tv Kennedy FOX Business February 5, 2015 10:00pm-11:01pm EST
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you'd like to share with us? we'd love to hear it. send me an e-mail or go to our website, strange inheritance.com. . kennedy: i'm jamie colby and i need a girl's night. amen! guess what? brian williams is a big fat liar. in 2003 while reporting from iraq for nbc news, the nightly news anchor was in a helicopter. that much we know. what happened in that helicopter, that remains fuzzy. but for a long time now, williams has maintained the helicopter he was riding in was nearly blown out of the sky by an rpg! he says the chinook took a hit about 100 feet above ground that he and his crew were lucky to make it out alive from the decimated army craft and luckily were surrounded, protected and kept alive by an
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armor mechanized army platoon conceivably before they were eaten alive by werewolves. the crew of the actual chinook that was really shot, they heard his story. the fib hasn't sat well with a few of them. some of the guys finally had enough. they called out brian williams on facebook and williams has been forced to issue an apology. he said this last night -- >> i want to apologize, i said i was traveling in an aircraft that was hit by rpg fire. i was instead in a following aircraft. we all landed after the ground fire incident. kennedy: brian, no! it's like losing your wallet then claiming you've been robbed. that's not misremembering, that's lying. and the worst part, it wasn't just a tall tale that nbc's most respected news man indulged in a dozen years ago. he recounted his heroism for
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david letterman in 2013. >> two of our four helicopters were hit by ground fire, including the one i was in. >> no kidding! >> rpg and ak-47. >> what altitude? >> 100 feet doing 100 forward knots. we had the massive pieces of bridge beneath us on slings. >> what happens when everybody figures out you've been hit. >> we figure out to land. kennedy: yeah, we, he told the same b.s. story again just six days ago. >> the story started with a terrible moment a dozen years back during the invasion of iraq, when the helicopter we were traveling in was forced down after being hit by an rpg. kennedy: stolen valor! stolen valor! >> here it is, guys, stolen valor at its finest. stolen valor! right here! stolen valor! >> brian, it's not misremembering, it's not
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conflating, no mistaking whether or not you almost died or you heard about some guys who almost died. big difference. you totally lied. a lot! and that makes you a liar! in the spirit of misremembering, i have a few things i'd like to come clean about. a few connations i have made over the years. i was not in crimea during the russian invasion of ukraine. i was just drinking a white russian in new york and i got kind of confused, and for that, i am sorry. on several instances, i have talked about my experience as a medic in the crean war, and how tragic it was when my dear friend colonel henry blake died in a helicopter crash. i now realize that not only was i born after the korean war, i've never seen an episode of "m*a-s*h-." last year i confided while a camper at penn state, i had been molested by then coach
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jerry sandusky, in actuality my sexual relationship was entirely voluntary, and i regret implying otherwise. that is so bad. in 2011, i claimed to be member of elite navy s.e.a.l. team that killed osama bin laden in pakistan. i really thought i did that! but apparently, i miss remembered it. i was in no way connected to the crack s.e.a.l. team. in reality, i just killed some guy. i was not as previously reported one of tiger woods' lovers. that was just a flashback to my torrid love affair with jerry sandusky on the eighth hole on a golf course in 1992, the memory of which has become very fuzzy over the years. probably because the white russian. i'm not proud of my conflattions and keep my misremembrances to a minimum in the future. thank you. this show is so packed it could
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be called action jackson, and otherwise smart lady tells me i'm crazy for wanting to end the marijuana prohibition, and you can take my grammy picks to vegas and make lots and lots of money, and the government is creating another utility, no, not solar powered jackalopes, grab this one by the horns. i'm kennedy. ♪. kennedy: all right, here we go, follows the horrific video isis released of a jordanian pilot's death by fire, jordan's king says his country will wage relentless war until his military runs out of fuel and bullets. his quote. jordanian warplanes carried out first strikes on isis since the video was released. conducting a raid in iraq and syria, the de facto capital, ambassador john bolton joins me tonight, former ambassador to the u.n., and we're going to
