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tv   Cavuto  FOX Business  December 20, 2015 7:00am-8:01am EST

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they were too hawkish this week. >> i want to thank you all. impressive markets. i want to issue everyone watching the marriest christmas happy holiday. remember, you are our gift. four new speeches from the president and no new strategy to fite terror. nothing to calm america's nerves. did we hear he assuring straight talk from the fbi director? listen. >> before they left, trying to commit mass murder. one exchanged 109 messages with somebody we know is a terrorist outside the united states. i have no idea what they said. i still can't tell you what they said. they communicated with each other that morning 109 times using a mobile messaging app that's end to end encrypted. we recognize we are all americans trying to keep people safe, but we have a problem.
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>> telling it straight. is that what americans want and deserve? hi, everybody. welcome to "forbes on fox." let's go in focus to find out with steve forbes, mike ozanian. there was a re fresh ing frankens that we don't necessarily get from president obama. >> the president's efforts to continue to play it down unnerves the american people more. they know we are not doing enough in the middle east. they don't feel we are doing enough at home. they hear about curtailing nsa and other agency activities. director comey said they couldn't find out what the people were saying. the american people are worried and they trust the fbi director more than the president who plays down the threat. >> the administration's handling of terror is to a new low. we haven't seen the lows in government reassurance about the government since right after
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9/11. >> these are certainly frightening times for people. i think what the president is doing is a little bit more measured and legal when you compare it to some of the gop debates where they are talking about carpet bombing. i don't know if that violate it is war crimes or whatever. i think the president came out at the end of the week and talked about how this is going to be costly if we deploy troops. i think it was talking something on the order of 500 troops and $10 billion a month. countless lives. people need to know these things before we go deeper into this. >> rich, there is the issue of trust. americans aren't dummies. they know if somebody keeps saying something that doesn't turn out to be true you stop believing them. remember the president just a week before san bernardino said the following. >> right now we know of no specific and credible intelligence indicating a plot on the homeland. >> yet, rich, you listen to
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comey, the fbi director. he says, we've got a problem. i'm going with comey. i don't know about you. president obama said me nehe ne to watch cable tv more to understand the fears of the american people. that's outrageous. compare it to fbi dreker to comey who is straightforward and i'm heartened by his tech sophistication. isis is trying to unleash manchurian candidates through en crypted communication and social media. >> 79% of the american people believe it is very or somewhat likely we will be hit again in the next couple of months. >> comey and obama are being dishonest in legitimizing thugs. you look a israel surrounded by countries and terrorist groups that want to push it into the sea but they routinely slap them
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around. yet we are supposed to believe isis is a threat to the most powerful and greatest military in the world not to mention that we have isis in the first place? i don't think this is serious. >> they are a threat to us here now. that's the problem. >> i think whether it's president obama or comey, blah, blah, blah. >> comey is a little bit different. he admits that we have a problem which is something i haven't heard from the top guy. >> the president has been in office for several years. if he were serious it wouldn't be what he's saying. it would be action. he's done nothing in terms of action. that's the problem. that's what the american people are seeing. we send out bombing missions where if there is a chance of a civilian being hurt they can't bomb isis. that's not taking isis seriously. >> domestically when i hear director comey talking really frankly about the problems we have and how we have to get together and do it, makes me
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think he's giving us the straight talk. >> he is. but this president is the one who said the j.v. squad was isis. he doesn't understand the depth of the risk. he said in yemen that was the model of our anti-terrorism activity. totally wrong. what obama said is that it's congress's fault and congress needs to declare war on isis. i agree with john. that would legitimize isis, be a recruiting tool. the president has broad power to do what he needs to do to protect america under the congressional authorization after 9/11. >> well, steve, you know, sometimes when you think of great leaders, i go back to winston churchill in terms of wartime heroes and leaders. he was very frank with the public. he said, i have nothing to offer but blood, sweat and tears. frankly that's what a lot of americans want to hear. >> the american people want to hear the truth. they also want to have a leader where they feel they will get the truth and effective policies. with this president they get
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neither. he plays down the threat. when he's called on it, he changes the rhetoric a little bit. but then doesn't change his basic approach. not bombing isis oil trucks because it might hurt the drivers, come on. this is beyond parody. >> doesn't it concern you most americans aren't reassured by the government efforts up to now? >> of course, of course. this is an anti-war president. he has credibility on the fact that osama bin laden is dead. the debate in the country if he's saying if we do more, put ground troops there, i have never heard a president say how much it will cost before we go into a ground war. >> the problem is he may be an anti-war president which is true. but the war has come to us. you've got no choice when you are attacked to attack back. even if you are anti-war.
