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tv   Larry King Live  CNN  November 13, 2010 3:00am-4:00am EST

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>> and apparently they can't fly for a while and that's why i guess you don't see them out on the streets very much because they're obviously can't fly and we would all mistake them for rats. >> the rats are much bigger than that. >> that's true. that's true. so appreciate it, and sal, thank you very much. at the top of the hour, more serious stuff, amazon.com slowly >> larry: tonight -- michael moore. fed up or fired up? he calls the election a day of reckoning and why he thinks the democratic loss was really a win. how does he feel about george w. bush now? and what do oprah and tom hanks have to do with it? find out because michael moore is here for the hour next on "larry king live."
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good evening. program note before we start. general colin powell will be here monday night. our senior executive producer, wendy walker, on tuesday. president h.w. bush and barbara bush on wednesday. dolly parton thursday. and russell brand one week from tonight. but tonight's guest is old friend michael moore, the academy award-winning documentary filmmaker and the best-selling author, all of us happy to welcome him to "larry king live." the democrats took a pounding in the election. was this angering democrats embracing republicans general anger or i've had enough? or all the sfwhov. >> i think it's more i've had enough. i think people are upset at democrats and republicans. democrats are in power. unemployment rate unofficially is close to 10%, probably
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unofficially closer to 20%. 53% of the population according to the "washington post" this week said that every month they worry about whether or not they're going to be able to afford the mortgage or the rent. that's the mood of the country. so the democrats were there and that's what happened. >> why didn't they sell something? an extraordinary health care bill, whatever you think of it as, the first one in a hundred year, and i think 85% of the population got a tax decrease. >> mm-hmm. >> larry: what was the anger? >> the -- well, first of all, the health care bill, and there are many good things about that bill though it didn't go nearly as far as i wish it had gone. >> larry: better than before. >> absolutely better because if you have a kid that's 25 years old, they can still be on your health insurance plan, et cetera. too much of the new health care bill doesn't take effect until 2014, so people didn't feel the immediate impact in these last few months before the election, so not that anybody went to the polls thinking our health care problem is solved, my personal health care problems are solved, that's not the mood of the country. they put it off. >> larry: he gave a tax decrease
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to the middle class. >> and put it in what he called the stimulus bill. it was, like, you know -- that's part of the democrats' problem. i'm not the first person to say that. why would you call it a stimulus, a jobs creation and tax cut bill? they don't do that. here's honestly how i think the people see this. the government is like this giant frat house and for the last eight years a very rich frat boy and his frat boyfriends essentially destroyed the house. imagine if you were, say, the landlord of that house and after eight years they completely destroyed the house. you bounce them, you get them out of there and you hire a guy to come in and fix the house that they messed up. that's what the american people did. they hired president obama to do that. say you went off on a cruise or around-the-world trip for a couple years and you came back and the house is still in the same frigging mess that you left it in. would you be mad still at the
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frat boys who had the house for eight years or would you be mad at the guy you hired and had two years to fix something and fix your house? >> larry: does obama share the blame for the shellacking? >> well, yes, because he didn't come out of the gate fast enough, hard enough, strong enough for the things the people elected him to do. he came out wanting to compromise. he would start compromising before anybody even asked him to compromise. instead of just -- on the public option with the health care bill, instead of let's just -- here's what i believe in and just fight for it, he goes in with a compromise. and i think that -- i think -- i'm sure you agree with this. most americans, they're not ideologue ideologues. they don't think of themselves as left or right or democrats or republicans. what they do like is someone who's strong, someone who's principled, somebody who has the courage of their convictions. and -- >> larry: you could be all those three things and a wacko.
