tv FOX and Friends Sunday FOX News March 2, 2025 4:00am-5:01am PST
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♪ ♪ peter: it's the 7 a.m. hour of "fox & friends" if weekend starting with this, ramping up resistance. democrats are ready to rip a page out of nancy pelosi's playbook ahead of president trump's address to the joint session of congress. charlie: plus, the tariffs are coming. outraged canadians are protesting the change -- by changeing the name of a popular coffee drink. rachel: and a new study ought isinging the decline in christianity may be with slowing down as more americans are finding faith. the second hour of "fox & friends" weekend starts right now. ♪ ♪ i just can't get enough. ♪ if. peter: a nice shot of atlanta. is that buckhead?
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in atlanta? charlie: looks like downtown. peter: please e-mail in. rachel: i don't know if we've ever played defetch if mode. i'm kind of loving that. peter, so good to have you on this morning. peter: good to be back. thanks for letting me come back. rachel: charlie and i talked after the show, and we just feel like we have such bad posture. [laughter] peter: i feel like i need to sit is up because, you know, i'm used to being in the white house briefing room where you have to look like you're paying attention so that they call on you. rachel: should i do this more, peter? is that better? what is your -- what is the key to your posture? peter: my spine. [laughter] if my back. -- my back. i don't know. rachel: there wasn't -- you didn't take ballet as a young guy -- peter: it's never too late to start. rachel: steve didn't put books on your head to make you walk --
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peter: no, when i stay home in new jersey before the show, that's what we do, up and down to the mailbox. yeah, just right on the top of my head. it's -- we run a morning show host boot camp -- [laughter] rachel: i can just see it. charlie: which, of course, includes leaving the house with the wrong cup. peter: no, that's the right -- we don't have a peter cup -- rachel: take steve's. i like that. peter: he left this here on friday, it's still hot. [laughter] charlie: very good. rachel: it's been greating having you with. peter: thank you. thanks, guys. charlie: president trump will address a joint session of congress on tuesday. peter: and democrats are already preparing their response with a man to ramp up the resistance to trump's agenda. rachel: maaed a lin rivera joins us live from washington. maaed key, good morning. -- can maddie, good morning.
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>> reporter: president trump is expected the highlight some of the work his administration has done and the rest of the work they want to do in his first address to congress since taking office. he has moved with lightning speed, wielding his executive authority to address the border and resame the federal government, and his expansive use of that power as left democrats wondering how to pond. axios reports house minority leader hakeem jeffries do want members to attend the speech with a plus one. a congressional memo obtained by axios asks house democrats bring a guest who has been harmed by the trump administration's early alaska as. but other democrats -- actions. other democrats are reportedly weighing not attending. lawmakers who are leaning against or are undecided about a going include vermont senator bernie sanders, massachusetts senator elizabeth warren and massachusetts if senator ed markey among others. if per "the washington post," former house speaker nancy pelosi who notably tore apart the president's state of the
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union address back in 020 the is now encouraging members to, quote, let the president stew in his own juice. pelosi, who's still widely respected within the democratic conference, reportedly wants democrats to focus on the republicans' budgets framework, that gop blueprint that would enact the president's agenda and also call for spending cuts which democrats argue would slash programs like medicaid. that, in pelosi's view, would be a much more effective way for democrats to respond rather than simply interrupting the president's speech. so we'll see. charlie, rachel and peter. rachel: thank you, maddie. peter: maddie, can we keep her just for one second, i just want to double check the quote, nancy pelosi wants donald trump to stew in his own juice? >> reporter: yeah. rachel: that's a quote. i saw charlie and peter, as soon as you saw that -- said that, they wrote down stew in juice. [laughter] peter: i heard that. colorful.
