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tv   FOX and Friends  FOX News  March 10, 2023 5:00am-6:00am PST

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tell your doctor if you have liver problems or mental health concerns, and if you are pregnant, breastfeeding, or considering pregnancy. some of the most common side effects include injection-site reactions, fever, and tiredness. if you switch to cabenuva, attend all treatment appointments. every other month, and i'm good to go. ask your doctor about every-other-month cabenuva. ♪ ♪ >> the bodies of two americans brutally murdered in mexico back in the america. >> they acted under her own. >> they didn't surface. >> does this have any chance of passing? >> no. >> biden previewing his new budget featuring taxes. >> they have unleashed record inflation. >> deeply sorry i am. >> cop apologize for the
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disaster in east palestine. >> not just a lack of leadership but a lack of action. they are creating fireworks on capitol hill as to journalists testified before lawmakers. >> american population with the disputes. >> he gives set up! he survives and advances! ♪ ♪ >> brian: yeah, that is the place where the cowboys used to be really good. dallas, texas, on that professional football team. but one of the fastest growing cities in the country. why? people love to go to tell us? they don't say i want to buy a home, they build the homes here
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they build it. it is cheaper than buying someone else's home? >> ainsley: it is great for shopping, good churches, people, everyone is nice, i love it, great food. i think we should send somebody from our team today. do you want to volunteer? >> steve: listen i'm actually going to dallas later today. life at the american rodeo in arlington just a little west of downtown the big d. ainsley. there are too many people moving to texas. too many people moving to dallas as it is. we don't need you to talk about mark. there are still some cowboys that are good but they are behind me. they just don't know where to start and the emblem of the american rodeo taking place this weekend in arlington, texas. it is incredible. also hanging out with the bull rider and one of the best bulls on the circuit. use all behind me, and
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impressive horse. that is a pickup horse, rides bareback riders, but these speak to my courses is more expensive than driving a for our repair they will not let me on one of these half a million dollar courses. the best in the country and they will be performing tonight. you have to see these courses and cowboys perform here the american rodeo in arlington. >> brian: you will be there tomorrow. you will do your best today and you will have nothing for tomorrow? >> my game is deep, brian kilmeade. i haven't begun to scratch the surface. >> brian: we are very impressed so far. >> steve: you know what you're doing. it is great to have you there. coming up this hour. also, this hour. we went to the february jobs report due out and a half an hour. putting the finishing touches on it. expected to show a sharp decline
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from january. >> ainsley: it comes as president biden propose a $6 budget that calls for $5.5 trillion in tax hikes. it is during inflation, can you believe that? critics say if that plan passes it can cause the national debt to swell to $51 trillion in the next decade. right now $31.4 trillion. >> b>> steve: lucas tomlinson on the north one of the white house with in d.c. doa when it comes to the republican congress. >> good morning, steve, ainsley, brian. president biden wants to raise taxes on american and ronald reagan slash the tax rate on the wealthiest americans to just about 30%. president biden rolling out the budget not here at the white house but the swing state of pennsylvania. in fact, going to philadelphia the third time with u.s. marines. no sign of u.s. marines is time. the budget will grow the federal
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debt by $17 trillion, 50% increase, guys. let's see what is in it. it increases taxes on those making $400,000 from 3.8% to 5.8% and raised 80 experts say when you factor in only 3% increase from last year so many think more is needed to keep up with restock piles and modernize the nuclear. the u.s. defense budget is historical low when it comes to a percentage of gdp. not much higher than what we are asking nato. $6 billion more to support ukraine and europe and $26 billion to strengthen the border and helping poor countries deal with and a hundred thousand police officers across the nation. a matter of republicans that want to defund the police. the alcoholic peter doocy after the speech. >> does this have any chance of passing?
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the contrast to occur. >> the budget wants to 2400 epa employees committee 7,000 irs agents, 350 border agents. so i will flip those numbers around. keep in mind the average federal worker makes twice as much as the average american worker. here is that 25% minimum tax on the wealthiest 0.1% of americans. house speaker kevin mccarthy. >> the problem is he is spending more. it is not a revenue problem. it is spending. what does the budget do? raise more taxes, spends more money, creates the biggest government we have ever seen in the history of the united states. >> the national debt is roughly doubled over the past decade with interest rates rising, the interest payment on that $31 trillion on that debt expected to be larger than the defense budget. let that sink in, guys. >> steve: what happens next?
