tv Tucker Carlson Tonight FOX News April 6, 2023 10:00pm-11:00pm PDT
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more and more for less and less, and we hate that. and less, and we hate that. >> that' s wh y respectersts partnered with wal-mart to provide amazing supplements to provide amazing supplements at great americans , forced back to products, use clinically studies afforda, ne l patented ingredients to powerfully improve your health. they're also deliciousing to use and affordable. to use and affordable. that's why force starters no the number one best selling herbs and supplements branded wal-mart rushed to wal-mart. >> and unleash your potential with force factor. d good evening and welcomepped a to tucker carlson. tonight, on tuesday, two days w ago,ar all twitter slapped a wag label on all tweets fromng national public radio. going forward, npr will ben mu identified for userssk to be on my social media site as ,e ce quote, state affiliated medigoa >> that is the same category as russia today or china
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central television. it means that npfrr is not thate different from the tehran times ,with the exception, ofhappen course, being lessed accurate and more anti-american. yo >> so that happened on tuesday. why are we telling you. chan abt with all the momentous changes underway around the world, whyy would we open a showab with a story about twittergorizing categorizing npr as state media will ? because it's true. reaso that's the reason.n. finally, thankfully, somebodyd in authority has told the truth about something and that is thrilling to see on its own terms. in a world defined by lies froms our leaders. >> this seemedig like a rare sis of hope and progress. up telling the truth is the mostms revolutionary act of all, far more than taking up arms. and yet you rarely see it. human beings created language or to describe the world around them more precisely than they could with , say, grunting sign language. ng o beeurnn evly, we have national publi own creatioern ever since, but not tonight by calling national public a radio what it is .
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elon musk has used english as it was intended to be usedd l in order to tell the truth. of course, npr is state media. >> have you listen to it. it has all the hallmarksaria repetitive dishonesty, authoritarian politics, unwaged devotion to the party in charge. >> of coursethat cou, i could de virtually all media in this country. the differences th is the state actually pays for npr, nprwa has created more than fifty years ago by a law signed by democrat lyndon johnson. it was called the public broadcasting act. and from its very first day, npr was wholly dependent on tax dollars in order to exist. g is >> and it still is federal funding is essential to npr,to explains npr's own website. is a greere was no factual debate about that fact, but there is a great deal of lying about it. >> every year, npr lobbyistsdemd head to capitol hill to demand more tax dollars. t wi >> democracy can't existtht us without us , they screech well
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simultaneously at the very same time telling you at highnp volumeno that npr takes virtualy no tax money. so we don't need federal subsidies, don't even want them, really. is to increase them.as bee that is npr's wine and has been for decades under the political leadership of both partiessenti it's essentially unchallenged by anyone. it just stays. g rema >>in wars and recessions come and go. but npr funding remaine s. e is >> but after more than half a century, it is very clear that there is nothingradit public about national publicio r radio. npr is the radiomanent station permanent washington. that's who pays for it.be fro that's who benefits from by adding three simple words to npr's tweets. elles n usque exposed that to ther to the world . such is the power of truth ito r exposes. and of course it infuriate those who are exposed.e so npr howled in outrage, but with its signature pursed lipped fussiness. >> here's a directsyness he que
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a piece on npr's website, which really does belong in the museum of uptight liberalism. >> quote, npr official s have asked twitter to removeplie the label. they initially assumed it wasd appliebyd by mistake. laur >> npr spokesperson isabelle larra said we were not warned. it happened quite suddenly last night. laura saidresponse in response n npr email for the story seeking comment and requesting detailsdn about what in particular mightat have led to the new designationn . twitter's press account, orta replied with a emoji. moji >> what's just so perfect? you couldn't prove it? hey, twitter stopped callings us what we are. okay, npr here's a sketchcartoof cartoon so you can forgeortars,o the rockets in the electric cars. elon musk is a hero for this alone. >> but npr wasn't finished. still had fight. national public radio was soedie angry, so enraged to be called state media that supporters enlisted the help of o the regime's top spokeswoman to claim. otherwise.
