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tv   FOX and Friends Saturday  FOX News  September 28, 2024 6:00am-7:00am PDT

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rachel: well, we're back with a fox news alert. thish s df if says hezbollah leader hassan nasrallah's reign of terror is over. the iranian-backed terror group's leader was killed in massive strikes in beirut. will: right now smoke's rising over thatty as over 140 idf strikes took place over the night. and the idf is making it clear that israel's war is not with the lebanese people. pete: nate foy is live on the ground in tel aviv. hey, nate. >> reporter: hey, guys, good morning. so israel's defense minister is out with a new statement reacting to the airstrike in beirut yesterday that took i out hezbollah's leader, hassan nasrallah, a man who has been in charge of the organization since 1992, and gallant a said that nasrallah was an immediate threat to thousands of israelis and citizens across the world which is a very similar message that we just heard if from idf spokesman. listen to this.
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>> hezbollah, under the command of nasrallah, chose to to join the war that hamas started. there are consequences for that decision. hezbollah is not just a threat to israel, not just a threat to the state of remember. non, hezbollah is a threat to the world backed by the regime in iran. >> reporter: is so nasrallah was one of hezbollah's founding members in the 1980s, he's led the group for 32 years. he oversaw the up group's integration into lebanon's political system and also hezbollah's rise to becoming one of the most heavily armed nonstate militias in the world. the strike took out not only him, but his -- hezbollah's second in command as well, including the group's radwan commanders that the group say were planning to invade northern israel. israelis targeted hezbollah
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weapons facilities. they put out messages in arabic telling residents the evacuate before hand. hezbollah's response is underway, israel estimates the group still has tens of thousands of rocks and missiles, and based off the statements from iran this morning, many expect an escalation in the coming days. now, israel faces threats from several different directions, from several groups backed by iran including the i houthi rebels in yemen who just early yesterday morning fired a ballistic missile here at tel aviv that, flankfully, was -- thankfully, was intercepted. we are still waiting to see if prime minister benjamin netanyahu will speak today after he cut his trip to new york horse to return to israel after speaking before the u.n. we'll send it back to you. will: all right, thank you, nate. pete: thank you, nate. rachel: let's bring in jim hanson who served in the u.s. army and potential forces. it's great to have you on -- special forces. just give us your thoughts on what you see happening, what you
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expect to unfold in the next coming days. >> yeah, it's decision time for the ayatollahs in tehran. they started this war. these -- they're all their proxies who have been involved in the seven-front attack on israel. israel has now decided that their not -- they're not going to allow these terrorist groups to the attack them and not face massive consequences. but also they're not going to leave them in a functional state directly on their border. so they've been basically dismantling hamas. now they have done some tremendous damage to hezbollah, and the islamic republic in iran is going to have to decide are they going to step this up, and i have a feeling they've seen a little more than they wanted. and i don't think they can internally stand to go ahead and start a regional war with the problems they have with their own populace. if.
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pete: based on that, jim, is your sense that iran would want to deescalate is probably the wrong word, but is it performative or substantive? are they prepared to back off? i guess the question is because this make a wider war more likely or less likely, that they've done to hassan nasrallah? >> aye got to say if you look at the organizational chart for hezbollah, there's some fun ones running around online, it's nothing but red xs. they've got no leadership left. [laughter] so i think the idea that iran can use their proxies to do this has been disproven, and there's also been some, if you look at cargo planes leaving tehran and heading toward beirut which ostensibly would have been resupplying hezbollah, a lot of them made a u-turn and headed back to the tehran due to the fact that i don't think they took the israelis seriously when the israelis said they would knock them out of the air. i don't think the iranians are
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going to the start a bigger war because i truly believe that they are now in hiding themselves. i'm sure khamenei is deep inside the deepest bunker that they have, and the problem is they are probably wondering whether israel knows the grid coordinates to that bunker as well. i think they will do what they have to do to save face. i don't think they want a piece of this. will: that's a great point. we're talking about what iran's offensive response can possibly be, but to your point, they're very much on their heels as well now looking for a defensive posture because they can be next for israel. if we rewind the clock to october 7th, one of the working theories was iran backing hamas hoped to provoke a wider war to get the larger arab world upset with israel. israel is on the front foot here when it comes to hezbollah, and it doesn't look like that plan, if it was the plan of iran, has
