Skip to main content

tv   FOX and Friends Saturday  FOX News  March 4, 2023 5:00am-6:00am PST

5:00 am
vaccine or plan to. liver problems may occur in crohn's disease. ask your gastroenterologist how you can take control of your crohn's with skyrizi. ♪ ♪ control is everything to me. ♪ learn how abbvie could help you save. ♪ will: welcome to "fox and friends," the 8:00 hour from new york city, glad to have you with us. that was hotlanta as they call
5:01 am
it, sometimes, the locals. rachel: i have never been there. will: the only bad thing about it, home of cnn, the only downside. a nice place, when i was at fort benning, there were fun places. rachel: i know what you mean. it is so destructive. pete: today's is particular, we fight through it. it is particularly distracting. one of our producers is keyed into our ear as she talked to somebody else. it is a bit distracting as we hear that. rachel: confirmation they are
5:02 am
not listening to us. pete: i thought she was listening to was. i made a joke and there was some backlash. rachel: they mock us in the control room. pete: we are people in our ears focusing on you. glad to be here. rachel: good morning, everybody and national hug a veteran day. a g.i. . are you really a g.i. ? you were an officer. pete: g.i. is an overarching term for everyone. rachel: i thought that was the case. pete: it is usually the case. rachel: you are not a g.i. joe. taking my hug back. pete: the white house has no plans for president biden to visit east palestine, ohio, after he said he will go at
5:03 am
some point when questioned about the plans going forward. karine jean-pierre, the white house press secretary, was asked about the president's plans. >> you heard from the president yesterday, who said he is planning to go there at some point. what he is going to do, when that happens, coordinate with state and local officials to make that occur. he said sometime in the future i will probably go but i don't have anything to share. rachel: we had been carson on a while ago and i thought -- i miss having him here, he had such a good heart and the way he approached government was may be because he was a doctor, from that feeling of compassion and wanting to help people. what if people in government treated the people in east palestine as if they were our family members? the most common symptoms being reported by these people, they
5:04 am
are getting headaches, 74% are saying anxiety, coughing, fatigue. a lot of the symptoms you imagine you would get if you are exposed to dangerous chemicals. the federal government saying you are okay, get back to your house. will: that from the ohio department of health. the statement is sometime in the future, i will probably go, but i don't have any -- one of our other guests said if someone said that to you about anything in your life, you know they don't want to see you and don't care about seeing you. that has been and remains the disposition of this white house. at this point, what good does him going do? will: to communicate with east palestine, ohio, every blue-collar worker, i haven't forgotten. pete: he has artie told him he has forgotten.
5:05 am
now, they drag my carcass here and i have to say words someone else wrote for me. will: the result of that is they feel left behind. that is what senator jay d vance is saying. >> why hasn't the administration showed up until trump and other folks forced the administration to pay attention to this? you want the government to do its basic job. you want the epa and other folks be on the ground responding to the crisis in real time. that took longer than it should have. there's some progress being made. you want leaders to show up and let people know that they care. that is one way the biden administration has been a catastrophic failure. rachel: this whole presidency was sold on this idea that he was somebody who had compassion and could connect with people because he had lost a son in a tragic way, he really cared,
5:06 am
but if you look, this is the only incident where he showed a callousness. remember when 13 heroes came back from afghanistan, many of the parents of those young soldiers said he was looking at his watch. he kept talking about his own son instead of their son or daughter. he missed a lot of opportunities and showed a callousness. this is the latest example. pete: global citizens are utterly terrible citizens of their own countries and cities because they love the ideas and principles of how much to love each other across borders and the dirty, difficult work of what happens in a neighborhood or school, that is messy and stuff, we are at a higher level of this. this is actual toxins, actual pollutants into the water and
5:07 am
soil of a town in america. they are saying i can smell it. i vomit. i have headaches. you are not feeling anything you are feeling inside your body. it is an absolute rejection of common sense, of health and the environment. rachel: he was in ukraine. he loves these global meetings where he can feel like he is the global leader who is helping ukraine. so much compassion for the people of ukraine. i remember mother teresa to one of her best quotes, she has million if you ever meet them, says charity begins at home. charity begins at home. i would say that to the president as he thinks more about ukraine than he does his own people. will: is a reversal of virtue, reversal of priorities. concentric circles out from
5:08 am