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>> stop calling it propaganda, said the propagandist. >> again, it's an irony free zone and just two grea in >> watch this. there's no doubt of the independence of npr's journalists, and it hafs been io you've ever beenu t they on the receiving end of their of their questionse, youn know this you know that. np they have their independence in journalism.r journalists work npr journalists were digitallyry to hold public officials accountable and inform the american people the hard hitting independence indep natuf their coverage speaks, speaks for itself. and so i'll leave it there. >> so baghdad, bob , it'sunbeli unbelievable.ev. here here she is reading a press release for npr that tells us they're famous for hard hitting independence, which speaks for itsel f. really, how many toughd you, questions have they asked you? i karine jean-pierre not a singlee one . they're fluffing her every daydo she's so smart and so she paysse
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them back . >> hard hitting independence. radie same radio stationk that in the final days of the last presidential campaign took a look at the biggest political story in years. the new york post storyptop on biden's laptop, and then ig ignored it completely and nonotd ignored it completely. but because they are fussy and self-righteous to their. we very core, they bragged aboutwa how they were ignoring it completely. waste andwe don't want to waste and stories that are not really d npstories that npr's managing editor terence samuel. >> and we don't want to waste o listeners and readers time on stories that are just pur ere distractions. before two weeks before our presidential campaign, we find out that the democratic candidate has been taking moneya from a foreign adversary. >> but that's justwhatever a distraction. did >> so whatever happened to terence samuel? what did he get in return?r for helping joe biden become president at the state netwo affiliated media network? he serves well on samuelson'se been promoteeditord to npr's
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executive editor, but he stillru has time to spare because it'se not that hard to put morning edition on the air. you know what he does in hise su spare time, terence samuel and hosts seminars on requoting disinfo nation and democracy. it's something called americaner university. and no, we're not making any of this up, nor are we fabricating npr's report from just last month that informed us mal ueo n athletes have no inherenhet performance advantages over female athletes. none at all.males, that m is a fact. are ladies and gentlemen, men and m, women are physically the same iser. they have the same musclesencebs as there is no differenceed whatsoever in their bone structure. we with exp checked with experts. , so as you know, npr is famousiee for its widely respected science coverage. ra. thatbut that's not the onlyn that npr is now the go to news source for unhappy female attorneys over 50 . no, there's more to it thanyle i that. e, thethey're the lifestyle pie, the features, as they used to say in the newspaper business. >>r ex here's a piece, for exam
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on how one african-american barbie doll, ahead of its time in the toy industry changed the life of a lettings girlememe forever. >> i remember this one christmas, my cousin's father gifted us all barbie's. and when everyone was unwrapping, you know, the excitement, the paper and i opened up the barbie and my barbie was black .yo you know, and everyone kind ofyb like lookeied my barbie and i looked like their barbie thatidn i could kind of liketify, identy to their barbies, too. and i wasn't this kind of like as melanie did as a barbie. and i was like, oh, my gosh, i am different. >> unhappy middle aged ladiestan talking about themselves. >> the narcissism piped directly into your audi. that's npr. you've got to say they know
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their audience. r they don't really serve the audience. they put their audience on the air. so it' s a continuous loop.ke the snake eating its own tail. >> so you probably shouldn't be too surprised that with an audience like it's desperately unhappy baren personal audience that npr is all in f on the question of romance novels. >> watch. i'm like really bii ones theg. the sci fi one for the booksad. is a gay couple and one of them was a crack and i didn't wante, that to unlock something. g, >> unfortunately, it did before i knew it was happening. cyrus is carrying me a muscular length of historical support and our combined weight and shuffling us towards a stara without breaking our kiss.s i knew hthate was strong, butyoa i didn't think he was that strong. you like that rolands? a he asked as his time to go slamw the door to the shower staller open. and we sat on thatn. side. well, so it's tentacle . okay, yeah.
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i mean, technically itb genre, is tentacle , which is ont goin subdominant. we're not going to pollute your mind by telling you any m more about it than that. >> but what it really is , is narcissism, because here youe have an upper income oberlin wo graduate talking about what would you be talking about? well, himsel be talkinf, of cou, because that's what npr h listeners want to hear about themselves. ea themsand that's the real joui the hard hitting independent journalism karine jean-pierrtte here was touting from the white house briefing room and npr didn't just start doing it after they got joe biden elected. they've been doing it for generations. geir health their health coverage in particular stands out. aney news organization can run a piece on how to be more healthy. but only npr dared to affirmby t the snack habits of its listeners by telling you, yeah, go head and be fat.t, here's an anti diet dietitian. so diet culture is this overarching system, beliefs and values. it's really endemic to western culture at this point. weerin history. d >> christy harrison is an
