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tv   Tucker Carlson Tonight  FOX News  March 17, 2023 10:00pm-11:01pm PDT

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t.b., seriouh,tack, sts infectit and blood clots. some fatal cancers including lymphoma and skin cancer. art disedeath, heart attack, ste and tears in the stomach or intestines occurred. as s reactio 50 and oldert least one heart disease riskdert factor have higher risks. factor have higher risks. don't take as serious reactions can occur. lear may become pregnant. can eczema. talk to your doctor about ritvo . >> learn how he can help you said good evening and welcome to tucker carlson. >> tonight, i'm will cain in for tucker and it's a big day. it's a big day for the irish and the president of united states. would like to wish all of you a happy saint. >> patty st. patrick's. you know, the thing joe biden love st. patrick's day because he's told us four decade
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he's irish. >> he's even in the irish american hall of fame. his secret service code name is celtic. that's how irish he is . and joe biden is proud of that. he was today with the irish prime minister. >> every saint patrick's day, every irish war goes out to find another irish to make speech to . well, that's why i'm here. i , like all of you, take pride in my irish ancestry and as long as i can remember, it's been sort of part of my soul. >> how i've been raised. >> it takes pride in ancestry. but he did go on to joke that he's not really irish because, well, he's sober and his family isn't in jail. >> at least not yet, because, get it, the irish drink and they get arrested a lot. >> watch. i've been to ireland many times and not to actually look up to find my actual family members. and there are so many and they actually weren't in jail. they were all.
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but all kidding aside, i met the bloods and the finnigan's and all of the folks who were we related to . i'm the only irishman you ever met. donitz never had a drink, so i'm okay. i'm really not irish. >> well, watching all this, you have to wonder how joe biden's countrymen in the puerto rican community are thinking tonight. for years, joe biden has told us that puerto ricans raised him. and yet here he is giving all the credit to the irish.bly feey slighted in puerto rico. or maybe they're relieved. either way, the facts of joe biden's biography are getting harder and harder to pin down. you see, it's not just the puerto ricans who are being airbrushed away. what about all the poles and the greeks? who played key roles in joe biden's upbringing? see, it's not st. patrick's day. joe biden talks about them a lot. >> you know, i grew up in a heavily irish catholic community in scranton, tevanian, heavily italian polish community in claymont, delaware. i also want to acknowledge someone else who means a great
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deal to our family. rabbi michael beals of the congregation, beth shalom in wilmington, delaware. that's i received my education. i probably went to shul more than many of you did. >> you all think i'm kidding? we have a very in relative terms, large puerto rican population in delaware. i was sort of raised in the puerto rican community at home. >> i got my education for real in the black church. that's how firmly in fact, i'm an honorary greek. >> not only today, not only today, but every day, black , puerto rican, greek pole, italian, jewish, puerto rican. i think i said that one twice. what are you going to have to take joe's word for it? >> because it's friday. it's also kind of funny to imagine this benneton of an upbringing if it were true,
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even though it's clearly not true. so i've got to ask, how does a puerto rican greek irishman celebrate st. patty's? what we've been able to identify that joe biden has something of a tradition for this holiday. first, he makes fun of the irish while at the same time bragging about himself. here was joe biden last year, for example, must be farther from about to send. i well, i just want you to know i may be irish, but i'm not stupid. >> maybe irish, but i'm not stupid. that was last year. this year, i may be irish, but i'm not drunk and in jail. joe biden i've been at this for a while, so the subtlety of his insults is gone. but back in the day, joe biden was more clever. he found more inventive ways to slight his irish guests on st.. patrick's day back in 2010, for example, biden memorialize the mother of ireland's prime minister, even though she was very much alive.
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>> the teacher knows a lot about it. his mama lived in long island for ten years or so. god rest her soul. and although she's wait, your mom's still your mom still alive. >> is your dad passed? god bless her soul. i got to get this straight. >> yes, it's a big one to not have straight. you can feel it. i mean, it's electric. joe biden's enthusiasm for st. patrick's day in these videos, it's infectious. in fact, kamala harris told us today joe biden's love of this holiday is authentic. and , of course, no one is better to judge authenticity than kamala harris. >> watch as you all know, vice president biden and this was one of his most particular joys as vice president and as you all know, he is quite exuberant in that joy . and i now have caught the bug.
