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tv   FOX and Friends Sunday  FOX News  July 23, 2023 4:00am-5:00am PDT

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had a vaccine, or plan to. thanks to clearer skin with skyrizi - this is my moment. there's nothing on my skin and that means everything! ♪nothing is everything♪ now's the time. ask your doctor about skyrizi, the #1 dermatologist-prescribed biologic in psoriasis. learn how abbvie could help you save. ♪ ♪ here's to the good old boys, the guitars that made the noise ♪ joey: welcome back. good morning. of it's 7 a.m. on the east coast. you're looking at the east coast there, that's ocean city, new jersey. beautiful, beautiful day starting there, beautiful american flags. gotta love it. gotta love this country. i think jason aldean loves this
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country. listen, today is a special day for me, a couple of days ago i turned too old on july 2 1st, but today, july 23rd, is my son's birthday, joseph braden jones, i call him jose. that's him there. he's my mini-me. he looks a lot like me, but he's a lot smarter -- pete: and he proved that to us, by the way. joey: he did. he came on the show last year, about a year ago today, and we did one of those competitions, kind of like when rachel won the trophy you didn't let her have, and we did the rubik's cube. this is him. >> it's going to be up with your right hand. you're going to go to the left with your top index finger on your right hand, and then you're going to go back down on that same side, and with your left hand you're going to push it right with this thinger. -- finger. >> so up, over -- rachel: you didn't tell me how
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hand handsome your son is. joey: you won, bud. rachel: he's a good looking kid. joey: he looks just like me. [laughter] rachel: happy birthday, jose. joey: i love you, bud. pete: very cool. joey: he lost me, you got to use your right index finger, i don't have one. [laughter] rachel: smart, good looking, very to polite, with well-manneredded boy. pete: for sure. something you're probably -- i don't know how to transition -- rachel: not proud of, not happy about. [laughter] pete: do you remember when donald trump was running, he talked about the less pressure coming out of the showerheads, you're not going to like your dishwashers under the next administration? all of those predictions are coming true k and there's a new one. so we've talked about gas stoves, we've talked about a dishwashers and air conditioners. now they're coming for your water heaters, your hot water heaters. the department of energy, we'll show all of these new proposed standards, but the newest one is
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regulatory proposal on limiting water heaters. so that was a couple days ago. many may they were talking about dishwashers, limits on the amount of water in dishwashers. in march it was home air conditioners and cleaners, and in february it was the one that really got rachel going which was the proposed rule on gas stoves. so the department of energy not looking at our gap and our ability to the actually produce more energy here and provide for people and uplift their lives, but how can we squeeze less out of the appliances that we all use every single day. so you live a little worse so that you can save a little bit of water with the government telling you what you can buy. rachel: right. so these propose to just make your appliances not work as well. the liberals also went after light lightbulbs. do you remember that? pete: for sure. rachel: when it comes to lightbulbs, i'm pro-choice. i'm actually pro-choice on all
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these things. i think most americans go i want my dish basher to work. if you have a big family, a business busy family, you need your appliances to work. and in the end, they don't save energy because if the dish washe first time around, guess what you're going to do? pete: run it again. [laughter] rachel: so i think it's a war on families, i really do. joey: i love the spin though. like, i'm busy reading this quote, this is jennifer granholm, the energy secretary, you know, the genius there. she says, this proposal reinforces the trajectory of consumer savings that forms the key pillar of bidenomics and builds the unprecedented action already taken by this administration to lower energy costs for working families across the nation. what she's saying is, well, if you just don't use energy, you won't spend as much money on energy. food is a lot cheaper when you don't eat. pete: so your hot water 's going to be less hot, your dishes are going to be less clean, your
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air's going to not cool down as quickly -- rachel: your clothes in your washing many machine won't be as clean either. all of this, it's about control. pete: it's for you. joey: how stupid do you think we are? your ott not going to spend near as much money on energy if you just don't do things that use energy. your light bill won't be bad if you don't have lightbulbs. how dumb do you think we are? sacrifice the necessities of life in order to think that the economy's doing better? that's where we're going with this? pete: it's bidenomics. joey: that means they've lost it on the green energy side. rachel: yeah. what's good for not just consumers, but also manufacturers is to allow them to create the best machines they can for, you know, for consumer use. you know, and speaking of that, they are floating, you know, and california, by the way, they already have rolling blackouts, but there's already floating in
