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tv   FOX and Friends Sunday  FOX News  March 19, 2023 6:00am-7:00am PDT

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♪ ♪ ♪ i remember what you say ♪ ♪ i remember what you did ♪ ♪ you have made all things new, god i remember you ♪ ♪ i remember ♪ ♪ ♪ i know you hold me ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ you said you're with me ♪ ♪ i remember what you said ♪
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♪ i remember what you've done ♪ ♪ you have made all things new ♪ ♪ god, i remember you ♪ >> rachel: oh, boy, that was awesome. it is today's faith and friends six-week easter concert series. you heard travis green and forward city. they are going to perform again at the end of the show. you need to stick around for that. thank you. >> will: every sunday morning for the past several weeks we have had our faith and friends concert series, a wonderful way to finish off the show in the fourth hour of "fox & friends" and leading us up to easter. >> joey: nothing makes me feel like i live a life of privilege sitting in the front row of watching these bands. if you are inspiring to host fox and friends, this is why.
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>> rachel: former president trump says he expects to be arrested on tuesday citing illegal leaks from the manhattan d.a.'s office probing hush money payments made during the 2016 cam campaign. >> will: if indicted he would be the first president in u.s. history to face criminal charges as he remains under intense legal scrutiny under additional probes still underway. >> joey: joining us now is the host of life liberty and levin, mark levin, what's your take on this? >> let me read something to you, first of all, good morning. that was beautiful. many people know who this is, ronald reagan had his book prominently displayed, the law perverted and the police powers of the state perverted along with it. the law i say not only turned from its proper purpose, but made to follow an entire contrary purpose. the law become the weapon of every kind of greed instead of checking crime, the law itself guilty of the evils it is
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supposed to punish. and let me tell you something, when the people lose faith in the law, the country's done. the people are losing faith in the law because the democrat party, democrat prosecutors in manhattan, a soros prosecutor, wants them to lose faith in the law. their whole goal is to destroy the civil society and the morality that undergirds it. that's the mission of the democrat party. how many times have they gone after this man trump? what has he done to deserve this? why are they studying his life like they are studying an archaeological site? why are they looking for novel legal theories to go after the man? why are they trying to turn a law upside down where they have to jump through the hoops in manhattan? the statute of limitations two years for misdemeanor, five years for felony. they have been examining it for six years. the southern district of new york, the u.s. attorney's office looked at it and said there's no federal crime here. and there isn't. how do we know that?
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because this was tried against john edwards, and that case was lost. it was lost under a man you may have heard of jack smith the special counsel now in washington, d.c. when he headed the public integrity section of the criminal division. this guy's invisible hand is everywhere. you have this hack prosecutor in manhattan. let me put this in plain english so everybody can understand what's going on here. it is not hush money. these are non-disclosure agreements. companies, individuals, divorce parties enter into nondisclosure agreements, 10,000 a day probably all across this country. how much do you want to bet the manhattan d.a.'s office has entered into nondisclosure agreements? how much do you want to bet the department of justice, the fbi and the u.s. attorneys have entered into nondisclosure agreements? how much you want to bet these news operations covering it like msnbc, nbc, and the rest, have entered into nondisclosure agreements?
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we call it hush money? there's nothing illegal with nondisclosure agreements. the reason you have a nondisclosure agreement, whether it's severance or something is you're telling people keep your big mouth shut. in exchange for that, we'll take care of you. that's not a crime. it is what it is. it's a contract. that's number one. number two, what is this d.a. doing? so he has a nondisclosure agreement. does the trump organization or this entity set up by michael cohen. so what? why do they keep looking at it? well because it was paid for by a third entity that used corporate money -- so what? who cares? he didn't pay for it out of his campaign, trump. there's no question of the misused campaign dollars. here's what they are saying, they are saying okay misdemeanor statute of limitations has run. state felony statute has run. we can't make a felony case anyway because it is not a
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felony. we have to have an underlying obstruction so we will look at federal law which is not even the jurisdiction of a local d.a., and federal law says what? federal law says you can expend money campaign law for the purpose of influencing an election of this sort this way -- you can't expend. what else does it say? if that money is used and it has other purposes as well, that is, it is not just a campaign somebody's embarrassed or somebody doesn't want to get information out or whatever it is, then it is not a crime. this thing isn't a crime from process, from substance, in state law, in central law. w -- in federal law. what's happening here is they are using the law the way they used the constitution, to try and destroy the law and destroy the constitution. what would you expect from a radical left wing legal bomb thrower who has inserted into this position by george soros. >> rachel: exactly.
