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tv   Fox News Tonight  FOX News  April 28, 2023 5:00pm-6:00pm PDT

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tonight. i'm done for the week. thankfully. jesse watters will be back here in his safe and capable hands on monday night. hope you have a great evening. please remember, i'm not watters. this is not my world. he'll be back. >> all right. good evening, everyone. hope you're having a great friday. this is "fox news tonight." i'm brian kilmeade. we begin. for the majority of our country's history, political parties existed for the simple purpose to make our lives better. political parties may have had different ideas to achieve that goal, but in the end the goals were the same. but if you've noticed over the last few years, that's no longer true, especially when you talk about the democratic party. the point of the democratic party's agenda today is no longer to improve the lives of the voters as far as i can tell. it is to keep the voters miserable it seems.
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democrats push misery because it's demoralizing. the more demoralized the populace feels the more powerful they become as a result. take your average democratic voter. there is one. have you ever noticed how modern progressives seem unsatisfied, anxious, unhinged, angry, nose rings, purple hair. a recent survey found that liberals were roughly two times less likely than conservatives to feel completely satisfied with their lives. liberals reported feeling less satisfied with their own mental health. i'll back them up on that. and their family lives. their entire belief system is in part dedicated and predicated on the idea that the world is about to end due to climate change. it's been in the schools forever. they're hearing it from powerful politicians like aoc. it means they're willing to do anything, even destroy priceless historical pieces of art to remind you of that fact. that's what a few climate extremists did to the national gallery of art in washington, d.c.
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they did it on thursday. >> we need our leaders to take action about what's happening with the climate. >> yeah, that's effective. where's security, by the way? that was one of the many examples that climate extremists have been destroying art all over the western world in recent months. >> the destructive nature of our addiction to oil. >> climate change is needed now more than ever. >> what is worth more? art or life? we cannot afford new oil and
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gas. it is going to take everything we know and love. >> destroying beautiful art is the first steppingstone in their revolution, but it's not enough for democratic politicians to convince people that the world is going deed. to keep you miserable, they have to rule over your everyday life. to do that, they've decided to take everything you like away, starting with your ability to move freely in the country. joe biden has told us he wants to eliminate all gas-powered vehicles, right? he wants to force you to drive electric. >> $370 billion investment, reducing annual carbon emissions by 1 billion tons in 2030. folks, for example,, it offers working families a thousand dollars a year in savings, rehabilitates to buy new efficient appliances, weatherize their home, get tax credits for heat pumps and rooftops solar, energy-efficient ovens, dreyer's and so much more.
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provides tax credits for electric vehicles, new and used, because we convinced the auto companies on this lawn out here a year and a half ago to move to all-electric vehicles in the near term. it's a gigantic game changer. >> unbelievable. does he even know what he's saying? since the world is apparently going to end, democrats want to control what food you're allowed to eat. new york city mayor eric adams, to him eating healthy means vegan, plant-based diets. >> i always say we have two mothers. one gave birth to us. the other sustains us. we've been destroying the one that sustains us based on the food we've been consuming. one in every five metric tons of carbon dioxide our city emits comes from food. all food is not created equal. the vast majority of food that is contributing to all the emission crisis lies in meat and
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dairy products. >> i can't steak tonight? that's what this guy is focused on. eric adams believes the world won't be saved until you stop eating meat and dairy. believe it or not, that makes his views look moderate compared to democrats in california. listen to this. the state is dealing with ramped crime. it's clear they're not trying to fix the problems. they're too focused on pressing issues, like the fact that buying candy is legal. yes, candy. >> proposed legislation in the california assembly could see a host of popular candies and foods, including skittles, sour patch kids, as well as campbell's soup, potentially banned. the goal is to crack down on five common food addictives linked to cancer and organ
