rachel: all right, we're going to the fox fox news alert. disturbing images out of iran, thousands pouring into the streets of tehran to to heart attack the an verse roy -- anniversary of the 1979 takeover of the embassy, the crowd chanting death to america and death to israel. pete: did you see that uncle sam looking figure? that's how they view it, death to america, death to israel. and about 20 the minutes ago, secretary of state blinken express, quote, deep concern -- which is his permanent state -- as fighting intensifies along lebanon's southern border. israel hitting targets one day after the iran-backed terror group's leader declared they're ready for full scale war. will: the israelis opening up a corridor to allow palestinians to get out of northern gaza. saying if you care about yourself and your loved ones, heed our instruction to head south. let's go to mike tobin live on the ground in southern israel with the latest. mike, i'd love to begin with this: you told the us earlier about that warning from the idf and the roads that were open to head south but also that there are targeted terrorist attacks in the south. is it a matter of its intensity? it's just safer in the south because the bombing and the attacks, the idf if ground invasion is less intense than mt. north? >> reporter: that's it exactly. fewer operations and greater care for the civilian population in the south. in the north the civilians have been warned to get out of there, and you have such a massive operation going on north of the evacuation line are. as far as the evacuation corridor, it's going to be the open now for another hour. but what i'm getting from palestinian sources is that it's not going very well. there are two main roads that go from the north to the south, one of them is the beach road, and the other is the one that israel opened up and said you have safe passage. a lot of people were on it and also had the ability to see the beach road. and what i'm hearing from palestinians is there was a strike on the beach road when the people were evacuating south, and they got scared. thus far it is the not successful. you've got 3-400,000 palestinians who had not evacuated thus far and remain north of the evacuation line. and still, as you mentioned, there was a strike at the refugee camp, and there was a continued ground operation to a smaller scale south of that evacuation line. here's the idf spokesman if. >> we know that there are many hamas leaders and commanders that are in southern gaza. we will strike the them in southern gaza using the same methods that we've used, trying to differentiate between civilians and terror forces. >> reporter: fighting is intense in the north of the gaza strip. gaza saw city is said on the surrounded with israeli forces, and that's where the population really starts to get dense. what we're hearing from the idf what they've been able to do is take out personnel, command and control infrastructure, take out tunnels and deal with booby trapses and roadside bombs. also they're establishing roads so they can maintain the operation in the north of the gaza strip. a. rachel: mike, another question for you. some people say the ceasefire will give an advantage to hamas and allow them to regroup and so forth. oh side -- other side says, no, ceasefire will help innocent civilians get out. you often these different corridors that are being created. how is that information getting to the people? i heard earlier in the report there was a, you know, they said they're putting it out through social media. i presume not everybody has social media and electricity. are they walking? are hay taking cars? how do they know what to do? >> reporter: that's a tough question, and the answer's kind of all of the above. the israelis is have done everything from social media to dropping leaflets over the population in gaza is. the internet and the phone service is in and out, and speaking with contacts on the ground in gaza strip, it's very difficult because of that. so they do everything they can to the talk to each other, but word of mouth, of course, is very big in a densely populated area like the gaza strip. so you get the message out, and you hope it gets through to people, but you also have situations like we do know where the people got scared about traveling south on the road, and they're talking to each other and not evacuating south. will: all right. mike tobin, thanks very much. to another fox news alert, thousands are on their way to washington for what could be the largest pro-palestinian march in u.s. history. rachel: and this is coming as anti-israel protesters delayed a military cargo ship yesterday with as part of a rally in oakland, california. pete: give griff jenkins is -- griff jenkins is live in washington with the latest. >> reporter: protesters are already taking to the streets ahead of today's march on washington to, quote, free palestine, one of the country's largest left-leaning coalitions known as the answer coalition posting this video of volunteers already out there on pennsylvania avenue. and they also posted video of protesters being bussed in from atlanta chanting along the way. >> free, free palestine. long live palestine. from the river to the sea, palestine will be free! >> reporter: so they'll be here in the nation's capital soon. the answer coalition organizing