tv FOX and Friends Sunday FOX News April 30, 2023 6:00am-7:00am PDT
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ll your doctor if you are or may become pregnant. disrupt the itch and rash of eczema. talk to your doctor about rinvoq. learn how abbvie can help you save. ♪ ♪ ♪ i've been waiting so long -- pete: sunshine of your love, and there is no sunshine many in that shot. which they're going to tell us concern do you know where that is, will?
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will: no. pete: looks like there might be a pier going out many that direction, i'm guessing florida. the trees don't match -- will: it's raining like it is in florida right now. rachel: it's america. i can say that because i see the flag. pete: and no one's going to tell us. so that that's an unknown location in america -- [laughter] where it is not sunny. will: rehoboth. pete: i was right on the pier. will: 70s. rachel: oh, that was cream. will: best country, best rock and roll, '70s. pete: i mow your taste. '90s. rachel: '80s. that was obvious. pete: fourth and final hour of "fox & friends," and i've officially not even quiet quitting, every morning when you try to order breakfast on this show. she said she was going to the order us keach as 7 a.m. --
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quiche, it's 9:00 -- rachel: i don't do it on my phone, i'm old school. i just cook. pete: start preparing breakfast at home the night before and bring it in -- rachel: i'm actually going to do that. pete: will you do that one time? rachel: i'm going to do it. pete: she tries her hardest, we love her for it. will: how about a live look from the fox flight team. hundreds of illegal immigrants are crossing into brownsville, texas, from mexico right now. rachel: this as title 42 the is set to end many in just 11 days. pete: here we go again. griff jenkins joins us live from the border. how you doing, man? >> reporter: hey, pete, will and rachel, good morning. the title 42 crises is already here. take a look at our drone in the sky. you can see hundreds of migrants already arriving in this area. let me try and put the quickly in perspective. if we remember back many 2021
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that the haitian crisis under the bridge many dell the rio, it took 17 days in september of 2021 to reach to 20,000. in the past 12 days right here in brownsville, they've exceeded 20,000, in 12 days, and they are mostly venezuelans. we got exclusive access, guy, down on the border as texas dps and national guard try to deal with the situation. take a look at this. you're getting a firsthand look at operation lone star literally here to save lives, here in brownsville on the other side of the banks, mat more process, mexico. you can see women and children on this route and the dangerous river current. the texas troopers along with the national guard all under texas' operation lone star throwing the floatation devices to help. the texas state trooper here working this line to try and bring them across. they're coming anyway, they can't stop them. the at least they can -- least they can to do is save their
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lives. this one is going to make it. the rgv sector becoming ground zero for this late migrant surge. you can see the challenge that the troopers have in trying to move very small children but, clearly, this is a crisis that they haven't seen in a long time the in this specific area. and i want to show you just one other piece of video we got exclusively yesterday. you can see lines of humvees, texas national guard humvees, all part of operation lone star doing a show of force. this is called a pdi operation, prevent, deter, interdict. so while, obviously, you have troopers on the river trying to literally save lives in this humanitarian crisis, you also have the show of force similar to what we saw in del rio, and it's the happening here now. and i will just add one last thing, and that is it's not just here on the border. in chicago we've got video of migrants sleeping in the airport yesterday saying they're seeing
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a tenfold surge in migrants, and that's coming to new york and other cities across the country. it's astounding to me, guys, there are not more cameras here right now, because the concerns of what happens after title 42 the lifts, that's already starting in a major way here, and it is going to have a major impact on border communities as well as major i cities in the interior. ill say that the administration -- id say the administration should start throwing every resource they've got at it, because it's already spiraling out of control. will: hey, griff, this current surge the best you've been able to el the, where are most of these migrants coming from? >> reporter: so that's a great question. 90 percent of them are from venezuela right now. you have migrants as well that we talked to yesterday from colombia, cuba, peru, ecuador as well as a few from the northern triangle. but this is being considered, this area where i am is officially dubbed within the border control camp monument where they're screening,