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joe biden takes st. patrick's day seriously. i really can't talk. >> i use my hands a lot to talk. but how seriously joe biden take st. patrick's day. we can't confirm this, but there are reports tonight that biden's famous showdown with corn pop resulted from mr. pop not having the proper reverence for st. patrick's. he refused to wear green and irish. joe had no choice but to teach him a lesson in corn. >> pop was a bad dude and he ran a bunch of bad boys. he said , i'll be waiting for you. he was right by three guys in straight razors. not a joke. and he cut off a six foot long dick cheney fold up and you walk out without shame. and you walked out of a car and said, you may cut me, man. but i'm going to wrap this chain around your head. >> the truth that truly is one of the greatest hits of politics. that clip never gets old. >> it is solid gold. now, again, we cannot be sure
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that corn pop had offended joe biden's irish, puerto rican, greek, polish, italian ancestry. but it's starting to look like the most likely theory. >> and chatting more with the spectator. >> here with us now to assess chadwick on a serious, somewhat on an attempted , somewhat more serious note, chadwick, this is the administration of cultural appropriation and social justice. this is the administration that's here to teach us about racial justice. yeah, i mean, if if half of biden's voters, if they're grandfather said the things that biden has said in his past about racial jungle's and segregation and saying that gay people are national security threats and shouldn't be teachers and stuff, they would disown their own grandparents. i'd be shouting at them at the thanksgiving table, i hope you die, but it's okay for joe biden to do it, which, of course, is exposes their own idiocy and hypocrisy and they don't really care. i mean, these stories that joe biden makes up about his past are so hilarious and ridiculous. most prominently, his great lie
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about seeing a couple kissing nineteen thirty two or whatever , and his father telling him that, you know, love is love. yeah, yeah. you know, i could just hear him now like, well, you know, the biden family always believed that trans rights are human rights. but grandpappy told me that during the potato famine. give it a rest. joe biden. nobody's buying it. yeah. the the gay marriage epiphany was the slowest moving epiphany in history from nineteen fifty through opposing gay marriage in the early 2010s. it just took 60 some odd years, but it was an epiphany for joe biden. chadwick. this, this look, we could dismiss this as the the tangled web of lies of one old man. but the truth is it also fits into, for example, justin trudeau wearing blackface or ralph northam. well, wearing blackface. it seems to be the take away. chadwick is maybe this is all for show. yeah, it it's so deeply offensive. everyone knows that, like liberal white guy that puts on like a black accent when he talks to black people
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and everyone just or like hillary clinton does. and it's just so offensive and gross and cringe. and it's sort of an effect that this is what joe biden does as a default setting. and it's almost like he doesn't really need to because nobody expects him to be this kind of tiktok, social justice warrior. he's perhaps pretending to be or thinks he needs to be. it's really just be like the old white guy that's completely corrupt and using your family to enrich yourself and your position. that's fine. we all get it. joe biden, you can't distract us with trying to pretend you're puerto rican. or black and jewish and everything else that you are trying to do. what do they say? >> it's not a lie if you truly believe it. do you doubt that joe biden believes he is a black puerto rican jewish pole? >> could be possible. he actually . >> these things. chattooga, more of the spectator. thank you so much. for being with us tonight. >> thank you. my pleasure. all right. march madness, it's underway. and howard university made its first appearance in the tournament since 1992. sadly, they didn't last long.
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howard was blown out in the first round by kansas and that wasn't even really the worst part of the night for the bisons. moments after getting destroyed on the court, howard took another loss when vice president kamala harris entered the locker room, she addressed the players who had just lost the biggest game of their lives as if they had just failed to complete their first day of kindergarten. watch playing hard play to a very left. you made all those faces so, so you hustled down there. you are smart, you are disciplined. you put everything you have into the game and you know that's what it's about, right? until the last minute you guys did that. so you keep playing with chin up and shoulders back because you showed the world bison
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on offer, right? i mean, literally what you have done is in historic proportions. yeah, i was at howard back in the day where we were just happy that there was a game. let's to this place, coach , i'd rather get blown up by 40 by kansas than have to put up with that punishment. no confirmed reports that that was what was said after the speech. >> but you saw it, by the way, kamala harris was in attendance for the game and the fans booed her then. doggett's is a former player and head coach for the indiana university of hoosiers, and he's also a former head coach at bowling green state university. he currently hosts the show, don't ask me for out kick . and dan joins us now. did you ever have such a passionately inspiring motivational speech, dan , in all your years of bowling green or indiana? >> when i was with coach knight, we just used to throw things well and then we'd figure it out later. all right.
