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tv   The Ingraham Angle  FOX News  February 17, 2025 4:00pm-5:00pm PST

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special day. the. >> i pronounce you married. you may kiss. [cheers and applause] >> bret: pretty cool. dozens of couples say, "i do" simultaneously on valentine's day at loveland ski area in colorado, 12,000 feet above sea level, a record 130 couples clicked into their skis and snowboards to get married. at least 300 couples have gotten married in the event's history. tomorrow on "special report," live inside the treasury department. i'll talk exclusively with treasury secretary scott bessent about implementing trump's misvision for the economy. that's it for "special report." fair, balanced, and still unafraid. here's laura. >> good evening. i'm charlie hurt in for laura
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ingraham. this is a special edition of "the ingram angle. a delta flied flipped upside down landing at toronto airport earlier this afternoon. we're expecting a press conference at any moment. we will bring it to you live when that comes. here with the latest is fox news senior correspondent. >> charlie, a very dramatic and compelling picture. you can see that passenger jet flipped over, on its back. you know, it could have been so much worse tonight. the delta connection crashed at toronto pearson international airport, ending with the belly of the plane, as you can see, facing up on the frigid runway. thankfully none of the 80 people on board was killed, but at least, as you said, 19 have been reported injured. three of those passengers in critical condition. among them a pediatric patient, a child. in addition, a 60-year-old man and 48-year-old woman have all
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been taken to the hospital. but officials say all 80 people, 76 passengers, a full flight, and four crew members, who were on board, are all accounted for. >> there's people outside walking around the aircraft. >> yeah. we've got the aircraft on sight now and burning. >> flight 4819 took off from minneapolis/st. paul airport, operated by delta connection airline endeavor, landing at. 13. the wind gusts were 40 miles an hour coming from the right. it appears that the right wing of the plane may have struck the runway when it touched down with such jarring force the wind completely snapped off the fuselage. there also appears to be dark scrapings and dent marks on the right side of the cockpit area in the front, indicating a side nose likely hit the runway, and then the jet fuel spilled out on the runway, because the engine
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broke, thankfully saving people's lives, sparing the lives of those passengers. tonight the national transportation safety board is sending a team to toronto to work with its canadian counterparts, the black positions, pilots' communications, reports of breaking conditions from other flights, all part of the ongoing probe. experts say that the crosswind rules landing at 35 knots -- 35 knots, charlie, is about 40 miles an hour -- really at the edge, really a challenge, for landing this type of jet, this 16-year-old crj, the canada air jet, but thankfully the good news tonight is that although three people are in critical condition, they're being attended to and everyone has so far survived this crash. we're awaiting for the update from that news conference in toronto and the very latest. charlie, back to you. >> truly dramatic. great reporting. thank you, eric.
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>>es going to yet again raise the concern about faa staffing, air traffic control staffing. there's been this talk about maybe staff cuts at the faa as a part of president trump's effort to trim down the federal worker force, feeding into the recent incidents and the safety of the total air traffic system is going to be very much a part of the conversation. >> the liberal media is already accusing trump of being a cause of this airline crash, but what's really to blame? joining me now is a retired commercial airline pilot and an aviation expert and former faa safety team representative. kyle, i've got to ask you. do potential cuts to the faa and other parts of the federal government have anything to do with what's going on right now? >> from what i see at this point, they have zero to do with this accident. it's not a matter of staffing.
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they had nothing to do with this, i can tell you that right now. >> so, scott, i realize that this is -- it's pretty impossible to tell from just this dramatic footage what happened, but you have a wing that is completely sheared off. and you have 40-mile-an-hour winds as sean reported. can you give us any sort of indication as to what you think might have -- what are the range of possibilities of what might have happened here? >> certainly, charlie. there's a number of things that come to mind. landing in a crosswind on a low-wing airplane like this, you got to to nail everything just right. it's a little bit of a challenge. when you add icy runways, blowing snow across the runway into the equation, it becomes very tricky. experienced pilots that do this day in and day out have got a little bit of an edge, and we're aware of what's going on with the aircraft. you can never give up on it.
