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tv   FOX and Friends Sunday  FOX News  September 22, 2024 3:00am-4:00am PDT

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because kamala harris is an islamist and marxist. have you noticed the silence? while she's trying to figure out how to weasel into being presidency. they know they own her, exactly what she's going to do. they think kamala harris because they can control kamala harris because she believes what they believe and that's why they're not complaining in the least but takes a flip-flop lie. i'll see you next time on life, liberty and levin. ♪ ♪ ♪
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[national anthem] ♪ ♪ [national anthem] ♪ ♪ [national anthem]
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♪ ♪ will: good morning. well to "fox & friends" on a sunday morning. will cain, pete hegseth, rachel campos-duffy. good morning. pete: good morning. will: how you feeling? rachel: how was your son's game? will: good. rachel: did they win? will: no. rachel: did he play well? will: he played fine. i just told pete, he kicked another onside kick last night. pete: the world master -- rachel: is that a -- pete: it's hard to do it properly it's almost impossible, not impossible, but a 5% chance to do it possibly. this is the kind of thing that could get him a college
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scholarship. will: that, i don't believe. pete: i'm telling you, if you want an onside kick specialist and you're a college football coach, check out charlie cain. will: thank you for that. it's a little like saying you're good at russian roulette. [laughter] it's a very random thing -- can. pete: he does it very, very well. it's good to be here. if a producer in the building said sometimes the beginning of our a blocks are a little awkward. will: really? if. pete: yeah, a little quiet -- rachel: the six? pete: mostly the six. he wakes up later, turns it on from the beginning -- will: who is this producer? if what show because he work on? rachel: it goes two ways. sometimes in the 6 a.m. a because we think no one's watching, we actually -- will: i'm going to move to what we're supposed to do, but that is not how i think. i don't think no one's watching -- rachel: at 6:00?
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will: no. we don't have anything planned. pete: and sometimes it shows. rachel: the weekend anyway feels like we busted into the buildin- [laughter] pete: that is true. rachel: no one's here, we've commandeered the cameras. let's just have that kind of show today. will: i think we are. rachel: eric, right on. let's go. pete: all right, let's start with this, folks were all over the campaign trail yesterday, all over swing states including donald trump who was in wilmington, north carolina. you may have caught some of it here on fox. if you did not, here is a portion of what he said yesterday. >> this election is about the economy, this election is about the border. that's what it is. and i am your border president. [cheers and applause] your border president. kamala would be your with invasion president. she would be your country-destroying president. as soon as i take office, we will immediately surge federal law enforcement to every city
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that is failing, which is a lot of 'em, to turn over criminal aliens, and we will hunt down, capture every single gang member, drug dealer, rapist, murderer and migrant criminal that is being illegally harbored. [cheers and applause] every one of the top 25 the worst cities are democrat-run cities. we will get them out of mc, and we will send them -- out of north carolina, and we will send them home where they belong. i'm announcing a plan to end all sanctuary cities in north carolina and across our country. [cheers and applause] no more sanctuary cities. rachel: donald trump knows his message. he's talking about the economy, and he's talking about the border. i'm the border president, she's the invasion president. she's the make your country worse president. he's also a grandpa. he's got a soft side, and we saw that last might in north carolina because his daughter lara is from north carolina.