bus rides, actually, for more than 50 cities, you see here on the map. many apparently selling out in places like chicago, boston,s new york, philadelphia, tampa. in michigan we expect we could see, by the way, michigan's representative, rashida tlaib, among the protesters today. she's been an outspoken critic of president biden, accusing israel of committing outright genocide in gaza and is demanding an immediate ceasefire. >> mr. president, the american people are not with you on this one. [inaudible conversations] >> from the if river to the sea! >> we will remember in 2024. >> reporter: today's protest starts in freedom plaza, then they'll march to the white house to the accuse the president of supporting genocide. and if today's march is anything like the turnout yesterday in oakland, california, law enforcement will be busy. in oakland a group of protesters you see here delayed a military cargo ship from departing for nearly nine hours. the protesters claiming that ship was carrying weapons to israel, though u.s. authorities have not confirmed that. this comes as we see these massive turnouts also many in places like london where tens of thousands have been taking to the streets. and in london, another one today expected to begin in just a matter of hours. now, i'll be out in today's march here in d.c. along with my colleague, mike emmanuel. we expect there'll be some from testers chanting a chant we've been hearing in recent days, biden, biden, you can't hide, you're supporting genocide. and when they're chanting that, guys, the president will be in rehoboth, not here in washington. pete: griff, when you're out there today, can you get clarification? from the river to the sea, griff, does that mean anything other than no israel? because that's -- they seem to want to pretend like it does. >> reporter: it's a great question, pete. from the river to the sea. now, it's the river because it's the west side of the jordan river where the west bank is, and to the sea is a reference to gaza. so if they get rid of everybody in between that area, that's the entirety, essentially, of israel. so your point is well taken. we'll try and find out. also we'll try and find out a little more, as you were mentioning, rachel, about the funding of the answer coalition which is an anti-war, left-leaning group. it's been around sinces the days of president george w. bush, funded by, apparently, the progress unity fund but hard to get decan tailses on exactly -- details on exactly where those donors come from. will: anti-war? i'd be curious, is the answer coalition opposed to the war in ukraine? i'm just curious about their consistency. >> reporter: well, let's find out. i don't recall any specific large marches, to that point, but the answer, by the way, it's an acronym for act now to stop war and end racism. so they've been an umbrella group with lots of different causes. not sure about the ukraine one. will all right. thank you, griff. pete, i hear your question the griff, and i told you guys this off camera only because i strive to the understand. i wan to be know when i see these protests taking cross place, how much of is anti-zionism, how much of it is some other political perspective that that wants to seeking a two-ate solution, right? i want -- two-state solution. i want to understand when i'm looking at thousands and thousands of people on a bridge what those thousands think. and i also think it's complicating many that what we might be seeing on american college campuses is not the same as what we're seeing, for example, in someplace like london. there are different ideologies unless the only explanation is overriding anti-semitism everywhere. but the point i'm getting at is i want to understand, not excuse, i want to understand the motivating factor when i'm looking at thousands of people. now, i'll put this to you, there are certain lines where you get to is and you go, listen, when you fly a green hamas flag, there's no other conclusion but anti-semitim. when you -- semitism. when you do it in the 72 hours immediately following the worst terror attack in decades, there's no conclusion but anti-semitism. and when you're a member of congress and you're unwilling to condemn terrorism or antisemiism, it leads us through anti-semitism. and there were several democratic congressmen who voted no on a resolution to condemn anti-semitism, and they were pressed by a fox news digital reporter about why. >> reporter: why couldn't you condemn anti-semitism? >> [inaudible] >> reporter: why didn't you rote for the bill -- >> [inaudible] >> reporter: why can't you condemn anti-semitism on college campuses? >> i do. a i'm one of the most vocal people to condemn anti-semitism. because there's lies in the resolution, and right now there's lies everywhere on all sides of this. >> reporter: wouldn't it be an easy vote? the resolution basically condemns antiself-tism. >> i didn't agree with the resolution are. i didn't think it did enough to move the conversation forward. >> reporter: why can't you condemn anti-semitism on college campusesesome. >> i condemn anti-semitism and islamophobia and is hate in all its forms repeatedly. >> reporter: why didn't you vote for the resolution? >> you know, i really respect, will, that you really -- i think you're really sincere when you ask these questions about, you