tv The Big Weekend Show FOX News December 8, 2024 1:00am-2:00am PST
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syrian government appears to have fallen in a stunning end to 50 years of rule by the assad family, insurgents conducted a lightning offensive, claiming to have liberated the capital of damascus. rebels taking just ten days to topple president bashar al assad's authoritarian regime. syrian officials say president al-assad has fled the city by plane to an unknown destination. the syrian prime minister reportedly had contact with the rebels commander on how to manage the current period. he's also now calling for syria to have free elections so the syrian people can decide who they want to lead them. meanwhile, protesters are tearing down statues and posters and reportedly looting banks and public institutions. there are reports the iranian embassy in damascus has been ransacked and that syrian opposition fighters are shooting guns at the entrance of the presidential palace. damascus is the third city to fall. syrian rebels claim to have fully liberated the city of homs and aleppo, too. in light of these events,
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israel's military says it's deploying forces to a buffer zone and at a number of points necessary for defense. meantim, idf says it will not intervene in the events taking place in syria and the white house says president biden and his team are closely monitoring the extraordinary events and staying in contact with their regional partners. president elect trump also weighing in, saying russia is no longer interested in protecting al assad. he goes on to call for a cease fire in the russia-ukraine war, adding that zelensky and ukraine would likely make a deal to, quote, stop the madness. again, if you're just joining us, chants of freedom at this hour across syria, as the syrian government appears to have fallen in a stunning end to a 50 year rule by the assad family. insurgents conducted a lightning offensive claiming to have liberated the capital city of damascus. rebels took just ten days to topple president bashar al
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assad's authoritarian regime. syrian officials say president al assad has fled the city by plane to an unknown destinatio. keep it here. we'll have the very west side hostel that day and checked at the counter, he paid in cash and used fake id i'm told. 30 minutes before the shooting this is what happens. this man is caught on camera at nearby starbucks, two blocks away. police say he bought a drink, finished it and tossed it in the trash and now evidence in the case. they are working to use the saliva to track him down. what else could they have here, you can see the gunman walk up behind the ceo, we pause it because it's hard to watch and he opens fire. there are thousands of cameras across new york city. >> our detectives did the most unbelievable job tracing this per--person of interest in november 24th in the city, that is all done manually by these
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detectives looking at thousands of hours of video and so they have fairly robust evidence where the person has been in new york city over the past week and a half. reporter: brian thompson 50 year's brother of two, ceo of one of the largest healthcare companies in the world, united healthcare. what's that about? well, similar to a title of a book that's all about slamming the insurance industry saying it's big racket and unfair. i asked police if that could be linked to a motive. >> obviously when you look at the writing, you look at the victim's employment, you know, it could possibly be disgruntled employee or client, we are not ruling that out but not committing at this time. >> no matter where people are watching on, you can help the case, person of interest went back to atlanta georgia but this
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is a nationwide man hasn't so no mart where you're watching from, you could help, it just takes one tip, if you have any information call 800577 tips, jason. jason: alexis, you're the best. joining in studio former nypd inspector and fox news contributor paul, paul, thank you for being here. nicole. >> you know, i was listening to chief and detectives and they don't want to commit to a motive obviously given the nature of what the victim did, being ceo of largest insurance company and every american has dealt with one and not in favorable matter, 50% of insurance claims are denied. so the thought is it could be someone who had some sort of negative feelings about the insurance industry but that does not narrow it down in this specific case, what i am seeing right now is a lot of rhetoric, a lot of hate felt speech online especially the digital media, it's completely overwhelmed with people suggesting maybe he
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deserved it because as the ceo of a healthcare -- health insurance company he's denied coverage and therefore it has cost lives. so sort of terrorism can actually lead to violence and it is possible that what we have seen online could have lead to someone vulnerable kind of taking that messaging and committing a murder based on all of the, you know, the information we have seen so far and, again, it's all speculative we don't have a lot of information but what makes you think that this wasn't necessarily a random act of violence and this was planned. >> a couple of things, first of all, what initially happened, we had to admit to the idea that could be completely random, somebody that likes killing people, unfortunately that happens, once you got back the shell casings, the messages that tracked the antiinsurance book, therefore it was a targeted attack and mr. thompson was the target. the writing on the shell cases could be a false flag but you have to play percentages here and there's no way antiinsurance book that has language, title
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similar to shell casings could possibly be linked, unlinked, excuse me to the fact that this guy was the ceo of united healthcare. as far as motive, believe it or not, the cops don't care about that right that much. they want to deal with the hard facts they have. the event was supposed to kick off at 0800, 8:00 o'clock in the morning and yet the shooter arrives 5 minutes beforehand according to chief of detectives himself and is set up across the street, he acquires mr. thompson at a goodies tans, i've walked that and it was dim, it was tie light, early in the morning and then he comes up behind him and he knows it's him right away and furthermore, had he known he would be there an hour and 20 minutes before the event. it argues these are some kind of access or somebody was helping surveil, now, alexis mcadams who has done great reporting asked the chief of detectives directly, is there anybody else involved, he says we don't believe so at this time.
