tv FOX and Friends FOX News February 19, 2025 3:00am-4:00am PST
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something. >> todd: realistically every american watching and period could get a dividend from a sovereign wealth fund in our country. >> if they -- they set it up that way so it's put together in that manner. but, currently about 660,000 660 alaskas are eligible and get a dividend check every year. again, it's -- i think it's a shining example of what could be done here in the united states. >> carley: yeah. well, it's a very interesting idea and you break it down so well and "wall street journal" op-ed. so i encourage everybody to read that i was going to make a je'kel not being quite 1:00 in the modern and thank you for joining us until i found out you were coming to us from washington, d.c. doded to excited for the joke. >> sorry about that. >> carley: thank you for joining us nonetheless, have great day. >> todd: "fox & friends" right now.
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>> lawrence: i guess if you are watching brian kilmeade. [laughter] >> brian: so resentful. >> lawrence: just a lot. 6:00 on the east coast february the 19th. >> ainsley: made me laugh. all right it. is the dynamic relationship that everybody is talking about this morning, president trump and elon musk, how they came to work together for the good of our amazing country. >> elon called me and he said you know they are trying to drive us apart. you know what, elon, people are smart they get it. >> we must be over the target and doing something right. they wouldn't be complaining if we weren't doing something useful. >> brian: eric adams will face a judge today who will decide whether the justice department can drop its corruption case against him or not. and we are still waiting to find out if governor hochul is going to kick him out of office. >> steve: yeah, what's the
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hurry? plus, could we see a cure for addiction? we are talking to a mother turned activist whose opioid vaccine is in phase 2 studies in people. >> lawrence: "fox & friends" starts right now. ♪ i was just thinking about that weekend ♪ and time where we made out in the rain. >> lawrence: good morning, welcome to "fox & friends." a big. >> ainsley: south carolina, y'all. i have friends there. term toggle just dr. hunter birch is there. one of my really good friends and she lives in south carolina. that's the city where joe biden went to the catholic church and they refused him communion, remember? florence, south carolina. >> brian: what made you say dermatologist? >> ainsley: one of my wonderful christian fends christian lady hunter birch her office is there. >> steve: right there?
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>> ainsley: right in florence, south carolina. >> brian: is everybody burning off epidermis. i'm burning this off. i'm burning this off. i got sun spots or whatever. everyone is on fire. >> ainsley: especially in florida. >> brian: everyone is stabbing up. >> ainsley: get older. >> brian: i can't go out my face is red. >> ainsley: all those years of golf and baking in the sun. we are paying the price. >> brian: you don't mean baking you don't go outside. >> ainsley: and bring my easy bake oven. >> steve: brian, how much coffee have you had today? >> brian: none, zero. >> steve: somebody who has got some skin in the game would be elon musk. >> lawrence: that was good. >> brian: end the show here. >> steve: he has been asked by the president as you know famously to take a look at the federal government because the president has felt for years there is a lot of waste, fraud, and abuse. last night sitting down with sean hannity in an interview that i think they taped a couple
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days ago, really interesting. he, actually, elon musk revealed that in the total budget right now they have identified about 1% in waste, fraud, and abuse, and ultimately to think they could hit a trillion dollars, which was the goal all along. >> lawrence: yeah, so they are talking about total savings of $55 billioning. >> brian: so far. >> ainsley: so far in one week or in one month i should say. >> lawrence: contracts have ban canceled. the number is only going to go up, ainsley. >> ainsley: now even showing an interest in the idea of guaranteeing a $5,000 check to every american. it would be called the doge dividend. they are saving a lot of money. what i got out of this interview and we we are going to play a lot of clips for you this morning it. humanized them it. showed that they really get along it. showed. >> brian: they are pals. >> ainsley: how much they love america. he is a billionaire. he doesn't have to go through all the things he went through the last 8 years. elon musk is working for free.