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op-eds across america in liberal a patients this idea, you know, that we should just institute -- pete: blackouts are good. rachel: rolling blackouts just so you tart to get used to just having no energy, as you said, joey. this is a war on modern life, this is a war on families. these are people who don't care because as they take away the lines into new houses for gas stoves, for example, you can be sure that the rich people in their houses, you know, their mansions are going to have those gas stoves. in fact, alexandria ocasio-cortez, as she was doing one of her instagram videos defending the gas stove ban or actually trying to tell us it wasn't happening until it actually did happen, there was a gas stove in the background. pete: but she rents. joey: that was her landlord's to. pete: all of joey's buddies in the hamptons -- [laughter]
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joey: they're building nice houses for're other people. you talk about a war on us, essentially, the arrogance of this administration started a couple years ago. really it started on their way in. it started with covid9 and the idea they could tell us what to do, when to do it, how to do it and controlled every moment of our lives to include mandates like masking. well, christians that were arrested for being maskless, for having a maskless outdoor church service back then in 2020 the, they're going to get a a payout from a college town in moscow, idaho. pete: that's right. gabriel remember where. was one who said you can't prevent us from worshiping. they were not allowed to worship and gather outside to sing hymns of praise. and if as you can see in this instance, he was arrested by the police in moscow, idaho. in one of those, again, one of those flashbacks we look back at now and we say how in the world could we have gotten there, but that was the culmination of a lot of the lunacy of local
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governments going way too far saying, well, look at those circles on the ground. they even tried to say we're standing in the circles, so we're distancing -- even though they were trying to distance, and they were outside, and it was a church service not a strip club, they were told they can't -- rachel: that's why i'm really glad that they're going to get this money. obviously, this $200,000 is not going to change these people's lives, it's getting distributed between three different people. we can't forget the stupid ways they wanted us to submit to the government during that that period of time. so you mentioned they were singing psalms. remember, they were -- they didn't want our children to sing even in school because that singing could spread to covid. you saw those silly circles. the dumb things they made us do that we knew were ridiculous like you have to wear a mask when you walk into a restaurant the, but when you sit down, you could take the mask off.
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the things they had us do on airplanes. the fact that, you know, here they couldn't sing outdoors and be outdoors and worship god, churches were closed down but strip clubs and liquor stores and bicycle repair shops -- joey: hair salons for the elite in california. rachel: -- were all things you could do. pete: and donald trump spoke out about that, then-president on october. th -- 7th saying dems want to shut your churches down permanently. hope you see what is happening, vote now. he was recognizing what a lot of people were sitting. now, the city of moscow, moscow, idaho, you might -- obviously, those terrible murders happened in moscow, but there's a big crec, conservative christian movement there as a well. doug wilson and others, classical christian school out of moscow, so it's a town with not divided, but you've got a college town, liberal college town and then a very conservative part of the
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community. the city of moss how cow, idaho, put -- moscow, idaho, put out a statement the about reaching this $300,000 settlement with churchgoers to fox digital. here's what they said. a matter related to the unprecedented covid-19 pandemic and the city's efforts to protect the public during an exceptionally trying time. so they're looking backwards and trying to explain if it away when in the moment what really matters is what you did in that moment. rachel: right. pete: in that moment, i don't think the police probably wanted to do that, but the mayor and others forced them to do it. joey: and i know we have a quote we need to read from the pastor that was arrested. he said what needs to happen is the people need to change how they vote and deincentivize the targeting of christians and those who are genuinely trying to defend the constitution. it's actually the city of moscow that was defying the law. i was obeying the law. rachel: amen to that. that's really important. joey: yes. rachel: is important that they
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say those statements. joey: what bothers me about this is it was never about keeping those people safe, it was about squashing dissent. it was about proving that you had the authority over their lives regardless -- well intended or not, it was about showing them that there are no exceptions -- rachel: it was not well intentioned though, because when you say -- and look at the state of california. when you say because of covid and safety and hygiene, churches have to close but strip clubs can stay open? is that's a targeting of christians is versus other things. pete: they told us what they believed was not essential. rachel: exactly. and, by the way, god bless that pastor because too many pastors submitted to the government during that time. some of them are regretful now. joey: and we saw three, four police officers there there. i've got brothers that left the marine corps and became police officers. i support police officers. i think that's the job of putting your life on the line, your tomorrows on the line for other people sometimes.