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182 page budget proposal goes to kevin mccarthy on capitol hill. do they start negotiating or what? >> there will be some negotiating, but republican said it is dead on arrival. the colleague chad pergram to get into the details next. but a nonstarter and what we have heard from senator joe manchin, we are not doing budgets like we used to. it is not going to be reconciled in time. it will be pushed way out into the future. >> steve: it is overly late. the senate will not do anything and perhaps in the house my guess it is they were served. thanks, lucas. >> yes, sir. >> steve: keep in mind although scary numbers that he was just talking about. those are increases that joe biden could not get through a democrat congress because they were so toxic, people don't want to see all those budget tax increases. he couldn't do it then and republicans returned to the house, zero chance i would say. >> ainsley: we see all of the hearings now and the republicans
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going after democrat for decisions they have made in the past. this one yesterday got attention. >> brian: it is unbelievable. we have covered over the last few months matt taibbi and i think a couple of others with access to the twitter files because elon musk did the impossible and bought it for $44 billion and exposed what was taking place. sophisticated programs out there working with the fbi and some lawmakers like adam schiff, angus king to go ahead and decide to ban entirely a post they didn't like that had narratives they couldn't support, what wouldn't work to their advantage. this was outrageous as matt taibbi mentioned to me, he said, "any journalist would kill for this once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to go find out what is happening behind the scenes." he said, "anybody wanted to be a journalist a level, what has been revealed, call directly the f by working directly with twitter to make sure the russiae
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forward and other narratives pushed down as well as people like charlie kirk, others with 300 followers and $3.4 billion for the fbi to do this." here we go, let's dive into this and let's see if democrats as curious as republicans about what took place. wrong! all they did was attack the credibility of the journalist giving access to these twitter files. for example, here is sylvia garcia accusing these journalists of -- they are just focusing on the sources. listen to this. >> when was the first time mr mr. approached you about riding for twitter files? >> again, congressman. >> i just need a date, sir. >> i can't give it to you, unfortunately because this is a question of source. >> you will not tell us when
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first approached you? >> again, congressman, you are asking me to refill source. >> circum- i don't understand, you can't have it both ways but let's move it both ways. >> know he can because he's a journalist. >> either elon musk as a source are not the source and if he's not the source. >> no one is yielded, the gentle lady is out of order. >> you are not recognized. [overlapping voices] >> he said he will not reveal the source. the fact that democrats are asking him to do so. >> ainsley: chaos. >> steve: six people actually at the same time. that is how the hearing dissented to. >> ainsley: it protects journalist from their sources. >> steve: shirley and matt taibbi should not rebuild his sources. it's not about the sources but timing but we don't know what she was referring to but if i had to guess, my position would be essentially she is asking him
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when did elon musk give you the stuff? and maybe, just imagine, if he had access to it before he bought twitter. would he be able to give that to somebody? maybe that is what the question was about? this as a part of your speculation but that could explain why he got so testy. >> ainsley: another one who represents the virgin islands was looking at the guys saying, "you so-called journalist." they both looked at each other and said one vote for joe biden. i'm just a journalist reporting the facts. we got the twitter files. that is a good scoop if you are you journalists fear they wanted to tell us what was going on behind the scenes. why censorship? why did they hire someone from the fbi to go work for twitter when biden leapt up story came out. >> why adam schiff's office calling up to get rid of certain posts and where something was going from pure that twitter would put this out
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there. other agencies would say i got this for twitter. the next think this narrative, get on hyper-speed and go through the blood system and the 2020 election specifically. what happened is as soon as elon musk bought it, i'm sure he contacted these guys because no one can say they have points of view. they can go in there with credibility and report it. instead, they tried to take guys with the point of view and diminish their credibility instead of looking at what they found out, which, you know, like ro khanna. he would be a fair guy to ask a good question there. everybody else was trying to shout so loud that no one would examine spirit and the twitter fires has not about the coverage it showed. now the opportunity yesterday and they want to go after sources pure that when was so confused. who is this bari weiss? and are you a threesome? are you a threesome? bari weiss worked for "the new york times," do you have any research at all?
