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tv   FOX and Friends Sunday  FOX News  October 29, 2023 3:00am-4:00am PDT

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the nomination and he is the odds on favorite to become the next president. what rogan said and the other fellow, the other guy, the hardhat working-class kind of guy, trump kept gasoline prices low. trump cut taxes for the middle class. trump and regulations for small business. here is the thing with this terrible israeli -- >> real quick. >> trump stood up trump bankrupted iran and killed iran's top military guy. that's five -- that's why people want trump. >> thanks so much. ♪ we will see you monday 4:00, "fox & friends" this weekend. jack keane sunday, six ♪ ♪ [national anthem] [national anthem]
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♪ [national anthem] ♪ ♪ [national anthem] ♪
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♪ pete: straight to a fox news alert, rockets ringing out in gaza overnight as a israel enters its second phase of war. >> translator: we have two goals in this war, to destroy hamas and all its infrastructure and do everything that's possible to bring our hostages back home. rachel: the idf says they destroyed at least 450 terrorist sites in gaza over weekend. and with the full scale invasion still looming, israel officials are urging innocent civilians in gaza to the save themselves. expwhrpt gaza city should temporarily move south to the a safer area where they can receive water, to food and medicine. will: in response to the latest
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strike, iran's president says israel, quote, crossed the red lines which may force everyone to take action. now let's go to senior foreign affairs correspondent greg palkot who's live on the grown near the israeli-lebanese border. good morning. >> reporter: hey, folks. yeah, we have just wrapped up the sec night of israeli troops on the ground inside gaza going after hamas militantses, and by all things -- signs things are escalating. israel says more troops along with tanks and other armor have is entered joining nose who are already there as they go after a number of militant fighting positions. israel is still not talking exact figures of troops inside, but a sign of clashes, two israeli soldiers were injured in a fire fight with hamas inside gaza last night. israel's also staging continuous airstrikes against hundreds of hamas sites especially going after the vast underground tunnel the network of militants. they gave a new warning to
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civilian in gaza to flee south as they break into food warehouses in gaza amid a humanitarian disaster. here's a bit more of what prime minister benjamin netanyahu had to say overnight. eke speak tongue. >> translator: this is our second independence role. we are fighting and defending our homeland. we will fight and not to quit. we will destroy the enemy of the land and under. we will fight and win. >> reporter: outside of the prime minister's house last night an angry protest, however. family memberses of the 2229 people still -- 229 people still held hostage demanding their release above anything. also relatives of some 1400 people killed by hamas wanting answers from the government. up here in the north along the border with israel and lebanon, there are clashes between israeli military and hezbollah militants, they are escalating. three rockets were fired at two
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military bases near us over the weekend. no casualties were reported, but last night we herald the roar of outgoing israeli tank and artillery fire responding into lebanon. concerns remain, guys, as the ground invasion down south builds that these fights that we've been witnessing for the last couple of weeks here on the border could build as well, and we could end up with a couple of fronts in this war. back to you guys. rachel: hey, greg, so those protests of the families of the hostages was in front of netanyahu's home, i understand. how -- and i know they also met with him as well. so how is that complicating the decisions that they're making militarily? is it causing them to hold back a little bit? what, the israeli military, what is going on? how is that playing out in politics and in real things on the ground? >> reporter: yeah, there's a lot of different angles on the
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hostage story. number one, you're right, it has held back with it is believed by analysts here, this ground incursion. it started, you know, a couple weeks after the october 7th massacre and hostage taking by hamas. the ground incursion as we've been watching very careful, very slow. not only do they want to protect the lives to of the israeli soldiers, but, yes, they want to protect the lives of the hostages being held perhaps in those tunnels that we just mentioned. politically, it's a hot potato for benjamin netanyahu. he rougherred to it last night in his -- referred to it last height in his speech. you're right, he meant with family members, but there are a lot of questions being asked of the netanyahu government, basically how they let this happen and now how they are handling both the ground incursion and trying to get hostages out. they say they're doing everything that they can. the families, obviously, want more. they want their loved ones home.