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she was there with two of his grandkids, and he brought them up on stage, and it was let's just say adorbs. watch. >> we also have, and i said, i alluded to to it, a very important member of my family, far more important than eric or lara, and her name is carolina. [cheers and applause] and she's beautiful and she's sweet, and she doesn't know how evil life is -- >> make america great again. [cheers and applause] >> would anybody if like to meet luke, her brother? >> vote for grandpa pa. [cheers and applause] >> he doesn't want to get off the stage. oh, wow. look at that. he's got the gene. [laughter] rachel: he actually whispered in the little boy's ear and said say maga, but the little boy
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said vote for grandpa. pete: will you go. she -- there you go. she doesn't know how evil life is. isn't that true. will: you know what i like about that exchange? i don't know, politicians -- and i'm not talking about donald trump are here, i don't know, everything becomes currency. your entire life just like -- and with that, you obviously lose a lot of authenticity. whenever donald trump indulges little moments of windows into who he is and we get a lot of his opinion but who he is, that's what was accomplished on gutfeld, hey, do you wear jeans? do you wear a pajamas? rachel: he said, i don't fit into them anymore. will: i had a conversation earlier this week with a guy who's not a fan, and, you know, he can be pretty endearing. when he lets these little windows in, my point is, pretty endearing. rachel: yeah. sometimes it's his family like when kaya at the convention
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talked about what he was like as a grand with pa, i thought that was the most important speech of the night of the convention. will: rnc, right. pete: yeah. people who meet him for the first time say he's way more gracious and charitable than i ever thought he would be. and you see it if you're looking for it. but if you want to create the caricature as the left does, they have no idea. will: so this thing i'm talking about, and you guys know this, i do think thematically it's very important part of his campaign, although obviously the economy -- one hinge this election's about, it's the economy. but this idea of authenticity and phoniness and who you are, and i was just point out how you turn everything in your life to currency, that is the effort with vice presidential candidate tim walz. it's to turn him into -- the whole thing is, like, who is he? a midwestern coach and he's a dad. that that's what we saw. do we have that, where he is doing an ad and is he's leaning
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into a car, have you guys seen that? rachel: yes, i saw this ad. he's pulling out some sort of fan thing in the car? pete: he's work on the engine. rachel: yeah. but then he didn't actually talw he used the change out the fan in the car or something, but he count actually change it out, he just goes on and talks about a donald trump. [laughter] will: politico is talking about this. the headline, tim walz tests the limits of his working class appeal in pennsylvania's ultimate swing county. it's likely walz will have more luck turn thing out the base in the blue-turning suburbs here than trying to sway working class men in the county that is a mix of historically democratic cities and small towns and suburbs in deep red, rural stretches. pete: if he didn't do it in his own state of minnesota when you look at his policies and you look at his person, there aren't hard working, blue collar guys that go, yeah, i'm not a tim walz guy. i'm not with the jazz hands guy.
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he can play the cartoon of what the left might think a blue collar, midwestern guy looks like. will: right. pete: camo hat, you know, sitting over an engine. rachel: yeah. like, a beer belly and a t-shirt and a trucker hat. it's all, it's like cosplaying because, as you say, will and pete, nobody in minnesota, for example, who is the person he claims to be really likes him. he's only liked by, like, really liberal white ladies inside of minneapolis and only in the rich suburbs. so and enclaves, so, yeah, that's no who he is. sometimes he makes mistakes on the trail. like this one was funny, and he accidentally endorsed donald trump. watch. >> -- in minnesota to have enhanced background checks and red flag laws to get guns out of there. [applause]
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and i've still got my guns to go shoot pheasants in a couple weeks. look, kamala harris made it clear, these guys want to instill fear. they want to tell you that, just get over it, it's a fact of life, this is the way it is. she simply has said it doesn't have to be this way. it doesn't have to be this way. [applause] we can't afford, we can't afford four more years of this. rachel: there's a campaign ad for trump, right there. [laughter] pete: we cannot afford four more years of us. will: do you think it's a mistake? because they are definitely trying to act like she's -- rachel: yeah. will: they're trying to pull a, this is pulling a rabbit out of a hat. on one hand, biden-harris, she has leadership experience. on the other hand, hope and change. like, we're different from where we've been for the last three and a half years. they're pretending like donald trump is the incumbent. pete: yeah, they are. ofst it's a schizophrenic sense of messaging, and they're hoping
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people will realize into four more years of trump as if the last four years have been trump, which they have not, and she's trying to dance away from it. rachel: but to will's point, will they get away with it? pete: i don't know. it all plays into the theme of inawe innocent in. you're running -- inauthentic. that's part of what j.d. vance point out yesterday. he said, you know, kamala harris is hiding from the media because someone else is writing stuff for her that she may or may not believe and we don't know. and j.d. vance has done a nice job pointing that out. watch. >> the only time she speaks before the american people is when she's got a teleprompter right in front of her. and i, and i think it's because shes has no idea what to say unless somebody else is writing her lines for her. isn't that a disgrace? i give kamala harris a little bit of credit because she's given two interviews over 50 days of being the democratic party's nominee.
