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What a show we have for you today. Pierce Morgan about the anti-wokeness is spreading around the world. We're happy about that. Senator Dave McCormick on what's going on in Venezuela. He was in the 82nd Airborne.
He also has been briefed. And Deborah Lee on the media moments that really matter. But first, the fastest, most impactful monologue in America, if I do say so myself. We begin with the future of the American worker. This week, Amazon shocking many with massive layoffs.
Amazon announcing it will lay off about 14,000 employees with more cuts expected next year. The layoffs will affect multiple divisions of the tech giant, including AWS and Prime Video.
So, is the company suffering? Are they in the red? Doesn't look like it, right? It's actually the opposite. They're one of the world's top five companies, and they're thriving.
The announcement that we made a few days ago was not really financially driven, and it's not even really AI-driven. Not right now, at least. It really. It's culture.
So while all the layoffs are not AI, that's true, a lot are. And it's hard to ignore the inevitability of robots. Internal memos revealing that Amazon's automation team expect to avoid hiring, follow me on this, one hundred sixty thousand workers by twenty twenty seven. That would company would normally need those workers and would have to go find those workers. This time, they're not even looking.
The second largest employer in the country has always set an industry standard. People follow them, and now it's sending a message too. It's time to welcome the robots. Corporate giants like IBM, UPS, Target also announcing layoffs in recent weeks, totaling about 62,000 cuts.
Now, with artificial intelligence disrupting the job market, layoff announcements surged last month, marking the worst October we've had in 22 years. This is due to the government shutdown, though we don't know exactly the health of the labor market overall because we do have gains. But many can't help but wonder: on the next release, will the American workforce be the victim or they will be the beneficiary of AI success? I know this seems really jarring, but the innovation is also massively advancing efficiency. Hold on tight because while the AI surge might be getting rid of some white-collar jobs over there, it's going to create a whole lot and a wave.
Of blue-collar ones. Right now, this country is facing a significant labor shortage to the tune of about 600,000 factory workers, approximately 500,000 construction workers. These numbers have nothing to do with government policies, Biden or Trump. It's about innovation and intelligence. But these data centers, which we need in order to grow our AI footprint and beat China.
They need people. They need people to build them and people to run them. Trade jobs are hotter than ever, and the next generation seems way more optimistic than you'd expect. With high school and college students expressing actual excitement about AI, they're not worried about it, they have no fear.
So, as we embrace the bots, are we out with the white-collar jobs and in with the blue-collar jobs? Can both possibly gain? There is no one better to ask than my two guests: the CEO of MicroWorks and the CEO of Ford. We got Micro and we have Jim Farley. Welcome, guys.
Thanks so much. Brian, how are you? Mike here. And it's great to have you both together. And I just want to make this an open forum.
Mike, the Blue Collar Jobs, you're looking, you're nodding your head. You knew these are common. Is there a way to Is there a way to train our people to fill those positions? It would be inelegant to take some sort of victory lap on your fine program, but you know, we've been beating this drum for 17 years now, and Not to put too fine a point on this, it's great, by the way, to be here with Jim. We saw each other about a month and a half ago.
He put on a terrific event in Detroit. And we talked about these things at length with the Secretary of Labor. And since then, The thing I think I'd like to start with is a trip to Texas two weeks ago. I finally got a tour of one of those data centers you were just showing. And while I was there, and I swear I'm not making this up, I ran into three electricians.
All of them are under 30. All of them had been poached. Three times that year. Wow. All of them were making north of $240,000.
Now That means something else is happening, to your point, while all these other things are happening at the same time. And in this case, I think it simply means that supply and demand have simply got to that place where there's no denying it. We are in such acute Need of more electricians, more welders, more HVAC people. And you could really just. You could limit that.
purely to data centers. I was in the room with Dave McCormick and President Trump back in July. I know Dave's coming on a bit later, where they pledged. Ninety-two billion dollars to build more data centers in Pennsylvania alone. Alone.
Right.
So There's so much investment, there's so much pivoting. I'm the micro guy. Jim is the macro guy. Ford is macro. And I can't wait.
To get his take on this. Jim, I gave you a lot of stats. Mike gave you a lot of facts. Your thoughts. Mm-hmm.
