tv FOX and Friends Saturday FOX News August 17, 2024 3:00am-4:00am PDT
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on fire. i need you to save the date because the fox nation'sex na patriot awards has been announced. it will be held this yea her on fifth in new york. you can get your tickets at derby. derb aw.foy derby at fox natione slash patriot awards. gsee there. >> we'll have a good time. yes. and jessica. okay jes >> a. so a year after partnering with hellmann's titan's quarterback, it's levis right?g is releasing a mayo scented cologne it's just $8 a bottle se which honestly seems like a lot for something like that.ondiment but you can smell like the athlete's favorite condiment in addition to mayo the fragrancse also has notes of lemon, parsley, vanilla and coffee. he has a lifetime supplyd co no. coming to him a mayo, and it's already sold out, but it'll be restocked r greg.e in oh, wait a minute. the man is in his projects. you can smell ♪
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[national anthem] ♪ pete: well, keep 'em coming. a great final shot there. beaten by that final shot right there. keep your e-mails and photos coming, friends@foxnews.com for our nation's anthem every saturday and sunday morning. good morning, you two. will: good morning. pete: what should we talk about today? [laughter] will: i don't know. didn't come out of the gates with a ready to to go topic. rachel: well, we did, we talked about will who hosted jesse watters last night, anna paulina luna's gone viral for wearing a
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one-piece swim suit. pete: there you go. what do you want to the talk about? rachel: that's your new mount rushmore? [laughter] pete: wow. will: my thing is i have a thing where if you're thinking it, you've got to say it. the only problem is i've got a cohost who believes in that maxim more than me. i'm dangerous enough, and now i sit next to somebody who says, gotta say it -- rachel: well, you said it to me on gavin new. and i watched that interview. i thought you did a very good job, and i think she is, can i say it? bad ass. pete: i didn't know she was an air force vet. rachel: i did mow that. pete: right? i feel the same way. will: i'm serious, by the way. with the dnc just days away, vice president kamala harris is rolling out her first campaign platform. rachel: featuring $1.7 trillion in handouts.
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pete: madeleine rivera joins us with details. >> reporter: she's touting it as a way to build up the middle class. but her proposal is getting mixed reviews. the policies harris announced include providing down payment assistance of up to $25,000 for first-time home buyers, restoring the child tax crept which expired in 20211 and a federal ban on grocery price gouging. she's taking action against companies that she says aren't e playing by the rules. >> we will build what i call an opportunity economy, an economy where everyone can compete and have a real chance to succeed. on a deeper level, for too many people no matter how much they work, it feels so hard to just be able to get ahead. >> reporter: but create ins say her plan won't do much to help -- critics. "the washington post" editorial board out with a scathing review
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equating harris' proposals to gimmicks and adding she missed a moment to address the anger of americans over high price. among the many criticisms of the board is a lack of detail regarding how she plans to offset costs. former president trump sounding off on truth social saying in part if you think things are expensive now, they will get 100 times worse if kamala gets four years as president. former president trump is holding a rally in pennsylvania today where we expect him to continue to criticize harris over her plan. will, pete and rachel. will: thank you, madeleine. this new plan is the subject of a ton of conversation, and i think it's certainly worthy of "fox & friends" weekend as we talk about the philosophical underpinnings that have been laid out. and they're not there therely underpinnings bought -- truly underpinnings because they are overt. i don't want to get rachel too excited, but direct an entry of venezuela. [laughter]
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before we get into that,s and we will this morning, it's important to note that the. nonpartisan committee for a responsible federal budget says that the skeleton of a plan that she's put together would run the deficit up $1.7 trillion over 10 years. rachel: yeah. we're already, by the way, i think we're at $35 trillion. when sean was running for congress, he was complaining about $15 trillion. at this point i think the democrats are, like, whatever. i think the analogy with venezuela is right on. what's interesting is they are being -- she is being so overt is, i actually really love it, pete. tell us what you're going to do. let's make this contrast because people have been alluding to it and saying communist, you know,commy kamala, saying she's a communist, and now she puts out a plan that says she's a communist. [laughter] so at least we can have an honest debate about two different ideas. pete: yeah. it's a big mistake for her. it may be honest, but at some
