tv FOX and Friends Saturday FOX News May 13, 2023 6:00am-7:00am PDT
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concerns this morning over overcrowding at u.s. facilities across the southern border as migrants pour in at a record rate at the end of title 42. rachel: the top border patrol union calling this worst disaster any agent has ever seen and warns that the worst is still to come. pete: matt finn live in el paso with the latest. >> reporter: pete, when you're referencing overcrowding, i mean, we're standing in the middle of it right now here in downtown el paso. this is the sacred heart shelter. as the sun has come up, many of these migrants who slept on the streets last night are now waking up. sadly, there's a lot of coughing going on, so some migrants who are showing symptomses of illness. inside the shelter right now, we're told there's about 140 women and children, and outside is overflow, you know, maybe two or three city blocks of migrants who slept outside overnight. i spoke with a few of them yesterday, they say they're from
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venezuela and colombia. one of the migrants from colombia said he was trying to get into the united states before title 42 ended this past week, and we now know according to cbp sources a record 83,000 migrants cross the southern border this week. yesterday here in el paso we watched as a few hundred migrants right at border wall arrived to the united states. and as we see so often, they are placed in a single file and systematically processed, put on white buses and then it's not quite clear how many of those migrants were released into the streets here in el paso. over in brownsville, texas, fox news cameras capturing migrants being released there yesterday, yet the white house claims these mass releases are not happening. as we well know, the crisis has spread all across the united states including california, new mexico, arizona and many town to thes here in texas. towns here in texas. >> border patrol taking a little bit longer to to process people because they're now needing
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court dates before they get paroled. we're limited in infrastructure and medical capacity for any large number of admissions, and this is a reality that we don't also -- we don't have a pediatric intense thive care unit locally, so that is a concern. >> 85,000 the migrant children that have come across the border that are unaccounted for that the government has no idea where they are, but yet they brought them into our country and processed them. >> reporter: and fox news has obtained new data showing more than 8,000 unaccompanied migrant children are in the u.s. government custody right now. back to you guys. will: all right, thank you, matt. rachel: thank you, matt. matt said 5-6 blocks of men, you know, just laying on the streets. or where are they going to the restroom? how are they sharing, keeping themselves clean? dr. siegel said the morning he's saying we're seeing a rise in infectious diseases coming from across the border.
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he said tb is on the rise, two-thirds of those cases coming from across the border. imagine you have little kids going to schools in these communities and now facing diseases that we thought we eradicated. they're coming back because this is just not sustainable. pete: no. it's an invasion of people who we have no idea who or they are, what they're bringing with them, what they're coming from or what their intentions are. and there are probably plenty of people that just want to work and provide a living. all it takes is more than a few who don't. and it's being facilitated by our government in realtime. will: but even for those who are seeking legitimate refuge, they come at a price, it comes at a cost. and it is what already exists in this country, mean being our resources, our jobs, our safety. there's a new report, for example, just right here in new york city that a nonprofit group is saying homeless veterans are being booted from hotels to make room for the needs of illegal immigrants. pete: you mentioned jobs, you mentioned dollars, how about events? so events who are getting help
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because they've down and out or homeless are provided temporary or in some cases long-term housing in extended stay hotels, and this particular instance there's an upstate hotel in new york that's telling events you gotta go because we've got to the make room for the illegals. it's, it becomes a zero sum game when resources are not infinite, and they're not. we're hearing the same accusations here in new york city as well. rachel: yeah. we're also seeing that with foster kids. we've cone reports on that here at fox as well where american foster children are being kicked out of their group homes to make room for illegal migrant children because, for whatever reason, the government contracts pay more than what they were getting paid by the government for the american kids. so there is this really odd prioritization because our current administration wants these people here, needs to get them out of the border area so they don't have a congestion and cameras and the wrong kind of p-
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pete: hide 'em away as fast as you can. rachel: and sara carter said that when she came on, he were telling them not to film as they were filing all these young males on to buses to to leave the area. will: well, as to that depletion of resources and specifically hotel rooms for veterans, homeless veterans, sharon tony fin if. , she's the ceo of the tony foundation, said this to the new york post: our veterans have been placed in another hotel due to the what's going on with the immigrants. one of the vets told me he had to leave because the hotel said extended stay now is not available. then i got another call, we didn't waste any time, that's when we started on monday to organize when and where to the move them all, talking about the homeless veterans. you know, rachel, you just brought up sara carter. a fox news contributor who's covered border for years, she was on "fox & friends" earlier this morning, and she said something that caught all of our attention. and we don't say this -- not
