tv Fox News Tonight FOX News June 14, 2023 10:00pm-11:00pm PDT
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>> the five remaining self-taught teams returned to the scene of the crime that got to do it right. we know we're on the chopping block. anything can happen. all the crime scene kitchen. monday at nine on fox. >> the sports world loves the usfl. here we go. this is the gridiron phenomenon that fans are going crazy for. >> look at that. the usfl saturday. 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. and you saw it right here. is it a turning point in american history? whatever you think of trump, you may love him. you may not love him. this entire prosecution is unprecedented. no president has ever been federally indicted and arrested before. hopefully won't happen again. but that's exactly how most cable news covered it. this was unprecedented. >> wall to wall coverage, right? according to newsbusters.
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cnn members and mitt and msnbc's we spent 95% of their airtime covering donald trump's arraignment. think about the build up over the weekend to. by now, you've 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 president left the courthouse. he stopped by a famous cuban cafe in miami on his way out. cnn, like most networks, took trump's cafe visit live for most networks and certainly producers. his surprise stop is a godsend. 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,
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along with wall nada, who is charged with intentionally setting up lies to the grand jury, to the fbi. any way you look at this. and again, despite whatever may be going on in that restaurant, this case isn't going to be settled legally in a cafe. it's going to be settled in the courtroom for the facts and law. the folks in the control room who i don't need to see any more of that. this he's trying to turn this in. he's trying to turn it into a spectacle, into a campaign ad. >> that's enough of that. >> we've seen it already. yes. all those people in that cafe 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. nicolle wallace on msnbc was no better. she was angry at her producers for even putting the footage on the screen to begin with. so 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 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. let's we're going to start of course, i just want to know is begins this this clip we're about to show you about 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. >> well, he had a speech at the speech he actually outlined his defense and his thoughts. that's newsworthy, i thought. but what about msnbc's. >> did they hear 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
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these circumstances. there is a cost to us as a news organization to 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. pbks, 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 cover trump all day that used him for ratings, the former president 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 really an allegation. the media have 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 airwaves as if
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they're facts. so yet the broadcast they will broadcast trump's version of events now. trump, whatever you think of him, has a right to respond to allegations in the indictment. both parties, the justice department and trump, will argue that 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 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. i mean, 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
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everything you've done for us. we really 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. >> she's back to deplorables, right? in a free country, a democracy, everyone is innocent until proven guilty. she doesn't get that. 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 that 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 rod blagojevich. he says the case against trump is very familiar and it's all politics and that he knows who a 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
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with stealing a horse in town and some of the other cowboys, especially the guy whose horse was stolen, were very unhappy with that guy. one of the cowboys said, let's hang him. and 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're 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. >> rod blagojevich, the former governor of illinois, joins us now. rod, this whole thing, regardless of the details, but the way this is being executed, reminds you of a reminds you of what you experienced. oh, very much so. this is deja vu all over again. what they did to me at the triple-a level, to democrat governor, they're now doing continued to do to president trump, the republican president, the major league level. i think they felt when they got away with doing it to a governor, hijacking a governor from not a single crime. they lied about the things they call, these things
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they come up with fancy names, sale of a senate seat, russian collusion. it's like they go to madison avenue to get these public relations experts to give you these names. they put it out immediately to the media. they arrested me at 6:00 in the morning, the swat teams around my house. i was a sitting governor. and then the prosecutor, fitzgerald, who is corrupt, is this guy. smith is went out and said he, quote unquote, was stopping a crime spree before it happened. and so they did that. me, they failed to convict and they're fake corruption charges. the first time around. i thought it was over. then i learned that they can try again and think they can use unlawful standards to turn legal things into crimes by custom tailoring jury instructions. so i see what they're doing to president trump, and i know the role the media plays because immediately they jump on the narrative. when i was told handcuffed by the fbi that morning that they were arresting me for the, quote unquote, sale of a senate seat, which incidentally, was eventually reversed by the appellate court. i thought it was so absurd that the media, even those who didn't like me, there were plenty of them who didn't would laugh them out of court, but instead they went with the narrative and ran with the narrative.
