Vimarsana.com

Latest Breaking News On - Roseanne - Page 1 : vimarsana.com

Transcripts For FOXNEWSW The Ingraham Angle 20180331 02:00:00

have that somehow or another that trump is trumping back. i will say that there is pot calling the kettle black to say that somehow democrats are playing up these cultural issues. this is the willie horton party. >> laura: what michael dukakis came up with willie horton. >> reagan and welfare queen. jesse helms crumbling that up paper. the way that donald trump is race baited. >> laura: barack obama at the same point in his presidency was 46%, he wasn't above 50. look, this has been a wild ride for a year all i'm saying is when it comes to the economy when it comes to trade agreements slightly better for middle america. fewer people unemployed. that's good stuff. doesn't mean everything is perfect and there aren't big disagreements. i think that d.c. deep poll >> this was the party of barack obama using the irs if you like your plan can you keep your plan. relations in the oval office. we can't even talk about whawith my kids because they are under age. richard, please, give us a break about the honesty and integrity line. i'm a christian conservative, i'm saharan, too. i get it. >> laura: everybody is. >> that is absolutely ridiculous that the democrats are the party of honesty and integrity, come on. >> laura: we all have our issues. each party has problems on that score. we have seen that i whic think the economy in the end is what people are voting for. 56%, again to the dcc research 56% of americans in these districts are saying that they are confident about the future. i'm happy weighs the way people feel. it was a rough ride for many americans. we have a long way to go. i want to play a sound bite of al sharpton another big those jobs, traditionally entry level jobs. they haven't done a great job of selling that i think they should and i think donald trump should go into those areas, as uncomfortable as it might be and actually preach the good news of his economic reform. >> two things, first, remember donald trump said to the black community what do you have to lose? answer, healthcare, voting rights. medicare, social security. i'm just saying that there are actually, we now see after a year and a quarter that there are things that the black community did lose. >> laura: how are they losing voting rights. >> it seems to me if you look what the the justice department is doing and ♪ doing they are not standing up for the voting rights of the black community in districts and states around the country. >> laura: i just don't understand what examples do you have of that. >> let me just say one other thing about donald trump. the problem is his bona fides when it comes to race relations are frankly between what he said about the central park five. what he said about good people on both sides at charlottesville. he just also a no standing. i agree with you. the only way he is going to restore it is to go into those communities. >> laura: he should do that. >> say something meaningful as opposed to something that's trite and frankly -- >> laura: dan, close tout. >> richard, donald trump was celebrated by people in the civil rights community before he ran as a republican. richard, how do you square this circle black unemployment is down dramatically. black middle class expanded by a third under ronald reagan. and they are stopping black people from voting? did you just make that up and please don't tell me because it would be entirely racist to suggest that because you are black you don't know how to get an identification card. that would be entirely absurd for you to suggest that i hope that's not what you are saying, right? >> laura: do you want to make. >> what i'm saying is that every line in the economy is on a straight line starting with the pits that barack obama inherited to the great kind of record that he developed. so all donald trump has to do is step out of the way. >> blaming bush now. >> that accounts for why his numbers are as strong as they are. >> laura: clearly manufacturing rebirth that is happening. all the announcements from apple on down companies bringing back wealth to the united states, i don't think there is a strong argument that that would have were it not for the tax cut that he helped push through and all these other reforms. we will see how this goes. the republicans have a long way to go in selling the message of free market capitalism and, you know, individual initiatives that's rewarded into all communities, especially minority communities. they have a heavy lift. great segment, guys. dan and richard thanks so much. the democrats as i said seem to have no interest in working with president trump on cultural issues or anything for that matter. is that good politics? not according to a poll i mentioned just a short while ago. new private poll conducted for the democratic congressional campaign committee as reported by axios. they found that democrats running in these swing districts quote must express a willingness to work with the president. as i said. well, joining me now for reaction is shelby steel, a senior fellow at the hoover institution. dr. steel, great to see you. how are you? >> i'm good. i'm good. good to be here. >> laura: does that surprise you that there seems to be an unwillingness on the part of democrats on the issue of the president moving from daca kids from 800,000 kids who would have gotten amnesty, dr. steel, to 1.8 million would have received amnesty under the trump proposal. the democrats in the end as i predicted said not going to do it. >> that's right. that's right. there is the source of their power and on the american left. i think has a lot to do with supporting policies that win them a kind of innocence in the culture that put them on the side of the good show them to be redeeming, racist, sexist, so forth past. so that is what they are looking for in bills like this and in much of what they pursue today because the other side of that is that america has morally grown in the last 50 years. it is not the racist society that i grew up in, for example. today, it is -- you can say that the oppression of minorities is over with it's simply systemic part. this pulls the rug out from liberals. they have no mandate than to rectify history and rectify the past. they are a bit exhausted at this point. they don't know what to do next. stephon clarke funeral i mentioned. al sharpton flies in. he gets up and speaks at the funeral. people are very impassioned. he said i flew here 3,000 miles only for this family and to keep this going. we have a sound bite. let's watch. >> white house press secretary sarah huckabee sanders to say this is a local issue is the main reason that many of us said no matter what, we will be here. this is not a local issue. it's a national problem. >> laura: it's a national problem. now, we will see what the facts of this case ultimately show. but whether it was trayvon martin or michael brown or freddie gray. each horrible innocent ended up racial slash point regardless what the ultimate facts determined, dr. steele. >> well, the flash point, if we're going to have a flash point, should be mr. sharpton should fly to chicago where in 2016762 young black largely boys shot by other black boys committed that many murders in one year wheres that liberal sharpton again. again, liberalism goes after examples of victimization. what's amazing about mr. sharpton he has a passion for black victimization. he loves it he celebrates it he won't let anybody escape it because victimization is his only source of power. he has nothing else to offer. nothing to say about the economy. immigration, whatever. nor do most on the left. they can call people racist. take positions that give them this ora of innocence from the americans. i'm not a racist. i'm an in the, good-hearted american. we're going to go and have diversity and inclusion and so forth while they actually ignore the real problems. if you have got 762 boys being shot on the south side of chicago in one year that suggestings a profound unheard of level of human pathology particularly in the western world. well, what -- we will believe them again when they begin to have something meaningful to say about that circumstance. >> laura: dr. stool, we have talked about this before on radio and you are so insightful on what happened to the actual debate. i saw this going back to college there is an attempt to shut down debate. someone actually raises a point about what happens when our fighting forces become social experimentation places. then you are anti-trans. or anti-this or anti-that. instead of having a conversation what works best for the military or what works best for borders. i are anti-immigrant. the left does not want a discussion. they want to impose their will on others and if you do not bow down to them. they want to try to demonize you or, you know, isolate the sole solon ski tactics so patently obvious at this point. >> that's absolutely right they want to shame you. and that's really what they are about. again, they have no other other than sort of again identification with innocence moral superiority. one thing they resent the most is pragmatism. nuts and bolts of it how do we fix a problem like the family break down we see across the black america today? what do we do there pragmatically down on the ground that can actually move us into the modern world? now that as blacks we enjoy this level of freedom. what's going to help us meet that challenge? nothing to say. they want to take us back to the old world. he wants to fly to sacramento. stand before the cough continue of another black kid and basically identify that event with slavery and segregation and so forth and sohio himself to be humanely concerned with all of this he never appears in chicago or baltimore or st. louis or detroit. any of those cities. >> laura: doctor, it's a heart-breaker but it is utterly predictable and to a lot of people it's utterly depressing. but your insights are amazing. i could do a whole hour with you. thank you so much for coming on tonight. we really, really appreciate it and by the way, also something that's been stunning is roseanne's run away success. could it already be triggering a conservative renaissance in the entertainment industry? well, details coming up. plus, did the pope really say hell didn't exist? stay tuned. >> we hit the door at 110 miles an hour every morning. and if we're not moving at that speed, our colleagues will fly right by us. >> sandra: our job is to facilitate smart conversations so that the people who are watching us can better understand what's happening in the world. >> bill: to go deeper, to find a different question that other people are not asking. that's the real challenge. >> sandra: to give it to you straight, bad or good, like it or not, deliver the news. ♪ hey. pass please. i'm here to fix the elevator. nothing's wrong with the elevator. right. but you want to fix it. right. so who sent you? new guy. what new guy? watson. ♪ ♪ my analysis of sensor and maintenance data indicates elevator 3 will malfunction in 2 days. there you go. you still need a pass. ♪ ♪ >> laura: welcome back. over 18 million people watched that debut of the roseanne reboot on tuesday night. staggeringly high number in thisser wrath cable television and smart phones. according to a report in the "new york times," the idea to relaunch the show came from a brainstorming session at abc. this happened the day after president trump's victory over hillary clinton. it took a presidential election for the suits at abc to realize that regular americans had different values than the far left people who live on the coast. wow. joining me for reaction is cathy arrive ryu who is a publisher of catalina magazine and here with my in the studio is mollie hemingway senior editor of the federalist. i love this story. i love it so much. catherine, i want to start with you. >> okay. >> laura: the "new york times" writes this piece and says the meeting that took place on the morning of mr. trump's surprise victory led new york to reconsider strategies and had in place means of revised strategies centering on struggling midwestern family a show to appeal to the voters who had helped put mr. trump in the white house. is ben sherwood still the head of abc entertainment? he is a smart guy. i know ben. if he had anything to do with it doesn't surprise me. it is amazing. like these people have always existed. they have always been there we have a coast and america in between. i'm sorry that's tom wolf's line. why did it take them so long to figure this out? >> i think the election maybe inspired them. i would hope they were going to have this meeting anyway. they were number four when it came to the network channels in ratings. abc had not had a hit for a while. modern family had not been working. other shows had not been working. i wouldn't say that roseanne is the brand new answer because they are hitting on middle america. middle america loves empire. empire is fox's big hit ratings buster. walking dead huge hit. that's about zombies. i don't think that's about middle america. i wouldn't say that exactly roseanne is a reflection of what americans are looking for because it's them. >> laura: cathy, 18 million people tuned in. >> exactly. big bang theory. >> laura: big bang theory launched how many years ago. big bang theory a liberal favorite and funny show i watch it every now and then. it's on every channel all the time. >> right? >> laura: mollie, it's not like it's a conservative show. just treats people who are conservative like they are real people have a sense of humor: like "duck dynasty" in the beginning. they were really popular. >> what an audience. >> laura: it's massive. >> reflective of what happens when you make good art. this is such a small thing for a really large population of people. there isn't one kind of trump voter. yes, the people on roseanne might represent one type of trump voter. there are tons of different type of trump voters. so unrepresented in our art it's bizarre. this is a group that's large enough to elect a president and, yet, media treat them as if they don't exist or cartoon characters of evil. >> laura: speaking of which donnie deutsche on morning joe had this little snarky comment about the roseanne deal. let's watch. >> isn't a big part of this news is the demo that watches appointment television that means when it's actually on the air when ratings count are the more red state, lower income, lower education and, yes, when you put that on broadcast television, l-3 television, those numbers are always going to be higher. >> laura: cathy? >> i don't know. i don't always agree with donnie deutsche. i think middle america loves the walking dead and those were zombies. i think right now maybe roseanne yeah did come out with 18 million viewers. at the same time there is a sister there who is anti-trump supporter. >> laura: that's the point. >> that's what's beautiful. this is what is happening in america. i think the coast and middle america, everyone can relate to rose san right now because we all have trump supporters and nontrump supporters in our lives and this show is teaching us how to live with that we haven't seen this on tv right now. brand new arch were bunker and it was about time. i think all of us can relate to this show no matter what coast or middle states we are living in. >> laura: good point. i have family members who lo trump. family members who can't stand him. it is amazing that sometimes in families they can't even speak to each other. like, you guys are family. this is family. family should transcend politics. what are you talking about? >> i think it shows so many people in hollywood think they are being brave when they go up among their piers that have the same views and talk about how they have the same views. so much better when people do art grappling with members in the family. >> laura: that's real family. >> that's better than what we see usually from hollywood which is preachy. >> laura: cathy. >> beauty of the show appealing to all of us. >> laura: they love each other. >> they love each other and led by a trump supporter. there is the other representation. i think we are all learning from this show. hopefully the ratings can stay up because she is doing a favor to all of us right now. >> laura: do you guys think this will be replicated. everyone thought after the passion of the christ that everyone would see all these more religious films that were really well done. i'm not sure. i think most of these folks in hollywood, they put profits second and ideology first. you have an opportunity to have struck gold with this audience for decades and yet, they have not done it because they are ideologically incapable of seeing past their own, you know, the hanged in front of their face. >> yeah. every few years you get a lesson like this where people really do have, you know, overwhelming numbers of people coming out to see things that are different than the traditional values done by hollywood. and, yet, they care. >> laura: "american sniper." >> they care so much about ideology. >> laura: a little embarrassing for some of these executives, cathy, if they put on a show that a lot of these traditional folks like there is a strain of intolerance in that narrative. we would see more of it because we have half the country doesn't agree with the prevailing wisdom in hollywood and that half of the country is not served. cathy, can you wind it up for us. >> in hollywood they do say everyone first wants to be second. now that they see there is a winning formula. they will return to try to replicate it and i don't know if they can do it. roseanne has done it beautifully. >> laura: all right, guys. people of faith by the way speaking up. standing with president trump amid the stormy daniels controversy. we will tell you why. this holy week, did the pope really say that hell does not exist? our friday follies segment with raymond next this is wild. evangelicals still supporting donald trump. we have been hit with nonstop stormy daniels and other people coverage. >> other alleged relationships and it seems the evangelicals such a big part of the trump fan base and supporters, 8 to 10 they are supporting him and giving him job approval numbers at that level. will out of 10 evangelicals still support him. that's incredible in the face of what they have been seeing. >> laura: so the left thought that they would push the sex narrative, donald trump. >> the networks with doing it around the clock. >> laura: it is nonstop. they thought that would crack him. that would crack him. crack his support. it reminds me of the billie bush tape came out. they thought that was it we stuck a fork in him. he is done. again, they don't want to debate trump on the issues. they do not want to talk issues. they want to demonize and isolate him and destroy him. that's the left's tactic. >> look at this piece of video. this is cnn. they convened a group of evangelical women and they thought well, we will rattle them. we will play some stormy daniels for them. this is what happened. >> why would she come out and give this interview if she wasn't telling the truth? >> money. >> money. >> and more money. >> do any -- based on this interview, do any of you believe that stormy daniels did have sex with trump? >> >> i don't believe it i haven't seen any hard proof. >> believe the president of the united states. >> pick him over her. >> or a stripper porn star. >> i go with the president of the united states. >> this is a porn star. why are we giving it any credibility? >> laura: why are they sticking by him? >> they are sticking by him because, remember, during the campaign, i went out polling places and encountered a number of evangelicals and catholics why in the light of the billie bush thing are you voting for this man? >> laura: that's right. >> they sewed we believe he is check not only on government gone away we didn't like it to go but on our churches that have also gotten very political. they are talking about environmental issues and climate change and we don't agree with that they said. they see the president as a check in all those areas. look at the agenda and the record he has changed and dropped the obamacare regulations. >> laura: funding planned parenthood though. >> well, planned parenthood. >> laura: that's a billing mistake. >> stopped the funding of planned parenthood which he promised and protections. still willing to give him the benefit of the doubt also for a man not particularly religious, he speaks and talks about god with regulator. evangelicals like that. >> laura: i still remember the lighting of the christmas tree. i haven't heard jesus mentioned that much. that was unbelievable. >> it was a very heart felt. >> laura: religious. we are used to saying happy seasons greetings. >> santa claus. all about the baby in the manger. >> laura: the pope sent everyone over the edge through this interview that he did with 3-year-old the atheist. >> italian newspaper 93 years old. he has interviewed the pope five times. >> laura: why is the pope going to do interviews think he might convert him. >> convert him and friendly. see the world politically in the same way. look, he claimed the pope said hell does not exist. we will put it up on your screen. what exists is the disappearance of sinful souls, i won't go further because we are running out of time. >> laura: there it is. can you read the whole thing. >> hell does not exist. what exist u.s. is the disappearance of sinful souls. they are not punished. those who repent obtain the forgiveness of god and go among the ranks of the souls who contemplate him. those who could not repent therefore cannot be forgiven they disappear. now, as can you imagine, all of christian dom was up in arms when this headline hit pope says hell does not exist. >> laura: good friday thing. >> this is the second time he has claimed the pope said hell does not exist. >> laura: isn't that the whole point of the resurrection? >> this has caused -- people listening. they said the article is the part of his reconstruction which the exact words spoken by the pope are not quoted. no quotation marks in the above article should therefore be considered as a faithful transcription of the holy father's words. that's a non-denial denial. i mean, so people are still wondering what does that mean? >> laura: interpretation of the interpretation. >> the language wasn't exactly what he said. buff the question is subsubstantively did he capture what the pope meant. >> i doubt it the pope has talked about satan and the lures of the devil for a long time. they should decry this and say the pope believes in hell and this is a big misfire. >> laura: well, now walmart is removing -- we don't have enough time. they are removing cosmo. >> they don't want little girls sex and how to please your man. >> laura: good. >> happy good friday. >> laura: by the way p.c. mob sets its sights on monuments. thomas jefferson is next when the ingraham angle returns. just one free hearing test at his local miracle ear helped andrew hear more of the joy in her voice. just one hearing test is all it took for him to hear more of her laugh... and less of the background noise around him. for helen, just one visit to her local miracle-ear is all it took to learn how she can share more moments with her daughter. just one free hearing test could help you hear more... laughter... music... life. call now! for a limited time, you can get $500 off miracle-ear hearing aids! ♪ come fly with me, let's fly, let's fly away. ♪ want thomas jefferson, his statue outside the student center removed because our nation's third president owned slaves. and last year the city of new orleans removed several confederate statues. here is what new orleans democrat mayor mitch landrieu had to say about this issue earlier today. >> you can't change history by taking a statue down. you are just moving it to another place. these statues prominent places and reflect four years of new orleans 300 years history crowding out all of the other history. >> laura: joining me now for reaction is correspondent at large geraldo rivera author of the geraldo show a memoir and with me here on set is fox news political analyst gee an know caldwell. mitch landrieu also a had a number of statues removed in the dark of night. they have been there a long time. worth multimillion dollars and we don't know where most of them are. p.c. beauregard and other statues are just gone. what's your take on this? is this the right way to handle these historical monuments? >> putting aside what's happening in new orleans. and i really do like mayor landrieu. i think is he a very thoughtful man. i think his family has real roots. real cred when it comes to new orleans and louisiana history generally speaking. remember, laura, i resigned from my fellowship at yale university a year or so ago when they changed the name taking john c. calhoun's name off the college and naming it for more contemporary person. i fear when history starts being rewritten constantly through the prism of political correctness and contemporary thought, that we risk cutting ourselves off from our roots. i absolutely get that slavery, this abomination is different than a lot of things that happened in political life. this is something like the holocaust, that can't be forgiven but i think that to try and continually rewrite history, jefferson was a slave owner. so was george washington. what will happen when the entire first third of our history is cut off or in some way covered up, laura? >> well, there is levels, as i see it. you have the confederate statues. ones of generals and if you look at the history of the generals, most of those guys, they were military, generally speaking and that was pretty much it. so have you got these statues in public squares of individuals who fought to really divide our country. and when you look at it from that perspective it gives a greater degree of understanding why statues like that really should be in museums. now when it comes to somebody like thomas jefferson, for example, he is much more than a slave owner. that was a past of his. somebody who created had a hand in creating the declaration of independence. he said all men are created equal and in addition to that he was the president. he was a governor. he was a secretary of state. so, this is an individual i think that we can celebrate. although he did have past sins. these other individuals, however, their past sins was the majority of their career from the viewnt o viewpoint of g confederate -- >> laura: general beauregard did so much after the war. he helped build schools for minority children and ca did so much work to bring the fabric of the community together. i mean, he is a bee loved person post war. so, yes, sins of slavery, horrific. an entire life span, maybe not so much with everyone. i agree with geraldo that painting every historical figure living in the south at the time and might have fought in the war brush of take him away, take him away in the middle of the night. puts it somewhere where we don't even know does not serve us all that well. i'm not a black person. i don't know how it feels to walk by one of these statues and maybe you are told this person hated you and didn't think you were a real person. i can't imagine that. but, i do think that people who especially worked for reconstruction or forgiveness for bringing and healing the country, especially those people, i think we are on a real slippery slope if we start saying like, look, hofstra students were serious. they were serious at princeton about woodrow wilson a great internationalist. democrat hero. woodrow wilson has to go off the wilson center. this is what one of the hofstra students said on fox news the right to peaceful protest and assembly is at the core of our democracy. hofstra supports our student's rights to engage in peaceful demonstrations aboudemonstrationsabout issues o them. we look forward to civil discussion on the subject. that's what their statement was to fox news. it looks like groups of students mobilized at princeton university not successfully yet, but i think it's a matter of time before thomas jefferson gets put in that same place as robert e. lee who past american presidents including fdr hailed as one of the greatest generals we have ever had. one of the greatest christians gentlemen we have ever had. that's fdr's commemoration of robert e. lee. this is a wild territory we are in. i don't know where it ends, guys. >> i would have to disagree with that. i think it's a slippery slope if we are continuing to put these individuals, these confederate generals in similar categories as thomas jefferson. they are not in similar categories as thomas jefferson. you have individuals who really founded our country, christian principles. you talk about robert e. lee, democrat who lived to destroy the fabric of our very country. yet. >> laura: he didn't own slaves his wife did though. >> african-americans see this as a problem because you see many that celebrate this. and not put it in its proper categorization. if you want to put it in a museum by all means. we can't erase our history. i understand that. certainly not. we shouldn't be celebrating it in public squares and allowing for people to think that there was nothing wrong with that. >> laura: should we remain washington, d.c.? >> you know, laura, just going back to. >> laura: he owned slaves not too far from here. >> i get it. >> laura: thousands of acres of land. >> john c. calhoun in the 1950s was voted one of the five greatest senators in american history by an elite senate panel that included john f. kennedy. so senator kennedy was one of those who picked john calhoun as one of the great -- that was in the 1950s. my fear is that as con temporary more rays an more mo . there was a time in the beginning of this country beginning of reaction to reconstruction. beginning of jim crow where statues were erected specifically to stick it to black people, to let them know who was still boss. and who was subordinate. those statues, i think they may have the facade is historic monument but the real purpose is a racialist. >> yeah. >> social statement rather than historic remembrance. i think you can look at them. it's easy to find their providence and history and determine how you feel about them based on that. >> laura: all right. guys. great segment. hillary clinton by the way has a brand new victim card to play. i will perform a tune for her on the world's tiniest violin right after this. >> laura: welcome back to our special culture wars in the age of trump. if a cold shiver just inexplicably ran down your spine maybe you felt hillary clinton was coming. well she speaks out again this time about the backlash to constant election loss griping. >> i was really struck by how people said that to me, mostly people in the press for whatever reason like oh, you know, go away, go away. and i had one of the young people who works for me go back and do a bit of research they never said that to any man who was not elected? >> well, just tossing this out. maybe it's because no male failed presidential nominee in modern history has gone on never ending speaking tour blaming almost everything imaginable for his loss. what or who does hillary clinton have left to scapegoat at this point? joining us are reaction katie pavlich editor of town hall.com along with antwon seawright democratic political consultant. all right. let's talk about this. hillary clinton has been on a book tour that never ends. it just goes on and on and on. it's like cher's farewell tour it keeps going on and on and on. her book was titled "what happened." antwon, here is what happened. hillary lost and forgot middle america. hillary is now blaming sexism when democrats say time to leave the stage, please. your reaction to this? >> well, my reaction is this: i think it's -- i think it's quite disgusting for the right to harp on what hillary clinton as a private citizen is doing in her private life. look, she did lose the election. actually, she lost the electoral college because 3 million more people voted for her than president donald trump. she lost the electoral college. but she is in her private life. getting paid to do speeches. selling her book. and so why does the right wing want to harp on what hillary clinton says? i don't think hillary clinton gives two cents about what the right wing is doing. so leave her alone. let her be. hillary has served our country well first lady, secretary of state, u.s. senate, let her be hillary clinton her private life. >> laura: okay. as long as that's the way the left is going to treat the right. like we can just -- as long as we just don't talk about each other. >> laura, laura, laura what i don't remember is -- i don't remember anyone harping on whether it was joe biden, whether it was -- >> hk is -- i have only covered two major presidential elections, but i also remember al gore losing the election. instead of going out and talking about the reasons he lost unending, he actually found a pet project instead in global warming. hillary clinton could do the same. the global warming argument actually worked for al gore for a number of years to help his party and the left. hillary clinton is stuck in this idea that everything is still about her. she captains move on. she is insulting women across the board. >> that's not true. >> let me finish my point. she is insulting women across the board. insulting voters in red states where senate democrats are vulnerable. and it's not the quote right wing conspiracy that you are citing that is talking about hillary clinton. it's hillary clinton talking about herself and it's people like senator dick durbin and senator claire mccaskill who are democratic senators saying hillary, nothing helpful. time to move along. >> laura: i think the "new york times" and "the washington post" reported unnamed democrats don't want to give their names were hoping that hillary would just just enjoy retirement. they need to no move on from the clintons. they had their run. they had the clinton foundation, they did all that stuff surrounding that. they had their run. it's time to go. now we are looking to the future for the democratic party and they have kamala harris and a lot of interesting people. that's the point. it's not about sexism an antjuan they had their time and it didn't work. >> i agree with the fact that we have to move on from the 2016 election. there are a couple points. one, people actually want to know what happened. they want to know what happened in the election. so in the future democrats cannot perhaps make this trip up on the same thing that prevented them from winning the white house again. people want to know. i don't think there is nothing wrong with talking about what happened in the last election. you win or you learn. >> here is what happened. [talking at the same time] >> you win or you learn. she is talking about what she learned. >> she hasn't learned anything. >> great lesson for all of us. she talked about it in her book. >> laura: she said she drank chardonnay afterward. she used that joke 15 times. it's a joke the first time she said it i drink a lot -- okay. great. >> again, if mitt romney. >> excuse me, in learning from your mistakes and helping the party move forward. but instead it's a pity party for her. in the meantime she is damaging democrats who are in shamables in trying to get their party back together by revamping this deplorables argument saying white women only vote based on what their husbands do. elitist is what democrats are trying get away from. they are pulling her back in. she is enfu helpful to them. >> that's the point republicans want to pivot to something to take their eyes off the most toxic president that has ever occupied the white house donald j. trump with the numbers in the tarng as they are. >> at least he is in the white house. >> and they want to use hillary clinton as that something else. >> laura: all right. well, his numbers are the highest they have been since last year and they are not too far away from where obama was in his first year in office at 46%. but, great segment nonetheless. just in time, guys for easter. what may prove a heavenly secret weapon in college basketball's final four tomorrow? stay tuned. ♪ this is a tomato you can track from farm, to pot, to jar, to table. and serve with confidence that it's safe. this is a diamond you can follow from mine to finger, and trust it never fell into the wrong hands. ♪ ♪ this is a shipment transferred two hundred times, transparently tracked from port to port. this is the ibm blockchain, built for smarter business. built to run on the ibm cloud. of sister jean merchandise has been through the roof leading up to tomorrow night's game. i love it. the 11 seed loyola chicago ramblers take on the three transient michigan wolverines in san antonio. great match up. today, at a press conference, sister jean provided wisdom and perspective, much needed, on the game that i really like. >> we have a little slogan that we say, worship, work, and win. so you need to do all those things. and if god -- god always hears, but maybe he thinks it's better for us to do the l instead of the w and we have to accept that. >> laura: wow. here's hoping sister jean and loyola's cinderella run continuous. that is all the time we have tonight on this special edition of "the ingraham angle" ." a blessed good friday and passover to all of you. i'll be off next week for easter break with my kids.