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do you have any staff? >> steve: to your point, brian, not getting enough coverage, if the uncovered laws being broken, that would be a big story. >> brian: i will put it this way, anyone who looks at this and doesn't think it is a huge story is just so worried about being covered the mic uncovered or unmasked just wanted to go away. it just to mission mike diminishes the russia hoax and anti-trump that was existing at twin or comic twitter. and i can just imagine what it's like. >> ainsley: ashley with headlines. >> good morning, guys, the mexican cartel issuing the policy with members involved and responsible for the murder of two americans across the border. we share this picture of five men tied up and blindfolded thing they will face consequences. it comes as the bodies of shaeed woodard and zindell brown arrived in the u.s. peer of the surviving kidnapped victims are
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still being processed. and the ceo alan shaw testified with 30 cars on norfolk southern train derailment in southern alabama and despite his vow to help residents of east palace dean ohio, folks are still suffering from the toxic train derailment and to concerned ress joined us last hour, take a listen. >> our value of the property has dropped drastically. i have been sick since we got back from the evaluation. i did see our family physician. she told me i had upper respiratory infection that is not clearing up. mr. shaw said he will make things right for east palestine, but is done nothing. >> meanwhile the company investigative for hazmat situation with a train traveling to north carolina last month. and this is a real site to see, see dragon flying over the pacific ocean. 6,000-pound swing ride called the santa monica flew over 26
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years but now it is replaced with new upgraded see dragon ride. no one is being shipped to the museum in st. louis. good old missouri. >> steve: that is a classic. that is cool. >> ainsley: that is hilarious here they are moving it across the parking lot in the water, the big dragon ride. >> brian: fantastic. >> ainsley: somebody needs to buy that with a lot of kids. >> brian: where they shipping it? >> ainsley: st. louis. wouldn't that be fun -- >> steve: in your backyard. >> ainsley: rachel campos-duffy. >> brian: absolutely. >> ainsley: she has a lot of children. >> steve: all right, a quarter after the top of the hour appeared coming up benjamin hall set to join us live to talk about his brand-new book and everything that he has been through in the last year. >> ainsley: we will see him on the set up a first another major win for school choice sarah huckabee sanders finds a new education reform bill into law.
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♪ ♪ >> brian: and another major win for parents and kids, school choice is in play in arkansas thanks to governor sarah huckabee sanders. a new education reform bill into law and the bill expands and plans to adopt school choice by 25, 2026 school year and pans critical race theory.
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sarah huckabee sanders, governor, arkansas is struggling and has been for years. the overall ranking of 50 states performance when it comes to math and reading. how could this change that? >> we are taking a massive comprehensive approach to look at education and we didn't just tinker with the system. we are flipping it on its head and making major investment into education and the success of our kids. a lot of the focus has certainly been on the education freedom accounts that allow parents and students to have more power about where and how they are educated. that is only a part of the puzzle. we are going to the bottom of the country, number 48 in the country for teacher pay to the start of the school year going to the lowest to the very top anywhere in the country. we are putting major investment into literacy in the state. we know it is such a huge indicator and a major benchmark
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for success of students. if they cannot read by the time they are in third grade, we are setting them up for failure. we are hiring through the state 120 literacy coaches deployed with schools to catch those students up and put them on a pathway of success. >> brian: i think the whole country needs that because every kid over the last 18 months kept out of school, maybe went to school but it was not the same. everybody is underperforming. there should be a national program, in my view. the best of luck, i know you will put it in over the next three years. and you get better with great results and certainly that is the model proven to be successful. the other thing that fascinating that you are taking on his social media. study after study shows the great weight keyed the mike keep kids off social media until they are 16. the horses out of the barn. how do you plan to get control. >> looked, i am a parent of three young to know my kids and the world can be pretty
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terrifying. we know study after study the data suggest the more kids are on their phones and exposed to the things that they can't see on social media with a massive increase in depression, anxiety and suicide rates, particularly among teen girls. what we are pushing for in the legislation in the state of arkansas come in a new user under the age of 18 has to have parental consent in order to be on a social media app. it doesn't mean you have to be on there but your parents have to know if you are a peer that heightens the awareness and parents paying closer attentiono what their kids are doing. hopefully will limit the amount of time kids are spending on social media in our state. >> brian: real quick, you are making the social media companies have in their registration some type of identification verification just for users in arkansas? will they do that? >> they would have to work
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through a third-party system so that they aren't collecting the data of those individuals. and there would be provisions and the law that would protect that third party from housing or maintaining any of that data. if the law passes, they would have to work with us to implement a system. >> brian: it looks good. it will cause a conversation in the hall. education might make parents make a different decision rather than the spirit governor you are off to a great start. thank you for joining us. >> thank you for having me. straight ahead one year ago our very own benjamin hall was greatly injured by a drone attack while covering invasion of ukraine. now, he is sharing his story more of resilience. it is excellent and he will join us live to talk about it.
