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tv   FOX and Friends Sunday  FOX News  November 10, 2024 4:00am-5:00am PST

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♪ ♪ if. pete: it is the 7 a.m. hour of "fox & friends" weekend starting with this. another swing state pick-up for president-elect trump as he officially flips arizona. will: plus, democrat division on display as nancy pelosi hits back at bernie sanders'
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criticism that the party abandoned working class voters. >> no, we didn't, that's who we are. we are the kitchen table, working class party of america. pete: that's who you were. [laughter] rachel: and your holiday gatherings could get i much smaller if your liberal relatives listen to this terrible advice from a yale psychiatrist. >> say i have a problem with the way that you voted, i'm not going to be around you this holiday. e need to take some space for me. rachel: oh, man. she needs a hug too. [laughter] the second hour of "fox & friends" weekend starts right now. ♪ you can jump right in. ♪ let the music pull you in. ♪ you can jump right in. ♪ go on and lose yourself again. ♪ as the southern wind sings again another lullaby ♪ rachel: what a beautiful shot of virginia.
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makes me want to go there. will: yeah, it is it was really beautiful. i know i'm on tv. hold on. [laughter] rachel: they're snapping at us. will: they're snapping at me to look up. i'm just looking up -- rachel: he loves maps, so there's some map thing involved. pete: a lot of marines in virginia, to the is the marine corps birthday. all the marines out there, ooh rah. rachel: you know i know the a marine corps song? and. pete: do you? would you hike to sing it for us? rachel: my brothers would take my arm and twist it in the back until if i sang it right. pete: there we go. ♪ ♪ i know it all a because i was tortured until i could get it right by my brother path rick. pete: amazing. i think the bombshells are going to play that later. will: pin hook is close to roanoke, by the way, what is that, kind of central virginia? pete: is that a lake we're looking at there?
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will: will yeah. i wondered what part of virginia or, really beautiful. rachel: it is such a beautiful state. pete: what's the name of the lake? obviously huge. got a little island -- will: smith mountain lake. pete: smith mountain lake. wow. shout-out to you. rachel: we begin this second hour with a fox news alert. this is a good one for president trump, it's our final call of the 2024 presidential race. president-elect trump has officially flipped arizona. adding that to his historic win. pete: that means trump's sweeping all seven battleground states, lifting his total number of electoral college votes to3 12, the most won by a republican presidential candidate since 1988. will: this comes as white house press secretary karine jean-pierre revealed trump and biden will meet in the oval office on wednesday. meanwhile, demonstrations popping up in places like new york and seattletesting the election and fierce over deportations and -- fears over
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deportations and threats to reproductive rights. pete: here we go. rachel: so let's talk a little bit, you guys, about biden-trump meeting on wednesday. what do you think's going to happen there? there's a lot of speck if layinn wore a red suit to go vote, and everyone thought that was sort of, like -- [laughter] a signal that maybe she was voting for trump. they're mad. so how do you think this meeting with biden and trump quos? -- goes? pete: will was looking at rachel, and i thought maybe he was disagreeing that biden voted trump. will: i don't know -- pete: i think, who knows? think of all the things that biden said about trump, what a threat he would be to the existence of our country, threat to democracy. all of those as people are -- that'll, i think, that'll all wither away, ultimately, actually, and they'll -- biden will likely be gracious, trump will be gracious. the reality is what it is, trump's taking over. rachel: do they normally mote this early?