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now, i think i've, i think i've figured out the secret though. the reason kamala doesn't give very many interviews is because every time she does, i think we pick up about 100,000 the votes. so i guess kamala's attitude is better hide from the american people, but kamala harris, there is no hiding from the wisdom of the voters of pennsylvania, and in 44 days -- [cheers and applause] you're fired. rachel: he just answered the question we were kind of pondering here. j.d. vance thinks the wisdom of the american people will prevail, that you can't pull the wool over our eyes with, you can't tell us that the last four years were not horrible and not your fault. so -- pete: let's hope. i mean, the air war's coming, by the way. hundreds of millions of dollars on the tv screens and is on digital ads trying to characterize trump and her, and both sides have a ton of money. will: those two debate, j.d. vance and tim walz, a week from tuesday. that's going to be fascinating.
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i think j.d. vance will hand it well. i think it'll be interesting to see how he handles not just walz, but the moderators. for me, he's a mystery, i have no idea how he will be on that debate stage. rachel: walz? will: right. pete: good question. rachel: we have seen how j.d. handles moderators from the interviews he's done, and he's really good. pete: yeah. rachel: he calls them out, holds them accountable. pete: who are going to be the moderateerers for that debate e? will: it's margaret brennan, i believe, and -- it's cbs. pete: nice and -- will: no. pete: it's going to be a three on one again. rachel: oh, for sure. will: something like that. now to a fox news alert, fears of wider-ranging war are nearing an all all-time high as hezbollah and the idf trade rocket fire overnight. israeli prime minister benjamin netanyahu saying in an address moments ago, quote, if hezbollah
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didn't get the message, i promise you, it will understand the message. rachel: meanwhile, inside of gaza israeli forces continue to battle hamas who are still holding dozens of hostages. pete: mike tobin is live on the ground in tel aviv with the latest. hey, mike. >> reporter: good morning, will, rachel and pete. as promised by hezbollah leadership, the rocket fire has increased both with frequency and the distance they are penetrating into race el -- israel. the drones have been flying this morning, the great est intensity of the rocket barrages was between 6-7 a.m. local time. while israel says the defense systems are effective most of the time, several rockets did get through striking an area very near the port city of haifa. with the greatest penetration of israel since the 2006 lebanon if war, the israeli air force has increased the frequency of attacks in southern lebanon. an idf spokesman says some 400rockets and missiles were hit. at a hospital near haifa, staff
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has begun to relocate patients to underground facilities there built to defend against the rocket fire, and school has been canceled in the knot of israel. the home front command has given the order to avoid travel. people are allowed to go to work but only if they have access to bomb shelters. and with the devastation the to the hezbollah communications and command structure as well as collateral damage, an idf spokesman said this morning that hezbollah has had numerous occasions to back down. will, or rachel and pete? will: thank you, mike. pete: mike, thank you. we're going to turn now the a few additional headlines. at least four people are killed and dozens hurt after an overnight shooting in birmingham, alabama. police say several shooters fired multiple shots into a group of people. officers are working to the track down the suspects. >> rest assured, we are going to do everything we possibly can to make sure that we uncover,
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identify and hunt down who was ever responsible for preying on our people this morning. pete: so far no as have been made and no motive has been determined. and in oregon, an amusement park is suing the manufacturer of a ride that malfunctioned in june leaving nearly 30 riders dangling upside down for if you have roughly 30 minutes. the oaks amusement park in portland claims the company failed to keep its atmosphere ride safe and didn't have the right tools or procedures to fix or maintain the ride. the lawsuit aims to make the ride maker liable to the park for any financial losses associated with the pending lawsuit. and to college football. the ohio state krauseing past marshall -- cruising past marshall yesterday helping the buckeyes move to 3-0. meanwhile, their bitter rival michigan was busy hosting usc. the wolverines using this fourth down touchdown in the final minute to take town the trojan ises 27-24.