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>> well, that's the point. that's the number one duty of the u.s. president. to my good friend john, nobody on the panel is saying isis is a threat to the u.s. military. they are a threat to individual americans. the problem with isis and the use of social media and encrypti encryption, it can go viral quickly. >> it's worth point out that switzerland is a very rich country. it's easy to get into the country. they don't have a trichl problem. can we ask the question or entertain the notion that one reason we have a terrorism problem is we intervene in parts of the world that shouldn't concern us? if we stayed out, we wouldn't. >> frankly switzerland doesn't have a problem because they don't care. sbits land is not a powerful country. >> we are the epitome of jude o christian beliefs. that's one reason we are being targeted. long before gitmo or the excuses
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liberals give why radical islamle is attacking us. as far as ground troops this president wouldn't even support the kurds who were willing to fight against isis. >> i like the swiss. they have good cuckoo clocks but that's it. banks. >> chocolate. >> we are the center of western civilization. that's why we are attacked. >> right. you can't opt out of the world. before world war ii denmark and norway thought they were neutral. the world came to them in a bloody, terrible way. switzerland can get hit if the terrorists go against them. we have to lead the fight and we are not doing it and the american people are upset. in terms of cost you don't know these things in advance. we have a threat. we have to deal with it. >> coming up next, the saudis launch a military in the mideast. mideast. can we t
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his privileged upbringing. now back to more forbes on fox.
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saudi arabia announcing a new anti-terror coalition. the bloc will coordinate and support military operations to fight isis in the region. john,le should we let them foot the bill? >> without question. this is true whether or not we trust them or not. this is their part of the world. if they want to commit treasure and more important blood to vanquishing isis that's a good thing. i think we have hopefully learned from iraq and afghanistan that when you commit treasure, troops it's expensive. you can't commit the outcome. we should let them fix their part of the world. >> a lot of people saying we should be leading the fight not letting the arabs do it. >> right. we have left a vacuum in the middle east. the saudis and others are stepping up. i worry because those regimes don't respect human rights either. as a woman in saudi arabia i would be in bad shape. i want to trust them.
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when it comes to war there are only permanent interests, not alleys. they do fund terrorism around the world. the saudis do as well. >> rich, absolutely. some of the 9/11 terrorists were from saudi arabia. there was one that said donors constitute funding to terrorist groups world wide. that's where their money has been going in the past. >> they are rich. they are at over $10 a barrel making money. they are keeping prices low. yes, they should be asked to pay for this. >> bruce, their own hypocrisy bothers americans. on the one hand they criticize our qualms about the refugee program here in the united states. guess how many refugees they have resettled?
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their resettlement program is nonexistent according to amnesty international. >> the good sign with the coalition, several stories said they did the coalition because the u.s. was prodding them. so the u.s. was prodding them to get more involved in the refugees, et cetera. also maybe this is a good sign that maybe the u.s. can prod them to kick in money to help fight isis as well. >> steve, let's be honest. their biggest enemy now isn't isis. it's iran. iran is what scares them. iran is where they are focusing national treasure, right? >> yes. they are threatened by both sides and the iranians want to be the dominant power. isis wants to destroy the kingdom as well. you can't depend on saudi arabia to lead the coalition. typical barack obama thinking he can get out of the u.s. obligations. if we don't take the leads new york city one will. you have a nuclear armed iran, saudi arabia could fall which would have disastrous impact
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around the world. we can't ignore the world. >> we could use their help, their money but we have to lead. >> exactly. it's not going to happen with the obama administration. they won't even arm the kurds. what do you expect them to do? hopefully saudi arabia will help. it's not going to be something to replace the u.s. leadership. >> john, without our leading we may want the saudis to get into the fight and even take the lead in a fight. they are not going to solvele the problem. >> i'm hearing about it but we talk about the incompetent politicians in the united states. yet we think they can dictate a great outcomele there. that's fanciful. i'm hearing about how the iranians don't like isis. the saudis don't like isis. let them fight it out. why commit our troops. >> a lot of people have family in the military and that sounds good. >> yeah. i've got an idea. we lead, they pay in blood and money. >> what do you think of that,
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steve? >> nice theory, nice sound bite. in the real world if we don't take the lead it doesn't happen. we saved japan after world war ii when the north koreans went into south korea. we have troops there today. we have to save europe. it meant saving us. we have to make sure in the middle east the bad guys don't get in. we have to make sure iran doesn't get the bomb or it affects us. we should learn from the attacks in california and elsewhere. they are after us. >> i see carrie nodding. >> steve is right. if the iranians get the bomb the saudis want the bomb. then it's an arms race we could have prevent. we have a history of being a shining city on a hill. instead we are outsourcing to the saudis who don't respect human rights. >> bruce, should we be nipping this in the bud? >> i think so. we are off to a good start. i think the coalition, the u.s. -- [ laughter ] >> you're scaring everybody. >> you're scaring me here. >> mike, go ahead. >> i can't even respond to that.