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you have to treat bad people as they're good a lot of times in that job, but this shows you right here those may be three amazing men right there, those may be three heroes, but sometimes you've got to know when to say no, that's not right. that's not what i'm supposed to -- it starts at leadership. it starts with sheriffs, with police chiefs, it starts with folks that can take the bullets -- when i say the bullets, the arrows and the shield for the subordinates underneath them. and, you know, for those police officers to stand there and do that, i don't know what's going through their mind, but this is why we worry at the local level about the government's interference in our lives, about city ordinances and second amendment and first amendment. this is i why we preach about this, because even good people will do the deeds of bad government sometimes. rachel: that's very true. joey: and we have to keep beating that drum. i hope those men look at this and go there's no way i'd do that ever again. rachel: i hope they're really embarrassed about it. joey: i'm not beating up on the-
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rachel: i think the left wants us to forget about all that stuff that happened. pete: they followed through with it. they didn't just let it go. there's a settlement, and in the end it's effectively an admission who was in the wrong. sometimes it takes tree years to get to that point. rachel: do you think this will happen again? pete: let's pray it does not. i agree with your view. i've talked to a lot of pastors who very much regret the extent do which they were willing to comply because they thought -- they didn't know, if they didn't know, you know, they're hearing these things and there was a lot of fear, you've got elderly members of your congregation, they're trying to respect them. remember, there was a lot of confusion. but they said, ultimately -- rachel: we saw some really -- pete: welsh sure, obvious there were. joey: we were lied to. pete: we wering being lied to, but sometimes you don't know when you're being lied to. fool me once, shame on you, fool me twice, shame on me. i think it's the next go-around where pastors will have to say this is never happening again.
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rachel: the pastors that have written, i've seen bulletins with priests writing out their apology, i'm sorry that when you needed me most, i obeyed the government instead of doing what god. wanted me to do. and and, by the way, i received communion in secret as if i was chinese or a first century christian catholic, you know? that's how crazy that time period is. it was totally communistic, and i hope we never go back to it. all right. well, turning now to your headlines, israeli prime minister benjamin netanyahu is now recovering after being fit with a pacemaker according to his doctors who placed him urn sedation for the emergency procedure. they say the prime minister feels great and is not in any life-threatening condition. he'd been given a heart monitor after being hospitalized for dehydration can about one week ago. netanyahu is under observation but is expected to be discharged from the hospital today.
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a train derailment in montana causing consumer goods like napkins, cake mix and other items to spill. according to railway officials, # 11 cars derailed near milk river on friday afternoon. luckily, no one was hurt. one of those cars was carrying paint thinner, but it did not spill. the derailment is urn investigation. is under investigation. would you let a. i'm sorry pick a romantic partner for you? fox news digital asked some people what they thought about an artificial matchmaker. >> i got desperate. i hope it never gets that way. >> no. it's scary. >> [inaudible] from just a little odd. i like the old-fashioned way. >> no a.i. or robot or system to find the perfect match for you. >> i think i'd take a shot. i think that would be
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interesting. rachel: the dating site keeper or spurring the conversation, they use a.i. to match singles after they fill out a personality survey. pete: isn't that what dating web sites already do? rachel: it kind of is, actually k. and i don't believe in this. if you want to catch my podcast, you'd have to go back a few months, on the right way to find a romantic partner, and it's called going back to the '80s. check out my podcast on that. i give all the tips that help people in the '80s find love without all the swiping and prejudging -- joey: forget finding love, what about finding your way to the grocery tore? i mean, we are fully dependent on these devices, and it is potential. pete: i think if done the right way, dating apps are just a are efficient way -- rachel: it seems efficient, but -- pete: -- to find people that align with your values or what you're interesting -- interested in. rachel: it tends to encourage you to make very sort of rash
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decisions -- pete: people don't make rash decisions at 11 p.m.? rachel: that's true. in that's a good point. why don't our viewers just check out my podcast. i have some really good tips on how to actually have authentic relationships that are not based on artificial intelligence -- pete: you get to the authentic relationship so you meet someone online k and then it becomes -- rachel: there are some success stories. i think people are becoming too dependent on it, and what people need to do is get out of their house and have a real life and a social life and meet friends, and i think it's going to happen more naturally. joey: i've got to get my buddy daniel ridgeway on farmers only. coming up, consider another city, new york city is planning to send out no vacancy flyers at the border, and mayor with adams is discouraging migrants from settling in the big apple. our next guest worked at the largest migrant hotel, and he says it has been overrun. he joins us next. pete: plus, a case of the lakes?