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and that's precisely what they're doing today to president trump, the media, the pundits, and of course, the hyper partisan members of my own party, the democratic party, who are putting political expediency and short term political political game gain above the interests of the united states. because this is a constitutional crisis. what is happening to arrest the sitting 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 serious than documents. all 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 the whatever you think of the indictment, you do want to hear what the other person has to say. why would you not be curious to hear the president's defense, how he plans on attacking back, how he plays are mounting it? well, who he plans on employing? what exactly is the explanation for keeping the documents
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and what does he say when people say he was obstructing the effort to get them back? that, to me is news, regardless of what you want to see happen, it is newsworthy. you also felt like they they actually had 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 8000 2896 days, i was compelled to shelter in place in prison for politics, not for crimes. i read two of your books, the one on washington i despise . thank you. and the one on jefferson and the tripoli pirates. i know you wrote a book about andrew jackson. and andrew jackson. reminds me a lot of president trump that 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 very heart of our democracy that you can just bring accusation.
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and a department of justice that i know from my own experience is corrupt and dishonest and that they rig the system, that they could 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 they're getting away with it in broad daylight. and the so-called mainstream media is going along with this. >> well, president trump was accused of jaywalking. they would say this is some capital crime. but i mean, a lot of what you're saying, we know the president had documents. they were at the highest level, classified documents. that's virtually confirmed. i mean, that was pulled out. it would have been a lot easier had he just said, come and get him. i took 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 just feel was an overreaction to something that could have been settled. >> and in the past it was. so 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 anarchy. >> well, kgb, soviet style politics is now find a place in the united states. abraham lincoln is rolling over in his grave and joseph stalin is dancing in the streets. and you say, can i see that happening? yes, i can, because i see what they're doing now. and i'll just say this from a historical point of view of 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 to be as fair as you possibly can be and to be able to give both sides an opportunity to air their differences. the press today, they've become there's supposed to be a watchdog. they become an attack dog for the people against trump. and it's wrong and it's scary. >> and i think the american people need to wake up. governor gunn, nice to see you. >> i'll talk to you again soon. and thanks so much for you. my books in prison. thank you. you got it. meanwhile, it's my privilege to bring in representative jim
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jordan, the man with the sleeves rolled up in his tie, not quietly. i'll put up you never button the top button. i don't expect. and you are tonight. which is a bit of a surprise. so, congressman, great to see you, chairman, i should say the way before we talk about what you discovered of bank bank of america, i want to build on it. i haven't heard you talk about this yet. the mar-a-lago raid that led to the indictment that we all 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 newsworthy except this one in maybe some others? that that's today's, quote, free press. we don't really have a press that covers the news. it gives both sides. you were talking about both sides. there's a great scripture that came to mind, brian, when you were saying that proverbs 1817 says the first to present his case seems right until another comes and cross examines him. that's the whole point. you've got to give both sides of the story. they won't because they know this is this is a double standard. brian, 60% of the country now thinks the justice department
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follows a double standard. you know why they think that? 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 that president trump has been wrong clear back since 2016 when they use the dossier they knew was false to get a warrant to spy on an american citizen. associated with his campaign and it's continue now for seven years so the country gets it even if the press won't tell the story the way they should. >> but i'm just very curious to see where we go from here. is it your understanding that we should be expecting two more indictments on the president from what's happening in georgia to the january six? >> do you think those two things are coming? i don't know about i don't know about january six, i think i think fani willis in georgia is going to do it just like the crazy case up in new york with d.a. alvin bragg there in manhattan. everyone knows that case is ridiculous. i think everyone sees all these cases are in. the president has the power on the special counsel case. the president has the power to to classify and control access to any national security
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information that flows from the constitution. that's straight from navy. egan a unanimous decision of the court written by justice blackman back in 1988. everyone understands that except it seems that's political special counsel jack smith, who all, by the way, we actually deposed him back in may of 2014. we deposed jack smith, the oversight committee deposed jack smith when 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 the and lois lerner. >> and my final thought about jack smith, and we'll have to have you back on the banks. we have a little bit i had a few audibles is a he failed to get governor mcdonnell. he failed to get senator menendez. he failed to get john edwards. he failed to get congressman renzi. so he's very aggressive. he knows what he wants, but he doesn't always get get what he targets.