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back to you. will: all right, greg palkot, thank you so much. pete: there's no do you want there is -- doubt there is a lot of finger pointing inside the israeli government going back to october 7th, who's responsible, who didn't see it, and a lot of questions too the merchandise the political realm of the israel too. there's a rally around the flag effect for bibi netanyahu, a unity government right now, but there's also been a cratering of his approval rating because people are frustrated, a, that it happened and, b, how it's being conducted. and i think when you see these hundreds of bombings overnight, the sense i get is this is just an over -- they're the telling people to get out if they can. it's an overwhelming bombardment so that when a ground offensive happens, the strategic offensive is all with israel. it's basically saying we don't want to take a byes are risk with any of our guys in a house to house fight straight up with hamas. we're going to level the place and then go in.
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rachel: what are the criticisms of the way he's handling this? pete: well, hostages, which we're seeing. i mean, how do you -- you've got both sides of the aisle, right? if more hard, right-wingers saying, hey, we've got to go, we've got to go now take out hamas, and the other side saying, hey, negotiate if we can. but it's the always been the policy of israel to not negotiate as much as possible, but they have done prisoner swaps as well. overwhelmingly one-sided prisoner swaps where you get one soldier for a thousand palestinians. it feels never ending, and who do you choose and at what timing and at whose terms. so i do think the argument being made by the israeli government right now is by going on the offensive and targeting hamas, we can create the conditions for better negotiating, at least that's part of the argument they're making right now. rachel: right. and the heart broken families are saying we want whatever it takes to get them out. will: and it does still seem
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there would be some political price to the pay for october 7th. that is such a massive failure that -- and netanyahu's government is one that would have been the one that promised to the take the threat of hamas most seriously, at least on its face. so somebody at some point is going to have to say what happened on october 7th, but the story is still only halfway written,s i would imagine. what happens after the invasion. greg palkot is sitting there today the on the border of israel and lebanon, what is the response from hezbollah, what is the response from syriast the sort of like reading a book only the first three chapters. who knows what the edge of this book looks like. pete: yeah, no doubt. and to complicate it even further, you've got an administration here in america sending mixed signals. joe biden saying, hey, we support you, but behind the scenes they're asking to pull back or delay in providing humanitarian aid which provides an opportunity for con last in the presidential detective -- contrast in the presidential election which is exactly what
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candidated did yesterday at the republican jewish coalition summit talking about israel and the growing threat of anti-semitism around the world and in our own country. here's a percent of what a number of the republican candidates said yesterday. >> the hamas terrorists worship death. [applause] don't tell me there's a moral equivalency here, because there is not. >> we need to commit if ourselves to insure that good defeats evil. that means fighting anti-semitism in congress and on college campuses. and it means giving israel everything she needs to destroy a hamas. >> let me speak to any student who's advocating for murder and terrorism. you should be expelled from the campus. any university, and i mean any, any university that a lets itself become a megaphone for
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evil should lose every single dime of principal money. [applause] if. >> israel wants to destroy hamas. israel should go ahead and destroy hamas. [applause] i'm just getting started. if israel wants to destroy hezbollah, israel should go ahead and destroy hezbollah. [applause] if israel wants to the at long last abandon the myth of a two-state solution, israel should abandon a two-state solution. >> when i'm back in the white house, the united states will stand with israel all the way, 100%. when i'm back in the white house, america's enemies will now once again concern and they're going to know it -- [cheers and applause] that if you try to kill our citizens, we will kill you with. we will kill you. will: you know, if i might, i want to address what tim scott had to say there the about, essentially, defunding colleges that have embraced anti-semitism or taken support for palestine
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to the its absurd conclusion. and i understand this is also, you can pair this up with billionaires pulling their money from college campuses, their contributions to the endowment. and that's fine. but i guess my response to tim scott or many of these billionaires, college campuses have been a font of anti-american sentiment and thought for quite some time now. and i have a lot of passionate thoughts about this, about what it means to be american. but america rallies around a set of ideas that we choose to believe in and that we have since the beginning of time. our values that are core to who it is, and we're not just a flag, and we're not -- we're, we are, we are western enlightenment. in greek, socrates and aristotle in thought. we are the constitution of the united states. and college campuses in america have been undercutting this tribe for quite some time. rachel: yeah. will: they've been undercutting the idea of what it means to be american and sowing discold and and tearing us apart at our seams for quite some time, and i
