tv Outnumbered FOX News March 6, 2023 9:00am-10:00am PST
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with low-cost options to help maximize savings. from the plains to the coasts, we help americans invest for their future. and help communities thrive. ♪ ♪ >> emily: hello, everyone. this is "outnumbered." i'm emily compagno, here is my cohosts, harris faulkner and kayleigh mcenany. joining us today, "the federalist" editor in chief, mollie hemingway, and cohost of "the bottom line" on fox business, former wisconsin congressman sean duffy. we begin with police coming under attack again in atlanta. rioters wanting an all-out assault on a $90 million police
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training facility they call cop city. according to police, a group of "violent agitators" were operating under the cover of a police will protest in the forested area around the site. they showed up, changed into black clothing, and broke into the construction area, throwing rocks, bricks, molotov cocktails, watching fireworks, and setting fire to the construction vehicles. police say the group launched a "coordinated attack," torching that equipment and even burning down a surveillance tower. but the protesters are telling a different story. they accuse the police of lashing out at attendees at a nearby music festival organized by that same group. at least 35 people were arrested. police say many of them are from out of town and are calling the attack and active anarchy. >> you attack law enforcement officers, you damage equipment, you are breaking the law. this was a very violent attack. this wasn't about a public safety training center, it was
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about anarchy in the attempt to destabilize. >> emily: kayleigh, he's absolutely right. it's about a violent attack and an attempt to destabilize, and it's about anarchy. >> kayleigh: has come and i'd rather hear that from mayor andre dickens then from te police. from what i have come to my count, i have seen, to the credit of atlanta, the statement from the city encouraging to remain peaceful. the mayor of portland, remember, when the same thing was happening at that courthouse, the mayor called the police come with her and paramilitary forces. but come out unequivocally and say this is unacceptable. not on my watch, not in my city, because it matters more than just a statement. you can go ahead and do this,
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have carte blanche, because your member the portland rioter case? 47 of the cases were dropped by biden's doj. what signal does that send? >> emily: she makes such a great point. in those riots, i was in a law firm in a high-rise next to the courthouse and i thought it was a very small group, a very small group that was very violent, that the police force was essentially trying to corral protecting the citizens. so exactly to your point, it's often a small group that are extremely violent that then, without the calls from the centrists, from the mayor, from the president, to say that violence is unacceptable, we unequivocally do not condone this, without that, this small group gets to be louder and louder to the risk of those public safety officers and police officers' lives. >> harris: i'm not as optimistic about the mayor and others speaking up. it isn't just them saying we don't condone this, it's actually changing their rhetoric
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that is anti-police. it's actually putting some dollars behind the efforts here. so if this is a compound that police say they need, it ought to be replaced immediately. you know they have the money. and if they don't have the money, they ought to raise the money to do it, because it needs to be a strong signal now that authority is authority and crime breakers are the other thing. we all have to agree on what that's going to look like, otherwise we know what happens. cops leave. it isn't always that they wait for you to ask them to go. the best of them will leave. and if that happens, it takes a long time to get them back in the roles they use to fill. all that experience. so these cities start to look like the number one major city in america, new orleans. these cities start to look like chicago. at eric adams in new york is starting to wake up. i don't know if it's politics or wet, but when you're saying the right thing, hopefully he will do the right thing, too.
