tv Stossel FOX Business October 12, 2013 1:00am-2:01am EDT
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♪ buying, thank you for watching tonight. we'll seeou tomorrow. >> how incentive and cold can you get? >> that is what iear if a challenge a welre program. >> we're talking about people that we ought to be rushing to try to help the needy did benefit credit cards, edt cards. ♪ john: free stufforictims. bill o'reiy. >> no matter what the evidence, no matter what facts are presented, the liberal line will be the same if society's fault. john: she blames her parents for bad attitude. the back street boy's neck rter blames his drug binges on paris hilton.
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lamar odom as father blames his sons trole on the kardashian these pple say they cannot find work. this woman works for the welfare office. >> which should be done about that? >> i don't really know. they will get a job. john: selling victim died. at is our show tonight. ♪ spherejohn: are you a victim? won 19 emmys. solar poweredlothes dryer, just 50 bucks. what did they get in the mail? a clothesline.
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>> this machine supposedly used emical sprays to make people feel younger. or yocould use this device. >> will step. of ugl facial fat. john: it's my job. i should warn you about scams. nothing wrong with consume reporting. e media always goes orboard. and in 2020 we did. >> coffee makers may have started dozens of fires. john sssel with the facts you @%ould know, brewing disaster. john: did you happen to catch this so-called this story? >> investigative reporter went undercover to see firsthand how this underground wld works. >> eight peoples shang a meal in a stranger's home. blended best and dinner parties like tse have become more common. insiders tell us they are completely unregulated. john oh, my goodness. unregulatedinner parties. gavin mcinnes is a media critic ann cumnist. he hates this kind of hid and
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writes about it. what gets in their heads? out of touch with the average american andhinkhat they need to get in there and regulated all. i feel like they he never built the business, a liberal ts degree, a journalism degree, don't run the numbers. john:hat is a good point. anybody u.s. tried to build something, a building or a business, they wake up to regulation. reporters, most ve never built anything. >> i notice they took the comments section down from t web page at that news station. you called the reporter up and gave her some heat, i hope. e said she seemed dubious. with my questions she returned more questions. john: you wold not answer the question. >> sheanted to know what my ankle was aire was asking questions. one thing i find a lot of these reporters are scared ofs being exposed. they're like politicians. wh you stick their face a per call at the name they're less likely to on these witch hunts
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john: well, undercover cameras. one of the moreams ones, julia roberts won an oscar portraying the hero, aaron brockovich. >> very harmful. >> it lls people. >> oh, yeah. >> a dream about being a will to watch their kids women a pool without worrying it will have to have a hysterectomy at the age of 20. john: this was about a chemical leaked from a california power plant that was supposedly causing cancer. but it turned out it probably wasn'tausing cancer. the california cancer registry studied cancer rates in that ar and found no cancer in excess. it i mean -- >> peoplfell f this because it is intuitive that think that being near power plan is probably bad. being stressed must lead to cancer. when you talk to experts in the field they go, really, smoking is the only thing you can do to change your genetic makeup. if you're oing to have cancer
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you, you're going to hav cancer. otherwise, live for everyone and it asressed as you want. john: lawyers made a hundred million dollars despite no evidence. i give teir real erin brockovich some credit after she and her lawyer boss were criticized calling me a corporate sll. i iited her on the program and she came. john: californians have to p more for electricity to pay off all of these lawyers. itooks like this camp. >> is definitely not a scam i have to tell you, in this instance wit the southern g and electric and being part of it from the process from the ginning to the end, it was a willful egregis intentional contract -- contact. they knew that that chemical was aoison. john: the chemical is a poison, but for the record a steady at 50,000 people who worked at the power plant and were exposed more and were healthier than average.