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unfolded in terms of the entire muslim world turning against israel. >> no, i think you're absolutely right. they wanted that. they wanted a couple things. first of all, i think they wanted to derail any possibility of a deal between the saudis and israel for normalization of relations. they also wanted, as you said, to stir things up and cause trouble trying to isolate israel. and to embarrass them. and they succeeded in embarrassing them initially. the thing is, israel is quite campaign. and while they were on their back feet on october 7th, they have been leaning far forward. and i think the pager operation to take out all of those hezbollah folks was one of the most incredible asymmetric warfare operations in modearn history. so i don't think -- modern history. so i don't think anybody new is looking at israel as the soft one in the region, and i think this may backfire for iran and actually incent some of the gulf arab states to say maybe it's time to say the the islamic republic of irans has reached
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etc. expiration date, and nobody wants them causing trouble in the region. rachel: jim, what kind of impact, you talked about this pager explosion attack being so successful and if opening up this front in this war from gaza now into lebanon and being on the offense. has that helped benjamin netanyahu domestically? i know he was having trouble before, but are these successes helping him? >> oh, absolutely. no, it was a tremendous and horrendous embarrassment for hamas to be able to waltz into israel proper and slaughter, rape israeli citizens with no real repercussions immediately. and to bring all the hostages back into gaza. so now having shown that israel actually is the more powerful, the more competent, the more professional military, they have
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taken a hamas out of control of gaza, they are doing operations in limited ways in the west bank to enshire that nothing bad -- ensure that nothing bad happens there, and now they have really dealt a tremendous blow to hezbollah. all of those things, you know, includings just the amazing complexity of an operation like below the belt, that all shows that israel is no one to be messed with. and i think it's given netanyahu some breathing room and some control over domestic sentiment in his own country. pete: jim, real quick exit question. the ground war in gaza has been a challenge, guys like you and i know it's not an easy thing to do. what happens next with hezbollah in the north of israel in they have tens of thousands of israelis displaced right now. if you want to create a real buffer zone, you probably have to do more than just an air campaign. do you think that comes next? what's israel contemplating in the north? >> there is a u.n. resolution that a says hezbollah is not
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allowed to be within, you know, basically 20 miles of the israeli border that they've been flagrantly violating. consequently, all of those israelis who are within range of hezbollah rockets and missiles, etc., have been moved out. i think israel needs to ensure that that resolution is followed and, consequently, if that requires ground troops to push them out of that area, good. i think this might be the place where the international community, the vaunted international community which thus far has been telling and accepting lies about there being a gaza genocide, needs to actually do the right thing and enforce that and say, look, hezbollah, you started your part of this. get back to the line you're supposed to be above, let those israeli citizens back in and let's not turn this into a regional war. we'll see. i don't hold out a lot of hope, but that's what ought to happen. pete: all right. jim hanson, editor of the middle east forum, thank you very much for your time.
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good to see you. >> good to be with you. pete: all right, let's move down to our southern border now where there was -- we talk about substancety or performative? [laughter] there was a big performance that happened on our southern border in douglas, arizona a, yesterday. yes, the democrat nominee -- installed, not elected -- finally made her way to the southern border for the just the send time since she's been in the white house as the vice president and now as a candidate. he spent a whole 30 minutes there, went to the border wall that was not part of trump's wall even though much of it is. this was constructed under obama. walked, strolled with a couple of agent, we don't know exactly what they discussed at this point, and then she, took to the microphone trying to make you believe she is tough on the border. here she is yesterday, if you can believe it. >> there are consequential issues at stake in this election. and one is the security of our border. the united states is a sovereign nation, and i believe we have a
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duty to set rules at our border and to enforce them. and i take that responsibility very seriously. these men and women who work there and at other places along our southern border help keep our nation if secure, and they need more resources to do their jobs. [applause] and the american people deserve a president who cares more about border security than playing political games and and their personal political future. [cheers and applause] and so even though donald trump tried to sabotage the border security bill, it is my pledge to you that as president of the united states i will bring it back up is and proudly sign it into law. [cheers and applause] finish. will: she accuses donald trump of killing that bipartisan border bill. the performance, of course, was on yesterday. he spent less than a half an hour, 202 minutes, at the tucson sector -- 20 minutes.
