tv FOX and Friends Saturday FOX News May 20, 2023 4:00am-5:00am PDT
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rachel: we're back with a fox news alert. new damming evidence that the fbi repeatedly used warrant lesser much powers on american citizens. pete: unsealed fisa document revealed the bureau did this over 278,000 times in one year. will: alexandria ho hoff is livn washington with the latest. reporter: good morning. it was unsealed at a court filing and highlights the fbi's past misuse of the program
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called section 702 and part of the foreign intelligence surveillance contact and the fbi is really only authorized to search the 702 data base when there's reason to believe it'll produce evidence on foreign actor crimes, usually the suspect has to be abroad. but in the year ending 2021, the filing shows the fbi used the warrant lesser much powers against u.s. citizens 278,000 times. the gorge floyd protests in the summer of 2020 and a batch of 19,000 donors and unnamed congressional campaign and one fbi searcher described in the filing "the analyst said she ran the queries to determine whether individuals had foreign ties and indicated she had run thousands of names within the fbi systems in retaliation to the capitol break investigation and did not remember why she ran these 13 queries on raw visa information".
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fox news learning in the year ending 2022, the number of section 702 searches dropped by 92%. seen yore fbi official sayre -- senior fbi official shares "as a judge i'm made clear the errors in the court's opinion are completely unacceptable as a result of the audits revealing the instances of noncompliance and fbi changed query from procedures to make sure the errors do not happen again and we're committed to continuing this work and providing greater transparency into the process to earn the trust of the american people. section 702 set to expire at the end of this year and up to congress to renew it. will, rachel, pete. rachel: thank you, alexandria. jason chaffetz is the utah congressman and things he's talking about when in congress. jason, what do you make of chrischristopher wray saying wee
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fixing the stuff. don't worry. >> when i was in congress i said i want to go to the court and interview the judges that are doing in and they said no, you can't. they're not a court. it's literally a judge sitting in a skiff, a secure compartmental facility reading the documents and something like 99% of the time, they stamp and approve and move on. pete: i mean, director wray on the screen said instances of noncompliance. except it happened 278 think times. jason, that sounds like a policy. >> there's supposed to be a predicate, a probable cause or articulate and somebody looking at tie withs foreign. it's called foreign intelligence surveillance act, but that's not
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what they're doing. they're going on a fishing expedition. george floyd protesters and january 6 people. they're just flowing out names and looking at congressional donors and fishing. phishing. that's not the american way. pete: phishing to run a service connected and have find a connection and then dig further into the american in that case? >> yes, and there ends up being no tie to any sort of foreign person. what there needs to be, part of the reform that's coming up this year, they've got to go through it. even jerry nadler, the democrat from new york and ranking member on the judiciary, said i'm not voting on it in favor -- rachel: approval for fisa? >> yeah, advocate for potentially innocent and pushback in front of a judge saying we don't think this is justify and this is why. that part of the process -- it's like the grand jury. it's a one way street. will: jason, i want to back up first and make sure i understand this. fbi wants to search my phone and
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go into my texts and e-mails, they can't do it and need a search warrant. in order to get a warranted, they traditionally or in concept would say, okay, we think will has connection to this foreign government or this terrorist and we have this evidence to suggest. they need to have probable cause. that's how it should work. they go to fisa court and go will has this connection and we need to search his phone and the fisa court goes, yeah, do that. instead there's nothing on will. nothing except that i showed up let's say to january 6. they say, and also 22,000 other people like will were there. i want the ability to search all of their phones and the court's supposed to say what's the probable cause and connection? that's not there. there's nothing l. >> yeah, even though the number was 100. think about the george floyd protest. they took that group and they said, hey, let's go phishing and see if there's somebody out there that has this. that's not the way that america works. there's a presumption of
