tv The Ingraham Angle FOX News March 23, 2023 12:00am-1:00am PDT
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the studio tomorrow with an audience and a major programing announcement. >> on monday, we will have an exclusive sit down interview with donald j. >> trump for the full hour. and i say dvr. we've never missed an episode on monday pense tomorrow. that's all the time we have left. let not your heart trouble. let's give a warm hello to everybody and hey, laura . oh, i have an idea why. i have an idea. i like my my idea is you have pets tomorrow and then you have trump monday. why don't you just do them together on the same show? >> i mean, what about come on , michael. you know, the first time say good night that everybody know that the bottom line is the person that really needs to go
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is joe. that's the bottom line. exactly. well, john , i need i hope the president is watching because i'm going to give a few campaign tips in my first angle. so i have campaign tips for him and for desantis. so fantastic. great show and awesome audience there by tomorrow. bye, guys. all right. i'm laura ingraham and this is the "ingraham angle" from washington tonight. thanks so much for joining. as i said , tashaun, campaign advice. that's the focus of tonight's angle. so i thought i'd play campaign manager just for tonight for both trump and sanders. and since most of my advice to them relates to the economy, we all need to be clear on how exactly biden tanked it. now, first, instead of encouraging all states to fully reopen their economies and to get all kids back into the classroom, biden kept the panic going by keeping fauci out front and then mandated covid shots for
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federal workers. remember that health and federal contractors and who knows how many people lost their jobs? four shots they didn't need. and didn't want. and then, of course, there was his obscene spending after we'd already spent four trillion uncovered relief. in the first year of the pandemic, president biden decided to spend more . he insisted on blowing almost two trillion dollars more on the deceptively named american rescue plan. well, of course, there's no such thing as free money. so all this did was send inflation higher. millions of workers were incentivized to stay at home rather than to go to work. that drag us down. now, it didn't take an economic brainiac to see what biden was creating. an inflation time bomb. and this is where the campaigns need to focus. but concerns by people like larry summers, they were dismissed. i see important transitory influences at work, and i don't anticipate it will be
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permanent. >> how does she still have a job now? the white house just kept the spend a palooza going, sometimes with republican senators help. remember that nightmare, the so called infrastructure bill ? it cost a trillion dollars. thank you, bill cassidy and mitch mcconnell. and others. that's the parade of horribles there. then, of course, this past august, the first known as the inflation reduction act, only seven hundred and forty billion dollars saw an inflation reduction act. is the law the single most important legislation passed in the congress to combat inflation and one of the most significant laws in our nation's history? >> oh, my gosh, it's hilarious watching this. now, of course, a bill with seven hundred and fifty five pages long, no one read it. it was a putrid, pork filled mess and it only made inflation worse. >> these were all pieces of that big law that we passed last year. now they're kicking in
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and americans are starting to feel the benefits in their everyday lives. >> oh, yeah, right. and because the fed started raising rates too late and by too little, even nine straight hikes hasn't brought down inflation, but it did help cause the current banking crisis. >> well, they have that. a new poll out tonight by the associated press shows that only 10 percent of americans now have faith in our financial banking system. and look who can blame them. they see our economic growth is flatlining. the fed today predicted that this year our gdp will be a dismal point, four percent in next year. >> only one point two percent. both numbers are down from their earlier projections. so welcome biden's new economic normal, long lasting inflation ,a lower standard of living. >> so put that on a bumper sticker. >> i have to go to two stories.
