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tv   Hannity  FOX News  October 3, 2011 9:00pm-10:00pm PDT

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night in store for you. herman cain is going to be here and ann colter will join they me. first, publicly he said he will not be a contender for the presidency in 2012 but new reports now indicate that new jersey governor chris christie may be on the verge of jumping into the gop primary. according to the wall street journal. governor christie spent a lot of time over the weekend considering a lawn of a presidential bid and discussing the logistics with his wife and family. a decision may come at any moment. steve forbes, the former presidential nominee and candidate, he's a new jersey candidate, he said the governor will make aaron announce meant within 72 hours. right now the waiting game continues. joining me now what a kristi presidential bid could mean. dick morris is here. how are you?
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>> great. >> look, we covered the speech of kristi last week at the reagan library. he said look, my answer is no, no, no. >> look, i am loaded on him -- unloaded on him last week and said fish or cut bait. this teasing and stuff. >> we should know. >> make a decision. the thing i like about chris christie, and i like him very much, is if you had to identify the most important thing that happened this year, 2011, it was the governor's revolt. it was led by new jersey, which was the precurser. and new jersey with ohio, indiana, florida, virginia, idaho, tennessee, a whole bunch of them basically freed their public schools by domination from the teacher's union and freed the government by public
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domination of employee unions and chris christie broke that path. i think he's going to be a very strong candidate, but if there's one thing we've learned from rick perry, wait until the debate. >> it's not just wait until deet bait, there's also, look, for example, herman cain is going to join us a little later in the show tonight. he said he's pretty liberal. now i wouldn't say he's liberal, but i look at his -- for instancehe once said illegal immigration doesn't exist. >> no, he said it wasn't a crime. >> so here's the point. he's got that controversial judicial appointment, he's got some issues. >> global warming. >> so he's going to are to now face the scrutiny. and i think a lot of people said perry at one moment wag going to race to the top and get the nomination. >> that's right. the phenomenon that i think is impressive, the guy you are having on in a few minutes, herman cain, the he's obama in
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'08. he has all the substance in the world and all the experience p and people and me can cain get the nomination? well, defeating romney in the primary is a lot easier than defeating hillary in the democratic primary and once it starts, god knows where it ends. the thing is he's tapping into the biggest untapped people in the party. you have the evangelicals, and other people but you have small business owners and cain absolutely is that. on the one hand he needs to beat perry, he said i've run a business, and to beat romney, he said i've run small businesses just like the oddiance has, not super-duper investment venture can't lifts. >> i loved his line on one of the early debates, you have no political experience and he
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said, well, look at what you've got. how is that working? but think of his background. he's worked for coca-cola, he's worked for pillsbury, he worked forburg he king, he worked for godfather's pizza as a ceo and in almost every case it was a turnaround situation. >> it's one of the huge differences that i think is very attractive. all of the other presidential candidates, every single one of them, they have articulated their jobs program and what it meant and repealing what obama did. but the economy was sick before he got elected. cain is talking about fundamental reforms, like the 9-9-89 program. >> now, the other candidates said mitt romney has a book out, specifics on his economic plan. >> very good, i really enjoyed it. but when you get down to it, what he is proposing is essentially to roll back the
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united obama -- >> he's also advancing a more conservative general -- agenda. >> but no one is talking about anything as radical as 9-9-9. that's a revolution. if he has -- look, you even said they may have 60 seats in the senate, republicans, and that will be a difficult task under any scenario, obama or no obama. a majority in the house if he were elected and that could probably pass. >> it could. and there you are not talking about a little tinkering, you are talking about the same kinds of reforms as communist countries made when they threw out the system like poland. you are talking about something that really changes the whole global structure of economics because it makes the united states so much more competitive. >> let me ask you about -- and i love the courage of coming up with that stuff. >> one of the reasons that i decided to wait is because i
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want to see the process unfold. i want to see all these guys under fire, i want to see how they respond under pressure. i think each candidate is getting stronger as they are going along. they are getting sharper in their message. rick perry didn't have a very good debate in orlando, especially on the issue of immigration. now we've got this controversy over this place where his family used to go hunting, the hunting camp. if the media overlooks so much of obama, am i right? >> right. >> we even now find out the new black panther party which we will have on the program tomorrow to admitting to snorting cocaine, and look how they treat republican candidates. what happened? >> well, you have the dual standard that's going on. but you said you are waiting. i'm readyto make a commitment in the presidential race. >> today? >> yeah, today.
