tv The O Reilly Factor FOX News June 22, 2012 8:00pm-9:00pm PDT
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our goal here has always been to bring about a fair and a just result in this case. that goal has been accomplished with the jury's verdict today. and we believe that justice has been served. thank you very much. and... thank you. >> i'd like to give state police here a chance to say a few words. >> thank you, general kelly. my name is major brett wagner, director of the bureau of criminal investigation. i stand here as representative for the commission of the state police. colonel frank nunan, i echo comments offered up by general kelly. i thank her and her agency for cooperation we've received throughout this investigation. i salute the prosecutors, that
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prosecuted this case. i think, what this gentleman did in the courtroom, i salute him for that. but there is a lot of other work by the prosecution that went unseen that. is mr. frank feenan and his staff and what they've put together to bring this to a success. the officers and agents from the pennsylvania state police and attorney general in this case. they took it personal. they were dedicated to it. for two weeks they have been away from their families and many headed down the highway to reunite with them. i'm proud of them, i'm proud of what they've accomplished and efforts. as a police officer you learn pretty quick that you need courage in order to do this job and that doesn't mean you have fear, it means you to work through your fear and be
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unintelligible ]. >> we're here today to talk about the jerry sandusky case, that is a case of pending trial. i don't think we're going to talk about that today, we'll save that for another day. >> any other questions? if not, thank you very much. >> i can say that this is an ongoing investigation. it continues. so we can't speculate on whether or not they'll be future charges but we're continuing to look into this. the trial hasn't been scheduled yet. there is no trial date yet. we can't tell you when that trial will go forward this, is an ongoing investigation.
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>> the attorney general for the common wealth of pennsylvania on what is no doubt a very successful prosecution for all of those involved tonight. astounding this news conference on a behalf of the defense attorney f there are grounds of appeal i wonder if he didn't just pour water on them. >> what's happening is that he's going to get fired and that is what should happen here, he's going to look at those as words that the trial attorney uttered throwing bouquets at the jury and judge. on any appeal if you appeal a lowest misdemeanor jury trial what you're attacking is the judge make the right decision? or did the judge make mistakes? did the jury look at the evidence the wrong way? or the jury made mistakes? you have the guy in the hole,
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he's in the fox hole, and he's throwing bouquets. we agree with the jury. there is overwhelming evidence. what criminal dpeens attorney after his client is convicted utters words the jury reached this verdict because there was overwhelming evidence against any client? oh, my god. disgusting. versus well written out by the staff of the attorney general. >> our senior annaist judge napolitano is with us. i've never seen anything like that. >> the first count in the appeal will be in effect of council now, what the lawyer says outside of the courtroom and after trial of is of no moment to the appellate court but does indicate to you an inadequate, almost incompetent approach to the dpeens of jerry sandusky. and the -- it almost negates, if you will, the allegations
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of error on the part of the judge. and the essence of an appeal is that judge made mistakes and as a result of the legal errors the judge made we ended up with inappropriate verdict. statement being made after the trial which was absurd would seem to throw cold water on the argument. >> judge, thank you. randy has said you thought that the evidence wasn't that solid. clearly the jury thought it was. your thoughts? >> certainly, there are no words that could describe how i feel as a human being right now. to begin to understand what these kids have suffered through now that the jury has spoken, i can't do it. what i will say in defense of joe amadola is two things is that no matter how the bouquet thrown at the jury says two things are profound.
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one, he said we didn't have enough time to prepare. that is going to be a ground for appeal. what he said with regard to joe sandusky not being able to testify, inability of to testify because of the last minute hail mary from matt sandusky, that, in my view is a solid ground. >> and a criminal defense attorney on the line, in the afternoon, david lee miller has been there from the beginning. when is sentence something. >> we expect about 90 days time there will be pretent yens reports then, he will be back at this court house again. we talk about the defense attorney this is the same defense attorney told me that his client jerry sandusky did a wonderful job on nbc when giving that interview that probably helped the prosecution in their case.