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i go to the food town and i go to this store here right afterwards to get the extras, you know, like for cheaper pack of meat, cause about ten dollars now when it was like five and three dollars for a lot of people are not working . jobs are not the same. and for stories of increasing the prices very hard, we cut back on the amount we purchase . we ration. as far as the size wise, there's not as many left over. >> now, this is the reality of life in the biden era, and this is what any republican candidate will need to dig us out from. so given all this, what should desantis is ? can the campaign message actually sound like no one don't get into a trump slugfest? first, it's not going to benefit desantis to spend a lot of time responding to small criticisms. the census did a good job with piers morgan, but just briefly touching on it, then moving on , trump. give me so far ron ron desantis
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run. why can't i even he let me i can't i don't know how to spell the sanctimonious. i don't really know what i mean. but, you know, i kind of like it's long. it's got a lot of vowels. i mean, so we go with that. that's fine. you know, you call me, you call me whatever you want. i mean, just as long as you also call me a winner, because that's what we've been able to do in florida. >> and republican voters, they do want to win. and most really like trump's policies and i appreciate trump's service to the country. this guest knows he has to convince voters in key primary states that he will be more of a trump republican , not a romney republican . that he'll be america first, just without the constant chaos . my approach to leadership, you know, i get personnel in the government who have the agenda of the people and share our agenda. you bring your own agenda and you're gone. we're just not going to have that. so the way we run the government, i think, is no daily drama. focus on the big picture
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and put points on the board. and i think that that's something that's very important. well, there will be drama, whether you like it or not, but that's kind of wishful thinking. but it's not a bad point. and as important as the cultural woke stuff, is for parents and their kids, we think it's very, very important . >> republicans, i think, have gotten just about as many voters for those issues that they're going to get at this point. >> the key question for voters about the this then will be, does he really know how to turn around the u.s. economy? because this is going to be a 1980 style election. we started doubting ourselves and thus the rest of the world is doubting us as well. this has to change. it's going to require that desantis become very conversant. and what i laid out above all that led us to the precipice and we have to back away from it. without a strong economy, a thriving middle class, america becomes weaker and more vulnerable in every way, including in foreign affairs.
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desantis has to bone up on that as well. this the danger, of course, we face with an emboldened china under biden, blinken and a band of buffoons, america has lost leverage in the world. we only get it back when our economy is strong. again and we stop making china rich . trump gets this. he's very comfortable talking about this. desantis has to be even more convincing. this means his economic team has to be comprised of people who live and breathe these issues. no one from the swampy old gop guard should be given any prominent role. >> new blood, new ideas, bold thinking, finally. well, of course, desantis has had a very good story to tell in florida. the rest of the country needs to hear more than about what he it on covid or about how he's fighting liberal schools. he's going to need to convince voters that he can take the florida story and win nationally, that he won't be the guy on election night
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complaining that he lost because he got cheated, that he'll win by such a large margin. even sleazy democrats won't be able to overcome it. now, let's move on to campaign advice for president trump. now, if i were trump and running his campaign, i'd strongly urge him to stop talking about 2020. it's over enough marinating in old claims of election fraud will not win over a single voter in any state that he needs to win in. twenty , twenty four and gives desantis an opening to say why take a chance on the guy who just complained after the fact about early voting and ballot harvesting? instead of beating biden on both fronts. so explain to voters in a major speech on the specifics on how trump will rebuild the economy. he knows this stuff like the back of his hand , but he needs to lay it out step by step. things like cut government
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spending, i don't know, 10% across the board, at least middle class tax cuts reverse all of biden's anti fossil fuel agenda. pull our manufacturing back from china immediately, shut down the border, start moving people out of the country who never qualified for asylum. all of those things would be a good start. republican voters are just in no mood to lose. >> in 2020 four . they know the stakes. so they're only going to nominate a man or a woman. i think it's going to be trump ron desantis, who they believe can defeat the democrat machine . so this nightmarish economy, the victor of any republican candidate, should be overwhelming. it shouldn't be a squeaker. expanding the gop base, which trump has already done, is key. so i'd suggest talk less about yourself, more about the american people you met a lot of them. voters don't want a replay of the greatest hits about mahler or adam schiff, but they do
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want you to assemble the most talented advisers and probably best to treat them well. surround yourself with givers, not takers, serious policy people who know how to hit the ground running on day one . no more travel ban. fiasco's run a tight ship and run against the democrats, not the media. we all know the press is biased. you know, news flash, don't dwell on it, deal with it and maybe, just maybe drop the nicknames and the petty personal stuff. it was funny in twenty , sixteen and even in 2020, but i don't think it works with how serious the challenges are right now facing the country. i sense that the voters are weary of all of that stuff. so debate your opponents on the merits. you know, the issues. you have a great record . defend it, take it to the next level. although i'm thinking about it. >> i think you should keep sleeping, joe . i like that one . so that's some of my advice for what it's worth.