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processing and ultimately transporting out, and it is 90% or more venezuelans. while we had a haitian crisis in 2021, we have right now a venezuelan crisis out of control. and you saw them on the banks. by the way, we talked to one migrant who broke down in tears. we're working on getting it translated. stick with the channel and watch later today to at noon, and you can understand they're coming in major numbers, and it's going to happen well before that title 42 the lifts. they're already in the pipeline, and they're already coming across in unprecedented numbers. rachel: thank you, griff. pete: thank you, griff. rachel: by the i way, you guys, totally predictable stuff. when we were worrying about the ukraine migrant -- refugee situation, people in latin america were saying, hey, this is actually greater numbers, the refugee situation in venezuela are. they're moving to colombia, colombia can't handle it. very predictable if you open our border that they're going to come up here. pete: it's like a bad movie on
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repeat. i mean, how many times -- and, by the i way, griff and bill melugin with, this is necessary work. you can't stop looking at it. you need to continue covering it. they're counting on us not paying attention, but how many times have we said title 42 the is going away? oh, it's coming back, oh, there's a new policy. oh, there's a surge. and i know texas is doing what they can, but nothing has effectively been done at all. and so we play this travesty of invasion of illegals on our borders day after awe day, and the compounded reality of tens of hundreds of thousands more? i mean, where are those people now, let alone in the future? and then the power of networks underneath it and the cartels? i i mean, it -- rachel: yesterday -- pete: it's so disheartening. rachel: yesterday we had ranchers on, and i asked them how they were preparing for it, they said we're getting guns and cameras, but we're also afraid
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to protect our property -- pete: they're the bad guy. rachel: these are real problems, and they feel totally abandoned. will: let's bring in missouri republican senator josh hawley, member of the senate homehand security can committee. senator, thank you for being with us on this sunday morning. you just heard that report from griff jenkins. you add to that the reports we learned this week of something like 85,000 children have been lost to the system. illegal immigrant children lost to the system here in the united states, don't know where they are. what is your reaction? >> well, it's, listen, it's a travesty. and the biden administration is absolutely morally responsible. for what is happening to these kids. 85,000 kids who they've completely lost track of. the thing is we know, though, what they're doing, these 85,000 kids, they have been sold into modern day slave ily. they are in slaughterhouses, factories, they are working overnight, they're in roofing companies. heir not getting paid. these global multi-national corporations are taking advantage of them and, by the
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way, displacing american workers at the same time. and all i can figure is the biden administration doesn't care because they are such open border fanatics. the thousands of kids have to get lost and sold into indentured serve tiewld to get their policies to work, to have that border open, ten they're all for it. rachel: yeah. we should have seen that in covid, by the way. they didn't care what happened to our kids there either. they just wanted tear vaccinations, their policies, they wanted to shut down schools, and they didn't care about the children there and many of the vaccine injuries that happened in children as a result of this. senator, i want to also ask you about this dobbs decision and the leak. it's very clear that, you know, supreme court justice the alito is signaling that he kind of knows, he he thinks he knows who did it. are we ever as the american people going to know, and shouldn't we? if. >> you know, absolutely, we should know. i mean, the american people have a right to know. and for the justice to say he thinks he knows who did it is
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extraordinary, but i have to say i don't find that unbelievable at all. it's a small place. listen are, i worked at that court. there's only 36 clerks at that court. i mean, it's not like it's a massive place to work. i mean, if they wanted to find the leaker, here's the bottom line: if they wanted to find the leaker, they could find the leaker. and the truth is i don't think today really wanted to, and i think that's what justice alito is really getting at there. he's saying, listen, i think i know who it is. it's not complicated. this is a travesty, and it's going to happen again. mark my words, if you can do this one time and you can bring all this pressure to bear, you still have people marching around amy coningny barrett's home. if you can to that with one leak, they will absolutely do it again. pete: staggering. you know, we just talked about two big topic, but there are sometimes topics that rise above that that are even bigger that inform how we get into these crises. one of those is how do you strengthen and preserve manhood, masculine i the, families in
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this country. you spoke yesterday at a stronger men's conference this missouri and talked about manhood in america today. here's a portion of what you said. >> no mart how you feel, no matter how the last two months have gone for you or the last two years, your life is a life of influence. your life is a life of significance, and god wants to use you to do something that he won't use anybody else for. he has something for you that he doesn't have with anybody else. he has called you to a specific task and purpose in this day and in this hour, and the world needs it. because he's chosen you to do it. pete: you gave -- from if what i understand -- about a 45 minute speech about men and their responsibility in america. talk to me about why this is a topic, something you're so passionate about. >> you know, if you just look at the statistics, just look at the number of men in america who say they're suffering from compression, all-time highs. look at the number of men who are suffering from drug abuse,