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anti diet registered dietitian with a master's in publicng t health. we've been trying to get christy harrison, the anti diet dietician, on our show foro luck years now. but we're not np sr, so no luck so far . f you're looking forco coverage of lgd,verage bte, q ,u z, plus issues, you've comejust to the right place because it's not just the conventional stuff ,gay marriage or trans issues. >> they've taken it to another level, as befits a cuttingndent edge, totally independent newsne channel like national public radio. >> here they are reportings. on trans dinosau whetherts. of manr y people who are, whether they are trans or gr, some other form of genderqueer or whatever it is . >> we love dinosaurs, along with being a dinosaur expert, ro riley is herself transgender. and according to riley, there is a whole community of genderqueer dinosaur enthusiasts online. we had no idea, so we checked
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it out. sure enough, there there we found dozens of paleo artists online that identify as type it dinosaur into the lgbtb redd sub reddit. hundreds of results with pride ,danos, rainbow, danos, dynel moms, dido, dads, and a lot of puns like ally, saurus, trans serotypes, trans sarah topps, trans saurus rex. npr >> now, a lot of people say ifo' the topic of npr comes up in wor conversation, yeah, i'm all for national public radio and i'm k ahappy to work an extra days a year to pay for it. >> butsaur, i'm not a transi' o . i'm not. a so what's in it for me is a non trans dinosaur that seems a little niche. and that's a common misperception. niche, thabout national public radio.on as long as you're talking aboutf yourself and doing so in a self-satisfied, completely out of touch, wa n iy. all fo npr'rms the station for you. d in otheriv words, they're interested in all forms of diversity. discovered a
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back in 2020 one , npr discovered a trendy new television show. well, >> what? they like it. well, here's why. >> kumai, what tv show were youe bingeing this year? >> i was watching we are ladymey parts. it's a musical comedy about a punk band in london that is made up of all muslim womenra . what are you watching?s th that'setwe a hard hitting newsen coverage that makes the difference between democracy and tyranny. what are you watchinu watchig? self-satisfied people with nose piercings, talking about what they're watching in their tiny little apartment in brooklyn? >> well,ny apartments i i'm watching a musl in all muslim trends musical, a punk band. at's >> it's great. so that's npr in 2020 three . kn and the truth is , npr has unbea always been kind, awful, kind of unbearable, kind of cringing, as they say.no but now you can't even listen to because the people who work there are deranged. they're ideologues
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and ideologues, of course, incrz the end go crazy and start attacking each other. the revolution inevitably eats its own. and we're seeing that on display now and frankly, kind of enjoying it. so o after npr laid off 10% ofsw its staff recently, one npr show called louder than a riot louder than a riot. they love riots and it pr tweeted this and we're quoting the hardest part is that our season season, if you're not hungarian, you probably know what that means. >> we certainly don't. our zen is about msg. i jin wah quere trans black woment face in hip-hop. yet within npr, the majority impact in these layoffs workwear peoc staffd programs. r words, and programs. >> in other words, racist genitt wah. >> ihingn case you aren't up on your npr, speak something do with bigotry against womenk, noa who are black . not that npr bothers to define
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any of those terms anyway. >> it gets better because once you put crazy people in chargeng of your newsroom, well, crazy things happen. >> slo they try to call an all hands meeting to explain why people are being fired.wants to the real reason, of course, t is no one wants to listensp to this, but aean npr executive had to get out there and try to speak slowly and tell thesena people why they were fired calle and people start screaming out. so he called for civility and then one employee said , you need to read this piece,ed quote, when civility is useds as a cudgel, against people ofas color, that's npr. >> ladies and gentlemen,state on the inside, npr, by the waymy we told you the outside is nowa officially state medialo. and honestly, that tells youe. a lot about the state. >> vince collins is a radio host in washington, d.c., a very popularington one , deses so. >> and he joins us tonight to assess npr. and you live in washington. you report npr it on the radio. >> was there ever a question,
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your mind that this was state a media? not at all.ll my our mutual buddy the chris plante calls a national panhandler radio, appropriately npr. and yor radiaru know what's amag about this? they're trying to prove thatd they're not state media by and they're relying on everyone defes funded by the state in order to make that defense. prs so karine jean-pierre stands there at the white house press briefing and say briefins npr ie independent, she gives a braveheart style speect styleh attesting to their independence. do you think she would ever do s that for simon atibaim? >> like, not in a million years. not in a million years. of course, it's for npr. npr cited yul roth, the former head of censorship twitter,affii as a guy who saidat m they shouldn't be labeled state affiliatededia media. dollars yo, roth and twitter atfedera the time were making millions of dollars from the federal government to censor the american public. these are all completely biased people. and one last big thing thatr i noticed about this, tuckerde, they say in all of their defense as well, only one percent of our fundinge, lesss than one percent, comes from
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the federal government. even tha npr ist is deception. even that is a lie. the thou npr is a content organizatiosanl the thousand member stationses t that they send content to all m pay fees to npr. >> guess where they getth their money from? atthat's right. the federal, state and local% governments, as much as twenty three percen frt of all ofions their funding comes from there. we're talking hundreds of millions os,f and here they areg playing a shell game and the pla only type of organization that plays that kind of deceptive shell game, not a newsnization organization, one that is running a political operation on behalf of the government. >> it's totally right. npr is repulsive, but noreput qe as repulsive as its listeners. the most privileged people i in the world demanding welfare from the rest of us sincewh colonieso who was on commercial appreciat working for the state. appreciatete seein. thank you.>> t gooduc to see. g >> a quick programing note c on tuesday will be heading dowon to the east coast of florida to speak to donald trump, ret runner will e fron
