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tv   The Five  FOX News  January 29, 2025 2:00pm-3:00pm PST

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and how strong she is. jenny has been at my side this entire time and what an absolute humbling honor to have a chance to represent the fighting men and women of this country. so as a sigh of relief that one process was over, will, hug my family and say we are in this together and i know you wanted to be there, brother, so you will get that interview, i will salute, that is going to happen. >> will: all right, thank you so much. i knew and i know you had to get straight to work and we appreciate the work you are doing for america. your new secretary of defense, pete hegseth. thank you. all right, there you have it, there is your first exclusive interview. didn't know it was going to happen today or we would have promoted it a little bit but i promise we will getting more interviews, and giving them to you hear from the heart of america, getting to the heart of what matters. here on "the will cain show." next up, "the five." ♪ ♪
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>> dana: hello, everyone, you guys, we're starting, dana to read all of the judging. jessica jessica tarlov, -- this is "the five." ♪ ♪ okay there was some serious fireworks on capitol hill is present trump's hhs nominee rfk jr. testified at his nomination hearing, outlining his quest to make america healthy again by ending the chronic disease epidemic but that wasn't all, watch. >> the first thing i have done every morning for the past 20 years is to get on my knees and pray to god that he would put me in a position to end the chronic disease epidemic and to help america's children. i don't want to take food away from anybody. if you like a cheeseburger -- a mcdonald's cheeseburger or a diet coke, which my boss loves -- [laughter] you should be able to get them. >> news reports have claimed
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that i'm anti-vaccine or anti-industry. i am neither. i am pro-safety. >> dana: that answer on vaccine was not good enough for some senate democrats, with rfk jr. spent most of the hearing sparring with them. >> the receipts show that mr. kennedy has embraced conspiracy theories, quacks, charlatans, especially when it comes to the safety and efficacy of vaccines. >> do you accept even a scintilla -- just even a sliver of responsibility for the drop in vaccinations and the subsequent deaths of more than 70 people? anything you do differently? >> absolutely not. >> and frankly, you frighten people. >> you are supportive of these? >> i'm supportive of vaccines. >> are you supportive of this
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clothing which is anti-vaccine. >> i am supportive of vaccines. >> dana: greg, you love that one guy, ron wyden. >> greg: ron wyden questioning anybody about health, look at that guy. he makes joe biden look like the rock. by the way, none of these idiots could pass judgment on fitness to serve. they swore biden was fit to serve, and he was a wind sock, so either they were lying then and they are lying now, or they believed it and that means they are categorically insane. this stuff no longer flies. we are in a new world here, whether social media people -- people already know this stuff. the circus, as always, adds nothing and only subtracts peered look at him, i can't even look at him. we are talking about onesies
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here. i stopped wearing those years ago. rfk is a glorious mixed bag. on one hand, he is passionate, he is persuasive, he is open-minded, he is not woke, he is interested in the world around him not himself. on the other hand he has stuff on vaccines and autism that seems more reliant on his gut instinct and science, the correlation, the rise of childhood autism or autism and the use of vaccine, it is not cause and effect, it is a correlation. a lot of things can happen at the same time. i can have beans for lunch and jesse could break wind, but you will think it was me, but there is no cause and effect, only correlation because he did it right after me. so he does raise good points, and i like the fact -- we need people to raise questions. that is what the senate doesn't do. i want to know why when i was growing up we were swimming and peanut butter. we put peanut butter on peanut butter. and now, like everybody, everybody is allergic to it. but if i were in the senate, and who is to say i'm not? i would vote for him. because he is in the pirate ship and he rode really hard on that
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ship, and we should throw our commitment behind the crew who gave republicans the most definitive mandate they have had in recent history. all republicans should say yes. i love the idea of this eclectic, free thinking renegades. the reason this group is so important -- they remind me of the founders, jesse, you remember them, right? the reason you have to back these guys, they shared the risk. the people who shared the risk deserve in return that you back them. or it is not risk sharing. it is a two-way street. it is reciprocity. if you have their back, they have yours. you might not like half of the things he said, not might not like 20% of the things he does but this is not a tight grp of elites governed by lockstep. this was a movement that was bottoms up and these guys know it. this isn't like a union or blm where it is three people controlling everything. this political people is an
