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tv   Greta Van Susteren  FOX News  February 23, 2012 10:00pm-11:00pm PST

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>> there are new developments in the solyndra scandal. now we suspect you are furious at the obama administration wasting more than $500 million of your tax dollars with solind ra. tonight, there is more. it is the solyndra bankruptcy judge hitting you. why? that's even more perplexing. we will tell you all about it. cacialtion let me ask you about the president. he was on the radio today and he was quoted as saying, my
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presidency is not over. i have another 5 years coming up. we are going to get this done and absolutely, we have strong support in the latino community because they have seen what we are working on. >> it first of all, there is a certain arrogance to "i have five more years," as if the election is a mere formality. but let's talk about the context. he was in front of a latino audience, talking about the fail tower get comprehensive immigration reform. now remember, he comes into office in 2009 with 60-40 in the senate, 255 to 175 in the house and he does nothing to try to push through comprehensive immigration reform, despite having said he would do so in 2008. now we have nearly nothing to show for t. he is excusing himself, saying i have another five years to do t. i had to deal with obama in 2006-07.
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i remember his lip service. when the critical votes came for, he voted for every killer amendment for comprehensive immigration reform. -- >> why did he do that? >> you know, i am not certainue know, he -- it was more important to placate the labor unions and gut the guest worker program than it was to follow throughie a pledge in the cabinet room, sitting in a group of senators where he affirm to the president and the bill sponsors that he was in favor of comprehensive immigration reform. his rating among latinos has slid 22 points from the time he was inaugurated because the economy is terrible. there is an entrepreneurial group that likes to create small businesses. that's difficult in this tough economy and he led them to believe he would do something about comprehensive immigration reform and ignored it for basically 3 years. >> i remember the speech at american university in which he talked about immigration.
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i think at the time, he had the house and the senate still. so something still could have been done. that was the last i remember hearing about it. >> he never sent a proposal to congress. he never formed a working group with the requisite agencies to come up to the thoil work with the democrats on t. i think he is conflicted. on the one hand, he likes it as a political issue. he wants to kick it around to point to the republicans as he did today -- think about it, there were 40 republican senators and 60 democrats. he had 255 democrat house members and 178 republicans. he didn't send forward a bill. but he has the hoots pato say it's all the republicans who kept me from doing. >> it it's the question is, whether the hispanics are looking at it to see the timeline to see what he has promised and what he has done. unless he is paying taping to the timeline, it's very effective. >> he has dropped 22 points. i think the latino vote is up
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for grabs in this election and the republicansv can win it if they go after it hard. >> governor jeb bush, the brother of president bush and the son of president bush was quoted in dallas. he said, i used to be a conservative i watch the debates and i'm wondering. i don't think i have changed. but it's troubling when people are appealing to fear and emotion, rather than trying to get them to look over the horizon for a broader perspective. that's kind of where we are. i think it changes when we get to the general election. i hope. it doesn't sound like he's impressed with the way the race is going. >> i share his concern. the debates have tended to focus the effort on exactly what he says, operating out of fear. partly because of the nature of the kind of questions and the fact that they are trying to gain an advantage over each other. certain number of debates is good. we have probably had too many. we have particularly had too many with the questions dominated by the media. how many questions did we have about the economy and jobs and spending and deficits and helt
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care, as opposed to processed horse race, intra-party troaferts and social issues? we had very little. former and a lot of the later. >> there is a very cozy relationship between the media and the candidates. the candidates want the attention and the free promotion. the media love its because we get a lot of buzz. so there is -- there is you know, both have a lot riding on it, personally. >> they do -- >> not making it good. >> but the candidates lost control. once the series started, all you have to do is have a news organization and a sponsoring organization announce they were going to have it and they were obligated to show up, even if it wasn't in their interest to do so. now with this georgia debate coming up, santorum, paul and romney said, you know what? this is a complete pain.