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charlie: you definitely reported the juiciest part, so we're grateful to you. >> reporter: you got it, of course. rachel: who can forget nancy pelosi ripping up the speech, but you know what my if favorite was? remember this clap? [laughter] that was so good. peter: that person right here with the ceremonial copy the speech is the person who doesn't want any of the democrats to protest this time. it almost makes it feel like she, even though she's just a back bencher now, rank and file member, not the speaker, not leadership, it makes it feel like she has not blessed any of the democrats as the worthy successor to the obama, biden, pelosi era. charlie: great point. if. peter: i don't know without next big dem is going to be -- rachel: here's what "the washington post" said about this. now rank and file lawmaker, pelosi retains a great degree of clout to your point, pete -- i mean, peterrer -- inside the democrat caucus.
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younger lawmakers continue to seek her counsel with recent discussions including warnings, do not turn themselves into part of the story during tuesday's speech and urging them to narrow the party's message in next year's midterm election. any demonstration of can disagreement whether visual or whatever, just let him stew many if his own juice and don't be any grist for the mill to say this was inappropriate. pelosi said thursday. really rich coming from she who ripped up the speech and had ton finish the funny if clap. charlie: alligator clap. rachel: it was to good. for about three weeks after that, that's all i did. charlie: this is great. rachel: i did the clap. here's why i think some of them are not going to go. usually a state of the union address this early in is just like i'm going to do this and i'm going to do that, and it's a lot of fantasy talk about all the things they think they're going to do, hope they're going to do. donald trump going to to show up there on tuesday, and he's going to have solid accomplishments
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that have been cone in just one month, more than what many presidents get done in even three years. it's remarkable. we talked earlier about the border, charlie. i mean, it's gone down, like, 90 some percent in terms of illegal crossings. just huge accomplishments. and then all the pun saved on top of that -- money saved. charlie: such a great point. and the idea of him stewing in his juices, the juices of success -- rachel: yeah. [laughter] charlie: the juices of winning. just get him a hot tub of his juices of winning and success, and he can just sit up in there like you say. that's such a great point. it'll be the first time ever that you have somebody in that -- of course, this is not a state of the union address. this is a joint address to congress. it's a slightly different title because he's not been there for manger more than, as you say, two months, a matter of weeks. but he's going to actually be talking about success ises. rachel: yeah.
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charlie: wins. rachel: he said he would get -- we would get tired of winning. peter: my nancy pelosi fun fact? you know what he has for lunch every day? charlie: oh, no. peter: a hot dog. rachel: does he? that's what they have inside the cloak room. they serve hot dogs -- kid you not know that? charlie: serious reporting right there. rachel: i have a husband who has snuck me in there many times, me and the kids, and, yes, they serve hot doings. peter: is it free in. rachel: no. you have to pay for your has dog in the cloak room. charlie: really? if. rachel: yes, you do. rachel: if kids go in there, they don't have the pay for the ice cream. peter: you know who pays for it? we do. rachel: i'm telling you, it's not free. you have to pay for your own hot dog, but that is what they serve. i'm imagining that's where she's getting the hot dog. peter: she's been there a long time. rachel: i'm going to tell you this too, she's eating hot dogs
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for lunch? say what you will about a her, she's very trim. she still has or you know -- charlie: sharp mind. rachel: -- spring in her step. charlie: she's very sharp-minded. rachel: no, no -- charlie: she's older hand joe biden. rachel: i know. charlie: that will always amaze me. rachel: the other one that's aging backwards is maxine waters, i'm sorry. again, another person -- charlie: starting out at zero, it's not that -- rachel: can somebody tell us how old maxine waters is? peter: face id -- charlie: all their bank accounts are -- charlie: she's 86. rachel: she looks amazing. nancy pelosi's aging backwards, her bank account is going the other way. charlie: am i the only one getting yelled at right now? peter peter -- joint address to congress, i will be up late at the white house. i airs tuesday, 9 p.m. --
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rachel: and i will be there. i derailed this -- i don't know how i did that. charlie: there's always time for hot dogs. rachel: that's his favorite food, did you know that? charlie: and i didn't know that. covered here -- her for years. way. rachel: we're beginning to have to sneak you into the cloak room. charlie: talk about the success ises, the juices trump is stewing in p one is his effort to bring antithe our borders -- sanity to our borders, and top of the list there is tariffs. mexico has decided that that they are going to, in objection to the 10% tariffs that trump has decided to put against canada to fight fentanyl and illegal immigration, canada has decided to change the name of their popular coffee drink called an americano to canadiano
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according to "the washington post." you know, it's just coffee. but if you want to call it either one, that's -- rachel: well, didn't we do something like this ourselves? charlie: yes, the freedom fries? rachel: to french fries. charlie: and, remember, that wa- rachel: 9/11. peter: there's a great quote -- rachel: why'd we do that that on 9/11? peter: because the french were not backing us up in iraq from what i remember from watching this show in when i was in high school. charlie: when we were all in war mode. rachel: when i was a warmonger. peter: there's a great quote. this guy owns a café in toronto said, when somebody orders an americano, employees jokingly inform them that isn't the drink's correct name p. it's definitely me saying, hey, just in case anybody was wondering, this is where we stand on the subject, we're pro-canadian with.
