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tv   Jesse Watters Primetime  FOX News  December 27, 2024 10:00pm-11:00pm PST

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120. got away. weaving dangerously in and out of traffic. who needs reindeer when you have got a ninja. santa and kangaroo still very much on the lamb. >> good work to both of them. hawaii having awesome surfing. a southerner narrowly avoided disaster after being swallowed up by a giant wave in maui. a notorious spot for monster waves. tossed around, rescued and went back out to serve some time between christmas and new year's. no one really knows what to do with their time. we'll be backing hunting dodges of america fox nation all weekend long. enjoy. season three available now. >> jessica: everyone tune into that go. to tyrus' tour. find the "jesse watters primetime" takes it from here
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welcome to a special edition of jesse watters primetime. i'm will cain filling in for jesse. where are you? when are you going to be coming to the center of the universe? mar-a-lago. that's what donald trump wrote early this morning on truth social. and some are speculating that message may have been meant for elon. in that same truth, he said, we miss you. and x presumably elon's son new year's eve is going to be amazing. djt trump also, by the way, teased a surprise visit from bill gates. he says the microsoft founder is taking the pilgrimage to the winter white house tonight. gates went from donating $50 million to kamala's campaign to now begging to see trump. but at this point, really, who isn't? from silicon valley to wall street to washington, everyone is lining up outside of 40 seven's door. even the great state of canada, after threatening them with crippling tariffs and promising to cut down their taxes by 60% if they became our 51st state. top
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canadian officials got on the first plane down to west palm beach to meet with the president elect's team and shark tank investor and canadian kevin o'leary says he's heading to mar-a-lago to start the annexation. >> canadians over the holidays. the last two days have been talking about this. they want to hear more. and so, you know, there's obviously a lot of issues, more details. but what this could be is the beginning of an economic union. think about the power of combining the two economies, erasing the border between canada and the united states, and putting all that resource up to the northern borders where china and russia are knocking on the door, so secure that give a common currency, figure out taxes across the board, get everything trading both ways. create a new, almost eu like passport. i like this idea, and at least half of canadians are interested. the problem is the government is collapsing in canada right now. nobody wants trudeau to negotiate this deal.
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i don't want him doing it for me. so i'm going to go to mar-a-lago. i'll start the narrative. the 41 million canadians, i think most of them would trust me on this deal. >> but kevin, let's make sure they sign up and want to assimilate into the culture of america. but if canadians want trump to be their president and ceos are begging to help, trump's even winning the hearts and minds of democrats. listen to what one dnc chairman said this candidate had to say he won because he really ran as a democrat of the bill clinton and obama era, bill clinton and barack obama were actually very moderate, and they understood the voter. >> that's why trump got 80 million votes. we have to return to fighting for policies, common sense that work universal school choice. trump's right on that as well. not our kids must be taught reading, writing, math. trump has embraced that not gender, sex and race. kate, that's the problem that our party has. >> all right, well, trump is convincing the world to see
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that his side is the side of winning. he's promising to usher in a new golden age with common sense, and now everyone wants to be a part of it. trump's doing what biden promised he'd do unite the country. and maybe joe is a little jealous. >> we have the bald eagle now, officially the bird of the united states. what do you expect to see him do in the next three weeks of lasting effect? >> i mean, i think he's what he's trying to do is trying to corner donald trump and sort of box him in so he can do, i think the biden administration and the president is trying to prevent donald trump from doing as much damage as he possibly can, could do, which he could do a lot at becoming president. but i think joe biden is trying to box him in on this box. >> him in biden's working harder now than he has in the last four years. he spent nearly 40% of his presidency on vacation. that's a total of 570 days on vacation in the last four years. and he's spending the week in saint croix before heading over to rome. ask
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yourself, how many vacation days have you had in the last four years? the country barely saw the president or heard from him. >> one of the things that i've really seen was that i think one of the big problems in the biden admin was not so much the policy, but the messaging. right? they didn't do interviews. they didn't. they weren't forward facing the way donald trump was. i mean, for four years, donald trump basically ran for president again, whereas biden was not doing interviews, was very sort of, you know, careful about what he did, didn't do a lot of media. and i think that was a really big mistake, because trump sort of really took all the oxygen out of the room. >> oxygen out of the room is right. since the election, seven out of ten democrats have tuned out politics. the party is on life support, and some are already riding each other's political obituaries. politico says the end of the year
