tv The Ingraham Angle FOX News September 4, 2023 4:00pm-5:00pm PDT
4:00 pm
3:00 p.m. on the west coast. join stuart varney, dana perino and ilia calderon as they moderate the second presidential debate on fox business septembed reagan foundation and institute in simi valley, california. thanks for watching "special report." t"the ingraham angle" is next. ♪ ♪ >> laura: hi, everyone. i'm laura ingraham. this is a special edition of the ingraham angle from washington tonight. all right. so far 2023 hasn't just taken the angle from 10:00 p.m. to 7:00 p.m. but it's brought us coast to coast to investigate everything from the crime that's are a advantaging san francisco to flying cars in florida now, i have spoken with fentanyl addicts. i have learned life lessons from a man who sells snow cones and i have even fought an mma legend.
4:01 pm
now i want to take you back on all of these trips. we begin in san francisco. now, what i have seen happen to that wonderful city is just nothing short of heart breaking. >> how long would it take me to get crack. >> under a minute. >> how about heroin? >> same thing. >> fentanyl? >> same. >> easy to get? >> very easy to get. >> laura: less than two years ago, i was right here in the tenderloin district here in san francisco. it's an open air drug market. we decided to come back to see whether things have improved or gotten worse. >> within the past week three shootings one resulted in an ahomicide. one resulted in another person being shot and another resulted in a car being shot up. >> laura: just in district. >> yeah. just in this district. >> lieutenant tracy mcrae has been with the san francisco police department for nearly 30 years after spending 11 in the army. >> this is ground zero here in the tenderloin district for hard core drug addicts in the area,
4:02 pm
correct? >> right. i mean, you just take a look around and you see people addicted to fentanyl, crystal meth, you know, heroin, you got your crack cocaine still. but you got your ga garden variy of all the type of drugs. this is where you will find people on all of these different drugs just walking around. you're going to go down the street and you are going to see someone who is shooting up. >> laura: right in broad daylight. >> right in broad daylight. >> while it's tempting to turn your heads away from the human sadness and suffering on these streets, i decided to speak firsthand with those in the grips of addiction. >> laura: how old are you? >> i'm 38 years old. i have family. i have a husband. i have children. >> laura: you got to get clean, ma'am. you got get clean. >> i have to get clean. but since i have been on the street, because i just barely started using fentanyl. >> laura: where are you getting the fentanyl. >> i buy it from off the street from people. but, to me, fentanyl has been
4:03 pm
like on or about -- like something helping keep me alive. it helps me not think about some of the trauma that i have been through. when i don't get it like, i can't breathe sometime or have anxiety really bad. but when i have it, like i immediately calm down. i immediately calm down. >> laura: okay. the human need is great. after seeing this firsthand, it's going to take a lot more police and a lot more creative thinking to get this situation cleaned up. how many police officers in the city? >> currently right now 580. >> laura: you are down 50580. >> down 580 officers. >> what would -- this poor guy? >> fully staffed police force could be out here connecting with people trying to get them connected to services. we need those partners out here,
4:04 pm
too. that's the thing. they all say we get all this money billion dollars organization. get all this money bore where do you see the boots on the ground from the community organizations out here trying to help that man trying to help that man across the street. trying to help that lady in the doorway. trying to help that man wrapped in a blanket. where are they? see, that's my problem. where are they? >> laura: so your point is off the street your choice is jail or treatment, that's it. >> that's it. those are the only two choices you get. >> laura: right now, what happens? >> you get none of that. you get to stay out here and do. >> laura: you can just live out here and do as much drugs as you want? >> yeah. the injunction about clearing tents and homeless encampments. >> laura: you can't clear it out. >> you can't do that, no. they want us to but we can't do it by law, right? a judge says no. and unless you can provide a bed for every person you see out here. and my whole thing is when did that fall on us?