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>> so we'll see what happens here. you know what he did? yeah. you know what he didn't fail to get was the president's attorneys notes for goodness sake. they broke the attorney client privilege, which is a sacred principle. it's crazy. >> all right, congressman, thanks so much. meanwhile, the fear of you that you got to share the fear of a runaway justice system extends to local prosecutors as well. >> marine vet danny penny indicted today. he faces up to 15 years in prison. we got abc's sid rosenberg, who talked to the lawyer this week up next to do some instant wi >> chevy silverado factory lifted trucknch lifts. versat where will they take you? with the capabilitilmulti-fly oo with the capabilitilmulti-fly oo inch lift, the versatility of the available multi flex tailgate of a 13 and the connecf
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one of the most prestigious soccer tournaments of the the caf gold cup u.s. jamaica, june 24th on fs one. welcome to crime scene kitchen . the five remaining self-taught teams return to the scene of the crime with two new mystery desserts to figure out for $100,000. caramels used right here on a hard no on this caramel. wow. brownies are too dry. dang it. we've got to do it right. we know we're on the chopping block. anything can happen. all the crime scene kitchen monday at nine on fox. there, donald trump. the exclusive interview on "special report" from one che
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sellers. go to ship station .com slash try and get two months free. ne >> here we go.wsgrand a fox news alert. and it's not good news. granjuicted jury has indicted ml veteran 24 year old danny penny for the subway chokehold death of a homeless career criminal named jordan neeley. the penny on oneuntle count of criminally negligent homicidecr, second degree manslaughter. >> sid rosenberg, abc morning show talk show host, numberall one in the market all over this storjoiny, joins us now with sos analysis. you talked to his attorneyid, said, what did he say? >> well, i did speak to thomas caniff. and, you know, of course, brian, i endorsed thomas catnip when he ran agains ht alvin brag for d.a. here in manhattan. he should have won. he's the better man. wa erman.r hero, too, by the way.
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and i am telling you that thomas cohen and his partner, stephen raiser, are very, very confident that mr. a penny will be exonerated. he did nothing wrong that day. he nothing was scared men, wome and children on that train. and he believes that, i believe, which is daniel penny is not is a hero h notlem. a criminal. so here's the problem. we wanto heat to hear about the witnesses, but they say that he died of a compression of the necn ofk. they also claim that he held them for 15 minutes. he didn't hold them down fort h a 15 minutes. no, he didn't. according to daniel penny, who released the video, was,on a you know, brian on sunday and was very, very articulate and very, very gooy d. r the whole thing lasted about two or 3 minutes. he's got witnessesree minu that agree to that. somebody said 15 minutes made up. it was probably al sharpto n. but who knows, you know, trying to make this not the george floyd situation. but i will telu th l you this,ttorne brian, which is the scary part. i know his attorneys commitment ysrazor like me want to seecoloy the toxicology report. the first thing daniel penny said was this guy's eyes were
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glassy. mors there have been rumors, allegations he's been smoking k2gations for months. why can't we see the toxicology report? and you know the answer. they don't want us to see it because it doesn't plausyr to their narrative. this guy was probably allegedly on drugsnarrativ. n that he was violent. he scared everybody on the train to death. and here death a h the hero, d daniel penny. and now, like new york does, they indicoeim.t him, said they said this what al sharpton said when they choke cd jordan they put their arm around all of us and essentially sayingly/k that this is a white black thing and that's what caused the riots inon t the streets and pressured alvin bragg to even put a grand jury in place.het an >> final thought? t >> well, of course, it's not a white black thing, because, as you know,ing beca one of thes along with daniel penny that we restrained, jordan neeley, brian warained hs african-amerin male, also the first lady, the first lady to complain on that train that day and actually credite daniel pdfe daniel penny with saving her life and african-american female al sharpton. what do you say to that?at t