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and in colorado where coach prime's squad needed a wing and a prayer to send the game into -- against baylor into overtime. >> all rushing from one side. >> big 12 opener comes down to this play. sanders gets the feet set, toward the end zone for the game, it is caught! [cheers and applause] pete: the buffaloes tying the game as time expired with that touchdown. colorado would go on to stop baylor in overtime to win 38-311. causing the colorado faithful to storm the field -- will: really? pete: -- in celebration. wow. those are your headlines. rachel: even i liked that sports moment. that was amazing. pete: the hail mary? rachel: yeah. i like anything with a hail mary. [laughter] pete: that's why she loved it. i got it. will: rick -- pete: you guys were communicating during those headlines. [inaudible conversations] [laughter] rick: rachel and i were having a
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conversation -- rachel: right across you. we're trying to the decide if with this outfit i should keep the glasses -- rick: she was, like, should i keep my glasses? yeah, or i think you should. will: speaking of style, yesterday was national dancing day? so we line danced out on fox square. rick joined us, all four of us. check it out. ♪ ♪ will: oh, no! hold on. pete: oh, spin. ♪ [laughter] rick: rachel, i'm watching you. ♪ >> forward, back, back, forward. will: couldn't jump in on the run, buddy. this is bad. pete: come on, will! >> back, back, forward, forward, back, step, turn. right, 2, 3. left, 2, 3. >> that that's it. [cheers and applause] will: so, yeah concern.
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pete: the response was unrelenting. rachel: it was brutal. apparently, will's dancing is upsetting people in the hospital. [laughter] pete: sitting in a hospital bed watching "fox & friends" weekend when out of nowhere i'm subjected to seeing will cain prancing across the screen doing his december tush thing version of a -- disturbing version of a line dance. why does pete hegseth let him do this? i had to the ask the nurse to give me -- [laughter] will: why don't you put your name on it? rachel: this one is, another x post says, will, you are from texas and you can't line dance. will: i saw some of these yesterday, by the way, and and the camera wasn't panned out enough for you to appreciate this, at least in that clip -- rachel: i think rick should read the next one. will: you're not supposed to read the stuff about yourself with. kim said, rick nailed it. you were quietly doing all the moves with the instructor, well done, rick. rick: thank you very much.
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[laughter] i appreciate it. listen, i will say, is there anything you can't do? there does come a point with pete, like, he did that dance. you should be on -- rachel: "dancing with the stars"? pete: it's a very basic dance. will: -- out of control. your man crush. [laughter] rachel: really, i was so focused on will's bad dancing, i didn't really notice pete's good dancing, but you're right. pete: we were in montana the summer, and we did family line dancing. rachel: of course you did. pete: we did. hours and hours of family line dancing. will: i just wan you to know, men don't line dance. pete: the kids love it. [laughter] dad, can we do more? will: congratulations, you're a really good line dancer. rachel: he's married the a dancer. rick: that is true. willgu: more "fox & friends" afteof ar this. er clinically proven to help reverse the 4 signs of early gum disease
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♪ >> kamala and her group have seen what's happening to the their campaign, and it's not going well for them. they would like to do another debate. [background sounds] although good entertainment value. a lot of people say, oh, do it, it's great entertainment. i've already done two.
