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tv   Greta Van Susteren  FOX News  June 3, 2013 10:00pm-11:01pm PDT

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that's all the time we have left this evening. let not your heart be troubled. why? because the news continues as we now toss it over to greta standing by to go on the record. we'll see you back here tomorrow night. greta, take it away. tonight, well they did it again. another taxpayer funded video -- no, it's not the gsa this time. it's your favorite, the irs, spending $50 million for just two years and whacky employee videos. >> it's time for the irs to come clean. >> to the right. >> to the left. 3, 4 -- >> i'm absolutely appalled at the waste of taxpayer on frivolous conferences. >> the lyrics were directly to the dance. >> what was the irs thinking. >> to the left.
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i need a straight line. trying to get ready for anaheim. >> what on earth were they thinking? it is truly amazing to me. >> it seem swres a new misstep every day at the irs. >> to the right, to the right, to the right. >> do you feel like the irs detrayed the trust of the american people? >> i do. >> has anyone today been held accountable? >> let me answer your question this way -- >> that's a yes or no. >> i would say yes. >> this is harder than doing an op review. >> before congress spends one more time on the irs, we need to know how it spends the money it receives already. >> they don't pay me enough to do this. i'm not an executive. i just play one on tv. >> people should be reviewing these conferences to see if they're appropriate. >> i don't know whether to admire you or pity you. >> make me proud. we just practiced it. come on now. come on now.
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>> hey, this isn't so bad. >> during today's hearing firing questions at the active irs commissioner and inspector general. did he get answer thes he was looking for? well, we'll find out. >> thank you. good to be with you. >> did you get the answers you wanted. >> we didn't get all the answers but or constituents are mad and angry and frustrated. what we have seen is not like line dancing. it's more like the watermelon crawl. when are we going to get down to who made the order, who made the call for these employees in cincinnati or where ever they were to do what they have done as far as targeting any american as they have. >> all right. so the gentleman from the irs, the acting commissioner has only been there since may 22nd. we can't blame him for what happened beforehand? or can we. >> we was held accountable today. he's the boss.
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he's the man in charge. >> but there's going to be more transparency. i hear that and my eyes roll around in my head. what in the world does that mean? do you know. >> it doesn't mean pleading the fifth every time you're asked a question. you would expect direct answers. today i asked him i said have you interviewed or asked any of the employees in cincinnati who ordered them to do this. his answer was no. >> that's a perfect example. he's been on the job only since may 22nd but he hasn't even done that. wouldn't that be a starting point. >> it would be the first question you want to know. >> how can you feel like -- he's a perfectly nice gentleman coming there and if he hasn't done the very basic asking what in the world happened isn't that a bad sign to start wit >> one thing has determined is that nothing changed wechlt might have a few name plates changed but nothing changed underneath in the irs. we need accountability. somebody needs to be held
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responsib responsible. he was asked did he think accountability had been delivered he said yes. there's only been two resignation. who has been held accountable. >> what in the world is congress doing in term of providing oversight? we hear that in the past between 2010, 2012 the irs spent $50 million on conferences. they go off to some hotel and they call it a conference, but it's essentially a party. $50 million. where's congress been. >> that's a good question. we've been through the process of continuing resolutions. not an open progress. that's what we're pushing through right now. hopefully we'll get them to dig in deep but when you give the irs money they're not responsible. >> you have an organization, the american people have traditionally hated it. they haven't liked it. they don't like a notice from
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the irs. you find out that they're having these conferences spending $50 million. they're tartgeting americans an making ridiculous videos and we have an irs code that nobody can understand. i would admit not one member of congress does their own taxes. this is a far bigger problem than targeting a couple of groups in this country. it's a major problem. >> it's easy. time to dismantle them piece by piece. the flat tax, the fair tax, something that empowers the american taxpayer instead of giving somebody a tool to use against their political opponents. >> have you heard from the white house on this? did they dispatch people to capitol hill to figure out what we're going to do about this scandal? >> i haven't heard anything from the white house which is an indication of their leadership role in this. they have done nothing to this. i asked the commissioner had he met with the president or the white house in preparation for
