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tv   Fox News Tonight  FOX News  June 14, 2023 5:00pm-6:00pm PDT

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sexual assaults. >> jane from vernon new jersey well at least i have another word for minaj a i would. thanks. >> ricky from texas, 50 million for 60 homeless people? that's 800 gs each. can we get an audit here? the same people auditing that city did the blm people. i'm watters, this is my world. ♪ >> brian: hello and welcome to fox news tonight i'm brian kilmeade and will be brian kilmeade all week long. now this former president donald trump's arrest and arraignment you saw it right here, it a turning point in american history. whatever you think of trump you may love him you may not love him the entire prosecution is unprecedented, no president has been federally indicted and arrested before. hopefully it won't happen again but that's exactly how most cable news covered it. this is unprecedented, wall to wall coverage right? according to news busters, cnn
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and msnbc spent 95% of their air time covering donald trump's arraignment. think about the buildup over the weekend, too. by now you'd expect the media to have learned how to cover donald trump and his family but that's the exact opposite of what happened. after the the left the courthouse, he stopped by a famous cue and cafe in miami on his way out. cnn like most networks took trump's cafe visit live. for most networks and producers, his surprise stop is a god send. after all, how exciting are plane landings, suv caravans, courtroom sketches? but not cnn. this unscripted moment where average voters, as you see right here, show affection and enthusiasm, a human side to president 45, would not be covered. they would not allow it. watch. >> donald trump is charged with a series of federal felonies for mishandling the most sensitive government documents that we have and for obstruction of justice along with walt nada who
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is charged with intentionally setting up lies for the grand jury to the fbi. anyway you look at this and despite whatever's going on in that restaurant this case isn't going to be settled legally in a cafe it's going to be settled in a courtroom. >> the folks in the control room i don't need to see anymore of that. he's trying to turn this into a spectacle, into a campaign ad. that's enough of that. we've seen it already. >> brian: yes, all those people in that cafe are actors. they were cast months ago just for this moment. that's a spontaneous reaction. they actually like him in florida. god forbid cnn broadcast the fact that some americans in florida like him a lot, if i can steal the president's cadence. nicole wallace on msnbc was no better, angry at her producers for even puting the footage on the screen to begin with. by prime time things had gotten worse. the same media outlets that spent the entire day covering trump's arraignment suddenly wanted nothing to do with the former president. cnn refused to air trump's
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speech. if you tuned in last night, this is what you got. >> we're not carrying his remarks live because, frankly, he says a lot of things that are not true and sometimes potentially dangerous. but we do have some, a small portion so you can get a sense of his state of mind and how he might be framing his defense. i want to get your reaction to it. we're going to start of course, i want to note, he begins this clip we're about to show you by making unfounded claims about the charges against him, untrue and unfounded claims about the charges against him, and the people he thinks are behind it. >> brian: well, okay. he had a speech. at the speech he actually outlined his defense and his thoughts. that's news worthy i thought. what about msnbc? did they air the speech? >> we are prepared for his pre fundraiser remarks tonight to again be essentially a trump campaign speech. because of that, we do not intend to carry these remarks live. as we have said before in these circumstances, there is a cost to us as a news organization to
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knowingly broadcast untrue things. we are here to bring you the news. it hurts our ability to do that if we live broadcast what we fully expect in advance to be a litany of lies and false accusations, no matter who says them. >> brian: pbs meanwhile issued a disclaimer on trump's speech warning viewers that trump's remarks could cause violence. yep, violence. you can see their disclaimer on the screen right now. so the same media outlets that covered trump all day, that used him for ratings, the former president of the united states, the most famous person in the world, love him or hate him, then wouldn't take the speech live because they don't air lies? but how do they know trump is lying? an indictment is an allegation. the media has treated the justice department's allegations like they're complete facts. they never have been, they don't even claim they are. they broadcast every claim in the indictment across their airways as if they're facts. so if the broadcast -- they
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won't broadcast trump's version of events, trump whatever you think to him has a chance chance to respond to the allegations, both sides will argue their version of the facts, the truth will ultimately be determined by a jury if this goes to a trial. at the same time democrats are already trying to smear any republican who might side with trump. hillary clinton, not exactly squeaky clean herself, as you know, said republicans defending trump are delusional. >> it's going to be the fascinating, i guess, in a bizarre and sad way, to watch them spin themselves up. if you watched any of the news programs this weekend, their efforts to defend this man are truly beyond anything that i ever thought possible in our country. i mean, it is so profoundly disturbing how this could have been the break. this could have been the opportunity to say, you know, thank you so much for everything you've done for us, we really