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>> emily: to harris' point about the optimism, this is a growing fire. we have seen this over the months, the demonstration grow increasingly more violent, specifically there in atlanta. multiple people were arrested in january, and note that the majority of them, all of them went from there. i have a list of those who are arrested. a ton of people from pennsylvania, ohio, new york, maine, weighing in on what they say is still in territory. weighing in on anti-police rhetoric. there is smiling faces on the screen, and interestingly they for some reason have a stake in atlanta where their actions are disproportionately affecting those who actually live and pay taxes in atlanta, including and especially those in those underserved communities. >> sean: which goes to spekayleigh's point. if you have a paramilitary force where you attack cops, we are going to arrest all of you and your all going to go to prison
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for a very long time. but there is no prosecution of these people, so what i'm fascinated by, this is a cop training center. i thought they want to trained cops on the streaks of people don't get hurt. i would think the left to rally around the idea to make sure we have well-trained police officers who don't have choke holds that kill people, didn't shoot people who may not be armed. i want will train police. but i think what antifa wants is they don't want cops on the street, because then they'll be on the street and the power shifts to them. they are the ones who will control the streets and be the gang members that have all the power on the streets of america, and watch out for the rest of the law-abiding citizens. because we'll be subjected to their lawless rule. >> emily: it really muddies the water, mollie. to shawn's point, a peaceful protester exercising their first amendment right it sometimes next to an agitator where you don't know what that motive is. in that motive might simply be to foment anarchy, to foment destruction and violence, who
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knows what. so they are including the articulation, the environment of protection, taking back native land and the like. we all remember the eco-terrorism spat in the '80s and the '70s which led to deaths. these are dangerous tactics they are engaging in where, thank god, thus far no police officer was killed, but those fireworks came dangerously close to their unhelmeted heads as we watched on television. >> mollie: there have been shootings in atlanta and other places, as well. in the whole operation where you have a peaceful protest and radical left-wing antifa types or other radical left-wing groups, that's something they've written about. they say it's a good idea to get masses of people to come out to provide cover, then to have people who intentionally want to exploit that situation. but it's all part of an operation and it's not just happening in atlanta. it's been happening for months in cities all over the place. you might remember the keystone pipeline which involved some radical activism. the portland situation, where a
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federal courthouse was under siege for months. and, yes, the trump white house tried to do something about it, but you recall, the portland mayor and the governor of oregon, they thought it vociferously. the left tolerates political violence and terrorism that supports their larger aims. that's why it's also a story about merrick garland. he said last week that he went after pro-lifers to a peaceful but not people fire bombing pro-life pregnancy centers or christian churches, because those happened at night. i guess the fbi is unable to do things at night. >> harris: good to know. >> mollie: he have helicopters and every gun aimed at these people. but because it's the left and he supports their political goals, he doesn't even seem to have anything to say about it. >> kayleigh: 34 individuals peacefully at pro-life centers have been prosecuted and targeted by this administration. in fact, some in the middle of the night, and you compare that, two individuals have been
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prosecuted for attacking catholic churches even though there's more than 100. and the radical traditional catholics, we will go after them, as well. all you want. >> emily: and the refusal of merrick garland to acknowledge the coronation behind all of those. have they even acknowledged antifa yet? i don't know. but they have been vociferous against the catholics and those damaging so much of our protection and security, like parents daring to weigh in. unfortunately this is yet again widens america, and merrick garland's department of justice. california's governor is slammed for leaving the state for a personal trip to baja. while snowed in californians are still desperately waiting for. rescue. we all need cash in the bank to stay ahead. well here's great news for veterans who own a home. home values have climbed to near all-time highs, too. that means the cash you need is right there in your home. newday can unlock it with the newday 100 va cash out loan.
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a series of devastating storms, which have hit the united states, now has risen to 13. in southern california, a powerful blizzard has left people in the mountains trapped under 17 feet of snow. they been there for days, and if you kind of zoom in here, you will see a "help" sign. they need help. they are stranded. they don't have food, they can't dig themselves out. 17 feet. and some people who live there are so desperate, they resorted to signs like this, many californians are waiting for help if they can. governor newsom decided to leave the state for personal travel just days after declaring a state of emergency. so he wasn't anywhere near this, obviously, if he could leave on any sort of transportation, sean. >> sean: we were talking before we came to this topic, that the criticism that ted cruz got when he traveled --
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>> harris: we are talking to toto mike during the commercial. >> sean: all the liberal networks covered it, but gavin newsom leaves in this crisis, he flies off to baja, california. do i really care that he's not there? you have homelessness, drugs, crime, power outages. he's on the climate crusade, taxes are going up, people are fleeing. is gavin newsom really going to do anything to help the people there? you should probably show up. i don't think he will help a dying soul in california. >> harris: but it is bully pulpit. it helps to show up. it really does. pete buttigieg is probably learning the hard way with the second derailment. >> mollie: i think the governor really does have a role to play in cases of national disasters like this. you compare it with ron desantis in florida when the hurricanes hit, he took an active role. or the surfside strategy, he took an active role making sure all resources were where they needed to be. unlike the center of texas, the
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governor of california really does have a role to play in making sure all the state resources are where they need to be, and it's actually kind of shocking that he would think this was a good time to leave. anybody in leadership in california should not be. >> sean: bakery, governors do matter, but not governor newsom. i don't think it matters in california. that was my point. >> harris: all those other catastrophes -- and let's not get it twisted, they have been catastrophes. the grid problems they've had out there are such that you couldn't even plug in your electrical cars, last summer. nobody was talking about what it was like to live in those homes. i talked about this last hour, i have a friend with a newborn baby with this last round of storms who had to move into hotels, and that hotel was the last one on the block with a generator. it's a nightmare out there, because you need fossil fuel and coal for those grids. emily, you brought up a point. we may not exactly know where gavin newsom went, but we know this, it was not california. >> emily: exactly.