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would have liked to see such strength when the attacks were against the foundation of america. rachel: yeah. i think that's a really fair point. pete: i think that's a a great point. for so long, those threats were almost covert inside our universities meaning you had to really pay attention ott curriculum and to the direction, the anti-american direction of what was being taught. think what's different here is it's become blatantly overt in that you've got, you know, the flags being waved, we support hamas from the river to the sea, and it's become a demonstration of the cesspool because, you're right, they were lost a long time ago, and we let it happen. will: this did not happen overnight. rachel: no, this has been a slow boil. but there's also been some really interesting, nefarious forces within the university with. it's not just marxist-leaning professors which has been happening for a long, long time. foreign countries is have figure thed out that this is a way to undermine network. and so you can look at the
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amounts of donations that have come, for example, from the chinese. we saw that they had these confucius certains, and the islamic world wanting to change public opinion in america has taken a page out of that. so when i was talking to sean about what do you do, i feel a little uneasy with, you know, politicians making subjective decisions about what good thought, what's bad naught on campus -- thought the on campus, and he just said you should make a decision as a university. if you take foreign money, then you cannot get money from the u.s. government to subsidize your loans and all the other things that the government does for public universities. make that decision and make it public so that you've decided you're going to take money from the chinese or from, you know -- pete: or we should just not take money -- rachel: well, i agree, of course. pete: but your point is well taken. the single biggest donor to universities since 2001, foreign contributions from qatar. rachel: exactly. pete: and you wonder what
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they're selling. they're the ones harboring hamas right now. rachel: that's right. pete: and at the rjc, mike pence cropped -- dropped out of the presidential race. rachel: by the way, i thought this might be a great recruitment day for them, like, they might have more members after they saw what the fruits of the obama and biden administration has cone for the jewish committee, so let's see is, maybe the rjc will get a little bigger. pete: we'll see. and we move to another fox news alerts, tributes pouring in after "friends" star a matthew perry was found dead from an apparent drowning at his los angeles home. rachel: marian rafferty has the details. >> reporter: good morning. the 54-year-old actor was reportedly found unresponsive by his assistant in a jacuzzi at his los angeles home yesterday morning. he appears to have drowned. law enforcement sources telling tmz first responders rushed to the address for a reported
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cardiac arrest. officials say no drugs were pound at the scene, and foul play is not suspected. police are still investigating his cause of death, but tmz reporting he was playing pickleball earlier that morning. perry's final post on instagram was this eerie photo showing him relaxing in a jacuzzi. he's best nope for playing chandler bing on the sitcom "friends." >> i don't sound like that. >> oh, oh -- >> yeah, you do. >> the hills are alive with the sound of music. [laughter] >> that is so not true. [laughter] oh, shut up! >> reporter: throughout filming the show, or he struggled with drug and alcohol abuse. in an interview last year, he opened up about his addiction the. >> the best thing about me, bar none, and if minute comes up to me and says i can't stop drinking, can you help me, i can say, yes, and follow up and do it. when i die, i don't want friends to be the first thing that's mentioned. i want that to be the first thing that's mentioned.
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>> reporter: the official "friends" social media account post, quote: he was a true gift to us all. our heart goes out to his family, loved ones and all of his fans. maggie wheeler who played janice on the sitcom writing, quote: the world will miss you, matthew perrily. the joy you brought to so many in your too short lifetime will live on. justin trudeau where writing: i know people around the world are nebraska going to forget the joy he brought them. perry is survived by his mom, dad and stepfather. he was 54 years old. back to you. will: pretty shocking and sad. rachel: yeah, really sad. will: still ahead, as israel expands ground operations in gaza, one of their biggest challenges is the hamas terror technology tunnel -- terror tunnels. pete: but first, new details on the maine mass shooter.
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police are -- were alerted last month about his threats but say they couldn't locate him. rachel: we talk to retired nypd inspector paul morrow about them major reead flags, next. re. you know you can get these all at once, right dad? the holidays got sweeter with same-day delivery. you got this. we got you. look who saved slider sunday again! here we go... (♪) a perfect king's hawaiian slider. tastes good too! king's hawaiian slider sunday... the only way to sunday!