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damage. >> right. skittles kills organs, right? next razzles. they still make razzles, right? meanwhile criminals in new york are released on zero cash bail. the democrat-run state legislature can't find enough money to fund 14 charter schools. there should be enough money for a hundred. 14 is criminal. democratic governor kathy hochul is busy trying to ban nicotine products. nicotine is bad, but marijuana is good, and now will be encouraged by the state. >> governor kathy kathy hochul s the first batch of retail licenses will only go to people convicted of pot-related offenses or to their family
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members. hochul wants to ensure those most harmed by the drug's prohibition directly benefit from the legalization. >> right. the people that were convicted of marijuana charges are the ones allowed to open up marijuana businesses. it's insane. ignore real problems, create new ones, doing both. so that you can make your life more miserable, in my rough estimation. that's what the democratic party's current playbook seems to be. lawrence jones has been watching this, but also going from city to city. his show is great. you can see him at 9:00. two hours today. you'll be hosting this weekend. be hosting this show next week. lawrence, as you're watching this, this must frustrate you. you go to the cities, know the problems. >> i'm trying to stay composed, because i talk with the people impacted by their bad policies. i mean, look, it's really not partisan for me. it's, like, when you see people that are being shot up on the
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south side of baltimore, philly, it's not a major city that i have not hit. when you see the hopelessness with the kids. they decided they were going to keep them at home during the pandemic. then you want to give them a quality education in the school. when the parents are upset their kids can't read, they're totally sold out to the teachers union. the most powerful union that exists is the teachers union. people having to pay eight bucks for eggs. the gas prices. it's issue after issue. they say they love the climate, care about the issue, but the people of east palestine, you didn't see protests there. the president hasn't been there. this gender ideology thing that is touching children, we still don't that stuff, the killer in tennessee, it's issue after issue after issue that the democratic party has failed. look, i don't say this with any joy. my first political campaign was
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in 2015 for barack obama. okay? i've seen both parties. they both have let people down. there's one party that is married to their ideology. i think that's the democratic party. >> so in new york we have a chance to see this up close. bail reform has destroyed the city, other cities, zero cash bail, so criminals go back out on the street and bargain down every single charge. they funded public defenders and looked the other way. who benefits from charter schools? minority kids. don't tell me the democratic party is for minorities, because you only open up 14? that leaves thousands of families heartbroken because they're not going to get the attention they deserve. >> and who are the people that are hurt? black and brown communities. >> yeah. >> i always tell republicans that we have the -- they have the right message, but the wrong messengers. the democrats have the wrong message, but the right messengers. people think they're going to
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get one thing with that party, but they don't get that thing. if republicans had any brains, because if they went to black vote, win the latino vote, democrats can't win an election. if they were to go in the community, just sell liberty. i mean, it's not something special, that they care about the kids, the safety of their families, they'll win every election. unfortunately they're not doing that. of course the democrats sell racial grievances every single election cycle. >> all right. you're going to be here at 8:00. >> i love my people. >> you'll be anchored to the desk. look forward to watching your show tomorrow night. >> you're passing the torch. thank you. >> actually saturday, too. thanks, lawrence. i'll have to read this intro, and you can sneak out gradually. that chair rotates. you can go now. you want to go. go ahead and go. it's saturday night. you may remember last year democrats in congress gave the irs $80 billion in new funding
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to hire nearly 90,000 new irs agents. at the time democrats told us the irs needed the money to crack down on tax cheats. what democrats didn't tell us, those irs agents would be doing that with the use of force. here's an official video. they're recruiting. watch. >> in addition accountants, but law enforcement officers, which is interesting, because special agents that work for the irs, they don't come from a law enforcement background. we get to do the same things like all the other law enforcement officers do. things happen, we have to respond. we have to be ready. >> we teach our agents to fire a firearm. we teach them defensive tactics, methods of protecting themselves and others as well. they go through the entire process so that not only can they analyze records, but they also have that law enforcement component. >> really? so i have a bookkeeping error, a bunch of people come to my door with guns? only billionaires.