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>> they are all democrat investigators. they are all democrat jurisdictions. new york city, atlanta, washington, d.c., i mean, this is outrageous. let's move on because i hear some people say now wait a minute. this case is an abomination, but the others are powerful. let me deal with the others very quickly. let's look at this document case. you're taking a document case, and you're trying to make an obstruction case? obstruction against donald trump? how? we asked for the documents over and over again and he wouldn't give them to us. that's an obstruction case against a former president? i was a former chief of staff to a former attorney general, if i had gone or a u.s. attorney had gone to him and say look we want to charge jimmy carter because we keep asking him for the documents, he won't give them to us, we're going to get a warrant, you know what he would tell me? get out of his office. am i out of my mind?
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not these guys because it is a righteous pursuit for the left. it is a righteous pursuit to go after parents, to go after pro-lifers. it is a righteous pursuit to go after republican state legislatures, republican members of congress, and i'm telling you something here, they are setting a precedent that is disastrous. did donald trump obstruct when it came to documents at mar-a-lago? he has a funny way of obstructing, doesn't he? he didn't put them in the fireplace. he didn't shred them. he didn't rip them up. that would be obstruction. he didn't sell them to the enemy. he didn't do any of that. they are in mar-a-lago under the protection of the secret service. wow. what an obstruction case. let's take the more complicated one, january 6th. they are trying to twist the law again. laws that haven't been used since the civil war against the confederacy, to try and use them against donald trump. and you had saul weisman here and others. let me explain to you. do you know what this is? this is the book that governs
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us. this is the constitution of the united states. not the criminal code. not elected prosecutors. not the department of injustice. why is the department of justice involved in the 2020 election at all? why is it subpoenaing state legislatures? why is it deposing donald trump's lawyers? why is it doing all these things? and i say this because the party that has the say on whether they are going to accept electors is congress. congress. there were no u.s. attorneys when this document was written. there wasn't an attorney general when this document was written. there wasn't a department of justice when this document was written. there wasn't a criminal code when this document was written. it's a political act electing a president. there are state legislatures involved. there are electors chosen. there have been disputes before. haven't been settled by u.s. attorneys and department of
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justice. they are settled by the united states congress. so let's say, just for argument sake, let's stipulate, and i will be attacked for this, but i'm the one who actually reads it. i'm not a former federal prosecutor which is irrelevant when it comes to the constitution. but i did work at the justice department. let's say the president called some legislatures in state acts and said you might want to consider reversing this or doing that and something like that, why do you think the democrat lawyers are in the state legislature? they were there to change the laws, to change the regulations, to do what? to change the outcome. is the president of the united states the only one who can't talk to legislatures, can't talk about the processes they have used to select electors, particularly when these changes are made at the 11th hour by state courts who don't have the authority under article 2? by federal courts who do not have the authority under article 2? this isn't a theory.
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this is something that came up in the bush versus gore litigation in 2000. and i guess a conspiracy theorist no less than the former chief justice william rehnquist even raised it. who has a final say here? as the florida supreme court kept changing the law, the florida legislature was about to meet an emergency session to tell the florida legislature to go stick it. we have the final say under the constitution. all of a sudden, that's a theory. we have a jerk in manhattan who has a novel legal theory. it is not a novel legal theory. he's lawless. then we have black and white text in the constitution that says the state legislature makes the final decision, and that they call a legal theory. our whole history says congress has the final decision on who chooses electors. so the president picks up a phone and says hey ernie -- i don't know all the fact. if he says ernie you might want to consider this rather than
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that and so forth, that's obstructing the transfer of power? there's been no transfer of power. the election isn't over because nbc, cbs, abc says it is over on election night or two weeks after election night or month after election night, the election is over when congress is done meeting in joint session and counting electors. nobody knows this better than leftists and other democrats who tried to change the outcome of an election in 2016 and tried to change the outcome of the election when george bush got elected, by challenging electors. so what the hell is a u.s. attorney doing or a guy that used to prosecute doing who is another democrat whose family is filled with democrats what are they doing try to criminalize this sort of thing? i take a different view, the constitutional view, not the accepted view from all these former federal prosecutors that this is bogus.