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♪ ♪ musical >> ainsley: nearly hit by russian empire while newsgathering on the outskirts of kiev killing two colleagues, pierre and sasha. >> brian: benjamin hall survived the attack and severely injured and had to be rushed back to the states for medical attention. >> steve: his new memoir, "saved: a war reporter's mission to make it home" will be
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released on tuesday, exactly one year after the bombing. benjamin hall returns home. good morning. >> good morning. >> brian: it is emotional for us to see you. >> it's been a long year for me and one of the things i want to do is get back on air, get back to work and look for things that you want to do. so being here today is emotional for me, also what's on one of the things i want to achieve. >> ainsley: i know you are supposed to be on shaun's show a little segment. he interviewed you and said, i've got to spend an hour talking to him. i know he's doing his entire show dedicated to you in everything you have gone through. when we were talking to you every morning out there in ukraine when the war started, we were all saying prayers for you because we knew it was so dangerous. then we learned the worst. tell us what that moment was like. i know you saw your daughter there telling you to wake up, daddy. tell us what that was like in those last moments with pierre because i know you held his hand
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and was there with him. >> that was the moment we knew we were out covered as an abandoned village with shells. there were russians nearby and making our way back when the first bomb came over head and landed just in front of us. it was a mad dash to reverse the car and at that point the second bomb landed just next to the car. that one blacked me out totally. a lot of facial injuries, shrapnel in the eye and throat. i was all but done appeared out of nowhere, the blackness came and my daughter. >> steve: a vision. >> a vision. i could have felt her, smelled her coming she came to me and said, "daddy, you have to get out of the car." i open my eyes and pulled myself to the edge of the car and got out of the door. in the bomb hit the car itself. that wimp took the leg off of my foot and i was on fire pretty badly. and i had to get the flames out.
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i was just sitting there for a while. and there was no cell phone reception. it was a long, long way and then finally the car came past. the one the amount of pain that you must have been the end, how did you get through the pain? basically, the pain in your eye, net, the burns? >> what is amazing i couldn't feel the pain at first. i could look at the end injuries and shock adrenaline. i was dragged along the ground. then i felt the pain and for the scan ripped off the bones. >> brian: his name was -- >> i was saved by save our allies and that is when the pain kicked him. and then you would be amazed when you are struck with immense pain how you have to dig deep, find a level to realize i have to get through this no matter what. put aside the pain and on the other side is safety, freedom, your family. you would be amazed how much you
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can get through. >> ainsley: how long was a train ride? about ten hours. >> ainsley: what? >> steve: going back to the moment of impact do you think you were targeted as a journalist? do you have any idea? >> we don't know if we were in a civilian car, we had jackets on peer there was certainly not an attack on the military. it was an attack on the press, the civilians either way. >> brian: so the goal was to get you to the medical facility. to get from one hospital to the next hospital. then k you had to be a journalit again. so can griffin and his interviewing of abnormal clerk, the word comes to her you've been hit, the whole crew has ben hit and you've been hurt badly. and he said, don't go anywhere. and she starts with "save our
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allies." what did you learn behind the scenes? speak with the people who organized my effectuation are te real heroes in this book. they risk their own lives to save our allies the most incredible group that goes out and saves people in afghanistan, americans, and kim kennedy was on yesterday. >> they were across the border and came straight and risking their own lives to come and find me. what they did come at the speed in which they did it to save me to bring me home to my children is what they were saying to each other is incredible. i want to help them if they can. >> ainsley: every time someone at fox talking about your story, he is an incredible survivor. we are all amazed that you are happier than you have ever been. for the first time in decades, you are eating with your children every night and home with your wife every night. >> that is a right pure to people find it strange but i thk it has realigned the prioritiesn my life. i lost limbs and i was badly injured, but i don't see it that
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way. i think i was given my life back peer to peer and sasha we have to remember every minute they lost their lives. if we can't try to make the best out of every second of life, and so i honestly think i've been given a gift, i was saved and back here again. yes, i will enjoy every middle of life. i want to help because that is why we are here. >> steve: one of the things i talk to you in the green room before we got started and i asked uf at any point something like this happens, a lot of us were sure you would never make it out alive. but for you to make it a light but then so catastrophically injured, human nature would tend to give up. i did i go on that assignment? why, why, why and throw a pity party for yourself. but you never did that. >> not for a moment. the work we do in the field is essential. when you cover conflict and i love the job i do.