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appreciate it, you know, but this is kind of serious and so we're not going to, you know, continue to defend you. but, no, they're all in again. that's what -- the psychology of this is so hard for me to fully grasp. >> brian: she's back to deplorables right? in a free country democracy everyone is innocent until proven guilty. every american republican or democrat or otherwise has a right to make their own judgment about the trump indictment. but the media, to discredit -- the media wants to discredit the very idea trump could be the victim of a political prosecution. that belief is no longer allowed. but it's not like they've never seen this before. nobody knows this more than former illinois governor rob blagojevich. he says the case against trump is very familiar and it's all politics and that he knows what political persecution looks like because he experienced it firsthand. >> there was an old saying in the old west. there was a cowboy who was charged with stealing a horse in town and some of the other cowboys, especially the guy
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whose horse was stolen, were very unhappy with that guy. one of the cowboys said, let's hang him. the other cowboy said hold on before we hang him let's first give him a fair trial then we'll hang him. under these rules, i'm not even getting a fair trial. they'll just hanging me. and when they hang me under these rules that prevent due process, they're hanging the 12 million people of illinois who twice have elected a governor. >> brian: rob blagojevich the former governor of illinois joins us. this whole thing regardless of the details but the way this is being executed reminds you of what you experienced. >> oh, very much so. this is déjà vu all over again. what they did to me at the triple-a level to a democrat governor they're now doing and continuing to do to president trump, a republican president at the major league level. i think they felt when they got away with doing it to a governor, hijacking a governor, for not a single crime. they lied about the things they called these things, come up
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with fancy names, sale of a senate seed russian conclusion, they go to madison avenue to get public relations experts to give these names, they arrested me at 6:00 in the morning with swat teams, i was a sitting governor. and the prosecutor fitzgerald who's as corrupt as this guy smith is, went out and said he was quote, unquote, stopping a crime spree before it happened. they did that to me. they failed to convict under fake corruption charges. the first time around i thought it was over then i learned they can try you again and can use unlawful standards to turn legal things into crimes by custom tail org jury instructions. i see what they're doing to president trump and i know the role the media plays because immediately they jump on the far tichlt i was told, handcuffed by the fbi that morning, that they were arresting me for the, quote, unquote, sale of a senate seat which was eventually reversed by the court. i thought it and sashedr sehrt the media plenty of whom liked bee, but they ran with the
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narrative and that's what they're doing with president trump, the media the hyper partisan members of my party the republican party and political expediency and short-term political gain above the interest of the united states. because this is a constitutional crisis what is happening to arrest a former president over documents, a civil matter, unprecedented, and these pundits and the way they're talking are trying to convince the american people that this is something a lot more experience than documents. >> brian: right. i don't want to re -- i can't retry your case and you don't want me to and it's not worth going back. but overall, what i find stunning is the lack of a counter narrative. whatever you think of -- whatever you think of the indictment, you do want to hear what the other person has to say. >> right. >> brian: why would you not be curious to hear the president's defense, how he plans on attacking back, how he plans on mounting it, who he plans on employing, what exactly is the explanation for keeping the documents and what does he say when people say he was
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obstructing the effort to get them back? that to me is news, regardless of what you want to see happen, it is news worthy. you also felt like they should -- the media shut down your narrative. they didn't want to hear your explanation. >> you know, brian, you're a historian, in fact during the 28 dis96 days i was told the shelter in prison i read two of your books the one on washington and the spice and the one on jefferson. i know you wrote a book about andrew jackson and he reminds me a lots of president trump. i was born for the storm the calm does not suit me. but those books and you being the historian, should remind all of us that we have this glorious past with glorious heroic people and yet the stakes now what we're facing today are perhaps maybe the most important battle we're fighting since the civil war. because this goes to the heart of our democracy. that you can just bring accusations and a department of justice that i know from my own
