tv The Ingraham Angle FOX News January 21, 2025 4:00pm-5:00pm PST
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♪ young man. [cheers] >> bret: he stole the show there. tomorrow on "special report," president trump says china controls the panama canal. we will take you there. remember, if you can't catch us live, set your dvr, 6:00 p.m. in the east, 3:00 p.m. on the west coast. follow me on instagram and x at bret baier for exclusive behind the scenes content. every once in a while we will be here on the north lawn of the white house. thanks for inviting us into your home tonight. that's it for this "special report," fair, balanced and still unafraid. "the ingraham angle" starts now. ♪ >> laura: good evening, everyone. i'm laura ingraham. this is "the ingraham angle" from washington tonight. thanks so much for joining us. promises made, promises kept.
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that's the focus of tonight's angle. >> what a breathtaking 36 hours. ♪ young man ♪ there's no need to feel down ♪ i said young man ♪ get yourself off the ground. >> laura: on the campaign trail he promised to never stop working for you. i don't think we have ever seen a president who packed more into one day. [cheers and applause] ♪ ♪ >> protect and defend. >> the constitution of the united states. >> the constitution of the united states. >> now, we just had a great
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time. we just had a great day. >> join me in raising a glass to the president of the united states, president donald trump. >> here here. >> that's a big one. a lot of big ones, huh? ♪ ♪ >> there has never been a first day like yesterday. >> laura: holy cow. the past few days have been like a bracing but kind of welcome shock to the system because we basically have had no president for the last four years. all we had was a sad old man who they shuffled out to read some things and then who was shuttled back off the stage or the platform and then he was put back into hiding. but yesterday and today and for the next four years, we're going to see a real president.
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and i was blessed to have had a bird's eye view of history. [applause] [applause] ♪ >> laura: now, people talk so much about how a president, look, can he get a lot done in the first 100 days? i was thinking about this today and watching what has happened over the last 36 hours. and we have to all just think of it this way. trump is built differently. because donald trump focuses on getting as much done -- this means pushing his staff by the way. but getting as much done as possible every single day. and, of course, you still make the time to go three balls at the end of that day. trump is an original. when, before we had a president who, you know, could take a question every six months from the press? we had a president yesterday who signed stacks of executive orders.
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and actually answered questions at the same time. it was a sight to behold. jesse watters were watching it. it was during both of our shows and the shows got cut short but it was unbelievable. then you have to ask really why are so many people feeling positive right now? because i think most of us felt the deep sense of unease and real anxiety and the world as it is an actual not having an actual president capable of confronting crises and making critical decisions in the white house. having a strong leader in charge and a confident white house staff was something america really missed. what about transparency. trump told us what he was going to do and now he is in the process of doing it. now, contrast that to biden world where covering up was their m.o. they didn't just cover up his mental condition though. they lied about the condition of the economy, the truth about the
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border, the truth about the war in ukraine. it was one giant cover-up. but trump is telling you what he is thinking on all the issues. even if you don't always agree, he puts it out there. >> do you want to keep h 1 bs? >> i like both sides of the argument but i also like very competent people coming into our country. i'm not just talking about engineers and talking about people at all levels. mate that des. wine experts. even waiters. high quality waiters fern worker issue as we have in the past and do that in coming days and weeks. were dems in the press able to land a glove on trump today? no, but they did sputter. >> it's a golden age for these fat cats but democrats are fighting for you. >> his first actions as president haven't done what he promised voters he would do. >> the very heart of what the
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american voter told us they wanted. >> this white house is about one simple thing. if you storm the capitol in his name to keep him in power, heel help you. >> now, what they are really mad about it's not the pardons, the j 6ers. obviously biden set a much more dangerous precedent. they are mad that he is actually delivering on his promises one by one including bring jobs softbank, open ai and oracle all plan to work together and $500 billion investment in ai infrastructure. >> this is a beginning of the golden age. we will decided unless you want. we will immediately start deploying $100 billion with the goal of making $500 billion within the next four years.
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>> laura: you heard them. they wouldn't have done this if trump had not won. so the pace here is astounding from his executive orders on gender and dei. leaving the who, exiting the climate accord, plus, he ordered a review of our trade policies. it hasn't got as much attention. it is being done across government and individual agencies have to report back on april 1st. that will pave the way and very smart way for new tariffs. but, every one of these orders was well executed all signed off by lawyers with the ultimate goal, of course, withstanding legal challenge and there will be many. there are already legal challenges. but don't take what we have seen in trump's first 36 hours for granted. this all takes real work. hundreds of hours of work by teams of people. and they were able to pull it off because his staff is devoted and competent and motivated.
