tv Kennedy FOX Business November 21, 2022 7:00pm-8:00pm EST
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not a good place to pick. >> what do you think? >> first, god bless them for fighting back, thank god they were not injured or killed themselves. but they shouldn't have up to hole the law. we have police for that, democratic left has tied the hands of police, tied hands of law enforcement unless citizens fight back, we'll have no law and order. we need to change the laws, we need to change the politicians who are passing those laws give police and law enforcement the ability to protect ours so fee. elizabeth: mr. pataki thank you for joining us, happy thanksgiving. >> thank you. elizabeth: i am. >> it might be most closely followed media story of all-times, elon musk's wild takeover of twitter, but with former president trump
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potential return the laters are having a meltdown, will elon get the last laugh, i'm tom shillue if for kennedy. you may have noticed that twitter has been in turmoil, this month, musk purchased is for 34 billion and laid off roughly half of the company's 7500 employee, last week ehe issued an ultimatum to his remaining staff, work hardero get lost, many quickly quit, there were room o rumors that the platform could collapse. over the weekend elon held an on-line vote to whether to reinstate trump's account, trump won but so far the former presidents has been coy about getting rejoining. >> a big vote to go back on twitter, i don't see it. socialist taking a place for
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a lot of people,. >> regardless of whether he does or not, the mere prospect sent liberals to over drive. >> i think it say terrible mistake. >> the danger that is presented by someone who is unhinged. >> anyone who woke up this morning and saw the news, had a avalanche much dread hit them. >> he will politicize it and use it, all of those domestic terrorists that have is leading will have a voice. i am very disturbed about it. >> wow, avalanche of dread. another is qw kanye west, he was kicked off for tweets that critics calls anti-semitic, he got back on this weekend, his first tweet was shalom. has twitter descended to hell scape elon promised to
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avoid or is this hater hot air, we discuss with party panel, jason, and richard fowler and elie breen, welcome back i miss you. >> miss you too tom. kennedy:. >> let's start with you. let's give elon a grade. what do you think his first days of twitter? >> i love it. he is pushing so much marketing through the platform, you don't need anyone back or you don't need trump on there that assault that platform is about. it is people unhinged whether they want trump back or a don't. it is the best marketing strategy he had, i think that poll was bs, i don't think it was a real thing this was i think that drive people to see how much interacted he could get. he himself is unhinged.
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you look for unhinged people, comparing bill gates to be a pregnant man he is the new trump of twitter, he can take the place ever. >> jason, musk reinstated a bunch of new accounts. certain ones we reuses, someone mentioned what about alex jones, he answered no. is it about free speech or people that he thinks should be back on twitter? >> i think that is a great question, i agree it is he has been doing a great job with the marketing and bringing spree speech back to the platform but i don't agree with the idea that elon musk or a committee a round him if you pick and choose who they will allow or not, we either have free speech or not, consent of free speech is not supposed
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to protect us from speech we agree with but from speech we do not agree with i think that bad speech, answer to bad speech in american context is really not less speech but more. if you think about it in a lot of ways social media is essentially the modern public square, that is what twitter is and wants to be, if you sensor social media you have the ability to shape ideas, and if have power to remove people you disagree with on social media, you have the ability too silent their voices. i think that is dangerous and that is why i believe that a machine who got 75 million votes, and was the 45 president of united states of america, he should have never been deplatformed from the modern public square too begin work musk did the right thing, not sure we should pick and choose and deciding who should be on the platform
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to begin with. >> richard, so, people on the left. liberal and people on the left, have really embraced censorship in an unprecedented way. the -- they want these people off of the platform, something that jason said on the show, i think if he said that on twitter, they might take his account off of twitter, why is social media more harsh, more engaged in censorship than a cable news program. >> there are a couple points, when we i use the term free speech we use it too loosely, the idea is government is who free speech is before, the government cannot block you from saying something unless you yell fire in a movie theater, and number two let's remember why trump got kicked off of twitter, he was not kicked off for saying nasty things but he