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very often do our jaws drop and our eyes open wide. what did you just say, sara, about what's happening at the border. watch this. >> right now what we're seeing is possibly also a coordinated effort, and these are reports that are coming in for the center for immigration studies, reports that i heard if from sources on the ground, some of the migrants that i spoke with. we have mexican migration officials actually on the other side of the border that are apparently coordinating, and i say apparently, with department of homeland security officials. and these reports have already been established, they're already coming out, and what they're doing is they're trying to maneuver the large groups to areas that are open and to areas that are away from, basically from texas department of public safety, away from the national guard and away from the eyes of reporters. pete: amazing. so i look it up, center for if immigration studies. this is what they're reporting. they're saying the americans on
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the other side of the river would ask the mexicans to hold back the migrants before they swim across not because such crossings are illegal and should be blocked and obstructed, but only until the americans had finished processing the last batch into the country through brownsville. so you've got dhs officials in this instance that the center for immigration studies is saying communicating online with the coyotes or the mexican officials to say we don't want the line to get too long here at our processing center because we don't want that bidenville under the bridge, so let's coordinate and you send 150 to go swim now. okay, wait an hour, send another 150. this is a facilitated, coordinated plan. they're trying to make it more efficient. rachel: and then our government does the last leg. so now we're actually in part oe human smuggling, you know -- pete: it's not even the last leg anymore. rachel: now we've moved into coordinating with mexican officials who we know are completely compromised by the
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cartels, working with the cartels to get people across. this is so intentional that i just, i look at the images, i see these reports coming out, it's really hard to believe that this administration is getting away with breaking our laws like this. pete: called the controlled flow system. rachel: yeah. that's a really nice name for it. will: once you're on the mexican side of the border controlling the now, what's the difference in going to the root causes and doing the same thing? what's the difference in going to central america, to guatemala, haiti, cuba and saying no go -- now go, now go. now the line is small, now go. what's the difference? ten minutes after top of the hour, 9:10 on the east coast. we'll move to this, former top intelligence officials, one in particular, has said you remember the famous 51 top cia executives from leon pa net that to michael haden said that
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hunter biden's laptop was russian decision information. now this intelligence officer is saying they had zero evidence to support that claim. they had zero evidence to affirmatively declare thetop was russian disinformation -- the laptop was russian disinformation. pete: here's chris porter, former national intelligence officer for cyber, talking to fox news digital. he said, as the intelligence officer in charge of u.s. intelligence and analysis of foreign threats to u.s. elections in 2020 the, i was concerned at the time about this letter because it did not reflect our understanding of the threat. yes, it looked like the kind of thing moscow might do. but as our unclassified report to the public later indicated, despite an extensive in23450u7bs campaign, there was no evidence this particular item was russian disinformation. and you remember in that letter, guys, they didn't say it was russian disinformation, they said it has all the hallmarks of russian disinformation.
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so they always create a little wiggle room for themselves all so that joe biden could have a talking point on debate stage to say, see, all these 51 people said it's russian disinformation. it's all fake. rachel: all to the, essentially, interfere with u.s. elections which is, of course, so ironic because they were saying that the russians were interfering in the last election. here are ex-cia and intelligence community were coordinating -- pete: they are the russian misinformants. they're telling us to look out for and it -- for it and they know it isn't and they're blaming it on that, they're doing moscow's work while accusing trump. it's unbelievable, the cynicism. rachel: and it has such long-term, you know, implications. because then you have, you're maligning the russians, accusing them of things that they didn't do, and then the russians are now aligning themselves with the9 chinese which also hurts us. i mean, this has, you know,
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reverberating consequences. and that's what happens when your government lies to you, when your government officials and intelligence community alter elections. that's what happens. will: yeah. and meanwhile, we've talked to you about the rise of a.i., artificial intelligence. well, here's yet another portion of part of our economy that could move under the aid, the assistance, the influence of a.i., how about airlines? the president of emirates airlines is saying a.i. could replace real life pilots in passenger airplanes. here he is, his name is tim clark, and he was on cnbc. >> one thing you can't do is ignore it. harness it, use it, don't fear it. you might see one-pilot aircraft, could be flown on a fully automated basis? yes,ed. there'll always be somebody on the flight deck, in my view. will: i wonder if a.i. could do what sullenberger did.
