tv The O Reilly Factor FOX News September 3, 2011 2:00am-3:00am PDT
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>> chris: look, once again, like clockwork. that's "special report" for tonight. i'm chris wallace. please join us for "fox news sunday." guest is former vice president dick cheney. he wl talk abouthe tea party, the 2012 presidential race and his health. keep it here on fox where more news is always on the way. bill o'reilly is next. >> bill: "the o'reilly factor" is on. tonight. it's the best of "the o'reilly factor." >> thank you for agreeing with me. >> uh-oh. >> did i do that? >> i think so. >> okay. i was confused. >> you were in a funk delic band. >> don't tell everybody that. >> that's the easiest one of the questions. >> really? >> bill: everybody watching knew that. >> dennis miller. >> do you know what the tragedy
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of all of this is? >> what is the tragedy? [ laughter ] >> bill: even jesse watters in unforgettable watters world. >> obama is probably going to raise taxes on people here what do you think of that. >> i can't wait to pay. >> caution, you are about to enter the no spin zone, the factor begins right now. captions by closed captioning services >> bill: hi, i'm bill o'reilly. thanks for watching this special edition of "the o'reilly factor." the director's cut. tonight we will present to you the most talked about, tweeted about, emailed about fan favorite segments with a little something extra added to each one. we begin with bernie. cbs hiring norah o'donnell to be the cbs correspondent. this woman has a long track record of liberalism. here is the latest. roll the tape on it? >> i went to the nbc "wall street journal" poll and crossed the does tabs on people
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uncomfortable with a mormon as a candidate. actually, among republicans, they are more uncomfortable with a fox commentator than they are a mormon. >> who is the fox commentator. >> any fox commentator. >> bill: that's b.s. i was going to say a bad word there but i didn't. huckabee. mike huckabee very high in the polls and is he a fox commentator. it's another snarky, you know, little dig that she specializes in. and now she is the woman who is going to be covering the white house for cbs. i was surprised because cbs' plan as you know is to go back to the hard news, no bias, let's just give them the facts. >> right. when the new management took over a few months ago, they held a big, big staff meeting. and jeff bigger, the head of cbs news said if you have an agenda, find another place to work. that's a good thing to say. i have known jeff for a. >> bill: is he a good guy. >> and he cares about this kind of stuff. >> bill: he does. >> maybe he told her keep your liberal opinions to yourself when you are at the white house.
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bill, there is a much bigger much more important point to make. no network would hire as its chief white house correspondent someone as far to the right as she is to the left. because if you are even a little to the right, you are going to stick out in the newsroom. but if you are as far to the left as she is you don't stick out at all. you stick in. fish don't know he's wet. how does he know he is wet he has no frame of reference. same with liberal journalists. they are surrounded by other liberal journalists. in that world nora done is not a liberal, she is a moderate. she is just like everybody else there. >> bill: you upset me deeply with the reference to the funkadelics. [ laughter ] i can see you with the head phones on. >> you were in a funkdelic band in the 1970s. >> bill: don't tell everybody that come on. i know it galled you, it had to
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gal you to see me at the top of that most trusted political guy list. >> you just won a popularity contest so congratulations. >> bill: that's the first time i have ever won a popularity contest ever. >> you should be very happy. because almost everybody on this list isn't a political reporter number one, and a lot of them aren't even journalists. but there is a serious point here. they could have -- the people could have voted for anybody. the way the poll was conducted they didn't have a list and said which of these people do you think is the most trusted? they said who do you think is the most trusted? they could have said anybody and more people said you than anybody else. >> bill: a lot more. >> a lot more. and that does say something. and it frankly does say something good. it says that, yes, you are popular. yes, there is name recognition, but they could have picked anybody and they picked you. so congratulations. >> bill: we are happy they did. the broader picture though on fox news. >> right.
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>> bill: as opposed to the others is a much more definitive statement. correct? >> and a much more important one, i think. with all due respect to you, of course, bill. let me answer the question this way. almost 10 years ago my first book bias about liberal bias in the media came out. and i was immediately put in the crosshairs of -- by liberal journalists who said, a, there is no liberal bias. b, that i was a right wing lunatic which came as -- came as news to he me. and anybody who knew me. and even -- they even said that i was a traitor for writing the book. these are people who don't call real traitors a traitor but i was a traitor. what they didn't understand back then is that they didn't have an argument with me. the debate wasn't between me and the mainstream networks. it was between the mainstream networks and their own audiences that lost faith in them and lost trust in them.
