tv Kennedy FOX Business January 18, 2018 8:00pm-9:00pm EST
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more jobs. i think that's an exciting future to look forward to. lou: thank you, president trump. lawrence jones, rebecca woods. kennedy: president trump touting his economic plan in pennsylvania. will the visit help sway a critical upcoming election. the president's lawyer says he's quote very eager to speak with special counsel robert mueller. it's time to get cooking, turn on the oven. how does someone with one of the strongest personalities in the world attract so many people who want to control him. the world knows steve bannon tried to position himself as president trump's puppet master. john kelly implied to bret baier
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that he is the one pulling the strings. >> there has been an evolutionary process this president has gone through. i pointed out to members in the room that they all say things throughout the course a campaign that may not be fully informed. but this president if you have seen what he has done, he changed the way he looked at a number of things. he changed his attitude towards the daca issue and even the wall. kennedy: guess who didn't take kindly to hearing he's uninformed. he wrote back the wall is the wall, it has never changed since the first day i conceived of it. parts will be of snow see-through. hopefully general kelly has informed the president of the eminent domain colossal hassle that awaits him from texas.
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private property owners alone there. there are only 100 miles that are government owned. when we get caught up in the wall loop, we are only talking about the what, not the why. why are there border issues to begin with? the drug war destroyed entire countries by propping up a system where cartels run beautiful places into the ground. i hope the president's view on the wall is evolving and i hope it ininvolves honoring the constitution, due process and ending the costly and deadly war on drugs. i'm kennedy.
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white house chief of staff john kelly isn't the first in the white house to do it. what's it like in the white house when the president and members of the team don't see eye to eye. dana perino returns. obviously you know the inner workings of the white house. however, this is a white house unlike any other. >> it's hard to compare. i don't think what general kelly said on bret baier's show is any different than what president trump said in the past few months. where he takes all the heat he said he was willing to take in that bipartisan meeting a week ago. >> while the general had good
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intentions, when said perhaps the president wasn't informed, properly informed when he was running for office -- >> i can understand taking offense to that. he's going to hyper focus on those words. >> if you do that, you can -- you cannot move forward. there is a lot that has to happen in politics and business. if you make this whole pivot and get the deal done, you will be heralded with a good legacy. kennedy: aside from the president's personality, at this point, believe it or not, he has made good on a lot of his campaign promises. if you take him out of it, if this were any other person, the legacy is going to be pretty good. >> excellent. if you look on paper and ask any
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conservative do you like these things they will say yes. they got the president to say it won't be across all the miles because you will use technology. he already said that. so in some ways what general kelly could have said, as the president has said, this is what he's for. kennedy: he made it sounds like i'd told him and i let him know and i was the one who sprinkled intelligence throughout his brain. >> i didn't take it that way but i can see why somebody would. kennedy: does the chief of staff want to be fired? >> i don't think he wanted the job in the first place. and he's done an amazing job as the chief. to a person at the white house they say imposed discipline on the staff. there is a better schedule. you have the door closed to the
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white house. there are no leaks. there is no michael wolff running around. kennedy: you talk about border security. the democrats voted for it in 2006. and they ran into eminent domain issues. can they swap out the term wall for border security? >> if they pass border security they will call it the wall. and that will be his trophy he campaigns on. they will say we supported border security. he calls it the wall, whatever. everyone will have to give a little bit if they want to solve it. but i can see a scenario where they get all the way up to the line and everybody can agree on everything except the question of amnesty. kennedy: people don't know what they mean when they say the and what they are promising when
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they cover it. and that term alone is more problematic than that term alone. president trump in the pittsburgh area touting his economic successes and stumping for a republican who is up against democrat connor lamb. the district is mostly white, rural, and blue collar it's trump country. but analyst says the democrat has a shot and it could be a major early indicator for what's going to happen in the mid-terms. do president trump and the gop have a reason to are worried? guy benson is here along with the co-host of "the five" juan williams, and wrestling
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superstar dolph ziggler back in the wring. welcome back to the show. let's discuss this special election. both parties want to claim that every election, every race is a bellwether. this one is going to be the big indicator for how things go and the president's fortunes fall in november. do you buy that with the special election that's supposed to be quite red. guy: i think we put more emphasis on special elections. in georgia the republicans were excited, then virginia wasn't a special election but the democrats point. alabama the democrats were crowing about. there was a race in wisconsin that flipped a trump district. in the pennsylvania race the republicans are running the playbook they used in georgia.