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no one more than gavin newsom understands that mantra made famous by chicago mayor rahm emanuel, that you never let a good crisis go to waste. i remember him traipsing through the horrible burned out forests of northern california, decrying the climate crisis, calling for federal aid. he interestingly has taken out billboards in states all over the country decrying their policies and wading into it. so now, when there are millions of californians in peril, when the death toll will likely rise because thus far the snowdrifts are covering up to the second-story window in many places, as the crew goes door to door searching and checking in on people, they will likely find more that have passed away. that's devastating. it's important for transparency for him to explain. if he said this a family tragedy, some is in the hospital, i'll be back in 12 hours, we've got it. but just personal time, at this inopportune time. remember, think saving 2021, he
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was enjoying cabo with a russin oligarch, and he's no stranger to taking advantage of these crises. a leader is needed, and i don't see one anytime soon in the state of california. >> harris: in the picture that ran from california all around the world was him going to that two star michelin restaurant. >> emily: french laundry. bon appetit, kevin! >> harris: i want to get into the politics of president biden, though. you might see him show up. remember him at the fema agency, when he had problems at the lectern. he did show up. it was a hard speech to give for him. he had some problems at the teleprompter. in all fairness, he did show up. he is now doing less of that pete pete buttigieg finally goes to east palestine, ohio, a month then and another train derailment. sherrod brown, democratic senator in that state, also took some personal time last week to go to hollywood.
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>> kayleigh: joe biden had a choice and he chose to make pete buttigieg the fall guy. he said, let this guy get out there. >> harris: and gavin newsom, people he might face! ah, interesting. >> kayleigh: had a choice. follow the joe biden model, show no empathy, don't go to east palestine, or follow the cabo model, which you hinted at, mollie. six sanibel causeway in record time. he chose to go the route of joe biden. ironically, he took personal time and the florida governor is in his home state while he's on personal time. so he's in california during the crisis while the california governor is m.i.a. quinnipiac, 76% of people told quinnipiac that de blasio shouldn't run for president. and they said gavin newsom should not run. when your own constituents don't want you anywhere near elevated office, that says something. >> harris: of the many to so who do theylike?
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>> kayleigh: he's now the fall guy, so who are the left of? >> emily: and they share a love of the same donor base. the big families in california, the two of them are seen as the same entry and class. so maybe they are both in the hashtag, #anyonebutthem. >> harris: maybe they can get a tandem bike and background to save energy. new york city mayor eric adams is defending his views on faith, next. >> don't tell me about no separation between church and state. state is the body, church is the heart. you take the heart out of the body, the body dies. [applause] i can't separate my belief because i am an elected official. he series... let me tell you about the greatest roster ever assembled. the monster, the outlaw... and you can't forget about the boss. sometimes- you just want to eat your heroes. the subway series. the greatest menu of all time. age is just a number, and mine's unlisted.
