tv FOX and Friends Sunday FOX News March 12, 2023 6:00am-7:00am PDT
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♪ i will be put my trust in you alone. ♪ and i will not be shaken. ♪ holy, there is no one like you. ♪ there is none beside you. ♪ oh, lock my eyes in wonder. ♪ show me who you are. ♪ fill me with your heart. ♪ and lead me in your love. ♪ to those around me. ♪ yeah. >> beautifully done. that is house fires performing build my life as part of the faith and friends concert series we have in this easter season. beautifully done, amazing to have a front row seat to watch that. rachel: amazing. imagine what a better world we would have if everybody would
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let jesus fill their life. >> i've had front row seats to a couple concerts, that might be the next one. do we have to start talking? can we let them play for a few minutes? it's that good. >> it's the freedom, to your point, of following jesus, being invested, the freedom it brings to your life. rachel: yeah. >> as opposed to the labor of sin and all the other things in this world. this easter season, pour into it if you're at home with your family. rachel: and support groups like house fire, download their stuff. >> absolutely. rachel: all right. >> we go from faith to free throws. [laughter] >> and rachel was outside playing basketball. look at this. look at that. bam! i mean that was -- >> is that one of those moments where you let jesus take it. rachel: he jesus took the wheel, for sure. >> no warmup, no nothing. [laughter] >> i feel like where did you learn that form, it's a good one hand. rachel: yeah.
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pretty good for a cheerleader. [laughter] >> it's march madness. we brought the court here to fox square and we'll be watching the game tonight like you will. we start this hour with a fox business alert. the collapse of silicon valley bank stunning the global financial markets. rachel: clients lining up outside desperate to get their money back. >> brook seeman joins us with the latest on this. >> that's right. we have the silicon bank collapse which will have a domino effect throughout the u.s. as clients look to move their money larger, more stable institutions. people lining up of withdraw their money. some clients have not been able to do so. >> we wired out the money yesterday but silicon valley bank did not honor our wire. we were not able to move any of our cash out of our bank
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account. we'll get access to $250,000 on monday. after that, trying to get access to the remaining capital is going to take months so the reality is we can't operate our business without accessing certain capital. >> california's department of financial protection shut down the bank friday sending shock waves through glow ball markets. it appears the company may have seen it coming. before the collapse they posted a financial crimes senior management position on the website, it would examine potential risks by new clients a an online retailer said it used the bank to issue payments to some sellers and notified those sellers of a delay with their deposits after the collapse friday. meanwhile, tesla and twitter ceo elon musk says he's open to buying the bank in response to a user who said twitter should convert silicon valley the bank a digital bank -- the bank a
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digital bank. the home depot founder says the biden administration is part of the blame for the collapse. >> i think the administration has pushed many of these banks into more concern about global warming than they do about shareholder return. everybody is focused on diversity, and all of the woke issues and not concentrating on one thing they should, which is shareholder returns. >> the u.s. federal deposit insurance corporation will reportedly pay an an advanced dividend for uninsured deposits this week. rachel: thank you, brooke. so interesting in the report, she said they saw it coming, they saw it coming and yet they continued with their social justice and esg agenda, so there was a female ski trip, there was -- employee ski trip or executive you ski trip, the lgbtq month events rolled out
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planned, e-mails about climate change from the people in charge so all of that going on as the bank is going under and they saw it coming, again, speaks to what the ceo of home depot said about the lack of mission focus can. >> you know, i spoke a point on this, i spoke with robert wolf, we're going to play a sound on tape of him in a second but first, what he didn't get to that we talked about in the break is that these banks took this money and bought securities and then when they needed capital they had to sell the securities many well, in the meantime, the interest rates went up and when they sell securities they take a loss with a higher interest rate. so this traces back to biden's bad economy, overspending an high inflation as being the linchpin for this. the bank was doing bad practices. but we'll let robert wolf tell us about it right here. >> silicon valley bank did what you should not be doing. they took people's money and they invested in risky assets
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and long-term assets. even if it was treasuries, the idea that it was longer term made it more risky. people got nervous, started taking out deposits. what happens? they have to sell some of their assets. they sold it at a loss. when they aannounced the loss, people got nervous and became what we'll call a run on the bank. lines of people trying to get their money out. they didn't have enough cash to fulfill the obligations. that immediately. and then all of a sudden what happens, the regulator which in this is the fdic, the federal deposit insurance company, comes in and they close the bank, take it under receivership and now there will be an orderly liquidation. there's enough coverage here to give all the depositors 50 to 75% of their money immediately. >> that remains to be seen how much they do get back. this is bad for regional banks as well who some have speculated charlie gasparino was on earlier saying hopefully it doesn't lead to a run on regional banks but