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obituary packages are publishing. and look what they're saying are the trends in politics that died in 2024. it's mostly what democrats ran on celebrity endorsements, door to door canvasing, die campaigning on abortion, trusting the experts, politico says. feel free to offer a quick moment of silence. we may not see them again, and democrats may never see kamala harris again either. they're talking about her like she's in the past. >> i've really been thinking about this because i think in a lot of ways, you know, the fact that she did lose the election has overshadowed what was so extraordinary and important about her accomplishments as the first female vice president. and i think history is going to look kindly on her term. she was an extraordinary advocate on issues that matter to women in ways that we have never seen before. and i think, like many women and really anyone who is the first who is a trailblazer, they carry an extra heavy load and the burden
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is really upon them. it is an incredibly difficult road to, you know, path to walk. but she has done it with grace. >> i'm not so sure about that. i think history will remember kamala harris for putting the party $1.5 billion in debt and for shattering the obama coalition. because of her, the party is being forced into a great reckoning, and the clock is ticking for the old guard, one democratic strategist says. i think there are going to be big demands for a greater reckoning. the democratic politburo, obama, pelosi, schumer, jeffries and others all participated in the obvious lie that biden was capable of a second term in the anti-democratic move to install a wholly untested vice president. harris. and in lacking the courage for the past four years to stand up to a progressive left whose policies are far out of touch with most voters, they all failed the test of leadership in this respect, and for that, the american people told them,
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you're fired. so what's next for the democratic party? let's turn now to fox news contributor charlie hurt, who's joining me at the desk. charlie, where does the democratic party go from here? >> well, you would think there would be a reckoning, but when you look at the some of the comments you hear from top democrats right now, you get the real sense that they're not really serious about doing a real reckoning. and the idea that you have people talking about how, oh, the problem with their campaign was messaging that was not the problem with this campaign. the problem with the with the kamala harris joe biden campaign were the democrat policies. and say what you want to you know, a lot of people i get why people don't particularly like donald trump's demeanor, especially if you're sort of on on the left. but, you know, you got to give him credit for exposing the absurdity of a lot of the policies that they have embraced, like, like, like the notion that we want we want to become go from a colorblind
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society that we have strived to be, to suddenly making race be the most important factor in everything that we do. he exposed all of that, and the american people voted. this is with the entire media complex on the democrat side and americans voted to reject. >> i do think there's some sense that they're going to go back to the drawing board, charlie, not just on messaging, but on policies. i do think they have to look in the mirror a bit about immigration, about the economy, even about this racialism of america, as you point out. i don't know where they come out the other side of that wilderness. i don't know what they draw up on that blackboard now that it's blank. and we should remember, you know, after obama won, it was like, oh, republicans will never govern again. so the question is, what comes next for democrats who emerges from the wilderness? is there a revolutionary in that party that brings it back from the dead? >> yeah, i think one thing that's really interesting you pointed out about the obama coalition, which has been shattered and it has been in 2008. i was never on board with the obama stuff, but obama
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managed to run a very a you know, he managed to present himself as a very centrist candidate, and he pulled together a tremendous coalition and then managed to govern, i would say, quite radically. but he was just cool enough, and he was just hip enough to kind of keep everybody together. and i think that that period of time actually papered. obama was able to paper over extraordinary differences that democrats have never worked out. republicans, going back to the tea party movement, have had to work through a lot of these issues and come out, i think, a much stronger, better party. democrats haven't even begun that, or they're starting it now. >> one thing i'm really excited about, charlie, is this revitalization of the american revolutionary, the american expansionist, the american spirit. this is this is president trump. he's talked about, as we just mentioned, canada, but he's also talked about the panama canal, and he's talked about greenland. >> i think what president trump is suggesting is a very common sense. he's the third u.s.