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i head for mitt romney, heart for herman cain and gut for gingrich and feet haven't thought about it yet. >> you are going out on a limb there. >> we appreciate you for being with us. and we have the story on hundreds of protesters were arrested in new york over the weekend. we have a special report. and that and ann colter and herman cain on the program tonight. a 15th anniversary celebration continues. we hit the road. a very special audience show in atlanta, georgia. it's happening this thursday night, october 6th. if you are in atlanta, centennial park, it's open to anybody that comes. we will have newt gingrich and kneel, we will have book beckel and jeff. you can join us navigating today's real estate market is complicated. you've seen the signs. that's why having the right realstate agent
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$50 savings card. call now! >> protesters were reportedly arrested and members of the occupied wall street movement clashed with the n. y. p. d. on saturday. the arrests came after protesters refused to remain on the pedestrian walk ways of the bridge and walked in traffic. and we are near wall street to find out why they are there. what happened? >> hey, sean, i'm going to walk
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in lower manhattan. you will see a lot of people, all different ages and races and different reasons for being here. how many days have you guys been out here? >> ten. ten days. >> ten days. and it's been raining over the last few days? >> yeah. hasn't been fun. we have a lot of tarps. everybody has been really cool about it. >> we want democracy for the people and not the corporations. it depends on how much money you have and what you can get done rather than your voice. >> a message for barack obama? i see your message here. >> no, it's on my jacket. >> do you make a difference doing this? >> i can only try. i mean, obviously we are changing something. we are affecting people. >> why are you out here? >> not quite sure but it just seems like this is the first time where i have faith in the
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human race. i was a very apathetic youth and now it's a community where we are all actually equal. >> 20% apr, thank you. i want too. >> everybody seems pretty unhappy right now. >> no one really knows why they are here >> you don't need to know why you are unhappy sometimes. you can still feel unhappy. >> fighting against everything. >> what specifically do you want to change? i'm hearing lots of different concepts from people. what specifically? >> even the way it's run, the industries, the pollution. >> why are you out here? >> because this is where the enemy is, the enemy of the working and poor people. this is where the power comes out. all the politicians are puppets and the money trial controls the system. >> now do you feel there can be change if you are camping out in a park? >> i think now we are all just discussing it. there are a lot of world views and people are exchanging them
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and eventually we will go back to our communities to organize them. >> you are not shook up about getting arrested? >> if that's the case i will get arrested again because we need change. >> do you understand that? we have reaction from the fox business network charles gasparino. >> well, i'm not sure why i am here. anyway, for the first time in my life i have faith in the human race? they don't even know why they are there. >> it's like they are looking for friends. they are getting together in a big group. i covered these before because these have gone on for years. what you find is tourists, people who are homeless, you find a guy with a microphone and other people who just want to be on camera. it's not a real movement. i know they would like to think it's a movement and we are getting together, we are going to fight this. no. >> there is one common thing i hear, agreed. agreed on wall street. the class war rhetoric, to what
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extent do they get this message, the oh about obama democrats, because they have been hiding it. >> they are some of the most uninformed people if you listen to them. like the one guy said we are expecting things. i think what they are expecting is traffic. this is really unbelievable. i don't think that most people care about these guys. i will say this, if you listen to their barely coherent message, and it's barely coherent when you get through all the garbage, it's a left wing radical language. and some of this stuff the -- it's about people making money, class warfare. barack obama is responsible for some of this. not all because look at these guys. they are farther left than obama. they are true revolutionaries. >> there are a lot of guys on wall street that make a lot of money. but i have written about it. >> first of all -- >> they don't even mention that. if they want to talk about the bailouts of banks and insurance companies and financial institutions and car companies,
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i probably find myself in agreement with a lot of their argument but they aren't even arguing that. they make too much money. but what about the jobs they create for the other people, the 90% of people on wall street? >> it's a column i wrote in the new york post where i pointed out who do you think kept the welfare state of new york, new york city and new york state going all these years, it's wall street. before we thought of regulating the hell out of them, and right now they aren't making money and the stocks are crashing, they were financing the new york welfare state. all the things that those protesters are for. >> i'm going to tell you, i think there are some things to complain about. you have bank of america just this week introducing a five dollars a month fee on using your debit card. >> what was the reason for that? >> it's the regulation. >> i don't care if it is the regulation. i don't care. don't charge me. i'm the consumer. >> if you are going to sit there and squeeze these guys -- >> not my problem. >> it is your problem. >> you want to have a relationship with me for a long time? don't load me up with big time
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fees. i don't want to play this game. >> then vote out obama. corporations. they don't pay taxes. they pass it on to the consumer. so the regulations put on the banks, and hang on, corporations pay higher taxes, guess what, they are going to charge more. that's the whole problem. >> i don't want toic pick up the tab. >> but you are going to pick it up. >> are other problems too. look at the trading on wall street. it's done by a bunch. people that are trading with compute rised trades, a million trades. >> they should not even be competing with them. >> and they aren't, they left. and we have to retire some day, charlie. and the stock market is the only way they get there. you are paying that off the table. it needs to be invested. >> the high frequency trading it the problem of the market? >> it's one of many.
