tv Outnumbered FOX News May 26, 2023 9:00am-10:00am PDT
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welcome, everybody. we begin on the unofficial first day of the summer travel season. and you better pack your patience. 42 million americans will take to the skies this memorial day weekend. experts think it could be one of the busiest on record. now, the white house is pushing to avoid another flight mare like last year. president biden is touting his effort to compensation travelers for flight delays, quote, ledezma up for travelers this memorial day weekend. we launched flight rights.gov. if the flight was cancelled or delayed, check the dashboard to see how you could be compensated. transportation secretary pete buttigieg thinks it will serve as a big test for the airline system. >> this weekend will be a test of the system and i think all of us have airline stories from last summer and the disruptions that took place then, cancellation and delay rates were at unacceptable
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proportions last year, and it's important that that not happen again. >> all right. so pete buttigieg is going to test the system over the weekend. see how that works out. >> they're trying to deflect away from all the problems that are firmly on pothole pete's shoulders. the fact they gave him this job is beyond comprehension. front page of "the wall street journal" today, spay of runway near misses casts shadow over summer travel. there was a meeting conveying from senior aviation officials and regulators in march because of all of the near collisions, including when a fedex cargo plane almost landed on top of a southwest airlines jet taking off from austin, texas. almost killed 131 passengers. that was a few months ago back in february. this is just one of the
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mere i can'ted of problems which he oversees. there's no head of the faa. there's the software meltdown in january. airlines announced they're reducing summer flight schedules in new york and d.c. because of a shortage of air traffic controllers. they can only get 50% of them on the job here in new york city, and then a long list, no head of the faa because remember, phil washington dropped out of the job, but again, this is where we are because the bailouts during covid, the airlines got $54 billion from the federal taxpayers, so that's what happens. they're trying to change the subject. >> it reminds me of the debt ceiling situation. feels like it always falls on everyone's plate on the day it is going to start happening. one of the programs they rolled out, i went on that
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thing called flight rights.gov, it is a burea bureaucratic, click here, which airlines will reimburse you. doesn't say call this number, we'll make sure you get it taken care of. we have such a pilot shortage in the country, air traffic controller shortage. i wish during covid they said when things get opened up again, we're going to need more people. here's an incentive program to get into the program now, learn how to do this. what are your thoughts on how we got here is what i am asking. >> how we got here as you mentioned is because of covid when a great majority of americans got used to not coming to work or getting a check in the mailbox rather than going to work. no surprise there's a worker shortage. i think every industry is feeling it, you see help wanted signs everywhere. when it comes to air travel, you had a vaccine mandate that pilots were not happy about, that caused a lot of them to
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retire early, want to get out of the business. felt their rights weren't respected. pilots recently have been standing up, wanting better conditions, better pay, benefits, better safety protocols, rightfully so. what's frustrating for so many americans, pete buttigieg sits up there and says we're going to test the system this weekend. when you are ruining somebody's family plans, we don't want to be part of your test or experiment. every time something like this happens, it has been countless times under this administration and pete, he says he is going to do something about it, couple months later we have a big travel weekend, something goes awry, he says he will do something about it. might as well replay the sound bites every time there will be travel because he does nothing, airlines are not held accountable and we rinse and repeat the same thing over and over again. people are upset, miss milestones in their families' lives and we all have to just get over it i guess. >> used to feel like things worked fairly well
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in this country, amy. i notice on his chart where the responsibility falls, government, other entities, he said i'm going to call this section god because it was weather, and it was the largest section. it looked to me he was saying look, there's not a whole lot we can do, it is out of our hands, it is an act of god. >> as a scientist and meteorologist, it is frustrating, also a frequent flyer. i do about 8,000 miles minimum a month. i am in the skies a lot. there is science and meteorology to tell you what you need to know about weather. for example, this weekend we have a low pressure system off the coast of the southeast portion of the country. it is going to impact 500 miles of coastline and comes inland. we know that will happen. hubs like atlanta which will have high volume will be impacted by the weather. and despite the fact they have access to their own private meteorologists and government agency that's federally funded, the national weather service, and they offer all kinds