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if you want a coffee and somebody says that's not what we call it anymore, you're going to be so annoyeded. charlie: but that's what happens, when you go in and say i'll have a small coffee, that's a venti. peter: it's not called americano. do they have at tim horton's in canada? where does anybody if else get can have tee in -- coffee in canada? rachel: i have a feeling this isn't going to stick. by the way, i love that you brought up -- this is back when we were into war. you're so right. it's such a great, it's a funny line you just said, but it is to emblematic of where we're at right now, just how donald trump has completely transformed the party from the moment which you brought up to to me last weekend, that that moment at the debate in south carolina when donald trump said no more stupid wars. we all sort of woke up to go, yeah, it's stupid. and now -- charlie: it's the most
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pro-military state in the country. if you were going to move the v.a. out of washington, which we should, you'd move it to, like, south carolina because those people really care about veterans. and they would be the best at dealing with the veteran affairs. and trump went down to south carolina in 2016 and just laced into the wars, and republicans were, like, actually, i don't disagree with him. rachel: nobody disagreed. this was some sort of weird taboo with about it, and at thak we're talking about peace. peter, you know what pete and will used call me, they used the call me indy sheehan, then they moved to cindy snowden. [laughter] is that says a lot. get used to it. charlie: i just realize, you could actually use this cup. rachel: yeah, that's a great idea. pete hegseth -- peter: thanks, secretary hegseth. rachel: you lost your yeti. you got a time, but you lost the yeti.
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[laughter] charlie: turning now no your headlines, starting with a win in the war on terror, the u.s. military killing a senior military leader of an al-qaeda affiliate in syria. that high-value a target was taken out in a precision airstrike. centcom's general is vowing the u.s. will pursue terrorists relentlessly. check out this out of this world image beamed back to to earth from the moon. it's courtesy of the blue ghost lander after a successful touchdown overnight. [cheers and applause] >> -- just became the first commercial company in history to complete a fully successful moon if landing. charlie: god bless private
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enterprise. the lander now expected to spend two weeks studying the moon's surface. and finally, m if ooo-ve over, cows, because lab-grown milk apparently on hits way marf climate activists' concern about the meth haven the emissions from cows. "forbes" speaking to to a few start-ups that expect to roll out their product by later this yearen or early next year writing, quote, this approach also a offers a viable path to mass producing milk in a way that is resource-efficient and sustainable9 with the potential to scale to meet global dairy demands without reliance on live stock. because if they want to kill all the cows because they're murderous, blood thirty lab people. you know, my -- lab-grown meat, i think, all of it is so the disgusting, but has been-grown meat is an affront to hot 40 dogs, that's my problem -- hot
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dogs. lab-grown mil should -- we should bomb any lab. this could make me to-war again. rachel: yeah. [laughter] charlie: they're worse than -- they are chemical labs. if you're making lab-grown milk, no. i'm off the train, we're done. rachel: it's interesting, who would invest in that not because it's gross and, obviously, your body's not going to be able to process and metabolize something that's made in a test tube, but did they not get the memo? america, the most bipartisan issue is make america healthy again, and it's about a healthy milk. by the way, isn't that just baby formula? [laughter] peter: when nancy pelosi says she wants trump to stew in his own juice -- [laughter] rachel: i bet she drinks lab-grown milk. charlie: no, she doesn't, because there's nothing healthy about it, real about it. cows are wonderful, cows are magnificent is. peter: i bet you could use
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lab-grown milk to gas up an indycar. charlie: yes, you could. rachel: probably full of all kinds of flammable things that could go into a gas tank. charlie: yeah, you might not have to -- peter: who can help us figure it out? if. rachel: all right. abby is live in florida as the indie car series revs few up for an inaugural season at fox. abby, would you drink has been-grown milk? if. >> reporter: absolutely not, rachel. i was just saying when i was hearing you guys react to this segment, you know what's not lab-grown? these tires. these are hand-mounted onto the cars. yeah, i don't think that the drivers fuel if it with lab-grown milk. yeah, i will not be doing that. we are currently hanging out in the paddock which is where all of the teams ahead of this indie car race -- indycar race are getting ready. and i got to get into one of these cars yesterday. that take a look. can you drive me to work every day, please? >> absolutely, i'm in. i don't know if i could do that
