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Transcripts For FOXNEWSW The Five 20180205 22:00:00

that play in that situation. juan, what did you think? >> juan: i loved it. what's interesting about the brady thing, people are criticizing bill belichick, genius coach of the patriots, because his quarterbacks hand was injured. it had been injured and he was wearing gloves. i think there was no glove on the right hand last night. but to ask a guy to go out and catch a pass, 40 years old, what if he had gotten hit, some linebacker came across and hit him, wouldn't have been a celebration in boston. the other play, both catches. i thought that is high risk, fourth down. i am surprised they went for it. and then to do that, you've got to take your hat off to the philly coach. >> jesse: great scheme and they executed it perfectly. dana, your mascot theory was correct. >> dana: i am 6 for 6. every year. follow me. what is a fleece -- auntie for -- antifa and destroying public and private property. somehow we find this acceptable. it is not acceptable behavior. you don't have any role in the team winning. it's not an achievement on your part. to destroy things is disgusting. >> jesse: you don't know what it's like to be a philly fan. i think we are going to give them a little slack. >> kimberly: i knew you were going to say that. they have been waiting for it for long to have some kind of victory. everybody knows, the philadelphia eagles fans, this is the way they roll. win or lose. as a former prosecutor, i'm not going to be critical. i think it's inappropriate. we don't need to be lighting things on fire. we don't need to be flipping buses. unlike antifa, they didn't stab a horse. but they ate from one. >> greg: they did something with a horse. >> jesse: let's talk about the performances. pink had the flu. she paid respect to the red, white, and blue. ♪ >> ♪ home of the brave >> jesse: greg, you didn't like that? >> greg: are the one thing i don't like is when they change the note at the end to surprise you. we're going to go high. no, we are going low. we didn't have the clip of her when she spit her lozenge out onto the head of a sick child. i couldn't believe she did that. >> jesse: that is fake news. >> dana: i like pink and i like the guy who sang before, "america the beautiful" ." and i like the children's choir. they brought the community out for the game. >> jesse: we have footage of justin timberlake. he did the halftime performance. some people liked it, some people didn't. ♪ >> ♪ i would dive for you >> jesse: they had prints in the hologram, what did you think? >> juan: wasn't a hologram. prince said if -- he thinks when natalie cole was doing it with her dad, thought it was wrong. he said if i was supposed to play with duke ellington, he would've been alive at the same time. i think the holograms are pretty cool. i remember being in vegas and seeing that michael jackson one. unbelievable. i think what they wanted to do, given they knew people were going to criticize it, they went with the screen. i don't think it was the most memorable halftime show. didn't match the equipment malfunction. >> greg: to that point, it would've been more fair. j.t. was on his best behavior. the whole thing should've been janet. why is he there and she's not. strikes me as a bit sexist. the wardrobe was straight out of a house party from the '90s. >> jesse: he wants another nip slip. >> greg: i can't say i would've wanted -- but why is he there and she is not. >> ♪ because i've had the time of my life ♪ ♪ i never felt this way before ♪ >> jesse: what did you think? >> kimberly: i loved that move. i would like to do it. >> jesse: be hoisted up like that. >> kimberly: fun. really good commercial. the dancing was better than the justin timberlake piece. i don't know. i didn't think the justin timberlake thing was that good. >> jesse: you liked the justin timberlake performance. >> dana: i keep liking things no one else likes, like the joe kennedy speech. i am 2 for too. i thought it was entertaining. i liked it. the mannings were pretty funny. >> jesse: about $5 million for that one. >> dana: maybe they could put that into their recruitment for next year. >> jesse: that was good. stay there. more to come on "the five." breaking news developments on the memo when we return. woman: i'm a fighter. always have been. when i found out i had age-related macular degeneration, amd, i wanted to fight back. my doctor and i came up with a plan. it includes preservision. only preservision areds 2 has the exact nutrient formula recommended by the national eye institute to help reduce the risk of progression of moderate to advanced amd backed by 15 years of clinical studies. that's why i fight. because it's my vision. preservision. that's why i fight. a heart transplant... that's a whole different ballgame. i was in shock. i am very proud of the development of drugs that can prevent the rejection and prevent the recurrence of the original disease. i never felt i was going to die. we know so much about transplantation. and we're living longer. you cannot help but be inspired by the opportunities that a transplant would offer. my donor's mom says "you were meant to carry his story". fbi, discredit the mueller investigation, do the president's bidding. >> kimberly: adam schiff still on a terror about the g.o.p. memo that alleges the fbi and doj abuse the fisa process. democrats want their own version out to the public and there could be a vote soon. meanwhile, the president called adam schiff one of the biggest liars and leakers in washington. who must be stopped. the congressman is firing back. mr. president, i see you've had a busy morning of executive time. the primary author of the memo, devin nunes, piling on his democratic colleague. >> if you look at what they've done over the last couple weeks since we put together the memo so we could make sure the american public discovered the fisa abuses that occurred, they continue to leak out information to create narratives that quite frankly have one thing in common, they are always false. mr. schiff knows he is spreading false narrative therapy. that's not new for him. he has spread false narrative the entire time. >> kimberly: the president calling him a liar and the leaker who must be stopped toda today. >> dana: over the weekend i tried to take a step back and i figured i'm going to let it settle and then read a couple more things on monday to see where people are. i feel like it is -- we are at the same place that we were on friday except that the democrats have sort of advance their agenda by responding to the president the way they had come over there it is punching or counter punching, i have lost count. i think the question of whether the underlying documents are going to be revealed is still an open question. friday night, devin nunes was on bret baier's show for an exclusive interview and bret asked if he had read the underlying documents and he said no but that trey gowdy had become a congressman from south carolina who is overseeing the oversight committee. i'm wondering about if the intelligence committee folks are not read in on what's happening underneath, should the documents be released to all of us because i don't know what the context is not don't know if it's a really good idea to start disseminating to the public information that is supposed to be for investigations. i think it's kind of dangerous. i feel like a lot of the time line doesn't make sense to me. especially the memo talks about carter page and the fisa warrant in october 2016 when he left the campaign a month before in september and according to the timeline the counterintelligence investigation started three months before that. i'm not even sure what carter page could've even told anybody on any kind of wiretap that would've been relevant to the trump campaign if he had left. i think there is a lot of open questions. >> kimberly: dana thinks it might be an imprudent escalation to try to release the democratic side and go back and forth. >> dana: i think the democrats should be allowed but i'm wondering about the underlying documents. >> kimberly: perhaps could have some national security implications. >> greg: to state the obvious, this is another example of sport politics. we did a segment, the color of the dress and some people thought as gold. and the other was blue. one side will always see this one way and the other side sees it the other way. having said that, andrew mccarthy nailed down in "national review." responding to a letter and saying it's not about steele being reputable. it's not about him being -- he's an upstanding guy. it's not about that. it's about the sources. he didn't write the dossier. he simply delivered it. the fbi and doj should have been more, put more emphasis on that. anybody, a capable person, could put together a report on you with unvented sources. are you happy that the government used a capable person, that that's okay with you that they used anonymous sources saying crappy stuff about you. the democrats, you keep hearing it's a constitutional crisis. how can that be a constitutional crisis and trying to unseat a president in a general election is not a constitutional crisis? i think trying to steal an election from the american public is a constitutional crisis. releasing and obviously, a memo that has political opinion in it, done by a republican. there's two sides. that is far from a crisis. but somehow generating and ginning up this scandal to steal an election, that's a crisis? >> juan: wait a second. who ginned up the scandal? this scandal was the russians interfered in our election. >> greg: there is no collusion. >> juan: i don't know but i'm telling you that's the thing. >> greg: of the russians interfere in everything. we know that. >> juan: so we should minimize it? >> greg: no, this is about collusion. if you don't have a clear-cut case of collusion you try to impeach trump and something happens, you've got a big problem in your hands. 67 million people are going to wage war. >> juan: you can portray this as some kind of cool but the coup would've been if, in fact, we have a candidate running as an agent of a foreign governmen government. >> greg: you have nothing there. >> kimberly: no evidence. >> greg: "what ifs" are beautiful. >> juan: there is no question about "what if." no question about the russians favoring donald trump. >> kimberly: you can't blame the president for that. he didn't call up and say hey, russia, can you interfere with the election? >> juan: what about donald jr. going to trump tower with a russian and saying i am looking for dirt on hillary clinton. >> greg: where did the dossier information come from? russians. >> juan: oh, please. let's go back to dana's point. this makes no sense. devin nunes' attempt to say the timeline, and this is the basis, they already were looking at carter page from 2013. >> greg: and why were they looking at him? he was actually cooperating with the fbi. >> juan: the russians tried to recruit him. >> greg: and he cooperated! >> juan: under the table in order to avoid -- >> greg: how dare you, why would i look under the table? >> juan: here is the weird part. why not release the democrats -- >> greg: i am for it. do it! >> juan: donald trump says he is vindicated. >> greg: you are creating a straw man argument. i am for releasing the memo. >> kimberly: this is crazy. to make less sense, jesse. >> jesse: the obama officials used fake information and got the court to justify spying on the trump campaign. they lied to the court, juan. a lie of omission. the dossier was the reason for this buying. the dossier was kept from the judge. they didn't say it was paid for by hillary. >> juan: wait a minute. i thought the argument -- >> jesse: they didn't say that the dossier was paid for by hillary. why didn't they tell the judge that, juan? they knew they would never have gotten the spying done if it wasn't for that. that's why. >> juan: do you know how weak you are. >> jesse: week? we just won the super bowl. >> kimberly: we must separate the fans from the players. >> jesse: it's not a scandal on your side. why is everybody getting demoted? why is everybody retiring early? strzok, page, all these people on that side must be guilty of something because they are now getting in trouble. the other thing, you are spying on carter page for all of these years. hasn't even been charged. >> greg: and he was cooperating. >> jesse: where is the dirt? there is no dirt. now there is more memos coming so now that's why you are getting nervous. >> dana: it's not remotely clear, none of it is, that anything that the government would have been listening to with carter page, not even on the campaign anymore, would even relate back to the trump campaign with the trump family in any way because he wasn't involved. maybe there was a problem getting the warrant and that needs to be looked into but i think the trump family, i don't know why you would be concerned about carter page being listened in on? he wouldn't have known anything. >> kimberly: if you want to learn more about carter page, you should watch the "ingraham angle" tonight. he is going to be with laura. trey gowdy talked to a lot of people about his surprise decision to leave congress, and his explanation might surprise you. and the wolf huffed and puffed... it can be hard to get air out, which can make it hard to get air in. so i talked to my doctor. she said... symbicort could help you breathe better, starting within 5 minutes. symbicort doesn't replace a rescue inhaler for sudden symptoms. symbicort helps provide significant improvement of your lung function. symbicort is for copd, including chronic bronchitis and emphysema. it should not be taken more than twice a day. symbicort contains formoterol. medicines like formoterol increase the risk of death from asthma problems. symbicort may increase your risk of lung infections, osteoporosis, and some eye problems. you should tell your doctor if you have a heart condition or high blood pressure before taking it. symbicort could mean a day with better breathing. watch out, piggies! get symbicort free for up to one year. visit saveonsymbicort.com today to learn more. if you can't afford your medication, astrazeneca may be able to help. today, the new new york is sparking innovation. you see it in the southern tier with companies that are developing powerful batteries that make everything from cell phones to rail cars more efficient. which helps improve every aspect of advanced rail technology. all with support from a highly-educated workforce and vocational job training. across new york state, we're building the new new york. to grow your business with us in new york state, visit esd.ny.gov. >> greg: trey gowdy is leaving congress. apparently to spend more time with his hair. i kid. i like the guy. look at him over the years. mohawk, goatee, sideburns, beard, glasses. gets rid of the beard. he has more looks than lady gaga. sunday gowdy says he is leaving because he is lousy. >> i was a pretty good prosecutor. i think i've been a lousy politician. i see multiple sides of a single issue of the fact that someone disagrees with me does not make me challenge their love of the country. it doesn't make me believe they are corrupt. i have got a lot of friends on the other side of the aisle. i think the manner in which we get places matters, and in politics, too often, winning