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innocence in this country. that's not the way the court works even when in the case of donald trump when they found kevin clinesmith had forged documents, forged documents and changed them to go to the court. what did he get? he got probation and didn't even lose his law license for goodness sake. rachel: he was an fbi lawyer; correct? >> yes. see all these abuses are happening and now for director wray to say, hey, don't worry, it's under control. that's not good enough. they have to have systemic change top to bottom. rachel: i remember hearing unmasking with samantha powers and so forth. >> unmasking is there's very few people with a need to know who's being surveilled and why and certain people within the white house, samantha powers, susan rice, others that could go in and peel that back and see what was going on and look at those names. again, another protection for americans that was just looked
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at in mass. pete: seems like reverse of that and the people are already unmasked or they know who they want to target and they try to find the connections. and that's the fundamental problem. rachel: find me the person and i'll find the crime. show me the person spill find the crime. and i'll find the crime. will: jason, stick around with us and we're moving to the fox news alert. joe biden about to meet with the leaders of australia, india and japan on the sidelines of g7 summit and biden expected to hold talks with a guest who just arrived today. rachel: this all happening as the debt ceiling talks stall here at home. biden says he's not worried and instead focusing on climate and social issues during his overseas trip. will: edward lawrence joining us live from japan with the latest. edward. reporter: good evening from japan, will, rachel and pete. the g7 meetings that have now start willed have in-person meetings with ukrainian
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president volodymyr zelensky and he's here in hiroshima and president biden will tell him the u.s. will start training f16 pilots and overshadowing this trip is the debt ceiling impasse. >> our view is that where the f16 fits into the fight is not right now. so if we had it right now, this is not the main focus of what they need on the battlefield for this counter offensive. we feel like we'll be in a position to give them what they need for that future force when they need it. reporter: here's the president and frustration from the house speaker. >> mr. preponderate how concerned are you about the debt talks at home? >> not at all. >> we took a pause because of the frustration -- this white house will not acknowledge that they're spending too much. the way the process works, the house passes a bill, senate passes a bill and go to conference. senate never passed anything. house raised the debt ceiling and put us on a trajectory to
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get our house in order. reporter: so i wanted to know if the president was out of touch when it comes to spending. listen to this. >> the president is not out of touch at all. i just laid out at the top when the president's budget looks like and looks like decreasing the deficit by another trillion over a decade. >> interest from other world leaders in our debt ceiling talks has the lack of a deal caused the president's stature to take a hit? >> not at all. reporter: she did not like that question at all. back to you guys. rachel: thank you so much. pete: back to jason chaffetz and talk about the g7 stuff if you want, but the debt ceiling showdown is looming. where do you see that going? >> the president needs to come back and no deal is going to be finalized till the president is here and he'll be having the negotiation withs kevin mccarthy three months ago and no reason why the president should have delayed this. when kevin mccarthy and the house republicans united and passed a bill. hey, that put the house
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republicans in a powerful position. i think the big question for chuck schumer is why aren't you bringing up that bill and passing it or voting on it. if you say it won't pass, put it up for a vote and it would do because kirstin sinema and joe mansion and others would vote for it and it would pass. this whole idea that the president is cutting a trillion in deficit. deficit is the annual number. debt is the accumulation of those deficit numbers. we're $30 trillion in debt, folks. we're paying almost $2 billion in day just in interest on our debt. if you don't think there's a spending problem, you're out to lunch. it is so, so fundamentally wrong. rachel: is there some political advantage that just maybe joe biden thinks his party can have by bringing it so close to the deadline? >> yeah, they seem to blame republicans and they have the traditional constitutional media going out there saying it's the republicans but the republicans passed the bill.
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remember, every house democrat voted against raising the debt ceiling and they have to be able to beat that drum. pete: it's true. they will -- they're seek ago confrontation in hopes of demonizing republicans and then they passed it. >> deadlines will propel this. when the markets start to react, there'll be a deal. rachel: unless they want things to go bad and when there's a cry cease, this is when they act. they -- crises, this is when they act and never let it go to waste. i hope that's not his plan. will: jason on the big saturday show today at 5:00 p.m. eastern time. thank you, jason. rachel: we love having you, come back. now the headlines and funeral for the home lless man that died on the new york city subway held yesterday in harlem. al sharpton delivering a fiery eulogy. new york congresswoman alexandria ocasio-cortez, some call her sandy.
