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tv   FOX and Friends Sunday  FOX News  September 17, 2023 3:00am-4:00am PDT

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released tuesday how many storefronts it will be in, how many interviews will be done and so forth. this is considered provocative. i consider it essential to understand why we lose our country and what we need to do to get it back. i'll see you next time tomorrow night on life, liber ♪ ♪ ♪ [national anthem] ♪ ♪ [national anthem] ♪
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♪ [national anthem] ♪ ♪ ♪ will: good morning, and welcome to "fox & friends" on this sunday morning, once again just absolutely gorgeous pictures. i don't know if it's sunrise or sunset, but minute got a potential one where it wasn't just orange, but it was pink and
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purple. whenever you snapped that photo, we're glad to have you -- pete: and look who we have today. >> hello. love spending sunday morning with you and all of you. will: they forgot to give us our booster seats. pete: they did. [laughter] i till have mine. carrie: you -- carley: you guys are perfect the way you are. [laughter] will: oh, boy. that's permanent? carley: this relatively new couch hasn't got the dave votes created yet. about three months ago. pete: this is a three month old couch? carley: i think so. pete: why do they have tape on it in. carley: i don't know. i'm not the keeper of the couch. i remember it was a big deal, or we got a new couch. the old couch had butt divots. pete: i'm thinking this is a
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2-year-old couch. carley: you think so? will: in the meantime, we're here to report to you not guilty. that's the verdict handed down yesterday in the historic impeachment trial of texas attorney general ken paxton. pete: the republican a.g. was facing 16 articles of impeachment and has been acquitted of the charges he was facing although he does remain under investigation by the fbi. carley: paxton denied wrongdoing, and his attorneys argued there was either no evidence or there wasn't enough to rise beyond reasonable doubt. so this whole impeachment trial has really been playing in the background of the national news, you know, cycle, can if it all came to a head yesterday when he was acquitted. a statement that he released after is getting a lot of attention to the, and this is why. he a says the weaponization of the impeachment process to settle political differences is not only wrong, it is immoral and corrupt.
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finally, i can promise the biden administration the following: buckle up, because your lawless e policies will not go unchallenged. we will not allow you to shred the constitution and infringe on the rights of texans. you will be held accountable. i think one of the reasons this story is particularly important is because, first of all, he was acquitted from the impeachment. he still does face legal challenges, and he's been accused of a lot of different things. so you do have to keep that in mind. but he has also become a big thorn in the biden administration's side. how many times have you read a headline that texas sues biden administration over x, y, z? don't expect that to go away anytime soon. pete: yeah. and the interesting dynamic here is that it was in the house, texas house, it was the house republicans when joined with democrats to push the impeachment out of the house and over to the senate. and i think if you would have looked at this a week ago, the thought would have been, well, probably a lot of republican senators in texas are going to cross over is and vote with democrats, but they did not.
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there was a huge last are minute push by more trump-aligned republicans because there is also a feud inside texas. there's the more old-line, sort of bush republicans in texas who see the world a little differently than newer -- carley: yeah. and ken paxton -- do. pete: -- republicans, and maga republicans rallied behind paxton at the last minute which helped him -- carley: yeah. ken ken paxton also said he's a victim of a political attack by the bush, george p. bush republicans as well as the bide- pete: we should ask our resident texan. i know it's more complicated than that. will: that certainly is the way to impose a national or to see it through the prism of a national political lens. i think there's certainly -- the detailses of which i'm not fully versed, i think we can acknowledge if our own limitations on the specific charges which as you pointed
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out, carl everything y, are not all resolved just yet when it comes to corruption, a mistress, an affair -- carley: it got messy. will: concern payouts. but when it comes to the republicans, it required two-thirds of the senate, something like, what is it, 39 members of the texas senate, to is they needed 21 total, they only got to 12. all democrats, 2 republicans -- carley: they needed 8. will: 8 more republicans, and it failed. president donald trump was very happy, by the way, he put this on truth social: congratulations to the great people of texas and the state senate for respecting the integrity of our elections. we should choose our elected officials by voting, not by weaponizing government. that is for baa man a that re-- banana republics. now attorney general ken paxton can get back to work, he's one of the best with. carley: and golf greg abbott said the attorney general has
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done an excellent job representing texas. i look forward to continuing to work with him to secure the border and protect texas from federal overreach. so that is how that is shaping up. there's also a horrific crime story that we want to focus on this morning as well. are a retired police chief is killed in a shocking, intentional hit and run in las vegas. will: this is horrific. i don't know if you guys saw it yesterday. a 17-year-old is now facing murder charges accused of plowing his car into the man while he was out for a bike ride. pete: alexandria hoff joins us live from washington with the latest. >> reporter: good morning. it really doesn't get worse than this. i think you describe it really well. this video that ignited social media shows two young people driving recklessly in a stolen car. the 17-year-old driver is being filmed by his passenger. both are laughing as they agree to ram the vehicle into the back of a man taking his morning bike ride.