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actual populist movement, and the people up front understand that, and i think we owe them to vote yes, even if you disagree with little things about that, or even big things. i still have problems with the autism stuff. >> dana: jesse, your name was brought up several times peered. >> jesse: he who smelt it dealt it. [laughter] i want to tell you a little story about jimmy. jimmy wakes up in the morning and both parents work so they don't have time to make him eggs and he has frosted flakes and fruit juice. so he goes to school and he is all hopped up on sugar and then he crashes, school lunch program, grilled cheese, cheetos, cherry coke, hopped up and then crashes peered this kid must be bipolar or adhd, he got to medicate him, so he is medicated. then he doesn't really do recess because he is looking at his own the whole time. after-school program he is inside. he goes home and since his parents are helicopter parents they don't let him outside to play in the neighborhood because
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they are worried about pedophiles so he goes inside in front of the television till his parents come home and they are too busy because their back from work so they order take out more fried food, and then he sits in front of his ipad before he goes to sleep and he doesn't get a good sleep because he has had screen time all day, no sunlight, and no exercise. and this cycle repeats itself for years. until he is single, suicidal, overmedicated and fat, sick, lonely, and depressed. and then he turns on tv because he wants to see what kennedy has to say about making america healthy again and what does he see? he sees disgusting looking senators who are funded by industry cutting him off so he can't even hear what the guy has to say. there are millions of jimmies out there in this country. they have been neglected. they have been preyed upon. and they want to get healthy but they don't have the knowledge, the support system, or the environment to make it happen.
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rfk jr. is not a perfect person. none of the great leaders are, but he is the perfect person because he has the knowledge, experience, skills, and passion to get inside the government and turn this chronic disease epidemic around because this is not just an economic issue. it is a spiritual issue. >> dana: judge jeanine, i know that you know him a little bit and i'm sure you watch today. >> judge jeanine: i did watch. this goes jan politics. this about our humanity. he put party aside to join donald trump because he believed that donald trump was the best shot at making america healthy again. and everybody knows, historians know that if you are looking for reform, you need a radical. and rfk is a radical. i worked with him when he had the environmental program when i was a d.a. in westchester. he had a great program.
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i started in environmental crimes unit as a result of working with him. and he said i was the only republican that ever worked with him, which i found was shocking. but the truth is i am so disgusted that in 2025 we are so divided in america that we can't have a reasonable conversation about being healthy and being fit. why all of a sudden is this guy subjected to all kinds of craziness? he went into the lion's den. he didn't care. he is willing to go into the lion's den to take the attacks peered i saw assaults today by a guy, they talked over him, yelled at him, interrupted him,s a problem with his voice so he couldn't really come back at them and they took advantage -- >> dana: that wasn't fair. >> judge jeanine: but the truth is these senators are bought and paid for by the lobbyists, big pharma, big egg, pharmaceutical companies. you look at them, wyden in particular, how much money does he get from the pharmaceutical companies? this is a guy who is going
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against the grain. this is a guy who is saying, you know what, i am concerned about the fact that we've got 60% higher medicaid costs than we had four years ago. no other country has got that. he percent of american adults are over obese, why is the united states not illuminating r cancer-causing ingredients thats illuminating from candy? and as jesse said from cereal. the bottom line is rfk is exactly who we need peered xavier becerra was the last head of health and human services, what the hell did he do? what difference did he make? this guy is going to make a difference. >> dana: jessica? >> jessica: you guys are conveniently ignoring the fact that there were a number of republican senators that are clearly very skeptical of rfk jr. as the nominee. listen to senator cassidy's line of questioning, which exposed the fact that rfk jr. didn't understand basic facts about how the medicaid program works in this country. who is eligible, if there are premiums or not.