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point you have to put a little meat on the bone. who am i. what do i actually believe. is it different than joe biden. so she started with the economy because that's the biggest issue, but then she led with hercom -- commie foot forward. caps and giveaways, whoa, that has devastated economies. our own economy in the if '700s, latin america, the same thing -- rachel: argentina p venezuela. pete: the more she has to put meat on the bone and talk and reveal who she is, that's her problem. that's why they kept her in the bubbling so long, why they will as long as they can, because this is the core of what she believes. there's no free market ideas in what she veal ared. not at all. -- revealed. rachel: she stole a few ideas from trump -- pete: well, the no tax on tips is just a steal. will:s it is interesting, and i think greg gutfeld pointed this out yesterday on "the five," for her to be accused of socialism
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or commune communism is a tool that's only so or sharp. it's a knife that can be dulled because that has, quite honestly, been wielded often by the right. she basically admits to it. you have to listen because it's put in philosophical terms where she's, like, i believe in equal outcomes. she's said that on numerous occasions. but now you're seeing the actual mechanics of communism. and it's less soviet than it is venezuelan because it's the accompanied by the handout. it's got a sheen of populism. i'll give you 252 grand to buy -- that 25 grand to buy a house. that is the kind of sufficient that has appealed to people across latin america for years and has plaid out with tragic consequences on their economies. rachel: absolutely. go ahead. pete: no, no, i was just going to say she's very neighborly. [laughter] rachel: yes, she's very neighborly. she's going to the take your neighbor's stuff and give it to someone else --
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pete: a tim walz thing. rachel: steve moore, we had him on last week. he gave me an a many economics, and he was on last night and had this to say. >> now they come up with this idea so they have to fix a problem that they created themself. it's like, you know, your fireman is an arsonist, right? so this idea of putting price controls on grocery stores, on 7/elevens, on landlords, on people who own apartments? i mean, my gosh, have you noticed that biden and kamala harris blame everybody but themselves for this massive inflation that has made the average family $2,000 poorer than when trump was president? rachel: you know, you guys, it was so predictable, what was going to happen. the flakes is just obvious. spend too much money, you print money, this is what's going to happen -- the inflation. what was the bill, the inflation reduction act. [laughter] i forgot. everyone said this was going to
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happen. and you know it's really bad when you even have people on cnn and other liberal outlets saying, whoa, this is bad. will: what do you make of that? i was actually in the elevator this morning riding up to the office before the show, and i wiz thinking about headlines like this -- i was thinking about headlines like this in the atlantic and the washington post, harris' plan is economically dumb but politically smart. washington post, it's in the opinion section -- rachel: right. will: it says the times demands specific economic ideas -- pete: -- editorial board. will: to rachel's point, actually, this is just two examples. there is a lot of legacy mainstream media that can criticized this, and i was starting to think in the elevator, why? there's been so much covering for kamala harris, why is this economic plan sort is of a crack in the dam? rachel: maybe hay want to give her enough time to reel it back and explain it away. because this is not popular. and i'll tell you, we've been talking a lot about a the
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hispanic vote. hispanics are going to hate this because they know it. this is not a theory to them. many of them came from venezuela, from argentina, from bolivia, from central american countries who have tried this, and they will not stand for this. i had, remember danielle dimartino -- daniel, i had hem on my podcast this past week, and he was saying there was a woman who came out of the ballot box recently in venezuela, and she was crying. and she was interviewed by someone on social media, and she said i'm crying not because i got to vote for who i wanted to vote for, i'm crying because i voted for hugo chavez in '99, and i am responsible for why my sons are in this position right now. you can't undo these votes. it's really easy to get into socialism and communism. you can vote your way into it, it is bloody getting out. pete: that's exactly right. part of this is coming from
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actual economists who are saying none of this stuff works. [laughter] like, we teach this. we teach supply and demand, we teach markets, this will be devastating. and that includes someone like former obama economist jason furman who said this to the new york times. i mean, think about this, this guy was an economic adviser for obama. this is not sensible policy. and i think the biggest hope is that it ends up being a lot of rhetoric and no reality. there's no upside here. and there is some downside. rachel: one of the headlines said that it was politically smart. popular, because she's adding all the giveaways -- will: that may be, right? i mean, whether or not it's economically literate is whether or not it's politically literate. bad things can afeel a voting base -- appeal to a voting bas- rachel: when they're desperate. will: you can vote your way into socialism, you cannot vote your way out of socialism. i talked to erik prince, the