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it was successful in suburban atlanta. will it work in trump country in pennsylvania? kennedy: this democrat is interesting on paper. it goes to the democrats' efforts to recruit different kind of candidates, and people who are not like nancy pelosi and are more like tim ryan and centrist with military background. juan: in the wisconsin race the democrat ran as a former member of the deer hunter association. she ran basically saying we need more healthcare, we need to fight the opioid crisis and make sure the elderly, everyone in our community was taken care of. i'm not playing in the sandbox "political positions or attacking trump by name.
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i'm saying i'm the one who's closer to the people. kennedy: what's interesting for some of these candidate, it's difficult. because the president is not popular in every district. president trump is also out -- president obama is out on the stump as well. he will campaign hard for democrats in 2018. which of these democrats do a better job for their party and which hurts their party. >> a tim ryan or somebody in the middle. you want to take advantage of trump's economy. kennedy: can you make that case without tying yourself to the president? >> a lot of times you have to say you have to give some of the credit to obama. you don't give the credit to anyone. you say the economy is doing great, i'm not obama, i'm here for you. kennedy: that economic message
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is going to resonate. if the economy keeps on improving, it's hard for democrats to play politics with that. but you would think with everything going on in washington, d.c., the president would want to spend more time out of town. like pittsburgh. but one of his lawyers say he's eager to speak with special counsel robert mueller about the russia investigation. this comes a week after he said it seemed unlikely he would sit down for an interview with mueller's team. he has called the investigation a witch hunt. almost half of americans think mueller's investigation is fair. only 28% think it's unfair. back and forth, mixed signals. one week he's going to talk to him. the next no-dice. guy: i wonder if they are
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signaling he's eager to do it if it's inevitable. if it's going to 457, they want it to look like he's eager to have this conversation. i do find it interesting that the president's lawyer keeps predicting the mueller probe is going to end just a few weeks from now. 4 to 6 more weeks, it goes on and on. and i'm waiting months. you keep hearing maybe even a year. i don't know what the strategy is to keep saying over and over again that it's almost over with it has been proven wrong repeatedly. juan: i think the strategy is the placate president trump. whether he talks to mueller, he was trying to set a negotiating point. but is it a matter of, for
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example, knowing the questions beforehand? is it possible he gesh yates a deal where he only answers written questions with written answers rather than putting himself in the position where -- kennedy: you know his lawyers are sitting down with him coauthoring most of of the answers? juan: from their position he's protected. with trump being as impulsive as he is, if he goes off the talking point he's in big trouble because he's under oath. kennedy: anyone who has ever met the president, say he's a star. when he goes to these big rallies and looks people in the eye. he knocks it out of the park every time. will he be able to bought that same magic with the special counsel. guy: i think he thinks so. can you see a lawyer whispering and him repeating what he's
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supposed to say. it's unreal. there is no way. oh, i'll beat this. but you are now under oath, and it could be very, very unbelievable to do if this doesn't work out. i got it. but it was a great point, as a negotiating tactic. i'm not going to talk to this guy. so kay, we'll meet in the middle and i will talk to him. he said over and over again that there was no collusion. so i understand maybe some of that -- i did not do what the main charge is, i'm eager to say that again because it's true. that's the pro-trump argument that resonates. i understand that. kennedy: anyone who interviewed him knows the president has buttons that can be pushed. if the special counsel has access to that they will find past statement that perhaps contradict. that's why so many lawyers are
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saying don't talk to them. >> you can do it. and then that's it. you can do a second take. no, this is it. kennedy: the man panel returns a little bit later for party swap. first up, however, for decades the united states has been the most of powerful country on earth. a new poll suggests the rest of the world is not look to the u.s. for leadership like it used to. i'll ask ambassador john bolton if it's true. that's next. it's easy to think that all money managers are pretty much the same. but while some push high commission investment products, fisher investments avoids them. some advisers have hidden and layered fees.
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kennedy: is the u.s. still number one? not adoarkd a new gallup survey that finds only 30% approve of america's leadership under the *. germany, a lot of germans answering the phone. they have a 41% approval rating. but when there is a natural disaster or a crisis somewhere in the world, who do they call first? the germans? no.