Well, the shortages are real. I'm really glad that we get the chance to talk about this on Such an important show. you know at Ford, we have a shortage of factory workers, but we have a shortage of technicians and dealerships. As Mike said, those jobs, even though it takes a while to get up to speed, we have about four hundred thousand people That we need. Right this morning at Ford, we had 6,000 stalls that were open with no mechanics in them to fix our vehicles.
The jobs are getting harder, they require. technical support, innovation.
So I think at Ford, we'll solve this problem because we're a fortunate company and we're committed to America. But the issue is, what is the little guy going to do? Yes. The plumber and electrician that owns our super duty, what are they going to do if they don't have the resources at Ford? They're barely getting through the day with a lot of red tape.
For them to try to find the next generation, as Mike said, it's really hard. And we have to help them. Companies like Ford have to help. We have a lot more work to do as a whole industry. You know what they say, Mike?
This reminds everybody of 2003, because we changed telecoms. We went from the hard line to the cell phone. And we lost maybe 171,000 jobs, and everyone reconfigured and readjusted. I don't know if you remember back then, you were probably on PM Magazine. This is something that you can't blame any party for.
This is advancement. Should we be welcoming this? And should we as workers be responsible for adjusting? Either if you got that Harvard degree, I don't think it has much to do practically with whether you welcome it or not. It's standing at the door and it's not going to knock.
It's coming in. And yeah. I remember 2003. What I don't remember, but what I'm pretty sure did happen, was our country pivoted from an agrarian industry or economy into an industrial age. And from an industrial age really into kind of a financial age.
And now we're going from this financial age, whatever that is, into clearly a digital age. And we're building the plane in the air. And there is no playbook for this. I think Jim's challenges and experiences at Ford are Are similar yet different from, say, Alex Carps over at Palantir.
Now, what I'm interested in, you know, Alex has his own little meritocracy school that he's building there. He's recruiting great kids straight out of high school and teaching them what he needs them to know. They're also exposing them to the liberal arts, which I just think is brilliant and fascinating. And I know that Jim has talked about building trade schools again within the Ford organization in order to satisfy this need. To me, That's leadership.
You know, and each company is going to have to s kind of Kind of figure out this Rubik's Cube in their own way, which is why I don't think there's a general playbook. But it is super interesting to hear how the smart people among us are going to solve this. And Jim, before you answer, I have Alex Karp a quote from Palantir's CEO, co-founder, and he says this: AR is going to help many people with vocational training, but no college degree, make a lot more money because of the value being created.
So to tell somebody who gets that master's degree from Yale that you probably would have been better off from high school going to a trade school, is that the message for parents watching, for 11th graders watching? Yes, it should be. I believe we put too much emphasis on a four-year degree in the United States. You look back two or three generations, like my grandfather, he got his job at Ford, he put my mom through college, I went through college. You know, we have a whole, as Mike said, you said, we have a whole generation here that has a new opportunity.
And I think our society puts such a pressure.
Now, Mike has been battling this. With everything he's done for many, many years and being a spotlight on this. But now, as he said, it's a real thing. Road construction takes longer, people waiting longer for stuff to get fixed on their house. You know, if we want this to change as a society, we have to ask the question.
Do we really want to put this much pressure on the next generation to get a four-year degree? This is a live debate in my family. My kid learned welding over the summer as a high schooler, and he asked me, Dad, you think it's worth going to college? The CEO of Ford, my wife and I had a big debate about it. I actually asked Mike about it.
And I'm fine with whatever he wants to do. But as a society, we have to have a debate about this. We can't just get stuck. With the direction we're going. And that explains a lot of the frustration where people are leaning towards socialism.
I need some help. I don't have any stability.
Well, what if you guaranteed me something? And what if I had an enemy and it's called successful people? That's the scary answer that uneducated people or ignorant people are making now and making choices.
Now, the other thing I want to, when we talk about innovation, you talk about China. Mike, I'm sure you've talked to Jim about this. Jim, what did you see in China that almost unnerved you in terms of how advanced they were? I go to China regularly, obviously, but during COVID, something happened that I think many of us were not expecting. They made huge leaps and bounds.
China wants to be the manufacturing, heavy manufacturing source for the world. They now have twice as many car plants as their local market can absorb. They want to export all of that to create these great jobs. We are in a war. For manufacturing now globally.
Now, the Trump administration has done a lot of good things here.
Now we have a real tailwind behind companies like Ford, who make 80% of our products in the US. But we need to do a lot more. When I went to China, I came back completely different perspective. They want every one of our jobs in our place. Wow.