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of weather data. we can be accountable for the science of weather. there are going to be freak accidents of lightning strikes or places we want to keep people safe in the midst of a storm that might create minor delays, but when you know weather is coming, they could create a pattern, deal with some of these things. they choose not to because they think what if it doesn't happen, then i don't have to make adjustment. it is a way to get off the hook. >> amy, i want to ask you a question. for me, i am not a meteorologist, every time the airline messes up, they tell us it is weather. i look at my weather on the app, i don't see any weather on my flight path, but they often get out of having to compensate you because they say it is weather. how often do you call them out on that because you well know when it is weather related or not. >> the way they're getting around it, they talk about the weather is somewhere elsewhere your plane is held up. that's how they have that weather related clause to get out of pagan things. it is playing russian
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roulette with your vacation, your situation. it is tough for somebody to understand if it is weather somewhere else. >> part of this is government connected, right? you have the faa, you have also pilot shortage that we talked about, air traffic controllers that we have simply not enough of. you feel like every time you go in the sky, i hope i don't crash into another plane. where is the government responsibility here? >> you shouldn't be famous if you're the secretary of transportation. that should not be something that gives us a segment to talk about, shouldn't have train derailments, backups in the supply chain, shouldn't have ports you can't open, shouldn't have the faa system crashing. we have all of this under this supposedly genius secretary of transportation. and there are a number of ways to fix that. you can deregulate, allow stacking on some crates that we have to deal with at the ports, there are a lot of innovative ways to make that move faster. you can work on the rail
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like they're trying to with the bill in the u.s. senate. incentivize people to become air traffic controllers, get rid of the vaccine mandate for pilots. you talked about it a moment ago, things used to work. >> i know. >> it was always something broken behind the facade. like you go to europe, paris, look at the beautiful building, inside, the lights are out, wallpaper is peeling. we are getting there, great essay about the doctors have been lying to you, health insurance companies are lying, colleges putting out morons. our society has been going forward with momentum, but once it is stuttered, you realize how much of it doesn't work, how few people know how to make things work and it starts to crumble. >> they should have a program to incentivize people to become air traffic controllers, give them a good salary, move some money in the system obviously because we have
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$31 trillion in debt into the right places and get people motivated to be part of the system and say let's have the best air traffic system in the world in the united states of america again. so with that, here's what's coming up, folks. target stirring up even more controversy. we're learning that the retailer is funding a group that pushes for kids' genders to be secretly changed in schools without giving their parents consent or knowledge of what's going on in those conversations at school next. sam was 8 when we got him. i convinced my husband to go to the adoption day and we saw sam. he did not bark for like a month after we got him. and then one day he went “woof.” i was like, “you can talk!” advice to dog owners? feed them good food, take them on walks,
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rolled out a line of pride month lbgtq clothing for kids, other merchandise. the retailer's market value reportedly down about $9 billion after calls for a boycott started a little over a week ago. target has moved those pride displays to the back of some stores, but we're now learning the retailer has been donating to an activist group that's trying to push gender ideology into classrooms. that group called glisten advocates for teaching gender theory in all levels of public school curr curriculum. it offers school districts guidance on hiding gender transitions from parents. target has been donating to this group every year with the company saying, quote, glisten leads the movement in creating, affirming and anti-racist spaces for lbgtqia plus
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students. we are proud of ten plus years of collaboration with glisten and continue to support their mission. martha, target's dedication to this movement, it goes a long way back and it goes way beyond just the stores and this merchandise, and the ceo is quite proud of it. they need to stand up and just own it and say to everybody if you don't like it, don't shop here. >> absolutely. 100%. i think it's really important for consumers and parents and anybody out there to be aware of their take on this. they proudly stand behind it as that support for glsen suphows. this is what they're about. you can make a decision whether or not you want to shop there. it is unfortunate. to me, i have a business reporting background as you do, companies exist for a couple of reasons. one is to sell products,