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sort out the allies from the a-holes. welcome, ambassador. >> glad to be here. kennedy: jordan is fully engaged in the fight against isis. that is the best-case scenario. the people and the countries in the region who have the most to lose, they should be the ones taking the fight directly to isis. from, oh, my goodness to absolutely amazing, how do you rate the development of jordan's participation? >> i think it's a plus. bear in mind, according to public reports today, 21 jordanian planes flew on the mission along with 20 from the united states. so one might ask why hadn't the strikes been carried out long before? from the u.s. point of view, we have to ask ourselves what we think the problem is with isis, and if we think it's a potential threat to the united states, a clear strategy means that we prevent it from becoming that threat which means we have to be involved, too. i think many of these arab countries would respond with greater force themselves if
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they thought our president was really committed to the objective of destroying isis. i don't think they believe he is. and i agree with the arabs. kennedy: all right, i agree that the arabs should certainly be spearheading this effort. it's their region. it's their religion, they should be the ones redefining islam. shouldn't be the united states. we have haired enough time understanding what's going on there. the actors who can participate. they should be coming up with their own strategy. i want to ask you about strategy, that's a critical question and that's where a lot of americans are on the fence. they don't a costly war, they don't want a lot of american deaths but isis scares the begeez us out of them. ash carter, do you think he's the best for secretary of defense, and were you satisfied with his answers on capitol hill about his isis strategy? >> no, i'm not. i don't think the issue is strategy, i don't think you get on strategy until you define what your objective is, and i don't think you can define your objective until you analyze what the problem is.
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i think isis is a threat to the united states, i think it will only grow over time. from the u.s. point of view, objective should not be as the president says degrade and ultimately destroy isis. ultimately is a long way away, every day isis consolidates control over territory, it becomes harder to defeat. i think the objectives should be defeat it and soon. how do you describe that? when colin powell was chairman of the joint chiefs of staff, he said what he was going to do to saddam hussein's forces in kuwait. powell said first we're going to cut it off, then kill it. kennedy: you were talking about an army, a foe that is far more diffuse, and a group who is burrowing inside civilian populations, densely populated areas with all sorts of people and schools and hospitals, and lord only knows what else. seems like we don't have a lot
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of human intelligence on the ground, and the problem is whether it's president obama or anyone else who's opinions he ignores, it's been a shoot first, aim later strategy. >> well, i don't think that was the bush administration's strategy. i certainly don't think it was the strategy in the surge which did result in the defeat of al qaeda in iraq. i think a large part of our mission should be to turn the sunni arabs of western iraq away from isis to make them bear a good part of the battle. they're fighting or acquiescing with isis because they oppose the baghdad government, which is a tool of the iranian ayatollahs. one reason i would not equip and train the baghdad forces again. kennedy: we've already spent enough doing that. 25 billion dollars training the iraqi military? i don't want to do that in another country, but i want all of those countries. they've got guns, i don't care if they know how to use them. that's not our responsibility.
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let's talk about uae. they have stopped their missions to harm isis because they say we don't have a good enough search and rescue plan over rag. how do you get uae and jordan to work together? >> i think the administration now belatedly said we will put in search and rescue assets. the uae air force was not defined to work independently. we created the air force to be an adjunct of ours. they expected in a fight with us that the search-and-rescue and other assets would be there, but the obama administration didn't put them in. the administration's degrade and ultimately defeat strategy is degrade over a language period of time until the president doesn't have to worry about it anymore. it's the failure of leadership that leads others to say this isn't going to work. kennedy: he knows that, he knows he's got less than two years in office. >> if he had eight years, it
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would be the same strategy. in his heart the president believes strong american presence would create more -- kennedy: we agree the president has no idea what he's doing, he's in over his head. doesn't know anything about military, what do you do if you can't get the president on your side? it's not like the department of defense can act unilaterally? >> it's an impossible question to answer. if we had a real president, i could tell you what to do. i will in a second with. this president, americans are justifiably worried he'll get us into a war and won't know what to do about it. you have to act as quickly as possible before isis consolidates control over the territory. kennedy: i want to ask you one quick question, only a couple seconds left. bob graham chaired the 9/11 commission. 28 pages of the report redacted. that's in the news right now. do you think that those 28 pages should be made public and why are we protecting this?