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additionally this is the same defense attorney who, outside of the court house joked about this being a soap opera and likened it to "all my children". it was certainly to say the least unorthodox it certainly was. david lee miller thank you for your tireless work and terrific reporting of all of this. and as attorney general was noting a moment ago in her understandable reviews to answer questions, this is just the beginning. there are a number of cases which are pending in the common wealth of pennsylvania against officials from pennsylvania state university and you heard the reporter ask the question did penn state as an institution, did penn state as a division of the state is penn state covering this up? that is a matter for another day. as the attorney general put it, but that day will come. all of those who came near this case will be questioned, and requestioned. the national collegiate
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athletic association will be opening a new chapter on an investigation at penn state. great tradition of lions football and athletics is no doubt on the line tonight whether anyone in the viewing public wants to think about it or not, or hear about it. penn state has many difficult days ahead. but probably none more difficult than those for victims who, as you heard tonight, came forward to tell their stories. what happened to them as little boys in the trusted hands of a member of the penn state family. trusted to the point where he started a foundation to help little kids who were without parental supervision on the father's side. as attorney general put it, he went to that foundation and he trolled for his victims. and he found them one after another. now two more have come forward, one to penn state university, one a young man, sharing his last name. but the journalist of fox news i'm shepherd smith this, wraps
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up our coverage of this part of the trial but we'll be here with the rest of it and with the rest of the penn state family as it moves on. that is jerry sandusky. guilty on 45 of 48 counts. we'll spend the rest of his life in prison. depending on what happens on appeal. the o'reilly factor we'll join in progress in just a few minutes. a quick commercial break first. i'm shepherd smith, good night. recently, students from 31 countries took part in a science test. the top academic performers surprised some people. so did the country that came in 17th place. let's raise the bar and elevate our academic standards. let's do what's best for our students-by investing in our teachers. let's solve this.
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voter suppression. insane? >> probably. >> okay. >> bill: that's all you need to say. >> but you have to add that, remember, it was not the attorney general who said it and it was not the president of the united states who said it. it was nancy pelosi who said it, the exspeaker of the house. or reverend al sharpton. >> bill: just for the record, herald probably -- geraldo,
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probably insane. a stretch. number two. >> bill: i like probably insane better. race card? issue isn't relevant. holder didn't do anything wrong. they are after him because is he black. insane? >> it is hard to avoid the optics, bill. you know. >> bill: what optics? >> the optics of the first black attorney general. >> bill: you are saying that's a valid arguement in this case. >> first black attorney general in the united states. i said optics being questioned by 22 white guys and one southern woman, 23 people. and. >> bill: you are buying into this. >> citing in for contempt of congress for the first time in history. >> bill: you buy into this. >> it is bad pr i think. >> bill: that's a dodge. is there any have validity. >> that's a different question. you didn't ask me that. >> bill: now is he being a little slimy lawyer here. >> not slimy, accurate. >> bill: is there any validity to the charge that trying to get information for the terry family is race-driven?
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>> no. >> bill: thank you. >> thank you, geraldo. okay. two down. now. >> is the race card being played, bill? >> bill: i'm used to it? >> you have to get more used to it. >> bill: you have a situation here where the incumbent president, the first african-american president leads among asian americans. >> bill: we know what the item -- item graphs are. >> john f. kennedy led among catholics and irish americans, it's natural. all right? but when it bleeds over into legitimate issues like finding out what happened so the terry family knows why their son died, then we have to draw the line. okay. i think that's it. that's where i'm going to go on that with you. now, university of minnesota. >> don't you want to conclude?
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what's your concluding statement. >> my concluding statement is holder should turn over the documents so the terry family knows what happened to their son you don't disagree with that. >> i don't disagree -- >> bill: thank you, geraldo rivera. >> tough prosecutor in the cross-examination. >> bill: you bet i am. university of minnesota. >> you are in a bad mood because it's so hot in new york. >> luck. >> it's not luck. it's privilege. we're privileged that people see us not a color. >> privileged that we don't get stared at when we walk in the room. >> privileged that we don't get followed by security when we go shopping. >> or pulled over when we are in the wrong neighborhood. >> we're privileged because society was set up for us. and our silence keeps t in place. >> we're privileged and that's unfair. >> bill: why is the university of minnesota running a thing about white privilege? >> well, i think they make -- the psa makes a point that is
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a valid point. in the same way that the berkeley students who had bake sales and they charged white students twice as much as black students to make the point that affirmative action was wrong and inherently unfair. i think they both have a point to make. unfortunately. >> bill: explain the point as you see t of this video at the university of minnesota. what is the point? >> you know. i'm the head of did diversity. co-chair of diversity of my kid's school. i said to them when talking about privilege when i'm with bill o'reilly and someone mentions white privilege his head is going to blow up. white privilege exists. people are not being stopped and frisked at nearly the rate and all the rest of the problems that come with being black in america or being brown in america. those are realities. what is unfortunate, bill, on both the berkeley example and this university of minnesota at duluth example is they are exacerbating a situation with no real benefit.