is the only thing that matters. every hero i have has lost, every one of them. so losing is not the worst thing in the world. not knowing what you believe and not caring enough about it to fight for it, that's the worst thing. >> greg: underneath the cowlilck , he has a point. take the memo controversy. it was the super bowl for political poindexters. everyone took sides before reading it. no one in the media seemed to mind tribalism before one only one side fought to win. for the left, the politics was always personal. indeed, the right has learned from the left and republicans are now as spicy as he left easy as old. the results of both feedback loop where one side accuses the other of divisiveness which leads to endless contract decisions. simply agreeing we are all guilty of this might help solve the problem. will that ever happen? who knows. divisiveness is easy and it's profitable. it feels good to point a finger and label people. if you disagree with me, you're probably a racist, homophobic trader. it's true. where do seem going? may be a style segment on "fox & friends"? >> kimberly: oh, my god. come on. >> greg: i like him. >> kimberly: really bright, phenomenal prosecutor. he had a great reputation, a large volume of material and stuck with it in terms of the benghazi hearings. i think he is being a virtuous person and i like what he had to say in terms of being able to see all sides of an issue. because someone disagrees doesn't mean they are a bad person or their politics or their intentions should be question. i am excited to see what he does next. i don't know. >> greg: dana, every time we hear about the intensity, the tribalism. every time i think about it, i think about the past. we've had assassinations in civil wars. is this idea that we are being divisive a bit overwrought. we had an actor kill a president. >> dana: i remember when i talked to mitch mcconnell last week. he said only put everyone's mind at ease. they used to beat each other up on the floor. i think trey gowdy seems relieved. this is a decision he has wrestled with for the last couple cycles because he realized i think early on, this might not be for me. there's a lot of different ways you can serve your country and be a public servant and you don't always have to run for office. it's the endless fund-raising, the inability to do what he wants to do which is the law. he is someone you would want as your own personal lawyer. if he decides to go into law, you would want to miss that. you'd want him as a neighbor or teacher or friend. teach a little bit as well. i'm a big fan. ever since the benghazi hearings when he would be willing to talk to you and he would give it to you straight, that was welcome and different. no wonder he didn't fit in. >> kimberly: he would be a good member of a book club too. don't you think? >> greg: i think we are going too far. i think the conflict is heightened because republicans have learned from democrats on how to fight. don't you think that's true? in the '60s, everybody who disagreed with was evil. started with the vietnam war. >> juan: let's go back to the civil war. >> greg: democrats, right? >> juan: to me, trey gowdy, by the way, i think he's a very competent prosecutor but what he did during benghazi, two years of beating up on hillary clinton coming to the conclusion there is nothing here. i don't understand it. i like the fact that he now says you don't have to turn your opponents into devils. i think, but now he's leaving, and he's, unbelievable to me, 41 republicans who are leaving this congress. nine committee chairman, including people like trey gowdy who does have respect. as i say, i don't like what he did with benghazi but he does have some respect as a man who knows the law, men who could've been one of president trump considerations considerations for attorney general. now you see these people fleeing. there is an erratic president and a chance the democrats are going to have a big november this year. >> greg: jesse, can you tie this into the super bowl? >> jesse: i don't think gowdy is leaving because he's going to lose his seat. >> juan: no. >> jesse: i like the hair shots. can we put the six shots back. the one on the upper left, best look. scruffy goatee. the benghazi hearings, juan said nothing came of it. we found out they didn't protect the consulate on 9/11's anniversary, couldn't save our men and women because they didn't have assets in place, and then lying to the americans thn people in the families inside it was about a video when they knew it was a terrorist attack. i think he got to the bottom of it. he looked relieved. all you do is dial for dollars. they put you in a room for four hours a day and you fun race. that sounds terrible. the swamp stinks. i would like to get out of it too. >> greg: shelly move on? special surprise in addition to team usa's olympic delegation. that's next. i have type 2 diabetes. i asked my doctor. he 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. and 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®. >> dana: the parents of otto warmbier's at the state of the union last week. their son's memory was honored at the capitol. the tragic story retold again to shine a light on the threat posed by the north korean regime that tortured him. this week, fred warmbier will travel to the region with vice president pence to attend the olympic opening ceremonies in south korea. the vice president said fred and his wife remind the world of the atrocities happening next door. i think this is a show of diplomatic strength because the south koreans are apparently laying it on thick to welcome the north koreans to help them feel good. saying we don't want to normalize. bringing mr. warmbier with him, the vice president is forcing all of the media to cover the story. >> greg: it is a powerful, symbolic gesture and perfectly counters the inclusion of north korea and its propaganda pep squad they are going to be putting out there. every time north korea is out there, the networks are going to show the dad as a reminder of what the world is like under the rock of that hermit kingdom. we have to turn the rock over. you're going to see the best part of that rock during the ceremonies. you have to remind people there is bugs under it. >> jesse: i think it's good when you use people and their personal stories as a rallying cry for policy or something like that. we have the kate steinle situation, and you had kate's law. we are jessica's law. i think otto, perfect for his mother to go there and remind everybody how disgusting and despicable the regime is. we haven't really had a situation like this since the cold war where the olympics had the nationalistic competition, even though north korea is not really competition. it brings the world's attention around the evil, the evil empire in the '70s and up '80s. he is not being used. a lot of people say he's being used, being exploited. he is not. he is in this and wants to be part of it and i'm glad mike pence stated the invitation. >> dana: is a father, he is saying i'm going to take this opportunity to try to prevent this from happening to anybody else. >> juan: i don't know that he can prevented, but what a horrible story, what happened to his story. it's unbearable. if he wants to go, feel free. the question to me is what are we setting ourselves up for going forward? stories about how the pentagon has been criticized by the white house for not sending over possible military scenarios and then you hear from the back that the generals don't want the white house to act precipitously in terms of attacking or giving a blood he knows to north korea, and even somebody under consideration to be ambassador, oppose that policy and withdrew his name from consideration. i know, from what we've been told, the north koreans are going to have a big military parade and make a show of power in addition to which they are marching in with the south koreans. it looks to me like there will be all of this pretty stuff about north korea at this moment and i think warmbier serves as a nice antidote to that. >> kimberly: it was a moving moment. i found myself looking at the family and really looking at their faces and looking in their eyes and you can see it's palpable, the pain and suffering and loss and the way his mom's face looked. still so real every morning when she wakes up and every night when she goes to bed, it's her personal last and final font and his father looking over at his wife. it's unspeakable. president trump doing so much to try to get him home and they got to see their son one final time. incredibly symbolic of the american spirit and patriotism. we are all tied and connected in this together and it's a real reminder of the savagery of the north korean regime that we should never forget about. >> dana: jimmy kimmel has a theory on why so many late-night posts are liberals. that one, next. you do all this research on a perfect car, then smash it into a tree. your insurance company raises your rates. maybe you should've done more research on them. for drivers with accident forgiveness, liberty mutual won't raise your rates due to your first accident. switch and you could save $782 on home and auto insurance. call for a free quote today. liberty stands with you™. liberty mutual insurance. you or joints. something 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. do have to be over the baseline. >> juan: is he implying the conservative side of the country is stupid? unintelligent? it appears so. what do you think, greg? >> greg: that's what happens when you are in a comfortable space. he's being interviewed by these fan boys. this is what happens when you come to politics late in life. it creates a false confidence, inversely proportional to your actual knowledge. if he is only sure of his stance, because he hasn't moved from the emotional position to a factual position. everyone is like this. i was like this in my 20s. and both sides are guilty of this. they rely on the intelligence insult. look at tweets about juan. if they don't like juan, they called him an argument. that's not an argument -- they call him an idiot. he's not. rather than call someone an idiot, envision yourself on the other side and try to make a strong argument for their argument and take it apart. he is in the immature portion of his political life. maybe he might grow out of it. you see in the world of podcasts the mix between right and left him of people interviewing each other. everybody treating each other with respect. dave reuben, jordan peterson, they all work together and don't second-guess the intellectual superiority. they don't try to say they are intellectually superior. i think that's what he needs to learn, and he probably will. >> juan: he actually had on conservatives, people who disagree with the pathway to citizenship for the dreamers, and have them talk to dreamers. seems like he is willing to hear from the other side. >> kimberly: yes, it's his show but that's not him actually doing it. this is kind of ratings in developing. he's been able to do quite well. he started to resonate during the health care debate and he was taking on some conservatives and that became sort of his area, his sweet spot where he seemed to generate some buzz and some interest. you are seeing him continue down the path because it's continued to be successful and there are dividends that is paid off. i think it really is that simpl simple. >> juan: jesse, he has said if conservatives don't like the criticism of donald trump, don't watch. >> jesse: that's fine. you can change the channel. watch fox. i support that. he was doing the man show before this. i don't think that was very highbrow, bouncing on trampolines. it takes whit and it takes a good personality and decent interviewing skills to be a late-night host. but network executives hire people in the comedy and entertainment space and most happen to be liberals. most conservatives don't go into that space for different reasons. i don't think it's very deep but i do think he is getting a little cocky. he did land some punches with the health care deal. in all honesty, i have to invoke "the view" card. i want to be on a show eventually. i will hedge and say he's very great. >> greg: [laughs] >> kimberly: interesting. >> jesse: maybe things go well here at fox and maybe he invites me. >> greg: are things going badly right now? >> jesse: i don't think i am good enough at this point. >> dana: some of the funniest people i know our conservatives. they are smart. you can't be funny without being smart. >> juan: why is it none of the hosts are conservatives? >> dana: it says like why don't conservatives go into academia. there's choices. >> kimberly: they have the entertainment people in the liberal hollywood guests gone there. >> juan: "one more thing" is next. stay with us. baby boomers, here's something you should know. there's a serious virus out there that 1 in 30 boomers has, yet most don't even know it. a virus that's been almost forgotten. it's hepatitis c. hep c can hide in the body for years without symptoms. left untreated it can lead to liver damage, even liver cancer. the only way to know if you have hep c is to ask your healthcare provider for the simple blood test. if you have hep c, it can be cured. for us, it's time to get tested. it's the only way to know for sure. touchdown! [cheering] yeah! okay, and i made a bet with martha maccallum. here it is, and you will see the results on her show. >> it's a good match. >> jesse: if the eagles win, i think you should wear an eagles jersey on the set. how about that? >> okay, for the last block. >> jesse: for the interest of the wager. >> kimberly: such confidence. she can't stop winning because she was actually there. >> jesse: she was. i was not. it's fine. i was enjoying myself. >> kimberly: oh, it's me. >> jesse: go ahead, and finish grade >> kimberly: doritos planning to release new tortilla chips for the ladies. they make less of a crunch. they are going be smaller and a single-serve bag will fit inside your purse. >> jesse: are you serious? >> kimberly: global chief executive of pepsi says women do not like to crunch loudly. >> dana: i don't mind if i crunch. i don't like to listen to other people crunch. >> greg: that's going to be a problem. time for this. greg's mail it in monday. i will keep it as simple as possible. roll it. a huge stag dropping by a bird feeder for a snack. i don't have much to add other then i wasn't that picky about my "one more thing" today. >> dana: that's amazing. >> kimberly: did they eat the bird? >> juan: here we go. nutritionists tell you stay away from fast food. turns out one of america's guilty pleasures might come with some health benefits. japanese scientists are now using a chemical found in mcdonald's french fries to grow hair. the chemical is used to stop cooking oil from foaming. so far researchers have only used it on bald mice but they believe their groundbreaking findings might work on people. you can be fat, greasy, and harry. >> greg: now you have food in your hair instead of hearing your food. >> dana: here is what i'm doing today. i don't really cook at home but i got a great new cookbook from one of our colleagues here. "home cooking for your dog." it's got everything in there. fish cakes, polenta, peanut butter and coconut cakes. i think i might do this. >> kimberly: for peter or jasper? >> dana: just for jasper.