4:05 pm
that's not my issue. right? like i get -- i am my brother's keeper but, damn, how much keeping does one person have to do for another adult who makes these choices? that's the other thing here nobody ever talks about. these are adults who are making choices to be out here to do this. >> laura: lieutenant mccrea knows all too well the dangers of having a department stretched to thin as an officer and even herself one time the victim of crime. >> police are not the solution. we can't be the only solution. and until people want to make these hard decisions and tell people no, then this will continue to happen. you will see this and get back in two years and it will be much years. >> in 2020 mayor london breed cut $1 million for police and sheriff's departments in the city directing to direct disparities in the black community. three years later she wants to give more money and even call the national guard in to deal
4:06 pm
with the drug issue. >> do you know what it actually means it's a division of their intelligence unit helping gather information to try and stem the flow of where these drugs are, identifying, you know, but it's not boots on the ground being it's not what it is. it's the chb coming and helping maybe do traffic stops maybe if they do a traffic stop stop that it doesn't mean by any stretch of the imagination up and down these streets. >> laura: will it help clean this up at all. >> no. >> laura: do you have hope for this city? >> i mean, i have hope, but it's going to be long time hope
4:07 pm
project. we're talking five years, 10 years down the road to recover, right? san francisco will bounce back. it always has this one is going to be tougher to bounce back from. >> many of us take for granted feeling safe in our own home. but many san francisco residents have had that feeling of safety shattered. now, i talk to a lot of people during my time there and it's just heart breaking the way they are feeling and they don't have the support from their political leadership, all democrats or even the police. they are overwhelmed where is their representation. you don't hear anything from nancy pelosi unless it's involving her family her city too. she lives there why are so many people struggling and so badly. why are the streets filled with despair. why are residents having to pay for private security to protect themselves in their own homes. well, i spoke to one homeowner who had to do just that. after his house was broken into nearly a dozen times.
4:08 pm
his story was first reported by independent journalist lee fang. >> the bottom line is i don't feel safe in my own home. >> laura: you may have heard about the crime. the assaults on the streets, targeting of asian americans. closing of stores they can't keep items on the shelves they are being stolen. but what about individual homeowners people who are investing in this city? maybe they are renovating a house or doing an entire reconstruction of existing home? how are they making it? we decided to talk to one littl, tech entrepreneur been burg glirsed not once, twice, three times during reconstruction project during the past three years alone he has been burglarized 10 times. how is he dealing with this. and what's the future of san francisco if this crime problem does not get solved? >> so my first break-in when i was living here was in the summer of 2020 in total i have
4:09 pm
had 10 break-ins. >> laura: 10 break-ins in less than three years? >> yeah, actually. yeah. >> laura: what are they looking for? >> valuable things. you know, something they could sell getting tense, getting scarier and it's constant. >> laura: ben cook grew up in kentucky and dime san francisco to get his hd. he stayed because he fell in love the city. >> laura: i see the broken window in front what was that from. >> that was a break-in earlier i can't remember which one. >> laura: that's what it's of it's come to you have had so many. >> they happen all the time. after the break-in and theft i lost tens of thousands of dollars. of my crew lost a lot of tools, a lot of valuable tools they need. and this fellow lost all of his tools. significant amount of money. i mean, he is upset. >> laura: the most recent break-in at cook's home happened over the weekend.
