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tv   FOX and Friends Sunday  FOX News  June 11, 2023 6:00am-7:00am PDT

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>> we begin this hour with a fox news alert, this is a live look at a major incident on i-95 outside philadelphia. where a portion of the highway has collapsed. traffic now stopped in both directions after a tanker truck caught fire under the overpass which caused the major highway to buckle. rachel: local authorities say traffic will be rerouted for an extended period of time while they work to repair the road. >> it's unclear how the fire started or if anyone was injured. we'll continue to monitor this breaking story and bring you
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more. >> that could be a long-term repair right there. rachel: absolutely. >> now to this, former president trump making his first speech, a couple of them yesterday, since being hit with that federal indictment. rachel: and he did not hold back during his speech in georgia, calling the charges baseless. he even compared president biden's tactics to something stall inwould do. >> he also hit at the timing of the indictment. listen to this. >> every time i fly over a blue state, i get a subpoena. it's no coincidence they indicted me, the very same day that it was revealed that the fbi hid explosive evidence that joe biden took $5 million illegal bribe from ukraine. next hunter will probably be charged with some very minor offense so the fbi and doj can pretend they're fair, they want to pretend they're fair, we got hunter for jay walking. as far as the joke of an indictment, it's a horrible
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thing. it's a horrible thing for this country. i mean, the only good thing about it is, it's driven my poll numbers way up. can you believe it? >> well, let's dive into the jaw-dropping story of that $10 million biden ukraine bribery claim. while we talked all about the indictment, the timing is quite interesting. rachel: very curious. >> when you look at the indictment coming just a day after reports emerged of the 1023 that had b been submitted t money paid to buy dense in exchange for moves to ukraine. five to hunter we knew about. the allegation is five to joe through a series of shell payments to other members of his family as well. >> these are allegations that came from a highly credible source. it's been reviewed by james comer and the house committee on investigating hunter biden and joe biden's potential corruption. rachel: so he got the $5 million here, hunter biden, but
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he sat on the board if you recall of burisma, think about it. doesn't speak the language, knows nothing about energy, has a crack problem. highly unlikely that he would get this job except for the fact that his father had been given ukraine as part of his portfolio as the vice president under the obama administration. >> so burisma is the major energy company in ukraine and this confidential source through 1023 who has given credible information to the fbi before said burisma execs paid the bidens through so many different bank accounts. it's not like it was $5 million from burisma to chase bank and the name of the bidens, it was pass through to pass through to pass through to family members and that's why what james comer and others are doing in the house oversight committee is so difficult because you have to find the money and tie it together. rachel: it's not impossible to do. the fbi is very familiar with doing forensic audits, seems like they're just not as interested in this one. they have to want to do it. >> what's unique here, this is
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a source that's given information to the fbi in the past that has been useful and credible. it's a highly credible source that's giving them this information about joe and hunter biden. let's reveal the time line. in 2014, burisma, a ukraine energy company brings hunter biden on with no language skills, no experience in the oil and gas industry, no real qualifications to sit on the board other than his last name and gets paid $83,000 a month. >> it's a pretty suite sweet deal. you look -- sweet deal. you look at the time line. that's why the time line is important. that very same year -- joe biden was brought on to be the policy guy. in became an -- ukraine became an essential part of his portfolio, involved in policy in ukraine, consistent vently at the same time hunter biden is on the board of the energy company as the energy company wants more access to drilling rights in the u.s. and elsewhere. rachel: isn't that interesting
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too. there's irony in that. the green new deal energy that wants to shut down american energy but his son is invested in oil and gas production for another country. here's victor shokin, a prosecutor in ukraine, trying to figure out how does burisma keep getting all these sweet deals so he's looking into that and as he's doing that, hunter's on the board and suddenly joe biden as vice president is pressuring the president of the country to fire victor shokin. >> that's exactly right. so victor shokin who alleged to be corrupt -- you had a guest on earlier who said alleging someone in ukraine to be corrupt, the question is was he investigate the wrong set of corruption. shokin was fired. rachel: there's video of this, by the way. >> he was a problem for the sweet deals happening for burisma. he had to go.