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720 billionaires in the country. that's a lot of irs agents. they're looking to hire armed agents in all 50 states. james, are you surprised about the aggressiveness of these ads and the hiring? they need thousands of employees over the next 10 years. are you surprised the irs needs to be armed? >> >> for years and years the irs has had an arm called the crime investigative division. they are armed. they are agents. i start with the treasury department, like elliott ness, back in those days. people can be violent. they've only got about 4,000 total members now that carry firearms. they're dealing with everything that police are right now with the defund movement. they're having trouble
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recruiting, trouble in retention, brian. >> i love this. applicants must be willing to carry a forearm, work a minimum of 50 hours a week, irregular hours, on call to bring the heat 24/7 including holidays and weekends. they just have to crack down on people like matt tiabe, knocking on his door, sending a message. i don't know anybody not concerned about this. i really don't. should they be? >> no. i mean, brian, i'm not a big fan of how the recruitment is being done these days with the job fairs, things like that. but as i just said, they're struggling to recruit people. how president biden and his administration thinks they're going to hire an additional 87,000 employees. all of them won't be armed, but i don't know how they'll do it. i don't think the ads will help. >> yeah, we'll see. i just find it hard to believe that they're going to crack down
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on the rich. i find it hard to believe they're not going to crack on the deli owner, the dry-cleaner, the gas station owner, because of revenue in, revenue out. that's how they drill down and get the real estates out to fund social programs. could you feel as though -- i always thought they would combine with the fbi if they thought there was a possible hostile situation. i did not know they would be law enforcement essentially. >> the fbi and the irs do work closely together. but, brian, look, they're claiming they're only going after people that make more than $400,000 a year. i guess that's where the rubber has to meet the road if that's really going to happen, or to your point if they go after the deli owners. >> the small business owners, which makes up 80% of the economy in this country. thank you so much. appreciate it. >> yep. thanks for having me.
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>> meanwhile, first anthony fauci. the another wants your kids in school all along. we know better. all that homeschooling you were doing was just because you wanted to be there. she was begging you to come back to school. that's wrong. we'll discuss it next. don't move.
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>> glad you're back. hey, it could be years before we find out how much damage the covid lockdowns did to the country, to our kids. the share of adults reporting feeling anxiety and depression skyrocketed, but the children suffered more than any other group. kids were unnecessarily kept out of school thanks in part to the teachers union, which control the democratic party. the head of the second largest teachers unions in the country is trying to revise history. in a hearing on capitol hill this week, she says she did everything in her power to keep schools open. >> every day from february on, trying to get schools open, we knew that remote education was not a substitute for opening schools, but we also knew that
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people had to be safe. maybe it's because i live in new york city. i live near a hospital. every other minute there was an ambulance. there was terror. our members were terrified. others were terrified. what we were simply looking for was clear scientific guidance. when we couldn't get, we did it ourselves. we worked with doctors. we worked with others. we just tried to get it out there. >> we spent every day from february trying to get schools open. that is completely false. when former president donald trump was trying to reopen schools in 2020, randi we weingarten wants everyone to think she's not culpable, but
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she is. >> i was very interested in these hearings, brian, because i'm a mother of five young children. so i lived through this pandemic like the whole rest of my fellow americans did, and i know exactly what happened. she's trying to dish out falsehood after falsehood, and thinks we'll swallow this. we know in 2020, as you said, she said those of us, not just president trump, but private schools, other red states, who wanted to open schools were callous, reckless, and cruel. we take that personally. we love our kids more than anything. we knew we could look at the studies coming out too. we knew that our kids were perfectly safe going back into these schools. it's really offensive she would gas like this before congress. >> and le lie, let's be honest. on august 21st, she celebrated when a judge struck down -- florida was going to open up the schools, and a judge stopped them from doing it. she celebrated.