Trump
Democrat
Issues
Back
Another
Willie-horton
Pot-calling-the-kettle-black
Laura-ingraham
Party
Welfare-queen
Cup-paper
Ronald-reagan

Transcripts For FOXNEWSW Fox News Night With Shannon Bream 20180329 03:00:00

she's cool on the show. i like all of your opinions. keep tweeting me. shannon bream is up next. shannon has lindsey graham on friday will be a great show, as always. shannon? >> shannon: he spent the day with the president. he will fill us in on that, laura. thank you very much. let's get you caught up on three breaking stories tonight. the inspector general at the justice department is starting an investigation into what republicans contend is bias at the doj and fbi and the russia collision investigation and those fisa warrants. we are learning that president trump has fired his veterans affairs secretary dr. david shulkin. senior north and south korean officials are just launching high-level talks to set up a planned summit in april with president trump. team coverage tonight, tomlinson standing by at the pentagon with why dr. david shulkin was locked up into his -- let's go. we begin tonight with chief national correspondent ed henry following the new pressure on the fbi. good evening. white house dr. ronny jackson to replace the shulkin, a navy rear admiral, a surprise choice to lead this sick government second largest department. he has served as white house physician over the past three administrations. recently jackson has been criticized by some after giving a glowing report on the president's health. >> some people have great genes, i would tell the president that he could love to be 200 years old. >> the president has heart disease. those numbers qualify him to have heart disease. it clearly needs a planted dry and prevent heart problems down the road. >> in a statement, president trump said admiral jackson is highly trained and qualified. one of the first g.o.p. lawmakers to call for shulkin's ouster applauded the move. dr. shulkin came from within the v.a. and did nothing to clean up the culture of bureaucratic incompetence that is to find a leadership at the v.a. i am convinced that only someone from outside the v.a. can clean up the v.a. the president named robert wilkie, the pentagon's undersecretary of defense for personal and readiness, to serve as the acting v.a. secretary until admiral jackson is confirmed. expect senate democrats to put up a fight. shannon? >> shannon: lucas tomlinson from the pentagon. thank you. kim jong un's secretive meeting with chinese president has left many in the u.s. wondering what will happen next. what it could mean for a future meeting with president trump. leland vittert joins us live with more on that. hey. >> good evening, shannon. lots of news but very few answers to the core questions here. when and where does the trump, summit take place, one with the ground rules, and what does the north koreans really want for their nukes? one thing is sure. the chinese made it clear with this visit that they play a front and center wall when it comes to dealing with the kim regime. the president paid respect to his chinese counterpart to that effect today tweeting, "received a message last night from xi jingping of china that he had a meeting with him drunk on and it went very well and kim looks forward to his meeting with me. in the meantime, and unfortunately, maximum sanctions and pressure must be maintained at all costs." despite their freeze on my cell a nuclear custom of the north koreans appear to be moving forward at all costs and a breakneck speed with her nuclear program. no photo show another reactor, the north claims that is for peaceful electric generation. intelligence reports it is also capable of throwing off plutonium for more bombs. if the white house or u.s. intelligence community knew about the chinese summit, they didn't say anything, nor did they seem particularly surprised. the chinese official state media it reiterated the offer by kim jong un of face-to-face with president trump. >> certainly, we are going to be cautiously optimistic, but we feel like things are moving in the right direction, and that the meeting yesterday was a good indication that the maximum pressure campaign has been working. you saw him leave for the first president trump and as yet undisclosed location. he is also rumored to be considering a sit down with russians vladimir putin, while one of its doctor's critics, japanese prime minister shinzo abe says he is ready for a meeting too. what is drawing him out of hermit kingdom all of a set on? let's talk about it with a republican senator from south carolina lindsey graham, a member of the senate armed committee. >> that is a stunning overview. if you told me a year ago that the north korean leader would be meeting with president trump, potentially there russians and the japanese, i wouldn't believe it, and hats off to president trump and his team for making this a reality. maximum pressure has worked. >> shannon: let's talk about china. i read an account today that said for six years, he's been pushing china to have an official meeting with him. they weren't interested, and never happen, they held him at arm's length. as soon as it's becoming apparent that he will meet with president trump, china says, hey, come for a visit. they obviously have different interests in the region that we do. there are some similar but there are differences. a piece says that "beijing is concerned with any concessions that north korea might make toward the u.s. in exchange for u.s. security guarantee or a settlement that could lead to the unification of the korean peninsula by absorption and the emergence of a unified korea as an american military ally on china's border" >> i think that's a pretty good analysis of what they fear. here was with a hope. they hope that north korea will stop being a pain in the rear for them. the north korean nuclear program destabilizes the entire world. i hope that kim jong un was told by the chinese president, we stand with america. you need to give up your nukes. i would tell her chinese, our goal is not to reunify south korea and north korea. i would tell them that north korea needs to give up their nuclear weapons to protect the world at large. help us there. >> shannon: do you think it will? the messages were relayed after their meetings that they are open to denuclearizing the peninsula, plenty of skeptics who aren't buying math or wonder what kind of agreement we can gr as rigorous, legitimate inspection. >> we have seen this movie before. in 1994, they gave up their nuclear program for food. they took the food and kept their nukes. the one thing i would tell china and north korea, the worst mistake you can make is meet with president trump personally, have a discussion about what to do, and try to play him. if that happens, that's the end of north korea. i met with the president today. he doesn't want a wife. he is hopeful that this can resolve in ending the north korea nuclear threat, stabilizing that part of the world. i think he is ready to go big. the korean war is still -- it's never been ended been ended. >> shannon: technically. >> but i would like to see happen as a peace treaty between south korea, north korea, china, the united states. north korea would give up their weapons. japan and south korea doesn't have them. we'll give them insurance that we won't need north korea, we'll tell the chinese we are not trying to unify the korean peninsula, but we are insisting that kim jong un give up his nuclear program. there is a chance for a deal. this is the last, best chance to avoid a war. the worst thing that can happen is that the north korea tries to play donald trump. >> shannon: you said that the damage from a war with north korea would be worth it in terms of long-term stability and national security. that scares a lot of people. >> i don't want to minimize the damage would be great. worth it. it's all about bad choices. if there is a war between north korea and us, south korea and japan will get hit, hit hard. thousands of people could die. that is not lost upon me. but if we allow them to get an icbm, they can hit america with a nuclear tipped missile. the names of americans are at risk and he will sell anything he develops. he sold to syria, tried to help iraq. so north korea proliferates nuclear materials. so you got to go bad choices. to me, it is worth it to stop him from getting a big nuclear arsenal because he will give it our selected people who would use it if he would not to. >> shannon: let's talk about russia. interesting because the president took the steps obviously in tandem with a number of european allies to expel a number of russian personality, intelligence officers, and response to this poisoning on british soil that russians are now saying the u.k. did had made it look like the russians did it. i am no security expert or professional envoys and so i won't comment on that. a couple of people stepping up in the mainstream media to praise the president, david singer from "the new york times" saying ," "it's getting harder to make the argument that the president has not gotten tough with putin. "the daily beast" income of this is big, it deserves credit. >> 50 diplomats plus spies. the best thing that they can do is unite the world against russia's aggression, not just be the united states versus russia come but the entire world. look at what happened when we decided to expel russian diplomats and spies sprayed the entire world followed president trump. the best thing he can do in my view at home and abroad is to tell putin, i don't want to be your enemy but you are making me be your enemy and if you continue to disrupt the world, invade your neighbor, assassinate people, in foreign countries, then you were going to pay a price. if china -- excuse me, in france and germany would get behind trump's efforts to change business practices and trying to come i guess what, china would stop cheating if they had to pay a price. putin would stop us dropping the world if he paid a price. i can tell you this. putin will respond to weakness, aggression, he will respond to strength by backing off on president trump i've got a moment in time here to really make putin pay a price. his economy is the size of italy. >> shannon: 15 seconds. he spent 90 minutes with the president. how did he seem? there's a lot of new swirling around him, much of it not positive. >> very, very focused, very upbeat. it feels like he's doing a good job. we have some historic moments coming in may when north korea and iran, tax cuts are working, the president was very upbeat and quite frankly, i think he's done a very good job as commander in chief. >> shannon: senator graham, always good to have you with us. thanks. the polish government signing off on a huge deal to buy the u.s. patriot to missile defense system. for nearly $5 billion. it is the largest arms procurement deal and poland's history and is also a major step in modernizing their forces, which analysts they do not sit well with the kremlin. the u.s. economy looks to be on stable footing. in the final quarter of 2017, marked the third quarter in a row with gdp close to or exceeding 3%. the pace that the drop administration set as a target. gross domestic product measures the value of every item produced in every service rendered in the u.s. president trump will buzz at northeast toast ohio tomorrow afternoon to present his proposed $1.5 trillion program to rebuild the country's aging infrastructure. economists argue that it won't add to the u.s. economy. the white house council of economic advisors says the plan will give a significant boost to the gdp over the next ten years, adding up to 400,000 new jobs. they are calling it a boomerang effect. what began as surveillance of a trump campaign turning into an investigation of the alleged fisa abuse by the fbi under the obama administration. what it all means for the special counsel probe next. plus no developments tonight on a breaking story. a new trump administration proposal aimed at making sure immigrants don't become dependent on government benefits if they want to attain legal status. also on tap, marching for our lives to marching for life. another group of students is trying to organize a nationwide school walkout. we look at the same kind of support? portion of the ball being built, adding, "great briefing this afternoon on the start of our southern border wall." it becomes following are part of the drop administration seeking to her restrictive legal status for immigrants who rely on tax credits and government welfare programs. let's talk about with tonight's panel. radio host ethan berman. fox news contributor lisa boothe. the federalists mollie hemingway, also a fox news contributor. good to see you all tonight. >> hi, shannon. >> shannon: tell me more about this. this is what the dhs spokeswoman said. this is their proposal, apparently they say nothing is finalized yet. once it is approved, it will be released, have a comment. matt, the whole 9 yards. this is what she said. "the administration is committed to enforcing existing immigration law which is clearly intended to protect the the amn taxpayer." mollie, they say this is a tackn attack on people who are trying to gain legal status. because this gets at the heart of the debate about kind of immigration should have. some people say should be random and lottery based on some people are pushing for a move to the more australian or canadian style where it's self-sufficiency playing a role. it doesn't play a role for people who have special needs or our refugee status or particular persecution. at in general, a lot of immigrants are coming to this country, american citizens are looking for people who can be self-sufficient and can contribute to the economy. a lot of immigrants do. this is a test to make sure that this is working out for current american citizens. >> shannon: reacting to this, the statement from dnc chair tom perez, "it's another heartless attack on immigrants. donald trump should spend less time finding ways to punish hardworking families and more time standing up to the values of inclusion of opportunity that make america great." your response, lisa? >> i think mollie is right. this is consistent with what we have seen from the sweat has, a illegal immigration, that looks at what mollie discussed, and merit-based immigration approach, and something that president trump pushed for as well when he laid out what he would ideally like to see congress and address on the daca issue. also, i think this is very consistent with what we have seen from president trump wanting to bring people into this country that would benefit more economically, maybe not take as much public assistance. it would bring some sort of skill set to the workforce. >> shannon: ethan, the dhs says it's about making sure that u.s. tax to taxpayers are treated treated fairly. >> of course we want u.s. taxpayers to be treated fairly. the 1996 offer act and the immigration act of 1996 already addressed this issue. this is a very marginal number of people come illegal immigrants already over abundantly contribute to our economy. there are greater number of small business owners that need a foreign spy they work at a higher percentage than native-born's. they are higher education levels, they actually earn more than native-born americans. this is just meat to the base because it is such a tiny percentage of people that we are talking about. it is not billions of dollars that are being abused or wasted right now. >> shannon: okay. i want to make sure that this next topic, i get all three of you in. keep your interest relatively brief. ethan, i'll start with you. today the inspector general said he will look into these allegations about whether the fisa warrants were abused, whether the doj and fbi under the obama administration was fair and complied with the law. >> i think any time that there is an objective investigation by an inspector general, that is something we all need. we need to know that the process works. however, it sure seems to be a right-wing move that seems to think of the deep state is so embedded that the fbi is not able to function. we have a couple of bad apples who were caught red-handed and were removed from the process. but really, we have the new paul manafort connection to the russian intelligence and that is not what we are talking about. >> shannon: lisa? >> there are also bad actors that were helping to lead these investigations, that is where the concern boils down to. i do think to ethan's point, michael horowitz will be deemed as a more objective investigator. however he doesn't have the prosecutorial authority, which is why people like chairman county, members of the senate, calling for a second special counsel. >> shannon: mollie come as a top democrat on the judiciary committee saying it's a conspiracy theory that's been deprived and it's a waste of time and money. >> in the last year, you had committees on both sides of the senate and house looking into russian meddling, the inspector general looking into hillary clinton email probe. what everybody sits down, it's a violation of processes and serious problems of the department of justice and fbi. you've had at least six, seven, eight people who were fired, demoted, moved around because of these problems. you have very serious issues with fisa abuse. these are secret courts, you can it's incumbent upon our government to make sure we are handling the surveillance authority well. we do need to restore the credibility of our federal law enforcement. this ig is a good step, a small step, though, because they can't compel testimony from people who have left fbi or doj. it also doesn't deal with the problems that we found that state, cia, and other places. we'll need a special prosecutor just so everyone can trust the fbi and doj. >> shannon: the calls for those continue. panel, what you were fabulous. stick around, we have more hot topics for you and just a minute. thank you. in the meantime, amazon founder jeff bezos is reportedly the richest man in the world but his network took a serious tumble today all because he's reportedly made one very powerful enemy. plus the news stories are so unbelievable, we have to remind you they are legit. the real news roundup coming up. ♪ eal. that's why there's otezla. otezla is not an injection or a cream. it's a pill that treats psoriasis differently. with otezla, 75% clearer skin is achievable after just 4 months, ... with reduced redness, thickness, and scaliness of plaques. and the otezla prescribing information has no requirement for routine lab monitoring. don't use if you're allergic to otezla. otezla may cause severe diarrhea, nausea, or vomiting. tell your doctor if these occur. otezla is associated with an increased risk of depression. tell your doctor if you have a history of depression or suicidal thoughts, or if these feelings develop. some people taking otezla reported weight loss. your doctor should monitor your weight and may stop treatment. other side effects include upper respiratory tract infection and headache. tell your doctor about all the medicines you take and if you're pregnant or planning to be. ♪ otezla. show more of you. >> shannon: in the wake of anti-gun student walkout, the california teacher was suspended for asking whether pro-life protesters could do the same thing. she wound up suspended. one of her students is fighting back. trace gallagher has all the details from the west coast. hey. >> i might come as we prepare the nationwide pro-life walkout is specifically meant to imitate protest except the goal this time is too shy to a bright light on the lives destroyed by. the event will also test if there's a double standard when it comes to allowing students to protest things that take lives. the walkout is being organized by 17-year-old brandon gillespie. a junior at rockland high school outside of sacramento. gillespie says he wants to honor the lives of aborted babies, raise awareness of what he calls the injustices of planned parenthood, and to protest the suspension of his history teacher, who was placed on leave when she brought up the double standard. here's the teacher. >> i open up the discussion for if schools, not only just our school and administration, but across the country, are going to allow one group of students to get up during class and walkout to protest one issue, would they still give the same courtesy to another group of students who wanted to get up and walk out to protest? i use the example of abortion. >> she's back teaching now and says the upcoming pro-life walkout will literally answer the double standard question. the event is now set for april 11th, and the students are asking for the very same 17 minutes given to students who protested gun violence. it remains unclear how schools across the country will respond. in the meantime, were getting a better idea of who participated in the march for our lives against gun violence. apparently, it wasn't mostly young people. a sociology professor at the university of maryland at her six person research team randomly surveyed hundreds of people who joined in the march and found 70% were women and quoting all the about 10% of the participants were under 18. the average age of the adults of the crowd was just under 49 years old. she also says 27% of the participants had never protested before and most of the new protesters were not motivated by gun-control but rather, by issues of peace. and of president trump. shannon. >> shannon: all right, trace. very interesting. thank you. tonight, the aclu is urging greyhounds not to let i.c.e. agents searches buses for illegal immigrants without a warrant. meanwhile, the acl use efforts against law enforcement and may have had unintended consequences. researchers are blaming tougher rules on police officers for chicago's huge spike in homicides. they are calling it the aclu effect. the aclu calling it junk science. senior correspondent mike tobin takes a look at the evidence from chicago tonight. >> the aclu is to blame for chicago's 2016 increase in violent crimes, that according to a new study from the university of utah. >> we have a collection of data that come together to make it clear that causation exists here. >> the study concludes that burdens placed on the city's police force have taken their toll. protest erupted in 2015 in response to a video of black teenager look juan mcdonald bank shot to 16 times by a chicago police officer. in the aftermath, the aide don't mock the aclu chicago police reach an agreement to address accusations of racial profiling. police officers were required to fill out elaborate cards after stop and frisk spray to take 15 to 20 minutes to complete. as a result, stops dropped by 82% in 2016. homicides jumped by 58%. chicago endured an additional 1100 gun crimes. the study examined other factors, from anger on the streets, to the opioid epidemic. it concluded that the aclu effect of the anomaly and cops are discouraged from checking suspicious people for weapons. >> criminals on the streets of chicago became emboldened to carry guns. the deterrent effect decreased. when there were more guns on the street, being carried by criminals, the predictable result is an increase in gun related crimes. >> the spike in blood shed is is undeniable. that and enhanced scrutiny of the police frequently gets attention from the president to. >> what the hell is going on in chicago? >> and aclu lawyer says you can't just look at the chronology and blame the contact cards. >> it make to makes claims thate thing caused another. >> the aclu claims that most of the entries on my contact cards are required by the chicago pd, not their organization. representatives challenge the objectivity of the researchers, who also authored a study in 2017 reaching the conclusion that miranda requirements for police effectiveness. shannon, back to you. ♪ >> shannon: time for a quick round up the of the real news out there. that was often derided by the mainstream media for being weak on russia or even colluding with president vladimir putin to influence the 2016 election, "the new york times" is crediting president trump with getting tough on russia after expelling 60 russian diplomats earlier this week. david sanger is the chief washington correspondent. >> he is getting harder to makee argument that the president has not got in touch with putin. this is certainly a tougher move, for example, then president obama took when he expelled 30 some odd diplomats after the election issue. >> shannon: president trump getting tough on portraits of government officials. 1 of 3 bills signed into law yesterday, eliminating government-funded oil painting act bars the use of taxpayer funds for partners of federal workers, like former epa administrator lisa jackson, former secretary of defense donald rumsfeld, and more. some of these portraits cost taxpayers $40,000 each. pennsylvania high school has a rifle team with equipment more than 40 years old. that is not the only problem facing the mountaineers. the school board if they are voted monday night to reject a $5,000 grant from the national rifle association meant to help them buy new gear and guns. the team put together a gofundme site with an appeal for help that says, "let's put our political ideology aside and come together as a community in support of our rifle team." the night they nearly doubled their original goal after abouta dozen local businesses got together and decided to help fund the team. classic '90s tv show made its most anticipated return. as "roseanne" really representing trump voters? tonight's panel returns for what is sure to be a lively debate. d heritage, craftsmanship and innovation. today we're bringing you america's number one shave at lower prices every day. putting money back in the pockets of millions of americans. as one of those workers, i'm proud to bring you gillette quality for less, because nobody can beat the men and women of gillette. gillette - the best a man can get. sarge, i just got a tip. that'll crack this case wide open! turns out the prints at the crime scene- awwwww...did mcgruffy wuffy get a tippy wippy? i'm serious! we gotta move fast before- who's a good boy? is him a good boy? erg...i'm just gonna go. oh, you wanna go outside? you gotta go tinky poo-poo? i already went, ok? in the bathroom! as long as people talk baby-talk to dogs, you can count on geico saving folks money. fifteen minutes could save you fifteen percent or more on car insurance. late checkout... ...down-alternative pillows... ...and of course, price. tripadvisor helps you book a... ...hotel without breaking a sweat. because we now instantly... ...search over 200 booking sites ...to find you the lowest price... ...on the hotel you want. don't sweat your booking. tripadvisor. the latest reviews. the lowest prices. >> shannon: it's a scene that's all too familiar too many american families, the divider for the 2016 election. abc showed us by reviving "roseanne" after a 20 year hiatus. >> how could you have voted for him, roseanne? >> he talked about jobs, jackie. he said he'd shake things up. this might come as a shock to you but we almost lost our house the way things are going. >> have you looked at the news? now things are worse. >> not on the real news. >> police! >> shannon: "roseanne"'s debut scoring massive ratings in cities like new york and middle america, dominating states are president trump won like ohio. there is a debate about why. let's talk about it with the panel. i thought it was interesting, guys, it had monster ratings but not everybody agreed it was necessarily a good thing for conservatives because roseanne's character supports trump. ben shapiro writing, "there is something else going on in "roseanne" that should disturb conservatives. the redefinition of trump supporters as blue-collar leftists rather than conservatives. the implication is that she's a good person because of ease-of-use but the real difference between trump voters and hillary voters are economic in nature, not cultural." lisa, what you make of that? >> i don't want to get into an argument with venture. because he's a smart guy. i also think that -- if you look at the trump coalition, it is sort of a hodgepodge of individuals in this country. i think that he certainly have people like roseanne barr, a trump supporter in real life, also an executive producer of this show that may be a little bit more socially liberal but voted on him for the economic issues. i also think you additionally have people that went for president trump because of these cultural wars. again, president trump sort of has this broad, hodgepodge of a coalition. i see a point, i think it's a smart point, but i don't 100% agree with the point he's making. >> shannon: ethan, what you make the monster ratings last night? >> i say congratulations to the show, the cast, i think they did a great job. i'm not the biggest fan but i will tell you something, ben shapiro is totally wrong on this one. it's about love, it's not about hate. that is what "roseanne" is preaching and what she's been doing for many, many years. she led the way both the advocate and have come out in support of "roseanne," not just the show -- but 24 years ago, but it was a groundbreaker in terms of the first kiss between two women on tv. that is a big deal for a lot of people because especially in light of for the president has been doing with some of the anti-lgbt moves, "roseanne" shows that you can love and support trump at the same time. >> shannon: i think that is ben's concern. it portrays trump voters as being ones who care about the economy but not the cultural issues. he doesn't think that's the case. we'll see. we love having been on. we want to make sure we get to our second topic. we'll start with you, mollie. a young student in california said he will do a pro-life walkout april 11th is the time mandate for that. he wants to test a couple of things. he says, along with being a movement commemorating the millions of children who are victims to abortion, the movement stands for all students rights to freedom of speech and assembly. he wants to test this theory about whether it will get the same kind of support that the anti-gun rally dead. >> it's interesting that the study came out showing that the people at this weekends barge, the average age was 50 and there weren't many children there. if you go to the march for life, held annually in d.c., also in the state capitals and other cities throughout the country, you are blown away by how many young people are there. high school students and younger. it's an issue, and he destruction of human life in the womb and violence in the womb and how that hurts women and their children is an issue that young people care deeply about and it is something that maybe have not done a very good job covering. it's a really interesting question to ask, whether schools will be supportive of this as they wear, actively colluding and trying to push this antigun rights march that they did. >> shannon: ethan, the student directly was a student of the teacher got suspended in california for asking this and having this conversation in her class. do you think that the two topics will be treated the same? what do you of this plan? >> i always support people to exercise their first amendment rights. there is a significant difference between an already existing march for life and antiabortion rally that goes on. into reaction by a lot of people -- by the way, i was at the march for our lives with my two children, while under the age of 50, i think we saw a lot of young people there. i don't think that study was somewhat nonscientific in d.c. only. but the point is, the kids in parkland at around the country are worried about the violence that took place at marjory stoneman douglas high school. abortions are not happening in high school classrooms. these are different topics and there are separate marches for that. >> shannon: we got to leave it there. we are out of time. thank you all. we'll see what happens. thanks, guys. facebook under fire. amazon stocks plummeting as a third news technology raises eyebrows with a controversial equipment. breaking on the tech headlines next. you can leave worry behind when liberty stands with you™. liberty mutual insurance. ( ♪ ) only tena intimates has pro-skin technology designed to quickly wick away moisture to help maintain your skin's natural balance. for a free sample call 1-877-get-tena. ♪ for a free sample ♪ applebee's to go. order online and get $10 off $30. now that's eatin' good in the neighborhood. is it a broader backlash? >> it's a broader backlash, shannon. in many ways, it is helpful that it's happening because it's shining a spotlight on something that is really important, which is that these tech companies have got too big and too powerful. it mirrors is something that is happening in the economy in general, where you have a concentration of power, and that is always bad news. it's bad news when it happens in government, when you get a concentration of power in washington. that is why i believe indent might be centralizing power from the federal government to the states and communities. the same thing needs to be happening in the economy. we need to topping up the antitrust laws. breaking up these companies, not just tech, throughout the economy, to get more competition into the marketplace. >> shannon: alayna, to that point, the president apparently, they are reporting, from your outlet, he would like to take steps against amazon, thinking it's hurting brick-and-mortar stores, retailers, shopping malls, people in real estate, a business where he has a lot of friends, he wants to go after amazon according to sources who discusses with him. he is obsessed with amazon a source said, "obsessed." alayna? >> it's definitely interesting to see, that's exactly what the reporting shows. really, the president, he is a 1950s man. he's a businessman before he was president. he kind of was nostalgic for the days that it used to be. and he is starting to see -- talking to steve's point, he thinks there's a lot of power in the hands of these text companies, and amazon in particular for its e-commerce aspect and what it's doing to mom-and-pop stores and other retailers that he sees it as a big threat to some of those smaller businesses. he's looking at perhaps taking some action. press secretary sarah sanders said there is nothing in the works right now but from what the sources have told axios is that he really is looking at antitrust regulations and some other tax treatment that they might be abusing. >> shannon: another tech company that has revolutionized the way we get entertainment, netflix has announced susan rice, former ambassador, former nsa under the obama administration, will join their board. a quick reaction for both of you. steve, first to you. >> i think there is nothing to be upset about except the fact that it is so typical, isn't it? people who serve in government and then basically cash in on their public service and get who burned up by these big companies. as happened forever, it is part of the swamp. that is the real story here rather than the politics of netflix. it's all about the swamp. this is how they work. >> shannon: alayna, there's been backlash and threats of a boycott because of the ambassador's role in the benghazi fiasco. how do you feel that plays out? >> a lot of people, on twitter and other forms of social media, say they will boycott netflix for putting susan rice on the board. we saw similar things happen when there was buzz that barack obama and michelle obama might also have a netflix series on netflix. so a lot of people believed, just like steve's point, it is the swamp coming to these big media outlets. a lot of people don't like that cross over from the political world in washington into some of the more tech companies and media companies that they see as their entertainment and ways of escaping all of that. >> shannon: a tough day for many in the text companies. a tough week in the markets. we'll see how they fare tomorrow with the next news cycle. stephen alayna, great to have both of you with us tonight. >> thank you. >> thanks, shannon. >> shannon: so many of you have reached out in the last few days after i put out a twitter plea for a young boy he was very ill and had one last wish. we've got an update for you right after the break. ♪ w pneumococcal pneumonia is a potentially serious bacterial lung disease that in severe cases can lead to hospitalization. it may hit quickly, without warning, causing you to miss out on the things you enjoy most. prevnar 13® is not a treatment for pneumococcal pneumonia... it's a vaccine you can get to help protect against it. prevnar 13® is approved for adults to help prevent infections from 13 strains of the bacteria that cause pneumococcal pneumonia. you should not receive prevnar 13® if you have had a severe allergic reaction to the vaccine or its ingredients. if you have a weakened immune system, you may have a lower response to the vaccine. the most common side effects were pain, redness and swelling at the injection site, limited arm movement, fatigue, headache, muscle pain, joint pain, less appetite, vomiting, fever, chills, and rash. help protect yourself against pneumococcal pneumonia. ask your doctor or pharmacist about prevnar 13®. ♪ directv now gives you more for your thing. your letting go thing. your sorry not sorry thing. your out with the old in with the new, onto bigger and better thing. get the live tv you love. no bulky hardware. no satellite. no annual contract. try directv now for $10/mo for 3 months. more for your thing. that's our thing. visit directvnow dot com i lost a twitter campaign after getting the request from emilio's uncle. thanks to your tens of thousands of retweets, videos personalized for emilio poured in. today one of them was set to call him at the hospital but the 11-year-old cancer fighter did not make it. emilio's family started a foundation to help others. emilio wrote a book last year, and all the proceeds will help fund the foundation. if you want to help go to genesfoundation.com. emilio proved that social media can be an enormous force for good. strangers will often care and have compassion even when it will benefit them in no way. we have seen that happen over and over again since sunday.