your faith, family, neighborhood, city, state, nation, internationally. too many project their virtue far from home while ignoring what is happening with their neighbor. the administration said they would bring the adults back in charge and therefore you would assume defined by competency. not just east palestine, peter buttigieg, whose competency has been called into question. we had several over the last couple months, near air collisions in the air of commercial airlines. this is the latest comes from boston. we had two commercial airliners, one taxiing and one landing. it happened in austin a few weeks ago, one was taking off, another landing at the same time. amidst that danger, philip
5:09 am
washington took questions on capitol hill. watch. >> can you quickly tell me what airspace requires an a dsp transponder. >> not sure i can answer that question. >> what are the 6 types of airspace that protect national security? >> sorry, i cannot answer the question. >> what are the operations for a pilot flying under basic med? >> thank you for the question. i am not a pilot. >> telling what causes an aircraft to spin or stall? >> again, i am not a pilot. >> if you tell me what the minimum separation distance is for landing and departing airliners during the daytime? >> i don't want to guess on that, senator. rachel: have they always been pilots at the faa? pete: probably not but when you
5:10 am
have problems with aviation, more complicated systems than we ever had but a lot are antiquated at this point. you would want the federal aviation administration to be run by someone who knows a little bit about aviation. it sounds simple, but true. he has been a command sergeant major who ran the denver airport, you might just stumble into some of this knowledge. now he's nominated by pete buttigieg. will: it is hard to feel that way when we prioritize as you pointed out something above merit. whatever it may be. at every level, not just governmental, corporate, always this push for something other than merit to decide who gets the job. pete: it is the first of this in the first of that. philip washington may be qualified, has nothing to do
5:11 am
with his race. all it has to do at all, whoever is at that day is should be able to answer these questions if you want competency and merit in every decision. will: down to the guy flying the plane. rachel: you see put pete buttigieg in charge of the transportation department. one of the first -- he being gay and all, that was why he was picked because clearly it is not that he was the most qualified person. will: he might be the least qualified. can't fix potholes in his own hometown and became the transportation secretary. no other credentials. rachel: he has seen nothing but supply chain issues to the train derailment, all the way around and his response to the crisis, he has been absent.
5:12 am
the problem is i am afraid it will take an act before this country starts to rethink this whole equity over excellence path that we are on. pete: he speaks a bunch of languages, he could be the head of the library of congress. rachel: i don't want him in charge of any libraries, we have enough problems with school libraries. at least lives won't be lost in that. maybe minds and souls but not lives and this is what we will be facing soon. pete: we are as frustrated as you are. moving on to a few additional things starting with this. convicted murderer alex murdagh is at a maximum security evaluation center serving two life sentences for killing his wife. will: this kicks off the downfall of us after line of family dynasty. rachel: anita vogel has the details.
5:13 am
>> reporter: a harsh new reality for the once legal giants now known as a convicted killer. 54-year-old alex murdagh was in a mug shot with shaved head and yellow prison jumpsuit after he was booked into a temporary evaluation center where he will face a number of medical and mental health tests. on thursday he was convicted of killing his wife, maggie, and his son, paul, prosecutors said he killed them to gain sympathy and to bide time before facing investigations into his growing financial problems. judge clifton newman had this exchange with murdagh during his sentencing. >> i would never under any circumstances hurt my wife maggie and never under any circumstances hurt my son paul. >> might have been the monster you've become, you take 15, 20,
5:14 am
30, 60 opioid pills, to see paul and maggie in the nighttime and attempting to go to sleep. rachel: defense lawyers plan to launch an appealing just ten days. also speaking out, father of 19-year-old mallory beach, who was killed in the 2019 boat crash caused by paul murdagh who was drunk at the time of the accident. >> it has been a long four years. it is an outcome. >> reporter: when alex murdagh completed evaluation he will be sent to a maximum security prison to serve out his double life sentence. back to you. pete: a fox news alert, an elderly deli worker shot and killed in new york's upper east side late last night in an apparent robbery. police say the shooting took place at this gourmet deli. the 67-year-old employee was declared dead at the scene.
5:15 am
the suspect wore a hazmat suit and the mask and sped off on a scooter. now to a fox weather alert, powerful storm sweep across the south, killing at least ten people including three in alabama. four debt in kentucky, several tornadoes touched down. in the midwest, the upper midwest, snowfall in indiana creating dangerous conditions on the road. serious situation in southern california, communities in san bernardino buried. members of the national guard helping shovel residents out of their homes. boston police are using artificial intelligence to answer nonemergency calls as they face staffing shortages in a budget crisis. when someone calls 311, ai software will ask -- questions and fill out a report. this is being used to document crimes like minor assaults, fraud, and identity theft. 300 openings, the cops are like we are done here.