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is he a billionaire. he talked about his companies, the neurolink can help the blind to sea, spinal cord injuries so someone can walk again. this is incredible. cutting edge. he talked about the rocket and for the first time the rocket usually dumps in the ocean. but if they can catch it like the baby, donald trump said, then that saves a billion dollars. >> steve: it's more efficient. >> ainsley: it is. >> brian: spacex falcon 9 rocket in the air. after they have the booster, the stage booster is going to drop down and get caught. and the booster will land on a drone ship called, of course i still love you. it will land there and he saves everything. here is elon musk on what his role is with the government. >> i think the thing with me i'm a technologist and i try to make technologies that improve the world and make life better. and that's why my t-shirt says tech support. i'm here to provide the president with technology support. and now, that may seem like
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well, is that a silly thing. actually it's a very important thing. because, the president will make these executive orders, which are very sensible and good for the country but then they don't get implemented. one of the biggest functions of the doge team is just making sure that the presidential executive orders are actually carried out. and this is -- i just want to point out this is a very important thing. because, the president is the elected representative of the people. so, he is representing the world ofwill of the people. president bureaucracy is fighting the will of the people and preventing the president from implementing what they want, what we live in is a bureaucracy and not a democracy. >> you write beautiful executive and sign it and assume it's going to be done but it's not. he take it with his hundred geniuses brilliant young people working for him that dress much worse than him, actually. they dress in just t-shirts. you wouldn't know they have 180
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iq. >> sean: is he your tech support? >> is he much more than that. he gets it done. he's a leader. >> lawrence: all the initial report saying that they are fighting and that the president is jealous of him. as you can see that was clearly wrong. i think this is why also, you are seeing a less frustrated donald trump in this next presidency because before, he would sign an order and there is no movement. there is no movement at all. they don't know how to cut through the government bureaucracy. what elon is doing is holding each agency accountable under the supervision of the president. it's not like they are working against each other. he is helping the president. >> brian: i never really thought about that. i thought executive orders' weakness was it's not legislation it will be overturned by the next pepper. what he saying you are signing this stuff and they are not executing it. don't believe jim mattis don't blame john kelly. people are just not doing it. president goes in two faces cut
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the people don't like me inspector generals on down. get rid of the prosecutors trying to make my life miserable. number two find someone i don't think he was fully aware that could execute my executive orders which i found are very interesting. the other thing i thought about the mindset is. this donald trump would have a problem with elon musk if he was in real estate muskingum would have a problem with trump if he was jeff bezos bluer jib. their focus is on the country. third thing they are focused on no rivalry their objective is the same. >> ainsley: left in the country so addicted to bureaucracy. they all run on saving us all money but they never actually do it. what i saw in that interview last night is they are exposing the left. all of the money, the wasteful spending that we all work hard for, our tax dollars, and what it is going to. it's going to all these dei programs in other countries. that's not what americans want. we don't mind helping people. let's help california and north
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carolina. the average american as sean pointed out last night makes $66,000 a year. guess what? they all pay taxes. they live paycheck to paycheck. they don't want their taxes to go to all of this nonsense. >> steve: ultimately, elon musk nasa was shooting rongts in the sky. he just went into that industry and made more efficient. everything he has done. he just does it more efficiently. he runs the electric car company very efficiently. and so what they are doing is now they are imprinting what he has done his whole life over the federal government. >> lawrence: private sector. every single federal agency as of this week now has a complete doge team. doge team is -- there is a team leader. there is a hr specialist. and there is a lead -- an attorney and an engineer. what they're trying to do is trying to figure out okay. what do they do, this agency, and how can we make it more
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efficient? one thing did he say during the interview with sean hannity, and we didn't realize, this is that some people on the doge team are actually federal employees and they are getting paid. nonetheless, and this was alluded to a moment ago, if you watch the mainstream media, you know, you see them trying to pull them apart, it's like okay, there is donald trump and elon musk in the oval office, who is the president, stuff like that. here they are addressing that right there. >> i see 2 all the time. they tried it and then they stopped. they have many different things of hatred. actually, elon called me he said you know they are trying to drive us apart. i said absolutely. they said we have breaking news donald trump has ceded control of the presidency to elon musk president musk will be ascended a cabinet meeting tonight at 8:00. [laughter] and i say it's just so obvious. they are so bad at it. i used to think they are good at it, they are actually bad at it. if they were good at it i would
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never be president. nobody in history has ever gotten more bad publicity than me. i could come out with the greatest things. i get 98% bad publicity. outside you have and a few of your very good friends, it's like the craziest thing. do you know what i have learned, elon, the people are smart. they get it? >> i guess we must be over the target or doing something right. they wouldn't be complaining so much if we weren't doing something useful. i think what we are seeing here is the thrashing of the bureaucracy as we try to restore democracy and the will of the people. >> brian: right. i do think the publicity has been somewhat better this time. i think they are treating him somewhat fairer on this issue. a lot of it is because elon musk is the one they are targeting and less about him. and is he moving at such a great speed hard for me people to keep up. elon is doing as well. but elon is the harsh person that's going in these agencies
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saying that has to go. has to go under the ordered of the president of the united states. so what you have a chief of staff that is focused on, you know, committees and getting legislation, and managing the cabinet and you got elon doing all the cutting i think this is the most beautiful relationship though clearly like each other. as you said, there is no competition here. doing what is best for the country. as you look at the two of them during the white house over the weekend it becomes very clear. good cob guy on the left and bad cop on the right. so elon is doing the dirty work because there is a time limit on how long doge is going to go ainsley dividend checks at the conclusion of its tour of duty.