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look, we all know that belarus is a god awful public speaker. in fact, i always think she's high on something, i swear to god. but i got to tell you, that's a tough speech. well, that is a tough speech. if you're a coach . i'm trying to be fair here. that's a tough speech. if you're a celebrity, you come in, you're asked to speak to a bunch of kids that just lost by twenty eight points. you know, they want to do they want to get out there. but i got to tell you, she's the worst public speaker i think ever in politics. i almost want to take joe biden out of it. and by the way, you had me rolling with you're wondering how his fellow puerto rican countrymen were taking his love of his irish heritage. i was rolling here, but that's a tough speech. she talks to people like they're in kindergarten. she loves own jokes. i would be sitting there going, man, come on . but i will say this. i thought the howard kids showed class. i thought they were fantastic. i thought they sat there. they were respectful.
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and i did like at the end that she invited the howard team to come to the white house. i did think that was good. but man, oh, man, that's a bad speaker. how is that a vice president speaking like that? >> you know, dan , i love your search for fairness. i truly do. because when i think of fairness, i think of dan dakich and i. i love your pursuit of fairness. if this were one off bad speech, by winston churchill, i think we could forgive the moment. it is a tough moment. to your point. i don't know what coach knight would have said to your point. he might have thrown a chair, but this is part of the record for kamala harris. this is this is she speaks to everyone like they're in second grade or in kindergarten. and you have to wonder what she's waiting on . it's like an applause line that she got on holborow, an applause line she got during a vice presidential debate that she now thinks is coming at every moment. and it's always unearned. it's missing. >> yeah, well, she has no charisma. she has no sense of timing. and then one of the beautiful things about her is that she loves her own jokes.
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my shows on out kick from nine to 11 . you've been a guest, but the content we get from come on , kamala harris or whatever her name is , is unbelievable. because every time she sits there, every time she's in some type of public speak, speaking a dinner, maybe it's an event she gives you content, will because it's awful, is she is a content machine, but it is always the same thing. jibberish, word, salad, laughing at your own jokes and speaking to whomever it is like. they just started you said kindergarten. >> i'll give them second or third grade. well, how again? fair of dan dakich. he said it himself, but it's 9:00 to 11:00 eastern time at about crickets. don't ask me where in his pursuit of fairness, he has seen the light and known that at least after one game in the tournament, the texas longhorns are a real national championship contender. dan dakich, always good to see you. thanks, dan .