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>> we disagree on a lot. >> i'm enjoying this. >> guys, we do this all the time on fbs. we will continue follow the protests and see if we can get a coherent message. some have been there for what, the third week? and no showers. you get double pay. >> and the reaction to the recent wall street protests and explains why that shocking behavior is no shock to her. and what number has played a roll in the pizza mogul herman cain. we will also look at his brand new book. the one and only herman cain is ♪ my sunglasses. [ tires screech ] ♪ oh, it was the first time i fell in love ♪ ♪ the first time i felt my heart ♪ [ man ] people say i'm forgetful. [ horn honking ]
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>> the disruptive occupy protests continued in new york today. now like minded protesters in cities all across the city have all joined in this effort. the next guest isn't a least bit surprised. she's been warning of this left wing behavior for years. she argues that they also exhibit the same characteristics of a mob, including the sometimes dangerous mob
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mentality that leads otherwise law-abiding people to engage in such behavior. and ann coulter. have you noticed how incoherent this message is? i am trying to understand, why do you give up three weeks of your life, a nice warm shower to hang out in the same location and then when somebody asks you why you are here, i don't know, but it feels good. i don't get it. >> it is a classic mob uprising. it's utterly incoherent. they are always left wing and completely destructive. what are they doing downtown on a street called wall street? when we refer to wall street, firms are no longer located on wall street. it would be like protesting in philadelphia for the capital. and most of the the reasons are
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incoherent and it can't be said often enough, wall street is liberal. wall street gave more money to obama than they have ever given to anyone. and before that they gave an enormous amount of money to hillary clinton and before that they gave an enormous amount of money to bill clinton. and yet somehow they get teed off about with wall street. it's as if hollywood is blamed on republicans. they get the money and blame wall street shenanigans. >> it's the same coalition that makes up the democratic party. special interest groups, environmentalists are there. if there's one common theme that runs through i guess the narrative that they are advancing down there, they hate corporation, they hate capitalism, and in the end they want statism. so they really don't like freedom. they empower the government to
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take everyone's money and redistribute it into programs they want? >> absolutely. mob uprisings are always left wing. starting with the french revolution. and part of the reason was they thought it was an eyesore. and that revolution inspired the russian revolution and revolutions in china, venezuela, vietnam, cuba, of course. i of had absolutely nothing to do with the foundingf this country which is in fact much more similar to the tea partyers. they haven't had mass arrests. it's been reported the police stations around the country would change their rules for their protests. normally you can't bring a flagpole because the typical liberal protests, they use the playing poles as weapons and started smashing windows. police noticed that at the tea
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parties they wanted to use flag poles to fly the american flag and they allowed them to carry things like flag poles. there is no violence the tea parties. this is a mob. >> there is a great comparison here. what we saw over the weekend in new york and other places versus the tea party rallies where the democrats have talked about being astroturfing, et cetera. and within 72 hours, you promised you were going to take away governor chris christie's inhaler. you threatened to do this. well, you did. you told me he heard you say it if he doesn't run. and i thought when he spoke of the reagan library that it was over. but apparently, you know, the mystery continues for another 72 hours. and you are begging him to run. why? >> well, i must say i kind of flipped now. i seem to be one of the few
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people who now believe he's not going to run. while he was at the reagan library, i didn't believe he was not going to run back in june or july or august, but he said it often enough and i still haven't heard him say anything about him reconsidering. i hear others say it. >> i have it on good authority that what we reported at the top of the show today is true, that he did spend the entire weekend thinking about it. he is reconsidering. he has talked it over with his family and a final decision will come this week. if he gets in, you are going to be thrilled to death and you will give him his inhaler back. >> yes, i will. i will do cartwheels. i will set off fireworks. and yet still i must say i don't even -- i think he may have convinced me. he's made good decisions over and over again. he's gone into a very, very blue
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state and slashed government spending, he's taken on the government unions. i trust his decision making, whatever that decision is i suspect it will be what he's been telling us all along. and also i'm much more comfortable with our candidates. after watching the debates, i think dick was hinting at it, i want romney-cain. i think that would be dynamite. >> i want to play to you what president obama said, and if he can't say the country is better off under his leadership, how is it he get anyone to vote for him again? here's what he said earlier today. >> there's so many people who simply don't think they are better off than they were four years ago. how do you convince them that they are? >> i don't think they are better off than they were four years ago. they aren't better off than they were before the lay man