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so the media cells that,yers get rich, everyone pays more for electricity >> corine is a pson and we swam in it all the time. it's great. i love boys and. john: you wrote recently about e myth america pageant. what is that about? >> what isappening in media these days is they have become storytellers. they find a villain and said that this princess in the castle story and then work backwards and get the evidence fm there. the evidence is rlly there, so they started relying on twitter to prove theheories. with the ms. america pageant it found a bunch of teams to set things like she looks like a terrorist. twitter is the same place where people say this house is not zombie-proof, but are stening to opinions. john: there was actual backlash. they hav some fact. >> some kid 14-year-old spirit take there followers. ere was no backlash. it fits their narrative. a crowbar it and. john a sample, the media freak
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out. >>he new winner is facing a fierce backlash. some people calling her a foreigner, an arab, en a terrorist. >> coming face-to-face with racism. >> racist comments bacchante -- began flooding the internet. $1 began tweeting, ms. america is a terrorist. john: fierce backlash. >> i look at woman at that she has zero followers, little kid. if you lookp i hatebabies you will find dozens of kids saying at. john: twitter is full of rhetoric. what is the medido this? >>here are a million theories, but culpability is not syn tv. john: irresponsible. >> even though it is what made our culture great, its to we are is a nascent -- nation. it mes people feel better to say it i not their fault, victim of circumstance. john: one last example about media people wringing there hands about victims is that media concern about kids being vo -- bulli. >> this kind of bullying is on
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the rice, by one ount as many as one in three kids being victimized. >> cer bullying, a gwing epidemic. john: onhe rise, a growing epidemic. i assume there was more bullying when i was a kid because nobody thought about it. i was bullied. i assumed it was just part of schools. now at lst there is awareness. i t there is less. a former teacher jet a dire -- jedediah bila says thiss an something right.3dia doing >> i like thii. i saw cases of bullying. john: elementary school. >> elementary, school, college. it is a real roblem. you have kids to not only have their grade suffer but contemplate the idea of hurng themselves. stories and in his work is ultimately commit suicide. when it comes to legitimate cases a bullying the med and media personalities that have a platform can highlight cases and say, for example, there was a girl in queens. in may and read a story about a
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girl who did commit suicide as relt of bullying. it turned out that the administration was not doing properollow-up and the parents to try to reach the administration to look intohe problem. that is the kind of journalistic coverage that can help the issue in may because parents who ordinarily are not to sound into th issue t say, hold on. let me ask mike t some key quesons. let me get to the school and make sure erything is okay. john: what about the media always saying it is on the increase. they don't know. >> in some cases the media c create victims and label things as bullying and really serious that are not necessarily but there are cases where it is serious, particularly now with the internet age where we have facebook and twitter and cyber bullying, schools have a responsility. john: and overweight tvnchor was praised by the media, g on the today show bause after she got a letter from a viewer who said, you are a bad example for kids and should take care of herself, she complained about his bullying.
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>> there are children who don't know betr, who did e-mai. as critical as the one i receivedore in many cas even worse, each and every day. the internet has bome a weapon . jo: come on. she is a hero. e g just said you should take care of yourself. >> this is an examp of in my hyh is where the fine line comes in. >> thikeeps happennng with all of these cases. now, yes, it is a tragi thing that someone killed themselves, let's can pare that to a bees sting. how serious is this problem? millions of ks. let's qntify. john: hundreds of americans are kill. >> let's quantify the people who were not. when you bubble a child like that and put a protective layer and coddled them they're not prepared for the real world. john: now we have the internet, and anene which lets people believe more.
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>> inevitably when you are arguing with someone likthis guy who called arafat and s is fat, by theay. john: did not even call arafat, the wake. >> he should feel bad. you're overweight. sorry. >> there has to be a balance in terms of how we looked at this. hn: we are way beyond balance. thank-you. if you would like to keep this conversation going go to facebook and twitter and use that has tagged. victimhood. let people know what you think. coming up. >> cupcakes for sale. john: i held the bake sale, a racist bake sal >> tt is not right. >> ou goto be on your -- john: also today, what does it mean to be poor in america? >> at tv. >> television. john: air-conditioning? >> yes,. john: cable-t >> yes,. johnhow many channels?
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could you live on that? have you? what amount of pay is reasonable at what point is is so low that if you work for tt you are a victim? >>eople got bills. you know, child payment, car insurance, utilities. you know, that doesn't -- the minimum wage is not cats -- john: there have been lots of otests around the country, mostly restaurant workers complaining about low pay. the protests have had an effect. california just passed a bill to raise the state's minimum wage to $10 per hour. most people around me -- i do live in manhattan -- c $10 is not enough, and the governmen mu get ino guarantee those victims of greedy employers more money, a living wage. this, but he is president of the ayn rand ititute, and we notice of this person ayn rand
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was. hugest advocate selfishness? >> i'm advocating thatveryone should be self interested. there are many people out there who e interested in working for these rat. what happens when we set the minimu wage so high, $10 per hour or whenever it happens to be, $25, what happens to those people who don't produce at $ an hour or $7.205? what we create is a class of people who will never find a job. you why those people? young, inexperienced, teenage, inner-ci youth who are now excluded completely from the work force and will never learn skills a get the experience necessary for making a hundred dollars an hour. john: how are they excluded? >> because if they can only produc $5 an hour, no one will employ thee at $10 per hour. no onn will lose on the employees that they hire. john: and the restauran lobbyists ran this ad.