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experience is corrupt and dishonest and they rig the system. if they can do something like this to a president of the united states, the leading presidential candidate of the party that's not mine, doing it to the republican candidate and getting away with it in broad daylight and the so-called main stream media is going along with this, i mean, president trump was accused of jaywalking they would say this is some capital crime. >> brian: i know what you're saying, we know the president had documents they were at the highest level classified documents. that's virtually confirmed. that was pulled out. would have been easier if he said come and get them, i took some of them. i'm putting a book together, which he is, of letters from other leaders. whatever the situation is. but having said all that you feel it was an overreaction to something that could have been settled and in the past it was. so the president of the united states is the leading vote getter. final question, if he does get the nomination, are they really not going to cover his speeches? and if he does win the election, are they not going to cover his presidency? and can you imagine a country
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where every news network, except this one, decides that everything the president said is not worthy of paying attention to, that's and anarchy. >> soviet style is finding a place in the united states abraham lincoln is rolling over in his grave and stalin is dancing in the streets. i'm seeing it now. democracy in a free society cannot survive without a free press. and the job of a free press whether you like someone or not is to try and be as fair as you can possibly be and give both sides an opportunity to air their differences. the press today, they've become -- they're supposed to be a watch dog they've become an attack dog for the people against trump and it's wrong and scary and i think american people need to wake up. >> brian: governor nice to see you. i'll talk to you soon and thanks for reading my books in prison >> good to bring in jim jordan
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the man with his sleeves rolled up and his tie put up. you never button the top button and you are tonight. congressman, chair man good to see you. before we talk about what you discovered about bank of america, i want to build on, and i haven't heard you talk about this yet, the mar-a-lago raid that led to the indictment that we saw saw in miami and then the president's speech at night. were you stunned to see every network bail out and say that wasn't news worthy, except this one and maybe some others? >> that's today's quote, free pres. we don't really have a press that covers the news and gives both sides. you were talking about both sides. there's a great scripture prove, 1817 says the first to present his case seems right until another comes and cross-examinations him. that's the point. you have to give both sides, they won't because they know this is a double standard. brian, 60% of the country now thinks the justice department follows a double standard. you know why they think that?
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because it's true and americans with common sense, despite the press not covering this, can see right through it and they know what's happening to president trump has been wrong clear back since 2016 when they used the dossier they knew was false to get a warrant to spy on an american citizen associated with his campaign, and it's continued now for seven years. so the country gets it even if the press won't tell the story the way they should. >> brian: i'm just very curious to see where we go from here. is it your understanding we should be expecting two more indictments on the president from what's happening on georgia to the january 6th, do you think those two things are coming? >> i don't know about january 6th. i think willis in georgia is going to do it, just like the crazy case up in new york with da alvin bragg in manhattan, everyone knows that case is ridiculous. i think everyone sees all these cases are ridiculous. the president has the power on this special counsel case the president has the power to classify and control access to any national security information that flows from the
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constitutional. that's straight from navy v egan a unanimous decision of the court written by justice black monday back in 1988. everyone understand that except this political special counsel jack smith who, by the way, we actually deposed him back in may of 2014. we deposed jack smith, the oversight committee deposed jack smith when he was looking for -- think about this. looking for ways to actually prosecute the very american citizens who were being targeted by obama's irs and lois learner. >> brian: my final thought about jack smith and we'll have to have you back on the banks, have a little audibles, is he failed to get governor mcdonald. he failed to get senator menendez. >> yep. >> brian: he failed to get jon edwards. he failed to get congressman renzi. he's very aggressive goes after what he wants and doesn't always
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get what he targets. >> you know what he didn't fail to get is the president's attorneys notes. they broke the attorney/client privilege which is sacred. crazy. >> brian: the fear of a run away justice system extends to local prosecutors as well. marine vet danny penny indicted today faces up to 15 years in prison. wabc's sid roadburg rosenberg who talked to them this week up next to do some analysis. ♪ chevy silverado factory-lifted trucks. where will they take you? with the capability of a 2-inch lift. ♪ the versatility of the available multi-flex tailgate. ♪ and the connection of a 13.4” diagonal touchscreen. chevy silverado.