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former founder of blackwater, and he said, no, the only way out of socialism is through bullets. rachel: yeah. which is why they take the guns away as soon as they get into power, which is what they did in venezuela and why the people are so desperate right now. pete: one thing that would be nice to have is a couple of interviews, maybe a couple of questions, how would these price controls and all these caps work in reality? what would the impact be on our markets? and you could have economist kamala harris answer those questions but, of course, that hasn't happened. instead, we're getting hard-hitting interviews with the pets of the candidates. [laughter] no, think about that. will: i'm in. i like it. pete: you like it? we're 26 days -- 27 days into her candidacy. she's taken a couple of questions by airplanes, and this is what we got. so this is a -- will: this is the vote cover. this is tim walz's dog. rachel: it's not even kamala's
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dog. will: does she have a dog? scout. that's scout walz on the cover of dogue. how do you pronounce it? pete: scout walz's man's -- and maybe america's -- best friend. will: here's the interview. hey, what's a your favorite meal? answer, anything with peanut butter on it. what's your strangest hasn't? stealing and eating tim's glasses. if you could talk, what would your catch phrase be? if i can reach it, i can eat it. what's your human's worst habit? the guy loves mountain dew. rachel: i wish they'd asked scout what his thoughts are on maduro's plan. [laughter] maybe tim. taylor van kirk, spokesperson, a spokesperson for vance --
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will: so this is j.d. vance now because also his dog -- rachel: he said atlas had a great time on the campaign trail today and, unlike kamala, enjoyed meeting the press on the plane. pete: we are sneak walking our way -- rachel: into socialism -- pete: and we're talking about freaking dogs. will: i'm a little here for it. pete: are you in. rachel: talk to us about that. will: every time we're away, she takes shoes to the bed. who doesn't like talking about their dogsome you don't have a dog. you're a cat man. [laughter] rachel: he's a cat lady. pete: i'm a childful cat man. [laughter] watch this, tell us about the cat. [laughter] knox -- pete: one of them just period on a chair, it was terrible. rachel:9 cat pee's bad. so much worse than dog pee. will: we just turned the show. a minute ago you guys were
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sleepwalking i our way to communism, now you're all in on talking about cats. rachel: do you mine if i call you cat lady? pete: cat man. do not misgender me. [laughter] and my cat love. will: cat man's good -- rachel: yeah. all right. will: well, maybe the vice presidential candidate and the potential presidential candidate on the democratic ticket will give as many interviews as their dogs. that's the goal so we don't sleepwalk our way to communism. but now we turn to your headlines. newly-released body cam footage shows the june arrest of -- tulsa police officers talked victor martinez hernandez to a bar after a 10-month national manhunt. he tried giving officers a fake name. he's now facing rape and murder charges. morin was delled last year when she was -- killed last year when she was jogging in maryland. law enforcement arresting a woman accused of trying to take elvis presley's graceland estate
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yesterday. lisa a finley falsely claimed lisa' presley owed her millions over a loan she didn't repay before her debt and offered the estate as collateral according to court documents. she allegedly published a fake foreclosure notice to seize graceland -- she went big. [laughter] pete: that's a bold move. will: before lisa marie's daughter filed a lawsuit. now she's charged with mail fraud and identity theft. things getting heated between the indiana fever and the phoenix mercury last night in indianapolis. >> far and away the all-time leading scorer, she's got 10 points tonight. a little extracurricular here. will: both players were issued a technical foul. caitlin clark scoring 29 in the team's first game back from the olympic back, and the fever win 98-89. you know, pete, i cannot get
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used to -- that color of of that court. just give me the regular brown basketball court. wood. pete: they're trying to make wnba interesting. will: they're messing with it -- that court looks like my tv's gone back to black and white. not good. pete: know -- will: rachel, you got any takes on this? rachel: no, i wasn't even watching. what's wrong with the floor? [laughter] will: it was painted gray. pete: weird colors. they're trying to be funky. will: see, look. rachel: oh, i see. it's kind of retro, isn't it? will: in terms of your tv's black and white. rachel: yes, that's what i'm saying. pete: too much. rachel: all right. pete: all right. vice president kamala harris doesn't mention interest rates in her economic agenda as she pledges to give first-time home buyers $25,000. so how much are the taxpayers on the hook for all of this? we'll discuss. rachel: good question.