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that is fundamental to it. listen to james lankford, who is concerned about the fact that he was pro-life 20 minutes ago, before donald trump offered him the opportunity to have a ton of power. and you say all these senators are bought and paid for by big pharma, show me where bernie sanders got a payout from big pharma, or elizabeth warren. come on. >> judge jeanine: what has bernie sanders done for my health or my kids health? >> jessica: moved to vermont, have a conversation with one of bernie sanders can deliver for you, but don't be so dishonest about it. this felt like the first hearing to me were all of the senators where all of the senators or 99% took it seriously and had real questions but that is because the range of awfulness or insanity that is on display in rfk jr. is so broad and sweeping. you have everything from the anti-vax stuff, which he loves to deny but they had him on tape over and over again in a lex friedman podcast, raphael warnock quoting him back, things like saying that lyme disease is
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a materially engineered by a weapon, pesticides are turning your kids trans. he is the man for the moment -- he can say whatever he wants today. point is he is on record having said these things. and elizabeth warren, i get the tone got a little high-pitched. but she is talking about "the wall street journal" did a big piece about this this week that he has been referring clients to this specific law firm, making millions of dollars off of people that are suing vaccine and drugmakers. we all at this table know how important vaccines are. mitch mcconnell, we will see what he does as someone who had polio. this is a guy talking about vaccines leading to autism, which greg i appreciate that you are skeptical of, but i thought that this was a display of excellent questioning from across the political spectrum. cassidy, warnock, i thought grassley was really good. he went three very serious list of concerns and said tell me where you disagree with anything that i have said. michael bennet, maggie hassan, the righteous anger frankly that democrats want to see in this
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because he didn't understand, no one mentioned putting birds in blenders and bear cubs out in central park -- brain worms. >> dana: we are out of time. up next, present trump rolling out another game changing way to gut the bloat in our government. it would be called a buyout. ♪ ♪ that the pregnancy test that i was holding was positive. it was so beyond the feeling of anxiety or of overwhelm. i just fell to my knees and i just said, god, you have to take this. and that was one of the first time in a few months that i opened up hallow. i surrendered everything to jesus. and i heard clearly these words. his name is luke. through surrender. i chose life and was led to adoption. luke is the best thing that ever happened to me. liberty mutual customized my car insurance so i saved hundreds. with the money i saved i thought i'd get a wax figure of myself.
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♪ ♪ >> judge jeanine: another trump tornado newsday to get to. the president offering 2 million federal workers a buyout, the chance to take a deferred resignation with a severance package of eight months of pay and benefits. the white house believes the
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move could save taxpayers up to $100 million a year. they are also tweaking the order to freeze federal aid, saying it is simply a rescission of the omb memo president trump explaining more. >> i'm restating right now to correct any confusion that the media has purposely and somehow for whatever reason created. social security, medicare, medicaid have not been affected by any action we are taking in any way, shape, or form. we are merely looking at parts of the big bureaucracy where there has been tremendous waste and fraud and abuse. and that process we identified and stopped $50 million being sent to gaza to buy condoms for her loss. $50 million peered and you know what has happened to them? they have used them as a method of making bombs. how about that? >> judge jeanine: but
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democrats like chuck schumer are getting a little too excited by the funding freeze. >> people are aroused. i haven't seen people so aroused in a very, very long time, in terms of going, trying to get this done, so yes, i think democracy will have an effect and we are going to keep at it. >> judge jeanine: all right, let me start with the job thing, jesse. since when does an individual who was hired to work in the office decide or return to work is too much to ask? and why would joe biden sign an executive order allowing these people to stay-at-home and work remotely until 2029? >> jesse: of "the view" has 150 staff. "the five" has 13. so on "the view closed mack they will have three producers in charge of putting photos on the screen. now on our show we have a producer that does that and doesn't like 17 other things.