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the same thing is happening with this poll. despite a constant ba rage of criticism against fox, both by supposedly objective journalists and supposedly honest opinion journalists, fox still comes out not just ahead but way ahead as the most trusted political source for news and here's the important point. every vote for fox, every single vote for fox was a vote against everybody else. >> let me break the news to you, my children are not in a public position. the mayor is. and as long as i'm -- >> -- you don't anybody knows where they go to school? >> no. i think you will do that let me be real little understand you are asking me a values statement. not a policy. no. no you have to appreciate this. my children are not an instrument for me being mayor. my children are my children. >> i have so many more questions.
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>> and i look forward to our future interview. >> please? >> i'm done. >> bill: is that a legitimate question when your public policy wants to spend a lot of time reforming the public schools but sends his kids to private school, is that legitimate? >> absolutely 100% legitimate. look, there are certain things scited is in therapy public's business. but rahm emable is hiding. is he not the only politician to do this. he is hiding behind his children. that's really lame. >> bill: why though? >> i am going to tell you why. here is why in a simple two sentences. because here's a sensitive, liberal progressive democrat, and he knows that it doesn't
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look good, that's the key phrase, it doesn't look good for such a politician sensitive liberal progressive all of that to send his kids to the she she private school while everybody else is going to crummy public schools. he has every right, every right to send his kids to a private school. i would do the same thing. but that reporter had every right to ask that question because it isn't about his children at all. it's about him, the mayor of chicago. he will make policies that effect other people's kids but not his own. that's okay. but you have a right to ask him about it. >> bill: chris christie on the totally opposite spectrum politically was asked a similar question. roll the tape. >> you don't send your children to public schools. you send them to private schools. so i was wondering why you think it's fair to be cutting school funding to public schools. >> it's none of your business. i don't ask you where you send your kids to school. don't bother me about where i
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send mine. >> bill: same situation or different? >> yeah. no. exact same situation. i want to give my bias upfront. i'm a big fan, a very big fan of chris christie. but he was dead wrong in my opinion in that situation when he got huffy with that voter. this wasn't about chris christie's children. this was about chris christie the governor of new jersey. he is -- first of all, he has the right to send his kids to catholic school, no problem. he even has a right, probably an obligation to make budget cuts even those involving public schools. i have no problem with that. but here's a woman asking a legitimate question. and that is, you're sending your kids to a private school, a catholic school. but your decisions are affecting my kids and other kids that go to public schools. how do you reconcile that? as i say, i'm a huge fan of chris christie but in this case i think he was dead wrong.
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>> bill: okay. straight ahead, our barack and hard place duo crowley and colmes on whether america is on the decline culturally. and, later, fasten your seat belts, it is the best of miller time. >> first off, i have got to say i can't devowj for what i'm going to say tonight because i'm getting zapped with so much radiation out here in cali now, when you want powerful wifi, you've got it. with aerizon mobile hotspot, you can connect up to 5 wifi devices to the internet with lightning-fast verizon 4g lte speed. a gaming device. mp3 pler. connect any 5 for wifi on the go. get the 4g lte mobile hotst now for only $49.99. verizon is the place with the largest selection of 4g lte devices. on america's fastest, most advanced 4g network.