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incited an insurrection at u.s. capitol, now that twitter is owned by musk, he is taking the company private and can do whatever he wants but don't do it say, i did a poll. the main reason he didn't want to buy twitter in the first place was because of the bots, i am sure if you look at poll half of people who voted were probably bots that musk paid, this is the irony and musk's ownership of twitter, and sort of letting some people on and others not on, because he is creating the rules as he goes, there is no rhyme or reason to how he puts people on and taking people out of platform. it depends on how he feels
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that day. >> i agree, it seems he is making the decisions willy-nilly. >> it is just his rules, you could go by that. >> true. >> bike. >> breaking news, we're getting exclusive message from president biden. >> hey, i'm 80 man, i'm 80, i feel 50. that is the way it is, you want to get to joe's age, you subtract 30, that is the way it has been, when i was 50 in 1992, felt 20, that's right, i remember those years, 1992. kennedy was hosting alternative nation on mtv and he and bob pack wood were squeezing waistlines and sniffing heads, those were the days, feeling like i'm 20 again. kennedy: snr
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>> this is special, he shouted touted kennedy, she is not here. reminding me of blue velvet at the end. okay. just one day after his 80 birthday president biden does not appear to look a day over 95. but sleep joe is not our only leader with 8 8 decades under his belt. nancy pelosi and diane feinstein, and chuck grassley. poll found three quarters of americans think there should be an age limit for people serving in congress. why do we keep electing so many octogenarians back into office? i'll start with jason. do you think there should be an age limit? >> i do not, i think it is cognitive and cognitive abilities than age related.
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now, there are people in their elder years that have more cognitive issues than younger, but people who won elections in last midterms like fetterman who does not have mental capacity to govern his state. when you have a commander in chief of the most powerful military in the world, military with over 4,000 nuclear warheads, and he is confounded to a teleprompter, he shakes hands with thin air and falls off stationary bikes and can't did any with without a cheat sheet, he has a cognitive problem. i don't believe there should be an age limit but you want to elect candidates that are cognitively able to govern. >> i do have handlers giving me cheat sheets. richard, this is democracy. we elect these people, i
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agree, we should not have an age limit. but why do we keep electing the old people, we know it is a different world. all people that i mentioned don't know anything about new technology. >> i think that is interesting,. when you go to iowa they love chuck tbr grassley, you go to san francisco, you asked them about nancy pelosi, they will say they love her, this is what they believe they like. if you go to pennsylvania, they will tell you we love john fetterman. but here the is thing we have to be careful when we use word cognitive, none of us have phd's or md's in psychology for us to make these assessments. when audience said -- this person said it has to be true, very careful.
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those types of determinations are made by medical professionals with years and years of experience. >> you know alli i agree that we cannot really m make a di diagnosis, i think that guy from pennsylvania is cognitively impaired in some way. it is a numbers game, i would assume even they would vote better than a democrat. >> that might be true, but i think we can tell some level of cognitive ability when you see biden shouting out to dead people. shaking hands with air, that is a problem. the issue too is all these people, the job they are in. i would be worried if they were serving me at cheesecake factory, forget about running the country, it is not able to is cognitive.
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they are right. fetterman i felt he was texting happy arbor day to president bacon, they are not all together there. >> i don't need a doctor when you open a debate, good night everyone, you this thank you panel. what are chances we see a biden and president trump rematch in 2024? a new poll could be a preview of president's decision, as trump's announcement continues to stir up controversy, tom bevin will join me next to discuss. ♪ ♪ love shack ♪ ♪ baby ♪ ♪ love shack ♪ ♪ own baby ♪ ♪ and lincoln financial solutions will help you get there. as you plan, protect and retire. ♪ flu symptoms hit harder than the common cold. so it takes the right tool for the job... to keep it together.
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tom: well we see another biden and trump battle for white house, democratic voters less likely to say it's time for a change in their new leadership. three quarters of democrat say president biden could win if he runs for a second term. poll indicates that left fields better about biden after he pulled off surprising wins in in -- many midterm race, trump's announcement last week he will run, for a third term has stirred up both parties.