4:10 pm
three incidents in a single day you can see one of the thieves walking out of the house with a ladder stolen from the construction workers. >> the guy who looked like he may have been armed broke in right there. you know, just a month or so ago, there was an organized crew that came in the middle of the night. two vehicles, big crew of folks, they even took my washer and dryer. you know, that's big stuff these folks knew what they were doing, they had a plan, they knew -- they had been watching us, that's what it felt like to me. >> laura: when do you call the police, what's their response? >> usually it would be we'll call you back. >> laura: um-huh. >> i called many, many times i just -- i was shocked that there was no response whatsoever when there was -- you know, home invasion. there was someone there there
4:11 pm
was a confrontation. fortunately, my guard, who i hired someone to sleep here at night because i knew the house was under constant threat. >> laura: wait a second, you are building a house, you had to hire someone to be here, sleep -- where are they sleeping? this is a construction site? >> yeah. the heat -- it's not comfortable. space heater and an air mattress. >> laura: this is insane it? >> is insane. i'm not okay with it. i don't think it's okay i don't know what to do. i don't know how to feel safer. i don't know how to protect the things that i have worked hard to get, you know. i hear stories from everybody it's just a part of life here you expect if you park your car outside a restaurant and you go to dinner, there is a pretty good chance that a window will be broken when you come back
4:12 pm
it's just you don't report it because you know there is not going to be a response i don't feel that should be acceptable part of life when you don't feel safe when you are out or don't feel safe in your home. >> laura: and, yet, you love this city? >> i do. it's beautiful. the main thick is it's full of brilliant, ambitious people. people that i don't feel like i would meet anywhere else, you know. i love my friends here, my network here. i'm committed to being here. obviously. >> laura: no matter what? no matter what happens? >> well. >> laura: is there a limit for you? >> there are limits, you know. i can't afford to have full-time security staff outside the house just to feel safe at night, you know? that's crazy. i feel like i should expect a basic civic service of security. and i'm not getting it.
4:13 pm
>> laura: what's your view of the city going forward if there is no significant change in law enforcement and actually pushing the criminals out and back? >> well, i don't know what to expect, but i can say in my experience and in the experience of people that i know and talk to, it's clearly getting worse. you know, steadily getting worse. and it's starting to get scary. and no one will do anything about it. i don't know what to do. i don't know what to do. >> laura: we showed you the drugs. we showed you the crime. and now it's time to see how both of those things are hurting the city and its residents economically. >> laura: just over a year ago, whole foods opened this store, a flagship on market street in san francisco. and now it's closed. now, the company says it's temporary, but we know what's going on. in the span of one year, 911
4:14 pm
received 568 calls about what was happening in the store. there were assaults on employees with knives. attempted shootings. a machete. attacks almost every day and people almost didn't feel safe. this is all the result of policies that have been terrible for this city. failure to enforce criminal law. and that's resulted in stores like target, wall green and others putting a lot of their toiletries behind plastic and thick plastic shields. other stores also closing like nordstrum and sak's off fifth closing as well here. what is the loss of retail going to do to san francisco? and when will people wake up? >> even if you go to like walgreen's security guards at the front trying to prevent people from stealing basic necessities. basic necessities are like boxed
4:15 pm
up in like plastic boxes. >> laura: what does it feel like when you go in a store and like toothpaste is behind thick plastic enclosures now? >> i'm used to it. >> do you get numb to what is happening around you? people shooting around. >> i see it a lot. >> laura: do you want it to improve. >> yeah. i don't think anyone likes living like this. >> laura: do you think people get numb to what is going on here in the city with obviously the drugs, the crime. >> i don't know if people are numb to it. people are aware of it and talk about how it feels -- especially since covid really it's mainly the shift has kind of changed, i'm worried about the future of the city overall. >> you were here when it opened? >> yeah i lived right here like you said and it was easy to get my milk and groceries, anything i needed. even late nights and eventually
4:16 pm
started closing earlier and that was already a problem now it's just gone. >> how worried are you about that and how it might change the city without retail? >> i think it's going to be horrible. it only gets worse. it has been getting worse since i got here. everybody is claiming about the crime. it's terrible here like 6:00 p.m. walking away at night. >> laura: are you afraid after 6:00. >> yeah, can't do it alone. >> laura: three years after george floyd rioters burned to the ground i returned again to see where things stood. well, frankly, i was shocked. well, frankly, i was shocked. shocked at what i saw and what i heard. that report,we s next. ♪ cademic challenges. one of the things we found is that many students who struggle are missing. important foundational knowledge. learning is a sequential process. it's like a chain of interlinked concepts. if one link is missing, there isn't anywhere to connect the next concept yourselves. acellus team responded by developing a technology called vectored instruction, which takes into account
4:17 pm
a student's existing knowledge gaps and dynamically provides targeted lessons to bridge those gaps. we had a student who was struggling in algebra, acellus gold recognize that the student was missing concepts from two grade levels before and automatically provided the basic lessons needed for the student to move forward. in a acellus academy. we're seeing student lesson scores increase by as much as 25% after receiving assistance through vectors instruction. all students possess the capacity to learn as a teacher. acellus gold provides me with the tools that i need to help the student succeed.