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♪ ♪ ♪ bring me a higher love ♪ >> kayleigh: welcome back. new york city mayor eric adams has come under attack in the media about saying this about his faith at an event last week. >> and we took prayer out of schools, guns came into schools. we need to build children better for our world. we need to be honest about that. and it means instilling in them some level of faith and belief. don't tell me about no separation of church and state. state is the body, church is the
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heart. you take the heart out of the body, the body dies. [applause] i can't separate my belief because i am an elected off official. when i walk, i walk with god. when i talk, i talk with god. when i put policies in place, i put them in with a godlike approach to them. >> kayleigh: powerful words, but apparently those comments didn't sit well with everyone, especially those on the left. yesterday the mayor clarified his point while defending his position on faith. >> you know those comments alarm some people, even some religious leaders who were in the room, a rabbi he was there called it dangerous. just to be clear, do you fundamentally believe in the separation of church and state from a governing standpoint? >> no. but i believe is you cannot separate your faith. government should not interfere with religion and religion should not interfere with government, but i believe my
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faith pushes me forward on how i govern in the things that i do. >> understandable, but one of the fundamentals of the constitution is a separation of church and state when it comes to governing. when i just asked that you said no, and that's going to alarm some people. >> kayleigh: mollie, she was the only one. she called it controversial and alarming. an msnbc opinion piece called theocratic impulses. here are the facts, i wrote a whole chapter on this in my new book, "serenity in the storm." separation of church and state is nowhere in our funding documents. it was intending to regard the legislature, not schools. yes, we do have freedom of worship, but this is taken wildly out of context to the point where a teacher can't have a bible on his desk. up until last year a coach couldn't kneel in silent prayer at the 50-yard line. that is never the intent of our founding fathers. let me pop this up really quick and you can react.
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this is reverend bill murray. his mother was one of the ones responsible for getting prayer out of schools. she's a famous atheist. here's what he said. july 17th, 1963, the first day baltimore's children couldn't pray in schools. before that date there had never been a murder in the baltimore school. they taught english, math, history, and science. 30 years later there's a baltimore school police force to do with violence and drugs in schools. he converted from atheism to christianity after seeing the devastation his mother's ruling cost. >> mollie: i couldn't believe some of the media coverage on this and how ignorant it was. it's not that difficult to read the first movement in the bill of rights. the very first part saying congress should make no law respecting an assessment of religion or prohibiting the free exercise thereof. it's not about having some imaginary separation that's not there. and we have so much history showing how important religion is to the functioning of our country. john adams said our
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constitutional republic will only make it if we are a moral and religious people. and as religiosity declines and as people are no longer expressing as much in terms of religious practice and worship, we are having some major problems. lack of tolerance, lack of civility, so it's not that surprising, but from the media on what the first amendment says is actually really alarming. >> kayleigh: it is alarming. powerful words, i hope he tells biden he is now 1 of 20 sits on his advisory counsel. i hope he shares these words. >> harris: first of all, congratulations on your book. >> kayleigh: thank you. >> harris: i had some trouble with where the mayor was going there. is he trying to say -- and religiosity is a completely different concept, too. faith, as he was trying to apply it, is personal to him but we want to apply to other things. we all saw that. it wasn't having some sort of hallucination, he wants prayer back in schools. i don't think he's going to be able to repackage this to the left. what he might want to do is
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double down. he is splitting hairs here. and that's not going to help his cause and it's not going to help the cause of all these people now that he suddenly wants to help by saying, when he does policy, whatever, he's praying over it. the only difference i guess we know is he's been paying over it. i think it may be the case that he's being questioned, how do you keep new york city from turning into new orleans? the number one capital the united states for the second year in a row. how do you stop these things are happening? and he's invoked his faith. which is beautiful. but either it is real or it is not. either people read what you're telling them to read in terms of what our constitution and articles say about religion and state, or they don't. but you've got to be educated, and if faith is real in his life, be bold and unapologetic. otherwise we don't believe you. >> sean: first come i think