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you're probably not easily persuaded to switch mobile providers for your business. but what if we told you it's possible that comcast business mobile can save you up to 75% a year on your wireless bill versus the big three carriers? have we piqued your interest? you can get two unlimited lines for just $30 each a month. there are no term contracts or line activation fees. and you can bring your own device. oh, and all on the most reliable 5g mobile network nationwide. wireless that works for you. it's not just possible. will: more vigil jills are scheduled for later today in
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maine for the victims of wednesday's mass shooting. this comes as we hear from the family of the first person shot in the attack as a he clings to life in the hospital. nate foy has the latest. nate? >> reporter: hey, will, good morning. a prayer service will be held this afternoon in this community as it continues to rely on each other and their faith to get through this horrific time. a candle will be lit for if each of the 18 people murdered in wednesday's attack, and each victim will also get an individual moment of silence today. take a look at this video from last night where a similar event played out. 150 people gathered for a candlelight vigil in lisbon falls, they also prayed for the victims and their families as, again, many are using faith to persevere through tragedy. >> father, none of us could have imagined this was going to happen a few days ago. and, lord, the hurt and the pain
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of those families ultimately only you can pill that. fill that. >> reporter: and we are learning that maine police received an alert weeks ago about the shooter's threats. two law enforcement chiefs tell the ap, quote with, a statewide awareness alert was sent in mid september to be on the lookout for robert card after the firearms instructor made threats against his base and fellow soldiers. on top of the 18 people killed, 13 were injured in wednesday's mass shooting, 3 of them critically, and one of the first people shot was justin carcher of lewiston. his sister saying of his condition, quote, it could be better. he did just have surgery, it's been rough. the hardest part is not knowing what the outcome going to be. authorities say robert card shot and killed himself in a box trailer at a recycling facility where he used to wok. his body -- work. his body was found at 7:45
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pretty night. police found two guns next to his body, and authorities also spoke about a possible motive in the attack. listen here. >> the mental health aspect of this, there's a piece of that where there's pair moye ya, there's some conspiracy theorist piece that i think what i've read and what i've seen is that the individual felt like people were were talking about him. >> reporter: authorities also revealed what was in a note that card left behind for a loved one, it contained the pass cold to his phone can and his bank account numbers. now as this community tries to move forward, again, they're relying on each other. the prayer service at this church behind me givens at 2:00 this afternoon. back to you, or will. will: thank you for that. let's bring in paul or morrow, attorney and retired nypd inspector. paul, great to see you this morning. let's pick up on this story about mental health. so as nate reported there, there was some sense that robert card thought people were talking
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about him, hearing voices, whatever it may be. mental health. what can you do? i mean, we talk a lot about this. you have a constitutional right like many others, but in this country you have a constitutional right to the gun. pointing out that somebody has mental health troubles seems to be just the start of the trouble what do you do, pull hem before a judge, strip them of a constitutional right? based upon what kind of evidence? >> it is our second amendment for a reason, it's the most unique thing about our american system, but it's no accident that this is the second, and it's it's a very difficult thing to overcome because it is right in the constitution. it's a constitutional right, part of the bill of rights taken very seriously. so what do you needsome first of all, due process, okay? you're going to have to have a hearing, make sure that somebody in authority in the legislative -- i'm sorry, the judicial system says, you know what in this person is a teenager to the himself or others, we have to overcome that right by removing those weapons from this person. and that can't just be done
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because the judge doesn't like the guy's face. it has to be based on evidence. it's going to be a medical professional. so to bring it back down to maine, they have yellow flag laws, the distinction from red flag laws is that only law enforcement can make that referral. then it goes to the a judge, the judge has to the are rely on the findings of a medical professional, and then the judge can put that process into place. in this instance the, as we've heard, it didn't happen, and i'm sure there's a lot of people wondering now why it didn't happen. will: i want to the distinguish yellow flag laws from rell glads, you said only -- red flags, you said only a police officer or law enforcement official can bring it before a judge. let's play that out. i know robert card, i hear crazy things he says at work. i go to the police and tell the police and then they need to see that evidence to take it to a judge? >> precisely. and that's what could have is happened in the instance of maine here because, as we've
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herald and as nate just said, we didn't have direct police contact with him prior to this. so what would have had to have happened? the military apparently sent out a notice that said they had this encounter with him in new york state. that's one of the complications here. the psychiatric incident was many new york state with the army. then they send out a circular, apparently, that goes to maine authorities, goes to a sheriff in maine. so maine there is getting that information just as you just said from somebody else, a third party. it's now on the police to go out and have a look. i think where the rubber's going to hit the road here with this case is what was in that bulletin. we're saying be on the lookout. that's very vague. so when the police received that bulletin the, how dire was the warning. will: right. >> how extreme was the threat, the way it was articulated in that bulletin. that's going to be what people looked at now, to see if there was enough there to alert the police that they should have
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initiated the process that you just stated. will: yeah. really enlightening. really helps understand how process may or may not have been handled better it's always a difficult thing to walk, obviously, the worst case scenario in maine. thank you, paul. >> thank you. will: straight ahead, thousands of pro-palestinian protests shut down the brooklyn bridge as businesses are plasteredded with zionism is terrorism stickers. the anti-semitic scenes coming up. but first, the idf says hamas headquarters is under gaza's largest hospital. we'll break down the hospital's layout and the expansive terror tunnels next. ♪ ♪ this isn't just freight. these aren't just shipments. they're promises.