4:20 pm
4:21 pm
can we provide health care virtually anywhere? we can help with that, too. is it possible to survey foot traffic across all of our locations? yeah! absolutely. with the advanced connectivity and intelligence of global secure networking from comcast business. it's not just possible. it's happening. >> laura: may 27th, two days after the killing of george floyd, the auto zone, which is right here, burned to the ground. that was august of 2020, i was standing right here in this spot with a torched police precinct over one shoulder and the burned down auto zone over the other. it was just 10 weeks after the george floyd riots that destroyed so much of this area. i decided to come back every summer to find out what's changing. is the crime getting better or getting worse? is there a police presence here that's trusted? and what about this third police precinct burned down during the
4:22 pm
riots? does it remain a monument to anarchy? why decided to talk a number of people in different walks of life. what do they think? >> looking at the third police precinct three years after the riots? >> myself but also obviously the police officers facility but it is just sad to see. here we are three years later and literally nothing has changed. >> >> laura: scott gear licker retired police officer. one of the commanders who led the police response after george floyd's death antiviolence initiatives. having said that crime still is high and any time you have 400 fewer officers than you did before it's difficult to get a handle on street crime. >> laura: it doesn't look like there is going to be a police precinct in this actual area
4:23 pm
that suffered so much after the floyd riots. the activists, i think, believe that's a surrender by the police or the c city council they consider it a victory. >> i agree. i think the activists and some of the city council members, also activists themselves consider a victory not to have police in the precinct because some of the city council don't want police to begin with. their agenda is to eliminate the police. their agenda is to disrupt law and order. they thrive on that. the residents, however, if you talk to the residents, i'm sure you have. they really want to see the police in their own community. >> it's been a tough couple years. mark is the owner of welna ace hardware. a business been in his family for 70 years. life here isn't easy. it's getting harder crime and frankly a lack of political leadership doesn't help. >> i notice you blocked off some of the aisles. why is that? >> we have to help people down those aisles because we just had too much theft. in the tool area, you know, a
4:24 pm
lot of the thieves that are breaking into houses around here, they can't even buy the tools of their trade. they have to steal the crowbars and screwdrivers. we have had pro-taken tanks that you exchange for your grills. we have all 18 of them stolen in one night. >> laura: homeless encampments have been a problem across parts of the city. how has that impacted the running of this family business? there is a lot of trash, a lot of needles all over our neighborhood like one of the young men that cuts the lawn in the neighborhood. most neighborhoods you pick up the sticks and twigs before you cut the lawn. he had to pick up 20 needles that were in his yard. >> we had the encampments and stuff like that less than half a block away from some of this stuff. i have had to pick up stuff. unnecessary things that shouldn't have to happen. >> laura: tony williams grew up in this area and he has noticed a lot of changes. >> like, when we grew up, we had every race around this neighborhood had natives, black,
4:25 pm
white, hispanic ha manning, jamaican every spot every house. we was all together all the time. something has changed. i don't know what but something did happen. >> some of the folks we talked to are really trying to make a difference in the community and saw real reason for optimism. buff then there were others who were long-time residents who see the fault not only with city officials and political leadership, but with the community itself. >> we have african-american community we have to wake up and be more aware. everybody that said they are for us is not for us. you have people like al sharpton lining their pockets. every time something gets killed he fly in town. we got to be more wise and see who do vote for. it's not about democrat or republican. we got read and study the issues and say has anything changed our quality of life. ain't nothing changed since i have been here. sad to say you have more