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thank you, my friend. >> all right. chicago mayor lori lightfoot is on her way out the door. a lot of people are thrilled about that, including chicago journalist william j. kelly . he just unloaded on lori lightfoot at a city council. you've got to see that here that he's going to be with us straight ahead. your windom this week when bucket list need checking points, need redeeming work trips, need crushing or trips, need crushing or anniversaries, need celebrating . no matter who yowithu are, 24 t you're going or whway with tweny four trusted brands by women to choose from your wyndham's waiting get the lowest price at windom, hotels.com and your little hand in mine. there i am on how we can find
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it's the story of how my life was changed. your life can be changed as well. to go see that movie, but let's keep praying that god sends a spiritual awakening to america again. we need help. we need jesus christ. and he's ready to step in and hear our prayer. >> hello, i'm mike lindell. in the light of the recent events, your continued support means everything to myself and my employees to thank you for having the biggest sale ever on my pillow. >> bening get my pillow bed sheets for as long as 20 nine ninety eight . a set of pillowcases for only nine ninety eight in this economy. instead of buying a new bed, rejuvenate your bed with my pillow mattress topper for as long as ninety nine . ninety nine . we all share blankets in a variety of sizes, colors and styles like plush wildflower gossamer for as low as twenty nine ninety eight . we even have pet blankets from small sides to the ones for your car. get huge discounts on duvets,
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>> the chicago mayor lori lightfoot has lost reelection. she'll be leaving office in a lot of journalists in the city are thrilled about that because lightfoot waged a war on press freedom. at one point, she even refused to let white reporters interview her. >> lightfoot also pulled the press credentials of reporter william jay kelly because she didn't like his reporting on wednesday at a city council meeting, kelly gave lightfoot this sendoff. >> people in chicago elected you. you shut down our schools, you shut down the churches, you shut down the businesses. you did the one thing that i thought could never happen as somebody who was born and raised on the south side of chicago, i never thought in my life that i would ever see the city of chicago brought down so low as you have managed to bring it down. >> shame on you. that is a legacy that you are
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going to have to carry. future historians are going to have a hard time understanding how you are, how you ever even became mayor of the city of chicago. i hope that you realize what damage you have done to the city. i hope that after today's city council meeting, you will pack your suitcase and get the hell out of my city and getting the hell out of office, that's for sure. william j. kelley is a journalist in chicago. >> he joins us now. william, great to have you on the program. i can't help but notice that was a city council meeting. it wasn't a press briefing. it wasn't q&a. that looked like a public comment. why was that? the circumstance of your statement to mayor lori lightfoot? >> absolutely. thank you so much for having me. well, well, yeah. like everything else in the city of chicago now, it's mission impossible meets kobayashi maru. we had traditionally mayor who would do a press conference
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after every city council meeting. but of course, this being her last city council meeting, due to the fact that she lost her reelection campaign, she canceled her city council press conference. so i knew that if i was going to have a chance to speak to her at all, i would have to register for the public comment section. and that's exactly what i did. it was a lottery only five people, only five names were drawn from the big glass bowl. and miraculously, mine was one of them. right. andi was given three minutes and sixty seconds worth the distance run times three luck the irish there, but not without effort. you had to enter the lottery to get a chance to speak to your mayor. why was this so important for you to say what you said to lightfoot? >> well, it was extremely important. well, because over the course of the last few years, i a number of people have contacted me, reached out to me and said
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,here's a question i would like for you to ask the mayor. here's something i would like you to say. police officers who had been overworked and obviously mistreated and a spike in police suicides as a result. >> and i feel like this particular city council meeting was an opera was the last chance that i may ever have to actually tell mayor lori lightfoot not just what was on my mind, but what was on the minds of so many chicagoans. and i'm just thankful that i had the opportunity to do it. >> and i heard in that moment where you told her you hope the history is written accurately, that you intend to write that book, that you intend to write the history of these years in chicago. we hear that in the video clip of your appearance there in the city council. what we cannot hear, william, is the response of the mayor or the council. >> what did they say to you at the end of your statement? well, you know, to add insult to injury, after i'm done giving my public comment or
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victim impact statement is how i actually viewed it. one of mayor lightfoot's city council allies heckled me. she actually said she called me a derogatory name and then she said that all the problems that mayor lori lightfoot had to handle mishandled was the result of the pandemic. and i just, i guess, channeled the entire city of chicago and let this city councilwoman know that she was, in fact, the pandemic. well, in chicago, for the moment at least, it looks like there's some relief from the pandemic. we hope that the circumstances in that city, which have been largely made it unlivable for the past several years, are alleviated and we appreciate you hopping on with us tonight, william j. kelly . and for that moment, in front of mayor lori lightfoot. absolutely. thank you. well, all right. people in east palestine, ohio, report that they've been getting sicker in recent days. it could have something to do with the fact that the water
