tv FOX and Friends Saturday FOX News February 15, 2025 6:00am-7:00am PST
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with this: a dea crackdown leading to arrests of some of colorado's most wanted criminal migrants. the potential agent in charge is going to tell us all about that bust. rachel: and democrats fighting doge like this? ♪ i will lift you up when they push you down. ♪ i will raise my if voice and stand my ground. ♪ when it looks like it might be a hard road -- ♪ i'm gonna walk it with you puck. charlie: plus, we are getting our self-care on, apparently, an at-home sauna that's perfect for valentine's day weekend. the final hour of "fox & friends" weekend starts right now. ♪ if. ♪ ♪ can't stop this thing we've started. rachel: good morning, everybody. it's 9 9:00. we're waking you up with a
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little bit of bryan adams. going back to the '80s. charlie: nice. rachel: come on. that's so nice. beautiful day, little cold. actually, a lot cold. but warmer because we have lisa boothe inned today. lisa: thank you. i live in florida now, i've been there for four years, so so this cold is very tough for me. charlie: did you notice that rooster out on fox square just now had a muffler on -- rachel: oh, did it? did you get close enough to see that? if. rachel: i didn't, but i did notice they were wearing diapers. [laughter] charlie: lisa point out -- lisa: covid masks, which i love. rachel: were they really? if finally, something that we can do with these covid masks. lisa: the reason the little guy was wearing it is because the girls were picking on him. i asked, they were wieting his -- biting hisser ifs. charlie: it's called being henpecked. [laughter] it's a real thing. henpeck pecked -- rachel: it's a real thing.
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charlie: it can happen to humans too. lisa: okay, good to know. hopefully that doesn't happen. [laughter] rachel: we're going to do a segment on that. [laughter] charlie: post-valentine's day -- rachel: this is the a reality, after the marriage. [laughter] lisa: also good to know. rachel: oh, boy. we're going to get a lot of farm humor. i know that, it's happening to the show. and we like it. we like it, charlie. well,, listen to to this, speaking of not laying hen, but laying people off a -- charlie: or hangovers that are not going to go away. rachel: that's right. doge this week is laying off, get this, 3,600 probationary employees, 4,000 employees retained and so then the savings is $600 million. so i guess a probation their if doesn't mean they're on probation, it means they were recently hired and they're in this probationary period which
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makes it easier for doge and the government to to let go of them if they decide that their jobs are not necessary. lisa: well k if this is a guy, with elon musk, we saw went he took over twitter he slashed a lot of the employees. it's still running fine. the biggest problem with our federal government, it's too big. this is not the original vision of america. we were supposed to have decentralized government. that was the whole vision of the founding fathers. of so what we have now is the antithesis of what america's posed to be. and when government becomes so centralized and big, it becomes corrupt. rachel: correct. lisa: and that's what we're seeing, that's what we saw with the biden administration going after its political to pones without fear. so -- opponents without fear. it's the we the people, election, and we're seeing a we, the people, administration. rachel: probably the most shocking were the things we saw happening at usaid a. we're going to talk about that tomorrow. who knew that so much money was being spent -- we knew there was
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regime change operations going on, but they were to the tune of billions and billions and billions of dollars, doing the work of the cia through usaid. it was very opaque. nobody knew it was going on the. it was -- going on. it was going to ngos, and we saw hillary clinton's daughter receive ising a lot of money. there was a lot of hinges that have come come up -- things that have come up, and i think the american people, and you see the polling, are onboard with this. it's hard the believe that these democrats believe they can sing their way out of this because the american people are onboard with it. charlie: yeah. who would possibly be against making the government more efficient? and as much as we'd like to just snap our fingers and fix all of it, the truth of matter is it's going to the happen by not hiring new employees, by extending buyouts to current employees, it's going to be a gradual thing, but it's going to make it more efficient. but what is snapping your finger is the trump administration is finding all of these giant pots