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who is going to watch this psa and suddenly say ah-ha, i never thought that white people, you know have a leg up on black people in this country. i think all it does is aggravate a situation. it's not very helpful. nor was the cake sale, the bake sale very helpful. i think that people who kind of rub salt in what is really the most pressing domestic issue, i still believe that the economy is certainly but the social logically race is still a very big deal in this country. >> bill: that's a very very good analysis. i have always said and written in my books it is much more difficult to be a black person in america, an asian, an hispanic than it is white. i think that is the truth. but, as you said, to try to foster hatred or resentment is wrong and anti-american. now, i have got to go. so you can't say anything else. >> yankees. >> bill: two out of three. all right? two out of three, geraldo rivera. >> don't walk around in the
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bronx. >> bill: you need to trim that mustache. if it gets any longer we need another studio. new polling shows americans may be drifting away from the belief in god. body language on the president being interrupted and putin disrespecting mr. obama. we're coming right back. ♪ why not make lunch more than just lunch? with two times the points on dining in restaurants, you may find yourself asking why not, a lot. chase sapphire preferred. and no one's around to hear it, does it make a sound? [ meows ] or if a tree falls on your car and no one's around to answer your call, do you make a sound? the answer is probably "yes" [ growling ] and "like a howler monkey."
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>> bill: impact segment tonight, have you ever doubted the existence of god? that question was asked by the pew research center. the result 60% of americans under the age of 30 they have never doubted the existence of god but 31% have. for the u.s.a., that's a big number. among americans 65 years or older, just 9% have doubted the existence of a deity while 89% are people of faith across the board. >> so you can see secularism is taking a hold among younger
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americans. joining us from washington fields from the daily caller and fox news analyst leslie marshall. leslie, i predicted this would happen in my book culture warrior. young people are not getting the same message. that's important. same message from society that older americans once got. am i wrong? >> actually, i agree with you, bill. because society is comprised of our parents and our families as well. and although i think it's sad, i do think that people in america are not taking as much time out for god, taking as much time to teach their kids about god and, quite frankly, instead of going to midnight mass on christmas eve, they are at best buy trying to get the latest electronic device so i do think that plays a big part. >> bill: in a catholic church i'm a catholic as you must know. 24% now going to mass on a weekly basis. very, very low. and nothing like it was even 15 years ago. but there is a more -- the public schools have a lot to do with this, i think.
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where spirit has been totally wiped out at the curriculum of all american public schools. can you can't talk about anything sphirl at all or church and stayed and this, that and the other thing they are -- -- fainting, throwing up. design the school application and of course you have secularism and that's what we are seeing, right? >> i think it's important to note that this poll doesn't say that young people are disbelieving god but that they are more skeptical of him. >> bill: that's where it begins. >> that's no surprise though. if you talk to any young person they will tell you being a christian or believing in god there is a social stigma attached to it. >> bill: why is there a social stigma. >> you go to universities and professors are telling their students that people who believe in god, christians are republic. and they are the ones who don't believe in science, are destroying the planet. they treat homosexuals as lesser beings, that has an
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effect. all of this misinformation has an effect on kids. >> bill: would you say michelle that's indoctrination or is that just a secular argument overwhelming the traditional religious argument? >> it's indoctrination because it's misinformation. that's not true. we see this in television and in films such as juneau or saved. we're always -- every time there is a religious character, they are always the idiot. they are always the uncool one. >> bill: no longer bing crosby's father, whatever his name was in the bells of st. mary's the greatest guy. do you agree with that leslie? do you agree that's indoctrination or secular argument more powerful to the rationale mind? >> no. i don't agree with michelle there. you know, one of the things i think we are seeing more kids go to college. we have so much information out there and i think, bill, it's more accepted and less taboo these days to question the existence of god and to have such questions and there is so many sources and resources not only online but in books, et cetera, i think i even know for myself i have
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read a lot of these things and asked a lot of questions i wouldn't dare do in college. i wouldn't dare have spoken to my parents years ago. >> bill: i was in college and i asked questions all the time in my theology courses and challenged the prevailing wisdom. it comes down to a belief system. you're not going to prove or disprove any kind of a deity situation in a classroom. >> correct. >> bill: or on a program. you are not. >> correct. >> bill: you either believe or you don't. it is apparent younger americans, michelle, are going away from the belief system as this is exactly what happened in europe. exactly what happened. little by little they started to go away. and now, even in countries like italy and france which used to be very religious countries not anymore. i think that might happen. >> bill: dawkins. i kicked his butt all over the place. he didn't have -- he admitted it to his credit.