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merchandise to employ people and help them support their families, and if it is a public company like this is, it is to increase shareholder value. that's the mission of a company or store in this case. they have wandered so far away from their mission, i think this is a problem in education and probably in a lot of areas of american life. if you don't know what your mission is, what you're about, you're there to sell clothes, employ people, increase shareholder value. but they're here to preach about something which is a whole other avenue. it is good that people are becoming more aware of that, they can make a decision whether or not that's something they want to support. >> target partners with organization that pushes kids' genders to be secretly changed in schools without parental consent. and the ceo just about a week ago said i think these decisions on diversity, equity,
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inclusion is good business and is the right thing for society, and it is a great thing for our brand. moralizing, they're taken a side that doesn't line up with a lot of their customers. >> it should go beyond a boycott, i don't want to live in a libertarian landscape where they pay for parents to be cut out of decisions for it to go through schools, it is wild to see this. people trying to obfuscate. the governor of california said it is about racism, anti-semitism. it is not the don't say gay law, it is you cannot target children. for the activists that claim it is about freedom, they chip out when people say you can no longer attack children. seems like it is a central, core part of the ideology. places like target shouldn't be allowed to do that. the american people
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shouldn't allow it. >> i don't believe in boycotts, never called for them. it is up to every individual in this country where they shop. it is up to target who they want to stand up for. i love what joey jones broadly said. he said i learned a long time ago if you make half of america mad by taking a stand, all you do is make the other half made going back on it. might as well stick with it. that's what happened with target. >> you might remember in 2016 target started allowing men that identify as women to go into the changing rooms of women and children. and at that time the american family association called for a boycott of target. didn't get a lot of traction. still was crossing a line. target has a history of some of these things happening. what i find as a parent of four children, it is difficult to be a parent anyway. to put these in front of families, you sexualize children at a young age, it is already hard enough
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to be a parent in modern society. to start to conflict and confront things you don't need to think about until children are much older makes parenting so much more difficult. >> right. we are showing tags from the bathing suit, that was for an adult, but you walk into the score, if that bathing suit was in the store and a kid asked what is that, you got to explain what it is. and well, it is a ladies bathing suit with extra room in the bottom and that's a long conversation you have to have. but target is going to stand with this, then they need to stand with it and tell everybody who has a problem with it suck it up, butter cup. >> i think they're going to. target being woke is not anything new. this has been going on quite some time now. we saw in the 2020 george
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floyd era, blm riots, the store was looted, they lost multi million in revenue. my local target was boarded up, i don't know about where you live, your local target was probably boarded up during the riots of 2020. so the company stoke with woke activist values through and through, and they're going to continue to do that because they don't care about consumers or losing money, they care about the corporate quality index and want to rate high on it. for some reason, some corporations would rather rate high on that than be appealing to their customer base. what they're going to find out that they haven't found in the past, conservatives will take a stand as we have done with bud light and we are going to make you bleed revenue. before it may not have mattered, may not have caught on, but it is catching on now. >> true avenue for mothers to think this is something i am related to and empower them to take the
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position they haven't been brave enough to do in the past or wanted to do in the past because target is something that moms and families are in a lot. this is maybe a first for some families to say this is something i don't want to be part of, it gives you an avenue. >> this is clearly corporate ethos, more than bud light who hired one individual. this is a company that funneled money for a decade to an organization that wants to keep parents in the dark when a child in school is transitioning in gender. they have owned it. well, they are going to own it and they're going to feel it. coming up, a new documentary exploring highs and lows of greek life, impact on our young women. the intense sorority rush process at the university of alabama. that's next.