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you can eliminate because we will take him at his word. that remains the big question, how did he know he will be there and when. >> we are getting updates, major updates every 15, 20 minutes throughout the day, i'm constantly checking my phone, so there's this sense of momentum i think that we all have that something big could happen during the show at any minute now. is that just hope that we are going to have an id, there's going to be an arrest at any minute now or is there something you're seeing in the investigation that leads people down this path? >> excellent question. i will be honest with you, i have not probed this in terms of sourcing and stuff like that, very, very earnestly and he's still free out there and i don't want to give information from that report that could impact this. this is one that i've taken a step back. when they get him we will hear about it. i know the kind of people and few people who are working on
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this. they are the best of the best. they are going to get him and relatively soon. too many data points out there. let me go back to something real quick that you mentioned, doc, he wrote on those shell casings, those messages, if that is, indeed, the message and he did it to coerce a population, civilian population you aren't getting -- are getting in terrorism area. that's the state terrorism charge. i actual brought along with people first terrorism charge. i know the statute well. once they get him and they are going to get him, it's actually not tend, it's the beginning. jason: we are watching the daniel penny trial, a jury will reconvene monday to debate lesser charge against marine veteran after the judge dismissed manslaughter charge in the case. penny's legal team respond today move saying, quote, we are
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cautiously optimistic that the one remaining count will be dismissed by the jury on monday. that would finally put this nightmare behind danny and allow us to focus on the civil lawsuit filed two days ago for the same allegations contained in the criminal indictment. as we await the verdict new yorkers are being confronted with disturbing poster reading a man was lynched here on the subway. this comes as lead prosecutor dafnay is being scrutinized, aback in 2019 she sought a lighter sentence for black man who killed an elderly asian man after robbing him all in the name of restorative justice. >> the circumstances that one should take into account the trauma of that individual. i really felt incredibly sorry for him that he had gotten to that point in his life where he felt like there was no other choice but to commit this
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robbery. >> paul, my first question around this, if jordan neely who was killed would this be a case, pepi jumped in to protect, we are talking women, children, is there a racial component why this was prosecuted in the first place? >> those of us who grew up, it felt like we were passed all of this. thank you, alvin bragg to bringing us to the good-old days. you saw the interview with him, we have his background, does anybody really believe that if a white guy had gotten and behaved the way jordan neely did he would have stepped up? remember something, penny was probably the hardest target in the car. he's a striping young marine, you can see he's in shape, it's women of color from what i understand, a hispanic woman with a young kid who nearly
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seemed to be moving, he stood up to protect them at risk of himself and he held on waiting for r the police and according to the prosecution summation he held on 51 seconds too long. if you're going to be a good samaritan in new york city these days carry a stopwatch. jason: heaven forbidden if he's been convicted. who is going to help somebody? he was trained in a position to help somebody, he was a threat to all those other passengers and the idea that they're even prosecuting especially from this prosecutor is atrocity. >> it's sort of disheartening because, you know, new york, there's this thing, they want to look out for each other, always been a very blue-collar city and you see something like that. remember, something else in this, to that point, when the cops got there, okay, they did all the interviews, they saw the -- they got the body camera, it's mostly people of color, right, now you don't know entirely what happened but you know a guy is dead. you bring him back to prezipping, interview him.