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this was back on august 4th, and that cyclist was 64-year-old retired police chief andres probst. the 17-year-old driver was quickly taught and -- caught and taken to a juvenile detention center. charges will be upgraded to include murder because this video has come out. according to the daily mail, this happened in northwest las vegas around six in the morning. the international conference of police chaplains weighing in stating, this is nothing but pure evil. evil that has taken chief probst away from his wife of almost 35 years and his children. ann a grace probst retired to nevada after retiring as a police chief. he was there in bell, california, previously. and last month his wife and daughter got an alert from his apple watch that a fall had taken place. his wife crystal describes the scene they then found because they went right there. she said i come from law enforcement as well in my younger days. i was able to ascertain there's
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his bike with, his helmet with -- is way over there, his phone is way over there, i'm, like, this is not good. daughter taylor described her father like this: being around him, it was like being next to a ray of sunshine. he was always laughing, always smiling, offering support, life advice, career advice. again, his life was taken by two people driving recklessly, appearing to have a very good time while recording themselveses driving a car like a video game. the drivers' name has not been released because of his name, but that could change, and it's unclear if the passenger, who was very apparently encouraging the driver, faces any charges right now. will, carley, pete. carley: this is so sad. alexandria, thank you very much. and apparently in this audio that you can watch on social media, the driver and the passenger are saying are you ready, and then the passenger says, yes, hit him. and then they were laughing at
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it. i cannot imagine being a member of this police chief's family and being forced to hear that video. and he was a police chief. think about how many times he intentionally put himself into danger, and you have two 17-year-olds, minors, intentionally mowing him down. will: yeah, it's the awful. carley: heartless. pete: yeah. we're not able to show the video for -- carley: obvious reasons. pete: -- certain reasons, but you can find it. and the reason we know who these minors are is because they posted the video themselves or it got out -- carley: can you believe that? pete: this incident apparently happened in august, but they didn't know who hit the police chief. carley: so i guess they were gloating, and this man died. pete: the idea that -- i can't even connect to how far gob your mindset must be that it's the fun to sideswipe cars, let's go hit and man, and then they kind of acknowledge we've got to get out of here. but at some level -- the. carley: there was no remorse because he also says, wow, we
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really got him, you know in there was some swear words and curse words with, but that was just paraphrasing there. and that's why i think it's such broad logic to say that it's compassion not to after -- you don't know if these 17-year-olds have a rap sheet, but i wouldn't be surprised because mowing someone down with your car is usually not your first crime. right now we live in a society where it's the compassionate to let people go, you know, get off once, twice. well, they're kids, no big deal. say, for instance, you don't, and you hit them with a real, harsh penalty. that could turn their lives around, and if that were the case, this man's life wouldn't have been taken as well. will: i mean, we know so few details on who these kids are, but you want to make assumptions about the way they were raised, about what was lacking in their upbringing, but what's clear in these videos, they just don't see this man as a human being. there's no humanity in the entire thing. and i don't know -- carley: couldn't injure an an
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mall like that. will: to pick up on what you said, you're too far gone if you can drive down the road and see the world as though it's a video game. it's really -- and i'm afraid, i'll just leave it at this, i'm afraid it's bigger than this individual story. carley: it is. pete: yeah, it's true. all right, 12 minutes after the top of the hour, we turn to a few headlines this morning. new overnight, a sheriff's deputy in los angeles is dead after being shot in his patrol car. officials are calling it an ambush. police say an a unknown attacker shot the deputy in the head before leaving the scene. he was found unconscious in his car and taken to the hospital where he later died. authorities are still looking for a suspect and are asking for the public's help. speaking of callousness, there you go right there. now to a fox weather alert, post-tropical cyclone lee leaving at least two people dead after hammering the new england coast and canada with fierce