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>> bill: is america on the decline culturally and if so whose fault is it. alan colmes and monica crowley have a lot of thoughts on the subject. now, i think that the essential point that americans have to understand and younger americans in particular is that there is a drastic difference between the attitude and i think you would admit this, colmes, of our parents and how this looked at their own lives and how they comported themselves than now because of the sense of the depression world war ii. korean war. 50s. everybody was basically conforming. now, look, it's like i want x, y and z. i'm going to do pretty much everything to get it a lot of things are venal, am i wrong? >> think back to the 1950s as you mentioned. i love lucy was a big show. inez and lucy had to sleep in spret beds. turn on any network in prime time which used to be the prime time hour and now it's soft porn. >> bill: lucy should have given
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desi a break once in a while. >> i trace it back to the 1960's counter culture. had you the. >> bill: 1960's. >> antiwar counter culture which changed the standards. so now you have got an everincreasing low standards that have become the norm. >> bill: what do you say. >> i feel like anytime a time warp this is a conversation every generation has. when i was a kid everything was better. i heard that when i was a kid and my parents -- people would complain about the way things were much better when they were a kid. every generation thinks the previous generation is better than the next generation. >> bill: you any let's just take music for example. the music today is the equivalent of what it was. >> back in the 60's,. [french] >> okay because it was in french. so that was okay. but heavy hettle music. come on. the same. >> bill: celebrated now. the culture basically is saying to children, look, be crude. be crude.
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>> i don't think the culture is saying that. i don't buy that. >> bill: what do you mean you don't buy it. >> we keep knocking young people. do you know how many young entrepreneurs we have. the founder of facebook which i think is a positive to society. the founders of twitter. would very young entrepreneurs, 20-something billionaires we never had before. young people today have doing a lot better in many ways. >> bill: you think that the social media, the internet has elevated the culture. >> helped bring a revolution to the middle east. >> positive aspects to it but also used for very course purposes as anthony weiner discovered, didn't he? it has its upsides and down sides. in large part it is driven by the media we talked about the 1960's counter culture. as a result of that, you have an explosion of media. so, back in the day, there were three broadcast netted works that aired i love lucy and dick van dyke. now you have hundreds of cable channels. you have the internet. what happens is you get driven down to the lowest common denominator because that's the
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stuff that ends up getting rewarded. >> bill: colmes, you make the point that there are entrepreneurs, younger people doing very well. i agree with you. i think there is going to be a huge separation, this is something you don't want between those who are successful and those who go to the ivy league schools, those who are well-educated. those who have privilege in their lives, they are going to be the masters of the universe and everybody else are going to have tattoos on their forehead and piercing. >> it's not new. tattoos are not new. proliferation in the 12 and 13-year-olds who have them is new. >> every generation has its own element of what you would consider diminution of the culture. >> i would say with the explosion of mass media now that kind of thing is so amplified that it is considered the norm. and if the kids don't do it, then they are considered marginalized. >> peer pressure. >> because of the proliferation of the media. so, elvis presley gets on stage, they don't shoot him from the
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waist down because is he swivelling his hips. lady gaga can go photographed on the internet all things flying and people say i love her music i want to be like her. >> bill: if that's the reality, why is that bad? colmes says it's progress and it isn't bad. >> no. i think it leads to a severe coursenning of the culture. what we have seen through the history is empirist cultures that have gone down this road of extreme permissiveness have faltered and destroyed themselves. it remains to be seen whether the united states is the exception to the rule. >> gay marriage healthy. equal rights healthy. drug legalization cost benefit of that makes it much more healthy. what you call permissiveness, i call progress. we are going to disagree about this i'm sure. i believe it's forward movement. >> bill: i hope you or any of your loved ones or anybody you know is never killed in a car by somebody who is high on narcotics. >> well, of course. well, of course. >> bill: that's the unintended
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cons sequence. >> that can happen whether it's legal or not. that's not issue. >> bill: it's amplified if it becomes legal by a thousand fold good debate. the best of the culture warriors. >> for as bad as things are and as much turmoil as it is in the world god has a 52% approval rating. that is higher than barack obama, speaker boehner, obama, speaker boehner, co host: could switching to geio really save you 15% or more on car insurance? host: do people use smartphones to do dumb things?