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>> ainsley: if you watched that interview last night in that, you know, hour long special. >> sean: more tonight, right? >> ainsley: it is just common sense. and take away everything you think about donald trump or elon from the past. if you just listen to what they are saying, it's common sense. it's saving americans money. and sean made the comment last night you have the "new york times," "the washington post," you have three networks. you have the late night talk show hosts that threw everything at you. and he said. i was watching another network this morning while getting ready. >> steve: why? >> ainsley: i wanted the news. i love laura ingraham. it was a rerun. i wanted to see the live news what was happening this morning. i have like 30 minutes in my bathroom. i'm watching this network. and they show clips of elon musk rolling his eyes a few times. making fun of him, basically.
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and then sat down with shall donald trump and elon musk and never aired a clip of the interview over the 30 minutes. media not working and americans are smart. >> lawrence: elon musk has been clear about his condition and transparent. i don't think that's right to put that out there as if he wasn't paying attention. >> brian: aspergers? >> lawrence: treat him with that type of respect. don't just play video of him rolling his eyes as if he is annoyed when there is a condition there. there is plenty of americans and children that have that same condition. >> ainsley: it wasn't annoying rolling eyes. it was like what his body does because of his condition. >> brian: walter isaac son right before is he about to have huge breakthroughs goes quiet almost into like a trans. so a lot of times he is thinking and the results are obvious
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seven major companies with major breakthroughs as modern day benjamin franklin mayor of new york indicted. told prosecutors stop prosecuting the case. it next he thing you know mayor is on our couch. gets under a lot of democrats' skin and says i want to work with tom homan when it documents illegal get you into refresh my recollection put democrats over the top to the point an emergency meeting took place mayor al sharpton officials governor, rather getting rid of him. evidently the governor has that power. i don't think she is going to do it. in june we have a primary
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already to about his re-election. he might even lose that. but this is really coming to a head. >> steve: bread cat hochul. when we were on the couch yesterday sounded like she was going to have this beating and decide whether or not she was going to remove him because she did and does have that power. however, she said i'm going to wait and find out what judge dale hoagie decides. because later today here in new york the department of justice has been called into this federal judge's chambers to explain why they dropped the charges against mayor adams adams attorneys going to be there. there is a possibility the judge will not follow it. in fact, he quoted an appeals court ruling from 2022 notes that judges can reject bids to toss cases.