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>> inspired by the viral sensation known as #bama rush on tiktok in 2021, the documentary is called bama rush and dives into the good, the bad and the ugly of the greek life recruitment system at the university of alabama and other places as well. watch this. >> consists of four highly competitive rounds. >> i would probably not be going to alabama if it didn't end up on tiktok. >> i am nervous and excited. >> it is way more dramatic than you think it is. >> being in a sorority will help me figure out
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the person i want to be because i feel like i don't really know who i am, you know. i have trust issues with people. i get nervous people are going to leave me, so i'm hoping when i get to alabama, i can always have an open heart. >> i moved out at 16 as soon as my dad died. >> it is exhausting having to hold everything in. >> we put a lot of pressure on ourselves. >> oh, boy, this is a hot topic as a mom and someone who was in a sorority, i have a lot of mixed feelings about this whole thing and when you watch this process, there are good things about these systems and there are bad things about them, but i think growing up now in a world of social media, you talk about fomo on steroids, the amount of depression and anxiety that exists in young women today, then put them in a system if they don't get into the sorority, they're going to transfer or leave
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the school because they'll be miserable if they don't get in and are not part of it. >> probably some misplaced priorities in large people, young people want to go to a certain university because of the fraternity or sorority system. i don't think that's the best way to choose a school of choice. i will say this. one it is obvious that there are a lot of young women desperately searching for belonging. part of the problem is they have grown up online, on social media, and they have not taken time to interact sometimes in healthy ways, so they are yearning for that, see it on social media, glorified it in their minds for so long, it is sad that they need to be in a sorority to belong in society. part of it might be a good thing because if they get in the sorority, maybe they interact with actual human beings, may help them get away from screens, we just don't know. i live in the south. this is a big deal in the south, a very big deal for young women in the south.
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>> but chris, what are your thoughts on this? sometimes people don't get in. >> sometimes people don't get in. >> what happens in those cases, some of them leave. from these schools, they're going to transfer out. >> if that's the number one priority, they ought to be focused on getting education. this is an important part of growing up, not for everybody. i joined a fraternity through the rugby team. through that i met people from other majors, people i never would have associated with, some people friends for life, a number of whom at my wedding a few weeks ago. this is one of the last bastions of normalcy on college campuses, the activism, insanity, we're going to split you by race, gender, by this and that that's going on, for hbo, a company that a few years ago put out a tr transhood to go after creek life is insane. tiktok is a serious issue on people's mental health. social media, i would
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never want my stepson to have access to social media until he is 18 essentially because it warps the mind. it is a dangerous thing that we ought to be taking seriously as society, when the industrial revolution happened, we fed kids into it. we have to do the same with technology today. >> you could turn out okay if you don't go to a sorority. oldest of five girls, none of us were in a sorority. we are successful. i have a sister that's a life saving medical professional. they've all raised children. i have a sister who's an entrepreneur, has gone on to do many wonderful financial things for her family. another sister that's a soccer mom/broker. she put one of her kids onto a team that won a national championship. there are women out there successful that are not part of these sororities and there are groups that will accept you, you can be part of something that's great even if it is not a club that looks cool
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on tiktok. that's my message to mothers, sisters out there everywhere, you can be successful. >> there is no doubt that you are absolutely correct about that. i don't know what your thoughts are on this. i know at notre dame, one of the schools we had kids that went to, there's a dorm system. you're put in a dorm freshman year, you stay there all the way through. that becomes your home. they wear t-shirts for their dorms and compete against each other in volleyball or whatever. that's their home. when they graduate, they say what dorm were you in. you don't have to rush. you don't have to pay someone. they're paying $8,000 to advise them how to get into the sororities. >> right. even before social media for generations and decades the rush at these very large southern public universities has been brutal and cut throat and
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i actually get a little nauseated thinking about it. i was in a sorority but it was local at the time and the campus did not have fraternity houses and sorority houses, so it was very, very different. there were a lot of very spectacular women who i was in a sorority with, but for me college was just the most miserable experience ever. before social media. >> tiktok, you're happy, crying, your friends are hugging you. >> the era of bulimia and panic attacks. and i could not wait to start my life and that's not life. >> thank you. >> that is not life. neither is social media. >> we had a great discussion about this in my morning meeting with a bunch of these young ladies. we'll talk about it more
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landing when the door flew open and wind came roaring through the cabin. at least 12 people were reportedly hurt. no word on their condition. the plane landed safely and airport police reportedly detained the suspect, a man who could face up to 10 years in prison. everybody has the same question, chris. how the heck do you open the door not supposed to open mid air. >> and not fly out. find this guy, sign him up for an arm wrestling contest. he must be the incredible hulk to open it with pressure and stay in the airplane. it is wild. it is a nightmare scenario. you look at the levers, maybe i am weird, i look at that, wondered if someone could open it. >> i wondered that, too. this is a great advertisement to remember to keep the seat belt on. all three of those people would have been sucked out if they didn't have the seat belt on, no way. >> amy, based on some of
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the reporting, they saw the man who clearly had problems opening the door and they tried to stop him. the plane was only at an altitude of about 700 feet, but the wind speed would be about, speed of the plane about 170 miles per hour. the door is not supposed to open. >> it is not supposed to open, it is pressurized. i have many of the same questions all of you did. you mentioned some of the other passengers tried to stop him or reach out to make sure -- i wouldn't be able to do that. i would be back there going for myself because they always ask do you want to sit in the emergency exit row, i don't want to do that. i want to be watching, spectating video from the back seat. i don't want to be involved in that. >> the person taking the cell phone video, i think we have become as a society, you want to get that viral moment, putting your life on the line holding up a phone?