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same show, same format but they have a bloated staff. if you were to offer to buy out half of the 150 staffers at "the view" and they took it, you wouldn't as a viewer know the difference by looking at the on air product. nothing would change. in fact i would argue that the chemistry behind the scenes at "the view" would improve because people would be working harder. why don't we do that in the government? they do that at cnn, gm, tesla, they lay off people to streamline and cut costs but we don't do it in the federal government? why not? let let's just say they take ths buyout, it is more generous than any other buyout in the private sector. eight months full severance and benefits? that's crazy not to take that. we are getting worst service from the federal government. is anybody happy with how fema is doing? female was skipping homes with trump lawn signs. is anybody happy with the va? they were having orgies at
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hospitals, judge. medicaid lose $100 billion a year and fraud and they don't even see it. so i would argue that if you just slashed some of this workforce through severance by outs, you wouldn't notice a different. in fact, it might actually make the services for the federal government improve. >> judge jeanine: and you know, jessica, the president indicated people take advantage because if they do, they leave s smaller. what he said was eerily similar what elon musk said. elon musk reduce the workforce at x, yet he was able to run it just as efficiently. >> jessica: i'm not sure about running it as efficiently. obviously got rid of a lot of engineers and certainly fact-checking folks there. but yeah, it is the same thing that he did, it even had the same title, fork in the road. what i am seeing, though, is this proposal is having the opposite reaction that they intended, at least in some
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cases. there all of these reddit threads of federal employees talking but how this buyout has made them more motivated to do their job, saying i have never been more motivated to stay and defend the constitution. great. [laughter] acting as if everybody who has dedicated their life to public service is easily replaceable or not doing their job is a gross position and not reflective of reality at all, and they will learn that the hard way when they started pushing people out, doing -- this freeze that went so well, yesterday, such a good first day, the press secretary, and now her tweet was -- the judge who looked at this and has frozen the freeze. it is complete chaos. it is not being managed in any sort of orderly fashion at all. it is confusing even republican senators who are getting their marching orders from the top, then they go out there and say what they are supposed to say like good little soldiers.
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than they hear from all of their constituents that the portals are down, they don't know what is going on with head start, medicaid, et cetera. then they hear that the freeze has been frozen, they say that is a good thing, and i am sure they are about to get slapped on the wrist again when they stepped out of line. >> jesse: you mean the unfroze the freeze. you can't freeze a freeze. >> jessica: on pros the freeze -- >> jesse: you thaw it. >> jessica: the freezer door is open, 20-year-old running the government, that "wired" piece. >> judge jeanine: greg, do you want to respond to that? >> greg: no, i'm still thinking of chuck schumer being aroused. don't point that thing -- >> jessica: you are turning me on. >> greg: we don't need to know about how you feel, you weirdo. get out of my head! we talk about how the government doesn't work. i don't think we meant that quite literally, but now we have proof. nearly all of the federal
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employees didn't go back to work. we have to be honest. they gamed covid benefit and they gamed it on our dime. we are paying them billions to sit home and binge watch "real housewives" while doing their nails, and don't get me started on the women. by the way. i have been fired three times. i have done my share of firing. that's part of life. when you get fired, it's the best thing for you, and if you are working at home and you are sad about going to work, you should be fired. you should be thankful you are being fired. some of these people would show up one day a month or do two days in a row so they wouldn't have to come for two months, and then their idea of work was a zoom call on pan-asian bisexual awareness week, and then oh, i am just as effective at home as i am at work, yeah, if you measure your day drinking. do you know how many people became alcoholics because they were stuck at home? you can see the statistics.