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doing so would be clearly contrary to manifest the public interest. it's unclear though what would happen, exactly if the judge denies the government bid to toss it because, of course, ultimately a federal judge works for the federal government what is the judge going to do prosecute the case itself. i look forward to see how this showdown is going to go down. the governor is here for emergency meeting. okay? there was a cop shot by repeat offender yesterday. there was no emergency meeting on that didn't remove the d.a. responsible for repeat offenders from being on the street as well. i think this is a lot of preliminary back door deals going on. and al sharpton in my opinion, ainsley should have never been at the meeting. why is he involved in this. >> ainsley: i don't get that but welcome to new york. kathy hochul has a tough decision to make willful the
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people matters few more months he is in office. maybe he will be elected again. let the people decide. this has never been used before. she does have the power to remove him but it's never happened before. and we all voted and the people of new york city spoke. do you know why they're mad at him? because he wants to remove illegal criminals off our street. >> lawrence: he is still saying that he wants the city to be a sanctuary city. >> ainsley: yes. >> lawrence: still saying people who committed nonviolent offenses. [laughter] >> steve: the federal government even said in asking them to dismiss the case they said being okay, we are not first there isline election coming up. also it, would be great if he could help the administration. that's why he was on the couch last friday with tom homan saying i'm going to. even though we are in sanctuary city. i'm going to work with this particular president that drives a lot of democrats crazy. >> lawrence: i wonder if the judge would have the same
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opinion. we see all the times in court of laws where there is decisions to drop charges because of the public good or they agree to testify against another offender or anything. this happens in court all the time. you mean to tell me helping to get the criminals out of the city is not public good? governor hochul cared about the indictment he gravity of the moment. what got under her skin and gets these democrats crazy they are working with trump. that he went to trump's inauguration. he was on our couch. i watched mayor de blasio, the worst mayor in american history say the big problem was he was on "fox & friends" couch on friday. it's unbelievable. i guess we don't -- alexis mcadams caught up with al sharpton. here's what he said. >> the only reason that we are late facing a court hearing tomorrow and only reason that the governor has to make a
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decision to do something or not do something that has not been done in 235 years, is because there was a double standard used on eric adams' case that those that he claims he believes were victims. i do not believe that he should have gotten a pardon. but i believe that donald trump has been inconsistent. having said that, the governor said to me that she is going to see what the judge decides tomorrow and keep deliberating with other leader. >> lawrence: first of all, he didn't get a pardon. the case was never adjudicated. charges were brought and dropped. happens all the time. and if he wants to talk about double standard. i didn't hear him say anything about hunter biden. what about all the people that have gotten prosecuted and put in jail because of gun charges and the president of the united states let his son off the hook. do you do a press conference about that? >> brian: what about all the money he owes the irs and his company. he owes like $50 million.
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>> ainsley: the judge in the case dale ho is a biden appointed george bushist. >> steve: what's he going to do find out later today on fox. >> brian: by the cadence leading it up to me to toss to todd. >> ainsley: teed you up. >> steve: where it says brian voiceover. >> brian: vo brackets. happening today, dash. president trump is heading to miami to give a keynote address at international summit. >> ainsley: now lawrence with brackets. [laughter] >> lawrence: thanks, ainsley. bring in tech executives around the world okay, ainsley. >> ainsley: todd buyer row. >> todd: don't worry the first line doesn't have brackets the second one does. i'm on cam now i can go. thanks, guys. the summit taking place next three days in miami hosted and funded by the saudi wealth fund trump's appearance comes as marco rubio is in abulbasher buoy dhabi after meeting with sd
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to host peace talks between president trump and president putin some time in the near future. today's event looking to bring influential leaders together to discuss some of the world's most pressing issues. such as food and water and security. climate change and ai, artificial intelligence. it will include tiktok ceo susie chu. he and trump have been publicly working with one another since the app.'s ban last month. also set to attend is oracle ceo satisfy cats. miami dolphins owner and tennis legend serena williams. the president is expected to deliver his speech around 5:00 this afternoon before flying back to the white house later tonight. toss to anchor ad-lib. there is nobody in the prompter. you guys will have to fight over it. >> we know having done it 28 years. we say thank you very much. now we toss to anti-israel
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protesters breaking thought jewish brooklyn last night. hundreds protesters flooding the street screaming things zionists go home screaming that at pro-israeli protesters who showed up to counter the protest. the two groups eventually needed to be separated by the police. at least one person was arrested. today is a very busy day for some of president trump's nominees on capitol hill. at 10:00 a.m. eastern time. lori chavez der reerm will take questions from lawmakers for labor secretary, then at noon the senate is expected to confirm kelly loeffler as the head of the small business administration. and kash patel's nomination to serve as fbi director is heading toward the final vote after clearing a procedural vote yesterday. he could be confirmed as soon as this week. meanwhile, the upper chamber also pressing on with its effort
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to pass a key trump agenda item before house republicans get a chance to do it their way. senate majority leader john thune posting on x before the vote that it is time to act on the decisive mandate the american people gave to president trump in november. republicans are still poised to pass two bills to tackle trump's agenda. the first on border security, energy, and national defense while the second focus on extending trump's tax cuts. those are your headlines, my friends. >> steve: all right. thank you very much, carley. >> carley: you are welcome. >> brian: love it or hate it. everyone is talking about doge. we're going to tell you how elon musk and president trump are responding to the constant criticism from the media. no words
