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tv   FOX and Friends Sunday  FOX News  March 10, 2024 3:00am-4:00am PDT

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means so much to me. i encourage everyone to get it hopefully everyone has gotten it for their wives and a moms and d sisters. >> mother's day coming up a quick favorite? what's my stories and that of course talking about my three boys. i had my first on when i was in high sky talk a lot about that. also jennifer griffin, so many others at the beautiful book. >> it does make a great mother's day gift i'm anxious to read it so thank you. all right, that's going to do it for us we had a good time here. we're going to be back tomorrow with sue at 7:00 p.m. eastern for the big we can show. "life, liberty & levin" is going to start in just a few minutes. stick around. ♪ ♪ ♪
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♪ [national anthem] ♪ ♪ [national anthem] ♪ if. ♪ ♪ [national anthem] ♪
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♪ ♪ pete: good morning, and well -- welcome to fox and friends if on this sunday, march 10, year of our lord, 2024. your photos, as always, they're amazing. we never run out of them, apparently. rachel: no p. pete: you keep supplying them. friends@foxnews.com.
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send in your photos so we can play them during the anthem. and we're excited to be here. rachel: by the way, did you see i texted you buys -- you boys this morning about international women's day? pete: oh, yeah. it's a socialist holiday. you were on it. rachel: that's from hang thattinging on -- hanging out with. pete: nice haircut. will: oh, thanks. cut it off. pete: you didn't take the much off the top. rachel: it's more of a side trim. p. pete: check this out. i need some magnesium. will: you notice how -- rachel: more magnesium than he does. will: you notice when you get a haircut, you're like, ooh, 4 a.m.'s to catching up. pete: thankfully, rachel brought me some magnesium.
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will: is that really? pete: if you were watching yesterday, apparently, that prevents you from going gray, and someone told will at a diner or you immediate to get -- will: 1,000 milligrams of magnesium. rachel: along with that jog thing you bought. will: we'll talk about that in the 8 a.m. hour. pete: the thats' worth its own separate conversation, for sure. [laughter] we're glad you're here. the primary is on tuesday in a few states. they call it mini super tuesday except it's a moot point at this point, but the campaigns of the trump and the biden campaign seem to be running through the tapement. they were both in georgia yesterday. if you were paying attention online, trump had a big oldally, and biden had a little get together. but here was a big part of the topic, laken riley and the state of the union still and the characterization offer killer and whether or not are we're embracing that family and her and recognizing the tragic
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circumstances that occurred, and it didn't have to be that way with. here's donald trump in rome, georgia, yesterday at a rally talking about meeting laken riley's family. watch. >> if one of the lives that was taken from us was a incredible 22-year-old nursing student right here in georgia, laken riley. 9 from the time she was in the first grade, laken's dream was to spend her life caring for others. and i met her beautiful mother and family backstage, sister, friends, some of her, her roommate. they said she was, like, the best, she was always the best. she was the whole world to her or parents and to her sister, just to the whole family. incredible. then the unthinkable happened. 16 days ago laken went out for a morning jog. she was in great shape is. she wanted the keep herself that way, and she never came back. never came back.
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will: that was president trump who did meet, as pete mentioned, with laking i'm -- laken riley's family. meanwhile, president biden sat down with msnbc and said perhaps one of the most offensive things you can possibly imagine when it comes to laken riley. he did not apologize for messing up her name and calling her lincoln riley. he apologized to the alleged murderer for calling him illegalful. >> during your response to her heckling of you, you used the word illegal when talking about the man who allegedly killed -- >> undocumented. undocumented person. i shouldn't have used illegal. it's undocumented. and, look, when i spoke about the difference between trump and me, one of the things i talked about on the border is the way he talks about vermin, these people polluting the blood.