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>> bill: thanks for staying with us. i'm bill o'reilly. new poll from public policy polling, a democratic firm asks americans this question. if god exists do you approve or disprove of its performance? >> the poll should have used the word his because the masculine pronoun takes precedent but, again, this is a liberal polling agency. anyway, 52% of americans do
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approve how god is handling things. i'm sure he will be glad to hear that 9% disapprove. they are going to hell. and 40% are not sure. they are pulling their punches. the extra 1% in that survey by the way is a number rounded upward. here now the culture warriors author of the book american individualism margaret hoover and here in the studio gresham carlson. what do you make of this poll. >> stupid. stupid poll with a stupid question to. call god it and first of all if god exists do you approve or disprove of its performance. on what? on the economy? on your pocketbook? on your family? that's a stupid question. and by the way, even if you did take the question as legitimate one, it's about personal responsibility and people -- half the people in the united states are blaming god for their problems? >> bill: well, look, there san age old for every religious person how a just god can allow bad things to happen. >> it's always been that way. >> bill: it's always been that
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way. we live in a world that's absolute turmoil where bad things are happening all the time. so i think that was the spirit of the poll. >> it's not phrased in the right way. >> bill: of course it's not. >> it gives people the out. i think the question is irrelevant. >> bill: what do you think, hoover? >> well, for as bad as things are and as much turmoil as there is in the world, god has a 52% approval rating. that's higher than barack obama, speaker boehner, congress, or any owe elected official right now. so, let's keep in mind god is doing pretty good. i want to know who this 40% are that aren't sure. >> bill: he knows best. they are not going to say anything. see, here is my take on the poll. if they had called me up and i would say, you know what? i'm not smart enough to pass judgment on what god is doing. i'm going to let god be god. all right? whatever he is doing, i'm not going to question it because, number one, it's insane to do that if you are a believer.
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if you are a believer, you know, there is a reason for everything in the universe. and if you are not a believer, then i think atheists could probably do better on this poll. so you both think the poll is kind of bogus and just provocative deal, is that what i'm getting. >> god has been pushed out of so many critical debates in our society right now about really tough issues that maybe that's why more and more people don't think that god's performance rating is good. >> bill: i'm a christian and i don't want to be an evangelist here. if everybody practiced judeo-christian tradition of loving your neighbor as yourself we would have a better world, correct? >> correct. thank you for agree with me. uh-oh. >> bill: i do that? >> i think so. >> bill: we discuss government intrusion in the family a number of ways. in portland oregon, a boy, 11 years old, hoover, was removed from his home and put into foster care because he was
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400 pounds at age 11. is that a good or bad thing for the government to remove that boy from the home? >> well, in that specific case, it looks as though the family volunteered to have him be taken by social services. >> bill: they had to. backs were up against the wall. they had to. >> and the situation with that particular family, look, generally i think this is -- this should not be a precedent. i'm not in favor of the government coming nabbed actually using obesity as a synonym for neglect and abuse. i think that's going down the wrong path. >> bill: 400 pounds at 11? >> in this specific case he also had significant health problems. his parents were split. caretaker, father was basically invalid. feeding him fast food three times a day. social services been working three years. worried about the kid's health. >> bill: you support that decision. >> it wasn't because he was obese. it was because of all the other health issues that the dad who
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wasn't around couldn't take care of. >> bill: don't take care at that age going to have health issues. that's what's going on. >> in this case felt he die before 20 years old. where does this stop? a kid 300 pounds going to take him away. the kid is 200 pounds. >> bill: you have the same situation on the other end of the spectrum if there is mall malnutrition. >> we talked about that before. >> bill: if there is malnutrition in the home the state has the right to go in and remove the child because the child isn't being fed properly. if you have a gross obesity where health problems are developing all over, r. i don't see the difference. obesity is a huge problem in our society and not going to be solved by taxing junk food or anything like that. what about incentives in obama care? that's what would have worked. when companies have incentives for people to lose weight and their health insurance costs go down. they lose it. >> bill: i don't know what that has to do with this. >> it has everything to do with it. educating our culture to not be so fat.
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>> bill: i think we are doing that here. i'm giving you the last word, hoover. you have a situation where i believe there comes a point that the state has to move. and it has to do two things. number one, the problem has to be brought by the school. educational authorities have to bring the complaint. number two, a physician has to say to the state this kid is in danger. if both of those two criteria are met, i'm okay with this. last word, go. >> that's exactly what happened in this situation. and i think that some folks got worried that this is going to set a precedent that as soon as you hit 200, 300, 400 pounds you have to yank the kid from the parents. it wasn't that situation. it's exactly the criteria you outlined i'm with you on this one. >> bill: you are both agreeing. >> just this once. >> bill: coming up next, unforgettable watters world as jesse heads to the hamptons to see how the horse set is dealing with the economic chaos. later on the economic the d man spouts off. spouts off. the best of miller
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>> bill: in the watters world segment tonight, as we reported yesterday the gap between the rich and the poor in america is staggering. also has to do with education or lack thereof. if you have a college degree you are likely to prosper in this country. if you don't, things will be much tougher. despite the recession, happy days are here again out on the eastern part of long island, new york. the area known as the hamptons. so we sent jesse watters out there to gauge the mood.