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there is filled with poison. that's why the residents of these palestine hired scott smith to do independent testing on the water. and so he's the chief sustainability officer of eco integrated technologies whose results were accepted by the epa. and scott smith joins us now from his palestine. scott, great to have you with us. as we mentioned, you were hired independently by some residents there in ohio to see what's in their water or see what's in their soil, see what's in their air. >> what did you find? >> well, first of all, thanks for having me. well, it's great to be here. and we found dioxins. but before that, i want to tell something. 17 years ago, my business in one hundred employees jobs were wiped out and oil and chemical contaminated water. that's when i realized that water testing and remediation were seriously flawed. and ever since this experience, i go into communities affected by water contamination and i help people get the truth so
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they don't have to go through what i went through. and here's the main lesson. you can't find it you don't look for. we started looking for dioxins last week in february. well, we got initial results back . we got the water results back . we don't even have the soil and air. and we found dioxins in dioxins essentially are the fenthion of chemicals. and why? because they're measured in parts per quadrillion as much. i've never heard of parts per quadrillion. i've been doing this for a long time. just to put it in perspective, lead metals. other chemicals are measured in parts per billion or part parts per million, one part per quadrillion is equivalent. if you have twenty trillion pennies to one penny. >> that's how sensitive is in what what is the health risk of dioxins? >> well, it's related to agent orange and if you can look it
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up, i'm not a toxicologist. i've got a lot of experts. we have a great team cancer. it is very dangerous. to pregnant women and a whole host of other issues. and i can tell you what separates this from other experiences. i've been to . >> people are getting sicker by the day. children are spitting up, coughing up blood . >> i saw pictures today when was with residents. >> so, scott, you mentioned you can't find it. you don't look for you looked for dioxins. you've been doing this, as you mentioned, i think you said some 60 odd incidences. you have investigated independently since the one that you lived through yourself and you i know you've said this ,but that has in turn giving you the playbook for how these things are normally handled by the government. the epa, by private corporations. they do the testing. what is the playbook? the playbook is let there be no doubt about it. the public relations people are calling all the shots. and i can tell you right now the playbook is going to be
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dioxins are ubiquitous in the environment. and i don't even need to get the rest of the results, because i can tell you right now, children spitting up blood , people with headaches, getting sicker. that was not ubiquitous in health symptoms. in this environment. the good news is we're going to find the truth and we're going to find out what people have been exposed to and they'll be able to go to their doctors and get help. and this will be able to be cleaned up properly. that's where i want to finally arrive at our conversation. scott, i know you tested furnace filters because it's the greatest indication of what's in the air and what people have actually inhaled. i'm not going to look at water and soil as well. and i appreciate you're not a toxicologist. i appreciate the limits of your own expertise. but having done this 60 times, to your point, what is your outlook for palestine, ohio? is it the dioxins can be removed and people can again live in this village? or what is the prescription for the cure here in this village and for these people with is a great expertise.
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you've got to solve the problem. like einstein said , you've got to admit there's a problem and then we can solve it. we need to admit there's a problem here and work together. i also want to say furnace filters. you want to know what what people were breathing in their lungs. the furnace filter is the closest thing to opening up someone's lung. and i want to tell you a quick story. last night i was at a community fair with courtney miller and other residents. we went from the epa table to the railroad table to the cta. that's a contractor. we went to the epa. they said we're not testing furnace filters. the railroad is . we went to the railroad. they said we're not testing furnace filters. so we did that round robin and we found out there may be other people testing furnace filters, but we're going to get all these furnace filter results in over the next four , fifteen to thirty days. >> i appreciate the note of optimism, by the way, scott, in order to correct a problem, you have to accurately diagnose it. but i hear you with that note of optimism that once it's accurately diagnosed, this village can be saved, this
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village can be cleaned. i heard that earlier in our conversation. i think that's an important note of optimism. this is this is important information for independent analysis is appreciated. thank you for sharing it here tonight on on tucker carlson. tonight. thank you for having me. all right. if you don't like mowing your lawn and who does and you don't want to hire a lawn service, there's a new solution available. get a lamb mower. the geniuses behind this business join us straight ahead. >> being a public servant, it's called me one of many things i expect the unexpected. that was not a smart move on your end, sir. what are you to do? come out? don't do it. i want to run that day my back.e
