good morning and welcome to the fourth hour of pox and friends. concern fox & friends. hey, speaking of usfl, memphis showboats running back alex collins, he s boeing to to show abby hornacek how irish accept dangs has helped with step dancing has helped with speed. dance and cross-training has always been part of high-level athletics. pete: and i think we re going to do a little bit of that later. rachel: we did step dancing. one of you guys did a jig. pete: we re going to bring back the tape, obviously, of will and his irish jig dancing. it looked just about like that, he s got great moves will: thank you. pete: because you re an elite level athlete. will: yeah, well, what can you do? [laughter] pete: it s the burden you carry. rachel: we re going another some dancing later. maybe another show we ll do some flamenco dancing. pete: probably next weekend. will: we ve done it all. have we not done rachel: no, we have not done flamenco. will: what did we do with we d
supreme court s first female justice. also, a guy who claims to be all three of those things. elon musk met with benjamin netanyahu this week and agreed that israel must destroy hamas. i think musk could destroy hamas almost instantly by becoming their ceo. good morning and welcome to morning joe. it is monday, december 4th. we ve got a lot to get to this morning. israel expanding its offensive in gaza with ground forces moving into the southern part of the territory. it comes as israeli officials have withdrawn from negotiations for another humanitarian pause. we ll get the very latest on these major developments in just a moment. plus, an update for you on the string of attacks on an american warship and multiple commercial vessels in the middle east. also ahead, the dangers of a possible second term for donald trump. we re going to go through a special feature from the atlantic. a major effort to detail all the threats our democracy could face. here s what th
are not conservatives, by the way, absolutely none of them will hold these people to account, and that s why we re going to get dog walked again by these people. pete: bringing it, as you always do. dan, who do you got on the show tonight? i got the great pete hegseth, you may have heard of them. i ve got dana white, covered ufc back in miami and they worked with uwa. i ve got a former mobber is the, i love mob move movies, i want to see which ones were real and which ones weren t, and an mit professor, max tegmark, to talk about the increasingly growing threat of a.i., this guy knows what he s talking about, it s very reasonedded. this guy stays says straight up, listen, man, you better be careful with this thing. and he says something really surprising about china and a.i., and if you watch the segment, you ll see it caught me off guard. it s interesting. rachel: wow. you ve got me hooked.
of job openings gives they freedom to demand more or walk away. this phenomena has inspired some panic in some employers who are desperate for workers. there are fears that the shortage will hurt small businesses or that a rise in wages would make business less competitive in general. but these fears are misplaced. these trends are actually good news, especially for american workers who are in dire need of good news. as the m.i.t. professor recently wrote in the new york times the u.s. has been plagued by a glut of jobs. low-skilled american workers are some of the lowest paid in the industrialized world. they make almost one-third less per hour than their counterparts in canada. low-skilled norwegian workers are paid nearly twice as much. as nick kristof wrote last year in a new york times op-ed a worker in mcdonald s in denmark earns about $22 an hour.