4:26 pm
african-american churches, too [inaudible] too. they always want to say it's the white man's fault. it's the white man's fault. how about sometimes we say it's the black man's fault. it's our community. ain't no white folks coming in our community and putting trash. of ain't no white people killing. it's us killing each other. it's called black on black crime. this is black on black crime. it's a shame we are pumping all this money. this country pumping all this money into trying to get the african-american community back on track. it's not happening. where's the money going? we still got potholes over here. where is it going? you come back next year, this city will still look the same. all across chicago, san francisco, and all over. it's not only in minneapolis. it's all over. it's like a wave. >> laura: all right. coming up. i know you have thought about this. isn't there some way to fly over traffic? well, that may be a reality sooner than you think. i got the chance to check out a car that will actually be able to fly. i'll show you right after this.d
4:27 pm
so sta iy there. i'm taking a two-year business course. i've been studying a lot. i've been producing and directing for over 50 years. it's a very detailed thing and the pressure's all on me. i noticed i really wasn't quite as sharp as i was. my boss told me about prevagen and i started taking it. i feel sharper. my memory's a lot better. it just works. prevagen. at stores everywhere without a prescription.
4:28 pm
4:30 pm
i'm hungry, i'm in a hurry, i don't have time to make anything healthy. you could if you had a blendjet. blendjet? it's the portable blender that makes the healthy choice the most convenient choice. i don't know. it seems like a hassle. hahaha! wrong. just pour in some milk, add some frozen fruit, and bam! you've got a nutritious and delicious smoothie. mmm! that is good. you're welcome, sad office guy. get yours today at blendjet.com are we in in an ad? we sure are.
4:32 pm
>> welcome to fox news live i'm jackie ibañez. burning man organizers reopened the road leads out of the nevada festival today allowing tens of thousands of attendees to escape after being trapped for days by mud. many of the 64,000 people who remain on site may choose to stay a little longer to watch the festival's giant namesake go up in flames tonight. unexpected summer rain turned the week long arts festival into a muddy nightmare. meanwhile president biden marking this labor day with a visit to philadelphia to honor american workers. speaking at the annual labor day parade. biden touted his economic plan. his administration says biden's policies created more than 13 million jobs. pennsylvania is expected to be a pivotal battleground state in the 2024 election. the president's trip to the city of brotherly love marks biden's
4:33 pm
seventh visit to philadelphia this year. i'm jackie ibañez back with "the ingraham angle." >> roads, we don't need roads. >> laura: when back to the future two came out we all thought we would be dressing like this and commuting to work like this all by the year 2015. well, we skipped the fashion, and the flying cars never came until now. this is the droney h 1. >> you really do look like you are flying a very large drone. very, very cool the founder and ceo of temperature reasony aerospace. he started developing the flying car just seven years ago i saw this kid play with a grown here how fast would these go in first
4:34 pm
iteration. >> 100-mile would be cruising 100 miles per hour. cruising 120 max speed just comfortable cruising nicely carbon fiber. mostly carbon fiber. >> laura: concern people have with anything electric is how far it will ultimately go. people see cool flying car i can go across country but what's the reality? >> so, at this point, unfortunately you cannot down the road definitely. >> laura: price tag, who could ever afford this? what do you see this originally costing? >> at this point it's about 300, go to $375,000. our goal is to democratize it, to make it accessible. we will try to do the best way to do leasing. whatever we can so people can afford it.