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the hearing and he said no. >> i heard you asked that question. had he met with the president prior to going to talk with you. >> i asked if he had met with the president and talked to the president and the president afforded him 20 minutes of discussion time for this. so where is the president on this? that is the big question. is he going to take a leadership role and clean house. that was another question i asked. did he order you to clean house and fix this and hold anyone accountable and the answer was no. >> what directions did he give? >> it was a softer gentler approach. let's just work through this. let's take our time. don't rush to any conclusions here. but this is self-admitted inappropriate behavior by the irs with people we know that is involved. this is not about being patient. it's about accountability. >> when are you going to talk to the people of ohio. >> that's a great question. we said have them come in. >> they should have been in this morning. you should have asked them this
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morning. >> i'm not the committee chairman. that's a great plug for me, if i were, i would do that. >> the american people are up in arms about this from top to bottom. there's going -- what's good about the irs? what have they done well. >> apparently line dancing but it didn't look too well did it. >> congressman -- >> i was going to say the folks in cincinnati were asked who gave them the order and they would not respond. >> hopefully we'll get to the bottom of that. thank you, sir. nice to see you. >> thank you. trying to get more answers from the active irs commissioner. >> mr. commissioner, can you just tell us how you plan to implemented the transparency? we heard a lot about it. how will we implemented it? >> we just answered a lot of questions in the hearing. we'll answer more questions going forward. right now i'm going to get back to the irs and get to work. >> what was your reaction to the videos, sir? did you see the videos?
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>> as i mentioned we just answered a lot of questions and we'll answer more questions going forward. plenty of time to do press interviews but right now it's most important that i get back to work. >> do you believe the agents in cincinnati deserve an apology if the direction came from above? >> okay. bad enough the irs targeted people but do they have to do this too and bill us for it? take a look at this irs line dancing video. >> get in line, now. >> look, i never signed up for this. no, seriously, i never signed up for this. >> are you ready? i don't see you being ready. i need you guys to get in line. come on now, chop, chop. can you get here please? get in line. thank you, thank you.
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on my queue. to the right. to the left. [ music playing ] >> it's so challenging to teach them even though the lyrics are the direction to the dance. my goodness. >> to the right, to the right, to the right. >> this is harder than doing an op review. >> i need a straight line. trying to get ready for anaheim. >> stay in your lane. stay in your lane. >> i need my lines straight. >> they don't pay me enough to do this. i'm not an executive, i just play one on tv. >> okay. >> that's the shuffle, didn't the chicago bears do this in 1985. >> ed o'keefe joins us. we keep hearing trying to get ready for anaheim in that video. what was that reference to. >> reference to a conference that took place in august 2010. 2600 employees at mostly a training meeting. this video was aired at the end
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of the conference preceding some kind of event that occurred as the finale. we don't know the details of that just yet. anyone that lives west of washington would know that was not a line dance, that was the cupid shuffle. most of your viewers have probably seen a good line dance before. that was not it. >> good to know. >> that was at least two or three ones that aired during the conference. there was a star trek parody. they discussed aspect of the business. they were responsible for dealing with small business owners as they do their taxes and there were various things discussed in this training video. what to look for and the other things they're supposed to do if they deal with people that come with them for questions. those videos combined cost about $60,000 to produce. >> it's not that high a price but why were they just released on friday. >> the star trek one was
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released in march because congressmen heard about it. this was released on friday to get ahead of the report due out tomorrow. >> that shows a guilty conscience to me. they know the report is coming out tomorrow. they know they'll get caught with their parents down tomorrow so they shove it out on friday night. on a friday night. it's the whole -- to me it's sort of indicative of the way they are thinking at the irs. >> i think the new leadership who we saw testifying in your last segment, those guys understand they have to try to get as much of this out as possible and just get it out of the way so they can move on in rebuilding this place but as far as we know this was one of 225 conference between 2010 to 2012. >> how much money. >> $50 million. >> you think $50 million is a lot. in the grand scheme of federal spending it's a drop in the bucket. divided by the employees you can slice and dice that and say it