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the cops didn't make an arrest. this looks justified. ten days later before it ever got to the grand jury, the order went out go out and arrest this guy. jason: dangerous if they convict him. all right, coming up on this jam-packed hour of the big weekend show. >> the idea of preemptive pardons is a rational response. >> that only reinforces to me that biden is genuinely trying to do the right thing. jason: democrats are pushing biden to go on a last-minute pardon spree before he leaves the white house but will he do it and president elect trump is repping america on world stage while traveling to paris of open of notre dam
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it's an idea that's quite attractive. or... another word... -fashionable? i was gonna say- "popular! you're gonna be pop-uuuu-larrr!" can you do defying gravity?! yeah, get my harness. buy one line of unlimited, get one free for a year with xfinity mobile. and see “wicked,” in theaters now. alicia: president elect donald trump has officially made grand return to global stage, he met
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with world leaders today at the reopening of historic notre dome cathedral in paris. >> world leaders are looking ahead to the next american administration, with that president elect trump high-level meetings this afternoon. french president emanuel macron welcomed him to las palace. macron was also in office when trump left the white house in 2021. the two brought in volodymyr zelenksyy. pete hegseth met with skeptical senators last week and will again this week, appears the nomination was in trouble but trump suggests there's momentum behind hegseth.
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>> it looks like pete is doing well now, people were a little bit concerned. he's a young guy with a tremendous track record actually went to princeton, went to harvard. he was a good student at both but he loves the military and i think people are starting to see it. >> another president elect's controversial nominee tulsi gabbard back on capitol hill, director of national intelligence among the concerns sympathetic comments about russia and meeting in 2017 with syrian dictator bashar al-assad, meeting that takes on greater significance today as it appears assad's grip on syria is slipping. he posted to truth social, he said that syria is a mess, not a friend of the united states but that the united states should not get involved in the developments there, back to you.
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alicia: rich edison, thank you so much. we had president biden earlier this week in angola. >> the implementation of the project will provide important opportunities for africa's development in sectors such as agricultural, renewable energy, digital transformation, trade and logistics along the corridor. >> so this has some wondering could this be why biden is not in france today. other moments that caused us to worry about the president. >> it's hard to tell. [applause] >> and joan -- xang --
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>> god save the queen, man. [cheers and applause] >> okay, so i want to get back to the former and future president. [laughter] alicia: being back on the world stage. it was a complement and trump be invited. pretty savvy of macron. optics are everything. >> i just want to say that anybody is more excited than president biden, east eager to get back to delaware, watching president elect trump in the last couple of weeks this is a preview of what the next four weeks will be, we are in good shape. he's presidential, meetings, in-person meetings with world leaders, canada, mexico,
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president macron spoke with president zelenskyy, seeming very presidential and i think he's handling himself very well. >> to nicole's point moved on. >> the united states of america is the world superpower, we need to act like it, donald trump does that. he offers clarity and he offers leadership. he is a president we can all be proud of and showing and taken the mantle. he knows what to do with it and everybody is starting to respect the united states. alicia: and world leaders know they can take trump at his word, and so it behooves them to show up or invite him. >> this person should not be president. when he stepped down in july and not running for president again, he should have stepped aside as well as the president. instead he's president for the next 7 months after that time. he's still president for another 43 days after this. he wasn't asleep for like 10
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seconds there. that went on for 2 minutes. it's an utter embarrassment and here you have now president elect donald trump, he's negotiating already with canada and mexico threatening tariffs as far as securing our border. biden is catching up rem sleep in angola. where is the vice president? kamala harris, you will find liz cheney playing tennis at mar-a-lago before you see kamala harris in front of a camera anymore. so who is running the country? you're right, january 20th can't come soon enough but at the same time this is an embarrassment, i'm sorry. alicia: according to multiple reports not yet independently confirmed by fox news, president biden might go on a last-minute pardon spree before leaving the white house, dr. anthony fauci, general mark milley, adam schiff and liz cheney have been widely reported as speculative individuals who could receive pardons. as of now there is no evidence any of these individuals have
