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tv   Hannity  FOX News  May 28, 2013 6:00pm-7:01pm PDT

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eldritch when writing. i-like that word. please remember the spin stops right here. we are definitely looking out for you! >> welcome to "hannity." tonight an investigation has been launched into whether or not the united states attorney general lied under oath. we have a complete update on this developing story. but he's not the only member of the obama administration who is misleading the american people. we have uncovered new evidence to suggest that the irs is still at this very hour targeting conservatives. if this is true it will directly contradict what the president and his top aides have been saying for week. >> despite all the media interest in our april, 2013 awareness, it's important to remember that the conduct, of course, stopped a year early.
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>> now according to some that is platent lie because they are representing more than two dozen conservative groups that claim the irs harassed them after that date. and they are calling out the administration saying this abuse of power was related to one rogue office in cincinnati. take a look. this was from an irs office in california. it was sent to a conservative group and included dozens upon dozens of questions and demands. needless to say that's a long way from cincinnati. here's anotherler, also from california, requiring the group with the forbidden word patriot in its title to supply the tax agency with mounds of information. and remember when we were told nobody in d.c. was involved in orchestrating the political witch hunts? then why did somebody from the washington headquarters send thisler to the albuquerque tea party back in 2010?
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two attorneys are hoping to get the answer to that question. jay and rob. good to he sue, guys. >> good to be here, sean. >> is what jay carney said that this stopped in may of 2012, is that a truthful statement, jay, or is that another thing he has to contradict at some point? >> it's absolutely incorrect as a matter of policy. we have a letter we received from -- letters from last year from the acting, head of the tax-exempt and she's now on administrative leave. we have letters from lawyers in washington d.c. i am holding in my hand a lawsuit being filed in u.s. district court tomorrow morning representing conservative groups, not all tea party groups, there are other conservatives in the complaint and this complaint, about an inch thick, does not compare to
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the amount of documents that skip manhandling with the irs on our behalf. he has been dealing with the agents on this during the last year and a half. he will tell you it's documents, sean. mounds of documents. >> skip, tell us what you know. >> well, i can see every document that goes through that comes from a tea party group, one of our clients, goes back to the irs. i have been dealing with the irs agents for about a year and a half. we have provided a great deal of information. we've provided in one case 688 pages of data to answer their questions and that still has not satisfied them. we still have ten of our groups have not been given any type of tax-exempt status. of our original clients we only have 15 approved, none have been disapproved, but we have -- what you immediate to understand is from the time they submit their initial paperwork until they get contacted the first time with additional questions has ranked from as low as four months up to
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25 months, and the vast majority are over one year. >> isn't it interesting, because a lot of this was leading into the 20 is it 11 election after the tea party's success in 2010. do you think this was a delay tactic? have you concluded, jay, maybe they did this for political purposes to sort of neuter or neutralize the tea party movement? >> sean, i do. and i'll tell you why for two reasons. number one, the president and senate democrats were calling on investigations of these conservative groups going back before the 2012 election. so when you have chuck schumer and dick durbin saying they can't believe the irs did this, really? they signed letters asking the irs to do this. that's one. number two, the president made comments about these conservative organizations. and there's a third one. e-mails between the inspector general's office and the congressional staff indicates this report was actually ready probably in september or certainly late september, but it
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kept getting delayed. and i cannot help but think now that the inspector general admitted, which, of course, is the truth, we knew it all the time, he never spoke to anybody in the white house everybody did not in fact do an investigation, that it was only an audit, couple that with what skip just said, there were up to two years when there was no communication between the irs. in fact skip will tell you, we sent letter after letter after letter in some of these files and never got a response from the irs even acknowledging receipt. >> we will go through the timeline later in the program tonight. but lois learner new about this in june of 2011. the audit that was done internally by the irs was finished in may of 2012. we were told by doug shumann in march of 2012, no, we aren't doing this when he should have known better, if he didn't. so the timeline seems way off here, no? >> it does. skip could answer this directly, but the fact is, sean, there was a series of times, gaps. i'm talking about six months