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every one of these cases is bogus, just like the mueller case was bogus, just like the phone call to ukraine was perfectly fine, two bogus impeachments, this is outrageous. one last thing, although it is not the last thing, but one other thing i want to say, donald trump today is the leading candidate for the republican nomination for president. can you believe a local d.a. knows that he doesn't have the law, state or federal on his side, and is trying to cripple the nomination for the presidency? can you believe a federal prosecutor appointed by biden's attorney general is trying to bring bogus charges against a president with two -- one grand jury is not enough, two grand juries in order to prevent joe biden from running against that opponent? can you believe a d.a. in atlanta is trying or thinking about bringing charges when the
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constitution, the federal constitution, not talking about the rest of it, the federal constitution says congress chooses in the end the president of the united states. i tell you, the law has become an -- as some people has said. that's it. >> rachel: what does this mean for the people? i have spoken to a lot of people who have lived under the totalitarian state. they said the beginning of this looked a lot like this. we saw january 6th. we see what's happening with donald trump. anyone associated with him has had to face jail time and all kinds of bogus charges. a lot of people i talk to say i'm worried. they are conservatives. they say yeah this is about donald trump but i'm worried about me and how do i live in this country that has a two tier justice system? >> mark: well, you should be. if you protest in front of an
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abortion clinic now, you're putting your freedom at risk. if you protest at a school board meeting, you're putting your freedom at risk. if you go to a protest and it turns ugly, some people riot, and you don't, and people pick you out of a picture and you are going to be charged you are putting your freedom at risk. if you go on line and try to put in in information or under twitter and so forth, you did, the fbi, intelligence agencies, your putting your personal confidential lifestyle at risk. you can see the 1st, 4th, 5th, 10th amendments are all under attack. separation of powers is under attack. the democrats attack the constitution. they reject the declaration of independence. they want to stuff the court with like-minded ideologues. they want to add four democrats to the u.s. senate. they want to change the voting system so they never lose.
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they've built a 2 million person bureaucracy, so even when they lose elections, they continue to legislate, from this behemoth. so yes, i wouldn't say people say that, you know, this is what happens in tyrannies. this is a soft tyranny. >> rachel: yes, it is a soft tyranny. if you can't protest freely, then are you a slave, or are you a citizen? are they in charge? are you in charge? i thought we were supposed to be in charge. anyway, mark, this has been a great discussion. you are the great one, for sure. and your show is on tonight. you're going to have trump's attorney on life liberty and levin tonight at 8:00 p.m. >> mark: thank you very much. i don't know about the great one. i'm becoming the great big one. i'm about 25 pounds overweight. there you go. thank you. joey, thank you, i hope to meet you one day and all of you, god
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bless you. >> rachel: god bless you, mark. sacrifice and survival a story from the front line airs tonight at 9:00 p.m. >> will: here's a piece from that story about benjamin hall. >> we thought we were going five minutes around the corner to film these abandoned villages. there was a bombed-out gas station, filmed that for a little bit, said do you want to go further? we went a little bit further. >> benjamin hall will be live tomorrow on fox and friends. you can catch that tonight at 9:00 p.m. eastern time. >> absolutely amazing story. amazing man. >> rachel: absolutely. >> joey: still ahead, it's been 20 years since the beginning of the iraq war. two veterans who fought in fallujah including a medal of honor recipient join us right here. i will have a talk with them next.