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if the pilot was unstable coming down on the approach -- i'm not saying that ahe was, but if he were, that adds complexity to the equation as well. if the air speed is fast as he's coming down, the controls that he's going to put in on a normally will act slightly different, and it can overexaggerate the flight control surfaces, making it quite easy to catch a wing. once he lands, the game is not over. he's got to continue to fly that airplane all the way down the end of the runway. if he relaxes at all, there's a good chance the wind will catch a wing, causing it to cartwheel and put it on its back. i know it's too early to tell. there was not enough weight to flip that airplane. weight turbulence is ruled out. i think they'll look at the pilots. i agree with kyle, it's
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ludicrous to blame doge and president trump on this. the controllers up in canada are not even faa. they're canadian controllers. so very, very different situation up there. >> right. well, that's a really interesting point, an important one, i think. earlier today, kyle, a congressman blamed trump, saying president trump is in charge of air aircraft, all crashes are trump's fault. does that kind of thing help, if you're trying to navigate a crash like this, figure out what the hell happened? >> you know, it doesn't help. like your previous guest just pointed out, they were in the canadian airspace system. so nothing to do with donald trump. nothing to to with the way the faa is run. it's not the faa. one thing i want to say, the faa and canada, tremendous aircraft
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certification requirements. the outcome of this crash, with not a single fatality really indicates how superior the regulation is when it comes to building these airplanes. they have 16 g seats in that airplane. and also breakaway wings. we haven't seen those in airplanes 40-50 years ago. and that attests how great the system works. everybody walked away from this. that's what the airplane was designed for. and, umm, if there is, you know, a glimmer of light here is that everybody walked away. obviously there were a few injuries, but the system worked, umm, with everybody walking away. we really have to applaud the way these airplanes are built and the certification that the faa and canadian authorities mandate in the building of these, umm, airplanes. >> sure. real quickly, kyle, is there anything odd about the fact that the ntsb -- would we expect the
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ntsb, our ntsb, to take part in the investigation, even though it's in canada? >> yes, we would, because -- >> thank you very much. deborah flint, president and ceo of toronto pearson. i've just come over from our emergency operation center, and i'm here to give you a statement on what events transpired here today at toronto pearson. first and foremost, there was no loss of life. this is in due part to our heroic and trained professionals, our first responders, at the airport. so the facts of the matter around this event that happened approximately 2:30 p.m. is delta air lines flight 4819 from minneapolis to toronto operated by a subsidiary endeavor air was involved in a single aircraft accident upon landing at toronto pearson. the plane was carrying four crew and 76 passengers. among them, 22 canadians.