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he could not -- he could not make his case that the earth was formed in a natural way without any kind of divine intervention. he could not do it. all right? and this is supposed to be the brainiac of the secular forces. so, we're glad we did that all right, leslie, i'm giving you the last word. you are not a pagan, are you, leslie? >>. no i believe in god. just doing, this bill, what the human body has to do is pretty miraculous. >> bill: thank you. i'm not mocking you, that's right. if you look at our bodies and look at every human being has a talent, even the dimmest of us right here has a talent, all right? it's not random. it just couldn't happen. ladies, very interesting. thank you. >> my mother will be thrilled with that tonight. >> bill: plenty more ahead as the factor moves along this evening. body language on the president rudely being interrupted and president obama being disrespected by the russian leader putin.
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lou dobbs on whether the economy will perk up just in time to help president obama. hope you stay tuned to those reports. [ male announcer ] this is genco services -- mcallen, texas. in here, heavy rental equipment in the middle of nowhere, is always headed somewhere. to give it a sense of direction, at&t created a mobile asset solution to protect and track everything. so every piece of equipment nows where it is, how it's doing or where it goes next. ♪ this is the bell on the cat. [ male announcer ] it's a network of possibilities -- helping you do what you do... even better. ♪ helping you do what you do... even better. but they can be really well thexpensive.ted a puppy, so to save money i just found them a possum. dad, i think he's dead. probably just playin' possum.
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>> bill: body language segment tonight, three hot topics president obama being interrupted by neil monroe of the daily caller. >> it is the right thing to do! >> excuse me, sir, it's not time for questions, sir. [shouting] >> not while i'm speaking. and the answer to your question, sir, and the next time i prefer you let me finish my statements before you ask that question is this is the right thing to do for the american people -- i didn't ask for an argument. i'm answering your question. >> shouting. >> it is the right thing to do for the american people and here's why. >> bill: this is personal to me because i do the finger thing all the time as you know. i get the finger up a lot. i get the mail what does the
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finger mean? >> the finger is very aggressive. when you do it, what you are doing is being overly aggressive. >> bill: wait. overly aggressive? >> yeah. what you are doing is dominating that person. >> bill: well, maybe the person needs to be dominated. >> you are right there. is a time and a place for everything. this is not typical obama. normally he does the politician point. >> bill: he does two things well, three things. he does the one finger, he does the five fingers. >> that's the chop. >> what's the chop mean. >> once he goes from the finger he tries to now change up and goes to a chop which is to be emphatic without being overly aggressive. >> bill: one finger is overly aggressive. the chop is emphatic but not overly aggressive. >> that's right. >> bill: three fingers. >> three fingers now he is making. >> bill: now is he confused. >> here is the interesting thing he does at the end of this piece he changes hands and he starts pointing now. >> bill: one hand is tired. [ laughter ] >> actually, no what he is trying to do is reanchor the conversation and take it in a different direction. >> bill: when you switch hands you are trying to get away
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what you are doing to something else. >> anger in one hand and close out discussion with the other hand. >> bill: one finger angry. i'm not angry sometimes i'm trying to make my point i don't think i'm over l.a. aggressive but i didn't think atila was, i thought he was moderately aggressive. >> here is the difference though. it's not what you are feeling. it's how the recipient was feeling. >> bill: i don't care how the recipient is feeling and there you go. [ laughter ] here is obama and putin. >> thank you very much, mr. president we in fact, did have a candid, thoughtful, and thorough conversation on a whole range of bilateral and international issues. >> bill: my question is, this putin is sitting on a nail. >> yes, oh my goodness. >> bill: sitting on a nail. that is the worst body language i have ever seen. >> it was terrible. so he is sitting back, is he gripping on to his chair, is he not even oriented toward the president. look how his chin is tucked
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down. >> bill: he hates him. >> what's really great is obama goes and pretends. >> bill: he is not even acknowledging it? >> he looks at his chest. i swear to god. you know what? come back on me with the camera. the only finger only aggressive. i would take five fingers and slapped him if he slowched like that in my presence, putin. >> there was such a disconnect. if you look at obama he has his elbow out like trying to be territorial. >> bill: wanted to elbow him in the head but he didn't do it? >> look how he looks away. >> bill: i know. it's so disrespectful. >> i have nothing to say. >> bill: rielle hunter we don't like her but we have to use this clip. governmental what do you think the reaction is when the woman who is sleeping with the husband starts talking about the wife, who is now dead from cancer? >> there are a lot of people that go wow, i understand, i get it. a lot of people would be outraged. and i feel for both my