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president to make this proposal. it's common sense solution to a thorny problem of what do you do with a giant territory that is not defendable and not developable by this small country, denmark, and it's part of north america? and so just like he's talking to canada, well, greenland is just right by us and canada. >> as the ambassador to greenland. charlie, i have to tell you, i love i love this bold vision for the future of america and a willingness to talk about anything and consider anything. >> and, you know, she makes a good point and trump makes a good point. you have this, this, this spot of land chinese. the russians would love to have access to that land. it's undefendable right at the moment. yet we're on the hook for it. if it does get invaded. so why not just sort of talk about figuring out a way to buy it and use it to the best of america's needs and
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abilities? not a bad idea. at least we're talking about it. and i agree with you, will. i think that to me, the most thrilling thing is this big, visionary way of looking at problems, whether it's greenland or the panama canal. >> it's not neocon interventionism. it is. no, it is conquest. yes, it is expansion of america. all right, charlie hurt. thank you so much, charlie. all right. former democratic campaign operative evan barker joins me now. evan, get that last sip of water, and let's have this conversation about the future of your party. it seems you are lost in the wilderness, bumping into trees, but luckily, you'll be well hydrated. >> i am lost, but luckily, i'm hydrated. and i'm here with you on fox news. >> what do you see as the future of the democratic party won right now? that is walking away from kamala harris, walking away from joe biden and trump? >> i mean, honestly, i think right now it's not exactly clear what the future of the democratic party is going to
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be. i think they have three different paths, though, and they can either follow the path that they've been going down, which is, you know, the obama and the clinton operatives leading the party. or they can go with the squad progressive brand of the party that has pushed many sane democrats like myself out. or they can chart a brand new path which might look a little bit more like populism. like what we're seeing a donald trump campaign look like. so i think at this point it's kind of unclear, but i think those are the three different paths that lie ahead for them. >> that's fascinating. let's do this together. let's walk through those three paths really quickly. so first of all, the old coalition, the obama pelosi powerbroker coalition of the democratic party, i don't think any of us have the foresight or ability to say the nail has been driven into the coffin for those power brokers, perhaps more so for obama. pelosi is in her 80s, but still powerful. do you think that direction of the democratic party won't have a
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stranglehold on the future? >> i think it's going to be difficult to get them out unless we lose again in 2028. i think if we lose again in 2028, they'll have no choice but to be ejected from the party. but otherwise, i think over the next four years they're probably going to continue to have their stranglehold. >> okay. then the second group, the squad, we've seen members of the squad already losing their seats. you know, cori bush, jamaal bowman. we've seen the squad reduce in its size. now there are still going to be a story to tell about aoc. but it doesn't seem to me like the squad is on the path to defining the future for democrats. >> i think the problem with the squad is that they had no spine. they could have forced the vote. instead they went in this hyper woke direction. they lost all of the populist values and messaging that bernie sanders had in 2016. and, you know, now they've become a huge liability for the democratic brand. so i also don't see them as the future either. all right. >> then lastly, i can hear you
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ro f third category, this populist in the vein of donald trump. perhaps there's only one name that's ever really represented the left on that populist side, but he's very old as well, and that's bernie sanders. so i don't know who will emerge that could inspire someone like you. >> evan, perhaps, maybe dan osborne, i don't know if you followed his race in nebraska, although he's not an elected official. we need a lot more people like him, or somebody like john fetterman even could emerge as the future face of the populous. that's a fascinating on the left. >> all right, the president in a hoodie. we already have the senator in the hoodie. maybe your presidential candidate in the hoodie. he is certainly a man who will surprise. great conversation. thank you so much, evan. all right. american mediocrity. fact or fiction? a huge debate straight ahead. >> your parents have given you some amazing gifts. celebrate the ones you inherited with ancestry dna. explore the detailed family roots,