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where no communication from the irs. skip, if i'm not mistaken, some of that was where you were sending out letters and no response was coming back from irs to the agents we were dealing with. they said they couldn't answer the question, and they would hold back questions and rehit others? >> that's exactly right. it's one of those situations where we had -- we finally were retain by a client, we contacted the irs to ask for additional time to answer them. we would get no response. we would send another letter and get no response. send another letter, get no response. five or six months has passed and then we would get a letter back saying never mind the previous questions which we had been working on all along, with he are setting up with new questions and that's happened on more than one occasion. >> coming right out of washington d.c., sean. that's where it was coming out of. not some rogue office in cincinnati. >> the white house also said they didn't know anything about
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this, but then we find out the chief of staffs and others were informed about it and there was a coordination with the treasury on forcing this question or faking this question. >> correct. >> tell us more about that lawsuit. we just held it up that you are going to file tomorrow. >> this one is being filed in u.s. district court. we represent 25 groups. sean, i will tell you, it is about an inch thick and it will require the irs to file serious answers. i served in the counsel's office out of law school. i spoke to a friend who also worked in that office and you have former irs lawyers, myself and this other friend of mine and a whole team of lawyers going after this very, very seriously, sean, when you look at this lawsuit, they will have to give answers, there will be deposition, we will go to the agents and find out who told them what. i will tell you from my experience as being a junior lawyer, a trial lawyer with treasury, there is no way this came out of rogue agents. and we've got letters from washington d.c.
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in fact, agents were telling people in washington, they were getting supervisory approval. and cincinnati is not a small office. that's the largest office for processing taxes and applications. and one other thing. this idea there was a huge increase in 2010, actually if you look at it factually there was not, of applications. that was not true also. i don't know how the white house is going to explain it or white house counsel will explain it but we will take a lot of deposition necessary a very big lawsuit. >> do you think we were lied to about this being out of one rogue agency? >> no doubt in my mind this was not one rogue agent and one rogue agency. this was irs which is part of treasury. sean, obviously we know now the white house knew what was going on and helped try to figure out how to get the information out before the ig report came out. there's a lot here. >> good to see you both. appreciate it. who knew what, when and where. dana perino, we will go through the timeline and break it down for you who knew what and when. and liz cheney will join us
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later. first the attorney general, did he lie under oath when testifying on capitol hill? there is been an investigation launched to answer that very serious question. we have the tape. we will update you on that breaking story out of washington when we return. don't forget you get to pick the video of the day and there are a lot of good options tonight. you will see a portion of each throughout the hour and you get to vote on "hannity" and also on twitter. first up, senator rand paul like you have never seen him before delivering a hilarious stand-up comedy routine on obamacare. >> i know you have some bad things about obama what care and i haven't been a big fan but your government just wants to take care of you. they don't think -- they don't think you are smart enough to make these decisions, okay? with the spark miles card from capital one, bjorn earns unlimited rewas for his small business take theseags to room 12 please.
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>> welcome back to "hannity." did the attorney general of the united states, older, lie under oath? there is statement he made during testimony he gave earlier this month about the justice department looking into the personal records of journalists. watch this. >> with regard to the potential prosecution of the press for the disclosure of material, that is not something that i have ever been involved in or heard of or would think would be a wise policy. >> now just days after that
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testimony we learned that the justice department did in fact access among other things the personal he e-mails of fox news mr. rosen and it was eric holder himself who signed off on the search warrant. according to a report in the "daily beast" holder felt personal remorse after the washington post broke the story about rosen. so can holder survive these scandals? will he be fired and should he be fired? joining me is patrick j buchanan. joe, when he says with regard to potential prosecution and this is not something i have ever been involved in or heard of and or would think would be wise policy, but he signed off on it. >> you can't make this stuff up. you can't. >> good answer. pat, don't you love when somebody surrenders on the first question? >> look, if i were the president, if i were advising the president, i would advise
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him to accept eric holder's resignation. >> you mean and for his resignation. >> no, no, accept it. have him walk into the room and say i accept your resignation. >> i think you are right. >> i think that's just -- this is all going to get investigated, the truth will come out. i don't think eric holder has handled it well. >> and he lied. >> that i don't know about. >> it seemed like he lied. it's his signature. >> it does not look good. but my point is whether he did or not, those consequences will come down the line. but i think his ability to get anything done, those days are numbered. >> i agree with you on all counts. patrick j buchanan, this is a serious matter. we go back to valerie and joe wilson, will the same standard apply to eric holder? >> there is a lyrics between what he told the committee and