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requested pardons or committed crimes. fox has reached out for comments from the white house schiff, cheney, milley and fauci and have not heard back. schiff told npr he's not interested in blanket pardon from biden. here is what the white house had to say about this yesterday. >> i'm not going to get ahead of the president but what i can say is that the president is reviewing pardons and commutations, i'm not going to get ahead of the president. i'm just not going to get into specifics of what we are going to do, not do, i'm not going to get ahead of the president. >> there's a process, the president will go through it and not going to get ahead of him. he's going to make announcements on pardons and commutations. alicia: now at least one democrat is suggesting for biden to pardon trump. >> i think it's true that -- that the trial in new york for trump, that was political as
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well too, a pardon is appropriate. we cannot allow these kinds of institutions to be weponized against our political opponents. alicia: okay, jason, the constitution gives the president this power. this is different what they're talking about, this blanket pardon for unknown crimes. jason: we haven't seen anything quite like this. i think those most likely potentially to be on the list is biden family members. what james comer said about them, chair of the oversight committee, deep research on this, those are the people that i think are in jeopardy because there are literally millions of dollars that have flown overseas that ended up in the bidens bank accounts and when investigators go and get away from merrick garland and get to pam bondi and patel and look at the documents and congressional investigators can look through the documents,
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more vulnerability, potentially, potentially for biden family members. alicia: we will have to see, the report from politico that it wasn't the president who was in the conversations, it was the people around him and first that hit me so real, he's not in the conversations and then i thought, maybe it's not so weird. joe: that's been the case for four years where other people have been running the country that we don't know about. they are faceless people. john fetterman, god bless that guy, he's the voice for reason for democratic party and only one that goes forward and says new york trial in trump was politicized. you would think other leaders come and say, that's right, and move on. that's not happening, john fetterman, 2028, watch out for that guy, he's making sense when democrats are running and hiding with preemptive pardons. i've never heard anything like this nicole. nicole: i agree. i'm shocked by him this entire year and impressed by him not
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only this instance but other things he's talked about. we can't take the white house at its word what they will do for pardoning because they have blanketly lied about pardoning joe biden's son. at the end of the day there's still going to be investigations specifically i'm looking to covid investigations seeing what was known, what was kept secret and maybe they'll have blanket pardons. the people deserve to know. alicia: interesting five six weeks or so. still ahead in weekend show, the left is losing over child sex change debate. we have all the wild claims from supreme court justices and pundits, you don't want to miss it. ♪ ♪
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here is an msnbc host comparing opposition to transmedical procedures to nazi germany. >> targeting transpeople isn't new. it's an age-old tradition which nazi germany did which brutally endeed in the 1930's. jason: wow. during supreme court arguments over the transtreatment for children, left-leaning justice sotomayor and ketanji brown jackson also made insane comparisons to historical events and over-the-counter medication. >> every medical treatment has a risk, even taking aspirin. there's always going to be a percentage of the population under any medical treatment that's going to suffer a harm. >> some of these questions about who decides and the concerns and legislative prerogatives, et cetera, sound very familiar to me, they sound in the same kinds
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of arguments that were made back in the day 50's, 60's with respect to racial classifications and inconsistencies. jason: now the far left is using trans-children as ponds to fear monger. >> what concerns have you had about speaking out? >> that i'm going to be like murdered, like one day i'm going to be walking down the street and somebody is going to come up and like shoot me or something. >> that's a really scary thing to be worrying at 10 year's old. >> yeah, that should not be worried. jason: dr doctor, what is your e on this? >> i have a 10-year-old and it's devastating that they are afraid they will be discriminated and targeted against and victim of some sort of violence. i was appalled when i listened to joy reed make the parallels
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to nazi germany. she actually has a point there. she has facts wrong. in nazi germany there were medical experiments that left some disfug -- disfigured and se dead. it's not just on the outside, they're also doing permanent damage on the inside, so you have physical and mental mutilation. the question is at what age should there be consent that they're allowed to do this and if we have to have legal age for alcohol, flying alone, all of these things, the child's brain is not fully formed and you are talking about a time when hormones are going wild. they're in a complete state of chaos constantly, this is not when they should be making life-changing decisions, much of which has permanent consequences. it is something that they want to do when they are an adult, they have a fully formed brain and they can accurately weigh