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we know as humans we are at home with our dog or our kids and there is no visible boss, you aren't working, you are shirking, and don't say hey, oh, but they might have home issues, medical problems, sick kids, filling grannies, join the club, we all go to work every day, we all have these problems. we do it, so can you, if you don't like it, there's the door. >> judge jeanine: all right, dana, and even those who are promising to return to work are not guaranteed that they are going to keep their job given that they are going to be looking at agencies and positions. there is an argument for institutional knowledge, but given the bloated federal government, don't you think this is trump just fulfilling his promise? >> dana: there is no management. new management comes in, there's often changes, you see that in the private sector all the time, doesn't happen too often in government. i have an incredible, crazy story from when i first worked at department of justice. my friend had managed an office
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of many, many people, and she had many career people under her, as well, and she heard about this woman. there were complaints about her, she doesn't really do a lot. she would log in every day. she would do some work. it really wasn't high on her to-do list. and then she was -- ran an errand to macy's one lunch hour. she was leaving and she sees this woman at the makeup counter working. >> judge jeanine: jobs. >> dana: that was 25 years ago, long time ago, but you can find stories like that, you can find the $800 hammer. but you can also find really great people who have dedicated their lives because they love public service. you are one of those people. i want to be a prosecutor. think about those people leaving the private sector now to work for president trump for a dollar or for nothing because service matters to people. you might have somebody, i know somebody who works in cybersecurity, they can make five times the amount of money
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they make government. they were told before the pandemic that they could work from home three days a week. some of them moved. so now the choices are do i move and go back to d.c. but then i don't know if i'm going to have a job, and you only get ten days to think about it? i think some of this hasn't been communicated the best in order to have a good workforce that says we understand, we got it, we understand. there is just a lot of confusion and some of this could be cleared up with a little more care and thinking about how this is going to be taken. however, most people that hear about this or not going to be said at that it to the federal worker. whether that is fair or not is left to be seen. >> judge jeanine: i think that was a promise that trump made and that he was going to reduce the number of people in the government. anyway, up next, tampon tim is back and giving advice to democrats. ♪ ♪ military decoration awarded by the united states government.
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the tunnel to towers foundation and the congressional medal of honor society recognizes valor beyond the call of duty. britt slabinski, a recipient of the medal of honor himself, sat down with fellow recipients to hear their stories from their military service to their transition into the veteran community. it■s nothing we won, right? we're pretty vocal on that, saying, look, i didn't win anything like we're a recipient of this. you're going to highlight me for the day. we're four guys get killed. never crossed my mind about receiving the medal of honor. never. i was told i was being put in for it the day after the battle. the highest level of valor. you want to understand, why did these people lose their lives? why aren't they in my place? can't refuse it. we don't have the wear if you don't want to. they feel you earned it. people think war ends the moment you get home. no. war sticks with you. for me, it was like i was in a fog. really? for. for several months. you're literally on the edge of life and death at any moment.
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and then 12 hours later, you're at home and you're going to birthday parties and you have to go back to assimilating that life. it's fascinating how many of our brothers and sisters. it■s a significant problem. end up on the streets. tunnel to towers is taking a leadership role. and specifically when i think about the veteran homeless population. we as an organization, we have gaps and it takes partnerships to come in and help us fill those gaps to ensure that nobody is left behind. and that's what tunnel to towers does. we just recently gave them our citizen honors award, recognizing all the great work that they have done. it's a fulfilling a promise to this nation, saying that, tunnel towers is gonna give you smart homes, pay mortgages. there's no level of recognition that rises to what is being done on behalf of those gold star families. and we're not forgetting you. never forget. go to t2t.org and donate $11 a month. thank you.
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♪ ♪ >> jesse: remember tampon tim walz, kamala's jazz hands one of the failed vp is back and heading out advice to a democrat party that according to the times is getting frustrated by president trump's flood the zone to strategy. >> everybody is fatigued, trust me, i get it, it was pure hell and the disappointment and frustration and i'm soul-searching what could we have done to make the case because we knew this was coming, we knew the implications, and they are throwing show much at us that we are fatigued. >> jesse: the democrats, dana, are fatigued. >> dana: they are fatigued with themselves. the democratic party favorability is at an all-time low of 31%, quinnipiac. all of the republicans disapprove and a big chunk of democrats disapprove, as well. they are having a hard time finding their footing. i thought it was funny last night when they said they were going to have an emergency meeting tomorrow.