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if there's concerns about how they're being managed with long-term bets there could be a consolidation into bigger banks so hopefully it doesn't ripple but it certainly impacts a lot of startup, small business, mom and pops that use silicon valley bank that are in a bad spot right now. >> another symptom of a struggling economy that we didn't have to have. >> really bad fiscal policy driving decisions inside banks in are distracted by other things rachel as you pointed out and those who hope to use the institution are left holding the bag. onto another topic that impacts energy. there's been a bait and switch for the biden administration. remember, they went to war with oil and gas, they wanted to get of it all. now they're expected to sign off, sign off, meaning agree to an $8 billion oil drilling project in alaska. one day of course after the energy secretary said china's doing -- maybe jennifer granholm -- rachel: say what jennifer
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granholm said. >> jennifer granholm effectively said we should model ourselves after how china is doing their energy policy and climate. if we're modeling ourselves after china, then we should build lots of pipelines and lots of coal plants because that's exactly what china did. maybe this is all part of a strategy from the biden administration to fool us all, the name of the project is the willow pipeline i believe. it's the conocophillips willow projects. here's a few data points. three sites inside a 23-acre national petroleum reserve north of the arctic circle. they may slim it down to two sites. an estimated 600 million barrels of oil could be pumped you out over 30 years, it would nearly double the amount in the strategic petroleum reserve which we depleted and would release 9.2 million metric tons of carbon poll hughes a -- carbon pollution, that's what
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the climate zealots are worry about. rachel: they're not worried about the people having trouble heating their homes and gassing up their cars. joey, sorry. >> it's just we point out 9.2 -- i don't remember if it was billion or trillion tons of pollution but the rest of the sentence is, which is substantially less than the amount of pollution when we're buying that same amount of oil and gas somewhere else and having it brought here. one of the greatest things about the keystone pipeline is when you don't put it on the p pipeline, what do you do? you put it on rail and you burn -- you burn carbon all the way to wherever it's going. it's one of those can did you really help the environment by forcing the oil and gas to burn coal to get to where it's going? and so this shows the hypocrisy in such a big way. the administration can change where we get our oil from. they can pressure or squeeze how much oil we can get. what they can't do is change the
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americans' appetite and will to use clean, affordable, oil and gas to power our lives and that demand has gone nowhere. it's only gone up. rachel: they're trying to. you saw demand go down when they locked us down. let's hope that's not part of the strategy. here's joe biden promising to end fossil fuels. this is why his greeny friends are so mad at him. >> he promised them for a long time. rachel: the white house official told politico this approach has not changed, nor will it. our climate goals are cutting emissions in half by 203 of 0 -- 2030 and oil will continue to be part of the energy mix while we shore up domestic clean energy production for the long term 6789 they're saying listennings we're going to get this oil out in alaska but it's not going to change the that we are dead set on transitioning americans to become dependent on china
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through the green policies and the green energy that they want. because remember, we can't transition without rare earth minerals that are mined by the chinese, they won't let us mine them here. in africa, using child slave labor. it's going to make us more dependent, the more we're dependent on -- >> that's a total reversal of everything joe biden. rachel: why is he saying it? >> i think there's probably direct economic reasons and political reasons. rachel: the strategic oil reserves, they need to get them -- >> when they shut the door in the white house, they probably go we do need energy. joe biden at the state of the union said we might have to use oil and gas in ten years and the whole chamber laughed. they think everyone will be driving a battery powered car that isn't powered by something else th that emits. they have to know of it's all
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fantasy. if you don't want to be dependent on china and destroy your economy, you have to find ways that keep us limping along on production of oil and gas. they stopped the keystone xl pipeline because it was a campaign issue. they hope to open an y y an aln pipeline. rachel: i think their goal is to the wreck the economy. that's what they did with the energy policy. >> they don't want to wreck it too much. that hurts re-election prospect. enough to make people feel the pinch so they change patterns of what they buy and so they're frankly more easy to control down the line. there are those dynamics. but if they destroy the economy, joe biden doesn't get elected. rachel: it's to make sure it doesn't get totally wrecked before the election and then after the election they're going to go through with this he globalist plan to get us all transitioned to what they want
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us to be on. >> what you're saying is there may be ulterior motives at play. they're not being honest brought what their motives are. we turn to your headlines. starting with a fox news alert. a standoff in los angeles lasting more than 24 hours after a shootout between police and a suspect. police responded to a shots fired call around 2:30 p.m. friday and the suspect fired at responding officers before barricading himself at his residence. other houses were evacuated as a precaution. so far, no injuries have been reported. to a fox weather alert. a minnesota blizzard warning is in effect for the south and central portions of the state. as heavy snow continues to fall. iowa is getting slammed by wet, heavy snow causing dangerous road conditions. a nor'easter is headed for the east coast which could bring heavy rain and snow. for more on these stories, download the fox weather app and on any tv connected device.