President
Trump
Officials
Secretary
Firing-david-shulkin
Fisa
Learning
Summit
Warrants
Talks
Senior
Veterans-affairs

Transcripts For KGO ABC World News Tonight With David Muir 20180329 00:30:00

the wounded boy who called 911. he'd been shot, and what he tells the dispatcher. facebook under fire tonight. and now, apple ceo tim cook, and what he says about facebook. and tonight, our experiment. one of our producers prints out everything facebook knows about her. and you'll see what she found. and the hit and run tonight in broad daylight. five people hit. at least one dead. good evening. and it's great to have you with us here on a very busy wednesday night. possible severe weather hitting this evening, and the newest turbulence in washington at this hour. president trump has fired another member of his cabinet, v.a. secretary david shulkin is now out. this comes after the firing of secretary of state rex tillerson, then the president's national security adviser h.r. mcmaster was out, and then today, shulkin. all of this in just two weeks. replacing shulkin, the president is now nominating admiral ronny jackson, the white house doctor, who, after the president's recent physical, said the president has, quote, great damaging winds and strong hail, that's in la mesa, texas. and just this afternoon, torrential rain in monroe, louisiana. a mess tonight. strong storms from texas all the way up to ohio in the next 48 hours. and, of course, rob is tracking it all for us. hey, rob. >> reporter: hey, david. this is a long, dense line of thunderstorms right now. you can see it stretching all the way to houston. getting lit up right now is the houston area. that line moving across i-10. but we've got this tornado watch up until 9:00 there, until 11:00 in through mississippi. we've already had tornado warnings around the monroe area. heavy rain with these, stretching into the ohio valley and all the way up into new york tomorrow. strongest down along the gulf coast. we could see four inches of rainfall in areas that are already saturated. so, flash flood watches posted. nashville, louisville, rivers there are full. so, a flood threat with this system, as well, david. >> could be a tough night ahead. all right, rob, thank you. next tonight, the growing outrage after the deadly police shooting in california. an unarmed black man killed. fired at 20 times. it was that video shot from that police helicopter helping to spark the initial anger. authorities say more video could be coming. in just the last 24 hours, protesters and stephon clark's family crashing a city council meeting. demonstrators blocking an nba game. abc's kayna whitworth in sacramento tonight. >> black lives matter! >> reporter: tonight, city leaders in sacramento urging for calm after a week of unrest following the death of stephon clark. >> everybody, take out your cell phone. take out your cell phone. does this look like a gun? >> reporter: tuesday, the city council meeting interrupted several times. >> stephon clark! stephon clark! >> reporter: clark's brother emerging from the crowd, jumping onto the mayor's desk. outside, fans prevented, for the second time in a week, from entering the sacramento kings arena. >> we are committed to continuing to do everything in our power to maintain the peace, while we pursue justice. >> reporter: demonstrators calling for justice, after unarmed stephon clark was shot at 20 times, killed in his grandmother's backyard by officers who were responding to reports of vandalism. >> show me your hands! gun, gun, gun! >> reporter: the police association defending those actions, saying clark "took a shooting stance, and the actions of the officers were justified." the california department of justice and the district attorney now investigating, as the police department reviews their use of force policy. today, white house press secretary sarah sanders calling the incident terrible, but adding that the president does not plan to weigh in. >> we want to find ways to bring the country together, certainly not looking for any place of division. >> reporter: tonight, clark's family prepares to bury the young father of two. >> and kayna whitworth with us tonight. she's outside where friends and family are gathering at this hour for that wake of stephon clark. kayna? >> reporter: david, i spoke with some family members who say they're wary of this police investigation. they are encouraged by the state's involvement, and they believe in the system, but they don't trust it yet. now, police do plan on releasing more body cam video, but clark's family says they just want justice, as they prepare for his funeral tomorrow. david? >> kayna whitworth. kayna, thank you. for the first time tonight, the 911 calls from the school shooting in maryland. the boy who had been shot, and what he said to the dispatcher. and it comes just as a group of wisconsin students protesting about gun violence marching 50 miles to the home of house speaker paul ryan. here's abc's steve osunsami with those 911 calls, and the fear from inside this latest shooting. >> reporter: maryland police tonight are releasing these panicked calls for help from classrooms at great mills high school. >> all i could see was, like, a pool of blood on the ground. >> reporter: right outside room f-05, in the art hallway, 17-year-old austin rollins is shooting and 16-year-old jaelynn willey is bleeding to death. >> okay, are you with her right now? >> no, i'm not. i'm in my classroom with my students, we're hiding behind the desks. >> reporter: inside, teacher addie miller and her students are hoping they're not next. >> okay, and you're in your classroom, how many kids do you have with you? >> 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11. >> reporter: meanwhile, police are clearing classrooms. >> anybody need medical treatment? >> no. >> reporter: in room e-01, 14-year-old desmond barnes is calling on a cell phone, with a serious gunshot wound to his leg. >> oh, my knee hurts so bad. >> we're getting help to you, desmond. okay? you need to stay strong with me, buddy. >> reporter: you hear his teacher, ms. holiday, whispering in his ear that he's going to make it. >> hold on for me, please. sir, can you please tell me what to do? i've got a student who has been shot. and he's bleeding. >> we're getting help to you, ma'am. >> you'll be okay, they're coming. they're coming. you'll be okay. don't worry. >> reporter: investigators say the 17-year-old gunman last tuesday killed himself and was using his father's legally owned handgun. david? >> steve, thank you. in pennsylvania tonight, a judge dismissing the most serious charges against some members of a penn state fraternity, involving the death of a pledge, timothy piazza. the judge dropping involuntary manslaughter charges against five former fraternity brothers after a hearing to determine if there was enough evidence to go to trial. several of the brothers still facing charges tied to the case. sophomore tim piazza died after falling down the stairs after an alleged hazing ritual. next tonight here, north korea and china now confirming those reports of that mysterious meeting in beijing. kim jong-un did, in fact, go. it was his first diplomatic appearance on the world stage, welcomed by china's president xi, before that face-to-face planned with president trump. here's abc's chief global affairs correspondent martha raddatz tonight on the highly secure train that kim took. he does not like to fly. >> reporter: the clues were all there. the secrecy. that deep green armored train spotted in beijing. the heavy security for the convoy that was there on arrival. but the mystery is now over. kim jong-un had journeyed outside north korea for the first time since taking power. his wife at his side. chinese president xi pulling out all the stops. a review of the troops. toasts between the two leaders and a banquet. the chinese, who released images of kim taking notes as president xi spoke, say that kim told them, "the issue of denuclearization of the korean peninsula can be resolved, if south korea and the united states respond to our efforts with goodwill." >> we're going to be cautiously optimistic, but we feel like things are moving in the right direction. >> reporter: kim's secret trip took even the white house by surprise. president trump preparing for his own meeting with the north korean leader, raising expectations today with a tweet. "everyone said that peace and the denuclearization of the korean peninsula was not even a small possibility. now, there is a good chance that kim jong-un will do what is right for his people and for humanity." his incoming national security adviser, john bolton, was one of those voices of gloom. >> there's an all-purpose joke here. question. how do you know that the north korean regime is lying? answer. their lips are moving. >> martha raddatz live with us from washington tonight. and martha, incoming national security adviser john bolton at least publicly sounding a lot more skeptical than the president right now. bolton saying he wants this meeting to happen sooner rather than later? >> reporter: that's right, david. he says he hopes the meeting can be even sooner than may, because he doesn't want the north koreans to stall us, while continuing with their nuclear weapons program. so, the sooner, the better, to see if they are sincere. david? >> all right, martha raddatz, always good have you. in london tonight, british authorities revealing a major new detail in the nerve agent attack on a former russian spy. police now believe sergei skripal and his daughter first came into contact with that nerve agent on the front door of their home in salisbury. the pair later found slumped over on that public bench. the alleged poisoning triggering a diplomatic standoff between the uk and russia. and now several allies of the uk, including the u.s. there is still much more ahead on "world news tonight" this wednesday. the deadly hit and run in broad daylight today. we have new developments. several people struck. at least one person killed. and what we've just learned about the driver tonight. the escaped prisoner ducking under this garage door at the jail, running from police in handcuffs. we've got developments on this front, as well. and facebook under fire tonight. questions about your privacy. and our experiment right here tonight. one of our producers prints out almost everything facebook knows about her, and you'll see what she found. this was eye-opening. we'll be right back. but why go back there, when you can stay home with neulasta onpro? strong chemo can put you at risk of serious infection. neulasta helps reduce infection risk by boosting your white blood cell count, which strengthens your immune system. in a key study, neulasta reduced the risk of infection from 17% to 1%, a 94% decrease. applied the day of chemo, neulasta onpro is designed to deliver neulasta the next day. neulasta is for certain cancer patients receiving strong chemotherapy. do not take neulasta if you're allergic to neulasta or neupogen (filgrastim). ruptured spleen, sometimes fatal as well as serious lung problems, allergic reactions, kidney injuries, and capillary leak syndrome have occurred. report abdominal or shoulder tip pain, trouble breathing or allergic reactions to your doctor right away. in patients with sickle cell disorders, serious, sometimes fatal crises can occur. the most common side effect is bone and muscle ache. so why go back there? if you'd rather be home, ask your doctor about neulasta onpro. (vo)is ahhhmazing!ful simple goodness meaty morsels. a tender texture. with real meat and a blend of peas and carrots i can see. a totally new kind of awesome going on here! (avo) new beneful simple goodness. tender, meaty morsels with real ingredients you can see. vojimmy (shouting): james!as been jimmy's longest. he's survived record rain and a supplier that went belly up. so while he's proud to have helped put a roof over the heads of hundreds of families, he's most proud of the one he's kept over his own. brand vo: get the most out of your money, whether you're using quickbooks smart invoicing to get paid twice as fast or automatically tracking your mileage. smarter business tools for the world's hardest workers. quickbooks. backing you. my doctor recommended i switch to miralax.on, stimulant laxatives make your body go by forcefully stimulating the nerves in your colon. miralax is different. it works with the water in your body to hydrate and soften. unblocking your system naturally. miralax. next tonight, facebook under fire. the company making major changes to your privacy settings, putting them all in one place. we're going to show you tonight, they say they hope it makes it easier to delete or download every post, picture and comment facebook has ever tracked. we did it today with one of our producers, and what she found. here's our chief business correspondent rebecca jarvis. >> reporter: tonight, in the face of growing backlash, facebook unveiling changes designed to make it easier for users to protect their privacy. >> you'll be able to download and understand more about what kind of data facebook has on you and facebook is going to make it easier to delete some of that data if you want to. >> reporter: instead of nearly 20 separate screens, you will soon be able to access settings through one page. plus, a more straightforward way to delete anything you don't want in your facebook profile, including apps, posts, photos and comments. facebook already under fire this week after confirming it logs texts and calls for some android users, access facebook says those users allowed. and tonight, apple ceo tim cook making news, telling recode, "i wouldn't be in this situation." something he hinted at when i asked him about the responsibility of tech companies to their users. >> it's the people that create the products that decide whether they are making products that do good or not, and there's a lot of good products that can be used in bad ways. >> reporter: tonight, facebook is acknowledging it must do more to keep people informed. and for anyone who wants to see a copy of personal information they've shared on facebook, go to facebook.com/settings from a desktop and click download for a copy of your facebook data. >> i know a lot of you are thinking about this at home. rebecca is with us. our producer tried this today. what did you all find? >> reporter: yes, she did, david. this is just some of the files, she stopped printing to conserve paper. and in these documents, she's been a member of facebook since 2006, she found phone numbers of friends she hasn't spoken to in the last decade. >> well, now she has their numbers if she wants to call them again. but in the meantime, let me just show this to you at home. this is, right here, this is the stack, and she said, she stopped printing to conserve paper. >> reporter: this is only some of it, yes. >> some of what facebook has on her tonight. we'll have all of this online for people at home. not her information, but tips for you to download yourself. thanks, rebecca. when we come back here this evening, the new medical headline tonight. have scientists really discovered a new human organ? it got our attention. and the deadly hit and run in broad daylight today. new developments coming in right now. now. but mania, such as unusual changes in your mood, activity or energy levels, can leave you on shaky ground. help take control by asking about your treatment options. vraylar is approved for the acute treatment of manic or mixed episodes of bipolar i disorder in adults. clinical studies showed that vraylar reduced overall manic symptoms. vraylar should not be used in elderly patients with dementia due to increased risk of death or stroke. call your doctor about fever, stiff muscles, or confusion, which may mean a life-threatening reaction, or uncontrollable muscle movements, which may be permanent. side effects may not appear for several weeks. high cholesterol and weight gain; high blood sugar, which can lead to coma or death; decreased white blood cells, which can be fatal; dizziness upon standing; falls; seizures; impaired judgment; heat sensitivity; and trouble swallowing may occur. you're more than just your bipolar i. ask your doctor about vraylar. we cut the price of trades to give investors even more value. and at $4.95, you can trade with a clear advantage. fidelity, where smarter investors will always be. oscar mayer deli fresh ham has no added nitrates, nitrites or artificial preservatives. now deli fresh flavor is for everyone. like those who like... sweet. those who prefer heat. and those who just love meat. oscar mayer deli fresh. a fresh way to deli. oscar mayer deli fresh. is it possible to save from thousands of miles away? yes. thanks to the dedicated technicians at the american red cross... who worked with vmware... to develop technologies to help redirect the flow of blood to the areas and people needing it most. helping them recover... and refilling everyone with life-affirming hope. magic can't make digital transformation happen... but we can. that's the power of vmware, part of dell technologies. with moderate to severe rheumatoid arthritis? how do you chase what you love do what i did. ask your doctor about humira. it's proven to help relieve pain and protect joints from further irreversible damage in many adults. humira works by targeting and helping to block a specific source of inflammation that contributes to ra symptoms. humira has been clinically studied for over 20 years. humira can lower your ability to fight infections, including tuberculosis. serious, sometimes fatal infections and cancers, including lymphoma, have happened; as have blood, liver, and nervous system problems, serious allergic reactions, and new or worsening heart failure. before treatment, get tested for tb. tell your doctor if you've been to areas where certain fungal infections are common, and if you've had tb, hepatitis b, are prone to infections, or have flu-like symptoms or sores. don't start humira if you have an infection. ready for a new chapter? talk to your rheumatologist about humira. this is humira at work. to the index tonight. the deadly hit and run in san francisco. police say at least one person killed, four others hurt when a driver crashed into a group of people on the sidewalk. the driver allegedly swinging an axe at them before getting into his van and hitting them. the suspect is under arrest tonight. the prisoner escape in porter county, indiana. surveillance showing michael maldonado bolting from a police car, ducking under this garage door. he was barefoot, still handcuffed. police did arrest him in the woods. and did scientists uncover a new human organ? researchers using new imaging to learn about a network of tissue in the body, it's called interstitium. it's found in thin layers around the lungs, the bladder and elsewhere. doctors now say it acts as a fluid-filled shock absorber protecting organs, and could be a way for cancer to spread throughout the body. as for whether it should be called an organ, they are still debating. when we come back tonight, take a look at this. the house somewhere right here in america, and why 18 million people were suddenly trained on it again last night. on it again last night. you may be at increased risk for pneumococcal pneumonia, that can take you out of the game for weeks, even if you're healthy. pneumococcal pneumonia is a potentially serious bacterial lung disease that in severe cases can lead to hospitalization. it may hit quickly, without warning, causing you to miss out on the things you enjoy most. prevnar 13® is not a treatment for pneumococcal pneumonia... it's a vaccine you can get to help protect against it. prevnar 13® is approved for adults to help prevent infections from 13 strains of the bacteria that cause pneumococcal pneumonia. you should not receive prevnar 13® if you have had a severe allergic reaction to the vaccine or its ingredients. if you have a weakened immune system, you may have a lower response to the vaccine. the most common side effects were pain, redness and swelling at the injection site, limited arm movement, fatigue, headache, muscle pain, joint pain, less appetite, vomiting, fever, chills, and rash. help protect yourself against pneumococcal pneumonia. ask your doctor or pharmacist about prevnar 13®. the next big thing in food was once a little paper box. now we can easily take out food from a restaurant. let's stay in and binge-watch the snow. genius. now, the next big thing is the capital one savor card. earn 3% cash back on dining, 2% on groceries, and 1% on all other purchases. 2% on groceries, ♪ from only the thickest, juiciest heinz tomatoes. no one grows ketchup like heinz™. but prevagen helps your brain with an ingredient originally discovered... in jellyfish. in clinical trials, prevagen has been shown to improve short-term memory. prevagen. the name to remember. it's these fleas and ticks. the itchys andow!ratchys? i'm getting bit like crazy. got any ideas for me? well, not all products work the same. that's why my owner gives me k9 advantix ii. it kills fleas, ticks, and mosquitoes. mosquitoes too? yep. kills all three through contact - no biting required. wish my owner knew about k9 advantix ii. ow! well...could be worse. -ooh. glorious. protect against the bites that can spread disease. k9 advantix ii. wise choice. a farmer's market.ieve what's in this kiester. a fire truck. even a marching band. and if i can get comfortable talking about this kiester, then you can get comfortable using preparation h. for any sort of discomfort in yours. preparation h. get comfortable with it. finally, that house i just showed, in real life, it's in evansville, indiana. the image used for "roseanne" 20 years ago. and now, that family is back. >> are you ever sorry we got married? >> every second of my life. >> reporter: it's been 20 years since that harmonica. ♪ roseanne, surrounded by her family. there wasn't always harmony. they reflected the times. and they still do, 20 years later. the conners are back, admittedly, slightly older and slightly wiser, now watching their children raise their own children. >> i'm not afraid of you. >> give it time. >> reporter: in a divided country, they are divided at their own table. >> but most of all, lord, thank you for making america great again. >> mom. >> oh, it's okay, darlene. >> reporter: 18 million people watched. it was quite a rollout. >> roseanne barr and john goodman. >> reporter: on "jimmy kimmel," on their coach. >> how many times would you say you quit the show the first time around? >> my mother says, i've always had trouble with authority. >> are you over that now? >> yeah. >> you are. >> yeah. i'm on social security now, jimmy. >> are you really? >> yeah. >> reporter: on social security and on twitter. today, thanking the 18 million, saying, "i am so grateful to the fans," for remembering those family pictures. >> what are you doing with my pictures? >> i'm getting rid of the ones where you guys were fat. >> those are the only ones where we look happy. >> sparking conversation then and now. thanks for watching here on a wednesday night. i'm david muir. i hope to see you right back here tomorrow. . only at 6:00. the deadly crash of tesla to who was behind the wheel. >> this hurts so bad because this is so unnecessary. a time to grieve and demand change. a wake is held today for the man shot and killed by sacramento police. >> bay area woman finds out her phone number has been hijacked by unethical tell markers. i am michael finney, ahead on "7 on your side" a warning about a growing scam. walter was just a straight up caring guy. >> friends and family mourning the death of apple engineer walter after he crashed his tesla. new information about his experience with the car in the months leading up to this crash.

Everything-facebook
Boy
Tim-cook
Shot
Producers
Dispatcher
One
Experiment
Apple
Under-fire
911
People