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she did attend that service but mayor eric adams and governor kathy hochul did not. now a violent outburst at chips @achipotle and a man reaches ovr the counter and throwing items at the employee. the suspect is on the loose. offering a reward up to $1,000 for information leading to his arrest. education secretary is roasted after tweeting "teachers know what's best for their kids because they are with them every day, we must trust teachers". presidential candidate nicky haley replying parents know what's best for their kids because they raise them every day. we must trust parents. fix it for you, miguel cardna telling him to delete his account and was drilled over a hearing at proposed title 9
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changes stripping funding for public schools that ban transgender athletes from competing in sports. those are your headlines. pete: all right, good stuff. move onto another topic this morning. who did the interview and, rachel, with a 16-year-old student in canada who was passing out bibles at an event. that is illegal in canada? rachel: i guess so. let's back up for just a little bit. so he was kicked out of his school originally because he stood up for girls who didn't like that there were transgender people in their bathrooms and he used bible quotes to sort of -- he goes to a catholic school and the catholic school kicked him out. that's the state of events in canada if that tells you anything. he went to this -- he's been kind of held up as a hero of sorts on the conservative side
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in canada and attended an event, a rally for trans rights or whatever and he was passing out bibles and, yes, he was taken into custody. i interviewed him just a little bit ago and here's what he said. >> i certainly don't think it was a coincidence that the after four minutes at the protest, police standing by witnessing me being assault bade mom with my hands in the air decided to arrest josh alexander and i don't think there's any coincidence there and it was about four minutes into the rally when i was arrested and that was a very clear statement. but however at the same time i am impressed the calgary police will be pressing charges against the few individuals that assaulted me. will: they said in the reporting around this situation, it said he was being provocative by passing out bibles. rachel: super provocative. will: his stance was super
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antagonist ick and the assault taking place on your screen right now. quite the state of affairs in canada and provocative to hand out bibles but not to physically restrain and assault someone because your position is so morally clear. pete: you get handcuffed like that for being provocative and not violent. will: i'm laughing. pete: your position is so morally superior and clear it requires some physical violence. that's how it goes amongst the alphabet mob. rachel: christians feel under -- will: they're alphabet is big, they have two fs at ld2slgbtqia. pete: there's a number in front? will: yeah n can dam it rachel: what does that stand for? will: two spirit? rachel: what's that? will: it's like tans but tied to
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indigenous population in canada. rachel: wow, it's just -- will: truly is as big as the entire alphabet. rachel: people feel persecuted in the country and nothing compared to what people feel in canada. pete: if you don't have a first amendment that you can absolutely cling to in&a court willing to enforce t speech codes become a reality. the group think of the orthodoxy at the moment and start to dominate what's threatening and not threatening and a bible really threatening. rachel: right. will: why the plus? pete: it's anything. will: it's insufficient because we keeped aing letters. pete: pretending with the plus. at what point customer the plus encompass everybody? system of articulation rachel: now it's natives. will: no, that's why two ss wered ad. pete: it's not an inclusive plus. it's a discriminatory plus.
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will: exactly. coming up, historic new york city hotel opening doors to new york city visitors and you'll be paying for their entire stay and the 20 bus loads of migrants dropped off in the big app and will how much it's costing the big city. rachel: why harry and meghan's wallet could be to blame for their alleged car chase. and that and more in my pop culture roundup with our special guest carley shimkus. stay with us. ♪ lowe's knows you need appliances... ...that work as good as they look. that's why we carry... ...a suite of lg appliances. so you can get the most... ...out of your kitchen and dollars. and now... buy more save more up to an additional $1000. >> woman: why did we choose safelite? we were loading our suv when... crack! safelite came right to us,
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picker the roosevelt -- pete: the roosevelt opened its doors to 20 bus load of illegals and comes as city business leaders warn summer tourism could be become a hot mess if asylum psychoers take over too -- seekers take over too many rooms in the city. we have tom gretch with us. the roosevelt is two avenues and
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two blocks from here. it's become the hub. what do you make of how this is unfolding in new york city? >> good morning and thanks for having me. it's a mess right now but i think at least at this point we've got a centralized location not too far. not only from your offices but from the port authority bus terminal we can at least have a sense of control and understanding of what some of the needs are as we continue to get inundated with these folks from our southern boarders. pete: tom, new york city is famously a sanctuary stay and said come one come all. mayor adams said recently hotels willing to take illegals, 50% of those are filled up by that population at this point. doesn't feel sustainable. >> yeah, i agree and understand and the same on the statue of liberty and give us your tired
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and poor and we live up to these ideals and the same not for texas and new york. the issue falls square defeat of the congress, both parties as well as president biden to allow this to happen. we've not heard a lot coming out of washington dc about how to handle this in a big way. a big coordinated way and i think it's fallen to our mayor to figure all this out and going with the governor and others in the state of new york but in fact it is a mess and as we get to this season of -- this is probably the first summer in three years we'll have normalcy in our city and state. we are concerned about the influx of folks taking up hotel space when we're almost into the summer season. pete: tom, you mentioned congress should do something about it and that's part of it and executive branch decisions being made that facilitate this and this wasn't happening three years ago or four years ago and this is something that's clearly changed.