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joe biden said if you want the billion dollars the united states will give you, you better fire shokin which strikes me as a very precise and specific desire of u.s. foreign policy in exchange for a billion dollars. was tax dollars his leverage in order to keep the money flowing for the bidens? we don't know. but he bragged about it openly at the council on foreign relations, i fired that guy. now we're connecting dots that maybe there's more to that. rachel: and basically said we're not going to give you foreign aid unless you fire him so leveraging american tax dollars against this desire that obviously benefits his son. >> and president trump later presses president say of ukrain. for that, this is the source of president trump's impeachment. rachel: alexander vindeman leaked the conversation between sthem.
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it ends up being true they should look into the corruption and pete, we have to wonder what does zelensky know about the corruption and how that might impact the money that may be tied to ukraine. >> how much does the fbi know and has been totally unwilling to dig into as they zero in to circle the story back around, zero in on the political opponent of joe biden, the top republican in 2024, a lot of focus, a lot of subpoenas, a lot of investigations, indictments there. we have yet to see any real interest in pursuing the bottom of what feels like a more direct and obvious standard. >> here's what president trump had to say about this indictment and this incident and the timing all suspiciously right in the same period. >> the ridiculous and baseless indictment of me by the biden administration's weaponized department of injustice will go down as among the most horrific abuses of power in the history of our country. many people have said that
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democrats have even said it. this vicious persecution is a travesty of justice. you're watching joe biden -- think of it, biden is trying to jail his leading political opponent, an opponent that's beating him bay lot in the polls, -- by a lot in the polls, like they do in stall inist russia or communist china. >> joe biden hosting the biggest pride event in white house history yesterday. >> the president focusing heavily on transgender rights in his remarks, slamming republicans who are working to keep gender and sexual orientation teaching out of the classroom. rachel: alexandria huff is live in washington. good morning. >> reporter: good morning. this is the month as a whole it's certainly expanded, pride is traditionally celebrating those who are same sex attracted. yesterday's celebration at the white house was held on the
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south lawn, originally scheduled for thursday but had to be moved because of the dangerous air quality that day. yesterday there were sunny skies as hundreds were invited to participate in what was called an all american picnic. the first lady started with a speech focusing on the last letters of lgbtq. president biden shared this. >> happy pride month. [cheers and applause] >> happy pride year. happy plied life. you're some some of t bravest, most inspiring people i've ever known and i've known a lot of good folks. we all move forward when we move together. with your joy, with your pride lighting the way. >> reporter: the president tweeted today the people's house, your house sends a clear message to the country and to the world, america is a nation of pride. and earlier in the week the
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white house announced new actions to protect lgbtqi plus individuals and kids from what they call attacks. will, rachel, pete. >> thank you,. rachel: thank you. it's interesting at this pride event he calls out anyone who owe poses the gender mutilation of children or the confusion that's caused with the curriculums that are so widespread across american public schools, that somehow you're bigoted and hate gay people because you think it's a step too far and doesn't have a place in our schools. you have to be careful how we allow them to frame these arguments. i think if anyone saw pictures of what it looks like when a young girl has her breasts chopped off or some of the things they're doing to the drugs as well that they're giving them and it's basically a chemical castration, these are not loving, good things that you do to children and we have to not let them frame that argument. >> and it's an unnecessary
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pushing of the envelope on a movement that largely succeeded. rachel: exactly. >> gay rights movement that succeeded and it's not the issue so now we're going to kids and to trans so pushing back on that doesn't make you anti-the other stuff, just means don't touch the kids. >> the radical transformation thing where kids are already confused and don't know all that much until they're prepared to make those decisions. >> you spoke to a father, a dad of six, abraham hamilton, and this is what he is saying about what he is teaching his school through the process of home schooling an faith. >> my wife and i made the decision to do research before we had our first child and in doing that research we discovered the current educational system is not a coincidence. it's actually operating as designed. people say the educational system is failing and in order for that assessment to be accurate we have to know what was its intended purpose. the fact we're seeing a decline
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in civics and history understanding is not a coincidence. it's been designed in that fashion. it's actually operating and being funded to accomplish the purpose that it's accomplishing. rachel: yeah. >> love how he said it. rachel: no one knows more about what the aim is of the curriculums, what's in it, what's not in it, basically a blackout of anything having to do with communism and the results of communism and death of destruction but then all of this other stuff that we're getting, it's all designed in a certain way to kind of create as you say a democrat camp, come me camcamp, creating activists. >> he said i'm going to do my research and said they want loyal subjects of the regime of whatever the latest thinking is and schools can produce and pump that out but if i as a father and my wife want to create good citizens who love god and understand our history, i'm going to do it myself.