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>> joey: tomorrow marks 20 years since the invasion of iraq by the united states military. with overwhelming show of american military might, it was what was described be i the unforgettable phrase -- by the unforgettable phrase shock and awe. how did it start and end? let's take a look at the wall, on march 20, 2003, president
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bush ordered troops to iraq and said they had weapons of mass destruction and announced the beginning of the war. in january, 2004, the search for the weapons came to a close after the administration admitted nothing was found. then in june, 2006, radical jihadists was killed in a u.s.-led airstrike. he was known for his campaigns against suicide -- or his campaigns of suicide bombings, kidnappings, and we all remember those incredibly gruesome beheadings. in that same year, in december, dictator saddam hussein who had been captured was tried and executed. on june 30, 2009, u.s. troops began to withdraw from under president obama. by june 18th, 2011, the last soldier leaves iraq ending a nine-year military mission after the status of forces agreement expired and the obama administration failed to
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renegotiate it. joining us now to discuss is medal of honor recipient for his actions in the battle of fallujah, staff sergeant and recon marine and veteran who fought in the battle of fallujah and ramadi. thank you for joining us, gentlemen. i fought in iraq in a probably much different way than you all did. it felt very routine to me. david, i want to go to you first. your actions are of legend. but here we are -- the last thing i talked about was 2011 and the inability to create a status of forces agreement to leave troops there. that was in 2011. by 2013, we had isis. so we can talk about how this war started, but david, when we talk about how it ended, is that why we would say we lost the war in iraq? >> you know, the biggest problem we have with iraq and veterans of iraq is that we felt that there was always a good war and a bad war. and i think of the lessons that we have learned, we should never
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do that to a generation, the war of choice versus the war that we had to do to avenge 9/11. we talked about the failed intelligence. when you look at the legacy of iraq, there's two sides of it. you've got gold stars that are grieving every single day that we live for, the fallen. we've got the injured that have the scars of their sacrifice every single day they wake up. but there is a tactical side of the war in iraq, and the march to baghdad, mark my words, in 50 years, historians will look at the logistic supply lines from kuwait to baghdad as one of the most impressive logistical things anything has been done in modern warfare. we see how important logistics are to the russians. we fuelled, we resupplied, and we triaged injured as we marched in realtime on a moving convoy, one of the most incredible things that have ever been accomplished. >> joey: you know, rudy, i know you because you played yourself
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in the series generation -- i always know because you live a life of inspiration to this day. i know it was important to you to be have that story told. what is the story about the iraq war that isn't told, aside from the politics? >> thank you for your service gentlemen. good to be on here with both of you. when i think about the iraq war, of course tactically, the blitz, what we were able to do with a lightning strike. i mean, first recon battalion, led the 1st marine division, and we had everything, on our gun trucks and the mission was get to baghdad. we did this. of course the fallout of chopping the head off a snake is many more snakes grew out of that. we went back to fight in fallujah, ramadi, and it was an insurgent hotbed. when i think the good things
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that we got, the iraqi families that believed in us, helped us set up elections, the iraqi families that believed in us to have a democratic and a more inclusive iraq, where their children could have school and paved roads and not fight emphysema, the belief and the beauty that these iraqi people and every man and woman that served in uniform over there believed in, to make iraq a better place and the world a better place. that's what i take back from iraq, and that's what i hold as my treasure from all that serving. >> that's a message that needs to be told. david, when we look at iraq, it is a bookended war at this point. i was in iraq, but i consider my war really afghanistan. that's where i saw combat. it is book ended at this point. are there lessons from the iraq war how we got into it and ended it that our government -- that we need to look at and as voters
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we need to hold our government accountable for? >> we have over 87 percent of the house and senate was in favor of this war only to turn on it two years later. really shameful behavior. we didn't vote to go to war. we served our country and followed orders. you know, we cannot defund wars while they're being fought. we learned that lesson. but understand that we changed the way that we fight modern war in realtime and the war in iraq. we changed close quarter training, working with armored brigades, the task force, taking what the marine corps did with their team, moving that over to the army, it truly was incredible. if you look at kabul today, and you compare it to baghdad, which one of those two countries is actually more stable, more robust? afghanistan is the fallen failure. but there are promising days for iraq in the future. >> joey: staff sergeant, medal
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of honor recipient, you are a scholar and warrior. rudy reyes you are a living inspiration. thank you for your service. thank you for representing this generation of warrior well. thanks for joining us to commemorate 20 years since the beginning of the iraq war. all right. back to you. up next, robot lawyers, tik-tok hypocrisy and moving air pod production out of china, our tech wrapup. ♪ ♪ 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.