And Mike, what does that make you think? We're competing for... workers here and then we got a cut we have a country that could take us out manufacturing wise. If I had like one of those big red bells in a fire department, I'd. I'd hit it with a hammer.
I'd ring the alarm. This is it. Jim, you can't overstate it. And you can't put it in one vertical. We have to.
Fight this thing on every front. And the front that I'm most interested in is the reason I'm on your show. It's the reason I come on whenever you invite me. We have to keep this front and center. And when Dave McCormick is on later, please thank the senator for me for doing that event.
Because in that room where 35 CEOs pledged $92 billion in front of the president, my message was simple. Carve off a little tiny piece of that. and allocate it To making a more persuasive case for the very jobs that we are desperate to fill. I'm rooting for the president. I love the idea of 2 million new jobs in manufacturing, but you got to admit, when there are 480,000 openings right now that we can't fill, the math is getting a little hinky.
Five retire, two come in. Five out, two in over a decade now. We need to get in front of it. And as I told Jim at our last meeting, I'm like, not a week goes by where somebody doesn't call me to say, Mike, do you know where the tradesmen are? We're going out of our mind trying to hire.
And I say, yeah, I do. They're in the eighth grade. Start now. Be persuasive. Bring shop back.
Don't stop. Auto mechanics back and make people excited again. Hey, guys, we need another two hours. I don't have it, but I'd love to have you back in a few weeks, and we'll continue to update this because I know you're personally making progress getting corporate America to sponsor a lot of your stuff. Jim Furley, Mike Rowe, it was our privilege to have you on.
Thanks so much. Thanks, guys. Appreciate it. All right, next. Is it time to heed a warning from London after Zo Run Mamdani was elected the next mayor of New York City?
Pierce Morgan is here on that and much more. Plus, a Democratic Civil War? Is that brewing?
So, how can Republicans capitalize? If so, I'm going to ask Dave McCormick that. Plus, be sure to catch me on tour. I'm going to be back February 14th, Valentine's Day. I am a romantic guy, so this is going to work out perfect.
History, Liberty, and Laughs, Four Myers, Florida, BrianKillMe.com, streamed on Fox Nation. Let's go! We begin. A warning to the people of New York from the people of London. Ask yourself, how is it possible that Sadiq Khan, the most hated man in London, who has destroyed the very fabric of our capital city, has seen crime and hate explode, police abdicate their duties to protect, how does he not only get elected as mayor but gets re-elected?
The answer is voter apathy. This is no time for apathy. The only way New York can save itself from becoming like London and remaining one of the greatest cities in the world is by protecting itself from the curse of Mamdani. Morning not received because Orem M. Dani has been elected the next mayor of New York City.
He'll take over in January. And the reality of New York City becoming in many ways like London feels more real than ever. Thanks to open borders over in England, London's in chaos in many respects, with Islamic extremist ideologues running rampant.
Now with a socialist soon to be in charge of the financial capital of the world, I guess reluctantly, because he doesn't like finance, many are fearing London's fate or worse. Joining us now to discuss this as a true expert on both, across the across the pond, on both sides, Pierce Morgan. You're the host of Uncensored, which we can get on YouTube for the right price, and also the author of a brand new book, Woke is Dead, which is excellent, Pierce, and you really chronicle your career along with it. And we'll get to that shortly. What about what that gentleman just said?
Well, look, I don't think London's quite as bad as he paints it, or as indeed you would paint it. I mean, there's a lot of English accents there, which I know you find personally troubling. But it has a lot of structural issues with it in terms of, I think, how it's Changed over the last few decades. Sadiq Khan's been re-elected twice. He's in his third term.
Is he doing a good job?
Well, I don't think he's as terrible as the people that say he's the most hated guy in London think he is. But remember, he's not a socialist. He's more of an establishment labour figure in the UK. There's no real comparison, I don't think, other than the fact he's Muslim, to Mandani. Who opened up your borders?
Well, that was a national government decision.
So that's not on Sadiq Khan. What's the effect been? The effect has been terrible, and you can really chart it back actually to Tony Blair's government when he opened up the borders to Eastern Europe originally. And then we've had this ridiculous issue of these small boats just popping up on the southern border from France. We don't know who's on these boats.
We have to assume a lot of criminals are on these boats. We know that. Every policy, every government, right-wing, left-wing, everyone has tried and failed to tackle this problem. And the result is that, I mean, not only illegal immigrants have been coming in in increasingly big numbers, but also legal migration has been completely out of control.