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this is a president who has just outsourced this. >> that's the last word. the "cashin' in" gang getting ready. eric? >> terror threat s against the biggest school districts. was that the right calle? how do we handle threat s in the future? plus, who putin is endorsing to be america's next president. see you at 11:30. >> thanks, eric. up here first a government agency has just been accused of breaking the law. will it be punished? we have been warning taxpayers about i have asthma... ...one of many pieces in my life. so when my asthma symptoms kept coming back on my long-term control medicine, i talked to my doctor and found a missing piece in my asthma treatment. once-daily breo prevents asthma symptoms.
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so we have been warning you about the epa's overreach. now the government accountability office agrees, accusing them this week of "engaging in covert propaganda" when it used social media campaigns to tout its controversial clean water rules. >> it's like the white house. everything is politics now in the federal goth including the regulatory agencies. you don't have to go through congress. just pass rules with the force of law by the agencies. they ignore science. they abuse the political process. they engage in political propaganda as the gao points out. this reflects president obama, this reign of terror. at the irs they are still doing crazy things. >> well, bruce, the government accountability office is one of the most neutral, nonpartisan
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groups around. it's a government watchdog agency. they used the term covert propaganda. that's tough. that's pretty harsh. >> yeah. i sort of thought the words were strong. we're talking about some tweets here that went out. if they were so bad, which i don't believele they necessarily were, in speaker ryan's budget bill these rules were in there. they were poised to pass it this week. >> again, the gao said it's bad. not us. when you're talking about covert propaganda by a government agency there is ale huge problem. >> yeah. besides that, i think the epa's time and money would be better spent tracking president obama's carbon footprint as he flies around from climate summit to climate summit. it would be more useful. >> there is a tremendous hypocrisy on the people who claim there is a problem with global warming. on this issue alone should they
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be called to account -- epa? did somebody break the law here? >> the e pa damns itself by urging people who redistributed the messages not to identify the epa as the source of these. we have to stop the epa now. this whole climate change stuff since congress isn't going to approve it as a treaty it will be enacted through the epa. we have seen only the beginning of the power grab. >> john, depending who the next president is, the next president may agree with president obama using the epa as a political tool instead of a regulator. >> it's a bad idea when the unelected bureaucracy does the political widing of the administration in power. democrats may like it now. they are not going to like it if it's a republican and vice server is a. these people should be neutral. it's probably a dream. >> let me read from senator jim
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inhoff saying the gao finding confirms what i long suspected that the epa will go to extreme lengths, even violate the law to promote its activist environmental agenda. somebody should go to jail, right? >> absolutely. this is why trust in government is low, especially among people in my generation. we are cynical to see the government manipulating and trying to put out information that's absolutely just hidden source.ister in some ways to not it's troubling precedent. >> bruce, doesn't it bother you that your money, granted a little piece of it, but your money is being used for government propaganda. >> a real little piece of it. >> our money. >> it is our money. listen, this has all been transparent. we have the congressional report. congress were approving the
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budget this week. they didn't do anything about it. it was out there for everybody to see and they didn't do anything. >> transfer parent and covert propaganda don't necessarily go together. thank you very much. coming up, less than one in four workers expects a holiday bo thus this ♪ i built my business with passion. but i keep it growing by making every dollar count. that's why i have the spark cash card from capital one. i earn unlimited 2% cash back on everything i buy for my studio. ♪ and that unlimited 2% cash back from spark means thousands of dollars each year going back into my business... that's huge for my bottom line. what's in your wallet?