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pete: that's it, right? i mean, i know drones work, i know that, like, a computer can beat me at chess, but i don't know how you factor in judgment, human judgment, of, you know, the tiny variables that happen on a flight; turbulence, different route, different -- i don't know, you can think some things would be easy like elevation. computers already mostly fly a lot of -- will: i think it already is, yeah. pete: a ton of it. but i want a person in there, i'm sorry. rachel: what if somebody could hack the system -- pete: there's that too. rachel: -- and then, you know, cause it to crash or go somewhere else. there's just all kinds of things that can go wrong. a.i. technology is something that we really should go a lot slower with. pete: i bet in a couple years though you'll have -- because you would probably only need one pilot instead of two. give it five years and there's one pilot in the cockpit, and he or she doesn't even have to the take it off or drive it unless judgment is called for.
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you know what i mean? i don't know, why not? rachel: yeah. a lot could happen. will: personally, i don't find that as scary as the next potential place for a.i., and that is in human are relationships. here's karen marjorie, she's a 23-year-old snapchat influence or talking about how a.i. can help loneliness. she said, men are told to suppress their emotions, not to the talk about issues they are having. i know how to fix this with karen a.i., i have worked with the world's -- i think she should have thought about that name. i've worked with the world's leading psychologists to seamlessly add -- pete: it's the her name. will: well -- and chi lek tick behavior -- lie -- dialectic behavior therapy. this will help rebuild confidence and what has been taken away by the pandemic. rachel: what's interesting is snapchat, which is a platform, by the way, that a lot of us our age don't use, right? a lot of kids do though more so
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than grown adults, and so snapchat now has a.i. you can go to it for psychological advice as well. it's programmed with all liberal advice so if you say that you're not, you know, you're a little gender confused, it'll tell you to transition. there was actually a great article in the federalist -- i know i'm biased, it's by my daughter -- but it explores what a.i. will do when you input these kinds of questions. and again it talks to what you said, will, what happens when we replace, you know, robots and a.i. and, you know, this sort of intelligence with real humans and that judgment that you talked about. pete: yeah. it's just not clear that we need a.i. karens. [laughter] we have enough of everybody in this world. [laughter] will: let me introduce can you to my a.i. girlfriend karen can. [laughter] rachel: that is -- pete: i don't know, i think more people will use this. remember when people thought
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online dating wouldn't catch on? rachel: that's true. pete: it caught on, and there's a lot of people that have wonderful, fruitful marriages -- rachel: and there's a lot of unhappy people that think they're going to find love there, and t it's just not as -- pete: true, but there are peopl- rachel: there are some. pete: there are a lot. rachel: yeah, that's true. pete: i don't know. i think a girlfriend, it's never going to the manifest. zero chance of marriage. unless maybe the future is marrying robots. i don't know. why -- [laughter] where does it stop, where does it start? nobody knows. will: that's a big discussion right before we go to to headlines. [laughter] rachel: all right. we'll wrap. we'll leave you thinking about that, pete. all right. turning now to your headlines starting in the middle east, the u.s. military sending reinforcements to the arabian gulf as iran steps up its seizures of merchant ships and tankers. ten days ago the iranian revolutionary guard swarmed this oil tanker and seized the panama-flagged vessel.