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this if new york city, but i'd give it a shot. >> reporter: i have to tell you, i felt like i was inside one of those games at the arcade, but you were in control, and i got 100% and won the race. >> well, you know, that's one thing as athletes, as race drivers, we don't just sit is here. you feel what you have to go through for 100 lap ares, making pit shops -- stops, racing with different guys, it's tough. it's a long day. >> reporter: on that straightaway, that's the airport runway, right? >> yeah. we run about 160 miles an hour. >> reporter: i gotta tell you, 160 miles per hour feels like it when you don't have roof over your head on these cars. they are aerodynamics -- aerodynamic. it's around the streets of st. petersburg, so there are 14 different turns. the drivers really have to balance precision but also aggression as you have that 160 miles per hour on that airport runway. it's just, it's so varied.
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and you get to see all of beautiful florida as you're whipping around in one of these cars. and i do want to leave you with a fun fact about these tires. this sidewall here is actually made from recycled plant from arizona, and i'm from arizona a, so so i had to give a shout-out. guys, peter, i'll tell you that i know i drove you for ride to work for fox nation, and i kind of regret not driving you in one of these indycars. maybe we'll do that next time. peter: i think the problem is if you drive like anything without a lid in new york city, people are just going to start throwing tough in the back -- stuff in the back with, just whatever's in their hands. charlieal a though they do drive the reverse trisickles without a lid. not the ask a stupid question, but most of these indycars don't have a backseat. they just had a backseat for you, right? >> reporter: yes. so these were a different type of car. the one that i was in goes with about a maybe 180 miles per hour if you push it to the limit.
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but when they're racing let's say an to oval track because there are three different types of tracks in indycar, they go about 240 miles per hour when you have a one-seater. that's pretty cool. maybe they'll let me drive one of those one day. charlie: that's amazing. rachel: awe a many. thank you, abby. >> reporter: thanks so much, guys. rachel: we'll check, in with ashley plater as well. charlie: ukraine's zelenskyy now to sign the minerals deal after a being kicked out of the white house on friday. we'll take a look at the country's mineral wealth and what its resources could bring to the u.s. ♪ ("three little birds" by bob marley) ♪ ♪ smiled with the rising sun saying... ♪
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peter: back with a fox wildfire alert. several wind-driven fires are burning across the carolinas prompting new evacuation orders overnight. this massive cloud is from a fire burning about 10 is miles away from myrtle beach, south carolina. it doubled in size overnight to about 1200 acres. thankfully, no injuries reported so far. so let's now check in with meteorologist adam klotz for our fox weather forecast. adam. adam: hey, good morning, peter. yeah, tease are those fires spread across the carolinas,
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largely many if north carolina, but we do have that fire in south carolina as well. this is being driven by a front that moved on through, brought a lot of wind with it and some cold kind of dry air. you saw it moving through saturday, all of that cloud cover. no rain in it to mines the ground, instead just told -- cold, cold, dry air. boy, these temperatures have really dropped here over the last 24 hours. 18 degrees the in chicago currently, and with that wind that a's fairly widespread, it feels a lot colder. the coldest spots across portions offer into year new england -- interior new england. it stays relatively cool across the country for today. the only other weather headlines is we're track are thatting storms across texas and oklahoma, and we continue to see moisture running onto the pacific coast and they're looking at high el vision snow. for now guys, back to you. charlie: thank you, adam. this morning president zelenskyy now claim he's ready to sign a
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minerals deal after getting kicked out of the white house on friday, but how exactly would the u.s. benefit from the deal? rachel: our next guest bought ripeses for lithium deposits in ukraine with -- licenses -- and he warns it is crucial for the west to have more control of -- critical metals tony sage joins us now to explain. tony, welcome to the show. let met -- me just start with this, does ukraine have a substantial am of critical minerals, enough to pay off the billions and billions of dollars that they, that we gave them? >> the simple answer to that question is, no. but it becomes a little bit more complicated than that. i mean, they're pin ifal-rich, very mineral-are rich. they've got a lot of manganese, graphite, iron and, of course, lithium. but those minerals aren't really counted in the rare earths category. the rare earths that they do have haven't been explored