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is this survey just a bunch of rubbish? he call the good old u.s.a. does this matter that there are people in the world that think the u.s. has fallen off of some lofty perch? >> this is a bunch of rubbish. this is a poll asking widely diverse populations a question they perceive in a lot of different ways. i don't care fundamentally what the result is. whatever it shows at this particular time. only thing that matters to the global leader is whether people follow it when the clips are down, not what people say to public opinion polls. it's a gallup poll, several of them taken in france during the height of marshall plan aide.
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ago x wash -- and we were ratee unpopularly it's not something any american president should pay attention to. kennedy: we are sitting at the blackjack table and we have a nice stack of black chips when you talk bun employment numbers, rising stock market and economic indicators. is that a better measure, and by that standard is it good if people are jealous? >> i think it's ignorance and lousy press reporting internationally. and a fondness for barack obama. why not snow was viewed as a european and he all but said he was on a number of occasions. i thin -- i think what matters n
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there is an international threat, the difference is in many places particularly europe, they just don't get like iran, like north korea. it's significant, i think, that american approval ratings are way up in israel. which is a country that is under constant threat and it doesn't yearn for the days of barack obama. they understand america is their ally again. that's important. kennedy: what will determine foreign policy? it can be perception or it can be reality. what will determine success and failure for this president? what does each look like? >> i think it means stopping iran and north korea. stopping them from getting that capability. that's a hard, scientific provable point one way or
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another. it doesn't depend on public opinion. a lot of bills are coming due from prior american failures. the bigger question looking forward is how this administration deals with russia and china. we have the defense review paper coming out in the next few days that has moved russia and china back to center stage after 8 years of the obama administration. some people may not want to think strategically internationally. but i am a firm believer if we don't maintain a strong global position we cannot us taint way of life we have today. kennedy: comedian snsari, has the #metoo movement gone too far? pssst. what?
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ken report house is set to unveil a bipartisan plan that will force lawmakers to pay sexual misconduct settlements with their own money instead of using taxpayer dollars. but many are started to wonder if the #metoo movement is headed in the wrong direction after an anonymous woman accused aziz ansari of sexual assault.
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the new york times and the "washington post" called it a gift to anyone who wants to derail the movement #metoo joining me now, editor-in-chief of the daily wire, been shapiro. thank you for being here. how much damage does a story like this do to victims who have bravely come forward with their own stories of sexual assault against people like harvey weinstein and naught lawyer? ben: i think it does damage because there are people month experienced terrible things, sexual assault and abuse who are afraid to come forward because the reaction to this story is so bad. but that's if the failure of the #metoo movement by not making a distinction the. people are saying maybe we ought
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to give every one short shrift, and led a lot of women to say i don't want to go under the microscope this way if everything i say will be picked apart. i think specificity is useful. kennedy: some of the accusations people have made about harvey weinstein and matt lauer and kevin spacey and louie ck, they are serious and speak to a much larger problem. do you think the #metoo movement has been good for the country? been require has. but it pointed to a need for a set of rules that make sense. so far i haven't seen a set of rules from people on the left and suggest connell on sent is the standard. but then even when it appears consent is given men are
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supposed to be able to read non-verbal cue. and being naked-his apartment and performing oral sex is a none verballal that she doesn't want to be there. if you got rid of all the traditional standards and built up this false standard that is legalistic in nature, and it's not holding. kennedy: describe progression of the backlash. with a movement this big to take down so many people, there is bounds to be a backlash. ben: people are going to say we need if something that's verifiable. then that's created the third wave feminist backlash that says you have to believe all women no
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matter how subjective or whether you think she gave a signal or otherwise you are victim blaming. once we move away from rape bad, sexual abuse bad. when there is backlash followed by backlash, it kills if the #metoo movement. kennedy: thank you very much, very good. are you tired of the same talking heads spinning over talking points over and over again? #metoo? make our guests argue for the opposite position. there we go. our liberal juan williams will argue for the conservative side. our conservative guy benson will do the opposite.
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and dolph ziggler will ask them divisive political questions. let's get this party started. juan, i will start with you. why do we absolutely need the wall? juan: have you seen any norwegians south bored? no. so what we need toys protect american interests. you have seen hoardes come across that southern border. whordes. and we need to stop it. and we should not alowter people to tell us about our own security issues. the american people need to impress their own border security. >> why is the wall more
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important than ever since that tax scam bill ignited our looming apocalypse. ben: i know i'm on faux news, or whatever the espn version is. i will make this simple for you guys. science. ever heard of it? walls don't work. they never have, they never will. that's the data. number two, you know who else had walls? hitler? ever heard of him? and you said the words illegal immigrants. edge if you didn't, you thought them. and that brings to something called compassion. ever head it? we need to make illegal immigrants the hate crime that that it is. and calling these children of god -- it's okay to talk about good and christianity.