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a lot more people are making that realization. it's not just the white house and state department, it's public schools across america where the ceremonies are happening and another form of religion has taken hold. rachel: absolutely. that's exactly right. a lot of people say what do we do, they feel us from trailinged, -- frustrated. i'd love to tell you fighting is great and we should fight but at some point you have to take y sr kids and take them out. >> turning now to your headlines, want to start with this. the una bomber has died in prison at 81 years old. the prison has not commented on the cause of death. several sources say he died by suicide. he was in prison with no chance of parole following a bombing campaign. he was arrested in 1996 after one of the longest and costliest
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manhunts in fbi history. police arrest a florida murder subject after nearly 40 years on the run. authorities say a breakthrough in technology led to the capture of donald santini in san diego for the 1984 murder of a woman. she was found with his fingerprints on her body. he awaits extradition to florida. the los angeles city council voting to become a sanctuary for illegal immigrants. the motion was approved in a vote of 12-0 despite 1 million illegal border crossers living in la. it instructs the city attorney to prepare a draft that prohibits city resources for being used for federal immigration enforcement. the motion also instructs the city's equity department to provide reports ensuring the city is on the right track to becoming a sanctuary city. more americans are getting tired of tipping according to a new
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survey, the results come as tipping expands beyond traditional restaurants. we asked if you're tired of constantly tipping everywhere. here's what you had to say. kathy said the expectation of tipping and now the new thing of asking to round up the bill is getting out of hand. and dianne says i hate tipping for fast food and to-go orders. i agree, dianne. if i get good service i tip 20%. if not, i tip accordingly down to $1. we talked about that earlier. i had horrific service yesterday, intentionally bad service. i thought it deserved zero. tracee said as someone who worked in the service industry my whole life i only tip for service and how well i tip depends on how well i was treated. see, she's in the industry and she understands. great service, 20%. service is poor, i put a penny in the water. rachel: wow, that is a mean girl. [laughter] >> that's intense. rachel: wow. [laughter] >> those are your headlines.
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>> if you feel like after a weekend of hosting, you just weren't up to par that weekend, you shouldn't cash your check that week. >> i don't intentionally -- >> do you hold yourself to the same standard? >> that's a bad analogy. i'm not mean to the producers, don't you dare get in my ear and say otherwise. i'm not rude to you. i don't intentionally offend the viewer because i'm having a bad day. what's that face you're making? >> rachel is making the same face. rachel: he's had a rough weekend. >> i have not had a rough weekend. rachel: he's sassier than usual. as the weekend has gone on, i'm kind of liking the sassiness. at first it was a little jarring and now i'm embracing it. >> i agree. rachel: we're going to go from -- what did you call him, something pants? >> he was cranky pants. rachel: now you're sassy pants and we're going to embrace that. >> he's over there like this, whatever, guys. >> ism ready to put the world on the right foot. that's all. >> i get it. i get it. racall right.we have a fox news.
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we're monitoring the partial collapse of i-95 near philadelphia after tanker truck caught fire. these are live pictures of the destruction. this is a major roadway on the east coast. we're monitoring this breaking news. we're going to bring you any updates as we get them. >> against all odds, four children found alive after 40 days in the amazon jungle following a deadly plane crash. a survival expert reacts and shares the skills you need to know, your kids need to know or grandkids if they're ever in a similar situation. lowe's knows you never come in for just one thing. so we've got to know a lot of things about a lot of things. like which mower makes the cut. the mulch that finishes the look. and picking a color that pops. you got this. we got you.
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>> fox news alert, this is a line look at a major incident on i-95 where a portion of the highway has collapsed. traffic stopped in both directions after a tanker truck caught fire which caused a major highway to buckle. it's unclear how the fire started or when the highway will reopen. we'll continue to monitor this breaking story and bring you more. rachel: all right. well, new details are surfacing about the four children would were miraculously found alive after being lost for 40 days in they colombian jungle after a plane crash. >> the siblings aging 13, 9,
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had and 11 months reportedly used survival skills they learned growing up as part of the indigenous community. the oldest using hair ties to secure a safe campsite. >> survival expert dave canterbury joins us with his insight on this incredible story. it's great to see you. before you give us survival tips, let's be honest about the conversation we've been having behind the scenes during the commercial break. these are kids being described as indigenous kids to t the are. huge leg up. we can teach our kids how to hunt all we want but that's not the same as knowing what to do in the amazon jungle. >> you're absolutely right. putting it in perspective is important. understanding they lived this lifestyle almost on a daily basis, gives them a big advantage over je over underonee u.s. for someone to survive a situation like that in the u.s.