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isn't a lot but others would say it s. one of the other videos, there's a gilligan's island spoof. they decided to do it because they cancelled all the conferences. so instead of flying people to one series they showed them this and said it was better than flying everyone to some city. >> i'll tell you why 50 million is bad, it's indicative of the way they think about treating taxpayer money. it's part of the washington culture. a lot of american people are trying to keep job to put food on the table and keep their kids in school. so that's the nature of it and if it's training to do their jobs, they're not doing a good job. look at what's been done in ohio and it went up the chain. other people had to have known about it. supervisors and if you didn't know about it you should have known about it. wasn't very good training. but you're not -- you aren't here to defender the irs. one other thing, kelly tweeted that the irs spent $11,430 to
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have happiness expert lead four experts. >> something like that. another person that came and got about $14,000 to talk about leadership through art and apparently painted some portraits during the session and then there was somebody else that got a few thousand dollars more to do another conversation. >> 27,500 for innovation expert. >> we'll hear about this tomorrow when the report comes out. >> there's all sort of things like this in there. >> unbelievable. always nice to see you. >> good to see you. >> a revolt in ohio. cincinnati irs employee insisting washington is throwing us under the bus. that's not all heard from workers at the irs office at the center of the scandal in cincinnati. steven joins us with more. nice to see you. >> great to be here. >> what are they saying in ohio? >> you've got these two irs agents basically that they interviewed --
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>> who is they? >> this is the committee, oversight and government reform going in and taking people's testimony and putting people on the record and saying, okay, well, were you told to do this? and one of the people said yes, we were told to basically target tea party groups and they were just doing their job. they were just doing what their higher ups told them to do. so the inference is it wasn't just a few rogue folks in cincinnati who just dreamed up this plot by themselves, but that it was actually ordered from washington. you have a second employee who actually was so uncomfortable with the direction to go after tea party groups that they requested and got a transfer. that to me -- if you're upset enough to get a transfer that's a pretty interesting charge. now what we still don't know is
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putting names to who actually ordered this -- >> why don't we know that? that would have been my question. if i'm on the committee and interview twod from cincinnati i would say who in washington. >> exactly. we're waiting to see the transcripts and the people testify potentially and there's a lot more employees than just two. he talked about 18 more of these kind of interviews. a lot more will come out. e-mails and documentation that's going to spread the light on who knew what, who knew when and who ordered it. it's one thing if this goes back to the irs office in washington. washington say big place. there's hundreds of thousands of government employees here. matters is if there's any ties to the white house and so far there isn't anything that ties us directly to the white house, them having anything to do with actually ordering this to happen.
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>> why can't this move faster? i know this is washington but this has been going on, we have known about it for a couple of weeks and it's drip, drip, drip. speaker boehner made reference to drip, drip, drip the other day. why can't they put them underoath and public and let's have the old fashioned transparency. put them up and do it and move it. >> washington tends to work slowly. you get lawyers involved. it takes a long time. that's going to happen. you saw that with learner, she took the 5th amendment and said i'm not going to testify. i would be surprised to see a lot of other people start taking the 5th amendment because they don't want to be -- there's an fbi investigation. you don't want to say the wrong thing. i do think we'll see these people come forward and testify. i do think that there is a danger here for republicans. they have a pretty good story here. they have a scandal, their groups were targeted.
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there's the potential for a lot of political advantage for them but there's also potential when you start doing things like name calling. like i said the other day when he called carny the paid liar kind of thing. if you are talking about name calling, that kind of clouds the whole issue. >> it would be nice if it wasn't the political pay off they're looking for but get to the bottom. this say terrible thing that happened. americans being targeted rather than the engineering they do around this town to get favor of political advantage but let's get to the bottom and get the facts. >> that would be great but the way washington works people are looking to see if there's an advantage for them in the story and if there is they want to push it harder. if there isn't, they want to go to something else. >> now to tonight's hot button issue, we have seen it all in the last few weeks. between the irs targeting and irs employee videos do you think there's anyway the irs could be fixed or do we have to scrap it and start all over?