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>> brian: here we go, a fox news alert and it's not good news. grand jury has indicted marine veteran 24 year old danny penny for the subway choke hold vet of career criminal jordan neely. the grand jury indicted penny on one countle criminally negligent homicide second degree manslaughter. sid rosenberg wnbc talk show host number one in the market all over this story joins us now with instant analysis. you talked to his attorney sid. what did he say? >> well, i did speak to tom is kanip and i endorsed him when he ran against alvin bragg for da in manhattan. he should have won the berman. war hero, too.
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and i'm telling you thomas kanip and his partner steven razor are very confident mr. penny will be exonerated. he did nothing wrong that day. there were scared men, women and children on that train and he believes, and i believe, which is daniel penny is a hero, not a criminal. >> brian: so here's the problem. we want to hear about the witnesses but they say that he died of a compression of the neck. they also claim he held him for 15 minutes. he didn't hold him down for 15 minutes. >> no, he didn't. according to daniel penny, who, at least the video, as you know brian on sunday and he was very articulate and very good, the whole thing lasted about two or three minutes. he has witnesses that agree to that. somebody said 15 minutes is made up, probably al sharpton who knows, trying to make this another george floyd situation. but i will tell you this brian which is the scary part. i know his attorneys kanip and razor like me want to see the toxicology report t first thing daniel penny said was this guy's
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eyes were glassy, rumors and allegations he's been smoking k2 for months why can't we see the toxicology report. you know the answer they don't want us to see it because it doesn't play to their narrative. this guy was probably allegedly on drugs, he was violent, he scared everybody on that train to death and here comes the hero daniel penny and now, like new york does, they indict him. >> brian: sid, they say, al sharpton said, when they choked jordan they put them arm around all of us, essentially saying that this is a white/black thing and that's what caused the riots on the street and even pressured alvin bragg to even put a grand jury into place. final thought. >> of course it's not a white black thing because one of the folks along with daniel penny who restrained him was an african american male. also the first lady to complain on that train that day and actually credited daniel penny with saving her life, an african-american female. al sharpton what do you say to that two black people involved
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in that incident that back and the penny. but this is what we do, we make everything race because the truth is they don't want to hear the truth. daniel penny, brian kilmeade, is a hero not a criminal. >> brian: and the next time someone sees something going wrong and there's no cops around how many will put their hands on somebody to save somebody else when this could happen, your life could be ruined, your family's lives could be ruined, your career goes on hold and now you have to face a beganed jury. sid rosenberg, thanks so much. >> thank you, bruin. i have to tell you i'm one of those guys. i would try to help somebody, not today. not after this indictment. they tell you in new york city, don't help your fellow new yorkers, that's the saddest part of this story. >> brian: i understand and i agree. thanks so much sid. we move ahead. big tech companies like amazon are often the primary enforcers of the left's moral code. fox news's trace gallagher joins us with more of a truly dystopian story. trace. >> brian an amazon driver who was dropping off a package at a home in baltimore where he thought he overheard a racist
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remark coming through a doorbell speaker. they notified amazon and they shut down their echo system which controls electronic devices including lights. the homeowner got an e-mail who told him to contact amazon who scolded him against the racist remark except the homeowner who's also black didn't make the remark. he wasn't even home at the time. instead it was the doorbell ring system saying to the driver scum can i help you. the driver, wearing head phones misunderstood. amazon responded quoting, we work hard to provide customers with a great experience while ensuring drivers who deliver amazon packages feel safe. in this case, we learned, through our investigation, that the customer did not act inappropriately. so amazon shut down the home with zero evidence for something the homeowner allegedly said in the privacy of his home even though he wasn't home. what if a driver hears a political statement that makes him feel unsafe? is amazon monitoring speech from outside people's homes? is alexa monitoring speech from
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inside homes. a lot going on. >> brian: i would say almost every twist and turn caught me by surprise. it's stunning. trace appreciate it. >> yep. >> brian: he made it so simple you can watch him tonight and i hope you will. the liberal media has slandered conservatives by falsely accusing them of political violence. more on that right after the break. ♪ suffering from sinus congestion, especially at night? try vicks sinex for instant relief that lasts up to 12 hours. vicks sinex targets congestion at the source, relieving nasal congestion, and sinus pressure by reducing swelling in the sinuses. try vicks sinex.