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the left is alarmed by this. if you have republicans who want faith back and if you powerful democrats, that's frightening for them. no doubt the left is alarmed. i think he took a page from kamala harris. he's looking at the root causes of problems in america and we don't have faith anymore. it brings morals and values and good people, and we have a culture where people are taking guns and shooting people, clothing people over the head in the streets. it maybe if there's a little more faith and morality in our society, that may not happen. so if you don't get it at home, maybe you get it somewhere in the school system or somewhere in your culture. and good for mary adams. >> harris: kamala harris didn't find the root problem. >> kayleigh: she still looking. at a time when data shows one in three girls thinking about suicide, i think faith would go a long way in healing hearts of young women across the country. >> kayleigh: of course. to your point, mayor adams was
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echoing those comments, that essentially, without the acknowledgment of faith, we see the absolute destruction of our society, especially including young people. i really appreciated your point about the ignorant extrapolation of what actually is in the bill of rights and what is determined by our constitution. to be 1 of 0 tolerance, zero connection, zero acknowledgment whatsoever in the place of government. and i find that heartbreaking, and also predictable. because it stems from the overeducated tiny liberal white enclaves of essentially separation and secularists, who say they are zero place in public policy for the representation or voice of faith-based organizations. i'm sure there's a short memory for the entire democratic party right now, but obama himself and his 2006 book, "the audacity of hope," wrote about it and warned about it. "in reaction to religious overreach, we equate tolerance
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of secularism." he was lambasting his own party for that point. he said, "we forfeit the moral language which would help infuse our policies with a larger meaning," which is what mayor adams was saying. which is, yes, i can include my faith into policies for the betterment of society. >> harris: and people in pennsylvania clinging to their guns and their religion. if you don't double down, we don't believe you. >> emily: he sort of double down a little bit at the easter breakfast and prayer breakfast paid he mentioned it vociferously. i agree with you, there was certainly cause for concern over his lack of being present with it at all times, but he did come vocally. especially in the presence of african churches, i think he represented a different thing. 24% of african americans polled said they want there to be a stopped enforcement of separating church and state in
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over 40% said they had no comment or refused to answer. so it's an interesting representation when you look at those sort of white enclaves, white liberalists on the upper east side telling everyone what's good for them. and the people who live faith, how they feel. >> kayleigh: and the supreme court warned about this when they banned prayer in schools. looks like we're there. coming up, usa powerlifting will now allow transgender athletes to compete with women. what this means for competitors and fairness in women's sports. that's next. lower your monthly payments with the 3 c's. pay down your credit cards. pay off your car loan. consolidate your debt with a va home loan from newday. ubrelvy helps u fight migraine attacks. u do it all. 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.
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so it's decided, we'll park even deeper into parking spaces so people think they're open. surprise. [ laughs ] [ horn honks, muffled talking ] -can't hear you, jerry. -sorry. uh, yeah, can we get a system where when someone's bike is in the shop, then we could borrow someone else's? -no! -no! or you can get a quote with america's number-one motorcycle insurer and maybe save some money while you're at it. all in favor of that. [ horn honking ] there's a lot of buttons and knobs in here. >> harris: a new debate over fairness in women's sports. emily is really ready for this. this time it's over powerlifting. a minnesota court has ruled that usa powerlifting must allow transgender women to compete
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alongside biological women. transgender lifter jc cooper filed a just termination loss eight to my demi-glace it in won here's a quote. "the harm is in making a person pretend to be someone different. the implicit message being that who they are is less than. "that's a very essence of separation and segregation. it is with them in a city human rights act prohibits. emily? >> emily: meanwhile the powerlifting organization came back and said, our position has been aimed at balancing the leads of cis and transgender women whose capacities differ significantly in purely strength sports. they have been the unfortunate recipients of the summary judgment but i think they have a huge grounds on appeal to surround this. let's listen to the normal language here. essentially what happened is that the judge capitulated to the left, saying, we can't be
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unfair, we can be discriminatory in any way, so yes, you can be included in this powerlifting. they are completely ignoring the entire purpose. why can't you argue that the unfairly discriminated against people are those that are getting blasted out of the sport because, physiologically, scientifically, and medically, they will never be able to lift as much as someone who has different physiological immutable characteristics? so this person here is touting this as a victory. she said, "i'm sick of being treated like this by the community and the organization. enough is enough." my heart goes out to all of those champions who are competing under their biological honesty with how difficult that sport is to begin with. >> harris: sean, i often have wondered, you never going to be able to write all the wrongs that have been done to transgender people as they ente.