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Transcripts For CNNW CNN Newsroom With Brooke Baldwin 20180806 18:00:00

The latest news from around the world with host Brooke Baldwin. giving this story way, way, way too much oxygen. >> okay. >> the tweets that he's been doing brooke on mueller, on the witch-hunt, on, you know, the democrats working for robert mueller, which is by the way not -- it is a red herring, that is not something the people working around the president on strategy are concerned with. this crossed the line. >> specifically on the piece regarding getting dirt on a political opponent, this to you. the president saying it's politics, everyone does it but federal law makes it a crime for any person to solicit accept a contribution for a u.s. political campaign or for the purpose of influencing any action for federal office. what is the trump tower meeting peter against the law even though as they say they didn't actually get anything on her, the fact that that was the intent. i would say they are all, everyone who participated in that meeting has a great deal of legality jeopardy. and certainly in the view of robert mueller, colluding, which it has been called in the press, is actually conspiracy, and mueller has already defined that activity as being illegal. it's -- he's indicted about a dozen people for violation of 18 u.s. codes, section 371, which is conspiracy against the united states. and anyone who participated in that meeting, whether they succeeded in getting information or not, is in jeopardy of being indicted for conspiracy. conspiracy is not dependent on success. it's simply an agreement. once that agreement is made, if it's illegal, and anyone -- any part of that conspiracy, any individual takes any steps to further it, then they can all be charged with conspiracy regardless of whether it was successful. >> peter, what difference legally speaking would it make if mueller can prove that trump actually knew about this trump tower meeting beforehand? >> well, it puts the president obviously in jeopardy as well. you know, i don't think it's going to be all that difficult to establish that. i mean, the trump tower meeting was on the 9th of june, as i recall. two days before that, he had made a speech saying that he was going to have very interesting information about hillary clinton. >> on hillary clinton. >> he was going to be announcing in a short period of time, in a matter of days. >> which he never followed through on, because he didn't get it. >> he never followed through on it. >> right. >> very strong circumstantial evidence that he was aware of that meeting before the hand and what the purpose of that meeting was. also just on the hypocrisy front, dana, not only does the president tweet out essentially no bigs, we got no dirt and by the way there was nothing wrong about doing that, every politician does it he then tweeted hillary clinton and her team 100% colluded with the russians. so did adam schiff. essentially he is saying when hillary wanted dirt it was a total crime. let me point out the obvious, there was no investigation pointing at hillary clinton and her colluding with the russians. secondly, you cannot have it both ways. no. >> you are exactly right. but that's following a logical stream there of argument, brooke. and that's not the point that the president is trying to make here. that's not the goal, i should say, here. the goal is to just throw things out there that confuse the situation, that confuse the investigation in the public's mind. and that's it. i mean that's the goal, which is what keeps us so busy doing what you just did, doing the yeah, but, and the fact check. it's important. but for the president, when he has the echo chamber on another cable news network and in talk radio and on conservative website, that's his goal. unfortunately, for the truth and the facts, he is successful on just stirring up mud in the waters so that you can't really see what's really in there. >> how about -- >> can you just say that -- >> go ahead, peter. >> bob mueller is not going to be confused by that. he's not going to be distracted by it. >> no. >> so he is going to speak much more loudly by way of indictments. and i would suspect that individuals who participated in that trump tower meeting will be -- there will be charges brought related to that meeting. so this yeah but hillary did it too is not going to get mueller off the track. >> how about, peter, just one more to you. one of the key witnesses at the center of that meeting and so many others was this woman, hope hicks, who was just getting on board air force one over the weekend which has a lot of people scratching their heads. you know, she doesn't work there anywhere. is the president at risk of witness tampering with her here? >> you know, i'm sure her lawyer would have preferred her not to have that contact. but my guess is that hope hicks has been interviewed. i know she's been interviewed on the hill. and i strongly suspect -- >> and by mutualer. >> that mueller has already interviewed her. >> yes. >> so he may feel ultimately that her testimony is locked in. >> okay. >> it's going to be very hard at this point for her to change her view of what the events were. she testified under oath in the grand jury. she is sort of locked into her story now. >> all right, dana and peter, i appreciate both of you so very much for that. come up next, breaking news in the trial of former trump campaign manager paul manafort. the prosecution' star witness, rick gates, is expected to flip and reveal what he knows. we will have a live report from the federal courthouse coming up next. also ahead, taking sides. is first lady melania trump supporting lebron james over her own husband? what we're learning about melania's very interesting comments appearing to contradict the president. and cnn goes inside the world's largest motorcycle gathering, sturgis, south dakotaa where some bikers are not shy, debating politics, and sharing their thoughts about this president. >> are you a fan of the president? do you think he is doing a good job? >> he is doing a lot better unanimous what obama did. unfortunately, it can't do anything about that. now that you know the truth... are you in good hands? the show stopper. he is manafort's former deputy at the trump campaign. he is awaiting his own sentence after pleading guilty to making false statements and conspiracy to defraud the united states. plus he is cooperating with prosecutors as part of a plea deal. simone is following this story for us from washington. let's start with the bookkeeper who has been testifying. tell me about the bookkeeper and any connection to gates. >> she is under cross-examination. the defense is questioning her. we don't have exact details yet but it's clear they are going to paint her as someone who may have been been confused or uncertain. i think one of the thing that the defense may try to do is ask her why she didn't report -- she is alleging all sorts of things that manafort made her do. why didn't she report to it anyone. the other thing, they are going to question her immunity deal, whether or not she is testifying, whether or not she is giving up this information because she herself is afraid that she is going to be prosecuted. those are typical defense things that attorneys would ask in these kinds of cases. the other thing is who is going to testify after her? we don't know yet. we thought maybe there would be fbi agents that would come in this afternoon and testify after her. that is not the case now we are told. but when does rick gates come in? we still don't know. it could be like you said, this afternoon. or it could be tomorrow. one of the things that i think is important this the gates testimony we are going is learn some details about his cooperation. we may even get to see documents that he signed with the special counsel's office in this cooperation agreement which will give us some perhaps maybe eyes into what he has been doing these last months with the special counsel. obviously he is a big witness for the prosecution, but i think even a bigger witness for the defense. because as you know, he's been sort of portrayed as the mastermind behind this. i mean, rick gates is important as a key witness for the prosecution but he's not their only witness. they have all of this other evidence including this bookkeeper and other book coopers and accountants who are going to testify. but rick gates really is an important witness for the prosecution. but probably more important for the defense. >> we will be following it and talking with you all week. thank you for the update on what is happening in alexandria. coming up next here a growing trend. members of president trump's inner circle, including family and top officials publicly disagree it was the president on a number of issues. the latest, his own wife. if first lady, melania, praising lebron james while her husband let's just say, isn't. what's behind this? we will take a deeper look, next. ♪ when i touch you like this ♪ 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. sometimes a day at the ballpark is more than just a day at the ballpark. stadium pa : all military members stand and be recognized. sometimes fans cheer for those who wear a different uniform. no matter where or when you served, t-mobile stands ready to serve you. that's why we're providing half off family lines to all military. are you one sneeze away from being voted out of the carpool? try zyrtec®. it's starts working hard at hour one. and works twice as hard when you take it again the next day. stick with zyrtec® and muddle no more®. alicewhich is breast canceratic that has spread to other parts of her body. she's also taking prescription ibrance with an aromatase inhibitor, which is for postmenopausal women with hormone receptor-positive her2- metastatic breast cancer as the first hormonal based therapy. ibrance plus letrozole was significantly more effective at delaying disease progression versus letrozole. patients taking ibrance can develop low white blood cell counts, which may cause serious infections that can lead to death. before taking ibrance, tell your doctor if you have fever, chills, or other signs of infection, liver or kidney problems, are pregnant, breastfeeding, or plan to become pregnant. common side effects include low red blood cell and low platelet counts, infections, tiredness, nausea, sore mouth, abnormalities in liver blood tests, diarrhea, hair thinning or loss, vomiting, rash, and loss of appetite. alice calls it her new normal because a lot has changed, but a lot hasn't. ask your doctor about ibrance. the #1 prescribed fda-approved oral combination treatment for hr+/her2- mbc. when he refers to journalists as enemies of the people. but lately we have seen a growing trend with some in the president's inner circle who are willing to publicly disagree with the man himself. a couple days ago the first lady sided with lebron james after her husband tweeted this, lebron james was just interviewed by the dumbest man on feflgs, don lemon. he made lebron look smart, which isn't easy to do. i like mike. right. so that was the president's response. and melania let's just say did not sing that tune. jeremy diamond, our white house reporter is on this. this is not the first time that his own wife has disagreed. >> that's right. she has done so in the past often via her own spokeswoman. it's interesting when we talk about the trump administration and people close to the president we are often talking about them defending everything the president says regardless whether it is true or not, regardless of whether it's right or wrong. now we are seeing several people close to the president seeming to distance themselves to some of what he said. let's start with melania trump, the first lady who of course broke with the president on the issue of lebron james after the president criticized him in that tweet you just showed the first lady released this statement saying it looks like lebron james is working to do good things on behalf of our next generation. and she also said that she would be willing to visit lebron james's school. we are still waiting to see if an invitation is forthcoming on that. but she is not alone, of course. there is also the president's daughter. ivanka trump was recently asked if she agreed with her father's use of the term enemy of the people to refer to journalists. here's what she said. >> i am very vehemently against family separation and the separation of parents and children. i have some sensitivity around why people had concerns and gripe especially when they sort of feel targeted. but no, i do not feel that the media is the enemy of the people. >> that was the president's daughter not only disagreeing with the term enemy of the people but also on the policy of family separations at the border. but she is not alone to disagree with the president's use of the term enemy of the people within the administration. the president's chief defender oftentimes kellyanne conway put it this way. >> i don't believe journalists are the enemy of the people. i think some journalists are enemy of the relevant and enemy of the news you can use. >> kellyanne conway there of course. the white house is always spin doctor putting a little bit of spin on there beyond just saying that fake news -- that journalists are not the enemy of the people. that is not all. sarah sanders, the white house press secretary has stood by the president's terminology the enemy of the people. he was pressed just last week to disavow that term. she refused to do that. that was in an interaction with jim acosta. but the president himself is sticking by this term enemy of the people. yesterday he once again reiterated that and also called reporters disgusting. that was just of course the president's latest attack on the news media. brooke. >> jeremy, thank you. let's go to the woman at cnn whose job it is to follow all things melania trump. she is kate bennett, our white house reporter. kate, jeremy laid out other members of the family or trump's inner orbit who have gone against the president on x, y, or did. again to have his wife totally split with him over, over lebron james. do you know, what's the thinking behind the first lady here? >> well, i mean, i think this is a first lady who just expresses her opinion and expresses what she's feeling, whether it disagrees or agrees with her husband. she is going to say it. this wasn't just a minor correction, wasn't a statement issued by her office. i asked the question, and that was the answer. i think the difference here between the east wing and the west wing is that oftentimes the answer feels like, you had know, it's come from the first lady. it's direct. it's truthful. and it doesn't mean to cause waves. it's not released to cause the waves. but by the nature of what she's revealing of course it does. we are all talking about it. again, melania trump demonstrated several times she has an independent streak, whether that's going to the border to talk about the border crisis, whether that's something -- like drawing attention away by wearing the white hat or clapping back at rudy giuliani when he tried to put words in her mouth and said she believed her husband about the stormy daniels situation. her spokeswoman says i don't think mrs. trump has had a conversation with rudy giuliani about anything, actually. these are all steps that we are seeing the first lady sort of make her mark in a very independent way, in a way that quite frankly can be very opposite of what her husband is saying or feeling. and she doesn't seem to mind. and he doesn't seem to mind. so, certainly, it's a very different sort of first couple that we are witnessing here in this administration. >> listen, i love a good independent streak. and a wife should not always have to agree with her husband, right? but it is -- it is of note. you just rattled off she went to barbara bush's funeral -- you can continue down the list of things where she has gone this way when her husband has gone the other. i'm wondering what you think that's about. >> i honestly think it's about the first lady in my opinion is one of the few people who doesn't react in response to something