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>> it could be they are withheld for valid reasons, and i'm --. kennedy: aren't you curious, though? >> i'd love to see, it of course, whether you make it public or not, we don't know. we make too much information public now. kennedy: i disagree, i think we're a strong enough nation and we need to show the world and the saudis they're bad people who financed something awful, the atrocity of which we may never come to terms with. they are not our friends. i appreciate you coming on the show. >> any time. kennedy: thank you very much, ambassador. coming up, a mayor who survived a brutal groundhog attack. he's just out of hospital. a miraculous story of recovery. first, i think marijuana should be legal. not everyone grease. you're crazy, kennedy. smoke them if you got them. spark a j, that's next.
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. kennedy: i guess i'm doing the devil's work, going to talk about legalization versus prohibition, america's first pot vending machines have opened in washington state, inside a medical marijuana dispensary, where a doctor's authorization and state id are required to even enter. it's part of a growing national trend to normalize pot. notable figures are very much opposed. colorado's governor john hickenlooper says his state's decision to legalize pot was
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reckless. i say bring on the legal weed. i don't smoke marijuana, i don't like it, i don't like what it smells but i believe in freedom. your freedom. this is you're crazy, kennedy. joining me is emily miller, chief investigative reporter for fox 5 in d.c., a gun rights advocate and a brilliant mind who is only wrong perhaps on this issue. emily, how are you? welcome. >> one issue that you get messed up is you're pushing pot on these people. kennedy: there's a big difference between fighting for freedom and pushing an agenda. i will qualify it every time, emly, i do not smoke weed, i don't think teenagers should, i don't think kids should smoke weed. i don't think it's necessarily great for you, that doesn't mean it should be illegal? >> well, i don't even understand your reasoning here, you agree with it doesn't help your life. you agree kids shouldn't do it. you are supporting people legalizing it in colorado, as you said, the governor said it is reckless.
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it's been a complete disaster. fatalities and car accidents are up. more college kids are using it. more deaths from this. this is the result from what you are calling more freedom. kennedy: so emily, you think that something that's deadly should be illegal, therefore there were 88,000 people killed by alcohol-related incidents. 43,000 prescription drug deaths, and these are things that are legal, far more deadly, far more deadly than marijuana. why don't we prohibit those substances as well? >> we do for kids. obviously, they get them anyway. kennedy: marijuana is not legal for children. >> they get them anyway. when you open up the market and legalize it, that's what's happened in colorado. the increase of kids in high school, college, increase in fatalities, that is the result of this, whether you think it's a good thing or it happened, that happened in colorado.
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a perfect experiment of legalizing marijuana. kennedy: emily, you are one of the fiercest pro-gun rights advocates in the country. you have written about the issue so extensively, you have staked your reputation on this. >> i can't see where this is going. kennedy: people say guns are deadly, they kill people. i'm not one of them. i agree with you on that, emily, i like freedom across-the-board, how could you possibly be so anti-pot when the same arguments could be applied to your gun logic? >> i actually have absolutely no idea how i can bring those two together in your logic. one is a constitutional right and one is not. i don't see how they are two different things. yes, a gun is deadly in the hands of a criminal just like drugs in the hands of someone abusing them. kennedy: those people are the ones who should go to prison. those who assault other people, those who rob should be in
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prison, not those who possess things like marijuana. it is a racial issue, black people and white people use marijuana in equal measure. african-americans in this country disproportionately are prosecuted and put in jail for this? >> the number of people in jail for pot is .1%, not just for smoking pot, having 150 pounds of pot. that is not true. they are not in jail for smoking pot. >> the culture warriors are on the losing side of this issue. many states a majority of whom -- >> kennedy -- >> people may disagree with pot, but overwhelmingly where it's put up on ballots, people want basic freedom. >> actually, just because you don't bail, doesn't mean you don't have the right to do it.
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>> we saw it change in washington, and colorado and now you're seeing a turnaround, there are scientific studies and statistics in law and crime happening as a result of this. things are changing, that's why it didn't pass in florida. in one year, the "gallup poll"s went down 7%. kennedy: that's not why it didn't pass in florida. it got a majority of votes, and by the way, the drug war, 55,000 people dead in mexico. you know what they import from mexico? marijuana! that's what's killing people. >> what is the relevance of mexico and colorado? i don't see the connection. kennedy: when something is grown legally, when it's no longer prohibited, people can grow it in regulated environments. if you're cool with that. >> you're talking in theory, not practicality. kennedy: they can theoretically die. >> they go to mexico and bring it up to the united states.