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on february 21st, she says she needs more time to bring her rank-and-file along. she'd like to open schools, but the teachers weren't ready yet. she forgot that. she basically admitted that she was writing the policy that the cdc would put out, editing the memos in real time. what qvcs did sheff? >> right. she's trying to deflect she was the one deciding this, but she was lobbying the cdc. we know that those areas where the unions were the most influential across the country, those are the areas that the school closures stayed closed longer. so we know that she had a direct afeffect on this. in all of these areas, too, the children were suffering. parents can see this. we're educated people. we can look at the studies, look at what's going on in europe with other schools. we could see that schools were opening safely. she continued to really scare monger and shame people when we knew that the science actually was on the side of the parents who wanted children back into
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the classroom. >> you know what she has in common with anthony fauci, they will never say this, i was wrong, this is what i thought, this is what i learned. people say, okay, maybe i understand a little bit where you came from, but they want to revise what we know they said. they don't think about collateral damage, what's happening at home, the rooms are closed, they're not paying attention. minority kids aren't opening up a laptop. most of the time there's no parent for supervision. they needed the schools opened the most. now we know, and knew it then, they were not susceptible to this virus. >> no. mental health problems went up, and scores, especially math and reading proficiency went way down. children need advocates. my children will be okay by the grace of god. they have parents who are married, who will advocate for them. think about children with a
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single mom, who had to go back to work, and they were stuck in front of a screen. those are the children who needed an advocate. randi became an adversary in public education. >> the idiots going through the pandemic six feet apart. another reason to keep the doors shut. they say, wait a second, that's not based on anything. six feet doesn't mean anything. no one ever apologized for that. it's incredible. it's bringing me back to that time. i'm going to go nuts. rebecca, have great weekend. thank you. >> thank you. meanwhile the biden administration's decision to entitle title 42 is having disastrous repercussions, as migrants line up in droves across the border before the regulatory change takes effect on may 11th. in a press conference on tuesday, the governor of the state of chihuahua, mexico, told reporters that over 35,000 migrants have set up camps in
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suarez, el paso, texas. here's video showing the consequences. >> it's become the epicenter for migrants who have entered the country. they're open to both documented and undocumented migrants, but with two weeks to go until title 42 is lifted the situation inside the church is unsustainable. >> we can handle so many, but this is beyond our control, beyond our capacities. >> in the last couple of days, the ethe elpassor is seeing 1,30 migrants a day since the month of april. hundreds have shown up here in the streets of el paso. >> former i.c.e. director was watching that with us we, discussed this before, knows a thing or two about the border. jonathan, what happens when title 42 goes away in three weeks? >> this mess we have now is going to get so much worse, because the only thing they've been able to do is send some people back under title 42 against the --
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>> you got to go back, this is emergency situation. >> right. >> the administration didn't even like title 42 to begin with. it's total open borders. mayorkas said he's going to send people back. you haven't done it for 2 1/2 years. i don't see a change. >> title 42 goes away. he says we have a plan. it's going to be title 8. we'll set up an enclave in guatemala, one in colombia, where people can report there, fill out an app, fill out a form, download an app, and we'll decide if they can come here. we'll cut out the coyotes, the traffickers, and decide if you're eligible to come. is this going to work? >> no, it's not going to work. it's going to work for the democrats, the biden administration, because they'll keep people coming across. all they have to do -- this administration has been very clear. as long as you're willing to falsely claim asylum, you get
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every benefit of a american citizen, plus a free cellphone. they're going to continue to do this, because they know politically, this is the best thing for them. they don't care about the consequences. you see on the clip, you see new york city, there are consequences to the american people. this administration doesn't care, because open borders is their highest priority. >> but it's not working. only 34% of the country thinks he's doing a good job on immigration. even less think he's doing a good job at the border. if you want to be selfish and political, how does this benefit them? they're not voting. >> >> well, i think they're playing the long game on this. they do expect them be voters. congress just recently voted to allow noncitizens to vote in d.c. so it's a mainstream position. they're pushing what they call comprehensive immigration reform, basically to formalize the amnesty of everyone that's gotten here illegally and on the border. yes, this is a long-term political play.