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let's not interrupt our campaigning. we are not going to do it. and they have surrendered a lot of control over the narrative to the people who ask the questions in the debates. the people who ask the questions in the debate, with a few exceptions have been people who have been more interested in the horse race progress and depicting the republicans as an exotic group of aliens than the real issues facing the country. >> they had a chance with donald trump. he wanted to do it. and a lot of candidates wouldn't have. the only one who agreed was speaker gingrich. >> most of the candidates thought, rightly so, a debate moderated by donald trump would have elevated donald trump at the expense of all of them. >> it would have been different questions. >> some of them would be concerned about being fired. >> all right. looking at last night's debate, this is the horse race, the
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conventional wisdom that senator santorum missed an opportunity to make points. i don't know if that's true. i have gone to the arizona papers to see what the arizona people are thinking. they are voting there. i haven't seen anything yet. but i think that the pundits listen to each other too much. >> they do. and i read the story this is morning in "the republic." look, santorum did not have the night he needed to have. it wasn't so much that he -- you know, lost. it was that he didn't win. and he allowed himself to be put in a place where he sounded like a united states -- an incumbent senator running for re-election. one of the most devastating comments was by one pundit -- and i thought it was accurate -- he looked like he had taken the rules from talking about debates from bob dole. he talked about senate speak. the committee this and process that. and take one for the team this and earmarks that. you know -- >> but they were hitting him
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with the earmarks and he needed to explain. his view that he thought that governor romney got money for the olympics and money for massachusetts health care. he had to defend himself. he couldn't sit there and take it. >> that's right. but he should have pivoted -- >> how?! >> well, go on and say, look, you can worry about the earmarks all you want, but the real issue in the race is the economy. and jobs. and what we are going to do about sev dit sits and -- deficits and side show -- >> i would have thought he was ducking it. we have heard about the jobs. i am not sure he would have handed that off to governor romney's issue. but why not tell us about the record? what's he running from? i would have looked at it a different way. >> he has to have a quick answer and get out of there. but the bottom line, conventional wisdom is that it was a missed opportunity for him. let's step back special think about what happens between now and tuesday. first of all, he aloud himself to be deficht -- to be depicted
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as the washington insider. that's know a good place to be this period of time ahead of the primaries. second of awcialg the other thing at play here, he is being outspent on television in michigan by 2 1/2 to 1. he put $600,000 more into tv on wednesday, the romney super pac put more into television to keep the margin big -- >> he can't help that. >> i know, i know. i mean, look, the debate is only woofer one of several big things at play here. he is worried about money. where is he tonight? texas! which hasn't even set the primary day and may be in late may or june. tomorrow morning, he will be in austin, texas, trying to raise money. >> trying to pay for ads. >> that's right. it's a sign of the tension inside the campaigns at this point. romney started, speaking in pront front of the associated
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general contractors, business group in arizona and then flew to michigan, where he will be tonight, tomorrow for several events. he will then go to florida for the daytona 500 on saturday morning and return to michigan on saturday night and be there sunday as well. >> private jet, right? i mean, he's got the money to fly privately. >> well, yes. >> which makes a huge difference. if you are at the terminal, waiting for a flight i. and look -- look -- -- >> that makes a big difference. >> santorum is probably flying privately as l. but think about this. in michigan, in the last week, there have been five poll, santorum by 3, santorum by 4, romney by 2, romney by 2 and a tie. their average is 33.8 to 33.2, 38.8 for santorum, 33.2 for romney. paul at 10.4 and gingrich at
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8.6. i say that because every moment in michigan matters. if mac -- if michigan is going to bend the arc of the contest, the principle contenders ought to be in michigan. >> governor romney has been endorsed. i imagine -- that, i am not big on endorsements. >> it will help on the margins. also will help, they have been voting absentee in michigan and arizona for a while. 200,000. and the question is: how is romney doing among those people? because most of those folks were locked in before santorum had his bump after missouri, minnesota and colorado. so the question is: how many votes has he now -- has romney
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salted away in the vault by that? we are to the point where literally, you know, every moment that you have between now and the michigan primary is valuable. and these guys are scrambling to find ways to jam michigan into their schedule. now, we have one other thing. i have very bad memories of michigan. in 2000, we had john engler, everybody and their mother in the state was in favor of george w. bush. we went to michigan and had television advertising. and a day or two before the election, our pollster called and said, my sister is voting in the michigan in in thial primary for the first time. i said great news, congratulations. he said, no, it's bad news. she's a teacher and the michigan teacher association, which was in a fight with engler, sent the word out, go vote in the republican primary in order to embarrass engler -- >> mischief? she was not a republican. >> not a republican. >> you can do myrrh mischief.