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>> i just wanted to know, are there accommodations for people -- [inaudible] pete: time blindness. should she get the accommodation? we will discuss and debate in fox and trends, coming up. ♪ i was told my small business wouldn't qualify for an erc tax refund. you should get a second opinion from innovation refunds at no upfront cost. sometimes you need a second opinion. [coughs] good to go. yeah, i think i'll get a second opinion. all these walls gotta go! ah ah ah! i'd love a second opinion. no. i'm going to get a second opinion. with innovation refunds, there's no upfront cost to find out. so why not check like i did for my small business? take the first step to see if your small business qualifies for the erc.
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joey: welcome back. new york city mayor eric adams is urging migrants to consider other cities as destinations. his administration is even planning to hand out no vacancy fliers at the border as the city announces a 60-day limit in shelters. many of the hotels in the big apple have been converted to shelters and are struggling with the influx. our next guest worked at new york's largest migrant hotel, the roe hotel, and came forward after he saw drunk children, violence, guns and drugs. carlos arriano joins me now. good request morning, carlos. i remember a few months ago and there were videos of these hotel rooms kind of ransacked and texts and a screen shot of someone telling you, hey, this
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kid's drunk. with that state of debauchery happening in these shelters, is eric adams a little bit late to the game in finally saying now maybe this isn't a good idea? >> yes, it is very late. he's feeling the pressure from the migrants coming. their family back at home, hey, we got luxury hotels, come on over to new york, everything's being handed to us. the word of mouth is getting around, and he's feeling the pressure from the very demanding my grants -- migrants wanting russian luxury hotels -- luxury hotels but when they arrive, they see they're already all handed out to people. so they're becoming very ang i and more violent than before. and it's starting to look a lot like the riots in paris lately, and that's are where i see this heading. joey: that's interesting. i know what you're talking about, the paris riots a bunch of migrants come into one area, and then they -- the migrants
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rise up. and so when you're down there there at the border, or you're in texas where the border, they're crossing the border. what are they saying when they get into texas? what are they saying when they first get in the country? i believe the cartels are kind of giving them information that's not right. >> yeah. they're telling them everything's being handed to you all at these hotels, go to the largest cities, make your way on over there. you're getting everything from health care to uber rides, to daycare services, everything that you can think of. and when they arrive to the city, they're arriving, and who can blame them, you know, when everything's being handed to them. i wouldn't say no to something free. but what happens when that free, those free things are no longer there to be given out anymore? they're going to be upset, and rightfully so. and this is exactly what it goes back to when i said that mayor
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adams and the city of new york don't know what they're doing. joey: you're right. if you advertise yourself as a sanctuary city and tell them you will do these things for them, you're bringing them into a situation where you're kind of obligated to do so, and it looks like new york didn't have what it needed to do it. >> exactly. and it's scary to say, but the situation from what i'm seeing, the friends that i still have who work there, they're telling me contracts are running out, money's running out andpeople are becoming more upset because the new shelters are not as luxurious as the rowe hotel, as other major hotels with migrants. and it's it's just going to be getting people even more upset, and we're heading straight to the riotses in paris. joey: yeah, i hope not, i really do. i think the crisis at the border has become a crisis in pretty much every town that's involved in it now. and carlos, thank you for being
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a whistleblower and telling us what's happening. >> thank you for having me. joey: take care. coming up, celebrities are reportedly staying away from prince harry and meghan markel. we have the social distancing saga. plus, president biden is going all in on bidenomics, but "the wall street journal" says voters aren't buying it in this economy. monica crowley says he is just rebranding, and he is here next. ♪ ♪