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ex. absolutely free. >> trump's doge czar and friend of the show, vivek ramaswamy, logged on to ex yesterday and boy did he cause a firestorm, writing the reason top tech companies often hire foreign born and first generation engineers over native americans isn't because of an innate american iq deficiency. it's a lazy and wrong explanation. a key part of it comes down to the c word culture. vivek went on to say, a culture that celebrates the prom queen over the math olympiad champ or the jock over the valedictorian will not produce the best engineers. a culture that venerates corey from boy meets world or zack and slater over screech in saved by the bell, or stefan over steve urkel in family matters, will not produce the best engineers. and yes, look, we've all watched those shows. they're fun and they're mostly harmless. >> corey, my dear little butthead, may i call you
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butthead? sure. i can't walk through life with you. >> is there someone else? >> there's everybody else. >> why? we're already standing together, and we look great. >> vivek says we need more movies like whiplash. fewer reruns of friends, more math tutoring, fewer sleepovers, more weekend science competitions, fewer saturday morning cartoons. now, most american parents look skeptically at those kinds of parents rights. more normal american kids view those kinds of kids with scorn. if you grow up aspiring to normalcy, normalcy is what you will achieve. now close your eyes. he goes on to write and visualize which families you knew in the 90s, or even now, who raised their kids according to one model versus the other. be brutally honest. he says normalcy doesn't cut it in a hypercompetitive global market for technical talent. and if we pretend like it does, we'll have our handed to us by china. i think vivek makes a point. a
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point that is not without some validity, but i think he makes too sweeping of a gesture, too sweeping of an indictment of american culture. american culture is complex. and yes, we're susceptible to rot and lazy entitlement along the edges. we can at times be the rich, spoiled, entitled kids of a previous generation. but the essence that keeps our nation shining like a city on a hill that remains intact. i know that vivek believes that too, because he's spoken at great length about american exceptionalism. see, if we weren't exceptional, why would people be dying to come here both legally and illegally? you see, as genius as our constitution and declaration of independence are, and they are genius that should be enshrined in amber for all of posterity. they're not what set us apart from the rest of the world. it is our culture. a culture of people that pushed west, that drilled holes in the earth and shot skyscrapers into the
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heavens. it's a culture of people that built great businesses with a mix of protestant work ethic and pioneer risk tolerance. it's why we are the world's preeminent economy, and indian engineers strive to come to america, where the world's most powerful military, the world's biggest melting pot, the world's leading technological innovator apple, google, microsoft, amazon, tesla are bred here on american excellence. innovation is in america's dna. it's why we have people like elon musk. he added, by the way, onto vivek's point. elon said the number of people who are super talented engineers and super motivated in the us is far too low. think of this like a pro sports team. if you want your team to win the championship, you need to recruit top talent wherever they may be. that enables the whole team to win. now i know something about sports. here's the thing about the pro sports analogy that i would suggest to elon. pro sports is almost totally devoid of culture.
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super teams don't last very long. they don't integrate athletes into their team over a long period of time. they go for the moonshot of one championship. now, college sports that traditionally had a culture. i'll admit it's dying, but it traditionally had a culture. and i'm going to give you two examples sports like soccer or one that i know well, water polo. they were not as good as the rest of the world in those sports. so what they do at say, pepperdine water polo or clemson soccer is they recruit foreign players to come in and fill roster spots that would have gone to american athletes or american students in order so that clemson can win a soccer championship. but is that worth it for the soccer team to make the final four? these institutions we created for the benefit of americans to build a winning program, the right way to develop american players in your own backyard. the same analogy applies to engineers or anything else in america. do that and we will truly enter a new golden age.