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way to do this. guess what? you were right. there is no better way to do it. you can just rent some lams to do it for a new company. lets you hire lambe moers instead of lawnmowers. corey suiter is the owner of land mowers .com. he's based in fairfax county and he joins us now to explain. and you have your labor force behind you. how is it no one has thought of this? you've got to tell me about your inspiration. and the market demand for lawn mowers. oh, thanks so much, will . i don't want to go out too much on a limb here. i don't know if you wanted me to ram through some bad sheep. i'm really honored to be on your show. we're glad to have we're glad to have you here on tucker carlson tonight. go ahead. i want to hear this. i have a ton of questions about your workforce air and their appetite. >> yeah, well well, we are the only licensed and insured landscaping company that also
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gets invited to kids birthdays and evening wine parties. we also have a lot of customers that just hire us to get rid of the weeds. and that's what makes me so passionate about what i do. i got into landholder's .com because i care about conserving soil and water resources for future generations. and my sheep. i do a wonderful job of putting organic matter back in soil where it belongs, and i have a lot of happy customers, brings people a lot of joy to have sheep in their yard, putting organic matter back into the soil where it belongs is is that i mean, i have to hire like a pickup service after, you know, my lawn with the lambs you fertilize as you as you cut the lawn. so my sheep do provide some biodegradable fertilizer pellets. and yeah, if you put in a lawn clippings back on the lawn, that's when our soil needs, you know, all of our soils here in
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the u.s. used to have over eight percent organic matter and now we're back down to only around half a percent, a lot of our farmland. and that just means there's not a lot of nutrients left in that soil. to feed us . it fuels the obesity epidemic in the u.s. to have soils that are depleted of nutrients and organic matter. yeah, and so i'm really passionate about soil health. and , you know, doing lawnmowers is one way i help educate people about that. i've actually read a lot about that recently. quite to your point, the soil has lost a lot of its nutritional value through industrial farming and widespread use of chemical fertilizer. and as we point out, you're giving back and i'm going to tell my wife the same thing when i don't pick up in the backyard. i'm giving back to the soil right now. but, connie, really quick, the names and it's lazy gardening, the names, the names of your workforce behind you. can you introduce me to a few of them? >> sure. so right here in front of me, i think this is were you and then. okay, yeah. you can't see that. so do you see snowy here?
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the cutest little lamb? yeah. and then right behind her is her mother. chocolate chip behind. that's ice cream. and it looks like. okay, yes. my kids help name the sheet and i really have a lot of fun . of course we got a little bit. that's why kids named uschi monster truck so that most of what we call monty for sure. i hate to say to enforce gender stereotypes, but that must be one of your sons. the corryong. i've seen the before and after pictures of of your workforce there and what you've done in the backyards of many overgrown neighborhoods, your lambs eating through what? no lawn mower weed can make their way through. so it's a fascinating business. it's an opening in the market. it's giving back , as you point out, to the planet. and we wish you and marshmallow and oreo and monster truck all the best in your business. >> limn moers. thank you, pcori. oh, thank you so much for supporting a local small business. i really appreciate you having
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me on the show, will . >> you bet. all right. so we'll move gears to this. the idea of the national guard is to defend our country, but currently more than twenty thousand national guard troops are deployed overseas as a new effort underway to bring many these troops home. 16 states are now writing laws to keep our national guard troops at home instead of sending them to fight foreign wars. sergeant dan mcknight has been traveling the country pushing this legislation. he's retired marine sergeant. and dan mcknight joins us now. dan , thank you so much for being with us. tell me about this. the national guard is , at least in part, under the oversight of state governors. what can be done on this? defend our guard initiative that is now at least been introduced. and i think what is it, 16 states perhaps passed? is it one or two montana? and soon to be perhaps arizona? >> that's correct. arizona senate passed it through committee and it's probably going to pass the floor on monday. but the defend the guard bill essentially says that
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the national guard cannot be deployed under federal service into foreign combat unless congress is first done. their job to declare war. that's something congress hasn't done in 80 years. and we found ourselves in a state of perpetual, endless war ever since world war two . it's time for congress to kind of reclaim their authority under the constitution. that's our authority that we've given to congress and properly declare war. if it's important enough for us to send the lives of americans and the treasure of american taxpayers into a foreign land for combat that congress should do the right thing and they should debate it and declare it and put their name on the line before our soldiers ever put their boots on the ground. >> such a great point. there was a time when it was expected congress would declare a war before we went to war. but if it did pass and so, for example, it has in montana so we can use montana as our example. what give me the mechanics of then what unfolds. if in fact a state passes the defend our guard law, is it that the state governor of, for example, again, montana, says no to the united states or to congress? not until you declare war?
