tv Cashin In FOX Business May 3, 2015 3:30am-4:01am EDT
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o buy is in the winter when it's snowing and no one is think inging about cutting their block. >> we continue with eric bolling and "cashing in." >> more protesters getting ready to hit the streets in baltimore and some democrats now blaming the media and the police for inner city problems. but should they be pointing the finger at 40 years of liberal policies instead? our "cashing in" crew this week. welcome, everybody. liberals blaming everyone except their own failures for the chaos and destruction in urban areas like baltimore. wayne, maybe they should be looking in the mirror. >> i think so eric in the following sense, poverty and despair are results. they're not causes. and the economics here and the racial questions here are not
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pertinent unless you go back and figure out what is the cause of all this. most of this is cultural. 80%, that's the first point. 80% of black kids in the united states are born out of wedlock. now, that creates a problem that results in this despair and poverty in the black communities, the major cities. the other part about this is there's no leadership. you've got somebody like al sharpton. i mean the worst. instead of martin luther king. that makes a big difference. that will ultimately cure this problem but it's going to take a long time. >> jonathan 40 years of democrat policies redistribution high taxation. poverty levels in baltimore are almost double the national average. >> what of the liberal economic policies over the last 40 years. the welfare state and the entitlement mentality. a lot of folks of meager means. what has that done? it's created dependency
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retarded the growth in a lot of these communities and destroyed these people's self-esteem over many generations. there's not one factor but certainly these policies are a big part. >> let's get to mr. al sharpton. the reason we're bringing this up is because mayor was supposed to do a news conference. instead of -- what happened was she showed up at al sharpton's national action network. sharpton got in the middle of it for some reason. this guy's a tv host. we want answers from politicians. here's what we get instead. >> excuse me, hey, why can't we ask questions? why can't we ask questions? we can't ask questions? a public official? we can't -- >> yes, you will have the opportunity -- >> i can ask questions? and will you answer them? you'll answer all questions? you'll answer our questions? >> at the press conference we will answer all questions. >> excuse us. >> the media needs to be responsible. quit playing with matches in
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baltimore. >> michelle why is an msnbc host blocking a fox camera from asking a question to a mayor whose city is embattled with riots? >> if the people of baltimore want to know why their city is the way it is all they have to do is look at the democratic party. these are the people calling the shots for decades. police abuse is just a breaking point now. the reason why the people of baltimore are upset is because theme been living under liberal policies for decades. we're talking about maryland that's ranked number ten in the country for the highest taxes. baltimore since the 1920s. have only had two republican mayors ever since the 1920s. if they want to see what the problem is all they have to do is look that they're living under liberal policies preventing them from living up to their full potential. >> we've tried to get answers from the mayor, we couldn't. we've seen almost 40 years of
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uninterrupted democrat policies. it's playing out in the streets of baltimore. >> i agree with jonathan that there's not one thing that is behind this. but that's where the agreement ends. the reason we're here today is largely because of racist housing policies in baltimore that date back not 40 years, but to 1910 -- >> so the reason we're here -- >> -- unchecked police brutality -- >> which one is it? this is a very important point. the uprising in baltimore, is it because of freddie gray and what is now being called a homicide? was it freddy gray's homicide or was it as you're pointing out, unfair -- what is it white privilege, is that what you're talking about? >> didn't use the words white privilege. it's not two words i use. the fact is baltimore has had these policies in place going back to 1910. baltimore is one of the most racially segregated edd cities in
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the country. unchecked police brutality plays into it. it is not freddie gray alone. it is the grandmother who is slammed to the ground when she calls police for help it's the pregnant woman when she calls police for help -- >> so it's the liberal -- >> help keeping these people down -- >> i know everyone wants to jump in. michelle jonathan then wayne. don't forget 40 years of democrats running the place too. >> i think if you want to fix baltimore, let's start by school choice. let's allow these people to decide where they put their children. instead of just putting them in the district that they're stuck in. baltimore is spending $16,000 per student when it companies to their public school system. yet only 18% of their eighth graders know how to read. that is a problem. these are liberal policies. it doesn't have to do with racism. it has to do with the fact democrats have been in control and have been keeping these people down. >> john. >> no question the liberal policies the entitlement mentality have been a major
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detriment. i wouldn't excuse the gop either. they talk about not wanting to end welfare but welfare to work. they increase the minimum wage. don't you think a lot of these young people will benefit from some type of a job? and of course the whole drug war and minimum sentencing has been disastrous for communities like these. it's democratic policies but there's more blame to spread as well. >> wayne? >> i think so i think that's true. but as i've said originally the poverty and despair are results. they are not the causes of this. the causes are cultural. you've got to cure that. that takes a long time to do that. >> we're looking at baltimore. we talked about detroit being in bankruptcy for many years. how do we get out of this? i only have about a minute. how do we get out of this? quick. >> not baltimore specific. one solution legalize marijuana. >> certainly get a lot of people out of jails. >> nonviolent drug offenders.