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the other passengers were multinational. airport emergency workers mounted a textbook response, reaching the site within minutes and quickly evacuating the passengers. we stood up our emergency operation center with delta air lines, police, paramedics, security, and federal agency partners. again, there were no fatalities. 17 injured passengers were quickly taken to local area hospitals. at this time we do not know of any of those passengers having critical injuries. we immediately halted further arrivals and departures on our remaining three runways. those runways were reopened at approximately 5:00 p.m. the other runways are remaining to serve the investigation, which will be carrying forward for the rest of tonight and into the next several days. umm, these two rains will remain closed while the investigation
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takes place. again, we are very grateful there was no loss of life and relatively minor injuries. we are very focused on the care and the concern and the passengers and the crew. some of whom have already been reunified with their friends and their families. others we have in a comfortable place right here at the airport in an environment where they're getting a lot of care and support from my staff. delta air lines is also continuing to provide customer care and information for passengers. umm, in closing, no airport ceo wants to have these types of press conferences, but this is exactly what our emergency, our operations, and our -- our first responder partners are all practiced and trained for. and again, this outcome is in due part to their heroic work. i thank them profusely. our thoughts and prayers are with all. we will be providing more information as it becomes available. we do expect that there will be
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some operational impact and some delays at the airport over the next few days while the two runways remain closed for the investigation. we will be sharing information periodically. for those traveling, continue to look at our website, and be in touch with your respective carrier as well. thank you for your time today. >> thank you for joining us. >> charlie: i want to bring back scott, a retired commercial airline pilot, and kyle bailey, former faa safety team representative. scott, you know, obviously i don't fly planes, but i ride in them an awful a lot, and i have to say, as dramatic as that footage is, the idea that
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everybody climbed out of that plane, you know, alive, it's completely upside down. you lose the wing. umm, how -- and obviously you may have never had quite this experience before, but how surprised are you at this outcome that -- that we don't have mass fatalities here? >> well, like kyle just said, i'm not -- i'm not completely unsurprised there were no fatalities. very excited there weren't. the cabin crew obviously did a miraculous job with cockpitting cabin and crew to get the passengers out. >> charlie: upside down. >> yeah. they climbed out. isn't that fantastic? they climbed out. a few took their carry-on bags with them, which is a knucklehead thing to do. the airplane could catch fire. they need to get out of the airplane. it's up to the cabin crew,
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additional passengers that stuck around to lift the other passengers out of the airplane. kudos to everybody involved. i i kind of agree that the crash fire rescue people did a miraculous job. outstanding. >> kyle, was there anything from that press conference that stuck out to you, that was important for viewers to know? >> no. i think that pretty much was an uneventful press conference as expected. the photos and everything from what we see, i mean, really explains the heroic efforts of all the parties involved. the flight crew, the pilots. and one quick thing i want to point out here is i think the ice actually, umm, played a part in the airplane at the very end. i mean, really that there's so many survivors, as a result of the lack of friction sliding over that ice could have actually -- with no fatalities. >> fascinating.
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>> thank you so much for joining us tonight. >> >> charlie: now to kentucky and tennessee, where some residents are facing deadly flash flooding. joining us now is fox news senior correspondent jonathan serrie with the latest. >> in reeves, tennessee, all day we were seeing first responders going out into the floodwaters in boats, checking on some of those holdouts, residents who did not want to leave their homes. they did their best to persuade them to get in the boats and come to higher ground. surrounded by water, these residents were isolated, and without power, and plunging temperatures as we go into the week. it makes it very dangerous for them to stay behind, which was also a concern in flood-ravaged parts of neighboring kentucky. take a listen. >> what this means, water still out there can freeze. we'll see b black ice in differt
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places during the days and nights, how cold it's going to get. remember the extra snow we're going to get. >> president trump has approved an emergency declaration for kentucky where the storm killed at least 11 people, including a mother and her 7-year-old daughter, riding in a vehicle that was swept off a roadway by floodwaters saturday night. first responders performed more than a thousand rescues during this storm, and storm survivors say they are determined to rebuild. >> it's hard, but i'll start over, i'll do better next time. i got to look at it that way. god's on my side. >> great attitude there. back here in rives, tennessee, i spoke with the fire chief, the head of the volunteer fire department here, serving with the department for about 35 years. he's seen floods come and go. the river goes up to an elevated level, sometimes twice a year, but he says in his 35 years in
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this town he's never seen anything like what occurred here last weekend. charlie? >> charlie: truly tough people, but they don't need any more of this. jonathan, thank you so much. >> yeah. >> charlie: trump's in the fast lane while democrats are broken down on the side of the road. that's next doctor box, there were many failed attempts to fix my teeth. i retouched all my wedding photos, and it was even affecting my health. i trusted you because you specialize in dental implants. you created a permanent solution and customized my teeth so it still felt like me. my new teeth have improved my life and changed my future. - thank you. - you're so welcome. get the smile you want from the number one provider of fixed full arch dental implants in the u.s. schedule a free consultation.