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i talked about what i'm not going to do, what i won't do. i'm not going to treat any, any of these people with disrespect. look, they built the country. the reason our economy's growing. we have to control the border and a more orderly flow, but i don't share his view at all. >> but you regret using that word. >> yes. rachel:s it is shocking. pete: bend the knee. bend the knee. say the word. take it back. that's all they care about, conform to our characterization of this. and, by the way, so laken riley's killer built the country? rachel: yeah. that that's what he said is. there's some hidden gems in what he said, but i want to, first, address this is the an indictment also on msnbc. they didn't ask him why did you get your name wrong with. they asked why did you call him an illegal, and as you said, he bent the knee and apolo used to the killer -- apologized to the killer and to all the illegals coming across that he's going to be more respectful if give them dignity.
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no dignity for laken even in the way he doesn't even know her name. but if you listen to that full statement there and his answer, he says we need to control the flow. is he's not saying i want to stop illegal immigration, i want to control our borders. what he's saying, and you have to translate this, is i'm not going to have another del rio bridge situation with a bunch of haitians under there. i'm not going to have people on the streets of san antonio or albuquerque, i'm going to put a lot of money into ngos and the whole system so is i can make sure that there's -- pete: a more orderly now. rachel: -- a more orderly flow. so we're going to get more of what happened to laken riley because we know that they've emptied prisons, that -- [speaking spanish] that many other cartels are coming through. and you saw the formations coming through the desert, men in camouflage and carpet shoes. so, yeahing we're going to get
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more of this. he said that in the interview is. will: this is beyond disgusting, and we have arrived at a moral impasse are where there is no rational coming together. rachel: yeah. will: there is no way to reconcile the need to apologize for using the term illegal in the wake of a murder. the murdered is the victim here, not the murderer. and if that needs clarification, we have come to a point where there is no longer an ability for discussion. you are upside down morally. this is beyond, i think this should be a breaking point for your average nonpolitical, independent person. if you see the video that you just saw, explain yourself. if you cannot see the black and white morality. rachel: well, someone who does is donald trump, and here's what he had to say when he was in georgia about that word. >> they just told the me prior to what i'm doing right now that
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joe biden went on television and apologized for calling laken's murderer an illegal. he didn't want to call him an illegal -- [background sounds] he said he should have called him an undocumented, not an illegal. and he wanted to apologize. [background sounds] they want to call him another name, did you ever hear the other one? newcomer. a newcomer to our country. are we, are we going crazy? he was an illegal alien. he was an illegal immigrant. he was an illegal migrant, and he shouldn't have been in our country, and he never would have been under the trump policy. [cheers and applause] biden should be apologizing for apologizing to this killer. rachel: and that rally, by the way, was filled with people holding up plaque if cards of laken -- plaque if cards of laken riley's picture. she's really become quite a
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symbol in this whole debate because it's really the worst case scenario of what can happen. well, actually, there are even worse case scenarios. we know that terrorists are coming over as well which could kill even more people. but for that family, wow. pete: yeah. especially potent in georgia. you hear the roar of the crowd. were trump to get reelected, or were trump to get elected, the clash we're going to see over what the trump administration would have to do to deport people, i mean, it's going to bt last night. i don't know why. you talk about the clashes we've seen in the past, the left's to going to lose their mind. will: bring it. pete: i agree. will: bring the insanity. pete: this type of, on this issue, some reason -- will: i had, i ran into an old friend yesterday at the gym in new york, and i've known him for several years, and he's on the left. all he talked about was this issue. rachel: really? will: all he talked about a was
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the change in new york city. mothers with babies in papooses on their back along the highway, kids begging on the subway. whatever greg abbott and ron desantis did, it worked. this is changing minds in the city. i don't think that means the city will ever go red. i don't think the city will vote republican. but i'm just telling you, there will be insanity on msnbc, i'm not sure there'll be with insanity in the country. i think people understand at this point this is out of control. rachel: well, joe biden has figured out a way to bypass even greg abbott and ron desantis' efforts the send tm to ore states -- to other states. he's literally flying them, 320,000 we found out this week, from south america directly into our country. i actually have some information from a whistleblower that they came -- you know, he was brought from chile, flown into texas.