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pete: yeah. this is a pretty standard thing -- rachel: okay. pete: the incoming administration is starting to,, the is transitioning into what roles they want for their fop folks, and the coordination begins. will: i also hi that donald trump has shown a consistent characteristic of remembering disloyalty but forgetting a hard fight. pete: great point. rachel: so true. will: what i mean by that, he understands there is the a game to be played and it will be vicious, but when he and ron desantis are done fighting, he's done being mad at ron desantis, it seems, i by the way, and you can go down the list. he moderated or softened his rhetoric toward joe biden and started the feel bad about what had been done to him by the democratic party. so this isn't the same joe biden that that screamed about democracy and stood in front of the red banners and gave speeches about the end of america. it's a different joe biden -- pete: who's playing the game. will: and what i'm getting at is
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setting up this meeting won't be quite the anger fest you might expect from if what the rhetoric during a campaign for the presidency. rachel: he told you as much. when we had that interview at bed minister, he said, you know, one of the things that surprised him so much the haas time he won is he can duh did think it was like the ufc fighters, heir really mad at each other, and when the thing's over, it's over. he came out after he won and said she's no longer -- what was his nick if name for hillary? crooked hillary? no, she's beautiful hillary. and then he said he was really shocked at the fact that the democrats didn't let him, you know, didn't let him do what he was supposed to do after and that they kept trying to undermight be him and using the -- can undermine him. he was shocked by that. but i think you're right. you know, as tough as he is, there's something very gracious about him, and i can imagine -- these two are very generationally similar. i think they're going to have a
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good meeting, and i think they both have the same beef with the establishment of the democrat party. of. pete: yeah. i also don't want to skip over that 312 number. we're just calling the final state that adds to the final number of 312. and we made that allusion to 1988? it wasn't that george h.w. bush was an amazing candidate that everyone was is fired up about, service that ronald reagan had inspired a nation and changed the map. and i think donald trump single-handedlitied that himself as well. to fight back and get back to where he was, run the race again considering what's been done against him and then win 312 the is a reflection of -- it's a man possess ifation of a political movement that is here to stay. it's reoriented and changed -- so we're going to get to nancy pelosi and this whole working class party thing. donald trump the really did change voting patterns for generations of americans which will help future republicans as well. rachel: it's not george herbert walker's party anymore.
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the party is completely different. and this thing that donald trump did of winning, having so much go up against him and then coming back from the ashes is really like an epic hero's journey. and i think all of us have been along for that ride, and it's been fascinating to watch. will: the other thing i don't want to skip past is the last line in setting up our conversation for this hour, and that is there have been scattered protests in places like new york and seattle. i think one of the big takeaways is, but it's not like you thought it would have been. st been much more muted. we've had some discussions about why that might be. if you get blown out in a football game, it's more depression than anger. if you lose many in a controversial game, it's more anger. but there is some scattered protests in new york and seattle, and in my mind, that is motivated by an insanity fed by mainstream media about things like your reproductive rights are going to go away the day
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after. and you're seeing this play out in some places. some women have shaved your head, some suggesting you cut off relationships with others who might have voted for donald trump. but then the trans if issue, representative seth moulton, who's a democrat, he said this to the new york times. democrats spend way too much time trying not to offend anyone rather than being brutally honest about the challenges americans face. i have two the little girls, i don't want hem getting run over by a male or formerly-male athlete, but as a democrat, i'm supposed to be afraid to say that. saying that the democrat party has given in to insanity. montana president most democrats very -- pete: most democrats have been afraid to say that. here's an x post if from kyle davis from massachusetts. i'm not looking for an apology from seth moulton, i'm looking for a resignation. seth moulton, i think he's indicative of the democrat party. he's a veteran, served under
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petraeus in the iraq war. smart guy. pretty moderate guy at first but has had to play the game of every other democrat, especially if you're in massachusetts. you can't really be ad moderate. you've got the hat tip and virtue small to the left to make sure it looks like you're a lib like them. but he doesn't want boys in his girls' -- but he can't even saw say that. and when he does he feels empowered to, he gets that clap reaction. that'll be the tension in the democrat party. rachel: it's interesting because, on the one hand, he feels like he can say it now because of this election. shame on him for not standing up for his daughters before this election, before this allowance thing by donald trump and every common sense parent and american who voted in the haas election. but here he defends hiss stance. here's what he says, he did not lose the 2024 election because of any trans person or issue, we lost in part because we shamed and belittled too many opinions held by too many voters, and
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that needs to stop. let's have those debates now, determine a new advantage for our party since our existing one failed and hen unite to oppose the trump agendaing, whatever imperils american values. do you think they're going to have this sort of, you know, i guess -- i want to say come to jesus moment, but that's not really to allowed in that party. remember, they said this is not that rally, he's not allowed in here. i would say this reconciling -- will: no. rachel: -- this emotional coming together. will: no indication that the points of view of someone like seth moulton will win the day. and here's a great illustration of that. this is an illustration of what moulton is talking about, do we give in to the insanity, do we police each other's language, do we condescend, look down and does it look like what you just saw on cnn? >> there are a lot of families out there who don't believe boys shuled play in girls' sports -- >> they're not boys. i'm not going to listen the transphobia at this table, i am