Transcripts For MSNBCW MTP Daily 20180601 21:00:00

campaign. all as part of an effort to undermine that investigation. he's pardononing people, perhaps sending a message to witnesses who might testify against him that they, too, could be pardoned. so stay strong. if an effort to prop up the dying coal industry his administration is reportedly weighing an unprecedented intervention in the u.s. energy grid which would basically order some folks to get their lick trits from coal plants. he tipped off wall street this morning about confidential employment numbers more than an hour before they were officially released. possibly to give himself some cover from last night's decision to slap steep tariffs on our closest allies in europe, canada, and mexico, renewing fears that he is leading us into a trade war. when given a chance to denounce a racist comment he instead attacks the press. he suggested one of his criminalityics should be fired for using offensive language rod will not go any further and something is going to happen. i don't know who gets fired or what happens, but we are going to be -- buckle up your seat belt. >> david? >> you know, that's all certainly possible. but we can't forget that the united states has seen worse than what we are experiencing right now, by several orders of magnitude during the nixon administration. and the system held. thist system worked. i want to be really, really careful about using words like constitutional crisis. i do think that the president could act impulsively and create a political crisis. but a constitutional crisis is an order of magnitude greater than that. we need to be careful about our rhetoric. as you have seen time and again when you cry wolf and cry wolf and cry wolf when the wolf is actually at the doorknob believes you anymore. >> i understand that. listen to what john brennan said in an op ed in the "washington post." for more than three decades i observed and amized the traits and tactics of incompetent and narcissistic foreign officials who did everything they could to exploit power. these demagogues routinely relied on lies, deceit and suppression of political opposition to cast themselves as popular heros and to mask self serving priorities. it never downawned on me we cou face such a development in the united states. here's the thing, i think if we had a different type of president in office, one of the things that he may have done over the past year and a half would set off real alarm bells of but he is doing these things, pushing these boundaries every day, sometimes multiple times a day. when you consider that, do you think that, i don't know, john, maybe eric holder is not sounding the alarm enough, maybe he is down laying it while john brennan is the one who is maybe looking at it more clearly? >> i think brennan has the right analysis here. politically. he hasn't suffered political consequences from this. during the election, he did all this and was elected. republicans in congress are in primary season right now. you have candidates running for office on the republican ticket who don't want to cross trump because that's just the reality of the republican base right now. that may change later on. we'll see. but at this point i don't see the incentive for them just from an analytical perspective to stop the president from saying these things. >> no incentive for them. but the republican party has always been a party that's been very serious about their principles, very serious about what they believe in and what they do not believe in. morals were certainly a big part of it. but also the rule of law was a big part of republican orthodoxy. they would tout it a lot. what did they go on this? >> i think to speaker boehner's point it's not in a the republican party is taking a .i a. it is in a deep high better nation. ticking their head in the stand and saying we just need to survive. they don't care how far it goes. frankly they are taking a page out of donald trump's playbook as long as they are not suffering major consequences it's okay to continue. is it right. >> do you hear people like myself and david and others screaming as loud as we can? it doesn't seem to matter because that's the way things are going. to the earlier pony about when is there a constitutional crisis, how do you ganl it? i don't think we are anywhere near there. i think we are at a different crisis, and that is a conscientious crisis. what our leaders are allowing to be deemed as normal is a disgrace. >> david, what do you think about that. what -- if the republicans are napping what is going to be the thing that shakes hem awake? >> i like that phrase conscientious crisis or crisis of conscience. i think there is a of the how of people who are setting aside a lot of values they advanced for the sake of attaching then selvesity at least for now to the trump administration. the question is, what does it take to sort of change the dynamic. really and truly, it takes election results. one of the things that really caused a lot of people who sort of held their nose and voted for trump to now be enthusiastically behind him, they never expected he would win. when he won they loved it and it shook up their expectations. these things happen in cycles. will the republican party love trump as much if there is midterm disaster? i doubt it. if there is midterm success this is going to be more of a trump party. there is a lot of people in washington, people i talked to who are hanging back. they don't love trump, they don't know what the future holtz holds. they don't know what to think. that's not a profile in courage. but it's not wrapping their armed around trump. they are up in the air. >> he ran on politicians not being truthful. not being who they are. doesn't all of the things he has done in this white house, lied repeatedly, broken norms, doesn't that really pull off the mask for republican politicians more than anyone else to say that they really only care about getting reelected and keeping their seats as onned to what they actually signed -- as opposed to what they signed on for, which was protecting the constitution and doing what is right, being putting their country over politics? >> you only know you have values when holding those values has a cost. for a long time it was easy to say that you believed in those things and get elected as a republican. and to say that you believed them. then when donald trump comes along and you say character matters in a politician, lying matters even if the economy is good. and then that has a cost, and people go silent, then i doubt they ever truly had that value in the first place. right now the values are being tested. >> here's where the republicans haven't gone silent. suddenly a lot of them woke up from boehner's word their nap when it comes the tariffs and trade. kevin brady, these tariffs are hitting the wrong target. sass, this is dumb. alexander, tennessee senator, these tariff will raise prices and destroy manufacturing jobs. paul ryan, i disagree with this decision. senator mike lee -- i'm sorry, this is pat toomey, he issing go to be cosponsoring mike lee's bill to reign in the executive brachl's power to impose unilateral tariffs like these. why is this what woke them up? >> it is the traditional disagreement the president and the republicans have had dating back to the campaign. >> this is the agreement? >> it is simpler. look at the people making those statements. it's about their jobs. this is where they get to say i'm going to stand up because my constituents will vote for me later down the road. >> it's still -- >> it is not out of principle. >> what kind of impact is that actually going off? not any. my point is they have voice these concerns and the president goes ahead with it anyway. again, what is the political consequence. >> their vote. their vote. if they hold it against the president when he is trying to get something passed, that's their only chip. >> they are trying to protect the economy. they believe that protectionism hurts the economy. i think they are right about that, by the way. but that is an indirect way of saying i want to get reelected. because if the economy goes south over the summer their constituents are not going to be happy and it will be worse for the republican party. what is interesting is that they chose to take an issue like trade, which is really not a matter of deep constitutional consequence, and speak out on that rather than on these assaults on our system, assaults on integrity, assaults on the truth. that's why they are deserving to be called banana republicans. they are lookeding like they are living in a banana republic. >> let's put a pin in it there. david french, caitlyn, jonathan, sus susan, stay with us. ahead, a meet the press exclusive. you wondering why i'm here today? chuck is in canada, he just finished interviewing president trudeau. he has tough words for president trump about those new tariffs. e. for leisure. so i go national, where i can choose any available upgrade in the aisle - without starting any conversations- -or paying any upcharges. what can i say? control suits me. go national. go like a pro. ...to give you the protein you need with less of the sugar you don't. i'll take that. [cheers] 30 grams of protein and 1 gram of sugar. new ensure max protein. in two great flavors. welcome back. president trump is rolling the dice with a trade war that is infuriating some of america's closest allies. administration's new tariffs on steel and aluminum imports from canada, mexico, and the european union are provoking swift backlash. all three are planning counter-tariffs on their own -- of their own, including other american goods like pork, apples, grapes, and certain kinds of cheese. president trump's response -- bring it on. along with morning tweets about the russia probe, jobs numbers, and samantha bee, which we will get to later, president trump wrote that canada has treated our agricultural business and farmers very poorly for a very long time. highly restrictive on trade, they most open their markets and take down their trade barriers. the reason, again, i'm hosting this show today instead of chuck is because he went to ottawa to interview the canadian prime minister justin trudeau for sunday's meet the press. trudeau had some choice words about president trump's decision to move forward with tariffs. >> the idea that, you know, our soldiers, who have fought and died together on the beaches of world war ii, and in the mountains of afghanistan, and have stood shoulder to shoulder in some of the most difficult places in the world that are always there for each other -- somehow, this is insulting to -- the idea that the canadian steel that's in military vehicles in the united states, the canadian aluminum that makes your fighter jets is somehow now a threat -- the fact that -- i mean, next week we are hosting the g7 summit of world leaders. and the air field, the military base that air force one is going to land on was put there in world war ii to protect an aluminum smelter that was providing to the military effort. the idea that we are somehow a national security threat to the united states is quite frankly insulting and unacceptable. >> what do you feel as if the president wants from you in putting these tariffs out there? >> i don't know. >> you don't know what he wants here? you don't know -- is this about a nafta decision? you don't have an idea what he wants. >> the reason i don't know is because he has talked about the fact this -- he is worried about trade surpluses and trade deficits around the world. well they have a $2 billion surplus on steel with us. so it's not like trade is imbalanced against the u.s. favor on this one. >> our panel is back. caitlyn huey burns. susan del percio. is trudeau laying it on thick there? >> yes, he should be. that's what his people want to do is stand up to donald trump. donald trump said we don't need friends this the world. i think it's great that leaders are standing up now i don't know at what point of what mass it takes to shake donald trump a little bit to get him to start recognizing we have to have our allies in place. but -- >> does he just think that the allies are going to be there no matter what if we really need then? this sort of thing is not really going to move them because they need us ultimately more than we need them. >> i think that's the case. >> listen to what he said talking about north korea. everybody wants a solution here so everybody is going to be there for us. i think that's certainly a part of the mind-set. which is not an accurate one. i'm not saying that. i'm saying that's how he has been explaining it. the other thing about trade and tariffs specifically, is that he talks about it as something he campaigned on. certainly, he did. but a lot of these target the very voters who helped propel him to office. >> harley davidson, that's in wisconsin. >> are going to be affected by this. right in and so this is -- this is where it can go wrong for high pressure. >> the canadians are actually targeting trump areas with a number of these retaliatory measures. look, sometimes history is about what didn't happen. and that has huge historical consequences. for 200 years, we have had a relationship with canada like this. we have never had any border disputes. we have been together in wars, as prime minister trudeau said. and we have been together very much in peace and building between our two nations the strongest continental economy the world has ever seen. by orders of magnitude. and to jeopardize this, even in a small way, to have even a lover's quarrel in a basically stable marriage is pointless. it's harmful to people on both side of the border, and it's reflective of the idea that this president dup have a clue as to what he is actually doing. >> trudeau is still calling that meeting of nations, the g7. the french foreign minister isn't calling it the g7 mim. he is calling it the g 6 plus one. unfortunate we are going to have a g 6 plus one with the made to alone against everyone and running the risk of economic destagization. he is saying we are going to be i don't know the red headed stepchild of the meeting of nations. >> what is crazy is that normally, famously, canada is a boring story, the famous headline, worthwhile canadian initiative is supposedly the most boring headline ever written. boring is good when you are talking about global relations, g7 -- to turn the g7 and our bilateral relations with canada into a reality show is really dumb. unless your only point is to create reality shows. >> what happens next? >> i gave up guessing with donald trump. >> does he pull back? >> today when he was talking about north korea and the summit and he said something really interesting, and it goes to this point. he said, you for example it's much better for japan and south korea because they are so far away. they -- you know, that place over there is so far away from the united states. no matter what happens we are okay, because we are us. i think that's the way donald trump likes to use it, as a way to reach out to his voters, who believe america first, america alone will be fine. >> is this all about perception for him? he wants one on one trade deals because he says they are going to be better and he wants to say he is the big negotiator. i don't think it's a lot about facts because what he does is he says something that's not true and then he continues to say it even when you say, that is not true. he bragged about it in march, "washington post" had a story about him telling his donors that he didn't even know what he was talking with, but he told canada he had a trade deficit. >> here's the thing. in the discussion of pardons, these are things he can do alone. he doesn't need anybody else to make these things happen. that's why he likes it. he has given up on the fact that he is going to get anything done working domestically. and he is finally saying oh, wow, this is what i thought i could do as president. i can do anything by myself. it is a ego centric way of doing business. he is like acting out like a child by saying i can with a pen do this or pardon that. >> or maybe like a senile senior citizen when he says today i got a very entering letter from mr. kim and he hasn't even opened the letter yet? somebody tweeted if there was your grandmother you would say grandma, you have to open the letter first. >> he likes to tease. he says one thing and contradicts it for the contradicts it. for the record, i have a red headed stepchild who i love very much. ahead, two comedians plow head first into controversy. thing have suddenly gotten very serious for rows ann bar and samantha bee. the clash between comedy and politics next. danced in a germe group. i wore lederhosen. when i first got on ancestry i was really surprised that i wasn't finding all of these germans in my tree. i decided to have my dna tested through ancestry dna. the big surprise was we're not german at all. 52% of my dna comes from scotland and ireland. so, i traded in my lederhosen for a kilt. ancestry has many paths to discovering your story. get started for free at ancestry.com. hey, i'm curious about your social security alerts. oh! we'll alert you if we find your social security number on any one of thousands of risky sites, so you'll be in the know. ewww! being in the know is very good. don't shake! ahhh! sign up online for free. discover social security alerts. i'm alex trebek, here to tell you about the colonial penn program. if you're age 50 to 85, and looking to buy life insurance on a fixed budget, remember the three p's. what are the three p's? the three p's of life insurance on a fixed budget are price, price, and price. a price you can afford, a price that can't increase, and a price that fits your budget. i'm 54. alex, what's my price? you can get coverage for $9.95 a month. i'm 65 and take medications. what's my price? also $9.95 a month. i just turned 80. what's my price? $9.95 a month for you too. if you're age 50 to 85, call now about the #1 most popular whole life insurance plan, available through the colonial penn program. it has an affordable rate starting at $9.95 a month. no medical exam, no health questions. your acceptance is guaranteed. and this plan has a guaranteed lifetime rate lock, so your rate can never go up for any reason. so call now for free information. and you'll also get this free beneficiary planner. and it's yours just for calling. so call now. (male friend) thanks for the invite! (anna) front row? nobody puts baby in a corner. yippee ki yay movielovers. (vo) download the atom app and get $5 off your first ticket. you might or joints.hing for your heart... but do you take something for your brain. with an ingredient originally found in jellyfish, prevagen is the number one selling brain-health supplement in drug stores nationwide. prevagen. the name to remember. first, it was on. then it was off. now president trump says the summit with kim jong-un is back on the books for june 12th. a top deputy to the north korean leader paid a visit to the oval office earlier today. he hand delivered a letter to president trump, a letter the president described as very nice, and very interesting. even though he hadn't read the letter at the time. that followed a not as nice letter president trump wrote to kim last week cancelling the summit. the talks derailed after a north korean official lashed out at vice president pence, calling him a political dummy. but judging by the president today, relations have improved once again. >> went very well. it is really a get to know you kind of a situation. we are going to start a process. and i told him today, take your time. you can go fast. we can go slowly. but i think they would like the see something happen. and if we can work that out that would be good. >> the president competing there with some tweets -- actual tweets from chirping birds which is not the trouble he typically has when it comes to tweets. the president said he is putting on hold new sanctions against north korea. we'll be right back. we're putting ai into everything, and everything into the cloud. it's all so... smart. but how do you work with it? ask this farmer. he's using satellite data to help increase crop yields. that's smart for the food we eat. at this port, supply chains are becoming more transparent with blockchain. that's smart for millions of shipments. in this lab, researchers are working with watson to help them find new treatments. that's smart for medicine. at this bank, the world's most encrypted mainframe is helping prevent cybercrime. that's smart for everyone. and in africa, iot sensors and the ibm cloud are protecting endangered animals. that's smart for rhinos. yeah. rhinos. because smart only really matters, when we put it to work- not just for a few of us, but for all of us. let's put smart to work. searching one topic. that will generate over 600 million results. and if you've been diagnosed with cancer, searching for answers like where to treat, can feel even more overwhelming. so start your search with a specialist at cancer treatment centers of america. start with teams of cancer treatment experts under one roof. start where specialists use advanced genomic testing to guide precision cancer treatment... ...that may lead to targeted therapies and more treatment options. start where there's a commitment to analyzing the latest research and conducting clinical trials-to help each patient get the personalized cancer care they deserve. start at one of the cancer treatment centers of america hospitals near you. the evolution of cancer care is here. learn more at cancercenter.com/experts californians are leading against donald trump. our senator should, too. kevin de león is the only candidate for senate who passed laws protecting immigrants from trump... and helped dreamers stay in school. he led bold action against climate change. and only de león fought for universal, medicare for all. democrat kevin de león the only true progressive for senate. change california now is responsible for the content of this advertising. this week we saw two comedians stepping over line. conservative comedian roseanne barr's racist tweet about a former obamaed a strooiz visor and liberal comedian samantha bee's comment about ivanka trump. it reignited arguments on both sides of the aisle about what constitutes appropriate and acceptable language. both the left and right are accusing each other when it comes to hypocrisy when it comes to calling out offensive language. i'm joined by charlie sykes, and eric digins. charlie, first to you. what do you make of the reciprocal anger from trump, the white house, and conservatives towards samantha bee? >> first of all, i mean we live in this era of what aboutism. we are in a downward spiral of incivility. i think it's revealing that after this textbook case of racism that we got from roseanne barr the response from the white house of course was not to express outrage or concern, but simply to say, well, what about this liberal comedian, who by the way also crossed the line, also crossed the line and was also, by the way -- since we are talking about comedians, grossly unfunny is this this is part of the problem. this is what you get, the degraded political culture and dialogue that we are getting. that you do have this duelling hypocrisy. and how hypocritic is it that we are talking about the trump white house expressing indignation and outrage over sexist slurs. you probably saw that c worth displayed at trump rallies you cuffed throughout 2016 so there is a little bit of fake posturing going on around here. >> the thing about that word, i never heard donald trump say it but he called ted cruz the p word on stage, and hillary clinton was shlonged by obama. he has a history but when it comes specifically to that word i never saw the president call out to any of these crowds and say to this person, hey, this is too far, this is not okay, you can do it. he almost condoned it. he certainly capitalized on that sort of anger and behavior in order to propel himself to the white house. eric, what do you think? why hasn't the white house come out, though, and tried to take a -- if they want to take a moral stan against samantha bee, should they have taken one with roseanne barr first? >> well, i mean, obviously, this is a white house that guess after the people they feel are attacking them. and they viewed roseanne as an ally. that's why they haven't spoken out against her. i think it is a mistake to focus too much on who used what word when. samantha bee admitted she made a mistake in using that word. i think she did. i think what is important is you have to look at a broadcaster or a performer's history. do they have a history of using sexist language, of demeaning women, of saying things that are racist or homophobic or islamophobic. ? roseanne barr's case she had a history of saying things on social media that were in a similar vein. she had said -- she had compared former obama aide susan rice also, another black woman, to an ape. she had said disturbing thing about islam. and she had also retweeted conspiracy theories. so i don't think you can compare the two cases simply because samantha bee admitted she crossed the line but when you look at her history her reports and her comedy have been about looking out for women's issues, about highlighting when women are oppressed or when women are held back. and she crossed the line in using this word. and she has apologized for it. so i think these two things are very ditch. >> are we perhaps in peril doing down a slippery slope if we continue to demand apologies from dmeed yons? their job is to push the envelope not to say this is pushing the envelope. >> i think the real problem we have here is we are focusing on the wrong issues. it is not the use of an individual word. in the case of roseanne barr and what she did it's about echoing a trope of stereotyping comparing black people to apes that we have been dealing with for hundreds of years. it's been rapt inside a lot of our media for many years. trike to eof the re rad kate that systemic prejudice. trying to get people understand that comparing black people to apea extends the stereotype that has held black people down for many years. i think people are trying to conflate these things because they don't want to have that discussion about systemic prejudice. they don't want to have that discussion about when a performer says something that reflects a wider problem in society. i don't think anyone thinks that samantha bee was trying to reach out to sexists in the audience by using that word. we are talking about two different things here. i don't -- i think the evident to conflate them is an effort to make roseanne look like she was just cracking an off-color joke rather than doing something that was much more damaging. >> charlie i'm old enough to remember when donald trump ran on being politically incorrect and ran against those who are clutching their pearls at everything. >> exactly. of course, he in fact has created an environment in which people feel they can push these lines. go back and look at the twitter feed of dinesh d'souza, the things he said referring to barack obama as a boy out of the ghetto and thing like that. you know, going to this point of the danger of having a double standard. look, they are not equivalent. i am not arguing that they are equivalent. the trump white house i think is very cynically using samantha bee in order to take attention away from the racism of somebody who was touted by the president of the united states. but on the other hand, you know, isn't this kind of a moment to realize that, you know, if you want to have a higher moral standard here, if you want to have the higher ground, then don't find a way to excuse vulgar sexist language as opposed to vulgar racist language. i'm in the saying they are equivalent because i don't think they are. but i do think that there is a real danger for people falling into kind this double standard. by the way, it's hypocrisy olympics all the way around here. >> let's remind people that samantha bee was talking specifically about a trump policy that was just enacted at the border ripping families apart. here's what her statement about that says today, the white house's war on the full frontal host risks calling more public attention -- that's not the one. we spend the day wrestling with the repercussions of one bad word when we should have spent the day incensed as a nation we are wrenching children from their parents and treating peop people seeking asylum as criminals. isn't that the real problem. >> yes. that's what she was talking about, this policy of the new cruelty. had she not used that word maybe we would be talking about that. this is where you undermine, you blow yourself up, you make yourself less persuasive. >> yeah. >> again, comedians first of all should be funny. if she wants to be an activist she should try to actually advance the cause rather than provide this kind of a distraction for the cause. the trump administration of course has seized upon this, that we are not talking about why did the president of the united states, why did the major network promote someone who, a vile racist like roseanne barr. and by the way, this was completely predictable. instead of that we are talking about the what aboutism. and that's self-inflicted. >> you know, i have got to say the samantha bee word blew that immigration story out of my rundown the other day. so don't worry, we are going to be talking about it. we are getting it back in. i promise. it's important. charlie sykes, eric digins, thanks very much. ahead. lordy, there are tapes. the michael cohen phone recordings that are getting some serious attention. uncompromising protection... advanced connectivity... and one more thing... the world comes with it. the new, reimagined 2019 jeep cherokee. and it's time to get outside. pack in even more adventure with audible. with the largest selection of audiobooks. audible lets you follow plot twists off the beaten track. or discover magic when you hit the open road. with the free audible app, your stories go wherever you do. and for just $14.95 a month you get a credit, good for any audiobook. if you don't like it exchange it any time. no questions asked. you can also roll your credits to the next month if you don't use them. so take audible with you this summer... on the road... on the trail... or to the beach. start a 30-day trial and your first audiobook is free. cancel anytime, and your books are yours to keep forever. no matter where you go this summer make it better with audible. text summer17 to 500500 to start listening today. welcome back. tonight in meet int mid terms, california govern tourial candidate may get his dream opponent in the general election. >> a republican would be ideal in the general election. >> i was going to say -- why do you want to face -- >> i just said it. i will be honest about it. >> careful what you wish for. >> either one of these will do. >> that line got a laugh in the debate chuck was moderating. i don't know if you could hear his voice there. but knewsome was not joking. in california, the top two vote getters regardless of party affiliation move on to the general election. knew some wants to run against a republican rather than the mayor of los angeles, the other big democrat in the race. even though some are worried that a republican on the ballot could increase gop turn out. with the primary days away. a new poll has republican john cox with a seven point lead for second place over via re goesa. cox's rise in the polls could be the results of consolidation in the republican vote. that poll was taken after president trump gave his full endorsement to cox. so we are going to be watching on tuesday to see what happens. and we are back with more "mtp daily" after this. i have type 2 diabetes. i'm trying to manage my a1c, then i learn type 2 diabetes puts me at greater risk for heart attack or stroke. can one medicine help treat both blood sugar and cardiovascular risk? i asked my doctor. she told me about non-insulin victoza®. victoza® is not only proven to lower a1c and blood sugar, but for people with type 2 diabetes treating their cardiovascular disease, victoza® is also approved to lower the risk of major cv events such as heart attack, stroke, or death. while not for weight loss, victoza® may help you lose some weight. (announcer) victoza® is not for people with type 1 diabetes or diabetic ketoacidosis. do not take victoza® if you have a personal or family history of medullary thyroid cancer, multiple endocrine neoplasia syndrome type 2, or if you are allergic to victoza® or any of its ingredients. stop taking victoza® and get medical help right away if you get a lump or swelling in your neck or symptoms of a serious allergic reaction such as rash, swelling, difficulty breathing, or swallowing. serious side effects may happen, including pancreatitis. so stop taking victoza® and call your doctor right away if you have severe pain in your stomach area. tell your doctor your medical history. gallbladder problems have happened in some people. tell your doctor right away if you get symptoms. taking victoza® with a sulfonylurea or insulin may cause low blood sugar. common side effects are nausea, diarrhea, vomiting, decreased appetite, indigestion, and constipation. side effects can lead to dehydration, which may cause kidney problems. change the course of your treatment. ask your doctor about victoza®. one picky customer shouldn't take all your time. need something printed? the business advisors at office depot can assist with exactly what your business needs to grow. get your coupon for 20% off services, technology and more at office depot and officedepot.com. welcome back. time now for "the lid." the panel back. kate listen huey burns. jonathan alter, susan del percio. michael cohen is back this the news for the tactics he used as donald trump as fixer. listen to how he spoke to a reporter who was doing a story on a trump pieiography which a deposition from ivana trump, donald's first wife, saying donald trump had raped her, which donald has denied. >> so i'm warning you, tread very [ bleep ] lightly because what i'm going to do to you is going to be [ bleep ] disgusting. do you understand me? >> what does it say about the way donald trump operated? >> like the mafia. the only question is if it's more like the sopranos or the godfather. i tend to be on the corleone side of the argument, because it's not just thuggish, it's stupid. >> the campaign reached out for comment and they sent him michael cohen. this, i think, shows that michael cohen was playing the fixer role, not the legal role, and i think that's really important in the context in which we're going to be thinking and learning things about cohen with the mess that he's involved in. >> like a $130,000 hush payment in which stormy daniels said she was pressured into -- >> this happened before the election, because tim mack was my colleague at "the daily beast" and we had at transcript of that. nobody cared. it was reported endlessly that not only do the trumpsters sound like the mafia, they were in business with the mafia. nobody cared. >> there is this myth that's going around social media now that we never reported any of these things about donald trump, and it's like, did you turn on the television? we reported about this stuff every single day. you might have cared but there was a good chung of the public, enough of them to get them into the oval office that did not care. >> at the end of the day, it's from being with president trump. anthony scaramucci had the same problem. he got fired for conducting an interview. >> we were going to talk about roseanne barr and samantha bee, but i think we need to talk about immigration. families are being torn apart at the border. they say this is a law, it's policy. what do you do if you're seeking asylum and we're going to take your kids away? >> it's illegal because asylum seekers have not broken the law. under federal law, they are entitled to a process to determine whether their application for asylum is legitimate or not. they are being prevented from having that process, then separated cruelly from their children in defiance of everything that we stand for as americans, everything about the statue of liberty and what we're supposed to be. but it's very important to understand that even though there were some abuses in the obama administration, which is what the what-aboutism types are always saying, that was a different situation. that was not dealing with these asylum seekers and short circuiting the due process that they're entitled to under the law. >> is this what republicans stand for? >> some republicans apparently, but not all republicans. and i think what would be really interesting is if there weren't other things kind of covering up this story, if you will, now. whether it's north korea or rosean roseanne, whoever. this was a story with a visual that really just could have worked to have hit donald trump in a different kind of way. this is a story that really started off with legs and i thought was going to have a really big impact. >> it still has legs. we're going to still report on this. >> i have no doubt that you'll still report on it, i just don't know in the scheme of things how much oxygen it will get within the public. >> which is really interesting, because we talk a lot, or people perceive the white house to be in this chaotic state. but when you look at things like immigration policy, it's incredibly important and tangible and actual things are happening in terms of this administration putting things forward in terms of policy. so, you know, if you are running for office, these are the kinds of things you might highlight, right? not to say that this isn't a constant state of chaos, but that this is an administration that's doing stuff and doing stuff like this. >> and real quickly, there are a group of republicans, moderate republicans, who are fighting back, who are angry, and who are fighting back and may side with the democrats to get something done. >> that is very true. i said rosie o'donnell earlier, i meant roseanne barr. donald trump called rosie o'donnell a fat pig, let's not forget that. my apologies no rosie o'donnell for looping her into this conversation inadvertently. guys, thank you very much. let's pay homage to sarcasm. the trolly awards are back. >> they came to us because of their own strength. a free press. >> the essence of communication must be that our failures as well as our successes will be broadcast around the world. >> when people are given the chance, they inevitably will choose a free press. >> it gives voice to the voiceless, exposes injustice. >> i consider the media to be indi indispensable to democracy. doctoring up the trump-kim summit coin to an entirely different kim. and responding to roseanne barr, racism is not a side effect of any sanofi -- sanofi -- i can't say it -- medication. hope they make a cream for that burn. hey, not anybody can get a tr l trolly, it's an honor just to be nominated. and trolly two, arnold schwarzenegger. trump administration officials are making plans to order grid operators to buy electricity from struggling coal and nuclear plants. schwarzenegger's response, i eagerly await the

People
Part
Effort
Investigation
Campaign
Witnesses
Message
Administration
Us-
Intervention
Folks
Energy-grid