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minimum wage. why robots could soon replace fast food workers demanding a @%gher minimum wage. >> we are actually seeings. if y drive up the cost, what restaurants will do, they still need to make their profit, keep the price of their products cheap. they will replace peopleith technolo. john: mcdonald's response i thought was interesting. they came out with asimple budget, and a free comprehensive ney management tool to providing an outline of what an individual budget may look like. they sw that a person can work for mimum wage and still save $100 per month. however, it included working two jobs. it took a lot of heat forhat. >> it is a little big brotherly for mcdonald's to tell its employee, here's at you can do. lo, pele are living all over this country making this kind of money people came tohis3 country with -- 100 years ago people lived on mh less than this. they sent there kids a got an
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education and rose up. john: people do around the world >> most people around the world live on much, much less. the governme has no role in, you know, dictating -- john: our government has decided it does. it sure has, and as a consequence you have seen youth unemployment in thisountry close to 20%. %-ted raise minimum wages, whatt you see is massive unemployment among those who can least affd it. john: i think progress, every facet of this budget basically is unachievable. >> many people achieve it. we all started somewhere. i make a lot of money today, but i started making less than minimum wage, foreign student, yo know, working at graduat school making probably lesthan this. we managed. it is wrongo try to force peop to pay a particular wage, to pay a particular form of income. this should be left for the marketplace. let -- left to negegotiations.
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john: affair was the protesters, there is a spring in their step. [chanting] john: they don't act like victims. >> i don see any one of those people look like they were starving. we make it more expensive. we are doing i not just, you know, violating their rights and reducing pfits in everything that has to do with ecomically , but also denying jobs to people who cannot afford e denied jobs and create unemployment. john: listen to this more seriou protester who presents the victim message, and this peuades people. >> some people work 80 hours a week and cannot make ends meet or have no time for anything else. all they do is work all week. jo: all they do is work all week. nobody -- >> nobody knows anything. john: don't we or it -- of the
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poor ssmething? >> no, we don't. jo: i feel i owe as an individual. >> then you as an individual can help them out, but they are not asking forour help. they're not trying to negotiate a better salary. what they are asking i f the stat to bring coercive power anforce yoto help them, force employers to help them. john: thank you. yaron brook. coming up, our black people victims in america? do i victimize them further if i run this race is to bakeale? >> we have different prices here. if you a asianan, and dollar 50. if you're white, and dollar. if you are latino orlack, $0.50.
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continuing racial discrimination but the author of "backlash" offers that this focus on the past is terribl for blacks. ca says they should stand up against destructive progressive tyrants to promote victimhood. distractive progressive tyrants. >> progressive policies are harming the black community, failing public schools, unemployment is over 13%, or 40 percent amo young bck individuals. john: they are victims. >> stands up to these present policies that are not working. and do not see them as victims. they are not victims. that is a narrative tha the left uses all the time to promote their big government agenda. they don't wanto promote liberty, personal responsibility . vapor vote --, a bigger governmt john: you went to the naacp annual summit and heard a lot about victimhood. >> throughout the entire meeting john: every speech?
