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tv   [untitled]    October 20, 2024 3:30am-4:00am PDT

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taken. i want you to look at this poll, this is with catholics. so harris has 57-42 with trump, but here's another interesting poll, that's among all catholics, but white catholics, 61% for president trump, only 34 with hispanic catholics. that's an interesting number especially as you're seeing hispanics, men in particular, moving towards donald trump. what do you make of those numbers? >> well, we're seeing even better numbers for the president in system of these swing states, particularly in the upper midwest like pennsylvania, michigan and wisconsin where the catholic vote makes up nearly 30%. and i think what we might be seeing is really a watershed moment where longtime tradition of many catholics voting for democrats have finally said i didn't leave the party, the party left me. and they are now looking seriously at donald trump not just on a lot of the obviously traditional social issues like life and religious liberty, but on the border, on the economy and on, frankly, just our
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catholic way of life. i think they feel comfortable with president trump, and they don't feel so with kamala harris. rachel: yeah. she's been very aggressive against catholics even as a senator, right? >> absolutely. as a u.s. senator, she went of after a member of the knights of columbus. she's introduced legislation that would end our catholic hospitals, our chair is. she does not believe -- charities. she does not believe in religious liberties for catholics, and we're waking up to the fact that this is a different democratic party that -- than what we've seen in the past. very different than joe biden who called himself a devout catholic. you know, catholics are kind of tired of being catered to by politicians every four years that come around with social justice platitudes, and they've finally said enough is enough. we want someone the stand up for us, stand up for what we believe, and i think right now president trump is that choice. rachel: yeah, you know, i think a lot of catholics did pall sway to the social justice, especially when it came to the border.
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hay really wanted to show come compassion to the illegal immigrants. many of them, as you know, are catholic. but so many have fallen into exploitation, the sex trade and even child labor that they're seeing these so-called progressive, compassionate if policies don't actually end up being that way. brian burch, great to have you. whoever's advise having donald trump, bravo. he's hitting all the right notes. kamala, pay attention. brian burch, thank you for joining i. >> thank you so much. rachel: you got it. we're going to toss over to you, charlie. charlie: thank you, rachel. a small suburb of since matty, ohio, is strug the -- struggling. the administrator of loughlin village says mauritanian migrants are hurting the quality of life. doug wemeyer joins us now. doug, great to see you thissen nothing. >> morning, charlie, how are
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you? charlie: great, thank you. i want to set the scene here. how many people live in loughlin, ohio? >> just over 350 to 90-- 350 0 to, according to the census. our health d. equipment -- health department estimates we're anywhere between if 3-5,000 -- charlie: so it's nearly doubled or more than doubled the size of your village there, and they're all from mauritania. they're not from other places? if. >> senegal, mauritania is the crux of it, yes. charlie: fascinating. almost leak it's something that's been organized here. and so did anyone in the town get asked about this? was this -- how exactly does this happen? was this a choice that the town made? >> it by no means was a choice.
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there's no notification, there was nothing provided. probably around 2021 we started seeing the influx. and, the apartments that we live in, we saw that fill, become overcrowded and found some spread from that to to other low income apartments in town. charlie: and this apartment building is rated to have 4 people living in an apartment, in some cases you have 12 people. and obviously you have building codes in place. did anybody, did the federal government come in and tell you that your building codes are wrong and you need to start putting 12 the people in apartments designed for 4 people? >> no. again, there was absolutely no involvement from the federal government whatsoever. we found this situation, and currently we're working through that. we're working through the identify positive to enforce the building code, enforce the health code, enforce the housing code to try to bring the
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occupancies back the a manageable and, honestly, safe situation. the situation they're in now is by far anything but safe. charlie: just incredible. so what kind of cost has this been? can you put, like, a dollar amount on cost of what this has been for your town? >> yeah, we're estimating this about $15100-200,000 in lost income tax. there's about a 200 toapartments that we're talking about. you take the median income of the village, even a smaller number, we're clearly 125 to, you know, at least $200,000 of lost income. and, again, that's the displacement of the the tax-paying residents. we're criticizing a little bit, no one's running them off. well, that's exactly what's happening. the culture has changed and the citizens of our town have essentially moved away. and if there's not a lot of other options, with an already shrinking population, we're seeing that tax base is
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dwindling. no choice of the village. charlie: just incredible. well, thank you so much, doug, for coming on and explaining it to us, and best of luck in a really impossible situation for you and your village. >> thank you very much. appreciate it. charlie: yes, sir. still ahead, vice president kamala harris taking anti-trump republicans on the campaign trail, but will this strategy hurt down-ballot democrats trying to cozy up to the former president in. >> tammy baldwin got president trump to sign her made in america bill. >> he sided with trump -- >> that's why i wrote a law signed by president trump. ♪ that just will never come out ♪ ♪ pour downy in the rinse, jade ♪ ♪ every now and then i rinse it out! ♪ fights odor in just one wash.