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americans just want a return to excellence, to merit, and they got it with trump 47. isn't it great to have a real president again. and that's the angle. joining me now is jonathan hurley, george washington university law professor, fox news contributor. professor, moments ago, president trump signed another executive order. this one ending what they call illegal dei. the white house says this will terminate radical dei preferencing and federal contracting. and direct federal agencies to combat private sector discrimination. professor, how soon will we start seeing legal challenges to this? >> >> ha ha. well, we saw a flurry of legal challenges immediately after trump took office. but it's going to take more than a legal flash mob to reverse some of these measures to some
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degree trump has been advantaged with the fact that we have had divided government in congress. which meant many of the things that president biden did, did he with executive orders. and what you can do by an executive order you can usually undo by executive order. but, this is really a flurry of executive orders that we're all trying to keep up with. i did glance at that recently minted eo, and it's very interesting. one of the things that he asks the department of education and the justice department to look at is to fully enforce the harvard decision by the supreme court. that was the decision that ended affirmative action in the admissions process. there have been complaints that universities had already prepared for the next round, to circumvent the impact of that decision. trump is ordering the departments to get on that, to use their powers, including their investigatory powers to determine if there is
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circumvention occurring. and that is the view of some, after the supreme court handed down its historic ruling. >> laura: and, jonathan, he also wants his new attorney general, assuming pam bondi, i'm sure she will get confirmed, to review all activities of all departments in the federal government over the last four years and identify any instances where the department or agency's conduct appears to have been contrary to the purposes and policies of the order and this is about the weaponization of government asking for appropriate remedial actions to be taken. now, this is a big order and some would say it might be a tiny bit general. but nevertheless, it makes a statement about what the trump family associates have endured over the past, really, you know, nine years. >> once again, this is within the navigational beacons for
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executive orders. they don't have binding legal authority. they are basically directions to federal agencies. >> this is a president who really is building on his first term. if you recall, when he first came into office, he was -- came face to face with an acting attorney general who ordered the entire department to stand down and not assist him in his immigration policy reforms. i consider that order by the way to be grossly inappropriate. and she ultimately, as she had planned, left office. but, trump had spent his first term dealing with a lot of this resistance from within the agencies. that's why he is moving very quickly on not just weaponization, but also to remind all the employees that it is their duty to carry out constitutional lawful orders of the president regardless of whether they disagree with his policies. >> laura: in rescheduling federal employees for the viewing audience, that's an
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entirely new way of eliminating federal workers by, quote: rescheduling them, which is another way of approaching government cuts. and a lot of these agencies, the president believes are bloated and just looted with people the. they didn't come to work for the last four years and no one really noticed. >> right. that has already been challenged. the thrust of that challenge is that other federal laws guarantee due process. and that by redesignating them, you are cutting back on legislative changes. a lot of these efforts are meant to slow things down including the challenge to doge. you know, the challenge there is that is to say what is doge? and what the challenge insists it's an advisory committee. an advisory committees have to be open and balanced. but they are a bit premature. they pulled that trigger in my view too quickly. doge is very much a work in progress. but the other problem that they
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are going to have is they can throw sand in those works. but congress has a parallel doge effort going on. they are not going to be delayed by litigation. so, i'm not too sure how successful these initial attacks are going to be. >> laura: well, jonathan, this will be a pace that we haven't seen in -- i don't think we didn't see it first term. but they know the territory now. they know the challenges. and do you agree with my assessment that each of these orders was reviewed by their legal team and they understood that these lawsuits were going to be challenged and i don't think a single one of them was issued without that in mind. >> no, these are obviously well prepared eos, and some of them, by the way, may be intending to start a fight. the eo on birthright citizenship. may be an effort to get this into the court. there is that sweet spot for a
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two term president. the first two years you really have to put a score on the board before halftime. because those last two years the pace slows down considerably. and so they may want this in court so that they can get that resolved and, if necessary, start a constitutional amendment process. >> laura: jonathan, always great to see you. thank you very much. >> this has been the most transparent government, most transparent administration that we have seen in a very, very long time. >> his objective and his commitment is to bring transparency and truth back to government. >> laura: promises made, promises broken. well no one ever expected obama or biden to be transparent with the american people. they don't even like most of the american people. ryu teenly ignored the press and only called on reporters if his aides gave him, you know, a card with a very specific list of names and probably new a lot of