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winds ask and rip currents. the storm the made landfall in nova scotia yesterday afternoon. crews are working to restore power as hundreds of thousands were left in the dark because of the storm's impact. more severe weather in canada and new england is still expected as the storm dissipates. for more on this story, download e the fox weather app or stream fox weather on any tv-connected device. and to college football, missouri pilling off a big -- pulling off a big upset e over kansas state the winning 30-27 with a last second field goal. >> it is brooks. the kick on the way it's good! [cheers and applause] missouri at the moment has walked it off! pete: meanwhile, frustrations boiling over in florida's 29 the-16 upset over 1 19th-ranked tennessee -- 1 11th ranked tennessee. florida's quarterback tried to take a knee to end the game. i stopped watching at halftime,
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but tennessee never felt like they were in it. and in boulder, colorado, coach prime and the buffaloes pulling off a stunning comeback in double overtime? to beat colorado state 43-35. >> better and better here in the second half. >> sanders, open. there he is again, touchdown, erickson! pete: this is the buffaloes' third straight win. they now triple their win total from last year but, will, it probably shouldn't have been that close. will: 20 the-something point spread so, yeah, suggests colorado should have blown them out. but, look, there are going to be tests throughout the season, you're going to underperform at times or other people overperform, and you have to pull out victories like that. and the quarterback, deion's son, he's awesome. the other day i was on my social media and this guy said deion sanders will win a national championship within three years, and my response was, at
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colorado? which, by the way, colorado did win a national championship in the early '90s, but that's not a national powerhouse, and they were 1-11 last year. i think there are questions like how long does he stay? did you see lil' wayne walked him out last night in. pete: i did. i was watching the big noon kickoff. will: this thing has turned into an entertainment extravaganza. so the question is how long does he stay the, and here's what dei on had to say about the example that he might leave for the nl. >> i'm sure you hear all the speculation just two wins in, people talking, you know, nfl might come knocking, things like that. >> i'd never do that. i love college. the young men are still impressionable. they're not is so financially wealthy that they can't hear you. at the next level, is some of these guys make so much money, they can't hear, they can't see the things they need to see and hear. i would have a hard time motivating a man that mix, you know, upwards of 20 and 30 and sometimes $40 million to go out
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there and do the job. i got a problem with that. will: won't lee for the nfl -- leave for the nfl. florida. pete: president i think he's right about what he's saying there. will: yeah, it makes sense. i don't know that i would take that to the bank. pete: yeah, what about his $50 million? [laughter] carley: and the colorado state coach, right, criticized deion sanders, and it was, why would you give all this ammo to deion sanders, and the colorado state coach said i take my hat and sun glasses off in public, my mom taught me that, and deion sanders was, like, you making fun of my mom? so it became personal. will: well, yeah. it became bulletin board material that he -- [laughter] by the way, colorado state, that was a heck of a game by them. pete: how much did they lead by? carley: what was the spread? will: they were up by 11 in the fourth quarter. carley: was it posed to be a blowout? pete: yeah. colorado was supposed to take it. does he stay at colorado maybe while his kid's there the but
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then after that -- the. carley: that is cool. i wonder what it would be like to coach your son in college football? will: i've coached them in little league, and it's awesome. pete: it truly is. carley: the other thing oi liked aboutkey onsanders is he ranks his kid -- will: he power ranks his kids. carley: but it changes every week. will: i only have two, so i really can't -- that's so perm when you only is have is two. pete: that's true. will: you should do that. pete: bad idea. i already do in my head a little bit. i don't know if i'm ready to share it with the world. carley: right. they're still little. pete: it's not changing -- will: if one just stays at thurm one all the time, that's hurtful. pete: kid power rankings. let me think about that. carley: yeah, yeah. all right, that is very funny, and we have a whole big show coming up. still ahead, general motors and ford returning to the negotiating table as the united autoworkers strike enters its third day. we'll talk to a worker on what
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she wants from leadership. will: see, it's not a problem if one stays at number one, it's a problem if one stays at number seven, pete. whey am i always at number seven? plus, today is constitution and citizenship day, but a new survey finds many u.s. adultses don't know key facts about america's founding documents, so we're going to test our knowledge. which branch of government can declare war? stick around for the answer and why it's so important -- pete: oh, this is easy. carley: yeah, we got this one. ♪ muck the long-lasting scent of gain flings made it smell like dave was in his happy place... ...the massage chair at the mall. but...he wasn't. gain flings with oxi boost and febreze.