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of gold that the biden administration was hiding all over the place. rachel: yes with. >> most recently, $1.9 billion in hud money was just recovered after being misplaced, misplaced, air quotes, during the biden administration due to a broken process. these funds were earmarked for the administration of financial services but are no longer needed. secretary turner and doge worked together to fix the issue and deobligated the funds which are now available for other use by treasury. if the federal government, these agencies, the only -- any company on earth that operated like this would to go out of business, and the people that a ran the company would be put in jail. rachel: what was the number again? >> charlie: $1.9 billion. rachel: that's like if we lifted the couch cushions and found $1.8 billion. i know how happy i get when i put my hand in a pocket and i go, oh, my god, there's a $5 bill. i feel like i'm rich. this is what's happening all over the map. we're finding money under the
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cushions, in your pocket. and it's just sitting there getting either about to get funneled off to some ngo to employ, you know, democrats in the next four years, or it's getting sent somewhere else, or it's going to the hands of criminals because there's all these networks that have been set up to defraud us. we heard about the money that was being sent overseas as well in fraudulent payments of social security. lisa: and in a lot of instances, these ngos are working against american interests. we've seen a lot of them the aid aing and abetting, basically, human trafficking with these illegal aliens over the border as well. you think about the it too, it's, like, a trillion dollars a year just on the interest on our debt alone, right? so we're over $36 trillion in debt. even though with doge and all the savings they're trying to find, we're just scratching the surface. that's' how bad things have gotten. but finally, they're taking this seriously -- rachel: and democrats have been complaining, saying it's not that much money. i don't see the clock turning the on the debt clock.
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every little bit counts. meanwhile, i mean, here are the boomers, the aging boomers, singing about how horrible it is that we just found $1.8 billion under the couch cushion today. listen. ♪ i will lift you up when they push you down. ♪ i will raise my voice and stand my ground. ♪ when it looks like it might be a hard road -- ♪ i'm gonna walk it with you. ♪ lisa: that's not the worst version we've a heard though. right? charlie: they're pretty bad. they're all pretty bad. they get worse and worse. lisa: my favorite is all the a clips from the hearings, like especially pete's and, like, the democrat members just, like, yelling at him. [laughter] charlie: and they think that they're reliving the civil rights movement which i think is really funny -- rachel: this is the civil is rights movement? charlie: this is their civil rights movement. civil is, federal employees who are union niced -- shouldn't be, by the way -- civil is workers,
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bureaucrats in washington, d.c. whose, who spend, you know, all of your money, all of it paid for by you. and, by the way, even if you were to make it as a efficient as a possible, a lot of them are doing things that we don't need. it actually makes life more terrible for people. rachel: and there are people that are doing great stuff. let's keep the people that keep the trains running, keep the system running and the checks paid to the military and the checks paid to our veterans. we need all that. let's streamline, get rid of all the a waste, find all these pots of money that are getting wasted away. i don't see anybody could be against it. but one of the tactics they're using is trying to separate elon musk and donald trump, this bro row nance -- bro romance -- lisa: bro chance. rachel: here's president trump talking about it to sean hannity. this is tease, you guys, because next week the whole interview
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with elon musk and donald trump will air a on hannity's show on tuesday night. here's donald trump talking about this tactic. >> you're both aware, you have to be keenly aware that the media and the pun punditry class not that, you know, i think you've proven they have of no power anymore, because they threw everything they had at you, and they didn't win. and that was, you know, "the new york times," washington post, three networks, every late night comedy show, two cable channels. they just, they threw everything, lawfare, weaponization -- >>st it's true. >> -- and now i see they want you to two -- two, they want a divorce. they want you two to start hating each other. oh, president elon musk, for example. you do know that they're doing that to you. >> oh, i see it all the time. they tried it, then they stopped. they have many different things of hatred. actually, elon called me, he said, you know they're trying to drive us apart.