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don't share needles or pens, or reuse needles. don't take ozempic® if you or your family ever had medullary thyroid cancer, or have multiple endocrine neoplasia syndrome type 2, or if allergic to it. stop ozempic® and get medical help right away if you get a lump or swelling in your neck, severe stomach pain, or an allergic reaction. serious side effects may include pancreatitis. gallbladder problems may occur. tell your provider about vision problems or changes. taking ozempic® with a sulfonylurea or insulin may increase low blood sugar risk. side effects like nausea, vomiting, and diarrhea may lead to dehydration, which may worsen kidney problems. ask your health care provider about the ozempic® tri-zone. you may pay as little as $25. >> time for tech wrap up with the cyber guy. we will go over the most compelling stories in the world, human and artificial advance. first up, good morning to you. this one i find terrifying. objection, your honor, that is a
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chat gpt. that's open ai, the latest version passes the bar exam? >> as you can appreciate, will, good morning to you. >> will: not easy. >> kind of scary we found this out this week. this is new model for artificial intelligence we've called generative ai, called chat gpt. the thing we should embrace and be terrified of. >> will: yes. >> it can indeed not just pass the bar, but it be in the top 10 percentile. will, did you test that high? it can now recognize images, for example. get this, you can take a photo inside your fridge and ask it what meal can i make? it is going to tell you what you can make -- >> will: off a photo? >> it is powerful, right, from the one photo, very precise and also very scary. one report says that chat gpt four -- task rabbit app somebody you could hire using an app saying it was visually impaired
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in order to figure out a security capcha that thing that says i'm a human. that was clever. something we need to be keeping our eye on. >> will: this is the story that changes all other stories. yet here we go anyway. so the white house is attempting to crack the whip on tik-tok. they have talked about doing something at tik-tok. at the same time, biden is popping up with tic -- with tik-toks with nile. i don't know who he is. he's big. that's what they are telling me. everybody is hypocritical. it turns out you don't have to have tik-tok. they might be getting your info anyway? >> it is incredible with this one. yes, president biden wants tik-tok to be banned in the u.s. unless china agrees to divest of
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its ownership in it for national security concerns obviously and despite the fact that he is appearing with pop stars, on tik-tok, that were filmed in the white house, now deeper concerns about tik-tok tracking data, even if you've never downloaded the tik-tok app, tracking pixels have been reported on airline sites, e-commerce sites, pixels are invisible to you and me but very powerful data tracking tool for the chinese-owned social network. this is another reason to always use strong anti-virus protection on all your devices. >> will: quickly, i want to get to this one, tell me what you think is the motivation or the take away from this. apple might be moving their manufacturing out of china into india for the first time, this for air pods. >> watch this trend happen not just with apple but with a lot of tech companies that have done a lot of manufacturing in mainland china. they are going to india with the air pods, the popular ear pods that are wireless now going to be produced for the first time in india, vietnam another spot. keep your eye on that mass
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exodus of companies that just don't like the thumb down on them for controlling what they are doing in mainland china. >> will: all right. awesome stuff as always. get his alerts with his free reports. it is a newsletter at cyber guy.com. thank you so much. all right. still ahead, more fallout after the collapse of silicon valley bank as a new study reveals nearly 200 banks could face a similar fate. maria bartiromo on the threat to our banking system next. what does it mean to be ever better? its your customers getting what they ordered when they expect it. discover how ryder ecommerce makes your customer's experience ever better.