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>> yes, we've had those. >> larry: you could with a dictator. >> yes, you could be, or you could be franklin roosevelt. right? >> larry: right. >> or you could be franklin roosevelt. and had he made the decision to come into office and act like roosevelt, i don't think that would have been as rough as it was in last week's elections. >> larry: do you think he gets it now? >> well, i think he gets it, but i think the part that he doesn't get is he can't -- he can't -- he can't keep operating in this let's all get along mode when the other side doesn't want to get along. i mean, he's got to say -- he's got to get out of the rut, and i think people watching the show and who supported him, i mean, a lot of people, friends, people who voted for him, everybody's a little down and depressed this week. but it's like, okay, come on, snap out of it. we still have the white house, we still control the senate. you know, the majority of americans still agree with us on the basic issues in terms of,
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you know, jobs, the environment, we should bring the troops home, all that. the majority of americans take the democratic position. they're just upset at what's going on. so why don't we start fighting instead of this kind of mickey mouse approach that the democrats have -- >> larry: how weak is ne on the world stage? he's at the g-20 now in asia. the headline today is his economic view is rejected by the world. >> well, yeah. i think -- i think first of all the world has seen us with our giant credit card going into debt and specifically with this war -- this war -- these two wars are going to cost us eventually about $3 trillion. that is a huge debt. we rarely talk about the impact of the war on the debt. and these other countries who didn't support this war and don't understand why, i mean, we have a military right now, larry, where our military budget plus the wars is greater than i
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think something like the next 25 countries' militaries combined. i mean, what are we doing with our money? why are we spending it this way? we're reckless. i don't think other countries appreciate that. and i feel bad for them. he's there and -- >> larry: what's ahead? gridlock, compromise, or what now, next two years? >> well, the republicans are going to continue to do what they've been doing, which is stop everything from happening. now they've got one house so they're going to do that. that doesn't mean he has to stop. for instance right now there's a lame-duck session that's going to take place. there are about 270 bills that the house has already passed that are sitting there waiting for the senate to pass. he still has and will have the senate. pass those 270 bills before this session of congress ends or pass three of them. pass the one -- there's the elderly abuse victims act. there's a child food nutrition act. there's a veterans act. i mean, there are some really
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good things that the public wouldn't go, what's he trying to do pushing this through on a lame-duck session? pass some of these things in the senate that the house has already passed. i also want to point out, i think there's a silver lining for the democrats in this election. the blue-dog democrats, the conservative democrats, lost by a huge margin, the majority of them, in fact, were thrown out of office last week. that's a good thing for the democrats. that's good because so much of what the democratic caucuses had to do is to sort of placate these conservative democrats and they water down these bills so they'll be happy. well, they ear gone now. the progressive caucus is about 80 members in congress, only three of them lost election -- lost the election last week. so it's going to be actually a more liberal democratic group, more progressive group -- >> larry: but smaller. >> smaller, but they'll be able to cohesively -- well, look what the republicans were able to do with the small minority they had. >> larry: we'll be back.
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>> larry: michael moore is our special guest. you have written if the democrats don't get their acts together, as you put it, we'll find alternative candidates to run against them. inside the party? challenged, you think? >> i don't know if that's going
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to happen, but i do think -- i mean, you sort of had a preview of it in the illinois senate race where the democrats lost that seat, the obama seat, to the republicans because the green party there, i can't remember what the exact number was last week, somewhere i think between 3% and 5% -- >> larry: costing the election. >> cost them the election. there's your coming attraction for 2012. if president obama continues down the road that he's on, if he doesn't put the restraints on wall street that need to go on them, if we have another crash in these next two years because he didn't put the clamp on these guys, if he expands this war or doesn't end it, there will be a challenge from the left. there's no doubt about that. >> larry: you've even suggested that democrats might want to run candidates like tom hanks or oprah. how about george clooney? >> well, yeah, i've said this for a long time that the republicans, for as much as they attack hollywood, they really do love hollywood because they love to run candidates from hollywood
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-- ronald reagan, fred thompson, gopher from the love boat, sonny bono. i mean, they've actually done quite well when they run hollywood. >> larry: george murphy. >> yes. exactly. i'm wondering why don't the democrats run hollywood, too? i mean, we have beloved figures on our side of the political -- >> larry: thought about it for a while. >> he thought about it. he's beloved. tom hanks, obviously. who doesn't like tom hanks? >> larry: oprah. >> again, oprah, this wouldn't actually -- i don't know if this would be a lateral move or a step down to go from oprah to be president oprah. >> larry: does obama get back all those young people who voted for him and the blacks who did not turn out a couple weeks ago? >> well, this is -- this is, i think, what i thought was the real news of last week's election, that 23 million people voted for him in the 2008 election. 23 million. how many showed up last week? 9 million. 14 million didn't show up.