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collapse, before the financial crisis, before this extraordinary recession that we are going through. i think that what we've seen is that we've been able to make steady progress to stabilize the economy. but the unemployment rate is still way too high and that's why it's so critical for us to make sure that we are taking every action we can take to put people back to work. >> three years, all his policies passed and the country is not better off? how can you make the case that you can be re-elected? >> luckily he has the entire mainstream media on his side and the power of all liberals for 200 years. and rising up mobs that have no idea what they are protesting to rush out and vote for obama. i don't think it's going to work and i certainly hope it doesn't work. and romney-cain or kristi-cain
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would be a dynamite ticket. >> he actually laughed at your joke, did he not? >> yes, he did. >> not a liberal that takes every word you say seriously. thanks for being with us. he has surged into the top tier of gop candidates in the latest fox poll. herman cain is live here in the studio to explain why he is the best person to take on president obama in 2012. all that plus the great american panel coming up. motorcycles, boats, even rv's. nobody knows where he got his love for racing. all we know is, it started early. casey mears, driver of the number thirteen geico toyota camry. geico, saving people money on more than just car insurance.
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way up. now cain received 48.9% of the votes cast, perry trailed with 14.1. romney with 14.3 and gingrich 12.5%. while herman cain was relatively unknown to americans a few months ago, he said now he is someone to be reckoned with. he put it down in a new book so you know who he is and where he comes where. entitled "herman cain, my journey to the white house." nobody else is in that journey. >> that's confidence, like you said. >> congratulations. >> thank you. >> i've known you ten or twelve years. and i learned things in the book i at any time know before. but i have to ask you a few political questions. >> understand. >> you said about kristi, you said he's a liberal. >> i think he has more liberal position that is a lot of people don't know about yet. >> forks?
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>> his position if you are here illegally, that should be a crime. well, a lot of conservatives believe that is a crime and i talked to some people in new jersey who live there and they say he has a lot of liberal positions. i don't know all of them but i think all of that will come out. >> the judicial? >> yeah. >> the think the one issue that probably has hurt governor perry the most is the in state tuition issue. >> yes, it has. >> this issue came up about perry and he commented on the sunday shows about it. that's about perry, i guess he went to this hunting camp. his family never owned it but they would lease it or rent it and go there and it had painted on a rock the "n" word. and governor perry's camp said that you said it was insensitive. >> the name on the rock is insensitive. >> you weren't addressing that toward perry. >> no. the fact that it was on the rock and whoever was in charge of the rock, it was insensitive. now the latest information i
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have heard, because i haven't researched it, haven't had time, the thing to do, in 1981 they painted over the sign. >> the perry family did? >> yeah, the perry family did. >> but what happens 1960 to 1981? however long it was there. i'm not trying to figure out who was responsible for leaving it there, who painted it over. as long as it was there, it was insensitive. that was my whole point. and i even went so far to say this, sean, i don't believe that that word on that rock represents how governor perry feels about black people in america. i really don't. >> this is the end of it for you? >> this is the send of it for me. >> before i get to your book, this is you. you have not aged a day. this is you in 1994. clinton pushing his healthcare plan. you are the head of godfather's pizza. we aren't going to show clinton's, it's too long but we will show you your response
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after he speaks. >> first of all, mr. president, with all due respect, your calculation on what the impact would do, quite honestly, is incorrect. let's take, for example, the fact that after i went through my calculations, your calculation or your example of the 6% or the 7.9, and in my case it works out to 7.9 case, now let's suppose that 30% of my costs are labor costs, 7.9 times that would be the 2 to 2.5% you are referring to. the problem with that calculation, sir, is the fact that those -- most of those 30% of the people currently have zero. so when i calculate in the fact that i have to go from no coverage on those employees to full coverage at the 7.9% rate, it actually works out to be approximately 16%. so what i'm saying and suggesting is that the
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assumptions about the impact on a business like mine are simply not correct because we are very labor-intensive. we have a large number of part-time and short-term employees that we do not cover for one simple reason, we can't afford it. >> owe! >> those were the facts. what can i say? >> that was a big moment. >> it was a pivotal moment. and what happened after that, all of a sudden business people started to say, you know what? he's right. they went back and did their own calculations. president clinton and his administration were pushing bogus numbers and they got busted in that one spot right there. >> you said your american dream in your book, $20,000, and you have run, worked at coke, pillsbury, work at burger king. >> yes. >> godfather's pizza ceo.
