tv Jesse Watters Primetime FOX News June 2, 2023 4:00pm-5:00pm PDT
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discussed america's energy policies with -- please remember if you cannot catch us live, set your dvr, 6:00 p.m. eastern, 3:00 p.m. in the west coast. i will governor kim reynolds, the west virginia senator joe manchin and tom cotton. thanks for inviting us into your home. that's it for "special report." fair vote dolomite, balance, and unafraid. -- fair, balanced, and unafraid. we will join jesse watters in just a bit. >> see you soon. >> moments from now, vice president -- the white house says that biden is going to be signing the bill sometime this weekend as soon as tomorrow. let's go to white house correspondent jackie hammer, who has all of the details. >> the president is going to be addressing the country before this bill reaches his desk. that's not expected until
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tomorrow, but he's going to tout this agreement tonight as crisis averted, preventing an economic collapse in an agreement where nobody got everything they wanted, but the american people got what they needed. he's going to highlight some democratic interests that were protected, including climate investments, infrastructure investments, and also, some things republicans never wanted to cut, including veterans benefits and cuts to social security and medicare. tonight, ratings have kept the u.s. on negative watch, despite the deal passing, citing deterioration of governance. the treasury though is saying that they are downplaying any risk. the agreement shows that the treasury market is the safest in the world. you will recall that in 2011, the u.s. was downgraded from its triple-a rating because we got was also close to the deadline without a deal. that could still happen, jesse. >> thanks, jackie. do you understand -- well, we actually have the president in
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the oval office now speaking, let's listen. >> president biden: democrats and republicans are no longer -- and you shouldn't way of thinking. the only way american democracy can function as their compromise and consensus. that is what i work to do as you president. bipartisan agreement where it is possible, and where it is needed. i have signed more than 350 bipartisan -- thus far, 2.5 years. including a historic law, rebuilding america so we can rank number one in the world in infrastructure instead of where we are now, number 13 in the world. another historic law, rebuilding the manufacturing base so that we lead the world again in making semiconductor chips so money more, so much more sophisticated. a bipartisan agreement. this is vital.
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it's essential to the progress we've made over the last few years. it's keeping full faith and credit of the united states of america, passing a budget that continues to grow our economy and reflects our values as a nation. that's why i'm speaking to you tonight, to report on a crisis averted and what we're doing to to protect america's future. passing this budget agreement was critical. mistakes couldn't -- those stakes could not have been higher. if we fail to reach an agreement on the budget, there were extreme voices threatening to take america, for the first time in our 247 years history, into default on our national debt, and nothing would have been more irresponsible, more catas catastrophic. our economy would have been thrown into recession, retirement accounts for millions of americans -- would have been decimated. 8 million americans would've lost their jobs. default would have destroyed our nation's credit rating, which
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would have made everything from mortgages to car loans to funding from the government much more expensive. taking years to climb out of that hole. america is standing is the most trusted, reliable financial partner in the world. we would have been shattered. it was critical to reach that -- it was good for the american people. no one got everything they wanted, but the american people got what they needed. we averted an economic crisis, economic collapse. we are cutting spending and bringing the deficit down at the same time. we are protecting important priorities from social security to medicare to medicaid to veterans who are transformational investments in infrastructure and clean energy. i want to commend spea speaker mccarthy. he and i and our teams were able to get along and get things done, straightforward, completely honest with one another and respectful with one another.