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and that's the angle. joining me now is mollie hemingway, editor, chief of the federalist, fox news contributor, and chris bedford, executive editor of the common sense society. molly, what's most important for both frontrunners at this point? let's start with president. yeah, i like the advice that you gave. i think president trump has the advantage of having so many republican voters who don't just like him. they love him. they love the policies that he did when he was president . but they are genuinely concerned about whether or not he can win. and he needs to make that case that he can win. he should talk about the coalition that he's building, why he has the ability to put together the best coalition, what his successes were during his first term as president and just really address that issue. that concern that many republicans have. and as foreign santos, i think he needs to also follow your advice. there of not listening to the swamp voices about what he should do. but really trusting his gut, understanding that he should not be trying to distance
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himself so much from president trump because of how much republican voters do like those trump policies. well, and , chris , to molly's point, i'm going to get to a statement trump made today, but to molly's point on the fantasy ,i didn't see the entire interview. but i do know that he when he talked about peut today, he said , yeah, i think he is guilty of war crimes. and , you know, i'm not saying that's a bad thing to say at all, but it does kind of begin to shift him over toward the gop establishment, especially given what she and putin just pulled off at their meeting in a new meeting scheduled in beijing. your thoughts on the ukraine angle, which i did not address tonight. >> unless you can explain the difference between somebody committing war crimes and just interests of the united states , of course, it's just that the states are trying to stop war crimes. but is it always in us interests when you're courting world war three ? that's something that should be seriously considered and something that's not at all been considered here in washington, d.c. and some of the people like the senator and a lot of americans are
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actually wondering. so you don't have to actually say vladimir putin is a good guy. you can sit back and say, obviously, this is a bad man, but is it in the american interest to take boys from iowa and girls from new jersey and get them potentially embroiled in a massive and escalating war in ukraine? because that is the kind of danger that we're playing with here. and to soon, at least so far , has done a good job of threading the needle. >> and molly, i want to get your reaction to the statement president trump released today criticizing a fantasy. it gets to something i hit on in the angle. he said he is for a republican, an average governor romney was a big lock down governor or other republican governors did much better than ron because i allowed them this freedom never close their states. molly, do you think anyone in america thinks lock downs when they hear ron desantis not it'st
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as for those students who engaged in this disturbing behavior here is where i'll remind you of how bad it got now. judge kyle duncan wrote in the wall street journal that as he entered the classroom, one protester screamed. we hope your daughters get raped. so what will happen to the future lawyers of america? nothing. the memo from the cowards at stanford, said the students will not be disciplined because administrators sent conflicting signals about whether what was happening was acceptable or not. well apparently stanford students need to be told by professors whether it's okay to hope and invited speakers. daughters get raped. and at a senate armed services subcommittee. we learn not just that the pentagon is doling out six figure d e i salary jobs that they're working with doctors who are now suggesting that seven year olds may be able to make decisions on gender affirming care, plus another day goes by without donald trump's indictment and that hush money case. so is
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this over. former acting attorney general met whittaker has insight. jesse smaller and actor who films the hit tv show empire told police he is the victim of a hate crime, truthful and consistent on every single level since day one. let me paint a picture for you. most folks aren't going out at two in the morning on the coldest night of the year, jesse hired them
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horrific like this, where pentagon doctors say we need to make it easier for military use to get so-called gender affirming care, including puberty blockers. now, these doctors are also saying that we can include children as young, age seven in the decision making process. but of course, that's just the tip of the iceberg. this is the story of a soldier who operates, patriot missile defense systems. it begins in california with a little girl raised by two moms . i needed my own adventures, my own challenge.
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and after meeting with an army recruiter, i found it a way to prove my inner strength. and maybe shatters some stereotypes along the way. >> how do i go from be all that you can be to cartoons? why is everything a cartoon today? look, i'm grateful for anyone putting on the uniform, male or female, for our freedoms. of course, it's amazing. and just like the woman you just saw. but there is no need to make dgi a driver in recruitment or a central part of our military training. the army missed its recruiting goal, as we reported on last year, by twenty five percent. as our enemies like china grow stronger and have the largest standing army now in the world, i want to ask each of you, have you heard is there any intelligence that you heard that communist china is somehow intimidated or deterred by our dgi initiatives? >> i'll take that as a collective. >> no.