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we are growing fast. this is a packaging company. >> resin comes from oil. oil prices are falling. that's going to help the profit margin. >> what do you think. >> whether stocks or sports mike is my guru. i agree. >> cvs pharmacy. why do you like them? >> they are a solid company, not
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a spectacular growth but growth and a good dividend. >> what do you think? >> i want to play the contrarian. goldman sachs downgraded from buy to neutral. buy >> thanks for watching. keep it here. the number one business block continues with "cashin' in." >> it is very easy in hindsight to criticize the decision based on results that the decider could never have known. it is also easy to criticize the decision when you have no responsibility for the outcome of the decision. >> damned if you do, damned if you don't. police defend the l.a. school district for shutting down over a massive terror threat this week. new york, houston and miami getting similar threats but refusing to close. who immediate the right decision? i'm eric bolling. welcome to "cashin' in." this week, michelle fields, jonathan hoenig.
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welcome, everybody. nerve gas, bombs in lockers, machine pistols and grenades. which school district did the right thing? >> it's tricky. you have to keep in mind that they just had the san bernardino attacks and the terrorist who committed the attacks in san bernardino reportedly had planned to go after a school. we have this in mind. it was fresh on their minds about what happened. it's easy to say they over reacted. if you have that in your head and on top of that it's better to be safe than sorry. >> new york didn't close schools, l.a. did. almost identical threats. which one, jess, was right? >> as a native new yorker i will go with the home team here. there were certain indications in the letter that this could have been a hoax that they didn't capitalize the "a" in allah which they say was a dead give away. i don't want to throw l.a. under
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the bus. i understand being cautious. we are in difficult times and the decisions have to be made more and more. what we should be talking about is sharing more information between police departments and intelligence offices. new york, we have been dealing with the greatest counter terror. >> we don't have a week to vet. this is a decision you have to make right there. >> you have to make a quick decision. >> john, one of the important issues is that 640,000 students and 70,000 employees didn't go to school or work over one e-mail. >> imagine the inconvenience, not to mention the expense. of course these schools had to sus pent classes. their job is to keep kids safe. if the school board can't defeat isis, the pta can't take on and destroy the islamic state that's government's job.
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essentially we are becoming here what the infantada has been in israel for years. everything is a threat whether it's pizza parlors, offices or schools. >> michelle and jonathan are on the same wavelength here. do you think houston made a mistake? do you think new york made a mistake not keeping kids out of class? >> i don't want to criticize new york. and houston or these other areas for their decisions. i think you can't criticize los angeles for doing this. >> can i push back a little bit? >> sure. >> new york says they get them every week and they can't shut town. >> why do they get them every week? >> that's the point. why? we have hardened airplane doors. now we have to take the shoes off, no liquids, body scanners. now they have moved to other threats. until we destairway the enemy this state of homeland security
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we have been in since 9/11 has been completely ineffective. now it's growing more disruptive with schools, any type of target is a threat. >> if something happened we would be here saying why didn't they do anything? well, there was a capital letter or not. we'd say that's a stupid reason for not doing anything. it's easy for us to say they made the wrong decision and it's inconvenient that they closed schools and parents had to take a day off work. it's more inconvenient to bury a child killed in a terrorist attack. >> imagine the hit to the my if every shopping mall shut down every time there is a threat via e-mail, every school, every business. it wouldn't take isis long to figure out we can shut down the american economy by sending e-mails. >> we are talking about some random person who sent a letter that resembles what homeland fans would be sending. i'm not -- i don't want to
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criticize l.a. line line this is part of a larger issue we will be facing going forward about how he need to beef up the way we evaluate whoever is coming in on visas. with the way we evaluate the threats we are getting. >> jess -- >> we need to be on high alert. you should learn from the forces who know how to deal with it and the new york police department is the best for doing this. >> john. >> jessica, aren't you giving in to the notion that we are in for a multi decade, quote/unquote, fight against radical islam? >> i'm not. >> it's not like the -- the pta can't destairway the enemy. only government has that. they have not yet addressed it which is why it may not have to be on high alert for everything. snipers at the super bowl. every bag is checked. everyone at the marathon has to be vetted on an individual basis. our lives are in deaf con one
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now until the enemy is destroyed. >> the way they reacted shows what's going on in this country. many people are living in fear. why? because they feel like the administration is not taking the threat seriously. something can happen. that's the larger issue that's happening. >> honestly, i'm trying to figure outgoing forward, a movie premiere, "star wars." >> you have a kid. >> i do. i'm being honest. i'm in favor of them -- i like them going through the hallways -- comes in the hallways. i am not in favor of shutting down the school. >> if you received the letter saying -- >> they do. they get them all the time. >> wouldn't you keep your kid home to be safe ? you would. you wouldn't send him. >> no, no. let the parents decide whether to keep the kids home or not. that's what you are getting at. i'm in favor of that. rather than shutting down. throw out a hundred e-mails with similar threat s and shut down the whole education system.