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enough to identify how much they're worth. but, look, it's a start. i think having the in there would completely change the dynamic. for example, we bought this deposit, the lithium deposit -- we bought two back three months before the war. the war started, and we haven't been able to to work those deposits since, obviously, for fear of our taffe's safety. -- staff's safety. so we've ex-patted them all back out of the country. so having the u.s. there, for sure, we're a u.s. company. we're listed on the nasdaq, so that would be protection for us. and the lithium that will come off the our deposits will definitely help the energy transition in the west. charlie: so, obviously, one of the things that, you know, one of the advantages in the whole idea of security is that if the u.s. has an investment many these rare earths -- this in these rare earths if in ukraine,
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it makes the land more valuable and, therefore, more likely for the -- a better ability for the u.s. to protect our interests. obviously, russia is watching all of this, and this puts them in kind of a bind, the idea that the would suddenly have real, concrete interests in minerals in ukraine. >> yeah. well, that's why i thought -- i was watching, we were ready to pop the champagne corks yesterday thinking that we're able to get back into the country, and then he makes a fool of himself by doing what he did when the u.s. was just saying we're going to have u.s. companies in there extracting minerals, we're not going to let russia hurt our interests. we've got a financial interest now in your country. that's much better security guarantee than what he's after. of i mean, to everyone on my side of the fence, it was just a ridiculous reaction yesterday. but i'm glad to see that he's changed his mind and he's
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willing to do that. it's not only going to help the country, it's going to also a benefit the u.s. because as we all know, the big elephant in the room here is not ukraine-russia, it's china. china control these minerals, 97 of the rare earths in the world is controlled by china. 97 percent. china's banned certain of those minerals from coming into the u.s. that is just an absolute disaster because the whole of the national defense system is based on rare earths. you cannot produce an f-35 fighter, you cannot produce an aegis destroyer or a nuclear-powered submarine. midwest of the satellites that go up into space -- most of the satellites that go with up into with space have rare earths if them. that's how serious this problem is. now, the ukraine will not be a solution to that problem because there's not enough work done on the rare earth deposits that are in ukraine. and that's why mr. trump well before, back in 2019 wanted to
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buy greenland. and greenland is where the west gets saved by exploring the deposit there. it's the biggest one in the world, and that's why you've seen a lot of interest by president trump and his team in looking after that particular country's interest. rachel: yeah. well, tony, a loft those mines -- a lot of those mines that china owns are in africa, and they're using child slave labor. china's not the only country involved in that gruesome, e isville industry there. hopefully, if there are other places we can get rare earth mineral, and i believe we have them here if we would allow people the mine for them here, then maybe we could see less child labor involved, upwards of 40 40, 50, 60,000 children -- >> yes, absolutely. absolutely. it's rife in the congo. and it's just -- in china itself, there's a massive copper mine near the city bet border
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that just -- tibet border that just conscripting people from the local tribes to work there with no pay, it's shocking. rachel: slave labor. >> we need these sort of minerals in western areas. greenland is a fantastic country. i've been operating there now with my partner for 22 years. we've got the massive resource. we've already been to the white house, we've already seen the state department, so that's where the west is going to get its supply from for the next -- charlie: tony, this is such great stuff, and i hope you'll come back and join us again and we can talk more about it. thank you, tony sage. >> no por -- worries. thank you. peter: coming up, president trump's senior add advisor, jason miller, will be here. charlie: but first, abby hornacek is live from st. petersburg, florida, ahead of the indycar series on fox.muci ♪ -- you've been creeping arouni a onme me ♪ your system fast.