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joining me now is the man who just saw missouri senator eric schmitt. senator , good to see you tonight. now, biden is asking for a pentagon budget increase and it goes now to nine hundred billion dollars. so my question to you is , how are republicans? republicans continue to just rubber stamp the kind of spending, given what we just laid out, what they're actually doing within the ranks of our own military? well, i served on that armed services committee, laura , and we were asking some really tough questions today. i mean, it goes beyond, you know, first of all, the biden administration from the very beginning has injected identity politics, is really divisive ideology into everything for grants for schools with crt. and it's now made its way into the military. the military has been as apolitical, a place where it's a true american to see where people from the humblest beginnings can achieve great things no matter your skin color creed. i mean, we have ticker tape parades for people who serve this country. that's what the military is all about. this divisive ideology
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is hurting recruitment. they're asking for 140 million dollars more for just programing for d.c.i. six figure salaries for d.c.i. consultants in the military. this stuff has no place. you know, we need a military that stands ready to defeat china to you know, it's you mentioned it. they are building islands in the south china sea. they're fully weaponizes. nobody in communist china is deterred by all is the training. we need a lethal fighting force and focused on that as opposed to the sort of world politics. the biden administration is bent on injecting. everyone. senator , i'm going to go further. i think it's hurting recruitment. i think all of this kind of stuff is hurting recruitment. the vaccine mandates that hurt recruitment. but if it's not anything different than like a college campus in the way these issues are addressed, then a lot of people would say, you know, i could do that somewhere else, but it's not the military. i thought i was i was going to enter. but one of your democratic colleagues did have a potential
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solution to the military's recruitment troubles. check this out. we need to also talk about other ways to expand that recruiting pool. this year, i'm introducing the enlist act. the enlist act will aid the services recruitment efforts by allowing a highly skilled and motivated individuals to succeed in the military who would be the people who could do this backor folks dreamer's okay. is this the workable solution? is this the way to rebuild our military? senator ? no, we need you know, i mean, this is just insanity. i mean, it's just one it's a parade of horribles, one after another. look, we have incredible men and women of our armed forces. we need more of them. the way that we're deterring more and more people from joining the military is this divisive, you know, world politics that's found its way again in every crevice of society. now, thanks to the bush administration, the military is no place for this. we have to be ready for the threats that we face around the world, including china,
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specifically china. and , you know, this kind of stuff deters recruitment. it makes it difficult for attention. we've heard from service members who have come forward and said they're uncomfortable with this, you know, dividing people by oppressor and oppressed. the totem pole of grievances has no place in our military. >> all right, senator , thank you for pursuing this. we're going to stay on this should not be funded. now, everything seems set up for manhattan district attorney alvin bragg to bring the long awaited liberal hero. >> of course, he was going to be the one to take down trump, but there was just a few problems with this. not only was this plan predicated on flimsy legal arguments, he was relying on a star and a purger and now his reliance on michael cohen is coming back to bite him. now, cohen said under oath that trump asked him to pay off his own personal funds, funds from a home equity line of credit to avoid any money being traced back to him. but in a newly unearthed letter from february 2018 to the
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federal election commission, cohen's attorney relayed something far different, saying, quote, mr. cohen used his own personal funds and that neither the trump organization nor the trump campaign was a party to the transaction. and neither reimbursed mr. cohen for the payment directly or indirectly. wow. well, here now is former acting attorney general during the trump administration, matthew whitaker. matt . now, is this an exculpatory document that could change the debate here and perhaps change where this case is going? >> yeah, it's good to be with you tonight. i think it does two things. first of all, it gives monday's witness, robert costello, a lot of credibility because that's what he's saying. it has been consistent throughout. and now michael cohen has been on both sides. and as you know, prosecutors love to ask, were you telling the truth then? or are you telling the truth now? i think it really is giving the prosecution team pause when
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they think about putting this not only in front of the grand jury or trying to get them to vote to indict president trump. but ultimately, in front of a jury trial. and what those 12 citizens will think with this evidence. >> now, the sense is that if something happens, it will happen early next week. in this build up, i think is also working in donald trump's favor in the court of public opinion. and i had a couple of democrat friends of mine from college who were messaging me, going, oh, my gosh, the democrats are going to screw this up. they always take it a step too far . we thought with mueller, we thought with a ridiculous impeachment and now we're seeing it again. i think in the end, this ultimately is not a smart move. forget the case is obviously ridiculous, but politically, i don't think this plays well at all. >> no, this plays into the the the the way that donald trump