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you could also check out a chase money skills workshop. that's guidance from chase. make more of what's yours. >> trump's appearance at the daytona 500 can be seen as a metaphor for a second term, taking a victory lap. >> this is your favorite president. i'm a really big fan of you people, how you do this, i don't know, how you just want you to be safe. you're talented people. you're great people, great americans. have a good day. have a lot of fun. i'll see you later. >> charlie: ha-ha. not only was trump having a blast, he was welcomed with open arms. ♪ ♪ >> and he was in high spirits
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for good reason. >> i think it's fantastic. it's great for the country. our country is doing well again. we have spirit all over the world, this spirit again, we brought it back. it's been less than four weeks. you'll see what we do in a little bit period of time. it's only going to get better. this is very exciting. >> charlie: we're barely a month into trump's second term. one thing is evident. his agenda is more popular than ever. americans are thrilled that we're actually getting a government that is rooting out the waste, fraud and abuse. things politicians from both parties have promised for decades. even democrats can't deny the success, though they try so hard. >> donald trump's favorability rating is actually higher than it ever was the first time around. 63% favor federal government's recognition of only two sexes. 60% favor deporting immigrants
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who enter the united states legally. 60% want to expand oil and gas production. 59% favor declaring an emergency at the southern border. >> let me say as it relates to all of those issues, we're just at the beginning. we have a broken immigration system. we need to fix it in a comprehensive and bipartisan way. at the same period of time as democrats we're going to protect dreamers, protect farmworkers and protect families who help our communities across the country thrive. >> democrats are using the same talking points they've used for years. all talk, no action. but now we have a president who's all action. democrats better get used to this or it's going to be a victory lap for the next four years. joining me now is american majority founder and ceo ned ryan, oalong with kailee mcgee white, and byron york, fox news
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contributor and washington examiner correspondent. so, ned, i want to start with you. i want to play senator mark warner's complete meltdown over the dems' predicament. watch this. >> i think the democrats' brand is really bad. this was an election based on culture. the democrats kind of failure to connect on a cultural basis with a large swath of americans, it's problematic. you know, i think the majority of the party realizes that the ideological purity of some of the groups is a recipe for disaster. >> charlie: ned, do you have any sense whatsoever that democrats realize the situation they're in, and how they might possibly fix it? >> i don't think so. to be honest, i think, charlie, they are doubling down. i don't think they've learned anything from november 5th. and besides, warner can say whatever he wants to.
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the fact of the matter is the power structure inside the democratic party is still the un-american far left that holds all the levers to power, especially at the grassroots level. and so as they're wandering around, you have trump going at this relentless speed. i think part of the magic of what's taking place with trump is that he's just proposing what is apparently a radical concept for many in d.c., that he wants a government that actual represents and promotes the interests of the american people. i think that's one of the reasons it's so popular, charlie, is because it's moral. i think it's the moral imperative of every national leader to promote the interests of his or her citizens on every front, every day. i think we've a lot of immoral leadership. trump shows up and goes, hey, we're not going to put up with illegal immigration, put up with this insanity anymore. if you look at that, trump has been one of the most moral leaders we've had in the public arena for generations. >> charlie: it's all about issues, durable issues, that are going to be around for a long
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time. obviously one of the more remarkable things, when you look at polling right now, kamala harris, still remains one of the most popular -- or the most likely democrats to be the party's leader, but she can't get away from her word salads. watch this. >> we're dealing with so much in the world. the we have to find those moments that are about eye. the you know, as we say, shining a light in moments of darkness. and knowing that that light comes from within as well as from without. >> charlie: can you translate this for me? >> no. here's what i'll say, congratulations to president j.d. vance if this is democrats who decide to run again in 2028. i think this is part of the reason why trump's agenda is so
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popular, especially among my demographic, gen z adults, because the opposition is so weak and continues to provide us with absolutely nothing. you see even trump's ability to tap into these cultural moments, like go into the daytona 500, or the super bowl. it's the american spirit, especially among my generation, which grew up in institutions that relentlessly pressured them to hate america, to be ashamed of it. so trump is bringing back that sentiment. he's also doing exactly what we wanted him to do, which is gutting the unlefted, unaccountable burr crazy. gen z doesn't want to be yet another generation that pays taxes into a system that ignores us and takes advantage of us. we deserve better. trump is proving that he can deliver that. >> and of course he does it very naturally. people can relate to him in ways that we haven't seen from a politician in a long time.