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people may not vote on the border issue, they may, but long term i think the democrats see it as a win for them. >> how many years you work the border? >> i was a federal prosecutor for 17 years. i was at i.c.e. i know this issue very well. i know the consequences to the community. >> people say, well, it's always been bad, what's the big deal. how different is this? >> if it's always been bad, it's far worse -- it's extraordinarily bad now. what makes it so bad, even before this, the democrats are constantly undermining all enforcement. so, you know, sanctuary cities or anything else. to say it was bad before, it was become the system had been undermined all along. >> and the cities are going bankrupt because of it. they can't balance their budget, because you have to house, you have to feed, you have to transport. it's not only a border problem, it's an american problem. someone has to sober up. john, thank you so much. have a great weekend. >> thank you. >> meanwhile last year's leak of the supreme court decision on roe vs. wade had a massive
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impact on the midterm elections. we never found out who that leaker was until now. that story next. don't move. lomita feed is 101 years old this year and counting. i'm bill lockwood, current caretaker and owner. when covid hit, we had some challenges like a lot of businesses did. i heard about the payroll tax refund, it allowed us to keep the amount of people that we needed and the people that have been here taking care of us. see if your business may qualify. go to getrefunds.com. pedro was born with a cleft lip and palate that threatened his future and impaired his speech, but his cleft condition didn't define him. he's playful, smart, loving.
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>> justice samuel alito told reporters of the "wall street journal" today that he believes he has a good idea of who leaked the dobbs decision overturning roe vs. wade last may, jeopardizing the legislativesy of the court. according to alito, who authored the decision, made him and fellow justices targets of assassination. we know that. they announced they were unable to find the leaker. jason, set the table for us. why don't we have somebody? >> we likely don't have someone right now because there didn't seem to be a rush to find the leaker. it benefited the democrats at the time. as you said, samuel alito tells the "wall street journal" i have
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a good idea who's responsible but that's different than naming somebody. their lives were threatened. he continued by saying those of us who were thought to be in the majority, thought to have approved my opinion, were targets of assassination. it was rational for people to believe they might be able to stop the decision in dobbs by killing one of us. of course, there was an assassination attempt or a plot that was thwarted. while we don't know who's responsible yet, we can make some assumptions, someone working for the court, because that january investigation revealed they didn't think it was someone hacking into the i.t. systems from outside the court. if the leaker is still there, working for the supreme court, this puts pressure on them. if all of a sudden we see a resignation, it could be suspicious. depending on the retails of this leak, it could lead to criminal charges. people think that's an assumption, assume that's definitely going to happen, but the leaker likely would have had to have broken the law in
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obtaining th could face those kinds of charges. >> jason, thank you so much. jason rantz, breaking news. joining us on the phone, jonathan turley, professor and fox news contributor. are you surprised justice alito says i don't have enough proof to bring charges. what are your thoughts. >> i'm surprised that he said so publicly. for a number of months we've been hearing that the court had a particular person in mind. i've heard various names. actually one particular name offered. what alito is saying there's a difference between believing that this is the case, being able to prove it, and what it leads to is this really chilling notion that you've got someone out there practicing law after violating the most fundamental principles of our profession. >> yep.