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what he did in the matter of james rose went the espionage act and the rest of it. he has an obligation to clarify that. i agree with joe to the extent i don't know whether he committed perjury or lied or misled or made a mistake or was referring to nonprosecution, but he really has an obligation to clear it up. sean, when the president of the united states himself gets up in a speech and talks about we don't want to criminalize legitimate journalism, it seems to me that's a backhand across the face of mr. holder and he ought to get the message. >> it's not clear to me they were trying to criminalize this. i think they were doing the tactic of we have -- of using the accusation to get what they wanted. >> but the is the 17 espionage act? >> right. i think it's crazy that's what they did but i think that's what they were doing. i think in the end it will turn
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out he wasn't lying. there was no intent to prosecute james rosen. which anybody who knows him knows there is like -- his flight risk is -- there is no flight risk. >> this is not the first time. let me take you back. this is back in may of 2011. this is eric holder being asked when did you find out about operation fast and furious? watch closely this answer. >> when did you first know about the program officially i believe called fast and furious? to the best of your knowledge, what date? >> i'm not sure of the exact date but i probably heard about fast and furious for the first time over the last few weeks. >> after that there was an investigation. he knew ten months before because they had memos discussing fast and furious. and if you remember, they voted to hold holder in contempt of congress. this is not the first time that he's lied. >> sean, i mean, look, this is the kind of slippery language and behavior you would expect not of an attorney general of the united states, but of some
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lawyer who really is well down the line in terms of ethics or -- this is the attorney general of the united states. the one thing the administration and the pes. the one thing that can keep him out of trouble other than incompetence, which is going to be placed upon them, is if they simply tell the honest truth to the american people. mr. holder does not look like he's attempt toing to do that. >> there is either one or two lies here and let me explain it and get your reaction. either he lied to congress or misled congress which is a violation of the law or he misled the judge to get the approval of the sweeping search using the espionage act. >> that's the one i think is more likely than lying to congress. >> why? >> because i think it's a a typical prosecutorial active to accuse the wife to get the husband. you do crazy things. they aren't really trying to put the wife in jail, they are
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trying to get her to turn. so they went after james rose tone get the records. >> you think he misled the judge? >> that's where i think it's possible. but here's the difference with this one. fast and furious, the facts are a lot of democrats went to the defense. it was seen as a partisan attack by the left. >> it wasn't. >> but there are a lot of other instances where erin schwartz, the justice department prosecution of him and the left was all inflamed about it and the right wasn't there. on this one it's coming from both sides now. both sides are at the tipping point. that's where this could be more serious than any of the others. >> there's another point, sean, and that is the attorney general's client, who is the president of the united states of america. and he does not like -- he certainly does not like what eric holder did with regard to james rosen, was out there publicking about it. he's distanced himself from the
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attorney general. he was not told about the a.p. full-court press. he was left in the dark on that. you have to think the president of the united states is sitting there somewhat unhappy himself at the position he's been put in by his attorney general. >> the president can handle that, pat. what if this were john ashcroft and george bush was the president, in your opinion? >> no one would be saying anything. >> the decider would decide. >> the decider would decide. >> we have to disagree about something here. i mean, quick -- >> nobody would say anything. >> yeah, nobody would say anything. >> and you are sticking to that? >> yeah, i'm stick to go that. >> i appreciate your honestly. holder has to go. the president should fire him. >> i think it would be better -- i think the right thing would be for eric holder to tender his resignation on his own without being forced, without the president doing it or congress forcing it. >> why not what libby got? >> first of all, we don't know
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the facts on that and i really don't believe he did. i just don't think dethat. >> i think the evidence is overwhelming. >> now we are disagreeing. >> now we are disagreeing. all right. good to see you, my friend. god bless you. >> good seeing you, pat. >> coming up next, a special hannity investigation into the obama's administration about who knew what and when about the enemy scandal and did they know the tax agency was targeting. you get to pick the video of the day. time to take a look at choice two. this features the cast of the french prince of bellaire. take a look. ♪ ow you can give yourself a kick in the rear!