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not going to listen. you call a trans girl -- >> allow me to finish -- [inaudible conversations] >> that's not hows it is -- >> yea -- >> they're not boys. they're not playing girls' softball. i'm not going to sit there and listen to that -- [inaudible conversations] >> that's not regular people, there's no consensus these are actually boys. this whole thing about trans girls is a canard. we're talking about a tiny, tiny sliver of the population -- >> but my point in terms of -- [inaudible conversations] >> hold on, get to your point. >> my point in terms of its effectiveness. regular people with churn look at these things and they say, you know what? this is a bit too far. i do not agree with this, i think democrats have gone way too much to the left on social issues. they're uncomfortable with it. will: so we need to to just emphasize what happened for one moment. rachel: unpack this, will. will: he took exception, great exception, the white guy on the panel to the black guy saying,
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saying that boys -- pete: boys in girls' locker rooms. they're not boys! will: the slur was calling them boys. pete: yes. >> will: and he would not stand or sit for that trans-phobia, and that is what caused him to lose his mind in a waterfall of virtue signaling. and i want to to point out the host. the host thought the right move was to say let's no not offend, let's just -- pete: it is cnn of after all, come on. will: but use the pronouns he requires. in other words, the moderating position on that panel was, abandon all your beliefs and objective reality, bend your will to to his ainge -- anger. pete: that's exactly right. and that's why i think this will be a reckoning and the common sense part of the party will not win because they're so invested in this identity politics that there'll be an attempt to have a common sense, regular focus eye approach to this, and they'll be shouted down.
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i said this yesterday, the trump administration if will ban transgendereds in the military and all a -- transgendereds in the military and ban men in women's locker rooms. likely will. what will the reaction be? that makes sense, get it. it will be, no way, all in, double down on that stance just like that guy on the cnn panel which will reveal the priorities of a party yet again to average americans who say, you know, the position trump's taking sounds pretty reasonable to me. and your backlash sounds crazy. rachel: you notice what he said? there's a lot of parents who feel -- and then he went on, and this is where i think the left really went wrong, you know? i think conservatives i know are very tolerant people. if and if you want to trans if yourself or, you know, mutilate your body at 20 the, 30, 40, two do it. but -- go do it. but i think line and the way they lost american people was when it started to go for the kids. pete: of course.
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rachel: leave the kids alone, and i think that's where they lost everybody. when you talk to democrats, and i have talked to them, they even acknowledge that's where we messed up. we shouldn't have -- obviously, this guy on the panel, not one of those people. by the way, that panel is like a microcosm of every school board meeting, you know, out there but loud and, you know, self-righteous, liberal guy who's going to, you know, tell everybody else to shut up because heir offending him. that's what every city the council and school board meeting looked like, and people are tired of it. pete: and or, will, to your point, too often not just moderators bend to that game. one of the first people to speak up and say we need to have a reckoning was bernie sanders, the democratic socialist, presidential candidate pushed aside by the democrats multiple times. he came out on, and on wednesday, right after the election, talking about the working class. and he's gotten some blowback on that statement. here's what bernie sanders said on wednesday after kamala harris
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was thumped. he wrote, it should come as to in great surprise that a democrat party which has abandoned working class people would find that the working class had abandoned them. first it was the white working class, and now it is latino and black workers as well. while the democrat leadership defends the status quo, the american people are angry and want change. and they're right. a lot of democrats, including nancy pelosi, take issue with this. rachel: that's right. here's what she said after bernie sanders said that. >> all due respect and i have a great deal of respect for him, for what he stands for, but i don't respect him saying that the democratic party has abandoned the working class families. that's where we are. for example, for example, under president biden you see the rescue package. money in the pockets of people, shots in the arm, children in school safely, working people back to work. what did -- what's his name? what did trump do when he was president? one bill that gave a tax cut to
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the richest people in america -- >> then why did voters who earned less than $100,000 go for trump in such large numbers? >> well, there are cultural issues involved in elections as well. guns, god and gays, that that's the way they say it. rachel: wow. you're right, their not going to to, they're not learning. will: well, that's a direct shoa direct shot at her. she is the democratic party. that's e how she sees it and, by the way, she has a ton of party, so she's not wrong. we have now seen limitations in barack obama's power. of i actually think she is the most important figure in the democratic party. and so when bernie sanders d florida florida really? will: yeah, i do. pete: i think she's going the start fading quick. will: well, yeah. because she's old. when he insults the democratic party, bernie sanders, he's insulting her, my a part, because she has been the democratic party. you've turned away from the
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working class, she's, like, i have not. you saw her rattling off things including shots in the arm. but i saw joy behar on "the view," doing something similar. not anymore. pete: or now are you the party of sending money to ukraine? will: right. pete: you know, shots in arms and -- i don't agree with the way she characterized it, but of course you've lost your way on cultural issues -- will: and the working class. rachel: the reason they lost was the economy and inflation. and i'll tell you why they lost, they lost because they went for pet, you know, projects for really rich white ladies who like, you know, all these environmental policies, and thel policies meant we had to wage a war on domestic energy. that drove up the cost, and that's what happened. and i think, you know -- pete: and you can't have your gas stove. rachel: and you can't have your gas stove. they didn't care about what working class people wanted.
