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tv   The O Reilly Factor  FOX News  July 26, 2012 8:00pm-9:00pm PDT

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good night from washington. go o greta. first, mr. bill. you beta. >> bill: o'reilly factor is on. tonight. >> there are some crimes that are so heinous that they cannot be left to the discretion of a judge like this guy murphy. thank god a hero has emerged in the awful child rape sentencing in brooklyn. u.s. attorney loretta lynch is coming to the rescue, embarrassing judge martin murphy and governors cuomo and christie as well. megyn kelly will report. ♪ i. [cheers] ♪ so in love with you. [cheers] >> bill: americans still like president obama even if they don't support his re-election. but why? john sununu and laura ingraham
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hat. also tonight, a new study says adolescents watch movies full of sex they are more likely to have sex. the culture warriors on that. can i come in? >> caution, you are about to enter the no spin zone. the factor begins right now. >> bill: hi, i'm bill o'reilly. thanks for watching us tonight. finally a hero to protect the kids that is the subject of this evening's talking points memo. andrew goodman raped two boys ages 11 and 13 over a period of four years. this savage pleaded guilty to 48 felony counts of criminal sexual acts. 48 counts.
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new york state judge martin murphy sentenced the monster to just two years in prison. outraging the victims, their families, and the brooklyn district attorney. murphy gave goodman the minimum sentence he could have given him life in prison. why was the judge so lenient? murphy refuses to answer the question. he is hiding under his desk. because of time served, goodman could be released in a few weeks. enter u.s. attorney loretta lynch who yesterday charged godman with a federal crime transporting him transporting he took to kid rock concert and had sex with the minor. if convicted on othe federal charge goodman could get 10 years in a federal prison. ms. lynch obviously doing this to protect children from goodman. something judge murphy is unwilling to do. she is a hero.
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and should be respected by all americans for standing up to a gross injustice. loretta lynch was appointed by president obama two years ago is a graduate of harvard law school and is being assisted in the prosecution by the fbi. finally, we see a public official willing to right a grievous wrong. finally. and we want the entire country to know it but what about new york state governor andrew cuomo? well, he remains silent in the face of a judicial atrocity that has embarrassed his state. new york does not have jessica's law and governor cuomo does not care. we challenged the governor to stand up and protect the children of the state. new jersey does not have jessica's law. governor christie was asked about that yesterday. >> i'm familiar with t but i don't think the legislature has done anything with it yet. a number of states have. ours haven't yet. if you are certain about it, get to your legislature and tell them to gets t passed. they send it to my desk i got
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a feeling i will put my signature on it. >> shepard: the reason new jersey does not protect children as it should one guy is blocking jessica's law that would be steve sweeney a democrat. the jessica's law bill is ready to go but sweeney is refusing to introduce it for a vote. how cowardly is that? now, we are asking you to help the kids as well. we have a petition for bill o'reilly.com we would like to you sign so we can give it to governors cuomo and christie. we believe governor christie will sign jessica's law. we would like him to be a bit more proactive and go after the guy who is blocking it in his state. governor cuomo remains a mystery. why? does he not care about a child rapist sentenced to two years in his state?le. lore cet that lynch an
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absolute hero. >> having spoken with the d.a.'s office brooklyn last week even they weren't necessarily expecting. this the thought at that point was that the next move would be try try to get the state attorney general to get this ant interview of mr. godman and now charges have been filed and now instead of getting out in september, which is what he is about to do. he will be arrested, transferred into federal custody upon his release from state prison he is facing 10 years mandatory up to life in prisonment. those who think it is harsh.