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or an abnormal heartbeat which can lead to death. it can cause serious skin reactions, liver problems, and low white blood cell counts that may result in severe infections. avoid grapefruit during treatment. tell your doctor right away if you have new or worsening symptoms, including breathing problems, cough, chest pain, a change in your heartbeat, dizziness, yellowing of the skin or eyes, dark urine, tiredness, loss of appetite, abdomen pain, bleeding, bruising, fever, chills, or other symptoms of an infection, a severe or worsening rash, are or plan to become pregnant, or breastfeeding. long live hugs and kisses. ask about kisqali. and long live life. pete: we're back with some headlines starting with this, a transgender former democrat state lawmaker from new hampshire is now facing charges of conspiring to sexually exploit children. stacy lawton, when was born a male -- who was born a male, resigned from public office in
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december after becoming the first transgender person to be elected to the statehouse. lawton's resignation followed charges of stalk stalking a woman. that woman, lindsay groves, is now charged as a copeer to have in the sexual -- co-conspirator in the sexual exploitation case. groves is accused of taking explicit photos of children in her care at a daycare center and sharing thousands of explicit texts with lawton. sick stuff. a two-alarm fire on the rooftop of a hotel property in the las vegas strip. nearly 90 first responders from three different departments responding to the fire at the fountain bleu which is currently under construction. when they reached the top of the building, the fire was quickly contained. the cause of the fire or is being investigates. and to the women's world
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cup, denmark scoring a late goal to defeat china 1-0, if sweden roars back from a goal down to beat south africa 2-1. >> -- for a reason. certainly a target to watch. headed down ask sweden finds a way. pete: governor greg abbott with a brief aexperience in the world cup. or -- appearance. and the netherlands beating portugal 1-0. team usa is back at it on wednesday. after their win over vietnam, they take on netherlands, catch all the world cup action on fox. rachel, other to you. rachel: thank you, pete. all right. well, the biden administration is taking a jab at republican governors for celebrating low unemployment rates, claiming bidenomics is behind their success. a white house memo saying, quote, in recent weeks we've seen republican officials with a welcome change of heart
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embracing bidenomics as it rebuilds our infrastructure, supply chain and manufacturing in states and districts across the country. but voters aren't buying it. the "wall street journal" saying, quote, voters say they haven't felt the impact of legislation that's the centerpiece of biden's campaign, and they cite what may be his main albatross, inflation. monica crowley servesed as assistant treasury secretary under former president trump, and she joins us now. one of the problems is that they tried to sell the inflation reduction bill as inflation, but we all know it was a climate bill. so that was interesting. they're trying to say that in in and in texas it's not the low regulations, it's not the -- [laughter] you know, the good economy, it's bidenomics. >> so the biden white house -- it's great to be with you this morning, rachel, they have tried to take biden's catastrophic economy and rebrand it as bidenomics and try to sell this new slogan as something positive. but, actually, you can take a
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pig and put lipstick on the pig, but it's still a pig, and that's exactly what's happening. these red states under red governors with conservative, republican legislatures, they do is have low taxes, they have a friendly regulatory environment, they have robust energy policies, and that's why those states are thriving. they have more economic freedom for their people, and that's why those statements are booming. it is in spite of bidenomics not because of bidenomic. rachel: yeah. that's to absolutely a fair point. meanwhile, governor desantis wants to sue bud light on behalf of the shareholders of florida's pension fund. this is exactly what needs to happen. why wasn't this done before? i don't know. it's the right way to attack esg, right? >> yeah. i mean, i hope other republican governors, speaking of them, they're doing great jobs for their states economically. i hope they're all watching governor desantis' move here with regard to anheuser-busch and will do the exact same thing because this is the way.