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>> welcome back to "hannity." one of the most fascinating things to watch the past few weeks has been the ever-changing timeline about who knew what and when about the irs scandal. at first nobody seemed to know anything but as the days go by it evolves quite a bit. take a look. >> can you give us assurances that the irs is not targeting particular groups based on political leanings? >> yes, i can give you a assurances. there's absolutely no targeting. >> they added the names tea party and patriot to the list of case that is should be centralized in this group. >> i first learned about it from the same news reports that i think most people learned about this. i think it was on friday. >> i have reviewed the treasury department's watchdog report, and the misconduct that it uncovered is inexcusable.
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>> i'm sorry, sir, i'm not going to be able to answer. >> i don't know the details, sir. >> i frankly was unaware. >> i don't know the precise date. >> i don't remember. >> it's not my area. >> i don't know. >> i personally don't remember. >> i will not answer any questions or of it about the subject matter of this meeting. >> we had to wait, appropriately, until the report was publicized oregon published for the president to be able to review it and respond,'s did very quickly. >> there was a white house counsel, rumler was notified on april 24th. >> who else besides the chief of staff were told about this? >> some other members of senior staff. >> do you have the names? >> i don't have a list for you. >> you were asked in a briefing last week about white house officials being aware. you mentioned an office but you never mentioned the chief of staff. >> i think i said i didn't know until friday but i'm getting this information to you now.
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>> doesn't answer why the president wasn't told. >> the counsel made the decision that this is not the kind of thing that you notify the president of, of an investigation that's not complete. >> well, the president doesn't know about everything that is going on in every agent of government. should mr. binger have known since this is his neighboring district and in cincinnati with the irs office is, i don't think you can hold him accountable. >> i can't account for every conversation that may have been had outside the white house. i can't tell you how many people knew. >> all right. so are you confused yet? now someone who has been behind that podium in that very pressroom, dana perino, former white house press secretary, how are you? >> great. better than he is. just kidding. >> what do you think of how they have gone out with the message benghazi, the irs scandal, james rosen, they have gotten a lot of things wrong and they have to go back and adjust and adjust again and again. why? >> i'm always careful not to blame the communicator for what
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is a fact-based problem or a policy program. the communicators take a lot of grief for a lot of things and sometimes they don't deserve it. sometimes they say they have a major communications problem. it's not really the case. it's actually a policy problem. however, in these three instances and particularly with the irs they have a major communications problem. and if i were those guys in the white house now, i would be rethinking everything and i would -- there are some things i would recommend. >> before we get to your recommendations, is it a communications problem or is it maybe a communications problem with a deeper root, a lock of desire to be forthcoming and honest? >> i hope not. but they are going to have to do some convince to go make sure that people don't think that. there will be a certain part of the population who will not believe them no matter what they say now because their story has changed so many times. what i cannot imagine is that the white house counsel would not have told me about something like this coming down the pike. even out of professional
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courtesy sake so i could plan ahead. i would have been terribly embarrassed if president bush ever said he learned something from the tv cameras and watching the news. >> he says that a lot, apparently. >> and seems like it's a tactic. >> let me give you a quick few timeline bullets. learner new about this in june of 2011. we know that in march of 2012 then head of the irs testified this is not happening but they finished their internal investigation in may and then they found out they did know they were doing it. but they really knew a lot earlier. so that's a problem. and the issue of the white house counsel knowing when carney said nobody in the white house new at all. they even coordinated how to release this. >> maybe he was not in the loop. i don't know. that's something they have to figure o going back to the earlier time frame, what worries me is they actually didn't think they did anything wrong. they only started to realize they did something wrong when
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the press got negativity you can look at eric holder as well. the only time he feels remorse and regret about subpoenaing reporters is when it comes out in the press. >> if you are jay carney, how are you feeling today? >> well, it seems to me that he seems to think everything is okay. press secretaries are like a duck above water. everything looks calm on the surface but underneath you are paddling furiously. i think i would ask for a fuel communications audit. one of the problems is they don't remember what they have said the day before and they don't know what other people knew and when. so i would bring in an independentent person, probably a lawyer and do an audit of who said what when and then i would go into the family theater and hire the people who played ryan and romney in the debates and