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would be much different than these children surviving in the amazon, although it's still an amazing feat. but they definitely had more knowledge than the average person to survive that scenario. rachel: i think another advantage, they talked about how they lived in a tribal community, also the older sister was very accustomed to caring for the younger siblings. so you have this family that they're helping each other, they know how to care for each other, another advantage, right? >> yeah, i think that's a very typical situation in tribal communities where the older siblings take care of the younger siblings on a daily basis so they understand -- a 13-year-old may not understand how to take care of an faint in the -- an infant in the u.s. very well, over there it's commonality. >> we agree on this couch that our kids wouldn't be able to do what these kids did. most american kids, probably not. if you wanted to get your kids prepared for survival or yourself, where do you start? >> number one, it's important to
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understand the elements, things you should carry with you when you're out and about. you should definitely have ways to make shelter, ways to make fire, ways to collect and utilize water, ground water resources and disinfect those water resources. you should be able to signal for rescue if need be and understand rudimentary navigation if you have to walk from point a to point b. so those things are all important. but also and even more importantly when you look at the scenario in colombia, understand the resources off the landscape you can use to your advantage, can you eat, what do i stay away from, what can i aid myself to make fire and shelter, where can i locate ground water resources, all of those things are very important and a lot of times in the u.s. nowadays those things take training from an outside person because family members may not know them either at this point. >> really quickly, dave, do you have five cs of survivability. we have them on the screen right now. we have a little bit of time. but walk us through the five
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cs. >> cutting tools, obviously, cover element, combustion, containers and courage many they will help you directly affect how you're able to control body core temperature. they also allow you to collect and disinfect ground water resources and they're the most difficult things to recreate from landscape materials. if you're carrying these items you don't have to recreate them from the landscape to utilize them in survival. rachel: how important is it to make sure you take your kids into nature so it's not -- that's part of understanding it. >> yeah, i think it's very important because children have a tendency to be uncomfortable in situations that they're not used to. so if they're used to be outdoors, they're used to being outdoors at night, spending nights in the woods where sounds may freak them out because they're young and never heard them, if they get used to those things they'll be more comfortable, less likely to panic, more likely think about the things they need to do
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survive. rachel: maybe it's time to go on a camping trip. summertime. >> here's the guy i want with me. rachel: maybe just the kids. [laughter] >> thanks, dave. appreciate it. >> thank you, dave. >> you're very welcome. rachel: bye, dave. >> coming up, another fox news alert, taiwan scrambles jets as 10 chinese war aircraft cross the median line for the second time in days. we're just getting this in. we'll tell you what we know coming up next. and ron de santis getting his first gubernatorial endorsement for president. tammy bruce and sean duffy on the state of the white house race, that is next. and they're right here. ♪ even if i can't find heaven. ♪ i'll walk through hell with you. ♪ trying vapes to quit smoking might feel like progress,
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>> we're back with breaking news, starting with this fox news alert. this is a live look at a major incident on i-95 outside philadelphia where a portion of the highway has collapsed, traffic stopped in both directions after a tanker truck
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caught fire under an overpass which caused the major highway to buckle. it's unclear how the fire started or when the highway will reopen. >> and another fox news alert, taiwan scrambling jets this morning after a group of chinese aircraft crossed the median line of the taiwan strait. officials say they detected 24 chinese fighters and bombers in the air but only 10 crossed the median line. it's the second time china's crossed the line since thursday. 37 chinese planes entered taiwan's air defense zone. and another alert. american musician michael travis leak has been arrested in moscow accused of selling drugs. he has lived in russia for more than a decade. he is being held for two months in pretrial detention. if convicted he faces 206 years in prison. the -- 20 years in prison. the state department says they're aware and working on assistance. pete: thanks, will.