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both sides operated in good faith, both signs kept their word. i also want to commend other congressional leaders, the house minority leader jeffries, senate majority leader schumer, senate my minority leader macconnell. they acted responsibly, putting the good of the country ahead of politics. the final vote in both chambers was overwhelming. far more bipartisan than anyone thought was possible. i want to thank the members of congress who voted to pass this, which i will sign tomorrow to become law. here's what the deal does. first, it cuts spending, and over the next ten years, the deficit will be cut by more than $1 trillion. that will be on top of the record $1.7 trillion, $1.7 trillion that i already cut the deficit of my first two years in office. it's clear that we are on a much more fiscally responsible corset than the one i inherited when i
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took off his four years ago. the deficit had increased every year in the previous four years when i came into office, and nearly $8 trillion were added to the national debt in the last administration. we are turning things around, and that's good for america. my dad used to have an expression. "joey, don't tell me what you value. show me your budget, i'll tell you what you value." that's at the heart of this debate, what do we value? protecting seniors. you may remember during my state of the union address, there was an exchange between me and a few republicans spontaneously occurring on the floor of the house of representatives. i was pointing out that for years and some of them were putting forward proposals to cut social security and medicare. some of them took exception and said very loudly that that was not true, so i asked them on the floor i asked them a simple question: will you agree not to cut social security and med
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medicare? would they agreed to protect these essential programs, lifeline for millions of americans customer programs that americans have been paying to every paycheck they've earned since they started working. providing so much peace of mind. the bright lights and cameras on, those few republicans who were protesting agreed. they said they would not cut it. that's how it protected social security and medicare from the beginning, from it being cut period. health care was another priority, a top priority. i made it clear from the outset that i would not agree to any cuts in medicaid. another essential lifeline for millions of americans including children in poverty, the elderly in nursing homes, and americans living with disabilities. the original house republican proposal would've cut health care for up to 21 million americans on medicaid. i said no. medicare is protected, and so are millions of people most in
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need. i've long believed that the only one truly sacred obligation that the government has is to prepare those that we send in harms -- way, and their families for when they come home and when they don't come home. that's why my last budget provided va hospitals with additional funding for more doctors, nurses, and equipment to accommodate the needs of veterans and more appointments. house republicans plan would have meant 30 fewer million health care va visits for veterans. we did not let that happen. in addition, this bill fully fund the pluralistic bipartisan pack act, the most significant law in decades for the veterans exposed to toxic burn pits and their families. it expands access to those veterans and their families to health care and disability benefits. we are investing in america and
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our people and our future. we create over 13 million new jobs, 800,000 manufactured jobs. where is it written that america can't -- in manufacturing? unemployment is at 3.7%. more americans are working today than ever in the history of this country. inflation has dropped ten straight months in a row. in this debate, i refuse -- what was response will for all this economic progress on the chopping block. this bipartisan agreement protects the law. it will help us build the best infrastructure in the world. it fully protects the chips and science act, which is going to bring key parts of our supply chain to america so we don't have to rely on others, like semiconductors, those tiny computer chips smaller than the tip of your finger, and effectively everything we rely on from cell phones to automobiles to the most sophisticated weapon systems and so much more.
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we protected another law that i passed and signed last year. we finally beat big pharma, which i have been trying to do for over 30 years. finally gives medicare the power to negotiate lower drug prices, just like the va has been able to do for veterans. this law has already dramatically cut the cost and then some for seniors from as much as $400 a month to just $35 a month for insulin. negotiating lower drug prices not only saves seniors a lot of money, it saves the country a lot of money. $160 billion is not having to be paid out because drug prices are more ration. we pay the highest drug prices of any industrial nation in the world. it's just the beginning. we also protected the most significant breakthrough ever in dealing with the existential threat of climate change. today, new wind and solar power is cheaper than fossil fuel.
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since i have been in office, clean energy and advanced manufacturing have brought him $470 billion in private investments. it's going to create thousands of jobs, good paying jobs all across this country, and help the environment at the same t time. remember at the beginning of this debate, some of my republican colleagues were determined to cut the clean energy investments. i said no. i kept the mall. there was so much more to do. we are going to do even more to reduce the deficit. we need to control spending if we are going to do that, but we also have to raise revenue and go after tax chiefs, and make sure everybody is paying their fair share. i promise no one making less than $400,000 year will pay a penny more in taxes. like most of you at home, i know that the federal tax system is not fair. that's why i kept my commitment again that no one earned less
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than $400,000 will pay a penny more in federal taxes. that's why last year, i secured more funding, more irs funding to go after wealthy tax cheats. nonpartisan congressional office -- nonpartisan says that this bill will bring in $150 billion, and other outside experts expect that it would save as much as $400 billion because it's forcing people to pay their fair share. republicans may not like it, but i'm going to make sure that the wealthy pay their fair share. i'm also proposing closing over a dozen special-interest tax loopholes -- crypto traders, hedge fund billionaires, saving taxpayers billions of dollars. every one of these loopholes. i'm going to be coming back. with your help i'm going to win.