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los angeles home. tmz reports he played pickleball earlier that morning and no foul play is suspected and no drugs found at the scene is. perry is survived by his mom, dad and stepfather. he was 54 years old. new overnight, a woman is dead after a shooting at a party in south bend, indiana. police are still investigating and say at least 8 people were hurt. all the victims were between 16 years old and 22 years old. officers say more than 100 people attended the party and that they saw a large crowd when arriving on scene. they're also asking for the public's help. now to a fox weather alert, more rain is expected to hit texas again today after flash flooding on friday and saturday killed two people. three officers were also hurt while trying to rescue a woman from her car. they've since been released prosecute hospital. to track that storm, download the fox weather app or stream
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fox weather on any tv-connected device. and those are your headlines. pete? pete: thank you, rachel. all right. the idf says hamas headquarters is strategically positioned under a hospital in gaza. so let's look at the city's exa pansive terror the tunnels and how -- expansive terror tunnels and how the idf will have to navigate. you've seen this graphic from the israeli defense forces which depicts the hospital aboveground and the subterranean headquarters below ground. now, this is hair take on what it might look like underneath, but ultimately when you go, when you go up above to that hospital, this is the single largest operating, most advanced hospital in gaza. it's in the north which means it's the in the area where the idf will likely can conduct their ground operation. here's why it's so complicated. it normally has 70 beds inside this hospital complex for patients. right now there are 60,000
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people, according to reports, 60,000 people sheltering inside this hospital complex. and when you look at the schematic and you see things like an outpatient clinic and an mri compound and a reception area and maternity department, it's like -- it's a functioning hospital. and then in red you see that hamas over the years has, because they know it's a safe zone that can't be bombed, created their command and control center underneath, further complicated it even more, reports according to the idf if the tunnel entrance is actually in the hospital itself. so the idea of getting in or out to the hospital without going into the hospital sounds like it's not something you can technically do. so hamas underneath, 60,000 people above including patients and, you know, women giving birth, young children, elderly, all of that, and yet terrorists underneath. it's almost impossible. we asked about those tunnels to
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the that major john spencer yesterday and also how you might approach them with something call a sponge sponge bomb. here's what he said. >> israel has some of the best things developed in the world from drones who bounce off the walls to attack dogs. they're going to have to approach each one situationally because there might be hostages down there. i did call it spongebob bomb when i saw it. just think about trying to seal a sewer opening so you can move past it. pete: you know, as we reportedded this morning, hundreds of bombs including bunker busters have been dropped in gaza. but if you're dealing with a hospital complex with civilians inside it, that's something you're not necessarily or you may not be able to to employ in that scenario. so what is a sponge bomb? it's a tactical weapon. it's got two liquid chemicals where once a pin is removed, a dynamic starts to form inside that bomb. so you pull the pin, it's the employed by a soldier. so it'sage -- an individual, it
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appears, an individual or team-employed weapon which means it'd be part of a ground offensive. and if they approach a tunnel that it doesn't make sense to go in, you throw it down, and the point is it expands. it doesn't explode with shrapnel, it hardens so a terrorist can't come in or out. a sponge if bomb might be an option that the idf use. all right, joining us now to talk about this and other related topics is dakota the wood, retired marine lieutenant colonel and senior research fellow for the heritage foundation. a dakota, thanks for being here. that hospital, how do you deal with that? you know where your enemy's command search, what we believe to be their command center, is. but it's under a gigantic humanitarian shield. what does israel do the? >> well, i mean, you can't ice
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late it. the command centers are always supported. but if the command center cannot talk with its military forces, if it can't issue orders, if it can't coordinate actions, if it doesn't know what's going on, then it's just a bunch of high ranking officials in a sealed room. so what israel has cone -- done has cut off internet activity, it's taken down the cell phone towers, all ultimate communications that would normally be used by gazams. it has isolated the area electronically. trying to keep your enemy in the dark and trying to make it harder for the enemy to coordinate actions against you. then they'll squeeze in, you know, this movement into gaza, air power can only do so much. it takes an inpantryman to look around -- infantryman to look around a corner, to seal tunnels as you methodically move your way in. so the idf and the israeli