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has been portrayed as a victim of the left's pursuit of him. and i think it makes him stronger in his base. mind's eye. and so i think you're absolutely right. this the left is going to overplay this. this case is so weak to start out that it's only going to get weaker. and the fact that alvin bragg is contorting himself into a pretzel to try to even bring charges i think demonstrates just just how bad this idea is for the left to try to prosecute trump under this set of facts, which are more objective by the senator from new york . and the federal election commission. >> does either the georgia case or the document classified documents case? apparently, how certain questions were answered? do either of those very quickly pose serious legal trouble to trump in your mind? >> no, i don't. i don't think they do. i think, you know, in in all of these situations, i think there are they're always taking the facts and circumstances and using the worst case
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scenario against donald trump and sort of taking the objective facts and circumstances and applying the law to it. >> matt , great to see you tonight, as always. thanks so much. and fauci is ready for yet another close up and an teachers strike looks more like a dance party. raymond arroyo has it all on . >> his books are seen and unseen next, there's a book, a teleprompter. preachers of kings and carpenters, a book meant for everyone. there's more to the story. explore the book you thought you knew at museum of the bible . i can't believe this is how you kids talk to your friends. this is talking. did you have a nice day? look at the size of these ginormous, preposterous talking . >> i would just lay there. we've been through the night, hasn't been in the cards for me until now. wake up and not be able to fall
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laura , you know, ella fitzgerald and martha graham. now, the guy who gave us the fauci auchi is being featured as a cultural hero. and mrs. fauci says it's hard living with a megacorp mean a bureaucrat. >> now, i also get to see lots of positive feedback that he gets from people. thanks my . yeah, good to see you. take care. you would think. but some of the gratitude was a positive thing. it doesn't feel positive. it feels exposed. you feel so exposed. i mean, that just doesn't feel that doesn't feel good. >> then may i make a suggestion. stop inviting documentary crews to shadow your every move and into your home and maybe it won't be so exposed. i mean, my goodness, they're like the harry and megan of dc. how about use a treadmill? all right. now, wait a minute. last year, fauci said that he didn't see himself. i thought a celebrity or a cult figure. >> hmm. i'm a physician. i'm a scientist. i direct a very important
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institute. i don't think about it in terms of being a cult person and everybody idolizing me. that's just the reflection of what's going on in society and really has very little to do with what i am and who i am and what i do. i'm really the pbs documentary laura furnishes us with some pictures of fouquet's home office. look at this. who has portraits of themselves and pillows of themselves and dolls of themselves and sketches of themselves on their desks everywhere. either he's the greatest patron of the arts we've ever seen, where he's got the biggest ego bigger than the vaccines. mihkel, itis right. okay, this is like lifestyles of the rich and infamous. well, i do have a book cover of myself behind me. >> i feel i know, but it a few of myself. you don't have it all over the house.
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this guy's got a paraphernalia about him everywhere. and laura in l.a. public school teachers are on a three day strike demanding that the lowest paid public school workers receive a 30 percent salary increase. while five hundred thousand kids were stuck at home, the teachers were line dancing in the streets. oh, oh, my gosh. it's just like the health care workers dancing. remember that they have the white coat. the difference is we gave these people, the taxpayer, four billion, six hundred and twenty six million dollars covid relief. the school board there offered them a twenty three percent increase. they won't take anything but a 30%. i mean, i'm sorry you cannot hold these kids hostage any longer. they went eighteen months without schooling. that's enough. and they're bad dancers. all raymond, the teachers abandoning kids because they don't really care about the kids. it's all about them and the teachers unions. i mean, it's a good segway,
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i think, to your new book, which is going to be a huge hit to children's book called the unexpected light of thomas alva edison. a lot of people think they know about edison's life. it's just out. but tell us why you end up calling him the patron saint of home schooling. why is that? i don't know why he's not regarded as the patron of home schooling. look, laura , this series is called turnabout tales. it's about crisis points in these young lives of historic figures. in the case of edison, he was thrown out of school at eight years old. master master said he was addled and couldn't be taught. his mother said , you're wrong. my son is more intelligent than you did. she took him home. she home schooled him and allowed him to read deeply and experiment, learn with his head and his hands. that was the last formal schooling he ever received. this is the man that gave us the microphone, motion picture cameras, lights, alkaline battery. it's an incredible story of
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never giving up on a child and how a parent's devotion can tend to life that can burn clear into the next century. and that's what we have in edison. it's a free country. and i know this from my own experience. it's not every child fits into the same. you the square peg round hole kind of deal . right. a lot of kids don't learn the same way and they they're more tactile and they can learn much better that way and be honest. and usually they think now, laura . so this is a this is a book of hope for those who have been cast aside or told you can't or you're not good enough. now, raymond, i know it seems like you're always on book tour. i mean, the unexpected life of the spider with the wisemen. but honestly, i've never seen on a book tour so often. well, that you're on a book tour and you're going to my favorite place, the villages where you live and where i'm going to check out your next retirement home. yeah. thank you. saturday at the barnes and noble of the villages, jacques's. i'm in new orleans on monday, the reagan library next