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>> you know, that's a great point. that's a great question. there is no mission that the national guard participates in, whether it's a domestic service, domestic defense or an emergency response mission or even a foreign mission, foreign training or operational missions that are noncombat related. not a single mission that the national guard participates in will be affected by defend the guard. the only thing that would be affected is the use of the national guard in a foreign war of choice waged by the united states with no authority from congress. that's the only thing that the national ought to be limited on . so it would be the governor standing up and usurping his right as the executive of the state to withhold the troops from combat that has not been declared. >> so, a , before we run, i want to ask you this. i would imagine somebody sitting here taking on a debate in a debate. they would bring up the authorization for use of military force passed after 9/11. it seems to be an open ended rolling authorization from congress to to pursue terrorism and make war what would be a
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response to the eu, imf and its role here when comes to defend our guard? >> that's yes, the amf has been the mechanism that we've used for decades. and it is not a declaration of war. what an eu imf is , is congress abdicating their authority. they're giving the president a blank check, a permission slip to make a decision whether to go to war or not. and then they agree that if he goes to war, then they'll just continue to write checks with no oversight. no geographical restrictions, no plan, no definition. of victory, and no way to bring the troops home in a short period of time. the emf is not a declaration of war and it should never be used. so the defend the guard bill would put that authority back on congress. that responsibility back on congress to reclaim that from the executive branch and realign the powers that that we granted to them in the constitution. what a great way to say it. great way to reinforce and highlight the point of our constitution. the powers that we granted to them that once we thought were obvious that congress had to declare war before committing us to war. sgt. dan mcknight, thank you so
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much for being with us. you bet. please visit, defend the gardot us and click on arizona and sign the petition and help get this across the finish line on monday. >> there you go . it's coming to a vote in arizona. >> thank you. so a new jersey man just successfully walked from the atlantic to the pacific. three thousand miles. why he didn't join us next. and tell us today, grab your friends for a fun night at . let's go to jane weaver, maryna and my second of the year, i brought my . >> i don't think that's what it's called. eighty four by digital today, sunday on fox. i'm trying to like the nascar cup series. it's the high banks of atlanta. this is a race of a different breed and better health. >> four hundred sunday on fox.
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a date, pick a cleaner and book your first cleaning for only nineteen dollars. i thought maybe i'd just run across brembo county and i figured since around this ball ,maybe i'd just run across the great state of alabama and that's what i did. i ran across alabama. no particular reason. i just kept on going. i ran clear to the ocean. >> well forrest gump just kept going and going for quote, no particular reason. but now we have a real life forrest. >> i hope he's not offended
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by that characterization because he has an actual honorable reason that he walked coast to coast. his name is tommy pasqua, and he just went from the atlantic to the pacific. three thousand miles. it took him one hundred and forty three days. and he said along the way he, quote, listen to country music, bruce springsteen classics and the will cain podcast. he did it to raise money and awareness for the many homeless veterans in this country. tommy pasquale joins now to tell us about it. so i think the entire country is wondering about your entertainment choices out there in the middle of the country. no one but bruce springsteen. will cain. right. i knew you'd like that. yeah, only the classics. that's american icons, if you will . >> right. tommy, tell us first of all, your inspiration to walk from the atlantic to the pacific. yes. so it was a goal of mine for the past few years to do something special like this. and with that, i knew that i wanted to pair with a really worthy charity. so i teamed up with the national coalition for homeless
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veterans trying to get these brave men and women who have served our country so valiantly off the streets. it just doesn't sit right with me that on any given night, thirty eight thousand veterans go to sleep homeless in this country. and you raised almost one hundred thousand dollars so far . many people watching right now can help contribute, i'm sure. how could they do that? yes. so you can do it two ways. one , you go directly to the national coalition for homeless veterans website, donate directly there and check out all the great work that they're doing. or you could go straight to my instagram. tommy underscore walk's underscore america and in my bio, i have a link to go fund me where you can donate there as well. what is what a purpose different than forrest gump to actually help america's homeless veterans. now let's talk about the walk. one hundred and forty three days. i want to ask you, i guess the most open ended question i can, but what is it like? >> it was tough is definitely the toughest thing i've ever done. but i would say overall was a great experience. i'm really happy. i did it. and i can honestly say with a straight face, i'm very happy it's over as well.