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ozora ceo james fischbach joins me now. james, thanks for being with us tonight. let's talk about what vivek had to say. i know vivek, i like vivek. i think vivek is brilliant and i take his point of what he is saying here when it comes to a very specific perhaps as he and elon tweeted, .01 percent of engineers that are needed to be brought from across the world. but i fear that his indictment was too broad, too sweeping about the culture of america. well, will. >> good evening and merry christmas. look, vivek does not mince words. what you'll notice about that tweet that i encourage everybody to read. it's been the tweet that's been heard around the world is he doesn't mention american culture once. what he's talking about, i think, is the anti-american, anti meritocratic subculture that has been exploded in recent years, especially under the biden-harris regime. the subculture will that cancels the science fair in favor of drag queen story hour, the
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subculture where college campuses are spending more time talking about microaggressions than microbiology. the culture that tells a young girl that cardi b is a role model and that thomas jefferson is a racist. that is not the american culture. we have deviated from that. but president trump's historic victory a month ago means that the golden era is upon us. and vivek, i believe, knows that to be true. >> and he's championed those ideas. he's championed them with me. he's championed them on this particular show. he's been a leader in pushing back on the things that have rotted our culture. but he does mention the culture more largely. james. he does talk about us venerating the prom king or the football player over the science fair competition. and what i would say, and i don't think vivek disagrees with me, i really don't. i think he believes in american exceptionalism, but i fear that in this particular sentiment, he has suggested that that mediocrity has led to an overall malaise in america. and he said it's happened basically since the 90s. now i have to believe that some of
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that is true, but we are still today, not just in our past. we are still exceptional in america. >> there is no question about it. even despite what's been a couple of difficult years under this biden-harris regime, this is the best country on earth. we are blessed by the grace of god. i know that vivek knows that. i know that americans watching at home, and i know that you know that will the bigger thing i think we have to ask ourselves is for as much as american athletes get credit for things, we need to also venerate and exemplify the great mathematicians of this country. when a kid wins a math or science competition, let's put him on a billboard two right alongside the winning quarterback. and so we have to prioritize merit and excellence, and we have to reject this anti meritocratic subculture that's trying to divide us. well, james, president trump will unite this country. do we have about it. >> do we have those individuals here today. so here's i want to get to the nuts and bolts, the brass tacks of this debate. a lot of it has to do with h-1b visas. and do we recruit talent
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from across the world, be it asia, be it china, be it india? do we recruit talent from across the world? and by the way, vivek is on the record. he edtem works. but do we continue to need to pull brainpower here today that can be developed, whether or not we're talking about silicon valley or wherever it's needed here in america? >> we absolutely have that brainpower here. there is no question about it. now, here's the thing, will. and the great thing about this h-1b debate, the silver lining, i believe that the h-1b process, like vivek has said, is badly broken. it's a scam. it needs to be gutted. but if you go online right now and look at all of the h-1b positions, here's an amazing fact for every one h-1b position for a, quote, ai engineer, there are 1313 will for h-1b accountants, we have 50,000 accounting majors graduating in this country every single year, from hbcus to harvard to community
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colleges to state colleges. we need to give them a fair and even shot. i spoke with a recruiter this afternoon who said that at his company that a policy do not hire american citizens, put h-1bs first. that is not meritocracy. when you restore meritocracy in america, as president trump will do, americans always, always rise to the challenge. >> so to be clear, if i'm listening to you correctly, james, you do not think and i don't know where vivek stands on this part, but american engineers, american students, he talks about vivek, talks about needing it's not a college issue. it's a cultural issue. at a younger age. you think i'm asking you here that americans are not getting a fair shake on getting some of these top jobs, because we're recruiting from places like india or china. >> that's right. they're not getting a fair shake. the recruiters have said. so. we have plenty of accountants in this country, plenty of engineers. now, when it comes to the top 0.1% of elite talent, welcome aboard. but the h-1b system as it stands is anti meritocratic. >> all right i say welcome aboard. as long as you believe in and buy into the