Transcripts For FOXNEWSW Justice With Judge Jeanine 20180805 07:00:00

courage. there is a brave, tough cookie, along with some of his friends. i didn't know he was going to be here. i looked over and said i don't want to wrestle him, he's tough. they are talking about this blue wave. i don't think so. i don't think so. maxine waters is leading the charge. maxine. she is a real beauty. maxine. a seriously low i.q. person. seriously. my wife, the first lady melania said the women really like you. they do like me. and i like them. but i said how did we win the women? we won the women. that was a surprise to a lot of people. but not if you have been to the rallies. look at all those pink posters. or #cancelwhitepeople. f white women. we are not just talking about a writer for the "times." we are talking about an editorial board member, an esteemed and prestigious position at any newspaper. the editorial board is looked up to for direction by journalists. it's the citadel of the newspaper publishing world is now admitting to its own hypocrisy. by defending jeong they are saying it's okay to be racist if your target is white. and they are saying all the outcry is over old tweets. as if three years ago is old. and they say she's a young asian woman subject to online harassment. hating wietds or cops is oh -- hating wise or cops is okay if you say you have been harassed. but she says her comments were not aimed at the general audience. pray tell if saying f the police is about as general an audience as you can get. and someone who has a job at the "new york times" as a wordsmith should know the difference between a specific and a general audience it's specific when it's against one police officer. it's general if it's against all law enforcement and the whole group of them. you know, the bigotry is alarming. a few weeks ago the "new york times" goaded its readers in an editorial to fight the nomination of the latest supreme court nominee great kavanaugh. quote to take a line from the god father. it's time to go to the mattresses. really? the godfather? it's been a while since i saw "the godfather." but last i recall it meant one family was going to wipe out another. but you are not surprised. you already knew this, didn't you. i'm tired of being told not to believe our lying eyes when the truth is obvious whether it's peter strzok saying he hated and despised trump and would stop him becoming president, but it did not affect his work when he's the one who began counter-intelligence investigation against trump that we are still living with. or jeong's defenders saying there is no evidence her tweets had any bearing on her work. it appears the old gray lady has finally flipped her wig. time to go to the mattresses on a supreme court justice? really? here is my favorite quote from the godfather. we are going to make you an offer you can't refuse. stop your resistance. stop your obstruction. stop the hypocrisy and get on board with making america great again or get the hell out of the way. that's my open. if you love my opening statements, you will love my new book. the "new york times" number one best seller "liars, leakers, and liberals." president trump giving a fiery speech hitting on a number of topics while urging ohioans to vote for troy balderson in tuesday's state election. joining me is anthony Former Westchester County, N.Y., D.A. Jeanine Pirro discusses the week's biggest legal stories. with attacks. tonight the president was unleashing his vintage true self. it made me think back to two years ago back to the campaign. presidents don't get out on the campaign and rally people the way he is. he'll be so ready and so fresh for 2020 and right through the mid-term elections. it's a saturday night, he could be in bedminster relaxing. but he's in a 110 degree auditorium giving that kind of rousing speech. jesse: that's a great point -- judge jeanine: that's a great point. the man is a nonstop work. president trump: a vote for troims opponent is -- a vote for troy's opponent is a vote for open borders. they don't care about the crime, they don't care about your military and they don't care minutes from scranton. i think these people relate to him. he's the blue collar billionaire president. he is able to tap into their joy. he's able to tap into their aspirations. the policies have been phenomenal. it will be hard to argue against what the president is putting on the table for every day average americans. judge jeanine: the gdp and the tariffs. the president said tonight, if we get the trade deficit down the gdf goes up. this your forte. he talked about the fact we rebuilt china with a $500 billion a year trade deficit. it's time we rebuilt our own country. everybody understands that. this whole thing with tariffs, they talk about the fact that it's not a good thing for america, they are going to hurt us. explain this to me. >> the president's position is the trade system since the end of world war ii has been unbalanced. the u.s. did that to help build the rest of the world after the defend sayings of world war ii. -- with the -- after the devastation of world war ii. the president's point is we rebuilt the world. we helped the chinese. they are the second largest economy. the world has to turn around and allow us to have a symmetrical trading system where it's free and fair trade where their tariffs come down. and if you are not going to bring your tariffs down, we'll raise our tariff to the meet your tariffs. what i liked about the strategy is it's finally getting people to the table. the president of the e.u. juncker was in town last week. i think the president will eventually get his way. i had two or through conversations with him about that. i'm from wall street and understand capital flows. i'm worried about the tariffs because it could change the psychology in the market. the president has such great momentum. 18 fantastic economic months. let's dial into this surgically with great precision so we don't blow the momentum and positive psychology in the economy. judge jeanine: before we go, he made it clear, he said we make a car and china taxes it 25% when it gets over there. they make a car and we charge them 2.5% which they don't pay. that's real simple to me. >> that's correct. if you sell a harley davidson in germy. if it's $100,000 here, it's $125,000 there. what i don't want to have happen. any of the great momentum he created for these workers he was talking to tonight. i don't want any of that to be deflated. but he's on course. i think what he did with juncker last week is a great sign of things to come. i predict lower tariffs and more free trade for the world. judge jeanine: anthony scaramucci thanks so much. more from president trump. charlie kirk from turning point u.s.a. are you ready to take your wifi to the next level? then you need xfinity xfi. a more powerful way to stay connected. it gives you super fast speeds for all your devices, provides the most wifi coverage for your home, and lets you control your network with the xfi app. it's the ultimate wifi experience. xfinity xfi, simple, easy, awesome. president trump: we have a couple places where i won by 30 and 40 points. it could very well be they come and vote, the democrats. they do talk. a few of them say nicer things about me than any republican. a couple of them compare me to some of the greats. they talk about abe lincoln. honest abe. they say great things. judge jeanine: president trump saying some compare him to honest abe lincoln at tonight's alley. my next guest agrees and he knows how to rule up th -- knoww to rile up the left. his next movie "death of a nation" hits theater and the country this week. >> lincoln was elected to unite a nation and stop slavery. dem gnats feared him, went to war against him, assassinated him. the liberals, the people who wanted to improve society. judge jeanine: filmmaker and "new york times" best seller dinesh d'souza. i understand you have had some incredible premieres with distinguished guests at those premieres. how do you interpret what the president said tonight, based on your book, i actually read it, "death of a nation." >> we morph the head of lincoln and trump. this outrages a lot of people because they think how dare you compare trump and lincoln. on the face of it trump and lincoln temperamentally are quite different. lincoln is broogd, melancholy and philosophical. but there are situations that are similar. in 1860 an outsider republican candidate enters the race and wins it narrowly. the moment he's elected all hell breaks loose. the northern democrats openly call for his assassination. and the southern democrats are willing to break the country up rather than abide a lincoln presidency. here we are with an outsider trump who wins unexpectedly, and the democrats go nuts. here we are two years after the election. judge jeanine: and they are still nuts. >> the movie looks at fascism and race i'm to delegitimize trump. they say he's ineligible to be president even if people voted for him. judge jeanine: why is the issue of fascism so on the tips of everyone's tongues. >> where do you get the license in a democratic majority. the only amaly that works is -- the only analogy that works is hitler circa1923. if hitler were democratically elected we would agot it would be justified to use any means possible to get rid of them. the left is taking that logic based on saying he's a racist and white supremacist. so this poison is used to legitimize the left's violence and attempts to engineer a legal coup. our movie takes them at their word. we say let's look at farb i'm. -- look at fascism. let's look at the nazi 25-point agenda because they campaigned on that. state control of banks, state control of healthcare, state control of education. state control of religious liberty. no sane person can read this and say this is on the right. then i look at the fascism of the left today. the key movement of the nazis was the party is the state. and also using the state to neutralize your critics. judge jeanine: when the police are standing down in some cases that's neutralizing not just the critics. but it allows the left to go forward with illegal activity and the whole idea of shugd down free speech. vandalizing the property of anyone on the right. assaulting, creating a crowd as maxine waters calls it. >> mussolini has para military fighters called the black shirts. if you look at what's going on with antifa. they wear black and carry bats and beat up their opponents. these people call themselves anti-fascists but they look like and act like fascists. judge jeanine: thanks for being here and congratulations on your movie. charlie kirk is on deck. "justice" rolls on in just a moment. anita vogel. is at the lowest level ever recorded. how good is that. economic growth last quarter hit 4.1. you all know that. you all know this, too. remember i used to say they always voted democrat. the african-american unemployment rate has achieved the lowest level ever record in history. judge jeanine: president trump's speech in ohio covering a lot of ground. let's get to it with my political panel, former new york state assemblyman steve levy and chris hahn. gentlemen, steve, welcome to justice. let's start with the economy. unemployment of those with high school diplomas is at its lowest level ever record. how are you democrats going to counter that one? >> it's a good number. i don't begrudge it. i give the president some credit for it. it continues a trend started with obama. the unemployment was on its way down when the president took over. in 2014, president trump had two of his strongest gdp numbers right before the mid-term election. he still lost seats in the house and they lost control of the senate. those numbers while they will help a president get re-elected do not necessarily translate into congressional wins. congressional wins are about a lot of things. the economy kiss one of them, but it's not a driving force. >> it's great being at your book signing. thanks for signing my book it's an incredible read, by the way. looking at the last year of the obama administration we had a sluggish 1.6% growth rate. many were saying that's the new normal. it doesn't have to be. president trump came in and said we can do better. we'll cut taxes and we'll see what happens. look what happened. 4% growth in the last quarter. consumer confidence the highest level since the year 2000. unemployment 3.9%. the lowest level in 20 years. food stamps are down. judge jeanine: so, chris, what steve is saying is the facts are the facts. when you talk about 5.1 with obama and he still lost, that's got nothing do with it. it's really about sustainability. what the president and what steve are saying is we have all the factors here for the sustainability of the economy. and when the democrats say they are going to raise taxes, do you think that helps? >> i agree it's about sustain built. the president's total gdp is a small percentage point higher. judge jeanine: really? read my book. >> his entire 19-month presidency. the last 19 months of the obama presidency the economy created more jobs than the first 19 months of the trump presidency. those are the numbers, those are the facts. google it, look it up. judge jeanine: is that true, steve. >> president trump's administration is the only one since world war ii that did not have at least a 3% growth for a total year. the president right now is on pace to achieve 3% for the whole year. but look at the other numbers. manufacturing is booming. manufacturing is up to its highest level since 2007. construction jobs are way up. that in -- that inures to the benefit of the middle class. normally the party in power loses on those off years. there was an anomaly. 1998 with president clinton. he had a strong economy. if there is anything that can break that trend, it's the strong economy we are seeing today. >> there was another factor in 1998. the democrats overreached. judge jeanine: that's why clinton lost his law license. don't talk about overreaching. you want to go russia collusion, don't start with plea, chris. >> if we are going to talk about impeachment, we'll have a lot of impeachment. but democrats might be making the same mistake as republicans did in '98. there was an overreach there and the public reacted negatively. you might be seeing that this year as well which is why democratic leadership is trying to tell all its minions stop talking about impeachment because it can backfire. judge jeanine: chris? >> i agree. it would be a complete overreach to make impeachment the issue and an overreach to impeach unless there was something to impeach about. the democrats have to be careful or they will hand trump a 2020 victory. judge jeanine: chris, i'm going to keep a record of what you just said because i think you believe it. >> i do believe it. i always tell you what i believe. judge jeanine: steve levy, thank you for being on "justice." brandon straka of the walk away project is next. and charlie kirk will talk about and charlie kirk will talk about this week's most my name is jeff sheldon, and i'm the founder of ugmonk. before shipstation it was crazy. it's great when you see a hundred orders come in, a hundred orders come in, but then you realize i've got a hundred orders i have to ship out. shipstation streamlined that wh the order data, the weights of , everything is seamlessly put into shipstation, so when we print the shipping ll everything's pretty much done. it's so much easier so now, we're ready, bring on t. shipstation. the number one ch of online sellers. go to shipstation.com/tv and get two months free. about him after his thursday rally. >> there is no way that anyone who knows donald trump could watch him and not come away with a feeling that the president of the united states is completely unhinged and getting worse by the day. judge jeanine: that's just one of the most of outrageous things i have heard this week. joining me with more reaction to that, charlie kirk. there isn't any way anyone who knows donald trump unless they are bought in some way doesn't think he's totally unhinged. what's your reaction to that? >> i couldn't disagree more. and the american people disagree with that. he's getting more and more popular. here is the stunning thing about the trump presidency. despite unprecedented media backlash and targeting, he's going against historical trends. usually tho -- usually presidens get less popular in their first term. hispanic approval rating is up 10 points and african-american* approval is 29 points. judge jeanine: if somebody is unhinged with all the hits he's been taking. anybody would buckle and be in a corner. this guy is fighting the fight every day. he gets energy from this stuff. who benefits from it? we do. speaking of that. madonna is suggests donald trump motivate herd to move to portugal. it's a full screen. >> i felt like we needed a change and i wanted to get out of america for a minute. as you know, this is not america's finest hour, not that leaving america makes anything different or changes anything. >> we as conservatives remain loyal and patriotic no matter who is president of the united states. liberals base their love or lack of love of america based upon whether their team member is president of the united states. when obama was president i was just as loyal and committed as an american as i am today. we believe in our history, heritage and people. liberals like madonna dismiss america if there is a republican in the white house. are you thankful to be an american or are you angry to be an american. many liberals are angry when we should be pouring out our gratitude. judge jeanine: people who hate america so much should rethink their address. kathy griffin. she is always good for outrageous. this tweet. trump and his administration are the enemy of the american people. charlie? >> the president is the ally and the friend of the american people. let's add some context for viewers at home. kathy griffin about a year ago posted a picture with a decapitated head of the president of the united states and then tried to play the victim 48 hours later that everyone was going after her. imagine for a second a conservative did that horrific stunt with barack obama's head. they would be investigated by the secret service. judge jeanine: they would be taken out in cuffs. >> exactly with a hate crime. we keep on saying the left are losing their minds. trump is the ally of the american people. the liberal elite, the more they talk, the more popular trump gets. unlike other historical trend, donald trump is getting more popular with time and we are just getting started. judge jeanine: the whole idea of the lowest unemployment ever for people with high school diplomas. with high school diplomas. it's across the board, this positive economy. charlie kirk, thank you for being us tonight. he walked away from the left and he walked right into justice. the walkaway campaign founder is with us with an update o trump with quite the speech tonight at his rally. my next guest is the founder of the #walk away campaign. he urges people to leave liberalism which he says has become too intolerant. brandon straka joins me. the last time you were here you were on your way to the u.k. and had just become a hit with your documentation of all of the hysteria on the left and the lying hysteria. what's happened since then? >> a lot has happened. the walkaway campaign has continued to grow. it's had an amazing impact. people are putting out their testimonials and it's growing like wildfires, especially in the minority community which i love to see. judge jeanine: the testimonials. do they attest to things that happened to them or what they see as untrue or fake? >> it's a combination of all these things. we see and hear the stories every day about violence, vandalism and petty and destructive behavior. even in people's personal lives. they are being cut off by their siblings and best friends or saying i support the president. they are losing their jobs. it's crazy. judge jeanine: it's even worse than that. the president's star on the hollywood walk of fame as well as the cabinet member's boat as well as cabinet members being thrown out of restaurants and grossy stores. i had my own issue with being basically thrown off a set on out of a building. >> i heard about that. judge jeanine: this intolerance. do people not understand how un-american that is? >> we have gone beyond anti-trump. it's play and thely anti-american -- it's blatantly antiamerican. conservatives stood by as they watched the erosion of american ideals under the obama administration. we didn't see anything like this. i was a liberal at that time. i was a obama supporter. i did not see people on the right behaving this way. judge jeanine: what is it you saw on the left that caused you, you are a liberal, you are gay, talk to me, why? and to step out. a lot of people who stepped out, they get in a lot of trouble with the left. >> i think the left has done a successful job in pushing this narrative of victimhood and oppressors. for many of us on the left myself included, we bought into it. i became a liberal because i'm against racism. judge jeanine: we are all against racism. >> right. but i didn't know that. the common idea is people on the right hate hispanic and gay people, hate hate hate hate hate. this is what we hear over and over again. but when the lightbulb came on in my head, i said i'm here because i'm against all these things, but you guys hate white people and straight people and you hate men. judge jeanine: sarah jeong, the woman from the "new york times," and the "new york times" dug up their heels in. she hates whites, she hates men. the excuse and the "times" bought it, she said i feel like i have been harassed. >> this is how liberal ideology gets ingrained in our culture through our education system and the media. roseanne lost her show. lost her show. but the "new york times" is standing by this woman. by the way, these tweets go back to 2013. this is five years of virulently racist tweets. they are standing by her because they say she is an asian-american woman so by default she is a victim of racism. the white people she made the tweets about, they deserve it. judge jeanine: when you say five years, the "new york times" says they are old tweets. 2015 is old? what are you up to next. >> we have big things planned for the walkaway campaign. i would like to you have me back on your show so i can announce it. judge jeanine: that's a good tease. we'll be right back, everybody. welcome! hi there. so, what do you look for in a vehicle? sleek designs. performance. dependability is top on my list. well then, here's some vehicles that deliver on that. woah! wow. oh jeez! that's our truck! it's our truck! and they're our cars! that's my chevy! chevy's the only brand to earn j.d. power dependability awards across cars, trucks and suvs three years in a row. awesome. i'm proud. it's like a dynasty. it's impressive.

Some
Friends
Courage
Brave
Cookie
Blue-wave
Person
Maxine-waters
Beauty
Charge
Women
Melania

Transcripts For FOXNEWSW Justice With Judge Jeanine 20180805 01:00:00

Former Westchester County, N.Y., D.A. Jeanine Pirro discusses the week's biggest legal stories. Former Westchester County, N.Y., D.A. Jeanine Pirro discusses the week's biggest legal stories. woman subject to online harassment. hating wietds or cops is oh -- hating wise or cops is okay if you say you have been harassed. but she says her comments were not aimed at the general audience. pray tell if saying f the police is about as general an audience as you can get. and someone who has a job at the "new york times" as a wordsmith should know the difference between a specific and a general audience it's specific when it's against one police officer. it's general if it's against all law enforcement and the whole group of them. you know, the bigotry is alarming. a few weeks ago the "new york times" goaded its readers in an editorial to fight the nomination of the latest supreme court nominee great kavanaugh. quote to take a line from the god father. it's time to go to the mattresses. really? the godfather? it's been a while since i saw "the godfather." but last i recall it meant one family was going to wipe out another. but you are not surprised. you already knew this, didn't you. i'm tired of being told not to believe our lying eyes when the truth is obvious whether it's peter strzok saying he hated and despised trump and would stop him becoming president, but it did not affect his work when he's the one who began counter-intelligence investigation against trump that we are still living with. or jeong's defenders saying there is no evidence her tweets had any bearing on her work. it appears the old gray lady has scaramucci. good evening. >> congratulations on the book. i read it last week it's fabulous. god bless you. judge jeanine: the president tonight and you and i both know, he has energy from his audience that goes back and forth and i think he's at his strongest when in front of an audience like he was tonight. but when the democrats go forward in this special election tuesday. what are they going to say, the economy is rotten? we are not safe anymore? what are they going to say? >> i'm going back to your book. the playbook is republicans are racist and xenophobic. it's identity politics and politics of division. they can't argue the policies or the state of the economy or rising wages for the hispanic americans or african-american community. they try to divide and hit you with attacks. tonight the president was unleashing his vintage true self. it made me think back to two years ago back to the campaign. presidents don't get out on the campaign and rally people the way he is. he'll be so ready and so fresh for 2020 and right through the mid-term elections. it's a saturday night, he could be in bedminster relaxing. but he's in a 110 degree auditorium giving that kind of rousing speech. jesse: that's a great point -- judge jeanine: that's a great point. the man is a nonstop work. president trump: a vote for troims opponent is -- a vote for troy's opponent is a vote for open borders. they don't care about the crime, they don't care about your military and they don't care about your vets. the new platform of the democratic party is to abolish i.c.e. and not worry about crime. really? it doesn't work that way. judge jeanine: i don't know who wouldn't agree with that. >> it's a bad strategy for them. what happened is the president is a human wrecking ball for the democratic party and he set off the alarm bells on the far left. so all of these politicians that want to run tore president are -- run for president are racing towards the far left. i don't want to be a democratic strategist on your show. but it's the wrong strategy for them and they are playing into the president's hands. he speaks in common sense way to common people. when you listen to him speak like i did in wilkes-barre, pennsylvania, my hometown. my dad is from plains, 15 minutes from scranton. i think these people relate to him. he's the blue collar billionaire president. he is able to tap into their joy. he's able to tap into their aspirations. the policies have been phenomenal. it will be hard to argue against what the president is putting on the table for every day average americans. judge jeanine: the gdp and the tariffs. the president said tonight, if we get the trade deficit down the gdf goes up. this your forte. he talked about the fact we rebuilt china with a $500 billion a year trade deficit. it's time we rebuilt our own country. everybody understands that. this whole thing with tariffs, they talk about the fact that it's not a good thing for america, they are going to hurt us. explain this to me. >> the president's position is the trade system since the end of world war ii has been unbalanced. the u.s. did that to help build the rest of the world after the defend sayings of world war ii. -- with the -- after the devastation of world war ii. the president's point is we rebuilt the world. we helped the chinese. they are the second largest economy. the world has to turn around and allow us to have a symmetrical trading system where it's free and fair trade where their tariffs come down. and if you are not going to bring your tariffs down, we'll raise our tariff to the meet your tariffs. what i liked about the strategy is it's finally getting people to the table. the president of the e.u. juncker was in town last week. i think the president will eventually get his way. i had two or through conversations with him about that. i'm from wall street and understand capital flows. i'm worried about the tariffs because it could change the psychology in the market. the president has such great momentum. 18 fantastic economic months. let's dial into this surgically with great precision so we don't blow the momentum and positive psychology in the economy. judge jeanine: before we go, he made it clear, he said we make a car and china taxes it 25% when it gets over there. they make a car and we charge them 2.5% which they don't pay. that's real simple to me. >> that's correct. if you sell a harley davidson in germy. if it's $100,000 here, it's $125,000 there. what i don't want to have happen. any of the great momentum he created for these workers he was talking to tonight. i don't want any of that to be deflated. but he's on course. i think what he did with juncker last week is a great sign of things to come. i predict lower tariffs and more free trade for the world. judge jeanine: anthony scaramucci thanks so much. more from president trump. charlie kirk from turning point u.s.a. crabfest is back at red lobster, with our largest variety of crab all year! like new crabfest combo. your one chance to have new jumbo snow crab with tender dungeness crab. or try crab lover's dream. but hurry in. 'cause crabfest will be gone in a snap. gacan start in the colon, n, and diarrhea and may be signs of an imbalance of good bacteria. only phillips' colon health has this unique combination of probiotics. it helps replenish good bacteria. get four-in-one symptom defense. this is a story about mail and packages. and it's also a story about people. people who rely on us every day to deliver their dreams they're handing us more than mail they're handing us their business and while we make more e-commerce deliveries to homes than anyone else in the country, we never forget... that your business is our business the united states postal service. priority: you ♪ where we're changing withs? contemporary make-overs. then, use the ultimate power handshake, the upper hander with a double palm grab. who has the upper hand now? start winning today. book now at lq.com. are you ready to take your then you need xfinity xfi.? a more powerful way to stay connected. it gives you super fast speeds for all your devices, provides the most wifi coverage for your home, and lets you control your network with the xfi app. it's the ultimate wifi experience. xfinity xfi, simple, easy, awesome. president trump: we have a couple places where i won by 30 and 40 points. it could very well be they come and vote, the democrats. they do talk. a few of them say nicer things about me than any republican. a couple of them compare me to some of the greats. they talk about abe lincoln. honest abe. they say great things. judge jeanine: president trump saying some compare him to honest abe lincoln at tonight's alley. my next guest agrees and he knows how to rule up th -- knoww to rile up the left. his next movie "death of a nation" hits theater and the country this week. >> lincoln was elected to unite a nation and stop slavery. dem gnats feared him, went to war against him, assassinated him. the liberals, the people who wanted to improve society. judge jeanine: filmmaker and "new york times" best seller dinesh d'souza. i understand you have had some incredible premieres with distinguished guests at those premieres. how do you interpret what the president said tonight, based on your book, i actually read it, "death of a nation." >> we morph the head of lincoln and trump. this outrages a lot of people because they think how dare you compare trump and lincoln. on the face of it trump and lincoln temperamentally are quite different. lincoln is broogd, melancholy and philosophical. but there are situations that are similar. in 1860 an outsider republican candidate enters the race and wins it narrowly. the moment he's elected all hell breaks loose. the northern democrats openly call for his assassination. and the southern democrats are willing to break the country up rather than abide a lincoln presidency. here we are with an outsider trump who wins unexpectedly, and the democrats go nuts. here we are two years after the election. judge jeanine: and they are still nuts. >> the movie looks at fascism and race i'm to delegitimize trump. they say he's ineligible to be president even if people voted for him. judge jeanine: why is the issue of fascism so on the tips of everyone's tongues. >> where do you get the license in a democratic majority. the only amaly that works is -- the only analogy that works is hitler circa1923. if hitler were democratically elected we would agot it would be justified to use any means possible to get rid of them. the left is taking that logic based on saying he's a racist and white supremacist. so this poison is used to legitimize the left's violence and attempts to engineer a legal coup. our movie takes them at their word. we say let's look at farb i'm. -- look at fascism. let's look at the nazi 25-point agenda because they campaigned on that. state control of banks, state control of healthcare, state control of education. state control of religious liberty. no sane person can read this and say this is on the right. then i look at the fascism of the left today. the key movement of the nazis was the party is the state. and also using the state to neutralize your critics. judge jeanine: when the police are standing down in some cases that's neutralizing not just the critics. but it allows the left to go forward with illegal activity and the whole idea of shugd down free speech. vandalizing the property of anyone on the right. assaulting, creating a crowd as maxine waters calls it. >> mussolini has para military fighters called the black shirts. if you look at what's going on with antifa. they wear black and carry bats and beat up their opponents. these people call themselves anti-fascists but they look like and act like fascists. judge jeanine: thanks for being here and congratulations on your movie. charlie kirk is on deck. "justice" rolls on in just a moment. o and home insurance with esurance, you could save with their single deductible. so if you confused the brake with the gas, or if your lamp post jumped out of nowhere, or if you forgot your bike was on the roof rack, you only pay one deductible -instead of two- for a claim involving both your auto and home. and when you save that much, it's almost like it... never even happened. that's auto and home insurance for the modern world. esurance. an allstate company. click or call. when you combine ancestry's with its historical records... you could learn you're from ireland donegal, ireland and your ancestor was a fisherman. with blue eyes. just like you. begin your journey at ancestry.com i'start at the new carfax.comar. show me minivans with no reported accidents. boom. love it. [struggles] show me the carfax. start your used car search at the all-new carfax.com. at&t provides edge-to-edge intelligence, covering virtually every part of your retail business. so that if your customer needs shoes, & he's got wide feet. & with edge-to-edge intelligence you've got near real time inventory updates. & he'll find the same shoes in your store that he found online he'll be one happy, very forgetful wide footed customer. at&t provides edge to edge intelligence. it can do so much for your business, the list goes on and on. that's the power of &. & if your customer also forgets socks! & you could send him a coupon for that item. ♪ it's so hard to believe ♪ but it's all coming back me. ♪ baby, baby, baby. all you can eat is back, baby. applebee's. booking a flight doesn't have to be expensive. just go to priceline. it's the best place to book a flight a few days before my trip and still save up to 40%. just tap and go... for the best savings on flights, go to priceline. countries against violating sanctions on pyongyang saying washington will take seriously any action that reduces pressure on the north to reduce its nuclear weapons. the north is calling recent actions alarming. evacuation orders lifted for parts of lynchburg, virginia after fears of a dam failure eased. heavy rains pushed the dam to capacity, threatening homes in its path. authorities will continue to monitor the dam. but for now people can return to their homes. i'm anita vogel. now back to "justice with judge jeanine." president trump: the unemployment rate for americans without a high school diploma. this just came out two days ago. i figure i might as we'll tell you because they won't say it. without a diploma, high school is at the lowest level ever recorded. how good is that. economic growth last quarter hit 4.1. you all know that. you all know this, too. remember i used to say they always voted democrat. the african-american unemployment rate has achieved the lowest level ever record in history. judge jeanine: president trump's speech in ohio covering a lot of ground. let's get to it with my political panel, former new york state assemblyman steve levy and chris hahn. gentlemen, steve, welcome to justice. let's start with the economy. unemployment of those with high school diplomas is at its lowest level ever record. how are you democrats going to counter that one? >> it's a good number. i don't begrudge it. i give the president some credit for it. it continues a trend started with obama. the unemployment was on its way down when the president took over. in 2014, president trump had two of his strongest gdp numbers right before the mid-term election. he still lost seats in the house and they lost control of the senate. those numbers while they will help a president get re-elected do not necessarily translate into congressional wins. congressional wins are about a lot of things. the economy kiss one of them, but it's not a driving force. >> it's great being at your book signing. thanks for signing my book it's an incredible read, by the way. looking at the last year of the obama administration we had a sluggish 1.6% growth rate. many were saying that's the new normal. it doesn't have to be. president trump came in and said we can do better. we'll cut taxes and we'll see what happens. look what happened. 4% growth in the last quarter. consumer confidence the highest level since the year 2000. unemployment 3.9%. the lowest level in 20 years. food stamps are down. judge jeanine: so, chris, what steve is saying is the facts are the facts. when you talk about 5.1 with obama and he still lost, that's got nothing do with it. it's really about sustainability. what the president and what steve are saying is we have all the factors here for the sustainability of the economy. and when the democrats say they are going to raise taxes, do you think that helps? >> i agree it's about sustain built. the president's total gdp is a small percentage point higher. judge jeanine: really? read my book. >> his entire 19-month presidency. the last 19 months of the obama presidency the economy created more jobs than the first 19 months of the trump presidency. those are the numbers, those are the facts. google it, look it up. judge jeanine: is that true, steve. >> president trump's administration is the only one since world war ii that did not have at least a 3% growth for a total year. the president right now is on pace to achieve 3% for the whole year. but look at the other numbers. manufacturing is booming. manufacturing is up to its highest level since 2007. construction jobs are way up. that in -- that inures to the benefit of the middle class. normally the party in power loses on those off years. there was an anomaly. 1998 with president clinton. he had a strong economy. if there is anything that can break that trend, it's the strong economy we are seeing today. >> there was another factor in 1998. the democrats overreached. judge jeanine: that's why clinton lost his law license. don't talk about overreaching. you want to go russia collusion, don't start with plea, chris. >> if we are going to talk about impeachment, we'll have a lot of impeachment. but democrats might be making the same mistake as republicans did in '98. there was an overreach there and the public reacted negatively. you might be seeing that this year as well which is why democratic leadership is trying to tell all its minions stop talking about impeachment because it can backfire. judge jeanine: chris? >> i agree. it would be a complete overreach to make impeachment the issue and an overreach to impeach unless there was something to impeach about. the democrats have to be careful or they will hand trump a 2020 victory. judge jeanine: chris, i'm going to keep a record of what you just said because i think you believe it. >> i do believe it. i always tell you what i believe. judge jeanine: steve levy, thank you for being on "justice." brandon straka of the walk away project is next. and charlie kirk will talk about this week's most of outrageous statement. still nervous about finding a new apartment? get to know geico. and see how easy homeowners and renters insurance can be. can make you feel unstoppable. ♪ but mania, such as unusual changes in your mood, activity or energy levels, can leave you on shaky ground. help take control by talking to your doctor. ask about vraylar. vraylar is approved for the acute treatment of manic or mixed episodes of bipolar i disorder in adults. clinical studies showed that vraylar reduced overall manic symptoms. vraylar should not be used in elderly patients with dementia due to increased risk of death or stroke. call your doctor about fever, stiff muscles, or confusion, which may mean a life-threatening reaction, or uncontrollable muscle movements, which may be permanent. side effects may not appear for several weeks. high cholesterol and weight gain; high blood sugar, which can lead to coma or death; decreased white blood cells, which can be fatal; dizziness upon standing; falls; seizures; impaired judgment; heat sensitivity; and trouble swallowing may occur. you're more than just your bipolar i. ask about vraylar. i never thought i'd say this but i found bladder leak underwear that's actually pretty. always discreet boutique. hidden inside is a super absorbent core that quickly turns liquid to gel. so i feel protected and pretty. always discreet boutique. take a listen to this one made about him after his thursday rally. >> there is no way that anyone who knows donald trump could watch him and not come away with a feeling that the president of the united states is completely unhinged and getting worse by the day. judge jeanine: that's just one of the most of outrageous things i have heard this week. joining me with more reaction to that, charlie kirk. there isn't any way anyone who knows donald trump unless they are bought in some way doesn't think he's totally unhinged. what's your reaction to that? >> i couldn't disagree more. and the american people disagree with that. he's getting more and more popular. here is the stunning thing about the trump presidency. despite unprecedented media backlash and targeting, he's going against historical trends. usually tho -- usually presidens get less popular in their first term. hispanic approval rating is up 10 points and african-american* approval is 29 points. judge jeanine: if somebody is unhinged with all the hits he's been taking. anybody would buckle and be in a corner. this guy is fighting the fight every day. he gets energy from this stuff. who benefits from it? we do. speaking of that. madonna is suggests donald trump motivate herd to move to portugal. it's a full screen. >> i felt like we needed a change and i wanted to get out of america for a minute. as you know, this is not america's finest hour, not that leaving america makes anything different or changes anything. >> we as conservatives remain loyal and patriotic no matter who is president of the united states. liberals base their love or lack of love of america based upon whether their team member is president of the united states. when obama was president i was just as loyal and committed as an american as i am today. we believe in our history, heritage and people. liberals like madonna dismiss america if there is a republican in the white house. are you thankful to be an american or are you angry to be an american. many liberals are angry when we should be pouring out our gratitude. judge jeanine: people who hate america so much should rethink their address. kathy griffin. she is always good for outrageous. this tweet. trump and his administration are the enemy of the american people. charlie? >> the president is the ally and the friend of the american people. let's add some context for viewers at home. kathy griffin about a year ago posted a picture with a decapitated head of the president of the united states and then tried to play the victim 48 hours later that everyone was going after her. imagine for a second a conservative did that horrific stunt with barack obama's head. they would be investigated by the secret service. judge jeanine: they would be taken out in cuffs. >> exactly with a hate crime. we keep on saying the left are losing their minds. trump is the ally of the american people. the liberal elite, the more they talk, the more popular trump gets. unlike other historical trend, donald trump is getting more popular with time and we are just getting started. judge jeanine: the whole idea of the lowest unemployment ever for people with high school diplomas. with high school diplomas. it's across the board, this positive economy. charlie kirk, thank you for being us tonight. he walked away from the left and he walked right into justice. the walkaway campaign founder is with us with an update on his powerful movement. (vo) love. people think i'm trash. but they're wrong. today i'm just an aluminum can. but one day, i could be a stadium. judge jeanine: that's president trump with quite the speech tonight at his rally. my next guest is the founder of the #walk away campaign. he urges people to leave liberalism which he says has become too intolerant. brandon straka joins me. the last time you were here you were on your way to the u.k. and had just become a hit with your documentation of all of the hysteria on the left and the lying hysteria. what's happened since then? >> a lot has happened. the walkaway campaign has continued to grow. it's had an amazing impact. people are putting out their testimonials and it's growing like wildfires, especially in the minority community which i love to see. judge jeanine: the testimonials. do they attest to things that happened to them or what they see as untrue or fake? >> it's a combination of all these things. we see and hear the stories every day about violence, vandalism and petty and destructive behavior. even in people's personal lives. they are being cut off by their siblings and best friends or saying i support the president. they are losing their jobs. it's crazy. judge jeanine: it's even worse than that. the president's star on the hollywood walk of fame as well as the cabinet member's boat as well as cabinet members being thrown out of restaurants and grossy stores. i had my own issue with being basically thrown off a set on out of a building. >> i heard about that. judge jeanine: this intolerance. do people not understand how un-american that is? >> we have gone beyond anti-trump. it's play and thely anti-american -- it's blatantly antiamerican. conservatives stood by as they watched the erosion of american ideals under the obama administration. we didn't see anything like this. i was a liberal at that time. i was a obama supporter. i did not see people on the right behaving this way. judge jeanine: what is it you saw on the left that caused you, you are a liberal, you are gay, talk to me, why? and to step out. a lot of people who stepped out, they get in a lot of trouble with the left. >> i think the left has done a successful job in pushing this narrative of victimhood and oppressors. for many of us on the left myself included, we bought into it. i became a liberal because i'm against racism. judge jeanine: we are all against racism. >> right. but i didn't know that. the common idea is people on the right hate hispanic and gay people, hate hate hate hate hate. this is what we hear over and over again. but when the lightbulb came on in my head, i said i'm here because i'm against all these things, but you guys hate white people and straight people and you hate men. judge jeanine: sarah jeong, the woman from the "new york times," and the "new york times" dug up their heels in. she hates whites, she hates men. the excuse and the "times" bought it, she said i feel like i have been harassed. >> this is how liberal ideology gets ingrained in our culture through our education system and the media. roseanne lost her show. lost her show. but the "new york times" is standing by this woman. by the way, these tweets go back to 2013. this is five years of virulently racist tweets. they are standing by her because they say she is an asian-american woman so by default she is a victim of racism. the white people she made the tweets about, they deserve it. judge jeanine: when you say five years, the "new york times" says they are old tweets. 2015 is old? what are you up to next. >> we have big things planned for the walkaway campaign. i would like to you have me back on your show so i can announce it. judge jeanine: that's a good tease. we'll be right back, everybody. ♪ keep it comin' love. if you keep on eating, we'll keep it comin'. all you can eat riblets and tenders at applebee's. now that's eatin' good in the neighborhood. judge jeanine: finally, tonight a big thank you to all of you who bought my number one bestseller. if you don't have your copy yet, run, don't walk to order it right now on amazon, barnes & noble or any bookstore. plus, you get to friend me on facebook, follow me on twitter or instagram. let me know your thoughts on the show in the book. thank you for watching. i'm jeanine pirro and thanks so much.