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go to gretawire.com and answer our poll. >> accusations that the attorney general lied to congress. the major is here to talk about that next. also more bad news about obama care. a whole new reason it could drive up the cost of your health care. that's coming up. plus what did michelle bauchmann do that governor sarah palin refused to do? start alec, for this mission i upgraded your smart phone. ♪ right. but the most important feature of all is... the capital one purchase eraser. i can redeem the double miles i earned with my venture card to erase recent travel purchases. d with a few clicks, this mission never happened. uh, what's this button do? [ electricity zaps ] ♪ you requested backup? yes. yes i did. what's in your wallet? yes i did. a brand new start.
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justice department is denying he lied to congress. the justice department insisting the attorney general accurately testified he had never been involved in the potential prosecution of reporters. that went over like a lead balloon with republicans and there are new calls for him to re-sign and some are reportedly coming from instied west wing. former new york city major rudy giuliani joins us. >> nice to see you. >> the congressman that sent the original letter to the justice department said we got a response from the office of legislative council and believe it's nonresponsive to the questions we directed. so now what?
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>> the answer is almost like admitting he committed perjury. saying they are playing word games. if i were defending him on a perjury charge i could get him acquitted. there's enough ambiguity. he gave the answer i never prosecuted. however, here's what he did. announced underoath in an affidavit that he was putting this man under criminal investigation for the purpose of figuring out whether to prosecute him. that was the change they made to the affidavit to persuade the magistrate to sign it. that rosen might flee or allegedly committed a crime. technically that's not prosecuting him but certainly it's investigating him for a crime. man, this is really splitting hairs. >> except there's one part sent to me tonight. someone sent a quote to me that said in regard -- this is a
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quote for congress, in regard to potential prosecution of the press for disclosure of material this is not something i have ever been involved in heard of or would think would be wise possible. then the rosen thing came out. >> we could have a big semantic argument about that but it certainly means he was seriously involved in an investigation of a reporter with the allegation being that that reporter committed a criminal act. now, is that a prosecution? is it an investigation leading to a prosecution? certainly he mislead the congress. i can understand if i were on the other end of it i would be going crazy tonight and saying, okay, well, maybe he's not a perjurer or proven perjurer but he has mislead us and is being sneaky and then let's get to the underlying act. what the heck is he putting that affidavit in in the first place and making the allegations against rosen. rosen didn't commit a crime. he wasn't a flight risk.
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he was doing his job. there's no indication he did anything but an ordinary reporter does in order to get information. a reporter is not bound by something being classified. how does the reporter know it's classified? half government officials lie about whether it's classified or not and half the time people are wrong about whether it's classified or not. it's not the reporter it's the obligation. it's the government employee's obligation. >> let's give it the best spin possible. it wasn't perjury, it doesn't lying but he was trying to dodge it and sneaky and can he survive as the attorney general as the highest law enforcement officer in the nation being cagey and dodging? >> the lost of trust and as a former justice department employee and official for more of my life than anything else i ever did and having gotten there right after watergate and part of attorney general levy and
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ford fixing the justice department, he should re-sign for the good of the justice department. maybe he can go prove his innocence somewhere else but shouldn't be doing it as attorney general. >> do you know what's so funny, he was on the bench here about 20 something years ago. we all tried case and form and i'll tell you he was probably one of the most respected, nice -- >> my personal dealings with eric have always been very good, very honorable. very nice man. i have no personal feelings about him. i don't know him that well but i have no personal feelings other than i like him. on the other hand, put that all aside, he is running one of the most important departments of government and one of the most important department of governments for legal professionals and lawyers and if a lawyer did something like this we would be talking about investigating him for disbarment. that kind of misleading conduct in a very, very important inquiry. this is not a joke. this is an extremely important
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inquiry. this is a line that the justice department stepped over that no justice department ever stepped over and congress has every right to figure out why did they step over it. the fact that it was fox and when you have the irs also going on, going after political enemies in the justice department and irs, where else are they going after them. >> what's the discussion? we hear things being discussed on the west wing but that could be washington gossip. but do you think it's being discussed how to ease him out? >> absolutely. now i don't know the president and i don't know how resistant the president is to this but around the president there are certainly political operatives saying this man is not doing president obama any good anymore. that's true. there's nothing good coming out of eric holder being attorney general. the only good that comes out of it is the president showing loyalty to him but he's not -- there's no way he is helping the administration right now. an attorney general should help