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>> michelle. >> i say throw them all out. all the politicians. and put in better people. >> start with stephanie raulings blake. >> let's get some development. a lot of young people with time on their hands. let's get them some jobs get them responsible and participating instead of acting out in a real destructive way. >> one quick thought for baltimore? >> yeah i think michelle is exactly right. you can't have al sharpton being the guy who they're looking up to. you need a martin luther king. you need a guy with courage. a guy with character. >> that's what you need. >> i tell you what this state attorney mosby, maybe that one. she seems like she knows what she's doing. it's your turn to shape the debate in america. do you think 40 years of liberal political control in baltimore are to blame for the riots? tweet your response and be sure to add our new go-to #wakeupamerica. coming up a growing number of americans betraying the u.s.
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call them the enemy from within. this week we're learning a woman from seattle could be an undercover agent for isis two weeks ago, six men from minnesota were looking to join isis. and last month, it was a mom from philly. home grown terror suspects popping up all across america. we have to wonder what's the
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psychology. who better than dr. phil the host of number one talk show. i sat down with him and asked, what are they thinking. >> you're dealing with malcontents. look everybody wants to belong to somewhere. the number one need among all people is acceptance. the number one fear is rejection. and if you get people that feel that they're not successful where they are, they haven't been able to live the american dream, they haven't been able to get their piece, they haven't felt like they've been, you know saluted, people have rejected what they have to offer, and they become malcontents. then the resentment can really build. and resentment really builds and they start saying okay i can't have it. then i'll start attacking it. and, you know, for normal people that might take the form
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of criticizing the policies criticizing the way of life. but you add to that, you know some extremist personalities and all. and then they start actually aligning themselves with enemies of their own people and their own country. it's obviously a very extreme position. >> when i was in high school and college, people who felt malcontent out of the loop or different were dressed differently. or they would start doing drugs or something like that. not picking up arms and looking to kill fellow americans. >> clearly, it's highly dysfunctional. i personally i don't believe that it's that they're running towards something, it's that they're running away from something. there's a big difference. it's like -- think about somebody that is growing up and getting married and they get married because they want to get out of daddy's house. so they're running away from the
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home. not towards the husband that they marry. okay. big difference. they're doing it to escape. not because they're wanting to go where they're going. >> are they so angry they not only want to escape american life they want to destroy it? >> clearly, i think you are seeing a lot of anger here. i believe -- now people may say, look dr. phil you're just being judgmental here these people believe in the ideology of isis or whatever. i absolutely don't believe a rationale american a rationale person that has had the opportunity to look at both sides of the issue, that's had the opportunity to be exposed to everything that's out there instead of just a very narrow slant of one side of the world issues can look at this and say, okay i want to sign up to start indiscriminately killing my
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fellow americans. to me that is not a rationale decision. that becomes irrational. irrational is not mentally healthy. so i do think you're looking at distortion. i do think you're looking at -- at what point does delusionenment become dissolutional? i think you're looking at people that disenfranchise becomes very angry, so they start feeling self-righteous and sanctimonious about it. i think they're highly misguided. and i do think they're dangerous. look there are predators among us every day. right now, you look down the stretch on the camera behind us here. there are predators among us. those that are most dangerous are those that hide in plain sight. the ones that, you know walk down, you know if satan walks down the street in a red suit with horns and a tail okay got it i see him coming. but those that hide in plain sight -- because they look like dress like act like and fade
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into the background those are the ones that are dangerous. >> what are the red flags? how do we find the ones hiding in plain sight? >> well, you know the truth is we don't have the markers to predict the next school shooter. we don't have the markers to look at those that are going to plant the bombs, those that are going to go over to the next side. we tonight havedon't have the science to predict. you can come in post hoc and say, 20-20 hindsight, they were disenfranchised, began to withdraw -- >> don't guidance counselors don't they have the ability to say, this person might be one that could pick up arms against america, might join isis might do something crazy, irrational? >> well maybe so but look at the virginia tech shooter. they go back after the fact and look at all of his writings and