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catch this. right now, the average billionaire in america pays 8% federal taxes. teachers and firefighters pay more than that. republicans are against it, but i am going to keep fighting for it. no person should pay -- less than a teacher or firefighter. i know that unity is hard. we can never stop trying. moments like this one, the ones that we just faced, the american economy art risk of collapsing. there is no other way no matter how tough our politics gets. forcing americans to stop shouting, lowering the temperature.
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securing prosperity, keep the promise of america for everybody. i have said my inaugural address. without unity, there is no peace, bitterness -- we can never become that country, bitterness and fury. i can honestly say to you tonight that i have never been more optimistic about america's future. we just need to remember who we are! we are the united states of america! there is nothing we can't do when we do it together. thank you all for listening and taking the time to listen to me. may god bless you all and may god protect our troops. thank you. >> jesse: that was president biden speaking from the oval office about the debt deal. let's bring in fox news chief political anchor bret baier. if the american people have not been following this that closely, if they haven't, these
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numbers, billion, million, trillium, it is dizzying. please explain to us in a very simple way why the president spoke to the country tonight on this issue. speetwo jesse, good evening. he wants to take the political advantage of a bipartisan deal. it is, to be fair, pretty rich for this president, who did not talk to house republicans for 97 days, to say that he was the impetus for this debt ceiling deal to be finished. the reason i got done is because house republicans have the vo votes. they passed a bill and that started a negotiation. he was forced into negotiating. this bill suspends, puts a cap on the debt ceiling for two years, so they basically don't have to do this next year, it goes into 2024. the spending cuts -- in washington, that's not what is happening. it's a limit on the growth. it goes down how much a gross.
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while they are saying they are cutting back, they're just cutting back to growth. it basically is going back to last year's spending plan. a number of things republicans cannot. they got some work requirements added for some different programs, some limited permitsing for energy projects, one in west virginia. overall what this does is put the fight off for another two years. republicans want actual cuts. this was the negotiated deal, the president wants to settle the politics of it, but in reality, it will be there if republicans hadn't passed the bill in the first place. >> jesse: thank you, brett. we will see you next week. let's turn to victor davis hansen, the hoover institute senior fellow. you heard bret baier say it. there is no actual cuts here.
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is that your interpretation as well? >> unfortunately it is. he had the largest deficit in history, that trillion and a half. if you cut that a bit, you've got one of the largest if not the second largest deficit. the real indicator is what two e owe according to gdp? where 130% with a $300 billion debt. that's higher than any year since world war ii, at a high borrowing around the war. we are paying 10% of the budget just an interest on the debt. it's not sustainable. of but he knows that. the speech itself was very disingenuous. he spends much of his presidency with that "phantom of the opera" background, demonizing half the country as a semiand ultra mega. now he says that unity is the most important thing. then he says he's going after the tax cheats, and the people who were not transparent about their tax returns at the very moment -- we've had
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whistle-blowers suggesting the biden family consortium in general, hunter biden particular have not been paying their taxes, not just the outreach fireman's taxes. we're talking about milli millionaires. i would like to believe he wants to have unity, but i think it's basically to get this bill through and then advertise that joe biden is a unifier, a tax cutter, a budget cutter, or whatever, but the facts belie that, unfortunately. what can't and won't go on and we will not continue thing about the republicans is they saw that if they did a little bit with 4-5:30,.33 of the government, they only have half of one-third of the government, then i think they can see what would've happened if they had had a big margin in the house, and won the senate and the presidency. unfortunately in the past during the bush administration and