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2011 border wall built under obama. meanwhile, under her administration, the biden-harris administration, these were the numbers that were released while she was making that trip. 13,000 illegal immigrants convicted of homicide released into this country. 15,000, almost 16,000 of those convicted of sexual assault. rachel: yeah. the total 425, so half a million known criminals willingly released by this administration into, into our country. this is just a slap on the face. i guarantee, you guys, she spent more time planning her outfit to wear at the border and the shots that they're going to use in their commercial to pretend like she is, you know, this was all just a photo-staged shot. that's what this was about. they took more time to plan that than they did -- than she's ever spent thinking about the border. pete: these are i.c.e. numbers that they did not want to give us, by the way.
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these are, i believe, foia'd numbers that came out yesterday, probably released on a friday because they wanted to dump it, but they were then released at the same time kamala harris went to the border. the cover of "the new york post" if says 15,000 killer immigrants in the u.s. it's stag -- it is the an -- it's treasonous, to allow criminals and rapists and to roam free through your southern border knowingly. it's one thing if they get away and you don't catch them, it's another thing to say we captured them, we know who they are and what they've done, yet we allow them to be maintained being released inside the country because in a lot of places local police departments are not allowed to cooperate with i.c.e. they don't put detainers, and they can't capture these guys. so your community, my community, i don't know, divide 15,000 by 50 states or every county, every county's got minute who has a criminal, and this number's low because it doesn't count the countries who won't tell us are criminals or are not able to or the known gotaways which is over
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2 million, let alone the unknown gotaways. this is the lowest possible number of criminals, rapists, murderers in our country that her administration has facilitated. rachel: yeah. add one more number to that, kamala harris -- actually, two, and joe biden, because it is criminal, what they've done. sara carter went ask and talked to residents of douglas, ads torque see what they thought about kamala's -- arizona a, to see what they thought about about kamala's visit to arizona. >> we have the vice president come anything today. why do you think she's here? >> because she's the flip flopper, and she's trying to get some votes at the last minute. where was she three and a half, four years ago? >> how do you feel about vice president kamala harris' visit here today? >> i'd like to be over in her face. >> what would you tell her? >> i'd say it's about time you visited the border. let me show you what it's really like. >> it's all publicity. it's kind of like she's here.
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she doesn't care, she just cares about winning. >> why do you think she's here? >> politics, of course. [laughter] i mean -- >> so you're not being fooled. >> no. absolutely not. i mean, she's had, what, three and a half, four years to do something of some consequences and hasn't done anything, and i don't think she's going to do negative but carry on another word salad, i guess. pete: people know better. rachel: yeah. i think people are on the it. you spoke earlier, will, about a just the lack of care, the compassion. pete, you did too. you know, you spoke about aoc when donald trump was separating children from, you know, people who claim to be their parents and she was outside of this gate crying in her white jeans. we haven't heard a peep from her. i want to show you another example, this is from 2008. now, remember -- will: '18. rachel: i'm sorry, 2018, my bad. i want you to remember we've
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lost 3202,000 --3 20,000 children, our government has lost track of them. we have no idea if they've fallen into sex slavery are or child labor. we know child labor's up4% in this country -- 444% if in this country -- 44%. here is rachel maddow during trump's presidency talking about children. if coming across the border. listen. >> this has just come out from the associated press -- this is incredible. trump administration if officials have been sending babies and and other young children -- [laughter] come on. to at least three -- ooh. can we put up the graphic of this? thank you. do we have it? if no. three tender-age shelters in south texas. lawyers and medical providers --
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think i'm going to have to the hand this off. if sorry. we'll see you again tomorrow. rachel: can you guys believe that? can you believe how selective their anger is and their pain is whcomes to the children at the border? i haven't heard anything from rachel maddow or -- pete: just no intellectual honesty on any of it. why are you sending kids -- because you're failing to confirm their parents are their parents or to make sure before you release them to somebody, that's the right person. you'll see one of that anywhere else about kids we can't keep track of. so cynical. will: and just to be point, it's not just selective emotion, selective attention. rachel: yeah. will: just very little acknowledgment or understanding of what you have referenced many, many times on this show, you know? if the number of missing children, the kids that are sent to an uncle juan that doesn't