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in the republican presidential race was just, as you know, firsindicted this week. this will be donald trump'sarra first interview since ignmeverything happened, his00 r arraignment in new york that will air here 8:00 p.m. eastern on tuesday night. >>so so we told you very brieflo about thisns wisconsin supreme court election this week thatt d will determine what the voting laws are ientin that swing stat the next presidential election. how did the democrat windee despite a history of doingple things that most peoplfie find d totally immoral? well, there's a reasone'lls wh and we'll tell it to you after the break. plus, we'll never get toe bi the bottom administrationsdeadmt blaming for its disastrous pullout from afghanistan. sing about thwho did that? >> but then they've got an answer. we'll be right back . sunday, the faith and friends answer series. tac teams must see the sunday on fox and friends weekend
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>> feeling good. i knew you would visit my michael .com, tony here from credit repair .com taken to the streets to talk about credit . >> what's a good credit score? go six hundred. >> maybe if you're trying to pay thousands extra and interest rates cut the confusion at credit repair, .com. this is a paid advertising for legal services. mesothelioma victims will be able to pay for treatment. you may be eligible for compensation to help cover the high cost of life. extending care call. now, if you've been diagnosed mesothelioma or lung cancer, unpaid medical bills can pile up. many victims dream their life savings to pay for treatment. an estimated 30 billion dollars in trust money has been set aside to help those with asbestos related cancer. financial help may only be a phone call away. call 1-800- five one eight fifty six fifty two . now for free legal consultation. >> that's one 855 one eight fifty six 52 tuesday. donald trump speaks out on tucker in his first interview since
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there. >> alton's go to right now. so what are you waiting for. >> this week? dem control of ty have heard, democrats took control of the wisconsin supreme court and that has major ramificationramificas for the ty twenty four presidential election in a key swing state, i which is why they won that seat so badly. so voter id will be shut down,t which will allow fraud.of >> that's the whole point of getting rid of voter i.d. how to commit more fraud. so how did democrats win therett ?rom probably a lot of different explanations, but one of themsc is they benefitehemepad from a e
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to pay voters with an app. int wisconsi trace gallagher has the story for us tonight. hey,eme cour tucker. so going into the wisconsin supreme court election, the balance of the court waswa four three leaning conservative. the race was between conservative judgen dan kelly and liberal judge janet protasiewicz, now a group called wisconsin takes action was offering voters up to two hundred $50 to influence their family and their friends to vot e. nhat wisconsin takes actio website doesn't mention protasiewicz by name, but itth does say, quote, we are readyn for a progressive majority in vot the wisconsin supreme court. in other t words, the grouhep ws betting that voters could do the math. and here's how the deal worked. wisconsin takes action, set up an empower app. if you download the app, you ad the as and get thirty dollars. >> if yophu provide seventy five names and phone numbers, you get an additional a sixty dollar gift card. and each time you reach out to a friend or acquaintanceo vo to vote, you get mortee giftgete cards until you reach two hundred fifty bucks. the wisconsin republican partyat
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filed a complaint with the state ethics commission and gop state lawmakers and othergh groups have called it outrightbr bribery. and wisconsiibery.n statute 12 1 appears to support that, saying that it is a violation or bribeo for any person who , quoting here offers, gives, lends or promises to give or lend or endeavors to provide anything of value.value" two hundred $50 would fall that under that anything of value category. it's als category. io notable ts election, half of judge protasiewicz campaign contributions came from outside the state of wisconsin.e the statonly 19 percent of judgs came from outside the state. she won. he lost. you will hear more about this, tucker. >> only 18 percent. that's unbelievable.unbelievs gatrace gallagher, thanks for that informative report tonight. >> appreciate it. e pullouso the pullout from afgn under joe biden was one ofportan the most humiliating foreign policy disasters in americanamei
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history. it's hard to think of one morecn thousa humiliating 13 american servicemen killed, thousands of american citizens left behind. many afghans died, by the way. some of them fell off airplanes. others were blowailanes,n in dre strikes for no obvious reason by the bush administration. on, wors and maybe worst of alle armed turned the taliban intmioe en the best armed military force ro after pakistan in the entiret region. >>s joe biden didpr that hiesit summer as president.? >> so what does he administration have to say instead they bla >> well, imen a new report, they take no responsibility whatsoever. instead, they blame itpete on somehow donald trump. >> so today, fox's peter doocy asked john kirby, how does that make sense? >> watch.ad >> the intel was bad. so how can president biden ever trust when they come intohi the ovalng in office with the . that anything in thereellige is legit? whatnce is i said was that intelligence is a mosaic. what if the mosaice, all wha the pieces are incorrect?