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>> not harsh. >> more fownts of child molestation and rape than sandusky and he got a life sentence essentially. this guy was getting out in two years, which is a month and a half from now after time served. if you didn't see it. this may be a coincidence. ms. megyn and i did the story in a very methodical way last week, a week ago. we walked it through. we called the judge. we gave the judge every opportunity. >> right. >> bill: to explain himself. judge gives us and the whole nation the finger. that's what he did. basically. i'm the judge. i'm not going to explain myself. but there is no rational explanation for this. >> bill: the victims were outraged and appealed directly to the judge not to do it. >> that's the thing. >> we talked about the fact that one person had -- one news organization was reporting based on a source close to the judge that he did it because he wanted to spare the victims the pain of a trial and the victims are standing up in court saying forget that i want the trial. i don't want the guy getting
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out in two years, judge, please hear me and he ignored them. lore cet that lynch is a hero and we will report that story. colorado, there is is an attorney making noise that he is going to file all kinds of lawsuits on behalf of the victim. >> apparently it has already been filed. according to reuters now been filed. guy in the theater on the night of the massacre with a friend shot and killed. >> it's an attorney who was in the theater. >> no, no. he has hired an attorney to represent him. >> he he was hired. he was there and his friend was killed. he has hired an attorney and what's the lawsuit. >> trauma and his friend was killed. the lawsuit is against the theater for not keeping them safe. warnerrer brothers who produced the movie. >> that's ridiculous. >> and any doctors treating the shooter but failed to disclose a known risk. so, the lawsuit against warner brothers is going to get thrown out there. is precedent for that one woman tried to kill the producers of natural born killers. remember that movie after she was shot in a similar manner it got thrown out.
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you cannot establish liability for a movie production company like this. movie theater, let the guy, in the shooter through the back door or through the doors where we all enter when we go to seat movie. then he exited through the emergency exit door and came back. in he propped it up. he went out and got his shooting paraphernalia and brought t back. in so maybe they will argue that the movie had some duty to keep the emergency exit secure. that's going to fail. the lawsuit against the potential doctors, we don't know whether this guy was under psychiatric care. if they can prove he was and there was a specific, has to be very specific threat saying you know, this friday night i'm going to go in the movie theater and shoot up the theater. >> bill: report it. >> duty to report that to the police. >> bill: finally the late michael jackson has three children and they are feuding with the other jacksons, members of the jackson family over michael jackson' will, correct? >> i don't even know who is feuding with whom. the family continues to just be so dysfunctional.
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she got custody of the three kids. >> who is she? >> catherine jackson. michael's mom. she is 82. >> their grandmother is now their custodian. she gets shipped off to some retreat in arizona. some resort in arizona by her actual children. michael's brothers and sisters, janet and the others. but she is supposed to be the mother, basically to her grandchildren. so they are left there in the custody of the nanny and the cook and whoever else runs the jackson estate but no caretaker. >> bill: how old are the kids. >> 14, 15 and 10. there is a nanny. grandma doesn't call. they goes away for a week and they can't reach her. jerry germane's son goes into court and says she can't be the guardian. make me the guardian. grandma is at some resort. the there you go. you t.j. who is the uncle to these kids, can you be their guardian but apparently catherine jackson is going to resume. >> there is a lot of money at
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stake here for caring for the kids and all of that. all right. it's a tabloid story but i wondered what it was all about. >> continued to be as distonguesal as dysfunctional family. >> should be done more. next on the run down, despite a majority of americans disapproving of job performance president obama's job performance rating is very high. why? emotional debate between lieu dobbs and jackson over gun violence. we will show you some of that upcoming. isn't it time you took the family into america's backyard? then you belong at bass pro shops. celebrate america's rich hunting traditions at the upcoming fall hunting classic - our biggest hunting show and sale of the year. trouble with a car insurance claim. [ voice of dennis ] switch to allstate. thr claim service is so good, now it's guaranteed.