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exist, there is no uncle juan. the kids that are in labor slavery or sex slavery or simply missing, just don't know, 30 300,000. rachel: yeah, it's really sad. i think it's interesting to see the way they reacted before, it's just shocking. pete: it's just donald trump. donald trump's in charge, the world is evil, in their mind. just like the border wall's okay to walk next to if it's obama's, but if it's trump's -- rachel: yeah, and those detention centers are called tender-age a centers under trump. no care. just move if 'em on, get 'em off to chicago, miami, get 'em off the pages of our press. we just don't want to see it. pete: we move now to a fox weather alert. at least 45 people with dead -- are dead since helene made landfall in florida as a monster category four hurricane. rachel: georgia and florida officials are surveying the damage and still dealing with widespread power outages. will: fox weather's bob van
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dillon joins us live in atlanta. >> reporter: good to see you early. yesterday at this time we had a flash flood emergency, the first one they ever issued for atlanta ever. and the reason why, we got about 111.5 -- 11.5 inches of rain in 3 days. the other side of the bridge is the bobby jones golf course. that water was right at the bottom of the bridge yesterday at this time. look at the precipitous drop. the rain has ended, the waters are going down, but a lot of mud right here. also some damage, obviously, to some of the structure infrastructure. you're looking at a sink hole developing where you had this runway, that's what it looks like underneath. that's going to have to be repaired. when i was driving here early this morning, sow -- saw some power outages, trees down, but we shifted from a wind event to a big rain event. like i said, almost 12 inches of rain in 3 days. that's what really got it going. that rain moved all the way up
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to north carolina, like you said. an amazing stat, over the last three days, yancy county, north carolina, almost 30 inches of rain. and the infrastructure up there can't take that, obviously. they're going to be in dire straits for at least the next several weeks if not next year, guys. will: all right. bob van dillen, thank you so much. pete: thank you, bob. will: join fox's recovery support, your donation enables the red cross to help people recover. visit redcross.org/fox forward or scan the qr code on your screen to support these efforts. pete: there you go. you are about to be looking live at a beirut where smoke is still rising after the idf if killed the leader of hezbollah. will: trey yingst is on the ground in israel, and he's next.
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president we're back with a fox news alert, the idf says hezbollah leader hassan nasrallah's reign of terror is over, and it's been confirmedded by hezbollah. the terror leader was killed in a massive strike in beirut. israeli prime minister benjamin netanyahu vowing to win the war in yesterday's fiery speech to the u.n. general assembly. >> as long as hezbollah chooses the path of war, israel has no choice, and israel has every
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right to remove this threat and return our citizens to their homes safely. and that's exactly what we're doing. pete: joining us live from haifa in israel, our chief foreign correspondent trey yingst. trey, we've been discussing this all morning. break down the significance of israel finally killing hassan fastal la, excuse me. if -- nasrallah. >> yeah, pete, it's extremely significant when we look at what's taken place over the past year. thousands of rockets raining down on northern israeli cities, indiana-tank guided missile attacks along the border, all of them ordered by hassan nasrallah, the secretary-general of hezbollah, a man who controlled the organization since 199 2. there were these massive strikes in the lebanese capital of beirut yesterday, and fox news learned that the target was hassan nasrallah. it took hours for the israel ally military to come out and confirm he was, indeed, killed in this strike in beirut.
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and following that confirmation, we've seen more rocket fire from hezbollah into northern and even central israel. so the concern here is that the situation on the ground could unravel further and that the iranian regime could directly respond for the killing of that isal la. remember, hezbollah is the group's largest proxy across the middle east. when you rook at the ir -- look at the irgc, iran's military wing, we understand that a deputy commander was killed alongside nasrallah, and this ups the ante for the entire region as we wait to see what comes next. we can expect israeli warnings to civilians, already we understand gatherings have been limited in the central part of this country, and this is an indication that israeli officials are concerned about the possibility of retaliation following the strike that killed the reeder of hezbollah, hassan nasrallah. pete in. pete: absolutely, trey. how likely do -- i've asked everybody this question. you know this better than anybody else. do you think an iranian response
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will be substantive or performative? do they want a wider conflict with israel? >> reporter: based on our reporting, performative, is the short answer, because the iranian regime understands the high cost a war with israel would inflict on their country. after losing not only hezbollah leadership, but also hamas leadership are, the israelis are systematically taking out the leadership of iranian proxies across the middle east. so a direct conflict would weaken the regime in tehran, and they now have lost key abilities not just from gaza, but also lebanon as the israelis take out the rocket and missile-launching positions of hezbollah. pete: absolutely. this most recent round of fighting started because of a brutal attack on october 7th, and now you've written the definitive firsthand account of what happened on october 7th called "black saturday," this is the next chapter of it. tell us again about the book, trey. >> reporter: absolutely. "black saturday" is is a book about the day in this war began.