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the problem with another debate is that it's too late. voting has already started. will: donald trump tells rally-goers it's too late for another debate as kamala harris accepts a cnn invitation to face off again on october 23rd. meanwhile, preparations for the vice presidential debate on october 1st are well underway as pete buttigieg is helping tim walz. he's playing the role of d.j. vance. if -- j.d. vance. alexa-inning joins us now. good morning to you. >> morning. will: let's start with this idea it's too late. it certainly is interesting early voting's begun in many states, and it it play into this idea with, well, kamala didn't even enter the race until very late, and now the debate scheduled doesn't even coincide with our election schedule. >> sure. and i was actually reading the harris campaign's statement when she said -- and this'll probably be the first and the last time i agree with the harris campaign.
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but they said the american people need to hear from kamala harris. yeah, of course they do. she's done two interviews since she was anointed the nominee? she wasn't even -- she didn't even earn that that, no votes. she needs to do interviews. do press conferences. you don't need another debate way late in the season. so it doesn't matter if you totally, you know, screw it up. i think it is too late, i agree with the president. she needs to get out there and get away from her safe space that is cnn. she doesn't have to do an interview with a babysitter. run for president, do what actual candidates do. will: is it the fact that kamala wants another debate, is it a sense that she and her campaign feel like they won the first debate and it was good for their campaign? >> i actually think it's the exact opposite. i mean, she didn't -- she declined the fox news debate, so clearly she's terrified of getting questions she hasn't rehearsed s. so i think this is a sign that they're in panic
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mode. i mean, trump and harris are tied in virginia polling. she's skipping the al smith dinner. the teamsters didn't endorse her. i think the democrats are kind of spiraling. will: you know, to back up your claim, a lot of the polling after the debate didn't seem to the award her the victory that so many subjective opinions seemed to have thought, that she. wont the -- won the debate the. doesn't seem to have moved the needle significantly for kamala harris. meanwhile, we do have the vice presidential debate coming up, and here is what donald trump had to say talking to brian kilmeade on "one nation." brian: j.d.'s got a debate coming up, margaret brennan, norah o'donnell, what advice do you give him in. >> he won't get a fair if shot, but he'll handle it really good. people are really liking him. he's tough, smart, he loves our country. he's going to have no trouble. will: do you think -- we were trying to remember the name of the other moderator a little bit earlier in the show, it's nora
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rah o'donnell along with margaret brennan. do you think it'll be as adversarial to j.d. vance and as friendly to tim walz as it was for kamala harris? >> of course. i think there's no question about that. the media is obsessed with donald trump and j.d. vance and trying the take them down. but what i am looking forward to is senate vance asking tim walz why he endorsed donald trump yesterday, and i think him saying they can't -- we can't afford four more years of this, is this the the first time that they've act mommed that kamala harris has been vice president for the last three and a half years? it might be. the fact that mayor with pete is prepping tim walz, i think he's going to be wholly unprepared. will: you know, i don't think you're wrong. i think that the track record suggests it would go the same way as the abc model, but that is the way it plays out, it will really shine a light on what went on with that cnn debate with joe biden where they didn't
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play that role, why that would be the outlier. it's great to talk to you this morning, alexa, thank you for being with us. >> thank you so much. will: as democrats try to tie president trump to project 2025, we will be joined by one of the plan's authors who was just on on capitol hill to set the record straight. >> you reiterated and have created a bogeyman that just isn't there. it is very misleading to suggest that there's any coordination there. every note... every chord... every instrument... creates an incredible melody of power and possibility. but that energy needs to be reliable to have the same power. and affordable — to keep the melody. at home, on the road, on farms and fleets and even ports — propane and renewable propane lower carbon emissions while harnessing the full symphony of energy. learn more about safe, clean, reliable propane at propane dot com.