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>> brian: the washington post suggested that conservatives are responsible for recent left wing threats for violence at target. yep. the paper buried the lead to this story to make activists boycotting the company look like dangerous extremists. they failed to mention that the threats were actually issued by the lgbt activists themselves. clay travis is the founder of outkick. clay, you had to go like seven paragraphs in to find out it wasn't conservatives getting mad at target. are you surprised? >> no. i'm not surprised at all, bryan, thanks for having me on. look, democracy dies in darkness
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and also in the subscription business of the washington post which is predicated on trying to make left wingers look like the hero of every story even if it's not true. and this is emblematic i think of the incredibly slanted coverage that jeff bezos washington post brings to bear on a daily basis. brian, my theory on this is, the subscription business demands that they satisfy the farthest and most left-wing of their subscribers and that's why they're not covering joe biden and the biden crime family by and large. it's why they're not covering the fact that they've had the hunter biden laptop since december of 2019. the washington post is an embarrassment. they haven't returned any of their russian collusion pull itsers either have they? it's a joke. >> brian: when you look at this thing in particular, pride month, had a pride section right in the front. one conservative says are you kidding me i have kids walking through the store asking me about the so-called pocket underwear to put it kindly. you have to be kidding, this is
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a family store that prides itself on having everything. so they moved a lot to the back and that ticked off the lgbtq community and they're the ones showing violent tendencies and with the boycotts and they're calling in with the threat. so we should at least get this story straight. not eventually, but right away. >> well, it's no different than what happened with bret kavanaugh, right? somebody showed up trying to assassinate him and that story vanished. i mean, they're having the congressional baseball game tonight. steve scalise was tried to be executed by a bernie sanders supporter. it's as if these stories, when they don't fit the preconceived narrative sees to exist at all and that is one of the big problems with our media now. we don't have journalists we have narrative enforcers and that's what the washington post is at the forefront of. >> brian: lastly real quick, we have this thing called average everyday people using logic and pushing back and we see some of the insane behavior on the white house lawn with the transgender
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day and pride celebration. >> yes. >> brian: they even got a review from the press secretary. we see middle schoolers sitting there saying i'm tired of washing lesbian, two women kissing during the day, i don't think that should be part of the curriculum and the kids getting rebrocade for it but the kids don't care. little things like logic and normal values are trumping this corporate push of political correctness. final thought? >> yeah, well, brian, think about it, it took someone bearing their breasts at the white house for the white house to actually say it's unacceptable. remember they didn't say it was unacceptable when 14 and 15-year-olds were having their breasts chopped off as part of gender affirming surgery one of the biggest lies that's ever existed in this country. joe biden should be ashamed for one reason at the forefront of children. >> brian: one thing i thought i would he ever in say on television but we now say it almost every day. thanks clay. >> unfortunately. thanks. >> brian: when the people think