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>> wha t i said was intelligence is hard business and they get it right a lot, too. there were some pieces here that weren't accurate. this document and this effort isn't about accountability today. this is the next muscleus movement. cl in what will be a long processan to better understand and comprehendd and adjustnistan to what we learn. and what we did in afghanistan. there were children beinging ano killed. there were people hanging offu of air force jets thatare were leaving. and you're saying that you guys are proud of the way that this>> mission is conducted. - does that mean that proud ofople the fact that we got more than one hundred ande twenty four thousand people safely out of afghanistan? you bet. anoud of the fact that we now have about a hundred thousand afghans ar live former alliess and partners living in this country and working towards citizenship. bet. doyou bet. eva does that mean that everything went perfect in that evacuatioce ? >> of course not. a few things were degrading to the reputation, hard earned reputation of the american armed services than having
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a shamelesn, kirbys liar like t. john kirby, speaking on his beha behalf. t of his >> jokin carried a weapon in combat zones for most of his life. he's retired green beret combat veteran, also former candidate for congress. he joins us tonight.u comin joe , thank you so much for his coming on . so wha le t do you as someone ro who spent a lot of his life in that region, what do you make of this explanation? >>t of well, first off, tucker,l the democrats and joe biden are trying to do right now is avoid accountability, shift it back to president trump. and that's because house republican nally startetting s finally stad putting some pressure on the biden administration, bidedemanding more accountabili. so that' tots the knee reaction. but this is a complete, total disgrace. look, i would have a lotf w more respect for the biden administration iaftef they went after the military industrial complex in the intelligence theircommunity for their lies. this all goes back to when president trump attempted to get us out of afghanistan. he foughist us ttan,o the negotiations table and that's in the intelligencele community and the military industrial complex lied to theaa american people.
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they leaked it to the media o that that putin had put bounties on the heads ofn fashio american soldiers, the whole russian bounty narrative, and then congress into get u a bipartisan fashion, move to block trump from spending money to gett ofan us out ofl tr afghanistan in the summer fall time frame o f 2020. >> we should have been out. then we had a plan, but then biden came in and he couldn't gt do trump's plan. he wanted to get our troops out on his timeline. in september 11th of 2020 one and the military industrial complex continued to lie. e to joe biden. you kept hearing those rosy assessments of how the afghan military was going to hold fig the ground and they were goinghd to stand and fight for monthssot on end. >> they lied and americans diedd as a result. someone must be held accountable. >> yeah. sowhat hap you know what happen. you personally, joe , can't know what happened and almost uniquely are brave enough to tell the truth about it. and this is why they prevented electionfrom winning that seat n congress and one of the mostwi rotten elections i've everll b seen. and so i hope you'lln be runnig again and continuing to tell the truth. thank yjoe , thank you.think >> thank you, tuckerth.lege sine i will. would
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>> so you'd think the price of college since the economy thais teetering may be coming down, but it's higher than ever. so you hav ae to ask what will happen when artificial intelligence replace r of thes maybe most of the entry level white e collar jobs that these students are going to college to try to get anyone thinking this through? >> mike , i was thinking it through. >> there's an old saying, if you want something done right, you have to do iwit yourself.thd >> idingn 2015 camil y , my dad a to revitalize american textile manufacturer with bedding crafted from cotton grown on our family farm. we createdbeore than land cut tu the best farm to home products because it's more than quality products. it's a labor of love from our family. go to red land cotton .com and receive 15% off your order with code fox news. >> think you know ron desantis
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think again. in congress. desantis voted three separate times to cut social security. that's right. three times over three years. worse, desantis voted to cut medicare two times. dissent is even voted to raise the retirement age to 70. >> the more you learn about the sadness, the more you see he doesn't share our values. >> he's just not ready to be president . make america great again. he is responsible for the content of this advertising . sometimes balance of nature gets feedback that dr. howard should be played by a better actor. >> well, maybe they're right, because i am not an actor and i don't want to be. i hope that you understand this is real. people are sharing their success stories because their quality of life has improved. you can't. rehab was quite a journey. i thought maybe this is the best it's going to be until i took balance of nature. i have low energy. i wasn't sleeping good at
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with the usfl kickoff weekend. wow. next weekend, the usfl returns to memphis at the forty years. it's a special season opener. the city will never forget them. it's a primetime spectacle. at birmingham welcomes back the 2020 two champs in a saturday night kickoff all the way to the usfl season kicks off next weekend on fox. seem t >> some people still seemo happ to want to get their kids intoee princeton, but you've got to wonder what's going to happen to universitie s. college enrollment dropped nearly 10% since covid. covit drop ever.es the elite universities obviously are becoming completely intolerant. you would never send your kids there if you thought about . and they're also more expensive than they've ever been. brown , which is sort ofor a college in providence, rhodehl island, cost eighty five grand for one yearin t. y costs other schools in the same category cost ninety grand. go
