is so popular. he was arrested several months ago in romania and remains in prison without being charged with a crime. >> and apparently despite being very ill. >> what is going on here? we think we know. we're going to talk to his attorney after the break. i got a good point. being a public servant, me one of many things i expect the unexpected. that was not a smart move on your end, sir. what are you going to do about . come on , man. we got to go.
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don't do it. but you feel great, honestly, okay? was it not mine? because i was peacocking a little bit. cycloset, what are you going to do? am i getting through to you at all? for you? >> boys. bad boys. hey, celebrity things for their lives. but who are they . >> go back. oh no. why the long face? the new season is epic and you can watch any time with weekly d new york night. eighty nine and a new twist that will have everyone what master was up all new masks wednesdays on fox or watch any time on hulu is tomorrow night
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and a lorit of it for some reasn is occurring in school libraryo . not today. jack is an ai eleven year oldne and who lives in the state of maine. he's in the sixth grade. grades wme heet jusint spoke up at a school board meeting to read aloud from the book, nick anoud charle checked it out of his school's e library. >> wha t? y an >> the sixth grader? i was the library and this book was on a stand. i'd like to read you a page my back over my hips as i ask if you should take takeothes your clothes off and you sayof yes before i finish my sentence . o he's pulling off my t-shirtff m laughing when i can'y t-sht unds shirt buttons, he's undoing my belt. i'm reaching into his bedside drawer for a . we're kissing again. we're rollinagain,g over. obviously, you can see where if this is going. i don't know if it'sit because's we're feeling especially emotional or just tired or these past couple of weeks have. been too much. but thisis reminds remin me so f the first time we had . >> we were both terrified and the whole thing was kind of terrible because we didn't know
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what we were doing, but it was good to so good as a little kid, really. but the librarian didn't care. librarian asked if knox wanted to check out a graphic novel version of that book. >> some pictures do not sayhat o jack and his father, adam,ok joo us tonight. knox time. m thank you so much for coming on . >> let me just commend you on your bravery. knox, first to you. >> what did you think whenif yow the librarian asked you if youet wanted to sehae the picture tha version of that book? >>bo the only thing that went through my head was i was so uncomfortable and i was just like, so angry. i don't know. i didn't believe it was actually happening. >> yeah, little kids know when something's creepy. like you can feel immediately. adam parentsn , too. but so many of them are intimidated from saying anything because it's unfashionablated by e. you're supposed to just you. want to be the uncool parent. why did you decidedi to bringd o this to public attention?
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>>ing this it was something th to be done.e. i heard about another book tha tha was in the high school and i asked my son to get a hold of it and even think anything of so my middle school son andl when i got the one that was in the high school, i was was disturbing, to say the least. what i found in there and it's just really, really, really disappointing to find out how our education system is failing our kids. >> yeah.>> how how did your how didour your neighbors, the otherto parents in your town respondai when you raised a fuss?se over thid a s? , a lo you know, at first, a lot of people just didn't have an idea that it was going on in our communities. yeah, but now that they've actually seen it and seeing an eleven year old speak about that at the school boardrd meeti
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meeting has really set the stage and place this in the laps of all the parentsarens across the country. co it's it's really it's really amazing. the support that we've gotten through the community. and now, honestly, across the country, i get messages privately, still hundreds ofhuns them. the day just saying thank you a for speaking up. and , you know, they'rrie worril about the castle culture. they're getting canceled o cr they're getting, you know,nceleo disciplined by their bosses or and 're losing businessed bys as owners. and that's not worth it.ve they'r got te terrified to spea. yeah, they certainly are.. but you, too, aren't. app knd we appreciate your bravery. knox for eleven . you're just amazing, self-contained. >> it's so impressive. thank you both. of course. >> thank you, tucker. i really appreciate you havingas