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[background sounds] charlie: today the indycar series officially launching on fox. the season opener getting underway in st. petersburg, the first stop on the road to the indy 500. rachel: let's head back to st. petersburg, florida, where abby hornacek is live along with today's starting lineup drierveg alexander rossi. good morning, abby. >> reporter: that's right, rachel. good morning to you. yeah, alex here is joining us. even toe he has a big race are coming up later today, so thank you a for joining us this morning. >> no problem at all. happy to be here. >> reporter: all right. you've won the indycar series eight a times, one of them was the indy 500 when it was a soldout crowd. you were a rookie, and it was the 100th anniversary. what was that like? >> when you put it like that, i'm hoping i didn't peak too
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early. no, it was an amazing experience, it was life-changing. it's the biggest single-day sporting vent in the world. it's a huge thing, obviously, for our sport but also american motorsports in general, 330,000 people in one place. t it's a must-see vent. just to compete is an amazing thing. >> reporter: as you can hear, people watching at home, it's very loud in here. where are we? >> we're in st. pete, a little bit south of tampa, in florida, it's race a one of the season. we race on city streets down here, and the race is in about five hours. it's an exciting time, you feel the momentum building, a lot of teams rah are warming up their cars and fans are starting to come in. >> reporter: you can hear all of the mechanics working on the vehicles. you were explaining to me kind of the difference between an indycar and a maas a car vehicle. is what are we working with -- nascar. >> i think the biggest thing is, obviously, the engine's in the back. there's no doors, no roof, it is
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a 2.2 liter v6, makes around 750 horsepower. it's hybrid technology now, so we have capacitor packs in the car that re-gen and deploy energy throughout the lap. carbon brakes, brake pads, operating temperatures around 1,000 degrees fahrenheit. the total weight of the car with the driver in it is 1800 pounds, so is power the weight ratio is pretty awesome. it's a lot of fun, obviously. i'm very lucky to get to do this as a job and, you know, we have a difficult task ahead of us today starting 20th, but, you know, we have a great team, you know in fantastic this year. it's just the beginning, and we're up for the challenge. >> reporter: all right. well, alex, good luck today. i asked him if he's superstitious, so i am allowed to say this much i'm not a betting woman, but i'm putting my money on you. >> as long as you don't say break a leg, we're all right. >> reporter: thanks a lot,
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alex. guys, i might drive this back to the new york if that's cool with alex -- charlie: do they have car keys in i've always wondered that. are or do you push a button? >> reporter: do you have car keys in how does it start in. >> see that guy9 with the computer. >> in that's the key. you need him and the computer. >> reporter: he just pushes enter and it goes? if. >> maybe a little bit more than that, but, yeah. >> reporter: did i answer your question, charlie? >> yeah, it does. peter: when he takes it to dinner -- >> reporter: i've got to steal him as well. charlie: there you go. rachel: all right. thank you, abby. peter: thanks, abby. rachel: well, the trump administration's plan to fingerprint illegal immigrants, and jeff bezos is shaking up "the washington post" opinion session. charlie: that's all coming up in my weekend news review.