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focused on creating opportunities for the middle class that advance their economic security, stability and dignity. together, we -- [laughter] pete: well, i thought we had more on the clip, but we're here with me. is this promise of an opportunity economy just building upon bidenomics, and what do american voters actually want? let's ask somebody who noses. former world bank group president and former deputy assistant treasury secretary turned ronald reagan and former chief economist at bear stearns, david malpass joins us now. david, here's a little bit more of the breakdown of the harris-walz plan for the opportunity economy. $25,000 house down payment for first-time home buyers, restoring the child tax credit, new child tax credit for families with kids in the first year of life. they've got capping prescription drug prices, federal ban on
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grocery price gouging, so now we're price fixing. what's the impact of this so-called policy speech? >> hi, pete, good morning. well, the impact is it's not good for the economy. that's what's very clear. it will cause inflation. remember when biden came in, he inherited 1.4% inflation, but then their policy was spend, spend, spend. she gave the tie-breaking votes for that spending, and inflation within two years was 9%. and so this would be worse than that because of the very high government control that's in it. i heard rachel in the previous segment point out how latin voters or people with any knowledge of latin america know when you put in government controls and price controls, it makes things worse. and that's really what the headlines are showing. i was surprised to see the harsh headlines in "the washington post".
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they called it gimmicks. in "the new york times" they said it's a mixture of government intervention and government assistance. and then cnn with a hammer blow, they say it could create more problems than it solves. it's simply not a sensible policy. and so the reason for that is because you're putting the government in the middle of all the markets. we know how that comes out. pete: why is it on this summit, we asked this question earlier in the question as well, why is it this subject where the media suddenly jumps up and says this is not going to work? because they've covered on everything else for her. >> it's interesting. if you have a vacuum, then it gets filled. and so she hasn't been doing press conferences and so on. her first pick was someone from minnesota which is a state that really hasn't done well under economic programs. and so now it's each the decision is making people wonder, is this a good way to figure your way through the problems. it's very clear we do have
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problems with housing and with medical care, but these aren't the solutions. that's what struck me, that if you thought through and everybody agreed we want to have more housing, how would you go at it, this would be about the last way you think about going at it. [laughter] pete: dade, real quick -- dade, do they believe this or is this a cynical political ploy? certainly, they have advisers that would remind them, you would think, hey, this is how this played out before, or is this just for political ears? >> one of the quotes e gave was from jason furman. he was an obama adviser saying this isn't sensible. i think some of them believe it, and there is a portion of the country that that really thinks in terms of socialism and bigger government. so this might appeal to them. but you've got to think that the big majority want the u.s. economy to do well -- pete: yeah. >> and that's clearly going to be through markets, through more production. you know, the solution is really
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clear. you need more energy, you can't control the appliances that are put in houses. so if your complaint is that house prices are too high, you've got to find ways to allow people to build more houses. interest rates coming down through production and output, not through these controls. pete: yeah. through actual market forces. david malpass, thank you for your time. appreciate it. >> thanks, pete. pete: you got it. all right. well, grassroots volunteers organizing their largest efforts yet to mobilize the faith community in this election season. will this be the key to bringing religious hispanic voters to the polls? we'll discuss. minute. ♪ ♪ god only knows what i'd be without you ♪ when you're in the military you're really close with your brothers and your sisters that are in the military with you. and when you get out of the military, you kind of lose that until you find a new family. we can talk about our struggles
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number of days, and just is about an hour and a half ago a, it made landfall on bermuda. that doesn't happen often, but a category one made landfall this morning. winds at about 85 miles an hour, and the storm's still right there, but most of the energy is on the front end, so i think the worst of it for bermuda is over. the back end not going to have nearly as much intensity. take a look at that right there, center of the storm moving right over bermuda. we're going to ask it tonight to pull off towards the northeast. you might think it's not going to have impact on us, but it is. we have major beach erosion, and this is one of those summer weekends people are going to want to get off the to -- out to the beach, you need to stay out of the water. really deadly rip currents. you've got to stay out of the water here throughout the day today. all right, rachel, send is it over to you. rachel: thank you, rick. well, it's the largest ground game for the faith community in
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history. more than 10,000 grassroots volunteers are working with the faith and freedom coalition to register millions of evangelicals and catholics to vote before election day. so as a hispanic -- hispanic and latino voters are expected to have more of an impact than ever before, will these efforts bring them to the polls? here to the the discuss is faith and freedom coalition's national hispanic director nilsa alvarez. so great to have you on this morning. yesterday kamala harris introduced the ma maduro plan of price controls. is that, the fact that she's laying out these economic policy that hispanics cheerily hate, is that making your job easier? -- cheerily hate? >> actually -- clearly hate. actually, i would have to say she's definitely making our job much easier. he is passenger-americans, especially those -- hispanic-americans, especially those who have my greated to our nation, it's now resonating.