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there were all these bizarre writings with all these really grotesque -- talking about killing and murder and all of that. how many writers -- how many horror film writers have written those kind of narratives before? you can look at it after the fact and go oh wow, i see now how that follows on. but it doesn't predict who's going to do it. >> we've become very politically correct in this country. we don't want to look into people. we don't want to point fingers. we don't want to profile different groups. does that enable this activity to take place? do we look the other way at mosques sometimes? we look the other way at colleges university. we let them do their thing. does that enable someone to pick up arms? >> i think we've become as a society so politically correct that we've become functional blind. and there is a point where you lose common sense. and people just don't want to say it out loud but i guarantee you, in their minds, they're
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going to look differently at those that set off some warning signs within them. and i'm not saying that that's always going to be accurate. but at the same time you don't want to stereotype. but if you start to see things adding up if you begin to see things adding up then we have to be the eyes and ears. well you report it to responsible authorities. the problem with stereotyping is if people misreact to it. it's not a problem so much if you deal with it in a rational fashion. where you ask reasonable questions and talk to reasonable authorities to ask reasonable questions. >> dr. phil it's always great to talk to you. always great having you in studio. >> thanks so much good to see you. >> don't forget to catch the dr. phil show weekdays. check your local listings. coming up we saw cops putting
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"america's news headquarters," stay with us. after the tragedy in baltimore, calls growing to put body cameras on all cops. now the justice department announcing a $20 million pilot program to do just that. but, body cams could that have helped freddie guy and preventing the rioting? >> i'm not a big fan of body many kas.
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i think it raises privacy concerns. let's remember, the family is not going to be facing the split officer. the camera's going to be outward, facing the individual the average citizen. i think what's going to end up happening is that feudage is going to be used to scrutinize the actions of the average american rather than the police officer which is what it's intend to do. >> i'm a big fan. i think it actually helps good cops more than hurts a bad cop. your thoughts on body cams? >> i think it should be not centrally planned. this is centrally planned policing. this is one place i think they were actually right. instead of spending $20 million on new policing equipment, why not try decriminalizing some of the drug use? a lot of those are for nonviolent weed-associated arrests. legalize or decriminalize drugs and you won't need the body cams
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as much. >> do you have a problem with body cams? >> i support body cams. this is much bigger than freddie gray. this is about a culture of violence. when you have wayne talking about culture, you have to look at the police culture and how there's not a trust between african-americans and police officers in this country. so when you have body cams think about all of these different videos that have come out in the last few months. if we hadn't seen them we would not actually be having this conversation -- >> but there are videos there were films from people standing by. >> that's why michelle i'm going to wayne on that that's why wayne, a lot of cops is in favor of putting body cams on themselves to protect them against all the finger-pointing that's coming frankly, a lot of it coming from the left. >> well eric you know this is an after the fact situation. that is to say the body cameras only reporting something that occurs after the fact. so it's used as if it's something that's going to influence behavior going forward, meaning that somebody is saying because i'm, watched
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"cashing in" crew for joining us. jonathan lost his tie in the break i guess. time to wake up america. ready for your head to explode? filmmaker michael moore. you know him from his films bowling for capitol hillolumbine. he had this to say this week about the criminal justice system. this is his quote. quote, here's my demand. i want every african-american currently incarcerated for drug crimes or nonviolent ochss released from prison today. disarm the police. we have a quarter billion second amendment guns in our homes for protection. finally, this one, local cops now mill tarrized. founding fathers said no army policing on our soil. why do cops have tanks? oh right, the enemy, the black man. i got a deal for you, mr. moore. i'll give up my kim better .45
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and my over-under when you stop traveling without armed security. i didn't think so right. that's what i thought. liberalism can be hazardous to your health. have a safe weekend, everybody. begins. "the willis report" is coming up next. lori: hello, everyone. i'm lori rothman in for gerri willis, this is "the willis report," the show where consumers are our business. tonight prosecutors in baltimore calling the death of freddie gray a homicide, and charging one of the six officers involved with murder. warren buffett hosting annual "weekend with warren" in omaha, and our own liz claman is there she'll join us live with the preview. elon musk charged up with the solar powered home batteries. it will change the world? in a show about billionaires, george soros in hot water for billions he reportedly owes the irs. why he's being called a hypocrite? plus why companies
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