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on the day of election, i want to vote republican. >> so here you have the united auto workers and the teachers unions, both in a place -- it is not an accident that the obama forces are running anti-romney tv ads in michigan. so have you this problem on tuesday. and it could be -- it could be 10,000. it could be 5,000. but if you have a 6/10 percent difference. if this race is really dead even, the polling may not catch the outside efforts. >> and rick santorum senate afford the ads, but president obama is running ads against romney in michigan. >> both santorrum and romney are spending a lot of television on money in michigan. romney for a longer period of time. but both are shouting at a vowel volume that's hard to ignore. >> what did you think about the question, candidates were asked for a one-word description?
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someone said consistent. someone said confident. but speaker gingrich said cheerful. >> i thought it was the best answer. it was honest and ridiculed the question: i mean, what's your favorite color, gratia? >> it's a question, i thought, boy, this is a stupid question, but i couldn't wait to hear the answers. so there must be something wrong with me. >> gingrich gave the best answer. i hate to pick on santorum. courage, that's so self serving. but cheerful was like, he had been cheerful all evening and he sort of gave everybody a chance to have a good gafaw at john king's expense. >> is speaker gingrich, if he gets the money in the super pac. we hear $10 million, $100 million as a possibility. is he a player? >> it depends. does he break 10% in scpairz michigan on tuesday. if so, by how much? the second question is, we are going to head into the territory
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where he should do well. on march 6, we have georgia with 76 delegates, tennessee with 58. you know, on the 13th, we have alabama, with 50. and... mississippi with 40. and we have oklahoma on the 6th. and the question is, in the southern states disco does he do well? you know, he is -- he is getting close to the edge. let's be honest about t. he is -- he ran third in -- in nevada. he is out of gas, essentially since south carolina. he has to bump back into this in a more profound way. >> he's going to be here tomorrow night. cacialtion thank you. >> there we go. >> straight ahead, the unthinkable, hanging someone for his religion, it's going to happen in any minute. a christian pastor being executed for being a christian pastor.
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that's next. a stunner in the courtroom. a surprise ruling for the man accused of drowning his wife on their honeymoon. and the jury never got the case. what happened in the courtroom, coming up and governor romney posed as the seinfeld character, george castanza and he misquoted him. you have to hear this. my name is robin.
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>> greta: 34-year-old christian pastor and father of two is set to be executed. they are going to hang him. why? he dared to convert to christianity and that is only the beginning. a war on christians is spreading throughout the muslim world. some are being forced from their homes and executed. reverend graham has seen it firsthand. sudarn's military recently bombed a bible school. reverend graham joins us next. before we talk about big picture i want to talk about this pastor
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in iran. he dared to become a christian? >> greta, according to court records that we can determine, he never was a muslim but his parents were muslim. he was christian. i think it what they have charged him is under islamic law, called sharia law, he has been charged with for converting to christianity. since he hadn't been a muslim they are going hang him because his parents were muslim. therefore, he has been sentenced to death because his parents were muslim but he was never a muslim. >> greta: if if he had banana muslim an converted, they say your conversion makes you eligible for execution. it's sort of the idea that a man or woman just decides to convert christianity from another religion from muslim and you get
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handled? >> there are millions of muslims that don't agree with this. they are wonderful people but they are under the system of sharia law. they demand if a person leaves islam they are to be killed. they reverse this, but if they don't denounce their faith, like this man was told to renounce his faith in jesus christ but he refused to do it. therefore they are going to hang him. this is the law sharia and it's a scary system. it governs all of life. it's economic, military. it governs everything. no western law is recognized. it's only sharia law. >> greta: nothing the united states can do for this pastor, we've got enough problems with iran.