5:16 am
today is national marching band day, "fox and friends" loves marching bands but the weather did not cooperate with us today. here's a look at our favorite marching band moments on the show. ♪ >> that is how you make it in. ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪
5:17 am
rachel: i love that. your girlfriend, paula deen, did such a good job dancing. we love a marching band and i love the dancers. i like a marching band with those sassy dancers. pete: there was a debate four years ago where "fox and friends" was in the center of the hotel and brought a marching band into the center and sean hannity came out of his room and right across the hall and "fox and friends" broke them up. will: the rest of the network roll their eyes at us. pete: marching band again? will: must be "fox and friends". before they say that about everything. barbecues, winged eating
5:18 am
contests, we do it all. we hope you enjoyed. coming up, as fentanyl poisoning skyrockets, we are doing a deep dive into the deadly drug. what is fentanyl and how did it become so dangerous? we go off the wall to find out. rachel: time to get to the bottom of covid's origins, but president biden has a delay. will: i am debating which fox host should host "fox and friends". senator mike braun is coming up next. ♪ ♪
5:19 am
born in 1847, formally enslaved, started buying land, was in the house of representatives. finding out this family history, these things become anchors for your soul. ♪ ♪ ♪ voltaren. the joy of movement. ♪
5:20 am
millions have made the switch from the big three to the best kept secret in wireless: xfinity mobile.
5:21 am
that means millions are saving hundreds a year with the fastest mobile service. and now, get the best price for two lines of unlimited. just $30 per line. there are millions of happy campers out there. and this is the perfect time to join them... right now, switch to xfinity mobile and save up to $800 on the new samsung galaxy s23 series. to learn more, visit your local xfinity store today. in order for small businesses to thrive, they need to be smart... efficient... agile... and that's never been more important than it is right now. so for a limited time, comcast business is introducing small business savings. call now to get powerful internet for just $39 a month, with no contract, and a money back guarantee. all on the largest, fastest, reliable network. from the company that powers more businesses than anyone else. call and start saving today. comcast business. powering possibilities.
5:22 am
>> president biden walking away from reporters asking questions on covid's origin. will: a bill requiring intelligence on the wuhan lab leak passed unanimously in the senate. the house expected to follow suit.
5:23 am
senator, great to see you after all these years. what happens at the white house, will president biden sign a bill and petition the house, to reveal covid's origins. >> an interesting back story, we did this, past it through the senate in 21 when it really would have had relevance. it was guaranteed that it would never make it to biden's desk because nancy pelosi was running the show. every democratic senator was on it then. it was never going to get anywhere. since they were on it, they almost had to be on it again. the difference is we have a different sheriff in town over at the house. will happen next week, it looks like, finally we will get to the bottom of what is there in our own coffers, hidden in
5:24 am
classified information, should have been released a couple years ago, that would be a very tough veto, when every democratic senator is on it or it will be interesting to see what the democrats in the house to because it will come to his desk. before the politics on this is fascinating. a lot of americans, happy for this bill, that it it is coming forward and will force the president's hand, probably need the bill to know it came from the wuhan lab. what will the consequences of what we expect to find, proves that our government knew way back when you were talking into thousand 20 that this came from the lab, what are the consequences politically and otherwise, in terms of policy with china. >> and look at the political
5:25 am
enterprising, somebody like doctor fauci is on, all hands on these discussions. all of that comes to light and it will protect all the methods and sources as well. you can't have an argument that this is going to imperil national security which that will be thrown out there. we may finally find out what was behind it. china will probably have to open up something that indicates what was there but interesting to see who of our own officials were part of the wuhan lab nexus who might have been involved in trying to keep this under the table. so much could happen here. it will put them in a real political vice, the president, if he would choose to veto it. then you will see all hell break loose on what is going on. pete: let's say it is released and we do find out it was known
5:26 am
it was a lab leak that was suppressed? what should happen to china? >> not only what happens to china but also many of our officials involved with it. verify what we learned in many other arenas, china is not a handshake business partner on anything. if this came out of that lab and they tried to suffocate it not to get to the bottom of it, that's the crowning blow of what could have been a competitive relationship as biden likes to phrase it. it is a geopolitical issue that has grave consequences. we will see what is there. rachel: it was pretty obvious from the get go, others have a lot to account for. maybe we will put a end to this
5:27 am
legacy of fauci. thank you for pushing this forward, transparency, so much was lost. pete: teachers, parents in st. paul, minnesota, ripping the city school district for failing to handle violence in schools. a reverend from the community speaks out. >> our students were physically assaulted over and over again. >> i witnessed middle school students bring weapons to school. >> my daughter's - daughter witnessed her mentor shoot someone in the head. ave never been more active. shingles doesn't care. i go to spin classes with my coworkers. good for you, shingles doesn't care. because no matter how healthy you feel, your risk of shingles sharply increases after age 50. but shingrix protects. proven over 90% effective, shingrix is a vaccine used to prevent shingles in adults 50 years and older.