So, two years ago, we had a net migration of a million people. And figure that into your population. How many people, your country's built for a health service of 50 million? You say it's around?
So, in the 50s, we built the National Health Service, the NHS, which has been revered around the world for many years until the last few years. Why is it creaking at the seams?
Well, partly because we were a population of 50 million in the 50s, now we're a population of nearly 70 million. This is a gigantic increase in the size of Britain, which is why the issue of immigration, both legal and illegal, in terms of the numbers coming in, is exercising so many people in the country. All right, so you wrote Woke is Dead. You're also an expert on many areas of the world, including Woke, which is very much a problem here. But I think we might have turned the corner.
I think that's the Surpremis of your book, which is excellent. I would point to one moment that happened on a morning show, a hit morning show. You always want me to make that clear. And you just have had it because you called out Megan Markle for a series of things, and you were being jumped on.
Well, that was the Oprah Winfrey win-a-thon, as I called it, where her and her husband Harry just trashed the Royals, trashed the monarchy, trashed Britain. And I was watching all this from my studio going, What is this? Who are these two little upstarts who've left the country now chucking these darts at us from America? And yeah, I just had it. And we had this weather guy who started chirping away, so I just got up and walked out.
Can we witness it again? Can we lift that up? No, no, no, no, no, you can't. No, no, no, I got the tape. You're actually tied in.
No, I got the tape. I got the tape. I don't want you to storm it off. I thought you wanted me to storm off. Throw it.
You don't like Meghan Markle. You've made it so clear a number of times on this programme, a number of times. And I understand that you've got a personal relationship with Meghan Markle or had one and she cut you off. She's entitled to cut you off if she wants to. Has she said anything about you since she cut you off?
I don't think she has, but yet you continue to trash her.
Okay, I'm done with this. No, no, no.
Sorry, no. Do you know what? That's pretty much it. You can trash me, maybe, not mine. No, no, no, no.
I'm being absolutely diabolical behaviour. And you never came back.
Well, just to be clear, I wouldn't have minded if he'd even been the senior weather person, but he was the deputy stand-in weather person. And it's like, come on, there's a pecking order here for this. You're not going to do this and me just take this from you. Plus, I just thought what he was saying was so disingenuous. We'd all watch this Oprah win-a-thon.
And you've got to remember, why was I so angry? I said, I don't believe the claims about racism against the royal family. What's happened to those claims? No evidence was ever put forward.
Now Harry says, oh no, that was the media whipping all that up. We didn't mean they were racist. Oh, yes, you did. And you remember who they accused? Because it came out in a leaked edition of a version of his book in the Netherlands somewhere, that it was King Charles and Kate, so our current monarch and the wife of the future monarch.
They were the two people that Megan and Harry claimed to be racist. You were right. Don't touch the royals. They threaten you. You're off.
You're off. And were you thinking for a second your career might be severely hurt? I didn't care. You know, at some time in life, you've got to stand up for what you believe in. I was not going to be lectured by this poface little twerp on the desk there, who, by the way, had messaged me the night before asking, could he come in?
Right? And so I got him in on the show, only for him to do that.
So let's take an excerpt from your book, which is best read by you. Thank you. This is about because of the accent issue. Yes, it does. You don't want to have to speak in my voice, right?
I know. I don't think I can do it. Even though it would make you immediately sound more intelligent. I know, but is it possible to sound more intelligent than I already am?
So, this is a moment you just talk about Hollywood. It's an example.
Well, audiences are clearly sick of paying to see hectoring and high-minded stories made by people who hate them. It doesn't have to be this way. Top Gum was the best escapist fun I've had at the movies since 1986, when a 21-year-old peers went to see the original Top Gum movie at the cinema 10 times. Maverick is pure entertainment. No politics, no preaching, no moralizing, no message.
And you loved it. Hollywood's got to get back to that. Yes, get back to entertaining. We've just seen, I think, the tide turn. That's why I say woke is dead.
I think the penny is dropping with a lot of people that being kind of woke, virtue signaling, cancel culture proponent, and so on is just no longer working with the public. I want to point to something else. Your interviews are fantastic, and you believe that I believe, and most of the world believes you are the best. Talk show hosts in the world.
Well, I did.