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now another of republicans are pushing back. so, is there a possibility for a 2020 rematch in 2024, joining me now discuss it. tom bevan. tell me where you think trump stands with republicans and biden with democrats. >> well no question that election changed p perceptions of both people, donald trump he was injured by what happened on november 8. the polling is not worth a lot this far out, we saw ron desantis det a bounce, he is the preferred alternative for a lot of republican voter, very well liked. to win that away from trump he has to muds where you el
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wrestle with him for a better part of two years. tom: and you also think that it was good for biden, was it just the elections that makes democrats say that biden would be more likely to win in 2024. >> yes, there flc there was a red wave, i think that biden would have been under pressure to step aside and pass the baton, that is less likely now, but still likely. but problem for democrat there is no viable heir apparent who can take things over. kamala harris would be favorite if biden stepped away according to the polls, i don't believe she is a strong enough candidate to clear the feel from other democrats who are ambition, gavin newsom in particular would of that would be a free-for-all t if biden
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did not, he is turning 80, he has a bump in post election. but as democratic voters evaluate it, it may dissipate identify time. and democrats will be back to wanting him to step aside. tom: tom, let me ask but polls, we heard about the hidden trump voter in last election. the people who didn't respond to polls but supporting trump, he got a bump. now you have this idea that maybe there might be hidden mail in voters, you know we talk about likely voters, i heard you say, that don't look at polls, that say registered but likely, when that they are turning likely voters to voters with the mail in situation. are people not likely to vote but now they are stuffing them in the ballot. is there a hidden mail in vote we're not seeing in polls? >> you know there might be, pollsters are dealing with
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this when they ask the questions after early voting started, they ask did you already vote, how did you vote, they are taking those into account. i i don't think that there is a question that democrats in particular in states that mattered, pennsylvania, arizona, nevada and georgia just flat out out ground gamed the republicans by using early voting. and banking the votes before election day, republicans either have to change the laws, or more likely get with the system and the game as played. they have been republican voters have been shying away from early voting and turning out on election day it did not work. tom: i think probably a combination. you have change the laws, and also you have to get some kind of a plan for early voting and mail in, thank you, tom. >> thank you. tom: as you recall price of gas was a big issue in midterms, gas prices have
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fallen it is still very expensive to heat your home, house republicans said they are ready to share up biden administration policies, power of future outlined 10 policy priorities that republicans should focus on. among them pushing for more demp domestic drilling, cutting certain taxes and reversing canceling of keystone pipeline, how it would help consumers, joining me now, daniel turner. welcome to the show. and let's go through a couple. pushing for more domestic drilling that is something you want to do. but when anyone mentioned that people on lift would s-- left say that would take a long time. how long would it take, i would assume people look to future if we're drilling more that will till the markets it will free up supply, maybe prices would go down. >> you are right. it will send market signal like you mentioned canceling
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keystone that sent a market signal, telling industry to get ready, this administration will punish you, by allowing more domestic drilling you are sending a signal to the markets this government will work with oil and gas industry and it will begin to lower prices even like not immediately. if you recall, president trump was sworn in, in january of 17, we declared ourselves energy independent, an net exporter in october of 18. it took almost two years. this shows how this is an industry that takes a while to sometimes come on-line. but you can shut it down quickly, that is what biden has done. tom: okay number two, i read. was cutting 7 search taxes -- certain taxes, which taxes, can be that done by congress or executive level. >> there is a lot of tools that house of representatives has.