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alcohol bewkes all-time highs. look at the the number of men in america committing suicide, all-time highs. there is no doubt that we have a crisis of purpose for men, especially young men in this country, and we just need to call these men to the something higher. yesterday i just talked about what the bible has to say about why men are important. god has a purpose for men and women in this world, by the way, those are two separate things. they're different, and god has a purpose for each one of us, and each one of us is a man or a woman with, and we just talked about this conference, 10,000 men from all over the country batherred to worship god, to hear about how they can be better fathers, better husbands, how they can go out and lead in their communities. i mean, it was just awesome on the part of. men want that purpose, and the country needs the men of this nation to step up. and that's really what we talked about. will: well, i agree with that sentiment very much, senator, and i think it's not -- i don't know if it's fair to call it an undercurrent anymore because i think it's become obvious.
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it is an undercurrent to the problems we have today, that men have lost a sense of purpose and identity and, in fact,ed had those robbed of them. and i think it's it's, you can trace that that back to a lot of our current problems. rachel: absolutely. >> absolutely. there's no doubt about it. you just look at, you know, the fatherlessness crisis that we have in this country, look at poverty. look at childhood poverty in this country. what's it caused by? overwhelmingly, by fathers who are absent in their homes. and, you know, that's one with of the messages to young men and all men out there listening. if you have a family, if you have kids, from to slide for your kids. if you have a wife, contribute to your wife. i mean, we could solve the childhood poverty problem in america or come pretty darn close if we would have fathers who would stay with their family, who would work a job, provide for their family. but listen, we also need to get policies that reward work and policies that create good paying jobs for people to get a good job in this country to be able to support a family in a good job. that's the washington piece of it. washington has failed the men of
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this cub. -- this country. washington has spent good paying jobs overseas. washington has hollowed out our industry in this country, sent it to china. so there's a washington connection here too. we need to hear that as well, and we need to step up and offer it. rachel: but it comes down to an individual father taking responsibility for his family and his child when they're out of wedlock or not. and it's really shocking that right now at this very moment we have the first son, hunter biden, shirking his responsibilities as a father, and we have grandparents in the white house who haven't stepped up at least to step in for him at that. so very, veried is sad that we couldn't get this example at the very pop. top. >> well, you make a great point about the need for dads everywhere whether it's, you know, the first son, i guess, as his title may be to any other son, any other man in america. if you've got kids, you need to provide for them. if you're going to have a
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family, take care of them. and, again, just think how this country could be transformed if every man in this country would say i'm going to take responsibility for my children. i'm going to take responsibility for my family. i'm going to provide, i'm going to protect them. with the crime, the drug the problem in this country, the childhood poverty in the this country, we could transform it. and having men stand up and be responsible really is the key. pete: i love your message that that, central to that transformation is belief in a higher purpose, that god has a plan and laws for each of us to attempt to follow while we're on this everett. senator hawley, thank you. great speech -- will: thank you, senator. >> thank you. pete: you know what? we talk politics every day on show. but we often the it -- talk about it almost with the assumption of those types of things, right? you know a lot of what we're talking about is a breakdown of family or faith or another
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component. i hope our viewers know that too. we talk about a lot of different stuff, but underneath it, the real stuff -- rachel: yeah. and you tell men that masculinity is toxic, and they're afraid to step up or become confused. i think it's important to talk about these things. will: we spoke about the white house correspondents' dinner a little earlier and whether or not are it's a, you know, whether or not journalism and power should constantly be rubbing elbows. well, let's just share with you a little bit of something that happened last night. watch. >> yeah, i know, i just announced my re-election campaign. [cheers and applause] will: and people are pointing out, you know, the president getting cheered. bias? the nonadversary y'all relationship, not what you would hope in objective coverage. pete: this is one of those moments where you just play the what if donald trump game, and the room would be silent or full of boos.