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wednesday. all the details are at raymond arroyo .com. and if people care about history and you want an inspiring tale for easter, this might be the one for your family. all right, raymond, thank you. best of luck out there. and say hi to all my future friends at the villages. all right. first whales, now dolphins. so we're to save the planet fanatic's. they're actually causing mass maritime death events along our eastern seaboard. commercial fishermen and new jersey mayor kirk larsen have some thoughts next. >> so stay there. you filthy stink. in response to brady, i always wanted to be that person out there when they needed it. be rubber gloves and joints. and firebrace of, okay, here we
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smokey bear flame was a seminal go to smokey bear .com to learn more about wildfire prevention. >> more on these strange stories of dead whales washing up on the east coast, nearly two dozen since december alone. and now a new jersey town just witnessing a different horror, a mass dolphin stranding event. a group of dolphins just turned and ran straight in for the beach. i'm looking through the binoculars and i noticed that there were six of them that were flailing on the beach and realized that they weren't going to get back out again. so i called the police when my officers arrived, it was determined that they found eight between fifty first and fifty second. so why did they beach themselves in their press releases? stranding center says they share the public sorrow for the loss of the animals,
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and they hope that a necropsy will inform them as to the dolphins cause of death. onlookers, however, came with increasing speculations about the sonar surveying for wind farms going on off the beach. my first take is maybe the wind turbines that they put offshore. the fact that they won't stop the testing for the windmill farm is really it's really sad to everybody in our actually not sad. >> we're mad . we're mad . they're not stopping another person angry that these projects aren't being stopped is barnegat light, new jersey mayor kirk larson. he's been a commercial fisherman since he was twelve years old. mayor larson, these wind farms also pose a danger to fishermen ,do they not? thank you for having me. were on a cold, cold night here in these these dolphins
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is something new to us here. we've been hearing one or two . one or two here and there, but i've never heard of eight of them in time come in the beach like the a couple of years ago here in borneo, we had two two whales here one year. so it's going to be a problem and very expensive to clean up the beaches also. so it's just a shame that these whales just keeps happening and nobody wants to find out the reason why. well, where the federal government on that stand, where's the interior department? where's the maritime experts working within interior, i guess the energy department, because they're pushing these mass wind farms in the atlantic ocean and in the pacific that are going to take up lord knows how many miles of space they're giant. they obviously make that very loud whirring sound. and we know whales and dolphins operate by their own sonar communication. so the sonar that thrown off
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by this testing looks like it very well might be the cause of their mass stranding. it's spooking them and they're moving into a beach area instead of out toward the ocean. i mean, what else could possibly be at this point? does anyone have any other explanation? no. and they're supposed to do some more testing here on some of the stuff, but they haven't yet. i think they're waiting. i think they're in a hurry to get these windmills up really before the tax that's run out. but it would be nice if they did some studies on these whales. the commercial fishermen are seeing them offshore. they have a video of one at a point pleasant, the of thrashing around in the ocean like he was going to die any man that was off shore. so we're only seeing the the edge along the beach there with a with a mortalities happening.
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i know in the commercial fishing industry, we can't, laura . we can't even we can't even dropping in the water without some kind of a plan and the right something to to get our we do get a certain amount of takes on turtles. we've done a great job in the scalp industry, staying away from turtles. and we wish everybody would do the same. we'd be held to the same standard if we could. you know, that would be nice. i mean, this is the green and yeah, the save the whale people . i mean, where are they ? they're nowhere to be found, i guess, because green energy trumps the animal. right. mayor larson. and fishable mayor larson, we have to go, but we're going to be following this story. thank you. >> now, kamala drops the line for the ages. that is the last bite next. today, grab your friend for a fun night. it will become we don't know
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once again she dazzled us with her rhetorical skills. >> during women's history month we thank women who made history throughout history, who saw what could be unburdened by what had been. >> wow, forget my angle advice and trump desantis with her on the ticket don't have a chance. >> todd: trump grand jury set to resume today and we are learning there is major dissension within the da office and the jury may not be convinced to indict the former president. you're watching "fox and friends first," i'm todd piro. >> i'm ashley strohmier, in for carley shimkus. two left alvin bragg's office over how the trump investigation was bein
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