tv Outnumbered FOX News March 16, 2023 9:00am-10:00am PDT
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good luck. td ameritrade, this is anna. hi anna, this position is all over the place, help! hey professor, subscriptions are down but that's only an estimated 15% of their valuation. do you think the market is overreacting? how'd you know that? the company profile tool, in thinkorswim®. yes, i love you!! please ignore that. td ameritrade. award-winning customer service that has your back. >> hello. this is "outnumbered." i'm harris faulkner here with my cohosts emily compagno and kayleigh mcenany, along with kennedy, and david webb.
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we begin with brand-new video from the pentagon, showing the moment a russian fighter jet collided with a u.s. drone over international waters. the stunning footage shows the jet approaching the drone, dumping fuel as it gets closer. then striking the drone's propeller before it plunged into the water. the defense department also released these images, one first showing the propeller attacked, a second photo showing the damaged propeller. the kremlin had said the u.s. downed the drone. well, we know that's not true. the video clearly is a receipt for why that didn't happen. almost immediately following the crash, russia sent ships to search for debris. we don't have warships there anymore. biden took them out. our top military brass is doubtful they will find anything, recovering usable intelligence, because that part of the black sea is some 5,000 feet deep. still the incident is very troubling. here's general mark milley,
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chairman of the joint chiefs of staff. >> so -- so was it intentional or not? don't know yet. we know that the intercept was intentional. i can tell you with certainty that we have absolute evidence of the contact, the intercept, etc. very aggressive. you've heard about the dumping of the fuel and everything else. we have video evidence of that. there's no question that part was intentional. the actual physical cabbing of the aircraft -- contact of the aircraft, i'm not sure. >> the fact of the matter is what will it mean for president biden? >> yeah. it's a great question. look, he went on to say this is part of a pattern of aggression. that's what the secretary of defense said. well, why is that pattern happening exactly? umm, the highest levels of the kremlin, approving this pattern of action. why is it happening? maybe it's something to do with our commander in chief, our
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president handling vladimir putin a list of what you can't do. there's a pattern happening because of the weakness we're seeing. you highlighted it just there. even in our response to this, we are weak. kirby, within hours of this happening, out on cnn morning show, it's very, very deep there. milley emphasizing that. it's very deep there. why are we telling the russians this as they have a warship in the area and saying we don't even have a ship there. why are we broadcasting strength? that's not something biden has the ability to do. >> last hour, congressman waltz from your home state of florida was on with me. that's how i learned why we removed the warships. it was appeasing putin so maybe he wouldn't do more than a minor incursion. >> we know how ukraine worked out. >> we took our warships out. we couldn't go back in there now if we wanted to.
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it's bizarre. let's take a look at frustration when it comes to the biden administration when it comes to russia. >> this is part and parcel for russia's agenda to own the black sea. my frustration is that the biden administration, biden ordered all of our ships out of the black sea before the war even started, because it was yet another concession, yet another attempt at appeasement, that maybe if we're not too escalatetory, nice enough, the russians will be nice back. we've seen that's a huge mistake. the broader agenda, we pulled our ships out, manned aircraft out. now we have unmanned aircraft in international waters, and the russians want to force them out too. the response can't be do nothing. >> kennedy, the way that congressman walsh describes this, it's like biden is running our foreign policy like a sandlot, like a playlot, if you're nice to the other kids,
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he'll only punch you in the face once. >> we should have listened to robert gates before the good people of this country voted president biden into office. he's horrible on foreign policy. this is a very scary time. this is where weakness meets desperation. he's telegraphing weakness, not strategy, certainly not strength, and certainly not something that would keep us out of a hot war with a nuclear superpower. russia is backed up against the wall militarily, economically, and desperation is not the best position to have them in, because they are now like a caged animal who's going to lash out. unfortunately i don't trust this administration, and frankly the military brass, and i don't buy their excuses about the depth of water and, you know -- i think there's a lot of it we're not getting straight truth. i don't trust this commander in chief to give it to us. that gives me pause and fear for the future of a very hot and
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dangerous conflict. >> yeah. i mean, i don't want anyone to believe that we can't handle a submarine, which is in very deep water. i just want to -- >> by the way, that's a very good point, since we're not supposed to know where the submarines are, are we able to deploy, but then a significant amount of our submarine fleet is not actually out and deployed right now, because they're in dry-dock, being repaired. to kennedy's point, angle of entry into the water, type of impact, implosion, separation of the parts of a drone, so we really don't know. they can't give us a definitive answer. mark milley's attempts to parse the answer, put the idea that this was not an intentional act out there by talking about a specific part, this is a complete intentional act. it's a big space. look up above you, everyone. for two items in the sky, or in this case two warplanes and a drone to come together is an intentional act. russia is also in the process of flexing its muscles.