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the questions or the gist of a lot of the questions ahead of time. but what about donald trump? well, he is not afraid of questions. >> does biden ever do news conferences like this? how many news conferences, peter, has he done like this? >> like this? >> none. >> zero. >> and it would be zero for the next infinity for infinity it would be zero. >> laura: yeah. so, as i mentioned earlier, like almost 50 minutes last night, trump signed executive orders, took questions at the same time. and then today he went out again in front of the media and again took questions. >> update on the gaza cease-fire and are you planning to travel to the middle east soon? >> keep sending weapons to ukraine or are you going to send a turn off the tap soon? >> laura: this is just completely, again, a shock to the system. it's a new era of transparency. and even some old foes have to
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admit it. >> you wanted to set a contrast with biden, you know, by going sort of having this rolling press conference. i actually think it's refreshing for presidents to be -- i mean, i was among those who was critical of the lack of exposure of president biden and i think it's good for presidents to be exposed. >> laura: joining me now alina habba counselor to president trump and i was able to see her last night in our really uncomfortable shoes standing at the bar. i'm still in pain. >> laura: first of all, your parents have adopted me so i'm just saying i love your parents. they are amazing people. >> they let me know. >> laura: incredible. thank you for sharing them. but, will the president commit alina, to doing press conferences every week, every two weeks, to continue what he says is going to be the most transparent administration?
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it seems like no problem for him. >> first of all, he doesn't need to commit it. i think he has shown everybody today yesterday, the minute that he was sworn in he got to work. actually we have been working since he was elected on novembe. nobody speaks better about the president's thoughts, policies than president donald trump himself. that's the truth of it. we can all spin and do whatever. we finally have a president, laura, and we have somebody who is not afraid to answer tough questions himself directly from the boss' mouth. and it's just been tremendous. being there, seeing how hard everybody's is working. these e.o.s coming out. reversing the damage that's been done and putting important things first, america first, frankly. it's just been great. is he going to be doing this a lot. this is president trump's way. it's his words. you don't have to hear it from anybody else. >> laura: i call it a shock to the system. but i actually think we got so used to a president in hiding
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and then aides kind of covering that up that you almost forgot what it was like to have a real president. so i think people are going to take a little while to get used to that again but in a good way. now, the executive order alina declaring two genders, i mean, it seems obvious to most people. but it set off one of the nbc reporters. here is what she, quote, reported? >> a legal expert told me that if you are someone who is transgender who has a passport that maybe has gender x on it they would caution you not to leave the country because you could literally be detained by border agents because you couldn't have your gender into the system if the trump administration is no longer identifying it. >> laura: alina, is that fear well-founded? >> yes. and you are going to be shipped to mars. i mean, they are fear-mongering. this is what we know they do. this is why cnn's ratings are so low. if they started arguing about
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facts, we would be much better. it's all the same. there is left wing, radical left wing media is giving you fake facts so that you think my god what is president trump doing? you know what we're doing? we're restoring america. it's based in god. we were made a man, a many would. we are not letting boys in girls bathroom and vice versa. making you go to schools and get jobs based on merit not on the identity. making people worry that they have to check a box and be an other. we're getting america back. people need to have faith in that. and this is not a fear-mongering thing. it's taking us to a simpler, more constitutionally protected america. it's the america we know. we haven't seen it for a while. he is getting us back there very quickly. >> laura: all right, alina, great to see you. get some rest or a little bit. thanks so much. >> thank you. >> laura: all right. just ahead, trump is keeping his promises, including cracking down on birthright citizenship. the legalityge next.
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grounds. people have wanted to do this for decades. >> laura: of course, the idea as a policy matter is completely correct. obvious, the idea that a child born here should automatically get u.s. citizenship even when neither parent is a u.s. citizen it's invited huge fraud upon our system. birth motels in new york and california. even has a name. birth tourism. the 14th amendment of the constitution does present a legal hurdle for the president. now, the supreme court hasn't definitively ruled on this yet. and 18 blue states and the aclu are already suing. the 1st amendment question. joining us now is missouri senator eric schmitt. senator, as a former state attorney general, this is going to, obviously, be subject to litigation. the court has not definitively ruled on this yet.