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for a golf getaway. double miles you can actually use... but mr. single miles can't join his friends because he's getting hit with blackouts. shame on you. now he's stuck in a miniature nightmare. oh, thank you. but, with e capital one venture card... you can fly any airline, any flight, any time. double miles you can actually use. what's in your wallet? alec jr? it was a gift. >> bill: in the impact segment tent, president obama's job approval rating hovers around the mid 40s. many folks still like him. "u.s.a. today" gallup poll says in the likability
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category mr. obama scoring 60% while mitt romney just 30%. to be fair, the president is much better known than governor romney. joining us now from manchester, new hampshire, former governor of that state john sununu. does it surprise you that 60% of americans like barack obama? >> well, he started out with a high rating and he has maintained it. but he has had a really rough couple of weeks here. i think you will begin to see that to change. his you didn't build it moment i think is really resonating around the country. and i know he is trying to walk away from it saying it's out of context but when you look at the context the context is worse. and even worse than the context is the tone and the arrogant and insulting way he is addressing people who have had success. >> bill: the way i see this george w. bush had almost the same thing that people liked bush the younger, even when his policies on iraq and the economy were going south. they still separated his job
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performance from the man. and it seems like they are doing the same thing with barack obama. you know, he comes across as very accessible and kind of a certainly not an intimidating man. he keeps his composure almost always. so, while you are saying yeah, that his policy and his view of what american capitalism should be and i agree with that i think he made an enormous mistake saying that entrepreneurs really weren't responsible for their own success, i think that the folks are separating the policy from the guy. do you disagree. >> they always do that to the president. as you said, george bush had high ratings until the last maybe five or six weeks. and i think that's happening to the president. as he tries to walk away from what he just said, i think he is going to hurt himself even more. and you know he is saying he didn't mean what he said. in fact that's consistent what you would get out a community
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organizer handbook. it's his communal way of thinking about these things and reflected in about everything he has done in the last few years. that's going to hurt his popularity. >> bill: maybe his personal popularity. i'm not sure whether it will but it might. what about mitt romney at 30% likability? i know the governor for a long time. is he a nice guy. i never saw him even when he was getting pounded in the primaries, i mean, it got a little nasty, but he was always fairly composed. when he ran mass massachusetts mass commutes, he he didn't do anything like me or you obnoxious guys. >> which one of us gets the prize? >> bill: you and me are what we call hot personalities. we kind of get riled up and we called it way it is or the way we see it romney is more of a political kind of classy guy. only 30% likability. that surprised me. >> look, he is he a very disciplined guy.
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and in large settings that doesn't come across as warm. you get governor romney in with a bunch of 30 people and he really is extremely likeable. warm guy, funny guy. smart guy. guy who knows how to take tough decisions. a guy with a backbone that can make the tough decisions this country needs. and, frankly the country -- >> bill: does he have to sing an al greene song, too to get people to like him better? what does he have to do? you are an advisor of his. >> yeah. >> bill: you don't want to get into the election with a 30% likability. you want to get that up. is there something he can do? can he roller skate? play miniature golf? is there anything? >> let the people see him. >> speed boat that cost 300,000. i don't think that's the right way to go. maybe he gets a kayak. imil, look. half the country hasn't seen mitt romney even in a political situation. they ignore -- you know, half the country ignored the
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primaries. this election really starts a couple of weeks before the national conventions and in those two and a half months, mitt romney knows he is going to have to communicate his personality. and his policies. 2008 was an election of style over substance. i think we're in big enough trouble with over 8% unemployment and the 24 million folks that are suffering either unemployed or under employed. >> bill: that's a good point. >> substance. >> absolutely. >> going to be a substance election. >> bill: i must say i have known governor romney and i saw him one time at fenway park in boston. he was a really humble guy. it wasn't an act. that's why i'm surprised that most people haven't caught on yet. >> this guy i'm very happy to call my friend and enjoy being with him. >> bill: president obama did me was very very polite to me and my daughter. i think they are both good guys. i have to say that. >> most public officials as