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the newly elected democrat commicommissioner of miami goes silent. when she was asked to lead the pledge of allegiance during her first meeting. check this out. >> commissioner koval, would you lead us in the pledge of allegiance, please? >> that's all of us there, you don't know it? she responded on twitter with this excus excuse saying when yl responsibility is that important, nervousness is normal and i'm not afraid to admit that i was, implyi implying nervous. when you're a leader you have to make a decision not to follow through with inaction. we'll move on from that. i'll get off my soap box. the president of the oscars is
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revealing a crisis team will be in place at tonight's ceremony. one year after will smith slapped chris rock on stage. he says the team has prepared for many different scenarios in hopes they will be ready for anything and this is just the gift that keeps on giving. i mean, the elites that can't handle themselves. this comes after oscar officials admitted the response to the infamous slap was, quote, inadequate. smith is banned from the ceremony for 10 years. >> but he wasn't banned in the event that night. >> he continued on. >> they let him back in. >> won an you award. >> so bizarre. rachel: what could they do? did they want security guards to pick on will smith. he walked back to his chair. what did you want them to do. >> it's a tough situation. >> rachel: it is. chris rock handled it beautifully. >> the oscars are tonight.
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here's a clip from a movie that could win best picture. watch. >> we can't take much morph of this. >> we can't outrun this. we've got to eject. >> pull the handle, eject. >> it's not working. >> good afternoon, ladies and gentlemen. this is your commander speaking. rachel: that's not the clip i would have chosen. i would have chosen the beach scene. >> pick your clip. we know you saw this movie this year, basically saved the movie industry. you loved it. there he goes. rachel: they did it for me. thank you. >> on command. raclet's to do thisin slo mo. >> some are taking issue with this, too patriotic, too
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masculine. rachel: too good. >> this makes me advocate for quality in gender when it comes to top gun. i want to read the quote real quick because this is msnbc opinion editor and this just -- listen to this. top of gun is as insidious as it is entertaining. it does not merely revive a forgotten human centered spectacle, it beckons for a return for accepting the american war machine as a beacon of virtue and excitement. it's a kind of nostalgia that smuggles love of endless war into celebration of live action, top gun is literal p propaganda. beautiful words there that mean absolutely nothing. rachel: actually, i think he's making a point. he's saying i don't like pro-america films. >> that's right. he's speaking for a lot of people in hollywood. i'm surprised it's up for best picture. i'm surprised if it's win. it should win considering the
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impact it had on the industry. they should realize this makes them a lot of money. faith filled americans want to see the good guys win, even he though we don't know who the bad guys are in the film. they never named them. rachel: i'm assuming it's china. >> the bad guy in the movie is self doubt. the movie is about believing in yourself, willing to sacrifice, being selfless, about redemption and forgiveness, the things that americans seem to have passed to the wayside. rachel: they still like i otherwise it wouldn't have been a blockbuster hit. hollywood doesn't like it. the american people have clearly voted with their dollars on this film. so up next, cutting corners, republicans claim the biden administration may have rushed to get covid vaccines approved. you think? texas congressman and dr. ronnie jackson reacts next.
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vaccines and research warning, quote, a review that is hyper accelerated beyond the already very rapid september 15th target date may be less thorough than our typical review. texas congressman ronnie jackson is investigating this on the house select subcommittee on the coronavirus pandemic and he joins us now. congressman, doctor, thanks for joining us. i know you've done a lot of work in this. explain what we're seeing here. >> well, thanks, joey. the biggest thing is the republicans have the majority now. we do have the select committee on coronavirus. we're starting to get access to e-mails we didn't have, we have whistleblowers and witnesses coming forward. we discovered the vaccine approval process by the biden administration may have been driven for political, not safety reasons. pfizer requested approval process for full approval of their vaccine because remember, up until that point it was being used kind of in experimental
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stage under emergency use authorization. they wanted full approval, applied in may of 2021. the approval process normally takes 10 to 12 months. july 16 of 2021, the fda came back and said we will give you an approval. we will start the approval process an we will expedite it so they can do a potentially they in six months, the shortest period possible. so they had a stated approval date of january of 2022. well, privately we see these e-mails where they're saying they want it approved by september of 2021 which was way faster, four months faster than the expedited approval process and eight months faster than the standard process. well, there are people like dr. gruber, the director of the vaccine research and that program responsible for approving it she was running the program, she and other members of the fda were up in arms. we see the e-mails where they're saying this is not safe.