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since the dylan mulvaney promotion, anheuser-busch's stock is down 14%, and and they've lost about $16 billion in market value. a lot of these states are deeply invested with their pension funds in companies, woke companies like anheuser-busch. so what governor desantis is saying is, look, if you're to going to put a radical social agenda ahead of your hair holders and in terms of a pension fund, you're talking about hard working americans like firefighters, police officers, teachers, public sector workers that are there to serve the people. they're being negatively impacted in terms of their retirement funds. because you in the company are pursuing this crazy left-wing agenda, and it's having a direct impact. so he may very well sue for a breach of fiduciary duty, and i think all a republican governors should take a look at what he is doing and think about doing it as well. because now it's time to fight fire with fire. we cannot allow the left just to
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wreak this kind of social and economic damage against average americans without any response whatsoever. rachel: yeah. >> so good for governor desantis. rachel: yeah. our pensions going to things we don't even believe in and that don't even make money, a good profit for the companies that we're invested in. okay, so let's talk about the politics behind this. what do you think? >> well, look, i think president trump is obviously so dominant in the republican field, and all polls show he is now leading his closest challengers, governor desantis and now vivek ramaswamy, by, like, 40 points. the lead, to me, is insurmountable. my view is the republican primary is, in effect, over, but all the other challengers are struggling to find a lane that will differentiate themselves from president trump. and think governor desantis -- i think governor desantis has had so much success in florida attacking the woke agenda with moves like this, you know, potentially suing woke companies
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and so on. speaking about this, removing it from florida's public schools and so on, he's had tremendous success with that. rachel: so why isn't it translating? why isn't it translating into the presidential election? >> because as important as it is, rachel, it's not going to win an election. it is a are important issue to take on and i'm glad he and others are doing it, but it's not enough when you're running in a presidential primary particularly against donald trump, also going into next year this is going to be a kitchen table election. rachel: absolutely. >> this is going to be primarily economic issues driving this. and the thing that is unsurmountable for everybody else is that president trump has a four-year-long record of delivering a booming economy with tax cuts, regulatory relief, robust energy policy and fairer trade deals. so you don't have to go back 40 years to remember the reagan boom, you only have to go back two or three years to remember
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the trump boom. that's what voters have in mind. so i would like to see governor desantis and others in the gop field put out a pro-growth economic agenda to run on. the issues, again, are critically important but not as important as feeding your family, dealing with inflation, high energy prices and very little economic growth and opportunity as we're seeing under biden. rachel: yeah. it's a great analysis, and you're right, it doesn't take -- you don't have to go back too far to remember e when times were good economically and what it was like to have a businessman in the white house. >> that's right. rachel: all right. thanks so much, monica. always smart. >> thank you, rachel. rachel: coming up, top oversight committee democrat ro khanna blaming the whistleblower hearing, saying hunter biden did not do get special treatment. >> what this showed clearly was there was no special treatment with hunter biden. rachel: wow, that was a crazy assessment. but joseph ziegler disagrees, and shannon bream spoke with him
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on "fox news sunday." she'll react coming up. and the early bird special isn't just for seniors. americans of all ages are eating at 5 p.m. we're going to discuss that and other trends coming up. ♪ ♪
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my clearer skin... my way. with skyrizi, 3 out of 4 people achieved 90% clearer skin at 4 months. in another study, most people had 90% clearer skin, even at 5 years. and skyrizi is just 4 doses a year, after 2 starter doses. serious allergic reactions and an increased risk of infections or a lower ability to fight them may occur. tell your doctor if you have an infection or symptoms, had a vaccine, or plan to. thanks to clearer skin with skyrizi - this is my moment. there's nothing on my skin and that means everything! ♪nothing is everything♪ now's the time. ask your doctor about skyrizi, the #1 dermatologist-prescribed biologic in psoriasis. learn how abbvie could help you save. ♪ muck. rachel: welcome back to "fox & friends". we're talking about trends, and one of them is that hollywood royalty are reportedly avoiding
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harry and meghan because they want to stay in the good grace of prince william and princess kate middleton. pete: here's the new york post reporting on it. they say celebrities including their high profile neighbors, even spielberg and rob lowe, are staying away from the excised royals in fear they will alienate them from prince william and kate middleton. joey: man, such a tough decision, which set of pap pamperedded elitists that believe they're endow by god do you want to enjoy most. rachel: i guess they're picking the working ones. pete: yeah. maybe it's a convenient excuse to avoid having to hang out with meghan. rachel: or it's a sign that people know that their fortunes are sinking. in hollywood people are pretty superficial. pete: you're stocked up or stocked out.