4:35 pm
we know this is the future. >> laura: the first time you got it off the ground, what did that feel like? >> it was amazing. the feeling is really cushions of air. you have fans throwing air below. and you are comfortable. >> >> inside inside of the temperature reasony h 1 is actually spacious and looks more like a cockpit or maybe a video game console than the front seat of a car check the batteries and the temperature. all the information we need. you are ready to take off. >> let's say i want to go at go straight up. >> so i'm the pilot. you are the passenger. what do i do? >> you are going forward like this. just going forward. forward? >> yeah. backwards. you hear it already. >> laura: there is a lot of play in this stick? >> just a joystick. very simple.
4:36 pm
>> laura: for all the kids that are video game aficionados this is going to be second nature, right? >> very easy and intuitive to use. >> laura: oh my gosh. i wish my son were here. this is so cool. let's say heaven forbid one of the fans goes out or two or three, something potentially catastrophic. what about safety precautions? >> right. so, all together we have 8 vertical fans so we design it in a way that in case of one or two not work, the system is self-stabilizing. they all go out we have a ballistic parachute deploy and land the whole aircraft. >> laura: what the sky doesn't have but roads do, lights, stop signs, gas and charging stations, all things needed in order travel safely. >> laura: how would it actually work in terms of multiple vehicles on the road? >> so, we try to take, to understand the three dimensional
4:37 pm
from 2 nextal. doesn't work that way. we have multiple layers. everyone can choose his own altitude in a way. and then interact with each other because it's all digital. >> laura: how high would these be flying? >> so we can reach out to about 10,000, 8,000, but comfortable zone is couple of hundred feet. >> laura: just last month the faa released something called implementationese type of vehicles and put in place new training requirements for pilots. >> laura: regulation of this industry is probably just beginning? what do you feet about that? >> so we can learnm other countries. we have them in brazil. we have them in australia and europe. all aware of this technology coming to fruition right now from our understanding it's you can comply up to 8,000, 10,000 feet. and can you fly almost everywhere beside going to major airports. >> laura: seems like an elon musk project to me. if i had to think of a project that elon musk would be interested in, this kind of
4:38 pm
seems like it. >> we are happy to drasht. we are very interested to get the big guys working with us. and we feel this is just starting point. it's endless. it's just endless. >> laura: that was pretty cool. but this next one may actually top it. i got the chance to train with mma legend colby covington and, i'm telling you this, he did noe go easy on me. that's next. ♪ independently homeschooling their children. acellus courses from power homeschool provide a self-paced learning solution that automatically adapts to help each student succeed. power homeschool has really transformed our child's experience. it allows my child to work at her own pace and on her own schedule. visit our website at power homeschool dot org. to learn more and start your child's educational journey.
4:42 pm
having diabetes isn't easy, but i found splenda diabetes care shakes which help me manage my blood sugar and give me the energy at breakfast to take on whatever the day brings... they're smooth and creamy have 16 grams of protein and unlike others, *splenda* shakes have zero sugar they're a perfect snack between meals. or lunch on the go. splenda shakes are made by the #1 doctor-recommended sweetener brand. splenda diabetes care shakes: find them in the pharmacy aisle today.
4:43 pm
rain shower lawyer there are two big battles that everyone is waiting for. the first is going to impact every american for generations to come. trump vs. biden next year 2024. the second two of the richest men on the face of the planet elon musk and is mark zuckerberg. mr. spacex vs. mr. facebook. i know a lot about politics so i'm pretty set for the first fight. but i'm not sure about this billionaire brawl. so i called mma legend colby covington. >> at 511, 170 pounds, colby chaos covington is ranked number two in the u.s. welter weight division. he made his octagon debut nine years ago. he has become outspoken supporter of president trump. speaking on council for sports, fitness and nutrition. >> laura: musk, zuckerberg. there is a lot of trash talk.