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>> emily, that's where they sell it? >> here's what happened in colorado and america, let's talk about that, we have legalization, the black market has gotten bigger because the kids are buying it in colorado. kennedy: no, the black market has gone the bigger because marijuana is too expensive because there is too much government involvement in the marketplace, let the market decide. let the individual decide, if you disagree with it, it doesn't mean the government should shut you down. emily miller, thank you so much. >> it's been a pleasure. kennedy: come back. private government sticky fingers off the internet. plus a mayor attacked by a weather prognosticator. there's blood, and it's on your hands. stay tuned. ♪
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kennedy: welcome back. the internet has been working pretty well these last few years on its own. unless you live in my neighborhood where it is slow and sucks. hasn't stopped the sec from wanting to reclassify the internet as a public utility. if they want to treat it like the phone company or your garbage collection or the power company over there, the progressive policy institute estimates that treating the internet like the phone service would trigger taxes and fees, obviously, look at your phone bill. up to $15 billion a year, but at least the government will be more involved in the internet. that sounds fantastic. peter suderman, we call him
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suderman computerman. the internet for most people who use it represents freeway. groups of big companies who want to deal with other big companies. the internet service provider, at&t, verizon, comcast, they've got the pipes. but the content providers like amazon, google and netflix they want to put their stuff down the pipes faster, the government doesn't want the two sides mingling together why, is that? >> basically what you're seeing with the proposal that was announced this week is a really big regulatory power grab. what's interesting this is a power grab that wasn't at the behest, wasn't pushed for by the regulators supposedly in charge of regulating the internet, the sec is technically an independent agency, but, in fact, this push is made by the white house and pushed the fcc chairman tom wheeler to go way beyond what he was really looking at, initially look at for most of
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last year, and they did this really by running a shadow fcc, a chateau regulatory organization from within the white house, and they drew up their own plans and said, look, this is what you've got to do. tom wheeler, after looking at plans that would have installed net neutrality protections without going full bore, reclassification, the title two route, treating the internet like a public utility. the white house said this is what you're going to do, and tom wheelie in the space of a couple months starting last november flipped on this issue. kennedy: tom wheeler is the puppet monkey and the president has his hand up tom wheeler's back side and we will all pay the price, because if i want to watch downton abby, i won't be able to do that everything on the internet will be treated the same. that sounds great, but in reality it sucks if you have
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priorities for certain content. >> well, the big thing we're going to miss out on is an awful lot of investment and innovation. interestingly tom wheeler says he flipped on this, not because of the white house pressure, but instead because he looked at the wireless industry, and the wireless industry has been regulated under title 2 as a utility as he wants to do with the rest of the internet for many years, and he said, the wireless industry has developed great. there's all sorts of innovation, but what he doesn't tell you is that the part of the wireless industry where there's been the biggest innovation, mobile dat has been exempt from title two, and only been a wireless voice that has been under title two for all of these years. are you using your phone for voice most of the time these days? kennedy: yeah, you can hear me. >> is that where you see the biggest development? kennedy: yes, absolutely
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suderman, and you make several fine points, the ultimate one is if the government gets involved with the internet, they're going to take away everything that is special and wonderful including people's ability to make money and the mobility of the internet makes it so fantastic, that will be squashed when you treat it like a utility and everyone should be offended by that. thank you, peter. >> thank you for having me, kennedy. kennedy: always and forever. coming up, who's going to the grammys, but first the pentagon does a psychiatric evaluation of vladimir putin and seahawks fan takes out his aggression on a tv. "topical storm" is next. i ask because i had mine for over 20 years, before i switched and saved hundreds with the aarp auto insurance program from the hartford. i had done a lot of comparison shopping. the rate was like half of what i was paying. $404 is the average amount folks save when they switch to the aarp auto insurance program from the hartford.