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>> what i heard when i was there was an as vse them mtality. added not hear anyolutions. i heard a lot of victimization, race cards voter i.d. is racist, as verses them. if you are black you don't stand a chance. john: at that same naacp conference where you are not allowed to speak should point out, al sharpton marked -- mocks people who say the election of president obama means that america is past racism. >> those that were saying that never was profiled in a department store. those that were saying at work never pulled over on the highway. john: here is a point, of the black man imore likely to be pulled over on the highway, profed. >> racism is not prevalent across our country. there are 80 it's out there may be racist, but clearly look at individuals and politics, business, sports, entertament. myself, and i implore all
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freedom of americans to stand u@ and push back on this narrative. don't afraid to be called a racist or aelloutut, of the different nam. if you believe in liberty and want to advance our country forward, i implore all americans to speak out. john: the stock to let the killing of tde on martin. the president said this could have been m son. it cld have been his son. >> he injected himself into this and made about a racial iue when, in fact, it had nothing to do with rac. john: we don't know that it had nothing to do about race. >>he fbi investigation concluded that. zimm cvicted. so clearly it was not about race. unfortunately early on we had people who promod it as our pop race. that is what domineered the headlines. john: and a produr at nbc -- surprise, surprise -- clearly had black victimhood in line -- in mind when he edited the nine month one call. re's the actual call. >> this guy looks like he is up
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to no good or something. it is raining. he is just walking around looking about. >> okay. this guy, is the white, black, or hispanic? >> he looks black john: the editor took up the dispatcher asking, is the white, black,ispanic, was left just th. >> ts guy looks like his up to no good. he looks black. john: lk, a television, we always -- maybe he was just -- >> no, that was justery inappropriate and the wrong thing to do. anything about race is emotional and it drives the headline. eerly on with this case, this investigation, it was always about race when, in fact, it wasn't. john: seventh blacks been viims in america? >> years ago, john. blk individuals did not have access to education, housing, jobs. times have changed, and we don't live in that era anymore. john: let's talk about
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affirmative action, given america's history of discrimination, it seems reasonable t me that whites should try to make amends, tried to give a break to minorities ace th i had. what is wrong with that? before you answer, let's bring in a white person who opposes affirmative action. jennifer gratz was denied admission to the university of michigan, you say because you are white. aviano was because of your race? >> well, they're proud of the fact that they use race and admission to help some people into heard others. the university of machinelike i applied -- johnn not prrudly hurt others. they say they help some. >> when i alied to the university of michigan and a point systemn place. you needed 100 point to be accepted. a perfect act score and an applicant to los points, and a standing as sake was one point. you're bck, as bennett, are
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native american, you're automaticall awarded 20 points, more than a perfect act your sa court. very obvus how much a factor replace. john: you sued over this inicate knledge of t suureme court and won. >> i did. john: firmative action still lives. >> the supreme court said that race preferences cannot be used in a mechanical way.3 the cou not be a point system, but race could be used as a ctor for about another 25 years. john: if i get a job applicant and they are equal, probably would take the black person figuring this person had may be to overcome something inhe past. what is wrong with that? >> i think that our decision making should be colorblind. i think that first of all, the chances -- john: what about the history of discrimination and special privileges forhites? >> i don't know of any special priveges that i have.
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there are three unintended viits of these policies. the people who get a preference to get into college and don't need or to get a job and don't need it and the credeials of unquestioned. john: us talk about that. he senus this video of a conversation with a 1year-old gi. she has top grades, perfect s.a.t. scos, and she is against affirmative action. >> t college, racial tension and racial division because the white people going to say, oh, but we don't get preferences. we don't get advantage they're going to resent the minorities. i'm going to get extra points because of pilot light, and i resent that. i don't want people looking at me and saying, maybe she got in becaus of what she lks like and not because she is qualified john: i have heard that before. how can you ever trust that this doctor deserves to be a doctor. >> these policies did not exist among we would love the people in positions that allow lives
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and their hands are there becae of their merit. john oer victims, you say, are people who get the preferences and do well in school. corct. people who are qualified toet into a second-tier schools are bound to because of preferential treatmenand get into a top tier schoo and then don'to well and end up with a considerable amount of debt and student loans and oftentimes dropout. so now they have a debt, no degree, and they feel horrible. they don't feel successfu we would be better off having kids go where they're prepared to, whether qualifications say they're readto go and graduate and get a degree in feel like a success. john: the third category is this message of vicmhood. >> yes. the race hustler of the world, and jesse jackson, al sharpton. john: if you're told you're a victim, you start to act like it exactly. you act like a victim. you become aictim.
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and it becomes an us versus them type of mentality which i know you talked about earlier. john: to raise people's consciousness about affirmative action, i once ran a racist bake sale. john: cupcakes for sale. my priceless said agents had to pay $1.50, white's $1.00, latinos and blacks jus $.50. >> that is not right. >> you have to be out oyour mind. >> that is stereotyping. john: it is. >> that is not right. john: it is the sam princle. >> you got their attention. let me give you a quick -- john: we had a conversation people were sayingi had not thought of it that way. >> frederick douass was born a slave, escape slavery, self educated,nvolved in politics, an adviser to presidents, he disdned affirmative action and special treatment. so if he was someone that could do it and be successful, anyone can with our work.