Well, certainly when I'm sitting here with you. No, that's not right. That means I'm a close soccer. I mean, I even read Minor X-Trade better than you would have done. That's the truth.
I think that's what makes you the best because you think you are. But here's another example: you're sitting down, you know, I play soccer through college, one of the rare times, grew up in the 70s when no one was playing soccer. You guys lived it.
So to see you with Christiana Robin, all that was great, but you brought up the question that everyone asks: who's better? Him or Messi? Yeah. Watch. I believe you are the greatest footballer to ever play the game.
Thank you. You also know there's a raging debate, right, whether Messi is. I say Messi is not even the best Argentinian. Maradona was better than him. But in my mind, I don't think in that way.
Of course. You want to win. Yeah, when you compete, you want to win. I'm not I I'm honest. For me it's I'm not gonna change the way I see the things and the way I see the football.
Do do you believe you've earned the right to be considered the greatest of all time? Of course. And by the way, he is. And the reason I know that, there's even a guy working the camera here who's wearing a Ronaldo 7 shirt in the middle of New York City. That doesn't tell you that Ronaldo's the number one.
Do you really think he is, or is he just your friend? No, I think he is. Do you know how great Messi still is?
Well, I think the two of them are the two greatest of all time. And in fact, Cristiano tells me privately that Messi's the best he's ever seen, but not better than him. Here's the reason why I think that Ronaldo edges it. On a wet Wednesday, In Brooklyn, in the middle of winter, if you had a soccer pitch and you had a match and you had to put your life in the hands of Messi or Ronaldo. On a rough old pitch in rough weather.
To score a goal to save your life, which one's it going to be? Let me tell you, it's Cristiano Ronaldo. He's the one that will save your life on the wet, cold night. This will definitely get you to his wedding. You are very smart.
He's only invited me. I know, I know. But if you said Messi, you would have been uninvited on a second. Messi's not even the best Argentinian. Claradonna was the best Argentinian.
Go out and pick up Pierce's book. It's fantastic. Even though he definitely is going to also do a whole book on that wedding, I hopefully. If I go to the wedding, mate, you're getting a book, a documentary, and probably a TV series. Right.
If you've had to ring a date, keep in mind, I'm available.
Next, Senator Dave McCormick is here, only on One Nation, Don't Move. And I'm asking you not to move. I'm not begging you. He was the best talker show ever. I'm the second best.
A peace plan for God. This is a Fox News Alert. I'm Chad Pergram on Capitol Hill. The Senate is still in the middle of a test vote to end the longest government shutdown in American history. It needs 60 votes to break a filibuster.
There are 59 yays. Eight Democrats joined 51 Republicans to overcome the filibuster. Kentucky Senator Rand Paul is the only Republican to vote no. Republican John Cornyn of Texas has not voted. The bill funds the government through late January, and it runs three sections of government through next fall.
There is nothing in the bill to offset rising health care costs. Democrats demanded money for health care aid before voting to fund the government, but Democrats only got a verbal agreement despite their shutdown gambit. It's doubtful the Senate could try to pass the overall bill later tonight. The bill will go to the House in the coming days. This is a Fox News Alert.
I'm Chad Pergram on Capitol Hill. I'm always going to vote to pay our military over the party. I'm always going to vote to pay the capital police here versus over the party. I mean, I'm always going to vote country over my party. And if I pay a price within my base, you know, I...
That's something I'm willing to do. He's unwavering. He's also on a book tour. The Democrats' Civil War. Election wins, but no unity.
Pennsylvania Senator John Fetterman calling out his own party, but it doesn't end there. Bernie Sanders crashing Chuck Schumer's press conference. It was bizarre, blasting his party leadership. No great secret. Of course, there's an establishment, and of course, there's a division.
Within the Democratic Party.
Well, the party leadership did not support Mamdani in New York anymore. Party leadership is not supporting Plattner in Maine, and I think he's going to win.
So I think it is, you know, I think there is a growing understanding that leadership. And defending the status quo and the inequalities that exist in America is not where the American people are.
So, Chuck Shun was supposed to be there. He was late, so Bernie hopped in. It's crazy. And by the way, Speaker Pelosi retiring, officially calling it quits. 85 years old.
What was she waiting for anyway? She is so angry. She's leaving. Is Steady Hoyer next? What about Chuck Schumer?
He won't even say if he's running again. And now, whether the Democrats like it or not, socialist Zoron Mamdani is becoming the new face of the party, fresh off his big win in New York City. Kind of scary.