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>> so how many of the peoplegraa who go to these schools and graduate are going to findte the hard way that i hasinking eliminated their jobs? >> a this. people should be thig about this. >> mike rowe is the host of how america works on fox business. mikehe has thought about it and joins us tonight. >> mike , thanks for coming on . so thin. this is one category of concerns about artificialct theb intelligence. it's and thank you for bringing this up. it's got to affect of the job prospects of kids graduating i from high schools. not's go, i think it's got to at everything. and i'm not suree it it's of iti a category unto itself. i was thinking of itof lic realn terms of like a cousinnd to technology and robot and automation and all of, the things that have beenink hastened in part, i think, because there's been a big push for a much higher minimum wage than we're accustomed to . but, you know, the unintendedof consequences of hastening techi has done a lot to eliminate many, many entry level jobs.to t this thing feels differentside to me. ofis feels like it's coming at
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it from the other side of the brain. and if it takes root and accelerates the way people yo then og it's going to , i think you're going to see a lot of white collar jobs eliminated in the same way you ' and at the same time. and as youm know, i'm a pollyanna, always a glass half full kind of guy, and i'ma looking for a silver lining insi it. and if there is one, maybe that pincer movement will pushr will us back into thinking about making things again on a mind, factory with a factory state of mind. right.e ou and by the same token, you know, a.i. is kind of likeoundao outsourcing in a way.n al and i my foundation alwaysam tries to look at jobs that you can't outsource, plumbing, fitting, pipsteam, pipes, that g and so forth. ofybl stare we'll start to see the same thing as we get off ofh chinese independence. i hope the least with regard to what we decide to manufacture for ourselves. >>so i remember worrying
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and talking to you years ago about the idea i would replace,e say, truck drivers. b but it's iigget seems at this pt ,who knows? >> but it seems like a bigger threat to junior lawyers. >> yeah, right. because i think, you know,nd with truck drivers and pilotsy and things like that, it's noteh enough to simply have the tech n in place.e you're going to have to convince a lot of humand beings that it's okay to bese driving down a highway and look over and see nobody behind the wheel of the 18 wheeler. that's going to that's goingk pa to take more time. i think paradoksy than basicall, than the underlying techyo will require. to your point,ur poiwhat's whatd on right now? everything i've read and everybody i've listened to who i respect is talking about thisn thing on an accelerant, unlike anything we've we've seen before. it's reading our minds it' and e churning out a better work product in many cases that we're capablable oe of. ing abou so, you know, i think a lot oftn people are thinking aboutso, we tapping the brakes. a >> yeah, i hope so.o more
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we're going to do a lot more on this, and i hope you'll cometime back to talk about it. >> mike rowe, thank you. tucker: newstime. >> so politico is a newsletter based in northern virginia that takes millions from creepy bigue companies to shill for congress, their issues in front of the congress. politico calls itself a news cag organization, but inside it's really run like npr, amber hasof obtained a list of wordsll political reporters are not allowed to use, and that list includes, well, standbys like mankind in thirdgi world countries. cabiological , gender and thi pro life. this is part of a much bigger trend that amber has exposed. >> her reporting can be found in the new book the snowflakes snrevealow woke millennialsnighb hijacked american media. >> she joinser us tonigho t. thanks so much for coming reposs on and congrats on the book. so politics a kindo seems reposs a kind of i mean, really, it'sss just a corporate shill machine,i but it's poses as a news organization. how can they ban englishis languageh la words?
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>> it's truly incredible.s incre i mean, places like the newget times and the washington post get a lot of flak fla and rightfully so. radar. ttico has kind of been flying under the radar. thatthis style guide is really just indicative of a larger trend at thacationt publication they also brought in several transgender activists to lecture the reporting staff on how they were allowed to writewe on transgender issues with one of the individuals who was leading that charge, actually telling the reporters that it is a violation of journalistic ethics to report re both sides of the transgender issue. and one reporter was even suggested to have sensitivity. readerher s go over her future articles because she had dared to quote conservatives in an. article on transgenderism. >> it's craz>> tuckey, a little self-respect. they have her dignity. se i getlf to show up at politico or "the washington post" and tell them they're not allowed to criticize fox news? i mean, since whenllowed activis
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allowed to ban criticism of themselves? , it's truly incredible.me i i mean, the idea that this person would go and her name is kate susan, by the way, she's with the 13th, whichgroup. is an lgbtq advocacy group. she went in lecturing about journalistic ethics. well, where is the journalistic ethics? and even allowins lowsg activiss to tell reporters how they were allowed to write on issues isue the first place? the entire dynamic is totally backwards and it's allall be in from response to this woke millennial takeover of newsrooms where the people who we used to deride as snowflakes have now instituted politics all across major american institutions, including the media. >> that's a totally right. we i that term snowflake never describe them accurately. >> they're thugs. no.cc athiuratelhugse with a new bookt on this topic. >> i appreciate your coming on tonight. thank you. thanks, tucker. ucker.so artificial intelligenci as you heard inng s our conversation, mike rowe is accelerating so fast that gas even some people in the tech business are really worried. but bill gates not worried because he's getting rich from