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i said, absolutely. no, they aid we have breaking news, donald trump has ceded control of the presidency to elon musk. president musk will be attending a cabinet meeting tonight at 8:00. [laughter] and i say it's just so obvious. they're is so bad at it. i used to think they were good at it. they're actually bad at it, because if they were good at it, i'd never be president. i think nobody, in history has ever gotten more bad publicity than me. i could do the greatest things, i get 9 8% bad publicity. outside of you, a few of your very good things, it's, like, the craziest thing. you know what i have learned, elon? the people are smart. they get it. >> yeah, they do, actually. >> they really see what's happening. >> yes. lisa: what i love -- this you see tuesday at 9 p.m. with sean hannity, that the's must-watch t right there. but what i love about this administration and president trump is the that he's an outsider. for far too long we've had people like joe biden, he's been in government 50 years?
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i forget -- rachel: his whole life. lisa: how can you fix government when it's all a you know? you're insulated from the bad policy decisions you made. all tease disrupters who are taking a fresh viewpoint of government and how to fix it. and you sea that with elon going through this nonsense at a usaid and all this tough. and he's probably going, how does the government operate like this in it's a mess. rachel: he's running, what donald trump is doing is he's running this government like a company. priest. lisa: great point. charlie: and two people who are coming to it, both of whom are billionaires and have made forcountries for themselves before they came to to government. and you have a guy like joe biden who spent his entire life on a government salary in washington working as a, as an employee of the federal government, as a, you know, in congress. and he leaves and his wife was a schoolteacher, and they leave washington as millionaires. they've made a fortune in washington off of their,
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quote-unquote, service to the country. and you have these two guys, they don't need anything, they don't need to steal money from e government. they don't need to use the government or their service to make money off of it. rachel: yeah. that was always a -- by the way, service, hunter. [laughter] lisa: under the guise of, you know, foreign affairs because joe biden and his family enriched themselves on all these foreign dealings, you have the clinton foundation, the biden penn center is. so so it's always under the guise of a shadowy foreign whatever -- rachel: but one of these outsiders that a you've talked about is bobby kennedy, rfk jr. and we had kali means on earlier today -- calley means talking about the excitement around his confirmation this past week, what he plans to do. and one of the interesting things that the he's talked about in addition to, you know, all the a -- and these are the programs that the he says he's going to do. he's going to tart with getting rid of the corruption. but he's also talking about a
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spiritual crisis in our country, that there's a loneliness epidemic. and the other -- the past add administrationtalked about it too, and their solution was community centers and investing money in community centers, if you recall. but here's rfk jr. talking about the spiritual crisis. listen. >> this is much deeper than a tactical issue of prescribing the opioid or prescribing the ssr are i. what what i love about this executive order is it specifically asks to look into ssris, is it appropriate to prescribe to 25% of women in 25% of women, rachel, in the united states are on a ssri or some kind of psychoactive drug. is that the root cause of the honeliness or depression crisis is, mental health issues that that we're facing? no. we have lost track with our cycles, we can't even say what a man or woman with, e -- is, we can't even acknowledge where we're depleting our soil where 70% of the soil, it's been depleted of the nutrients.