5:28 am
shingrix does not protect everyone and is not for those with severe allergic reactions to its ingredients or to a previous dose. an increased risk of guillain-barré syndrome was observed after getting shingrix. fainting can also happen. the most common side effects are pain, redness, and swelling at the injection site, muscle pain, tiredness, headache, shivering, fever, and upset stomach. shingles doesn't care but, shingrix protects. shingrix is now zero dollars for almost everyone. ask your doctor about shingrix today.
5:29 am
i was always the competitive one in our family... 'til my sister signed up for united healthcare medicare advantage. ♪wow, uh-huh♪ now she's got a whole team to help her get the most out of her plan. ♪wow, uh-huh♪ with coverage that's better than ever for dental... ...vision... ...prescription drugs and more. advantage: me! can't wait 'til i turn 65! aarp medicare advantage plans, only from unitedhealthcare.
5:30 am
take advantage now at uhc.com/medicare hi, i'm lauren, i lost 67 pounds in 12 months on golo. golo and the release has been phenomenal in my life. it's all natural. it's not something that gives you the jitters. it makes you go through your days with energy, and you're not tired anymore, and your anxiety, everything is gone. it's definitely worth trying.
5:31 am
it is an amazing product. pete: teachers and parents in st. paul, minnesota, slamming the school district for their handling of rising violence in school, watch. >> we reached out numerous times to ask for help.
5:32 am
this board has been negligent in response to the request. our staff and students have been physically assaulted over and over again. i have witnessed middle school students bring weapons to school, make threats about shooting up the building. >> my son witnessed, and my daughter, witnessed their mentor shoot a young man in the head. >> need to put school resource officers back in play. pete: here is reverend darrell spence. you heard the last soundbite. some of these schools temporarily brought school resource officers back to school. why is this violence happening? is it tied to the fact that there aren't police in school? >> most of it is happening because of gang violence, a continued circle. i am a strong supporter of bringing sros back into the building. i was there in the immediate
5:33 am
aftermath, solve the chaos caused by lack of connection between the school and the police department, the police department had no idea of the lie of the school, the best route out, how to best get kids back to their parents, and and not to have sros in the building. and which you are at. and they have 0 students. how can you learn math when worried about your own personal safety. >> i was in that and it was amazing how many teachers, educators begged for help.
5:34 am
they literally were baking for help. i raised the question how are the children? there was quick bickering at the top and started looking for our children. our children are dying. we are losing children at an alarming weight. we have to do something different. we can't keep being politics as usual. pete: are teachers able to enforce discipline and you schools? a resource officer can't do everything. >> in their words, they can't. i heard it over and over. we have to be honest, this has to start at home. kids have to come to school ready to learn. in the building at harding, all he sees is kids walking the
5:35 am
hall, has the ability to say please go to class but if he turns the corner, he'd comes to the building but they don't go to the classroom. pete: it starts in the home. that breaks down you can't expect anything else to fill in the gaps. at the forefront of trying to fix this, thanks. as fentanyl rantz ask the country, will and i go off the wall on the deadly drug. what is it, how can we combat the crisis? we will try to find some answers. a serious situation in southern california, communities in san bernardino are buried and need help. alify for a payroll tax refund of up to $26,000 per employee. all it takes is eight minutes to get started. then work with professionals to assist your business with its forms and submit the application. go to getrefunds.com to learn more.
5:36 am
(vo) if you've had thyroid eye disease for years and itchy eyes have you itching for a fight, it's not too late for another treatment option. to learn more visit treatted.com. that's treatt-e-d.com.
5:37 am
[music “this little light of mine”] in the world's poorest places, children with cleft conditions live in darkness and shame. they're shunned, outcast, living in pain. you can reach out and change the life of a suffering child right now.
5:38 am
a surgery that take as little as forty five minutes and your act of love can change a child's life forever. please call, scan or go online to give a new smile. thousands of children are waiting. 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.