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trump administration even, they didn't balance the budget or get close to it when it had that kind of power. maybe next time, they will. >> jesse: they didn't even try. both parties spend like crazy and then blame each other for the debts. what a mess. we will just keep printing and spending until it's all gone. thank you very much and have a great weekend. >> you too. >> jesse: ron desantis is still a distant second in the republican primary. trump is not letting them forget it. >> i could go after the one who is the second, and i think the one who is the second is going down so much and rapidly that i don't think he's going to be second that much longer. i think is going to be third or fourth. >> jesse: he's in south carolina today trying to avoid talking about from, but if he doesn't respond he will look weak, so he's taking several jabs. >> leadership is not entertainment. leadership is not virtue signaling. leadership is not brand
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building. leadership is about producing results for the people he represents. >> jesse: later, desantis laid out a plan every republican can learn from: if you want to win, you've got to be to democrats at their own game. >> each state has different rules. a state like nevada -- i will tell you this, we are pallet harvesting. we are going to -- we are going to do whatever we need to do to a race that the democrats are doing. i'm not fighting with one hand tied behind my back. i'm not telling people not to vote in these states. we need to exploit whatever we can. >> jesse: i love hearing this. democrats took a head start on ballot harvesting. need to catch up or we will never win a national election ever again. we need to cut the consultants outcome of the guys who get rich when the candidates buy tv ads, and instead, put money into the ground game. the democrats have stopped persuading. all they care about is ballot
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manufacturing. republicans have to do both and they will. republicans get into office, they need to make it easier to vote and harder to cheat. republicans need to win by so much that democrats can't play games, because joe biden needs all the help he can get. yesterday, we showed you that joe took another bad fall. it was his third in two years. asked about it today. >> there was no need for the doctor to see him as it was related to the fall. he's doing fine. >> jesse: no doctor? hit him on the knee with one of those little hammers? today, biden banged his school. he has a thick head. don't worry. these following videos are going to get a lot of play in general, a lot. the voters want to know that there are guys in the game. saying -- joe biden has no
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excuses. "fox & friends" we can. >> it's really hard for republicans, what they're like for different reasons, some of the same reasons. here they are punching each other in the head. it's not pretty, not fun to watch, but believe me, it's the best preparation for whoever ends up being the general candidates. they both need to have -- the deep states, the intelligence community, the big tech. all of the things that you have to face, metal sharpens metal. they will go to the voters and having that -- whoever can do with the best and come out ahead and come out standing is going leave the better candidate to
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take them on. i'm glad to hear ron desantis, and another trump has talked about it about stop being pristine about the way the democrat's ballot harvest. we will ballot harvest, find our own zuckerberg fund. we will put drop boxes at churches, outside of walmart. i was one of those purists who was like election day, paper ballots. voter i.d. now i'm like i'm going to play -- elected democrat if that's what it takes to win. >> it doesn't even have to be dirty. you just have to play within the rules that they set up, whatever happens happens. joe biden hit his head 24 hours after he fell on his head and then he just came out and did a decent job, including this teleprompter at the oval office. how big of a factor of these falls going to be as the campaign continues? >> it's a huge factor. it's a metaphor not just for the
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economy, this fragile economy that he has delivered us, but how we look on the global stage. we have some serious enemies, and china looks like this, they are laughing. putin is laughing. it looks terrible. i think the democrats are in trouble. listen, if he fails, that is, a la, -- kamala harris -- that is great for kamala. it's also great for republicans. if you can't make it to the end, kamala steps in. >> jesse: and we don't want him to fall. speetwo note, but i'm just saying -- >> jesse: you are right. what do you think joe biden thinks? joe biden, first her husband -- to run for reelection. he was on the fence, she pushed him. how did he think she feels?
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spewing the democrats spouses -- as well as self betterment. it is shameful, it is cruel. it is not just what they are putting joe biden through. just saw this going "he's fine, doctor, okay." no one wants to see the country go through this. our enemies are watching. >> we like to see our enemies falling. thank you so much. have a great weekend. >> you too. spewing up next, portland has a plan to fight drug abuse. just make everything legal. we find out how that was working out, next. moving forward with node- positive breast cancer is overwhelming. but i never just found my way; i made it.