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us . i do. >> so we talk a lot about climate, but how is the actual environment doing the soil and the air and the water?doin well, whales and dolphins arewil washing up dead indo the northeast. apparentlylphins as a wind farm construction. and now there is unfolding whatw maybe the biggest environmental disaster of all. it's called red tide. it's covering a hundred square r miles tonight in the gulf of mexico. the red tide the occurs when colonies of algae grow out of control. toxins in red tide kill fish in huge numbers. red tide also makes it hard fore people to breathe. but it's also true that red tide may cause als, lou gehrig's. so this is a huge problem that is widely ignored. for some reason, whileignored x is an ethnobotanist, he's the documentarian who did toxicn us puzzle, and we're happy to have him join us tonight. thank you so much.k you sofor for coming on . so you did this amazingng documentary, terrifying documentarcumentary on red tide >> and yet i think most peoplekt aren't aware of what a threat
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it is .. tell us , if you would, what red tide does to people potentially. yeah, thank you, mr. carlson.n >> there's been red tides along the west coast of florida for, oh, gosh, a century and a half. they're not unusual. neurot and they produce various neurotoxins that people detect by getting stinging in the eyes and sometimes respiratory distress . h. sometimes they poison shellfish. ha've looked at otheother typesf harmful, harmful algal blooms called cyanobacteria and found they have a toxin that not that causes a cancer, but also can cause als. and that's are something that we monitoring very closely with the outflow from lake okeechobee in florida.ee >> i mean, i don't think i think there's a consensus that als has got to bet the scariest or certainly one of the scariest diseases that people get . so anything that might cause it, it seemed, would sett off alarm bells and people would be completely freaked out aboute it. i don't get the senst the that the response to this is very
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urgent. well, fortunately, als is aent. very rare disease. but we found that a toxin called bma increased your risk of getting als. our colleagues, dr. kyrgystan tmall at dartmouth university neurology department, our colleagues in floridour a he found that if you're near these sign of bacterial blooms are clt your risk goes up. so this is completelyp, t avoidable. is compeople should just stay ay from the sign of bacterial tides if they havee asthma or serious neurological conditions. justserious stay indoors and stay away till it's clear .i and i think there's a realnsens strong consensus of scientists that this is a problem we can ll actually solve just by cleaning up the water a little bit. i think it'll reallye go along with cleaning up the water. it's just nice to hear somebody to say that out loud, because you really do at this point. foatr some reason.e weyo appreciatu e your coming o. dr. paul allen cox. you v thank yoeru. >> thank you very much. as so as we told you, a man called
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annotator, we've interviewed on this show probably the most popular person on the internet he hally has been rotting for months in a romanian prison. apparently despite being sick with what could be cancer, he has no nt been charged with a crime. >> what's going on ?whatg oh, you know what's going on ? we're going to talk to his attorney straight ahead. i'm dr. paul . i'm an optimistic physician. i do recommend balanced nature to my patients because it's almost a self-evident truth that if they eat a healthy diet that's rich in fruits and vegetables, they're going to give their bodies the rich source of biochemistry. they need to have their best chance of being healthy. i've been in the field of nutrition and dietetics for thirty years and when i looked at the ingredients of balance of nature, i could see that there were a number of things that were so important to help. so getting balance of nature in your diet or you're getting the right amount of fruits and vegetables that you need, think balance of nature is a great product. my name is dr. roger bond.
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i've been in practice thirty years now and i recommend the balance of nature to my patients and they'll tell me a balance of nature is making a difference. in their lives. take balance of nature because it really makes a difference. >> start your journey to better health by going to balance of nature. >> and don't forget to use discount code. fox news. >> hi, i'm greg. lori, you know, back in the late sixties, early 70s, it looked like america was unraveling and in many ways it was. and people were talking a lot about a revolution and a revolution came, but not the one we were expecting. it wasn't a political revolution. it was a revolution. in fact, time magazine described it that way. we need another spiritual awakening in america. another revolution. there's a film coming out to a theater near you on february twenty fourth called revolution. it's a story of how a generation was changed.