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they cannot figure it out. then you have chuck schumer, who as a communicator, he really struggles. when you see him on the floor of the senate, he has to read "good morning," and that doesn't play well on the television. then he was just telling us how aroused people are getting about i don't even remember what that was about, but like greg, i can't get it out of my head. the playbook on trump from the democrats is focus on the economy. where was that focus over the last four years? they wouldn't be in this position. >> jesse: are you satisfied, jessica, with the messengers in your party this first week under trump? >> jessica: a few of them. a few seem to get it. like you can disagree with her politics, which i do generally, but aoc, for instance, but she is meeting the moment, she is cg videos, letting you know what her opinion is, and chris murphy on the senate side has done a good job, as well, and jasmine crockett in congress.
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now trump has taught us many things but one of them is you just got to be out there. like you can say things and take it back later or not even take it back, but you have to be in front of people and you have to be in front of cameras, and democrats, like dana was saying, tomorrow i'm going to tell you about something that is an emergency. that doesn't work, your house is on fire, baby has a fever, calling the fire department right now. also supposed to have a press conference on the january 6 spartans, they happened last week, everyone has moved onto the next crisis. last night, or yesterday, especially election in iowa for a state senate seat, it was plus 21 for trump win at a democrat flipped that seat. and there is a big disagreement within the party about what the strategy has to be going forward. is it blow it all up and we have to refurbish the brand completely? or do we bide our time and see what happening? we held senate seats trump won
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in michigan, arizona, nevada, swing state democrats, swing district democrats, people on either side of the fence but we have to talk more, not aroused talk, just talk more. >> jesse: do you agree with that strategy, talk more, judge? >> judge jeanine: no, i think they need to think more. donald trump is dominating. they are lost in the wilderness. he is taking a wrecking ball to washington, and they are dithering, okay? and i'm sorry, i keep saying the same thing every day because they don't get it. do you not know why you lost on november 5th? was it that hard, tim walz says, what could i have done to make the case? why didn't you talk about the price of food? maybe it was too much. or border crossings. may be the crimes that are being committed are something that we need to be concerned about as americans. this guy says he is fatigued, it was pure hell? donald trump was indicted.
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he went to trial two or three times that i can recall. he was convicted. the guy was on the campaign trail, he has 20 years at least on all of them. he is fighting the good fight. they don't even know what hell is. they can't compare to the termination and to the patriotism of the people on the right who were determined to get this ship right. >> jesse: the losing vp going on maddow and saying the party is fatigued, not great communication strategy. >> greg: when you look at walz hi you see nothing. it is the democratic party. they need to find out what they are. they need to find out who they are. but what if it doesn't exist? you know, what if wokeism, the virus killed the host. and that is why they can't come back. i'm going to predict this. it is good to be a wild production. i don't think the democratic party as you know
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from 2024 is going to be around. there might be something different. and i'm going to tell you why. because this is a brilliant, brilliant move on trump's part. if the repu republican party ise party of common sense, what's outside that? what is the alternative? how can you put yourself up against common sense? and everybody now when they hear those two words, common sense, yeah, the republicans. they are sons of bitches but common sense on immigration and crime and this gender stuff. they are a little crazy peered but on that stuff, common sense. you try to imagine how with the democrats handle those three issues? without being common sense? they can't. they will end up going back to wokeism, and then the wokeism can only concentrate itself because than the same people keep leaving, which is what happened with the republicans. you got the elon musk, rfk,