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the administration. here's a great rule i learned back with attorney general levy and smith. the best thing the attorney general can do for a president is to be fair and independent and occasionally tell him knno. those keep attorney generals out of trouble. my closest friend from 1,000 years is former attorney general that had been a federal judge. he came into the bush administration and he really straightened out the justice department. he left a really, really high functioning justice department to eric holder and it's not that way right now. >> there's so many waiting -- thousands of lawyers at the justice department and career lawyers. >> they're doing their job. >> who every day are doing their work and now you have this stink bomb situation over the justice department. >> i was online assistant with john mitchell when he was attorney general. in fact, my appointment as an assistant united states attorney which goes back to 1970, i hate
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to say it is signed by john mitchell and i think -- [ inaudible ] they both got convicted. one of my colleagues that has a great sense of humor and someone that has the same one, he wanted to put on ebay to see how much money he could get for it. >> always nice to see you, sir. >> thank you. >> coming up, johnny has something to confess. he'll tell you that next. he'll tell you that next. also michelle you make a great team.
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>> why does johnny isakson say that. >> good to be with you. >> you were not the only republican that voted for the nomination. there were about 20 republicans including senator sessions, seemingly unlikely votes. but why do you say it was your worst vote? >> i did my due diligence. i was wrong and everything that happened since then has proven i am wrong. i like to admit it just like holder ought to do. he made two inconsistent statements about the press. he said he would never do something like that and turns out he signed the warrants on james rosen at fox. ought to admit to that. it ruined his credibility. >> has he done anything that impressed you as being a good thing? >> i have sat with him before. i've been around him before. i like him. a agree with what rudy giuliani
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said about him as a person but in terms of philadelphia, in terms of what's happened, in terms of the press here, he has not proven himself to be worthy of representing the president of the united states and you or me or the american people as attorney general. >> do you think he lacks the last judgment or he's plit politically motivated? what do you not like? >> judgment and when you look for an attorney that's going to represent you and represent your country, everything you look for is based on their judgment and ability to judge things fairly. i think he's been partisan. i don't think he's done a good job for the people or served the president well. >> what do you think is going to happen? >> i don't know. i'm not a fortune teller or mind reader but something is going to come to a head because this is very serious business. >> one of the jobs he has right now is to investigate the irs, there's a criminal investigation from the justice department. is there anyway that you could have confidence in him in light
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of the fact -- he disagreed with what happened before his testify on i think the 15th of may, is there anyway that you can have confidence in his investigation of the irs? >> not really because of exactly what you said on the testimony on the 15th of may and we found out on the 24th he signed the warrants on james rosen. anymore your statements before the public are inconsistent to turnover an investigation of the irs, the agency that collects your taxes and is going to run your health care, pretty soon the american people won't have confidence. >> when that testify is made on the 15th and if he thought i signed a warrant for james rosen, what i would have done or if i was advisor i would have said fire off a letter to congress and if it has to be confidential but tell congress, the problem is that nothing was ever done. that's the problem. he made no effort to rectify it. >> he should have and he should have had recollection to have
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remembered. even if he made the statement in good faith on the 15th of may he should have remembered what he had done in terms of the warrants and he should have come back. >> why did you vote to confirm him? >> i interviewed him on the telephone. i asked him on second amendment issues and talked to him about other investigations. quite frankly, griffin bell recommended him. i took that advice at face value and voted for eric holder but his actions since that time have proven that vote to have been wrong. >> so now we wait -- it almost feels a little bit -- i mean, there's more and more people but from the republican side, any democrats calling for him to re-sign. >> publicly i haven't heard of any, no. >> have you had any conversations in the hallway? any democrats giving you a nod and wi that he want him to go? >> no winks and nods but they maybe coming. >> is he going to be called up to the hill to testify to this. >> the house is talking about
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bringing him back, the chairman of the judiciary committee made that statement yesterday. >> he's unhappy with the response from the written letter of one of his deputies and they were most impressed with it. >> they're trying to change the subject rather than answer the question. >> thank you. >> coming up, new trouble for obamacare, that's next and in two minutes, remember charles ramsey, he was hailed a hero and now charles ramsey is getting a big reward and it's not just have aood night. here you go. you, too. 'm going to dream about that steak. i'm going to dream about that tiramisu. what a night, huh? but, um, can the test drive be over now? head back to the dealership? oh, yeah. [ malannouncer ] it's practically yours. [ wife ] sorry. [ male announcer ] but we still need your signature. volkswagen sign then drive is back. and it's never been easier to get a passat. that's the power of german engineering. get $0 down, $0 due at signing, $0 deposit, and $0 first month's payment on any new volkswagen.