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bring them in and say hit me with your hardest questions and that's where they find out what they don't know and then decan come clean. >> are you just putting everybody on the same page to regurgitate talking points? >> if that's the way you look at it. but if you are the press secretary you need something to go from that tells you exactly what people have said and when the holes are and what you immediately need to fix. they think it will go away. on a three day weekend that works for a lost things but not this. they have legs and a divided congress and darrell issa has hearings already scheduled. it won't go away. >> you want one day they should come clean and dump everything? >> they have three issues. the irs, one day cleaning house on that issue. there is a hearing coming up next week. i think they should do it before the hearing. i don't know if they have enough time to pull it all together. what my concern is that the lawyers are telling them to be even more careful now and that's when you are going to have
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everybody closing ranks and not talking. that would be the worst thing from the communication standpoint and not good for president obama. >> good advice. i don't think they have -- i think when you are not telling the truth completely and you are covering up. >> it's harder to remember what you said. >> you can't lie. good advice. dana, thank you. coming up next, the enemy is, quote, everywhere. those are the chilling words of a top british intelligence official, this after another soldier was stabbed by a terrorist. liz cheney is here to respond. and we always want to hear from you on hannitylive.foxnews.com. here's a sneak-peek at choice three. this involves a wedding party, a lake and a photo op and one bride and one groom that won't soon forget.
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>> welcome back to "hannity." there was another vicious terrorist attack in england over the weekend from a private was approached from behind and stabbed in the neck with a knife or box cutter when he was on patrol near a train station. the officials say the suspect was praying moments best incident and police are treating the stabbing as crutch. meanwhile new information is emerging about the muslim terrorist behind the brutal pushed after british soldier last week. the 28-year-old british citizen had rain rested by the kenyon police on suspicion of planning to join an al-qaeda cell in somalia back in 2010. the former head of the british intelligence agency, james stellar remington, is warning the enemy is everywhere. he is warning them to alert them
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of any possible security threat. is europe making a deadly mistake by ignoring the threat made by radical extremism and is the u.s. and president obama following the sammy course? with me is liz cheney. liz, they aren't linked, don't appear to be in any way, but it's a reminder. how do you juxtapose what happened in these two instances with the speech the president gave at gitmo and terrorism? >> you put your finger on it. what happened here in the united states is the president in his speech laid out a very clear plan to take us back to the kind of approach we had to terrorism before very directly is saying e are going back to that. he's look for ways that we can, in fact, do away with the authorization to use military force. again, a president who seems to think that terrorism is a law enforcement matter. you know, you have a situation where both here in the united states and in europe, as well, there seems to be a real his stancy for political correctness
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reasons, for reasons of trying not to cause offense, i suppose, to name this what it is. it's islamic terrorism. when people say not all muslims agree with the terrorists, that's absolutely true. but most of these terrorist attacks we are seeing are being conducted by muslims, and that means if we are unwilling to look at what is it about the radicalization of vast segments of the young people, for example, in the islamic world, what is it that's causing these attacks? if we are unwilling to identify the enemy it will be very difficult for us to succeed. >> look at the case of great britain. they have the radical imam. i had a fight with him on this very program but he's still out there spewing his hate and spewing his radicalism and nobody does anything. is it a good indicator of what is to come? >> it's a very good indicator, sean. the problem is, again, i come back to what the president said in his speech at the national defense university. this notion that somehow he's ended the war. the war is done, we are
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finished. if wishing only made it so, then we would never have to be engaged in war in the first place. but it's really, you know, difficult to describe how dangerous it is for the united states to be led by a man like barack obama who is doing everything he cannot only to weaken us at home, to weaken us abroad, but now he's essentially retreating. he's giving up, he's accepting defeat, he's walking away, he's refuse to go follow-through in terms of the necessity to rid the world and the united states of the threat posed by al-qaeda. instead he's turning around and saying we are going to go back to the days when we can prosecute these people. >> isn't the simple answer, a, control our borders, which we should be doing now for for national security reasons, and,, about, don't we really need to know. if people are coming from predominantly muslim countries where sharia is the law of the land, how do you go from sharia, where women are treated lake second-class citizens, to the