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an ngo made him sign a nondisclosure, but then he accidentally told me it was catholic charities. and then they flew into texas, and he was known to another state. i won't say which state. but -- pete: sounds like a more orderly flow. rachel: a little more, expensive probably, but they'll get it done. they'll get it done. will: we move to this, the justice department is opening a criminal investigation into the alaska airline ares incident that saw a door plug if come off mid-flight back in january. rachel: boeing also dealing with more mechanic alpha failures on their planes after a flight in san francisco lost a tire during takeoff. pete: tires falling off. ashley strohmier joins us with more. >> reporter: yeah, the doj is trying to figure out what, if anything, led up to the january 5th alaska airlines door plug incident in this criminal investigation, and now the company claims it cannot find the documents relating to the plug. the vp of boeing said in a
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statement, we have looked extensively and is not found any if documentation. and then alaska airlines downplayed the severity of it saying in an vent hike this, it is normal for the doj to be conducting an investigation. we are fully cooperating and do not believe we are a target of the investigation. the doj and boeing entered a deferred prosecution agreement back in 2021. it was following those max 737 crashes that killed hundreds of people. boeing a had to pay $2.5 billion and and agree to not violating the law to settle if that -- in that agreement. so to make matters worse though, boeing had more bad news this week. a tire fell off during takeoff in san francisco, and then another plane rolled off the unway in houston.. -- runway in houston after a landing. three passenger on that alaska airlines flight we were talking about earlier will suing the ourline and and boeing for 1 billion accusing both company of negligence, guys. back to you. rachel: thank you, ashley.
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pete: president all right. on to another topic. there's -- the free press. are you guys familiar with the free presses? they do a really nice job of -- she left "the new york times." you know this group of journalistses who are actually trying to recover the idea of journalism. they report on both sides and, certainly, report on topics the mainstream press never will. there's an activist group in california that's paying teachers to teach teens to be activists. so you get a certain amount of money if you're willing to teach them. jade goldfish is the name of the person in the high school who talked to the free press about this. he said one of the reasons they were hired is to help students find their voice and be able to express it. but in reality cfj is not helping students find their own voices, it's giving them a scripted voice. their teaching them parroting which is the exact opposite of how you empower children.
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they're called californians for justice. nearly 100 high schooler teachers received $1400. rachel: i remember, pete, when you first started doing your book, you started to refer to public schools as commie camps, and it's pretty good. i mean, like, that's really what that is. and now they're getting paid to do it. pete: yeah. rachel: so the taxpayers are, had some sort of fund that they devoted that the school -- allotted to the school,ing and then the school disbursed the money to the students. california gets money from the ford foundation, they get money from bill gates and maine lindy -- melinda gates' foundation. but they also a partner with this lawyer group, another justice group, to try and advocate for more money for this kind of stuff to come into the school system. so they're working every angle
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to not educate kids, but to turn them into advocates for their ideology. and so, you know, this is another reason why beware of these public schools. by the way, long beach unified school district had this to say about it. they said long beach unified values cfj's expertise in equity training and professional a development for students sponsoring an inclusive learning environment, our practice of providing stipends referring to internships up to $1400, etc., etc. kind of all that stuff we said before. will: no, you guys got it covered. pete: yeah. [laughter] rachel: ray i thought you were going, like, wrap it up, ray hell. rachel: no, that's not what i was saying. a. rachel: oh, o.k. pete: there we go. we're just finishing the cycle and following through with indoctrination. let's turn now to your headlines. two of the three victims who died in a national guard helicopter crash in texas friday
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have now been identify. identified. john rashida served as a new york state trooper e, and if casey e -- [inaudible] if hope i got those names right, servedded as a new york national guard soldier. the third victim, a cbp agent, has not yet been identified. officials are investigating what caused the crash. a spokesman for the national guard says more information on the crash could be released today. and joe biden signing a $460 billion spending package yesterday as congress avoided a potential government shutdown. the measure is a combination of six bills that include funding for the justice department, the fda and other a agencies. but the pentagon, homeland security and the state department were all left out. funding for those departments is set to expire in less than two weeks, and i'm sure there'll be passenger, and then there'll be some -- panic, and then there'll