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what was the difference last week between the republicans and democrats, number of votes? about 5 million 5 million. 14 million young people didn't show up who voted for him. all they needed was 5 million to show up and we wouldn't have the disaster we have. why didn't they show up? he basically forgot about them. they were the core of his campaign. i don't know if you remember the statistic but the 18- to 29-year-old demographic was the only white demographic that obama won in '08. he lost the white vote in every age group after 29 years old. that's how many young people voted in '08 to put him over the top when they were the only white demographic. and what has he done with him? i mean, they had a mailing list, e-mail list, all those texts, phone numbers. they did all that great work during the campaign. i would have set up a room somewhere in the annex just devoted to social networking, to creating youtube videos, to getting young people involved, having campus organizations,
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high schools and colleges. i would have done so many things if i were him to keep that enthusiasm going. and instead it's like they didn't exist. and, you know, they're young people. they've got other things to do. >> larry: are you concerned about the new speaker, baner? >> mr. boehner. yes. he will obstruct everything good that obama and the senate wants to do. i mean, that's exactly what's going to happen there. so get ready for nothing to happen for the next couple of years. but remember, just because he can obstruct, that's just the house of representatives. president obama's the chief executive of the other -- this important branch of government. there's a lot of things he can do, larry, in terms of regulations. he can do a lot through the epa that he doesn't have to get a bill passed in congress to start clamping down on environmental laws and things like that. there are many things he can do. >> larry: should the democrats retain pelosi as minority leader? >> well, i mean, i think -- >> larry: they vote in secret.
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>> yeah. i think -- yes, compared to who she's going to be running against in that vote, she's probably the better person to do that. and she's done -- i mean, it's funny how if -- i don't want to just sort of say it's because she's a woman and that, but it's just -- it really seems to me if she were a man -- she did a lot of things. that's right. congress did a lot in spite of what was in front of them and made a lot of things happen. that was under her leadership. i think that the republicans, as they are often wont to do, play off prejudices that exist in the general population. so it was easy for them to make her the villain. >> larry: her personally also grated a lot of people, didn't it? >> again, if she were a man -- >> larry: i get you. >> you know what i'm saying, larry? i think that's just -- you know what i'm trying to say? >> larry: i got you. michael moore is our guest. you're watching "larry king live."
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>> larry: we're back with michael moore. will the republicans be able to slow back health care reform? >> of course not. >> larry: they can't override a veto. >> they can't override a veto,
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they only have one house. what are you going to say to american people once their kids can stay on their health care until they're 26 years old or their kids can't get health care because they have a pre-existing condition? how are they going to tell the american people, no, we're going back to the old, ancient way we used to do it p? no. that's not going to happen. we need to push faster forward toward a better system than we have. >> larry: despite all the president's proclamations about those making $250,000 a year or more, about 1.5% of the population, and their tax cuts that he would get them back on the right path, does it appear they're going to capitulate, that those tax cuts will stick? >> it appears they'll capitulate. >> larry: why? >> why? >> larry: i'm asking you why. >> why do the democrats constantly give into this? why don't they just go to the american people and say that the
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wealthy, if they paid a fair share of the tacks like they used to for most of our adult lives -- they paid much more -- that would help so much with the deficit, with the things that we need to fund. if we cut back on the war, if he we bring the troops home, if we cut the pentagon budget, bring that down, we're going to have the money to do the things we need do. but but this country is crumbling right now. there are some basic things -- and, again, president obama tried to deal with this. they put a lot of money into public works, and it was -- the attacks on him i just have not -- i read this thing last week where it was an article called "how obama saved capitalism." i mean, here's a guy who voted for the bailouts, supported -- everything -- you know, put the wall street bos buoys in, summers and geithner and these guys that people in wall street wanted, saved the auto companies for the auto companies, not so much for the workers but for the auto companies.