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♪ will: national police shortage is causing small town police departments across the u.s. to close with nearly 40 disbanding their police forces since 20 the 19. meanwhile, portland is feeling the impact, what walking back their push to dethe fund police, now recruiting officers with entry salaries of $80,000 pluses a signing bonus. our next guest is from the independence,
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missouri, police department. he joins us now, chief adam dustman of independence. great to see you this morning, chief. thanks for being with us. >> thanks, will. great to be with you. will: tell me about independence. how big is it? how big is or your police department? >> so we have 327 total employees, 2 to of -- 230 of them sworn officers in a population that is 123,000 and about 78 square miles. will: okay. a little bigger. i've heard of independence, so i should have realized it's probably bigger or than in my imagination ors, but we talk a lot about defund the police movements and how it affected big cities, but this, i guess, perhaps trekking-down effect of officers in departments in smaller, in your case, you know, not a metropolis, but a smaller urban area and even mauler communities, what's going on with the police departments? >> it's just a shortage of applicants, will. we, you know, the same thing, it trickled down,
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you're exactly right. about 15 years ago, we would have 450 applicants easily for 1 or 2 spots with waiting lists a mile long, often times being exhausted over a year. now wire lucky -- we're lucky if we get 4 applicants total, and we are currently 25 vacant spots, commission spots and vacancies throughout the police department. and and you're right, you know, for us us it's a lot harder to fill those spots than it is a bigger city, but these small departments, you know, two officers for them maybe half their -- may be half their police department. will: what's the effect? if you're running shortages like that, if i'm a citizen of independence, how do i see that? do i see less police officers, quote9-unquote, off the beat? how does that affect my life? >> obviously, you have a strain on services. we're fortunate enough that we can, you know, move officers around to be able to meet basic service needs, but you have traffic enforcement and other things that have a direct correlation to increases
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in crashes and just an overall lack of enforcement almost to your last segment or, you know, when things are, you know, video game-esque and there's no consequences, then we have the, we have that problem too. so that's the effect overall. on us, on our staff it's fatigue, you know? overworking. you don't get to really have any of that down time. our officers are answering anywhere between 15-20 calls a day, and when you talk about the defund the police movement, there is no doubt that it has a massive effect. when you see and hear that the police are the enemy, who in the world is going to sign up and say, yes, please, you know, i want the go do that job? will: right. really quickly just out of my own personal curiosity, chief, i don't know, i've come to be someone who believes in this idea of community. not every place can be mayberry are, right? and independence is bigger than perhaps the question i'm present dog you, but owl are local guys? how many are local independents, community
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members who decide to be cops versus we've got to attract them from across the nation? >> several. so obviously, you know, we attract and recruit here out of our own community, and we have several that are very proud independence natives. but for me, i'm a native of kansas city, so adjacent to independence, the bigger city, but i came here because of this family feel. and so it is a huge draw, you know? we -- and i'm telling you, you know, they, this are profession is more noble now than it ever has been before. service above self, that sense of duty, and we will get there, i really do believe that that. but the work that these men and women do on a daily basis is phenomenal. will: yeah, we appreciate you, chief. appreciate these small towns, appreciate that sense of community and what you bring to that community. thank you so much. >> thanks, will. will: all right. coming up, two of the big three automakers returning to the bargaining table as the uaw strike enters its third day. one union worker joins us next to share her insight. plus, shocking new
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video showing illegal immigrant video at the border crawling underneath razor wire. more on how texas authorities ultimately intervened, coming up. start your day with nature made. the #1 pharmacist recommended vitamin and supplement brand. about two years ago, i realized that jade was overweight. i wish i would have introduced the fresh food a lot sooner. after farmer's dog, she's a much healthier weight. she's a lot more active. and she's able to join us on our adventures. get started at betterforthem.com (light acoustic music plays) (eagle screeches) (energetic music plays) there he is! it's right there! ♪ oh, he's straight ahead. he's straight ahead. straight ahead. go go go. ♪
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see your doctor if your asthma does not improve or gets worse. ♪ what a wonderful world. ♪ ask your doctor about once-daily trelegy for asthma - because breathing should be beautiful. pete: general motors and ford return to the negotiating table as the united autoworkers strike enters its third day. the bargaining is a sharp test for joe biden's longstanding, he says, pro-union position as workers, they're worried about the ev push and the fact that it could cost them their jobs. here with her position is u a w worker jennifer if defs. she works at the ford plant in wayne, michigan. jennifer, here we are in day three. first, just overall, do you see resolution coming soon? >> hoping and praying that one will come soon. pete: all right. so they are at the table which, i guess, is a good sign, but
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they're very far apart. why is it, why are the companies in need of holding out on this? why can't they get the the pay increases? what pressures are they facing? >> i really don't know. i know that in 2008 a lot of our, my sisters and brothers had given up a lot of things to save ford from the crisis. and that has not been returned to them. my whole life i've always wanted to be a part of the big three, and now that i'm finally there and been there for four years, it's sad to say that i can go to a fast food restaurant and make more an hour than what i'm making now. pete: absolutely. you've already made sacrifices, how many more will you need to make. and yet joe biden has said he throws pro-union -- he's the most pro-union president ever, effectively. what do you say to that considering where you are right now? >> this isn't about politics. we have to, we have a lot of support from the public.