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are connected to wifi 90% of the time. that's why our network has powerboost with wifi speeds up to a gig where you need it most. so, this whole meeting could have been remote? oh, that is my ex-husband who i don't speak to. hey! no, i'm good to talk! xfinity internet customers, cut your mobile bill in half for your first year with xfinity mobile. plus, ask how to get the new samsung galaxy s25+ on us. >> steve: all right. last night on musk you saw it president trump and elon musk opening up about their relationship and shared goal cut wasteful spending during an interview with sean hannity. >> elon called me and he said you know they are trying to drive us apart. i said absolutely. i wanted somebody really smart to work with me in terms of the country. a very important aspect. >> president is the elected representative of the people. so he is representing the will
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of the people. if the bureaucracy is fighting the will of the people and preventing the president from implementing what the people want, then what we live in is a bureaucracy and not a democracy. >> this all comes as democrats and some in the media are fixating over who exactly is running doge rather than the jaw dropping findings about government waste which is why the spreads. here to react is fox news contributor guy benson. guy, good morning to you. >> guy: hey. >> steve: i think it drives a lot of people crazy to think that the world's most powerful man and the world's richest man are actually working together in the public, something like we have never seen before and seems to be working out for both of them. >> yeah, one of the things that was striking it to me last night wails this response by the two of them sitting there together just the visuals of it. we have seen this argument from the critics. who elected elon musk?
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ened i think that's a weak point for a number of different reasons, but here they are sitting side by side and the signal very clearly is, here's the president of the united states duly elected just a few months ago by the american people. he is putting his impro-mom ter what they are doing especially in the executive one thing that stuck out to me. and you heard the clip there trump and elon both acknowledging very obvious that the media and others are trying to drive a wedge between them one point somebody is going to blow up. they were aware of a dynamic talking about it. interesting admission and probably a healthy thing. >> steve: shear a snippet from another channel. white house deputy chief of
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staff stephen miller who was asked hey, who exactly is running that thing? watch. >> so who is in charge of doge? >> president of the united states. >> he is the administrator of doge? >> no. the -- doge is the what was formerly u.s. digital services an agency of the federal government that reports in to the office of the executive office of the president, which reports to the president of the united states. >> steve: and he is accurate. they have changed that department. now it's doge but it is the president at the top of the flow chart. i know it's hard to grok with some people. what doge is doing and how they during it. that's fine. the puzzlement over is this legal? who is really in charge in the president is electedful. he puts a team in place. he delegates responsibility and
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there is a chain of command. donald trump is not sitting at his desk all day looking at line items. all right? he has given that responsibility to several other people who are overseen by elon musk. this is not a mystery. in many ways it is not unusual in our government but i guess it has to be spelled out by some of the people who are at least playing dumb. >> steve: to your pointed, guy, you have got the president big picture guy next to him the guy explaining what they are doing. he knows to a granular level exactly what doge is doing. some people might not be happy about what is happening. nevertheless they are being quite a contributor sprain explaining what they are doing and why they are doing it. >> so many bureaucrats, speaking of unelected people forever, for decades and decades. they move our money around in the chattels. sometimes it gets exposed often
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no one knows a thing. here you have two people committed to reducing a lot of the waste and the fraud and the abuse. there is plenty of that to go around that should be cut down. they are giving nationally televised interviews about it together. i'm not defending every last thing. but, overall the mission here, the picture, the way they are going about it. the fact that they are being transparent with people and like putting full documents out on x or twitter, which, of course, elon owns, that seems a lot better to this previous alternative and status quo that a strange number of people seem very, very committed to and invested in whereas most american taxpayers, i think, are in a very different position. >> steve: right. the average american likes the fact that doge duo is putting the so-called on a skinny diet. guy, thank you for joining us from washington. >> guy: you bet. >> steve: 26 minutes before the top of the hour of. the ncaa barring biologically
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>> janice: good morning, everyone. look at wind chills as far south as dallas, texas, negative three is what it feels like. feels worse than what it does in new york at 4. you got the artic air invasion as far as south as the gulf coast. negative 50 in montana north dakota, south dakota as well. so, it's really dangerous to be outside for a great length of time. i think they actually have school closures in the dallas, texas area because of the cold. here is the live radar. here is the storm system we are watching. bringing the potential for winter weather across portions of mississippi, alabama, georgia, in towards the carolinas where we can see a mixture of snow and ice over the next few hours as it finally exits the mid-atlantic. and then we get another burst of
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snow behind it later on this afternoon. snow in the new york city area on the back side of this system. ice in the forecast. that's going to be so dangerous for the carolinas: tomorrow and friday through the weekend, things start to warm up but we really need to get through the next few days, fox weather.com for all of your latest details. negative three is what it feels like in dallas, texas, over to you brian kilmeade. >> it is winter, just one more month be through. this. >> janice: i hope so. the ncaa facing criticism at this hour over its updated policy banning biological men in women's sports. listen up. the policy states athlete's sex is determined by birth records. critics say individuals are responsible for verifying athletes eligibility.