4:44 pm
we're not sure what is going to happen here what are your thoughts? is this going to go forward? >> i hope it goes forward because i think it could be the biggest and best fight the universe has ever seen. i think it could do just crazy numbers on p pay per view and stimulate the economy that we have never seen with a fight. people want to see it. they want to see free speech vs. the guy that is censoring people. >> laura: i used to do too quan dough in my 20's. what do i do to get ready for understanding this whole mma style of fighting. how do we train? can you show me. >> i'm going to show you today. you already have the biggest and best base ta'quon dough you understand the striking and movements it takes to be a good mma fighter. >> freidman has been training one of the techniques freidman
4:45 pm
was showing basic single leg takedown. so the first thing we're going to do is lower our elevation to get to it. we're going to do one step and we're going to grab with two arms good block behind the knee. the best way to put them in right here. we're going to bring this leg. we're going to like swivel like a swisher step. yeah. like on a car. the windshield wipers. so we can take the leg off, windshield wiper down and now this is what they call the guard, so once we get to the guard, the way you pass the guard the fridman show zuckerberg fake one way and throat legs that way. then we come to the back and when we get to the back we are looking for the rear naked choke one arm under and then we are going to attach it to our buy accept and go to the back of the head. and then we are going to submit
4:46 pm
him. they can't get kicked because we are right here making him think, punching. lowering our elevation one step to get deep in here. yeah. and then the reason wrestlers get caught yeah like this. and then keep their head close this their hip. no higher, lower, yeah. then we are going to bring them down, bring down, yeah. and then grab two legs right away yes. now we are right here, yep, yep, bam, right there. >> laura: there was one move i really wanted to learn and it's elon's favorite. >> i'm going to use a move called walrus where i just lie on you and you can't get away. [laughter] >> the walrus is really about leverage and weight. so when we get -- say we got to this position and we throw them right here, this is what they call side guard and right here we're just putting our weight on him. see i'm putting all my weight. i'm not on my niece. i'm on my toes.
4:47 pm
there's nothing i can do. i have all my weight and my hips are blocking his hips. and just right here just lay on her. yeah. yeah. on your toes, heavy. >> laura: colby, elon has done summa wrestling how much is that going to help him in this fight. >> going to help him tremendously have that base in sumo have the mat and not getting pushed out. control the center of the ring is important in ufc and mma in general. >> training wasn't over yet. now it was time for some strength work. >> we're going to do 10 seconds right there, one, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight, nine, 10. now we're going to go over here, jumping jacks. that's power right there, laura, let's go. yes, yes. now we're going to go to the incline. and we're going to grab the rope. and we're going to walk up. using legs and using back and a lot of the punching muscles that you use. yeah. just like this.
4:48 pm
[grunting] >> you are not even breathing. >> laura: not yet. >> this is easy for you, laura. got. this i'm going to have to call dana white. laura ingraham ready for a world title fight. 1, 2, 3. good, laura. now, the jumping jacks. 1, 2, 3, 4 -- nice, laura, good form. good form. three slams. oh, good explosion. one more, laura, come on. good, nice. one more, 3 -- goes all day. she don't get tired, man. laura ingraham, baddest woman alive. you heard it from colby covington. i think you are ready to fight, laura. i think she is ready to fight. she is ready. oh, look at that. [bell] >> she's a political power house. she knows all the angles. she is the undisputed champ of the 7:00 p.m. hour, introducing the beltway brawler laura
4:49 pm
ingraham. >> you want to do, this laura. >> there no you in ufc. >> i like that. >> back up thought. >> nice. elbow. single edge. very good. oh. the walrus. i can't go nowhere. [bell] >> don't mess with laura i ingraham. i promise you, it won't end well for you. >> laura: i thought that was going to be the end after all i won the fight but colby insisted i needed to try cryotherapy next. part two of my training with mma legend colby chaos covington. next. ♪ let innovation refunds help with your erc tax refund so you can improve your business however you see fit.
4:50 pm
rosie used part of her refund to build an outdoor patio. clink! dr. marshall used part of his refund to give his practice a facelift. emily used part of her refund to buy... i run a wax museum. let innovation refunds help you get started on your erc tax refund. stop waiting. go to innovationrefunds.com you really got the brows.