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people on a person-to-person basis are very warm. >> i don't know about that governor. we may be going over the cliff with these two guys. >> no. 95% of them fall on that category. i know they do. >> governor, thanks very much. >> you and me. >> laura ingraham on the president wants likability and controversy surrounding a chicken fast food business and gay marriage. laura is next. [ manager 1 ] out here in the winds, i have to know the weather patterns. i upgraded to the new sprint direct connect. so i can get three times the coverage. [ chirp ] [ manager 2 ] it's like working in a giant sandbox with all these huge toys. and with the fastest push-to-talk... i can keep track of them all. [ chirp ] [ chirp ] [ male announcer ] upgrade to the new "done." with access to the fastest push-to-talk and three times the coverage. now when you buy one kyocera duracore rugged phone, for $49.99, you'll get four free. visit a sprint store, or call 855-878-4biz. [ chirp ]
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>> bill: week in review angle ms. laura. do you like president obama as a person? >> why does that matter? i mean. >> bill: i'm just curious. >> i don't know him. >> bill: do you like him. >> i met him a couple times. we have some mutual friends in common because we were in law
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school at the same time. i met him a couple times. he he seems fine. didn't say much. i didn't get my invitation like you did, o'reilly to the white house christmas party. i haven't gotten. i'm waiting for those. they are coming any day. >> bill: from what you see, separate the political stuff, we know you disagree with him on that. what you see his demeanor how he handles himself. 60% of americans like him personally. i think a lot of that has to do with his family. >> yeah. >> bill: you know, from what you see he looks like a pretty good guy, right? >> here is what i say to that. he seems like a great dad. he seems like a great husband. i think people love that i think at this point in our country's history, i don't think it really matters all that much whether he he has 60% and romney has 30%. i mean, i agree with you romney should get his numbers up. the bottom line is you can fire an employee, even if you personally really like the employee. right? you don't have to hate the employee to think the employee
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is probably not doing a great job position. >> understand that going to vote on who is going to be better for the country than who is going to be hosting "dancing with the stars." >> yeah. we like ryan seacrest. but although ryan has had more experience in business than obama. >> ryan would be great at the job. >> he is a pretty interesting guy. >> very smart in business. very smart. but, bill, i think, look, you are on to something. because the president has spent enormous amount of time over the past three and a half years burning his likability factor. because, he came and ran on this hope and change platform. it sounded very interesting to a lot of people and very historic. people were glad that there was a first african-american as president. i think some of that carries on though this day. at the same time, i believehe rg finally examined. whether he is likeable or
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really kind of a jerk is irrelevant to the question of whether we like what has happened to america. and i think a lot of people don't like that. >> here is a troubling story. there is a fast food chain called chick-fil-a. it's run by a very conservative guy in atlanta, right? is he out of atlanta? >> yes. >> bill: okay. he believes, this guy, dan cathy in traditional marriage. and he, i guess, has been critical of gay marriage and has made his opinion known. so now we have the mayor of boston and some other politicians trying to ruin his business because because they disagree with his political opinion on gay marriage. chick-fil-a, correct me if i am wrong, they sell to anybody, if you are gay and married and walk in and get a bucket, you are going to get one. i don't think they indicaterred barney frank's wedding. if barney had asked they
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probably would have. >> they are good business people. >> i find this story to be disturbing for a number of reasons. number one, we're supposed to be able to express our viewpoints in the united states without being called haters or horrible. that's his view. let's not forget up until a few months ago that was president obama's basic view that he believes in traditional marriage, thought there should be civil unions but probably not all for gay marriage at that point. he has kind of evolved and he changed his mind, that's fine. i still think the majority of americans probably generally agree with this particular ceo. so, he was asked about it, he says guilty as charged or something like that. you know, i believe -- >> bill: he said this is what i believe and why i believe it. this is the kind of environment we have at chick-fil-a but we are not -- you know, if it would be something else, if he were firing gay people or not selling to gay -- >> that would be disturbing. >> bill: this is an opinion that he holds.