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♪ >> what brings people to an event like this. >> i think their ego. everything that you think about the hamptons, exactly right. >> what are you talking about, willis? >> you have got to hold on to these ridiculously expensive traditions. >> this is the most pretentious type of event that you could possibly go to. >> do you think that this has a bad reputation as being elitist event. >> no. everybody looks like they are having a great time. >> stepping in horse dong for nothing to have their pictures taken and be interviewed by fox news. >> such fun a lot of good looking beautiful people here. >> i'm ugly, i'm ugly, i'm ugly. >> are those real pearls and diamonds. >> of course. >> are you competitive about the size of other women's hatedz hats. >> i'm sure there is social ranking in hats. >> don't waste your time on girls with hats. they tend to be very proper. >> your hat is quite exexquisite. >> yeah, the bigger the better. >> what? >> so are you surprised the
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factor is out here. >> i didn't expect to see you guys here. >> what? [ laughter ] >> this afternoon we're serving a pastry. >> like regular, creamy or al dente. >> any caviar? >> i hope so. >> i know this little out of the way place great viking food. >> obama is probably going to raise taxes on a lot of these people, what's up with that. >> i can't wait to pay. >> are you okay with your taxes getting raised. >> ouch. no taxes. >> how much would you want them to be raised auto%. >> no. like 5%. >> i would prefer not to give it to the war machine. giving the money to corporations, the money grab that's going on in this country. >> nobody out here wants their taxes raised. the only thing they want to do is have a cocktail and stomp the difficulties. >> what's the best techniques for stomping detective vets. swivel. >> don't ever do that again. >> can you name any polo players. >> nacho. >> i keep hearing about this guy nacho. >> is he is mine tonight. >> who is winning. >> that's a good question. >> i have been coming here for
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seven years. i have never seen polo played. >> you have got to be joking. >> how does it feel riding around on a horse during a bad economy. >> i'm happy to be playing polo and i'm doing what i love. >> that's ridiculous. i thought you wanted to kill -- it says blue star jets on your hat. that's a corporate jet. >> it's hot. >> i'm sort of stuck between a rock and hard place. are you guys factor fans? >> you can say that. >> i did say that. would you say that? >> i love bill, tell him i said hello. >> i wish he were here. >> i'm not a factor fan. >> what are you, on dope? >> you are a fox fan? >> absolutely a fox fan. >> i love you, bill. >> anybody with conviction i totally, totally respect. >> bill: the guy that you were interviewing with the hat, the corporate jet hat that's russell simmons. the music mogul and you got him. you caught him. >> the whole event was sponsored by a corporate jet company. he had no idea he was wearing the hat. >> bill: the guy with the corporate jet. >> right.
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>> bill: the polo match was sponsored by a corporate jet guy. >> right. >> bill: is there any wealthy liberal guilt out there that they -- all these people obviously well healed. they have a lot money. they go to these swell events. the rest of america, you know do they feel bad. >> there is no guilt at all. it was a microcosm of liberal hypocrisy sponsored by a corporate jet owner. $10,000 a pop to get into the v.i.p. test. >> bill: 10,000 bucks. where does that governmental who knows? it goes in the pockets of some of these sponsors and organizers. there was champagne, everything you could possibly ask forty lavish event. >> bill: for 10 grand you are not going to get big macs. the atmosphere was, look, we are wealthy and we are just having fun. that's it. >> yeah. i think everybody said they work really hard and it's tough out there so why not relax and watch a little polo. >> bill: capitalism, if you hit it, you hit it and you get to play with the russell simmons. is he a good guy. >> is he a decent guy.