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tulsi gabbard, the sane people left peered what happens in every company, when the bad stay behind, it is because they don't have the options to leave. so the company gets worse and worse. so the democratic party is going to become an insignificant kind of like crusty little ball of excrement. i don't understand how do you counter common sense? >> jesse: foreign policy, america first, what is their answer? >> greg: america second. >> jesse: all right, jessica, he predicted it, a dead pile of excrement. >> jessica: i am looking forward to what life will be like as the ball of poo. >> jesse: ahead, a liberal magazine busted for trying to paint maga as racist. ♪ ♪
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♪ ♪
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>> jessica: "new york magazine" controversy, accused of out black attendees at a trump inauguration event from its recent cover. "the cruel kids table." "new york magazine" literally cropped all of the black people out of this cover photo and then complain that the entire room is white. greg, this falls into the category of why? >> greg: they wanted to play the race card and they still stacked the deck. they had a narrative that they had to follow so they had to make sure it happened. they didn't mention the host of the party was black. there is something to the envy of this. looking at the cover, people are having fun because they are fearless, not looking over their shoulder for the cancel culture cop. in fact they invited the writer to the party because you know
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why? they don't care. the thing you have to understand, dems have to learn not to care about what people say about you on social media. you know, the writer is a man in a dress. but no one cares. no one cares peer i think that bothers people whose sole ego gratification is identity, but when you let go of your identity, you see an inclusive party, but if you cling to identity you are a party of one and that is no fun, jessica. not at all. and i would never crop you out of the picture. >> jessica: i think you have. dana, what do you think? >> dana: the magazine editor, that had been under your watch, you would be furious. >> greg: i did that to destiny's child. >> dana: that is how beyonce launcher solo career peered speedier and cropped out two other girls. >> dana: i was thinking about, the coalition under the trump republican party is like if you had the football team, the drama kids, the marching band, the
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debate team, the smokers, and the nerds altogether and everyone is having a great time and there is like ten people who are left on the other side, really wanting to join the party but feeling like they can't because they want to hold onto the past so much, and the democrats are not helped by a media who continues to placate them this way. >> jessica: to that point, jesse, a "new york magazine" cover is not for a gen z base, it is feeding a 40 plus, very liberal audience, and it betrays the election results. >> jesse: the media used to celebrate young, healthy, good-looking well-dressed white people having a good time tricking together. and now they want to make you ashamed of your skin color and your country and your sex life peer now all of the heroes are trans. it is now hot to hate if you have a piercing or a tattoo, they think that is beautiful. >> greg: jesse. >> jesse: i am officially
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declaring it over. and all of the models are obese if you haven't noticed, jessica. we used to have aspirations to be the high school quarterback who then falls in love with the prom queen. not anymore. that is cliche. now it is the transgender migrant who is in a relationship with two teen atheists that are depressed. we are so back, jessica, and i guarantee there is not a single tampon in the men's room at that party. >> jessica: judge? >> judge jeanine: i agree with what everyone has said peered. >> jessica: really? jesse? >> judge jeanine: no, jesse is like whatever. they created their own story about racism. i mean, it is as simple as that. they are so out of touch. i mean, maga had a historic number of blacks, historic number of hispanics, big blue cities voting for donald trump, yet they are not journalists, they are political ideologues, they want to still push the narrative that maga is all aboug
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blacks, they cropped out the black people in the article, and by the way the guy who wrote the article, he identifies, he may wear a dress, i don't know, but he identifies as they/them and one of his most proud profiles is a profile for dylan move any. >> greg: he does wear a dress. >> judge jeanine: how does he look? >> greg: not good. >> jessica: we have to leave this important conversation. benjamin hall joins us next on his inspirational new book. ♪ ♪ everywhere but the seat. the seat is leather. alan, we get it. you love your bike. we do, too. that's why we're america's number-one motorcycle insurer. but do you have to wedge it into everything? what? i don't do that. this reminds me of my bike. the wolf was about the size of my new motorcycle. have you seen it, by the way? happy birthday, grandma! really? look how the brushstrokes follow the line of the gas tank. -hey! -hey! brought my plus-one.