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remember people need to understand how powerful congress is. kudo to nancy pelosi, she hated our industry. and she did everything she she could to persecute it. but she knew all power she had as speaker, i hope kevin mccarthy realizes the power we will have as well, one tax in particular tax on natural gas, that idea that somehow corporations are going to pay higher taxes is laughable, what they will do is pass on cost to the consumers, that is how corporate taxes work, punishing the gas industry will raise the prices and rather than see americans suffer more we would like some relief for american families, that tax can be eliminated through a lot of political match nations of
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the house. tom: you know, daniel, guys like yourself are good at talking about the value of fossil fuels and energy. republicans are not that good at it, do you anyone in your industry they are talking about energy. >> i appreciate the compliment, we are trying to do with incoming freshman class. i always tell people, anyone on conservative end on right, who starts to embrace climate movement, will cave on every other issue whether it is abortion or guns or taxes, wars. regardless of the issue, climate is the bell weather, a lot of conservatives try to play this game to appease the least, i'm very worried. soon gauze d as you go down that road i are doomed. >> thank you. tom: coming up disney announcing a jaw dropping
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or discover she's smart... really smart. now what? here's what: you connect with prudential's rock-solid team serving over 50 million people. with investment, insurance and retirement know-how. who's your rock? visit prudential.com or speak to an advisor today. tom: as the who once sang meet the now boss, same as the old boss, what does it mean for disney. announcing iger will take back helm of the house of mouse, replacing chapek who lost confident of senior leadership, iger has a ton on his plate. all had an impact on the company's bottom line. nail in coffin, disney shares hit a 20 year low. after a weak earnings
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respect. will iger take -- report will iger take disney back tto its wholesome roots, the panel is back, this is a real fox business story, new ceo, but iger was ceo for 15 years, he had a couple years off. company is doing badly. and they put him in, stock has a bump because they trust the old guy, it will make a difference? >> i don't see how it could. does not make sense, they are losing money hand over fist. now they pay two ceos, they have to pay the other guy his entire contract, tens of millions to each who no proof that anything can -- there is no saying they are not pushing an agenda and entertain. i have no idea, if i were a shareholder or parents bringing my kids to the park, i would be really pissed off. i wouldn't attend. it wouldn't change going for me. tom: a lot of americans are
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like that. >> note it is not just wrright widgers, a lot of families looked to disney as wholesome, they don't like the company any more. a don't like disney like they used to. is disney going to able to get that back? >> they could start by lowers the prices to their theme parks, i have cousins they went a couple months back it is $1,000 to send a family of 4 to disney world for the weekend, jesus take the wheel, that is the larger problem, you could say it is woke ideology, if you take a principal spend on whether anyone can bring their lgbtq child to the park, especially after what happened in colorado springs. but i think this is more or less about that more about fact that earnings call they
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lost money. even iffy lost money they will lose more paying two ceos. that my take. tom: seems like jason, the -- iger quit at the perfect time. he stepped aside, february of 2020. so, he basically took the pandemic off and now he is back. i feel his timing is too perfect, i'm out of here now i'll get the credit for the come back. >> look, i really think that this basically rehiring architect of their woke agenda, do not think it is the cost of admission to the park. i understand that it is expensive. i don't think that the reason disney is losing as much money is because of the cost of the park, it has always been expensive, there is their woke ideology that
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left, understands very well, that if they cosubvert the minds of our youth they are our future generations, that is why they have been playing long game in higher education, and they play the long game in public schools. and i think it is indoctrination of our children and youth they have their minds set on, until that changes, i think they will be purging money hand over fist. tom: i agree, i think that america's families. >> jason. tom: it is not just disney, i think america's family used to be able to trust corporate america they can't anymore. iranians taking a stand diagainst their own brutal regime on the global stage, play iers at the world cup refusing to sing
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their national anthem, in reaction to death of a 22-year-old girl, while in police custody. so far as many as 419 people have reportedly died in the protests since then. is the iranian team the brbravest one at the tournament. this takes a lot. this is not messing around. this is the land of the f free, iran may come down on them. >> it is truly heroic. and they are standing up for the barbaric brutality against wim in their country. what you say is true, may will be met with potentially imprisonment, beatings and or even death with what they did, different from nfl