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he has not cashed in. he has not given permission for his name on any products and refused offers to endorse hamburgers but now he's signing a deal with the loas vegas speaking bureau. he will speak at trade conventions and corporate functions. he will do meet and greet appearances. would you go to meet him and listen to him speak? go to gretawire.com and vote in your poll. your poll. back in two minutes the kyocera torque lets you hear and be heard even in stupid loud places. to prove it, we set up our call center right here... [ chirp ] all good? [ chirp ] getty up. seriously, this is really happening! [ cellphone rings ] hello? it's a giant helicopter ma'am. [ male announcer ] get it done [ chirp ] with the ultraugged ocera torque, only from sprint direct conct. buy one get four free for your business.
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she pretty much lives in her favorite princess dress. and she's not exactly tidy. even if she gets a stain she'll wear it for a week straight. so i use tide to get out those week old stains and downy to get it fresh and soft. since i'm the one who has to do the laundry. i do whaany expert dad would do. i let her play sheriff. i got 20 minutes to life. you are free to go. [ dad ] tide and downy. great on their own, even better together. . the president promised obamacare would get more people insured and bring down the cost of helg care. neither one of those things may happen. according to a new survey, 64% of americans that lack health insurance right now say they don't know if they would buy coverage on obamacare and that would drive up helg care costs
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for everyone. peter joins us, nice to see you, sir. >> thank you greta. >> if the 64% of people don't buy into obamacare, then what happens? >> the whole premise is it's going to be all of these healthy people coming in and paying a higher premium and playing a more active roll. if they don't participate you're into this same old problem and the problem actually gets exacerbated. costs go up and few people have coverage and this is all of the false premise of obamacare. during the campaign to pass it the president was pumping sunshine. he was overcharacterizing the possibilities. he said that rates were going to go down. they're not going down. they're going up. >> you said the whole idea is if everyone joined in and threw money in the pot we could have risk management that we'd pay for the people who are sick and the people that are healthy wouldn't be drawing money out of the pot because they're healthy. with the 64% now it's curious why they would -- if they think
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they're so healthy they don't need health insurance, they only pay $95 a penalty that that's cheaper than buying into health care. >> it's a manipulated system then. so the federal regulators have to say we need to increase the penalty. we need to increase the adverse impact of not joining the pool. so you get to this point where folks are beginning to say i'm being forced into this system and my costs are going up. i thought this was going to be a benefit and it begins to unravel. >> it's not going to be too popular when the ones that are enforcing the penalty are the internal revenue service that is under fire. >> you can't make this up. a hollywood script writer said the very institution that is going to impose personal health care for each individual american they are under fire for manipulating and targeting people based on their political
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bleefs it's so unseemly and difficult it's hard to get your head around. >> the whole idea was the states would set up the exchange where is people went to get their insurance. 26 of them said they are so the federal government has to set up the exchanges for the states and they haven't done that. plus there's the money, so the secretary has been trying to get private funding. now she is getting heat that she is trying to assert the role of congress and it gets more complicated. we haven't gotten to january 1. >> the other thing is the administration was clearly slow walking these regulations. they didn't want this out in the context of a political campaign. avoidance, push it off until after the election and now they're trying to jam this through in a collapsing period of time and they're not ready. there's an open question as to whether it's appropriate for the secretary to solicit 7 figure donations from the very entities that she has the authority to
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overs oversee. >> i don't think that's an open question. i think that's improper. if she tried to hustle someone else, that would be a different question. >> fair enough. >> but if she regulates them or oversees them, they're going to try to curry favor. >> right. >> nice to see you. >> thanks greta. >> what did representative >> what did representative michelle bauch i want to make things more secure.