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these are a room full of his fellow democrats, and the concept of the white house correspondents' dinner would be were correspondents always adversaries with those we're supposed to check power with. once a year we have a dinner and show that we can crack jokes at each other's expense which has turned into just a gigantic love fest for the democrat party, the establishment inside d.c. will: the met gala, the oscars of politics. pete: absolutely. and, actually -- rachel: the double standard is interesting too. last week they had the state dinner with the south korean president, and chip and joanne, you know them from texas, a great couple, they went. she's korean, half of korean-american, and she went and posted it online. they're a nonpolitical couple, but just imagine if they had gone to the state dinner in the trump white house. and sean and i actually talked about that on our podcast, on the kitchen table --
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pete: being complicit. rachel: exactly. they're a apolitical, and believe me, i think it is a nonpolitical event to go to a state dinner. of she's korean-american, she's showing that, buts the just a counsel standard that continues to -- double standard with unequal justice, unequal treatment in the press, at the white house correspondents' dinner by the press. it's just, it's glaring. pete: yeah. will: all right. a few additional headlines, we're going to the start with this: the army identified the three soldiers killed in the apache helicopter collision thursday as chief warrant officer christopher, chief warrant officer kyle mckenna and warrant officer stuart. the three died while returning from a training mission at fort wayne wright. a fourth soldier is in stable condition. following that crash and a blackhawk crash in kentucky last month killed nine service members.
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doctors in nevada sounding the alarm over a 300% spike in a rare, potentially fatal brain innext among children. the majority -- infection among children. the majority of children presented with sinus infections that that rapidly progressed. the cases peaked in march of 2022 leading researchers to question the impact of covid-19 shutdowns and weakened immune systems. check out this heart warming moment from day three of the nfl draft. so cowboys' scout chris vaughn is reacting to the cowboys in the sixth round selecting his son, duce vaughn. you can see dad going around the room hugging team staff, including jerry jones, before calling his son to break the news. >> hey, buddy. >> how's it going? >> it's going good. this is dad. my phone wasn't working. look here, man, you want to come to work with me next week? >> i would love that. [cheers and applause] [laughter] >> i got somebody want to speak
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to you. >> you earned every ounce of me being able to make this call. i'm so excited, there's just something magical about this moment that that may be bigger than we even realize here talking to you on the phone. you are now a dallas cowboy. your daddy just handed the card in. will: the cowboys posting this picture -- rachel: oh, that's awesome. will: -- at a cowboys' game years ago captioned, it's a family affair. isn't it awesome? he's an area scout, and they said during the whole draft process, he didn't scout his son. you need to leave the room, you don't look at the tape, we'll come up with our own grade. and they always call draft picks, you call him. how awesome is that? pete: so cool. rachel: all right. well, coming up, the white house is pushing ev production but, apparently, it isn't interested in where we get the materials for it. >> are you aware that china controls the minerals that are
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critical to both the ev world and depence? >> thank you for -- defense? >> thank you for that information. [laughter] rachel: we'll break this down and why this is the actually very dangerous and hardly a laughing matter for our national security. ♪ knows the first step to motivation is inspiration. so, we've got new everything. new flooring, new paint, new patio sets, new pillows. i can keep going if you want me to. you got this. and we got you. harry and david makes mother's day easy. share a gift made with love with a mom in your life. choose from hundreds of stunning baskets and towers. it's the perfect way to say thank you for everything. harry and david. life is a gift. share more. the chase ink business premier card is made for people like sam who make...? ...everyday products... ...designed smarter. like a smart coffee grinder - that orders fresh beans for you. oh, genius! for more breakthroughs like that... ...i need a breakthrough card... like ours! with 2.5% cash back