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players here and other sport figures. when they get you know multimillion dollar contracts, they make more money kneeling to the american flag and national anthem then playing football, that is a different thing, i don't think you can compare them. that is my position on what i'm seeing out of the soccer. tom: i think richard, i think our panel and me wild agwe'll agree on they are brave, not only players but also those at the game attending. >> absolutely, the bravely begins with the young woman and all women standing with her, we'll stand up for our rights and right to be, and for sexual rid identity, they matter, our lived experience matters. whether you live in iran or live in london or lived in
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paris or right here in u.s. uyour right to be matters. tom: this is a story that what is going on in iran now, such a huge world story, i i just don't feel it is getting a lot of media coverage. that is my sent from what i see in print media, and seeing things to cable news. do you have the same sense this is a massive world story for some the reason we're not hearing a lot. >> that is why we hear through the brave protesters, we should be seeing footage every day of what is happening in iran. it is horrific, handing out date sentences and killing people like crazy, these people are taking a real chance to get publicity like this to talk about it do something, they want help. a lot of countries there in the same position, we know it building of stadiums in
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qatar it was slave labor, we're playing the fifa world cup like it is nothing. i think they are bringing a lot of attention to it at their own expense. tom: i guess sense, sports is a great opportunity sports has a great student to spread these -- stu opportunity to spread these messages, you mentioned people protesting black lives matter protest and people protesting the war, but the world, sports as an opportunity to change the world, a lot of sports figures cower, the nba cowers in the face of china, i am right? >> mm-hmm. 100%. right now you have at world watching these games, i think that to the other guest's point, there is so much attention focused on this story that never would have been focused on, it is very brave of these soccer
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players to stand up. and to protest what shaping what is happening in their own country, so this is in the news cycle and we understand what is goiing on going on and happening to the women. tom: jason thank you, and thank you to the panel, jason, richard and a alli, fox sports has all world cup you cahandndndndndnd. cominerallllll ououououou i i it shshshshshshns ha - - - - - -hitting kids hard. how can you protect your family during the h the h holiday signs, dr. marc siegel is making a house call next.
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dinner with extended family for the first time since before the pandemic, but now we have a pair of illnesses to w worry about, it could be one of the worst flu seasons in decade and a nasty respiratory virus arriv, r rsv sickening children from coast-to-coast. all the time we spent in isolation, weakened than immune systems, who would have thought! hospitals in a number of stays cities are at capacity and out of beds. >> joining me now. dr. mark siegel. thank you for joining us, to that point. that i just read from the teleprompter. it says the isolation weaken
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the immune system. didn't see know, that my mom used to tell me that get out and get the colds, that is what helps build your immune system. >> right. i would tweak it a little bit. you know just read off the you are teleprompter, you are a damn smart guy. we closed schools people were not exposed, i don't think that the immune system is weakened but it did not get exposed to viruses it is used to seeing, it part of a tremendous toll of the moves that were made during the pandemic without considering consequences short and long-term. we talked about learning, now we will talk d about virus, we're seeing rsv out
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of season and a rip roaring fflu season because they were not exposed to the viruses over last couple of years. >> i heard another doctor, talking this very way, you are talking, saying, immune system is not weaker but naive. what is the difference? it is you can't deal with the diseases, people are getting sick because of the shut down. because of the separations, because stay home stayed safe made people unhi unhealthy, everything they told us to to was wrong. >> yes, there we go th got to point of agreement it was sh -- short-sighted, the hygiene -- if you are exposed to viruses you build up a immunity. and rsv no one say it, affecting those under age of 6 months, 6% of all visits
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to the doctor's office including mine, are because of respiratory viruses now. and 10% of the hospitalizations, and over 45 thousand hospitalizations flu, it a rip roaring flu season buzz ba we h -- because we had a mild season before, the immune simple system it will recover, i do not know our psyche will recover, now they have to look at viruses they were not seeing they should have been seeing. >> there are also infants i think, rsv and i think i heard you say, 10 times amount of rsv, something like 7 times in infants that is a 6-month-old baby or one-year-old baby, getting rsv, what can be causing this? these little babies were not