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he's done a lot of what they wanted him to do. if you had $100,000 on the day he was inaugurated, larry, and you just invested it in the nasdaq average, just put it in for the last almost two years now, that $100,000 would be $177,000. you'd have a 77% -- that's -- that's what obama's done for the wealthy, for capitalism. and what's he got in return from them? set a record. more money than they ever have in trying to defeat the people. >> larry: and the obvious question is why, if they're doing so well, do they want him out? >> they're that greedy. >> larry: they want more? >> they want -- yes. because they're afraid that they may have to pay 3% more in taxes or they're afraid that they may have to pay the same flat rate of social security tax that every other -- everybody watching the show right now pays somewhere about 7% of their income that goes, you know, your fica and all that, but after i think like $110 thoushg, if you
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make more than $110,000, you know what your phi kashgs your social security tax rate is in zero. zero. so a flat tax on you or i, say, because you and i make more than $100,000 a year, so a flat tax on us, that's a great deal because 7% out of us -- out of -- >> larry: sure. >> you know, compared to the -- if a person is making $40,000, $50,000 a year, and 7% of that has got to go -- that's a big chunk for them. my point is we wouldn't be worrying act social security so much if we paid, if everybody who makes more than $100,000 a year, pays more than the $40,000 a year guy makes we'd have enough social security till about 2075. >> larry: that's another source of concern to the republicans is the tea party. many of the old-guard republican party, and it's shown already in the fight over who gets a break here and who doesn't, over the tea party and the establishment.
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could that hurt the gop? >> oh, absolutely. i think it already -- it cost them the senate, didn't it? i mean, really, because -- because the tea party was successful -- >> larry: raises the -- >> miller and -- the delaware woman. >> larry: yeah. >> i mean, they might have -- >> larry: nevada. >> huh? >> larry: nevada. >> yes. they're going to have essentially a republican in alaska. yes, they would have -- they might have been -- >> larry: a republican. >> yeah. they might have been able to control the senate. they're not going to be able to do that now. yes, they're going to have their civil war, and i would think it's not -- wouldn't be -- i wouldn't put it past them if a more traditional republican gets the nomination, say a mitt romney, that the tea par si the just going to go nuts and say we'll have to run our independent candidate and you're going to have perhaps a sarah palin or rand paul or whatever running. >> larry: mitt romney, whose health plan in massachusetts is what recently passed. we'll be right back with michael moore. don't go away. let me tell you about a very important phone call i made.
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i had only one thing to say... sign me up. call the number on your screen now... and find out about an aarp medicare supplement insurance plan. you'll get this free information kit... and guide to understanding medicare, to help you choose the plan that's right for you. as with all medicare supplement plans, you can keep your own doctor and hospital that accepts medicare, get help paying for what medicare doesn't... and save up to thousands of dollars. call this toll-free number now. >> larry: we're back with michael moore. tea party. what do they represent? are they the right-wing michael moore? are they angry and they've had enough? >> well, i think they do represent -- or they did at the beginning -- a certain group of them remitted a certain populist sense of -- that they were getting screwed. not just -- >> larry: can't stand -- >> not just the government but against the banks and corporations and wall street who have taken their jobs and sent them elsewhere, who are now taking their homes and they don't see a very bright future.