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those are two black people involved in that incident, whicwoinvolvedh are back, danie. but this is what we dodo. this is what we do. we make the everything race bece the truth is they don't want to hear the truth. daniel, penndaennyiay brian kile is a hero, not a criminal. and the next time someon: and e something going wrong and there's no cops around, how many are going to put their handny wt ths on somebody somebody else when this could happen, your life could be ruine bruinedd, your family'w could be ruined, your career goes on hold. and nou have tcew you've got toe a grand jury. >> sid rosenberg, thanks so muchs so. o >> thank you. brian. i got to tell you, i'm one of those guys. i would trthose d y to help som not today. not after this indictment. th newell you in new york cityth ,don't help your fellow new yorkers. that's the saddest part of this story. yorkere saddest parti understan. thanks so much. said. all right. we movthanks sch sid e ahead. big tech companies like amazon are often, often the primary enforcer s of the left's moral code. fox news's trace gallagher joins us wit dymore of a truly dystopian story trace. >> yeah, and briany., an amazon driver who's black was dropping off a package at a home in baltimore when h
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e thought heeard overheard a racist remark coming through the doorbell. speaker he notifie a rt d amazon and they shut down the home's amazon echo systemified am, whie controls electronic devices, including the lights. the homeownectc r got an email him telling him to contact amazon, who then scolded him about the racist remark, except the homeowner who's also black didn't make the remark. he wasn't even home at the time. wasn'ime.d, it was the doorbell rings system saying to the driver, excuse me, cansystem thp you? >> the driver, wearing headphones misunderstoodad, responded, quoting, we work hard to provide customers with a great experie experience while ensuring drivers who deliver feels feel safe.throug in this case, we learnedh io inrough our investigation thatn, the customer did not actap inappropriately. so amazon shutso amazon shut d e with zero evidence for something the homeowner allegedlr idn y said in the priy of his home, even though he wasn't home. what if a driverdriver hears u a political statement that makes him feel unsafe? his amazon monitoring speechns m from outside people's homes is alexa monitoring speech froe.
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inside homes. >> a lot going on in this story, right? >> bi woul twistst everya lot go and turn caught me by surprise. it's stunning. tracit'se, appreciate it.le yeah. and he made it so simple. you him t. l medi tonigh and i hope you will. meanwhile, the liberal media has slandered conservatives s d again by falsely accusing tm of political violence. more on that right after the bream of k. >> friday, justin roiland and everybody give like you, me, don't miss the fun full performance life at fox square friday on the all american summer concert presented by lowe's. >> lowe's notes home improvement. >> it's empire today's biggest sale, the 50 5050 sale, 50% off carpeting, flooring, 50% off patagonia materials, and 50% off installation. that's right. half off your entire project. >> you can save thousands empires. 50, 50, 50 sale won't last
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also dies in the subscription business of "the washington post", which is predicated on trying to make makes lo look like. the hero of every story, even if it's not true. iand this is emblematic, i think, of the incredibly slanted coverage that jeff bezos as washington post now brings to bear on a daily basigs . and brian, my my theory on this is the subscription businessy 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 by and large, it's why they're not covering the fact that they've had the hunter biden laptopse hn december of 2019. "the washington post" is an embarrassment. they haven't any ofusio their russia collusion pulitzers either, have they? it'sn pull just a joke. you well, i mean, when you look at this thing in particular, it pride month, it had a pride section. it was right in the front. well fronte co, conservative sag you kidding me? i got kids walking through the store. they're asking me abou h tht the so-called pocket underwear. to put it kindly, we've got r toto be kidding.