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oklahoma governor kevin stitt becoming the first u.s. governor to officially support ron de santis for the white house. >> i believe that ron de santis is the right guy. i know all the candidates. i believe he is the right guy to beat joe biden, to be in office for the next eight years. i am officially 100% endorsing ron de santis for president and we're going to win it in oklahoma. >> joining us now, fox business co-host of the bottom line, sean duffy along with fox news contributor tammy bruce. welcome to you both. >> good morning. >> tammy remarks do you make, this endorsement, does it make a difference and kind of your overall state of the race. >> look, at we've seen over the last several cycles that the campaign matters. you learn about people. people learn about themselves. you can have ideas and you can think you're going to run for president and if you're running for president you believe you can be president. but running for president especially after what the media and what the establishment did with trump is a very different
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experience. you can be very surprised. even john mccain was shocked, the great relationship with the media, the moment he became the nominee they shredded him. that stunned him. you can't afford to be stunned. you can't be surprised by yourself or by how -- who endorses you, and who doesn't. if you begin to take tierntion s seriously or you think the media will help you or not, this is an education for everyone. ron de santis is finding out what his weaknesses are. you can get endorsements. that's fine. i think that's great. it's early. trump was succeeded because he never changed. he was the same guy in the primary season as in the general and he's the same guy now. i think that's key. ron de santis adjusts. if you adjust based on worries about what's going to be said or what the media will do you're already in trouble. >> the field has changed, meaning more candidates but the
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polling hasn't, it's remained pretty static as far as support for donald trump. >> if it changed, you talked about more in the favor of donald trump. there's one endorsement in american politics that means anything to anybody and that's the endorsement for donald trump for candidates especially in the primary. you asked does this matter at all, it doesn't change the game as all. the senator from oklahoma endorsed donald trump. these endorsements don't matter. maybe as a whole if you take them together, you might go there's a lot of guys from florida -- >> when trump rolled out those endorsements. >> that's a big deal. so i don't think this comes into play. to tammy's point it's going to be who can develop a campaign, who can connect with people, and if you look at the heat that donald trump has taken over the course of the last four or five years, every candidate is going to get that kind of heat if they become the nominee and the question always becomes for the voter, can ron de santis, can chris christie, can they all
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take the heat that donald trump has? and i think in the back of voters' minds, they're not sure. they know donald trump can take it. but they're not sure the others can. >> let me argue also, this is not 16. you know, there's a freshness that's lost. there's things that you learn that you feel betrayed. >> to that point, real quick. we don't have that much time. if there's a -- set donald trump aside. he's over 50%, the frontrunner right now. is there a sleeper you see amongst the other group surprising you early on? >> well, let me tell you, any ky hailey surprised me. i -- nikki haley surprised me. i underestimated her when she was picked to be ambassador to the un. talk about a shock to the delivery. she is serious. she is -- as the world as you saw in one of the alerts, the next president has to deal with a world on fire so we've got to have someone that's not worried about -- it's about who can deal with the horrible world. >> vivek ramaswamy. here's the guy speaking to the
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base. he's unafraid to say the truth in every interview. i think he connects with a lot of voters. he's at 2%. if there was a sleeper, it would be a guy like vivek. >> he's unbelievably clear and crisp in his language. i think a guy like that could catch fire. donald trump i think is going to be the nominee as it looks today. >> it's a great talent bench, a great cabinet. let's lift all of them up and see who comes out in the front. >> we're going to fight each other. >> it's going to be great. >> don't let democrats pick the nominee. sean, tammy, great to see you both. watch the bottom line on fox business week nights at 6:00 p.m. eastern time, catch more sean duffy. >> it's great. >> great show. >> rachel, don't laugh. it's great. >> stop it, rachel, it's great. >> your husband has a great show. >> taiwan scrambles jets as
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chinese airplanes cross the median line for the second time in days. maria bartiromo on the rising from the ccp, that is next. when covid hit, we had some challenges. i heard about the payroll tax refund that allowed us to keep the people that have been here taking care of us. learn more at getrefunds.com. frustrated by skin tags? dr. scholl's has the breakthrough you've been waiting for. the first fda-cleared at-home skin tag remover clinically proven to remove skin tags safely in as little as one treatment.