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it's a story of how an awakening turned america back to god. and it's my personal story of how i came into a relationship with god. and it tells you how you two can come into this relationship with the lord . so go see it in a theater near you. you can get your tickets now. the information's on the screen, tony, here from credit repair .com taken to the streets to talk about credit. what's a good credit score? go six hundred. maybe if you're trying to pay thousands extra and interest rates cut the confusion at credit repair .com don't want to take down gordon ramsay, of course. where are we going with gordon ramsay? does not do losing the next level. chef thursday on fox and watch any time on hulu. the face off for the crowd right here. this is the map where the conference is as well as time march eight eleven
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point concept. >> and this one who's got promoted as tv's most captivating new crime show. and now you can watch it any time the newest on new tuesdays on fox and watch any time on hulu when you can watch, listen, get the latest news business and news headlines on sirius xm any time anywhere. fox news audio on sirius xm america is listening covid bleak inside the potential origin of the virus. plus, an all be a
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defect of the immune system that affects millions. early testing can give children a chance to dream interstate became the single most popular person on the internet globally. by talking about masculinity. the personal responsibility men have, et cetera, et cetera. he also became really hated on the left. for some reason. back in december, romanian authorities threw tate and his brother in jail, where they remained despite tate's case being very sick, they still have not charged him with anything. tate is under investigation for human trafficking. joe biden state department may or may not have had a hand in this, but they're thrilled by it in any case. so what's going on ? and how long is this going to continue? >> isn't it a human rights violation? looks like one . >> tina ballandean is annotates lawyer.
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>> she's a partner of garagos and garagos. we've talked to her a few nights ago. here's what she said. what are the charges? >> how can he be in jail if he hasn't been charged for months? hi, tucker. thanks for having me. so in romania, the procedure is a little different than what we're used to here in the united states . there they have a procedure called preventative arrest, which is what they've essentially arrested the tape brothers and two women for, and they arrested them. and at the end of december and initially it was a twenty four hour arrest and then the prosecution made an application for a 30 day extension, which was granted. and last month they sought a further 30 day extension, which was granted most recently. that was extended again until the end of march. and they have up to one hundred eighty days in which they could extend this detention without formally charging them with any crimes. so it's an ongoing criminal investigation, but they are detained. they're rotting in a romanian jail. and we can only imagine what a romanian jail is like. this is clearly this is the definition of human rights
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violations, a media figure, and he's rotting in a jail without charges. have civilized western government said anything about this? unfortunately, 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 laws. it's the procedure is is proper kind of under their law. however, i think the way it's being applied in this case is completely a violation of international human rights law. and this investigation didn't start in december when they were arrested. this investigation actually started back in april when there were false accusations made. the police raided their residence and they realized that the accusations were false. they did not arrest anybody. they did not charge anybody. and at that point, actually , the brothers filed criminal complaints against the two women who had falsely accused them. and many people have not heard about those criminal complaints, but those are active and are open as another
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investigation in romania right now. i hope henceforth you use air quotes around the phrase romanian law. if you would, months in romanian jail. andrew tate was quite a spirited figure by some counts, the most popular person on the entire internet. as a result, obviously, the point is to break his spirit. have they done that? absolutely not. both brothers are of strong mind and strong spirit, and they are doing the best they can under the circumstances. i think they're holding up as well as anybody. hood, they're praying, they're meditating. they are receiving a lot of letters of support from family, friends and all of their other fans around the world. and that's keeping them busy. the only thing is they are extremely frustrated. obviously, they want to prove their innocence. they want to return home. they want to tell tell the world what is going on . but right now, unfortunately, because there is an ongoing criminal investigation, we aren't allowed to actually discuss all of the evidence