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>> this is a family store that prides itself on having self oeverything. t so they moved a lot of ithean to the back. and that ticked off the lgbte os community. and they're the ones showing violent tendencies. they're the ones with the boycotts and sadly, their code, their calling in with the threath s. t th >> so we should atis least. get this story straight, not but right away. well, it's no different than what happened with brad kavanaugh, right? somebody showed up trying to assassi n him and that story vanished. i mean, they're having the congressional baseball game tonight. so steve scalise was tried to be executedwas trie b by a bt sanders supporter. it's as if these stories, whenhe they don't fit the preconceived narrative, cease to exist at rrativall. 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 thate reat the absolut e forefront of. >> but lastly, just real quick, we do have this thing called average everyday people usingckd logic and pushing back. and we see some of the insane
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behavior on the white house lawn with the transgender dae tm and pride celebration. they even get a review from the press secretary. weress see middle schoolers siti there saying, i'm tired of watching'mired o two women kissy during the day. i don't think that shoul, i dod be part of the curriculum and then the kids getting rebuked for it. but the kids don'tgettinocade fi the little things like logic and normal values are trumping this corporate push of political correctness. final thought? >> yeah. well, brian, think about it. itk took someone baring their at the white house for the white hous e to actually say it's unacceptable. remember, they didn't say it was unacceptable when 14 and 15 year olds were having their chopped off as a part ofeasts ch gender affirming surgery, which is one of the biggest lies that's ever existed in this th y. n sh joe biden should be ashamed for many reasons, at the absolute forefront. his failuroue to protectt children. >> there was so much of this segment i never thought i would say on televisiothn, but we nowo see it almost every day. thanks, clay. amen . unfortunately. all right. meanwhile, when americans think a violentunately.t political ac,
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they think of antifa and black lives matter in many cases. but accordin viog to experts, there's a new movement. the movement's emerging, evolving, radicanel transgender activists. they're reportedly growing excreasingly violentr ac and extreme. some are using the term drum roll. please try antiftra to describe the phenomenon. journalist andy no joins us now. trandy, you're the first one to tell us about antifa to go inside some of the unrest and prove they exist. noey're not just an idea like w.the fbhei director said.th >> what about this group? well it's the same movement really is just their current manifestation. >> antifa can only mobilize, organize and radicalize in opposition to something for. many years. that was donald trump. of course, they were aided onald tre they w by the opposition party as welln as those in the liberal press. now they're going after parents and what they call cis women girls. bid by that i meanomen biologic,
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real women and girls and the violent movement, really. in my what i've seen is that it allows t for particularly violent, misogynistic men to take out their hatred against u women under the guise of transt activism or trans rights. and it allowris women who are taking cross-sex hormonescal be and taking on some male typical behaviors for violenceha to thep also partake, partake in that wholent criminal. >>d where have you seen this happen with cities? well, it's happened in portland, in seattle, in los angeles, when in new york andyo various places where women'se tr rights activists have tried to campaign foier the for the based protections and rights t that women are entitled to.u se in the uk, you see that as well, as well as on continental europe. >> do you see backlash real's g quick and do you see at one point the average american is goinoio say g to sas
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is absolutely ridiculous and this violence should not stand? fa well, what we're seeing now ,immigrant families and muslim families starting to speak up and organize in l.a., in maryland, in michigan. and so, i mean michiga, you kno, ine violence may end up shooting antifa in the foot. >> by, andy.d analog t thanks so much. all right. well, stay well. stay in touch with you'll as ty develops. meanwhile, a shocking new report says the u.s. governments knew thatinated the coronavirus originated in the wuhan lab. >> i three scientists theree with the first who we actually know,w th the name ofya the three scientists who contracted it first. why was the informatioformatione covered up? how many lives could have been saved had the chinese just beeny honest? honestlomi
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>> my name is shannon knight, >> my name is shannon knight, and i own littletaker an knight. de care carolina sports, inc., a paradise for parents. >> let me to feed current caretaker and owner. caretaker and owner. the employee retention credit.tr that is a legitimate tax credit. so innovation refunds has so innovation refunds has really the process. i can'f my records together, submit that and they made it that and they made it as painles >> i can't thank innovation refunds enough what they did. >> michael's biggest deals of the summer are this storewide sale only happens three times a year. shop now for our lowest prices on thousands of items plus get 30% off your regular price purchase with coupon. don't miss out on the summer's hottest deal at michael's sirius xm savings are on the horizon. get your favorite ad free music. plus exclusive entertainment and more for $5 a month for two years. plus, fees and taxes. that's one incredible. two year road trip. so what are you waiting for?
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when you at any base shop now need sleep number saturday. it's baseball night in america on fox get all this land from new york boston the deep rooted rivalry continues as john carlos lead the yankees against rafael devers and the red sox. for randy arozarena and the league leading rays take on juan soto and the padres. it's baseball night in america. saturdaynst asia at seven easten on fox. . >> attacks against asian americans and pacific islanders are on the rise. >> my simple solution to the >> my simple solution to the problem was remove people from the scene and help them feel safer in terms of the hate crimes. >> i think there is so much more work to be done. we really need to come together and tackle this issue as a community.