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there's been an interaction with the uk aircraft recently. there are other questions being raised about north sea interactions. a caged animal will reach out, in this case and i say flex its muscles, to show that i'm not as weak as you think i am. >> emily? >> yeah. i think it's telling that russian officials on wednesday came right out and said we are going to induce recovery efforts immediately. then contrast with kirby who said, well, there may not be any kind of recovery effort given the depth. what a stark contrast in response. you know, i'm not surprised, because remember after the debacle pullout that afghanistan was, where 13 service members lost their lives, we left behind $7 billion worth of equipment. why should we care about a $32 million reaper right now? i wouldn't be surprised at all. i'm not. remember what the pentagon did at the time, what this administration did at the time about that equipment, not only confirming it, but then saying
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basically, i guess it's not that big of a deal. we know that equipment included aircraft, vehicles, munitions, guns, communication equipment, and the reaction was a lot of this stuff is likely to quickly become nonoperational guys, not to worry. remember when jeff selden said is any of this equipment reaching al-qaeda or isis, guys? the continued response, we continue to monitor for any indications of that happening. they said, the purpose by the russians is to always be raising the stakes. as a normal american that values my freedom and my security and my faith, living in this country, nothing terrifies me more than russia going all in under this administration. >> russia going all in, knowing that china is right there. >> yes. >> china yet, according to admirable kirby, china has yet to tell us whether it's chosen
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to push for peace between russia and ukraine or possibly put more than soft kits on the ground for weapons. we're waiting for them. >> right. we've seen russia's army is not what we thought it was. they're losing to ukraine pretty badly. but china, they are the real threat to this country. they are, you know, essentially possibly backing the russians. we'll see. >> uh-huh. >> yeah. we'll have to see. >> yeah. >> because kirby says we have to wait. >> got to wait. >> all right. coming up, despite what we see with our own eyes, the biden administration keeps telling the nation there's no border crisis, but a stunning admission from the president's border patrol chief when he was asked if we have any operational control at all at the southern border. veteran homeowners. one of the most powerful ways to fight inflation is to pay off your high-rate debt to lower your monthly payments. at newday we make it easy. our newday 100 loan lets you combine your first mortgage, your second mortgage,
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>> shocking admission from president biden's border patrol chief, admitting to members of congress that the situation at our southern border is out of control. like we didn't already know that. he contradicted previous testimony from dhs secretary alejandro mayorkas. this is what the secretary said back in april. >> will you testify under oath right now, do we have operational control, yes or no? >> yes, we do. >> operational control of the borders? >> yes, we do. >> hmm. at the hearing yesterday in texas, which the democrats boycotted, the border chief raul ortiz offered a different view about operational control. >> sir, when you talk about operational control, 10 years ago we used operational control as a measuring stick of our effectiveness along the southwest border. >> i'm asking a very specific question. >> yes, sir. >> you're kind of describing how the goal post has been moved, because of the mass waves of people that are coming.
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my question, you heard the secretary, he said we have operational control. that's the definition of operational control? >> based upon the definition you have up there, no. >> we don't have operational control? >> no, sir. >> so operational control, federal statute is the prevention of unlawful entries into the united states, including entries by terrorists, illegal aliens, contraband, and more. we've had 900,000 migrants from 147 countries just in the fiscal year '23. 16 on the international terror list. operational control? >> no. by any definition, you can broaden the definition, soften it, whatever the metric is, this is a failure. so i look at this administration, you know, obviously i may have a different view of immigration than some people who talk about this here, but i'm wondering from the
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administration how bad are you going to let it get? at what point will you say it's a failure you cans it's not working, this is wrong, it's dangerous for people who live here, dangerous for people coming here, it's immoral for kids trafficked from those 147 different countries whose parents are desperate to borrow money to give them to cartels, to give them to coyotes, to get them here as a distraction to funnel drugs into this country. it is a broken system. they are unserious people. the democrats didn't even attend the hearing. like, fine, we'll have a hearing in washington, with the same people, show up, do your work, and keep things safe, because that's one of your basic jobs, right? >> mark green had comments on democrats being awol. >> in the army, when someone didn't show up, we called them awol or absent without leave. their place of duty is at this hearing, because it's a full
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hearing, and they're not here. they're awol. >> emily, i don't understand. okay, so they didn't show up, but why not counter program the republicans and show up at migrant facilities, act like you care about the kids who have been trafficked across the border? why not do that? >> because they don't care. i love what he said, their place of duty is at the hearing. this is the chairman of the house homeland security committee. i thought that was powerful. what struck me about their absence is what message does it send, send to all of us americans, to all of their constituents. they replied and said, the reason we're not going, it's been politicized by the republicans, and disrupted our proud history of bipartisan work. all we see are empty seats. i note the two states with the highest drug overdose, the highest poisonings occurring are maryland and california. maryland with the greatest overdose death rate among all deaths. california with the highest number in general. those are staunchly blue.