know, what does this mean. and i think part of, i mean, i have looked at what the protesters have done, and i think the confusion is really their fault. if they wanted to talk about peace and no war, that could have been their slogan. if they wanted to talk about the innocent civilians that died in israel and condemned that and at the same time condemned the innocent civilians who have died on the gazan side, and they're certainly getting images through tiktok which i think is another part of this conversation, they could do that. if they wanted to talk about a two-state solution, they could do that. they're, they want us to believe that this is about coexisting, but there's nothing that they've sloganeered on that goes to that. so i think it makes it hard for people to not draw other conclusions. i, as you know, i'm a peace lover, and i have wanted to, you know, israel needs to do what they need to do, but they have a responsibility and do it in a way that doesn't kill as many civilians as they can prevent from killing. and there are, there is a humanitarian crisis there. i think it's worth talking about. but i don't think that these protesters are doing that at all. they're not talking about that. heir making this different, and i think it leads to some of the conclusions that you were talking about. pete: yeah. i'm a peace lover too, just in a different way with, by killing lots of bad guys. will, i appreciate the attempt to analyze, and i think it is, you know, good to do so. rachel: yeah. pete: but in this case, it's all of the above. this is an anti-wen coalition. that's what -- anti-western coalition. that's what answer is. you go to their web site, it's all funded by marxists, socialists. this is who they are. they're anti-oppressors, or anti-imperialists, anti-colonizers -- will: and that's in europe as a well. pete: this and many europe. will: i agree. pete: it's a left-wing agenda of an unholy marriage of israeli, islamists and leftists who hate the world that's been constructed by america and the west, who hate israel for what it represents. there are 22 pulley arab- fully arab muslim countries in the world, but hay can't tolerate one jewish state, not one. it's got to go from the river to the sea which means wipe it off the map. there's no analysis to be had, they're intentionally undone their argument every time they chant that. will: i know you say sometimes i might overanalyze, but i think your with analysis just now is really strong. i think you're right. if there is a unifying factor, there will be factions this weekend, right? different points of view. but i do think you're right that there is a common thread, and it's not just in america, it's all over. pete: and they're happy to conflate, which is why it's an exposure of the radicalism -- will: and that thread is anti-westernism. rachel: yeah. will: there will be some anti-semites in there -- pete: a lot of them in there. will: yeah. but the commonnal i think is anti-westernism. rachel: and if you can conflate, you can also make your numbers look bigger, so people the have different reasons for why they're there. pete: check out the signs that'll be in the crowd, or it'll be a grab bag of left -- hateful left-wing content. rachel: and hopefully tomorrow we can dig further into the numbers and go who is funding this and what are their intentions, because as you saw, many of them are coming from -- pete: people on the bus aren't getting a paycheck for that as they go from the river to -- that bus is paid for, they're juicing the numbers, because hay want to see it. will: turning now to your headlines, right now rescue crews are searching for survivors after a major earthquake in nepal. at least 157 people are dead and dozens hurt, and those numbers are expected to go higher. but there are glimmers of hope. incredible footage shows responders pulling a buried woman out of the rubble are. amazingly, she was able to walk away thanks the those heroes. america's crime crisis, police in southern california are searching for a man caught on camera snatching a wallet out of a grandma's purse. the woman was targeted by the thief as she was shopping at a grocery store in orange county. authorities releasing a clear photo of the suspect in hopes someone will turn him in. clocks are going back tomorrow, and senator marco rubio is once again calling on congress to make daylight savings time permanent. he introduced the sunshine protection act last year, but it failed to the pass the house. i'm with rubio, i'm proud he's taking up in this challenge. rachel: what is the thing here? why is this such a big deal? will: which way? rachel: either way? it's nothing i've lost sleep over, no pun intended. will: i doubt that's true. [laughter] pete: you have lost sleep over this. will: i think you have lost sleep over it. no one wants to eat dinner at 4:00 in the amp. that's terrible. meanwhile, more than half of americans want to the make daylight savings time permanent, over 60% want to end the change. i always get confused, i just want it to be the same year round, and i want as much light as possible during the day. rachel: i like that. is that what march -- marco wants? will: i think so, yeah. president no one really knows -- rachel: i know, that's what i'm saying. will: some statements don't do it, like arizona and hawaii -- rachel: marco