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institute of virology. miat according to journalistutes taibbi and michael shellenberger. now the first people to contract covil d were the scientists conducting gain of function. corona right. the corona the virus research at that very lab. the lab leak once called the conspiracy, has now proven to be true. we even know the guys that gottr it first, china responsible for the pandemic. can everyone hea r that? for years, it was forbidden to say that you were a spy. you were? i don't know. justst reading ut spreading rumors abot a virus you knew nothing about. world leaders insisted that any criticism of china racist. in fact, they demanded chinat ty be praised for how it handled the virus. >> here's the head of virus.the w.h.o.. nese >> the chinese government is to be congratulated forhe the extraordinary measures it has takeary measn to contain the outbreak. china is actually setting a newt standard for outbreak response ,and it's not an exaggeration. >> the guy has no integrity. he's been bought and solrian: t. by that country. we were told to praise china.
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you just heard it. we w though the virus came from the lab in wuhan. anyone who pointed out wasattacd attacked. we know because we were attacked every day, evenwe knowu obvious, even to jon stewart, who came out of semi-retirement to say this to the horror off st stephen colbert. >>ephen there's a novel respiry coronavirus overtaking wuhan, china. what do we do? oh do?, you know who we could ak the wuhan novel respirator, our coronavirus lab. >> the disease is the same nam e as the lab. so wait a minute. you work atht the wuhanlab. respiratory coronavirus lab. how did this happen? and they're like appen?, oh, pangolin kiss the turtle. ts >> it's funny, but it gets you so angry. dr. marty mccaffrey has been saying this all along. he's a public health expert at professor johns hopkins schoolhn of medicine joins us. >> dr. mccaffrey, your thoughts ,your thoughts about this story that was broken on substack. port b
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>> really? it's an incredible report, brian. you know, previously wri thae thatm th the lab was five miles from the epicenter of the hospital and anybody could logically deduce tha t there was a correlation. but now we have the precise namee s of the individualse th and those individuals that weree the first patient patients who tested positive. we're also w working in the lab. two of them were coauthors on ar paper with dr. shi in the lab about describing bat coronaviruses. one of them was described as the right hand scientism watf dr. shi. so if therf e wathers a one in 100 chance of any alternative explanation besides the labo leak, the odds just went to about one in a million. >> right. and evidentllion. brian: y the e is. it's not going to mean anything to anyone out there but ben huo and ping yang and yan xu. thes he are the three lab scientists who got it first, and they were seen in 2017 on some video with ill fitting lab clothing acting haphazardly with corona virus test test
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tubes. so tt on tape. andgh so if they were honest and said we made a mistake, we blew it.mi stakthere's a there's a wild coronavirus wreaking havoc iniof a small portion of china. could lives have been saved? coulcould the world have not bee poisoned? >> well, absolutely, because coh the genetic sequence could have been made available to theilable world about two months prior. but of course, everybody was gagged i of ybodn. spital the doctors at the hospital w who took care of the first patients were arrested, detained probabl, y, threatened because they were forced to sign documents that they would not sprea tuld. so it's pretty clear these original scientistoriginals wers patient zero. and it's no curiou ns study that they also applied one year a prior in 2018 for a grant for $14 million to insert this fear and cleavage site into the b the covid virus, into the background virus, whic wh on
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course, is what we have in: the current covid 19 virus. and byay, the way, they got to have another variant they're dealing with right now in china. and finally, dr.n fauci,d with his contacts and the respect he had globally, he coul ttend have got to the bottom of this. or do you think he knew about and sa not to be his advantage, to be candid about where this came from? what do you thine ca k? y >> well, look, the only reason this is controversial about whether or not it came from lab or not is because it's embarrassing that dr. fauci was funding that lab. so those trying to politically cover for him suggest these alternative explanations. dr. fauci himself says we may never knowpoliti. buat's his famous line about the origins of covid 19, but it's pretty darn clear. and when he calleddarnar. that emergency meeting in the beginning of 2020 with his staff, virology experts on the phone, a hastile ymeetin convened emergency meeting, three of them told him anitially thisd hi came from the lab. >> that was their instinct. and that's clear what clearly what it was. >> tng t. macquarrie, this is gt to hurt attendance at his next tedtalk. these factese facts s because hs