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united states based on the culture you were brought up in? is that transition difficult? should that be considered? >> i would say, a, control our borders, and b, we have to be clear where the threat is coming from. it's clearly coming from the islamic space, from people who are members of the islamic faith, and i would add a third thing, stop lying to the american people. the president of the united states is doing everything he can to pretend he has somehow defeated al-qaeda. it runs through the whole story of benghazi you were talking about earlier tonight on the show, the extent he doesn't want the american people to understand how strong al-qaeda and its affiliates are. the people that watch your show i know care deeply about the united states but it's time for all of us to understand how dangerous this president is to stand up and fight and be heard and do what you are doing, sean, say enough. we aren't going to relented mainstream media here to get to the bottom of this. >> what would you say when one
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would target con everybody istive groups with the names patriot, tea party, conservative, constitution, target journalists, but would be definitely afraid to go after radical islamists or say it? >> you don't even want to think about what that might mean. i would say we've had five years of being able to watch this president. he seems willing to unleash the power of the presidency, to abuse the power of presidency, to use chicago tactics to go after his enemies while at the same time he's unwilling to go after the terrorists who are attacking the nation and all we have left to do is the ability to stand up and say we won't take it, we won't let the many stream media cover this up anymore, we will stand and fight. >> liz cheney, always good to see you. thanks for being with us. >> you too, thanks. >> and coming up, they may soon be apologizing to veterans and families thanks to a series of despicable tweets she sent
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commemorating memorial day and you get to pick the video of the day. go online and vote. we always want to hear from you. it was very painful situation. i'm very athletic and i swim in the ocean. shingles forced me out of the water. the doctor asked me "did you have chickenpox when you were a child?" the pain level was so high, it became unbearable. some of the most advanced driver systems ever made. stereoscopic vision... distronic plus braking... lane keeping and steering assist... eleven enhanced systems in all. ♪ twelve, counting your adrenaline system. the 2014 e-class. the most intelligent,
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>> so all americans all around the country celebrated memorial day yesterday and over the weekend by remembering those who died serving this great nation. the town of beverly, massachusetts, they decided to cancel their annual memorial day parade, a tradition of more than 100 years, but after choosing to spend more than 30 grand on a parade earlier this month honoring american idol finalist angie miller. we have to ask the question where is this town's priorities? and that's not the only one. actress is turning up controversy after she wrote
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happy memorial day, i've already peed in two different starbucks bathrooms. and she said: >> joining me is jim norton, and katie past rich. it's not even funny. if it was funny you might give it a pass but it's crude and rude and mean. >> i'll be honest, i didn't think her tweets were directed at veterans. i think that's two different thoughts and like happy memorial day and then you tweet other disconnected things. >> it would have been nice if she gave the warning to everybody else. >> absolutely so i could go in right after. but i don't think she was slamming veterans at all, and i don't think the one about dying and peeing was connect today veterans at all. i honestly don't. >> you really don't? but you want to give people a pass as often as you can because you believe in freedom of
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speech. >> yes. >> you are pretty blue, hard-hitting, risque comedy actor. >> i'm a creep. but if somebody doesn't say anything, like in this case -- >> you are not a creep in real life. this is an act for you. >> my act is dirty but i'm a very sweet boy in real life. >> i'm not so sure i want you to date anyone i know or like or trust or care about. katie, what's your thoughts? >> i'm not certain when peeing became mainstream to talk about, but in this case it seems like ms. dunham is trying to fill the shoes of jane fonda and that's not a good thing. it will be nice if she under the fact that she has the freedom and ability to write her scripts for her girls show in english thanks to all the men and women who sacrificed their lives for her freedom and the first amendment over the years. whether she thought about it or not, combining peeing with her memorial day tweet, and she
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could have said something like thanks for dying so i could have my show on hbo. >> if she said happy about memorial day and then -- >> i mean, if you read my tweets you would think i'm a sexually frustrated, broken, lonely man. >> are you? >> are you sure you are not? >> of course, i'm kidding. i certainly am. but i think they are making a big deal about it and there's nothing to it. >> everything is fair game in your world of comedy. everything. i listen to you, i watch you, i think you are very funny, but you know something, when we have one day to honor people that died and gave hair life for freedom, i don't want to put the two together. you know what? there is some -- i'm sure you have lines you do not cross. >> occasionally i'll put a line in. but this is something i would have tweeted without thinking anything. >> you would have tweeted happy memorial day. look, you like our military.