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♪ rachel: the biden administration continuing its push for electric vehicles even as critics say it will make us more reliant and dependent on other countries like china. major materials for ev batteries include graph fite -- graphite, lithium and cobalt mining is done in congo. by the way, those mines are owned by the chinese. and indonesia mines 50% of the world's nickel. our next guest says this push may engager danger -- endanger national security. joining us now is paul gilbert. paul, so great to have you on today. i can't for the life of me figure out why we're doing this, why we would risk our national security like this and make ourselves more dependent. why is this happening? >> well, rachel, i've spent the last ten years of my career or really assisting organizations public and private in developing
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strategic plans. you come out with a vision, the stakeholders each have missions that they have to, you know, work towards, and they break that down into goals and objectives. and the goals and objectives tell you, you know, what you're doing, how long it's going to the take, how much it's going to cost. and that all has to be coordinated with the different stakeholders. in the case of the federal government, i would think at least the stalk holders would be ther into -- interior, department of defense, transportation and energy. but the goals and the objectives have to be achievable. and when you, when you pursue those goals and objectives and you find that they are not achievable, the cumulative effect on that is that it's certainly going to affect your vision. just the other day jennifer granholm, i heard her say that by 2030 all of the military --
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[laughter] vehicles will be electric. you know? and i don't know, that kind of came out of the blue, and and i'm not sure there was a lot of coordination with that. finish. rachel: even if it was achievable, even if it was achievable, why would we want this as a goal when it makes us more dependent and vulnerable with our greatest enemy? i mean, there's no doubt especially after the balloon and the way they're taking over latin america and all these other places and what they're doing with our currency that they're not trying to take down america, and yet we're trying to transition to this. let me just play you this clip first really quick. this is congressman sic key grill -- zinc key grilling the interior secretary. >> right, i've seen that. >> are you aware that china controls by proxy production, the supply chain of critical minerals that are critical to both the ev world and defense? >> thank you for that
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information. >> are you aware by multiple studies that in order to satisfy the present requirements of the ev and critical minerals, it would take an increase of 2,000% of mining for 20 the years? -- 20 years? are you aware of that? >> thank you for the information. rachel: i don't know what to make of that this. either she's dumb, our president is compromised by the chinese so he doesn't care about my of this stuff, he's got to do what his masters want or, i don't know, you tell me. what is this? what's happening? >> well, i've heard a lot of conversation recently about lithium, lithium, lithium. but the reality is there are a lot more components to the ev batteries than lithium. rachel: yeah. >> you've got graphite, and china mines 82% of the graph fite. aluminum, china mines 60% and produces 60% of the aluminum. , and it, frankly, is the only
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country that could possibly meet the electric vehicle needs in terms of the batteries. nickel, a lot of that comes from indonesia and australia. and there's a lot of movement afoot to oppose the mining based on environmental issues. steel, china produces ten times what the u.s. produces, and the u.s. still has -- [inaudible] 20% of the steel. manganese, africa, china, australia. china has invested and they have long-term control over manganese. cobalt, 70% from the congo, china has negotiated long-term rights -- rachel: yeah. >> -- to that. so one word, everything that we have to go through to secure this obsession with electric vehicles, it all has to go through china. rachel: right. >> that raises some serious questions -- [laughter] about the viability.