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it's not coming off the this campaign that you just mentioned and one of the key issues that we keep talking with faith leaders and hispanic pastors from all over the country is the need to protect america from socialism. so this is one of the alarming issues as well as the radical sex education in the public school systems that are indoctrinating our children with the gender chaos in which hispanic families are outraged. so, yes, there are so many issues that right now are waking up our hispanic faith community. rachel: yeah. and it's so -- it's actually hand in glove. i mean, the whole gender theory comes out of cultural marxism. the economic stuff that we're now see seeing coming out of the camilla campaign and, ultimately, socialism, communism is anti-christian which is what you're trying to bring christian voters out to vote their values. you mentioned gender theory. what other cultural issues are -- or other issues are less
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resonating with hispanics when you have 10,000 people knocking on doors? you guys are hearing from hispanic christian value voters. what are they telling you? >> well, we're hearing a lot of stories because we're communicating with hundreds of hispanic leaders every month. and we're getting new stories. you know, there are so many families that are struggling financially right now. parents having to take on a second, third, fourth job, something they did not have to do just three and a half years ago. rachel: right. >> also it's our community at the forefront of the exploitation and abuse happening at a our southern border with today's humanitarian crisis and human trafficking. it's our hispanic community that's being abused and exploited. so that's something that a our hispanic leaders have communicates they are passionate about ending. and we're not seeing collaboration between this administration and government organizations from abroad that
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are trying to present human trafficking cases and crimes, humanitarian crimes, evidence of those crimes, and they're getting a cold shoulder when there should be collaboration to ending this crisis and protecting our hispanic community. rachel: yeah. yeah, this government has lost almost 10100,000 children. they can't keep track of them and, of course, they don't want to work with organizations on this child sex trafficking that's clearly happening at our border, because they don't want to bring attention to it. i'm glad you brought up the issue of people having to take on multiple jobs. that's something i heard a lot about when i was many allentown, pennsylvania. people saying i have to take9 another job just to keep up with grocery prices, represent increases, the utilities going up. it's interesting to me, nilsa, hispanic women are the demographic that most wants to be an at-home mom. and it -- >> yes. rachel: -- they just simply can't do it. not only do they have to go outwork a job, they may have to work two or three jobs now.
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>> yeah. so in response to all of this, we've been helping our faith leaders and our hispanic pastors in encouraging and engaging the citizens in our congregations to be registered to vote and to speak up on all these issues. they're showing up at school board meetings, at commission meetings, they're meeting with legislators every single -- or every single opportunity they have in order to the voice their faith, family and biblical values. and we're seeing interesting trends. rachel: yeah. well, good luck. faith, family and freedom, those are definitely hispanic values. we wish you luck. thanks so much for joining us this morning, nilsa. >> thank you. more on ff coalition.com. rachel: got it. the supreme court blocking the enforcement of the biden-harris administration's new title ix rules. louisiana's attorney general helped lead the fight, and she's up next.