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it helps my argument. we need to call them undocumented heroes. they are better than most of americans, especially you. build that wall. and insure victory in 2020. juan: i think for president trump he's got to deliver on his campaign promises because that's what the base knows and the base has a strong reaction to immigrants. donald trump do your thing because guess what? you have been the winner. don't let these naysayers, leftist snowflakes fall on your wall. >> is it okay to make up stories about the president if it gets hillary elected. ben: hillary was elected.
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she is the president. there is a thing called the popular vote. ever heard of it? she point. that's one thing. here is a tears of rage. and i have to say this, this is not normal. this is not normal. the only thing that's fake is our fake fat phoney russian president who says [bleep] [bleep] [bleep] [bleep]. he said it. and i want to say this on behalf of journalists. the people he's smearing. they are the greatest people in the world other than my undocumented heroes. if gandhi and mother teresa had a child, it would literally be journalism. >> i how healthy and smart is president trump? >> he can't be any healthier.
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didn't you merit from his doctor? this is just the facts. my democratic opponent holds up a sign that says science. i will allow you the science because the doctor came back with evidence, and the scientific evidence said our starburst, mcdonald's eating president is in great shake. ben: you are talking about some white house doctor. i have it on good authority that the president is 500 pounds. but do sanjay gupta told me and that's what matters. >> juan, you sounded like a genius today. guy is our winner. juan: i believe in science.
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be setting up technical support offices and contribute $350 billion to the u.s. economy. employees will be getting a boinls of $2,500 big ones in apple stock. is that true? and how can we keep this economy roaring? joining me, brian brenberg. let's break it down. what took apple so long? >> they have been waiting for years for the u.s. authorities to fiction our corporate taxes. they said for years once you fiction this we'll brit money back home. we fiction the thanks system and they bring the money back home. it shouldn't be a surprise to a lot of people except the hard left who don't understand the
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tax rate. but am is reacting to a good change in the corporate thanks rate. kennedy: is this a direct correlation to what conservative economists have been saying, if you lower the tax rate you provide incentives for giant corporations to come here. >> it's both. they wouldn't have brought the money back if we haven't fixed the corporate tax rate. it's good marketing. but i like that. i like the fact that in the u.s. today businesses can talk about the good they are doing and not have to worry about being brand as a villain. now they get the opportunity to say here is what we are doing to make people's lives better. i think apple deserves praise for that. kennedy: nancy pelosi says it's just crumbs. how tone deaf is that to people who have been hurting and don't
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have enough money to pay their bills month to month. >> i can't believe democrats want to argue against $30 billion anyone investments. $20,000 in bonuses. you have people on the left saying that doesn't mean that much or it's only a one-time thing. maybe it is only a one-time thing. but the economy is growing faster than it has in 12 years, and that's the driver for raising wages. democrats never wanted to talk about economic growth. they always wanted talk about inequality. but when you start focusing on growth people at the bottom's wages go up. kennedy: the 1% argument doesn't hold as much water when you have a rising tide. the dow, people are saying the rights to 26,000 is too much too fast.
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>> we are starting to see the tax cuts baked into valuation. and corporate profits are strong. companies are performing well. so it doesn't surprise me the dow is moving up. on the other hand -- kennedy: is that anticipated for cause and effect. >> investors are anticipating higher corporate profits with the effects of the lower tax rates. you can get the runups where people are buying because they are seeing prices bow up. is it a case where you might see a pullback this year? that's possible. and you are likely to see interest rates go up and that will probably dampen the stock market a little bit. but there is nothing on the horizon that suggests we'll see a strong pullback. kennedy: i feel great about money. i love money. more of it for more people.
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don't redistribute it. go out and earn it and participate. kennedy: more to earn, more to invest. happy almost weekend. >> thank you. kennedy: people are riding horses through bonfires in spain. "topical storm" is next. my name's dustinhey, dustin. grab a seat. woman: okay. moderator: nice to meet you. have you ever had car trouble in a place like this? (roaring of truck) yes and it was like the worst experience of my life. seven lanes of traffic and i was in the second lane. when i get into my car, i want to know that it's going to get me from point a to point b. well, then i have some good news. chevy is the only brand to receive j.d. power dependability awards for cars, trucks and suvs two years in a row. woman: wait! (laughing) i definitely feel like i'm in a dependable vehicle right now. woman 2: i want a chevy now.