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locked down, they were not wearing a mask, they were not born a year ago, what is causing it in infants? >> a fantastic question. answer is, infants are not getting the immunity from their mothers they usually get. usually, up to age of 6 month antibodies from mother gets transferred when they are in the womb because the mothers were not exposed on viruses because of shut downs, across the board short-sight edness, here is the worst thing. almost like a punch li line, tom, you know what it didn't do? it didn't prevent the spread of covid, it did not work. it did not prevent the spread. tom: that is why i refer to you, i say criminal, what they did was wrong. and they should be held to acup thank you doctor. >> coming up, supreme court embroiled in a scandal is highest court representation
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allegation. justice alito had friends allegedly mentioned outcome of the hobby lobby case, for which he wrote the majority opinion. tedemocrat saw read and calling for an inquiry to ethics rules. is it a conservative one that are off the table, we don't know who was behind the abortion decision leak. is it too late to salvage court's representation, joining me now. author of supreme disorder, ilya shapiro, you wrote a book about hobby lobby. >> i did, i coauthors it 8 years ago now, there was no leak. this is all begin -- ginned
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up. tom: from what i understood, in "new york times" piece, made a inflammatory headline about the leak, then said according to the report there was a dinner it was justin h just is alito, his wife and another couple, after the dinner, the woman from other couple called her friend, said i think i know something about the hobby lobby decision, he was a a -- they were all trying to you know, get ready for this decision. just as i described it to you, does that sound like it is an ethical breach, can you talk about things at dinner with your friends if you are a supreme court justice. >> you can talk about things, you are not supposed to talk about pending cases. i can't imagine that justice alito was being a blabber
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mouth like that. i had dinner with him bu before, in a group of 30 or 40 people, i have talked with him before and other justices, they know what they are doing. this is not their fires t first time around the block, you have hearsay on hearsay as lawyers call it broken telephone. at the end of the day politico reporting on this "new york times" article talking about hearsay on hearsay, they tried for months to coop kosh corroborate the leak they could not do it, they turned to circumstantial evidence. you are in media business, people prewrite reaction to things going different ways this particular case, was very easy to predict how it would go. this is all a big nothing burger.
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burg ginned up stuff. the leader changed his stripes and now trying to change the tune and muddy the waters, i feel briefs at the court, i have my ear finally tuned to things, i would hear about leaks it is to think this would happen, trying to get at this dobbs leak. and which you know we should know answer of who leaked that, i hope the chief just wiis -- justice with supreme court martial are still filing their report. >> that was a real leak. i would hope we'll get to the bam of this thank you ilya. >> we'll be right back.
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and i served in the united states army. back in 2004 when my brother came back from his first tour, he asked me to make him a promise and that promise was if anything ever happened to him overseas that i would finish what he started. unfortunately, my brother was shot in 2005 in the head in mosul, iraq. three years later, i knew that i needed to fulfill that promise. it was about finishing what the schei name started. and july 2nd, 2010, we were called on a mission. and that was the day i got hit. transitioning back to civilian life was extremely difficult. you feel like an outsider every it was hard to admit defeat. and that's exactly what i felt like i was doing when i finally contacted the wounded warrior project. i knew that i needed help. and when i reached out, they gave me tools to better my life. they truly saved my life.
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dude, what're you doing? i'm protecting my car. that's too much work. weathertech is so much easier... laser-measured floorliners up here, seat protector and cargoliner back there... nice! out here, side window deflectors... and mud flaps... and the bumpstep, to keep the bumper dent-free. cool! it's the best protection for your vehicle, new or pre-owned. great. but where do i---? order. weathertech.com. sfx: bubblewrap bubble popped sound. ♪ ♪
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this... is a glimpse into the no-too-distant future of lincoln. ♪ ♪ it's what sanctuary could look like... feel like... sound like... even smell like. more on that soon. ♪ ♪ the best part? the prequel is pretty sweet too. ♪ ♪ tom: thank you for watching the show tonight, i'll could back tomorrow night with great guests. with spike cohen, and let's look at tennenbaum. and if i ask for your two cents, well, it's not because i think your opinion is only worth a penny more than your thoughts. once upon a time,
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