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and i will continue to do it. take the precautions if you have to. i wouldn't change a single thing. i would change everything for pierre and sasha. >> brian: you said when you were covering these events, there were some horrific scenes. the first time i heard about you was a story written in "the new york post" picked up. you were basically doing isa spirit and in your eyeball to eyeball and you learn to put fe. did you learn how to put fear away and is that still awake? >> i think you have to turn off some of the emotions to find the story. what i have learned most despite the horrible things that had happened to me. some might see the story as evil and the things that happen but i don't. i see incredible things happened appear there was more good than evil peer of the people that cao rescue me. the doctors in san antonio, the 82nd airborne who flew me in, those people are amazing.
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i don't remember the evil but the good peer that is the same when covering covid. >> ainsley: what about your parents? i know that they were worried with you being out there in war zones and your wife. how many surgeries now? >> that will rise quite soon as well. my father sadly passed away before this happened. i went to his funeral in. my wife, family, children got me through this. you have to find something to fight for a peer that was my family. people talk how brave, but my wife has gone through as much and my wife, felicia has been there every step of the way. she has picked up the hard pieces. when i went home, there was so much more pressure on her. she is my rock. she is the one i love. you marry someone in sickness or in health. we have been put to the test and came through with flying colors. i'm the lucky man to have
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married such a great woman. >> ainsley: we have one here. >> steve: you were talking about the people who put you bak together. and we are about to read a passage where you are talking about san antonio. >> ainsley: okay, kelly we able to the gym and moved chest pad in front of me. kelly helped me stand at the walker with my arms braced on chest level padded mats. my left leg with makeshift boot on the ground and my right leg resting on the 14-inch hi table. kelly, i blurted out, look at me, i'm standing. indeed i was holding tight to the walker but in a upright position with both of my legs and instinctively i began to move. i lifted my right stump up off of the table and put it back down. and turned, lifting my left foot and again and again. to my astonishment, i was marching in place. "kelly, i'm walking," he said.
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>> incredible. one of the things you work towards. you have to plan goals and walking was one day what i wanted to be doing again. i wanted to speed that up as much as i could. we were to move slow, just move your leg a little bit further. i could go a little bit more peer that moment where you realize you can do it. physically to do it was amazing. none of us appreciate what it is to learn to walk. it happens when you are a baby. i thought this is joyous, learning to walk again and let's enjoy every moment of it. an incredible moment of recovery. >> brian: looking through the book in the beginning, where did you get this passion for going overseas for these conflicts and these horrible situations? who is really your data, right? he wanted to pay back the country for macarthur who saved him and everybody else in the philippines. he signs up for the korean to fight for the korean war. he gave you that sense of adventure and how much it means
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to travel to every corner of the world. >> that is right. my father was 12 years old and live for years japanese prison camps with his young siblings. they were in the streets and he was rescued when american g.i.s came back in and picked up for the ground and made his way to america. he served in korea. he was rescued american forces around the world and then i was rescued american forces around the world. we are a family saved again and again. the duty to our country and to the military. yes, it led me to travel. i wanted to experience the world. i wanted to experience and i started my job because i wanted to see new places. as you start to cover wars, it goes to another level. you see how important it is. and i think my father every day as well and the recovery was as much for him as everyone else. >> steve: benjamin, what have you had to do in the last year that has surprised you that you have been able to do? >> well, i think the ability to
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stay strong, to know that you will go through the toughest times of your life, physically, mentally. but if you focus hard and have enough willpower, trust, faith, you can get through everything. i was amazed what you can find in yourself. i wouldn't have or have thought of but i am a firm believer we all have it. you have to get through something difficult in life, don't give up, up fight for it and you can find a way through it. >> ainsley: the viewers, they have been praying for you. >> one thing, every step of the way, thousands of prayers and letters were sent to me. books, i read every one of them. go out and encourage people if they are having a tough time. if you know somebody going through a difficult time, one little note to say it matters. it does matter and i'm living proof of that. i felt every single one of those messages. thank you for the sport that they gave me, you gave me. if we do things together as a team and community you can get through anything. >> brian: we will see on the
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channel to talk about your work. if anybody wants a book to inspire somebody else, this is the book to get. even if you are not in the news, this story is inspirational. >> steve: at shelves tuesday and available for preorder right now. >> ainsley: sean hannity has a special hour for him tonight. grab your kids. >> brian: i will see you on "the five" later. benjamin, welcome home. meanwhile coming up straight ahead, the february jobs number my joining us with the same re os cotton farm in north alabama. the heartland of america. we rely on hard work and honest manufacturing to deliver high quality, heirloom inspired bedding, bath towels and more, all made in the usa. experience the farm to home difference for yourself. go to red land cotton dot com and receive 15% off your order with code fox news.