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be some big bill, and we won't know what's in it. camden high school cruising to a victory in the new jersey group two state title game yesterday after a controversial call that we with showed you yesterday. players from the team on the wrong side of that call on tuesday were at the game. watching camden celebrate their championship win. referees waved off the buzzer beater during that game against camden. the state governing body later admitted the call was wrong, they said they could not reverse it. well, we talked about camden yesterday, they've got a good basketball team -- will: that's the story we were -- rachel: that's the town -- will: oh, you're right, we had the shot. pete: president the thing at the top -- rachel: where he said it was not a great town. pete: i asked people to e-mail in great things about camden -- will: was camden the one that
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got hosed? pete: yeah. no p they're the ones that benefited from the oh team getting hosed. rachel: if you're from camden, tills nice thing it is about -- tell us nice if things about camp den. biden making abortion a major theme of his state of the union address as democrats put the issue front and center in 2024. a pro-life activist says the message is out of touch for many americans. >> of you in in this claim potential and -- chamber and my predecessor are promising to pass a national ban on reproductive freedom. my god, what freedom else would you take away? are you ready for♪ ♪are you ready♪ ♪are you ready♪
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i'd like to get your reaction to the state to have unii don't think soar and i want to make sure we leave some time because this is going to be an issue, and a lot of politicians are putting their heads in the sand, republicans, and they think they can just not talk about abortion and it will go away. and and this is something they could actually win on, and i know you believe that. so let's start with state of the union. >> shower. yeah -- sure. yeah, i mean, i hope americans wore neck braces on thursday night. i felt like i was on a plane, i felt like i should have worn one to watch. the rhetorical whiplash was simply stunning. with heard messages of women are powerful, we can do anything except multitask and be a mother and also work. babies in test tube it is are fantastic and valuabling and loved, but babies in the womb, not so much, and they should be allowed to be a aborted up until the moment of birth. and if they're diagnosed with a genetic around normality as your
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daughter and my daughter were in the womb, they should be simply thrown away and discarded because they don't matter. the environment, we should protect it. big pharma, we should go after it for making money off of prescription drugs unless they're selling chemical abortion pills, and then we should completely unregulate it even though women are buying and becoming infer tile, and these drugs are polluting our waterways with known entity disrunner thes. law is good -- disrupters. it was unbelievable. rachel: yeah. and those abortion pill, by the way, are drumtizing -- traumatizing women who are essentially performing their own abortions in the bathrooms and not realizing what what's going to happen. it's absolutely devastating to talk to women who have been through that. but with let's talk about the politicians. how should they talk about it? if you had -- if i was running for congress right now, what would you tell me is the best way to talk about this?
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>> well, i'd give you the advice i gave my children, you can't outrun a bully. planned parenthood expect abortion lobby is a bully, and when it comes to abortion, whether it's a state or federal race a candidate's running for, you can't outrun them on this issue. it's best to confront them and actually go on the offense and make democrats name, make your opponent name one abortion they don't support. because they can't name one. they support abortion up until the moment of birth with taxpayer funding for any reason and and that, rachel, is a position that's out of touch with the vast majority of americans. more than nine out of ten young people, the most liberal part of our voting bloc, gen-z and again y, they disagree with the platform on abortion with of abortion for any reason up until the moment of birth and tax pay where are-funded. the key is we need to tell america that's what they really stand for, because if they hide
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around the euphemisms of choice and reproductive care. and meanwhile, they're not actually telling anybody what's going on in these abortion facilities, how these children are being killed in the womb. and all of the alternatives and if life-supporting resources that are in communities that 75% of our neighbors don't know even exist. the democrats suck at problem solving. their solution to a potential problem is to end the sufferer, not the suffering. rachel: great points, all of them. kristin hawkins, i hope some of those members of congress will be calling you to get some advice. they've got to confront it and go on the offense. i couldn't agree with you more. >> absolutely. they can call me anytime. [laughter] rachel: i love it. thank, kristin. -- thanks, kristin. have a great sunday. >> you tooment. rachel: she's doing great work. the gop rallying behind a gold star dad who was arrested after this moment at the state
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of the union. >> the year before i tack office, murder rates were up 30% finish. >> [inaudible] >> 30, they went up. >> [inaudible] >> the biggest increase in history. >> [inaudible] rachel: representative michael waltz says he will pay the dad's fines. he's next.