5:39 am
i want to trust him as my savior and follow him as my lord. 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. rachel: fox weather other, powerful storms hammering the south, killing ten people in several states. in the san bernardino mountains the national guard is working to dig out homes where people have been stranded for days. let's turn to rick reichmuth for the forecast. >> is amazing to see that much snow in southern california with more snow coming this weekend, not to southern california, back into the sierra nevadas. with these storms across the central plains towards the ohio
5:40 am
river valley, winds up to 98 miles an hour, all these areas still without power. 400,000 households in kentucky without power as you are waking up. weatherwise, the tail end of that front, it dies down a little bit. not a major cooldown. we remain with these warm temperatures for the most part. it brings significant snow across northern new england, spots by the end of this, one to 2 feet of snow, we've not had much snow across parts of new england, we are going to get a little more here. that's good news. then we turn our sites to parts of the west. winter storm warning is in effect across sierra nevada. 3 to 4 feet of snow again for the next storm here, snowy season continues.
5:41 am
pete, over to you. pete: we will take it. as fentanyl poisonings skyrocket across america, many people, especially children, are becoming victims. will: what exactly is fentanyl? how did it become so dangerous and how do we combat this crisis? let's find out. it is a drug that everybody has become familiar but do we know what this drug is, what it does? fentanyl is a thin that it -- a synthetic opioid with a power up to 100 times more dangerous than morphine, 50 times more dangerous than heroin. pete: as they are introduced on the market they become more prominent, you see how it ruins people's lives.
5:42 am
morphine use on the battlefield to get people immediate relief, something like, gives you a sense why such a tiny amount of fentanyl is so potent and that is why is problematic. will: symptoms of fentanyl ingestion are like symptoms of any opioid, drowsiness, confusion, constipation, unconsciousness but the difference with fentanyl is the amount that it takes to begin to feel the lethal effects. pete: placing a little bit into existing drugs is how they try to enhance the feeling from that drug, it quickly goes to unconsciousness, too much oxygen goes to the brain and you get a lethal dose. how much does it cost? that is the problem also, next to nothing, $2 for a single dose of fentanyl, single dose, or 2 or 3 which could kill you. will: if it is so dangerous, wise on the market? it was developed with medicinal purposes like most recreational drugs.
5:43 am
in the 1950s by doctor paul janssen, it was used internationally in the surgeries. really controlled early on in the united states. pete: there was a lot of resistance from the federal drug administration in the united states because it was so potent. for years it was not allowed in the united states. it was used in europe but made its way in to the illegal drug market and eventually allowed to be legal aspect of medicine here when it was added to other things that made it safer. will: in 2,000, the opioid crisis begins, people becoming addicted to opioids, pills pushed by doctors and pharmaceuticals across the country. pete: i recently had minor surgery, and i got a little bit of fentanyl. it is something that they have used. it has gone sideways. will: it becomes part of the illicit drug market as a cheap alternative to the opioid crisis. look at this. this is the global trade in fentanyl.
5:44 am
the precursors, the chemicals needed to make fentanyl come from two places, china, and india. but 70% of the chemicals needed to make fentanyl come from china. pete: in 2019 china attempted to crack down on distribution of fentanyl. a lot of those facilities moved to india. india is an outsource, the main place for all that comes from and when it comes to us, if it is not coming here directly. will: it is the pill presses, you got to turn them into pills. wears that done? along with chemicals, they shipped the pill presses to mexico, there, it is made into the pills that are killing every buddy and smuggled across the border. pete: we know now there is direct cooperation between the chinese manufacturers and the cartels. we are happy to move those into the us. will: the number of deaths in the united states from fentanyl
5:45 am
poisoning. you look at 9000 people die from fentanyl. that is over 6 year timeframe to 2021, begins to double. pete: as production capacity ramps up, cartels gain control of the border, 70,000601 opioid deaths. will: i believe the latest, we are getting up -- which means -- pete: what was 10, 30, 50, 70, 100 really quickly and away they didn't happen. will: talking about smuggling, this is 2022 figures, fentanyl seizures, 50 million pills and that's how much powder 10,000 pounds, that is what we have caught by the way.
5:46 am
pete: those 10,000 pounds of fentanyl powder have the ability to kill 2.2 billion people. will: let's end on a solution, what can be done to control the crisis. the first thing you can do is choke the supply. either in china, forced the chinese communist party, nothing happens there, to constrict the supply going to mexico. shut down the southern border, keep this from coming across. pete: increase public awareness on this. most people who overdose and die on fentanyl didn't do so intentionally, and had no idea fentanyl was laced into an existing drug, shouldn't be taking anything not prescribed but more so just say no to anything. will: i have a teenager now. it used to be don't drink and drive, you still say that, don't take any pill, no pills whatsoever. pete: it could be something else.