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how do those combined populations of 46 million americans feel about their elected representatives not caring to show up? because whatever sort of talking point defense they gave, it doesn't sit well with the grieving families, those torn-part communities. so to your point, even if they held it in washington, i doubt they would show up then, because they do not care, because actions are what matter. >> harris, we heard about the whipping of migrants, a report that came out, and the conclusion was there was no evidence that border patrol agents involved in the incident struck migrants. what i'm curious to find out, here's an email at 12:05 p.m., when this was going viral, in mayorkas' inbox, and that email had words from the photographer saying it never happened, but mayorkas double-downed, demonizing them, and so did the president. did mayorkas share it with the president? >> who's making the decisions about what the narrative is
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going to be? is that the white house? i think we know that. we also know that in this instance. the white house called this hearing a stunt. even though democrats used our money to buy all of their travel, have lined up at least one witness, they flipped the switch politically, and canceled on all of this. same thing with the whipping. the white house was still trotting this out, long after that email had landed. >> uh-huh. >> in the box of mayorkas. we also know that there was a narrative about the thousands of haitians under the bridge in eagle pass. i mean, that was a nasty scene. it looked terrible for the white house. mayorkas calls the border patrol. i got that on the record. he wanted to know, is this real. did the news media make up this picture. i guess that was what they were going to float. the border patrol said everything everybody is dealing with it right now. it's very, very real. so the white house wants america to believe something different. i'm going to ask those
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democrats, along the lines of what emily was saying, who do they represent? not everybody voted for them, but they are responsible to every constituent in their district respectively. they are. they serve the people. not just the people they like. >> right. there are laws. >> yeah. >> david, you know, one thing that i'm curious where you stand, i've heard two arguments made. one from republicans saying we don't want to impeach mayorkas, because we don't want to look like we're politicizing impeachment. another argument, he's deserving of impeachment. two guys that have been there, saying in their article, it's reserved for holding public officials accountable, when they violate the law, abuse the power of their office. sadly the actions of mayorkas demand congress take this rare step. that's pretty bold. >> it's bold. for kevin mccarthy to say, quote, he's going to respect the process and not go forward, when
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there's two filed articles of impeachment ready to go, into committee and out of committee. mark and tom and i talk about this on my show. the use of impeachment against mayorkas matters here. by the way, it ties to what you were talking about that mobile home that went to email. his responsibility before going to the president, when he was there during trump, so he saw what happened when real border security was in place, and he's seen the failure, his responsibility is to find the facts and go to the president. mayorkas is a deliberate failure. it's a deliberate policy. to the point of who the democrats are speaking to, they're speaking to their open borders constituents. they don't care about recently americans. doesn't matter what side of the aisle they're on. that believe in community safety. that want americans to have the secure border. that want us to be protected. they do not careinpe sg to their constituents, not to the rest of america. >> if mayorkas had a podium to stand at, those agents who he
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demonized did not. they could not speak for themselves. if he knowingly knew they did nothing, and stood at that podium and demonized them, i mean impeachment is the only -- >> he's actually lied in congress, to congress, under oath. >> that's what we found out from raul ortiz's testimony, that they're not conflicting, one side was lying, and as i said last hour that's a problem. >> yep. >> huge problem. all right. up next, a look at america's crime crisis in oregon where a public defender shortage has forced the state to dismiss hundreds of cases, putting alleged violent suspects back on the streets.