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byron, congressman jamie raskin is already fantizeing about another trump impeachment. watch this. >> this whole corruption attack that is an attack on the department of justice for engaging in corruption prosecutions could be impeachable in a different political environment. >> charlie: will their third fake impeachment work? >> well, a different political environment would mean democrats controlling the house of representatives. that's not going to happen real soon. i think there's something we need to talk about here, which is there's a couple of aspects to this. one there's the popularity of trump's positive agenda. democrats are flailing about for their own agenda. so that leaves them with the option of attacking trump. and the problem here is the democratic and their media affiliates attack machine has not been able to get in gear. go back eight years from right now, the first month of trump's
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presidency, february 2017, the national security advisory, michael flynn, has to quit, because he's been targeted by the fbi in some sort of russia investigation. if you go back and look at media reports at the time, what democrats, including jamie raskin are saying at the time, it really is all russia, russia, russia. there's a certain hysteria they managed to get going and keep going for a long time. what you're seeing now is the absence of something like that. jamie raskin was hoping maybe this handling of the eric adams indictment at the justice department could be that. we've had other people hoping that elon musk and doge can be that. but nothing has gained the traction that democrats already had at this time in trump's first term. >> charlie: sometimes it makes you think that the only thing they have left is their shamelessness, which in politics is a pretty good thing to have,
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but it's not working out. thank you so much for joining us. >> thanks, charlie. >> charlie: dems' war on doge, the left exploding after billions of dollars in waste has been exposed. that's next. oh, it makes me want to tear up. i swear to god, there ain't no way i would be here without tik tok. i got really good at tearing motors apart and putting them back together, and the car still worked. i received so much support for that, and it made me feel like, okay, maybe i can really, really, really do this. (♪) my business has tripled in the last year because of me sharing my videos on tiktok. i wouldn't be able to support the families they'll work for me now without tik tok. without the increase in sales. (♪)
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>> donald trump h outsourced may of the functions to elon musk. he's an american oligarch. you see this in every autocratic regime. >> they're looking not only to access irs systems, but potentially lay off irs workers. i mean, this is a full-scale assault on government. >> your country is under assault. they're not at the gate anymore. they're in your bedrooms. they're in your living rooms. they're in your businesses.
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they've got your data, [bleep]. >> charlie: according to the left, transparency over how your tax dollars are being spent is the worst thing imaginable. the swamp doesn't like it. they're taking aim at doge, because muck and company continue to expose the decades-long build-up of deposit rot and efficiency, waste and fraud. they think that saving your taxpayer money is aiken to biden's biggest foreign policy debacle. >> this does remind me of the federal government version of afghanistan withdrawal. the way we did it was horrible. we could have done it in a better way. right now we agree there's waste in the federal government and that everyone would like to cut the deficit and cut spending. the way they're going about it, it makes no sense. >> charlie: and all the left has is their fake outrage.
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>> elon musk has got to go! elon musk has got to go! hey-hey, ho-ho! elon musk has got to go! >> joining me is the president of the article iii project and a very smart guy. mike, what are they so afraid of, honestly? >> that's a very good question, because president trump campaigns on the facts that he's going to hire elon musk and set up doge to go into the federal government and cut waste, fraud and abuse. you have these activist judges now telling the president that his treasury secretary, for example, cannot look at treasury payments because apparently these activist judges also don't want the trump administration to find waste, fraud and abuse.