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>> we are in tough times now. >> aren't they winning when they shut down school systems with one e-mail. >> you sound like barack obama. >> i do? >> you sound just like him when you say you can't let the enemy win. >> i don't think that's what he said. george bush after the world trade center went to tv and said, get back out there. go back to the shopping malls. >> you're saying we should not shut down the school system because of a threat. that was the attitude. >>. >> we joked about the terrorists have won. >> they have. jihad has grown since 9/11. to your point, the fact that everything is a threat now,
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"star wars" opening, school plays. any place where people gather. >> football game, hockey game, adele concert. they are winning. we have to fix it. ut we have to go now. tweets. we are averaging 15,000 comments per day and 25,000 on saturdays. your voice is reaching tens of millions when you use # wakeupamerica. coming up, satire turning serious on an ivy league college campus. did students at yale just sign away the first amendment rights? god help us if they did. >> we are
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an interesting take on free speech and the p.c. culture at college campuses taking an unexpected turn. a political satirist going to yale university asking student ifs the first amendment is still necessary. many were willing to sign away theirs first amendment rights. >> we are calling to repeal the first amendment. get rid of it. blow it up. >> i think this is fantastic. i absolutely agree. >> excellent. >> thank you. >> love it. >> i'll sign it. >> appreciate it. >> i appreciate what you are trying to do. >> you shouldn't be exposed to things you don't want to hear.
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>> yeah. >> micro aggression should not be protected. making fun of people is not cool. it sucks. >> i agree. >> fantastic. love it. signing it away. what's going on with college campus campuses? >> one in three college kids don't know what the first amendment is. the majority want codes against offensive speech. it's like they are perfect little college students. these are ideas that have been perpetrated at the most elite universities for decades. america is flawed, built on slavery. who needs to know what the constitution is all about? it was flawed from the start. >> especially when those nasty little micro aggressions. they're going to kill you. >> i told you guys before, i love micro aggressions. they keep things lively. this is ridiculous. we know they are edited. the average student isn't going
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to say that. to jonathan's point we need to be edgele indicating people more about the constitution, what it says and have a discussion about what hate speech is. >> how come college kids don't know about the constitution at yale university? they don't know about the constitution? >> it doesn't seem like everybody does. i think having a discussion, i don't think it has to be a mandatory freshman seminar. >> i think it does. >> hang in there. i want to read this. this is response from yale. a spokesperson said there are a number of, quote, heavily ed ed prank videos. if you watch that video, it doesn't look like they are pranked, like the kids know. they are signing away their first amendment rights. >> if you look at what happened at a lot of college campuses trying to silence free speech, create safe spaces where other opinions aren't allowed. this is what college kids are like today. they are delicate flowers who
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don't want anyone to hurt their feeling or so offend them. they believele that the constitution gives them the right to not be offended. that's what they think. it's crazy. >> as long as it fits their dialogue, once it gets into micro aggression, shut it down. >> it's anti-conceptual based on feelings. if their feelings are hurt, that's right. what they strive for is consensus in everything. that's groupthink. >> feelings, jess. you have an abundance. >> so many feelings and i'm having them now. maybe it's all about micro aggression missing the point. racism goes on, sexism. when we talk about the missouri case we ignore the fact that there were real racist threats that we had the swastika incident on the wall in the
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bathroom, things that were confirmed. these issues exist. but let's talk about the real issues instead of this side show. >> okay. let's move on to this. yale isn't the only college campus causing controversy this week. look at what our friends at campus reform.org found for us. this is a place mat. harvard giving out holiday placemats for social justice. it's a guide for holiday discussions on race, and justice with loved ones. harvard has apologized but now you're on this, jess. this is a great topic during christmas to teach people how to talk about race and socialle justice at the christmas table? >> at thanksgiving it was how to handle relatives who like donald trump. i think the placemat is ridiculous. we need to know how to talk to people with differing upons. i do it all the time. i keep coming back, outnumbered. it makes me a better person, a clearer thinking and more
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resolute in my own principles after each of these shows. >> harvard and yale, michelle. what's going on. >> it's the best and the brightest. pathetic the universities think they have to tell their student what is to think. they gave them a place card which are talking points because they think they are too dumb to not know how to argue about hot topics? if i was one of these people in school paying $60,000 a year i would demand a refund. >> and islamaphobia, refugees, black murders in the streets. you want to talk about this at christmas dinner? >> it demonstrates the danger of the university. they are training the future leaders and politicians where ideas are born. that's what's frightening. not like this is a small group of college kids who don't know about individual rights. this is institutionalized on the college level. we are churning out generation after generation of
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anti-conceptual, anti-capitalist, anti-american thinkers. >> we are in so much trouble. coming up, trump is tearing up the polls in america. did you see who is endorsing him i have asthma... ...one of many pieces in my life. so when my asthma symptoms kept coming back on my long-term control medicine, i talked to my doctor and found a missing piece in my asthma treatment. once-daily breo prevents asthma symptoms. breo is for adults with asthma not well controlled on a long-term asthma control medicine, like an inhaled corticosteroid. breo won't replace a rescue inhaler for sudden breathing problems. breo opens up airways to help improve breathing for a full 24 hours. breo contains a type of medicine that increases the risk of death from asthma problems and may increase the risk of hospitalization in children and adolescents. breo is not for people whose
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terrorists and missing red flags and the sainthood of mother teresa. now back to kwoez cash. -- "cashin' in." >> putin is pushing for trump to win the white house. the russian president saying relations between the countries would be better. now what could it mean for america? >> i'm not a fan of putin.