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growing homeless population is sparking a mass exodus of businesses from the downtown area. big name stores like wal-mart, nike closing their doors. just last year, they were nearly 100 murders in the city, almost 10,000 assaults, as well as thousands of other violent crimes. david, this of course is the tip of the iceberg as it deals with public defenders. we know the prosecutorial rate regardless of the shortage was less than 50% going into that. that doesn't speak to the state crimes, where prosecutorial discretion is equally weak. the residents there are frankly being terrorized, and they have no options left to protect their own safety. >> and the people who are at the head of terrorizing them are the very people they elected into office. , because the policies are made by these politicians. but it filters down. this is a problem, not just in portland. it's gone on in many cities over the years. as prosecutors become overwhelmed, a number of cases become too much, what do they
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do? they release criminals faster out into the street, who continue to commit crimes. as police departments lose and are unable to recruit, retaken or grow, because there is an actual of ratio how many police officers you need to the population you serve, and the type of population. there are many metrics to that. portland is unable to meet this. what used to be a great town, with food and, you know, hip culture, fun to go to, has turned into this crime-ridden debacle. economically, these businesses are not coming back. residents lose jobs. they lose opportunity. the town loses a tax base. this is predictable failure on steroids in portland. we saw lori lightfoot in chicago. we've seen what happens in l.a., san francisco. look at new york city. look at new york city, what they're doing. these policies take decades to overturn. the people pay the price. they elected these officials. they put them in power.
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get out and get them out of office. it's your first point of contact. >> i love everything that you said. i take issue only with the election component of it, because, kennedy, you and i have family in that area. i always say it's like a buffet of socialism. the options are absolutely terrible. the voters there, they essentially vote for the best of what's around, but there's no options because good people aren't attracted to serving, because there's nothing to show for it. >> that's difficult. >> yeah. >> it's organizing. look, school boards, what did parents start to do? they started showing up. if you want to save your town, you have to get involved. it's how the founding fathers structured this country, we the people. i know it's difficult. the republican party is often absent. that's another tragedy. they don't even compete in chicago against lori lightfoot. look at that example. there's elements here. you need to get together and work on this. those counties that want to leave and go to idaho, those 13 counties, they're serious. >> yeah.
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oh, they are. kennedy, what's so tragic about what david outlined, how fast it fell. we have family in that area. my dog is operating his farm. your family is working. they don't have time to run for elected office on their own. they hope that the tax dollars will result in an accurate,ed adequate, commensurate investment into safety, allowing them to operate their businesses, but the reality is it's not. >> no. safety and function. you know, that's the problem, because as the tax base leaves, you've got 2700 businesses that have petitioned for different zip codes with the post office, that's how they know the businesses are leaving, but multnomah county, they're moving out of portland, because it's not safe. they always thought there would be small businesses, keeping the economy afloat, keeping portland weird, but that's not the case.
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if your businesses is constantly broken into, your safety is violated, and you can't keep your employees safe, you're going to leave. what are you left with? you're left with the trolls. we were talking about this earlier today. the ancillary effect, the bleeding-out effect. not only are the businesses fleeing, but so too are the criminals. i spoke with our neighbor, a law enforcement-owned small business, and told me about a series of devastating stories, people held up at gunpoint at 3:00 p.m. a fellow deputy who got his truck stolen, and told it was up to him to get it back when he located it on the streets of portland. she talked about the fact, that because the officers are diluted, underfunded, nothing is being done, now the neighboring counties are struggling to contain what portland failed to. we cannot overstate the impact that has on so many families, so many agricultural businesses, affecting the nation's commodities. >> i was amazed about the
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stories you were telling me, especially the man who lost his truck, and they told him to get it. i went to portland, 2019. went back in 2022. it's stunning. the homeless encampments. mayor wheeler pledged, i believe i was made for this moment. that's a direct quote directing homelessness there. you weren't made for the moment. i went, and the moment is pretty bad. >> pretty bad indeed. >> when you talk about the metrics that have to change in a city, and almost every building block within 50 feet of this building, missing starbucks, missing everything, that changes the city. >> we had a business metro, a cafe in my building, it's gone. they had five locations in the city. gone during covid. policy decisions affect the business community, affects the people you need to run the city, who can't even afford to live there. if we don't get back to
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governance structures, these cities will continue to fail, and the left benefits, and the american people and american economy loses. >> yeah. what makes my heartbreak more than the corporate fleeings, are the small businesses, especially portland. there was an indigenous coffee shop. a female-owned, lgbqt, etc., that still wasn't good enough. she was ransacked, gutted, had to move out of town. there's no end until strong leadership comes in to play. i won't hold my breath. coming up, vice president kamala harris is finally asked about the show "veep" and how accurate is. her answer next. when pain says, “i'm here,” ♪ i say, “so are they.” just one aleve. 12 hours of uninterrupted pain relief. aleve who do you take it for?