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>> bill: thanks, jesse very much. attacks joel biden. >> little did they realize that half if a's body is buried biden's -- >> bill: a terrorist and i confronts him. [ male announcer ] it's been a good year for the chevy silverado. and not because of the awards or the accolades. no, it was good because you told us so. the chevy model year wrap up. get in on our greatest model year yet. just announced -- celebrate labor day with an additional $500 bonus cash. with all other offers, including the all-star edition discount, that's a total value of $6,500. ♪ our greatest model year yet is wrapping up.
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don't take chantix if you've had a serious allergic or skin reaction to it. if you develop these, stop taking chantix and see your doctor right away as some of these can be life-threatening. if you have a history of heart or blood vessel problems, tell your doctor if you have new or worse symptoms. get medical help right away if you have symptoms of a heart attack. dosing may be different if you have kidney problems. until you know how chantix affects you, use caution when driving or operating machinery. common side effects include nausea, trouble sleeping and unusual dreams. ♪ my benjamin, he helped me with the countdown. "5 days, mom. 10 days, mom." i think after 30 days he got tired of counting! [ male announcer ] ask your doctor about chantix. over 7 million people have gotten a prescription. learn how you can save money and get terms and conditions at chantix.com. >> bill: thanks for staying with us. i'm bill o'reilly in the miller time segment tonight, the d man is vacationing some place very
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expensive, i presume. but if you watch the factor throughout the past few weeks, you know he has been on a roll. san francisco is like the nanny state of all time. >> yeah. >> bill: and they don't want gold fish, cute adorable gold fish within the city limits, miller. what is this all about? >> what's next after gold fish? cheetoes? pringles? then funyuns then the whole thing comes down around our head. i thought it was snack food. >> goldfish. >> listen, san francisco is going to hell in a hand basket. you can't circumcise up there. you can't go to mcdonald's and super size. you can't criticize. all you can do is row manhattan size about the urge to if a that the size. what's what's happened up there. so open-minded pretty soon mussolini hanging upside down on the golden gate with crows pecking out his eyes.
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>> out. >> how did they get involved in all of this stuff? >> bill: from what i understand the city council of san francisco believes that the marketing of gold fish is cruel because they remove the gold fish from the water and they put it in a tank. and that is -- you can't -- the gold fish wants to be free. >> bill: wasn't there a movie about gold fish born free ♪ born free. >> blurb blurb blurb. goldfish may not want to live in san francisco right now it's such a uptight whiney place. okay? i did read today in a story in the chronicle you can still circumcise a gold fish in san francisco. if you have ever seen that he comes in and tiny and frog man gear on and using exsax toe knife. >> hello. >> bill: do you know what the tragedy in all of this is? >> what is the tragedy?
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[ laughter ] >> bill: the homeless gold fish are in san francisco. >> exactly. i know the radiation comes across the ocean. it is dissipated by wind current and salt spray, but it is reaching the shore of california. >> bill: what say you is? >> first off i can't say i'm going to divulge what i'm say tonight i'm getting zapped with so much radiation in cali i'm not thinking clearly. last night it made me so crazy i almost watched nancy grace's show. >> don't worry, everything is fine. >> not quite. >> bill: all right. what do you think is behind nancy grace believing that, you know, radiation is -- they are going to be mutants in the streets of santa barbara? what's behind that? >> behind nancy grace is a facade. in front of the facade is a facade called nancy grace. that's what's happening there. all i know is it looks like the
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radiation has gone all the way back to new york if i'm to judge jesse watters tie correctly. >> something like that. >> bill: is he glowing. >> hi there, how are you? >> bill: miller, do you wish you were on that bus? do you want to be on the bus? >> first off, i have to say it's crowded out there on the highways. have you got the palin bus. and i see oscar mayer has the anthony weiner mobile out. so you have got to watch yourself out there nowadays. but, i think the bus looks like fun. i like a nice piece of pizza. todd palin and sarah palin seem like my type of people. that looks like fun. maybe jay carney and i can get in a win beg go and he can continue to sound like a bingo caller at a vfw with a gas leak in the kitchenette area. >> i 27. >> bill: do you know who you should be in the camper with? joe biden biden and miller. oh man, i would pay. sell it to oprah's network. >> there are no words to match