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my contention is that if china plays nice for a few years and all the while we are abandoning our mining operations, we're reducing our refining capabilities, we've given up fracking, we've given up exploring for natural gas, obviously, nukes are out of the picture, so if the china play froms nice for a few years -- plays nice for a few years down the road and decides to pull the plug, where does that leave the u.s.? rachel: vulnerable. it leaves us vulnerable. >> -- that i don't hear anybody talking about is the pressure that china can uncert -- assert on taiwan. rachel: yeah. well, that's definitely, that's definitely a component. it just lees us vulnerable -- leaves us vulnerable and dependent and at the mercy of china in the long run. by the way, another point we didn't bring up was the child,
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human slaves many if africa working in those mines in the congo that are own by the chinese. we have to leave it right here, paul. i'm so sorry. thanks for bringing this to our nation's attention. it's a really important topic. i think we're all scratching our heads because it makes no sense if you love america. >> okay. well, the detail i've kind of put out in the federalist article is i've written some other things on substack along these same lines. rachel: yeah. i encourage -- >> -- [inaudible] the power of the future to china. rachel: yeah, exactly. all right. fox weather alert, a car tossed across a road in florida. rick is tracking more severe weather this morning. if
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join us. together, we can give children the hope and healing they never thought possible. it's a mission powered by love, made possible by you. give today. pete: we're back with a fox weather alert. severe storms batteredded west palm beach, florida, yesterday including at least one tornado touchdown. strong winds pick up a car and
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hurl it across the road. for severe weather could be headed to florida today. just a few feet further up, that could have been him. let's check in with the chief, rick reichmuth, and our fox weather forecast. rick: actually the exact same area under a tornado warning right now. radar indicated that right within this center here this storm as it pulls off towards the northeast, potentially a tornado could drop from this. west palm beach right at the center of that again. get into your safe spot right now for a potential tornado headed your way. this line of storms continues to pull off towards the east. this is the southern side of the storm, that's the northern side. both of these storms combining to the make it a really rough weekend for pretty much everybody across the eastern seaboard. we're done with this by tomorrow morning, say by noon it'll be out of here. this is the rain and snow over the next seven days. take a look at this, you've been so warm the last few days across parts of the west coast, take a look at this, more snow across
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parts of the sierra rah nevada and the heaviest of the rain over this next week is across parts of the northeast, and cold air settles in. look at the snow falling across the higher elevations. pete, back to you. pete: rick, thank you. guy chi's the covenant tells the story of a u.s. army sergeant who makes it his mission to save the interpreter who once saved him. >> you're here to translate. >> actually, i'm here to interpret. >> john, you have tales approaching. [background sounds] >> we owe that man your life. >> it wasn't enough for him to consider carry me across those mountains, now he's hiding in a hole somewhere. i should be in that hole. pete: it's a story many of my generation can personally understand after working with my own afghan interpreter. more than ten years ago while deployed in afghanistan and others in iraq as well. my interpreter from that deployment, my friend, saboor,
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with we knew him then as abdul, i've got to see you in person here soon. it's been too many tv times. with we need one for real. it's great to see you. i don't know if you had a chanca chance to see this film, and i love that clip because we even throw around the word translator, and that's no what you were to us at all. you helped us understand the local culture, people, customs, what we were trying to do to work to folks. so explain that difference, and if you saw the film, what'd you thinksome have oh, thank you, pete. good morning, and it's great to be on the show again. you've got to give them the credit, they've done a phenomenal job capturing, in essence, what was the relationship between an interpreter and their soldiers and the folks that were deployed there to bring peace and stability to afghanistan. so one of the scenes that i love about this movie is when the interpreter says to the sergeant, is specifically saying i'm an interpreter, and he says it in a way i'm not just a
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language interpreter. pete: yes. >> it goes beyond the language abilities of these individuals being able toen communicate. they're the eyes and ears of these soldiers who understand the culture, the social, political culture that exists in these communities to be able to save the lives of the of the soldiers x. that's precisely one of the greatest moments in the movie, and i'm glad they captured it. pete: you're exactly right. i've had interpreters say, sir, don't go down that road right now, it doesn't normally look like that this time of day. that's the type of intelligence they provide. i'll also let our viewers ors know, we had a tragic thing happen outside our base when a rhino bus was hit by a suicide bomber x and some of our guys were some of the first people out there. you know who was the first person in the vehiclesome abdul. no, really, i think what people don't understand is the extent to which, yes, we're shoulder to shoulder with americans, our brothers, but when you're there interpreting, your life's on the line too, and you're as invested as anybody else.