that the president does. so we see a lot of the president doing something and then people respond. whether it is about the russia investigation or you know a policy issue. the first lady is not reacting necessarily to what the president did. in fact i think she is more reacting to what lebron james did. he said i don't want to sit across from the president and talk about this. the first lady is saying in the effort of kids and education i will sit across the table from you. >> uh-huh. >> i think it's more her in the interest of pushing forward her agenda regard of what the president is thinking that motivates her. and that's also something that we are seeing in other flourishes of her personality. she is very mysterious, very private. so we have to look into these things and read into them a bit. but i truly think that was a response more to how lebron was responding even more so than how her husband was. coming up next, two historic landmarks targeted with disgraceful acts of vandalism. among them, where emmitt till's body was recovered. and it is known as the world's largest gathering of bikers. cnn's bill weir goes inside to talk politics, president trump, and facts. don't miss this. behr presents: ordinary versus overachiever. a lot of paints say they can do the job, but just one can "behr" through it all. behr premium plus, a top rated interior paint at a great price. family friendly, disaster proof. find it exclusively at the home depot. whenshe was pregnant,ter failed, in-laws were coming, a little bit of water, it really- it rocked our world. i had no idea the amount of damage that water could do. we called usaa. and they greeted me as they always do. sergeant baker, how are you? they were on it. it was unbelievable. having insurance is something everyone needs, but having usaa- now that's a privilege. we're the baker's and we're usaa members for life. usaa. get your insurance quote today. i've been making blades here at gillette for 20 years. there's a lot of innovation that goes into making america's #1 shave. precision machinery and high-quality materials from around the world. nobody else even comes close. now starting at $7.99. gillette. the best a man can get. there are land marks meant to remind the nation never to forget about the savagery of racism the horror of the holocaust and the heroes who emerged in the struggle against it. now two of those historic landmarks have been vandalized. romanian vandals sprayed anti-sem of the ethic graffiti on the home of elliot wisel. police are investigating. they say they already have a list of suspects there. here in the u.s. for the third time the memorial marking the spot where emmett till's body was pulled from the mississippi river was defaced. someone fired multiple shots into the sign, as you can see. and the prior vandalism incident happened just over a month ago. joshua due but a is with us. a cnn contributor and a adviser to president obama on faith and charity. i on the wad to have this conversation today because when i was read being the incidents, it is profoundly infuriating. two men, two different parts of the world, but men that really stand for something. >> yeah. >> my question to you is why do you think this is happening. >> first and foremost, brooke, thank for calling attention to this. it's absolutely disgusting. disgusting is not even strong enough a word. for viewers who don't know, emmett till was a child a 14-year-old who was tortured and brutally murdered in mississippi down in the delta for no crime at all. they said he whistled at a white woman which of course should not be a death sentence anyway. and even the woman has since said he didn't do anything at all. to shoot up a memorial to that little boy. and then elie wisel, a survivor of genocide, someone who was at the forefront of making sure that incidents, genocides like the holocaust never happened again, to deface his home. it is not about the incidents. it is a broader crisis of hate. we have seen hate crimes increasing for four years in a row. a 60% increase in anti-semitic ins tents from 2014 to 2017. this reached a crisis point and it's time we take it seriously. >> i want to ask you a question on something else. it won't seem related but in the end we are going to come back around. i want to talk about lebron james. he opened -- i promise school opened the last last week. to 240 at-risk third and fourth graders. let me just -- the school includes free uniforms, free tuition, free breakfast, lunch, and snacks, free bike and helmet, free transportation, access to a food pantry for families, and guaranteed tuition to all graduates to the university of act ron. first of all, before we delve deeper on this, how great that? >> amazing. he could be so much else with his money and his time. he has decided to pour into other people. yeah. >> don lemon goes and interviews lebron in cleveland, and they air, they reair the interview on friday night. and listen, i don't know if he was watching or not, but the president tweeted, lebron james was just interviewed by the dumbest man on television, don lemon. he made lebron look smart, which isn't easy to do. i like mike. all right? i want to point out don lemon's response, who is the real dummy, a man who puts kids in school or one who puts kids in cages? that's the response. what makes the president feel like he can doing this and specifically attacking levels of intelligence? >> it's absurd. it's like our parents told many of us, when someone is bullying or attacking you it often says more about them than it says about you. this is coming from a place of weakness, insecurity, inferiority. the president is kt aing and behaving -- i'm not saying he is, but he is behaving like a small man who can't respond on substance so he responds with insults and attacks. again it is a bigger problem because he is moving the boundaries of debate removing the guardrails telling americans you can say and do whatever is in your best interest. when he removes those guardrails it's no wonder that our civility and our conversations have run into a ditch. >> amen to that. joshua due but a i appreciate it. we are getting breaking news out of alexandria. we are getting breaking news out of the criminal trial of the former campaign chairman paul manafort. what's up? >> it's what we were just talking about moments ago. the big witness for the prosecution in the paul manafort case is set to take the stand, rick gates, as you said, will be taking the stand sometime this afternoon. as once the prosecutors and the defense team finishes up with the accountant who is on the stand now, rick gates is expected to take the stand. this was announced in court moments ago. he will take the stand. he will begin his testimony. at the very least this afternoon. where we will learn a lot about his cooperation. and really, for the first time hear from him since he started cooperating with the special counsel's office. >> so you made a point a second ago when we were talking. i just want to unpack a little bit of what we could hear from rick gates. you were saying we may actually see as far as evidence any sort of documents, anything he has signed as far as cooperation deals and the like. why is that important? >> usually that is something that on direct testimony the prosecutors will go into great deal with. really, it's to tell the jury what he's been doing, how his cooperation has been going, how he's been cooperating. they will probably limit it specifically to this case. but it's really to sort of give him some credibility. and honestly, for the progs to be honest with the jury about what he's been doing. also the documents that are usually associated with this kind of an agreement are submitted into evidence so that the jury could essentially review it. and then also the defense attorneys obviously are going to want to question him about his agreement. because sometimes good defense attorneys like to use that as a way to say, well this is the reason why someone is cooperating. look at this deal that they have given to him. and it goes to his credibility. his credibility is the big issue at this trial. and the prosecution is going to do everything you can, upt expect, to try and bolster his credible. and then the defense obviously will do everything they can the rip it apart. also big for the defense here is they are trying to pin everything, put everything on rick gates. he is going to be a big witness for them as well. >> all right. it happens this afternoon. we will be in contact over any and all headlines made from that federal krouts in alexandria. shimon, thank you for now. also, moments ago the president of iran responding to president trump's offer to hold talks this. as new u.s. sanctions kick in today. also ahead, what started as a search for a missing toddlerette led investigators to make a chilling discovery involved an underground kpounld. a live report next. hey allergy muddlers. stick with zyrtec® and muddle no more®. hundred roads named "park" in the u.s. it's america's most popular street name. but allstate agents know that's where the similarity stops. if you're on park street in reno, nevada, the high winds of the washoe zephyr could damage your siding. and that's very different than living on park ave in sheboygan, wisconsin, where ice dams could cause water damage. but no matter what park you live on, one of 10,000 local allstate agents knows yours. now that you know the truth, are you in good hands? - (phone ringing)a phones offers - big button,ecialized phones... and volume-enhanced phones., get details on this state program. call or visit a horrifying discovery in new mexico has led to charges of child abuse, and is many unanswered questions. police raided this makeshift compound outside of santa fe. they were initially just looking for this 3-year-old who had been missing since november. instead, what they found, 11 emaciated children who looked to quote law enforcement like third world refugees. the children's ages ranged from 1 to 15. they had no food, no running water, and wore dirty rags for clothes. police now have charged five people with child abuse including the mothers of these children and kalee hare tongue has been following this heart breaking story for us. who are these people? how long were these children living like this? >> so many of the answers to those questions are unclear. the sheriff's office saying these are the saddest conditions he had ever seen. investigators are working to determine what these 11 children endured while they were living inside this compound. they are in the care of child protective services right now who say their focus is on those children's most basic needs now and ensuring that they are minimizing any further trauma. when authorities came to the scene of this makeshift compound, this small travel trailer partially buried in the desert they found these two men who amassed something of an arsenal. they were heavily armed with ar 15 rifles. they had loaded 30 round magazines and loaded pistols and plenty of ammunition on them. those two men are being criminally charged. one of them is the father of the missing child. the missing child, who is still missing. while these two men are in custody along with the three other women's who are believed to be the mothers the 11 children who were found authorities say they are not answering questions or giving up any information about the whereabouts of this child. authorities say they have reason to believe he was in that compound as recently as a few week ago. today is that child's fourth birthday. >> here is hoping justice is served and then some in this case. kalee, thank you very much. let's get you back to our breaking news here. rick gates, paul manafort's former right hand man, about to take the stand and testify against president trump's former campaign chairman. we will go live to the courthouse in northern virginia next. ♪ 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. are you one sneeze away from being voted out of the carpool? try zyrtec®. it's starts working hard at hour one. and works twice as hard when you take it again the next day. stick with zyrtec® and muddle no more®. sometimes a day at the ballpark is more than just a day at the ballpark. stadium pa : all military members stand and be recognized. sometimes fans cheer for those who wear a different uniform. no matter where or when you served, t-mobile stands ready to serve you. that's why we're providing half off family lines to all military. voters. we sent our correspondent bill weir to ask them to weigh in on the president and his politics. >> reporter: they rumble in from all points on the comp pass. for one week each summer this little town of 7,000 explodes to half a million. this is one city that looks nothing like the rest of america. you can go hours without seeing a person of color. in sturgis, a minority is a white guy on a foreign bike. there are no debates over gun control here, offer the ethics of the me too movement. and there is no doubt who is the leader of this pack. you are a fan of the president? do you think he is doing a good job? >> he is doing a lot better than what obama did. >> this ghost rider identifies him as john sands a postal worker who rides up from kentucky each year and like so many i talked to sees proof of trump's brilliance in the brooming committee. >> the trump bump. the economy is so good. people are feeling so good. >> reporter: rod woodruff is the owner of the buffalo chip, and says his hampers have an average income of $95,000 a year. >> 70% are homeowners in the united states. lots of people own multiple motorcycles. >> we have a tattoo parlor up here. we have food, pizza, anything you want at the free access crossroads. >> reporter: do you have your own jail? >> no. we don't need one. >> reporter: you don't need, one? violence and arrests are incredibly rare for a crowd of this size. one reason is that most folks share the same values. and those that don't keep it to themselves. what i see here in moirktding is a microcosm for the whole country. and i get the feeling sometimes that people that don't believe in what's going on is right become very quiet. >> i think there is a lot of hypocrisy going on in the country now because i feel like everybody wants freedom and they want rights but god forbid somebody disagree with you because then you will get your head bitten off. >> reporter: not long ago the president aimed his trade guns at harley davidson. they shut down a packly in kansas city, laid off hundreds of workers and said because of the tariffs they would have to start production in a new country overseas. which begs the question, is this the ultimate loyalty test for his base? do these folks pledge allegiance to the president or harley davidson? >> hell, i'm going to to go with what is going to make america better. if harley wands to choose to go somewhere else then i will choose to buy different bikes. >> i personally love the man. i think he is doing a wonderful job. >> reporter: despite the president's disdain for my profession they couldn't be nicer. do i strike you as ann me of the people? >> not at all. and it's glad to have you here. >> reporter: no reporting, no matter how earnest, will change their minds. >> if you look at the russia investigation there is a lot of red flags and dark clouds. >> that's over a lot of politicians. one they are picking on him because he is on the outside. how come the clintons can do things and no one else can. >> i'm old enough to know what he the base loved harley davidson and hated russia. seems like it flipped a little bit. >> i don't see any reason to call him out. if they don't want to be friends it is another story. >> even vladimir putin a dictator, a murderer? >> he met with kim jong-un as well. >> y'all are fake news. we all know it. >> touch me. >> back downtown, our presence sparks a debate between some fox news fans from texas and bonnie from nebraska. >> they don't know what they are talking about. >> oh, come on. >> yeah we do. >> you are un-american, too. you are on the other side. >> that's not true. i watch both. i go either way. >> see? which proves we now live in a media age where people can choose their own facts. >> i have a friend who is very

