up every basic assumption of gun control. it was the government that allow this to happen, existing gun laws would have stopped this, but they weren t enforced because the bureaucracy is incompetent, and the only person was armed with a private gun that you would like to ban. why doesn t this make you rethink your life s work? i m really glad that i was there, everybody ought to stipulate that it was good that a good guy with a gun happen to stop this guy, but there ve been 377 mass shootings this year in the united states. a good guy generally is not there, plus if you ask police chiefs whether it makes chance to have more guns in a shoot-out, almost inevitably, even if there is a good guy with a gun, it civilians they end up shooting. better for everybody to get assault weapons than to rely on a good guy. tucker: to do an analysis of accidental shootings by police department, they are very, very common, very common, and people are injured by them.
look back at things. yes, exactly, that you re looking at a political maneuver that in fact gives credence to president trump s criticisms and concerns, and that of course now that he was perfectly correct in firing him as well. jeanine: all right. matt, let me ask you this, you know, mueller is a buddy of jim comey s, and mueller s investigation centers on a truth-telling contest between comey and the president of the united states. given the fact they re pals dating back to the john ashcroft hospital days, and what we re learning about comey that it s possible he perjured himself in front of congress by lying under oath saying he didn t make a decision until after the investigation, doesn t this shed a whole cloud now on mueller s investigation? yeah, i definitely think there s so many questions on other side. we ve spent all this time with all of these crazy charges about
jeanine: it allows you to look back at things. yes, exactly, that you re looking at a political maneuver that in fact gives credence to president trump s criticisms and concerns, and that of course now that he was perfectly correct in firing him as well. jeanine: all right. matt, let me ask you this, you know, mueller is a buddy of jim comey s, and mueller s investigation centers on a truth-telling contest between comey and the president of the united states. given the fact they re pals dating back to the john ashcroft hospital days, and what we re learning about comey that it s possible he perjured himself in front of congress by lying under oath saying he didn t make a decision until after the investigation, doesn t this shed a whole cloud now on mueller s investigation? yeah, i definitely think there s so many questions on other side. we ve spent all this time with
jeanine: it allows you to look back at things. yes, exactly, that you re looking at a political maneuver that in fact gives credence to president trump s criticisms and concerns, and that of course now that he was perfectly correct in firing him as well. jeanine: all right. matt, let me ask you this, you know, mueller is a buddy of jim comey s, and mueller s investigation centers on a truth-telling contest between comey and the president of the united states. given the fact they re pals dating back to the john ashcroft hospital days, and what we re learning about comey that it s possible he perjured himself in front of congress by lying under oath saying he didn t make a decision until after the investigation, doesn t this shed a whole cloud now on mueller s investigation? yeah, i definitely think there s so many questions on other side. we ve spent all this time with
espn. saying they have no compass. it s whether or not it might be bad press for them. not about what the right thing to do is. brian: what about bob lee, why did he escape? why would they try to protect him from a meme? kimberly: it was the shortened name. kimberly: i hate it when cable network gets bad controversy. hey, dana, doesn t this reveal the difference between the perception of possible outrage and real outrage? we operate, the media, we are constantly worried about what we are going to say. dana: i self at it. greg: you have a filthy mind. dana: i think they were over thinking it. i think they made a terrible decision and i was the first to say this was the most ridiculous story. but, i think they probably were, when it got around they probably have consultants who called in, charging them a lot of money to sit around and say we should really try to protect