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i would be grabbing to the seat in front of me for dear life. i don't care if i get a viral moment or get on "outnumbered" or fox news, i am clinging to the seat for dear life. this person wanted to get a video, they got it. again, i would be curious if the person did it on purpose to cause mayhem or like the rest of us, he thought i wonder what happens if i pull on this lever. i wonder if i will be sucked out. i wonder if it was malicious or somebody curious. >> they were trying to stop him. other people were trying to stop him from doing it. feels like something he did intentionally. yes. the video. thank you for the video, otherwise we wouldn't have a segment. >> i was on a flight where a stewardess was attacked. i was the first one there and two guys behind me to stop it. he was showing signs of mental illness through the flight, getting worse and then attacked her.
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>> ron desantis makes his first big speech since announcing for president. can he close thebout joe biden? only a third say he is a strong leader. karl rove is here with his down america with cyber attacks? keith kellogg with his assessment. and republican candidate vivek ramaswamy says it was a mistake. was it? we have the receipts. could you lose a high school debate not because arguments weren't strong enough but because you make them at all. how woke invaded the debate stage. russia sending attacks to belarus. dan hoffman is here. i am john roberts. join jillian turner at me for "america reports."
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♪ >> it is time for "in case you missed it." first lady jill biden was left searching fo for applause during a speech after her inspiring line fell flat with listeners in the crowd. >> as i traveled around the country i visited red states and blue states and i found that the common values that unite us are deeper than our divisions. and i thought you might clap for that. >> how jeb bush of her. >> it is cringe worthy. you have joe, her husband. every time he makes a speech, we're waiting to see what he is going to stay, not say, stumble on. and you have jill, i am happy she didn't try to
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pronounce or say anything about certain people being breakfast tacos. that's a win in the scheme of jill biden, but it is cringe worthy and brings back that nobody is excited about the bidens. even if you were voting for joe, i don't think anyone can say i am fired up for joe and jill. there's just nobody. i would like to see the person who is. >> she's preaching unity. >> she one is applauding. she said maybe we have a lot that unites us. it is a corny political line, i thought it was funny when she said guys, you can clap for being united in this country. >> i mean, i think that people just haven't felt what she was talking about. and kind of it is like a hollow weird moment because he ran on unifying the country and bringing everyone together. she stands up, turns out we all have so much in common, it falls flat because it doesn't feel like that's what's driving
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them. i think there's a reason it fell flat. >> there wasn't a genuine feeling behind it. >> phony and fake. a new study from university of notre dame reveals that people tend to pay in cash when making purchases that are hard to justify. that way there isn't any lingering evidence or credit card bill to remind shoppers of purchases that they would rather forget. i'm thinking of dirty things, i'm not going down that road, martha. >> what else is new. >> i use cash because i'm afraid to go to the atm. >> that's a real fear. who wants to walk into one of those places where the door closes behind you, a little terrifying to get cash. this is interesting though. i think we're kind of tired of having everything be tracked. you say pick up the phone, let's chat instead of putting everything into a text message these days
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because it is a little bit of privacy to be able to use cash to buy 12 donuts at dunkin' donuts, no one knows you ever did it. >> and eat them in one sitting. >> is that the guilty purchase? >> exactly. i don't do cash for another dirty reason, the germs. but the kids from checking accounts get cash. and hey, what are you getting 20 bucks for, they're buying soda and candy and things to go under the radar. >> miami heat one day away from reaching the nba finals, and star player jimmy butler is speaking out about his love for country music. butler says he started to play country music in the college team locker room as a joke, and the music ended up growing on him. >> before the game everybody was listening to like the beach bay dre', they weren't wireless, thick cord, were obnoxiously loud.