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>> apparently you can't have that. >> trying to hurt his business. i think that's bad. >> apparently you can't have that opinion and run a business in the united states. you can't speak freely because if you do people will come and demonize you and try to destroy your business. by the way today chick-fil-a store owner in chicago where rahm emanuel is trying to shut them out of chicago came forward and said look we not only welcome gay people into our restaurant and we serve them proudly and with great dignity we welcome them and they hire them. so, they basically come out and said what gives here? you know, we're a christian owned business. >> bill: trying to hurt people with whom you disagree. you know, look. >> jobs. >> bill: i have been doing this 16 years. 16 years they have been trying to hurt me. the same thing is true with you. >> yeah. think of the jobs bill that chick-fil-a has created across the yatsd. >> bill: they didn't do it. it's because they had roads leading into chick-fil-a. >> they didn't do it themselves. they did it with the help of rahm emanuel. exactly. >> bill: heated verbal
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shootout between jesse jackson' daughter and lieu dobbs over gun violence in america. mr. dobbs will be here. next, culture warriors on a new study says if teenagers watch movies full of sex they are more likely to have sex are more likely to have sex themselves. when i found out my irregular heartbeat put me at 5 timesgreater risk o, my first thoughts were about my wife, and my family. i have the most commonype of atrial fibrillation, or afib. it's not caused by a heart valve problem. i was taking warfarin, but my doctor put me on pradaxa instead to reduce my risk of stroke. in a clinical trial, praxa® (dabigatran etexilate mesylate) reduced stroke risk 35% better than warfarin. and unlike warfarin, with pradaxa, there's no need for regular blood tests. that's really important to me. pradaxa can cause serious, sometimes fatal, bleeding. don't take pradaxa if you have abnormal bleeding and seek immediate medical care for unexpected signs of bleeding, like unusual bruising. pradaxa may increase your bleeding risk if you're 75 or older, have a bleeding condition like stomach ulcers,
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have sex themselves more partner and use no condoms. there is no coalition between what hollywood puts out and behavior. join us is senior editor at in touch magazine in for gretchen carl son this evening. the author of the new provocative novel sly fox. all right. janine, movies and behavior, what say you? >> look, we put our kids in front of a television to learn how to count, to learn how to spell. sesame street. we are shocked to find out oh my goodness if they see sex in a movie they might replicate it. now we have dartmouth and the university of missouri who proved based upon a study that they tracked for six years that the kids who have seen sexual content in movies tend more likely to have sex earlier. more partners and risky sex. what a shock. who are we surprising here? >> so you believe the study? >> i believe the study. there is a correlation. by the way kids are also titillated by this stuff, too. you don't think that they are going to start having sex.
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>> bill: curious about this stuff. >> 1200 kids in this. not a huge sample of people. we also don't know how they were raised. what their parents and family taught them. who their friends were. what other movies they saw. i know growing up i was not allowed to see r rated movies when i was 12. i don't know. were these kids seeing r rated movies when they were 12. >> a difference when you were growing up. now you can access almost every r rated film on the internet. that's the troubling part. adolescence, the patients can't be monitoring you 24/7. there are kids in my neighborhood who watching the exorcist i mean 10, 11, they have this little computer on their laptop and they are watching the exer cyst. >> why do we have pgg and every other rating. >> walk into the theater. >> at home they can get it and that's the point. >> in the study they say some g-rated movies have sexual content which i'm very confused about. g-rated does that mean snow
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white. >> bill: didn't alvin go study? >> the prince did kiss snow white to wake her up does that mean sexual content. >> let's go back. all i can say is that when i saw dirty harry, i didn't want to go out and shoot somebody, all right? >> didn't titillate you. these kids have sexual interest. >> bill: dirty harry was exciting to boys and this and that when i saw the graduate mrs. robinson and dustin hoffman i wasn't hanging around 35-year-olds. know wasn't. i am trying to thinking back was there ever a movie that i saw that made me want to or that i actually did something based upon what i saw on the screen in the answer is. no there isn't one movie that i saw except godzilla and i canceled my trip to tokyo and that was it. >> because you were raised a certain way. >> that's true. i was raised by a father who would hold me accountable for my actions. therefore, my actions were muted until i was about 12 or 13. >> that's the kids in this study. 12 to 14 and then they track