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♪ ♪ >> jesse: let's take you on a walk through portland, the city where you can do whatever drug your heart desires and in the street. in oregon, drugs have been decriminalized since 2020. democrats in oregon thought they could fix the drug crisis by just handing out more drugs. what could go wrong? portland got wackier, and the city has gone off the rails. >> what are you shooting there? you are doing fentanyl right n now? do you do other drugs besides speed? what are we talking here, fentanyl? >> mda, speed, and -- >> that's a lot of drugs. >> so you -- narcan? said it didn't work. >> i have that injectable.
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i did dive. >> those are the lucky ones. overdose deaths in portland are up almost 50% since this time last year. instead of cleaning up their mess, the city just takes the cash and hangs out, hangs itself out to dry right there on the street. >> 17,000 ghost houses! >> telling us no one is out here really. >> people steal from you? >> oh, yeah. >> they are the wurst! 72 hours to get out. and then after that 72 hours, they take everything they own and they have to start over again! >> jesse: in portland, the democrats there, the slogans "you've got problems? we will make it worse. drug addicts, here's more drugs. almost, here's a tent and more drugs." crime, defund the police and hand out more drugs. portland is in so deep that they
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don't know -- i don't think they are going to survive the detox. if you try to walk in there and you just get chased out of the city. ♪ ♪ >> you guys -- >> we walk away. they feel how many times have you been assaulted? >> i've been stabbed twice, punched multiple times, needles shoved in my back, been tested for hiv. a guy tried to cut my head off with a machete last year, chased me full speed. the only reason i live is because i dove last second. after he was arrested he said "i was trying to kill you because i wanted to be murdered by the police." >> jesse: the journalist, his name was kevin dahlgren, and he joins us now. that guy almost killed you. >> he did. i was with tyler oliveira, who has this amazing youtube
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channel, wanting portland to learn. he embedded with me, and within the first few minutes, i guy pulls out a knife and chases us with it. that is portland. it's become this complete chaos madness wallace city. -- madness lawless city. it's no longer safe. >> you had a couple people say "i almost died, i did die." what's going on? >> that's common to hear. almost every person we spoke to said bare minimum they have overdosed. people are dying left and right. to me they are overdosing and dying, or simply being murdered. the lawlessness have completely taken over. it's unacceptable. it's a dangerous place to be. extensive outreach and borgen. people are very comfortably pulling out knives, a gunshot
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within 23 feet of us. it's crazy out there. the city and the county have been very good about talking about a plan, 20 plus years. there is no real strategy right now. there is sanctioned camping. >> jesse: that's just allowing it to fester! >> yeah, and it really comes down to policy change. we need to bam camping -- we need to ban camping, sidewalks and overalls, they need to reclaim the city. it's a bit that's been going on for years. it is like the blind leading the blind. >> jesse: are the police in full force? >> they are not. it's rare to see an officer in downtown portland. i don't blame them. they've been asked to stay back.
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since everything is decriminalized, what can they do? you basically have a free pass at whatever you want in oregon, so there's a massive inflow issue with a lot of criminals in the united states who come to portland to do whatever they want to. >> jesse: it's unbelievable. you are brave and we wish you safety in all of your thank you so much. >> i appreciate that. >> jesse: coming up, if you are a woman, and a transgender guy beats you in a track meet, what do you do? that woman is here, next. i have moderate to severe plaque psoriasis. thanks to skyrizi, i'm on my way with clearer skin. 3 out of 4 people achieved 90% clearer skin at 4 months. and skyrizi is just 4 doses a year after 2 starter doses. serious allergic reactions and an increased risk of infections or a lower ability to fight them may occur. tell your doctor if you have an infection or symptoms, had a vaccine, or plan to. nothing on my skin means everything!