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and in late april the iranians seized a tanker belonging to the marshall islands. governor gavin newsom announces california's budget deficit has grown to the nearly $32 billion, that's $10 billion higher than previously estimated. in response to newsom's $30 # billion budget blueprint california republicans' assembly leader james gallagher said, quote, his fiscal gimmick es are shortsighted and his words about good government and efficiency are yet another empty promise. and prince and princess of wales releasing a rare glimpse behind the scenes this morning. with a personal movie of the family during the coronation celebration of king charles. the family seen with a camera crew inside kensington palace before they head to westminster abbey, and later the whole family takes part in volunteer
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work and festivities at the coronation party. and now to this, -- [inaudible] might be your favorite for baked treats but now they're heading to the frozen aisle inspired by fan favorites like chocolate chip cookies and frosted doughnuts. six new flavors welcome back available -- will be available exclusively at wal-mart. these guys dug into this -- pete: they were telling us to hold off on the wrappers. rachel: okay. will: what'd you go with? cookies and came? that's brownies. pete: chocolate glazed cookie doughnut ice cream. will: if it's a doughnut, i'm usually in. pete: how many ice cream sandwiches have you seen that look like a doughmutt? will: try it, is it good? what's it taste like? a doughnut? rachel: it's really good. pete: tastes like a lot of
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chocolate. rachel: it's a lot of chocolate. will: i like this one. pete: chocolate chain cookie -- will: cookie ice cream sandwich. rachel: i want this unwith. will: did we eat them all? do this one, do the brownie one, that one's going to be good. good job, entemann's. pete: these are really good. will: healthy breakfast yet again. [laughter] rachel: there's no hope for us -- pete: 20 minutes after the top of the hour. will: a i've done it twice today. the second time it didn't feel so smooth. no more calling out the time, will. straight ahead, a marine veteran is released on $100,000 bond after being charged in the chokehold death of jordan neely. an attorney lays out the legal hurdles next. pete: plus, the elephants in the room, trump and desantis to hold different events in iowaed today. what it means for the 2024 race
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attorneys for both sides outlined their clients' positions as manslaughter charges loom. watch this. >> he is dealing with the situation, like i said, with the sort of integrity and honor that is characteristic of who he is, characteristic of his honorable service in the united states marine corps. >> daniel pennyed did not know how many times he was arrested, so that's a non-factor. for anyone to bring that up and say it impacted the situation, you can't do it. will: here to the react, texas attorney todd shapiro. todd, great to see you this morning. >> hey, will. will: second-degree manslaughter, el me, you know, were this to the go before the jury, what type of factors, this legal analysis we talk about reasonable, reckless, indifferent. what type of factors would go into a calculation of whether or not daniel penny's guilty of sec-degree manslaughter? >> well, when you talk about manslaughter, will, you're talking about a reckless standard, much more so than an
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intentional standard. i don't think there's any doubt that daniel penny did not have the intent to kill when he put this gentleman in a chokehold. excuse me. i think his desire was to neutralize the threat that he believed was against the community inside that subway car. and he had to subdue this individual that looked like he was a danger to everybody around. will: todd, so if it's reckless is the standard, how is that defined? like everything else in the law, is that by the definition of a reasonable person, somebody in the same situation, would they have responded in the same way? is that what dines reckless? >> that's -- what defines reckless esome. >> that's exactly correct. a person similarly situated in the same type of situation, would an ordinary person have reacted in the same way. that is loosely the way it's defined. it's different state by state, for sure, but that's same idea
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with regards to recklessness and whether or not he acted properly or, you know, had the right to defend, you know, daniel did here the right to defend himself and others or whether or not his actions were determined to be, you know, too much. will: well, would this help define what the response would be of a reasonable person, the witnesses who were also if that subway car along with penny and neely, one of whom said the following, she said: i hope he has a great lawyer, talking about daniel penny. i pray that he gets treated fairly because after all this ensued, i went back and said to him, thank you. is that -- i would assume witness testimony from inside that train that day is going to be very, very pertinent, and i would imagine help define the situation in what kind of action was. reasonable. >> ill think that that would be the only thing that's pertinent. not all the outside noise and smoke that's going around now. the eyewitnesses to the account the way the deceased was
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actinginging in the moments -- acting in the moments prior to daniel taking the actions that he did is going to be most important inside that courtroom. from what i've said, the words of oi want to die, i'm going to die, that seems like a very real threat to me. will: yeah. look, you and i have known each other for a long time the, we've had conversations here, on the will cain podcast, about society and these individuals who step up into these moments of chaos and violence. and i know that it's important, i've said this, the world needs more daniel pennys to step up. >> i i'm with you, will. i think he potentially saved the lives of a lot of people on that subway car. he didn't know at the time whether or not this gentleman was about to pull out a gun, a knife, start harming people, and he used his training and his experience and his knowledge to, again, neutralize the threat and do what he felt was necessary. will: always good the talk to you, od. thanks for joining us this morning. >> thanks, will. will: all right. coming up, migrants are heading
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to the border, dhs employees are working all weekend long, and biden is headed to his beach house. tom homan on the absent plan from the commander in chief during this time of crisis. ♪ hey pops - what's cookin'? ♪ and i am linda. my turn! who wants more sliders? thanks, mom. i am groot. nothing brings the galaxy together like king's hawaiian. see guardians of the galaxy: vol 3. only in theaters.