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♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ kia. movement that inspires. you all have a lot of money. i know about 20 of you and you're rich as hell. we're going to give you tax cuts. i am not rich as hell. i work hard. i scrape to get by. donald trump wants to give tax breaks to billionaires, but kamala harris has plans to help us. she's going to crack down on price gouging and cut taxes for working people like me.
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i voted for donald trump before, but this time i'm voting for kamala. ff pac is responsible for the content of this ad.
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without talking to your doctor. show off to the world. ask your eczema specialist about dupixent. ♪ will: tomorrow kamala harris is going to be targeting disaffected gop voters with anti-trumper liz cheney in key swing states where down-ballot democrats are hyping up their ties to trump. >> casey bucked biden to protect fracking, and he sided with trump to to end nafta and put tariffs on china to stop them from cheating. >> tammy baldwin got president trump to sign her made in america bill, then she got president biden the make it permanent. >> that's why i wrote a law, signed by president trump, forcing drug companies to show their actual prices. will: our next guest led an effort for biden to run in 2016 and later advised bernie sanders, but he switched to become a republican last year.
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will pearce joins us now. will, let's talk about these who two -- well, it's an intent by kamala harris to reach out to i guess what they would say is reachable republican voters hoping liz cheney if helps in that effort versus look at all these democrats in swing states who are running ads to tie themselves to donald trump. >> thanks for having me on, will. first of all, i do not know why the democrat party is reaching out to liz cheney, a republican who lost by close to 30, 40% in her own race. it's at a weird point in the democratic party where they're now cozying up to the cheney family overall when we saw what they did in the past. and another thing as well, like, if you just look at all the stuff going on as well, they keep saying democracy's on the line, but notice here they're, hike, they're also cozying up the people like liz cheney and other republicans who the ones who set us back a lot. will: yeah.
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you know, i'm old enough to remember when they called george w. bush hit hitler, said mitt romney tided his dog to the roof and had binders full of women. yet we have these democrats, as i point out, who on one hand say democracy's on the line, on the other hand, say, look, my policies are very similar to donald trump. >> absolutely. and this is the reason that they're doing it, i think notice from polling that it's in a dead heat right now. you're sitting here and trying to reach across the aisle to to republicans saying this kind of stuff, at the same time, we're not hearing about the economy, we're not hearing so much about jobs, food prices that keep soaring, soaring and soaring. instead, you have the democrats who want to talk about issues like hope and change and all of this, trying to go back to obama. but we saw those policies as well. it's not a policy or a game plan that's going to work. will: will, i think we talked
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about this last time we were the together, but it always deserves a little attention. biden in 20 the of 16, bernie sanders and now donald trump, republican, how did you make this evolution? >> well, overall, i've been a long democrat, but i've just been fed if up with their policies. this is -- and i think most of the american people, especially african-american people, are fed up right now. one of the key groups that both sides are going after right now are black men. me, myself, are a perfect if example. and a reason why is just lip service like we were just saying earlier. the democratic party keeps saying, oh, we're going to do this, oh, we're going to do that. when is that going to happen? the kamala harris is saying, oh, i'm going to make these great changes. she's been vice president for three and a half years, we have seen no changes. all theme democrats like bob casey and everybody, oh, look at everything donald trump has done for us, nothing about what kamala harris has done.
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will: you point out your -- you're a black man, there's been a lot about black men men, which way they're polling. do you get a sense that donald trump has made real inroads in while in the past we might have seen 990% of the black -- 90% of the black vote go democrat, that's going to be different many 2024? >> absolutely. i think a key example is pennsylvania right now. you have both sides focusing in on that. you even have elon musk who yesterday was many pennsylvania right now and, you know, doing a lot of his stuff with his pac as well, all sides know that pennsylvania is one of the biggest swing states system and one key group in pennsylvania are black men, especially in the philadelphia area. and the thing is because the democratic party has ignored them for far too long, and now they're sitting here and they're trying to the come back, but i believe it's too little, too late for the democrats. will: all right, we'll see. it will be fascinating to watch that. ucfor being with us. >> thank you.
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will: will pierce. rachel, over the you. rachel: thank you, will. the new york city releasing surveillance video of a man suspected of stabbing a person in the eye at a subway station in brooklyn on thursday. they say the attack happened while the victim was standing on a subway platform in the early morning hours. the victim is in stable condition and is set to undergo surgery. wow. becoming a girl scout might become more expensive. the youth organization may raise yearly dues by 240% after seeing a drop in new members. the possible hike would take the membership fee from $25 to the $85 a year. the organization believes it's necessary after the group ended the last fiscal year with a deficit of more than $4 million and is expected to end this year with a deficit of more than $5 million. well, try not going woke. go woke, go broke, isn't that what happensesome pay attention, girl scouts.