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>> jesse: high school sports are the best. that's when i peeked athletically. i peeked athletically in eighth grade but let's not split hairs. i was on the few teams and to this day i still brag about how great i was. nowadays kids are losing out because they missed practice, but because the rules are stacked against them. chelsea mitchell was called the fastest high school girl in connecticut until the state allowed biological men to compete against her. >> in 2019 i was -- fastest biological female in connecticut. when i had to compete against a transgender athlete i feel defeated before i run the race. i was this elite athlete. i was up there with the fastest people in the state, and instead of myself taking home that title it went to transgender athletes. it feels as if nothing i can do would be enough to win. >> jesse: that 20-year-old is
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fighting back. her and three other athletes are suing the state of connecticut to have all of their wins restored so chelsea can rightly call herself the fastest girl in the state again. they are standing up for women's sports. joining me now, track star chelsea mitchell and her loyal alliance defending freedom senior counsel. you were white lightning, and all of a sudden, what happened? a transgender guy -- >> to continuously go through that and know that i was defeated before he ran the race, it is completely. it just made all that hard work worth nothing. >> jesse: when did these men --
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>> in connecticut the policy is based on gender identity, so athletes can say they were a girl allowed to compete on a girls team without anything else. >> jesse: so you were in second place, second place, second place. did you ever confront these guys beating you after the race to say you know it's not fair? >> in connecticut, there was a lot of -- our lawsuit was kind of the first one to speak up against this. the high school administrators, coaches, everyone -- to stay
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silent. that's why took so long to file a lawsuit in the first place is because the media and everyone was very hush-hush and trying to scare us into not talking about this issue. >> jesse: what is the game plan legally? >> we are challenging connecticut's policies violating title ix. this law has been on the books for 50 years and has provided countless opportunities to young women across the country to let the talent shine in the playing field, but because of connecticut's policy, chelsea and the other athletes are losing championships, losing metals, having records that should be there is taken by -- we want the record and the hard work of chelsea and other athletes recognized. >> jesse: are you confident you will win the legal battle customer you know these judges especially in connecticut. speak of the laws on our side. justice ruth bader ginsburg has recognize their differences between men and women, and it's
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mattered in places like the athletic field. we hope the court will recognize this and hold the records, uphold the records and championships that these young women rightfully won. >> jesse: you look fast on the team. i'm scared of you. i would never get in a foot race with you. great job. you have great were -- work ethic and deserved to be number one in all the years you competed. thanks for taking us to the court. have a great weekend. keep us posted. up next, we are going to be playing your voice mails, the ones we are allowed to play. this guy is going to wrestle an alligator live. one prilosec otc each morning blocks heartburn all day and all night. prilosec otc reduces excess acid for 24 hours, blocking heartburn before it starts.
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realtor.com (in a whisper) can we even afford this house? maybe jacob can finally get a job. the house whisperer! this house says use realtor.com to see homes in your budget. you're staying in school, jacob! realtor.com. to each their home. somebody would ask her something and she would just walk right past them, (laughs). she didn't know they were talking to her. i just could not hear. i was hesitant to get the hearing aids because of my short hair. but nobody even sees them.
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country are fleeing cities like new york and l.a. heading to florida. crime, homelessness, taxes. watch out, because florida has its own dangers, worse than taxes: gators. >> all my god -- >> oh my god. that's the biggest alligator i've ever seen in my life. [bleep] [bleep] >> jesse: what do you do in these reptiles get out of hand? my next guest, mike drug edge, is an mma fighter and he also traps gators. he's pretty much a hero as victor's encounter with a gator outside of an elementary school.
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[bleep] >> jesse: all right. let's bring the men. mike, we had on a shark expert last year who said "if i'm ever i'm ever face-to-face with a shark, swim towards it." is that what i want to do with a gator? >> no, sir. how are you man? that's the opposite thing to do. you want to get away from an alligator at all costs. >> jesse: do you get on foot? do you swim away? do you run backwards? >> just get out of there. don't get close to him. if you find yourself spooked, get away as quick as you can.