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and i interview officials from across the israeli defense echelon including the defense minister, gallant. i speak with soldiers, with hostages that were taken into gaza and later released as part of the november ceasefire deal, with a hamas leadership, palestinian civilians. everyone involved on that danger dark day and the weeks that followed as the conflict erupted inside gaza. remember, what we are seeing unfold along israel's northern border is a direct result of the october 7th attack, black saturday. pete: yes. >> reporter: and one critical piece of information that i report in this book, four days after that brutal massacre the israelis had planned preemptive strikes against the iran-backed group hezbollah across remember. non. and i write about this in "black saturday," israeli jets were in the air before prime minister netanyahu decided to call off those strikes. and, ultimately, we've seen a war of attrition along this front following the october. th -- october 7th massacre and the war inside gaza, and
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hezbollah says they've been involved in the conflict because they want to support the palestinian people p. now there are major questions about what comes next for the middle east as the northern front remains a active as well. pete: shows you how relevant current events are to that day. watch "black saturday" on monday and preorder the book right now, it comes out on tuesday anywhere books are sold, but you can preorder at fox news books.com. i can't wait to read it myself. trey, thank you so much. good to see you. >> reporter: thank you. pete: all right. still ahead, vp if kamala harris insists strengthening our border is a hongstanding priority of her -- really in we're asking former director of i.c.e.'s removal's tom feeley what he thinks, next. next, it's on your skin. i got cosentyx. feels good to move. feel less joint pain swelling and tenderness back pain and clearer skin
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rick: we're continuing to track what was hurricane helene brought, obviously, all the
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damage. take a look at the maps, storm came onshore in the beg bend of -- big bend of florida, the second hurricane in the last six weeks in the area. hook at all the flooding we've had, especially southern appalachians. biggest flooding in history across that area x that is going to take some time before it fully is gone out of there. four storm thes so far, four hurricanes that have made landfall this summer, and we are getting towards the end of hurricane season, about 30% of hurricane season remains. ahead of us. that said, we're getting into kind of an active pattern. five different disturbances out this. the one across the western caribbean, that's one last week became hurricane helene, and now we've got another disturbance, over the next seven days, a 40 chance of development. -- 40% chance of development. back to you inside. will: vice president kamala harris getting this photo op with agents during a visit yesterday to an arizona border
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town. >> topping transnational criminal organizations and strengthening our border is not new to me, and it is a longstanding priority of mine. i have done that work, and i will continue the treat it as a priority -- [cheers and applause] when i am elected president of the united states. rachel: but under her administration, the numbers don't lie as i.c.e. vealed yesterday -- revealed yesterday tens of thousands of migrants, illegals, with sexual assault and murder convictions are now roaming free in the u.s. because of the biden administration. pete: roaming free. tom feeley served as directer of i.c.e. removals in new york. he joins us now. tom, thanks for being here. do these statistics surprise you in you were in the spot to know, and what do they tell you about the safety and security of our own citizens? >> good morning, guys. thanks for having me. it's nice to see the vice president of lies and word salads actually make it to the border, i think the second time
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since 2001? these thattist tibs are very disturbing, you know? i'm sure more realistically you could probably double them, and that's what the real numbers are. this is a total failure from the i.c.e. director itch. -- up. nobody will be held accountable, and we'll just go on with our day. rachel: tom, can you help me understand this, i get, okay, you're a democrat, you're kamala harris, you're joe biden, you don't believe in borders, you're part of this globalist thing. you want to let people come across the border, okay, i can understand -- i don't agree with it, but i can understand that. but letting rapists and murderers come in as well? i just don't understand the rationale politically, morally. why -- i'm sure you've thought about this, why would they let that happen? >> well, we're trying to understand stupid, quite frankly, because that's the only word that describes this. you know, i'm kind of angry this morning because i watched the
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vice president of lies and word salads -- i said it wrong again -- yesterday, and everything she says is a lie. she wants to the keep bringing up the border bill. listen, the law's been on the books since 1996 with president clinton. you've already said you won't enforce the law in the future. you've called ice-t the k, k -- ice-t the kkk, so let me get this right, kamala. you're not enforcing the laws now, but it you pass a new bill,s then you'll enforce the laws. this is, quite frankly, all bulls health care it, every american should be pissed and disgusted because this is all a crap. will: well said. [laughter] pete: spicy. but we understand. when you were the director of i.c.e. removals, were you allowed to do your job in new york? >> yeah, that -- this is why i retired, you know in president biden rolled in and id and said we're going to order you not to do this, and whether you like president trump or not, you know, under him the border was