is very passionate about it. and so is there, apparently. [laughter] will: i just don't know which side. pete: hey, you're like one of those protesters -- rachel: you don't know exactly -- will: more light and be consistent. rachel: let's get some funding behind that, will. [laughter] will: veterans day is just around the corner, and fox news is once again partnering with u.s. vets mt. camo for a cause campaign. pete: fox news' brand new camo products are available including shirts, mugs and hats now through november 12th, and 20% of all proceeds will be donated towards u.s. vets. rachel: head over to honor.usvets.org/fox forward. great stuff. the swag is good. pete: ties look nifty. rachel: they sure do. pete: all right, coming up, sanctuary city mayors begging biden for millions to help with their illegal immigrant crisis. how the major hubs are learning every state is a border state. will: but first, power to the students. virginia high schoolers staging a walkout over the transgender bathroom policy as the whole school board is up for election tuesday. we'll talk to a student and a dad from the district. [cheers and applause] ♪ ♪ >> they're not listening to students, they're not listening to participants, and i have a real sense that they don't listen to anybody other than their progressive right friends -- progressive left friends. the entire loudoun county school board is up for election on tuesday, and i encourage the loudoun county voters, get out and make your voice heard because it's time to elect a new school board in loudoun county. rachel: virginia governor glenn youngkin sounding the alarm on the loudoun county school board after high school students staged a walk to protest the district's transgender bathroom policy. a loudoun county student and his dad join us now. i want to thank you both for joining us. i'm going to the start with you, or roh man. you're 14 years old, the student protests were because the students wanted -- [laughter] did not want to allow transgenders into same-sex bathrooms. so just want to make that clear. tell us what happened. >> so this, we staged a walkout. it was a group of students, about 50-100. it had been a couple weeks in planning. we had talked with our principal about the whole thing. we had made sure what we could do, what we couldn't, and and we hosted it on wednesday morning, this past week. and it was a great success, in my opinion. rachel: have you gotten any pushback, or do you feel like most of the students are on your side of this? >> so there has definitely been pushback from some students, but mostly from the, some of the staff and administrators, in by opinion. -- in my opinion. seems like they didn't want us participating in this. rachel: did you say mostly from the staff? >> mostly from the staff, yes. rachel: interesting. steven, i just -- i'm a parent too. i just can't believe the amount of tame that we're spending on things like this. it just seems like common sense is ted in america. the is dead in america. >> yeah. you know, the one thing that we really want to get across is, you know, we bear no ill will towards these, toward these students or their families. rachel: of course. >> we understand they're going through challenges that the rest of us probably don't understand fully, but still we have an a obligation and a right and a duty to protect our children and their interests. and, you know, policy 80-40 as written is simply untenable, and i think the governor has made his, you know, his position clear that this has been rolled back in louden county. i think he said his position is crystal clear. there's a lot of other issues going on in loudoun county odd that need addressed. rachel: yeah, for sure. i'm going. to stick with you for a second here, stephen. the elections are coming up. how much is this issue going to play into the school board elections? >> i think it's this issue and then the recent issue with, you know, fentanyl overdoses, the lack of transparency on the school board, their track record over the past two years with assaults in bathrooms. s it's just been, you know, i think the lack of trust across many members of the loudon school board, i think, you know, i think we're going to see some seats change next tuesday. rachel: ronan, what's been the impact with the student body? is it dividing everybody? >> definitely, because when we try to get people to walk out, there was a lot of people who didn't want to do it. they didn't want to the receive backlash from any sort of way, because they just wanted to steer clear of the whole tom topic. so it started some sort of divide because, i mean, it is a sensitive topic. rachel: yeah. and nobody wants to feel like they're being, you know, discriminatory to anybody else or hurtful, as your dad said. i understand that. stephen, does this just make you want to pull ronan -- i mean, i'm sure you're proud of him, i know he's standing up for himself, and i'm proud of him too. but at some point wouldn't you just go, i give up, and i immediate to send my kids to another type of school? or is this fight, you know, worth havingsome. >> -- having? >> the fight is definitely worth having. we as a family don't give up. we supported ronan. i think it's admirable what he and his friends are doing, you know, putting themselves out there. we hiv in a democratic society, right? -- we