4:54 pm
4:55 pm
it emulates mount everest because it is cold. 300 degrees celsius negative. negative 300 celsius degrees. >> laura: colby is trying to kill me here. just because ibg does not mean that you have to kill me with cold. i put this on. a little headband. >> make sure we get no frost bite on the fingers or earlobes. colby is trying to take me out before our next bout. speak up at got to you in our next rematch. i've seen a lot of providers that have came here and have left crying after ten seconds. she is not even blinking. that is a real warrior. that is our fighter on your right.
4:56 pm
ten seconds. good, nice, laura. wow. that was impressive. >> laura: that was cool. i thought colby might be a little tired after working out with me all day long so i let them sit down for just a few minutes. what are your prefight rituals? >> preflight rituals is to keep my energy to myself. staying with myself, gathering my own thoughts, not being around anybody just eating clean and healthy food to make sure i can go out there and fight to my full potential. >> laura: i'm guessing that you do not drink alcohol. at all? >> it never appeared and the last 11 years, 12 years since college i just quit cold turkey and i said i'm going to commit my life to fighting and fighting for a bigger purpose. not just for myself, i'm fighting for their rights, law enforcement, first responders and all the military out there. i want to make sure that i do
4:57 pm
not treat them of what they deserve. >> laura: what about prayer? any prayer and life that is important to you? >> it is very important to pray to my lord and savior jesus christ. i grew up baptist family. my father was a baptist and church. we went to missionary as kids, and i pray to god every night. and very blessed and i would not be here and have this platform if it was not for god. >> laura: there is a viral moment a few years back and you took a call from president trump. >> potus is calling me. mr. president. >> you make it so easy. congratulations, i wanted to watch that fight. >> that was one of the greatest moments in my career to have a sitting president calling me after a fight and saying that he left a 60,000 person crowd in ohio just to watch my fight. so humbling. a small kid in oregon and here i
4:58 pm
am having the sitting president and entire world calling me and congratulate me. and he said i thought with a lot of power and great and he is willing to follow me and cannot think president trump i never why he has done for my career. >> laura: that is such an easy question. >> does an easy question. he is all about free speech and our constitutional rights in america as i know president trump is deftly supporting elon musk and that fight. >> laura: let's take a back and let say that 30 years for both guys. they are both in their 40s, okay. basically their 40s. trump and biden and they both took a couple of months to get in shape, who would win a fight, if again, they took some time to train and their younger men. >> president trump what job that might drop eight mag a bomb on him. he is flying across the country. stamina for days and he is a
4:59 pm
cardio king. the stings are lunch boxes. if he had see what does has you're going to sleep. >> laura: and the fight in november both biden and trump decide to go to watch what you think the crowd's reaction will be if joe biden decides that he is going to reach out to a different dynamic, people that go to de fc matches. what would that crowd do if biden win. the crowd would boo him because you see how trashed nyc is now and it is a depleted city and if trump walked in he would be a rock star. everybody's on their feet and screaming for president trump and screaming, "usa." because he is the last fight between freedom and communism. >> laura: the guy with the nickname chaos was not training me. he get back to prepare for his own fight his own fight happening later this year.
5:00 pm
>> you guys are more than allowed. you guys get the front row and first page access. we're going to give you everything and we want you to come backstage before i come out i'm going to see in front row and i'm going to give you a hug. going for the undisputed title for america for america. >> laura: does it for us tonight and thank you for watching the special edition of "the ingraham angle." it is america, now and forever. jesse takes it from here. >> jesse: thank welcome to "jesse watters primetime." tonight. surviving a predator attack. >> how many original colonies where they are? >> i don't know. >> jesse: it's should americans pass a test to vote? what do we know about artificial intelligence? plus... it is snake hunting season. ♪ ♪
170 Views
Uploaded by TV Archive on