i narrowly beat will. he almost took half the crew on a wide turn. rachel: and some tourists. pete: watch the guy with the checkered flag. watch will. will seems to be ai be aiming f. ththat was some athleticism. we have rachel who came running up to the studio, who is the winner. how does it feel to beat rick reichmuth. rachel: rick thinks he won. he says i m not equity, so i m willing to leave are you for fairness? we saw you cut you few cones. rachel: then i think rick will win. you ll give up the crown after the event? rachel: i am. it s up to me to end this equity thing. whoever won won and that s it. pete: will, what do you think? you re a sports guy. will: i ve never seen someone give up the crown. rachel: i m the anti-leah thomas. i ll be fair in this competition. pete: you re going to be a loser then. rachel: all right before she has given up, ceded her seat to go to rick. does rick have reaction. rachel: you guys said that i will: you put him in the wall, th
heartland of where our nuclear capabilities are and joe biden waited until it got here to soot it down. it raises the question of how much were they able to push back to beijing that s actionable for them in the future because the balloon at 60,000 feet is more granular and detailed than a satellite orbiting that goes over one particular location at a time. rachel: can i ask you something that s tangential to this. you re a former military guy. think about the mindset you had when you wanted to join the military and when you see this kind of weakness, maybe there s a great reason why the biden administration didn t act sooner but when you see this kind of weakness, you know, lack of action, how does that affect recruitment? we re in a really bad place recruitment-wise. pete: i would call it risk aversion. there s a disease of risk aversion inside our pentagon. the pentagon s job is not to be safe. pentagon s job is to stand up to our adversaries, he hopefully prevent conflict.
they have made this judge has made harris county an unsafe place and judges like him. just recently, he gave a capital murder suspect on parole already for another offense, a bond. and allowed him to walk free. we have over 25,000 wanted suspects in houston-harris county right now because of judges like this. and we need to find some way to fix that. rachel: again, i want to show our viewers what this criminal history is. it dates all the way back to 2008. felony drug charges, burglary, evading arrest, aggravated assault with a deadly weapon. you are absolutely right, doug, he should not have been on the street. i know this is so demoralizing to police officers. how is this kind of judge and policies for sentencing, how does that affect recruitment and retention? it makes it difficult. i mean, we see these same offenders time and time again.