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and one of the things i've been hearing, well, we didn't message right. they're still not getting it's the actual policies. will: right. rachel: you cared more about green energy than people being able to buy eggs and meat and milk for their children. that's the bottom line. .. i don't think how they overcome that -- will: they can't because it's their identity. they're focused on podcasts, meaning the platform, they're focus focusedded on messaging, but they're not focused on the actual ideas. pete: anybody who tells them we've got to stop doing this green stuff is going to be deemed a heretic -- like, they can't stop the it. rachel: or if you say -- when i went to the bronx, the women told me i can't walk at night because there's so much crime from illegal immigration up there. they've seen the change in their neighborhood, and then they're it would you're a racist for saying that instead of addressing the crime. will: it's the wrong. i've seen the stats, it's not true. if. pete: absolutely right. rachel: yeah. ful. pete: speak of new york city -- new york, but another part of it, please join us at the fox nation sixth annual patriot
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awards. it's going to be a party. in fact, i was there yesterday at the tillis center, it's a beautiful venue. we were recording some things that'll appear at the opening of the show. it makes you proud to be an american. we shine the spotlight on those who really deserve it but never sought it. it is the fox nation patriot awards on december 5th in new york. there are still some incompetents available, but they're going fast -- tickets available but they're going fast. foxnation.com/patriotawards. just outside of new york city on long island. fly into laguardia or jfk, hotels available. it's going to be a celebration of america, and what better time to celebrate than now. will: absolutely. let's have a party. rachel: it's going to be -- the party continues. pete: let's keep it going. all right, from the war on, in ukraine to the conflict in the middle east, lee zeldin breaks down how trump's win will impact foreign policy. will: but first, here's a performance from the american bombshells in honor of veterans' day weekend. ♪
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♪ >> we want a strong and powerful military, and ideally, we don't have to use it. four years we had no wars, except we defeated isis. we defeated isis in record time, but we had no wars. they said, he will start a war. i'm not going to start a war, i'm going to stop wars. pete: president trump taking immediate if action, speaking with leaders across the globe in the 24 hours after he secured victory. so what will foreign policy look like under president trump's leadership? former gop congressman lee zeldin joins us now with more. lee,, thanks for being here. yeah, what does -- in a second term here, what does a trump foreign policy look like?
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>> a continuation of a lot that worked when president trump was in the office the first time. and president trump's next term victories have actually already". the election was this past too tuesday, you already have the european union indicating they'll purchase united states' natural gas to avoid trump tariffs. there was a caravan that was coming through mexico that was pretty massive, already cut in half. a qatar kicking hamas out of its country. president trump already speaking the president zelenskyy about ending the war many ukraine. that bit that you just played from president trump on election night is exactly a peace through strength model that worked of ending foreign wars instead the of starting new ones, about having a military that was focused on being america's defenders instead of woke social experiment and understanding that we need to to treat friends as friends and adversaries as adversaries abroad and never sending our troops into harm's way where they're set up to fail.