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of violent activists they think of black lives matter and antifa but a new movement is radical transgender activists reportedly growing increasingly violent and extreme. some are using the term trantifa journalist andy gno joins us now. you were the first to go and show that they weren't just an idea like the director said. what about this group? >> it's the same movement really it's just their concern men at the station. antifa can only normalize and radical eyes in opposition to something for many years. that was donald trump. of course they were aided by the opposition party as well as those in liberal press. now they're going after parents and what they call cis women and cis girls by that i mean biological real women and girls
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and the violent movement really from what i've seen is that it allows for particularly violent misogynistic men to take out their hatred against women under the guys of transact vichl or trans rights and it allows women who are taking cross sex hormones and taking on some male typical behaviors for violence to then also paer take in that violent criminal nal. >> brian: where have you seen this happen? what cities? >> well, it's happened in portland, in seattle, in los angeles, in new york. in various places where women's rights activists have tried to campaign for the sex based protections and rights that women are entitled to. in the uk you see that as well, as well as on continental europe. >> brian: do you see backlash, real quick, andy? do you see at one point the average american's going to say this is absolutely ridiculous and this violence should not
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stand? >> well, what we're seeing now, immigrant families and muslim families starting to speak up and organize in la, in maryland, in michigan. and so, i mean, you know, the violence -- >> brian: got you. >>-- may end up shooting antifa in the foot. >> brian: good analogy. andy ngo thanks so much we'll stay in touch as this developments >> a shocking new report says the u.s. government knew that the confuse originated in the wuhan lab. three scientists there with the first -- we actually know the name of the three scientists who contracted it first. why was the information covered up? how many lives could have been saved had the chinese just been honest. that story next. ♪ ahhh! icy hot pro starts working instantly.
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to journalist matt taibbi and michael shellenberger. the first people to contact covid were the scientists conducting gain of function coronavirus research at that very lab, the lab leak once called a conspiracy is now known to be true. we even know the guys who got it first. china responsible for the pandemic. can everyone hear that? for years it was forbidden to say that. you were, i don't know, just spreading rumors about a virus you knew nothing about. world leaders insisted any criticism of china racist. in fact they demanded china be praised with how it handled the virus. here's the head of the who. >> the chinese government is to be congratulated for the extraordinary measures it has taken to contain the outbreak. >> china is actually setting a new standard for outbreak response and that's not an exaggeration. >> brian: that guy has no integrity he's bought and sold by that country. we were told to praise china you
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heard it, even though the virus came from the lab in wuhan. anyone who pointed out was attacked, we know because we were attacked every day. even though it was obvious, even to jon stewart who came out of semi retirement to say this to the horror of stephen colbert. >> there's a novel respiratory coronavirus overtaking wuhan china. what do we do? oh, you know who we could ask? the wuhan novel respiratory coronavirus lab. the disease is the same name as the lab. so wait a minute, you work at the wuhan respiratory coronavirus lab. how did this happen? and we're like, a peg win kissed a turtle? >> brian: it's funny but it gets you so angry. dr. marty makary has been saying this all along, a professional health expert johns hopkins school of medicine. he joins us. doctor your thoughts about this story broken on sub stack. >> really it's an incredible report brian.