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to its ingredients. those with weakened immune systems may have a lower response to the vaccine. the most common side effects are injection site pain, fatigue, muscle pain, headache, and joint pain. i chose arexvy. rsv? make it arexvy. >> what is your red line with prime minister netanyahu? for instance, would invasion of rafah, which you have urged him not to do -- >>s it is a red line, but i'm never going to leave israel. the defense of israel is still critical. so there's no red line i'm going to cut off all weapons so they don't have the iron dome to protect them. there's other ways to deal, to get to, to deal with the trauma caused by a hamas. pete: joe biden calling out prime minister bibi netanyahu as israel fights to defend itself
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from hamas terrorists who murdered more than 1200 innocent israelis and still holds more than 100 hostage. congressman and national guard colonel michael waltz sits on the armed services committee and joins us now. colonel, thanks for being here. what do you make of what was said in that interview, also the state of the union, kind of the shifting stance of this administration on i israel. >> pete, you cannot look at anything when it comes to israel except through the lends of michigan. the lens of michigan at this point. this is all about politics and pandering to the left. for biden. that's it. period. and that's why he's parroting this 30,000 dead figure that's coming from hamas-run palestinian health ministry, is and i would ask are we parroting, is biden repeating russia's death figure coming from its health ministry? of course not. but at the end of the draw, to
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not let israel -- at the end of the day, to not let israel take down hamas that's hiding behind civilians in rafah is essentially declaring defeat for us e eel and victory for hamas. that's it. pete: yeah. it's stunning to watch the way in which politics has interfered with every, we effectively at this point every aspect of what israel's attempting to do over there. by the way with, let me get your take tactically and practically on this idea of a port or harbor in gaza that the u.s. navy would set up to deliver aid. seems to me fraught with potential complications. >> i have so many questions, and i've sent a letter to the secretary of defense immediately after the state of the union asking how this is going to happen. i don't understand how you get supplies onto a beach without putting soldiers on the beach. so east we're just going -- can either we're just going to dump
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those supplies onto the beach and then let hamas and gangs and looting have their way, or we have to allow palestinians, trucks, terrorists potentially on to the pier next to our ships, and that's a huge security issue. so that's my first main question operationally. and then secondarily, how do we prevent smugglers, the iranians and all kinds of other bad actors from using this asset that a thousand soldiers and marines are going to put onto gaza? we lost two navy seals trying to intercept a small boat smuggling iranian weapons, missiles, drones into gaza. how are we going to prevent that from happening? effectively, we'd have to put a blockade around this pier. i just have a lot of questions,
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and biden just threw it out. pete: yeah, for sure. >> we need an explanation of how this is going to work. pete: we're going to ask prime minister netanyahu when he's on our program today at 9:20 eastern time, these very same questions, get his view on it. i've got to get your take on what happened at the state of the union. first of all, here is a gold star dad calling out bind at the state of the union -- biden at the state of the union. watch this. >> the year before i took office murder rates went up 30% -- >> [inaudible] >> 30%, they went up. >> [inaudible] >> the biggest increase in history. >> [inaudible] pete: he called out the name of his son. obviously, he called out biden who said that the world safer with him. and he was arrested, meant to pay a fine. you're doing something about it. share with our viewers e, if you would. >> well, we're calling on the capitol police to drop the charges. hopefully, they do that. and if they don't, i'll pay his
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fine. it's a $500 fine and up to three months in jail, and i pray the god that they just let this go. not only did this gold star father lose his a marine at abbey gate, his -- the marine's older brother committed suicide at the marine's grave a year after this shameful, disgraceful afghanistan withdrawal. this family has suffered enough. i spent time with him before, and i also brought a gold star mom from abbey gate to this day joe biden has not said their names out loud. and as we were being lectured about standing with our allies, biden meant it for ukraine with, i think steve the just lost it and said how about you say afghanistan. say ab a by gate. say these -- abbey gate. they seize 13 marines' and soldiers' names and take responsibility. be a man, be a leader, take
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responsibility for this tragedy that your incompetence caused. pete: you're exactly right. they were abandoned at abbey gate and then abandoned here at home. congressman michael wallet, thank you for your time. appreciate it. great insight. >> thanks, pete. pete: well,ing it is time to spring forward. it happened last night whether you knew it or not. the growing push to make daylight saving time permanent, coming up next.