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exceptionalism of american culture, i do believe that you believe that. and vivek as well. and i welcome vivek. i know he will accept it as soon as there is the beginning of the golden age. as you point out, i know he will accept the opportunity to have a longer conversation, which it is very much well deserved. but thank you for beginning it with us tonight, james. thanks, will. all right. the fbi knew the truth about covid, but was told to shut up. a bombshell report next. >> want to discover cindy crawford's secret to ageless skin? it's meaningful beauty. created by world renowned cosmetic specialist doctor jean-louis saba, these formulas come from a rare french melon that contains a youth preserving enzyme known as the youth molecule. >> it's kept cindy's skin remarkably youthful, and now there's really big news. >> doctor saba has discovered how to deliver meaningful beauty's age defying ingredients deeper into the skin, where wrinkles begin. >> whatever this magic potion does for your skin. i wake up
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intelligence community agree that this coronavirus was not man made. that is not a possibility. it came from a natural source. it didn't come from a lab. >> the wuhan institute of virology was made famous by these trump officials, who allege, without much concrete evidence, that the covid virus leaked from the labs into the facility. >> it's just a quick aren't you glad you don't watch that? i'm so glad for you that that propaganda is not what fills your living room. now, nearly five years later, we know the truth. covid's most likely origin is from the wuhan institute of virology. but it took far too long for the truth to come out. and now, according to a bombshell report from the wall street journal, american intelligence agencies may be partly responsible for the delay. early in his second term in his term, president biden ordered the intel community to investigate the virus's origins, and what they discovered was shocking. investigators found evidence that covid was most likely genetically engineered, but by the time the investigation made
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its way to biden's desk, the findings were watered down. they didn't even let fbi investigators into the room. the report downplayed evidence linking covid to the wuhan lab, and concluded that it transferred naturally from animals to humans, so joe biden was left in the dark. according to this report, on purpose, it seems, and according to the new york post, spy chiefs forbade investigators from sharing their evidence with congress. >> there were characteristics of the virus that said, oh my goodness, it looks like it's been manipulated in a lab. when did they know this? january 27th of 2020. how do we know this? they didn't tell us. none of them were honest. they were all saying the opposite in public. but we got through freedom of information. we got all their emails and what we found out from their emails, they all thought it was manipulated. even anthony fauci saying we know they're doing gain of function research over there and then in public. he denies it to me. he says, sir, we never, ever funded gain of function research.
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>> all right. now that we know what really happened, one last question remains why did our top spy chiefs fight so hard to keep the president and america from knowing the truth? doctor andrew huff is the author of the truth about wuhan, and the former vice president of ecohealth alliance. doctor, thanks for being with us. let's just start with that question. why? why did the spy chiefs, according to this report, keep this from everyone, including president biden? >> well, this actually goes much further back than president biden. and to add on to what senator rand paul was saying, it really looks like the intelligence community knew that covid leaked out of a laboratory in early october 2019. just four days ago in the sun, there was an article published that clearly specified from a whistleblower that this information had been communicated up to the highest levels of the department of defense. in october 2019. so who was in charge of the pentagon? why didn't that
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information make it up to president trump? and clearly, this looks like somebody was trying to subvert the president of the united states. but why take this one step further? you get. well, there's a number of different, different, i guess, hypotheses you could come up, come up with. trump was having successful trade relations or trade policy against the chinese one. it could have. another reason why is that these generals could have been trying to politically undercut him for the next election, and that's what it certainly looks like. what happened? >> there is some suggestion, i believe, doctor, as well, that the intelligence community were using american enterprise in china at the wuhan laboratory to try to keep up with what china was actually doing in the wuhan laboratory so that they couldn't therefore tell the truth about it, because it would have revealed america's own spying interests there in china. >> absolutely. so in my book, i discussed that doctor peter daszak, who is the president
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and ceo of ecohealth alliance, told me back in 2015 that he was working with the central intelligence agency. at the time, i didn't really think much of it. fast forward to his testimony in front of the covid select hearing in washington, dc, which i attended, and at the very end of the hearing, he admits that he was working with the intelligence community. if you go look at the transcribed interview with doctor ralph baric, it looks like he was working with the intelligence community. so if you when you look at the totality of this, right, it sure seems that the entire operation with the wuhan institute of virology was actually a giant intelligence collection, collection operation on a military laboratory. >> but then that leaves and i'm going to ask you to fill in that last gap if you can. so, okay, if the cia or whatever intelligence department is working with ecohealth alliance where you work, but with peter daszak at the wuhan lab, and they can't reveal that because i guess they don't want to reveal their own spying operations in china. what were they doing? what was our intelligence community doing at