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so the tea party, i think, has appealed to at least a legit legitimate feeling that exists. i live in the midwest and as you know it turned very republican here in the elections, lost all the governorships except for illinois in those great lakes states. and -- but, i mean, then there are those people in the tea party that are, you know, a little -- >> larry: off the deep end, maybe. >> off the deep end, maybe. >> larry: but that's a minority. >> well, i don't know. i think -- i still think that we live in a fairly liberal country, liberal in the sense that -- that -- that people want to move forward, they don't really -- they don't want to go back to the old way. you know, eventually, you know, things do get better in this country. women get the right to vote. we've passed civil rights legislation. gays will be able to marry.
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this will happen. you can see where the wave is going. the wave isn't going the other way. so i done -- and i don't think the tea party -- i hope -- isn't going to take us in that direction. >> larry: in 1932, norman thomas ran on the socialist ticket. he had a 20-point plank. 19 are now law. >> right. right. >> larry: some think that that drubbing -- >> by the way, thank you for mentioning norman thomas. this is going to be one of the really sad things about your leaving the show, is that your history, your -- i mean, what you bring to this, your knowledge, you've lived through so much of this, this is gone, you know. when you're gone, that's gone. that won't -- i mean, there's good people on tv. i'm not saying that. but i'm just saying that you bring this -- >> larry: it's called aging. >> well, or wisdom. right? huh? >> larry: okay. i'll take your word for it. >> i mean, if young people, anyone watching tonight who's in their 20s will go and google norman thomas --
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>> larry: they'll learn a lot. >> they'll learn something. yes. >> larry: our friend president clinton was knocked around in '94, came back, won big in '96. can obama come back? >> oh, i think with some of the people who have been elected, i mean, just look what happened this past day or two with the congressman in florida who was going to have as his chief of staff the crazy talk show lady. there's enough -- >> larry: she wanted to shoot -- >> yes. >> larry: on site. >> she won't be the last one, by the way. you'll see more of that sort of thing with the new congress. i think with some of the people that have been elected, president obama's approval ratings will start to rise within the next three or four months as people become aware of what the tea party and the republicans are really up to. here's the mistake that he shouldn't make as far as what clinton did uz wuz he thought i have to move more to the right and be more pro business. that's when clinton started the deregulation of wall street and the banks. that's when he -- all those --
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and his secretary of the treasury, mr. larry summers, started to put into place what eventually became, once bush got into office, that he took what clinton started and put steroids it into, and then we ended up with the crash in '08. we hope that obama -- that's not the lesson that he's learned from this. i hope that the lesson to learn is to see the more liberal you were, if you were a member of congress, in last week's election, the more likely it was that you got re-elected. the conservative democrats, the majority of them were booted out. the liberals won. he should take this country in the progressive direction he was elected to take it in. >> larry: they'll have a stalemate because the house is going to turn them down. >> but let the -- that's what i'm saying, though. he's afraid to even put it up in front of the people. say some of these bills that he could push through the senate right now, the disabled veterans bill, the elderly abuse act. >> larry: who's against that? >> yeah. and if the republicans -- but the republicans have held this up in the senate. these bills that have already been passed, make them
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filibuster. make them stand there and read from the phone book for three days, four days. shut the senate down and let the american people say why have they shut down the senate? they don't want to help elderly people who are abuse victims. they don't want to help out these veterans. he's afraid for some reason to just call on it. because i tell you what, trust me, if the shoe was on the other foot, if there was a lame-duck session ha the republicans had right now and they had a couple hundred bills, they'd be ramming those babies through every single day. >> larry: we're back with
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>> larry: we're back with michael moore. lots of people are still having mortgage and foreclosure problems. michael dealt with this in his film "capitalism: a love story." in this clip, you'll hear from congresswoman marcie captor. watch. >> don't leave your home, because you know what? when those companies say they have your mortgage, unless you have a lawyer that can put his finger or her finger on that mortgage, you don't have that mortgage. and you're going to find they can't find the paper up there on wall street. so i say to the american people, you be squatters in your own homes. don't you leave. in ohio and michigan and indiana and illinois and all these other place where is our people are being treated like chattel. and this congress is stymied. >> larry: i know a lot of people are doing just that. >> some people are starting to do that and they should do it because the banks don't have the paper. they've split it all up. they've bundled it, sold it off as securities.