So the question is: can Republicans seize on the chaos and turn the tide before the midterms? Joining us now is Senator Dave McCormick of Pennsylvania. He is, of course, good friends with his Democratic colleague, Senator Fetterman, and I think it's a great symbol for the country, showing that two people can represent a state from different parties and get along. Senator, you just saw that, you live that. What's your reaction to what's going on in the left after what should be a celebration day after Tuesday?
Well, you know, listen, I think it's a very scary thing that's going on in the left. We have a socialist. agenda that's uh winning the day in New York City. a campaign that was deeply anti-Semitic. It was a campaign based on hate.
And that won the day in New York City. And those socialist ideas have been tested time and again, and they've ended up in the dustbin of history. We see the Democratic Party very fragmented around this. And for Republicans, We need to just keep focused on delivering on the promises we made last November. We're making huge progress on that with President Trump's agenda.
And we need to keep the pressure on. And when we do that, we're gonna continue to win the day because we're gonna deliver for all Americans. And the contrast. Between that disunity and unity, between socialism and common sense policies to close the border and get our economy back on track and unlock energy, that contrast is becoming more clear by the day.
So I understand with energy, I think it's just a matter of time before the gas comes down. Unless you're in California, you're already experiencing that. But how do you personally handle it when items are more expensive? We hear bananas and beef are taxing people who go paycheck to paycheck, but yet, chicken. And dairy products are down.
eggs down. The Democrats effectively were able to message that the president hasn't delivered on affordability. What's your answer?
Well, listen, first of all, I think we need to continue to stay focused on affordability because many Americans are living paycheck to paycheck, and that was what President Trump's agenda on under President Trump and the Republicans in the majority in the House and the Senate. We've delivered on all kinds of great opportunity for Americans. The child care tax credit, the no tax on tips, the locking in all the benefits of the big, beautiful bill. We've unlocked energy, we're deregulating. But it's going to take some time.
for those policies to take effect. But what is very clear, and we've got to make sure everybody knows the facts on this, is inflation was 8.5%, 9%. Under Joe Biden, It's about 3%. Under Donald Trump, that's still too high.
Some things are down in price, some things are a little bit up, like beef. We need to stay very focused on that, particularly on gas prices, because gas affects everything, and that's why the energy dominance agenda is so incredibly important in Pennsylvania and around the country. Yeah, they should do it. New Jersey and New York. Should do what Pennsylvania's doing and frack and get that pipeline going, because you guys are a great example.
Now, another area of your expertise as a West Point grad, you know what's going on, who's a veteran of the 82nd Airborne. The Senate lost their push. To pass a resolution to block President Trump from targeting drug boats off the coast of Venezuela, in the Caribbean, in international waters. I'm thrilled by that. How do you feel?
What do you think about the President's operations there, the show of muscle he has there, the pressure he's putting on Venezuela? Do you feel as though you're informed about the President's objectives? Yeah, listen, I campaigned on this very clearly. This drug crisis in our country has reached epic proportion. We lost 100,000 Americans last year to the fentanyl, the opioid crisis, 4,000 Pennsylvanians.
I said during the campaign, we need to designate the cartels as terrorist organization. We need to use the military very selectively and targeted to take out that cartel infrastructure. It is a war, and the president has every right and responsibility to protect Americans. And I was on the runway. I didn't deploy actually, but in the 82nd Airborne Division in 1990 when we went to Panama.
And the motivation was very much the same to protect Americans from an out-of-control drug cartel. This feels very similar. I've got a lot of faith in the President using the military carefully and discreetly to protect Americans.
Well, he also is looking into the cartels in Mexico. He's also putting a lot of pressure on Colombia. He's got at least eight battleships and an aircraft carrier in the region. We went into Panama and you guys grabbed Noriega and pulled him out of there and put him in prison. Are we going to go in and get Maduro and put him in prison?
Man, that would be something that I think would help the region.
Well, listen, I've just seen the same news reports you have about him potentially stepping out. We'll have to see. I don't know what the plans are, what I do know. Is these cartels and state-sponsored narco-terrorism poses a huge threat to Americans and Pennsylvanians? We need to protect America and Pennsylvania, and these efforts are designed to do that.