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previously we knew that the lab was five miles from the epicenter, the hospital. and anybody could logically deduce that there was a correlation. but now we have the precise names of the individuals, and those individuals that were the first patients who tested positive were also working in the lab. two of them were co-authorizes on a paper with dr. xi in the lab about describing bat confuse. one of them was described as the right hand scientist of dr. xi. so if there was a one in a hundred chance of any alternative explanation besides the lab leak the orders went to about one in a million. >> brian: right, and this guy's not going to mean anything to anyone out there but ben hu and ping yan and yan zu they got it first and were seen in 2017 in a video with ill fitting lab clothing acting haphazardly with
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coronavirus test tubes. so this is all caught on tape. so if they were honest and said we made a mistake, we blew it, there's a wild coronavirus wreaking havoc in a small portion of china, could lives have been saved? could the world have not been poisoned. >> absolutely because the genetic sequence could have been made available to the world about two months prior. but, of course, everybody was gagged at the doctors at the hospital who took care of the first patients were arrested, detained, probably threatened because they were forced to sign documents that they would not spread misinformation. so it's pretty clear, these original scientists were likely patient zero, and it's no curiosity that they also applied one year prior, in 2018, for a grant for $14 million to insert this sight into the coronavirus, into the bat coronavirus which, of course, is what we have in
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the current covid-19 virus. >> brian: by the way, they have another variant they're dealing with now in china. finally dr. fauci with his contacts and the respect he had globally, he could have gotten to the bottom of this. or do you think he knew about it and saw it not to be his advantage to be candid about where this came from? what do you think. >> the only reason it's controversial about whether or not it came from the lab or not is because it's embarrassing dr. fauci was funding that lab so those trying to cover politically covering for him, dr. fauci himself said we may never know, his famous lines about the origins of covid-19 but it's pretty darn clear. and when he called that emergency meeting in the beginning of 2020 with his top virology experts on the phone, a hastily queened emergency meeting, three of them told him initially this came from the lab, that was their instincts and that's what it was. >> this is going to hurt attendance at his next ted talk these facts because he's a fraud. thanks so much dr. makary,
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always telling the truth the entire time. appreciate it. meanwhile how big is too big? an airplane seat might be a big reference but now overweight travel influencers are demanding bigger seats because they don't fit. >> join my petition calling on the faa to require all airlines to have a written official customer of size policy for plus-size travelers. this will provide accessible seats, reimbursement and employee training. all plus size passengers should be given a an additional seat or two or three as needed for comfort. under this policy they should have a straightforward refund seat for those buying individual seats independently. >> brian: this is a craze going to sign up and force this onto airlines. the truth is we're all a little chubby and could lose some weight but forcing everyone on the plane to subs dies plus size heats would raise pricing already too high. have influencers gone too far
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this time or are they right on the money. tyrus is a fox news contributor and a really nice guy and 6'8" and. >> 6'8" 341 pounds of twisted steele and sex appeal. >> brian: that's how i feel when i see you but in real life you are taller than me. >> genetically i'm a freak. >> brian: six'7". >> 6'8" 341 pounds but we sit in the same chair. my niece get in the back i fly first class and i earned that right and made it part much my contract. but that's not the point. there's a lot of things i can't do. i can't go on roller coaster rides, i can't be an astronaut. there's things i have been able to do, great career in wrestling, great career on the football field, go into places in a dark alley i'm never afraid. there's awesome things that go with being big and working out and being powerful and other things. but influencers want to be praised for their size, it's natural, can't say anything bad.