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remember, this is a vaccine that was being used under brand-new technology. we had tons of data coming in, we had a lot of reports of vaccine related injury and side effects coming in so this was a large request to look at this information. >> if it's true that this was sped up, and kind of alludes to that, saying we can't speed it up any more which means it was sped up at some point, who sped it up? >> well, the biden administration sped it up. people from the eop were pushing people at the fda. dr. gruber resigned in protest. she said this is not how this process is supposed to work. we cannot review all this information in a short period of time. it's unsafe. joey, they set the date for january of 2022. the process didn't start until july 16 of 2021 and after dr. greber left, do you know when they apr approved it, august a 23rd of 2021, five weeks after
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it started, five weeks after -- it was approved in five weeks. it was supposed to take 10 to 12 months and then six months with the ex he pee dieted process. -- expedited process he's. why did they do that? they were talking about vaccine mandates. they knew they would have a problem approving vaccine mandates using a vaccine that was approved with emergency authorization. the day after it was approved on august 2nd, dod second mandated it for all members of the military and cmc followed after had that. there's a lot here. >> it's hard to believe it's going to take decades for the american people or even congress at large to see all of this information and how this vaccine was approved. i know you've been grilling on that. hopefully that's not the case. there's a bill going to the president to get truth behind some of the origins of covid. hopefully the work that republicans are doing in the house gets more transparency out. doctor, congressman ronnie
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jackson, thank you for joining us. thank you for the work you're doing. >> thank you, joey. appreciate it. >> steve forbes assault incorporated by protesters at a conservative book launch party. he joins us along with co-authors, they're going to be right here next and the bags under your eyes are looking more like purses, it's not too late for another treatment option. to learn more visit treatted.com. that's treatt-e-d.com.
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and headache may occur. doctors have been prescribing otezla for over 8 years. i'm so glad i made it through the day. ♪ don't hesitate. ask your doctor about otezla today. >> protesters crashing a book launch party in new york city, reportedly throwing drinks and yelling slurs at guests, destroying displays and assaulting attendees like media mogul steve forbes. the co-authors of stolen youth say the protesters were exactly what they warned about in their book. angry, irrational and uninformed. joining us are co-authors carolo witswits and bethany mandel and steve forbes. steve, let me start with you. they went after you.
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what happened? >> well, i was talking to bethany and suddenly there was a rack he et, things were flying around, liquids were flying around, maybe glasses flying around. she got soaked more than i did but it was very -- and the yelling, the person was yelling about the kind of things that almost really had nothing directly to do with the book but was very, very quick and we got soaked very quickly. thankfully, had that's the only damage i had. some of the books were damaged but a lot of the guests took it as a point of pride to take those damaged books away because you pointed out this was all about the kind of environment we have today, intolerant, angry and ign ignorant. >> carol, what was their point? >> well, that was hard to understand. because they were screaming black lives matter. that's not really the point of our book at all. in the book, stolen youth, we go through the forced conformity the left pushes on the rest of us, their ideas are deeply unpopular but they have to do
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this kind of thing to make it seem like they're majority and they're not so in our book we teach parents how to fight back against this kind of thing and to raise resilient adults who won't be crashing book parties and throwing glasses around. >> bethany, do you think they were targeting your book or did did they see a group of conservatives and say oh, you're evil? >> i think they were absolutely targeting our book. i think they saw our book on display and they thought this is exactly you what we're fighting against and these kids, they were adults but they acted like children, they're exactly what we have -- we know that the parents are buying our book don't want their children turning into. >> for sure. steve, what is that instinct you think on the left to say -- i could walk by a book written by a lefty somewhere and they're having a book party and go not really my jam but walk on by. what is it about we need to confront you, call you names and try to shut you down if we could? >> i think part of it is they know they don't have a majority.