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if joe biden is onboard, that's wonderful: it's for all of us uaw workers. it's not just one individual, it's all of us that are hurting. it's all of us that are doing the work. it's all of us that are suffering. there's not just one of us, it's all of us. pete: what do you make of the suffering that that has been produced -- is some of that produced by the new push for electric vehicles, just a different type of vehicle? there's a lot of competition from china. battery ares can be made more cheaply there which lowers costs. it's more expensive to do it here, it's a different type of work. has the green push, the ev push, has that had an impact on these negotiations? >> not that i'm aware of. we've had no talk of evs at all. pete: do you make them at your plant? i'm just curious, i don't -- >> no, we do not. pete: you do not. okay, so it does not impact you there. how about inflation which has been -- it's high across america. it's gone up 17% during this
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administration. it's just more expensive to buy everything. it seems strikes go up when cost of living goes up, and that's what you're asking for, right? a koh of living to match the -- a cost of living to match the serious inflation we've seen. >> it's the cost of live living for hourly pay. not a bonus if check. we get one bonus check a year for $1500, and after taxes, we're taking ohm $800 -- home $800. cost of living should be in our hourly pay. not just one bonus check. we've worked for that. the company's worked for that, the uaw has worked for that. pete: how prepared are you to keep holding out? if how long are you willing to strike? >> as long as it takes. pete: as long as it takes. all right. well, we'll see. do you think -- do you hope more pressure comes from the national level to make it move? >> are i'm hoping we do have the region a1, which is our national uaw, and they are helping us as well. so i'm just praying, hoping that
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we do get together, we get this done and we can all go back to what we are supposed to be doing which is making wonderful broncos and rangers for all of our people. pete: i think i have a bronco e from your plant, by the way. i'm pretty sure. >> do you? pete: yeah. it's a fantastic vehicle, i love it. you make great stuff and hope you're back to work very soon. >> thank you very much. and we take very much pride in our vehicleses that we do produce from there. thank you very much -- pete: absolutely. thank you, for my car. [laughter] all right. coming up, the dangers of vaping. one florida teen was is so addicted, vaping every few minutes, that his lung collapsed. dr. ahmed says marketing that vaping is safer is not true. she joins us next.