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arrogant tom brady being suspended before the game, it was actually a game. a finish so thrilling plaxico burress was impressed until seattle shot themselves in the leg. some seattle fans knew they were seconds away from victory so started filming the moment before the big moment when blue and green confetti could certainly fill the sky and something went horribly, horribly wrong. >> you do not throw a pass at the goalline when you have marshawn lynch. [ bleep ]. kennedy: beast mode. there was a robust debate this morning as the stats here on the show argued as to whether or not that's real. and i know i, for one get so emotional when i watch football, when ucla comes on, my daughters both ask, mom, are you going to kick the couch again? because i get so mad when my team loses or makes mistakes, i
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take it out on inanimate objects. i'm sorry, i think this guy is real. do you think he's phony baloney. hit me up on kennedy nation and let me know your thoughts. speaking of the delightful ucla bruins, i'm wearing bruin blue tonight. a hip-hop spawn, snoop dogg's son has committed to the finest team in america, the kid is 6'2", 195 pounds, a wide receiver who turned down arizona state and usc to become a bruin, and joins the spawn of puff daddy combs. all they need is ice-t's sead and it will be a trifecta. the best part is snoop's tweets, he wrote i'm going to
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back him up 100% and throw out my usc drawers, and he proclaimed i'm throwing all my usc stuff away, i'm all ucla now. go ahead and burn that stuff, snoop. blue and gold all the way. hip-hop royalty in westwood. i know this may surprise you, but i also went to ucla. topic number three, 2008 study from pentagon think tank surfaced that claims vladimir putin has asperger's syndrome, characterized by difficulties in social interaction, repetitive interests like constantly posing shirtless, over normal social interaction and, of course, invading crimea. that's what all asperger's people do. we can't confirm the diagnosis until vlad visits the pentagon for a brain scan.
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rain man. topic number four, a 50-year-old british woman knows the secret to eternal youth, it's not injectables, not plastic surgery, this one simple beauty trick, she hasn't smiled in 40 years, here's a picture of her 40 years ago! and here is one of her today. look at her not smiling. here's what she will look like 250 years from now. she didn't smile when her daughter was born. i'm telling you, the woman is tight. >> yes, you are tight like a tiger. kennedy: you can tweet me at kennedy nation, on instagram as well, whenever you've got a juicy story, i will provide the digital napkin. bobby bone will talk with me about who's going to win the
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grammys. first more on the presidential front-runner, and the hack at sony is all coming up here. know that chasing performance can mean lower returns and fewer choices in retirement. know that proper allocation could help increase returns so you can enjoy that second home sooner. know the right financial planning can help you save for college and retirement. know where you stand with pnc total insight. a new investing and banking experience with personalized guidance and online tools. visit a branch, call or go online today. "what is it that we can do that is impactful?" what the cloud enables is computing to empower cancer researchers. it used to take two weeks to sequence and analyze a genome; with the microsoft cloud we can analyze 100 per day. whatever i can do to help compute a cure for cancer,
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♪. kennedy: i'll tell where you it's at, right here. last year's sensitive e-mails from amy pacific offal were released by hackers. pascal made jokes through the e-mail. how dare she! saying president obama's favorite movies were "django unchained" and "12 years a slave." she announced she will be stepping down in may. she's going to have her own production company. she'll be just fine and she'll make billions off of spiderman. we need to talk about the state of affairs, tracy byrnes, fox business reporter, a mother and a sicilian, and will ron, the
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senior editor at daily beast and one of our finest minds in this country. to the two of you, hyperbole aside, this is the best discussion ever. >> yes. kennedy: let's talk about amy. tracy, my friends who saw "the interview," the woman should have been fired for greening light the film. >> that ranked next to porky's for worst movie ever. the stock is down 43% when she became co-chair of this. she should have gone long, long ago. contract was expiring in march. this is logical, delicate way to push her out into the sunset. she says i've been dying to produce, this is great, my next stage in life. kennedy: that's what she said in her state which is disingenuous. now, you are a feminist from way back. >> oh, yeah. kennedy: she is the most
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powerful female executive, if a man said what she said, would a man have been fired? >> i'm not an entertainment journalist, i have to put myself in the position of mr. sony and mrs. sony in japan and seeing e-mails leaked out about top american employees and the garbled syntax and the typos and good writing is good thinking, maybe these people can't think beyond tag lines, it's problematic as they say. kennedy: are all your e-mails sintatically perfect? >> i'm senior editor at daily beast. you are darn right they are. they are perfect. she's lucky she had an editor for the apology, that came through pretty clean. >> everybody is reading everything. >> yeah, what's she thinking? she's put out great stuff, people say she is smart. there's something misfug think you're going to get away with