Cheers
Elite
Applause
Election
President-trump
Cheer
Takea-look
Job
Everything
Schools
Companies
Incomes

Transcripts For FOXNEWSW Watters World 20180805 03:00:00

Jesse Watters examines headlines pertaining to the 2016 election cycle with a rotating panel of guests and via on-the-street interviews. country. william mckinley from ohio was a great president. he understood the crucial importance of tariffs in maintaining a very strong country. people that followed him went down at great presidents because one in particular as you know, because he was given an economic behemoth created by mckinley. mckinley said we ought to take care of our own nation and her industries first. we want to help other people. but we don't want to help other people that are rich and not have them reimburse us. they are taking care of their military, we are taking care of their manufacturing. we are taking care of everything. a lot of these deals were made many years ago when they were weak and struggling. and they never changed them. but we are changing them now. changing them now. and troy balderson is going to be helping so much. thanks to our pro american economic policies. american steel -- one of the things i'm most of proud of -- american steel is making one of the biggest comebacks anybody has ever seen for any industry. nucor, a great steel company. the steel mills were closing up. nucor announced an $85 million upgrade in marion. charter steel announced a $150 million steel plant in cuyahoga heights. jsw steel is restarting the furnace and investing $500 million. cleveland cliffs announced a $700 million plant in toledo. united states steel is building or renovating or improving over seven new plants. they never thought they would see a day when this happens. this all happened within a very short period of time. because we stopped the dumping. if they want to dump, that's fine. but they have to pay a 25% tax. amazing the impact that has on people who want to rip-off our industries. we also have taken historic action to protect our amazing farmers. i reached an historic agreement with the european union. we talked about them before to reduce barriers to american-grown products and democratic leader and the leader of the russian investigation, dianne feinstein, had a chinese spy at her driver for 20 years. and she is leading the russian investigation if that's what you call it. how about leading -- she is leading the russian witch hunt. a democrat-inspired witch hunt. isn't that something? dianne feinstein -- how come china never spies on us? there are those who say they are brutal. you should ask the people. not only china. it's a lot of people. we have to stop it. we have to stop meddling and stop everybody from attacking us. but there are a lot. rush i -- russia is there, china is there. increased defense spending to $700 billion this year and $716 billion next year. we are doing things that we have never done before. and we approved $6 billion for opioid. it's down 20%. $6 billion we got approved. thanks to our $2 billion investment in armored vehicles. workers at the legendary take plant in lima, ohio are now back on the job churning out m1 abrams tanks. churning them out. the great thing about what we are doing with $700 billion and $716. it's far more important in this case. but we are also providing massive numbers of jobs because we build all of that equipment in the united states. that's the one case where the jobs just aren't as important. but we are doing it all here i'm proud to report we have given our service members the largest pay raise in over a decade. i have also directed the pentagon to create the 6th branch of the united states armed forces called the space force. [cheers and applause] that's going to be great. so much is happening in space. i am not just talking about mars and the moon. i'm talking about tremendous offense capability. it's in space. we are going to do the space force. we passed the landmark va accountability act. now if a bad government workers abuses a great veteran, we turn to them and say, you're fired, get the hell out of here! you are fired! we also passed veterans choice. so if our veterans can't get care from the va in a timely manner, they have the right to go and see immediately a private doctor and get taken care of. they have been working on that one for 45 years. we got it passed. i'm good at getting things passed. we are going to get the wall passed, don't worry about that. the obstructionist democrats. the democrats are obstructionists. the only thing they do well. they are lousy politicians, they have stupid policies, let's get rid of law enforcement, let's get rid of the military. let's not build a wall. they are haters. they do anything they can to obstruct or resist. their word is resist, resist. i used to see that word, i said why are they doing senate but they want to resist. i withdrew the united states from the horrible iran nuclear deal. and so many things have happened. i also recognize the capital of israel and five months later we opened the american embassy in jerusalem. instead of apologizing for america, we are standing up for america, we are standing up for the heroes who protect our country. and we are proudly standing up for our national anthem. thank you. [cheers and applause] [crowd chants usa!] but to continue our incredible success, we must elect more republicans and we must elect troy balderson. we have to elect troy. so get your friend, get your neighbors, get your family and get out and vote for troy on tuesday. loyal citizens, great people like you help build this country. and together we are taking back this country. we are returning power to where it belongs, to the american people. from columbus to the queen city cincinnati where i worked, the queen city. from dublin to cleveland and from toledo to mansfield, ohio has always been the home of red-blooded american patriots, strong people, real workers. people i love. this state is the home of the proud. and we are, we are the home of the proud. we are the home of families and farmers and miners and manufacturers and airators and astronauts. ohio is the home of everything good. ohio is where the wright brothers invented the airplane and where annie oakley got her gun. and ohio is the state that gives us american legend and american heroes like thomas edison, neil armstrong, and john glenn. we stand on the shoulders of generations of american patriots who knew how to work, knew how to fight, and knew how to win. you know how to win. just like them we are going to keep on work. we are going to keep on fighting, and we are going to keep object winning, we are going to win so much you are going to get so tired of winning. you see what happening. we'll keep it going for a long time. we'll never give up, we'll never give in. and we'll never back down. we'll never ever stop fighting for our families, our freedom, tore our great american -- or our great american flag. right? because we are americans. and our hearts bleed red, white and blue. we are one people, one family, and one glorious nation under god. and together as a nation we'll make america wealthy again. we'll make america strong again. we'll make america safe again. and we'll make america great again. thank you, ohio. thank you. [♪] engineers and contractors. this room was not designed quite for this crowd. and you people are hot. so if anybody wants to leave. leave. there is a lot of people out there who want to get in, but don't leave. it is rather hot. you walk out and lose about 10 pound. you say that was very good. that beats going to a gym, right? it's hot. so much for my brand-new beautiful suit. jesse: here to react, former trump campaign manager corey lewandowski and gina loudon the head of trump's advisory board. one of my favorite moments is when he pits the people against the powerful. in big trouble. the great lou dobbs. right? but you see, oh, maria -- maria bartiromo. i'm in trouble. i know i left out probably 10. but i didn't think i would be doing this. but they are blowing them away. cnn is down at the bottom of the totem poll. msnbc isn't even close to being next these shows. they are more elite than me? i'm more of everything they have, including this. and i became president and they didn't. [cheers and applause] and it's driving them crazy. jesse: judge jeanine is very upset because she was not mentioned by the president. i think i heard her throw a glass in the green room. besides that we wanted to get that in there. about the he athletes versus the regular folks. -- about the elites versus the regular folks that's so effective and they loved it. >> this president joined with the american people in ways no other president has. he said during this campaign, i want all americans to be as rich as me. that gave americans a vision of going back to work, reclaiming our economy both nationally and internationally. and those are the things he delivered on. so he has every right to say that to that crowd. jesse: he's saying these people in ohio, they are smart people, they own a business, they own land, they have families, they have savings, they have high salaries. they are doing great. then you have some little weasel making a tiny amount of money in manhattan and washington, d.c. he's got nothing going on and no action web's calling those people in the heartland deplorables, he's calling them toothless, and that's why people don't like the people in the media. >> it's not just the people in the media. it's the bi-coastal nature of going to an -- going to stanforr hash regard and look down -- or harvard and looking down on people who didn't go to ivy league schools. he's with the hard working men and women every single day in ohio who are seeing the benefit of the economy. he talked about the steel workers going back to work. they are better off than the professional elitists. jesse: under obama where the country lost 300,000 to 400,000 manufacturing jobs. and this president has added over 300,000 manufacturing jobs. dianne feinstein, the senator from california, i think she is one of the ranking members on the senate intelligence committee and leading the charge against collusion and all that kind of stuff. it was discovered there was a chinese spy, a mole, who was her driver, for 20 years, driving the senator around. good knows what he was hearing in the front seat when she was chatting on the cell phone. and she is upset with trump for being a national security risk? president trump: it just came out democratic leader and the leader of the russian investigation, dianne feinstein, had a chinese spy as her driver for 20 years. and she is leading the russian investigation. jesse: it's so funny the democrats, they get hacked, podesta gives his password which was password to th the enemies. she has a mole in the front seat. debbie wasserman-schultz has some crazy i.t. guy. >> this is what the american people are watching and they are seeing this hypocrisy. and they say you have got to be kidding me. do they believe their own lies? the only place they believe the lies is on the coasts and the d.c. bubble. the people in the heartland see all of this. they know it, and this is what elected this president. this is what will deliver the mid-terms for him i believe again too. jesse: let's play sound from the president. he made a prediction. here it is. president trump: they are talking about this blue wave. i don't think so. i don't think so. maxine waters is leading the charge. maxine. she is a real beauty. maxine. a seriously low i.q. person. seriously. max seen waters. -- maxine waters. she is leading the charge. all throughout the country, 125 years, whoever has the white house, that party tends to lose the mid-terms. i don't know why. maybe it's comply season i. maybe you win and you are a little complacent. but that was two years ago. i just said why? we have the greatest economy in the history our country. we have things that never happened before. look, the democrats get in, they are going to raise your taxes, you will have crime all over the place. you will have people pouring across the border. i think it could be a red wave. i think it should be a red wave. jesse: corey, what do you see happening in the mid terms? >> i think you will see republicans gain seats in the u.s. senate. the math for the republicans is very favorable. particularly in those places where donald trump won two years ago where democrat incumbents are running for reelection. you will see a gain of 2-3 minimum. on the house side there is a possibility the republicans will keep that house in the majority. it will be a slimmer majority. but the republicans will hold the house. the reason for that is what donald trump outlined. are you better off today than you were two years ago? unequivocally by every metric the answer is yes. unemployment particularly among hispanics and african-americans are at the lowest levels ever recorded. all those things point to putting people back in office. i think you will see a republican majority come november. jesse: they have a democratic generic lead in the head-to-head congressional matchup. i don't think trump supporters talked to pollsters. so that's baked in there. it will be a lot tighter than people think. this was his third big campaign rally this week. we have so much to play for you. we are talking about the elections. let's talk about even further. 2020 the president name sod potential matchups and here is what he had to say. president trump: imagine running against pocahontas or crazy bernie. i have got to hand it to bernie. i saw him up there the other day, that hair is getting whiter and white and he's getting crazier and crazier. he said we'll stop donald trump. we are stopping him. i looked at my wife and said you have got to hand it to that guy. he doesn't quit. and that's okay. crazy bernie. he's one crazy dude. jesse: one crazy dude. what do you think about that one? >> he's cutting right into the base. even some of those who might have considered themselves pretty far left. jesse: on trade. >> and if you look at the jobs numbers, unemployment is down, even among high school dropouts. the party of the little guy. the party of the guy house the have nots. this president is coming along and making their lives better. what are the democrats going to do with that? what are the socialists going to do with that? jesse: the president said i love the poorly educated. i think he was saying that with love. >> he was. but look at the numbers that came out this week. african-americans are now supporting this president at 30%. if he gets double digits in the 2020 election -- jesse: black support for president trump has gone from 16% to 29% according to rasmussen. guys, unbelievable. gotta run. coming up, president trump coming up, president trump versus king james.with my bladd, the products i've tried just didn't fit right. they were very saggy. it's getting in the way of our camping trips. but with new sizes, depend fit-flex is made for me. introducing more sizes for better comfort. new depend fit-flex underwear is guaranteed to be your best fit. timeit should be measuredsured byby how long steak & lobster is back at outback. back by popular demand, steak & lobster starting at $15.99! and time...is limited, so hurry in today. outback steakhouse. aussie rules. >> life from america's news headquarters. an investigation is underway into the cause of a deadly plane crash am northern oklahoma. five people died when a single engine plane crashed into a soybean field. that's about 90 miles north of oklahoma city. it crashed shortly after takeoff and burst into flames. there are no survivors. authorities have not identified the victims, three adults and two children. overseas, three people died when a helicopter crash am siberia minutes after takeoff. fifteen passengers and three crew members were aboard the plane. the helicopter collided with a low beam from another chopper. they are investigating allegations of negligence and safety guideline violations. now, let's go back to "watters' world" i'm so frustrated. but she's not much on "articles of organization." articles of what? so, she turned to legalzoom. they helped me out. she means we helped with her llc, trademark, and a lot of other legal stuff that's a part of running a business. so laura can get back to the dogs. would you sit still? this is laura's mobile dog grooming palace and this is where life meets legal. tremfya®. because you deserve to stay clearer. janssen wants to help you explore cost support options. i would never sit across from him. >> never. you don't want to talk to him? >> no. i would sit across from barack though. >> jesse: the president tweeted, lebron james was just interview by the dumbest man on television. he made lebron look smart which isn't easy to do. i like mike. talk about michael jordan. >> jesse: anna, i do not think this is that big of a deal. i do not know why people are getting so worked up about this. the president hits back when he is attacked. lebron james said something he did not like and he hit him back. what is the big deal, right? >> i'll start by saying this, jesse. the thing about kneeling during the national anthem is that the original purpose as to why it was done, is no longer topic of discussion. sports athletes did it to shed light on police brutality am this nation. now, the focus has changed to the level of disrespect it means to service members. >> jesse: it has been totally lost it am the symbolism because of the time they decided to express themselves. you understand that. they totally misread what they were doing, did not see that it was hurting their cause. now they're trying to see that trump is being devices when it was bringing unity by kneeling. >> no, that is incorrect. i would say the president's comment is divisive and beyond what the president of the united states and free world. we have lebron james, a man was been a stellar model both on and off the court. he spent $8 million of his own money to build this for the kids. nothing that donald trump has done compared to this. [inaudible conversation] >> i do not know you but what i can say to you, do not cut me off. >> jesse: we are going to do this nicely and with class. let me just respond to something you said. i agree that lebron james has been very kind and generous, and charitable off the court with his school and everything he has done for young and disadvantaged children. with that said, it is not right to say that president trump has done nothing. he has created hundreds of thousands of jobs. he has given lots of opportunities to disadvantaged people. i do not think that is appropriate. >> first of all, no, jesse. not only did what president trump do is divisive, but it's also racist. i will tell you why. he has called out by name colin kaepernick, curry, lebron james. he has never responded to the criticism. >> jesse: what about white people he has attacked personally. [inaudible conversation] >> i am telling you, why don't you listen to what i am saying. >> jesse: this has turned into something completely ridiculous. we are going to go to the next segment. thank you guys, very much. the new york times hires a blatantly anti- trump racist to be a member of their editorial board. we will react to that, next conditioner brand, has conditioners for every hair type. from air-light foam for fine hair, to nourishing 3 minute miracle for thick and curly. and the moisture-infusing gold series collection. giving more women great hair days - every day. pantene. world's number one... conditioner brand. -we're in a small room. what?! -welcome. -[ gasps ] a bigger room?! -how many of you use car insurance? -oh. -well, what if i showed you this? -[ laughing ] ho-ho-ho! -wow. -it's a computer. -we compare rates to help you get the price and coverage that's right for you. -that's amazing! the only thing that would make this better is if my mom were here. what?! an unexpected ending! it gives you super fast speeds for all your devices, provides the most wifi coverage for your home, and lets you control your network with the xfi app. it's the ultimate wifi experience. xfinity xfi, simple, easy, awesome. and, i was equating trump to hitler before it was cool. oh my god. here's his reaction with terrence williams. terrence, i don't have any words for that. take it away. >> that is a nasty woman. so, o of course the nasty new yk times a higher her. but will they hire roseanne? no. i would tell people not to read the new york times, but it is too late, nobody reads it anyway. i will get my news from new caledonia and then new york time. >> jesse: nickelodeon gets better ratings anyway. >> i don't know if this woman is chinese, japanese, or crazy knees. they are bunch of hypocrites. >> jesse: they suspended the hiring and said this. she was being harassed, they claim by racist people on twitter. she responded to that harassment by imitating the rhetoric of their harassers. they are saying, some people said racist stuff to her so she said racist stuff back to imitate them. does that make sense? >> that does not make no sense. no, no, no. there is something wrong with the fortune cookies they are eating. there's something wrong with her. >> jesse: terrence, i think you now have your self am trouble. we will be right back. i have to go to break saved an average of $412. that's auto and home insurance for the modern world. esurance. an allstate company. click or call. paying too much for insurance that isn't the right fit? well, esurance makes finding the right coverage easy. in fact, drivers who switched from geico to esurance saved an average of $412. that's auto and home insurance for the modern world. esurance. an allstate company. click or call. esurance. an allstate company. timeit should be measuredsured byby how long steak & lobster is back at outback. back by popular demand, .. the day after chemo shouldn't mean going back to the doctor just for a shot. with neulasta onpro patients get their day back to be with family, or just to sleep in. strong chemo can put you at risk of serious infection. in a key study neulasta reduced the risk of infection from 17% to 1%, a 94% decrease. neulasta onpro is designed to deliver neulasta the day after chemo and is used by most patients today. neulasta is for certain cancer patients receiving strong chemotherapy. do not take neulasta if you're allergic to it or neupogen (filgrastim). an incomplete dose could increase infection risk. ruptured spleen, sometimes fatal as well as serious lung problems allergic reactions, kidney injuries and capillary leak syndrome have occurred. report abdominal or shoulder tip pain, trouble breathing or allergic reactions to your doctor right away. in patients with sickle cell disorders, serious, sometimes fatal crises can occur. the most common side effect is bone and muscle ache. ask your doctor about neulasta onpro. pay no more than $25 per dose with copay card. it's a high-tech sleep revolution. the sleep number 360 smart bed intelligently senses your movement and automatically adjusts. so you wake up ready to run the world. the new sleep number 360 smart bed, from $999. [♪] [♪] jesse: that's all for us tonight. be sure to follow me on facebook, instagram and twitter. "justice with judge jeanine" is next. by the way, she never threw anything against the wall in the green room. i was kidding. that was a joke. i love her and i hope she knows

Go-tog-got-fell-good-com
People
Donald-trump
Good
Gentleman
President
Ohio
Country
William-mckinley
Presidents
Importance
Tariffs