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that is very favorable, that shows that they didn't commit any crimes in this case. >> pretty obviously a setup. i mean, let's stop lying. these guys were super popular with the people in charge and now they're in a romanian jail, a , quote, romanian law, like obviously no, i think you said it yourself, tucker. i did. because, like, let's stop pretending. let's stop playing. that's exactly what this is . >> it's just a updo. sure. i was gonna say it's frustrating to be on the defense right now, unable to respond to all of the one sided leaks that have come out when we have exculpatory evidence. but we're not able at this point to discuss it. yeah. and to put it out for the world to see and for the brothers to start to get the truth out. and to clear their names. yeah, because we know for a fact they tried to set him up for sexual assault before a woman who was supposedly assaulting him and said, what? no, that's my boyfriend. right. so there's a lot of lying here, a lot. and everyone in our country seems to be believing it, but
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we don't. >> so appreciate the update, tina. thank you. of course, you may recall the documentary called supersized me. it was about eating mcdonald's full time and inspired one man in nashville, kevin mcginnis. he's hoping the mcdonald's diet will super down size his body. he's eating only mcdonald's for one hundred days to lose weight. >> and he reports back it's, quote, absolutely working. >> kevin mcginnis blogs about his diet. he's a brave man. he joins us now. kevin , thanks so much for coming on . so it's it's when i say i don't believe, by the way you look fit and vigorous, i will say in a non creepy way. but how are you keeping me? so how are you? how are you keeping fit on mcdonald's? >> what are you doing so literally the concept. i was a boxer. i wrestled in school and you have to cut you to cut to make weight. so cutting calories, cutting the food in half, if three meals a day by cutting in half and i seek the heat before i eat. meaning i wait until that heat
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in your stomach says you're hungry. everyone else calls a hunger. i call it my incinerator turning on to it, get rid of all the excess and also burn off some of the fat off my body and then i'll have that next meal. no meeting, no eating hours, no counting, no measuring. just cut the meals in half. eat three of them a day when you're hungry. and my belief is , will be fifty pounds down by the end of the hundred days. better bloodwork and better health. >> you don't believe me to follow along. let's find out. >> that's, that's just so, so really the essential ingredient is self-control. you're approaching mcdonald's in the way that i never have, which is with restraint. >> so like how do you handle how do you handle. yeah well so breakfast is go to the mcdonald's order any breakfast menu item. so order the meal, including dessert if going to have the pastry, whatever , but then cutting in half. and at first the first three or four days wrap up the other half, get it out of sight, out of mind. and just eat the half and then save the other half later. eat that for lunch or save for
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the next day's breakfast, whatever , and then just eat again each meal, only half of whatever that whole meal would be at mcdonald's, cut it in half, save the other half. after you've done it for about three or four days, your stomach will have shrunk a little bit and then you can just eat the half and you can wrap up the other half after you've eaten half of it. >> either way is fine. two questions. are you right? this will kill you is the obvious one . and second, how is mcdonald's leftovers taste the next day? >> so on the leftovers. i'll answer that one first. definitely putting a sandwich in the microwave with a little cup of water. so it actually steams it a little bit. really good for the sandwiches for me. i like the softer. you can put the whole thing in an air fryer for the fries and hash browns, either air fryer or driskill it, and it turns them right back to almost brand new again. so they're really good as far as is it going to kill me? did the blood work at the beginning? we'll do blood work throughout. my belief is that it's going to absolutely improve the blood work throughout the whole process because by waiting go ahead. >> no, that's it. >> you're a wrestler.
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obviously, you're an iron man, a brave man. >> to kevin mcginnis, thank you for joining us . we'll be right back . sunday, the telethon friends concert series don't dontae both must see perform your shadow sunday on fox and friends weekend presented by halloween, the number one program. >> hey, mom, if i could talk, what would i tell you? i'd say thanks for giving me khoza quinn all these years. keep them moving with consequent joint health supplements. the number one vet recommended retail brand. the crisis inside ukraine has reached a catastrophic level, with the elderly pushed to the with the elderly pushed to the very limit. >> go inside. she's freezing cold. there's no electricity, no heat. no water. no water. winter is now a weapon of war used against the elderly,
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colored pill of fentanyl other than to target young? he's the biden administration doing enough to protect us from china's deadliest exports. >> saturday on fox and friends weekend, we've been informed, unfortunately, have only 15 seconds left in the week to sayn goodbye. thanks for joining, paul . the >> five days of the best weekend with the ones you love. and we will on monday. wow wow, what a great audience. oh, happy friday, everybody. eve rymade it. u for being here. we love having you here. we are back with our liver listudio audience, by the way, coming up tonight right here int studio. congressma n jim jordan of ohio will be here. >> als

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