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we've got a big problem, rachel, and and it's interconnected. rachel: that was not the clip i wanted but, actually, it is the clip i wanted. when's the last time you saw an hhs secretary talking about ssris? by the way, explain what those are, charlie. charlie: i don't with ever remember it. it's kind of a taboo subject is. but the way, i think, a real big picture way of looking at it is never before have we had so many people on antidepressants, and never have we had so many people suffering from depression. and that, those two facts alone a ought to raise a lot of questions. and rfk jr. is the first person to come along to -- and address it, you know, full on. lisa: we've also had a public health system that doesn't address public health. and we've not been addressing the root causes at as well which is why only one-third of americans have trust in our public health system. what was happening in new york city if with former mayor bill de blasio, he was giving out
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hamburgers and french fries to get people to get a vaccine. a cdc study found 78% of the people in hospitals were obese or overweight, which goes to hoe you how messedded up our public health s&p -- system is. and i've interviewed dr. marty makary for our podcast, and he told me in medical school you're studying the old school pyramid, so they're not even focused on how to prevent illness. they're just handing out medication, to your point earlier. rachel: absolutely. there is a massive problem with pharmaceutical companies in bed with doctors and with the medical establishment. and the solution to many of the ills we have whether as you talked about the kind of depression that comes from addiction to technology, to the phone, to tech and just the overall spiritual crisis that young people are facing because of the breakdown of the family, the breakdown of sort of traditions and spiritual things that used to keep people
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grounded and happy and with a missioning and a purpose in life. those things have gone away. 9 and the solution of our culture has been to medicate these children. calley means said 1 in 4 women are on these anti depressants, but the numbers for children are staggering. we have children, carly and lisa is, who are -- charlie and lisa is, who are growing up without a baseline of what it means to just be healthy and high on life. they're being medicated through their adolescence and into adulthood. lisa: and those lockdowns didn't help either, right? keeping people inside and away from people they love. rachel: how great that we're going to be addressing these issues. charlie: restoring science integrity? the most important thing up there maybe ma. lisa: common sense if is common now. rachel: yeah. he said the number one thing they're doing is addressing the corruption inside of this relationship between big pharma, big food and and our medical establishment. charlie: and this habit of using science to terrorize people
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whether it's the environment or covid is -- that's a huge thing right there. rachel: amen to that, charlie. lisa: all right. turning now to your headlines, pope francis is still in the hospital in stable condition as he battlessen bronchitis, and his fever did not rise overnight if. the holy see press office saying this: the pope is calm, he is in good spirits and has read some newspapers. doctors in rome began running test after the 88-year-old struggled speaking during a meeting yesterday. no word on when the pope will be released. rachel: i don't believe anything coming out of the vatican press office a. [laughter] lisa: now check out this wild video out of southern italy. hikers going for a walk in the snow if while mount etna erupts in the background. look at that. love a v.a. flowing after a series of earth wakes -- lava. and now tourists and thrill seekers are getting an up-close look at the amazing act of nature. that is pretty awe and to watch.
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and this, more than one million eagles' fans flooding the streets of philadelphia yesterday celebrating their big super bowl win. and sister running quarterback saquon barkley was spotted lifting the team's ball boy over the barricade to join the team. a bit later the the players pumped up the fans from the steps of the philly art museum. watch this. >> you can't lose if you don't quit. in philly, we don't quit. >> you guys are tough, you guys are resilient, you guys know how to [bleep] fight. >> say it with me, e-a a-g-l-e-s eagles! lisa: at least they spell it -- spelled it right. some birds' fans claiming anything they could for a bettey could for a better look at the champs. and those are your headlines. philadelphia's really the only city where they burn everything down win or lose.
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[laughter] charlie: when they lose. ray so fun watching -- by the way, as you guys know, i thought the eagles were going to win, the eagles won -- california a shar you had it right. rachel: save saquon and his family, their children went to you are kids' catholic school. leah:s oh, no way? rachel: and then he moved to philadelphia, and they win the super bowl. that might have if had a little bit to do with why i was supporting the eagles. i didn't mention that to will -- lisa: -- chiefs? rachel: yeah. and he was very cocky and condescending about how he's the sports guy. lisa: but you won. they're not burning anything down -- rachel: we love you, will. we miss you. charlie: all right. negotiating an end to the war in ukraine and confront being our allies over free speech. a big week for america first in munich. trump envoy for special missions, ric grenell, takes us inside the administration's thinking. rachel: and brian kilmeade's
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history, liberty and if laughs tour continues today in jacksonville, florida. wow, that sounds like fun. get your tickets at brian kilmeade.com. and here's a look at what is coming up tonight on" one nation." ♪ >> i cannot wait to tell you about this week's edition of "one nation" tonight at 9:00. senator ted cruz on why greenland really matters and what else he can do for you. mike rowe, blue collar jobs on the way up. how you can get a scholarship. and seth dillon, it's okay to laugh. it used to get him banned. now he is thriving. all about the babylon bee. that is coming your way only if you're smart enough to watch "one nation" with me. st going to be exciting. don't move.