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>> the president could call for something, he would make a statement. we apologized to the afghans because kor and was burned and was used to smug out messages out of prison. he apologized to afghans but why doesn't he speak out. he could use the power of the white house to call pastors together and have a prayer meeting but he hasn't done it. >> greta: we talk about this one case. newsweek covered it. what is happening to this man is not particularly unusual. it talks about the war on christians in newsweek and writer goes through many situations, especially sudan. >> we have people in the sudan right now, they are being bombed. it's almost every day.
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they are civilian targets. it's because many of them, faith in jesus christ but people are mixed between muslim and christian. they are black african. the north most part is arab and they are trying to kill the blacks. world is saying very little about this. we have a lot of friends. a few years ago muslims burned over a thousand churches in the south sudan. they are in the mountains and about 356 churches and they already they burned them again. >> you took me to a video from "new york times" website and it's breathtaking it's so horrible. >> i appreciate "new york times" sending a reporter to document this. >> greta: with south sudan, that
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convene leaders would go very far? >> the president bashir has told me on several cuba occasions. >> greta: he is one of bad guys. he is under indictment. >> he says america has to be engaged in this. in the south, the united states has to be engaged. jimmy carter, he took a big risk when he invited bagan and sadat to come to camp david. he did it. because both sides were weary of war, both sides wanted peace. think both sides want peace but if someone like our president, went to washington and sat down at camp david and hammered out a peace deal, this thing could be solved. >> greta: i urge people to read
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this because it talks about the groups around the world. reverend, nice to see you. >> coming up, if you don't like paying $50 million for fannie mae and freddie mac executives accused of scamming you you won't like this next one either. and it did just get worse. also the mexican government taking heat with gay marriage. stay tuned. what makes the sleep number store different?
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>> greta: syrian government is killing its own citizens. journalists are trying to escape syrian city where government murdered two dozen citizens, two correspondents were murdered. including a reporter from london news year. she spent 30 years as a war reporter. she continued working after losing an eye to shrapnel wound. why did she risk her life covering wars? back in march of 2004, colonel oliver north interviewed her for war stories. she said she wanted to make a difference. >> i think, i'm not rambo going out to shoot the bad guys.
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it's not something i want to do, it's not something i would do well. what i do think, in journalism, you can to a place and say what is happening and it is wrong. i believe there is right and wrong in the world. i don't believe, say, for example, the american people or europe. i don't actually think people are that different. i think as a journalist. what i try to write, wait a minute, for example, we try to make someone feel like, wait a minute, this could be my brother could be my sister. wrong things are being done. >> greta: broadcast the night before her death, describes the
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attack on cold civilians as absolutely sickening. her mother was scheduled to leave there and stayed for one more story. fox news channel airs special tribute. war stories deadlines on the battlefield. it will be at 3:00 p.m. on saturday. >> update on the solyndra scandal. obama administration squandered $500 million on the belly-up company. now, the bankruptcy judge, she gets $370,000 in bonuses. so why are employees of a failed company and why are we paying for it? so, liz, why are they getting bonuses and why are we paying for it? >> the judge and creditor's committee, they needed to keep these people in order to continue the break-up of
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solyndra. the gravy train rolls on. usually big bonuses lead to reckless spending leads to the collapse of companies. you usually don't give out bonuses when a company has class had. we have seen this happen for example with aig and general motors. those companies saw bonuses given out to supposedly other things. you think they could find somebody to help break up solyndra. >> greta: i picked up a copy of the bankruptcy judge's order, because because i want to see exactly what it was. we want to keep these people. we can't do worse. i looked at what the judge wrote. the court having determined the relief sought bonuses in the motion is in best interests of debtors and creditors and how in