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Transcripts For DW Treasures Of The World - Alhambra - Moorish Royal Palace Spain 20181109 23:15:00

w.'s team is seriously. d.w. dot com. here's what's coming up for the voters playing you know how flanking to talk back here for. the honestly just when we can hear. them. on the second of january fourteenth ninety two will abdel stood somewhere here in the sierra nevada mountains and gazed down on grenada for the last time. he was the last one issue and the other hand in arabic the red panda. he was banished to the mountainous region of southern andalusia by the spanish song grins isabella of cast steel and ferdinand of africa. he shed tears at the thought of soon having to exchange the lush and colorful spenda the alhambra for the average north african desert. babs it was him outside the gates of justice that he had to hand over the key of the alhambra to the catholic monk. to move in two hundred fifty years the hand hewn into the stone about the portal and all that protection to the out ambrose nasty. as now it seemed to bid farewell. since that time the blessedly mary has stood in a nice of the gate amidst the wonderfully melted multi-colored tiles the as an a.o.s. . the departure of sutton. marked the end of almost eight hundred years of arab history and spain. the nasty denah stebic least babbling fountains and gardens fauna flowers the arabs living in andalusia passionate about portions. opposite the alhambra is the natural bruna some a palace the vanity fair where they delighted in listening to the sound of water flowing and folding. when a dentist is founding father built the alhambra palace in the alley setting century he made water of the dominant and. from the beginning the alhambra design was refined by geometrically laid out more to congress. the ric palace contains three adjoining royal arab coats linked to one another by passages. from. the southern exterior wall is like an art historians text more in which craftsman of immortalized the high art of islamic ornamentation. scroll losing a few fics scripter to the scene leaf and tendril motives and to mexico free status . the masters drew inspiration from the plant when they molded plaster medallions with arabic inscriptions. until the end of the thirteenth century each ornament was modeled individually by hand then the princess was rationalized and stencils came into use. artistic representation of the qur'an is permitted only in calligraphy. poems and messages from the prophet or inscribed in the scrolls between the arabic asks. as is a recurrent phrase god alone is conqueror a nasty dentist is not. originally the facade was painted in bright colors with gold leaf or leaves and bronze doors glistening like the. one inscription weeds this fountain is beyond compan. the almighty desired that its charms outshine all others get uring as in rivalry with a diamond studded bell drops of liquid silver fall the water jets misty spray. the arabs great skill lane exploiting the ornamental quality of water as a foil for wall tiles and marble. the founding designers found means of preventing the water from falling directly into the pool and ruffling a smooth surface the movement of water in the round basin was slowed down the narrow conduit restricted flared so the water reached the pool very slowly and smoothly. in the. in the court of the matters the sultan received noble gases. the slender deceptively fragile looking pale as reflected in the poor innocent in the cotton bodies the essence of nasty architecture its closeness to. it surrounded by windows behind which one can imagine the sultan's administrator city. from this spot the little brown was ruled taxis were raised the laws were enacted the smooth function of the air geishas systems was insured. in the whole of the ambassadors the south and met with politicians and diplomats from foreign lands. if we could speak these would tell of the once feared scale of arab diplomats or of political finesse and wisdom debased into intrigue and assassination. perhaps they described the entry of the catholic monex into the alhambra the triumph of the recompete by which and alysia was regained for christianity. the ceiling resembles the seven happens of the koran it's a canopy of cedar. and mother of pearl. and . lower wall is tiled in intricate geometrical patterns these musics transport avila into an abstract well art of lying axis and seeing. the rooms where bathers mansion recuperated from the steam richly decorated such bath houses where an essential ingredient of islamic culture. once the warden slender pillars of the alhambra may all have been as colorful as this adorned in the brightest ten. quarter of the lions is regarded as the epitome of arab architecture the walls and arabesque swear once counted red green blue and gold. the one hundred twenty four marble columns glistened with gold in astrid times the gift of a sudanese ambassador. in. the court takes its name from the central fountain of the lines the water flows in cruciform formation into four narrow conduits which extend all the way to the colonnades and beyond them into the main chambers. these are the four streams of paradise for this court and the palace around it reflect the paradise of the corral. and the fountain bears the following inscription in this water i may fall from heaven and all rise from the depths of the earth or flow from the caves bounteous when. behold the tamed savagery of these awesome lands fearful in the dust before than the lord humbled by his majesty. and. it's easy to imagine private festivities in the patchogue illustrates the whole of the kings. the sultan and his immediate circle we have feasted to listen to poetry and song. reclining on cushions they sip tea and discussed fanaa safina or politics or the interpretation of the koran. going. on an eight hundred g.s. arab science of tolerance exerted a decisive influence on life in spain and enrich the culture of western and central . we owe to them was our earliest knowledge of greek and roman ideas and philosophy and of mathematics astronomy and meds. furthermore the writings of arab emirates inspired the troubadours of france and the menacing have germany exponents of cookie land. in forty nine hundred two the era of arab rule and tolerance came to an end the reconquista dick cheney did say and you do see i was reconquered for christendom spain was spanish from gibraltar to the peyronie's. plus list. of the creatures shot choppers. the super heroes of germany the wrong taco truck. supplies. our special edition and. politics coming up next tom selleck. a small country with a great many things to be proud. of. a small country with so many things the world loves it for. a small country marking one hundred years as a republic. austria celebrating its centennial your robotics in sixty minutes on w. the cause of. the first the global disaster the twentieth century. the war to end all wars cost millions of lives. world law. the marks the hundredth anniversary of. what has humankind learned from the great war. as of mine the above

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Transcripts For BBCNEWS Europe Votes 2024 20240609