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government will try to avoid any damage to that hospital, one, because of the value of human life; two, because of the propaganda value hamas would exploit or leverage. you know, showing scenes to the world of the evil israelis destroying a hospital with a maternity ward. you know, they don't want that kind of news, so they're going to try to isolate this command center and take care of the military forces that pose the most immediate and direct threat. pete: it's, i think, the most dramatic demonstration about hamas uses civilians to protect themselves. ultimately, do you believe ground troops will have to go in and clear that out? and also feels like a prime spot to hold hostages if, ultimately, you know, it could be one of the places where they're holding them as well. >> well, everything you said is absolutely true, and this is not just a current phenomenon over the last two or three weeks. israel has known that hamas uses human shields for decades.
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this is a problem that they have had throughout this episode of really a 20-year war where hamas has launched thousands of rockets to various sites on their own, suicide bombers, the kidnapping of israelis for many, many years. we're at a culminating moment on that. so ground operations, absolutely essential. airstrikes can go after point targets, hardened targets, they can try to collapse tunnels, hit hides that a hamas terrorists are using for ambush sites, but it takes an infantry source supported by armor, it's absolutely essential in urban combat, but it takes the ground forces to go many and root through rooms, go into tunnels and try to get at the enemy force. pete: president all with hostages as human shields. you've laid out why this is so complex. sir, thank you very much for your time. >> my pleasure. pete: you got it. all right, coming up, thousands
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of pro-palestinian protest ther thes shut down the brooklyn bridge yesterday as disturbing anti-israel rhetoric spreads nationwide. congresswoman nicole malliotakis reacting to that and more coming up next.♪ h ♪ ♪ ♪ it takes two to make it outta sight ♪ ♪ one, two, get loose now ♪ ♪ it takes two to make a... ♪ stay two nights and get 5k bonus points. book direct at bestwestern.com. theo's nose was cause for alarm, so dad brought puffs plus lotion to save it from harm. puffs has 50% more lotion and brings soothing relief. don't get burned by winter nose. a nose in need deserves puffs indeed. america's #1 lotion tissue.
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cleaning blendjet 2 is scary easy. just blend water with a drop of soap. recharge quickly with any usb port. boo-gie on over to blendjet.com and order yours today. pete: thousands of pro-palestinian protesters marching to the anti-israel
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rhetoric, protesters even defacing new york city businesses plastering storefronts with zionism is terrorism signs. new york congresswoman nicole malliotakis joins us now with reaction. congresswoman, thanks for being here. there are staggering images when you see that many people with that type of message in new york city. >> it is. and it's happening in places all over the world, predominantly arab nations. but when it happens here in new york city, it really catches our attention because this is happening following the atoesesties of hamas. -- atrocities of hamas. these individuals are justifying what hamas has done. and i think it's important to differentiate between hamas and the palestinian civilians who like israelis, who like americans have been killed at the hands of a maas if -- hamas. you just did an entire segment about how they use the palestinian civilians as shields. they set up their command centers,er their equipment, their storage a facilities, they
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do it in hospitals, they do it in schools on purpose. so the palestinian people are actually suffering as a result of hamas taking control of the various areas. and i think we need to just stand united to condemn this type of terrorism that we know is iranian-backed. and that is what we did the other day in congress. we sent a very strong message, and it was a shame that roughly 10 members of congress including the entire socialist squad did not vote with us to condemn the atrocities of hamas killing incident civilians and instead stand and also stand vocally and unequivocally with israel at this moment in time. will: congressman, i want to move as well, i've moved out of new york city now, it's been a couple of years, and he described a scene you would never have seen is. he said riding the subway now,
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you will see children, you know, 6 years old, 7 years to old, 9 years old begging on the train the, going up to people asking for money. clearly, these kids are the children of illegal immigrants. the city has changed drastically in just a few short years. and now this self-branding as a sanctuary city has proven to be an absolute farce if as the mayor's offering one-way tickets to leave new york. >> yeah. well, you know what? the mayor created this crisis in new york city when he sent the the message to the world that if you came to new york city, you would receive free housing. obviously, at the education pence of tax -- expense of taxpayers who are now suffering greatly seeing across the board cutses and their tax dollars that they work so hard for going to citizens of other countries instead of their own families. look, we put a lot of pressure on this mayor. i think what you're seeing right