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i don't on myself and and not free. it is sad in a free country that we are even calling ourselves pork. i got caught up in it, and a lot more people are today because they goodies are getting much broader and more expensive to the taxpayer. john: people who get government aid often say the solution to their problem is more government aid. here is what i was told outside a food kitchen in harlem. >> poverty stinks'. >> give usore jobs and opportunities. john: government shoul just created job. >> create jobs. >> create more jbs. john:: more food stamps. >> mar foods cents. >> more welfare >> more welfare john: oo and on. the impressions that goods come >> right.rnment. well, that is the disconnecti. i never thought about it when i lived on welfare. we have alsoaken the shame out. you can live tax depennt commit taxpayer dependence and no one will even know it. housingor the poor has improved w it is ce t wt lay it -- what they lk like.
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you cannot tell it is a government pay for. john: you see lived prey well. >> is a mentality. this is the problem. people are not connecting to thr own lives and well-being. it i give me something. then you make use similar to slavery where you make do if you are on by someone else. it put up barriers so they cannot live free. you move fm one benefit to the next. hn: chk out the fear of a california surfer dude who john robes interviewed here uses his food stamp card to buy lobster and sushi. >> hundred dollars a monththth >> thank you foror shopping with us. >> just like that. >> please remove our bags. >> all paid for by our wonderful tax dollars. john: he had no interest in getting a job. >> not something that appeals to you..3 >> nothatsoever. john you work the system when you collected. >> why not just hang out at veni beach all afternoon. i did it for a long time. it was not until the christian
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conversion changed my life and i engage in my o well-being. work is hard which is why we don't want to reward of behavior. john: the governmens welfare bureaucrats ussally clm that they are saving people. one outside welfare office i was this -- surprised the find that admitted what she does leads people to death not bother to look for work . you end human-rources encourage people to be independent? %-john: what should be done? >> i don't really know. i gss stop giving away the money and it will get a job. john: and you work for the government. >> that's right. john: that is a pretty unusual reaction. aughter] >> don't work, don't save, don't get married. that is the rule of welfare. john: don't admit that usually, do they? people witerious. >> no, they were not serious, but they did not admitted in public. mike case worker is the one that told me if anyone ever asked to
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make sure tt night did not live beyond what they were paying me. pretend that added the issue one to go to lunch with her girlfriend. she is part of the problem. john: one aspiring actress and lis in a poor neighborhood in los angeles made this video mocking the welfare system. >> go to california. i need some mey. >> free food. >> mama says she can't take me to school. >> we ge free food. >> free day care, free clothes. this is where ithen it checks pay anmoy goes. all you have t do is -- and nine mths later you get the@ big b. john: obviously her point, having babies wednesday benefits >> absolutely true. if you get pregnantyou get a check. welfarreform, you get pregnant at 14, 15, 16, you get a check and a housing voucher to move out of your parents setting. it is sad.
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john: you think a 14 year-old girl says i will get pregnant because i'm going to get this monthly check? >> i think tt what we have done is incentivized this type of behavior. remember, these folksave been conditioned to believe they are victims. when you're 14 years old and lived in housing project because your mother was 14 when she got pregnant with you and you looked out at your options, broken school, broken environment, yes, you can then say why not just live for today. the next thing you know you are pregnant and in that same cycle john: said if a politician dares suggt change, cutting benefits , the media and the left i they the same thing? eight hacked out rates. >> there are other things that could be on the table before you pick a program t is feeding the nation's poor children. >> al insensitive and cold can you get? john: and hal insensitive and cold you must be to suggest these cuts.
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[laughter] >> it is the beet medicine ever. is a cancer in our society, and the people that are promoting to keep the status quo at the very part of the system that is now working. we declare war on poverty, and trillions of dollars later we have a collapse of marriage, communities that are in total ruin and you havee the likes of those forces we just heard that keep insisng we connue this madness. john: thank you. we do seem to continue the madness. coming up, the truly hopeless deserved assistance, even i agre with that. government assistance? it crees more victi. ♪
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♪ jo: are you isabled? so disabled you can't findork? i am a stutterer. today's disability laws existed and i began work, i wonder if i had overcomey problem or maybe just given up, collected a government check. am glad today's disability laws did not exist then because without them i struggled and i am here. but the laws do exist now, and coincidentally, more americans say they a disabled.