class="nosel"> members of the european parliament. who will shape the eu, as it faces defining challenges. so what are the issues driving this election? and what's foremost in people's minds as they head to the ballot boxes? welcome to europe votes 202a. hello and welcome from sunny lisbon, where we are coming to you from today. i'm mark lowen, one of the bbc�*s europe correspondents. and over the course of this programme, we will bring new reports from across the continent as the election gets under way. but first, what's it all about? elections to the european parliament take place every five years. it's the only directly elected institution of the european union. shaping the bloc�*s policies, legislation and budgets. voting happens by proportional representation. each country gets a number of members of the european parliament, or meps, relative to its size. the meps sit in transnational groups according to their ideology. so, for example, there's left and right, eurosceptics and greens. the balance between them could change considerably this time. and this is the first european election since the united kingdom finally left the eu. polling is taking place across three days, with different countries voting at different times. the first eu member electing its new meps is the netherlands. with an expected surge in populist and far—right support, the dutch are still in the process of forming their own government after elections last november, which saw the anti—immigration politician geert wilders win most votes. climate has been one of the most divisive issues with the country under pressure to reduce its carbon footprint. anna holligan has been speaking to young people on both sides of the heated debate. every farmer is a bit crazy because they work the whole week, day in, day out. this man is a fourth—generation dairy farmer. it's a kind of a hobby, a way of life. and, yes, the love for this. home to 3.7 million cows — approximately one for every four voters — a dense population, global shipping and aviation hubs, the netherlands is one of europe's biggest emitters of harmful nitrogen, a potent greenhouse gas. with the desire to hit its 2030 climate goals, the dutch government proposed a number of measures designed to make farming more sustainable. but many farmers felt scapegoated. it's always about the farmers, so every time we had a problem and we had to reduce with nitrogen or carbon or whatever, it's always focused on the farms. and in the summer of 2022, protests ignited, thousands of farmers used their tractors to blocade highways and supermarket distribution centres. across europe, populist politicians have channelled this discontent to force the eu and member states to scale down climate legislation, by many considered to be central to decarbonisation. the key issues for dutch voters are migration, the cost of living and very much the green transition. in the drive to reduce co2 emissions, there's a lively debate over whether the eu is pushing too hard and too fast. what do we want? climate justice! and on the other side of the spectrum, climate activists have also been applying pressure. at a recent rally in the hague, winnie was among those calling for an end to government tax breaks and subsidies for high fossil fuel emitting companies. but she thinks the european union can help their cause. there's a big role for europe to play there because what we see is the dutch politics, dutch politicians have a hard time trying to satisfy their voters and still commit to the paris agreement. and that's a shame because that's the bare minimum that we need to do. among many young people, there is a shared frustration with the polarisation that infiltrates the climate debate. farmers as well will feel the effects of climate change and we need the farmers, so let's shake hands on this. we both want to have a clear perspective for the future, i so i think no—one has a clear solution to make one - clear policy in europe. in italy, too, conservative parties are expected to make big gains in election. brothers of italy, the party of the prime minister, giorgia meloni, is topping the opinion polls. she has moved away from a previously more far—right position, moderating in office, but she still takes a hard line on immigration, one of the issues voters are worried about. and she's struggling to boost the flagging birth rate and brain drain of young italians leaving the country. as i found out in latina, just south of rome. the big beasts of italian politics are lining up for their european battle. and at this farm south of rome, which rears 1,800 buffaloes, the question is whether change is afloat. it's a very italian family business, churning out exceptional mozzarella and ricotta. the grandson of the founder says the problems are many, from european farmers being undercut by non—eu countries to another long—standing italian issue. it's not that easy to find workers. medium salary in italy is not going up for a long time. and this is very sad because many times, younger university students prefer to not work because of this. it means they employ migrant workers to fill the gap, and there is no shortage there, with new arrivals soaring by 50% last year, despite the government promising to crack down. so, at the centre for young unaccompanied migrants, more keep coming and the town is feeling the strain. it's ok for now. the numbers we are receiving now. but i don't know in the future if they will increase more, if it will be ok or difficult. you are at your maximum point, do you think? maybe. yes, i think so. they put together pieces of broken lives in a country they will now call home. it cost 2000 euros to get here from burkina faso. translation: lots of africans think europe is a paradise, - but it is not true. now i tell people back home to stay there, but i know they will keep trying, and even if italy wants to stop the boats, it is impossible. so the to—do list is long for giorgia meloni, elected prime minister 18 months ago and still leading the polls. the main city here, latina, mirrors italy, with the same issues and the first woman in charge. translation: the meloni | government is working well. we have problems of the falling birth rate, for example, which affects all of europe. we used to passively accept migrants, but now we have a big say in managing flows. it is important that our party wins this election so we can put forward our ideas at a european level. behind italy's blustery beauty lies age—old problems, but what has changed here in the last 18 months is who is trying to solve them, with giorgia meloni dominating italian politics and hoping to further entrench her position after these european elections. but well beyond these shores, europe's other right—wing leaders are looking at her as a sort of figurehead, an example of what they, too, will hope to achieve. and so, a key moment for italy and for europe, a vote on how to navigate these rough times. well, across the eu, immigration, the economy and the environment are all big themes for voters in this election. that is also true in germany, the eu's largest economy, and with the largest population electing the highest number of meps. but abortion rights campaigners there say women's health issues are failing to get enough attention. 0ur corresponded jessica parker sent this report from hamburg. adriana volunteers to help improve abortion access. in germany, abortions are in reality permitted during early pregnancy, but remain technically illegal. when i read the penalty law, it really crushed me. because it really says you are still a criminal when you have an abortion. you can do it up until 12 weeks without being actually punished, but you are still kind of a criminal. and also, the law is written like they are trying to force you to think about it and to keep the pregnancy. so they are really pushing you in one direction. do you think this issue, women's health issues, have a prominent enough place in the public debate? of course not. women's issues are most of the time not the main priority. i would prefer if we had an eu law that ensures that everyone has access to safe abortions. even in wealthy liberal cities like hamburg, campaigners say women face barriers to abortion, while access across europe can significantly vary, from france where abortions have become a constitutional right to almost total illegality in poland and malta. abortion laws are set by member states, but in the last eu parliament, a majority of lawmakers called for access to be guaranteed across the bloc. it is a prime example of how some see the eu as an engine for social change, while others believe that brussels is already too interfering. it's up to the nations to say whether they want to have this or that particular abortion law, and the eu should not meddle with that. they have done that with other things, they try to interfere with nations' sovereignty, and i think they should not push the nations too far. we have seen what happens when they do that, and when people pick up on those ideas in particular countries, you saw that in the uk, and they play it well, people may turn away on a larger scale from the european union, and that's not a good idea. this professor believes eu—wide change is a distant prospect. i think member states- focus very much on having competencies in criminal law, and especially in these - sensitive areas of abortion. the eu parliamentary elections are nowjust weeks away. if, as some polls predict, there is a rightwards shift, that may diminish calls for embedding abortion rights. as parties push very different visions of how far the eu should reach into people's lives. from the chilly climes of northern germany down to the boiling beaches of southern spain, the increasing difficulty of making ends meet is playing big in voters' minds. spain is the eu's fourth largest economy, but it has the bloc�*s highest unemployment rate at around 12%, and among young people, it is also top, at almost 30%. in andalusia, away from the tourist hotspots, the country's biggest region is struggling with low wages, high unemployment and a lack of infrastructure. nick beek reports now from a city where one person in every four is out of work. in a perfect world, 20—year—old lucia would make a living doing what she loves, restoring furniture. today, it is this coat of arms. but it does not pay enough, and in her part of spain, finding anyjob is really hard. translation: i am working very hard to try to make a living - for what i love doing. i see my friends with full—time jobs only making 700 euros a month. they take advantage of the fact we are young because they know we are going to shut up and take whatever money they give us. in the city of algeciras, these people face a tough future. it feels like a bustling place, but 40% of young people cannot find a job. the highest rate in the whole country. the sky—high level of unemployment here means that there is huge scepticism that anything will change for the better after the european parliament elections in six weeks' time. there are deep—rooted economic problems, and despite the vibrancy of this place, success stories are pretty hard to find. but this is one. business is good at the repair company. a 230—metre—long containership the latest vessel they're fixing. it's meant 21—year—old mario has been able to get a decent job, something that has eluded many of his friends. outside of the sector, it is difficult to have a permanent job. the contracts they are providing, a low—wage, short—term, they take a little bit of advantage of the people to save them money. one of the bosses says he would love to take on more workers, but the problem is that while so many young people need a job, theyjust don't have the expertise. we are the highest percentage of unemployed people - here and those people, we cannot get with us, | because they don't have the skills. - this city boasts the biggest port in spain, but does not feel the benefits. the eu is sending 140 million euros to the region to try to boostjobs, which may or may not win votes at the european elections. but it feels much bigger investment is needed here, particularly in roads, railways and other infrastructure, to turn the tide for this young generation. and so, to france, often seen as the other half of the power couple driving the eu, along with germany. but it, too, is seeing a surge in support for the far right, the national rally of marine le pen and her young co—leader has been towering over opinion polls at around twice the level of support of the nearest rival, the party of emmanuel macron. that could put the far right in a strong position ahead of the next french presidential election in 2027. 