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you never going to be able to do that. and according to friends we have who do the show, like caitlyn jenner, you don't start, say, by 13-14, you can't turn on what's going on anyway. to make it even, can we do it equal but separate? is that possible? >> sean: i think you're in a different category for trans people, because you might say "i feel like i'm a woman, i was born in the wrong body chemicals go it biologically you are male. we were talking about this in the commercial break. out of all the sports, the transgender women and biological minute competing income of this is most unfair. men are stronger than women. i may get canceled for saying that, but no doubt. these biological women can't compete against biological men in the sport, so it's fundamentally unfair, so what steps do we take as a culture to go, you do have to have separate divisions where women can train
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and then competes and have a chance at a gold medal where biological men aren't taking it from them? >> harris: kayleigh, when you look at other sports, you have different levels, as sean is talking about, based on aptitude. even within the same gender. for gymnastics, you've got a gold, silver, a platinum level for different things. i don't think this would have to be all that different. >> kayleigh: it wouldn't be all that different. what it boils down to is how many women do you know that could out lift a biological male? i personally cannot name one. this is decimating an entire sport, but the good news is it's based on a minnesota state law, so this is not something that is federal at the moment and it is still up for debate, whether title ix by sex means biological sex, which is what trump argued, or what biden argued. >> harris: we'll cover it as it moves. comedian chris rock goes after
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>> john: monday afternoon and there's a lot going on. protesters in atlanta declare war on the police. what are the legal applications for the violent attacks? leo terrell is here with that. ron desantis rams of the war of words with california governor gavin newsom. is he running or not? steve hill, david avella, juan williams, will join us. back with a new perspective on the fentanyl crisis, and jonathan turley on why dr. fauci commissioned a study to shoot down the covid lab leak theory.
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i'm john roberts. sander is off today. gillian turner joins me at the top of the hour for "america reports." ♪ ♪ >> kayleigh: liberals are blasting chris rock's new comedy special, "selective outrage." they are taking to social media to cut shocking and sums that he desired that oscar slap from will smith. after he addressed that controversy and went after the easily triggered woke. >> i'm going to try to do a show tonight without offending nobody, okay? i'mma try my best. you never know who might get triggered. [laughter] you say the wrong thing, [bleep] get scared! you've got to watch out. people always say, words hurt. that's what they say. you got to watch what you say,
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because words hurt. you know, anybody that says words hurt has never been punched in the face. [laughter] >> mollie: this is a much-needed message and i'm not surprised to hear it from chris rock. he's got this lengthy history of having some really brutally honest humor dealing with race relations or other hot button topics. but we have a real problem in this country with people not knowing how to take offense without it turning into world war iii, and the more people say this, the better hopefully will be. >> kayleigh: and we have a culture of victimhood. let's listen to more from chris rock. >> i walked by, and in the window of every lululemon that says, "we don't support racism, sexism, discrimination, or hate." and i'm like, who gives a
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[bleep]? you are just selling yoga pants! i don't need your yoga pants politics. tell me how you work on [bleep] sweat. [laughter] >> sean: my wife has a lot of lululemon! listen, he's incredibly funny, he's touching reels that aren't touched any longer, he is a capitalist. he's going to crush it on netflix and make so much money because he's funny and he's talking about things that -- topics no one else will talk about. >> kayleigh: emily, he wants to get through a comedy act without offending anyone, try getting through a sentence without offending someone. >> emily: i got to be in the audience for his last comedy special, and he's hilarious. he tells it like it is, he is unafraid, and his point remains. you really can't get through one sentence without offending someone. we live through it every day. certainly he does. the point was made and some of the media coverage, some of the refreshing comments, the
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nonvocal minority, that said that was 60 minutes of refreshing, true comedy. a breath of fresh air. too bad we all have to sit through three hours of an upcoming awards show where it'll be simply placating to the liberal woke left, there will be nothing entertaining or funny or amusing or intellectually refreshing in any way of one of these road-shows coming up around the corner. so kudos to chris rock. can't wait to watch. >> harris: that reminds us of how boring it gets on the are all homogenous thinkers. and that true diversity in life has always been about what we think, how we grow up, who we are, and he is reminding, perspective, perspective. it's amazing to hear him be and to speak. he's right, at your words, they can't hurt nearly as much as a punch in the face. some words, it's interesting he speaking now, really causing a rift. because he's telling some things about jada pinkett smith and will smith. you've got to watch it.