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i don't think this is great. he's just trolling president obama, i think. i don't think he means it. he just wants to make him angry. >> jess, good or bad for donald trump? >> i don't think it matters. anything that's bad for donald trump ends up being good for him somehow. i have never seen someone that's receive lon to bad news. "ban muslims," up in the polls. i'm sure the base will think this is an indication of going into amazing american-russian relations. >> i mean, it's got to be better than putin saying we want to kill you, is it not? >> it's bet er than that, yeah. >> they have a lot in common. both banned press from covering their events. what frightens me is they both share not pat rottism but nationalism. for trump it's great america. for putin it's mother russia. that's collectivism. putin is not an endorsement a
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potential nominee should want or favor. >> michelle, would it be a draw on donald trump's popularity that putin likes him? >> no. i don't think it will make him go up in the polls. >> what if he takes off his shirt? >> that might help. >> i'd love to see him and obama square off on the basketball court and see how he will think he is then. >> if putin wants to kill isis, let him fly over syria and kill isis. decent strategy, no? i don't think you can trust vladimir putin. just as you wouldn't make a deal. trump wants to renegotiate, negotiate the iran deal as well. just because someone a strong leader and you can deal with them i don't think you should want to. that seems to be trump's point
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of view. >> horseback riding topless, u.s. and russia relations will be all better and good. >> jess, last word on this one. >> another reset that we'll have. joe scarborough asked donald trump about the endorsement and he said this is a man who has murdered journalists. trump's response was, well, we do a lot of killing in america. >> speechless. >> speaking of speechless, let's end it right there. coming up, mixed messages from the white house about keeping us safe. that's next.
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i want to say thanks to the crew for joining us. head over to foxnews.com to see jonathan's stock pick. by the way, in studio, both of the ladies. i can put my hand in everyone's shot. that's how we do it here. time to wake up, america. someone is lying to us. someone is deceiving us, someone is dishonest. listen to james comey on the terror threat to the homeland. >> the fbi has hundreds of first nations in all 50 states. >> just months ago comey estimated we had 900 credible threat s in all 50 states. amazing. now listen to the secretary of defense ash carter answering john mccain's question about isis not being contained. >> congressman forbes asked general duneford, quote, have we currently contained isil.
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general, we have not. mr. secretary, do you agree with general dunford? >> i agree with what the general said, yes. >> now listen to the secretary of homeland security jay johnson saying isis may be plotting to hide among the syrian refugees. >> we do have to be concerned about the possibility that a terrorist organization they seek to exploit our refugee resettlement process. >> got it so far? okay. now take a listen to president obama on thursday. >> our intelligence and counter terrorism professionals do not have any specific and credible information about an attack on the homeland. >> no credible information. really? i'm shaking my head, folks. either the fbi director, the secretary of defense, and the secretary of homeland security are conspiring and lying to us or the president of the united states is blatantly misleading you. i will stop now and let it sink
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in. the heads of three terror-sensitive agencies and deps in the u.s. government see the terror threat as real and imminent but the preside and so >> "fox and friends" back to the show. if what happened with the market this week did not spook you, how about lawmakers heading out without addressing the threat to the homeland? >> we have to be concerned with the pos kt that a terrorists organization may seek to resort the process. >> just more proof that the u.s. should not be taking in any refugees until it's changed. this is bulls and bears and the "bulls and bears" this week. welcome everybody.

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