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there's a different way to treat hiv. it's every-other-month, injectable cabenuva. for adults who are undetectable, cabenuva is the only complete, long-acting hiv treatment you can get every other month. cabenuva helps keep me undetectable. it's two injections, given by my healthcare provider, every other month. it's one less thing to think about while traveling. hiv pills aren't on my mind. a quick change in my plans is no big deal. don't receive cabenuva if you're allergic to its ingredients or taking certain medicines, which may interact with cabenuva. serious side effects include allergic reactions post-injection reactions, liver problems, and depression. if you have a rash and other allergic reaction symptoms, stop cabenuva and get medical help right away. tell your doctor if you have liver problems or mental health concerns, and if you are pregnant, breastfeeding, or considering pregnancy. some of the most common side effects include injection-site reactions,
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fever, and tiredness. if you switch to cabenuva, attend all treatment appointments. every other month, and i'm good to go. ask your doctor about every-other-month cabenuva. [background sounds] >> thank you very much. [inaudible conversations] rachel: president biden refusing to take questions from the's press yesterday hours after a migrant honduran teenager died in u.s. custody. former acting i.c.e. director and fox news contributor tom homan is here to react. tom, good morning. >> good morning. rachel: so you have been adamant about explaining to the american people that our border was the safest it has ever been in history under donald trump, and now we have u.s. border patrol agents who are telling the press that this is an absolute unmitigated, that they have never seen anything like this,
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this is the worst it's ever been. how did we get here? >> you know, i just came back from el paso last night, and i -- what i saw was just, it e made me so angry because you're right, rachel, we handed this administration the most secure border in my lifetime. and they destroyed it on purpose. this administration came in and unsecured the border which has caused this historic crisis. and, look, they're at 1700 migrants that died on u.s. soil under this administration, a record by far. over 100,000 americans die from fentanyl overdoses in the last two years, a record by far. this administration's policies are killing migrants and u.s. citizens in record numbers. the men and women of the border patrol are demoralized. when i was leaving, three guys walked up the me, all border patrol agents. they recognized me, they call me the i.c.e. man. here's what they said, thank god for fox news.
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mr. homan, tell them to continue telling the truth to the american people because our bosses, the president and the secretary, won't tell the truth, and we're busting our butts down here. and if it wasn't for your network that you work for, the american people wouldn't know what we're going through. so god bless this network for continuing to tell the truth. rachel: yeah. do you remember, tom, there was a fox drone covering the haitians that were gathered under the bridge, and pete buttigieg tried to get fox to take down the drone. now we have sara carter telling us they're telling reporters on the ground right now not to record the migrants getting onto the bus because our government's paying for the last leg. the latest thing we're hearing, tom, and i'd love to get your commentary on this, is that we're hearing that dhs is actually on the otherred side of the border coordinating with the mexican government to the sort of corral people across, tell them when they can go to evade texas who has now brought in their people, you know, their law enforcement to try and
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protect the border. so we have our, the dhs trying to help and facilitate people crossing over illegally? this has now gone to another level. >> you're absolutely right. it is true. this administration is complicit. they're complicit in the crime of smuggling. heavy been complicit from day one because they're allowing all these poem in -- people in at taxpayer experience -- expense. they're complicit. and it goes further than that. you know, they -- we have one child just died in hhs custody, and hhs will be investigated for it. two children died during the trump the administration, every democratic congressman went down there screaming and aoc saying how unhumane the border was. more than 85,000, close to 100,000 children that were released to unvetted sponsors that they can't even find.
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and these 85,000 children based on my experience are in very bad conditions, forced labor, sexual trade, some are living with pedophiles. these women -- i mean, these children are living a life of hell right now because of ad mrs. . -- administration. rachel: it's why representative kat cammack calls president biden the sex commander in chief. i'm going to wait for that magazine cover of joe biden and all the migrant children around him, remember that picture of donald trump with the crying child that they photohopped this? let's see if -- photoshop in? let's see if any of these liberal outlets start holding joe biden accountable for the suffering of so many children coming across the border which his administration has been complicit in working with the cartels for their abuse. tom homan, i wish id had you under better circumstances, but we really appreciate you being on the ground and giving us all this information. >> thanks for having me.