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>> yeah, no, absolutely. i think one of the things that's one of the critical pieces missing from this entire story of interpreters that are, that have worked9 with the united states military in afghanistan is that they risked their lives and the lives of their loved ones to be committed to this mission. pete: yep. >> just like me and others that have put their lives on on the line to protect, to defend, to uphold those values that we fought so much for is critical what needs to be told, part of the story, because every single day, right now interpreters are in those holes that are being captured in this movie that are in safe places that cannot get out, they're being hunted. and so you're exactly right. a lot of these interpreters have no other way. if it wasn't because of these interpreters, the united states would not have lastedded there for a year -- pete: president absolutely right. >> they were the eyes and ear of the united states military in afghanistan. pete: and the reason why this film resonates so much, and i haven't seen it, you have, i is
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that feeling when they are left behind and the feeling so many vets in america had when we abandoned afghanistan the way that we did and there were guys that served with us. you were a part -- we were a part of getting your family back. you were involved in getting other -- this may be fictionallal, but real quick, this is a real story for so many. >> yeah. this certainly brought up a lot of memories back many 2001 when the collapse of kabul took place, right, and afghanistan was collapsing. we had to the go around the bureaucracy of all the red tapes to be able to pull up a lot of the love loved ones that that we had inning afghanistan. quite frankly, this is a shameful story, and the u.s. government's inability to be able to help those who stood shoulder to shoulder with united states soldier. pete: yeah. >> and so what we need to do is to capture those and bring it to the nation's attention. and i'm, i i highly encourage anyone watching in this to, please, watch "the covenant."
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it's a great story that everyone needs to watch. pete: yeah. it is a reflection of the gut-wrenching moment that so many both afghans and americans had when that reality set in -- >> absolutely. pete: -- still left behind. abdul, you're the man. i hope to see you soon. >> look forward to it, thank you. pete: great american. all right, right now banks finalizing their bids to take over first republic. maria bartiromo reacts to the collapse of the third bank since march. there she is, in person! ♪ oh, listen to the music ♪
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cardiologist recommended form of coq10. qunol. the brand i trust. will: fox business alert, federal regulators are reportedly preparing to seize control of first republic bank as major financial institutions prepare their final bids for the bank. this is the third one to collapse since march our next guest covered the 2008 financial collapse firsthand, "sunday morning futures" anchor maria bartiromo. >> hey, will. will: good to see you. so first republic, the third bank. at some point do we need to begin to worry this is systemic or there's some tube of contagion in the -- type of contagion in the banking industry? >> i don't think it's contagion, but there's a real issue that's not done yet. and i think the fact that we're waiting on these bids from jpmorgan and pnc which we'll probably get tonight tells you the crisis is not over. and the federal reserve is expecting a recession later this
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year partly because of the banking crisis. the fed said this: the 2018 regulatory tailoring law impeded effective supervision, ands the going to introduce new proposals. so i think the bigger story out of this this is what kind of rule making comes out of the federal reserve which would be sort of an umbrella brush stroke on all of the banks and how does that make things more difficult for the industry in terms of higher costs, more boor rock says. the -- bureaucracies. if a are recession happened, what would your bank do, what they did not cover in terms of the stress tests is what happens if interest rates shoot higher. will: the one thing that's directly in their own control. >> incredible. so we are waiting to see new regulatory frameworks behind all of this and that is going on the, i think the, one of the big headlines. having said that, first republic is in a tough spot. stock is down 43% just many a couple of days, we will see