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of canada bringing big wind and rain across eastern maine. we've got this front moving through, you've got a humid day across places like atlanta. this front eventually moves through, and it's going to bring humidity levels way down throughout the day today, and it is going to be feeling very nice by tomorrow. humidity breaks, temperatures comes down, things are much more comfortable. we're going to be watching rain off the coasts of the carolinas and later this week potentially some tropical development as well. will, over to you. will: thank you. the armed man accused of impersonating a u.s. marshal at a robert f. kennedy jr. campaign event has now been identified. the police say adrian paul e e sp if urro was carrying multiple load weapon es claiming to be part of rfk's security team. the security team was able to ice rate the suspect until the lapd took him into custody. new video captured by fox news shows migrant children in eagle pass, texas, crawling
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beneath razor wire after crossing the river illegally during a thunderstorm. state dps troopers later cut the wire for the safety of the children as more continued to arrive. this video was taken just a few days after reports of a 10-year-old boy drowning in the river near the same spot in eagle pass. iowa senator chuck grassley turns 90 years old today, and he talked about the milestone birthday with ainsley in an exclusive interview. listen. >> so you have a very special birthday, turning 900 years old. how do you feel? >> i don't feel any different than i did on any other birthday except just pleased to have a life that i can live for the people of iowa and to serve christ. will: ainsley will join us later with that full exclusive interview with senator grassley. and those are your headlines. carley: looking forward to that. thank you so much, will. doctors say vaping is the blame for a florida teen's collapsed
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lung. 19-year-old mason middleton started vaping in high school and soon became hooked. here to react -- >> when it started out, it was very subtle chest pain. i was driving home from my grandpa's house. by the time i got to my house, i was barely able to get out of my truck and walk. and by the time i got into my house, i could barely move. i had terrible time breathing, it was very hard to breathe. i ended up going to urgent care, getting an x-ray done, and they showed me that my left lung was partially collapsed. carley: here to react is dr. ahmed. doctor, this is such a sad story, and it sounds like an extreme case, but do we even know a lot about the long-term effects of vaping? >> great idea. it's marketed by the industry as a safe, but these are clearly not benign and not safe. before 2020 there were 3,000 injuries related to the lung from vaping, 668 deaths -- 68
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deaths. we actually stopped counting them because of the pandemic. this is been one double lung assistance plant rah reality -- atlanta plant -- transplant. there is nothing benign about vaping. it has been morally attempting to capture a previous population that might if never have touched cigarettes. the market for cigarettes might be waning in a certain age group as the market for vaping is exploding in people as a young as 13. carley: is that what you're seeing? because i was reading, and it is so true how these sorts of things go in and out of style. young kids don't smoke anymore, but they definitely vape as young as middle school. is so what would i you tell parents who are worried about this? >> first of all, be aware. just because we raise age limits so that you can't purchase this because not -- does not mean children cannot access it. even in states where you're not allowed to do these activities, there are illicit sources of supply. add the vaping to this now
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liberalization of marijuana, marijuana is also being inhaled with instruments like vaping, and that adds, that's breaking the firewall between back in that used to be legal -- tobacco that used to be legal and still is legal, marijuana that is only now beginning to become legalized, and we're going to have a much bigger population at risk. carley: and i know that marijuana isn't regulated on a federal level because it's the not legal in all 50 states. so now what's happening is it's becoming much more, it's becoming stronger and stronger, and there are studies that hoe that people are even getting addicted to it. and you can use marijuana through a vape, i hadn't even considered that before. >> in states like utah and minnesota where marijuana is not yet legal as far as i understand it, illicit sources of marijuana through vapes are capturing a new population. so one of the things this person said is how frequently he was inhaling. multiple pods, each pod is e give are lent to about 20 the cigarettes a day.
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this richal, the -- ritual, the oral ritual, the inlation,, even the extent to which they inhale puts their lung ares at significant risk. and we forget about tobacco. 6 million deaths a year relate to tobacco. this pandemic that we've hived through in 02020 was 3 million deaths. carley: and i was going to ask you about the pandemic in a way because this is becoming very popular now, and i do wonder if isolation or not going to school has led to greater use of things like vapes, is if there's any relationship there. >> so that's a great observation. i'm seeing in my practice people more frequently vaping, much more use of marijuana, much more use of alcohol, a belief that long-term marijuana use is safe and there are me disdoal indications for marijuana. -- medicinal indications for marijuana. and this reliance on substances. there's a very small study which shows that about 38% of people
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who believe, who are healthy have mental health diagnoses that are using vape ising. so it probably is a marker for depression, anxiety, isolation -- carley: that is so interesting, and you're right, the commonly held view is that vaping is safer than a cigarette, but this poor young man who had a collapsed lung because of it is a living, breathing -- thank got that that there are significant dangers with vaping. >> the biggest product of the tobacco industry is -- [inaudible] and this is exactly the same. we've seen this movie before. carley: thank you so much for joining us. appreciate it. important topic there. coming up, party crashers. as more democrats lose enthusiasm for biden, pete and will go off the wall down the narrowing pathway to replace the 80-year-old president. but first, today is constitution and citizenship day, and to celebrate we're testing our knowledge on questions like how many senators
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does each state have? that is straight ahead. i think it's b. ♪ ♪ teeth sensitivity is so common. it immediately feels like somebody's poking directly on the nerve. i recommend sensodyne. sensodyne toothpaste goes inside the tooth and calms the nerve down. and my patents say: “you know doc, it really works." you didn't live this strong, this long to get put on the shelf like a porcelain doll. if you have postmenopausal osteoporosis and are at high risk for fracture, you can build new bone with evenity®. ask your doctor if you can do more than just slowing down bone loss with evenity®. want stronger bones?