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>> yes. >> most situations were turnarounds. >> yes. >> but $20,000, you thought you made it. >> because when i was growing up we didn't have a lot of money. i can remember my dad would give my brother and i to eat in the school cafeteria one day a week, fridays, and it was 25 cents. hot dog, apple and a carton of milk. and so we would say it would be nice to make $20,000 a year. why? i could qualify for an american express card. two of them. that was my life long american dream. and i never forget the day when i was an analyst and they called me in and said you are promoted, there's a new position, and you got your master's degree, you've done a great job. and i said, well, thank you for the title, but what is it going
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to take? and he said 20,000 and one dollar a year. >> describe growing up poor. >> yes. >> in the segregated south. your father had three jobs, janitor? >> yes. >> and your mom was a maid? >> yeah, dad never complain or played the victim card. he was thankful that he had the health to be able to work three jobs. he worked three jobs. he worked two jobs when he could make it off one job. he did it the old-fashioned way. we didn't know we were poor. >> tell a story, the segregated south, you were out with your mom and brother, who by the way since passed a way. i didn't know that until i read the book. >> yes. >> you want to get a drink. >> right. >> with your brother. mom says to go get it. >> my mom used to go to the market basement of the downtown department store. that's what we could afford. so my mom is downtown with my brother and i. i was 7 and he was about 6.
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so there weren't a lot of people in there. so my brother and i said mom can we get a drink of water? on the left and there was a sign that said, "white." there was a sign over the other one that said, "colored." my mom said to us, you boys make sure y'all go there. >> so we get to the fountain, my brother and i, and we look around, there wasn't a lot of people. i said to my brother, go first. he tasted the whitewater and we look around and said your turn. i taste the whitewater. then we both taste the colored water and we looked at each other, six and seven years old, the water tastes the same. what's the big deal? we had not been taught segregation at the age of six and seven. we wondered what the big deal was about. now that being said and growing newspaper the segregated south, i am not mad at america. i don't have a grudge against america because one of the things that has made this nation
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great in the short 235 years, is its ability to change. a lot of other countries don't have that ability. we ought to be appreciative of the fact that this country has that kind of resilience. >> we don't have time tonight, but the book, i have known you for a dozen years, i learned a lot about you. it talks about your upbringing, the challenges of business and also a lot of your political views and i really enjoyed it. it's a great book and you are going to be on the road now promoting it. >> yes. we have a book tour starting today. >> today? >> we just highlight it had, kicked off on your show as promised because you are still my friend. >> you talk to me, and now that you are so high up in the polls. >> go to our website and see where we will be the next two weeks promoting our book. >> let not your heart be troubled by the great, great, at adt, we get financing from ge capital. but they also go beyond banki.
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>> tonight on the great, great american panel, fox news contributor, usa today columnist, other person who curse on tv more than anybody else, bob beckel is here. the ceo, charles payne is with us. and contributing editor for town hall magazine, katie pavlich is with us. let's run the brilliant, the genius roseanne barr. >> i first would allow guilty bankers to -- you know, the ability to payback anything over $100 million of personal wealth because a maximum wage of $100 million, and over that amount then they should go to the reeducation cap and if that doesn't help, then be beheaded. >> why is the hatred toward people who are successful? when it that happen in america? >> i'm not sure. i think president obama has had
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success in class warfare to an extent. but i'm wondering when the last time you heard a tea party member say we should be head people, we should behead people on the other side. you can't say any because it didn't happen. then you look at the wall street protesters she was referencing, 7,000 people were arrested. and there's a double standard to the left. >> roseanne barr, she must have called her accountant the day before and said what am i worth? he must have said 999 million, $998. all the ultrarich people who are crying, michael moore, and they give these occupy wall street a vote of confidence, they are hypocrites. she should have said you can't give it back i'm going to set an example, i'm giving away all my wealth to the kids by wall street.