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♪ ♪ >> greg: benjamin hall has got a new book out coming march 18th. nearly three years after the russian missile attack that changed his life. the book is called "resolute: how we humans keep finding ways to beat the toughest odds." you can preorder "resolute" now at foxnewsbooks.com. and then joins us from a place called london, which i believe is somewhere in europe. been, how are you? >> benjamin: doing well, greg, thank you for having the on, i appreciate it. >> greg: tell us what this new book is about and then will take it around the table, by the way,
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you had another baby, like 12 kids, right? >> benjamin: we are growing a big family. this book is about "resolute" and about being resilient. it is about a thing that happened -- there is baby sage who was recently booked, she features in the book, as well. after i wrote "sage," so many wanted to hear more about what had happened and the lessons that were learned, other stories from my past, that is what i tried to do in "resolute," bring it together and it's plain many of the issues which i found quite difficult to talk about earlier, so it is a really open and honest book and i don't want to say it is a self-help book but i do think it should inspire anyone who has gone through something difficult on their own, whether that is physical injuries or problems with family or financial or anxiety. i think this book will help, as well, it is a book about many things but really a continuation of the last book. it was a hard winter right but when i am really proud of. >> dana: hey, ben, it is dana.
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can you give us an example of something you noticed about yourself that you didn't know about when you are writing "saved" and it was also fresh? >> benjamin: one thing i'm absolutely certain of, everyone has this resilience inside them. there are some moments when i thought that you had to learn that that came through experience, but what i have decided, speaking to many people -- and have interviewed some of them for the book -- people who have been in other war zones and gone through two medic events, as well, no matter what your background or where you come from, every single person has this in them, but the problem is many people don't realize. they don't know it until it is needed. and i try to convey in this book the sense that if you have that trust in yourself, if you trust in your resilience, you can get so much further and achieve so much more, and so it is resilience that i am really looking into, not only what i went through, but many other people, as well. that is something that sticks with me and i tell you what, gives you great power in life to know you can walk into almost anywhere and know you will not be knocked down here i just wish
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that is something that more of us knew, and crucially i wish something our children know and can learn for their future, as well. >> greg: we've got time for one more question, and i guess we should go to jesse because he is desperate. >> jesse: [laughs] when you wake up in the morning and you start your day, do you have any mental tricks in order to sustain the resilience? in order to kind of keep that drive going? and what can you tell the audience about may be how they can get in on those little ha hacks. >> benjamin: 100% because the most important thing is also the resilience isn't totally continual. you know, life is never full of only hurdles, you will always encounter things you have to get over, times in my day or my week where you have to find extra level of strength. for me that is quite simple. i turn around and remind us of all the fortunate things around me. i remind myself how worse things could be than they are and i always remember if we do things together that things can be better and stronger and i know
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everything i do is helping other people. things that other people are doing is helping me. i guess it is reminding ourselves we are not alone in this world and their people around us and if we work together that life is always easier. >> greg: gratitude and service. i love this chapter you have in here about me. it is a beautifully written chapter. benjamin, thanks so much. be sure to preorder your copy of "resolute" now, and "one more thing" is up next. ♪ ♪ let's get started. bill, where's your mask? i really tried sleeping with it, everybody. but i'm done struggling. now i sleep with inspire. inspire? inspire is a sleep apnea treatment that works inside my body with just the click of this button. a button? no mask? no hose? just sleep. yeah but you need the hose, you need the air, you need the whoooooosh... inspire. sleep apnea innovation. learn more, and view important safety information at inspiresleep.com
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♪ >> dana: time time now for "onee thing," greg? >> greg: jamie lissow is back. dr. dru, kat timpf and tyrus, 10:00 p.m., eastern. watch it. >> dana: all right, jesse? >> jesse: fox had the highest rated january of all time in our 23 years. best month of all time in january. "the five" 4.8. that's a hell of a month for us,
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too. tonight, jeanine pirro, cale means and. >> judge jeanine: now it's time for -- if you don't think your hips are big enough, this season's dior designs are for you. check out these models in structured petty coats decorative screen lynn and many other unique styles. i can see you wearing the gold dress right there. what do you think? >> greg: it's so 80's. although i do lo a good petticoat. deign pett petticoat junction. >> do you want to save yours for another day? >> i will tell you tomorrow. oh, that's a good tease because we will all be here tomorrow. have a great night. >> bret: i will be on pins and needles waiting for jessica's. >> jessica: you are going to love it, bret. good evening, welcome to washington. i'm bret baier, fierce and

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