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we believe at newday usa we have a noble purpose. our purpose is not just closing a loan. we want to do whatever's best for the individual service person. we want to be known as america's mortgage company for veterans and active-duty service people, and they and their families. we're the ones there to help them. people are doing hard, arduous, difficult, dangerous things. some of them are giving their lives right now, today,
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for the freedoms that we have here in this country. they're willing to do that for you, for me, and for our family. so for us, at newday, to have the opportunity to turn around and help those people at this point in time. it's a labor of love, it's a noble service, and that's what we're all about. >> steve: has promised, fox news alert february jobs numbers just coming out shows the united states has added 311,000 jobs in the last month. >> ainsley: that is higher than economists were expecting. they were expecting 203,000. as the unemployment rate edged
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up to 3.6%. >> brian: joining us to break it all down, american build, stuart varney. you like this number. >> it is stronger. it is typical of a strong jobs market. if you think we will go into recession, the strong jobs number will talk you out of it. it does not look like we are heading to a recession. when you have 300,000 new jobs created in one month. don't be fooled. we had 500,000 created in december. count to 300,000 in january, but that is still a strong market. this is really all about interest rates because the strong jobs report, i would have thought would make the federal reserve raise rates to get rid of inflation because it is a strong economy. but the immediate reaction to these numbers was actually rates went down. i'm surprised by that. not the end of trading right now. >> ainsley: i know we saw technology jobs being lost. >> this is a good point because
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you see all of these technology layoffs. how come we have a straw to make strong jobs reports? looking beneath that the employment rate went up for 3.4% to 3.6% and that account to tech loss. bars, that kind of thing. >> brian: the market has been slammed. how will they respond to this? >> i was surprised against the initial stock market because the prices to go up a little. it would have thought it would come down. again, we haven't seen the end of trading this friday. >> steve: we have been talking about it for a long time, this could be the soft landing they were hoping for. so fingers crossed, it would be that most people won't lose her job. >> president biden will make the most of it. good numbers because mainly hiring with plenty of jobs out there. but i think eventually come up avenues for interest rates and wall street. eventually. >> brian: you mentioned present biden and built 182 page
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budget yesterday. we know it is dead on arrival. there was a lot of taxes in there. >> it is taxes on steroids is what it is. with that the increase goes through is irrelevant. the president is pointing a direction for his party in our country for the next few years. that direction is left towards. the fingerprints of bernie sanders, elizabeth warren, they are all over this budget. >> brian: the tax rate now. it competes with china and goes above china. to bring the jobs home here that will not happen. >> you have tax hiring capital gains taxes, new taxes on the profit you make when you sell your home as you talked about earlier. crypto tax, stock buyback tax, corporate tax and add it all up and biden poses $5.5 trillion in new taxes. >> ainsley: that makes me stressed. pay for college, your rent. >> all of the people return me
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if those tax increases go through and people are making a good salary. >> steve: stewart will be talking about this. >> ainsley: does that stress you out? you have your own show somewhere in the building. >> get out, it is exciting. and a trinity. >> steve: speaking of exciting coming up we speak with will cain 2023 american rodeo live in texas. but stewart starts his job in 1. >> indeed, although i would mostly enjoy your interview preview with benjamin hall and that was absolutely incredible and inspiring. i'm looking forward to see him tonight on "the five" and youtube, brian, that will be great. >> ainsley: you were there for him. >> i have my copy of the book and the pages. we will be talking about it. president biden's new tech spending proposal is out. the boot print is for
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reelection. if $6.9 trillion budget signals where he wants to take the country in 2024, guess who will be happy? bernie sanders. "the wall street journal" will be here on that. the president of mexico tells the u.s. fentanyl is your problem. this comes as the wolf cartel apologizes for the two americann 2024 washington post governor ron desantis is likely to announce after the florida state legislative session ends in may. things are hitting up as well as desantis and trump had to the key state of iowa today. shannon bream will be here and we will see you
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>> hello, everyone. happy friday. hey, guys, what your name question or speak or rub end. >> what is your name?