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pieces of paper all over the world. they can't come into court with your mortgage. they can't come into court with your mortgage. you should stay in that house and you should fight it. she's great. actually, she's a good example of what i was just saying. she's the congresswoman from toledo, ohio, a state that just elected a republican governor, a republican senator, and yet she's one of the most liberal members of congress from a hard-hit place, toledo, ohio. and yet she won by an overwhelming margin again in toledo. the democrats have got to start -- again -- >> larry: you're telling people don't pay your mortgage? >> no. i'm saying -- no. i'm saying that you should not -- these banks are evicting people. they're not being given the break or the chance -- first of all, many of them were sold fraudulent mortgages. and the fbi has come out and said that 80% of the mortgage fraud that has taken place during this crisis was committed by the banks, not the people --
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>> larry: what's a fraudulent mortgage? >> well, they sell -- they sell these mortgages to people who -- well -- >> larry: they can sell the paper to whomever they want, can't they? >> well, they can, but what they do is they then -- once they've sold -- this is the real crime of what the banks have done and nobody's gone to jail for this, is they knew they were selling homes to people that probably couldn't afford those homes in many cases. >> larry: right. >> okay? and they were selling them at inflated prices, these homes now, to come back down probably to closer what they were actually worth. the whole market was out of control. but the banks -- here's the thing, larry. the banks knew that there would be all of this foreclosing going on. they knew that it would -- and yet they still sold them to people. you know, here, they bundled them as security, sold them, and then -- and then these wall street banks started placing bets against those very mortgages that they knew had a
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very good chance of bombing. they then -- they took a bet out saying that -- they're betting that these mortgages are going to fail. and they made money on that. it is so absolutely -- if a casino did that, i mean, they'd be brought in on charges. >> larry: we'll get into other areas of politics. bob woodward wrote in his latest book if obama could switch from biden to hillary, make them switch jobs. you buy that? >> well, if it could happen. i don't think it needs to happen, but i think his problems are bigger in terms of -- if he wants to win re-election, he needs -- he needs to -- i mean, we just had this deaf sit commission thing here yesterday. >> larry: right. >> and it's, like, that's the first commission that you put together, president obama, to -- let's reduce the deficit. we've got 10% unemployment. the first commission should have been a jobs commission. how are we going to create jobs? what are we going do -- that's the only thing that's going to turn this economy around, when people have middle-class job where is they're making good money and they can survive.
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>> larry: the writer and economist ben stein is a frequent guest. and one thing about ben is you never know where he's going to go politically. he thinks that nobody has the answer to the jobs question. there is no definitive answer. you pin any republican or democrat down and they can't tell you. what would you do? >> well, i'll give you a couple of ideas. right now you and i own about 61% of general motors. next week, the government now wants to sell off about 20% of our share. so we'll only own 40% of it. and i know -- i mean, obviously something about this because this is where i'm from, and i've seen people suffer as a result of losing these auto jobs. as the owners of general motors, why aren't we taking that company in a 2 1st century direction? why aren't we having this company build mass transit, build bullet trains, build the things that we need to move ourselves around the country?
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>> larry: congress has to appropriate the money. they'll be able to form jobs, but where is it going to come from? >> well, they -- well, first of all, you change the tax structure so that the wealthy are paying their fair share, not getting away -- i mean, last year exxonmobil, total amount of taxes ta they paid, zero. zero dollars. there's a whole list of corporations, you can read it on the internet, of -- that get away with paying absolutely no taxes, companies that have moved their corporate headquarters to the cayman islands or to dubai. i mean, this has been one scam after another so that the wealthy have just gotten wealth wealthier, that 1% now that makes almost a quarter of all income in america is made by 1% of the people. that's absolutely -- you're right, we won't have real jobs as long as that kind of disparity continues. ] november . go ahead. mark your calendars. because that's the first day you can switch your medicare part d plan. we're ready, and we can't wait to switch. [ male announcer ] make the switch to an aarp medicarerx plan, insured through unitedhealthcare.