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president trump has -- had four years of success from the if abraham accords can, withdrawing from from the iran nuclear deal and more. i think it's about picking up from where he left off and then some. i think his next term is going to be even greater than the last one. pete: which aspect of that do you think is most crucial? because you just laid out a list of things that have been cone and will be done. when you're looking at moves he'll make early on, what do you put at the top of the list? >> listen, the hottest commodity that president trump's going to have is time. and president trump isn't going to have the luxury of just picking one to focus op on on day one. and president trump is going to have the ability, with good personnel and policies around him, to look at all of the regions that are an issue and tackle all of them simultaneous ifly out of the -- simultaneously out of the gate. we have to combat illegal immigration and what's coming up through mexico and flying into our country from other countries at the same time as looking at an issue in israel and their
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existential threats around them to ukraine and especially china. i think president trump is going to have all of this at the temperature of the list, and he's going to be tackling all of it on day one. pete: you're right, that southern border and our vulnerability there is a national security issue, a par of the many things he'll be addressing. you know new york politic tucks very well. it's been an interesting week in new york. you had that lee letitia james press conference which was bizarre and super anti-trump. she presumed he's coming after everybody and she told -- holds this press conference, yet donald trump had cordial call with governor hochul about working in new york. who's right? what's the future of how donald trump interacts with new york state and new york city? >> president trump is showing that he truly wants to be the president for all americans. and it doesn't matter whether or not you're from a blue state, a red state, a purple state. and inside of that state you don't have to be republican or democrat. kathy hochul in '22 called on
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donald trump and lee zeldin to leave new york. just a couple of weeks ago she was saying if you vote for president trump, that you're anti-american. that's not stopping president trump from wanting to be a president for all americans. so this is about the poem of new york. this season -- people of new york. this isn't about a partisanship through parties. president trump is making it clear to blue state governors out there, blue city mayors out there that he wants to be able to work with everybody in order to deliver for all americans. i absolutely love it. and it's truly the leadership that we needed for unity that president biden spoke about on husband inauguration day and gave up on the next day. pete: yeah. they speak about it all the time, and then they never really follow through. and what they've missed about trump from the beginning is he actually is a businessman who wants to make things better and is willing to work with people even if they dissed him and disagree with him, as you point out. kathy hochul's been no fan of president trump or lee zeldin. you gave a heck of a run, and we
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hope you do again. thanks for being here. >> thanks, pete. booth. pete: marc morano lays out trump's agenda coming up next. ♪ ♪ if you have chronic kidney disease, you can reduce the risk of kidney failure with farxiga. because there are places you'd like to be. farxiga can cause serious side effects, including ketoacidosis that may be fatal, dehydration, urinary tract, or genital yeast infections, and low blood sugar. a rare, life-threatening bacterial infection in the skin of the perineum could occur. stop taking farxiga and call your doctor right away if you have symptoms of this infection, an allergic reaction, or ketoacidosis. ♪ farxiga ♪
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♪ ♪ rachel: president trump wasting no time fulfilling his promise on energy. a new report reveals orders are ready to withdraw the u.s. from the paris climate agreement and expand drilling and mining in western land. is what else can we expect from his energy agenda? climate depot.com publisher marc
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morano joins us with more. i actually thought about you on election night, you might like to be a little fly on the the wall at the world economic forum to see how they were reacting. what's going through their mind? what are they thinking about what they want to do and how donald trump's election might impede it? >> well, you're talking about that climate activist, what their agenda is? rachel: yes. >> in 2016 when donald trump won the first time, their attitude was we're going to hold this off, this is an anomaly. we have a net zero climate agenda, we're going forward. fast forward eight years and that entire agenda has been exposed. you know how, rachel? in much the exact same way the defund the police movement has been exposed. it's one thing to say it, it's another to try it. within a year joe biden's calling for refunding the police. the same thing happened since trump was elected the last time. the global community and the united states went all in on this insane anti-human,
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dementedded claimant agenda, and they were starting -- climate agenda. ev mandates, gas-powered car bans and, of course, coming after meat and other things like that. and so now donald trump is preside ising on an election where all he's got to do is do a gentle shove because this is collapsing under its own weight throughout europe, the united states. the american people are screaming they've had enough. and so the other side is just trying the hang on. bernie sanders actually said the night before the election the struggle against climate change is over if donald trump wins. let's hope that bernie's right for once. rachel: you're on your way to the cop 29 summit reporting, and we're going to have you back to talk about that. really quick, what will a donald trump agenda look like in terms of energy and food and pushing back on everything that we have seen coming out of u.n. and the world economic forum and the left? if. >> well, he's already said -- first of all, he wants to move
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agency -- agencies out of d.c. he wants to free up federal land. 85% of nevada, he wants to return that to the states. he wants to get us out of the u.n. paris agreement, but hopefully he'll do it in a way where we can't get right back in with any if future president. he's going after epa regulations, ev mandates. he's going after the entire centrally-planned soviet-style agenda is in the process. and this is the strongest leader in the world standing up to this. let's hope there's a domino effect because we saw the e.u. election last time, they are ripe for this whole agenda to collapse. donald trump may be with the greatest yang in the history of yins. he's going to pull this whole agenda down concern. rachel: yeah. i think the last few years there's a lot of anti-global is in europe. they've been in the closet. i think donald trump's re-election, it's energizing for them letting them know they're not alone, the american people
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stand with them. and i think that's the message that needs to be sent through the u.n. as well. that's an important position to send that message of where america stands as the leader of freedom and against this woke agenda. >> it's the most consequential election for the entire united nations' climate agenda since i've been following it since the early ix 90s. this has to be their darkest hour. al gore's admitted, compared himself to martin luther king and the civil rights struggle, that's how al gore took the the election. rachel: yeah. and he made a lot of money through that grifting. let us know what you see at this climate summit. hopefully, heir winding things down. [laughter] thanks, marc. >> thank you. rachel: you got it. it's the season for celebrating the holidays with your family. but if you're a liberal with trump-supporting relatives, a yale psychiatrist has this advice -- >> say i have a problem with the way that you voted. i'm not going to be around you this holiday. i need to take some space for me.
