Fox & Friends DO NOT Like Being Friends Anymore

Fox & Friends DO NOT Like Being Friends Anymore

Brian Kilmeade somehow deems it appropriate not only to discuss Catholic charities on Fox and Friends on @Fox News, which is certainly watched by people of many, many denominations, but he also deems it reasonable to warn viewers that when one donates to a Catholic charity in America, that money may be used on a non-American person. It might be used on an illegal immigrant. Brian Kilmeade is really angry, and does not care to listen to Steve Doocy's rational explanation, or even Rachel Campos Duffy's distraction technique involving government misuse of funds and then Catholic church profit motives. Kilmeade stays focused.

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Sam Seder: Let's check in with Fox and Friends. This is always always fun to watch; Kilmeade and Doocy realize they're not on the same page. I really think the days are limited. I feel like Kilmeade is in the back room, and he's going down the hall, and he's just going like, "I think Doocy's had enough."
Emma Vigeland: That's like watching Starsky and Hutch break up.
Sam Seder: It sort of is.
Emma Vigeland: Really.
Sam Seder: Here is Fox and Friends today. Kilmeade is pissed to find out that there is some notion of social justice in Catholicism. That's not his brand of Catholicism. Here it is.
Brian Kilmeade: By the way, if you're a Catholic and giving one of the Catholic charities in America, weren't you hoping it was going to help Americans? Not other people from other countries to come to America illegally. Are you happy about that? Think about that.
Rachel Campos Duffy: I think it's our government giving money to Catholic charities, by the way?
Brian Kilmeade: Well why is Catholic charities using their apparatus in order to, in order to...
Rachel Campos Duffy: Because it makes money for them, and donations are down for a lot of reasons, maybe because...
Brian Kilmeade: ...Catholic charities ethically challenged?
Steve Doocy: Catholic charities historically have helped the migrant community. This is nothing new.
Rachel Campos Duffy: But it's also very it's also a profit motive for the Catholic church.
Brian Kilmeade: The illegal migrant community? Because that's what they are.
Steve Doocy: The illegal migrant community.
Brian Kilmeade: No. I did not know that.
Steve Doocy: Brian, that's been going on for decades. But here's the thing.
Sam Seder: I love the idea that when you give to Catholic charities, it's supposed to go to Americans.
Emma Vigeland: Yeah, right.
Matt Lech: A Catholic charity in America.
Brendan Finn: Yeah, can't we remember how Catholicism is an American religion and only extends from, you know, New Jersey to California.
Sam Seder: There's not much of a history in Central America with Catholicism at all. You don't see that very much.
Emma Vigeland: You don't really see that.
Matt Lech: Also I miss that Pope Francis was like making regular sort of media appearances or like uh speaking appearances bashing The Wall. I don't know how did he miss that.
Emma Vigeland: He also missed that Pope Francis critiqued capitalism publicly or maybe they did cover that. I'm not exactly sure.

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