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would this be prevented at the source. >> comprehensive immigration across the country. north, south, east ask west that allows people to come in in a metered kind of controlled way? heaven knows we need workers to do some of the jobs that lots of these folks normally do. but without any kind of coordinated control in dc -- pete: but there is plenty of evidence that bring in -- the workers argument drives down wages for everybody else and if you're not here legally, how do you protect companies hiring illegals or minors in the process. is this really about labor? >> good point about that because right now there's no real process in place to allow the folks that are coming up here to have the ability to be able to legally work in new york and in the u.s.. we were decimated in new york with thousands and thousands of restaurants closed and we're just starting to get back and
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many of the phones that worked in the industries no longer choose to work in hospitality and in restaurants, and i'm sure if those folks that are being bussed up here unfortunately, unfortunately bussed up here could find positions in those roles if they were given the proper clearance to be able to do so. pete: feels like a solution to a problem that shouldn't exist if the first place pushing americans out of jobs and making the american dream less accessible in the first place. >> 6 to 7 million in the city of new york and that's an absurd number and the feds ought to step in and prevent the onslaught of folks coming on up to new york city. pete: the feds facilitating the onslaught and they're the ones helping and speeding up the process of illegals coming to this town and others across the country. tom grech, thank you for your time. >> thank you very much.
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pete: we have a quick correction on a story we brought you last weekend. the source who told the new york post, get this one, that the homeless veterans were -- homeless veterans in new york displaced to make room nor illegals at another new york hotel made the story up. it was a made up story and our apologies for reporting it as such. coming up, the 2024 republican field growing by the week. we hit the streets to see who people are talking about the most. >> donald trump. >> desantis or trump. >> not donald trump. anyone else including mickey mouse. pete: and president trump is weighing in saying the path to second place is wide open. stay with us. ♪ liberty mutual customizes your car insurance so you only pay for what you need. with the money we saved,
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>> who do you plan to vote for in 2024 and why? >> donald trump. >> desantis or trump. >> not donald trump. anyone else including mickey mouse. >> that would probably lean in the direction of where we currently are. >> that's joe biden? >> that's joe biden. >> i'm not feeling great as biden for the front runner for the democrats. >> if barack obama was voting again, i'd vote for him. >> he's termed out. >> nicky haley is very even minded. >> i like hutchinson because he's philosophically anchored well. >> who's your gold star? >> michelle obama i'd love. >> trump. oo>> biden. >> donald trump. >> that's three tram and one biden. >> i'm found of congresswoman liz cheney. >> former congresswoman. >> excuse me. >> i'm a trump fan. >> if trump would have gotten reelected, putin would have
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never went to ukraine. >> i don't who's running. >> i don't trust anybody in the government. ♪ pism well, we went to -- pete: we went to brian park in new york and found the only asa hutchinson supporter. the republican primary is heating up and we just reported yesterday that south carolina senator tim scott has now filed paperwork to run for president and that's days before it looks like ron desantis campaign will make it official. system of articulation rachel: yeah, i love that . asa hutchinson, you're big in new york. oh, boy. all right. well, here is a statement from the trump campaign saying ron desantis failed shadow campaign has opened the flood gates for career politicians looking to
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seize a opportunity to raise their profile for the 2028 race. tim scott's entrance and aggressive media purchase doesn't only kneecap desantis but scott sees the same thing as youngkins and others and the path to second place is wide open. they smell ron desantis' blood in the water. and no longer see him as an obstacle. will: yeah, last night, rachel, when filling@7:00 p.m., there's rrumblings that glen young kins may jump into the race. he too could run for president. rachel: he could be big at brian park. will: maybe. pete: it's interesting and you'd think okay, the field would get big because donald trump is vulnerable and that would have been the conventional thinking a year ago. now what the trump campaign is saying is maybe the field's getting bigger and the guy they thought could challenge trump has fizzled and desantis ease