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>> brian, this is like having an atheist priest or arsonist architect. this person did things that a lawyer cannot do and still be a lawyer. yet this person is likely -- indeed the justices may have interacted with this person after the supreme court tenure was over. >> might still be there. jonathan, what's interesting, the marshals did a good job with the resources given to them. really? you didn't give them everything ahead toed in order to get to the bottom of this? do they have a limited budget? >> well, there was a question as to whether chief justice roberts made the right call in not bringing the fbi. they're literally blocks away from the leading department in the world on forensic and computer investigation. i can understand that the chief justice didn't want the executive branch walking around
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the court, opening up files, interviewing people. >> right. >> there's still this lingering question as to whether the court could have done more early on. but at the end of the day you've got someone here who shattered this culture of the court. washington is a city that floats on leaks. the only island in that heap was the supreme court. it didn't leak. and it shattered the sense of trust on the court. >> and also indicated this, it's caused a lot of tension between the whys. he knows the justices didn't do this. he knows it was not them for sure. he said things were not normal all year. he also says this was part of an effort to prevent the dobbs draft from becoming law. intimidate them to change it or if you assassinate one of them a democratic president nominates to a democratic senate a democratic justice, and then
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there's no dobbs decision reversal. this is a real thing. he also said, you could pound us daily. you could be critical. but you went after our legitimacy. that's a problem for the country, and no one defended us. final thought? >> well, he's right, in that we had an attempted assassination of one of the justices. if he's correct, this was an effort to try to prevent this opinion from being published. >> yeah. >> it may have backfired. the justices may have decided they were not going to yield to this type of unethical conduct. >> i know. it's just amazing. the impact of this and the leak, not getting somebody, i think, is terrible. we'll see where it goes. justice alito did want to come forward. he didn't have to give this interview and the quotes to the "wall street journal" today. jonathan, thanks. appreciate it. meanwhile it's hard to believe as we change gears, but there's a growing leapt of the left that wants to sexualize children,
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coming with the support of the biden administration. the doj is now suing the state of tennessee over a law that protects children from radical gender experiments. according to the doj children must be allowed to mutilate themselves with puberty blockers and surgery. and youth-attracted individuals, what we call pedophiles. elon musk says it will not be tolerated. thank you. meanwhile landon starbucks joins us, the founder of freedom forever. 17 republican-led states they passed a law, banning gender affirming care for transgender children. let them make the decision when they're old enough to do it. in tennessee, they're suing back, saying no one should be denied access to necessary medical care. where do you stand? >> well, the notion that this is
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necessary medical care is just atrocious, almost as atrocious as the weaponization of our justice system. what we're seeing in the state of tennessee is that we are not going to be bullied into allowing us to be complicit in the abuse of children. chemically cast traiting a prebuescent boy and giving a 12-year-old girl a double mastectomy is abuse. we refuse to lay down and allow our children's bodies to be destroyed, their identities dismantled, and their childhood sexualized. >> this isn't right, we need that know that a 14-year-old who wants to change their gender has the right to do so. if the parents are on board, they won't be able to do it in these 14 states. are you surprised they're digging in here? >> yeah. well, yes and no. this is who we're dealing with. these are people that believe that children have a fundamental right to castrate themselves. as young as 9 years old. i mean, that's what we're
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talking about here. almost as if it's the same as asking, you know, rosa parks to get up off her seat. this is a gross distortion of what civil rights are. this is child abuse they are forcing us not just at the state level to be in violation of our state rights but as parents, our parental rights as well. >> is this acceptable now for adults who are attracted to young people to have their own flag, be outright? are we supposed to accept this in our society all of a sudden? >> we will never accept this in our society. at least in tennessee, we're fighting back. that's why they're so scared, why they've targeted tennessee, because we do fight back, and we have a child protection movement here. we will not allow our children to become, you know, embraced by maps, or whatever they want to call them now. it's disgusting. this is what happens when you have an orthodoxy to be whatever gender you want, whatever sexuality you want, whatever age you want, and that's why pedophiles taking advantage.
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we'll see them advocate for their civil rights. >> by the way, tennessee, it was clear where they stood. 77-16 in the house. 26-6 in the senate. why is the federal government getting involved in i'm reading the story, thinking to myself, is this the onion? are we being punked? this is insane we're dealing with this now on a daily basis. the administration seems to so aggressive. landon, thank you very much. have a great weekend. >> thank you so much for having me. >> we move ahead. a cow is on the loose in chicago. what could possibly go wrong? look. my a1c was up here; now, it's down with rybelsus®. his a1c? it's down with rybelsus®. my doctor told me rybelsus® lowered a1c better than a leading branded pill and that people taking rybelsus® lost more weight.