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them. that's exactly the point. they also track them. >> kim is making an interesting point. we live in a much more secular age. i was drummed into if i committed a moral sin i was going to go to hell. now nothing matters. no consequences for anything see it i'm going to do it. >> they did this study in 2003. that was before twitter. >> wait. what did they find out in 2003? the same thing? >> they started this in 2003 when the kids were 12 and 14. >> move forward 2009 is when they did -- >> -- track their behavior. >> by the way in terms of the study, they took into account the socioeconomic structure. the family values. they separated. they said in this study the influence of movies on their behavior 1200 people you can't make a definitive determination from just one study. >> bill: in this day and age with the internet that things become very very attractive to kids. there are far fewer restraints
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on children in america than there were 10, 15 years ago. >> that's why they are trying to make some movies that have smoking in t r rating. this effects kids, too. >> they blank it out. they actually do. >> bill: thanks very much. >> we are not doing the cougar? >> bill: that's right we were going to do the cougars. we ran out of time. let me explain to everybody. there is a sign that's really really offensive in west hollywood. what a shock. there it is. so we're going -- we will do that next week because we ran out of time tonight. that was an interesting discussion. i appreciate it alert toya special factor series next week. the strangest moments ever on this program. we went back to the archives and found some really crazy stuff. all next week we will show t to you. the strangest moments in factor history. when key woman right back tonight, big verbal shootout over gun violence lou dobbs vs. santita jackson. that after [ male announcer ] this is anna, her long day teaching the perfect swing begins with back pain and a choice.
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now? not so much. i got lotrimin ultra. it penetrates to soothe symptoms while it cures athlete's foot at its core. prescription strength lotrimin ultra. put your best foot forward. >> bill: thanks for staying with us, much discussion about gun violence in america. earlier this week i cited the tough gun laws in chicago and new york city that have not, have not stopped gun violence. lou dobbs also embraced that theme on his program. >> how you can sit there talking about gun control when you have already the strongest gun control law in the country in effect in chicago and you
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are watching dozens of people die almost every weekend? >> because you have a cultural problem. we go to war. >> a cultural problem. >> no. >> oh my gosh. >> there is a law. >> go to lunch. absolutely. yes, we do. >> there is no culture in this country. >> yes, we do. i love this country. and i love this country but we are too violent, lou, you cannot deny that. >> bill: here now is lou dobbs. santita johnson believes that violence is a way of life in some precincts. is that what she is saying? >> i infer that there is a rationale about the culture or subculture that is the reason for gun violence. i reject that personally. >> bill: let's explore it a little bit further though. she says that the violence in chicago which has very tough gun law but doesn't really enforce it by the way. isn't the fault of individuals who are shooting people. it's the fault of society who
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made them shoot people through deprivation and oppression. isn't that what she is saying? >> i think that is in large measure what she is saying. and that poverty the context. the action that a racial base may be the context or the crime. all of that may be contributory. the reality is if we are not enforcing our laws. if we are not setting certain standards and enforcing those sanders as a society. we are going -- we are going to watch this chaos continue. okay. now, the colorado massacre shooter, he wasn't deprived. the guy who grew up in san diego. >> absolutely. >> bill: he went to the university of california. he was going to ph.d. no deprivation there. no cultural aspect to his violence. he just wanted to kill people. then that brings us to how should society control his access to heavy weaponry.