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i was like why don't y'all turn that down, what's the point of having on headphones if you don't have them on your head. they was like no, don't worry about it. worry what's coming out of your headphones. said okay. we won the game. after the game i go home and i google what's the most country song there is. and it was like three popped up. the one i saw first was tim mcgraw, don't take the girl. i download it. i go into the next game, have my headphones like that, that's what i am blaring. they're like you can't listen to that, turn it down. i said no. you listen to what's in your headphones, i listen to what's in mine. then i started listening to the lyrics in the song and i was like wow. >> you liked it. >> and it just took off. now i'm a huge fan. >> huge. you turned me onto half the bands i still listen to. country music is the most
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m american music. comes from the scotch, cajuns, the africans, from all sections of society, comes together, generally a fun party. you go to any country con concert, you have a good time. i love that he did that. the subway, somebody is blaring music, i thought what if i played the bag pipes loudly. would they like that? never had the guts to do it. good for him. >> country music is three choreds and the truth. >> i am happy there's appreciation for country music. it is hotter than ever. it is wholesome music. you listen to country music, by and large wholesome words, don't have to [bleep] every other word. i like that it is catching on. it is nothing like a rap song, as someone who listens to country and rap, i can tell you you don't get the same experience. i love those loving on country music.
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>> wylan, willie, merle. more "outnumbered" next. and here's tim mcgraw's "don't take the girl." ♪ please don't take the girl ♪ ♪ same old boy ♪ turns out they didn't trust the printing of paper money, but they did trust gold and silver. article 1, section 10. gold and silver. good for the founders, good for me, good for you. rosland capital - is a trusted leader in helping people acquire precious metals. gold bullion, lady liberty gold and silver proofs, and premium coins, can help you preserve your wealth. call rosland capital to receive your free rosland guide to gold,
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as so many other young men did. he later flew fighter planes in the war. we congratulate him and thank him for his service. he's truly an american hero. also this week we're going to be rolling out the final journey, a project i've been working on for quite a while with fox nation, which takes you through world war ii, the european theatre, in the stories told by these men in their own words and their own experiences. wheel at a clip of that in a second. your thoughts on this graduate. >> it's an incredible story, reminds me of an en age of sacrifice. it seems foreign to us now. the it's wonderful. this weekend will be fun, a lot of people are traveling, but we have to keep in mind those people who never came back, never came back, and we have topy tr pay tri tribute to their
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sacrifice. >> we want to pay tribute to those who give us what we enjoyed. >> my uncle lied about his age. >> a lot of men did. they went in at age 16. here's just a sneak preview. >> we all-around general eisenhower, and he was making a speech to all of us, telling us how important it was for us to be successful as we jumped into normandy. he also told us that many of you here today will not come back. i'll remember that real well. >> i mean, to talk to someone, who was with eisenhower, as he gave the landing on the beaches in normandy speech.
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earl mills is a national treasure. these men are on their final journey, and we owe them the time to sit down and listen to them and hear the incredible stories. >> it's awesome. i'm so glad you're doing this, fox nation provides a home to do this. it's so great you're bringing this back for everybody. such an important message. >> it's an honor for me. download it over the weekend and watch it when you can. thanks for being here today. now here's "america reports." >> when it came time to make decisions during covid we had to make decisions about do you follow the crowd, do you abdicate your office to dr. fauci or do what's right? >> he doesn't have personality. politics is a hard business. >> there's no shortcuts to the white house. it's about getting people's trust. >> the road through socialism runs through the democratic
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