Transcripts For FOXNEWSW Watters World 20180805 06:00:00

Jesse Watters examines headlines pertaining to the 2016 election cycle with a rotating panel of guests and via on-the-street interviews. vastly increased the purchases of ohio's american crop soybeans. coy bea -- soybean prices are sg to go up. we are standing up to china. we authorized up to $12 billion to help american farmers during this period of time where china is targeting the american farmer because china is smart and they know the american farmers love donald trump. and they say what can we do to stop donald trump because he's the guy, he got it right. he's bringing the wealth back to the united states. china doesn't like it. so they are spending a fortune on public relations and ads. did you ever see the ads? look at who is paying for them. and by the way, other countries. speak of china. it has just come out the democratic leader and the leader republicans passed the biggest tax cuts and reforms in american history. we saved our family farms from the estate tax also known as the death tax, and we saved small businesses, small farms, small businesses won't be paying the death tax any any more. the individual mandate is now gone in obamacare. that's where you pay a tremendous amount of money for the privilege of not having to pay to buy terrible, horrible healthcare that's overpriced. we have given you a lot of healthcare plans you can choose from. we are giving businesses the greatest ability they have ever had to join forces to buy much better health insurance for much less money including across state lines. and we just added and introduced a brand-new rule to offer renewable plants that could save patients 50% or more compared to obamacare. obamacare. that was a beauty. obamacare. it was repealed and replaced. and you know weighs we did, which i think is really great. it's really something. when you are really sick, it's called right to try. how many times do you know somebody, and you are reading about this potential cure, but it will be 10 more years of experiments and food and drug. and we have right to try. people sign a disclaimer, they sign an agreement for more liability. instead of traveling -- most of people don't have the money. right to try, it's passed. you wouldn't think it would be tough. but the healthcare companies had a problem. the pharmaceutical companies had a problem because everybody was worried everybody would be sued. you sign an agreement where you don't sue people. they want to get better. they want a right to try. we approved that. they have been trying to get it for 40 years. i signed it into law three months ago. right to try. so if they have something you read about that looks really promising. you don't have to wait 12 years. you know one of the reasons you couldn't use it. they say we don't want to use it because it could hurt somebody. the people are going to die. it might not work, and it might work. it's also a great test medically. right to try. we have it. i'm so proud of that one. to retore our security we increased defense spending to $700 billion this year and $716 billion next year. we are doing things that we have never done before. and we approved $6 billion for opioid. it's down 20%. $6 billion we got approved. thanks to our $2 billion investment in armored vehicles. workers at the legendary take plant in lima, ohio are now back on the job churning out m1 abrams tanks. churning them out. the great thing about what we are doing with $700 billion and $716. it's far more important in this case. but we are also providing massive numbers of jobs because we build all of that equipment in the united states. that's the one case where the jobs just aren't as important. but we are doing it all here i'm proud to report we have given our service members the largest pay raise in over a decade. i have also directed the pentagon to create the 6th branch of the united states armed forces called the space force. [cheers and applause] that's going to be great. so much is happening in space. i am not just talking about mars and the moon. i'm talking about tremendous offense capability. it's in space. we are going to do the space force. we passed the landmark va accountability act. now if a bad government workers abuses a great veteran, we turn to them and say, you're fired, get the hell out of here! you are fired! we also passed veterans choice. so if our veterans can't get care from the va in a timely manner, they have the right to go and see immediately a private doctor and get taken care of. they have been working on that one for 45 years. we got it passed. i'm good at getting things passed. we are going to get the wall passed, don't worry about that. the obstructionist democrats. the democrats are obstructionists. the only thing they do well. they are lousy politicians, they have stupid policies, let's get rid of law enforcement, let's get rid of the military. let's not build a wall. they are haters. they do anything they can to obstruct or resist. their word is resist, resist. i used to see that word, i said why are they doing senate but they want to resist. i withdrew the united states from the horrible iran nuclear deal. and so many things have happened. i also recognize the capital of israel and five months later we opened the american embassy in jerusalem. instead of apologizing for america, we are standing up for america, we are standing up for the heroes who protect our country. and we are proudly standing up for our national anthem. thank you. [cheers and applause] [crowd chants usa!] but to continue our incredible success, we must elect more republicans and we must elect troy balderson. we have to elect troy. so get your friend, get your neighbors, get your family and get out and vote for troy on tuesday. loyal citizens, great people like you help build this country. and together we are taking back this country. we are returning power to where it belongs, to the american people. from columbus to the queen city cincinnati where i worked, the queen city. from dublin to cleveland and from toledo to mansfield, ohio has always been the home of red-blooded american patriots, strong people, real workers. people i love. this state is the home of the proud. and we are, we are the home of the proud. we are the home of families and farmers and miners and manufacturers and airators and astronauts. ohio is the home of everything good. ohio is where the wright brothers invented the airplane and where annie oakley got her gun. and ohio is the state that gives us american legend and american heroes like thomas edison, neil armstrong, and john glenn. we stand on the shoulders of generations of american patriots who knew how to work, knew how to fight, and knew how to win. you know how to win. just like them we are going to keep on work. we are going to keep on fighting, and we are going to keep object winning, we are going to win so much you are going to get so tired of winning. you see what happening. we'll keep it going for a long time. we'll never give up, we'll never give in. and we'll never back down. we'll never ever stop fighting for our families, our freedom, tore our great american -- or our great american flag. right? because we are americans. and our hearts bleed red, white and blue. we are one people, one family, and one glorious nation under god. and together as a nation we'll make america wealthy again. we'll make america strong again. we'll make america safe again. and we'll make america great again. thank you, ohio. thank you. [♪] engineers and contractors. this room was not designed quite for this crowd. and you people are hot. so if anybody wants to leave. leave. there is a lot of people out there who want to get in, but don't leave. it is rather hot. you walk out and lose about 10 pound. you say that was very good. that beats going to a gym, right? it's hot. so much for my brand-new beautiful suit. jesse: here to react, former trump campaign manager corey lewandowski and gina loudon the head of trump's advisory board. one of my favorite moments is when he pits the people against the powerful. he talks about the elites. i believe he has stolen this trick from the democrats who always campaign for the little guy against the campaign business interests. he ripped that out of their pocket and now owns that line. president trump: msnbc is so corrupt and disgusting. i would say almost their worse, almost worse. they are a fake news group of people. and here's the good news. the guys that we love, right? they are blowing them away in the race. hannity, laura ingraham, tucker carlson, steve doocy. so many others. they are blowing them away in the race. oh, excuse me, i would have been in big trouble. the great lou dobbs. right? but you see, oh, maria -- maria bartiromo. i'm in trouble. i know i left out probably 10. but i didn't think i would be doing this. but they are blowing them away. cnn is down at the bottom of the totem poll. msnbc isn't even close to being next these shows. they are more elite than me? i'm more of everything they have, including this. and i became president and they didn't. [cheers and applause] and it's driving them crazy. jesse: judge jeanine is very upset because she was not mentioned by the president. i think i heard her throw a glass in the green room. besides that we wanted to get that in there. about the he athletes versus the regular folks. -- about the elites versus the regular folks that's so effective and they loved it. >> this president joined with the american people in ways no other president has. he said during this campaign, i want all americans to be as rich as me. that gave americans a vision of going back to work, reclaiming our economy both nationally and internationally. and those are the things he delivered on. so he has every right to say that to that crowd. jesse: he's saying these people in ohio, they are smart people, they own a business, they own land, they have families, they have savings, they have high salaries. they are doing great. then you have some little weasel making a tiny amount of money in manhattan and washington, d.c. he's got nothing going on and no action web's calling those people in the heartland deplorables, he's calling them toothless, and that's why people don't like the people in the media. >> it's not just the people in the media. it's the bi-coastal nature of going to an -- going to stanforr hash regard and look down -- or harvard and looking down on people who didn't go to ivy league schools. he's with the hard working men and women every single day in ohio who are seeing the benefit of the economy. he talked about the steel workers going back to work. they are better off than the professional elitists. jesse: under obama where the country lost 300,000 to 400,000 manufacturing jobs. and this president has added over 300,000 manufacturing jobs. dianne feinstein, the senator from california, i think she is one of the ranking members on the senate intelligence committee and leading the charge against collusion and all that kind of stuff. it was discovered there was a chinese spy, a mole, who was her driver, for 20 years, driving the senator around. good knows what he was hearing in the front seat when she was chatting on the cell phone. and she is upset with trump for being a national security risk? president trump: it just came out democratic leader and the leader of the russian investigation, dianne feinstein, had a chinese spy as her driver for 20 years. and she is leading the russian investigation. jesse: it's so funny the democrats, they get hacked, podesta gives his password which was password to th the enemies. she has a mole in the front seat. debbie wasserman-schultz has some crazy i.t. guy. >> this is what the american people are watching and they are seeing this hypocrisy. and they say you have got to be kidding me. do they believe their own lies? the only place they believe the lies is on the coasts and the d.c. bubble. the people in the heartland see all of this. they know it, and this is what elected this president. this is what will deliver the mid-terms for him i believe again too. jesse: let's play sound from the president. he made a prediction. here it is. president trump: they are talking about this blue wave. i don't think so. i don't think so. maxine waters is leading the charge. maxine. she is a real beauty. maxine. a seriously low i.q. person. seriously. max seen waters. -- maxine waters. she is leading the charge. all throughout the country, 125 years, whoever has the white house, that party tends to lose the mid-terms. i don't know why. maybe it's comply season i. maybe you win and you are a little complacent. but that was two years ago. i just said why? we have the greatest economy in the history our country. we have things that never happened before. look, the democrats get in, they are going to raise your taxes, you will have crime all over the place. you will have people pouring across the border. i think it could be a red wave. i think it should be a red wave. jesse: corey, what do you see happening in the mid terms? >> i think you will see republicans gain seats in the u.s. senate. the math for the republicans is very favorable. particularly in those places where donald trump won two years ago where democrat incumbents are running for reelection. you will see a gain of 2-3 minimum. on the house side there is a possibility the republicans will keep that house in the majority. it will be a slimmer majority. but the republicans will hold the house. the reason for that is what donald trump outlined. are you better off today than you were two years ago? unequivocally by every metric the answer is yes. unemployment particularly among hispanics and african-americans are at the lowest levels ever recorded. all those things point to putting people back in office. i think you will see a republican majority come november. jesse: they have a democratic generic lead in the head-to-head congressional matchup. i don't think trump supporters talked to pollsters. so that's baked in there. it will be a lot tighter than people think. this was his third big campaign rally this week. we have so much to play for you. we are talking about the elections. let's talk about even further. 2020 the president name sod potential matchups and here is what he had to say. president trump: imagine running against pocahontas or crazy bernie. i have got to hand it to bernie. i saw him up there the other day, that hair is getting whiter and white and he's getting crazier and crazier. he said we'll stop donald trump. we are stopping him. i looked at my wife and said you have got to hand it to that guy. he doesn't quit. and that's okay. crazy bernie. he's one crazy dude. jesse: one crazy dude. what do you think about that one? >> he's cutting right into the base. even some of those who might have considered themselves pretty far left. jesse: on trade. >> and if you look at the jobs numbers, unemployment is down, even among high school dropouts. the party of the little guy. the party of the guy house the have nots. this president is coming along and making their lives better. what are the democrats going to do with that? what are the socialists going to do with that? jesse: the president said i love the poorly educated. i think he was saying that with love. >> he was. but look at the numbers that came out this week. african-americans are now supporting this president at 30%. if he gets double digits in the 2020 election -- jesse: black support for president trump has gone from 16% to 29% according to rasmussen. guys, unbelievable. gotta run. coming up, president trump versus king james. do not share needles or pens. don't reuse needles. do not take ozempic® if you have a personal or family history of medullary thyroid cancer, multiple endocrine neoplasia syndrome type 2, or if you are allergic to ozempic®. stop taking ozempic® and get medical help right away if you get a lump or swelling in your neck, severe stomach pain, itching, rash, or trouble breathing. serious side effects may happen, including pancreatitis. tell your doctor if you have diabetic retinopathy or vision changes. taking ozempic® with a sulfonylurea or insulin may increase the risk for low blood sugar. common side effects are nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, stomach pain, and constipation. some side effects can lead to dehydration, which may worsen kidney problems. i discovered the potential with ozempic®. ♪ oh! oh! oh! ozempic®! ♪ (vo) ask your healthcare provider if ozempic® is right for you. jesse: the president responded saying le bron james was just interviewed by the dumbest man on television, don lemon. he made le bron look smart, which isn't easy to do. i like mike. anna, i don't think this is that big of a deal. i don't know why people are getting so worked up about this. the president hits back when he's attacked. le bron james said something he didn't like and he hit him back. what's the big deal? >> i will say this, jesse. thing about kneeling during "the national anthem" was the original purpose why it was done. it's no longer a topic of discussion. sports athletes did it to shed light on police brutality. now the focus has changed to the level of disrespect to service members. jesse: it gets lost in the symbolism because of the time they chose to express themselves. and you understand that. they totally misread what they were doing. didn't see it was hurting their cause, and now they are trying to flip it and act like trump is being divisive when it was them who brought the disunity by kneeling. >> that is incorrect. the president's comments are beyond the pale as the president of the united states and the freed world. le bron james has been a stellar model of' sportsmanship, he spent his money to build a school for at-risk kids. he levied a judgment. [all talking at once] jesse: ladies, one at a time. >> i don't know you, but don't cut me off. jesse: we'll do this nicely and with class. wendy, let me respond to something you said. i agree le bron james has been very kind and generous and charitable off the court with his school and all he has done for young disadvantaged children. with that said, it's not right to say president trump has done nothing. he's created hundreds of thousands of jobs and given lots of opportunities to disadvantaged people. so i don't think that's appropriate. >> not only is it divisive, it's borderline racist. jesse: why? >> he called out by name colin kaepernick, stephen curry and le bron james. jesse: wait a second, anna. i can name about a dozen white people the president has attacked personally. >> what about what he's facing on twitter? why don't you listen to what i'm saying? >> you need to tell me actual facts. jesse: this has turned into something completely ridiculous. we are unable to have a conversation so i'm going to the next segment. thank you guys have much. the "new york times" hires a blatantly anti-trump racist to be a member of their editorial board. we'll react to that next. hydrants. here with reaction. terrance williams. i don't even have any words for that. take it away. >> that's a nasty woman. so of course the nasty "new york times" would hire her. but would they hire roseanne? no. i would tell them not to read the "new york times," but it's too late because nobody reads it anyway. i would get my news from nickelodeon. i don't know if this lady is chinese, japanese or crazy-nerks se. they are a bunch of hypocrites. jesse: they say she was being harassed by racist people on twitter and she responded to that harassment by imitating the rhetoric of her harassers. so they are saying people said racist stuff to her so she said racist stuff back to imitate them. does that make sense? >> that don't make no sense. there is something wrong with the fortune cookie that she's eating. jesse: terrance, i think you got yourself in trouble. i gotta run. we'll be right back. i have got to go to break. my father passed this truck down to me, that's the same thing i want to do with you. it's an emotional thing to watch your child grow up and especially get behind the wheel. i want to keep you know, stacking up the memories and the miles and the years. he's gonna get mine but i'm gonna get a new one! oh yeah! he's gonna get mine but i'm gonna get a new one! when it's time for your old chevy truck to become their new chevy truck, there's truck month. get 10 or 14 percent below msrp on 2018 silverado pickups when you finance with gm financial. plus, during truck month make no monthly payments for 90 days. find new roads at your local chevy dealer.

Go-tog-got-fell-good-com
Country
Mexico
People
Donald-trump
Good
Gentleman
Ending
Ohio
Purchases
Soybean-prices
Sg

Transcripts For FOXNEWSW Justice With Judge Jeanine 20180805 04:00:00

Former Westchester County, N.Y., D.A. Jeanine Pirro discusses the week's biggest legal stories. god father. it's time to go to the mattresses. really? the godfather? it's been a while since i saw "the godfather." but last i recall it meant one family was going to wipe out another. but you are not surprised. you already knew this, didn't you. i'm tired of being told not to believe our lying eyes when the truth is obvious whether it's peter strzok saying he hated and despised trump and would stop him becoming president, but it did not affect his work when he's the one who began counter-intelligence investigation against trump that we are still living with. or jeong's defenders saying there is no evidence her tweets had any bearing on her work. it appears the old gray lady has finally flipped her wig. time to go to the mattresses on a supreme court justice? really? here is my favorite quote from the godfather. we are going to make you an offer you can't refuse. stop your resistance. stop your obstruction. stop the hypocrisy and get on board with making america great again or get the hell out of the way. that's my open. if you love my opening statements, you will love my new book. the "new york times" number one best seller "liars, leakers, and liberals." president trump giving a fiery speech hitting on a number of topics while urging ohioans to vote for troy balderson in tuesday's state election. joining me is anthony scaramucci. good evening. >> congratulations on the book. i read it last week it's fabulous. god bless you. judge jeanine: the president tonight and you and i both know, he has energy from his audience that goes back and forth and i think he's at his strongest when in front of an audience like he was tonight. but when the democrats go forward in this special election tuesday. what are they going to say, the economy is rotten? we are not safe anymore? what are they going to say? >> i'm going back to your book. the playbook is republicans are racist and xenophobic. it's identity politics and politics of division. they can't argue the policies or the state of the economy or rising wages for the hispanic americans or african-american community. they try to divide and hit you with attacks. tonight the president was unleashing his vintage true self. it made me think back to two years ago back to the campaign. presidents don't get out on the campaign and rally people the way he is. he'll be so ready and so fresh for 2020 and right through the mid-term elections. it's a saturday night, he could be in bedminster relaxing. but he's in a 110 degree auditorium giving that kind of rousing speech. jesse: that's a great point -- judge jeanine: that's a great point. the man is a nonstop work. president trump: a vote for troims opponent is -- a vote for troy's opponent is a vote for open borders. they don't care about the crime, they don't care about your military and they don't care about your vets. the new platform of the democratic party is to abolish i.c.e. and not worry about crime. really? it doesn't work that way. judge jeanine: i don't know who wouldn't agree with that. >> it's a bad strategy for them. what happened is the president is a human wrecking ball for the democratic party and he set off the alarm bells on the far left. so all of these politicians that want to run tore president are -- run for president are racing towards the far left. i don't want to be a democratic strategist on your show. but it's the wrong strategy for them and they are playing into the president's hands. he speaks in common sense way to common people. when you listen to him speak like i did in wilkes-barre, pennsylvania, my hometown. my dad is from plains, 15 minutes from scranton. i think these people relate to him. he's the blue collar billionaire president. he is able to tap into their joy. he's able to tap into their aspirations. the policies have been phenomenal. it will be hard to argue against what the president is putting on the table for every day average americans. judge jeanine: the gdp and the tariffs. the president said tonight, if we get the trade deficit down the gdf goes up. this your forte. he talked about the fact we rebuilt china with a $500 billion a year trade deficit. it's time we rebuilt our own country. everybody understands that. this whole thing with tariffs, they talk about the fact that it's not a good thing for america, they are going to hurt us. explain this to me. >> the president's position is the trade system since the end of world war ii has been unbalanced. the u.s. did that to help build the rest of the world after the defend sayings of world war ii. -- with the -- after the devastation of world war ii. the president's point is we rebuilt the world. we helped the chinese. they are the second largest economy. the world has to turn around and allow us to have a symmetrical trading system where it's free and fair trade where their tariffs come down. and if you are not going to bring your tariffs down, we'll raise our tariff to the meet your tariffs. what i liked about the strategy is it's finally getting people to the table. the president of the e.u. juncker was in town last week. i think the president will eventually get his way. i had two or through conversations with him about that. i'm from wall street and understand capital flows. i'm worried about the tariffs because it could change the psychology in the market. the president has such great momentum. 18 fantastic economic months. let's dial into this surgically with great precision so we don't blow the momentum and positive psychology in the economy. judge jeanine: before we go, he made it clear, he said we make a car and china taxes it 25% when it gets over there. they make a car and we charge them 2.5% which they don't pay. that's real simple to me. >> that's correct. if you sell a harley davidson in germy. if it's $100,000 here, it's $125,000 there. what i don't want to have happen. any of the great momentum he created for these workers he was talking to tonight. i don't want any of that to be deflated. but he's on course. i think what he did with juncker last week is a great sign of things to come. i predict lower tariffs and more free trade for the world. judge jeanine: anthony scaramucci thanks so much. more from president trump. charlie kirk from turning point u.s.a. (vo) love. i got it. i gotcha baby. (vo) it's being there when you're needed most. he's the one. (vo love is knowing... it was meant to be. and love always keeps you safe. (vo) love is why we built a car you can trust for a long time. the all-new subaru impreza sedan and five-door. a car you can love no matter what road you're on. the subaru impreza. more than a car, it's a subaru. right now, get 0% apr financing on the 2018 subaru impreza. some of the greats. they talk about abe lincoln. honest abe. they say great things. judge jeanine: president trump saying some compare him to honest abe lincoln at tonight's alley. my next guest agrees and he knows how to rule up th -- knoww to rile up the left. his next movie "death of a nation" hits theater and the country this week. >> lincoln was elected to unite a nation and stop slavery. dem gnats feared him, went to war against him, assassinated him. the liberals, the people who wanted to improve society. judge jeanine: filmmaker and "new york times" best seller dinesh d'souza. i understand you have had some incredible premieres with distinguished guests at those premieres. how do you interpret what the president said tonight, based on your book, i actually read it, "death of a nation." >> we morph the head of lincoln and trump. this outrages a lot of people because they think how dare you compare trump and lincoln. on the face of it trump and lincoln temperamentally are quite different. lincoln is broogd, melancholy and philosophical. but there are situations that are similar. in 1860 an outsider republican candidate enters the race and wins it narrowly. the moment he's elected all hell breaks loose. the northern democrats openly call for his assassination. and the southern democrats are willing to break the country up rather than abide a lincoln presidency. here we are with an outsider trump who wins unexpectedly, and the democrats go nuts. here we are two years after the election. judge jeanine: and they are still nuts. >> the movie looks at fascism and race i'm to delegitimize trump. they say he's ineligible to be president even if people voted for him. judge jeanine: why is the issue of fascism so on the tips of everyone's tongues. >> where do you get the license in a democratic majority. the only amaly that works is -- the only analogy that works is hitler circa1923. if hitler were democratically elected we would agot it would be justified to use any means possible to get rid of them. the left is taking that logic based on saying he's a racist and white supremacist. so this poison is used to legitimize the left's violence and attempts to engineer a legal coup. our movie takes them at their word. we say let's look at farb i'm. -- look at fascism. let's look at the nazi 25-point agenda because they campaigned on that. state control of banks, state control of healthcare, state control of education. state control of religious liberty. no sane person can read this and say this is on the right. then i look at the fascism of the left today. the key movement of the nazis was the party is the state. and also using the state to neutralize your critics. judge jeanine: when the police are standing down in some cases that's neutralizing not just the critics. but it allows the left to go forward with illegal activity and the whole idea of shugd down free speech. vandalizing the property of anyone on the right. assaulting, creating a crowd as maxine waters calls it. >> mussolini has para military fighters called the black shirts. if you look at what's going on with antifa. they wear black and carry bats and beat up their opponents. these people call themselves anti-fascists but they look like and act like fascists. judge jeanine: thanks for being here and congratulations on your movie. charlie kirk is on deck. "justice" rolls on in just a moment. .. [burke] at farmers, we've seen almost everything so we know how to cover almost anything. even "vengeful vermin." not so cute when they're angry. and we covered it. talk to farmers. we know a thing or two because we've seen a thing or two. ♪ we are farmers. bum-pa-dum, bum-bum-bum-bum ♪ recent moves by the u.s. alarming. the u.s. warned countries against violating international sanctions against north korea. the foreign minister said his country has initiated goodwill gestures. this came in singapore following a handshake with secretary of state mike pompeo. negotiations for the nafta trade agreement are to be completed as quickly as possible after months of delays there has been progress. i'm anita vogel. now let's take you back to "justice with judge jeanine." unemployment rate for americans without a high school diploma. this just came out two days ago. i figure i might as we'll tell you because they won't say it. without a diploma, high school is at the lowest level ever recorded. how good is that. economic growth last quarter hit 4.1. you all know that. you all know this, too. remember i used to say they always voted democrat. the african-american unemployment rate has achieved the lowest level ever record in history. judge jeanine: president trump's speech in ohio covering a lot of ground. let's get to it with my political panel, former new york state assemblyman steve levy and chris hahn. gentlemen, steve, welcome to justice. let's start with the economy. unemployment of those with high school diplomas is at its lowest level ever record. how are you democrats going to counter that one? >> it's a good number. i don't begrudge it. i give the president some credit for it. it continues a trend started with obama. the unemployment was on its way down when the president took over. in 2014, president trump had two of his strongest gdp numbers right before the mid-term election. he still lost seats in the house and they lost control of the senate. those numbers while they will help a president get re-elected do not necessarily translate into congressional wins. congressional wins are about a lot of things. the economy kiss one of them, but it's not a driving force. >> it's great being at your book signing. thanks for signing my book it's an incredible read, by the way. looking at the last year of the obama administration we had a sluggish 1.6% growth rate. many were saying that's the new normal. it doesn't have to be. president trump came in and said we can do better. we'll cut taxes and we'll see what happens. look what happened. 4% growth in the last quarter. consumer confidence the highest level since the year 2000. unemployment 3.9%. the lowest level in 20 years. food stamps are down. judge jeanine: so, chris, what steve is saying is the facts are the facts. when you talk about 5.1 with obama and he still lost, that's got nothing do with it. it's really about sustainability. what the president and what steve are saying is we have all the factors here for the sustainability of the economy. and when the democrats say they are going to raise taxes, do you think that helps? >> i agree it's about sustain built. the president's total gdp is a small percentage point higher. judge jeanine: really? read my book. >> his entire 19-month presidency. the last 19 months of the obama presidency the economy created more jobs than the first 19 months of the trump presidency. those are the numbers, those are the facts. google it, look it up. judge jeanine: is that true, steve. >> president trump's administration is the only one since world war ii that did not have at least a 3% growth for a total year. the president right now is on pace to achieve 3% for the whole year. but look at the other numbers. manufacturing is booming. manufacturing is up to its highest level since 2007. construction jobs are way up. that in -- that inures to the benefit of the middle class. normally the party in power loses on those off years. there was an anomaly. 1998 with president clinton. he had a strong economy. if there is anything that can break that trend, it's the strong economy we are seeing today. >> there was another factor in 1998. the democrats overreached. judge jeanine: that's why clinton lost his law license. don't talk about overreaching. you want to go russia collusion, don't start with plea, chris. >> if we are going to talk about impeachment, we'll have a lot of impeachment. but democrats might be making the same mistake as republicans did in '98. there was an overreach there and the public reacted negatively. you might be seeing that this year as well which is why democratic leadership is trying to tell all its minions stop talking about impeachment because it can backfire. judge jeanine: chris? >> i agree. it would be a complete overreach to make impeachment the issue and an overreach to impeach unless there was something to impeach about. the democrats have to be careful or they will hand trump a 2020 victory. judge jeanine: chris, i'm going to keep a record of what you just said because i think you believe it. >> i do believe it. i always tell you what i believe. judge jeanine: steve levy, thank you for being on "justice." brandon straka of the walk away project is next. and charlie kirk will talk about dear great-great grandfather, you made moonshine in a backwoods still. smuggled booze and dodged the law. even when they brought you in, they could never hold you down. when i built my family tree and found you, i found my sense of adventure. i set off on a new life, a million miles away. i'm heidi choiniere, and this is my ancestry story. now with over 10 billion historical records, discover your story. get started for free at ancestry.com ♪ it's so hard to believe ♪ but it's all coming back me. ♪ baby, baby, baby. all you can eat is back, baby. applebee's. -we're in a small room. what?! -welcome. -[ gasps ] a bigger room?! -how many of you use car insurance? -oh. -well, what if i showed you this? -[ laughing ] ho-ho-ho! -wow. -it's a computer. -we compare rates to help you get the price and coverage that's right for you. -that's amazing! the only thing that would make this better is if my mom were here. what?! an unexpected ending! take a listen to this one made about him after his thursday rally. >> there is no way that anyone who knows donald trump could watch him and not come away with a feeling that the president of the united states is completely unhinged and getting worse by the day. judge jeanine: that's just one of the most of outrageous things i have heard this week. joining me with more reaction to that, charlie kirk. there isn't any way anyone who knows donald trump unless they are bought in some way doesn't think he's totally unhinged. what's your reaction to that? >> i couldn't disagree more. and the american people disagree with that. he's getting more and more popular. here is the stunning thing about the trump presidency. despite unprecedented media backlash and targeting, he's going against historical trends. usually tho -- usually presidens get less popular in their first term. hispanic approval rating is up 10 points and african-american* approval is 29 points. judge jeanine: if somebody is unhinged with all the hits he's been taking. anybody would buckle and be in a corner. this guy is fighting the fight every day. he gets energy from this stuff. who benefits from it? we do. speaking of that. madonna is suggests donald trump motivate herd to move to portugal. it's a full screen. >> i felt like we needed a change and i wanted to get out of america for a minute. as you know, this is not america's finest hour, not that leaving america makes anything different or changes anything. >> we as conservatives remain loyal and patriotic no matter who is president of the united states. liberals base their love or lack of love of america based upon whether their team member is president of the united states. when obama was president i was just as loyal and committed as an american as i am today. we believe in our history, heritage and people. liberals like madonna dismiss america if there is a republican in the white house. are you thankful to be an american or are you angry to be an american. many liberals are angry when we should be pouring out our gratitude. judge jeanine: people who hate america so much should rethink their address. kathy griffin. she is always good for outrageous. this tweet. trump and his administration are the enemy of the american people. charlie? >> the president is the ally and the friend of the american people. let's add some context for viewers at home. kathy griffin about a year ago posted a picture with a decapitated head of the president of the united states and then tried to play the victim 48 hours later that everyone was going after her. imagine for a second a conservative did that horrific stunt with barack obama's head. they would be investigated by the secret service. judge jeanine: they would be taken out in cuffs. >> exactly with a hate crime. we keep on saying the left are losing their minds. trump is the ally of the american people. the liberal elite, the more they talk, the more popular trump gets. unlike other historical trend, donald trump is getting more popular with time and we are just getting started. judge jeanine: the whole idea of the lowest unemployment ever for people with high school diplomas. with high school diplomas. it's across the board, this positive economy. charlie kirk, thank you for being us tonight. he walked away from the left and he walked right into justice. the walkaway campaign founder is with us with an update o with the new united explorer card, i get rewarded wherever i go. going out for a bite. rewarded! going new places. rewarded! learn more at theexplorercard.com moderate to severe rheumatoid arthritis was intense. my mom's pain from i wondered if she could do the stuff she does for us which is kinda, a lot. and if that pain could mean something worse. joint pain could mean joint damage. enbrel helps relieve joint pain, and helps stop further damage enbrel may lower your ability to fight infections. serious, sometimes fatal events including infections, tuberculosis, lymphoma other cancers, nervous system and blood disorders and allergic reactions have occurred. tell your doctor if you've been someplace where fungal infections are common. or if you're prone to infections, have cuts or sores, have had hepatitis b, have been treated for heart failure or if you have persistent fever, bruising, bleeding or paleness. don't start enbrel if you have an infection like the flu. since enbrel, my mom's back to being my mom. visit enbrel.com... and use the joint damage simulator to see how joint damage could progress. ask about enbrel. enbrel. fda approved for over 18 years. judge jeanine: that's president trump with quite the speech tonight at his rally. my next guest is the founder of the #walk away campaign. he urges people to leave liberalism which he says has become too intolerant. brandon straka joins me. the last time you were here you were on your way to the u.k. and had just become a hit with your documentation of all of the hysteria on the left and the lying hysteria. what's happened since then? >> a lot has happened. the walkaway campaign has continued to grow. it's had an amazing impact. people are putting out their testimonials and it's growing like wildfires, especially in the minority community which i love to see. judge jeanine: the testimonials. do they attest to things that happened to them or what they see as untrue or fake? >> it's a combination of all these things. we see and hear the stories every day about violence, vandalism and petty and destructive behavior. even in people's personal lives. they are being cut off by their siblings and best friends or saying i support the president. they are losing their jobs. it's crazy. judge jeanine: it's even worse than that. the president's star on the hollywood walk of fame as well as the cabinet member's boat as well as cabinet members being thrown out of restaurants and grossy stores. i had my own issue with being basically thrown off a set on out of a building. >> i heard about that. judge jeanine: this intolerance. do people not understand how un-american that is? >> we have gone beyond anti-trump. it's play and thely anti-american -- it's blatantly antiamerican. conservatives stood by as they watched the erosion of american ideals under the obama administration. we didn't see anything like this. i was a liberal at that time. i was a obama supporter. i did not see people on the right behaving this way. judge jeanine: what is it you saw on the left that caused you, you are a liberal, you are gay, talk to me, why? and to step out. a lot of people who stepped out, they get in a lot of trouble with the left. >> i think the left has done a successful job in pushing this narrative of victimhood and oppressors. for many of us on the left myself included, we bought into it. i became a liberal because i'm against racism. judge jeanine: we are all against racism. >> right. but i didn't know that. the common idea is people on the right hate hispanic and gay people, hate hate hate hate hate. this is what we hear over and over again. but when the lightbulb came on in my head, i said i'm here because i'm against all these things, but you guys hate white people and straight people and you hate men. judge jeanine: sarah jeong, the woman from the "new york times," and the "new york times" dug up their heels in. she hates whites, she hates men. the excuse and the "times" bought it, she said i feel like i have been harassed. >> this is how liberal ideology gets ingrained in our culture through our education system and the media. roseanne lost her show. lost her show. but the "new york times" is standing by this woman. by the way, these tweets go back to 2013. this is five years of virulently racist tweets. they are standing by her because they say she is an asian-american woman so by default she is a victim of racism. the white people she made the tweets about, they deserve it. judge jeanine: when you say five years, the "new york times" says they are old tweets. 2015 is old? what are you up to next. >> we have big things planned for the walkaway campaign. i would like to you have me back on your show so i can announce it. judge jeanine: that's a good tease. tease. we'll be right back, everybody. woman: it felt great not having hepatitis c. it's like a load off my shoulders. i was just excited for it to be over. harvoni is a revolutionary treatment for the most common type of chronic hepatitis c. it's been prescribed to more than a quarter million people and is proven to cure up to 99% of patients who have had no prior treatment with 12 weeks. certain patients can be cured with just 8 weeks of harvoni. before starting harvoni your doctor will test to see if you've ever had hepatitis b which may flare up and cause serious liver problems during and after harvoni treatment. tell your doctor if you've ever had hepatitis b, a liver transplant, other liver or kidney problems, hiv or any other medical conditions and about all the medicines you take including herbal supplements. taking amiodarone with harvoni can cause a serious slowing of your heart rate. common side effects of harvoni include tiredness, headache and weakness. ready to let go of hep c? ask your hep c specialist about harvoni.