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>> will: fox news alert, an indiana teenager is missing. police warn he could be in extreme danger. scotty morris disappeared thursday night from his hometown in eaton, about 75 miles northwest of indianapolis. police issuing a statewide silver alert describing him as five foot four about 150 pounds, hundreds of volunteers have joined the search as of yesterday. the search is set to resume today. to another alert, russian president putin making a surprise trip to ukraine. he visited the russian occupied city, the site of some of the fearest combat of russia's invasion. it comes after the international criminal court issued a warrant for his arrest. he will head back to russia for a meeting with chinese president xi jinping in moscow tomorrow. rachel, over to you. >> rachel: thank you will. wall street is bracing for
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another chaotic week as we learn the biden administration has reportedly turned to billionaire warren buffett for guidance in the wake of the bank collapse. meanwhile a new study claims nearly 200 banks risk collapsing just like svb with investments making them very sensitive to interest rate hikes. sunday morning futures anchor maria bartiromo joins us now. great to have you on as always on sunday morning. what do you make of this? is warren buffett the right person to be advising the administration? what do you make of the risk to community and regional banks that so many people in real america depend on? >> maria: good morning to you, rachel and the team. it is a very tenuous time right now. we are looking at mid sized banks asking the fdic to insure all deposits for the next two years. it is no surprise to me that this administration is calling on warren buffett because in the past, warren buffett has in fact come to the rescue. remember back in the 2008 global
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financial crisis, buffett invested in bank of america, gave b of a a lifeline there and invested in goldman sachs. gave goldman sachs a lifeline got incredible term as far as investing in there -- terms for investing in there, getting right at the bottom. no surprise to me he is being called on to help with liquidity. no doubt about it, we are talking about a weekend of panic and tenuous situation this morning. it is incredible what bad policy can do, and that is what is happening here. you're talking about 15 years of zero interest rate rates, and then in a hurry, in under a year, the federal reserve raising interest rates consistently, catching many businesses by surprise. the issue at silicon valley bank was that it had invested in long-term bonds, so as interest rates went up, at the federal reserve was raising rates, those interest rates on the bonds went up sending the value and the price of those bonds down. so when they started to see that
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they needed to shore up capital, they wanted to sell those bonds, they weren't worth what they paid for them, now we've got a situation where mid sized banks, regional banks are facing an issue, and they need liquidity, and unfortunately, you're in such a tenuous situation because all of the reckless spending by the biden administration, you're talking about 5 trillion dollars plus in borrowing, now we're facing a debt ceiling debate, and we're at a crisis because we've got to raise the debt ceiling, all of this has just compounded the situation, and now we are seeing very nervous markets. the federal reserve and all the central banks of the world are facing off a real dilemma right now. do i stay on track and continue to try to stomp out inflation, by raising interest rates? or do i pivot, stop the raising of interest rates, and then try to focus on financial stability? that will be the focus this tuesday and wednesday when the federal reserve has its meeting. we're expecting another rate hike. it is going to be hurting the
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broader economy. we're going to see a recession later on in the year. we're talking about all of this this morning. we have the main focus of our top story, and that is two systems of justice. we will lead the show with the chairman of the oversight c comm committee. we will get jonathan's turley's his take on the two systems of jus justice. swiss regulators are trying to get ubs to acquire credit suisse. we will talk with someone on the financial services committee. we will also talk with senator tom cotton because unfortunately all of this has led to our adversaries pouncing with xi jinping meeting with vladimir putin tomorrow morning. john rad cliff and rick scott round it out. big show, breaking news in about 15 minutes. see you then. >> rachel: thank you, maria. it is a blockbuster show. we will tune in. have a good one. >> you too. >> rachel: coming up travis green and forward city music perform live as part of our faith and friends concert series. don't go anywhere. ♪ ♪
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♪ ♪
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>> joey: travis green is not only a five time grammy nominated gospel music star, he's also the pastor at forward city church in columbia, south carolina. >> will: now travis and forward city music are out with two new albums tent revival is available everywhere right now. in little less than a month, april 7th, his new album expect impossible drops. >> rachel: travis green and forward city music join us now. you know, i was really interested in this, you said that forward city is a church for the unchurched and the overchurched. what does that mean? >> yeah, yeah. so we're based out of columbia, south carolina. we're a church that believes in reaching people where they are, unchurched meaning you don't know anything. you don't know who david and goliath is. overchurched meaning that you're just exposed to church so much you may be kind of sick of what you are used to. we're nontraditional, but we're reaching a lot of people this year alone, over 500 people have joined this year. hundreds of baptisms and it's
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amazing to be a part of. >> will: i'm fascinated by your professional story. i know you performed at inauguration in 2016, five time grammy award winner. i'm also fascinated by your personal story. you fell out of a window four stories and credit the power of prayer and your mom for coming back. >> we were living in germany at the time. pronounced dead. my mother prayed for me and god restored my life. so now we're traveling the world letting people know that jesus is real and he loves us. >> rachel: that will make you believe. >> yeah. >> joey: you have this amazing gift. you are a pastor. you talked about the power of prayer. what is is it about the power of music that helps in getting people to god? >> one of the way we learn theology the most is through music, giving people the greater truth that will help people inspire their life. >> what are you about to play for us in a moment?