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daughter and for all the kids involved. the full truth needs to be in the public domain, their father is not a demon and their mother is not a saint and i'm not a home wrecker. we are real human beings and there is a real dynamic that was going on, good and bad, and we all made mistakes. >> bill: i'm going to step back here because i just loathe her. >> three divik points. she starts off very small. her shoulders are hunched and legs are crossed and hands in her lap. she is feeling slightly insecure. when she says i feel for my daughter and the kids involved. her voice inflection goes up which tells me she is definitely feeling insecure. then the last piece is when she reaches out to cuomo. you will see her hands go out like this. that's her pleading to please, understand me. side with me for a little bit. >> bill: tonya reiman, everyone. thank you. >> thank you. >> bill: i'm not going to put that -- lou dobbs on whether the economy will get better later this year giving the president a boost. and then dumbest things of the
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week under discussion this evening. carl rove, crosby stills and surfing dogs moments away. if you have copd like i do, you know how hard it can be to breathe and what that feels like. copd iludes chronic bronchitis and emphysema. spiva helps corol my copd symptoms by keeping my airways open a full 24 hours. plus, it reduces copd flare-ups. spiriva is the only once-daily inhaled copd maintenance treatment that does both. and it's steroid-free spiriva does not replace fast-acting inhalers for sudden symptoms. tell yr doctor if you have kidy problems, glaucoma, trouble urinating, or an enlarged prostate. these may worsen with spiriva. discuss all medicines you ta, even eye drops. stop taking spiriva and seek immediate medical help if yr breathing suddenly worsens, your throat or tongue swells, you get hives, vision changes or eye pain, or problems passing ure. other side effects include dry mouth and constipation. nothing can reverse copd.
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>> bill: thanks for staying with us. bill o'reilly in lowe's the boss segment. another rough week for the stock market as five huge american banks have their credit ratings downgraded. why should we care? how does that effect you and me. here now fox business anchor lou dobbs his program is beating the competition on cnbc which has many more subscribers so congratulations to lou dobbs. i don't know if people understand you have maybe, what, 60% of what cnbc has? >> right. >> bill: you are beating them at the 7:00 hour. that's pretty good. >> thank you very much. i appreciate it. >> bill: you are welcome. why should i care about banks being downgraded. >> only to the extent there is
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a bit of a barometer, an indicator that the economy is having some problems that they are not doing as well as they otherwise might. but in the -- at the end of the day, it's not something for a depositor or someone taking out a loan to worry about. investors need to pay attention to it because it does effect the cost of money to those banks but only at the margin. >> bill: those banks will have to pay more to get money in or something like that. >> that's right. it's suggests that they are riskier when things are riskier. you have to pay more for the privilege. that's exactly what's going on. >> bill: are these banks being mismanaged, badly run? is that why they are downgraded. >> the great irony here is bill these banks are better managed today than they were. >> bill: why are they being downgraded. >> he they are ratings agencies. they are trying to catch up with what they missed four years ago. in part that's exactly what it is. >> bill: it really doesn't matter. it's just a paper thing. >> this is just a paper thing. it's also at the margin. when we are talking about economic growth it's slowing
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to 2%. when we are talking about 25 million people out of work or under employed. we have much bigger problems than. this of course we do. that's the next question i want to ask you. i'm going to ask you one more. william did do you vein he duvae he has the horse. maybe i should buy gold, hoard some gold and put in a vault some place. you say. >> i say listen to duvane he said it was about property. now he is buying gold. >> get into the property deal so you can have a nice horse. gold is not something that i invest. in i believe that there are other more -- >> bill: you have confidence. lou dobbs, the guy who is beating cnbc. do you, lou dobbs, believe that we are okay, our currency is all right, our financial structure is okay at this moment? >> okay is a great word for it. >> bill: all right. if it turns worse, you have got to come back on and tell us. >> i know that.