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the risks and benefits of this and acknowledge the consequences that make potentially come, they can do whatever they want. i don't believe taxpayer dollars should be paying for it and i believe there should be medical freedom but when it comes to our children, absolutely not. joe: what age, my daughter turned 11, i can guaranty she does not know at that age where she should be a boy or a girl, i'm sorry, that young, no way. not until at least to your point, i guess maybe 18, maybe 21, here is what i know, kamala harris once said when he ran for president in 2019 that she supported u.s. taxpayer dollars paying for sex changes for those here illegally while in prison and donald trump made campaign ad and most effective campaign ad during history, ran during nfl games, during big events and huge issue in swing states. number one in some swing states. if democrats want to run, part
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of the 20% that support literally chopping off body parts of children, roll the dice and take your chances because that's not something is going to win you elections ever, ever. alicia: when it comes town to it this is about the consideration and care of children, 14 and 15-year-olds should not be making decisions for their 45-year-old self and to equate the response to bigotry is shameful. >> they're not even legally allow today consent for sex. why are we changing their sex if their law says they can't consent to sex. joe: great point. jason: certainly not like taking aspirin. coming up on the big weekend show. >> i can't say exactly the size but they're not toy drones, they are commercial military type drones. jason: mysterious drones have been spotted flying all over new jersey, we will ask our eyewitnesses here on this panel about their strange encounters. ♪ ♪ ♪
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>> welcome back to the big weekend show. well, the fbi is asking for your help in identifying mysterious drones flying over new jersey in recent days and some eyewitnesses are claiming they can even change the clocks. residents have spotted them in at least 12 new jersey counties including sightings near trump's bedminster golf course and u.s. military base. right now faa has temporarily restricted flights over both locations. i can actually speak to this that i live in new jersey and i live close to trump bedminster golf course and we can actually show a video taken off of my local ring because these are at first you think it's an airplane but then you realize it's lower to the ground and move a little bit different and, you neglect, at first i thought this was probably some kid in the basement flying drones, they entered air space, restricted
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air spaces which raised alarms, but here is the thing, i've spoken to a state senator from new jersey and i've read the official statements that have come out from state officials and it seems to me there's an overwhelming sense of frustration going on right now because the state doesn't have much local authority here because it did enter restricted air space that is governed by the faa so it's really on the federal aspect. now why you have the fbi coming out and saying that they don't believe there's eminent threat, i would like to know what's that is based off of, there's a lot of concern especially because the air space that it did enter into is right over arsenal which is one of the largest armories of our military, so the question is, you know, is this one of our foreign adversaries potentially china, russia, someone else who are trying to surveil some of these areas, i certainly don't think it's a teenager anymore. joe: there's too many of them. i'm half hour north of you and i saw several on thursday night. you saw some last night, you saw
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one. the chinese spy balloon we didn't shoot down it was -- crossed the entire country before we shot it in the atlantic ocean. surveilled nuclear plants and we allowed it to happen. let's shoot down these things at least one of them and see what intelligence we can gather from that but we are not doing it for some reason. look, you're in new jersey we have enough to deal with, if you're here for springsteen and bon jovi take them. do not come after them. alicia: jason and i are from the west. someone in the western state would have taken them out by now. jason: for sure. >> there seems to be technology on these drones that they're evading the local radars and when they are being surveyed, that the lights go off and they're having difficulty identifying where they go but, again, the state has no authority to do anything about it, they're waiting on the feds. jason: this is the big legal question and sean duffy has his
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hands full, who controls the air -- who would you call if there's a problem, do you call your local sheriff, who do you call -- there's not faa police, they don't know who the call so it's a major dilemma, they should have been dealing with this ten years ago when we had the captor going landing by the capitol. how do we enforce the law, what is the law to good afternoon these things and -- and that has not yet been totally. nicole: it's a big problem. over bedminster, national security threats potentially and they need to be taking them seriously and i'm hoping they have more information and not being transparent with the public yet until they explore a little bit more. i hope it's not that we don't know because if that's the real answer, that's terrifying. joe: who is in charge here? nicole: he was asleep in a in a, we saw that. joe: rem sleep. >> we lost a lot of good people,
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show off to the world. ask your eczema specialist about dupixent. >> the case of the arizona was a catastrophe of bombing, high explosive went down a smokestack and magazine blew up. the billowing of smoke is from oil ablaze and resting on the bottom great armored sea fighter is a fantastic tangle of twisted steel. joe: today marks 83 japan pushed america into world war ii, attack on pearl harbor, roughly 2400 u.s. service members and civilians were killed, 101-year-old bob fernandez, one of the last living pearl harbor survivors recalls what happened on that faithful day.