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not hunting rifles or handguns. no sane person is going to say that that should be banned. but heavy weaponry. i mean, what's your opinion on that. >> an ak is a 762 round. not a heavy weapon by any reasonable definition. heavy weapons rise to 30 caliber machine guns. 50 caliber machine guns. some of the heavier calibers. i believe that what we have on the books right now, as laws are adequate. what we are kidding ourselves about. >> bill: wait, wait. what we have on the books right now is adequate. do you know that since 2011, all right, the federal government has demanded that in the states of arizona, california, new mexico, and texas, the border states, that if you sell an a.k. two or more semiautomatic rifles, all right? or a detachable magazine with a caliber greater than 22, you
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have to report it to the federal government. so they know who is buying it. that's what i said earlier this week. i said that gun dealers who are dealing in this kind of armament, all right, should report to the fbi who is buying. so that they can cross-reference. let me give you the more stark example. say this shooter in colorado, who is now, they are saying, we are reporting, fox is reporting sent a letter to a psychiatrist that he was gonna do heavy dang to people, all right? this is what fox news is reporting. if that psychiatrist had reported him as the psychiatrist should have, if it's true, to the authorities, and then he bought weaponry, the fbi could have cross-referenceed and seen that. >> the fbi has plenty on its plate. the fact is the psychiatrist and the psychologists in this country are not meeting any obligation of duty to society when they refuse to report people who are deeply
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troubled. >> bill: stay on the guns. >> i'm not going to stay on the guns because this goes well beyond guns. >> bill: do you object to this law in the border states? >> i think it's absurd. >> bill: do you think the law is absurd. >> absolutely absurd. the reason it was put in effect. regulation by the alcohol tobacco and firearms because. >> bill: the border war. >> no. because attorney general eric holder contemporaneously was trying to run a p.r. campaign about american guns in mexico as the mexican government was watching the slaughter of 55,000 -- no, no. let me use this number and put it in context. >> right. >> bill: 55,000 people murdered since 2006 in mexico. >> in mexico. >> because of the drug cartel violence. >> bill: you don't want any reporting of any a.k. sales or anything like that. >> i have got no problems with the existing laws which do, by the way. >> you have a problem with existing law? >> on the border. >> you have to report it. >> i think it's silly. >> >> bill: you think it's silly. >> i think it's silly and i
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will tell you further why. >> 30 seconds, go. >> in context, we have a psychiatrist, a psychologist, that has no responsibility for troubled people. what are we going to do? are we going to ban batman movies because this guy decided to be the joker? >> bill: look. nobody wants that lou dobbs, everybody. very interesting debate. >> where was the debate? it was a so. >> bill: coming next the olympic edition. factor tip of the day. some stuff you can eat that may make you stronger and smarter. we're coming right back. [ male announcer ] summer is here. and so too is the summer event. now get an incredible offer on the powerful, efficient c250 sport sedan with an agility control sport-tuned suspension. but hurry before this opportunity...disappears. ♪
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>> back of the book segment tent, the olympic edition. quiz kids martha maccallum
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playing from hollywood, south carolina. "fox & friends" guy steve doocy representing shirley. like it win great prizes sign up on bill o'reilly.com. about to go on vacation for six months last ha are a here. >> i will be back 2013. does that work for you? >> bill: got to get her agent. i have to get her agent. here is question number one, mohammed alli known as cacioss clay victory from rome. >> coveted gold medal for tremendous victory in the light heavyweight division of the olympic boxing championship. >> he made headlines when he claimed to have done what with that olympic gold medal? >> the answer is, threw it in a river. >> that wasn't nice.
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>> whoops. >> would have been nicer if he gave t to a waitress as a tip. >> that's right. very astute observation. >> doocy breaks on top but don't panic he usually falls back. here is question number two swimmer mark spitz. won a world record seven gold medals. >> this final victory spitz had broken every existing olympic record. >> spitz was an amazing talent. he also attributed some of his success to what he called his good luck piece. and what was that? the answer is, yes, his mustache. just like gracho marks. the same sort of situation except good groucho couldn't sw.
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>> maccallum thought he was cute i guess it was. 1936 summer olympics took place in berlin, germany with adolf hitler in attendance. jesse owens stole the show winning four gold medals. >> and the games are on. here in the semi final heat of the 100-meter dash catching blinding speed of jesse owens crack being the world record in the incredible time of 10/.2 seconds. >> all right when owens came home to the u.s.a. he claimed a u.s. president snubbed him by never congratulating him on his victory. what president was he referring to? >> f.d.r. >> what? >> yeah. isn't that interesting that allegation comes from owens himself. >> i didn't see it on the list. it was a visual error. optical allusion. i didn't hear.