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fraud. thanks so much. dr. mcafee always telling that n to truth through the entire time. appreciate it. meanwhile, how big is too big an airplane seat? might be a good reference, but now overweightnce bu travel influences are demanding bigger seats because they don't fit. >> join my petition calling req on the faa to require all airlines to have a written official customer of size policystomer o for plus sizeds. travelers. this policy will provide accessible additional seats, clear communication reimbursement, accommodations emd employee training. as my petition states, all plus size passengers should be provideald with an additional seat or two or three, depending on their size and need. duringeaor a flight for comfort. under this policy, airlines should also offer a straightforward refund process for those who are buying additional seats independentl straighy. >> wow. so this is a craze. everyone signing up is going to force thi ands to on airlines. look, the truth is we're all a a little chubby and could probably losittle some weight. but forcing everyone on the plane to subsidize plus size seatse on would only inflae prices that are already getting too high. how influencsizee how have inf
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influencers gone too far this time, or are they right new on the money? tigress is a fox news contributor and a really nice gu allyy. >> and six eight. and how much? d. six eight £341 of twisted st4 and . >> so she's like that.eel so that's how i feel. i know what i should have in mind, but it's all good, rightli ?ll but yeah, in real life you areea told to make sure everyone else genetically i'm a frea genetk. . got it right. six, eight, six, eight. £341.ut but we sit in the same chair. okay, so my knees get ind the back. but i fly first class. i earned that right. righcontrae it part of a contract. i'm saying that's good thing. that's not the point. the point is this. if you wan there't, there is a lot of c things i can't do. i can't go on roller coaster rides. i don't. rides, ii can't be an astronau. beere's a lot of great things i've been able to do. then i'len abll be had a great r in wrestling. i've had a great career on the football field. i goinonfootbaldg to places when a dark alley, i'm never afraid. there's a lot of awesome things that goes aws woulesomd be in bg and working hard and being a powerlifter and all those other things. bu out beint what a lot of these to be employers like, do they like to want to be praised for their size ? in it's natural.
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you can't say anything bad about it. the doctor asks him how much dosks them they weigh. it's a problem. so here's deal. if it's such a great things a with all with great things comes some responsibility. you have to buy your own seat.s it's not no one else's responsibility. if it's a genetic issue, you havea geu have a doctor who. and will give you a note. airlines already do this. southwesdy do t already does th. they'll they'll give you two seats. southwest will give you two seats. i haven't been when i've had to fly to see, i usually fly to southwest, go see my son, play basebali est l and when i'llexit go get i usually get exit row with actual legroom. but if i don't have it a little bit, would you like an extra seat? they'll ask me that, right? you know, and i'll say, i'll need thall nee it. but the option is there. so what this is again is you want to victimize yourself atvi the same time, praise yourself. go oou wanted to get thosectim d things, then you can go on a diet. you have to do things to fitdien the world should not haveo to succumb to what you want righumb to wt? two ta that's not how it works. so there's to to my takeaways from this numberkeay one, you point out limitations in your life. yeah. one of the things you can do is could be security for some of those famous people that grow from prince to snoop dogg. >> do you think i could do you think if these rich, famous people if can do that, you canm
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be a jockey? i care that that hurts. i feel i can play defensivfeeli line. you can be a defensive line coach, right? you know, i'm saying there's plusesyo a defen and minuses to being plus size. and one of the minuses is if you wantg plus s to travel, rige up your money. right. it's not your fault to pay for saver faul. 7 i wore a size 17 shoe. you were a size three.u shel is off the shelf anywhere special or mine. so should you have to buy buy my shoes? no. you could though, because you haveshoes? like, 17 jobs.u e i even forgot my question. yeah, all right. that's how. that's. 1 forgot mquestioni think for then you know, i think that at home people are saying weythingom shw more for cable. >> that's how that's how it been where i kno thiw a lot of people call their cable companies can we get a pulitzer for this? so i thinka pu for not. >> yeah, not in real time. but we could enter it in.t here yes. a pen >> remember, you heard it here first. i need a padded envelope and a vcr tape because that's>> what they tape. >> everythine.g you do. man, i forgot what's next. you know what, tyrus? thank you.k you ho. surehow about that?e always a pleasure. all right. and by the way, check out your live shows. where do we find you? like you check out? my live shows will be all over e
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the country. you can check them up on my >> cy livews thetry socialee o they'll be all over the country. and then, of course, my new book comes outmy n in november,t you can preorder it now on amazon or barnes noble. >> wow, that was fantastic o. fo were very ready for that. and let me tell you what's next. you don't want to stick around. is it possible to disk thiis ite back to life? a woman who was declared dead mysteriously cama womae back to. during her wake. how is that possible, dr. mark s going siegel, with the answers. but tyree, she's going to have to sit there again. and, you kno to ha there♪w, theg about treasure island is i'm getting to do what i love, where my family i treasure you, bro. it's not hard to find a two year with couldn't agree more. i found treasure, good family treasure. the new season on fox.