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rachel: all right, take care. coming up, all eyes on iowa today as former president donald trump and governor ron can desantis hold dueling events in the hawkeye state. two gop voters make their early picks next. ♪ ♪ just a landowner. you're a gardener. a landscaper. a hunter. because you didn't settle for ordinary. same goes for your equipment. versatile, powerful, durable kubota equipment. more goes into it. so you get more out of it.
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tonight. and while desantis still has not officially yet thrown his hat into the ring, the florida governor has his work cut out for him. trailing trump by over 30 points, over 40 in some other ones. let's bring in our gop voter panel, sharee murray, ran for congress against a socialist in the bronx and is a new york city business owner and new york city mom. natalia -- [inaudible] is that right? to to for purposes of this discussion, it's fair to characterize, sharee, you as leaning toward trump -- >> yes. pete: and, or natalia, toward desantis. why are you leaning that way? >> trump deserves another opportunity to bring america to where it was when he was running the country. it would be fascinating, i'm certainly going to support whoever is if primary winner in the presidential primary, but i
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think if desantis and trump with the dueling events tonight in iowa, if they could come together and talk, maybe it would be great for the republican party to see a trump-desantis ticket. [laughter] pete: feels a little farfetched at this point considering how they're going at a it, but we'll see. ma talia, why desantis? >> he was great during the two, two that have years of covid. he showed that he was always going to prioritize science and evidence. he convened the scientists that the biden administration systematically censored. he tried to reopen schools as quickly as possible. he imposed mask bans which were great because they protected children early on and allowed children to go back to the normal in florida much sooner than anywhere else. so, you know, as a parent and open schools advocate, that's one of the most important things for me, to see someone who
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prioritizes kids. pete: natalia, sharee said she'd support the are republican nominee whoever it is in this case. what about you? >> it's going to be tough. we'll consider it. st going to be hard to vote for biden again. i voted for biden last time -- pete: you did. >> yeah. pete: you saw what happened to schools, loved what desantis, but voting for biden, non-starter at in this point. >> it would be impossible to support him. i couldn't support hochul either as a new york democrat -- pete: common sense. your eyes are open. i appreciate that. marie, what do you make of the argument against donald trump that a lot of establishment times like to make, he can't win in the general, what do you say to that? >> i think this time around people have seen what the joe biden administration has done to america, basically ruined it. the gas prices are higher, food prices are higher, our quality of life has deteriorated. i mean, they kept our kids in masks, as natalia alluded to.
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i think america has seen and specifically for me speaking from my community perspective, trump has done a lot for different sectors of the population including african-americans. i mean, he gave us opportunity the, he gave us tax breaks, he gave us a better quality of life, and i think the media has done a good job of trying to demonize his character, but this go-around i think he is running a much cleaner, more presidential race. and i think the voters really see what politics is at play here. the democrats constantly try to demonize him. we saw what d.a. alvin low on crime bragg did in the recent indictment and the case where he just was found guilty in terms of having to pay the civil case. so i think that america sees what the media and democrats -- pete: certainly, republican voters have, because his numbers have only gone up. natalia, are you concerned as someone who supports desantis
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as his name has been floated, trump's numbers have only gone higher? >> i am definitely concerned. i mean, i thought this was going to be a cleaner, like, sweep. during covid people really rallied behind desantis, so i mistakenly assumed it was going to be an easy a -- path to the presidency. but, yes, i do find that concerning, and i'm concerned how polarized this country is with trump in office even if he is the better candidate. >> i think think the trump-desantis ticket would be the best ticket -- pete: maybe they're listening. maybe heir watching. [laughter] we'll see. thank you both. >> thank you. >> thank you for having us. pete: all right. we're going to toss it out to will who has some headline es, 48 minutes after the top of the hour. will: nice job. we're going to turn to your headlines, a jury finding idaho doomsday mom lori vallow guilty for the murders of her two youngest children. sentencing for the murders will take place in about three