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the wuhan lab? what were we there trying to gather intelligence on? >> well, that's a really good question. so there probably they could be worried about them manufacturing other synthetic agents. but the problem is if you look at this thing called the diffuse proposal, which was essentially the cookbook of how to make sars-cov-2. u.s. government officials and scientists that submitted this proposal to the u.s. government violated export control and sent this, this cookbook, this recipe to the chinese military. so really, what it looks like is that we were exporting advanced biotechnology to the chinese. >> i'm left with, were we concerned about covid? that doesn't seem to be the case if we're lying about it on the back end, if we're using this as an intelligence operation and we're worried about this on the back end, or is there something more being brewed in china, perhaps in wuhan, that we were concerned about and trying to keep eyes on eyes that we couldn't even explain to the president of the united states? doctor, thanks so much for being with us tonight. it's
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the beginning of a long conversation. >> thank you very much. >> all right. >> a big yellowstone star joins us here on prime time. >> irs3 letters that strike fear into everyone and for good reason. the irs is the most powerful collection agency on earth, and being in debt to the irs can have serious consequences. oftentimes, it begins with the irs sending you a collection letter, but then escalates. and before you know it, you're having your paychecks garnished, your bank accounts seized. even your home or business could be at risk. my problem was i hadn't paid my taxes in eight years. i was trying to take on the irs by myself. i have five children. i'm trying to take care of my kids, and there was a lot of stress. >> i owed the irs over $10,000. they told me the possibilities of garnishing my wages to resolve this debt that i owed them. >> i owed a lot of money to the
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>> 2024 was the year we learned hollywood has lost its influence on politics. thankfully, kamala's brigade of rappers and actors couldn't trick the people into thinking the last four years were a success. liberal hollywood has lost its grip. only a quarter of americans say they care about celebrities political opinions. day by day, americans are rejecting the woke narrative of hollywood after years of shoving progressive, uncomfortable, anti-family, anti-religious movies and tv shows down our throats. there's a groundswell of new content that is injecting a conservative ethos into hollywood mainstream. again, i would argue. how about just a proud american ethos? shows like yellowstone land, man, the saints are proving there's an appetite for content about uniquely american stories. >> i'm going to be a cowboy. >> well, that's a good thing. this ranch needs you to be one someday. this all. all going to
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be yours. >> well, that brings me to my problem. >> okay? >> i don't have a horse. i can't be a cowboy without a horse. >> yeah, pretty tough to cowboy without a horse, that's for sure. >> so can you buy me one? >> well, if i buy it, how are you going to pay me back? >> i'll clean out the stalls or sweep out the barn. >> it's a yes from your father. it's a yes from me. daddy, dad, you gotta train my horse. >> well, yellowstone actor neal mcdonough joins me now. neal, great to see you. of course. yellowstone's taylor sheridan show another one land man out right now. there's a scene in land man neal, a speech where he gives about the power of oil and gas versus wind, and how everything in our world revolves around the production of oil. it's if nothing, neal, it's unique.
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>> well, there's something about what taylor sheridan is doing. and will you hit on something? it's just being pro-american in our approach to our filmmaking. and i think taylor has done it better than anyone, even on tulsa king. we had such a great time talking about the heartland of america this year. but what i do miss, i have to admit, on a side note, i miss you sparring with stephen a smith so much i can't even tell you. oh, those were the days i loved watching you on espn. it was great. but you know, you know, you're right though. there's tulsa. >> there's a seismic to know that the guy in tulsa king is telling me that he used to watch me on first take. that's very flattering. thank you neil. >> that's right. no exactly. but it's it just seems like there's like a tide of change going on right now in hollywood. and, you know, i'm fortunate because my wife and i, we get to produce all of our films for angel studios, which is just an incredible machine that they have. and our film homestead came out this last week and it's doing very, very well. so thank you everyone for your support. and the more you support films like this that actually talk about the family, talk about issues that the