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but, knowing this court, i'm not sure how it would come out. i tend to think it might come out against what the president and all of us would like. but, why was it important for president trump to issue this order? >> well, it's addressing a real perverse incentive that exists. whether it's remain in mexico. making mexico the incentive of catch and release. that's an obvious one. here on birthright citizenship it has presented birth right incentive come here illegally and have a child at that point that child would be a citizen under that interpretation. here's why that is wrong. senator howard, who was the author of that amendment was very specific. he is quoted he has written about it. it wasn't intended for illegal aliens. wasn't intended for people here lawfully who had children like ambassadors. he was clear that's the intent behind it. s it with a specifically meant to address the dred scott case which the dred scott case said effectively that slaves were not citizens. they weren't -- they didn't -- they weren't subject to the rights. they didn't get to enjoy the
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rights and provision and immunities of being a citizen. it meant to address that specific issue at that moment in time. judge posner of the seventh circuit who never could be considered a friend of conservatives on these issues he agrees with that interpretation this wouldn't apply. also harry reid who is no friend to conservatives also agreed that this is not intended to be for children of illegal immigrants. so you are right. it's going to get litigated. i think president trump spoke very clearly on this and i'm glad that he did. >> laura: all about how you interpret the phrase and subject to the jurisdiction thereof. >> correct. >> laura: so it will be fascinating to see how this plays out. i think this is going all the way to the supreme court. >> laura: arizona, apparently doesn't really know the people she actually represents, watch this. >> i don't think that voters in arizona, whoever they voted for, ever thought that they would be voting to, really voting to
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undermine birthright citizenship or to destroy birthright citizenship. >> laura: senator, this is a very lopsided issue that runs against the democrats. that's a democrat state attorney general. does this not confirm in people's mind the idea that democrats put illegal immigrants first and not american citizcitizensrights? >> they don't understand by that quote what november 5th, 2024 was all about. president trump, saw him on the campaign trail. i spent a lot of time with him on the campaign trail. he spoke about illegal immigration all the time. he would talk about this issue all the time. there are 50 million people here illegally because we have created an incentive structure for them to come. they get taxpayer benefits. there's no wall to prevent them from coming. mexico is no longer the waiting room. so the american people knew exactly what they were doing when they voted for president trump. they wanted to end this invasion at the southern border. you would think the attorney general of a border state would
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understand it but, again, i think it goes to how out of touch these democrats are on the issues that matter to real people. >> laura: senator, great to see you. thank you very much. >> thank you, laura. >> laura: when we come out. the foe outrage of democrats on the january 6th pardons. what it really means. coming up. ♪ (♪) my back got injured very bad. i was off work for about a year. i heard about relief factor from my wife. i took it every day,
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she came out to family and supporters and putting on a trump hat. >> that is their biggest fear a group of people out on the streets who have shown a willingness to do -- to use violence in the name of donald trump. >> laura: they found their new resistance line. they're back at it. where was their demand for jail time and their outrage when the george floyd rioters burned down american cities? they did billions in damage coast to coast. several people, i think more than a dozen died. and if they are really worried about unprecedented use of pardons, why aren't they pressing the issue of a president preemptively pardoning his family members and their spouses almost entire congressional committee from getting pardoned.