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>> don't forget, tonight's the night we go off daytime saving. be sure to change your clocks. >> which way does it go? >> it's spring forward, fall back, mr. peterson. >> all right r it's 1:00. >> 1:00? if. >> set 'em up, sam mitch. >> i was this close to going home. [laughter] will: so it's daylight savings time officially as of last night at 2 a.m. st it's always hard to remember exactly, daylight savings is now when we spring forward and the days get longer, and i think better. standard time is what we do in the fall, fall back. i don't even understand why we have standard time. but i think standard time is standard, and now we're doing this thing which should be the thing. pete: you just confused me. will: i'm kind of confused --
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pete: so you're saying we've been on standard time, and if now we're in daylight savings time? will: yep. pete: ask and you don't like that? will: no, just keep it perfect. pete: so you don't want to go back to standard. will: ever again. pete: i think it's great. will: which? pete: boom, boom, boom, boom, back and forth. will: why? [laughter] pete: we've always been doing it. it's tradition. will: no, we haven't. we've only been doing it since world war i. pete: oh, okay, you're only for traditions -- rachel: that's a hundred years. will: do you know what it was like in america before that? everybody was different. it was 12:15 in boston and 12:05 in new york. everyone was doing their own thing. pete: that's before clocks could sync -- will: and trains mattered. pete: you want to go back to when everybody's chocks -- will: i just want more daylight. marco rubio said we're springing
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forward but should have never fallen back. my sunshine protection act would end this stupid practice -- pete: yeah. that'll show 'em. rachel: that's how we win. [laughter] pete: yep with. go for the doves. rachel: i, or honestly, i sat here and listened to you guys go back and forth -- pete: have you? [laughter] rachel: it was, it's like listening to you guys talk about sports, i'm so uninterested in this. i just find it so boring. pete: this is what we do were. will: rachel: did -- will: did you need socialism wrapped into it somehow? [laughter] rachel: if the commies did it -- will: i know. what if i tell you this, china is kidnapping bake byes and making them work -- babies and making them work in mines ask and set the clocks back in time is they'll turn us into socialist drones -- now you're in? rachel: i'm in. [laughter] rick, are you in? pete: we've not to ask rick. rick's got opinions. how do you feel about this --
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rick: you're not getting more daytime hours by changing the clock, you're just moving when ethos hours are. it's not like suddenly we have more sun in the day. inging. will: well, rick, the days are getting longer. rick: sure. either way, whatever we do to the clock -- will: so now those hours of daylight are not going to be at 4 and a 5 a.m., they're going to be at 7 and 8:00 at night. and that's better. rick: what if you're a morning person? what if you're somebody when gets up at 5:00 and wants to see some sun? will: like all these businesses like the ice cream shops and the bars? rick: yeah, but all the stuff that's open until, like, 9:00 at night -- will: they've shown it's good for the economy. rick: okay -- will: because people are out and about, they're doing things. remember rick sure. pete: they can be out and about no matter what, to rick's point. the sun isn't following our legislation -- will: nobody does anything in the morning. rick: a lot of people do stuff in the morning.