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doctor asks them how much they way it's a problem. if it's such a great thing, with great things come responsibility. you have to buy your own seat, it is not nonetheless's responsibility. if it's a genetic issue you have a doctor who comes in and we'll give you a note. airlines already do this. >> brian: they'll give you two seats. >> southwest will give you two seats. i usually fly southwest because my son plays baseball i get the exit row. they'll say would you like an extra seat, they'll ask me that and i'll say i don't need it. but the option is there. this is again you want to victimize yourself and at the same time praise yourself. if you want to get those things go on a diet. you have to do things to fit in. the word should not have to succumb to what you want. that's not how it works. >> brian: two take a ways from this. number one you pointed out limitations in your life. you can be security from some of those famous people in the world from prince to snoop dogg. do you think i could. >> if i can be that you can be a
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jockey i can't. >> brian: that hurts my feeling. >> i can play defensive line, you can be a defensive line line coach. there's pluses and minuses to being plus size and one of the minuses if you want to travel save your money, not your fault to pay for me. i wear a 17 shoe, you wear size three. >> brian: that is not true. >> you can get yours off the shell i have to special order mine. should you have to buy my shoes? no, you should though because you have 17 jobs. >> brian: i forgot my question. >> we smashed this. anything else. >> brian: at home i think people are saying we should pay more for cable that's how this good this segment was. >> can we get a pulitzer for this. >> brian: not in real time but we could enter it in. >> you heard it here first. >> brian: i need a pen and envelope and a vcr tape. >> done. you da man. >> brian: i forgot what's next. tyrus thank you how about that. >> always a pleasure into check out your live shows where do we find them. >> check out my live shows all over the country, on my link tree on my social media, all
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over the country and of course my new book comes out in november but you can pre-order it now on salmon or barnes and noble. >> brian: you were very ready for that. let me ask this is it possible to diane come back to life. a woman declared dead mysteriously came back to life during her wake. how is that possible? dr. marc siegel with the answers. but tyrus you're going to have to sit there. ♪
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♪ma ma ma ma♪ [clears throut] for fast sore throat relief, try vicks vapocool drops with two times more menthol per drop*, and the powerful rush of vicks vapors for fast-acting relief you can feel. vicks vapocool drops. fast relief you can feel. >> brian: so what it's it like on the other side. a 76 year old woman in ecuador was declared dead in the hospital only to revive during her own wake. she climbed out of the coffin after banging on the top as the loved ones mourned her passing. watch. okay. we watched enough. how does something like this happen? dr. marc siegel's a fox news medical contributor, fox news medical contributor. dr. siegel, that's pretty amazing for her to be declared
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dead in a hospital and then be put in a coffin wrapped up, away, set up and then you hear a banging on the lid, she's alive. >> i wish i could say it's never happened before but i will say it should never happen and would never happen on a really good doctor's watch. you look for stopping breathing, you check for pulse, listen to the heartbeat with a stethoscope. in the hospital you're supposed to have a monitor that flat lines so it shouldn't happen. but i have to tell you there's a nursing county in suffolk county where you live for something in a funeral parlor in a body bag still breathing, and in iowa earlier in the year also. it happens occasionally. you know why? because sometimes they'll ask me to sign a death certificate of someone i'm not actually pronouncing because it was a patient of mine and someone else pronounces them. but listen to this. did you know in the 1800s they actually tied strings around people as they were buried in coffins with bells outside the coffins so you could ring the
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bell if you were buried alive. >> george washington was always worried about that he said wait three days to bury me and they did. meanwhile a wisconsin woman had a heat stroke, died, her heart stop beating for three minutes. when she came to, she now sees dark, hazy figures. she records them and hears voices. she no longer fears death. what's she experiencing. >> she was declared dead about three minutes. i'll give you the medical version of this. cpr came in after that and if you start pumping on someone's chest within 2-3 minutes you could do it for 30 minutes after that, bring them to the hospital you're not going to have brain damage. i understand medically why she was brought back from a cardiac arrest but what you're interested in and i'm agreeing with is the out of body type experience she had. she felt calm. she felt ready. she felt ready to diane she was prepared for it and ever since then has continued to have out of body experiences. i believe that that's absolutely a sign from god. >> brian: so interesting for a medical doctor to believe that
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is fascinating. dr. siegel thanks. >> thanks brian. >> brian: listen to my radio show tomorrow brian kill me.com. brian, andy mccarthy on all the trump legal stuff and so much more. on fox and friends you're going to will have me between 6:00 and 9:00 pete hegseth dan sullivan mark green ainsley earhardt and steve doocy will be joining me. now the great sean hannity with a live audience. what's better than that [cheers and applause]. >> sean: by the way just because you work late at night does not mean you can show up late in the morning. i'll be watching at 6:00 a.m. >> brian: call me. >> sean: hello everybody thank you for being with us, welcome to hannity back with our life audience tonight and tonight amid terrible polling numbers your vice-president kamala harris is looking to reinvent her image. they even now have chosen someone to help with a complete makeover. buckle up, we have a sneak preview of kamala two.on straight ahead. also later tonight, democratic primary ch

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