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woman 3: i know! money managers are pretty much the same. all but while some push high commission investment products, fisher investments avoids them. some advisers have hidden and layered fees. fisher investments never does. and while some advisers are happy to earn commissions from you whether you do well or not, fisher investments fees are structured so we do better when you do better. maybe that's why most of our clients come from other money managers. fisher investments. clearly better money management. no one burns on heartburn. my watch! try alka seltzer ultra strength heartburn relief chews. with more acid-fighting power than tums chewy bites. mmmmm...amazing. i have heartburn. ultra strength from alka seltzer. enjoy the relief. of being there for my son's winning shot. that was it for me. that's why i'm quitting with nicorette. only nicorette mini has a patented fast dissolving formula. it starts to relieve sudden cravings fast. every great why
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kennedy: a "politico" poll found 43% of americans want oprah winfrey to run for president. topic number one. we begin in the spanish village of san bartoli. a handsome young jockey ran into an old flame. it looks more like the feast of malt hurricane. because nobody should be doing this sober. by this, i mean watching my show. that's another story. the ritual dates back to the
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19th century. if i were to guess i would say horses aren't the only things these guys are smoking. but it's nice the see horses doing something besides getting punched by an eagles fan. let's head out to the cincinnati zoo where an art vark has been cheat d an ardvark has been cheating on his diet. the good news is they finally got ardvark on the scale. they put opium pellets under his tongue. his doctor annoued he's fit as a fiddle.
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but theressefused t believe it. so tyoundedhe doctor ardvark's menta health that people are questioningheirs. and they are questioning him about his weight. relax, this is all health. too i c numberhree. nasa i reporting that a giant asroid is heang towds earth at 67,000 miles anour. before you sta looting and you ould know na iue as warning o anything that passes within 4 millioniles of our lonely rock. apparently they get their warning info from the same place as hawaii's miss soil warning. because while the asteroid in question is twice the size of
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the empire state building. it will be 2.5 million miles from the planet when it passes by february 24. don't put bruce willis in a spaceship, and please for the love of gravy, don't record another aerosmith ballad. oh wait that was me dplieg karaoke last night. i would rather get hit by an asteroid than listen to any more of my singing. topic number four. if someone invites you over to their house to netflix and switch. don't assume you are going to a swinger's party. if anything you are going to an under aged party. it's about to get 12 times better if the streaming service
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joins forces with the largest game console on the planet. don't get me on the scale and pinch my nose, you weirdo. if it's not just kids, if you put all the movies and video games on within console. it's only a matter of time before every adult gets so fat they refuse to step on the scale like this little buddy. i love him so much i want a fat pet ardvark that i can pet and squeeze. in life there are highs and lows, stripes and gutters. smiles and frowns, and hatred from the internet, and more hatred from the internet. this is viewer mail.
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johnson, you are named after a body part. [bleep]. will notes, childish imbecile. that's prince william. and tony wraps it up nicely with i know how you feel. sometimes i want to punch a cat in the face. what he meant is he wants to squeeze an ardvark's snout. because we don't condone animal torture. it's the ends of an era for fbn's kennedy staff. so we need a new place to hold
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guinness tonight because the rent got too damn high. the crossroads of the world. a series of build boards and stores that act as shrines. there was this little shamrock patch that served the most of succulent, lean and tasty corned inteef outside of my mother's kitchen. we would beeline to studio l and they never made fun of me for ordering fireball and diet coke. lan gerks n's was one of a kind and will be missed. the quality of this show may fall because we won't have lan
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gerks n's. follow me on facebook and instagram. and i'll see you on the "outnumbered"'s couch tomorrow. >> anything i could imagine, i could build, just like that. >> ...with an eye for history... >> this is a copy of daniel boone's rifle. davy crockett rifle that hethe . over here, is a 12-pounder napoleon. >> ...and a goal in his sights. >> collection of every gun of major importance in the history of the united states.ut when itl the incredible arsenal... >> were you shocked? >> oh, yeah, of course. oh, yeah. >> ...it's his heirs who hear a blast from the past. >> what did you estimate that collection was worth at that time? >> probably a million dollars. that was a small load. if you put a big load in there it'll knock you on your fanny. ho!
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