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this. >> i think she is disastrous. i've seen her in public, who the hell is your hair stylist. she looks like emo phillips. very timely reference. it looks, my gosh! she looks like leigh dunham on a good day. during a conference hosted by hispanic leadership network in the year of our lord, jeb bush said if your children always have to pay the price for adult's decisions they make, how fair is that. it's ridiculous to think there shouldn't be some accelerated path to citizenship. all right, is jeb in the right, and will the gop embrace his immigration stance, and i think it's very funny. will, before i go to you, his spokesperson said after that quote, that nugget was extracted, christie campbell said governor bush has been extraordinarily clear we need to address the border crisis, border security is a key and
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chief component of sustainable and effective immigration reform, if it were so important, don't you think he would have brought it up in 2013? >> sure, the statement sounds believable. i don't think it was much of a secret where jeb bush is on the immigration issue and views with -- >> hillary clinton? >> yeah, hillary clinton, also the chamber of commerce, a lot of the republican party leadership. the people who are going to be funding these campaigns tend to be pro-immigration, there is not a lot of money on the anti-immigration side. you don't see the sinking republican candidates that often. it's a notoriously difficult issue to poll, and sometimes eric cantor went down in flames largely because of the immigration issue. it's tough, it can cause damage during a republican primary. kennedy: tracy, can you be for border security and keeping people out while at the same time saying while you're here, i really love you? >> he did say it was an act of love to bring your children here.
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you can't play the sympathy card and make an economic decision at the same time. we need border security, and i'm sorry, the touchy feely stuff has to go away. kennedy: i don't mean to be judgmental, i don't think mexico is going to invite you and your family to mexico for spring break to talk. i like what he had to say about detroit. go ahead, populate some of the cities and people who want to work their tails off. push the unions aside, and see what fruit we can bear. >> yeah, there's definitely an argument to be made there. at the same time, selling it to people there exists the labor shortage in this country, and an economy just getting back on its feet, beginning to recover now. when you go out to people and say there are too many jobs out there, we need more people to fill them and drive down the cost of labor a little bit. that can be a tough sell. kennedy: illegal immigrants tend to gravitate toward
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agriculture, there have been plenty of states hit hard with individual immigration policies that have had a very tough time finding people to work in those laborious positions? >> yeah, and there are substantial economic arguments for it. politics is a lot more about emotion than logic, when you are telling people that the labor market is -- that there's too many people looking for -- not enough people looking for jobs right now, if you're unemployment or working at a part-time job you've been stuck in, you would think i'd like some of these jobs. >> and talking about giveaways, the earned income tax credit could give refunds without paying into the system? maybe they have. it's so gray and very unfair to will's point looking for jobs. kennedy: i don't think there should be financial inceptive for people to move here. i know it sounds heartless and cold, which is why you love me,
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to be honest. will and tracy, thank you so much for being here. you are the most handsome couple we've had since last night. >> we're keeping it secret. kennedy: with melissa francis and shiraz, and they're keeping the baby. >> good to hear! >> can you find all of their tweets on my twitter. i'm going to peer into crystal ball about the grammys, and a mayor who grappled with death in the form of a groundhog. you're not going to believe his harrowing story. at ally bank no branches equals great rates. it's a fact. kind of like shopping hungry equals overshopping. then you'll know how uncomfortable it can be. but did you know that the lack of saliva can also
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bones, he has the bobby bones show on iheartradio. he is fantastic. >> i've known the last seven bachelors. kennedy: when you say nailed the last seven bachelors? >> and i've nailed who they're going to pick. i've done both. college football championship, which i did say bet ohio state, can you show real money on the air. kennedy: this is what i owe bobby bones. >> that's right, $1,000. kennedy: okay, thank you for making it rain. >> now i will predict for all of your viewers, and i don't condone betting, but bet like crazy on what i say. kennedy: all right, song of the year? who do you think is going to win? give me the options or just say. kennedy: chandelier? stay with me, shake it off, take me to church, and all