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now is a result of that, we've sued to stop a lot of these migrant shelters, we've actually gotten a couple shut down in my district. i passed legislation the other day to prevent federal lands like floyd bennett field from being used as migrant encampments. so as we continue to do this, we put pressure on the mayor, he's recognizing that he can't use, you know, these parklands, and he can't use schools because we've sued him and were able to stop that and also got the fdny, by the way, to hut down these facilities because they're not safe, these shelters. or zoned for it, for that matter. he's recognizing he's running out of options, and he's going to see opposition from the republicans in new york city at every single turn. we're going to use every legislative and legal action to stop him. i'm glad that at least he's recognizing that we can't continue this, nor was right to shelter ever intended for homeless citizens of every countries -- other countries, these illegal immigrants coming in over our southern border. it was meant for homeless new
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yorkers. in the lawsuit, the judge referred to that in the decision. so that gave the mayor an outnow to stop housing them. rachel: congresswoman, i want to ask you about representative bowman. we know that he now was caught on video, that he lied, that it was the clearly he was trying to interfere with that official proceeding. we know there are j-6ers who are languishing in prisons being charged with that. what is going to happen? are you as a republican, as republicans now under new leadership going to make sure that he receives maximum punishment for this? if nothing else, in the interest of equal yous the cities? >> well -- equal justice? >> i've already introduced a resolution pollution to expel mr. bowman. i think either expulsion or censureship will happen depending on the votes, because we need democratic votes in order to expel him, and they're probably not there. what i will say is it is the disappointing that he's only
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being slapped with a misdemeanor, but if he pays a fine and writes an apology letter, this will be expunged. it should be a federal are prooffense, as you mentioned, equivalent to be individuals who disrupted government proceedings on january 6th. i think that we have to continue to push for this, but it just shows you again the double standard here, that he's only -- this is a guy, by the way, who was a school principal. so he knows very well what pulling a tire alarm is -- fire alarm is. will: yeah. congresswoman mall ya tack lis or -- malliotakis, thank you so much for being with us this morning. rachel: thank you. will: we'll be right back.
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rachel: the sha a lva center in jerusalem offers care to -- now the idf has designated it a national emergency response center. joining us now, gabey hersh. this is a world renowned center for children with disabilities. tell us how that mission has changed in light of what's a happen happened in israel over the last couple weeks. >> so on a typical day, we would have myrrh between really up to
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the about 1,000 children, babies, children and cults all coming to our -- adults all coming to our center from across israel's demographic, coming from programs that see all the way through birth to adulthood. as soon as we had the outbreak of war, we opened our doors. as you mentioned, we're a designated national crisis response center, and immediately started to bring in people who'd been evacuated from the southern border. so already the day after the outbreak of war we had hundreds of families who had come to stay in the neighboring hotel. we opened our doors to the center, and they've been using our center all day, every day for the entire families coming. we set up a temporary school here for them. in addition to that, we have a group of teenage youth at risk who, again, their center was in one of those neighboring villages. their center is now actually within a military zone, is and they're not able to go back for the foreseeable future. so a hundred teenage youth are
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here, this is now effectively their home. what you're seeing on screen now, therapy sessions we've opened both for the children and, of course, their parents, those who have been evacuated. more and more people have evacuated, potentially now also prosecute if northern borders, we are now getting ready to take the a thousand additional evacuees. rachel: wow. gaby, it's an amazing center. we know disruption of services is especially hard for children with disabilities. we thank you for all you're doing, god bless you. >> thank you very much. rachel: got it. visit is shalva.org to donate. more folk and friends next. like 2.5% cash back on purchases of $5,000 or more, so sam can make smart ideas, a brilliant reality! chase for business.
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