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>> counting on you to be paul revere here. >> i'm trying to fulfill that onerous duty. >> if you don't we will hurt you. >> market suspect year-to-date. >> bill: so what. you know what it is, it's crazy. is it possible that in september, two months before the election, we can have a surge of great economic news that would help the president get reelected? possible? >> it's certainly possible that things will improve. but we just heard the feds say they are not going to improve much. unemployment will stay near 8%. economic growth. >> bill: this is a bernanke prognostication. do you share that? >> i do. i do believe if you see an uptick in markets. a strong uptick, a change in the, if you will, the climate, more positive, it will be because, in fact, people are getting a sense that governor romney is more likely to win the election. >> bill: i was just going to ask you that. did you just read my mind. >> yes, did i.
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you have your powers, i have mine. [ laughter ] >> bill: if the street feels that barack obama, who is much less friendly to capitalism, than governor romney is going to lose, that could reignite the stock market. >> absolutely. >> reignite a little bit more optimism. >> i will go so far, bill to say if there becomes a clearer indication that governor romney is going to win and the high level of confidence that will that will occur by the general climate, by the polls, you will see sharp increases in the stock market indexes, the dow, the s&p,. >> bill: all right. lou dobbs, everybody. there he is the titan. dumbest things on deck. quite a discussion group tonight. carl rove, crosby stills and nash, and surfing dogs. dumb is next. you can prevent gas with beano meltaways, or treat gas with these after you get it. now that's like sunblock before or sun burn cream later.
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>> bill: back of the book segment tonight, dumbest things of the week, ms. arthel is off this evening. so it's just me and gutfeld, fill in your own dumb joke here. all right. gutfeld. i'm going to begin with carl rove. now, earlier this week nancy pelosi said she could have had mr. rove arrested, she, nancy pelosi, in the u.s. attorney's case. you may remember that 8 attorneys were fired by the bush administration. some people thought mr. rove was behind it here is what carl rove said about that. >> it's nice to know the speaker pelosi wanted to have me arrested. it's nice to know that she thinks she had the power to. you know, she sounds a little bit like inspector clueso and mad queen but speaker pelosi was dead wrong in her assertion. >> bill: up top, i don't know whether you were paying attention because you know your attention span. but we mocked nancy pelosi for saying hey, this isn't about
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attorney general holder and suppressing documents and fast and furious. this is about voter suppression. so now she says that she could have had rove arrested and you say? >> well, here's the thing. to pelosi truth is like a face lift that you just keep stretching. >> bill: oh. >> yes, telling point. here is the thing, there is no way she could have arrested him because there was never a vote for contempt. that's complete bologna. >> bill: he didn't hold a government position, carl rove he was an appointee. couldn't have been any contempt. >> that's the point. it's all garbage. she just doesn't have a screw loose she has an entire hardware store in her head. >> bill: there was nothing proven that he did anything wrong, right. >> he is evil. >> bill: we know him personally. >> he sleeps upside down in a closet. [ laughter ] >> on the 18th floor. i know, i walked in on it. >> bill: so you, greg gutfeld of five and of red eye. >> yes. >> bill: believe that pelosi's comments are dumb and politically motivated. >> everything she does is
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politically motivated. when she eats that's politically motivated. there is nothing in her life that isn't motivated by ideology. >> bill: you know this group crosby stills and nash. >> yeah, i love free bird. >> bill: no, that's wrong. they first got together at woodstock. do you remember woodstock. >> yeah. >> were you born. >> i was born during woodstock it was disgusting. >> bill: there was a lot of mud. >> yeah, there was. that saved me. >> bill: they were on stage, that was the first appearance ever. they are still around. they are 70 years old and still touring like the beach boys. >> yes. >> bill: i'm at the concert the other night and watching them. i have known them for a long time. they sing a protest song about private bradley manning charged with treason for wikileaks deal. >> yeah. >> bill: roll the tape. >> in a white room ♪ trying to communicate. ♪ trying to hang in from. ♪ underneath the rushing weight. ♪ locked in the white room.