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country music star morgan wallen is announcing his new music festival called stand in my if boots after wrapping up his tour yesterday. he says some of his friends will join him from may 16th-18th in gulf shores, alabama. no word yet on who will be in the lineup, but with we're all paying attention. and those are your headlines. let's turn now to chief meteorologist rick reichmuth for our fox weather forecast. rick: good morning,, rachel. today the's weather almost exactly like yesterday's weather. one little strip of warmer air, cooler air across the east9 and the west, and is -- it's the same rotation, same storm that's bringing snow across parts of the four corners. really heavy rain in new mexico bringing some flooding, and all of this is happening because there's high pressure across the eastern part of country that is not letting any of that energy make its way towards the east. it also means we're starting to
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see the drought begin to expand, and if you were thinking, hey, it should be fall and we should be getting some rain, not going to be happening for a while, unfortunately. one other thing happened, yesterday we were looking at one little disturbed area of weather that became a tropical storm at yesterday morning, at 2:00 the it became a hurricane. very strange to see this. right now it's hurricane oscar, it's right over the turks and caicos. it's going to the impact the western side of cuba and make a right-hand turn impacting the bahamas. it will not impact the u.s., which is very good news. that same high pressure protecting the eastern side of the u.s. as well. back with toward areas of the west, more winter storm warnings across parts of colorado. rachel, back to you. rachel: wow, rick, i thought will might join you -- he's stand thing right there watching with, like -- will: i like weather. i like maps. [laughter] rick: it feels validating to me, because will is the one person who when i'm doing the weather, e can see him looking, paying
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attention -- rachel: that's not fair. when i have to to travel, i am paying very close attention to you, rick. [laughter] thanks, rick. and our new meteorologist from fox weather, will cain. metaverse's massachusetts, instagram's parent company claiming some of its features were designed to purposefully addict children. the call to to hold the tech giant accountable. that's next. ♪ 'cuz you make me feel like i've been locked out of heaven. ♪ for too long, for too long ♪ and he got me pregnant when i was 12. ♪ ♪ ♪ 64,000 pregnancies from rape have occurred in states with total abortion bans. and trump did this. women and girls need to have choices.
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with kamala harris we do. i'm kamala harris and i approve this message.
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rachel: they're some of the world's most popular social media sites, and now a judge ruling meta, which owns instagram and facebook, must pace a massachusetts lawsuit accuse of it being purposefully addictive to children. will: our next guest says these companies have finally been caught redhanded. heritage foundation tech policy director kara frederick is here to explain. you know, it seems to me that every product, social media or any other, wants to make their product more popular. everyone buy more coke, buy whatever, coca-cola. how does social media walk this
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line of not making their product addictive but make it more popular to the consumer? >> you know, it's a hard consumer question, business question, but thus far i think big tech companies have gotten it very, very wrong. and so this reckoning is really overdue. and i say that because we know from all of these lawsuits meta was also sued by 41 state attorneys general, and in the discovery phase we've gotten unredacted documents that say, hey, we've got these companies dead the rights. they tried to capitalize on elements of youth psychology that would render them subject to impulse, peer pressure and potential harmful and risky behaviors, and yet they continued to try to make these products more and more attractive to the younger and younger audiences. they called, after discovering this, they called preteens, 9 to11-year-olds, a valuable but untapped awed a cents and created a -- audience and created a team to try to get those kids on to these products.
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that,s to me, is very, very incriminating when you look at they know it's harmful, and they continue to try try to attract the younger and younger kids. big problem for facebook. rachel: so i'm a mom, i'm apa paying attention, and i agree it's addictive. by the way, it's addictive to to us. i have to remind myself and my kids and my husband have to remind me to get off the phone. we know it's addictive, that's clear. but how is it different than good? we know they're producing ultra processed foods that are bad for you and addictive and making you fat and aren't good for you, so i am curious, what is balance? >> so the research is starting the really harden a causal relationship between younger kids and life satisfaction. you'll find two data points really interesting, i think, and americans will as well. cambridge in 20 to 322, in the u.k., they found an inverse relationship between the use of these products and life
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satisfaction in sensitive periods of adolescence, okay? so we know that. number two, 2023, umc neurococoncern unc neuroscientists found habitual use is actively rewiring the brains of children as young with as 112 years old. 12 years old. so, yes, while diet, nutrition and what not matter, when your brain is legitimate by being rewired by these companies and these company know it and yet continue on, i think that's when as an industry you have to make a determination and say, okay, we know that we're more concerned about user experience at this point because what we're doing is a net negative for the next generation and then move forward designing your products in recognition of that fact. and thus far we do not have them doing that. we have them doing the exact opposite. so i think that's how you tread that line if you're a big tech company, you look to the user experience, particularly its effect ifs on children first, and then you it rate from there.
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and these tech companies are not doing it, so they need to be held to account. charlie: a big red flag ought to be the fact that most of these company execs don't let their own children play with these products. meta issued a statement saying we disagree with the court's decision. we've developed numerous trial tools to support parents and teens and recently announced we're significantly changing the instagram experience with new teen accounts, protecting the experience for teens to automatically limit who can contact hem and the content they can see, but they still don't. atlanta third children. watch their own product. rachel: that statement wasn't reassuring to me. cara, thanks for being here. will: more "fox & friends" moments away. ert. sing it adam! ♪ turbotax'll beat your price ♪ ♪ this is a taaaax break-up! ♪ this fall, switch to a turbotax live expert
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