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>> this song is called tent revival. >> will: tell us about this song, message, meaning. >> i grew up in church. tent revival is like you know what? let's bring a remix of what we're used to growing up. >> joey: you're talking about a remix. i went to a lot of tent revivals growing up. we never had electric guitars. >> rachel: he baptized me this morning. >> awesome. your makeup is still great. >> rachel: it was a water accident. i will take it. [laughter] >> joey: we go all the way in. we're going in the river; right? got to get dipped all the way. >> will: we're excited to hear it. tent revival, travis green and forward city, take it away. >> do you want to stay with me? >> rachel: no, you guys go ahead. but we will dance.
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♪ it is feeling like a tent revival ♪ ♪ the life of the party ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ the blessings come down enough to go around ♪ ♪ yeah ♪ ♪ don't be ashamed ♪ ♪ if you feel it in your hands, lift them up ♪ ♪ here we go ♪ ♪ hands up ♪ ♪ i can see you moving ♪ ♪ oh ♪ ♪ oh ♪ ♪ i can feel your fire ♪ ♪ oh ♪ ♪ oh ♪ ♪ i can see you moving ♪ ♪ oh ♪ ♪ oh ♪ ♪ i can see your fire ♪ ♪ it is feeling like a victory ♪
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♪ ♪ ♪ this is the part right here ♪ ♪ one, two ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ i see fire ♪ ♪ i will be your revival ♪ ♪ i see fire ♪ ♪ i will be your revival ♪ ♪ my heart ♪ ♪ for you to dwell there ♪ ♪ my heart is a tent ♪ ♪ for you to dwell there ♪ ♪ my heart is a tent ♪ ♪ for you to dwell in it ♪ ♪ my heart is a tent ♪ ♪ for you to dwell in it ♪ ♪ i see water ♪
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♪ i see fire ♪ ♪ i will be ♪ ♪ your revival ♪ ♪ i see fire ♪ ♪ i will be ♪ ♪ your revival ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ my heart is a tent ♪ ♪ for the love to dwell in it ♪ ♪ i said my heart is a tent ♪ ♪ for you to dwell in it ♪ ♪ my heart is a tent ♪ ♪ for you to dwell in it ♪ ♪ say my heart is a tent ♪ ♪ for you to dwell in ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ hey hey ♪ ♪ everybody clap your hands ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ set a fire in my soul ♪ ♪ oh oh oh ♪ ♪ i can see you moving ♪
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♪ holy ghost ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ i can see the fire ♪ ♪ a revival in my soul ♪ ♪ i can see you moving ♪ ♪ holy ghost ♪ ♪ hey ♪ ♪ i can see your fire ♪ ♪ like a tent revival ♪ ♪ ♪ [cheers and applause]
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♪ if. will: so tent revival. it's available everywhere right now. you can go pick that up. and then travis greene and forward city's new album, expected possible, drops on april 7th. that was awesome, man, thank you so much. it's been awesome having you on
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the show. >> thank you. will: they've been warming up every commercial break. joey: i didn't know that was in store though. i heard you during sound check, you've got to start letting me know. you come to georgia, i want to know. >> travis greene., the v is my web site -- rachel: bye, everybody. will: have a good sunday. ♪ maria: good sunday morning, everyone. thanks so much for joining us, welcome to "sunday morning futures." i'm maria bartiromo. today, two standards of justice. president trump says he is expecting to be arrested this tuesday, just days after bank records revealed a biden family partner received millions of collars from communist china then contributed part of the money to the bidens. when asked, joe biden denies he's been doing deals with foreign governments and pocking th

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