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>> greta: okay, everyone it's time to hash it out. google glass may be the hottest eye wear but former governor sara palin is not about to trade in her glasses saying sara palin is antigoogle glass. governor palin refuses when approached last month. other high profile politicians
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are jumping on the google glass bus. congress woman michelle bachmann in a heating of house republicans last month. for the record i confess i'd love to get my hands on these. >> i founded a internet company that let's folks down load and share music for free. >> like napster? >> exactly, napster. >> do you remember justin timberlake in owe "social network"? he's not a fan of ruleses and it just cost him, again. ap reporting facebook billionaire sean parker must pay $2.5 million for a conservation program after big sur wedding slap. yes. sean parker's wedding bill keeps skyrocketing. the billionaire getting flak for the $2.5 million fine for tying the not in the area. $2.5 million. not a cheap fine but no sweat. he's a billionaire.
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and now, florida police taking a trip to the outback. well, sort of. we bet this is the first kangaroo chase for cops in the shine state. yahoo tweeting kangaroo leads police on a 12 hour chase. tasers didn't slow it down. the guy just keeps going and going and was hopping mad. cops using a tranquilizer to get him. he will be just fine but no word on where he came from. and if you're making a run for the border this will stop new your tracks. buzz feed reporting a pic of a taco bell employee licking a stack of shells was posted this their facebook page. yuck this, taco bell better see a drop in inspection grade ask we hope employees at other locations don't love taco shells as muches think this guy. that is gross z this new law in germany ap tweeting say
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goodbye to germany's longest word. i'm never going to try this one. take a look. yes but yes, it's a word. believe it or not it's the shaim name of a law to help prevend mad cow disease o of -- but was removed. they're probably just tire fd trying to spell it. now, it's your turn to hash it out with us. also don't forget to follow me on twitter at gretawire. and coming up, drinking is back. who streaked across the who streaked across the kneeled a baseball game? [ tires screech ] whoa! hey, we got a weather alert for this location... golf-ball sized hail and damaging winds are on the way... kids... eh, don't worry. it's tornado-proof. anyw, i'd put the car in the garage and secu thesehings. they could become flyingebris. kids! watch this. [ beep ] [ children screaming ] [ car alarm chirps ] awesome. [ male announcer ] mobile weather alerts fr your home insurance?
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>> greta: we've seen squirrels, cats and people streak across baseball fields but take a look at who grabbed attention of fans and players at this california college game. >> take a look at this. it's a pooch on the field. >> i -- it's going after right
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field looking for a bone. he buried his bone out there in right feechld he's just going to get it look at trevor allen. he wants -- . >> this is going to get on sports center. >> this is going to be, human squirrels were hugging trees now a dog. i wonder where the owner s he's trying to get out now. the arizona state bull pen and i think he turned this crowd who had to wait is starting to enjoy this crazy night that is a husky, i think. it's -- this dog whisperer anywhere? >> the husky didn't stick around but we're sure he was named mvp. thank you for being with us
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tonight. make sure you go to gretawire.com. tell us what you think about the irs. we'll see you tomorrow night at 10:00 p.m. eastern. good night. hello, everyone. i'm dana along with kimberly, bob and greg gutfeld. it is 5:00 in new york city and bob better not screw this up. h so investigating president obama's political opponent is not the only thing the irs has been up to over the last few years. even though they have taken steps to curb the outrageous behavior they are set to issue a new report tomorrow. it is expected to show $15 million was sent on -- spent on 200 employ econ differences from 2010 to 2012. where did the money go? funding things like video spoofs of star trek and gilligan's island and we have a look at another video featuring an ior

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