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numbers have gone down nationally certainly and trump's lead from 10% in january and now to national polls and over desantis and his rollout wasn't great in early states and maybe someone like scottr help as the field gets bigger? my guess is that it probably helps trump; right? all of the -- not other than trump field are dividing out. will: that's probably right and total up everyone else's together, it still doesn't equal where trump stands today but it's there splitting up the nontrump vote. rachel: correct. swing states and public opinion strategies name of polling institution and shows the swing states of georgia and arizona. here's georgia. in some hypothetical matchups in
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a general election. there's biden, desantis; biden trump, biden pence you can see there shows desantis beating biden in the general election. tighter versus the other two in arizona and georgia where it looks largely the same. desantis with a lead. is that arizona? desantis light over biden with the other two. tighter against biden. pete: they're pulling pence and cracked 4% and those are all inside the margin of error with 4.4% margin of error and took take from it what you'd want. that's the argument of the desantis tesla and meta kaine and -- campaign and key states of pennsylvania, georgia and arizona and win those as republican in 2024 to win the white house and then also all these campaigns are looking at new hampshire and iowa and south carolina because the only hope from someone other than trump is gaining momentum in the early
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state to show that they could win one early. the national polls showing a gigantic lead for trump. policeically speaking i'm laying out what the options are and see someone like desantis and tim scott said south carolina is maybe a place to win as an early state. rachel: one interesting thing is both pence and donald trump have gone over desantis and disney saying it's a bad business decision and people say trump did that trying to show he's the business guy and all the money lost by the state of california with the bat and will parents say i'm going to pay that price if you're not going to sexualize my kids in public schools and that's an interesting race and not the best hit on desantis and a lot of parents that don't care how much it costs and they want
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to protect their kids. they think taking on disney is kind of where the battle is at right now. will: the other big issue lurking in the elections and set aside where we feel we should be morally on the side of abortion, issue of abortion. how does it work politically? it's going to be a major question as there's a question about a federal ban on abortion. rachel: yeah. will: it looks like trump and i don't know that we've nailed down where they are on these and there's questions about how well that played in the midterms in 2022 and it was the shadow issue lurking over what happened in the midterms in 2022. there's a sentiment. >> i would say for true conservatives, most of the party. rachel: again that's a hill we're willing to die on and what donald trump did in the supreme court and overturning of row versus wade and his role is
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unquestion and will people are concerned he's criticizing desantis on the six week ban, which a lot of ---will: a federal ban is the issue going forward. forward. pete: that's not the issue going forward. there's a massive and he's a generational movement in trump's movement, which no candidate has figured out how to die second or take into account on especially consider hag hawkeyes he achieved for four -- what he achieved for four years and the guy that ripped it out by the roots and has the guts to do it and people go give awes shot. how does abortion play in the general election and de-san staking out a position. to the right. rachel: to the right of donald trump. will: many people saying i don't know how that'll work in the general election. rachel: that's true but overwhelmingly what will play in is what came out this week in the durham report. there's a lot of people feeling like there's no consequences for the people who tried to
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basically do a coup on this administration and the only way to get revenge or justice for what happened in their minds will be to elect donald trump. give him another shot. will: lot more to go on that obviously but coming up, the fbi facing a whirlwind of allegation and missteps and pete and i go off the wall in their biggest scandals and why politics are at the center or the stage. rachel: abby hornacek is live in texas for the professional bull riding finals and she's next. ♪ wait. can i still play? since we work with emower, we don't have to worry about planning for a third kid. you can still play golf... sometimes. take control of your financial future to empower what's next.