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this moment. >> bill: biden and miller on the road again. >> biden can get into the car pool lane with whatever that thing is on his head that's how distinct that is. >> bill: it's an extra passenger you are saying? >> yes, i'm saying that. billy,. [ laughter ] i kind of like palin in the bus. i like the whole family in the bus. it reminds me of the partridge hunter family episode or something ♪ come on now ♪ and be everybody >> they are all out there together. come on, let's shoot. >> bill: i remember that. >> i dig it. >> bill: just before willie netted son wanted to get on that bus but they wouldn't let him. owe biden ticket needs people. the vice president did address the yiewnel in this way. roll the tape. >> don't any of you, by the way, and you guys vote republican, i'm not supposed -- this isn't political. i'm not supposed to say this. [ laughter ]
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[applause] >> let me put it this way, don't come to me if you do. you are on your own, jack. >> bill: you know that tie combination he looked like mo green out there. do you remember mo green from the godfather. >> you are on your own, jack. >> little did teamsters realize that half if a's body is buriedd in joe biden's. >> i've got to do what i have got to do. >> a cock sure hack who famous every man's status but knew his own i couldq the first day he we to apply for that knowledge. one of those guys who spends his whole life who says let me he will it you something. >> let me tell you something else. >> then he never tells you something else. he is a lap dog for barack obama. he sends out to curry favor with some of these individual groupser that going to need to amall gait. the rest of us, the nonunion members who want to form a union because the whole thing is not
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work pg, we are not getting it anymore. >> bill: all right. the thinly veiled reference was interesting. if you don't vote for us don't complain because we're in the tank for you. and the other party isn't. i thought that was quite interesting. >> biden knows where his bread is buttered. it would be fitting if he went out and did all of this dirty work and sum indicated and kissed botox we have got to get rid of you because you are emblematic what an insider game you have turned into joe. you have got to go. maybe it happens the second time through. no they will stay together. love with keep them together. ♪ love ♪ love will keep us together. >> bill: coming up next, the most confrontational segment of the east coast, rapper loop pay fiasco calls the president a terrorist. i call out old lupe. set your dvr's. the
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>> bill: june 7th. chicago rapper lupe fiasco promoting an album called president obama a terrorist. we are used irresponsible statements from rappers that's really over the top. i invited him on the factor to discuss it. >> what do you mean president obama is a terrorist? >> my fight against terrorism, to me the biggest terrorist is obama in the united states of america. to put it into context i was asked about a song that i did called words i never said which addresses terrorism. >> i really think the war on terror is a bunch of bull [bleep] just a poor excuse for you to use a bunch of bullets. >> the statement i made which was that the biggest terrorist obama and the united states of america and its foreign policy, that was what the whole, you know, context of everything was. and it's really just an
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expression of me trying to, i guess, understand critically, the society. >> bill: president obama is not a terrorist. he is trying to do what he believes is the right thing to do. the united states is not a bad nation. it's a noble nation. we are trying to defend ourselves against people who killed us on 9/11. and then you go out there and talk to a lot of younger people. this is what gets me that your constituency are not exactly political science ph.d.es, okay? they are impressionable kids. >> i don't think that matters. i don't think you need to have a political ph.d. to understand politics. to understand politics, i don't think you necessarily need that and i don't think that politics are as complex as people like to make them seem or out to be. if you are going to fight terrorism, to me, you fight the root causes of terrorism. >> bill: the root causes of terrorism are many. okay? they are varied. it depends region to region and all of that the united states cannot cure ills of the world. what the president of the united states is responsibility is to protect you and me. that's his responsibility.
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he is doing it through aggressive action. so, navy seals killed bin laden. are you okay with that? >> with him hunting down a criminal, a person responsible for the deaths, right, of innocent people? >> bill: yeah. >> i have nothing wrong with that. nothing. >> bill: when bin laden got killed, you didn't have any problem with that, that was okay, legitimate action? >> you know what i had a problem with, the war in afghanistan. >> bill: okay. >> the war in afghanistan. let me finish. the point of the war of afghanistan was supposedly to go in and find bin laden. right? >> bill: well, no. that's not right. >> no. in the -- well, 9/11. >> bill: mr. jcaho, look, wouldn't you just say -- what you just said is fallacious, that means it's wrong. >> it's not that lacious at all, sir. it's not wrong. the purpose -- why are we in afghanistan if it wasn't to hunt down al qaeda and the terrorists. >> bill: i will answer it. >> definitely wasn't any other reason. no that's wrong. i will answer it. the reason we went to afghanistan was to deprive al qaeda of its sanctuary.