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whole family can sit around the theater and watch and have a discussion after. if you like those types of films, please keep supporting what the erwin brothers are doing. the kendricks are doing, dallas jenkins is doing, everyone at angel is doing. and it's there's a movement going on, and i'm just so blessed that we get to be part of it. >> i haven't had a chance to see it yet, but i've heard great things, by the way, about about homestead. you know, the thing about it is, if you're interested in being a storyteller, how rich? like what a rich environment to mine stories from americana america. >> well, you know, it's funny, five years ago, if, you know, they just came out with a list of all the wants that all the networks want. i want a show like this. i want to show like that. but i would say eight out of ten of them on the list that i just read at the bottom it says, if you have anything with faith based, we're very interested this year. so there's just a change that's going on that i love because these films are turning profits and we keep the prices down. the advertising isn't as much as you have with a big studio film, but the word of mouth
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through our angel films has really just caught on so well, and it's building such a fan base that i just love that we're part of it, and we get to keep on making, you know, the two of us get to keep making films for angel studios. we have our next one, the last rodeo, which comes out in may, that we're very proud of, that i wrote, well, i'll make you two promises. >> i'll watch the last rodeo and homestead, and i'll get steven here. we'll debate not just politics. i'll get him to debate something with sports as well. for you. >> we'll talk to greg. we can talk about the greatness of pepperdine. >> there we go. that's right. the greatness of pepperdine water polo. thank you. neal, it's great to meet you. all right. coach is on deck next. >> your parents have given you some amazing gifts. celebrate the ones you inherited with ancestry dna. explore the detailed family roots, cultures, and traits that shaped who you are today. for only $39, look closely at
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>> i had an incredible mother. father bruce at the time wasn't around that much. >> i've been in situations where i freeze going through a public breakup. >> it's been overwhelming. >> wait, who's your ex? >> charles, you are here to prove you have something about you. >> it's about taking that leap of faith. go. >> it really feels like the quiet before the storm right now. menacing, absolutely menacing. >> there's hope to move forward. >> i'm going to go see if i can help this lady out a little bit more, you guys. >> evangelical christian academy is a school unlike any other, with the prevailing emphasis on the transformative power of god. the school's football program is led by famed head coach and pastor denny duran. the school has won 14 state championships and is
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one of the top springboards into the nfl, and his program is highlighted in the fox nation show god, family, football. and coach dave doeren joins me now. coach, great to see you again. we've talked on several occasions. i should point out for the audience, you play biggest ball in louisiana. you play the big schools, the big public schools, and you win. but as you pointed out to me, and as you're showing on your fox nation special, you're winning by bringing up real men who understand the power of faith. >> yeah, our our football program has always been a springboard for ministry, always giving us an opportunity to be able to speak directly into young men's lives and to the real issues that they face. and i think the thing that i love about this series, will, is the fact that we don't dodge the issues, we don't present the sanitized version of our team. these kids are going through the same things that their friends are going through in the streets or at home with their girlfriends or in the
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classroom, and we face those issues head on. i don't ever get to see the shows until they're already done. yeah, so the season is already done before i even view it. so i'm seeing it when everybody else is. and all i can tell you is i am just so impressed with the product that fox nation has been able to put out, along with our wonderful creator and director, aaron benward. it's it moves, it's riveting, but it's also so real. >> well, you've got the you've got the, the football angle, which is compelling in and of itself. but as you point out, you're dealing with real problems. i met one right here in the studio. i met one of your players, if i remember correctly, coach, he was dealing with a brother who was diagnosed with cancer, if i remember that correctly. give me an example of some of the issues you're talking about. you deal. you deal with real life issues. >> well, right now it's very, very common for high school kids to smoke pot. and just because we're a christian
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school and they they pass through gates every day that have evangel christian academy over them, that doesn't mean that these kids don't fight that kind of temptation. so right, in the context of the show, we talk about drugs and we talk about how these kids are giving in to peer pressure and what the answer is. we also deal with a lot of grace with these kids, because if there's one thing that young people need to know is that adults really believe in them, right? and that we're not holier than thou, not now. or when we were their age and we were able, in our journey to find a god who could see us through, and they're going to find a god who can see them through as well. >> you're doing great things with these young men, great things in louisiana, and a great show on fox nation. god, family, football coach darren, thank you so much. all right. that's all for tonight. catch me on fox and friends weekend tomorrow morning or the will cain show every monday through thursday on fox news.

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