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joey: there's this case, you guys need to know about this, there's something called time blindness. it's real. it's a medical condition that should be accommodated at work -- pete: time blindness? joey: yes. at least that's what this woman's claiming. >> i just wanted to know are there accommodations for people struck with time blindness being on time, you know? and then the person i was with interrupted and asked like i was asking something -- acted like i was asking something else, and when we were done, they said accommodations for time blindness don't exist. i think a culture where workers are just cut off because they struggle being on time when there's other solutions we can look to, i think anybody who thinks it's just okay to treat people like that, yeah, that culture needs to be dismantled. joey: yeah, listen -- [laughter] she got served up a truth bomb, and it hurt her feelings. listen, i can respect the a fact, when i lost my legs, it takes me a lot longer to do things, and it took me years to
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ajust to that. but the first alarm clock was inevented in america 1787. we've had mechanisms to help us out -- pete: how did george washington know how to be on time? by the way, the tiktok handle for her is chaotic philosopher. rachel: that should tell you a lot. pete: don't show up to your job and say, i'm sorry, i just won't be showing up on time. [laughter] rachel: or at least say latina time -- pete: or afghan time. [laughter] we'll see if you show up. here's the third story, we're each reading a story, the one you e-mail us the most about is the one we'll repeat. this one is about early bird specials, you know, early dinner. a "wall street journal" headline says the younger folks are starting dinner early as well. america's becoming a nation of early birds, dinner parties at 5 p.m. more consumers of all ages are sliding activities back. night owls wonder where the action is. [laughter] i love this. joey: i do too. pete: i mean, i -- we're morning
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show hosts. dinner or definitely starts at five. joey: you know the best part? you get to eat again at eight or nine. you get two dinners. rachel: i think the reason this trend is happening is because so many people are intermittent fasting, so they want to eat early, and then i don't eat for the rest of the night, i'm obviously fasting while i sleep, and then you get to break your fast -- joey: charlie hurt call called it, what, the starvation diet. pete: that's basically what it is. joey: yeah. pete: supper at five, like, that's when dinner used to happen back in the day because the sun was about to set. you didn't have beginner at eight, you had -- dinner at eight, you had it at five. we're returning back to our roots. rachel: in europe, very different, they eat dinner at 10 p.m. pete: e-mail us, friends@foxnews.com, which of these stories between the
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royals, time blindness -- joey: that's the one. pete: -- and having begin dinner at five are you most interested in? friends@foxnews.com. coming up, vivek ramaswamy starting to make waves in the g if orb p primary field. the 2024 hopeful joins shannon bream later this morning, and she joins us coming up. joey: plus, as medical debt crushes millions of americans, christian health care solutions is helping during these difficult types -- times.bu they join ust next. ♪ ♪ amen. lord jesus, come to us now. help us to surrender ourselves completely to you. help us to listen to your voice. even when we're distracted or tired, we pray this in the name of the father and of the son of the holy spirit. amen. thank you so much. i just want to encourage you
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that if you want to join me in more prayer, check out hallow it's the number one prayer app in the world.
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pete: medical debt is crushing millions of americans as four in ten insured adults face cost barriers. but christian health care ministries' biblical cost sharing is a solution that can help navigate these difficult times. our next guests have been using it for ten years, and it's saved them from tens of thousands of dollars of medical expenses. hannah and blaine cruz join us now along with christian health care min i industries' president and ceo craig brown with. thank you all for being here. >> thank you for having us. pete: absolutely. craig, or let me start with you first. medical debt's a real issue. talk to us about that ask how
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you're addressing it. >> some estimates put it at $150 billion for americans, and medical debt, it crushes people financially, it adds to anxiety, it steals hopes and dreams, and it's in the face of this problem that christian health care ministries provides a faith-based and affordable alternative to health insurance. we harness the power of the christian faith committee with the power of free market economics to take health care and put it back in control of our members. pete: so it's -- what has that meant for you, hannah, as you guys-and-a-half if gate medical debt? how has it changed your life? >> whenever we first got married, he had some unexpected medical debt that happened to him when he was a teenager, and whenever we president got married, it was one of those things, you know, the first year of marriage is definitely financially difficult in a lot of cases. for us, i had quit my news to move upstate to marry him, and right after that he lost his