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i'm not sure what a fake car would be. >> i should be president or something. >> hmm. well, that might be a scene from the popular show "veep" but according to vice president kamala harris, the fictional show isn't far off. stephen colbert tried to get insight on what she does in the executive branch. here's how she responded. >> i know you love "veep." >> i do. i love "veep." is it accurate? >> there are bits of it that are actually quite accurate. >> what is the actual role on a daily basis as you've found it? >> well, i have the great privilege of serving with joe biden, president of the united states. he is an extraordinary leader.
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i wish that people could see what i see, because there's only one person who sits behind that resolute desk, and he's an extraordinary leader. >> that's an excellent answer. the question is, what is the job of the vice president? >> oh, that was perfect. >> we're all wondering that, harris. >> i thought that was funny. you know, when you can't answer what you do, it's because you don't have anything positive to say. she's been given a lot of responsibilities. what's she going to talk about? the border crisis? i mean, no, she's not. i think it was interesting, do you think she believes she would be on a ticket still with the president? >> yes. i think she's aggressively making that case. i smell blood in the water, like elizabeth warren. >> like she was shark swimming, swimming away from the sharks, letting everybody know she was going to make it to the beach.
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>> yeah. she broadcasts all the time she will certainly be the vp candidate, david. she talked about filling with her office with smoke by starting the fireplace without opening the flue. let's put this up. this was at a time when people were leaving her office, allegations in the press, she was not so kind to her staff. he tweeted this. hi. i work for vp harris. i love my job. just thought some of you should know. >> look, i'll go back to harris' answer. if you can't describe your job, i'll add one to it, maybe you don't know what your job is. the fact is her track record from attorney general to senate to here is not one of accomplishment. it's simply being there. if that's all you want, you haven't gained experience, you haven't evolved into a better
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politician, elected official, or maybe next candidate. >> even democrats don't seem to know what her job is. this stuck out to me. a lot of times people will criticize in their party they don't like on background. i don't believe in that practice. i don't like it. some people do it. however this guy goes on the record, democrat fundraiser, john morgan, says this to "the new york times," this in my opinion will be one of the most hard-hitting arguments against biden, meaning harris potentially taking over the job. it doesn't take a job to say with his age we have to think about this. so far she has not distinguished herself. i can't think of one thing she's one except stand out of the way and stand by him at certain ceremonies. that's harsh. he put his name to that statement. >> i think it's accurate. not that she's done nothing. she's the drag on an airplane weight. she has the extra weight that is failing our country, leading us to not accomplish anything. note that a democrat strategist just a few weeks ago said, yes,
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she needs to find an issue, she can get behind, accomplish, and that will help propel her forward for momentum for perceivably be on the ticket. two years and she doesn't have one? didn't she campaign on something? wasn't she a senator, a district attorney? she's been hallmarked by a colossal number of failures. the fact she cannot articulate what she does on a daily basis, she faces at basic fundamental communications in addition to even faking it for one second. we all see for our eyes, of course she's "veep" because she's a joke. >> and elizabeth warren saying, we'll let biden pick who his vp is, not leaning in. in 2021, he was on kamala's plane, air force ii.
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>> he's a total misogynist, doesn't respect her, trying to use her for power, thanks to the patriarchy, and he'll probably win, which, you know, i don't know whose career is going worse right now. they're both sort of at a race for the bottom, which is comical. a lovely distraction from the incredibly serious times we're living in right now. when someone asks her if her life is really like "veep," it's not a compliment, a fun tidbit late show nugget. it's sad. >> buttigieg, harris, warren. keeping your kitchen pantry clean and tidy could be racist. more on that next. ♪ ♪ we're reinventing our network... ...with smarter, more efficient routes...