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intercepted as many as 55 projectiles launched from lebanon. people were told to stay by their shelters today, that is something we've heard in recent days. fires broke out in the north because of this. no injuries reported just yet. but all of this follows this, take a look at this footage. this is the aftermath of a strike overnight. the idf says it launched an attack a on what it says was a hezbollah weapons warehouse. at least ten people were killed including two children, more wounded across the area according to state the media a there. mean if while in gaza, the israeli military says it's expanding ground operations in khan yunis, the air force says in the last 24 hours it's taken out as many as 40 hamas targets. according to the u.n. on average, 130 people are killed in gaza every day, so the high stakes ceasefire negotiations came to a close in doha, qatar, yesterday. negotiators will continue to have technical talks and work in the coming days, and senior potentials will meet in cairo,
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egypt, at the end of next week. so the ceasefire that really is going to be the focus in the days to come, president biden last night said that this is the closest we have come to major progress, a major breakthrough. that optimism, however, is not being shared among leaders within israel and hamas. u.s. secretary of state antony blinken will be here tomorrow night, he will meet with prime minister benjamin netanyahu on monday to stress washington's effort and and ambition to strike a deal. will? will: thank you so much. meanwhile, the supreme court blocking enforcement of the biden-harris administration's changes to title ix. which would have broadened definitions to include gender identity. the high court siding with a growing number of states that called for a stop to what they say is an unlawful rule against girls. louisiana attorney general liz merle helped lead that fight. this sparked the supreme court decision which came down just yesterday, she joins us now. mrs. attorney general, thank you for being with us.
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let's, first, if we might, put this in context so the audience understands what happened at the supreme court. this was an injunction that a lower court ordered that stopped the biden administration's rewrite of title ix which would have expanded sex to include gender identity. is that correct? what was decided by the supreme court? >> that's correct. it's a preliminary motion that was -- the government did not like the fact that we obtain the injunction, so they went to the united states supreme court to see if they could block it. will: all right. so an injunction stops the rewrite for now of title ix. let's talk about what the biden administration is rye thing to do to title ix hoe -- trying to do. they are expanding definitions of, for example, sex. they want to include gender identity. is that right? >> right. and this is not the first time they've tried. this is, in fact, the third time they've tried. they've on two other occasions attempted to do the same thing
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that they never had actually rewritten the title ix rules. this is probably the largest effort to date to make this particular cultural and policy change. will: all right. so a lower court stops it with an injunction, the supreme court upholds the injunk meaning that will not concern injunction meaning the rewrite not go into effect for now, but there will be a big case about this. what do we say, ms. attorney general, to the argument made by the government that the cultural debate we're having about men joining women's sports wouldn't be affected by this change to title ix? they are arguing this doesn't allow boys to jump into girls' sports. >> so i think that argument's just ridiculous. it would be impossible for them to deny the entire construct that they've recreated for title 9:00 and i somehow say that wouldn't -- title ix and somehow saw say that wouldn't apply to girls' sports. in fact, the current drafted rule does apply to bathrooms, to
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locker rooms, to classrooms, to everywhere. so it's a broad, broad application right now of the rule and rewrite of the rule. they didn't use the word athlete ins in it, but they really deny that it applies across the board, and they simply couldn't come and carve athletics out without contradicting everything they just did. will: i'm sorry to have to ask this quickly, but i think we take for granted times, the full scope of title ix. title ix governs how much of what we deal with in civil society. >> well, title ix covers the entire educational environment from k-the 122 and -- k-12 and all of higher ed and graduate schools too. so it's the very pervasive, and it's been one of the most successful laws that have advanced women in educational understoods -- opportunities and athletic opportunities that's ever been written. will: right. >> it's been enormously