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pete: abby hornacek is live in texas for the pbr world finals and we'll put on our hats here and see who wore it best. rachel: i almost put it on backwards. pete: bull riders competing for the $1 million prize. rachel: one of the bulls named black ice. will: a stock contractor and former bull rider. abby. >> hey, guys. he's an 11 time world class qualifier and knows what it's like to be on a bull. what goes through your mind when you hop on the back of the 1500-pound animal? >> as a processual athlete, a bull required, when you sit down on them, this is what you do for
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a living. you don't think about it and have to react to what the bull is doing and he'll hope for the best really. >> how do you plan for not planning? you don't know what that bull is going to do. >> you don't have a clue and it's just part of the game and react to whatever they're doing and hopefully it all works out. >> how do you go from riding bulls to then raising bulls? >> it was pretty simple and i was raising bulls when i retired and now i'll be honest with you flanking a bull, i'm more nervous now than i was riding them. i have no control over this animal and i brought him to down and have no control over it. when i was riding and had all the control over if i did good or not. >> i was going to ask you to get on but makes me more nervous. >> you can get on and he's only been road like 9% of the time so yeah, go for it. try it out. >> what do i do? >> whenever you go sit down on him, put your foot on him and
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let him now you're coming down. >> okay, he has a 91% bubbing rate. >> yep. he bucks everybody off pretty much. >> only 9%. i just get in and do i slide on like that? >> yep, slide. >> what do i do with this foot? >> can i step on him? >> yep. you're good. and then slide. look at you go. >> oh, yeah. all right. >> there you go, you got it. >> power of this animal and feel how warm he is and somebody never being on a bull, you don't know what it's like and he's get ago little testy. we're going to open the shoot, guys, back to you. i'm going to take him for a spin. will: abby, my respect for you is through -- i can't believe they let you do this. they barely let me stand next to the bull. reporter: i don't know if we told anyone first. pete: she doesn't know what could possibly happen and seems safe. will: abby, you're making me nervous. i want you out.
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i mean, lj knows what he's doing. reporter: lj will catch me. he told me. pete: amazing. rachel: will couldn't even stay that long on a mechanical bull out here. will: i mean, right. abby and lj see hag it takes for these riders to get to the finals. check out last cowboy standing on foxnation.com. good stuff right there. amazing, abby. all right. we're going to move to your headlines and start with this. tiffany trading and the iconic blue bags is trading them for plain white ones to keep he's from targeting -- thieves from targeting customers in new york city. customers on fifth avenue are no longer handing out -- they're handing out generic bags and choppers hiding pricey purchases within the last month nypd receiving 148 theft complaints in the area near the high end shots. rachel: that's here near the studio.
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will: near catastrophic car chase involving prince harry and meghan markle and the couple got swarmed by paparazzi and didn't want to spend the money on high priced manhattan hotel room and the car company refused to give them a deep discount on the room so the sussexes decided to stay at a friends house for free. the source claims the chase unfolded because the up can l didn't want the paparazzi back to stay with them there. pete: you badger high end hotels to give you free rooms? rachel: what else they did, know what else they did, because they've been gettiing hit so much for like going on private jets and all that stuff, they did a hertz rental car instead of black suv and now instead of -- they're calling her instead of the queen of hearts like princess diana, they're calling her the queen of hertz. pete: she's a woman of the people. rachel: yes. all right, coming up, one year later no answers to america's
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baby formula shortage. our next guest says it's time for mothers to stop waiting for solutions and begin breastfeeding. dr. nicole sapphire is here to explain. ♪ we're talking about cashbackin. not a game! we're talking about cashbacking. we're talking about... we're not talking about practice? no... cashbacking. word. we're talking about cashbacking. cashbacking. cashbacking. cashback like a pro with chase freedom unlimited. how do you cashback? how can you sleep on such a firm setting? gab, mine is almost the same as yours. almost... just another word for not as good as mine. save 50% on the sleep number limited edition smart bed. plus, special financing. only at sleep number.