0ur paris correspondent hugh schofield has been finding out why this has all been happening, and he starts his report in a cathedral town around 160 kilometres south—east of paris. they are on a roll and they know it. they, the national rally, are so far ahead in the french polls that their biggest worry is supporters like these taking a massive victory for granted and not turning out. that is why the president has come to this market town. selfie hell, of course. this is the new face of france's far right. he is personable, popular and above all, very young, and atjust 28, he is leading the national rally in these elections to new heights. circumstances are helping. inflation is hurting. 0ut here in the provinces, president macron is unpopular. and now there has been a run of atrocious stories of violence among immigrant communities in schools, in the paris suburbs, a 15—year—old was beaten to death, seemingly by the brothers of a teenage girl angry that she was in contact with him. the case is not unique. for the national rally�*s newest star recruit, it translates into a popular demand for authority. this former head of the agency frontex says he was hounded out for trying to be tough. immigration is a factor in many of these cases of violence, he says. this is a cultural clash. the fact that some teenagers consider that their sister shall not talk to a boy, that this is a matter of honour, and this is not part of our culture. in france, it is not part of our culture. i'm sure nowhere in continental europe or in the uk. back on the campaign trail, i asked jordan bardella where he thought the valance was coming from. translation: there is | a new savagery in society which means you might be attacked anywhere because you are not wearing the right kind of clothes or because you are in the wrong place at the wrong time. and now this violence is affecting the institutions of the state, like schools. his answer is to get tough, increase penalties, crackdown on illegal immigration. many, it seems, would agree. so, while voters in much of europe are focusing on their internal challenges, in some eu countries, it is what is happening outside — or, rather, beside their country — that is a priority, not least for poland, bordering ukraine, but also russia and belarus. although some other eu members in the east of the bloc, such as hungary and slovakia, have wavered in their commitment to assisting ukraine militarily, poland has been a firm voice against the threat of moscow. but there are signs of strain in its relation with kyiv and the conflict next door is having a political impact in poland, as our eastern europe correspondent reports. all along its northern border, poland is on alert. because on the other side here is russian territory that is heavily militarised. poland has taken the threat posed by its neighbour very seriously. ever since the full—scale invasion of ukraine. its constant warning is that vladimir putin will not stop there, so poland now plans to spend millions heightening security. prime minister donald tusk is making russia a big issue of european elections. reinforcing the border is about telling the enemy to stay away. and in polish schools, new security drills. getting prepared in case of an emergency. first lesson, evacuation. the training is run by soldiers with the territorial defence. it's partly about building confidence in the armed forces. partly learning skills to cope in a crisis. the teenagers we met here had no doubts why they were doing this. we are in danger. i'm worried that the war will come to poland. russia is near to us - and they could attack us. i think. but fearing moscow does not always mean help for kyiv, not to those who spoiled this grain for ukraine at the polish border. the polish countryside is often a place of strong feelings. not all of them positive about the eu of kyiv. not all of them positive about the eu or kyiv. this man has been farming since he was 18. but he says ukrainian goods are starting to flood the market here, undercutting local produce and threatening his livelihood. translation: it looks like ukraine is fighting a war on two fronts, one with russia and one against polish farmers. an economic and agricultural war. if this continues, we willjust perish. we have no chance. it's not the economy, though, its security that is poland's big theme at these elections. the message that living next door to russia remains a risk. and that all europe needs to remain on guard. so, those are many of the issues particular to each country, and here is a particularity with the election itself. changes to the law in some eu member states mean that this year, 16 and 17—year—olds are able to vote. while in some countries, the youth vote leans towards the greens or the left, in many, there is an unprecedented support for the far—right among young voters, which is expected to help those parties make significant gains. sophia sent this report from the heart of the european union, in brussels. in some countries, like belgium, the voting age has been lowered to 16. do you think that the european elections matter? yes. it's a very big - opportunity for us. and i really like it because it gives us a voice that - we never had before. europe needs to be stronger because we cannot always trust nato. my history teachers are really saying that it would not - surprise me if something i would happen in the future, so that really scares me. and my future and thinking about my children, my - future children, i don't have children now. - but more young people going to the polls won't necessarily translate into support for the eu. in fact, an unprecedented number of young voters are siding with far—right, populist parties. the success of the far right among young people in part has to do with their positions on immigration or on anti—woke. but also, with their very successful social media strategy, especially on platforms such as tiktok. they also have this very clear antiestablishment discourse, and even a rebellious vibe, that can appeal to young voters. that rebellion blaring out in the capital of europe. hundreds of farmers have come to protest here at brussels with their tractors. they have come from lots of different countries and many of them are really young. as voting gets under way across europe, they want to send a strong message — that the eu just isn't listening to them. the reason why we vote for the right is that we have global issues that we don't know how we can take control of. we can actually solve the issues that the left tried to solve, but failed to do so. another issue that is driving them to the right is migration. there is a big issue when it. comes to security and when it comes to keeping in track of all of the people - that come in. so i think that europe does not have the capacity - to receive that many people. and that is why you are voting to the right? that is why i'm - voting common sense. common sense or not, many young people feel that the more traditional parties are not listening to their concerns. and that disconnect is what could deliver the most significant victory to the far right since the eu was founded, more than half a century ago. so many challenges, and so much to play for. the 720 meps elected will take decisions on issues that affect all eu citizens, on everything from food standards to immigration, and climate targets to banking rules. and they will vote to decide who becomes president of the european commission, leading the institution for the next five years. the results are expected late on the last day of voting, sunday, the 9th ofjune. we will cover the twists and turns of this election right here on the bbc. but until then, from me, mark lowen, and the rest of our teams right across europe, thanks for watching. bye— bye. hello there. it's been a pretty decent start to the weekend. there was a good deal of sunshine around across most of the country. a bit of cloud here and there, a few showers mostly in the north. part two of the weekend doesn't look quite as good. it will start certainly quite chilly. but we've got a couple of weather fronts pushing down from the north—west that will increase cloud through the day, with some splashes of rain. now, we've got this weather front approaching the north—west of the country to move through this evening. showers merging together to produce longer spells of rain for the north and west of scotland. so unsettled, breezy, showery in the north, turning cloudier for northern ireland, but clearer skies for large parts of england and wales, with lighter winds here. so it will turn chilly for most. single digits, i think, for the majority of the country. but with more cloud across northern ireland, we will fall to around ten degrees in belfast. so sunday, then, we've got low pressure still towards the norwegian sea there, bringing northern—westerly winds into the country. we start off with quite a bit of sunshine. scotland, england and wales, cloudy skies for northern ireland, south—west scotland, in towards north—west england, north wales. and that cloud, with splashes of rain, will spill south—eastwards through the day. so it will turn cloudy across much of england and wales, probably the best of the sunshine across the far south—west, and the northern half of scotland doing pretty well, with sunny spells. but there will be blustery showers here and a cooler day to come, i think, because of more cloud around — temperatures of about 12 to 17 degrees. as we move through sunday night, that area of rain splashes across the irish sea, into much of england and wales, becomes confined to southern and eastern areas by the end of the night. so where we have the cloud and the rain, then, a less cold night here, 10 to 12 degrees under clearer skies. further north, it will turn chilly. we start to pick up a northerly wind as we move into monday. that rain slowly clears away from the south and east. it may take a while to clear the east of england. eventually, it will do. then it's a bright day for most, sunshine and showers. most of these across the northern half of scotland, where they will be quite blustery and a chilly northerly wind at that. temperatures, 10 to 1a degrees in the north, 15 to 17 further south, giving some sunny spells. and we hold on to this chilly northerly wind through tuesday, even into wednesday as well. before low pressure starts to move in from the south—west, that'll cut off the chilly northerly and temperatures will slowly recover towards the end of the week. but it's going to be a fairly unsettled and a cool week to come, with a little bit of sunshine here and there. live from washington. this is bbc news. four israeli hostages abducted by hamas last october reunited with their families after israeli forces freed them from captivity in gaza. hamas reports more than 200 palestinians were killed in the raid by the idff. the raid by the idf. two hospitals say they have counted scores of bodies. we'll have the latest from the general election campaign — he as the conservatives are pledging tax cuts — and labour promises to help small businesses. hello, i'm helena humphrey. glad you could join me. four israeli hostages taken by hamas during the october 7th attacks have now been reunited with their families. but israeli forces in gaza killed scores of palestinians in the military operation to free them. israeli special forces raided two locations in nuseirat, in central gaza in broad daylight. 0ne israeli soldier was killed. hamas says more than 200 palestinians were killed in the operation. an israeli military spokesman said there were "under100" palestinian casualties. the eu's top diplomat condemned the israeli raid. the us president has also spoken out at a press conference during his state visit to france. i want to echo president macron�*s comments welcoming