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other banks ache the up those assets. will: before we talk about what you have coming upped today, that that's a fascinating tact that you just gave us. it's as though the entire political apparatus and economic system never considered the prospect of higher interest rates -- which have which have -- [laughter] which means they never considered the prospects of inflation, their printing of money and and government spending. >> after all, will, we were at 0% for 15 years and after that time, we shot is up 500 basis points in about 11-12 months. 9 so so this has been a shock to the system, and it will continue to have ramifications. we've got a big show coming up. i am focused on joe biden's re-election campaign, and what i want to know is why did susan rice accept down the day before joe biden announces his re-election campaign? if very interesting. nobody's focused on this, but why would the head of domestic policy decide to the walk out of the white house the day before.
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is she planning somethingsome is she going to challenge joe biden? does the barack obama wing of the party tell joe not to do it? we're talking about that with ted cruz this morning, and, of course, what happened to the debt ceil. the bill, ken mccarthy had a big win in the -- kevin mccarthy had a big win in the house, what happens when it goes to the senate? john ratcliffe, we will talk about the come proprized -- compromised position that joe biden appears to be in, and newt gingrich is going to discuss the re-election campaign, and i'll ask him that question about susan rice. i'm curious, aren't you? will: it is a point that i've heard only you bring up, maria, and it does give us some insight on what the democrats may be planning. >> bingo. will: 10 a.m., "sunday morning futures," maria bartiromo. >> thank you. see you in 10 minutes. will: coming up, it's a summer
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family segment is all about camp. will: every summer about 26 million kids go to sleepaway or day camps. rachel: and here with a fun and faith-based option is tommy, the director of word of life youth camps here in new york city. pete: and florida. rachel: and florida. rick: how did you get so many kids up this morning -- will: no kidding. [laughter] rick: i've never seen this many kids in one spot. >> it's camp. they're here of to have fun. >> do you guys love this camp? [cheers and applause] rachel: what's the key to that enthusiasm? >> i mean, we combine the fun and then we combine that with the faith, and that helps, you know, the fun gets everybody excited, and it dids -- builds community and friendship, but the faith aspect is kind of the glue that forms a really specia- rachel: of course. pete: there is something about getting outside, getting your hands dirty, getting active with other people. you get to know them in a way
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that's different than staring at a phone. >> oh, absolutely. sign i feltses it's one of -- scientists say it's the natural way to improve your mental health, getting outside, that's a a really important part. will: a sense of purpose through the lens of faith. you can get involved as well, go to one of these camps, wol camps.org. now, if "fox & friends" fashion, we compete. >> yeah, let's do a relay. pete: rachel, you want to go? rachel: i'm on, i'm on. pete: all right, you go first. you're going down there and if back through -- [cheers and applause] pete: okay, turn, rachel! come on, rachel! rick, what are you -- whoa! will: go, rachel! [inaudible conversations] [inaudible conversations] [cheers and applause]
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[cheers and applause] pete: good job, team. hey, edy, thanks for joining us. go to church. ♪ maria: good sunday morning, everyone, thanks so much for joining us this morning. welcome to "sunday morning futures," i'm a maria bartiromo. today, democrats divided. president biden announces he will run for reelection in 2024, so why is susan rice exiting the white house as biden ramps up? coming up, foreman speaker of the house newt gingrich on whether she's presenting a challenge to the biden-harris ticket right now. then the calls are getting louder for president biden to address america's runaway de
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