Popular-trump
Rally
Troy-balderson
Support
Highlights
Running
Ohio
Godfather
God
Mattresses
Didn-t
Being

Transcripts For CNNW Smerconish 20180804 13:00:00

world. they explode the "new york time times", are seemingly racist tweets inexcusable as it claims. are they claiming the hoax, the lawyer says this is freedom of speech is that going to work. plus the boston globe uncovers a tsa program call quiet skies that been spying on thousands of ordinary americans. is that good post--9/11 police work neighborhood, several primaries not yet old enough to vote for themself, i'll ask when navigating controversial issues in our political process. first, are tweets making fun of white the people necessarily racist? and are attacks on police to be taken at face value? those questions arose this week regarding the "new york times" new hire sarah john a 30-year-old technology writer hired for their prestigious editorial board. typically for a conversation like this i'd go to the "time's," today there was nothing in the print version for hatred of white the people, police, et cetera, et set ramp that's something i noted on twitter, which prompted somebody else to reply, well, what else do you need to know? is it that simple? sit heard she tweeted f the police multiple times? perhaps the president retweeted the drenl report that calls her out. i know one time she said f the police. she included a clip of an animated movie she was watching in which dog raccoons with image cal testicles, i kid you not, have a standoff with comes. i might question her tape in film. but did that in anyway mitigate her question of the police? hopefully they'll be nor forthcoming. what do we know about sarah john? on paper, she sound impressive a journalist and a lawyer, a senior writer wrote the internet of gar badge, online harassment and the difficulty of regulating it. at harvard, she was name to foosh's 30 under 30 list for media in 2017, as soon as she was hired, old posts were posted on twitter which sound completely racist, such as dumbass white people maik marking up the internet with their opinions like dogs. white men stop breathing. you will go ex10th soon. this was my plan all along, jeong says her response were in line with attempting to punch back. she quoted post as a woman of color on the internet, i have faced torrents of online hate often along this vain. these two examples. if i saw you, i would south carolina right if your lesbian face shut the f up you dog eating and a slur. she added i engaged in what i thought of at the time as counter trolling. while it was intended as satire, i deeply regret my harassers, general audiences do not engage in such engagements. they say they were already aware of her twitter past and understood it for what it was the statement read, inpart, we have candid conversations with sarah as our thorough vetting process. she understands this type of rhetoric is not acceptable at the time and we are confident she will be an important voice for the editorial board moving forward. interestingly, it's significant due to another hire in february, quinn nortop, when some of ms. nortop's old tweets surfaced, which included racial slurs and a friendship with an internet troll that works with a neo-nazi website, she ended up stepping down that way. at that time they were not aware of her tweets before they hired her. we reached out to sarah jeong, we were told she was up available. i want to tell you what you think, go to my website, answer the question, should sarah jeong's twitter history have preclude her hire by the "new york times" as a member? joining me rich lowrie, editor of the review, does it patz if shelves counter punching in. >> usually when you are counterpumping, you are replying no other people on twitter. most of us done react to that with a year's long history of racist tweets, which she did here. so i think that explanation is complete nonsense. i don't like the practice of rum annualing back through people's twitter accounts and firing them on the bafrls of. that so o-of-basis of that. so i think the explanation is total nonsense. >> listen, i want to know the context for all of these controversial tweets. i went look myself and found they are dig lus animated movie a still image that shows the animation and at the top of that f he police. maybe it's intended as a joke in that instance. i noticed there were others, many more, one relative to ferguson, which i guess the context, teaching moment music. maybe. maybe the lesson of ferguson is f most of the police. >> that doesn't seem to be in response to some twitter troll. >> the same thing with a lot of oother justifying tweets. she retweeted the n word. it was someone using the n-word satirically to control race its and make the pont that they're wrong. the fact that she used her word has enough to be ousted before she got there i don't see how you fire quinn norton and stand behind jeong. the "new york times" i don't think has a defensible standard, clearly if she had used the n-worked she would have been fired. she can go open for years saying horrible thimgs about white people and that's okay. >> look, i'm a big fan of the "time's." i read it multiple times online Michael Smerconish tackles the American political and news stories of the week, offering only one kind of talking points: his own. known trifs, do you they ninl it, sleep during the flight or seem overly familiar with the airport or have a cold, penetrating stare? the program has been widely criticized by the boston global. i want to know where before i join the critics. i have written two books about airline security. i am a believer of police using instinct. consider the work of jose perez, melendez an immigration inspector august 4, 2001, stopped moemt moment al ka tanni, he was a saudi national. he incorrectly filled out a claim. he put his name into a computer. it came up negative. his documents seemed genuine a check of his possessions unremarkable. melendez said this guy just gave me the creeps and said throughout my training and military faerns experience my first empression, he was a young male, black trousers, black shoes, he was 5'6 another, impeccable shoulders and thin waist. a military appearance. poi upon eye contact, he had facial gestures which appeared air began. he had a deep staring look. well the next time the united states encountered him he was fighting for al qaeda in afghanistan. here's the kicker. we now know at the moment he was being given his walking papers by melendez in orlando. there to peck him up as a new arrival is mohammed at that. which is why they said his conduct may have spared the capitol or white house attacked. he right hand as the 20th hijacker the terrorists should have fended off theatre passenger revolt an continuing on to washington. joining me from the washington investigative police, janna winter. i want to make sleclear i think it's a great report. i have mixed penalties. i want "instinct" to be honored by law enforcement, but i don't want them on a fool's errand. do you think we can do both is this. >> i would like to think so. what we know at this point is obviously there has been a lot of bipartisan outrage, i will note, which is very rare, since our story published last weekend and congress agreed on thursday, tsa officials said, yeah, we followed 5,000 u.s. citizens not under investigation or suspected of any time and not on any terrorist watch list and 5,000 since march. and they have zero threats. they found nothing. they found no one that measures any follow up. no characters. nothing. i think according to people i've spoken with and other people within ntsa the resources which are slim-to-none to be focused on things that might be of focus. >> i think that's fair. give me an example. what stand out in your mind from those cases that are known to you of someone who has been followed in the sky that would seem ridiculous. >> i would encourage everyone to keep reading our reporting, but i'll say that someone being assigned to follow a southwest flight attendant working the flights, writing down the behavior, everything they do if they change directions, the air marshals are basically looking at their behavior check list saying, okay, she's not drink >> oh, then, absolutely. then everyone you are traveling with. right to you there is a focus on anyone in turkey for a certain amount of time. >> so where is this headed? i know you are continuing to report on it. you have intimated there is more to dom. what is congress going to do? >> i think congress is ticked off. tsa told me on the record that congress had been briefed. the relevant committees, oversight, have all been toll about this program. during a closed door briefing on thursday, there was a bit of a back and forth. the committee zappers said you never told us anything about this. this is not something that will die down. some lawmakers are calling for hearings. i think that will happen. i don't think anyone is letting this go. there is a lot of things filing. civil liberty groups. >> thanks for your reporting. we'll continue to read. >> thanks. let's see what you are saying on my smerconish twitter and facebook pages. what do we got? i can't get my head around this. they follow ordinary people around who do not fit any profile of terror or violence. but appeared nervous on a plane. what happens flying makes them nervous. you are getting followed because of what you been. once you are being followed, you might not think this is an appropriate defense, i'm explaining, then they're noting etching, including your habits, posture, how nervous you are, whether you are drinnking. it seems like a waste of resources, but let's not go so far that heroes leak who sea melendez and perez operating on instinct because the guy gives them the creeps and he turns out to be the would be 20ing hijacker can't be stopped. i want them to be in power of law enforcement. they are saying the children's deaths were stanld. he says he's protected by freedom of speech. is that financial to fly neighborhood, thanks to the lack of age requirement, are several candidates ready for this not yet old enough to vote for themselves? i'll tuque twole in the 2018 i'll tuque twole in the 2018 political climb. does your business internet provider promise a lot? let's see who delivers more. comcast business gives you gig-speed in more places. the others don't. we offer up to 6 hours of 4g wireless network backup. everyone else, no way. we let calls from any of your devices come from your business number. them, not so much. we let you keep an eye on your business from anywhere. the others? nope! for a limited time, when you get fast, reliable internet, you can add voice for just $24.95 more per month. call or go online today. call or go on line today. >> is making up a heinous lie about tragic deaths something you can be sued for is it covered by freedom of speech? that's a case being litigated in which the parents of a child killed in the sandy hook school are suing alex jones for his defamation claiming the massacre is a hoax. here's sample. the family minds i finds actionable. >> the official story of sandy hook has more holes in it than swiss cheese. my gut tells me people controlling the government were involved in this. don't think they wouldn't stage something like this. they kill little kids every day all day. it's the globalists. they're doing it, doing it, stanling it. >> in court, jones' lawyer admitted quote maybe it's fringe speech. measure it's dangerous speech. it's historical he phyperbole a its core to silence them through costly litigation. does he have a case? joerng me is a reporter covering the trial for the statesman. i remember speaking to you two years ago when alex jones was in the midst of a child custody battle. hits own lawyer at that time said this is all schtick. don't take it so seriously. that would be like holding jack nicklaus accountable for the joker in the "batman" movie. same thing is going on here, right? >> yeah, pretty much. in fact in that case back in april of 2017, they were largely able to exclude any use of alex jones on air personally in that case, so they didn't have to make that argument to any great degree. yes. it's the same thing. it's people tune in to watch the bombbast. they have a certain expectation. this is alex jones, they don't take it literally, apparently in a few cases they cake it quite literally and act on it. >> we know some people say according to plaintiffs, they have been stalked and had to move a number of times, explain. >> well, these are the parents of one of the children who are killed. and he has placed them in the middle of this sort of tirado because he says on a cnn intervi interview, de la rosa were using a blue screen, there was something fishy about the way the interview was done. that would suggest they were a part of this hoax. and as a result of this, they have been stalked.n they had to move seven times, that was woman who ultimately was sent to federal prison for issuing death threats against them. shelves instructed on her release from prison she can't listen to alex jones anymore. so they said, they resisted suing him for many years. and then back in april of 2017, he re-issued these claims and they decided enough is enough, heels not going to stop doing this. so they finally filed suit and in texas the defamation law requires you to file within a year. so by remaking or stating these claims, he revived their ability. that's at issue here has he said enough within the year of the statute of limitations to qualify as defamation? ? here's the take away, at least according to me, are you on the scene the take away is that people follow this guy and i mean some people in high places follow this guy. when bush comes to shove and he is challenged in a courtroom, his lawyers say you didn't really believe that, right? it's like the equivalent of pro wrestling. it's all bs. something jones has to fight against to keep that understand. >> yeah, in fact, in this blue screen argument, his lawyer says, you know, you can't prove that what he said was defamatory. even if it was wrong, it was merely, what he understands, an penalties masquerading as fact. that's the term of art. so he's saying that, you know, take it with a grain of salt, that he's not a journalist, he should not be held to journalistic standards. the plaintiffs have gone to some length to establish that he makes claims that he is an investigator, that he knows what he is talking about, that his blue screen claim is based on his deep experience in broadcasting and there is no reason that a listener should realize that he's not making these claims supported by fact. and that essentially that because of who he is, he's risk free. he can rant as much as he wants without having to back up his claim. >> thank you, jonathan. i want his audience to know to the extent they are paying attention to me at cnn this is all schtick. it's an act. that's his defense. so don't take it seriously and what an injustice done to those parents if their case is proven. thank you for being here. >> thanks a lot. let's check in on your tweets and facebook comments, hey, alex jones was an actor when he was getting divorced. now he's a journalist. we should call him what he is a vitamin supplement salesman. i get it. >> that hard core audience he's attracted to at youtube, they don't get it. he is trying to to have it in court both ways, people don't do this, trying to maintain that audience as a provocateurs. it's insense. should sarah jeong's history precluded her from the "new york times," go vote. my next guest on the ballot in the gubernatorial primary this week. but they are not old enough to vote themselves. [telephone ring] ahoy-hoy. alexander graham bell here... no, no, my number is one, you must want two! two, i say!! like my father before... [telephone ring] like my father before... ahoy-hoy! as long as people talk too loudly on the phone, you can count on geico saving folks money. fifteen minutes could save you fifteen percent or more on car insurance. i'm ready. with tremfya®, you can get clearer. and stay clearer. in fact, most patients who saw 90% clearer skin at 28 weeks stayed clearer through 48 weeks. tremfya® works better than humira® at providing clearer skin, and more patients were symptom free with tremfya®. tremfya® may lower your ability to fight infections and may increase your risk of infections. before treatment, your doctor should check you for infections and tuberculosis. tell your doctor if you have an infection or have symptoms such as: fever, sweats, chills, muscle aches or cough. before starting tremfya® tell your doctor if you plan to or have recently received a vaccine. ask your doctor about tremfya®. tremfya®. because you deserve to stay clearer. janssen wants to help you explore cost support options. chicken! that's right, chicken?! candace-- new chicken creations from starkist. buffalo style chicken in a pouch-- bold choice, charlie! just tear, eat... mmmmm. and go! try all of my chicken creations! chicken! so there's something differentant this week's state primary in kansas to replace the governor who left for a diplomatic post. several of the candidates aren't old enough to vote yet. it's quite a crowded field. they include the current governor, secretary of state, state insurance commissioner a doctor, businessman and 17-year-old tyler ruzic. on the democratic side a former wichita mayor, a farmer a family doctor are up against 17-year-old jack ferguson. the students have gotten a unique taste of the process taking stands, participating in debates all before graduating from high school. i wanted to see what they've learned and are thinking about the issues. alet me begin with you. you are 17. you can't vote. what should the voting age be, in local elections, there has been a trend across the country to lower the age. what should that number be? >> i really believe 16 would be a better number, most people can drive. people can, you can work a part-time job. you are paying taxes. a lot of 16-year-olds are productive members of our society. i believe they should have a right to say how the government functions. there are a lot of 16-year-olds more politically aware than people much old early. i think i not much about age but political awareness an with the rise of the internet and things, it is easier than ever for within people to be informed voters. i think 16 would be a good age and it would allow for greater involvement in our democratic system. >> tyler, what's it been like out on the campaign trail? do people tend to take you seriously or do they think this is somewhat of a lark. >> people definitely fake me seriously. they see on both a republican and democratic side, i'm the most moderate in this race, as moderate as i like to refer to mile as, they take me seriously from the beginning. in the op ed i wrote for the kansas city star, i said the idea is not age that matters in the kansas governor's race, i think people are focusing on my ideas. the voters are behind me, they're taking me seriously the state republican party has really been doing everything they can to express my voice by not including me in the state party sponsor debates. >> a cent ris a man after my own heart, jack ferguson, medical marijuana the rules have been relax in kansas city, how far should we go? give me a good answer. >> we should legalize it for recreational purposes, do what colorado have done and use the funds for our infrastructure system. colorado used it for their infrastructure system. we can use that in kansas, it's an issue of ensuring we have the funds to properly educate our children. >> that sounds pretty liberal. are you prepared to go that far and open the doors? >> i think the theme of my campaign is we have to meet in the middle and focus on where we agree and disagree with principle president reagan. what i believe is when it comes to marijuana, i believe on the medical level it should with recognized. we should decriminalize before full criminalization the stance the issue if kansas has many different perspectives, obviously, kansas is taking a more conservative look at the issue and i think you know our action on the issue of marijuana should be representative of the people in the state of kansas, not just following the trend of our great neighbors in missouri or colorado. >> jack, what should be the minimum wage? kansas follows the $7.25 federal minimum wage. set the number, what should it be? >> i definitely believe it should be much higher. 15 would be ideal, that is the minimum someone can work 40 hours a week and thought be in poverty. we should make so it no one does that, also, i believe that is one issue we need to be incremental on. i believe going to 10, 10, 12 in the beginning. the goal should be 15. we are working so no one has to work 40 hours a week and be in poverty? tyler, what's the number in. >> i think 7:25 may be a good base sign for it. i know that many young people are able start jobs a little bit at a higher pay than that. but obviously, many minimum wage jobs are low skill. they don't require a college degree. at many times don't require a high school diploma. there is a reason why it's lower. i believe the federal government should get out of the age, the wage issue. i think it should be more localized and up to communities, municipalities and countys to set a better number so they can set a wage that individual economic and fiscal needs and businesses and workers in their communities. >> guys, i think it's great you are running. i, myself, wasn't when i was in my 20s. it didn't work out for me but it was one of the best experiences of my life. so i salute you both. thank you for being here. >> thank you so much for having us on today. >> yes, thank you. >> jack ferguson, tyler ruzic on a kick for all of us at some point in the future. don't you think? up next, when nuclear warfares were at their peek, they built a bunker in west virginia large enough for both members of congress to 0er79 under ground. i visited thising woo. i still have questions. when you have a baby gentle means everything to you and to us. so at johnson's, we improved everything. we used 50% fewer ingredients. took out dyes, parabens, phthalates and sulfates. beat the top safety standards in the world and added one handed pumps. gentle means pure, gentle means safe, gentle means love. the new johnson's®. if you spit blood you may have gum problems,s and could be on the journey to much worse. try parodontax toothpaste. it's clinically proven to remove plaque, the main cause of bleeding gums. for healthy gums and strong teeth. leave bleeding gums behind with parodontax toothpaste. for whole home freshness. nuclear war with the soviets. it is buried beneath west virginia's greenbriar resort, a spectacular vacation destination for countless generation s of american families. dwight eisenhower initiated construction of the bunker at the outset of the cold war. it was maintained as an active facility complete with regularly rotated food supply to house inhabitants up to six months. in 1992, a journalist exposed the setup in a "the washington post" magazine story titled the ultimate congressional hide away. today the tour costs $39 a person. it is worth the price. even though as a taxpayer, i thought i already paid for it. hidden behind four blast doors, contamination chambers, 18 dorms designed to house more than a thousand people, a power plant with purification equipment, including three 25,000 gallon water tanks and three 14,000 gallon fuel tanks. communications area with tv production and audio recording booths. medical clinic with a dozen hospital beds and operating rooms. pharmacy, cafeteria, meeting rooms for the house and senate. this is a video of me checking out thickness of the blast doors. part of it is how they were hidden in plain sight. the more i saw, the longer my his of open questions. the bunker is said to be two underground football fields. why did i see only half that square footage? we were told today the bunker is used for data storage by csx, a division of the railroad that once owned greenbriar. did data storage necessitate replacement of power generators, filling of the water tanks or maintenance of diesel fuel. my mind racing, i returned to my cottage, decided to e-mail the journalist now 26 years after his discovery. was it possible the bunker was still hiding in plain sight i asked. indeed it could be, the perfect cover, both decommissioned but operational at a moment's notice. he replied why not. he wrote adding personally, personally i don't think so, but i've often wondered. well, i'm wondering too, but what a great vacation. still to come, your best and worst tweets and facebook comments. and the results on this question, go vote. should sarah jong's twitter history preclude her hire from "new york times" as an editorial board member? ♪ (electronic dance music)♪ ♪ comcast, building america's largest gig-speed network. time to see how you responded to the survey question. should sarah jones' twitter history preclude her hire by "new york times" as an editorial member? 7461 votes. 61% say yes, should have precluded. 39% say no. here's more of what came in during the course of the program. what have we got. sm the only issue most folks have with her is the double standard bigger than the raccoon balls in her anti-police video. if it were not white folks the way some of the tweets do focus, if it had been minorities, people of color, some other ethnic racial group, i don't think they would have hired her. i think your point is well taken in that regard. what else? smerconish, what's the difference between her and roseanne bar other than her fancy degree and she is liberal counter puncher is spin. if she's sending back something nasty to a person that says if i saw you i would sock you in your lesbian face or shut the [bleep] up, it is a slur, it is horrible. she gets a license from me to say whatever she wants to say to those individuals. counter punching, i don't do it. i don't do it. i just ignore the nasty ones that come into my own feed, but to each their own. but unsolicited to go after cops, you know, that's different. i looked at that animated video, and maybe she thought she was being funny, f the police in the raccoon dog video. going to probably do wonders for that movie, but i see a difference between the two, that which is unprompted and that which is in response to this sort of thing. give me another one. should trump be fired for his tweets, if not, then nobody else should be. now dottie, you're ruining the programming because we haven't mentioned the president this week, not deliberately. it is the first show, i have to say this. it is the first program i have done in a few years where not one of my four blocks was all about donald j. trump. i don't think since before the election, since he was candidate trump, not since mh370 disappeared have i done a show that's trumpless. and you just spoiled that. see you next week. check out the program on cnn go

Tweets
Issues
Process
Themself
Fun
First
People
Washington-investigative-police
Questions
Sarah-john
White
New-york-times

vimarsana © 2020. All Rights Reserved.