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job. so during that time period of just getting to know each other and all of a sudden we had these financial stresses, it was very difficult. so christian health care ministries was actually introduced to us by a friend of ours, and they said this is a cost effective way that maybe, you know, i don't think traditional health care would have been an option for us because if it was between paying our rent and paying a health care premium, it wasn't even an option. we got on that, got pregnant with our daughter, and we had the freedom to choose the kind of medical professional we want to go to, i went with a midwife, and we have now a bouncing baby girl and our son now. and in the meantime of those past ten years, they've been able to step in and help us. pete: no wonder so good, used to be in tv news? [laughter] >> for a horse time. pete: you brought in a ringer. blaine where, for people who aren't familiar with this concept, how has it worked for you? >> just like hannah said, the options to be able to choose any provider we want to go to, you
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know? when we were on traditional health care, we had to stay within a network. >> right. pete: sure. >> you didn't have freedom to choose what doctor you wanted to see. for us, it's been amaze anything that regard. pete: and the finances of it, how do -- the when people come to this network, how do they decide what to pay? i mean, just put a little bit more meat on the bone for what it means. >> our members choose and make monthly contributions based on their chosen membership level. it identifies cash payers or self-payers to the provider of their choice, and they just receive the associated cash pay discounts. they submit their medical bills, retrue view them -- review them. pete: and talk to me about the christian aspect of this. >> well, we have a robust economic value that we add. it's true that there's much more. when the physical body's in need of healing, as you know, most often there is a spiritual component that also needs healing. that's where the christian faith
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community comes in once again. we pray for each other, we share the promises of god's word with each other, we affirm each other all to the glory of god. and, president, we've -- pete, we've satisfy anded more than 9.4 billion of our members' medical bills, and with operational losses less than -- costs less than 10 cents on the dollar, our members enjoy and are receiving 40-60% savings in their costs and medical debt. >> i can't count how many times people have called us saying, hey, we heard you had this thing going on, can we pray for you. so to have a community that stops and prays for you is, bar with none, very unusual, and that's why we've been members for ten years, and we will be. pete: yeah. my insurance company has never prayed for me. [laughter] what an awesome concept. folks can learn more about becoming a christian health care ministries member at your chm.org. it's right at the bottom of the
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screen, your chm.org, certainly something to look at, a different approach. and we love the faith angle here on "fox & friends." thank you all. >> appreciate it very much. pete: all right. we still have two big hours ahead. shannon bream joins us at the top of the hour. don't go anywhere. ♪ -- if he's anything like me ♪ providing for your family is a top priority. but what happens when you need affordable health care? christian health care ministries could save you up to 40% today. as a member, you can choose your provider without network restrictions. sign up at your convenience with our anytime enrollment. that supports each other's medical expenses, offering peace of mind as you prioritize what's most important. enroll now at your chm dot org ♪ ♪
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♪ voltaren. the joy of movement. ♪
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we're traveling all across america talking to people about their hearts. ooh, take this exit. how's the heart? i feel like it's good. you feel like it's good? how do you know when it's time to check in on your heart? how do you know? let me show you something. it looks like a credit card, but it is the kardiamobile card. that is a medical-grade ekg. want to see how it works? yeah. put both thumbs on there. that is your heart coming from the kardiamobile card. wow! with kardiamobile card you can take a medical-grade ekg in just 30 seconds from anywhere. kardiamobile card is proven to detect atrial fibrillation,
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one of the leading causes of stroke. and it's the only personal ekg that's fda-cleared to detect normal heart rhythm, bradycardia and tachycardia. how much do you think that costs? probably $500. $99! oh really? you could carry that in your wallet! of course you can carry it in your wallet, right? yes, yes. checking your heart anytime, anywhere has never been easier. don't wait. get kardiamobile card for just $99 at kardia.com or amazon. [city ambience sounds] [car screech] [car door slam] [camera shutter sfx] introducing ned's plaque psoriasis. [camera shutter sfx] he thinks his flaky, red patches are all people see. otezla is the #1 prescribed pill to treat plaque psoriasis. [ned?] it can help you get clearer skin and reduce itching and flaking. with no routine blood tests required. doctors have been prescribing it for nearly a decade. otezla is also approved to treat psoriatic arthritis. don't use otezla if you're allergic to it.
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serious allergic reactions can happen. otezla may cause severe diarrhea, nausea, or vomiting. some people taking otezla had depression, suicidal thoughts, or weight loss. upper respiratory tract infection and headache may occur. [crowd gasp] ♪ with clearer skin, movie night is a groovy night. [ting] ♪ live in the moment. ask your doctor about otezla. ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ >> good morning everybody. it is 8:00 here in the east coast, and i'm so happy to be here with my flengdz. joey and pete hegseth having

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