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charlie: the trump administration brings america first to the munich security conference from negotiating an end to the war in ukraine to defending free speech and shared values. >> just as the biden administration seemed desperate to silence people for speaking their minds, so the trump administration will do precisely the opposite, and i hope that we can work together on that. in washington there is a new sheriff in town, and under donald trump's leadership we may disagree with your views, but we
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will fight to defend your right to offer it in the public square, agree or disagree. rachel: u.s. envoy for special missions and kennedy center interim executive director, we've not to get to that, that's one of my favorite things about you now, ric -- [laughter] is live all the way from if munich, and he joins us now. so great to have you on. let's talk for -- well, let's talk first about the kennedy center situation. so tell us what the goal is. a lot of board members have been let go, and you're coming in, cleaning house. what do you want the kennedy center to become? this is kind to of exciting. >> well, look, i just think it's pretty simple, we just want to bring common sense back to the kennedy center. i'm there as the interim president. we're looking for a president, so if you know of anybody that wants to be the permanent president, we're looking. i'm there to just kind of clean up, make sure that we have common sense approach. i mean, look, we'd like to the see, you know, normal programming at the kennedy center. let's bring back, like, a big
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musical a. let's have, you know, opera as and christmas programs that are geared toward the masses. i think it's become fringe. but also, rachel, there's zero cash on hand and zero dollars in reserves. so this is a place that really over the last several years has really deteriorated. and we need to be able to make the kennedy center great again. and i think that just means president trump wants to bring back common sense to the kennedy center and celebrate the art as again in a way that the masses are going to really embrace it. rachel: oh, liberal heads are exploding. i'm sorry. [laughter] lisa: and they're also exploding because of that that speech from the vice president. why was that important, for him to go there and call out the u.k., the call out brussels, the call out sweden? and what's been the response to it? >> well, look, lisa, i'm in
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munich, a city and a country of germany that i love so much. we have a lot of friends in europe, make no mistake. there's a lot of fans of donald trump in europe. but the europeans have really kind of lost their way, and i think there's a lot of europeans that are trying to figure out how do we make europe great again. because what's happening is that that there's a lot of hand-wringing and analysis but not a lot of action. let me give you a quick example, because one of the big issues here, obviously, is ukraine. donald trump, j.d. vance's speech, but on ukraine, for instance, they're trying to say, well, what is trump going to do? why are we doing this peace agreement? what does this mean for russia and ukraine? and what i'm saying to people is, hook, we've had three and a half years -- look, we've had three and a half years of vladimir putin and joe biden not speaking. donald trump decided that talking is a good idea. and we don't like the choices that we're given. we handed the biden administration total peace. they handed us total war. and so there's not a lot of
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great options left, but let's dig in, let's try to have peace agreements, let's start talking. and the europeans, you know, they were supposed to in 2014 take 10 years to bring up their defense spending because last time we had a crisis in crimea, we decided that let's have have as a solution europe that that's more prepared. so in to 2014 we said you've got 10 is years to bring up your nato spending. hay didn't do it. we have another war. and if so when they look at us and they complain or we say, look, we want to be helpful, but you didn't do your job in 2014. the first time there was a war, you -- the lessons that we learned were that you needed to be more prepared. you didn't do that. now we're in the situation again. don't throw on us. this is your neighborhood. charlie: you know, one of the interesting things about j.d. vance's speech yesterday, he said it's not just who you're fighting against, it's what a you're fighting for. and he went through and he
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listed freedom of speech, freedom of religion, and the room seemed to be pretty shock. >>ed by this. what has been the reaction from your rantage point among people over there to that peach? if -- speech? if. >> look, i don't think that europeans and a lot of people here at this conference want to be challenged. they like to talk. charlie: right. >> so what j. d. vance did is challenge them and say, look, the woke culture is dead. this is not good for the western world. the west needs to act like the west. we don't need to cancel each other. we need to have more freedom. really, i have a hard time why europe and westerners would think that that's a bad idea. and i think that a we've become so ingrained in this elite culture of canceling people that we don't like and elites running the masses that when someone like j.d. vance stands up and says, ah, how about freedom for all and how about the people