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just, like, 7 months. should we sell it? we hold... hold... silver vans are going for more right now, should we... hold... our low mileage is paying off. you think we should... hold... depreciation is really heating up you think... hoooold!!! hooold! hooold. hold! we just dipped 2.5%! hooooooold!!! now!!!! i'm on it. i'm, on it. already sold to carvana. go to carvana and track your car's value today. pete: top democrats getting pushback after multiple efforts to tie president trump to project 2025 the despite no evidence. >> we know what a second trump term would look like, it's all laid out in the project 02025. >> donald trump avoided the -- appointed the supreme court justices who got us into this mess. his project 2025 the goes even further. >> extreme maga republicans want
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to shut down the government because they are determined to jam trump's project 2025 down the throats of the american people. >> we convened a panel of four witnesses with deep ties to project 2025. the maga manifesto for a second trump term. rachel: former epa chief of staff who wrote a chapter of project 2025 just testified in front of lawmakers telling them trump has nothing to do with the plan, and she joins us now. welcome. and i saw your testimony, or a portion of it online, and i was really impressed because you just brought up a really basic fact which is heritage has been put out plans like this since it started. it's kind of what it does. it's its mission, right? and members can like the plan, like the bill, like the idea or not. >> yeah, that's exactly right.
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the heritage foundation has been putting out the book called the mandate for leadership since 1981, and if you look at the late iteration, it literally says the ninth edition can. so this precedes president trump, and it's just so disingenuous and frustrating, frankly, that the left keeps trying to tie president trump to a project that he was not affiliated with. and i was so frustrated on capitol hill because the ranking member started out the hearing once again reiterating a lie that we've heard from the harris campaign, we heard during the dnc that just is not true. and i know that because i, i wrote the chapter on the u.s. environmental protection agency. i did not work with president trump, with anyone who works directly for him or his campaign team. pete: well, the media, like we saw with the clips and also some headlines, is doing everything they can to make the trump campaign look like they are project 0225. "the new york times" -- 2025. a guide to the project 20225,
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the right's terrifying plan to remake america. what is project 2025. all those outlets are put it, splashing it front and center saying it's trump's. what would you say to their argument, well, there are some people who worked in the trump administration, therefore, it must be a trump plan? you know, give -- bring us under the hood. were there any people who were tied to trump? >> not that i know of. and the point of project 2025 was really to reflect where the conservative movement is when it comes to the federal government. there is massive frustration with the growth and the bloated federal government that really degrades the effectiveness of important missions and undermines the role of the american voter and reduces accountability. so project 2025 the when i was first contacted about it said, okay, you've got a clean slate at the u.s. environmental protection agency. from the conservative per spent if i based off of -- perspective
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based off of experience and wisdom having served there under president trump and there's also people who served under previous conservative administrations including president bush and even before that, but what would you do to actually make it work? and so that was the premise of the exercise. and it was led by the heritage foundation, but it had input from all sorts of conservative organizations that are out there really committed to to making sure that the conservative movement continues to move forward of which we've with seen great momentum under president trump. so there's things in there that certainly reflect actions taken during the previous trump administration. perhaps in the future. but that's not the point. the point is the reflect where are conservatives and where are the people who support the movement who want the federal government largely to get out of the way. will: yeah, i still -- the ninth edition of the mandate, i still think, like, all it is is a marketing --
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pete: branding. will: it sounds like a netflix dystopian specials project 2025. rachel: i like a lot of the ideas -- will: that's my point, scary thing, project 2025. rachel: i know. will: mandy, thanks for being with us this morning. >> yeah, thanks for having me. rachel: thank you. bye-bye. kamala harris under scrutiny appearing for three times fewer interviews than team trump, and it may all be by design. >> the reason kamala doesn't give very many interviews is because every time she does, i think we ping about 100,000 votes. i guess kamala's attitude is better hide from the american people. pete: we break down the democrats' strategy next. ♪ ♪ lowe's knows it's easier to make the right calls,
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there'll be representative here to help the vets get jobs. everything that they need to get back on their feet and return, if they can to the community. we■re here to help them do that. the second prong of our program, is our national case management network. anywhere in the united states where a veteran or their family are experiencing homelessness we provide them with direct financial assistance so we're able to help veterans in real time so the more support that we receive, the more we can support our veterans. go to t2t.org to donate $11 a month. ♪ >> i give kamala harris a little bit of credit because she's given two interviews over 50 days of being the democratic party's nominee. now, i think, i think i've figured out the secret though. the reason kamala doesn't give very many interviews is because every time she does, i think we ping about 100,000 votes concern pick up about 10100,000 votes --