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acting time. bright light. down the line. >> bill: all right. so they are feeling sorry. and by the way private manning is in lesson worth right now is being held. he is going to be tried. if he is convicted for leaking these unbelievable documents which, if true, if true, we're not going to convict the guy. put u.s. soldiers in afghanistan in danger. he could go to jail for the rest of his life. and crosby stills and nash feels sorry for him. is he a political prisoner. >> if he is found guilty, they shouldn't put him to death. they should force him to listen to that song. that was quite possibly the worst thing that i ever -- who opened for these people bill ayers and the swinging socialist? what are you doing there, bill? did you lose a bet? >>. no i'm a reporter. no, i know them. >> going to that show is considered suicide. >> bill: i'm going to be fair here. okay, wooden ships, great song. okay? they have had a few great
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numbers over the years. >> musical equivalent of the golden girls. >> all right. you are being cruel. >> i am. i'm a cruel person. >> bill: i think that's obvious. the song was dumb because crosby stills and nash don't know anything about this. >> yeah. dumb the guy is a traitor. >> bill: san diego, california great town. >> yes great town. >> bill: when you are around the ocean you have to have surfing dogs. ♪ let's go surfing now. ♪ everybody's learning now. ♪ come on a safari with me. >> surfing dogs and their dads hung 10 this weekend. it's kind of unusual to see man's best friend on board. as an added bonus, this one was one for the books. the guinness book of world records for the most dogs on a surf board. now, that's something to bark about. >> bill: no, that's dumb. >> bill: why are they on the surf boards? >> i heard that president
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obama was going to show up because he thought that was seafood. [ laughter ] >> bill: i'm -- >> i'm never going to stop doing dog eating jokes. that was surf and turf for him that was all you can eat buffet. dogs don't know they are surfing. do they win? do they know? >> bill: that's what i'm asking. is there a prize. >> the prizes that they didn't drown. >> bill: right. that they survived. have you ever surfed? >> i have. >> so have i. >> bill: i'm not very good at i have to say. one of the things i'm not very good at. body surfing i can do i'm too tall for the surf board. guys like you and your stated temperature easier to surf. >> i surf in a hot tub. >> closer to the board. in fact you become part of the board, one with the board. greg gutfeld, everybody, there he is his email address, write directly to him. you don't need to go through me. pinheads and patriots 68-year-old bus monitor verbally attacked by 13-year-olds. we will be right back with it.
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>> bill: very good, chet. it is quite the conspiracy theory, phil. you may have a future as a novelist. jim kendall, bannockburn, illinois. wouldn't it be true that the president could pardon holder if he got convicted? glen beck is right. riding a school bus is not a right. as a retired principal i know. the kids should be denied bus privileges. james, buffalo, new york. bell, your recent talking points on the decline of american power is is evident in the school bus entertainment.
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it has generated a rotting culture. the greatest military in the world cannot save us from that. but we can save ourselves, james. thus this program and this network. gary williams. sandpoint, alaska. watching you you here in the beautiful aleutian islands. leslie harris, mid loathian texas. you don't really need my permission. watch out for the fresh stuff, though. taylor, bloomingdale, illinois. mr. o i'm celebrating my 21st birthday coming to see you and millner chicago on saturday. we'll see you at the rosemont theater, taylor. we are revved up and ready to go. go to billo'reilly .com for info. we have tickets for the matinee left. >> i'm 16 and killing lincoln is the best book i have read. thank you, savannah.
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many schools across the country now have killing lincoln on the summer reading list. it remains in the top five after nine months in the marketplace and if you buy it on bill o'reilly .com you get a free copy of the gettysburg address. this is brand new. by the book on bill o'reilly .com and we will send you the gettysburg address in a nice display and if you become a premium member or reh re-up yot killing lincoln free of charge. most sympathize with the bus monitor verbally assaulted. they mocked her weight and cursed her are out. this is what ms. klein said yesterday. >> they would mock out anything they could think of. i tried to pretend that they weren't doing this. i have escaped a lot of my life in trying to let things go. >> bill: well, the american people have spoken and donateed
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more than a half million dollars to ms. klein. is comfort money. generous americans wanting to help the woman to ease her pa n pain. so all of those who donated money to karen klein are compassionate patriots. is it for us tonight. check out the fox news factor website different from bill o'reilly .com. we would like you tosspot off about the factor from anywhere in the world. name and town name and town, name and town if you wish to oh pine. word of the day do not be a p l poltroon when writing to the factor. to write about the greg gutfeld segment, write directly to him. i do not want to have to explain the surf and surf reference o on the o'reilly factor. again, thanks for watching us tonight. i am bill o'reilly. always remember the spin stops right here. we are d
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