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>> benjamin. >> do you want to say hi to anybody? my grandma and grandpa. >> where you from? >> texas. >> what is your name? >> nathan from alabama. >> my fiance, jim. bill from atlanta, high, barbara, i love you. >> beth from pennsylvania. >> nathan. >> stephen from baltimore. >> very nice. i have 30 seconds to tell you about the weather. we have cooler temperatures across the northeast. a storm moving in over the great lakes and northeast and maybe a little bit of snow for the new york city area tomorrow. but then, we have nor'easter that we will talk about real quick if we get to that. blizzard conditions for the northern plane. here is the nor'easter we will talk about, sunday, monday, tuesday, snow on the i-95 core door. it is possible, the computer model site a foot so that is something we have to fine tune this weekend and keep it tuned to foxweather.com. epic amounts of rain and snow
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will put a huge dent in the drought. look at the tent monitor, extreme to exceptional drought completely wiped out. brian kilmeade was declaring pedro over california. we are almost there, brian. >> brian: i want good news. >> we love you, "fox & friends." we love you! >> hi, everyone out there! >> brian: meanwhile talk about the rodeo, sliding into home plate and lowlife field in arlington, texas. >> ainsley: look how they are transforming it. part of the inaugural american rodeo and will cain is about to get a lesson from one of the greatest horseman in the industry. >> steve: that is right. he joins us with a couple of them here and will, introduced us to some real cowboys. >> i will, these are real cowboys and as you mentioned mobile life, home to the texas rangers, 720 tons of dirt
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turn this place into a rodeo or made it look like a rodeo. cowboys will transform this into a rodeo. i have two joshua valdes and todd, who are real horsemen. only when you go to a rodeo, seven different bull riding saddle bronx, bareback, et cetera. but home to the american performance horsemen competition. and josh, tell me about that. what is performance horsemanship and what will you show us tonight. speak with the showman horsemanship is the sportsman of cutting, raining and one arena for one night to celebrate the rich history of working ranches in the united states and the tradition of horsemanship in all three. >> hey, populates and who have seen it at yellowstone here they are showing, todd is one of the best in the business. competing and training. you will show us a little bit. >> some stops, spins that you
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will be seen today. >> it is a little bit like ice skating competition. precision with the horses. >> right here, the man, the myth, the legend, todd. roping his horse off and different maneuvers. one of them as circles that will be performing now showing the willingness of this course to be moved a certain direction. he will run down and execute a sliding stop. and this is totally used by cowboys when they need to stop their horse and go towards the cow. >> show us a couple of spins. >> agility. the athleticism and showing off your horse and willingness to do what you dictate to him in the sport of writing here. >> that is a competition that will be picking calves out of a herd here at the cow operation, like i said turning the cow.
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>> absolutely controlling one cow in the arena like the cowboys did. a blast from the past as a sport now. >> todd, we were talking about the horses. these are elite athletes, trained, specialized to be absolutely perfect. >> yocum a lot of precision in this. these horses are bred to do this but a ton of training and precision and correctness is everything. you have to do it i rate of speed and do it every time to be judge correctly. >> and these horses will become more popular. in a huge into this, these are not cheap here that is why i'm not allowed to get on this. >> this is a high dollar athlete. no times to a cowboy is allowed to touch except for his neck right here. josh, thank you so much. >> absolutely. >> appreciate you as well. back to you guys. >> steve: those horses are worth more than a house in some cases. >> steve, some of these horses
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can go for $10 million, $2 million, half a million dollars all over the map they are expensive. >> steve: thank you for joining us from arlington, texas. he will be there on "fox & friends." >> ainsley: and brian will be on "the five" and they should show saturday >> brian: w out a moment ago coming in hotter than expected. what it means for the fight against inflation. tricky one on a friday. i'm bill hemmer. thanks for being with us today. >> dana: i'm dana perino and this is "america's newsroom." our shot is coming in hot. we had the job numbers. the u.s. added 311,000 jobs last month. analysts expected 200,000. unemployment 3.6%. >> bill: the fed was viewing this report as a b

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