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what was the scariest moment? there was a lot of scary moments. just, you know, living in a tent with the elements out there, you know, here in some coyotes in the distance and just the wind whipping against the tent, i thought, you know, there was times where i thought i'd never see home again. but it made it through. how is the body how did you feel after walking for three thousand miles in a hundred forty three days? you know, it was it was painful. but, you know, like i always say to everyone who asks, you know, i was hurting the whole way, but i wasn't injured. >> and as long as i'm hurting and not injured, i could still play through it. tommy and i feel like we know each other because he's listened to the will podcast. and i've said on numerous occasions, i want to do something like what you've done here. i've wanted to canoe the lewis and clark path through the missouri river or ride a cattle trail from texas to montana. but what you've just done, i think, is a bucket list check item for many, many people out there in america to walk this country. and you did it for a purpose to help other americans . and i know that i , for one , i think most of america appreciates that about yutang pasquel. >> he's going to be on the will cain podcast. this we're going to go
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a little more into depth about what those nights, what those days were like. but we're proud of and we really appreciate you being with us tonight. thank you so much for having me on . well, all right. all right. if you like pez or skittles, there's some bad news tonight. eating those candies might soon be illegal. that's straight ahead. sunday, the faith and friends concert series, the church, travis green and forward city music's must see performance sunday on fox and friends weekend presented by halo, the number one player at millions of americans who couldn't get a good night's sleep found relief and comfort with the original mypillow. and now we're taking your sleep to the next level, introducing the new mypillow 2.0. i invented mypillow. i made it so it had everything you'd ever wanted. a pillow. now, twenty years later, there's new technology that makes mypillow even better. and i knew i had to bring it
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by women to choose from your wyndham's waiting get the lowest price at windom hotels.com sunday we came out to check the sounds of shelling is the first shell and over body pounds psyche and then out of nowhere the second one lands and holds first hand account of the horrors of war, sacrifice and survival. a story from the front line. really? well, yes, this is really fun stuff and i think when look man, you check your dignity, the door on fox and friends and you hope at some point in your career you can recover gravitas. that was me doing an irish step dance on fox and friends. i hope you're having a good st. patrick's day. unfortunately, though, if you like skittles, the news of the day has not been so happy. >> fox is . kevin corke has the story for us now. kevin , my man will good dancing. they're very impressive. border insecurity, homelessness, the nation's highest gas prices and a soaring crime problem.
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that's all california is dealing with . but instead, of focusing on that, some lawmakers out there in the golden state are too busy acting like the food police. >> they're focused on candy. say what you say. well, it's true. in fact, if a state assemblyman there has his way, you won't be able to buy skittles or sour patch kids or similar candies for very much longer. so much for tasting the rainbow . the guy's name is jesse gabriel . his district is just outside l.a. he's proposed a ban on many of the ingredients that are in the popular candies because there's some disputed research out there that suggests a possible cancer link. now, if successful, the ban could mean the long goodbye, not just for skittles, but also for trident. gum and campbell's soup and even some bread brands. now, in a statement, gabriel said californians shouldn't have to worry that the food they buy in their neighborhood grocery store might be full of dangerous additives or toxic chemicals. should be pointed out, there was a lawsuit against mar's
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last year, similar grounds. >> it was tossed fight for skittles, fight for skittles and get out of california. kevin , thank you so much. you know, i don't forget to check out the welcome podcast. pasqual loves it. we just had a fascinating conversation about svp and fauci x today. you can listen to the will cain podcast at apple. spotify or at fox news podcast. that doelis it for us tonight. be back. >> every night, the sworn enemy of lying, pomposity, smugness and groupthinhtk. >> welcome to this special edition of "hannity". i'm jason chaffetz. .in for sean.egin wit and tonight we begin with a st.c patrick's day message from the president of the united states . you're singing, even though i've never lived in ireland,andk i just kept thinking ofth the places that i did live with . my grandparents in scrantongr and scranton died, not died when scrantoandpn everything wet
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south in scranton, i moved to claim i jus

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