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the world can that be in the best interests? >> you have to wonder where is occupy wall street right now. where is ows, and the judge at the same time blasted solyndra for giving out bonuses to 7 employees after the company had filed bankruptcy, after it started laying off 1100 workers and was bleeding red ink. is this the way to go for solyndra? is this what needs to be done to basically break up the company and return any kind of assets to the creditors. >> greta: it's so easy to spend other people's money. last night you and i discussed the ridiculous $50 million in legal fees in the fannie and freddie situation. i'm still waiting to hear from congressman issa to demand the
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legal bills online. utter disregard to the money. nobody is paying attention and they just spend it. >> that's right. this is the same company that gave out big bonuses to ceos that took the fifth during congressional hearings. to take a twist what wall street journalists called the solyndra rule, buffet rule, we should have a solyndra rule, not to give out bonuses to executives to failed companies. what was the performance criteria? this is a company that failed. this is a company that failed on the taxpayers' nickel. where is the criteria for giving out the bonus money. i didn't see in the documents that you took a look at too. >> greta: i think legal profession, i'm still waiting, law firm that negotiated the law
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firm, had an enormous bill that we paid for. i keep asking it from congress. we paid that legal bill. these unbelievable, phenomenal legal bills in the millions of dollars that we pay yet we can't see them. anyway -- >> gibson ku the cher got hundreds of thousands to help solyndra go into bankruptcy. you are right. when the clock tolls nobody is looking how the money is being spent. >> greta: i'm going to have a job doing legal bills for people. it will be a rude awakening. >> a judge grants a motion that is really granted. it happened in a murder trial. defendant accused of murdering his wife under water. and then we'll tell you what happened. then big news for john edwards
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take control of your portfolio today. trade commission-free for 60 days, and we'll throw in up to $600 when you open an account. >> from headquarter headquarters, i'm ainsley earhardt. the jury has been chosen for the trial of a former rutgers university student accused of using a web cam to his gay roommate. he faces invasion of privacy, bias intimidation and other charges. tirely clemente committed suicide in september of 2010, days after he was recorded being intimate with another man. opening arguments are expected on friday. the financially troubed u.s. postal service announcing it is moving ahead with plans to cut costs. more than 200 mail processing centers will be closeddor consolidated and nearly 35,000 jobs will be eliminated. postal officials are asking
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congress to eliminate mail delivery on saturdays. the postal service has been losing billions every year. i'm ainsley earhardt. now back to "on the record." thank us for watching. check out our web site, foxnews.com. case update. it is a stunner. alabama judges putting the man accused of drowning his wife on honeymoon. judge resumed that prosecutors failed to present enough evidence to send a case to jurors. judge ended the trial by acquitting gabe watson. tina watson died while scuba diving with her husband. they claimed that gabe watson cut off her oxygen supply. they wanted to cash in on life insurance. they argued that he they failed to show that he intentionally killed his we.
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he served 18 months in australia on a manslaughter charge. >> she wins the sex tape. that is what the judge tape. lia hunter mistress of john edwards. judge ordered she is to get the sex tape starring herself and john edwards. it was made while running for president. it had been snapped by young. she said he found out while he was helping hunter lied out from the media. one of the most bizarre twists of john edwards story, young claimed to be the baby's father. judge ordered the tape to be destroyed within 30 days. >> now to crackdown on illegal immigration in always. the new law is one of the toughest in the country. it requires schools to determine the immigration status of
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incoming students. law requires police to verify a person's immigration status during routine traffic stops or arrests. griff jenkins hit the ground in alabama to find out more. >> reporter: alabama's new immigration law that went into affect in september of last year have faced from the federal government and aclu and special interested groups. they are awaiting a hearing on march 1st with some of the provisions blocked so we came here to alabama, a city with a population of just over 20,000 with a hispanic community that is made up 30% to find out how the law is received and what impact on the community at large. >> we have had a great reduction in automobile accidents and impounded vehicle with unlicensed drivers. we had a dramatic increase in sales tax revenue collections for the first few months of the fiscal year. we've been up 11%.