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from parent point of view here four years since january 6th. he wants to put this entire episode behind us. clearly a small minority who engaged in violence. the overwhelming majority were charged with misdemeanors, with trespassing and parading in the capitol. plus were defendants given their due process rights is another argument, considering the mysteriously missing potentially exculpatory evidence in the case. >> the national archives and records administration wants to know how the secret service lost text messages linked to the assault on the capitol. the agency confirmed yesterday that the messages cannot be recovered. how convenient cannot be recovered. two of the beneficiaries of trump's pardons. brandon and isabella de lucca. brandon do you believe that you and i know the answer to this but i don't think our viewers do, but when it went down and remind us of what you were
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charged with that you were given a fair trial? >> no. my case was a lie from the very beginning. i stood outside of the east side of the capitol for 8 minutes shooting a video when i arrived there were no police officers on the east side of the building. nobody was righ rioting, nobodys committing violence or destroying windows and the doors of the capitol were open. i stood outside of the building 8 minutes shooting a video. i never entered the capitol. never engaged in any violence theft or destruction because of who i am and the success of my movement the walk away movement they decided to come at me hard. two and a half weeks after i posted that video the fbi raided my home at dawn. got meet out of bed and put me in handcuffs began stripping my apartment of thumb drives, camera equipment put me in handcuffs and put me in jail. i learned they were charging with me with two felonies and misdemeanor and adding the 1512 obstruction of an official proceeding felony i was facing 30 to 35 years in prison for the
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8 minutes that i stood nonviolently outside of the capitol. to make this entire thing stick, they created this story that i stood outside of the capitol shouting go, go, go. to encourage people to enter the building and take it, take it encourage people to take a shield from an officer. did i no such thing. it never happened. nonetheless i took a misdemeanor plea deal rather than choosing to go to trial. part of my misdemeanor plea deal was signing their statement of offense saying that i did those things. when i did not do those things a will the of people signed the admissions of guilt because they didn't want to go to jail for 30 years. isabella, congressman raskin of the j 6 committee says that his pardon from biden is completely different from yours and other j 6 defendants. watch. >> the people who were pardoned the morning were pardoned because we were innocent and donald trump was threatening liz cheney and bennie thompson and others with fraudulent political
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prosecutions. the people who were just pardoned a little while ago were pardoned because they were guilty. >> laura: isabella, your reaction to that given what you were charged with, tell me, first of all, what you were charged with and why raskin is off base here? >> yeah. so i was charged back in march of 2024 with theft of government property for touching a table. they accused me of stealing. >> laura: you were touching a what? >> touching a table. they accused me of stealing the table. they charged me with trespassing and obstruction of a government proceeding. but, based on what congressman raskin had said i think there is a big problem when the people who were prosecuting the januard before the people who were actually persecuted for january 6th. >> laura: i'm trying to get my head around take the table. did you remove a table from the
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capitol? >> no. i touched a table. like i put my hand on a table and they accused me of stealing the table. theft of government property. and they came to me with a plea deal the day before the election saying that if i pled guilty to stealing the table, carried a maximum sentence of one year in prison and $100,000 fine that they would drop my trespassing charges. >> laura: this is -- brandon, you have been on me for years on this. i'm so glad you told your story. isabella, we will continue covering this because i think actually people have to really understand what happens with these prosecutors and how these cases go down. because this could happen again unless this is prevented from happening again. brandon, isabella, both of you, again, we will continue telling these stories and yours is important. thank you. >> thank you. >> thank you. >> laura: coming up, a woke bishop tries to lecture president trump and his family. supposed to be a national prayer service but, yes, it was another
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inauguration. and it happens at the washington cathedral. but rather than a christian service about god and country, they were forced to listen to the rantings of a lunatic. >> in the name of our god, i ask you to have mercy upon the people in our country who are scared now. there are gay, lesbian and transgender children in democratic, republican, and independent families. some who fear for their lives. >> laura: and her diatribe didn't stop there. >> and the people, the people who pick our crops and clean our office buildings, who labor in poultry farms and meat packing plants wash our dishes after we eat at restaurants and work the night shifts in hospitals, they may not be citizens or have the
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proper documentation, but the vast majority of immigrants are not criminals. i ask you to have mercy, mr. president, on those in our communities whose children fear that their parents will be taken away. >> laura: joining me now for reaction is fox news contributor raymond arroyo. the faces of the trump and vance families. j.d. vance, i think he had the best. but, tell me what you saw there. >> well, it looked like a fowl smell had been released into the national cathedral. and maybe it had. look at trump's face there. it's hilarious. they were having none of it. and for this bishop to use this moment, laura, that's supposed to be an interfaith prayer service into a political lecture it's really a misuse of religion here. and i mean, you know, they came together. the trump family, the vance family. they came to pray for the nation. not to be lectured by this woman who looks like kate mckinnon