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regulations. all-american tennis player joins us now. we saw the executive order signs we are not out of the wood yesterday, you are very skeptic. >> that ncaa policy rotten to the core. not a single line of it in compliance or alignment with the executive order. >> brian: if you have that trans athlete playing male, playing in a women's sport, we think that's in our rear view mirror but you said it's not. >> not remotely. we need to bullet proof policy women across the united states deserve a bullet proof policy. the current one that's out there would allow openly allows any man, mani membership on a womens team and then they discriminate between layers of participation with just birth certificate, which is totally changeable in 44 states. >> brian: wait a second in 44 states i could change my birth certificate whether it's name or gender? >> yes, correct.
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>> >> if i decide i want to switch genders and play in gender sports, if my birth certificate will get me passed for the ncaa. >> that's correct. as it's written no other screening mechanism and the policy is actually completely arbitrary because it doesn't define sex it, doesn't limit women's teams to female athletes exclusively and that is necessary. >> so it's premature celebration last week? >> not just premature celebration taps brazen attempt by the ncaa to call the president wants bluff. >> brian: they saw the executive order and this is what they told fox, the policy is clear that is no waivers available and student athlete assigned male at birth may not compete with birth certificates other storms of i.d. >> there is no way to tell whether or not someone has an amended birth certificate. and policy as it is written doesn't define women. it doesn't define sex. you can change your birth
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certificate and there is no screening mechanism in place and no accountability by the ncaa to oversee this. >> so what would -- the executive order, you know president trump's intent. what could the ncaa do to make sure the president's intent to make sure biological males don't play in women's sports. if the ncaa was sincere. what would their rules look like? what would it sound like? >> there are two things absolutely mandatory the first is that they must decide membership on a women's team is for female student athletes, secondly there must be a screening mechanism to ensure that no male athletes can cross that barrier. >> brian: blood? >> a simple cheek swab will take care of it. checking for the sry gene. >> brian: riley gaines and president trump and all those girls there. president trump, probably have the video was signing that executive order, they thought this was a done deal. but you are sitting here, saying it is not.
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>> no way. it's not remotely a done deal. the policy that the ncaa released has no accountability and oversight from the ncaa. it has no clear language limiting women's team membership to female student athletes, only and it has no mechanism for what should he do light it on fire and start over. >> thank you so much. thanks for enlightening me. if i looked at those words, i thought we were done. but you are saying obviously we are not. >> brian: keep fighting. could we soon have a cure for drug addiction. a mom turned activist who is working on one right now. don't move and bowel incontinence. but that changed when my urologist told me about axonics therapy. a long-lasting solution that has really changed my life. this is not another drug, and it works.