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100,000 votes. pete: we learn that trump and vance have sat down for at least 56 interviews compared to just 15 non-scripted interview for the harris-walz tickets, and that probably includes things like what she did with oprah. american majority founder and ceo ned ryun joins us now. can they get away with this, running out the clock? >> well, i think they're going to try, pete. do you really want the nation's leading purveyor of word salads out there constantly talking about being unburdened by what has been and yellow school buses and space and what that entails and really showing the american people she has no answers. but even more so, pete, you really want her out there explaining in fine detail, if she even had the ability to do so, her soviet-style price controls, the green new deal? she is a liability every time
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she steps up behind a microphone, and i think what their strategy is over the next 40 some days so to kind of put her in the background as much as possible and let the corporate prop began do diss continue that joy blitzkrieg and continue gaslighting the the american people that somehow she's not the incumbent and all of these disastrous policies that they are experiencing have nothing to do with her and she's a new way forward and she'll be a joyful way forward. i think that's their strategy over the next 40 days. pete: i think you're right. i've never seen someone who is winning clamoring for another debate, too -- >> exactly. pete: which isn't going to happen. >> it's not. and i think that's the right move by trump. it's clear that the harris campaign is realizing they're behind, especially in those key states. there's about seven states, pete, that are going to decide the white house, and i think they're looking at those battleground numbers just as i am. pete: if for sure. let's move real quick to your new book, it's called "american leviathan: the birth of the administrative state and
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progressive authoritarianism." it sort of takes you behind the scenes how we got here. tell us about it. >> it's about the rise of the progressive movement, pete, the rejection of the moral and political authority of the u.s. constitution. the rejection of the republic and in its place putting massive, unelected, bureaucratic state in which they thought those unelected bureaucrats should be the ones who govern. and that's how you find yourself a hundred and some years later where you find the duly-elected president of the united states, donald trump, in this massive political conflict about who decides. and your previous guest was talking about the perpetual growth of government. one of the points i make in the book, it's in the d dna of the administrative state. if you view the state as salvation, as progressives do, the growth is meant to be perpetual. that's how you find yourself with out of control government spending and just a massive, bloated bureaucracy. pete: real quick, can it be undone? >> it can be. you need a powerful executive at the head of the executive branch where most of the administrative
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state the resides, that'd be donald j. trump. you need the supreme court stepping up and, quite frankly, you need the american people to reject the legitimacy of the administrative state. it's not constitutional. quite frankly, it's very un-american. pete: well, if there were a moment, it sounds like that moment would be now if the american people can do it. the book is "american leviathan," it's right over ned's shoulder, go check it out. appreciate it, ned, thank you. >> thanks, pete. pete: you got it. let's turn now to the chief, rick reichmuth, and my friend. [laughter] hi, rick. re rick that's because i made the nice compliments. take note, will. [laughter] three different systems that a we're talking about tropics, but it's really this one that's in the gulf, and we're concerned about this one actually. looking at something to develop here. it's not developed yet, and when a storm isn't adopted -- developed, it becomes hard to know where it's going to go, but best idea is parts of the western caribbean and towards the north. i think by the time we get in
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this storm established, the center of this storm, we're going to have very good guidance, and it is likely a friday-saturday event, somewhere from louisiana through maybe the north half of florida as a potential billion landfall. this could be a hurricane by the time we get towards, say, next friday. not a lot of time to watch. if you're in areas of florida or parts of mississippi, louisiana and alabama, you should be aware. this is what we call the oceanic heat content, how much heat is in that water that the allows development of somes -- storms. and where we see the storm develop and move, it's going to move right over the area of greatest oceanic heat con end. that's why we're concerned. a front across parts of the northern plains all part of this system that brought a lot of show overnight across parts of the wrong keys. back to you -- rockies. pete: thank you, rick are. a dozen college athletes all diagnosed with the same rare and possible life-threatening muscle injury following a team workout
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to. dr. nicole saphier breaks down the medical mystery next. what do you talk about? the news? sports? a little family gossip maybe? nah, you don't do that. right? here's another topic for you: as they get older their risk of getting really sick from a respiratory virus like flu, covid-19 or rsv goes up. a lot. so talk to them about getting this seasons' vaccines...