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>> yeah, i felt kind of scared because i didn't know what the hell was going on. anybody else, i guess. so that's what it was, you know. run for your life. we lost a lot of good people, you know. they didn't do nothing, you kn know, but we never know what's going to happen in a war. joe: and today services are being held at the pearl harbor memorial to honor those who perished and the sacrifice they made for our country. all right, first they'll come over to you jason as far as people were remembering from our own families that may have served in foreign wars whether it'd be pearl harbor, whether it'd be vietnam. jason: god bless the men and women who have served and given their life particularly world harbor throughout that time. fortunate, proud of any
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father-in-law johnson, he was a surgeon, lieutenant colonel in the army and he served in vietnam. god bless him. he was there for years and did amazing service. joe: god bless him. alicia: god bless him. i want to tell everybody about grandpa walt. this is my grandfath husband's grandfather, walter anderson who served in the navy. he joined the navy after the attacks on pearl harbor. he served on uss helm in the pacific, there he is with lovely wife hasel, my husband's grandmother. in his retirement he started to edit together videos of battles during world war ii and he put them up on youtube to teach his family about the history of world war ii and also left this legacy, he would be very proud to know that we are on here honoring the veterans. nicole: i love that. joe: that's a gorgeous couple by
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the way. that deserves on a calendar somewhere. nicole: i'm beyond honor today talk about my great uncle anthony, tony joined the army after world war ii began. he served as staff sergeant in 36th division, the battle of casino, he received four purple hearts captured by the german army when he was shot in the neck. luckily he turned his head in the last minute. sounds like someone else we know. if he didn't do that he would have died at the spot. gave him the pow medal and in the camp he was known for making dandelion soup in his helmet. that's why i have such a love for natural herbs and when the prisoners were released they were in better help than the other soldiers because of dandelion soup. he still had fragments and after the war he joked that pow was for prisoner of war and post office worker.
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[laughter] joe: incredible story, shot in the neck, made soup for everybody. god bless, indeed. my great uncle domingo concha, lost at sea in north atlantic after warship crashed into german boat and fighting in suit, they have written books about this, you see the concha hairline on there. i wasn't -- i wasn't adopted, let's put it that way. my great uncle domigo, god bless him and god bless his service, indeed. there's the hairline. yeah, it exist cans. going back many years, thank you. anyway, stick around, big weekend are next, don't forget to follow the big weekend show on x, facebook, instagram at the big weekend show. we will be right back. ♪ ♪ ♪
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nicole: welcome back, it's time now for the big weekend flops, our picks for the biggest fails of the week and i'm going to go first. south carolina congresswoman nancy mace says transactivist told her staff that sex-base bathrooms she's advocate i for because congress e patients lose their hair. many people on chemotherapy do
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lose their hair, not once have i mistaken one of my breast cancer point of impacters on chemotherapy for a man. this is absurd, do not bring cancer patients into your dumb-founded argument. joe. joe: i have nothing to add to that, that was perfect. but, alicia, come on, share. alicia: i'm actually just like speechless. nicole: it's insulting to women, it's insult to go the patients and insulting to weep, keep them out of your mouth. alicia: thank you. joe: alex cooper roasted kamala harris for spending $100,000 on a fake set for her interview in october. listen. >> cardboard walls could cost six figures, it wasn't that nice. it wasn't like gorgeous marble, no, that was not six figures. joe: yeah, six figures for big set and million dollars to
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oprah, 500,000 to al sharpton, phoney interview, phoney candidate, kamala harris, didn't do very well on november 5th. jason: they were asking $25. joe: imagine if she ran the u.s. economy and the government. nicole: that's what they want to do, right? jason: mine is about ruining a brand. they have destroyed this brand and feel for all of you who invested tens of thousands of dollars to buy one of these, you know, james bond kind of cars because now they have just ultimately destroyed the brand. it's where they want to go, they are open about it, candidate about it, hey, we want to be really woke that we are all going in on the woke, but they destroyed that brand, bye, bye. joe: wow. nicole: jaguar or ashton martin.
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jaguars are known to break down, they have to be flashy. alicia: massive breach of u.s. companies, texts between iphones and androids are vulnerable to cyber-attacks, that's actually really scary, like literally nothing is safe at this point. nicole: another reason why my brother needs to get an iphone so our family text can be blue and not green. alicia: i'm with you. that does it for us, we will see you back here tomorrow at 7:00 p.m. eastern for another big weekend show, remember to always dvr if you can't catch us live. life, liberty&levin start righ m marianne rafferty in los angeles. chants of freedom at
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