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charlie: it's time now for my weekend news review, and there's nobody better to do it with than peter doocy who's going the help me break down some of the biggest stories from the week. we'll start with secretary of homeland security kristi noem announcing a mandatory online registry of illegal migrants
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with names, fingerprints and home addresses. this is, like, bringing back an old idea but using it today to start -- to get a handling on illegal immigration. peter: wasn't this mitt romney's idea with, like self-deport? but the difference is they waited until after they won the election to put it out. and so they can try. charlie: probably smart. but, you know, it does go back to the point that this was probably the most -- just like 2016, this is the most important issue that got donald trump elected. and the problem in 2020 was illegal immigration largely had been solved. the problem at the border had a largely been solved. and, but thanks to four years of joe biden, it was wide open again, and the problem was even bigger than it was in 206. peter: the problem is going to be, like we were talking about earlier, there are sanctuary jurisdictions where people are going to say they don't want to self-report, and they are not
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going to get in trouble. charlie: at which point it becomes a political fight, and trump wins all day long. okay, next topic. jeff bezos overhauls "the washington post" opinion section, says it will focus on personal liberties and free markets. in a tweet on wednesday he wrote: i'm writing to let you know about a change coming to to our opinion pages. we're going to be writing every day in support and defense of two pillars, personal liberties ask is free markets. i also believe these viewpoints are underserved in the current market of ideas and opinion. i'm excited for us to do -- fill that void together. of course, the opinion page editor decided to resign instead of go along with this. these are some of your colleagues in the white house briefing room, but there's a sea change. peter: but the reason that jeff bezos is a billionaire, maybe trillionaire, we have to check, is because he's a smart businessman. and they made -- he's also in great shape now. he looks great.
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but they made a big decision a couple years ago a to be hard on trump. now they are making a business decision to maybe the fortunes of "the washington post" will be better if they either go easier on him or just talk about something else. charlie: yeah. and it is kind of remarkable. i remember from my years covering the white house, you would often a get -- "the washington post" is always there. they never miss, but they would often a ask questions that didn't have anything to do with what most normal readers care about. peter: something else though, it could all be tied up in space. he has a space company. that's where all the money's going to be years from now, and he looks at his number one competitor, elon musk, with trump every day. charlie: gene hackman and his wife mysteriously found dead in santa fe, new mexico. sheriff's department has ruled out carbon monoxide poisoning,
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but very mysterious with. they're, what, 20 years apart, 30 years apart in age. both died on the same day with their dog. very, very curious. peter: we know his pacemaker recorded some kind of cardiac event nine days before. something kill her, and if we don't know yesterday, i heard dr. michael baden say yesterday it's possible he has this pacemaker event, she goes to get the medicine, falls down, it's not -- it's less of a dramatic hollywood-scripted ending, but it could have just been their end. charlie: i have to ask, what's your favorite gene hackman movie? peter: i really like welcome to mooseport. i think that might be the last thing i saw that ray roman if know was in. charlie: i might have to go with no way out. peter: we were just talking about that at my house, and by mom gave away the ending, and she said easter what happens at
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the end -- i'm probably the only person that is in the studio that didn't know. charlie: peter doocy, thank you for joining us. okay. a new survey suggesting the country's decline in christianity is slowing down. why more americans are finding faith and spirituality, that's next. farxiga has been trusted again and again, and again. [crowd chant] far-xi-ga ask your doctor about farxiga. ♪ 7 million us businesses rely on tiktok to compete. within a week of posting, i had over $25,000 in sales. small businesses thrive on tiktok. tiktok brings in so much foot traffic. i need tiktok to keep growing. ♪ (three little birds remix) ♪ ♪ [breathing of man through a mask] [woman exhaling] [flames crackling] ♪ [water crashing] [scrubbing] [salt falling] [fire crackling] [cheering]
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♪ if. rachel: america's decline in christianity appears to be slowing down for the first time in nearly 20 years. pew research center finding that 62 of americans -- 62% of americans identified as christian last year. that's a number that has remained stable since 2019. father mike. >> is miss is the young adult ministry director for the duluth, minnesota, die seize, and he joins us now. good morning, father. >> good morning p rachel. rachel: this is so interesting. it appears that the number of people who were saying they were christian or faith-filled or religious was declining. it's now stabilized. here's what what -- i dug into the numbers, here's what i find. we'll put up a poll so you can see some of it. 86% still believe in the existence of a soul, 83% in god,