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they know they can't persuade people to think this extreme way so they have to use intimidation so you silence yourself, you censor yourself, don't go against school boards like they're doing around the country in the aftermath of covid. they know in they can't win thrh the normal give and take of democratic debate. they try to do it by intimidation. >> what is the message of your book that they are medical mortified.>> there's a forced y they want us to be part of, you're not allowed to speak differently or think differently or step outside their lines. we teach parents how you to fight back against this and make sure your kids don't grow up to be angry protesters. >> you had a young child there too. >> i brought my 2-month-old
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with me because he was nursing. thank god i was looking at my time stamps, four minutes beforehand one of my friends stole him for snuggles across the room. i probably would have lost my cool in a way i was able to maintain as it were. >> i read your reaction, you said to them can you redo that? no one got it on video. that's pretty good. >> you know, yeah, it doesn't feel good to be protested but we have to laugh it off. we have to show we don't care. we have to mock them. they're little totalitarians. fighting back means making fun of them. >> irony, they just sold a bunch more books of stolen youth. ththank you for all you do. we appreciate you. >> thank you. >> all right. fears of a banking domino effect
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after silicon valley bank collapses. maria bartiromo on the fallout from the worst bank failure since the 2008 recession. that is next. ♪ who says you can't go home. ♪ its your customers getting what they ordered when they expect it. discover how ryder ecommerce makes your customer's experience ever better. avoiding triggers, but still get migraine attacks? qulipta™ can help prevent migraine attacks. qulipta gets right to work. keeps attacks away over time. qulipta is a preventive treatment for episodic migraine. most common side effects are nausea, constipation, and tiredness. ask your doctor about qulipta.
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government's next step. frantic silicon valley bank clients lining up, desperate to get back their money as the startup focused lender is the largest the bank fail since the great recession. our next guest followed the 2008 financial collapse firsthand. sunday morning futures host maria bartiromo joins us now. so great to have you on such an important event that just happened. how much will this affect us. maria: good morning, rachel. thanks very much. this is going to play out tomorrow morning with a stock market selloff likely. the fact that the treasury secretary, janet yellen, said this will not be a bailout shows you right there the pressure on regulators to bail this bank out. i've got a very good update from td cowen and company this morning from an analyst that is always spot on and he says it's going to be framed as a bank bailout and will boost pressure on regulators to increase capital and liquidity requirements in ways that will be costly for the banking
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industry. the that's one negative on the banks but tomorrow morning when the stock market opens if by that time we do not have some solution here, we will see a sizable stock market selloff tomorrow morning. the whole idea of a bank's run on assets where consumers run to get their money out of the bank really accelerated yesterday because bill ackman, a well-known activist invisitors tweeted out this. he says from a source i trust, svb financial depositors will get 50% on monday or tuesday and the balance based on realized value over the next three to sx months. if this proves true i expect there will be bank runs beginning monday, a large number of nonsystem cliff important banks. he starts accelerating the nervousness around the potential for a run on assets at major
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banks. that is why he we are seeing so much focus. i'm very surprised that the regulators have so far stayed quiet. they have been talking all weekend about what to do about this bank and whether or not there will be a bailout. what do i expect? i expect that we will hear an acquisition, another bank will likely acquire silicon valley bank and assume the assets and the potential losses here. there have been a number of banks talked about. one source told me he thinks had that it's pnc financial. we don't know if the that's true. we don't know which bank is going to step in here. but something must be done in the next 24 hours at a minimum because this is going to play out. i saw earlier that there was a headline that the fdic is going to have a meeting tonight at 11:00 p.m. what was reported earlier was that we are going to see the fdic and the fed's california
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lawmakers have a briefing on silicon valley bank for 11:00 p.m. tonight. whether it's 11:00 at night or sometime this afternoon, we're going to hear an announcement of a bank acquiring silicon valley bank to calm the markets because tomorrow is going to be very messy, losses they in the stock market, people are going to be nervous about the banking sector. that will likely lead to a selloff. that's what we're talking about this morning. i've got interviews in 15 minutes with the speaker of the house, kevin mccarthy, california congressman, he's also been in touch with jay powell and others. he is in step with what's going to happen. we will ask him what he wants to see here. and also we've got an exclusive with florida governor ron de santis. ron de santis put in a few law in december about insurance in florida. he also is going to comment on whether or not he's worried about the banks in florida. bottom line here, i don't think any regulator is going to allow the market to open tomorrow