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>> larry: we're back with michael moore. obama could be a one term president, then. could be. as you see things. >> well, he could be, but i also think that there's a chance for four candidates on the 2012. >> larry: would the -- four candidates. >> four candidates. >> larry: would michael be one of them? >> he could be. he could be. yeah. or like i said earlier the left
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is so fed up with what the -- obama and the democrats have done, they, like they did in illinois last week, they may run somebody, and so you're going to have an independent candidate on the left, you're going to have president obama, if the republicans nominate the tea party doesn't like, they're going to run an independent. and then of course then you have sort of the bloomberg thing. i guess you could have -- i mean, this has only happened a couple times in our history. abraham lincoln, there were four candidates on the ballot. i think he won with 39% of the vote. and harry truman, there was -- >> larry: why is a two-party system better? >> it isn't better. it's not. we have 300 million people. >> larry: the constitution never mentioned it. >> that's right. this ultimately has to change because two political parties cannot represent the broad spectrum of political thought that exists amongst 300 million people. our neighbors to the north, canada, you know, there's five legitimate parties on the ballot. when they have their debate, you see five candidates standing
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there on tv all, you know, presenting their position. but of course they have a parliamentary system, which we don't have, and in which in some ways seems like a fairer system because let's say you are a green party person but you're only 10% of the country, well, you should have 10% of congress. if you're libertarian and -- >> larry: have a voice. >> 5% of congress is libertarian. everybody then has a voice. it does seem like a fairer system. >> larry: but big money lost, too. meg whitman, over $140 million. she lost. spent $140 million of her own money. >> yeah. >> larry: money doesn't buy everything. >> that's right. well, there's a lot of examples of rich candidates who run and they don't make it. in my state, in michigan, though, the former ceo of gateway computers is our new governor. republican. >> larry: do you like him? >> i don't know. he -- you know, in michigan, republicans tend to be a little more liberal than other parts of the country. romney.
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and even before that, the republican party was founded in michigan in the 1850s. michigan was the first state to not have a death penalty and much of that is a republican legacy in the state of michigan. did i just say something nice about republicans? >> larry: well -- mark that down. keep date handy. back with michael moore. we'll ask him about sarah palin.
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>> larry: would the democrats like that? >> well, i think some people would. i think people think, well, that's going to be a no-brainer. but i wouldn't -- geez. i wouldn't be dancing the happy dance if suddenly she was the candidate. >> larry: why? >> because i think that, you know, we had a president for eight years who probably proclaimed that he was a "c" student and there's something he understood about his fellow americans or at least a certain chunk of them, that that was something to -- that was cool. it's cool not to be too smart. and so, she appeals to that, and the best news for democrats is if they don't get it together and they fight each other and she runs against the traditional republican as an independent or
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maybe she wins the nomination but then a traditional republican or a bloomberg decides to run, then, you know, there you go. what do i know? i've got a a high school education, larry. >> larry: have you read george w. bush's memoir? >> i have. >> larry: "decision points," i hear it's very well written. >> okay. yes. it seems to have nouns and verbs and adjectives and periods. i -- look. i don't know if you -- i actually went right to, because somebody told me that he trashed me in the book. so i went to that first, just to see what he said. >> larry: how did he trash you? >> he basically compared me to osama bin laden. from what i've read so far, the worst slur against any american citizen that he has rendered in this tomme of his.