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seasonful, and this eviscerates title ix for women. will: yeah. for now it's stop thed the, but we'll be following along as the courts hear the actual merits of the case going forward. attorney general, thank you so much for being with us on "fox & friends". >> thank you for having me. will: rachel, over to you. rachel: thank you, will. turning now to your headlines. court documents reveal actor matthew perry's final words telling his assistant to, quote, shoot me up with the big one shortly before his ketamine overdose death. his assistant along with four other people including two doctors and a drug dealer dubbed the ketamine queen have been charged. a patient of the doctor is speaking out. >> he was kind but unprofessional. we didn't fill out forms. lock him up. i think lock him up. rachel: perry was found dead in his hot tub the at his los
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angeles home in october. illinois state officials are withholding funds from the village of dolton after claiming the embattled mayor refused to hand over financial reports. a lawyer denying the petition. the village could be fined more than $78,000. henyard is accused of spending thousands of taxpayer dollars on lavish trips, cloweing and more, even using -- clothing, even using the village credit card to make purchases at amazon, target, wayfair and other stores. and to a story that makes us smile, a colorado dispatcher helps one couple deliver their newborn babe on the side of the road -- baby. the couple was on their way to the hospital when the mother started to go into labor in the middle of rush hour traffic. man, that's my nightmare. luckily, the can dispatcher on the phone was able to guide the new parents safely through the
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delivery. after the birth, the parents got to thank the dispatcher in person. >> you saved us. [inaudible conversations] >> i did what i do, so -- [laughter] yeah. >> we were freaking out a little bit. you helped calm us down. >> happy, happy that we got here healthy and everything. rachel: the baby's name kael. both baby and mother are doing well. those are your headlines. tech this out, curt the cyber guy is here with the latest gear to get your kids back to school and ready. ♪ ♪ simple as do, re, mi. ♪ ark bc, 123, baby, you and me girl. ♪ maya knows how quality care can bring out a smile. but it's been a few dog years since she was able to enjoy a smile of her own.
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[laughter] rachel: well, it's back to school week. these guys are in the back of the class goofing off. i can hear them of laughing. [laughter] rick: you're in the front row, aren't you? rachel: i'm a front row girl. we have the latest fun tech that you can use to get your kids matter. >> we invite you over and then get smarter later. having the tall for school is really what it's about -- tools. this is saw a farly jr.
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rock-noculars. you take thing rock collection and study what rocks are all about. it's, like, $17 on amazon. but what it does, it lights up the excitement of learning when you're young. rachel: that's awesome. >> we jump to what is now the very latest ipad if that will do for a.i. so apple a.i. is coming out in about a who months. pay attention, we're in class. rachel: sorry. >> it is the ipad air. it's the 3, and if you go through their educational site for schoolss, you get a discount. right now there's $1000 off -- 100 off, you get a gift card. and this laptop, okay, so if you really want it, you could get an asus laptop that starts at about $300 that's inexpensive, but if you want the a.i.-ready one for kids that are a little bit more advanced and older, this is the one to get. this is the pro art p16, just came out late july -- >> how much? >> it is the unbelievable.
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it's pricey, you could spend over $2,000 when you deck it out. it's something though that is for -- we want our kids to also learn how to create and so be ready for a.i. when they're, you know, meeting real life and education. jump to, you know, protecting -- oh, by the way, whether you do an ipad, whether you do an a laptop, the old one always a, i mean, it's all about a safety, right? privacy and safety. the best antivirus protection is at cyber guy.com. there's, like, five of the winners there. you pick whatever's good for you with, but don't go to school without having protection. rachel: what's this? >> you want to know when the kids come home from school and you're not home? maybe you're at a work? this is a great camera. this is a 44k wi-fi if camera -- 4k. it allows you to use the app and track it. and you don't have to hook it up to the cloud. you keep control of it, and you're ready to go with this, real link. it's great. i love it. and then this one right here, so
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for the backpack going back to school, again, security. if you're not using an air tag on your -- rachel: sow -- oh, that's so smart. >> it's, like, $25, very inexpensive. and this is a really cool thing. silent beacon. it's about $60, and you pair it with your kid's phone, and they have a panic button to call 911 or to call you. but most of all, think about security going back. think about your kid's privacy, and at cyber guy.com if you're not already getting the newsletter, we'll show you all these deals there, and we also are tracking a story that is the very biggest breach in data the we've ever seen. pete: cyber guy.com, check it out. thank you, kurt. rachel: that's what i got in trouble for. pete: big show ahead on this saturday morning.er ♪, than tylenol rapid release gels. because advil targets pain at the source of inflammation.
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