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♪ ♪ the black friday sale is now on. visit beaches.com or call 1-800-beaches ♪ >> if you are going to a situation where you have family members, where you have close friends who you know have voted in ways that are against you with like what you said, against your livelihood and it's
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completely fine to not be around those people and to tell them why, you know? to say i have a problem with the way that you voted because it went against my very livelihood, and i'm not going to be around you this holiday. i need to take some time for me. pete: a yale psychiatrist saying if you disagree with your family, you are the bad with guy. you should just cut them out of your life. is this the best advice heading into the christmas season? will: here to discuss is fox news medical analyst -- that's good, i think you're the right person, dr. saphier. this is bad medical advice, that politic -- that the issue here is not your politics, it's your family. cut 'em out. >> yeah. well, so good morning, guys. first of all, i do want to put the little caveat here, the woman being amplified on this network, she isn't a practicing physician. she's still in her training which means she's never actually
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seen patients without being under the supervision of an actual practicing physician. but ignorance and lack of experience certainly are not an excuse and can cause harm. when the biden-appointed surgeon general in the last couple of years has declared a loneliness epidemic, loneliness is rampant across our country. it was fueled by covid, by our digital technology, and elevenliness is not only associated with depression, anxiety, suicide, it also is related to the physical ailments such as cognitive decline, dementia, heart disease, diabetes and other things, so this is bad advice especially heading into the holidays where a lot of people have issues with some of their mental health. so, please, please, don't listen to this woman. get outside, get some vitamin d, call your family and friends. you'll never believe it, but there are things you can talk about outside of the election if you disagree. you don't have to agree on anything. i don't even care what you talk about, talk about something else, but do not isolate yourself. rachel: it's so funny because at
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my kitchen table we talk about everything. sean has a huge family, lots of democrats, independents, republicans. it's like if you don't learn how to get along long and talk about issues with your family, no wonder the country is so divided. this is where you learn to have difference of opinion and still love each other, and then you can take that out on a macro scale. i just -- i'm really sad that this woman is giving this advice. let's talk about baja, because you've talked a lot about make america healthy again for a long time. what to you see as the key issues? this has been a big driver of so many votes, i think, in this election. a lot of people love this issue. >> yeah. well, in my book, make america healthy again, back four years ago i was talking about the leading causes of death in our country, cardiovascular decide, cancer -- disease, cancer, mental health. and i gave some policy advicen, what we can do to a make america healthy again, and i'm.