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after the rainstorm. she is a mess. the speech was a complete like propaganda you would hear on union square. >> laura: like an old npr all things considered. you expected npr music. the people who pick our crops. the americans, let's just say in their view, american citizens they don't get the courtesy of having -- you can't have compassion for them. only have compassion for the people who cross our border illegally. if you don't you are not a good christian. it's ridiculous. after we are done, raymond, trump reacted to the service like this. >> message of a call for justice, for swift justice for george floyd, for systemic justice for black and brown people who have been under the knee of this country in ways that we have witnessed time and again. >> what is your message to president trump today? >> i have given up speaking to president trump. we need to replace president
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trump. we need leadership that will lead us in the way in this country deserves? lawyer. >> that wasn't trump. >> that was episcopal bishop mariann edgar budde. the inaugural committee should have bailed the moment they saw she was leading this prayer service. she has always been more politician than preacher, laura. look, when you unpack her strident hatred of president trump, i don't know why they put him in this position frankly. he should not have been in the room with this. they should have moved the basilica of national shine got a nice bishop to come out plenty. we need to pray not prey on the president. >> laura: raymond, anyone lecturing us about the george floyd, you know riots that -- with justice for george floyd when it was destroying people's communities and livelihoods, in one of those n 59d masks mask
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with a vent. that brings back such a nightmare vision to see some liberal individual screaming through a mask we document leave that behind. that was 2020 the bishop. >> raymond: if we had that reaction to entrepreneurship though after the service. >> laura: do we have it. >> you alluded to this early on in your angle. he comes out and just says it like it is. he is not holding back. this term he is in the going to hold back at all. >> laura: i guess we don't have that soundbite. so, that's all right. we can just do this. oh, okay. we do have it. go ahead, go play it. >> what did you think of the service? >> what did you think? did you like it? did you find it exciting? not too exciting, was it? i didn't think it was a good service, no. they could do much better. >> laura: that was under stated, raymond, that was under stated
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for trump 245689 was a cool, kind of he throwing some shade but not the full trump shade. he was playing it cool there. >> that's not the quite the yelp review the national cathedral. it's uncomfortable to put him there and his family in that position. >> laura: we don't want to elevate this anymore. i thought that was so egregious, raymond, and so out of touch and i know a lot of documentations are struggle beginning to put people in the pews. >> that one in particular. >> laura: i can't imagine the national cathedral is attracting thongs tractingthrongs of worsh. >> it's a sour note at the end of a beautiful inaugural weekend that invoked the 80s and triumphant ascendant america. then you get this trumpy sour
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puss. >> laura: throw back to the 70s. high school 1977, that's what it looked like to me. all right, raymond, thank you for that sorry about the bumpy ride with the elements. trump making a big move to make america healthy, coming up. ♪ you can rely on us for energy to power your growing economy and for critical minerals crucial to new technologies. we're here, right by your side. [title: ontario, canada] [title: ontario.ca/partner] [title: paid for by the government of ontario]
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to do because some of the early drafts tell you everything you need to know. requiring countries to identify and combat disinformation. so basically, our whole show would be persona non grata during the pandemic when we talked about masks and the shot and mandates. joining me now is a doctor and cardiologist. dr., you and i would have not been anywhere. we would not have been on television from february of 2020 through 2022 under this draft of the pandemic treaty. of course we shouldn't be there in this nonsense. >> the tipping point was that the global protests and the world health assembly last summer. the entire world is rejecting this international health regulations and pandemic treaty alliance. >> you know that people like bill gates are very serious about having global surveillance r and when they say surveillance, they mean
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reporting of data and so forth. on the surface that seems like it would be fine, correct? but when you get into disinformation and misinformation, given what she was saying at the early stage of the pandemic with the wet market and masks and social distancing, all of that turned out to be disinformation. >> we need bio surveillance but we need surveillance of bio labs that are creating dangerous pathogens. not surveillance on one another. and i tell you, i think the response back from the w.h.o. to trump said it all. in their letter they said they had been working on accountability, transparency and cost-effectiveness for seven years. laura, they just got a 20% budget cut. >> people don't realize this fact dr., but the w.h.o. cactus from the united states, and we are the biggest funder.
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$1.28 billion with a b. and their concern ahead of the w.h.o., that we need health, quote, equity. that is the main focus. does that mean? >> the w.h.o. is a global money pit is what it is. we have plenty of capabilities at the cdc. our health care is not influenced at all by the w.h.o. in the united states. >> it's absolutely insane. dr., i haven't seen you in a long time, great to see you. thank you for everything you have done on the subject. that is it for us tonight, or member to follow me, get on instagram. all of the hijinks and the adventures of the inauguration three days, all there. jesse watters takes it up next. >> jesse: welcome to "jesse watters primetime". tonight... >> these people serve years of
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