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about that bass. >> remember when you were cool? kennedy: i interviewed him last year and said hosier, i think he changed it now that he is blond. sam smith wins, this is sam smith's grammys. kennedy: i think it's going to be taylor swift. here's sam smith. ♪ won't you stay with me ♪ cause you're all i need >> that is tom petty, tom petty is going to get a grammy. should be chandelier, incredible songwriter. best new artist. who's going to win? >> sam smith, this is sam smith's grammies. kennedy: the best new artist is always a curse. i think it should go to heim. they're amazing, if you have heard their music, there they are. >> you can't be cool and hang out with taylor swift, they're
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like bff's. kennedy: it is ironic. >> you are making fun of her, genius, great. kennedy: album of the year. >> sam smith. i am not a sam smith fan. kennedy: you are. album of the year should be back morning phase. >> i have it. kennedy: good, listen to it. unfortunately it's going to be beyonce, i really do. >> i think beyonce will have the popular vote, beck will cool vote and sam smith rise to the middle. kennedy: basically -- >> i have sam smith. if i'm going with my head and not my heart, i'm going with sam smith. kennedy: he is a weenie. >> have you heard him sing in real life. it will blow you away. kennedy: i will not pay money to go to his concert. if i stumble onto it. >> when tenacious d gets a nomination, the category is a
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joke. kennedy: best rock song? >> who do you pick? kennedy: there's anthrax. that's not the song they're nominated for, but it is my favorite. >> is that in your apartment, your old apartment. kennedy: it is. best rock song, who do you think is going to win? i have black keys. >> the black keys are loved by the grammys. kennedy: check out black keys right here. ♪. kennedy: they put on a fantastic live show. it should be jack white. >> it should not be. the black keys are good, and everyone loves them. jack white lives in nashville. kennedy: dierks bentley, we agree he's going to win best
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album. >> miranda lambert, also. kennedy: coming up, mayor survives groundhog attack, bobby bones loves your body. he'll join me soon. micro clean formula works in just 3 minutes, killing 99.99% of odor causing bacteria. for a cleaner, fresher, brighter denture everyday. edward jones. with nearly 7 million investors oh hey, neill, how are you? you'd expect us to have a highly skilled call center. kevin, neill holley's on line one. ok, great. and we do. it's how edward jones makes sense of investing.
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you're down with crestor. yes! when diet and exercise aren't enough, adding crestor lowers bad cholesterol up to 55%. crestor is not for people with liver disease, or women who are nursing, pregnant, or may become pregnant. tell your doctor all medicines you take. call your doctor if you have muscle pain or weakness, feel unusually tired, have loss of appetite, upper belly pain, dark urine, or yellowing of skin or eyes.
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these could be signs of serious side effects. i'm down with crestor! make your move. ask your doctor about crestor. . kennedy: welcome back. mayor jonathan find of sun prairie, wisconsin risked certain death to have the groundhog jimmy about the length of winter. the groundhog savagely attacked him which we're about to show you. if you have children watching, you may want to send them to bed now before we show the footage. >> he suggests that he -- >> that vicious bite sent the mayor to the hospital. he's been in intensive care since monday. fortunately he has survived and pardoned jimmy, the grizzly mauler. mayor jonathan freund. welcome to the show.
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are you okay? >> thank you, doing well. kennedy: that must have been the most terrifying experience of your life. if it were me, i would have smothered that beast in its enclosure. >> well, jimmy has my ear, but we -- sun prairie loss of jimmy and granted him a full pardon yesterday. kennedy: that's amazing, you are a kind and beautiful soul because i have to tell you if i were in the jaws of death, i don't think i would find forgiveness in my heart. >> well, again, jimmy's -- we've been having this groundhog prognostication since 1948, and we'll certainly look forward to next year. kennedy: well, i'm thankful you're alive and thank you for being here, and many safe returns. >> thank you. kennedy: thank you for watching the show tonight. thank you for being here, mr. mayor. go to twitter and follow me at kennedy nation, i'm looking for
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100,000th follower. almost halfway there. if you are that person, i will put you next to me and will snuggle you for an hour. that is a promise! i will see you next time. stay beautiful. lou: good evening, everybody. i'm lou dobbs. president obama today making an extraordinary effort to draw a moral equivalency between christians, a millenium ago and the radical islamic terrorism of the islamic state now. president obama also chose to equate america's slave history with radical islamist terrorism saying both drawing on religion to justify violence and brutality. the president today embarking on what appears to be a new campaign of rationalization for both his policies of avoidance and his rhetoric that never refe
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