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having a greater voice, a lot of elites in europe say, you know, this is terrible. so the discussion with many people is we should probably think about this. but the ones who are being challenged the ones with the power, they don't want to hear it. lisa: i've got to get do you, real quick, on this. mayor bass is admitting it was a mistake for her to go to ghana. you're a californian. do you think we'll see leadership changes in california, or are voters finally waking up to the fact that democrats cannot lead? >> well, look, i've been running an organization called fix california for the haas four years registering conservatives that have been sitting on the sidelines, people frustrated and ap a nettic. and over the last four years because of donald trump we've seen a lot of people in california get really excited. so i think the fires, the crisis, the constantly pockily city from gavin newsom and the one-party control in sacramento, people are getting really angry with it. i think there's a real chance to do something different. remember, los angeles county is not only the largest county
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california expect largest city in california -- and the largest city in california, but it's the large county in america. if you flip los angeles county, you not only flip california, you could change the whole presidential map just by flipping los angeles county. that's what we've been concentrating on for the last four years. rachel: wow. fascinating stuff. he's an ambassador, he brings back hostages for donald trump, he's running the kennedy center, he's all the way from munich -- charlie: busy man. >> and i'm your friend, rachel. that's the most important. rachel: yes, he is my friend. we love you, ric. thank you for joining us. we'll have to have you back. >> all the best. rachel: thank you. all right. lisa: a new study reveals gen-z wants to put a ring on it. the new study that breaks down why they're looking for love, next.
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the google and apple sites as president trump reveals he is upbeat about a deal. >> we have a lot of people interested in tiktok. and i hope to be able to make a deal. i think it would be good. you know, people have learned, it's very popular. and we'll are to to probably -- have to probably get approval from china to do it, but we have a lot of people that are interested and a lot of people -- i think china will be interested because it's to their benefit too. charlie: evita duffy alphonso joins us now. hey, evita. tell us, what does a deal look like, do you think, in trump's eyes with tiktok? some. >> well, look, there are a loft -- lot of contenders, a lot of names. elon musk is one of them. i and commend commend president trump for saving tiktok. i have been against the tiktok ban from day one not because with i love china or to communism, but because i to oppose american authoritarian
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thought police. and if now i think most of america understands what i was talking about, because these last few weeks doge has laid bare the way that our federal government was committed the controlling speech abroad but also here at home. the uniparty cheerily united against tiktok because the deep state couldn't control it like they could other american tech companies. and what's incredible is those same people who were fear-mongering still have no issue with section 702 which allows the government to unconstitutionally spy on u.s. citizens without a warrant. and if they don't care that our phones are made in china and our farmland in the heartland is being bought up by china. the reason was because of the content on tiktok. that's' not a good reason. that's called censorship. that's violating the constitution. so, frankly, i'm actually not a huge fan of the forced sale. i think third world authoritarian nations will say, sure, you can do business here or sell your wiz to us -- business to us, i don't think that's very america but certainly this outcome is much
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better than an outright ban. and i really applaud president trump for being a critical third on this issue. rachel: yeah. well, there's a new report, e e see the tasker that's revealing a majority of gen-z is interested in marriage. 93 percent of gen-z is interested if getting married. you are someone who got married if young with, at 22 years old. what do you think is going on with your generation? you're a gen-zer, by the way. >> i am. it's a great question. i got married young, i don't regret it at all. i think going people are yearning for tradition, traditional marriage, traditional gender roles, ordering society, and i think it's the because we've hit rock bottom. i think relationships today are more dysfunctional a than ever, and 1 in 4 gen-z adults who are as old as 28 confess the being virgins which is interesting because we're a generation that's inundated with hypersexual content, pushing
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explicit, vulgar imagery on us for from a young anal. i think we're a sexually traumaized generation. 9 a great example is miley cyrus. millions of girls watched hannah montana only see miley a few years later twerking at the vma you said the foam finger -- i think gen-z is hyperaware of the destructive culture we have inherited, and we're seeing a surge in mass goers, in anti-woke sentiment, gen-z men voting for trump in record numbers. this isn't just a political pendulum swing, it is a interchul swing. we're secking for something that's lost. we're looking for ordered homes, stable work, spiritual and physical well-being, true fulfillment and, yes, true love. lisa: and the political shift is important. evita, as you've been speak, i've been thinking rachel's got to be so so proud. rachel: i am. lisa: you give us hope for future generations. thank you so much for joining
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the show. rachel: bye, evita. >> thanks for having me. he's least a dea crackdown leading to the arrest of some of colorado's most wanted criminal migrants. tells us all about it next.ta ifrs - you got this. - thank you. vanguard retirement solutions. fifty years of helping investors be well on their way to their financial goals.