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i don't know all of what chris rock knows, but there is some stuff underneath the surface there. >> kayleigh: he's really triggering a lot of leftists. there was a carnegie mellon professor who said netflix keeps screwing over subscribers, they cancel shows, people want to watch and give chris rock millions of dollars to prove will smith was right to slap him. and i we have professors advocating for violence. >> mollie: it is threatening to tell people they don't need to think of themselves as victims. we have much major media saying that the way forward is your victim identity. and particularly for women, to always think of themselves as victims, it limits what you're capable of accomplishing and makes you dwell on the worst parts of your life instead of thinking through what is to c come. it's actually like a social problem, so kudos to him, but more and more people need to be doing it. i also like that he tied it in with some of this massive corporate funding of the blm
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rioting which did harm civic society, civil society, and they thought they could play games to the tune of $80 billion in funding for these things and have it not cause problems for america. it really has caused problems. >> kayleigh: he's bold and is not placating the left and now he's paying the price for that. more "outnumbered" next.♪ ♪ veteran homeowners, it's time to fight inflation. use the 3 ps: plan ahead by getting a va cash out home loan from newday. pay off your high-rate credit cards. pay yourself cash. >> tech: when you have auto glass damage, trust safelite.
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research shows people remember ads with a catchy song. so to help you remember that liberty mutual customizes your home insurance, here's a little number you'll never forget. did you know that liberty mutual custo— ♪ liberty mutual. ♪ ♪ only pay for what you need. ♪ ♪ only pay for what you need. ♪ ♪ custom home insurance created for you all. ♪ ♪ now the song is done ♪ ♪ back to living in your wall. ♪ they're just gonna live in there? ♪ yes. ♪ only pay for what you need. ♪ liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty. ♪ ♪ ♪ >> last but not least, it's time to turn our clocks ahead one hour there sunday, and we all hate it. and marco rubio gets his way, hopefully it could be for the last time. he has no fan of the ritual of changing clocks twice a year. neither a 61% of americans. but senate review has introduced a bill to make daylight savings
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time permanent. this is for the multiple times, that the senate approved it never made it to the house, what say you? >> new leadership in the house, may be able get through. remember bees were dying, and then we heard about beeves, but the next important thing was daylight savings time. people care about it, i don't mind falling back, but i hate springing ahead. an extra hour early, so the leadership might get this done. it's big let's be clear, their actual reasons behind it that affects everyone. so first of all we lose on average $434 million because of cyber loafing which is essentially everyone is exhausted the next day. so it has real consequences that we can all appreciate including a 30% uptick in fatal car accidents every year the next day after switching our clocks. >> i actually do like having more son in the normal daylight hours, so i'm not as upset about it. i guess i am in the 39% of americans who does not mind the change, but i do think that it is like no better example of the
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arrogance of our federal government and congress and the idea that they are like literally legislating how the earth turns on its access, like it's kind of ridiculous that it is even a federal issue. >> correct me if i'm wrong, that would restore that, so we would be all the time and the maximum sunlight or daylight, so it is -- it would be like arizona. so all the time -- in the part of the time zone instead of switching. >> then you lose out of getting dark earlier at christmas time and putting on your christmas tree sooner, that is a huge negative. >> the one thing you know. >> and you just get through halloween coming up and out with your family, how great is it to fall back. i'm with you, i was debating it, but i'm with the 39%, all the way, baby. >> harris, tiebreaker. >> you talk about getting up earlier? >> certainly, but it will be light out, so when i wake up it won't be pitch black out. >> i lived in arizona quite a bit, and my husband is from there, it's only a two hour
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difference, so when you get there you are more relaxed, you're not stressed out. and that extra hour is kind of hard when you are not from attica like this. i don't know. i don't have a strong feeling one way or the other, i just need more sleep. >> that we can all agree. all right, guys, thank you for watching. don't forget to dvr that show if you can't watch live, and now here is "america reports." >> bill: emily, thank you. fox news alert to start us off on monday afternoon, the fbi has confirmed it is searching for four americans kidnapped to mexico shortly after crossing to a border town, a town notorious in recent years for gang violence among competing cartels. the incident comes as border officials warned the situation is rapidly deteriorating in the region and is now putting american lives at risk. spin on the clock is ticking down, the hours, what are the prospects for the u.s. rescue mission, fresh off the visit to the senate border, john cornyn is
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