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the most secure it's ever been. if you don't like that, that just means you're fact-intolerant. that's not my problem. that's the reality. when they come in, they undid everything. they ordered us not to enforce the laws. i believe in my country, i believe in the constitution, i took an oath, and i'm not going to do that stuff. rachel: why did those numbers get released yesterday from i.c.e. in the timing was interested. they got released yesterday as she was going to the border. >> i really hope that was the good people in i.c.e. trying to help out the american public. i really hope that the guys and girls that are still working over there believe in what they do, pushed those numbers out and got those numbers out to take vanning of her photo -- advantage of her photo op to the border and let the americans know, hey, bad people are coming in, bad people are released. icro, who has a gazillion fugitive operations teams across the country, isn't allowed to work. and that's why you're continuing to see these people hit the street. rachel: whoever made that
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decision to release those numbers yesterday, hat's off to you. will: thanks for being with us, tom. >> take care. will: we don't need more laws. all right, free speech concerns. if kamala harris wins the election. rachel: damn maine bruce on this prediction -- >> -- turns around if kamala harris gets into office. i think they clamp down more. she's openly discussed it, the same rules have to apply to facebook, to the twitter and that elon musk could lose his privileges. stronger and longer-lasting relief than tylenol rapid release gels. because advil targets pain at the source of inflammation. so for faster pain relief, advil the pain away. to me, harlem is home.
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♪ ♪ >> i don't think it turns around if kamala harris gets into office. i think they clamp down more. i think the same stuff that they were trying to do with twitter, they'll try to do with something else, with other things. they've already openly discussed it. you know she's openly discussed that the same rules have to apply to facebook, they have to apply to twitter or and elon musk would lose his privileges. rachel: a grim prediction from joe rogan who warns that kamala harris and tim walz will declare war on free speech if they win the election. and that they've already talked about it publicly. here to react, fox news contributor or tammy bruce. tammy, so great to have you on, especially on this summit, on this topic which is so important in this election. in fact, i would say that this topic along with government surveillance and unaccountability in the federal government in general, these are the top issues of the election. if. >> they are. and already this election has
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been different because of elon musk -- rachel: yes. >> -- because of the change of twitter to x. there are so many issues that would never have been allowed to be discussed, and yet we are having those conversations. and they're obsessed with social media because, without sounding trite here, information is power. and they don't want to have to explain things. they don't want the clips of kamala harris contra convict doing herself for years in front of everyone all the time. they want you to not have access to that. they want to remake the news with each news cycle. they want to control what people concern and already, even despite the supreme court decision, the biden administration, they look at a little bit of room they have and they're going to, have already begun to reconnect with social media outlets. now, they can't tell them what to do, but they never really could because of the first amendment. but they're obsessed with control of information because they know when people get the
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information, the truth, that the democrats and the left suffer. so she has stated -- and this thing about privilege, elon musk's privilege. that is not given to any american by the government of. anding of course, with his association now with president trump and a likely role in the administration, that is the only way that we're going to make sure that freedom of speech, the first if amendment stays relevant. rachel: yeah. well, tim walz claimed that the first amendment does not apply to misinformation. again, a fundamental misunderstanding of what our rights are when it comes to free speech, where our rights come from, which are from god -- >> that's right. rachel: we're born free, we're americans. it's outrageous. i i just think this is so disqualifying as candidates. if you believe this, you're not qualified to be the president and vice president of the united states. >> what you're doing is you're setting a table to convince and persuade americans that the constitution does not matter. and that is an argument the left has made for decades, for a