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how do you characterize what they're experiencing? >> i'll tell them, congratulations, because you have a very healthy ecosystem. that's what this is an indication of. >> really? >> yeah, absolutely. >> doesn't look healthy, doesn't look nice. it looks very unpleasant. >> well, it might be if you're a human. if you're a trout, this is one of the most wonderful things that can ever happen. so what happens is, these mayflies live for about a year in lakes, in the water, and you're seeing millions of insects coming out of the water to reproduce and lay their eggs. in an ecosystem where there isn't a lot of oxygen in the water, unhealthy waterway, there wouldn't be any mayflies. this is an indication of a healthy ecosystem. >> we were here first first. the residents were here first. they don't want to live with these flies. why suddenly are we getting this? >> sure. that's a good point. we don't have to live with them for long, because they only have
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a lifespan above the water for 24 hours. literally by tomorrow this time, you've got nothing to worry about p. the mayfly hatch will have passed, and everything will be back to normal, and you'll have a bunch of fat happy trout in your waterways. >> that's great if that's what you want. the fact they're there shows everything is healthy. >> yes. >> a lot of people getting freaked out. last year by the invasion of the spotted lantern flying, coming out of nowhere, destroying trees and crops, and now they're back and expected to be a bigger problem. are you going to tell me this is a healthy problem? >> no. this is a great juxtaposition to the mayflies we just looked at. these are an invasive species coming over from asia, causing damage to vineyards and wine crops. these guys are bad. you should stomp them, kill them, get rid of them, because this is an invasive species,
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completely opposite to the mayflies, which are natural, they are from this area. they indicate a healthy ecosystem. these guys are a sign of human interference. humans have imported these animals, and they're running rampant, causing problems. >> we can't, as humans, with a flight swatter take this on ourselves. is there a tdt not cancer-causing that we can spray and save our wine before it's too late? >> let's hope so. there's no dtd. there's genetic processes underway. basically what we can do as citizen scientists, if you see them, squash them, because every dead spotted lantern fly is a good lantern fly. >> exactly. instead of sitting at your desk, taking lunch, go outside and kill some flies. >> have fun with it. go out there and be creative. >> kill something. in new york you don't have to
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say that twice. now murder hornets, are they coming back? >> i don't think so. you know, the murder hornet thing, they've spread a little bit, growing in population, but as you may have noticed that was a big boom. everybody was concerned about it. it all went away. >> all right. they have the best name of any fly. they're scary. i can see a spin-off series. good news, bad news, everything in between. you're an animal expert. didn't think you could handle insects. i was wrong, forrest. >> thanks for having me. >> go get 'em. we have more later. i'll say something when i comeback. this is iowa. we just haven't been properly introduced. say hello to the place where rolling hills meets low bills. where our fields, inside and out, are always growing.
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and where the fun is just getting started. this is iowa. so, when are you coming to see us? ♪ hi, i'm susan, i've lost 84 pounds on golo and i've kept it off for a year. i had spent so much money on other products that when i saw the commercial for golo, the price was so much cheaper and i thought, "boy, this might not work but why not try it?" it is amazing and it works really well.
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we know you care. [music plays] but if this is all too real for you and your loved ones. ♪ make the call. because we care too. ♪ home instead. to us, it's personal. >> springtime is when high schoolers across the nation make life-long memories, and a time for trouble and mischief. good-hearted fun perhaps, but what happens when a senior prank
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goes wrong? in illinois, some students are finding out the wrong way. a cow kids planned to sneak into the school escaped early friday morning and ran through the suburbs. look at the speed of the cow. i had no idea they were that fast. couldn't believe their eyes, as the residents say, as this loose cow went crazy. it looked like a rodeo, said one witness. police eventually corralled the cow with the help of a couple wranglers from a local farm. don't forget, lawrence jones will be here next week monday through friday. don't forget to tune into "one nation" saturday at 8:00 p.m. among my great guests, governor christie nome. you're going to meet a guy that
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got banned, fired, for saying all lives matter. still can't get hired. he spent 30 years as the sacramento kings play-by-play voice. tammy bruce is in for sean hannity. i saw the schedule. the music is going to get louder. we'll toss to her. i saw her rundown. you'll love that show. thanks for watching all week. see you soon. stay within yourself. >> welcome, everyone. welcome to this special edition of "hannity time. i'm tammy bruce. biden's polls are plummeting, his age showing, and his blunders are mounting. a new gallup poll shows him with his lowest approval rating, 37%. a recent survey revealed 70% o

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