5:47 am
will: limit prescript and opioids in general which is an epidemic on its own. pete: we have an upper limit of addiction generally and take something you bought online that you think you are addicted to and it is something else. the unfortunate reality of fentanyl in america today. will: over to you. rachel: it is moneymaking for the cartels, but the chinese have other intentions, their involvement in this. thanks for putting that up on the wall, thank you. now to a fox news alert. indiana state police morning the loss of a trooper killed during a chase. james daily was struck by our driver on the interstate after throwing stop sticks. the suspect is charged in connection with bailey after death. the 15 year police veteran of the force is survived by his wife and his two children. how heartbreaking is that? robert f kennedy junior could
5:48 am
challenge president biden for the 2024 democratic nomination. yesterday the environmental lawyer and covid vaccine critic told a crowd in new hampshire, quote, i am thinking about it. i have passed the biggest hurdle, that is that my wife has greenlighted it. he will have some company if he decides to run. longshot candidate marianne williamson will make her white house beneficial and be the first democrat in the race. rfk could really shake things up. those are your headlines. one medical organization is removed from upcoming conference that they have been attending for 15 years. they are pro-life. their ceo -- up next.
5:49 am
5:50 am
5:51 am
5:52 am
>> meta-professionals were banned after 15 years of attendance for being pro-life. republicans are boycotting those in charge, even if it means taking the american college of ob/gyns for refusing meetings, american association of pro-life obstetrician and
5:53 am
gynecologist, doctor first - doctor christina francis joins us now. great to have you on today. you've been tabling for 15 years for your pro-life group. why are you being banned now? tell us about the circumstances of how you got banned. you only found out after you got there. >> thank you for having me on. you said i with the pro-life association, we are professional medical organization that represents thousands of pro-life medical professionals from across the country. we started as a special interest group and have been exhibiting an important conference for medical educators. we reserved our exhibit booth, and after having traveled to maryland where the conference is held, we found out a few days before it started that our booth had been canceled.
5:54 am
we found out through third-party vendor that our booth fee would be refunded and the only explanation we were given is we disagreed with acad but a reporter got them on the record saying the reason we were excluded from this conference was specifically because we are pro-life. rachel: there statement reads acog welcomes exhibitors who shares to our commitment of evidence-based scientific information. we continue to remain steadfast in our advocacy on evidence-based policy priorities focused on saving and improving the lives of patients across the country. i could tear apart that statement and so many directions but what say you? >> absolutely. first of all it is interesting the theme of their conference was building bridges but they have no desire to build bridges with anyone who disagrees even
5:55 am
a little bit with them. everything we present, defense of life, both our maternal patients as well as our fetal patients is all evidence-based, we don't say anything that isn't based in medical evidence and scientific evidence, they have no desire to see what we were going to present. is disappointing considering we know scientific advancement is made through the free exchange of ideas and respectful and scholarly debate. we were asking was the attendees of this conference, medical trainees and those educating them be allowed to be exposed to both sides of this issue which is not a settled issue in the practice of medicine. the science is clear when life begins but the impact abortion has on women is not settled among the medical community and there's a large portion of ob/gyns including those who do
5:56 am
not agree with their radical position on abortion which is abortion should be allowed throughout pregnancy with no restrictions or safeguards. actively excluding a large portion of their members who might disagree a little bit on this, this is concerning to us. that's why i asked the ceo to be willing to meet with me. i will meet her anywhere. hyperspectral discussion about the medical evidence on this issue. rachel: more "fox and friends" next. migraine hits hard... ...so u hit back with ubrelvy. u put it all on the line. one dose of ubrelvy quickly stops migraine in its tracks within 2 hours. do not take with strong cyp3a4 inhibitors. most common side effects were nausea and tiredness. ask about ubrelvy, the anytime, anywhere migraine medicine. second date, wish me luck buddy.
5:57 am
mouth to mission control. we have a denture problem. over. roger that. with polident cleanser and polident adhesive refresh and secure for any close encounter. if your mouth could talk it would ask for polident and poligrip.
5:58 am
5:59 am
6:00 am
♪ ♪ everybody's working for the weekend ♪ rachel: good morning, everybody. s the 9:00 -- it is 9:00 here in new york, and everybody's working for the weekend except we work on the weekends. pete: yep. this is our theme song, if we had one, right here. rachel: a beautifu

108 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on