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ted dehaven tudies this. >> a couple of years ago at walmart i over here a conversation between two women and hear one say to the other, i could take a pay cut or i cou just go for disabity. it really struc me as an analyst to dell's into various government programs. she spoke of that as if it w an eithe or. i wenhome and looked at it. the numbers have exploded. when you start looking at the program, we are not more disabled. we are not a blue-collar economy any more and he -- john: more people are working at home, less manl labor. >> exactly. so how could this band all this more money for disability and have these people applying. john: when you say all these peopll applying, you have the cato institute chart that shows the money spent over the last 50 years. people say, well, when the economy gets better and then it
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goes down. it barely went down in the 80's and the economy improved. bacally it is going steadily up. >> we have had a liberalization ineligibity goingack to the 1980's it is showing up now. for parents trying to get there kids on psychotropic medications and the hopes that they will increase their odds of qualifying for a check. it goes to dad and m. john: your neighbor gets sick and you stt to feel l like a sucker. >> the message being sent to my and disabled. as they become adultt, the first thing they're being taught is don't work. disadvantaged or they are or are not. john: disabled used to mean paralyzed. a severe injury. now it means what? deession back pain. >> is like any other government program. you start off th gd intentions a it becomes something it was never supsed to be.
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the original disability insurance program was supposed to benefit those ages 50 to 64 as basically a transition into regular retirement. since the 1980's u.s. in a 300 percent increase in awards for back pain, mental issues, what they call non exertion of restrictions. i am going to my chiropracr tomorr with a pinched nerve, compressed disk and quite honestly trying to take on the government is driving me nuts. is a good chance i could qualif if i pressed are enough. jo: it used to be that they were paralyzed. today most of the claims are things like anxiety, stress, back pain, nebulous diagnoses. >> and it is very subjeive. john: one oer reason more people collect, lawyers make big bucks promoting them. >> if you are disabled or can't work you need social security disability benefits, but don't try getti the money around. >> we help people get disability benefits. >> it is important that you act
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now. >> call 1-800-win/win one. >> my law firhas collected over $30 billion for injured people. john: the third of a billion dollars. >> yes. sometimes when i am at the gym i know this progr after program containing comrcials for tse folks. they don't make a ton of money, especially specialty law firms. john: $88 million according to the "wall street journalin just one year >> about a decade ago the deck -- the government made it easier r non lawyers to represent people in appealing a cla. they hire bunch of cheap non lawyers and such and rushed people through the system, figure out the system, collect little bs of money. it adds that if you get enough people. john: and you pay. thank you. coming up, a doctor composing rap music to try to fight victimhood.
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>> now is ti to have occurred and take resnsibilit for reactions in that year life the way it should be live. john: live your life the way it should be lived. that music is not from a professional sger, a doctor@ who works at a clinic in ohio. anthony atkins. you got this idea from the kids you saw. >> the idea from working with youth. it started in ohio, working in a fast track e.r.
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teenregnancies comes tds, guns, drugs, things of that nature. we just developed a bond. i started talking to them. john: you would say to these kids, like you live like this? >> very straight up with me. and sometimes he did not have a way to go. decided to use the music the way they do and listen to me to teach and educate. that is what we do. john: in response to teen pregnancy let's play a clip from your song titled what if. it. ♪ john: and do you really think this will make a difference? it is hard to think that music could make a difference >> this is medicine and music. yes, given the chance and guarantee it will make a difference. the kids will come back and say, i am so gd you spoke to us
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th way because a lot of people are not doing i you keep it really does. you keep it straight with us, and we love it. john: thank-you. your signs are directed to the black communy, but i should be clear that the show is not singling out minorities. most so-called victims in america are whiteeople, and many are affent. caroline biden, joe biden's niec was arrestee recently for throwing a punch at a cop. the new york post says she is addicted to alcohol and pills does not take responsibility for actions instead blaming them on the preure she faces because her uncle ishe vice-president. give me a break. america succeeded becau it was founded by people who were the opposite of victims, people with great, overcoming obstacles is the route to prosperity and happiness. so three cheers for dr. anthony atkins and for all of you fighting to be anything but
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victims. that is our show. see you next time. ♪ >> hello, everyone. i'm dennis kneale than for gerri willis. what does it cost when you criticize president obama and his economic policy? the answer may be over $20 million. that is what someone is paying. we will explain. and facebook ceo demanding me privac not for you, but for himself. you in the meantime are about to lose more privacy on facebook. so tonight monica de part two, sexual harassment in the workplace is lal, but a judge rules is okay in some cases involving interns. our legal team will tackle that issue. "the willis report" starts right nnw. ♪
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