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>> how do you deal with these guys customer do you stick something in their jaws, do you mount them? >> i get them tired and then -- i have this alligator here that was frequently hanging out at this resident's pool. it's a great example of why. they had grandchildren, we need to get it out of the area today. still has some energy here. >> okay. careful. are you going to lose an arm here? [laughter] >> no. she is good to go. this is a great example of why we remove alligators from the area, just keep the grandkids safe. i'm going to keep it easy on her. she is tired. thank you so much for having. >> of course. tape her up. that's what i always do. [laughter] >> for sure. >> jesse: do you think it's harder to wrestle a human in the octagon or a gator?
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>> oh, i think that -- [laughter] -- i would say it's easier to wrestle an alligator. i've tangled with some serious guys. i would say that's the tougher route to go. you've got to respect these animals. you just got to get the job done at the end of the day. >> jesse: pet her belly for me, tell her eye said hi. >> absolutely. tell greg gutfeld if he wants to come pet my stuffed animal here -- [laughter] >> jesse: he said this thing's not real, so i don't know about that. how long is that, 6', 7-foot? >> this is 7 feet long. >> jesse: so what's the plan if you see something like a 12 or a 13-foot? is it different if you see a 7-footer customer >> you just want to take different measures, maybe take it slower, get some
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more people involved, some of our designated agentses. i can handle this myself all day long. how much does that thing way? you picked it up like it was a carton of milk. >> 75 pounds or so. >> that is nothing. i put up weight like that every morning. mike, we love you. stay safe out there. tilde gator i said hi. i think i could see him, something nice coming from that thing later. >> for sure, jesse, thank you so much. thank you guys so much. veterans to jay esus to fight veteran suicide. >> jesse: have a great wee weekend. >> thank you so much, jesse. ♪ ♪ >> jesse: we have to say goodbye to somebody, one of our best riders, summer mullet. she's leaving "primetime" and moving back to ohio to be with
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her family. we are going to miss her. we are excited she's leaving but we are going to miss her. don't forget to call, and when you do, leave us a voice mail. keep it clean. let's get to it. we've got jim from iowa. >> jesse, you are a goofball. i get hiccups all the time. don't know where you get your crap from. >> jesse: that's interesting. we just found out something interesting about the hiccup having scooter driving producer. it has an electric lawn mower that he plugs in and it takes three batteries. sorry. from tacoma, washington. >> i heard that you want the voice mails left clean. i'm in my shower. have a good one. [laughter] >> jesse: that is sexy. we've got the judge from westchester.
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>> it's judge jeanine. only -- this weekend. they are still looking to run back to tennessee. i don't want them to be lost. if they are i will kill you! i'm going drop them off at your house tonight. >> jesse: you are dropping three dogs off at my house at 8:00 tonight? okay. let's see. sam. >> jesse, what is wrong with your hair tonight? did you blow your nose too hard? i think they are looks perfect for it randy from north dakota. >> hi, jesse, i wanted to let you know that whatever i'm doing , i stop it to watch her show every evening when you dissect and expose the news is beyond compare. to keep up the good work and
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tell johnny hello. >> whatever you're doing, randy you're going to drop. i mean whatever? the scop must be pretty good. we have one from houston. let's hear it. >> and looking for a rear bumpe for an e-marketing american sta and i was wondering on your website 109155 and 10964 to. i was wondering if you have anything available? was that the wrong number? mike from richmond, virginia. >> careful working out with those weights, you might start to look like chris cuomo. >> as long as my career doesn't go that way, that is fine very destiny from georgia.
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>> if you could please come to back because isaiah your photo on your screen and it covers like to actually hear from you. >> destiny, this is a one-way thing you call us, i don't call you back that is it for tonight. on waters, and this is my world. ♪ ticket welcome to fox news tonight. i am joey jones paid summer is here, the birds are migrating north, families are planning their vacation and politicians are taking to the campaign trai to vince the respective parties they have what it takes to be the leader. perhaps the most important candidate going into the season primaries is president joe bide himself at his party has decide to keep them off the debate stage for unspecific reasons, but he's done this for a better part of half a century in he
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