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rachel: a fox news alert, growing tensions with china this morning, ten chinese war aircraft crossing taiwan's median line for a second time in days. officials say they detected 24 chinese fighters and bombers in the air as 10 crossed the median
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line. it's the second time china has crossed the line since thursday when 37 chinese planes entered taiwan's defense air zone. sunday morning futures anchor maria bartiromo joins us now. maria, your thoughts on this breaking news? maria: well, rachel, good morning to you. rachel: good morning. maria: this is no surprise that we are seeing more provocations in the taiwan straits, obviously the ccp is in step with its goal of eventually overtaking taiwan and it wants no foreigners whatsoever involved in this and it will continue these provocations, maybe it's the second time since thursday but it certainly will not be the last time. the problem here is that we are not getting transparency from this administration on all of this. we continue to ask the question if the reason is, is because joe biden is compromised with all of the money we are told he has been taking in from communist china but let's not forget a huge story that unfolded last week that the administration quietly admitted over the
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weekend and that was the wall street journal's story that the ccp is going to be setting up a spy center in cuba, just about 100 miles away from florida to spy on the united states. the administration lied right to the faces of fox news when we had a reporter ask about this last week, just like they lied right to the same reporter about sending information from the spy balloon back to beijing in real time. they now are admitting that, yes, of course we knew that they sent information back in real time from that spy balloon a month ago but now we are learning that, yes, in fact there is a spy center set up in cuba and it's been happening since 2 2019. rachel: it really does beg the question that you brought up, i mean, why else would the president of the united states, someone whose job is to take care of our country, our national security, just give cover to the chinese, why isn't
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he outright defending us and showing indig nation about them operating in our country and in our hemisphere, it only speaks to compromise. maria: it's an absolute mystery as to why this president is so soft on china. remember right around the g7 meeting the white house leaked a story that joe biden was about to come up with new rules for -- and limitations to investing in chinese companies. it never happened. it was a one day story the white house wanted to leak so everybody would talk about joe biden being tough on china. it never happened. it never materialized and once again this administration is blaming the prior administration, trying to blame the spy setup in cuba on trump somehow, saying oh, yes this exists and it's been underway since 2019. we're getting no transparency whatsoever about the true intentions of the communist party of china and in fact one step worse is the fact that we keep bending to them. we now are learning that ant
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anantonyblinken will travel to a next week, he'll be there next sunday. once again, here we go groveling to the chinese communist party after they started the provocations, setting up police stations in america, setting up the spy balloon, sending it across the country, joe biden allowed it for an entire week, almost a week to hover above our military stations and send information back. we're going to get this this morning with john ratcliffe, the former director of national intelligence, talking about the ccp's goals, the administration's response to it and ratcliffe brought up another issue over the weekend, why are we considering sending $17 billion to iran now, what is iran doing with that money? that money is going toward creating weapons for russia. so again, this administration is saying that they want ukraine to win and yet they're enabling $17 billion to iran so iran can sell
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weaponry to russia. we're going to talk about it with john ratcliffe. i also have the senator from wisconsin, ron johnson, the two oversight members among the members of the oversight committee who have seen the document detailing a bribery scheme where joe biden took 5 million and hunter biden took 5 million from burisma of ukraine, that's representative nancy mace and anna paulina luna will join me on that and we'll talk about the two tiers of justice, president trump and this indicts dickment as well as the investigation into hunter biden that is going into six years. they were able to indict trump after seven months of jack smith being on the job but they're sitting on a frozen investigation of hunter biden now six years later. we'll also talk about why in the face of all of this the democrats are adamant that there will be no challenge to joe biden for the 2024 election, no debating. marianne williamson has a thing or two to say about that.
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she'll join me as welcoming up. i'll see you in 15 minutes. rachel: thank you so much. you have a very, very great show lined up. thanks a lot. maria: thanks, rachel. rachel: pete? pete: coming to a couple headlines. a minnesota highway got hog wild on friday when about 50 pigs got loose after their transport truck overturned, looks like little canada minnesota. not too far outside the cities. officials were forced to shut down highway 494 as they wrangled the pigs. and got them away from traffic. doesn't look like any got hit. no bacon. an unusually warm day in london causing at least three british guardsmen to faint in front of prince william during rehearsals for the king's birthday parade. more than 1400 guardsmen wearing heavy tunics and hats beared the 90-degree day all for the prince, prince william later
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thanked all the soldiers and those are your headlines. i've been in formations for changes of command. the general will be here in two hours. while you stand at attention. and lock your knees. don't lock your knees. let's check in with meteorologist adam klotz for our forecast weather forecast. adam. >> can i get a vanilla and chocolate swirl please. it's a beautiful day for ice cream. what's your name? aaron. >> can you do me a favor? this is the clicker, i need you to hit this button for me. i'm about to have ice cream in my hands. i'll tell you when to hit it. it's a beautiful day. you like the weather, you like the ice cream? >> yes. >> this what is we're looking at temperature wise across the country as i take my ice cream cone. hit that button, temperatures in the 70s in new york city. did you hit it? hit the button. showers in the middle of the country. hit the button again. we're tracking storms in the ohio river valley, illinois to indiana, to missouri. one more time with the button.