And so I think we need to use the military very carefully and discreetly, but that's what's happening here. I understand the Secretary of War briefed the gang of 12, I think it is. And at that time, he explained exactly the ships, and he was able to show the video of what we're doing. And almost every Democrat, at least behind closed doors, is saying, I get it now. I don't know what they're going to say when they get in front of the cameras.
But, Senator, I like the fact that you're there with your military experience, and I love the fact that we're finally paying attention to our own hemisphere and enforcing the Monroe Doctrine hundreds of years later. Senator, thanks so much. I do too, Brian. Hey, one more thing, Brian. Just for your listeners, anybody that's living in New York.
And is worried about that socialism. They can come to Pennsylvania. We're a short strain ride to drive away. And you have two senators from different parties setting a great example. Watching each other's back, getting along.
Senator Dave McCormick, thanks so much. Thank you. Don't move.
Next, only on One Nation, conservative influencer Deborah Lee is here with the media moments that matter to her and you. Yeah, um Scratch that, baby, I'm grateful. Gotta say it's Drop is final. All right, it's time for our favorite segment of the week, and probably yours. This week, I gave my only VCR, my only TV guy to have a subscription to political commentator Deborah Lee.
And I said, Deborah, come up with some media stories that are going to enlighten my audience. Deborah, great to see you. Thanks so much for doing the show. I gave you the VCR. Did you come up with anything?
I did exactly what was tasked to me. I found three very exciting stories that I had to play around with the VCR a little bit, but I got it under the hang and I think you'll like them. The pressure is on. Start with number one.
So, first up, Mayor Adams, still our mayor, despite him not believing so, got into a fight with Fox 5's own current Menifee over NYPD Commissioner Jessica Tisch. He was asked if he thought that Zorin Mamdani was actually going to keep Commissioner Jessica Tisch on, and he blew up on the reporter.
So, you hit the edit points and then you hit play, record, and stop.
So, should we see it now? Let's see it. All right. Or are you saying that you think the commissioner's going to stay? Brother, I don't know how many times I could say the same thing over the years.
You know, you're saying that he wants her to stay. I'm asking he wants her to stay, and you said we will see members of your administration stay, including her.
So if you're saying that you're going to see her stay, that means I'm asking, do you know that she's going to stay? Zana, do you have a question for me? Because I can't play this game with him.
Well, there's not a game. You're the one that said it.
Well, you can play this game if you want as well. I mean so let's not come on here. I'm getting ready to get off your show right now. All right, wait, I'm going to have the tantrum you want. I'm on the air with others.
It's a pleasant conversation. If you're rude, you're disrespectful. You have an agenda when you come on the show. All right, just breathe, brother. Breathe, man.
Breathe. I'm getting my breathing. I'm fine. Take a deep breath. That's why I did meditation because I know it's coming.
I do meditation every morning, brother, so don't worry about me. Wow. I mean, for me, they just say these students don't like each other. No, I think they need to have a nice bonding cigar session at Gracie Mansion because, you know, that's one of Mayor Adams' favorite things to do. But I seriously don't understand why he snapped.
That's a very reasonable question. He doesn't want to believe it. He said, come December 31st, I'm no longer your mayor. Honey, that's about six weeks away. You're still currently the mayor, and you still have to answer.
I know. You can go to your strip clubs and smoke your cigars in a couple weeks, but until then, can you at least pretend that you're our mayor? Right.
And in order to be strip clubs, they could be dance clubs. Yeah. Absolutely. And the only thing I would add is it seems like two New Yorkers that didn't want to take either one of them off the mat. They just were going for the kill.
All right, that was great. I don't think anyone else saw that. What else did you watch? Any national shows?
Okay, so Kristen Bell, if you know about her, she has a husband named Doc Shepard. He's a very famous podcast. And they are saying that they're intentionally raising their two young daughters to be outright disrespectful and rude. We need to watch this clip because you won't believe it unless you see it yourself. Let's watch it.
You're dead right. Oh they do talk back. And they are not respectful. And I can understand where that seems like completely unruly, but I want you to know what I'm prioritizing, which is like, When they're 19 and their boss is a creep, I want them to talk back. I want them to be disrespectful.
I want them to always advocate for themselves, whether I think they're right or wrong. And yeah, I'm willing to deal with this thing that is embarrassing at a restaurant for y'all. But I can deal with that. I can handle that.
Okay. Because I want this other thing for them as women. All right, I want to get your take first before I weigh in. What do you think of that parenting technique? It is ridiculous.