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Transcripts for CNN CNN NewsNight With Abby Phillip 20240604 02:55:00

they were allowed to die, they were allowed to be murdered by hamas, both by our own governments inaction, but mostly the savagery of hamas jonathan daco hen last time you joined us, i said this and i'll repeat it again. we do hope and pray with you that your son is returned to you alive. thank you very much for joining us. >> thank you so much for having me i'll be back in a moment the sirens are going off the tornado here you cannot out swim this. >> you cannot outrun it it really is a terrifying experience. it is the stuff of nightmares you could hear it and. feel it. >> eyes and make or brain i'm thinking, i'm going to die and i thought that was it along with earth with we're schreiber sunday at nine on cnn to look at okay. one unit on

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Transcripts for FOXNEWS Jesse Watters Primetime 20240604 00:47:00

>> jesse: last night alvin bragg disrespected sharpton by hijacking the ei thursday with a short trial. primetime will not anything get in the way bringing you are favourite stories about diversity equity and inclusion. we are celebrating on friday this week. primetime psa if you are on diet right now, stop. we have just been informed dieting is racist. watch. >> from a historical context being fat was viewed as being unable to control yourself, being attributed to savagery which is what was attributed to blackness. therefore in an effort to continue to separate themselves from fatness being white people in slavery times, 1 of the things they did was say fatness was like being a black person. and that is why diet culture

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Transcripts for FOXNEWS Life Liberty Levin 20240604 00:18:00

included increasing financial moral support for hamas fighting strength solutions and politicizing the savagery of the jews quote unquote. the committee's bond at several public facing organizations much of which are based out of chicago, dallas at washington they include all-purpose islamic association of palestine the financial arm represented by the occupied land fund the former holy land foundation. creates a think tanks and it founded care. individuals and networks provided various forms of support for hamas have been active in america for decades. small numbers of palestinians belonged to the muslim brotherhood networks in the gaza strip and in the west bank. in fact arrived in the u.s. since the 1960s to study at american university, immigrants, refugees, and so forth. it goes on in great detail. now ladies and gentlemen, this is the public record. it goes on and on we have it's finally gotten off and done its

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Transcripts for FOXNEWS Life Liberty Levin 20240604 05:18:00

included increasing financial moral support for hamas fighting strength solutions and politicizing the savagery of the jews quote unquote. the committee's bond at several public facing organizations much of which are based out of chicago, dallas at washington they include all-purpose islamic association of palestine the financial arm represented by the occupied land fund the former holy land foundation. creates a think tanks and it founded care. individuals and networks provided various forms of support for hamas have been active in america for decades. small numbers of palestinians belonged to the muslim brotherhood networks in the gaza strip and in the west bank. in fact arrived in the u.s. since the 1960s to study at american university, immigrants, refugees, and so forth. it goes on in great detail. now ladies and gentlemen, this is the public record. it goes on and on we have it's finally gotten off and done its

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Transcripts for FOXNEWS Life Liberty Levin 20240604 09:18:00

u.s. the committee's goals included increasing financial moral support for hamas fighting strength solutions and politicizing the savagery of the jews quote unquote. the committee's bond at several public facing organizations much of which are based out of chicago, dallas at washington they include all-purpose islamic association of palestine the financial arm represented by the occupied land fund the former holy land foundation. creates a think tanks and it founded care. individuals and networks provided various forms of support for hamas have been active in america for decades. small numbers of palestinians belonged to the muslim brotherhood networks in the gaza strip and in the west bank. in fact arrived in the u.s. since the 1960s to study at american university, immigrants, refugees, and so forth. it goes on in great detail. now ladies and gentlemen, this is the public record. it goes on and on we have it's

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Iran will not be bystander unless Israel stops aggression on Gaza: Amir-Abdollahian

Iranian Foreign Minister Hossein Amir-Abdollahian has warned that the Islamic Republic will not remain a bystander if the Israeli occupying regime presses ahead with its savagery against Palestinian people in the besieged Gaza Strip.

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