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>> think about that. >> you know, i work hard at it, kristi noem's working hard at it, and we've got almost 16,000 people we arrest in the interior, but it's the not enough. we've got to do more. charlie: this as dea a agents arrested nearly 100 migrants including 10 of colorado's worst criminals with at least 3 being tren de aragua gang members all in the past two weeks. dea rocky mountain field division special agent in carjack jonathan pullen joins us now -- in charge. jonathan, tell us about some of these criminals that you all rounded up. >> thanks for having me, charlie. so, listen, we've been busy the last three weeks. we've arrested folks from really all over the world, but primarily central and south america. we have a problem with this tda gang here in the denver area, and so we've been targeting them for months. what you're seeing on your
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screen is a culmination of those efforts. we've been working with our counterpart agencies at homeland security, that's to i.c.e., hs is i, atf, collaborating daily on who we're going to target, how we're going to go after them and where we're going to find these guys. charlie: what's the difference been for you on the ground in terms of the previous if administration compared to the current administration in terms of of being able to go after some of these people. >> well, listen, we've always done this work. dea's always been involved in tracking down the worst offenders in our cities and our states. what's different is now that we have some added immigration authorities that have been granted to the department of justice agencies, i can tell you, charlie, it's making a huge difference. you can see from the stats that mr. homan was talking about, just at a dea a we've arrested almost 10 so 0 people in the last three weeks -- 100. that's not including what hsi
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and i.c.e. has done in our neighborhood as well. that extra immigration push is essentially allowing us to take people off the streets and send them to their home countries as opposed to spending time and money investigating, prosecuting and incarcerating them which costs an enormous amount of money to the u.s. government. in some cases we can bypass that, and they've already committed a crime by entering the country illegally, and they're likely involved with other crimes. and we can send season them home. charlie: and i'm assuming that crackdowns like the one that you've just executed probably goes to the heart of breaking up the gang in a place like colorado for good. >> that's what we're hopeinging for, right? some of these people are very serious criminals. we're talking about major drug trafficking. if you look at that list, there's a guy on the top center, his name is kevin. he's a fentanyl dealer. he also a deals in meth. kevin sold some drugs to a woman in wyoming that ultimately
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killed her 1-year-old baby. charlie: wow. >> so, listen, we found out about that, we tried to prosecute the case. there's a lot of layers to it, but the case was not taken by the local d.a.'s office a, so we started to investigate kevin more and bought even more fentanyl and meth from him and then recently we were able to arrest him. so in a case like kevin's, right, where he's selling fentanyl that killed a child, now we're going to be able to take him off the street streets, we already have is, he's in custody, send him back to his home country, and with a stronger border, he's likely not going to be able to cross again. kevin's crossed the border illegally several times, and he's not getting a job in construction trying to spend money back to his family, he's selling fentanyl and meth and killing americans. charlie: keep up the good work. thank you, jonathan. >> thank you, charlie. charlie: it's time for self-care. everything you need to relax at home. that's next.