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because you've still got so much to talk about. dude? dog food in the fridge? it's not dog food. it's freshpet. real meat. real veggies. real weird.
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he was bad luck anyway.
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rachel: the fda has approved the first ever nasal spray if flu mist vaccine that can be
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self-administered at home. joining us now is fox news medical contributor, dr. nicole saphier. who needs a flu shot, first of all. >> well, good morning, rachel. good news, flu mist -- which, by the way, has been around for a couple of decades now -- it's a nasal spray flu vaccine. it's now going to be available for home administration not this year, but with beginning next year. and a lot of people don't actually go and get the flu shot because of the logistics of going to the doctor's office or the pharmacy or because of severe needle phobia, to this is a good alternative for those people especially because over the last with two decades, it is shown just about the same efforts cat city as the traditional vaccines -- efficacy. when it comes to who should be getting a flu shot, the cdc recommends everyone without contra indications over sex months of age and -- six months of age and over should get it. last year it was a little bit
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less than 50% of keeping people out of the hospital. does that mean everyone needs to get one? this is up the you as the individual, but obviously you want to talk to the your doctor, especially if you're high risk. rachel: you know me,ny choal coal, i will not take a flu vaccine, but i do want to boost my immunity. >> same here. prevention is the best key, and you also know that i love to take liquid right is min herbs. my favorite is elderberry, garl ec. you, of course, want to be getting your vitamin c and going outside to the sunlight getting that beautiful vitamin d. i'll post on my web site the things i like to prevent illness because it's the really hard to avoid possess if key respiratory viruses -- rachel: go to dr. saphier's twitter handle and bio and get all that information on natural a stuff, because i do that all the time. all right, is tufts university has opened an investigation after 12 the lacrosse players
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were diagnosed with potentially life-threatening condition after team workout to. so i'm going to have trouble saying this word, dr. saphier or but i'm going to give it a stab -- [laughter] you're going to explain what is wrap -- ra abdo my lie sis. >> this is actually a potentially life-threatening condition. this is very serious. wrap doe my lie sis is when you have the severe breakdown of muscle fires. you know when you're exercising and you feel that burn? welsh we do expect that you're tearing some of your muscles. that breakdown of muscle actually caused new muscles to to form, that's why you feel that burn. well, unfortunately, if you have severe strenuous exercises or you have a crush injury or some medications or an induction next, you can develop the excessive breakdown of muscle tissue. and one of the proteins in the muscle goes through the kidneys, it can turn your urine
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reddish-brown, and it can cause acute disney -- kidney injury, so it can be quite severe. most cases are very mild and really only require iv fluids to filter it out of your bloodstream. but, again, you have to be very careful because it can affect your kidneys, and so you certainly -- if your urine turns a different color after a strenuous exercise, you need to see a doctor to the make a sure your kidneys are okay and make sure before and after every exercise that you are adequately hydrating to make sure that if you do have muscle breakdown, it's filtering out of your kidneys. rachel: so work out hard but not too hard. take it a little bit easy and stay hydrated. [laughter] well, that was a scary situation for lacrosse players. thanks, nicole. we'll have you back. more "fox & friends" comingl . with 4 powerful pain-fighting ingredients that start working on contact to target tough pain at the source.
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