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will: that's why all the stores are open? rick: rachel and i both grew up in arizona, it didn't happen. having daylight saving time is so much better. in the fall you want to go in, it's nice, you get, like cozy in the evening. this time of year you're like, oh, my gosh, we've got an extra hour of light, it's great. if you don't have that marking of time, it's just another day. pete: rick wins. rick: there you go. will: so we need to suffer through the winters the enjoy the summer. rick: by the way, that's what time was. if you're going to cancel something, why don't we move our clocks three hours forward? will: the perfect sunset is -- [inaudible conversations] will: -- 7:30 p.m.. pete: will wants to be a dictator. [laughter] rick: rachel's now into it. here's what we've got going op. after yesterday's storm, things are going to get better with, but we have a rough day ahead
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throughout the northeast. down across florida most of the moisture's gone, it's not going to be that bade of a day. -- bad of a day. it's going to be cold and really windy throughout the day, we have snow, it is march. we're thinking it's spring, it's march 10th. we still have a little bit of snow and window conditions today. why not make it, like, four hours longer? will: i just told you the perfect sunset's 7:30. we should just mark it for that. rick: 7:30? will: and backwards. rick: yeah, okay. perfect. [laughter] rachel: i'm going to end this and move to headlines. pete: thank you. rachel: ray all right. florida police are looking for a driver who they say intentionally rammed into a motorcycle on the highway friday morning. the motorcyclist flipped several times and was seriously hurt according to authorities. officers say the motorcyclists were seen speeding away from the car earlier with. police are still investigating. this is an interesting story, irish voters rejecting two constitutional amendments that would redefine the term
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family and women's roles. ireland's prime minister says the amendments would take away, quote, very old-fashioned language. the first amendment would change the definition of family to include no longer family, you're in a durable relationship, pete and will. like unmarried couples and their children. and the second replaces language about a mother's role, a mother is -- it's not a mother's e role, it's duties to the home. so i do duties, i'm not mothering. fascinating. pete: you're in a very durable relationship. rachel: i guess the prime minister was surprised that, you know, he lost that. irish common sense prevail ised. auburn men's basketball coach giving a big assist to a young cancer patient. sam cunningham was diagnosed with leukemia at the age of 12 when coach bruce pearl sent him this video. >> i've heard more from your friends and your family about what a monster you are in
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battling this cancer. let me tell you something. cancer picked the wrong hombre, they picked the wrong dude to mess with! rachel: coach pearl and sam cunningham, who's now cancer-free and we love that, both joined us yesterday. >> this guy right here is a miracle, and i think there's a couple reasons why. number one, his faith. he believed that god had a plan for him, and that was not to die from his cancer. >> of that video gave me a boost, and with him saying cancer picked the wrong dude to mess with, that gave me another push the get through my darkest days and to beat my answer -- cancer. rachel: sam is now auburn's team manager. boy, the difference a coach can make, right? that's an awesome story. pete: no doubt. great story. great guy. more auburn fans out there as a result. all right, an iconic american ship signal sos after docking fees doubled leaving her in rough financial seas. we talk to the man trying to
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save her from the scrap yard next. so... - we're engaged! - we're engaged! congrats carol! your youngest finally popped the question. but now, you're really going to have to get those new dentures. after all, you need a smile that matches the moment. so this might be a good time to mention that aspen dental can create natural looking dentures in no time. just for you! and that comes with $0 down plus 0% interest if paid in full in 18 months. helping mothers of grooms look their best. it's one more way aspen dental is in your corner.
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will: the vessel known as america's flagship is in danger of being evicted from her home in philadelphia. the s is -- ss united states will likely have to move after
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her rent was doubled without warning during covid. warren jones is a board member for the conservancy, and he joins us now. warren, thanks for being with us. we see the ship behind you in the background. tell me why this ship means so much and should be something that we should fight to preserve. >> well, she is america's flagship, and she's the ultimate american product. over 3,000 american workers built this ship in newport news, virginia, entirely within the united states. and she used -- they used components and raw materials from every state in the nation. so this is truly an american product. she's been an ambassador to the world. there's been so much pride in this ship. she needs to be saved. will: all right. she's having trouble finding dockage now. tell me, what's the future for this ship then? if you need to find docking, and you need to find, i assume is, a way to increase foot traffic and bring people to the ship? >> exactly.
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we have a great plan ready to go. america cr hotel out of new york, two great firms, great track records have laid out a plan that's commercially viable and is privately funded, not using public funds to bring this ship to really the point that it's an economic benefit surrounding community. so we need a docker a temporary dock for this ship right now. will: all right. we wish you the best of luck, and everybody can check it out, ss united states. go visit her in philadelphia. warren, thanks for being with us this morning. >> thank you, will. appreciate it. will: all right. we'll be right back.
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pete: came back early. rachel: all right, it is the second hour of "fox & friends" weekend starting with this, an illegal immigrant is arrested fo

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