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>> yeah. >> you honor our military. you never would have put the two together. >> but i might have not thinking it was offensive. >> it's offensive you didn't think about it. it's offensive you didn't think with it. >> it's not if you didn't think about it. >> yes, it is. >> no, offensive is if you think about it and do it anyway. and stepping on your feet on purpose and you know that. and we don't celebrate memorial day the day you are probably supposed to anyway. we look at it as a day off of work. that's what people think about it. >> coming from a long line of people who served overseas, going all the way back to world war ii and the american revolution, i think it's offensive that you wouldn't think on memorial day it will be inappropriate to come bean a bodily function with happy memorial day and that's a cultural issue and hollywood has proven they don't care much about the troops and they definitely don't care about honoring them on memorial day. >> if you look at it like that, you are trying to make something out of something that there is
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no issue on whatsoever. >> i'm sorry, i think people dying for the first amendment for our freedom is something. >> you should actually wave a flag while you say that. i get it. i like the troops. you went to iraq, i performed for the troops, i got it. but i don't think tweeting something that is just kind of a silly joke is disrespectful of the troops. believe me i've seen things vomiting acting and disrespectful but this is something somebody tweeted not thinking. it's not a big issue. >> you should think more about it. no, i will never think more about it when we are done. >> you won't think about it anymore? >> never. >> you know what i found out about ancestry.com, my grandfather fought in world war 1 and in then he tried to fight in world war ii. that generation was amazing. >> there is something crappy about this generation but that has nothing to do with it. >> but the school system sucks
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so bad we don't remind people. anyway, thank you, katie, thanks, guys. next you get to pick the video of the day and we will unveil the winner. can febreze eliminate even the toughest odors? to find out we filled this car with smelly trash, left it under the hot desert sun, attached a febreze car vent clip, and let in real people. it smells good. like clean laundry. like driving through beautiful tropical... palm trees with like fruit hanging.
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standing by for capture. the most innovative software on the planet... dragon is captured. is connecting today's leading companies to places beyond it. siemens. answers. >> time for the video of the day. tonight it features kentucky senator rand paul and a few things you can expect from obamacare. let's take a look. >> i know you have heard some bad things about obamacare and i haven't been a big fan of obamacare, but you know, your government just wants to take care of you. they don't think you are smart enough to make these decisions, okay? so when you come in to see me, i'm a physician, i will put in a diagnostic code and there was 18,000 of these, but under obama care they will keep you healthier because now there will only be 140,000.
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and included on the codes will be 312 new codes for injuries from animals. 72 new codes for injuries just from birds. 9 new codes for injuries from the 346789icaw. i've asked figures all over the country, have you ever seen an injury from a micaw? there's two knew for injuries sustained from a turtle. you might say, well, turtles can be dangerous. but one of the codes, your doctor needs to inform the government whether you have been struck by a turtle orbitten by a turtle. >> all right, the sad part is it's true. if politics don't work out for senator rand paul, maybe he has a future as a stand-up comedy. let not your heart be troubled and thanks for being with us.
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greta is standing by to go on the record. we will see you tomorrow night. greta. ♪ >> this is a fox news alert. the midwest bracing right now as more tornadoes touchdown across the central united states. at this minute we can tell you about two reported tornado touchdowns in kansas. one spotted near the town of corning. homes and property demolished. very little information is coming in. as we hear about injuries, we will let you know. also reports of a second twister touching down north of selina, kansas. and tornado watches are across the midwest, parts of kansas, missouri, iowa and nebraska. we will bring you more information on the severe weather as we get it. but right now three simmering scandals. now boiling over. >> this is not just a scandal because of what was attempted, but the

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