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pope francis' help. double pneumonia. public events through sunday have been canceled. the # 8-year-old pontiff reportedly remains in good spirits as he stays at the hospital in rome. and he is asking for continued prayers on his behalf. so say a prayer for the pope. attorneys for karen reid asking a judge on tuesday to block a retrial on two of the charges
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related to reed's boyfriend's death but the judge abruptly ended yesterday's hearing due to new information presented by prosecutors. >> the implications of that information may have profound effects on this defense and defense counsel. >> read is accused of backing her car into her boyfriend boston police officer john o'keefe in january of 2022. her attorneys accuse local and state police of a massive conspiracy to frame read for the killing. the hearing has been rescheduled to next tuesday. a car in california plummeting off an overpass monday nearly striking several vehicles along i-5 in sacramento. the drivers on the freeway just avoiding disaster. look at that according to police, the driver of the vehicle that fell off the overpass had to be taken to the hospital for medical treatment as they continue to investigate what caused that crash. that was also caught on camera.
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those are your headlines, ainsley, upstairs to you. >> thank you so much. carley. >> you are welcome. >> the nonprofit cure addiction now working to develop treatments for substance abuse including a one-time vaccine that would end cravings for opioids. the founder started the foundation with her son jason, who she lost to addiction five years ago this month. nancy davis joins us now. nancy, thank you so much for coming on. >> thank you so much for having me i have interviewed you before race to erase ms working on something else that you co-founded with jason. tell us about. this my son came to me. he had an addiction problem. he kept relapsing. he wasn't doing well. he said mom, the 12 step program aa is great if it works for you. it only works for 7% of the people. what do we do with the other 93% of the people. >> ainsley: did i not do that. >> i'm going to too many funerals. your friends who are much older you are not going to funerals but people my age are going to
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funerals. we have to my -- all of a sudden, he needed to save his life. he didn't know what to do. and so he wanted to start cure addiction now. and it's all his idea. his different ways of doing it. he really wanted to find ways to make it equitable for everybody to be able to detox. not just somebody who can afford to go to rehab. and everyone thinks it does. but it does not. it's really hard. he wanted to find ways that you could actually stay sober and lose the cravings. mom, i'm a very logical person. i know, i'm sober this long. and i have a bad day. somebody broke up with me. the business deal didn't work. all of a sudden the first thing my brain wants to do is go use drugs. >> ainsley: now you are working with handful of doctors at different universities. to come up with this vaccine that we would take as babies or take it later in life.
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there is one that we're working on that we're so excited about for opiates. phase two inside humans brilliant. take this vaccine once and the rest of your life never crave an opiate. if you have an opiate anyway because sometimes addicts they test the waters. it will be blocked in your system. you will never be able to get high from it. there is a downside if you have to have surgery, break your leg what are you going to do later? if you have that happen so you would be put out for surgery with propofol, that would be okay a new drug came out recently that is a non-march particular pain killer. you would have to do it. be very careful. the idea of losing that craving permanently is just music to my ears, for sure. steve. >> ainsley: you said it was your biggest nightmare if you love an addict. we really do. this is so brushed under the rug
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and we ignore it. we don't think it's a real disease it. is a real disease. they get rehab and there is a cycle. just keeps going on. i got that call. i got that call. my life has never been the same. >> it was the worst thing. but what i have to do now is i can go forward and live my son's dreams, make his legacy very important. we are going to have our first cure addiction now event in los angeles. on the 24th of february. it's going to be great. >> ainsley: how close are we to this vaccine? >> i would say it's in phase 2 study on humans it. could take a couple of years. >> ainsley: it's amazing. >> someone else is, withing on one for key contain. working on different medicine. for 25 years nobody put any money into basic science research as it relates to addiction. people just brush this disease
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under the rug. it is the leading cause of death for people 50 years and younger. and it's like why don't we care about it? if you look at our homeless population. people in jail. a lot of people are there because of addiction and one way or another. >> ainsley: so sorry you lost your son. i'm a mother. >> i can't imagine going through that think about all the lives, jason's dream is going to save in the future. it's called cure addiction now. is that your website? >> yeah, cure addiction now.org. if anyone wants to come to an event. we have a big auction up on charity buzz. we're doing everything we can to get the word out and we want to treat everybody with a lot of dignity who has an addiction. it's time start looking at this as a real disease. and we have to do everything we can to fight this. >> ainsley: nancy davis, thank you so much. >> thank you so much for having me. >> ainsley: you are welcome. more "fox & friends" coming up. ♪
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