live in a democratic society. what we're teaching our kids beyond just this issue is how to protest, s you know, peaceably, how to, you know, take a stand for a position that you believe passionately in, how to research data, how to understand both sides of the position but how to stand for something. honestly, it has never even been an option to pull him out of school over an issue like this, you know? rachel: yeah. well, i love that you're finding the positive in this. you're right, you know, he's, you know, you're learning to the stand up for yourself, you're learning to the, as your dad said, look at both sides. it just, to me, seem like it's very distracting from the mission of the school which should be with just to educate our students. it's really important that the grown-ups have put you kids in this position. my last thoughts, ronan? >> no. i think that's all for me. rachel: okay. [laughter] i should have known that was going to happen. dad, any last thoughts? >> you know, i think loudoun counties has an opportunity here to lead. you know, it's the wealthiest county in america. the money is there. let's give these kids a third option, right? we can have bathrooms for girls, bathrooms for boys and the third option -- rachel: hello. >> that's the only way this issue is going to be solved. rachel: it seems so simple to me too. but good for you and really proud of you, ronan. it's not easy to do what you're doing. >> thank you. rachel: and good for you, dad. you're obviously raising him right. thanks for joining us today. >> thank you all for having us. rachel: you got it. we reached out to loudoun county public schools for a statement, but we haven't heard back. all right, coming up, sanctuary city mayors are begging biden for billions to help with their migrant or their illegal migrant crisis. how the major hubs are learning every state is a border state. arizona sheriff and u.s. senate candidate mark lamb on the fallout next. health insurance. it's often hard to know which way to go. it's nice to have options, but too many can be confusing. for instance, if you have medicare, you may be able to get a plan with extra benefits if you know where to look. a licensed humana sales agent can help show you the way. take humana's medicare advantage prescription drug plans. these are convenient, all-in-one plans that offer all of the benefits of original medicare, plus add extra benefits. with a humana medicare advantage prescription drug plan, you'll have doctor, hospital and prescription drug coverage in one convenient plan. but that's just the beginning. because every humana medicare advantage prescription drug plan also includes dental coverage with two free cleanings a year and a yearly exam. vision coverage, including eye exams and a yearly allowance for eyewear. and hearing coverage, including routine hearing exams and coverage toward hearing aids. plus, zero-dollar co-pays on many routine vaccines, including shingles, at in-network retail pharmacies. and worldwide coverage for emergency care when travelling! 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[laughter] >> yeah, that's what they want. as long as it's not their problem even though they claim to be sanctuary cities, they would like it to be our problem. will: yeah. i guess the takeaway is send more buses until they understand the problem. sheriff mark lamb, thank you so much. >> thank you, will. will coming up, new house speaker mike johnson hinting a biden impeachment decision is coming very soon. congressman byron donalds has been on the case from the beginning, and he's next. [ding] aargh! aargh! aargh! trouble booking the family vacay? come on. [whoosh] [ding] comfort has free hot breakfast for the whole fam! they have waffles! [whoosh] [ding] and splendid pools! [ding] cannonball! book direct at choicehotels.com. ♪ >> -- on your thoughts about impeachment, do you feel right now there is enough evidence to move on articles of impeachment? >> as we stand here today i've not predetermined that, but very soon we are coming to the a point of decision the on it. pete: the the new republican house leader not ruling out impeachment proceedings against joe biden saying the final decision is coming soon. rachel: speaker mike johnson stressing the importance of due process, a stark contrast to the democratic-led pushes against former president trump. will: here with reaction, florida congressman byron donalds. congressman, great to see you this morning. we talked about this earlier today, do you think this is a big moment? potential subpoena for people with the last name biden, i think that means a breakthrough potentially in this investigation. >> it's good to be with you this morning, and i agree with that because we have now seen actual checks going from jim biden to joe biden himself. they call it loan repayment, so there's questions around that. there's questions around what was the structure of this, quote-unquote, loan that they say existed between the two brothers, jim and joe. you have another question of where'd the money flow come from, like chairman comer said earlier this week, it looks like the money flow is coming from china through the cefc, and everybody remembers the famous text message, the whatsapp message from hunter biden to chairman zhao saying i'm sitting here with my father, we haven't