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>> we are awaiting two separate briefings from the white house and pentagon on how the u.s. plans to handle russia after the pentagon released brand-new video of the moment a russian jet collided with an american drone and downed the aircraft earlier this week. we'll talk about both events live. plus, mad spending and woke-obsessed bankers fueling a
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banking tsunami. plus an all-star lineup. come join me live at the top of the hour. the. >> well, if you are somebody who likes to keep things neat, tidy, organized -- i do, i'm type a -- one college professorship says you need to check your privilege. really? a professor at loyola university in chicago is claiming that a social media trend of obsessing your kitchen pantry is sexist and racist. here's what she wrote. "what lies beneath the surface of this anti-messiness pro-niceness stance is a history of classic racist and sexist social structures. my researcher influencers who produce pantry porn are predominantly white women and demonstrate what it looks like to maintain a nice home by creating a new status symbol, the perfectly organized, fully
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stocked pantry." david webb, my mother came from a long line of haitian domestics. our home was always perfect. she wanted everything appointed. dad's military shoes polished, everything like that. we didn't have much. i'm definitely not white. what is this? >> a lie, number one. and my family like yours, whether it's the jamaican side of the family or -- the kitchen was an important place, being organized. here's the thing. i moved recently. here my wife and i organizing the pantry. i'm clearly not white. and i'm the one who goes back and says, because i love to cook, i have my knives, everything laid out, i'm organizing my pots as i need to have them, my spices as i need to have them, because it's my getaway from the world. i'm a wannabe chef, whether it's on the grill or in the kitchen. this is ridiculous lie and nonsense that continue to undermine how people see
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themselves. it doesn't matter whether you're black or white. i've been in a lot of people's kitchens. i've been in a lot of chefs' kitchens. i've actually cooked with julia childs. that did happen. i love this. an organized kitchen is part of what you do in life. it's a good thing. it's not racist. >> kennedy, you know, i guess this would be different if we were just talking about, well, this was this person's opinion about 10 people, but a whole society. >> yes. especially white women. demonizing white women, thank you very much for that. she's also got an obsession. she's also a slob. this is what happens. when you're bad at something, you call that thing you're bad at racist. apparently that is somehow making a sound argument for you. no. everybody likes to live in a clean kitchen. we all lived through the pandemic. we had too much time on our hand, access to the store, so we bought baskets and tiny
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chalkboards, so we feel we have control over our lives because the government took it all away from us. >> if you want to argue me anything, i love it so much, i'll come. emily, i know you love laundry. >> i'm a sleeping with the enemies fanatic in my house. all the labels have to face the same direction. it's organized by size. i'm 100% that psychopath. if you need to me to organize your home, i'll do it too. it's deliciously satisfying to have everything organized and visually perfect. i make no apologies for it. i don't care what someone else thinks. i file this under what the heck is next, because according to the liberal woke left everything is racist. >> now being organized is racist. >> julia roberts knows that the potential killer is in the house, because the decals are not right. >> yes. >> i can see you emily. >> it was real. >> i learned mainly i need my
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cohosts to come to my house. >> we're on it. >> my husband is the most organized man on planet earth. i'm not. harris and emily can help me. >> and i'll make fun of your neighbors. >> thank you. everyone come over. ever better. it's when disruption hits your supply chain and ryder makes sure you're ever delivering with freight brokerage to transportation management, truckload capacity and dedicated trucks and drivers. buying a car from vroom is so easy, all you need is a phone and a finger. just go to vroom.com, scroll through thousands of cars. then, tap to buy. that's it.
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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.
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comes to customers service, or the lack thereof. they want to speak to a representative. an op-ed says it should not be hard to speak to a human but companies large and small are making it difficult to access a real-person when needed. wait times to speak to an operator are look, average wait time has tripled from 2020 to 2022. frustrations are real and companies say we cannot afford the customers service representatives and outsourcing it to people overseas and language barriers, a total lack of customer service. >> and the receiver end, you call a company and say it's an hour wait time and don't give you the option for a call back. simple answer, say we will call you back in an hour when we are free. some do, not all. >> i think a now layer of hell kennedy just comprised of the
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elevator music that being on hold for a 60 minutes subjects you to. >> or prerecorded, like well, you -- oh blah blah blah, and on the home going representative, representative, representative! >> agent, agent, agent, agent! >> i hope they never come to light, me speaking agent! >> i have found when you get the human i say these words, is this being recorded? i want to catch that person on the other side because they are so rude it's like they have been waiting that entire time. >> right, right. the frustration goes both ways. >> i have an advertiser on my show, they stress the point that you get a 100% u.s.-based customer service, companies are seeing value i think it's going to pick up more. >> and the other end, have we
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answered all your questions? yes, yes, get to the point, get to the point. balance between authentic and then too much. >> someone offered to come and help me organize my kitchen the other day, i thought was -- >> that was me. [laughter] it wasn't me. >> thanks, everyone for watching. don't forget to dvr if you cannot make it live, here is "america reports." >> nerves are certainly frayed at this moment. >> the down fall of the bank, the reason it had to be closed was that it couldn't meet depositors. our banking system is sound americans feel positive it's there when they need them. >> treasury stated no losses will be borne by the taxpayer. do you stand by that statement? >> yes. >> sandra: we will dig into that. america's top banking official in the hot seat facing tough qu
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