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there's a chance for severe weather and we're tracking it across -- i know, boo, boo that severe weather. >> boo! >> we're about toes it back to you guys. what do we say about ice cream, boo severe weather but what to ice cream? >> yea! >> we love it. we love it. >> i love it. >> more, more, more, more. >> ice cream for a all. >> adam's paying for all of it, don't worry. the dpifl ya stars take on the -- philadelphia stars take on the new jersey generals tonight. we'll have more on the usfl showdown coming up. ♪ more shopping? you should watch your spending honey. i'm saving with liberty mutual, mom. they customize your car insurance so you only pay for what you need. check it out, you could save $700 dollars just by switching. ooooh, i'll look into that. let me put a reminder on my phone.
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>> high steaks day in the usfl as the philadelphia stars face the new jersey generals tonight on fox, philadelphia aiming to clinch a play off spot. joining us is analyst joel plat. good to see you this morning. >> good to see you. >> le here we go. philadelphia, new jersey, what do you expect? >> philadelphia is one of the teams that got all the way to
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the championship last year. they lost to birmingham. they've been getting better this year. i think they have one of the three best quarterbacks in the league. he's been playing a lot better and this team just knows how to get better at the end of the season. what i'm excited about, though tonight, though, will, is we're going to have kind of a special type of broadcast. it's going to be myself and brock hughward and devinegared near on a players only broadcast. i'll be handling some of the play by play, duties if you want to call it that. but it's going to be a very football oriented broadcast. so if you like football, we're going to have all the micro phones, all the access you want and we'll go deep into the action in terms of how quarterbacks watch the game, view the game and see the game. i'm really excited about it. will: i like that. lelet's experiment, have a good time. all former quarterback, from the quarterback's and player's views
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viewpoint. have you a new interview series out. you have your podcast which is great. it's a hit. now you've got big noon conversations as well you're going to be talking to some of the biggest coaches, personalities, names, players in college football and you're starting with maybe the biggest, you're starting with prime time, deon sanders which by the way you're a buffalo. he's the head coach of colorado as well. let's take a look at your conversation. we'll talk about it afterwards. >> i walked into this one room and they had music playing. i said, if you ever bring music into one of my meetings, i promise you we will never see each other again in life and you got a problem? >> your first game, tcu, our premium window is because of you, all respect to tcu. >> i'm not going to say that. >> i know you aren't. i will. will: there you go. that's a big start, joel. >> yeah, listen, this is a big
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moment in college football history. as you know, will. and from my seat i think we're at n inflection point. what i wanted to do with my joe show, i wanted meaningful conversations about the sport over arching globally with the most influential voices in the sport, deon sanders, the commissioner tony patiti and ryan day, chip kelly, these are the biggest names having the most important conversations. that's what i wanted to do and that's how big noon conversations came. tomorrow, the first episode debuts with deon sanders tomorrow, monday, wherever you get your pod casts, on our youtube channel so you can check those out. will: i like cowboy hat deon, it's a good look. to your point, this moment in college football is huge, it's good to have the big conversations guiding you through. joel, i'll be checking it out.
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great to see you. >> have a good day. will: more "fox & friends"e coming up.th know a lot of things about a lot of things. like which mower makes the cut. the mulch that finishes the look. and picking a color that pops. you got this. we got you. i'll always take care of you. ♪ i'm gonna hold you forever... ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ be by your side... ♪ ♪ i'll be there... ♪
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♪ pour some sugar on me ♪ will: little league week, we've been playing baseball and eating soft serve all morning long. thank you, carvel. [cheers and applause] rachel: bye. pete: go the church, have a nice weekend ♪ ♪ ♪ maria: good sunday morning, everyone. thanks so much for joining us this morning. welcome to "sunday morning futures," i'm maria bartiromo. today, a damning indictment if from a political doj. how does america trust what's true and what isn't as the fbi and doj continue to to protect one side while persecuting the other? for so many years now. president trump are resumed his campaigning this weekend despite 37 counts against him from the if department of

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