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(car engine revs) (engine accelerating) (texting clicks) (tires squeal) (glass shattering) (loose gravel clanking) carley: we are back with a couple quick headlines. a new york city street corner has been renamed to honor slain
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nypd detective jason rivera who was only 22 years to old when he if his partner were gun down while responding to a 911 call last year. the street signs are located at the intersection of 204th street and sherman avenue, the corner where rivera's father would drop him off for school every day growing up. and arnold schwarzenegger is celebrating 40 years of being a citizen. he posted a video on ins instagram saying he was, quote, born in autrey a ya, made in america. >> when i raised my right hand and i took the oath of citizenship -- [applause] you know how proud i was? i was so proud that i walked around with the american flag around my shoulder all day long. carley: the former california governor came to the in 1968 and became a citizen in 1983. very good tough are there. will: all right. so today is constitution day and citizenship day. carley: and a new study finds many u.s. adults don't know key
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facts about constitution. pete: so why is civic education so important in schools? let's ask mom and ceo of the bsm media, author and marketing expert specializing in moms and millennials, maria with failly. thanks for being here. >> thank you for having me. pete: why is it so important, and how far behind are we in teaching it? >> with well, we are very far behind. we did a survey of 600 moms across the united states, and over # 90% of them said that it's important for their children to learn civics, but only 50% said their kids were actually being educated in schools on civics and citizenship. will: okay. so we are going to test our knowledge in just a moment, and we are all nervous because it's going to be done on national -- you're not nervous? pete: no. will: let me amend that, i am nervous. carley's already cheated. pete: you can blame the school system -- will: i went to law school.
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carley: i read the packet, and i didn't cheat -- >> well, here's some good news. if you don't do well, it's okay, you're in line with most americans because less than $only 30% of all -- 30% of all americans can tell you how long a senator is in term. will: is that right, 30%? pete: even just the basic citizenship test, i mean, most americans would facility, right? >> absolutely. and, in fact, 20% can only give you one of the three branches of government. carley: wow. pete: one? if. carley: before we get to the quiz. is there anything being done to, you know, change this? >> yes. the national civics bee is stepping in, and kids can compete now to, in their education of civics. so there are organizes like the national civics bee and the richard dreyfuss institute that are stepping in to fill the
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void. will: see that one in the prompter, pete? you're going to get it? pete: let's go for it. question one, what year was the constitution written. 1787, 1781, 177 -- will: is so it's just you and me. pete: not the declaration. i'm going to go co-- it's a. carley: it is. but how many americans would mow that? >> less than about 30%. will: that's got to be one of the harder ones. carley: the next question is how many senators does each stay have, b, of course. will, want to read the third question? will: which branches of government can declare war? pete: well, the correct answer is, of course, c. but the reality is at this point a and c. because the white house declares war all the time -- will: all the time. they don't, i mean, effectively declare war, but they wage war
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without a declaration -- pete: correct. carley: just to to wrap things up, it seems somewhat obvious, but i would like to ask why it's so important to learn about civics. >> well, it's important to learn about civics because there is a direct correlation between future leaders and also knowing the foundation of our government and how it runs. and so it's important to breed that next generation of leaders and well informed voters, and that's what moms told us. will: it is the, i know we need to the move on, but people have such strong opinions about politicses without understanding the basics -- carley: so true. >> absolutely. and that's what moms told us, was they want their children to grow up to be informed voters. carley: it should be math, science, history, civics. it should be one of the basics. pete: that's how we figure out -- we agree on the basics, and then we can disagree on other stuff from there. carley: maria, thank you on constitution day. will: coming up, word to the woke, how harvard's student
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newspaper claims limiting applicants to 200-word essays hurts students with marginalized backgrounds. more on the campus cra craziness, next. ♪ ♪ having triplets is... -amazing -expensive. so, we switched to the bargain detergent, but we ended up using three times as much and the clothes still weren't as clean as with tide. so we're back with tide, and the clothes are clean again. do 3x the laundry and get a tide clean. it's got to be tide. ♪ limu emu & doug ♪ what do we always say, son? liberty mutual customizes your car insurance... so you only pay for what you need. that's my boy.
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