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a chance to win a vegas vacation every day. >> sizzling summer savings are happening now at ashley. get ready to save on the hut furniture styles for every room in your home and to make these sizzling savings even hotter, we offer special financing options for every budget shop and save today only at ashley is there are more identity threats than you realize. >> lifelock alerts you and works to fix problems with a dedicated restoration specialist. >> go to lifelock ecom. >> so what's it like on the other side? a 76 year old woman in ecuador was declared dead at ecu the hospital only to reviven during her own wake. she climbed out of the coffikenp banging on the top. as her loved ones mourned her passing, watch. we watched enough. ws how does something like this happen? dr. marc siegel is the fact is medical new contributor, fox news contributor. dr. siegel that'dr. siegs, pretp
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amazing for her to be declared dead in a hospital and theitn be put in a coffin wrapped up. a wake is set upaway and thenal. you hear a banging on the lid. >> she's alive. i wish wis could say it's nevere happened before, but i will say it should never happen. and it wouneve would never happa really good doctor's watch. you look for stopping, breathintoppinbrg you check forh a pulse. you listen to the heartbeat with your stethoscope in a hospital ascope., you're supp to have a monitor that flatlines. so it shouldn't happenso it . i have to tell you, there's a nursing home in suffolk county right now where you under investigation for somebody very soon, or paula, inething i a body bag, still brb >> and in iowa, earlier inag ite year also and it happens occasionally and you know why? because sometimes they'll ask me to sign a death certificate of someone i'm notncing be actually pronouncing because it was a patient of mine. as and someone else pronounces them. but listen to this. did t in the 1800s they actually tied strings around people that they were buried in coffins with bells outside the coffin so that you coul >> thed ring the bell if
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you were buried alive. >> i know george washington was always worried aboute wash. e they said wait three days to bury me. and they did. meanwhil e, a wisconsin woman had a heat stroke, died. her heart stoppe beatingd beati 3 minutes when she came to. she now seessees dark, hazy figures. she records them and hears voices she no longer fearsvoicep death, what she experiencing. >> she was declared dead>> she i about 3 minutes. i'll give you the medical version of this. vershis.r came in after that. and if you start pumping on someone's chest within 2 to 3 minutes, you could do it for 30 minutes after that. coul minutesbring him to the hoi you're not going to have brain damage. so i understanngd medically whyk she was brought back from a cardiac arrest. but what you're interestedroth i'm agreeing with is the out of body type experience she had. she felt calm. >> she felt ready. she felt she was going die.t an and she was prepared for it. and ever since then ha so have continued to have out-of-body experiences. i believe that that's absolutely a sign from god.>> bri >> wow. so interesting for him, for a medical doctor, to believe medi is fascinating to actuallys
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go. >> it was great. great to see you, brian. all right. meanwhile,.dr. si i goteg to ha you watch me. listen to my radio show from nine to noon tomorrow. brian kilmeadeen, come amongstw my guest, china expert michael pillsbury. mand mccarthy on all the trump legal stuff and so much more on fox and friends. you're going to love me between six and nine. pete hegsethn 6:00, senator dan sullivan, mark green and ainsley earhart and steve do to be joining me. but now it's time for the great sean hannity with a livenow the audience with better than that. >> all right, brian, thank you. by the way, just because >> sean: doe you walk in late at night does not mean you can show up late in the morning. i'll w upat be watching at 6 a.m..t : oh, call me.00 all right. than an: callk you everybody, thank you for being with us. welcome to "hannity". back with our live audiencure tonight and tonight, amid terrible polling numbers, your vice president, kamala harris, is looking to reinvent heg to reinvr image. they even now have chosen someone to help with the completen makeover. buckle up. we have a sneak preview of up, kamala 2.0. >> that's straight ahead. also later tonighter t
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