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t ouour juryry aorneneys hehelpou reporter: welcome back to "fox & friends" a. cool start across parts of the northern plains and one of the last cool starts and a big warmup coming in throughout this week. we take a look at the weather map and what's going on with temps into the 40s in towards fargo and 44 this morning and 47 in denver and 45 in kansas city. that's all behind this cold front you can see draped across the ohio valley down across parts of the south and texas 3 to 6 inches of rain in the san antonio area and line of storms dying down across interstate 37 and northern side of this throughout the day today will meet up with a coastal system we're watching and we've got a fretty gloomy saturday in store for -- pretty gloomy saturday in store for much of the northeast and 2 to 3 inches of rain falling across parts of connecticut and by tomorrow this is out of here and summer is here with a beautiful sunday
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across mid at leeanne tick and the northeast. all right. rachel, over to you. rachel: thank you, rick. it's been a year since the baby formula shortage and our next guest believe ifs this administration can't fix the problem, moms must take matters into their own hands by breastfeeding. dr. nicole sapphire is here to tell us more. doctor, it's interesting because i learned so much from you all the time, i breastfed, i knew it was good for my babies, but i'm wondering why didn't i know it was good for me when it comes to breast cancer. why are public health officials telling us why aren't breast cancer awareness tells us more about the benefits? >> we have definitely created a national dependence on formula breastfeeding rates have been going down throughout the last several decades and the cdc has noticed this and there's been a lot of pushes and this was really heightened last year with the baby formula shortages and just this year in 2023, you had the journal with three paper
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series called the breastfeeding series and talking about how breastfeeding rates are down and how this big food, baby formula pushes kind of some nefarious ways to target these vulnerable young moms and you're no longer supporting women to breastfeed. yes, now there's some woman who cannot -- women that cannot breastfeed for physical reasons, emotional reasons and various reasons but for a lot of people that want to breastfeed, they don't necessarily have the support or knowledge that not only is it good for their baby but for them. decreases card voter vascular disease, breast cancer risk and ovarian cancer risk. these are all very important and we need town crease education and increase support and women that want to breastfeed need to. the cdc reports that by six months, less than 25% of babies are exclusively breastfed and the recommendation is baby should be breastfed to at least a year, if not two. why aren't women doing it? we've unfortunately stopped talking about it. rachel: there's big food
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interest and there's companies make ago lot of money off formula and corporations would rather have women get back to work and it's obviously easier if you're doing formula and takes work to -- and time. it's not easy and definitely not easy and moms need that support. i was hosting the jesse show and the former coca-cola consultant and he listed the ingredients in formula, which is really interesting. listen. >> a mother producing consciousness in her body and plaque louisly creating the -- miraculously creates the suspended ands is susp food thiw life needs and it's strategic that we try to get kids onto a processed food conveyer belt by -- let me read the ingredients of a leading formula, corn syrup, sunflower oil and soybean oil and these
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highly processed inagains are better potentially than what the mother produces. rachel: he's reinforcing your point. dr. sapphire, she has a foxnews.com op ed in the major change in breast cancer aimed at young women and thank you for that article. all right, thanks, nicole. more "fox & friends" up next. through the pandemic, getrefunds.com can see if it may qualify for a payroll tax refund of up to $26,000 per employee. all it takes is eight minutes to get started. then work with professionals to assist your business with its forms and submit the application. go to getrefunds.com to learn more. >> woman: why did we choose safelite? we were loading our suv when... crack! safelite came right to us, and we could see exactly when they'd arrive with a replacement we could trust. that's service the way we want it. >> singers: ♪ safelite repair, safelite replace. ♪ i told myself i was ok with my moderate to severe rheumatoid arthritis symptoms. with my psoriatic arthritis symptoms.
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pete: we begin this hour with a fox news alert and new damming evidence shows the fbi repeatedly used warrant lesser much powers on american citizens. an unsealed fisa document reveals the bureau did this not once but twice and 278,000 times in just one year. rachel: alexandria hoff is live with washington with this troubling story. good morning
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