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i guess the question we should have is, is why do they fear there's going to be accountability? isn't sunlight the best disinfectant? >> charlie: yes. especially after all the lectures we've heard from them for years about the importance of democracy. they don't like democracy all that much, especially as you point out, trump is not only president, but he campaigned on this stuff specifically. i was struck by something that elon musk said last week that i thought was really, really smart in that extraordinary press conference he did in the white house with his son sitting on his shoulders halftime time, talking about how if they -- if the president of the united states can't get this done, we don't live in a democracy, we live in a bureaucracy. >> that's exactly right. the president is in charge of the executive branch. he has a constitutional duty under article ii of our constitution to take care that our laws are faithfully
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executed. that includes these appropriations by congress and by these administrative agencies when they're spending money to make sure that it's not being misspent, that there's not waste, fraud and abuse, that we're not sending money, for example, to the un and gaza to fund hamas terrorism. so i think it's great that elon musk has become president trump's heat shield on this. >> charlie: i want you to listen to this, two employees from uaaid, who were cut. watch this. >> people are really scared. i think that, you know, 12 days ago people knew where their paycheck was coming from, how they'd pay for their kid's daycare, their medical bills, and then all gone overnight. >> they're not will go for competency, they're not looking if you're good at your job, they're looking for pure loyalty tests. if you don't give it, you will be punished. >> charlie: mike, they actually honestly believe that the
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federal government exists to provide them with jobs. >> yeah. ththe usaid has become their travel agent, right? wasn't that samantha powers' press secretary or something like that? the itists of washington, d.c. can find other jobs like real americans, and real americans do every day. >> charlie: or maybe they can't find real jobs. either way, they shouldn't be our problem. mike, thank you so much. just ahead, free speech under attack in europe, and the liberal media's obscene reaction. that's next
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>> charlie: a disturbing anti-free speech movement is afoot in europe. "60 minutes" revealed that in german their government is conducting a crackdown that is borderline orwellian. >> it's 6:01 on a tuesday morning, and we were with state police as they raided this apartment in northwest germany.
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inside six armed officers searched a suspect's home. then seized his laptop and cellphone. those electronics may have been used to commit a crime. the crime? posting a racist cartoon online at the exact same time across germany more than 50 similar raids played out. >> charlie: but there are also signs that america's establishment media, they're open to similar ideas. take margaret brennan, the host of "face the nation." after vice president vance denounced the attacks on free speech in germany on friday, brennan decided to attack him by rewriting the history of the holocaust in an interview with secretary of state marco rubio. >> he was standing in a country where there was genocide.
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he met with the head of a political party that has far right views and some historic ties to extreme groups. the context of that was changing the tone of it. >> charlie: luckily the trump administration won't allow the media to blatantly lie and go unchecked. secretary rubio did not mince words. >> free speech was not used to conduct the genocide. the genocide was conducted by an authoritarian regime. there was no free speech in nazi germany. there was none. there was no opposition in nazi germany. they were the sole party that governed that country. that's not an accurate reflection of history. >> victor, why should americans be concerned about what's going on with free speech in europe? >> well, they're a partner in western civilization. they're our ally. we have 70,000 troops there.