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of the ultimate wellness gadgets and gear to help you do that. lisa: joining us now is diy expert chip wade. chip, what do we have? >> we are kicking off actual sawn sauna -- sauna week -- rachel: i have this sauna, i love it. >> only 16 square feet, but it plugs into a standard outlet so you don't need fancy -- charlie: how hot does it get? >> up to standard -- [inaudible conversations] saunas as well. go to finley oak.com and register to win this very sauna, which is amazing. rachel: yeah, i love it. >> this is corduroy. it's not just a a bean bag chair, it has a mattress and a bed inside. you have a mattress that is great f like, a theater room or a vacation home, all kinds of different sizes and and really big too. rachel: yes, very comfortable. >> outside covers off, you can put them in the washing machine.
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for presidents' day weekend, 25% off. really great. cuordoroys.com. rachel: love it. >> i've been using this for a while, i really love this thing. this is called lumen -- >> and it's not a breathalyzer. >> new york it's not. it kind of looks like it. this is the world's firsthand herald metabolic coach. you breathe into this before your workout, and it does an anallyization of what you need to do -- anization. it allows us to customize our metabolism and keep it in the right state. rachel: how much is something like this? >> just a couple hundred bucks. charlie: it hooks up through your phone? >> yeah, through an app. next up, this is called the ecoflask. it has a proton hydrogen generator in there. it sounds fancy, but it puts hydrogen ions in the water. it helps us hydrate, helps with recovery, and ultimately, it allows us to drink less water to
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be hydrated. rachel: so it's like a natural a electrolyte. >> that's exactly right. it has this panel on the side, it's going to track how much you're drinking and help you along -- take it with you on the road. [inaudible conversations] ecowater.com. if next up, this guy's awesome. portable blender, usb, type c charger. it's strong enough to do ice, smoothies, protein shakes -- lisa: that little guy? >> yeah. look at that. take the bottom with off, make it into a water bottle. right now 15% off after blendy blender.com. last up, designing cool kitchen and bathrooms for 15 150 years. this is their new push button diverter waterfall tub spout. rachel: how does it connect to the wall? >> it hooks on to a bracket. and the water supply goes -- >> and you can take the low flow out. >> that's right. very, very simple, easy the assemble, but the curved edges
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make it great for kids, great for to havage. find this at a american standard-u.s. rachel: chip, you're so on with the times. water pressure is back. america's back. >> there we go. i love it. rachel: all right. chip wade.com. [laughter] ♪ ♪ i told myself i was ok with my moderate to severe rheumatoid arthritis symptoms... ...with my psoriatic arthritis symptoms. but just ok isn't ok. and i was done settling. if you still have symptoms after trying a tnf blocker like humira or enbrel,
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rinvoq works differently. rinvoq is a once-daily pill that can rapidly relieve joint pain, stiffness, and swelling as fast as 2 weeks for some. and even at the 3-year mark, many people felt this relief. rinvoq can stop joint damage. and in psa, can leave skin clear or almost clear. rinvoq can lower ability to fight infections. before treatment, test for tb and do bloodwork. serious infections, blood clots, some fatal; ...cancers, including lymphoma and skin; serious allergic reactions; gi tears; death; heart attack; and stroke occurred. cv event risk increases in age 50 plus with a heart disease risk factor. tell your doctor if you've had these events, infection, hep b or c, smoked, are pregnant or planning. don't take if allergic or have an infection. done settling? ask your rheumatologist for rinvoq. and take back what's yours. (♪)
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rachel: earlier in the show i said that chelsea clinton received $84 million, it was the clinton foundation. all right. anyway, great stuff -- charlie: clear that up. get your wellness on. lisa: and i'm dancing because i'm cold. [laughter] i'm trying to stay warm out here. charlie: did you turn this thing on? >> you know what? i'll do that. charlie: yeah -- [inaudible conversations] >> we're just kind of living life in the winter. rachel: bye, everybody. see you tomorrow to. ♪ if baby with, you a song -- >> president trump's influence being tested far and w
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