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so glad the future trump administration is embracing this. rfk jr. has been talking about a lot of these issues. in 2016 donald trump ran on repealing the affordable care act, but he quickly realized health care is complicated. he's said he's not going to repeal the affordable care act a, but i do see a complete change in mindset. i think he's going to do what he can to try and get rid of some of that bure rat craic bloat -- bureaucratic bloat, make sure the food we are consuming is healthier, focus on chronic diseases, making sure americans have access to affordable drugs like everywhere else in the country -- every everywhere else in the world. rump was working on this -- president trump was working on this, but because of lawsuits, he actually lost that. and then the biden administration did not renew e it. he's going to focus on bringing drug prices down, get rid of the administrative bloat. he's going to surround himself with non-industry people and
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take advice from people who are not career politicians who have not been employed by the government for decades because he wants to leave with a legacy, and i think make america healthy again is just the campaign to do it. pete: non-industry people, very good idea. important if you want to change things. dr. nicole saphier, great to see you. thank you. >> thanks for having me, guys. pete: she did write the book on it. rachel: she absolutely did. pete: let's turn to chief meteorologist rick reichmuth for our fox weather forecast. hey, rick, why don't you write a book? you'd write a great book. rick: can you get a ghost writer? [laughter] the problem with writing a book is you have to write a book. rachel: what would you write about? rick: i would never be able to sit down and write a book. pete: oh, you could. rick: sitting down to write an e-mail is hard. [laughter] let's take a look at thewet maps. -- weather maps. yesterday we had really unhealthy air across the northeast because of these fires that had broken out from the
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drought that has a really exploded across the northeast. now we have a change in the wind direction. that's now pushing that smoke towards the north. we have air quality alerts across the lower hudson river valley. be careful outside today. this is going to change. we've got rain coming in for the first time in around 40 days moving in towards the northeast. it's going to get here by this afternoon. take a look at the future radar here, start to see some of it move in towards the big city, i-95 corridor around 3, 4:00. by dinner time tonight, rain overtaking pretty much everybody. it'll be largely out of here by the morning commute, then we're to going to see cold air by tomorrow evening into tuesday. finally, a little bit of a break. it's not going to bust our drought, but a half inch of rain sure is going to feel good across the northeast. pete: we were all debating what book rick will write. military-grade technology helping recovery efforts after hurricane helene. the game-changing app designed by a veteran. rachel: but first, they're back.
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here's another performance from the american bombshells in honor of veterans' day weekend. ♪ ♪ america, america, god shed his grace on thee. ♪ and crown thy good with brotherhood -- ♪ from sea to shining sea ♪
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♪ will: when hurricane helene cut off thousands from relief and rescue efforts, an app created by a veteran and design for hunters was there to help. it's called spartan the forge if a.i. its founder, bill thompson, joins us now. bill, great to have you on the show. first, before we talk about some of the applications, tell me whats. >> spar -- spartan forge, when i was in the military, my job was to solve information problems for commanders, putting it in a form they could make decisions. it might sound a little cliche,
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but the idea is to aggregate all of the information a hunter would need to help them make decisions. bill: so it's an app on my phone, shows me everything i need to know about a particular area, geography, the position my, everything that i might want to hunt. >> yeah, exactly. it even tells you thing ins about the deer population, property ownership, beth time to go hunt, historical weather, high resolution imagery, all a kind of stuff. will: incredible x. and then-used in some of these needs, these moments like hurricanes and devastation in north carolina. >> yes, exactly. so we have what's called lidar, and the it uses light imaging of the earth surface, it shows you paths and stuff that you wouldn't be able to see on aerial maps covered by foliage. so it penetrates, shows you trees -- shows you the ground, so people were using it to get up to the backs of houses where the road had been washed out delivering critical services, food, water, getting people to hospitals, using old logging
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trails, old paths x. also there's a future called blue force tracker where it's like life 360 only it's for hunters. you can craw an area on the map, and everyone shares information while they're in that area so people could coordinate at nate dropoffs, rally points, water distribution points. will: incredible. >> we had about 200 people using it. we were welcome back working with save our allies providing support and getting people critical care services. will: you were saying you worked for darpa, you helped with a lot of these tools that are available for hunters. >> yes, i advised for two years as a chief warrant officer and technician in the military. i advised on a basically what are the critical needs for soldiers now, how do we implement them quickly. they're more abstract before that or pie in the sky ideas, but now how to we get critical capable to soldiers serving out front. i advised on the development of that to deploy if it forward to use in iraq are, afghanistan,
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africa, even the southern philippine will: really cool. before we go, spartan forge, i download the app and give me the layers, things i can put on a particular area to know what i'm going to get if hi -- i want to hunt or even explore in. >> we have a large language model that's similar to chatgpt, but it's trained by us for hunters. you can use it to learn all kinds of stuff. how to tan a deer hide, on the mapping layers there's high less light 5-15 centimeter imagery which you can see a baseball on the ground for half the country. there's weather, predictive weather and historical weather. really all of the things, like i said, in that target analysis profile that a commander would use, a hunter can use. will: incredible. spartan forge a.i. there we go. bill, thank you so much. >> thanks for having me. will: all right. more "fox & friends" ahead on this sunday morning. it begins. get all-day and all-night heartburn acid prevention
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