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>> i was looking at the list. >> it's definitely fdr though. >> i would like credit for it because we are so close and you know what i meant. >> she is this close to vacation lay off her. >> bill: i have heard good excuses as a teacher. i actually said it and it was on the screen somehow ms. martha didn't quite notice it. >> i was absent for just about five seconds. >> crew is not buying it nobody is buying it. >> i knew it was fdr though just for the record. >> bill: here is question number four, the 1992 dream basketball team also called the finest group of athletes ever to play together. dominated the olympic site in barcelona and brought home the gold. [cheers] >> >> now, the agreement team was stacked with talent including one player who served in the u.s. navy for two years. who was the veteran on the dream team?
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very easy question answer is c david robinson went to annapolis. >> i knew fdr this one i will fess up i had no idea. i know larry bird and michael jordan. >> david robinson from annapolis. >> now i know which is the great thing about this because can you learn something. >> an antonio spurs, i think he did. >> he doesn't know. don't ask him. >> i got it right. you missed it lay off of me. >> bill: who did you play for? yes, rirl was right. >> ding ding ding. >> bill: final question maccallum loses. an inspiration to girls across the country with the gold medal performance in l.a. ♪ i like that. ♪ can't get enough ♪ pure and simple toasted wheats ♪ now go get your wheaties, that's what this girl eats. >> watch out big boys.
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>> bill: yes, i will. okay, now, the year will mark the first time women have outnumbered men on the u.s. olympic team this year. when were the women first allowed to compete in the olympic games? cards up, please, the answer is a, 1900. so, maccallum, you didn't get any right, did you? >> no. one was fdr which i'm counting. >> bill: okay. maccallum was counting. >> it was actually 1900. >> bill: have a nice vacation. >> i think it's time. don't you? >> see you on groundhog's day. [ laughter ] >> bill: on deck, the factor tip of the day. some food that will make you stronger and quite possibly smarter. listen up mccallum. the tip 60 seconds away. building pass, corporate card, verizon 4g lte phone. the global ready one ? yeah, but you won't need... ♪
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hajimemashite. hajimemashite. hajimemashite. you guys like football ? thank you so much. i'm stoked. you stoked ? totally. ... and he says, "under the mattress." souse le matelas. ( laughter ) why's the new guy sending me emails from paris ? paris, france ? verizon's 4g lte devices are global-ready. plus, global data for just $25. only from verizon.
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>> tip of the day about good stuff to eat in just a moment. but we want you to become a bill o'reilly dot-com premium member. we will have auon a town hall meeting just for premium members. and you get a free, signed copy of "killing lincoln" or "killing kennedy." check out premium membership. now to the mail... >> am a sucker for running mr. rove's anti-obama ad? we are fair on this program. >> that's because the president's running the country. so of course, there will be more discussion about him. but our hard-newspeople are fair.
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[chuckles] >> just a little levity. >> not telling anyone to do anything. you are free to take or leave the tip of the day. >> might be a little overreaction, liz. we will miss you. >> very healthy, barbara. and very economical.
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>> lthank you. finally, the aforementioned and appantly very controversial factor tip of the day. we continue with this week's theme of good health without pain. everybody's telling us what we should not eat. how about food that makes us stronger? strengthens our immune system. tip of the day, things that are relatively inexpensive. wild salmon, cinnamon, sauerkraut and blueberries, but they don't work very well on tuna. these are just suggestions, we are not trying to force you to eat blueberries. we want to you feel good. that's it for us tonight. check out the fox news factor web site. please, spout off about the factor. name and town if you wish to opine. word of the day -- no maladdiction. ooh, great words. no maladdiction when writing to the factor. again, thanks for watching u

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