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so we're up 10% in our sales tax. unemployment rate has dropped 9%. we have 200, 300 individual americans show up job fair, wanting those jobs that critics were saying they weren't going to take. lo and behold they are taking those jobs and fitting in with those jobs. that has been a positive impact on the community. >> the mayor -- we need a program for working. so many -- i don't know what is going on with the economy now. >> reporter: have you seen
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saying this law has broken up our hurt families? >> yes. it's very hard. >> you see it. you go inside, you see people there. you don't see many spanish people inside. >> when when you operate around a 5 percent vacancy factor, we budget 5%, 10% we can handle. normally we don't see that. over the last ten years of keeping track, that is what it has been. immediately over 3-month period of time, we are back to high 26.8% initially. having that many come in was tough. >> we have to think about families and impact. i think it certainly has a
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negative impact on some families i really can't speak to how well it's helped unemployment and i have to look at it from a different perspective. >> reporter: her and her family have lived here for 20 years. she says this new law is certainly had an impact on her? >> it's been very hard for the business owners. the sales have went down. a lot of people have left the town. i've lost some employees, too. they move and it's been really hard on us. >> when i'm sitting down with a family and leasing a place or renewing a lease, maybe the husband is legal and the wife is not or other way around.
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they have children who are 14, 15 years old who were born here. they talk to you about the fear they feel. they talk to you about not making a comment -- it reminds me of the '60s. it reminds me of racial hatred. i can't stand that. >> greta: straight ahead, governor romney, jason alexander you what makes sam adams boston lager great is as simple as abc. a, the appearance. amber. [ jim ] b, balance. sam adams has malt sweetness, hoppy bitterness. [ jim ] c, complexity. pine notes, grapefruit notes. only believe your own pallet. go taste them. (crickets chirping) you might just wanna trade that one in. ♪music announcer: during the bass pro shops spring fishing classic save up to an extra $100 on a new reel when you trade one in.
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>> greta: here is the best of the rest. tonight, governor mitt romney taking heat from a new opponent. jason alexander is taking reference to seinfeld character, george cassandra, he mentioned during last night's debate. >> as george cassandra would say -- >> he says george never said that line. jerry seinfeld did and he is taking to twitter. governor romney i enjoyed the
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character he used to be, too. if he embraced he would be a great candidate. ouch! >> and man under arrest after cooking his own meal at denny's restaurant. he walked into a denny's and told the workers he was the new manager. he cooked himself a burger and fries. the current manager questioned summers about his new job but he said they didn't get the memo from the corporate headquarters. they called the police. he faces several charges. >> and the governor of taking heat. biggest critics is one of the hairdressers. it came when susanna martinez did not support gay marriage. he also left this voice message for the governor's assistant. >> antonio's hair studio, i
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think it was about two months ago she called to ask to get her hair done. i got wind of her ai posing gay marriage. you may pass this on and susan did a na if you want to listen it shame on you. i'm going to let all gay people know, stop serving you. stop providing you with what you need. thank you. >> greta: the governor seems to be too worried about her hair. she says she has several style zblists and collection of comic books $2.5 million. comics included some of the most prized issues, batman debut sold for $523,000 and superman's first issue, $299,000. who was the lucky guy? the man who found the stash in his aunt's basement. there you have it. the best of the rest. coming up last call, before we
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all kinds of vehicles, all kinds of savings. multi-policy discounts from progressive. call or click today. >> greta: 11:00 is almost here, flash those studio lights because it's time for last call g news is that there is less traffic. bad news... i'm going to let jay leno explain it here is an interesting decision. the federal government pointed today that in 2011 americans drove fewer miles on the road than the year 2003. people drove fewer miles last year than they to eight years ago. experts aren't sure why. i'll give you three reasons, exxon, chevron, texaco. those are the reasons. >> greta: that is your last call. make sure you join us tomorrow night. go to greta wire.com. there is an open thread and tell us what you thought about tonight's show and if you

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