And he thinks that he's going to prepare his two children to fight against some boss when they're 19. What an oddly specific scenario. How about preparing them if they get pulled over by the cops one day? Because you know what disrespectful and entitled people happens to them? They end up on cops on Fox Nation.
And I feel that we're going to watch a clip of them if they keep parenting this way. You can raise your two daughters to be very strong, strong women with a strong sense of self without raising them to be entitled and disrespectful. I mean, also, don't we see that in the workplace?
Sometimes when managers come down, they got to be tough on you in the beginning to maybe make you better.
Now, if they're related to him, they're going to answer back, they're going to storm out, they're going to sue. What employer has ever thought, hmm, you know who my dream employee would be?
Someone who doesn't listen to me, somebody who wants to raise on day one. It doesn't happen. You need to be a productive member of society. I agree. I think we both agree on that wholeheartedly.
Dax Shepard, I keep hearing what a great podcast he has. I don't want any parenting tips. And finally, we end with sports. Yes, so sports, which it was a very interesting situation for me, despite my not perfect knowledge of the sports world. But the Boston college coach, his name is Bill O'Brien, blew up at a reporter because he's just apparently not down.
Let's watch this clip. Coach, I'm wondering, do you have a message for the fans? Obviously, losing to Notre Dame Catholic school rival 1A now in the season BC. I've heard from a lot of fans. I've just really glad.
I'm glad you're down. I'm not down. Nobody's down. We're fighting. We're competing.
It's the second year of this program, Mike. You always come in here with these down questions. You show up once a month or something like that. You come in here with these down questions. I'm not down.
I don't know what year you graduated from BC, but this is a program that we're building. Nobody here is down. We're positive. We're going to show up and play our asses off against SMU. You can go out there in your dark, clouded world or whatever it is and do what you want to do.
We're not down. The sun is up and we're fighting. That's my message to the fans. What's up, Trevor? I don't know if he's down, but he's certainly a little angry and he's having a rough season.
I was going to say, it's hard to tell if he is down or not. It's a little confusing here, but this anger is unfounded, in my opinion. Right.
Listen, he's got a rough season. He used to be a Penn State professional coach. He was coaching for a while in the NFL. He's bouncing back. I believe Bill O'Brien could turn that program around, but sadly, not yet.
So great to see you. Deborah Lee, thanks so much. Thanks for having me. All right, and great job. Thanks, but I need you to return the VCR and the cords.
The TV guide is okay because he's a use for it anymore. You can have it. I'll give you my Netflix password. I've never heard of that. Netflix?
Thanks so much, Deb. Follow me on social media: Rumble, Instagram, X, and Facebook. Also, you can join the Culper Club on locals, get exclusive pictures and video. More One Nation in just a moment. Don't move.
I like me better when I'm with you. All right, it was a tough week in the tri-state area. For non-socialists, you had that Mondami victory. Not great news. And then the New York Jets.
They had a bye week and still found a way to break the hearts of their fans, training two of their best players that could potentially help them in the future with all these great draft picks. But in the interim, it left at least one fan, a young guy, absolutely crushed. Watch. The Jet strained sauce today. To where?
No. Till I am. No, it's okay.
Okay, that looks like a driverly jersey. It's okay, I'll get you a different one. He went to Indianapolis, and they also traded. They also traded Quinn Williams. I thought he said meal.
He did, but so did sauce. He broke up with the Jets right there. The Jets not only have the worst record in the NFL, but also have the longest playoff drought. It's been 14 years since they had a postseason appearance. It's torturous to be a Jets fan, but to their credit, they don't quit the team, but it does keep getting worse.
I was born into this, and I'm not gonna ever. I'm always a Jets fan, but like. I just, I hate the steam.
Sorry, guys, it's not going to happen this year. Hey, that's it for us tonight. Be sure to tune to my radio show. The word is it's the best ever. From 9 to noon, Monday through Friday, we got Mark Wayne Mullen all booked, and Michael Goodwin of the New York Post.
And in just a few hours, you can catch me on Fox and Friends. I'm going to jump in the shower, put a tie on, change my suit. As always, remember, stay within yourself and keep it right here on Fox News. I got to go. It's Will Kane Country.
Watch it live at noon Eastern Monday through Thursday at FoxNews.com or on the Fox News YouTube channel. And don't miss the show. Listen and follow the podcast five days a week at FoxnewsPodcasts.com or wherever you download your favorite podcasts.