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we removed the taliban government when they wouldn't crack down on al qaeda. now, to get bin laden, that was another part of the operation, okay? >> but it's a part of the operation, sir. it's not separate -- but that doesn't negate it. that doesn't take it away from the purpose of the just because it was another part, sir. it's the same. >> bill: to the war. the war. >> no, it gte gives -- the legitimate part of it was to go find a criminal. not to aggressively government. no the legitimate part is to remove a government, which we did, which enabled a terrorist group to declare war in the united states. that's what happened. >> that thinking right there is what i have a problem with because if that is the case, that is us. >> bill: you are oversimplifying and bringing a message to younger people who i pointed out who admire you that is a message that is not true.
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>> so to say that the president of the united states of america, all of them, not just obama. i'm not trying to undermine him and him being a terrorist many things, a protecter, a fearks a mix of other things. me just recognizing that one particular attribute of him is not me trying to undermine him or undermine my constituency or spread lies or rumors for the sake of anybody. i don't really care about the grop g.o.p.es or the democratic party my concern is the people. >> bill: you are misleading them. >> i'm not misleading the people, sir. president of the waits of perk america is the commander and chief of our armed forces. it's not a lie as you say. >> bill: what you say basically the entire u.s. government and the military attached to it is a fiasco? >> if do you want to change the name of the show to the fiasco factor. >> bill: right. >> we will definitely license the name out to you. i will do it for free. >> bill: do i have to wear the glasses if i do that that's daytime. >> actually they're prescription. >> bill: all right, great. thanks for coming on in here. >> i appreciate you, mr. owe
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o'reilly. have a great day. >> bill: how much do you know about the world's dangerous about the world's dangerous villains. like many chefs today, i feel the best approach to food is to keep it whole for better nutrition. and that's what they do with great grains cereal. see the seam on the wheat grain? same as on the flake. because great grains steams and bakes the actual whole grain. now check out the other guy's flake. hello, no seam. because it's more processed. now, which do you suppose has better nutrition for you? mmm. great grains. the whole whole grain cereal.
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what more can you say. here's question number one: one of al pacino's most favorite characters tony montana in scar face. >> you want to play rough, okay, say hello to my little friend. >> bill: that had to hurt. scar face is a fictional character, but scarface is a remake of a 1932 film of the same name. based on what real life gangster? cards up please. you are both wrong, al capone was scar fill face. that's the easiest one of the villain questions and you both blew it. everybody watching knew that. >> i should have call geraldo if it was al capone. >> bill: that's a cheap shot doocy, talk about a villain. watch out, geraldo doesn't
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like that stuff. >> number two, joseph mengele committed acrossties during world war ii. what actor portrayed la in the film the boys from brazil? >> i'm a scientist i have done my job. you are an executioner! do yours! >> bill: gregory peck was the correct answer. >> in the film last king of scotland forest whitaker won an oscar for his portrayal of eaddy amin. -- of idi amin. >> in my heart i am a simple man.
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>> bill: i say i'm a simple man too, i better drop that. he was dictator of what african country? the answer is uganda, correct. now we are rolling mccal . number four, johnny depp's character in the pirates of the caribbean movies, loosely based on real life pirates such as black byrd. -- blackbeard. >> bill: not sure blackbeard wore mascara, but it is possible in addition to the
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skull and across bones many pirates put what item on their flags to symbolize death and frighten their victims? >> bill: the answer is a, an hour glass. that was hard, i didn't know that. i don't know why an hourglass would frighten anybody. all three of these pirate movies has more mascara than maccallum has. but not more than doocy in the morning. king henry viii had two wives beheaded. four ties later a band had a hit song called henry viii. what is the name of that band? the answer is -- roll the tape. ♪ i'm
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