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he said osama had released a say or something before the 2004 election and he said the two of these guys sound just alike, michael more and osama bin laden. >> larry: how did you react to that? >> well, you know, he -- he said that his worst moment was when kanye west said that george bush doesn't care for black people. he thought that was a really horrible thing to say about somebody. for him to say that about me when, this is the president who in august of 2001 was handed a piece of paper that said, osama bin laden to attack america, probably using planes. and he looked at it, i made some comment, and then he went fishing and he went on vacation
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for the next four weeks and he recklessly put our country in danger, in jeopardy because he chose to ignore a very straightforward written report given to him. >> larry: one agent, i think, right? >> by advisers. not just one agent. listen, there's thousands of agents, you don't just get to hand something to the president. that's what they believed and you know what? they were right. >> larry: it's time now for heroes. a world renowned performer tells us about a man who's dedicated his life to feeding nearly half a million hungry children every single day. watch. >> hello. i'm ricky martin. as one of cnn heroes blue ribbon panelists, i had the honor of helping choose this year's top ten. as the founder of the ricky martin foundation i am committed to being an advocate for the well being of children around the world and now i am thrilled to help cnn introduce one of this year's top ten honorees.
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now, more than ever, the world needs heroes. >> i never expected my life to change in this way. my brother and i were having a pint in our local pub. we'd seen a news report about a refugee camp in bosnia and we began saying wouldn't it be wonderful if we could just do one small thing to help. i'm magnus mcfarlane-bar row. i sold my house to help the people in bosnia. out of that has grown the organization that feeds around 112,000 children every day in 18 different countries. we buy the food locally and then we ask the local community to take responsibility for the daily cooking and the serving of the food. we began working in haiti in 2006, in addition to feeding children we've been feeding the elderly. since the earthquake we've been involved in health care, helping with rebuilding of the schools.
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and every small act of kindness does make a difference. >> larry: go to cnnheroes.com to read all about our top ten heros and vote for your favorite. they'll be honored at "cnn heroes, an all-star tribute" thanksgiving night hosted by anderson cooper here on cnn. >> larry: couple more things,
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>> larry: couple more things, afghanistan. what do you expect to happen? >> i expect that they're going to start to tell us that they're not going to bring the troops home next year like they sort of promised. and it's going to be a year or two or three longer than that. and that's a huge mistake. it's an unwinnable situation there. we have no business being there at this point. >> larry: but doesn't that give the country over to taliban? >> yeah, i could list 30 other countries that are run by bad people. should we invade them tomorrow? is that our job? i mean, we should help whoever needs help and throwing any tyrant -- >> larry: but this is a country that may be harming people that killed 3,000 of our people. >> but they don't anymore. his own generals have told them that there's 20 or 30 al qaeda left in all of afghanistan. this is now their internal problem and the people of afghanistan have to deal with it. and we shouldn't lose any more of our young men and women. >> larry: so you fear the worst --
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>> i'm afraid if the democrats and obama keep behaving like they have, they're not going to stand up and do what the people -- 70% of the people want the troops home. >> larry: but it isn't a big vietnam protest war. >> because we don't have a draft. let's start a draft tomorrow or how about this? here's one idea for the deficit. from now on, whenever we start a war, everybody's taxes go up 10% to pay for it so we don't go into debt. how many wars would we be in after that? you know? i tell you, i just -- i know we're running out of time here and we're -- i have been coming on your show since i was a kid, really. and you were young, too. >> larry: those were the days. >> i just wanted to thank you for all these years and i came on radio with you before tv. i mean, i used to love those westwood one, remember that? you drank a diet iced tea. but you've been so good to allow me this time to say these things
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and to, you know, and i feel very privileged to be able to say the things that, you know, a lot of people don't get to come on "larry king" and say. i lucked out and i appreciate it. >> larry: we never had an agenda. i never learned anything when i was talking. >> awe lou all voices. sadly when the show is gone, this is gone. i'm a tigers fan, you're a dodger's fan. one player that means a lot to us, gibson. won for the tigers and, of course, great things he did for the dodgers. so i brought you a little going away present. this is a bat from kurt gibson, signed by curt gibson that i'd like to present to you. from a tiger to a dodger fan, and also ernie harwell was our broadcaster. >> larry: knew ernie well. >> he passed away this last year

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