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it. more on that, guys. already this spring, it's your last chance to explore everything. fox nation has to offer for just one item on what a privilege it is for you to have me here this evening. you change experience news stories that will renew your faith, support the and for the is the kingdom of greatest story. ever told happened right here. yes. sxrensen, brianna , it's the i sxrensen, brianna , it's the i your last chance to get fodex nation for one ninety nine a month when you sig htion,n up fr a yearly plan, don't wait and sign up today. and sign up today. >> wha loss program look like? no hunger, no cravings. th lasting resulteis and easy. lasting resulteis and easy. >> is that possible? it is with golo. these people changed their lives with golo without starvation, dieting, whether you have one hundred pounds to lose or want to shed those
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>> so people have been talkingai at the margins about a.i. artificial intelligence for hav quite some time and all of a sudden you have a chance to test it with various chatbots like chat gpt. no >> and if you have, you know how bizarre and unsettling and honestly amazing. bt scary this technology is . >> it's lots of different things. so i chat will lie to you in the service of neo liberal ideals. rajust flat out lies.'s all >> supposed to be all knowing. it's all deceiving. actually .y accusation >> elon musk and apple cal co-founder steve wozniak, e on t they both called for a six month pause on the developmentde of a.ii becaus. because it couln humanity and they're serious about it. mi they understand reall and the really, really worried. but bill gates, who founded microsoft, which is benefiting n onwa a.i., says no way, no pause. intonward into the unknown. eddie scary is the author ofserh liberal misery. >> he joins us t oo decide who's on the right side tonight. andy , thanks so muct h for coming on . so you have two of the biggestn
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names in technology founders,h a as they say in silicon valley, each taking a polar side of this issue. >> who do you think is right? well, i think if any of your viewers want to live a happy, healthy, sane life,e you can pretty much always douc: the opposite of whatever bill gates says. >> to smart. we agree on durings saw during the pandemic, thateri this is a person who is tha completely motivated and will say whatever it is that's inthe his own business interests, you know, it's, oh, get the shots,,e get all the vaccines. you can get three, get four, get five. , and as he's lining hisli pockets with pharmaceutical money, i think that there shoul pd be m reason to trust him. any more after that.m. when he says and it's not that in tt a bunch of faith in these these tech overlords, elon musk and others, but it turns out ses that with this technology, whate we have seen is the people who are enmeshed, enmeshed in it and saw what was coming. i even they weret. surprised by i.
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the people who developed thish t stuff, there were glitches with it. you ha mod,ese bots saying, oh, we're going to we're goinguld le to release more viruses inlive the world. >> we're going indep to we're go to we would like to destroy the world, live independently. d those and then even the peoplt who created those things say, oh, that's just a glitch. and we didn't mean for thata si to happen. we don't knox mow what that is . we're going to fix it. i mean, if a six month pause is all we can ask for and billti gates says the opposite. >> no, i think i think we need to at least take six months att. least. >> so elon musk said something really interesting that he said for all human historyhe, do human beings have hadas the highest known intelligence and no w we've created somethingconseq that has higher intelligence than us . of thaa secondkould thinue the consequences of that for a second before proceeding. oplv oh, yeah, for sure. and i think, again, when you san have this this machine thats these people have made, that even they are looking and saying, wait, we didn't realize it was going to do, we that. wait, actually , you played i with it for too long. we didn't anticipate thahavitngg happening. and it's having these conversations in ways that are almost we know ating what we think and what we see and what. we what we know to be true. yeam
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yeah, that's a reaeal problem. t in my new car yeah. >> i mean, if i got in my new, car and suddenly it became a submarine without telling meys ,i'd hang up the car keys for a while and try to figure out what went wrong, you know t exactly for sure it is scary. >> great to see you tonight. thank you.>> t thanks . >> so we want to end the show tonight with an update from the natural world . what still matters even with a.i.? so if you've got to be infestation, you're probably tempted just kill all the bees. t thertoe is another option. you don't have to kill allout th the bees. and actually all the bees are dying anyway. so care about the bees says a bee removal expert will join next to explain why you should care about the bees. jimgriffin. yes, onesided equiano.
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now use your promo code for a limited time when you buy one , you get a second one absolutely free with our 60 day money back guarantee you have nothing to lose. >> sleep well. america mike lindell .com and brian russell and coach and also a fitness guru. i like to work out. i was looking for something to keep me going and make me feel better. and that's where violent nature came in. i realized the difference two weeks and my energy level spiked when i take balance in nature, i know i'm putting things in my body. it makes me pause and make you feel good. i do feel better. i'm back doing the things that i enjoy doing, i think balance nature for that start. now by going to balance of nature .com and don't forget to use discount code fox news struggling with low credit or no credit . you need to lift your credit up by five star bank. the best there is in credit building our credit builder program offers quick, easy way to get the credit you
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strong odor. >> so get back at it. there was fair work there. works, works, use theory works every day to prevent muscle cramps and spasms. therrell works, works, try their works and get back at it. learn a randy that's how you make like it never even happened. happened servpro jumaa the king has been to throw and he's no longer untouchable. >> but didn't give you any pleasure to see joe . >> i don't think that his crimes against me are worthy of incarceration. >> the editors at jeff bezosthin this washington post spend all day, every day trying to thinkso of new ways to humiliate and degrade the american population. bu popt this week they've outdoe themselves. >> fox's kevin corke has.