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months. she faces life in prison. just ahead of travel season, thousands of united airlines' pilots picketing at major airports across the u.s. yesterday commanding higher pay and a better -- demanding higher pay and a better work/life balance. the pilots are upset because they've been working without a pay increase for more than four years. this comes as southwest airlines and american airlines' pilot unions threaten to strike ahead of the busy summer travel season. and thousand to the usfl. week five kicking off just hours from thousand with the maulers taking on the panthers at 12:30 eastern time. and after that game, catch the houston gamblers as they face off against the birmingham stallions. and tomorrow the memphis showboats will look to give the new orleans breaker s their first loss of the year. both of those match-ups on fox. and those are your headlines. tomorrow on "fox & friends" weekend, a very special mother's day show. plus, we're kicking off national
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police week with officers on fox square. so joining us tomorrow will be tim tebow and his mom who chose not to abort him. joe piscopo, monica crowley and congresswoman anna paulina luna. but first on this show today, may the best friend win. it's national mini golf day, and we're putting our putting skills to thest. ♪ ♪ i told myself i was ok with my moderate to severe rheumatoid arthritis symptoms. with my psoriatic arthritis symptoms. but just ok isn't ok. and i was done settling. if you still have symptoms after a tnf blocker like humira or enbrel, rinvoq is different and may help. rinvoq is a once-daily pill that can dramatically relieve ra and psa symptoms, including fatigue for some. it can stop joint damage. and in psa, can leave skin clear or almost clear.
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♪ ♪ will: today is national mini golf day. rachel: and what more perfect activity for our fox and family segment. pete: let's see what which one of us can take home the "fox & friends" trophy. the has been poorly organized -- will: we don't know what we're doing. pete: exactly. >> just choose a hole and go for it. pete: just choose a hole. will: rachel, go get it. pete: you putt, i'll putt -- will: no one's going to make this one. pete: look at that. keep going, rachel -- >> no, you got to stay with your ball. [laughter] pete: that's not bad, two hits.
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will: make it in three, rachel. she's still going. pete: four, all right. you've got to count that. oh, that's two. do i get a club length out? yes, i do. that's automatic. that's mini golf protocol. will: putting for three here? oh, no! pete: rachel, put it in for me. adam: this is my third or shot. pete: oh, my goodness. [inaudible conversations] ♪ pete: that's four. adam: oh, okay. three. get back, get back, get back! this'll be four. we all tie. it's all tied. pete: we're just all so good. will: here we go.
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adam: i think the barn. rachel, get many there. rachel: i need a ball. pete: interesting. wow, this'll be power. that's a billied madison approach. pete: i'm a lefty on golf and baseball. thanks, dan. rachel: where's the hole? oh, there it is. pete: that's a gimme, right, will? will: i don't know about that. [laughter] pete: i'm going to let adam go first. [inaudible conversations] adam: that's a two. i can still make this. pete: you can't get a two a off of that. adam: two! pete: adam adam klotz, clutch klotz. adam: too hard. pete: he gets a club length. can he do it? i'll will of course he can. pete: how about this corner one? rachel, you're eliminated. adam: sorry, rachel.
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rachel: that's all right. pete: she didn't seem too sad about that. if. pete: okay. this has got a bit of a slope on it. will: that left-handed helped you there. adam: yes, it did. pete: where's that trophy? i feel it. adam: get up there, get up there. there's a lot of pressure in tw- pete: this might be the longest competition sector we've ever played. rachel: if you hurry, i can actually attempt. adam: this is a tough one. pete: if he doesn't make it, we're going right here. if he doesn't make it. he does! ice in his veins! rachel: last one. pete: i think we're running out of time. adam: if i get a hole in one, i'm going to count this as a win. pete: thank you very much -- will: i got to see if i get my hole many one. pete: come back at the end of the show, and we'll finish it
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off, moments away. ♪ car insurance or personal loans. experian helped me find a debt consolidation loan that saved me hundreds of dollars. see how much you could save, free at experian.com/save (psst psst) ahhhh... with flonase, allergies don't have to be scary spraying flonase daily gives you long-lasting, non-drowsy relief. (psst psst) flonase. all good.
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the winner was it is not of us. it is the kids. [cheering] golf clap for all of them. they have been out here all morning long. next we will see you tomorrow greg rex thanks for hanging out with this great saturday. ♪ we arrive here and we want to leave this country quickly because our lives are in danger. ♪ ♪ ♪
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