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they are hypocrites. >> that's a good point i think by charles. they have the ability, you guys can be generous with your money. all the learjet liberals, they can give it away but they choose not to. >> let me say roseanne barr is nuts. do not put the rest of us in with her? >> how about the people at wall street. >> i'm going to join them. >> you will be the smartest one down there. >> if i said one thing, rose an barr does not speak for the rest. but there are people who do say that one of the great travesties of justice, the wall street bankers, with the money any securities, not one was punished. that's one of the great disgraces in our history. >> nor were the people involved in pouring $535 million down the
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drain because they wouldn't do due diligence with taxpayer money. what's the difference? >> at least those people -- >> when do we start hating people that are successful? >> people signed up for houses they could not afford. that's what happened. and it's not the responsibility of bankers, you shouldn't be be heading bankers. >> and the success is vilified is frightening. our country is teetering. look at the stock market. there's a message here. we are in a lot of trouble. they say you know what, we are going to cut the ladder of success in half. it's nuts. >> the biggest strip between the wealthy and the middle class, and you guys -- >> here's the trick. okay. you want to talk income inequality? here's the top, here's the bottom. you want it fix it, fix it that
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way. >> and maybe give some back. >>lien, the take after thanksgiving, i tell you what, not the day after, everyone is eating their thanksgiving meal, go to wal-mart at midnight. four towing see why a lot of people don't have money. they are going to take their welfare checks and bombard the security guards, and give away all their money. >> you know why a lot of people are homeless in this country? because we have wars we haven't paid for. >> be honest, man. come on. >> uncertainty in the marketplace. and -- >> i'm sure they think about that. that. >> the very
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>> we continue with our great american panel. we have this controversy over the "n" word and it got pretty heated on "the view" earlier today. here's what happened. >> when herman cain talked about it, how radically insensitive it was yesterday, he didn't use the term n word which is what we are supposed to be saying. it's so hard to know what to say now so i just use the word >> i found that so interesting because you did because when herman cain said it yesterday,
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and he said, and we never say it here, the name of this camp that rick perry's father leased, there was a sign that said, and -- okay. >> you and whoopy say it. >> perry said his father got rid of it. >> here's the problem. his father was the original leaseholder, he and his mother. it's a 40,000-acre ranch. they lead it for hunting. when perry was governor he took the lease from 2006-2008 and there are now seven perries on the record that say they went to the ranch to hunt and the sign was still there. perry said it was painted. i don't believe he's a racist, i don't buy in that at all. i give herman cain credit for raising the issue, but he had a problem with the word, not with perry. the problem really is somebody
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is not telling the truth. the people said they saw it, perry said it wasn't there. so i don't know. >> what bothers me in all this, where is all the scrutiny of cocaine use ofa obama, his radical friend. and we see him during the campaign of hanging out with a person of the new black panther party. nobody picked up on that. >> this is the washington post. and they are running pieces on conservative candidates and republican candidates and they set it up to look like rick perry was a race of the and set it up to create tension between herman cain and rick perry. the facts were kind of muddled. >> but you know what? a few people said i think i saw it, i don't know what year, this and that. and he's telling a very different story. it's a 40,000-acre ranch? >> yeah. >> excuse me, it seems absurd to me, what do you think? >> it does, from the information comes in. i think katie has a right to say
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that. it felt like a hit piece. eats one of these things that will create a lot of animosity. it gets us away from the issues. almost everything we are hearing gets us away from the real issues. >> what about the narrative that the demoats are running that they want -- the pea party conservatives want african americans hanging by trees. >> that was one person that said that. come on. >> he was the head of the congressional black caucus. let's face it. when they couldn't dismiss the tea party as being a bunch of dummies, they went the racist route. and i went to about seven or eight tea party events and i asked all black people to go because i hate it when they argue the black people. >> we are out of time. greta is next. we are back tomorrow. >> this is a fox

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