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>> you jus a report that, kevin , you justt never know what you're going p to find in the posost,t. s targ now, critics argueet that climae activists have already targeted ssuv and gas powered cars, gas m ranges, even the food you eat. but now they're coming after your bathroom tissue, sort of the post as a climate coach columnist, a guy named michaen l oren. p on >> in a provocative column, he advocates that americans give tp aup on tv and switch to bidel >> he says it'll save millionsre of trees.you now, beforthe you roll your eyee or throw rolls of tp at the tv. apparently, sales of bad days have left the u.s. some tene fru fold since the pandemic. they range in priccke from thirty bucks to twenty one grand. >> but most americans don'tve a bad day from a veneer. so what gives tucker, i thinknde most americans don't want to find ougot and they go with the pastry or the weird any day. toilet >> kevin corke, great to see, a. you too.
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so most people see bees as pests and want to kill themlf as quickly as they can. d dennis lengua of orlando,if florida, hasferentapproa a veryt approach. he is a humane bee removal expert.know he's been as the been doing it r more than a decade. >> he's known as the bee guy. he joins us to explain why he takes this approach. >> dennis, thanks so mucu'reh fr coming on . well, i se se i see you're protected. so what people see bs, they want to spray in with the t can of poison and kill them. wh>>y should they not do that?o rewell, two reasons. >> no. one is, as a homeowner, the last thing you want to do is leave a bees nest inside your structure. it'll cause more problems than you could ever imagine. and the other reason is because they're honey bees. d relo and so rather than having them killed, there's a beekeeper that would happily remove and relocate those bees. >> and we do that all day,>> every day. so how do you i mean, i'm just assuming the bees don't want to be gentrified and move to ayv new neighborhood. bu thet how do you convince them to to leave? >> well, it's a physical
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process. so we essentially evict them. weemov physically removeus their nest, putting it intol a bee hive. and duringva a process, we usett a special vacuum designed to vacuum the bees u them.p andt hurt them. and once they're brought back to the farm, then relocatee the bees from the vacuume with the nest and put everybody back together and put them to work. >> how matter they when they get out of the vacuum, you'd be surprised atut of th how gentle they are. >> se vao most of the time we dt have to wear a suit or a veil cl any protective clothing during the entire process because they're just totally defeated like they got vacuumeas that point. lik >> they just give up.e they it seems like they should you sting. you know. >>, that's not now. the it's just a matter of knowing te the insects and keeping themslyo calm.easo >> how important. and obviously you have reasonwh to promote bees. >> i'm very proby myself. y arto say it. >> but why are bees important? >> well, they produce one thirdw of the food we eat at least. and of course, they also make honey, which is a sweet, delicious treat.
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>> everybody enjoys. y grou so ip,f you if if any group, if we are to locate any group intht the world that produces one third ofhe fd we the food wt we obviously want to treat them like they were private. baronequity barons or hedge fud managers, like we treat them with a lot of respect. why?but we don't.le have why? i would think soa . i think it's just some people have a fear of bees and they're knee reaction is when they see a nail, they go get a hammer. yeah, i think that's right. or it a bug spray. i >> how much money do you eat? >> eat, honey? every single day. aldal the time. really. ker: do u got ice cream and hon and ice cube. >> you're obviouslwey wearing a full suit. we can't really see your outline, but you seem like a pretty slender fit character. how do you eat honey. aaint every daaiy and maintain your girlish figure? i work hard every day. i wake up at five a.m. and it don't stop until about 6:00 a.m.. yeah, well, you're making the world betterworl. unli. unlike most people, maybe even talk show hosts of denison. r cg
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>> i respect to you. thank you for cominge on tonight. a sweehave a sweet day with you. well, we are out of time, unfortunately, to remind you were going to be speakinprgesidn to the presidential frontrunner on the republican side. he's just been indicted, we believe, unfairly, donald trump. it'll be donald trump's first interview since he was arraigned in new york . so that will be next tuesday, will be back tomorrow night. and monday. >> in the meantime, seangh hannity joins us right now. all right then, tucker. thank you. >> by the way, i have a group of people that have a message. i support your friends. they support you. k you. we loo wk forward to the trump interview next week. tucker, thank you. we are back with a live audience. i these are the only normalyo people in all of new york citymo ,i can tell you that.en all right.ing t but tonight, we're tracking multiple major storieso happening right now. you've got two democratide stacy
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