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more importantly, we're losing europe. j.d. vance's speech wasn't just directed at the minister, nor even the maga crowd at home. it was to the silent majority in europe. what he was saying was, this elite has failed. anytime you fail that's when you start to censor. they failed on the border, on the economy, on energy, on immigration, on defense. so in their failure, they try to stifle all forms of dissent and free expression. he was trying to give encouragement to all the people of europe who know that, want to rise up. that's why they hate him so much. you know, ms. brennan didn't understand that when the nazis came to power, they started to outlaw free speech, one of the mechanisms they used was to say it was the german equivalent of disinformation or hate speech or misinformation. that's how it always happens. usually censorship is the twin of failure. when you're failing, you cannot
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stand the light of -- you know, of criticism. >> charlie: and it's so remarkable to me that so many members of the media don't understand the basics of what you just said right there. listen to cnn, talking about this. >> it's not about free speech, it's about speech that's favored versus disfavored. in the case of the president now, it's old speak versus new old to borrow from "1984." he wants to do away with old speak, erase certain language, promote in favor other language. >> charlie: do you think he actually read "1984"? >> no. you know, the problem with all that rhetoric is they never give a single example. why they don't tell us this is exactly what donald trump did. he used the government to do what?
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case, point, location. they never do. it's all below hard megaphone. they can't. they don't realize, again, that joe biden did more to harm free speech than almost anybody. he did it because he had a failed agenda and people were speaking out against it. that's why the fbi began to partner with facebook. that's why 51 intelligence authorities started to lie on national tv to suppress dissent about the authenticity. that was the point about the russian collusion hoax. they wanted to suppress free speech because their agenda was failing. that's what's happening in europe. they know that there's a populist nationalist belowback coming. j.d. vance wants to assure people that we are the friend of the real europe, not the pseudoeurope, the pseudoelite that's hijacked the continent the last 20 years. >> you know, the left wing media get a lot wrong, but you would think the one thing they might
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do is stand up for free speech. that's apparently asking too much. victor, thank you so much for joining us. another liberal celebrity is losing it over trump. that's next narrator: ontario, canada, your third-largest trading partner and number one export destination for 17 states. our economic partnership keeps millions of americans working. 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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>> charlie: aanother liberal's olympic mountain. sheryl crow decided to get back addison trupp for winning the election by selling her tesla. ♪ ♪ >> charlie: wow, cheryl, how will we ever recover? crowe posted this video on instagram and here's how she explained her decision to get rid of her tesla. saying that if she drives a tesla, it would mean she associates with elon musk and donald trump. she also says she will donate
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the money from her tesla to -- and i'm not making this up -- npr. jason rantz, seattle radio talkshow host join me now. lets remind everyone about sheryl crow's hypocrisy. here she is smiling with harvey weinstein. i mean, you really can't make this stuff up. >> all of want to do is mark sheryl crow. at the end of the day in this is performative politics at its most inseparable. she only purchased the just because she thought it would hurt some social currency and she only decided to film her getting rid of the tesla because of the social currency she thinks it is going to earn her. i love the fact that we're about at the time where half of this country has no clue, sheryl crow is and that makes me feel good.
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>> charlie: former cnn anchor jim acosta released a statement calling for the media to band together and stop covering the white house after the white house removed the associate press from the media pool for their refusal to use the name gauff of america. i think that this derangement system is in full swing not just in celebrity lala land but also among our press brethren. >> let's be clear because this dummy does not realize that by having that wing media not covered donald trump, it means there's less propaganda. at the end of the day, he hates him so much he is actually going to help the president if anyone were to actually take jim acosta up on his great idea. okay you know, you are not going to get attack ads by abc news. msnbc is not going to call him a precious. i don't know how he will rec recover.
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>> charlie: do you get any sense that the left is catching on to any of these things? for example i was impressed, charles barkley, who is not a big republican by any measure, it seems to have sort of recognized what everybody recognizes, which is that in san francisco, the homeless population has gotten out of control saying that he likes the mayor of san francisco but hopefully they will do something about the homeless crisis there. >> and he was correcting one of his colleagues who said it was a beautiful city. if you actually care about these cities, you will be honest about just how bad of a shape that they are in. so kudos to charles barkley. >> charlie: thank you for joining us. that is in for us the net. i'm charlie hurt in for laura ingraham. you can catch me every weekend on "fox & friends we can vote. jesse watters take it from here. ♪ ♪ >> jesse: welcome to you jesse watters prim

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