earlier on f fox & friends. rachel: it was national puzzle day. it is national puzzle day. it should be over after that. in response to that weird display that even pete s wife goes, what s up, i asked any psychiatrist that watches the program could you give us a diagnosis. other than simply friendship? is that how you show friendship? you told me one time, you said you re like the guy with the kitten, i love it, i love it, i want to crush it. rachel: i have t that with my . my kids are different. the other day t trey gowdy was n the show. they were old buddies, offices next each other. i was like why would you do that on the air? he s like we re on friends. i could never make fun of my friend s hair on the show and say let s talk about the fbi. that won t happen. i love had that jen called to check in on you. she said we need a diagnosis. this is an e-mail from patty. she said pete is secretly saying this is definitely not what i m saying. okay? good try, patty.
ed gender theory, how did we get to this point. started with studies under the guise of changing your gender which were pre verted experiments by doctors that the lefleft reveres today. i love to disagree. it s harder with you two. [laughter] i love free expression, the exchange of ideas. i know you can do as well. in my career i ve had the opportunity many times to go back and forth with people who are different than me in many ways. one of those is steven smith who i worked with at espn. he had has a brand-new book out, called straight shooter. you can pick it up. he came by here yesterday. we talked about what went down in memphis, tennessee. we t talked about the idea of fe expression and the value of disagreement. here s steven with us yesterday as part of the will cain podcast. i ve always appreciated the fact that you stand on what you
now they have to self these tiny little islands a ghetto of free expression. rachel: a ghetto of free expression, thank you. maybe not what the board of trustees is going for. but we ll take it. i m p i m not getting on the university of south carolina. rachel: they re trying something. it s an acknowledgement that the rest of the university is not about preexpression. it s super weird to say, the rest of the school is about indoctrination. let me give you the optimistic viewpoint. watch the applications flood into the that school. watch the students, watch i will guarantee you, that one s not going to be poorly attended and other schools will be like it s opt-in. you don t have to take courses from the school of civil life and leadership but you can. because the student base at north carolina, talking to a few people that go there, is right of center. rachel: yeah. so they re going to want this viewpoint represented and hopefully that demand leads to
right now, left wing and they acknowledge it that it s left wing but their board of trustees took a move. we talked to one of them yesterday on the program. had they voted 12-0, it would have been 13-0 but the other member wasn t present to create a new school inside the school that would stand for free expression in higher education. you would think it would be an entire higher education that would be devoted to free expression. we have a basti o tion of freed. he i said the goal should e the whole university but at least you re starting somewhere. here s part of what the chairman of the board of trustees said yesterday about the new free speech school. watch. we clearly have a world class faculty that exists and teaches students and creates leaders of the future. we, however, have no shortage of