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universal spirit. i'm fascinated because i think we're for faith-oriented than other countries and nations, especially in europe with, but i'm interested in the male part of this. it appears when you dig into the numbers, it's young men that are driving that that stability. in other words, their numbers are going up which is helping to stop this, this lowering of numbers. to talk to me, because you're on campus. where's -- what's happening to young men? >> yeah. no, i think it's fascinating. and i can completely see it. i think there's something, i think there's something that in the human heart and spirit that longs for something more. and is when there isn't anything more offered, anything more than just, hey, here is financial success is, worldly success, here is just success is on, say, a playing field, a sports field, if nothing more is offered, then nothing more will be reached for. but i think what i've seen is i've seen far more people and in many ways our culture has
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allowed the concept of god to once again be presented as a viable option. and not only as a viable option, but as something that actually is worth -- that god himself is worth reaching for, worth aspiring towards and a life of holiness is possible. and then in that context when you get to be able to declare and proclaim jesus christ, i think the response of so many young men is, yes, that is the model that i want to follow. that's the kind of man i want to be. rachel: yeah. and so much of what's offeringed to them whether it's technology, it's so nonfulfilling that i can see why they would be drawn to that and it sort of being countercultural as well. let's talk about lent, because on wednesday is the start of lent. what would you say to anyone who's watching our show right now who's, like, you know what? this time, this lent i'm going to have a more meaningful eleven, i'm going to, you know -- lent, i'm going to really use these 40 days to grow
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and walk closer to jesus. what would you recommend they think about over the next couple days before it starts on ash wednesday this week? >> i love that question. so i think a lot of times -- have you, rachel, you know the term assess schism? rachel: yes. >> ascetical practices, things we typically associate with lent. so that's fasting, prayer,al a. s giving, those kind of things. but i was digging deeply into the word, and it comes from a greek word which means training. and i was like, okay, wait. what if i didn't have that that sense of, okay, this lent, you know are, i'm going to be a little bit holier, maybe a little nicer, i'm going to, you know, restrict my food or whatever the thing is, what if my mentality was this lent i'm going the train? i'm training for something. and you know the difference between, like, working out ask training. working out is good, i'm exercising. training is i have a goal, and i want to be able to finish a
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marathon. my goal is i want to do a triat a loan, whatever the thing is. i think sometimes we walk boo lent without a goal, without a vision -- rachel: right. >> and the vision the church gives us is, okay, at the end of this lent, how can you and i look a little bit more like christ. and so as i enter into ash wednesday and go throughout lent, okay, what's my training going to be? and it could be the sense i'm really distracted. when i'm with people, i'm 23409 really with people. what could my training be? okay, i'm going to get rid of some distractions, maybe social media stuff, but also a, okay, when i'm with someone, i'm going to look them in the eye, be where my feet are kind of situation. rachel: yeah. >> i can realize that my heart isn't actually like jesus, but how does my if heart become like christ? do i spend any time with him? this 15 minutes a day that i'm praying isn't just because it's good to pray, but if i pray, my heart will become like his, and
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i'll start to look like him. training, i think, could be a good lens to look through. rachel: i think it's a really, really good way to look at it. sort of like a jesus boot camp, if you will. i like it. we're on the verge of lent. thank you for joining us, and i hope that we all learn from all your wise lessons. thank you so much, father. >> thanks, rachel. rachel: you got it. we have a big sunday season morning of "fox & friends" ahead. be sure to stay with us. do the. this way has people who start early. people who care and inspire each other to do things the way they should be done. this way uses technology (♪) and goes the extra mile (♪) to deliver your promises on-time, every time. this way is why we're the number one national ltl carrier for quality. which is why it's the only way we go. since starting the farmer's dog,
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bogart has lost so much weight. and he has so much more energy. he's like a puppy again. ♪ (banjo playing) ♪ c,mon bo! this is a before picture of bogart. such a big boy. pre-portioned packs makes it really easy to keep him lean and healthy. and look at him now. he's like a show dog. [silence] bogue, can you give daddy a break here? he's having a hard enough time.
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