gotten our money, and you better pay up because we will not forget. all those things now point to actually having to get whether it's in the hearing testimony or actually getting a deposition from members of the biden family. pete: congressman, are we at that point where it should move beyond an inquiry? how much work is left? i mean, where are you in this process? >> well, we're going to finish our work, and we've been consistent on that. there are more records that we are going to make is sure that we subpoena simply because you're going to have to paint a complete picture for the american people. this isn't nancy pelosi's house where you just decide to the throw impeachment articles on the floor. you're going to have to paint an entire picture of this. and there's other things that have to be considered, is joe biden in violation of federal immigration and border security laws? i believe that he does concern i believe that he is. and then you have the situation of what's going on at main justice. has there been obstruction at the behest of joe biden or to protect biden by merrick garland and others at the department of justice. many things need to be uncovered and dealt with because at the end of the day our government has to be the operating for the people. it's not to protect the president of the united states and his family. rachel: yeah. i mean, i appreciate the idea that you want to dot your is, cross your ts to the make sure you're ready to go, it's just frustrating as a vote iser -- voter, as an american. we know if this was donald trump who had, you know, all of this stuff against him and all of these checks going in shell companies, he would have been impeached a long time ago. so i do respect what you're doing. on the other hand, it just seems so unfair, the standards that republicans have to live by versus the other side which brings me to another issue that a lot of republicans are interest9ed in which speaks -- interested in which speaks to the lack of equal justice, and that is the january 6th situation. there has been indication that speaker johnson is going to release all those tapes. is -- do you believe that that is true, and do you know if there is a group or a large enough group of republicans who want that to happen? >> as i understand it, i do believe the j6 tapes are going to be released. i had a brief conversation with the speaker about -- oh, my gos. second thing i will say is that when it comes to members wanting to see that footage being leased, there are a large number of members who want it out there. but to the two-tier system of justice in our country right now, we all know that it is the unfair, the persecution of donald trump, but this is why we have to make sure that the rule of law continues to, continues. and that the democrats be held accountable for their malfeasance, what they're doing in these courtrooms all around the country. they're going to have to be held accountable for that, but we have to the make sure we're protecting our constitution and protecting the rule of law in america. you can't just go down this road of saying, well, they did it, now we're going to do it too. especially when the volume of evidence against hunter biden, jim biden and joe biden is so big, so voluminous, when you actually lay out this case, the american people will see it for exactly what it is, and then they'll be able to compare and see how radical the democrats have become in their quest to just get donald trump. i mean, it's foolish, it's ridiculous. but when you lay out the evidence very clearly, it actually makes it easier for voters to see that the democrat party does not care about america, they to not care about our democracy. they only care about power and their agenda, and my hope is they'll lose in 2024. will: congressman byron donalds, great to see you this morning. rachel: thank you, congressman. will: let's turn to chief meteorologist rick reichmuth for our fox weather forecast. rick: remember huh cold it was this week? it was really cold. a lot of places had temperatures like january. it's the also daylight saving time ends today. make sure you set your clocks tonight or maybe they'll happen automatically. i'm sure that microaway needs to be changed. this -- microwave. this started, by the way, back in 1918 to conserve fuel, that's why this whole tradition started. arizona and is hawaii, by the way with, two states that don't observe it. that's why ray smell i get confused where our arizona childhood. sunsets are going to be really early. new york city, 4:46. boston, 4:3 1. orlando, 5:36. temperatures cooler down across much of the southeast as well, at least to start today. you're going to warm up nicely, back into the 70s and 80s for almost everybody down across the southeast. and a nice warmup the next three days, in fact, most of the country's going to be looking well above average temperatures, a big difference from what we had. and what is going on the nice tomorrow? new york city marathon happens and, look at that, 53 degrees. say they -- they say that's perfect marathon weather. have any of you guys run one? will: sounds right. none of us -- pete: no such thing as perfect marathon weather. rick: i agree. [laughter] rachel: that's a great point. pete: i'm going -- will: i want to run a marathon. rick: you better get going on that, will. will: not tomorrow. are you saying because of your age? pete: he's saying because of your age. rachel: i think -- you're not -- you're older than me, rick, you don't get to be jumping on me. president east do it or don't do it, okay? rick: there's another saying for that. pete: i was going to the say, or, you know, get off the pot. rick: get off the pot. will: this morning television, what is wrong -- pete: i didn't say anything. rick, i love you. will: now they're telling us we've got to go, rick are. rachel: no pun intended. [laughter] okay. pete: all right. coming up tomorrow the on "fox & friends," or israel's former prime minister neftali bennett and country music star lee greenwood join us. rachel: but today young americans take to the streets calling for a ceasefire in gaza. but could it all be because of social media? tiktok's impact on the war, next. takes you off course. put it in check with rinvoq, a once-daily pill. when i wanted to see results fast, rinvoq delivered rapid symptom relief and helped leave bathroom urgency behind. check. when uc tried to slow me down... i got lasting, steroid-free remission with rinvoq. check. and when uc caused damage rinvoq came through by visibly repairing my colon lining. check. rapid symptom relief... lasting steroid-free remission... ...and the chance to visibly repair the colon lining. check, check, and check. rinvoq can lower your ability to fight infections, including tb. serious infections and blood clots, some fatal; cancers, including lymphoma and skin cancer; death, heart attack, stroke, and tears in the stomach or intestines occurred. people 50 and older with at least 1 heart disease risk factor have higher risks. don't take if allergic to rinvoq as serious reactions can occur. tell your doctor if you are or may become pregnant. put uc in check and keep it there with rinvoq. ask your gastroenterologist about rinvoq and learn how abbvie can help you save. 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if you're a young person who hasn't studied history and don't understand the dynamics, it's one-sided. >> i mean, you see the effects of tiktok in general. now you have kids literally dying from eating tide bods pods. the effect of tiktok on kids is something unseen and, yes, it's compelling because they start these trends, and now the pro-palestinians are hopping on the same trends, except they're making all of this propaganda. pete: welsh it's working. a poll that scad people do you approve of disapprove the way israel is responding to the hamas terroristest attacks, the majority disapprove. i mean, this is a terrorist attack that killed 1400 innocent israelis. israel's responding, and young people say no? >> well, most people, most kids don't even know that hamas is a terrorist organization. when you say hamas, they think it's the governing body of palestine. they don't understand if you really want to free palestine, you should want hamas out of the government too because they are repressing their own. especially the jewish people, but they're really just attacking everyone. pete: so between the education that kids are getting k-12, which we mow is captured boot university with, and tiktok where they're getting a one-sided view, how do we get out -- what's the future look like? >> session -- educational institutions have failed us, that's already established. the future is we needed to do something to get these pro-israel voices uncensored. we need to have a balance on social media -- pete: but china controls it. tiktok, i mean, i'm not on it, because i don't want to give anything to china. i know young people are. they, our enemy, decides what our young people see. >> that's where with america has to step in. because you're right, china, russia, all the dictators all align. it's their best interests if we decline as a society, and it's working. pete: absolutely. >> so that's up to our government to, you know, restrict things like that. they're not going to the stop it, it helps them. pete: of course not. imagine if our greatest enemy was able to put together an app where they got to the tell u.s. kids the hate -- we don't have the imagine, we have it right now. >> yeah, we do. pete: keep up the fight. emily, thank you. appreciate it. more "fox & friends" just moments awaymode. with my psoriatic arthritis symptoms. but just ok isn't ok. and i was done settling. if you still have symptoms after a tnf blocker like humira or enbrel, rinvoq is different and may help. rinvoq is a once-daily pill that can dramatically relieve ra and psa symptoms, including fatigue for some. it can stop joint damage. and in psa, can leave skin clear or almost clear. rinvoq can lower your ability to fight infections, including tb. serious infections and blood clots, some fatal; cancers, including lymphoma and skin cancer; death, heart attack, stroke, and tears in the stomach or intestines occurred. people 50 and older with at least one heart disease risk factor have higher risks. don't take if allergic to rinvoq as serious reactions can occur. tell your doctor if you are or may become pregnant. done settling? 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[laughter] will: after the third presidential debate. rachel: go ahead, pete, try it one more time. pete: we'll see you tomorrow morning. rachel: bye, everybody. pete: have a great saturday. [gunfire