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without some solution in place to calm things down. people are worried and they are speculating and that is never good for the market. so we'll be talking about that this morning in these exclusive interviews coming up. we'll you attack the issue of e threat on china with chrisity no, ma'am. she has been -- kristi noem, she's been pushing on the push to acquire agriculture land in her state. rachel: what a blockbuster lineup you have this morning. our faith and friends concert series continues next with house fires, the group joins us live with a special performance of "lean on the lord." ♪
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♪ >> the mission of worship collective house fires is to create music that sparks the light of god in homes all over the world. >> in their new album, how to start a house fis fire, is doing just that. rachel: brian ellis of house fires joins us with a big announcement before their performance. what is the announcement. >> we have our ep dropping of 3/24 and our album dropping on
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4/21. presave that and look for that to come soon. >> more from house fires. >> more from house fires, more to come. >> talk to us about house fires, what's your inspiration? what kind of music to do you make. >> we make music that is accessible to people that is trying to start something in their house. we're so used to going to church buildings or different places but really the heart behind our music is just to get people an easy access, a tool to be able to just worship with their friends or start something in their home. rachel: the song you're going to sing for us is "lean on the lord." for those watch, maybe they haven't been close to the lord or maybe they don't know the lord. what would you say it means to lean on the lord? >> leaning on the lord is just having it at the forefront of your mind, god's goodness, seeing through the eyes of jesus and being able to hear what he says about you, you know, that's like step one. you know, hearing what he says about you and being able to walk
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that out so you can see it in other people. leaning on the lord is just daily commuting with god. rachel: prayer, sounds like a lot of prayer. >> a lot of prayer. >> both of my brother-in-laws are firemen so i don't know if they like me starting about house fires. >> this is the only house fire you should be starting. >> so many of you are here today, it's a lot of people to pack into the green room. everyone was so respectful and nice to be focused on their work. every commercial break you guys were practicing. i think we're going to let you maybe play some music for us. >> let's do it. thank you guys for having us. >> go ahead and take it away. >> appreciate it. ♪ i remember when i was just a kid. ♪ didn't worry about a thing, the world was simple then. ♪ but it's different now, a lot
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to think about. ♪ at some point i've got to learn to lay my questions out. ♪ i try to make sense of it all but i just can't. ♪ when i don't understand, i lean on the lord. ♪ lean on you, lord. ♪ some things don't make sense. ♪ but one thing's for sure. ♪ when i lean on you, lord. ♪ lean on you, lord. ♪ somehow your love gives me the strength to go on. ♪ so i lean on the lord. ♪ lean on lean on. ♪ lean on lean on. ♪ lean on the lord now. ♪ lean on, lean on. ♪ you didn't tell me then and you won't tell me now. ♪ if i'm still breathing, there's a reason that i'm still
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around. ♪ i will trust in you. ♪ give me all the strength. ♪ i you try to make sense of itl but i just can't. ♪ when i don't understand i lean on the lord. ♪ lean on you, lord. ♪ some things don't make sense. ♪ but one thing's for sure. ♪ when i lean on you, lord. ♪ lean on you, lord. ♪ som somehow your love gives me strength to go on. ♪ so i lean on the lord. ♪ lean on lean on. ♪ hey, come on. ♪ lean on lean on. ♪ lean on the lord now, now, now. ♪ lean on, lean on. ♪ lean on the lord now. ♪ your word.
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♪ your strength. ♪ i'm learning how to lean on you. ♪ your grace. ♪ your strength. ♪ i'm learning on to lean on you. ♪ your word. ♪ your grace. ♪ your strength. ♪ i'm learning how to lean on you. ♪ your word. ♪ your grace. ♪ your strength. ♪ i'm learning how to lean on your love. ♪ lean on you, lord. ♪ some things don't make sense. ♪ but one thing's for sure. ♪ when i lean on you, lord. ♪ lean on you, lord.
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♪ -i say to you, love your enemies and pray for those who persecute you. -i don't feel any different. -i don't need you to feel anything to do great things. (upbeat music) -jesus, if you do not renounce your words, we will have no choice but to follow the law of moses. -i am the law of moses. ♪ what the? good morning hallow makes it easy to build a daily habit of prayer and meditation want to start with a five minute daily gospel? sure. take a deep breath and focus your attention on god in the name of the father, mother, son to the holy spirit. amen.
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pete: thank you for joining us on in the faith and friends concert series. we loved being with you for all four hours. joey: have a great day and be back in your chairs for the big sunday show. pete: happy sunday. go to church one more time. see you nec weekend. >> good sunday morning, everyone. i'm maria bart romo -- maria bartiromo. another stock market selloff monday morning. because of the failure of silicon valley bank. bank regulators trying to come up with a buyer for the failed technology lender. is a bailout coming? speaker of the house kevin mccarthy on the first major bank failur
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