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hundred plus years around the world that, in fact, regular people aren't good enough to be able to run their own leaves. they have -- lives. they have to be guided by their superiors. and, of course, the disturbed who are in politics which attracts a lot of the disturbed these days believe that they are simply better they just don't like what's happening. you know, when we think about the border and crime, this is about punishing us for daring to not conform, the not comply if -- to not comply. they're going to get a healthy dose of that on november 5th. rachel: or daring to notice what they're doing and talk about it. your not allowed to do it. >> that's right. rachel: thank god for elon musk -- >> that's right. rachel: it would be a very different election. tammy bruce, thanks for being on. >> thanks, rachel. rachel: it's not saturday without a little college football. abby hornacek is live ahead of the colorado-ucf game on fox. ♪ ♪
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automatic protections for who can contact them and the content they can see. (♪♪) ♪ ♪ [inaudible conversations] >> reporter: what's going on, guys? oh, yes, we've got the excitement, rotc, of course, our men and women in uniform -- [cheers and applause]
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our favorite people in the world. they, of course, keep us safe. who's going to win today? >> pardon? >> reporter: who's going to win? >> oh, 100%, knights. charge on. colorado sucks, man. >> reporter: he said it, not me. [cheers and applause] and you know who loves rotc and our men and women in uniform? if. >> usa! usa! usa! usa! usa! usa! >> reporter: what do you love about america in. >> beer, football and ucf! >> reporter: all right, will. try to beat that. will: all right, abby, i know you can't hear me. good for big noon kickoff. thank you, abby. that is every saturday. we're getting an awesome crowd there for big noon kickoff. by the way, former president trump, you see on your screen right now, he's going to be in alabama today because alabama takes on the georgia bulldogs in an epic sec rivalry. trump's no stranger to college football, he's hit a tailgate or
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two over the years, he's even watched the dogs and the tide play in the 2018 college championship. clay travis is in alabama for the game and will be interviewing the former president later today. good morning, clay. i think the first question -- you're going to talk to him after the game, i believe, so you may have the answer to this before you see the president. who's he rooting for? i mean, georgia's a swing state, so how's he going to come out there? is he going to be go, dogs, since we've got to do well in georgia? he's been alabama in the past. >> i would advise you to go all in on the georgia bulldogs to win this game because, as you just mentioned, will, it is the swing state, right in and so if you're going to try to figure out alabama's locked and loaded, he's going to win it by 20 the or 25 points, so if he asks my opinion, i would say i pick the bulldogs, but i'm the greatest gambler who's ever lived -- [laughter] and i'm on alabama to win, and i like the under.
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obviously, it's going to be epic p. he was here and i watched as a fan back in 20219 if you remember that incredible lsu at alabama game, that was the year that that lsu went 15-0. and i gotta tell you when they put trump on the jumbotron at that game, the crowd went crazy. i think it's going to be an even more popular trump in 2024 in this venue than he was in 2021919. and i'm looking forward to talking to him. and i think, will, i mean this honestly, i think football tans when you look at michigan, wisconsin, pennsylvania, arizona, georgia, north carolina, you look at those battleground states, i think they're likely to decide who wins this election and given the gender imbalance, if trump can get a lot of nontraditional men out, black, white, asian, hispanic voters who might not usually show up, i think that's his pathway to victory. will: why do you think he's so popular particularly with college football fans? >> i think it's because college
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football, and you know this, you're a diehard texas longhorn fan, i'm a university of tennessee fan, i think college football fans are salt of the earth guys and gals. my cohost on the radio, buck sexton, who you know as well, makes fun of me because i automatically trust anybody who is college football fan. i feel like we speak a common language, and so when you find out somebody else is a college football fan, everything else kind of fades into the background and you i just want to talk about the perform -- pomp, circumstance, pageantry of your favorite team, of the traditions, everything that surrounds it. and we speak a common language, and i think trump speaks that language in the same way that he connects, say, with construction workers. i think he connects with average football fans, ask kamala recognizes she clearly does not, and they've tried to throughout out their own hail mary with tim walz and argue that he's a coach and a football guy, and i don't think he connects in the same way, frankly, that trump does.
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people is can see through it because it doesn't feel as authentic. i think trump loves sport sports, and i think fans know. will: i'm with you as a well, by the way, i'm on alabama over georgia today. i think georgia's a little bit overrated. not sure about that a quarterback -- >> by the way, congrats to your longhorns, number one overall. you guys are on fire. but there's only one real ut, as we all know, and that's tennessee. [laughter] by ewell we don't play you in -- >> might be the sec title game. will: there you go. all right, clay, we'll be checking you out. more "fox & friends" moments away.
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rachel: breakfast prize goes to pete hegseth who ordered the best breakfast we've had in months. well it was excellent. pete: keep watching football, we'll see you tomorrow. neil: you are looking live right now at beirut,

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