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tv   The O Reilly Factor  FOX News  June 12, 2013 5:00pm-6:01pm PDT

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for this wednesday, june 12th, 2013, i'm shepherd smith. thanks for checking in. here all back together for studio b. back here for the fox report tomorrow night. and owe riley normally follows. if i know every single phone call you make, i'm able to determine every single person you talk to. i can get a pattern about your life that is very, very intrusive. >> that's back when president bush was in office. then senator joe biden scorching surveillance on telephone calls. but now it's a different story, isn't it? we will have a full report. >> this opportunity to say on behalf of the secretary that he has full confidence. >> i'm just seeing through the process. >> okay. >> state department once again on the defensive over whistle-blower allegations about prostitution and drug use. james rosen, will have a follow-up report tonight.
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>> also ahead, great britain banes this ad starring pamela anderson. wait until you hear the reason why. >> adam? adam! >> you are about to enter the no spin zone. it begins right now. hi, i'm bill o'reilly. thanks for watching. a poll, what do you think of government snooping. that's tonight talking point memo. the national security agency is logging phone calls made by americans and storing them for possible scrutiny in the war on terror. also, there are unproven
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allegations that some e-mails may be in the hands of american intelligence as well. >> the accumulation of phone data wasn't anyone listening to the calls is most likely constitutional. but gathering u actual words, definitely unconstitutional. the government cannot pry into your conversations whether spoken or written without a valid legal reason. new cbs news polish u is out. first up, do you prove of the federal government collecting phone records of ordinary americans? 38% say yes. wow. 58% say no. the government's collection of those phone call records necessary to find terrorists in 53% say it is necessary. 40% say it is not.
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in the fwogovernment's efforts fight terrorism. how concern are you the government might be monitoring your internet use? 60%, not concerned. now it used to be that liberal americans strongly protested to the government snooping. listen to joe biden in 2006 when joe biden held office. >> if i know every single phone call you make, i'm able to determine every single person you talk to. i can get a pattern about your life that is very, very intrusive. the real question here is what do they do with this information that they collect? that does not have anything to do with al qaeda? i think he wrote down, this is not mine org trolling. if it's true, the 200 million americans phone calls were monitored. in terms of not listening to what they said but to whom they spoke and who spoke to them, i don't know. the congress should investigate this. >> well, how about that.
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>> i wonder what vice president his boss barack obama believes it is vital to the war on terror. what say you, mr. biden? >> talking points respect differing opinions on this issue. but here is what should happen. president obama has an obligation it tell all-americans exactly what the nsa, cia and other intel agencies what they are doing. are they really accumulating e-mails from americans, is that happening? we know phone records are being stored but we don't know about the internet stuff and we have a right to know. it's not going to hurt the war on terror, us knowing that. it is a general strategy. terrorist know we are watching them. interesting to see liberals battling liberals. this is one issue that has crossed party lines big time. now for the top story. latest on a news state controversy and federal
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snooping. joining us from washington, fox correspondents. a cover-up of crimes, crimes by state department officials under former secretary of state hillary clinton. what do you know about this? >> we know there will be more than one whistle-blower. you know i've been reporting this week on a set of eight cases of state department personnel who are accused of misconduct or even crimes and agent working for the state department's diplomatic security department. a complaint that their investigations into these cases are halted or disrupted because of undue influence from higher-ups at state. one of these was the case of this u.s. ambassador to belgium, investigated for pedophile and prostitution charges. >> wait, wait, wait. you're out -- you're out running your coverage for here a minute. let's take it step by step.
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simple man, rosen. i'm a simple man. >> i don't believe that, but go ahead. >> all right. he is still in brussells. he hasn't been removed. but it isn't fair to the ambassador. is it to smear him? this is pedophilia, prostitution, american ambassador, raised a lot of money for the democratic party and barack obama. i'm not sure this is fair it smear this man. what do you think about that? >> i haven't smeared him. i have simile reported -- >> no, no, i'm not saying you have. but whistleblowers are throwing him right out there. >> these charges about ambassador gutman are contained in october 2012 memo generated within the state department's office of the inspector general. a separate agency that served as watch dog on the department of state and the investigation into the charges had proceeded to the point where the agent doing the investigation determined these charges to be true. but the under secretary of state
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for management patrick den diwho served in benghazi short circuited the investigation. >> that's serious. >> he denies it and state denies any such interference and mr. kennedy has as well. we have learned that the diplomatic service has itself been under review from the state department's office of inspector general or oig. we learned about ferocious internal infighting about what oig would be able to say inity final report about the diplomatic service and operations to the point of where the oig's final report issued in march of this year appears to be scrubbed of damning conclusions. >> the same mo. >> very similar. here is where my reporter's guts tell me this is all headed. there is litigation pending that threatens still further disclosures about ds, its management and integrity about investigation. disclosures that will prove
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problematic for former state department officials, including those close to hillary clinton. even beyond that what officials at state are most gravely worried about, is that ds itself, as law enforcement agency, could be so tainted by these disclosures it would threaten many pending prosecutions why ds agents are witnesses and even potentially overturn past convictions. can i promise you when the disclosures surface and we are working it hard, we will keep the factor updated. >> bottom line is chaos again in the state department. that the bottom line right now. we will see where it all leads. all right, today, cameron, general keith alexander, head of the national security agency, big shot. he goes up to the senate appropriations committee. >> i saw an interview in dh mr. snowden claim that due to his position at nsa, he could tap into virtually any american's phone calls or e-mails.
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true or false? >> false. i know of no way to do that. >> but we haven't gotten to the crux of the matter here at that hearing so far, cameron. that is, does the nsa take any from americans do you know? >> they will tell lawmakers about those programs, if they exist, in classified talks tomorrow. not that much at all interesting, really. because important stuff happens behind closed doors. having said that, the nsa chief did defend the program and personnel. basically said that they are good people and that they are trying to do what the right. and that agency works lawfully and they respect privacy. when analyzed together. they have been quote critical to disrupting dozens of terrorist actions. >> you expect him to say that. you don't expect him to say guilty of crimes. but we know, cameron, they are
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bundling and seizing phone records. not listening in but who you call, when you call them and how many times you call them. if you don't know about the e-mails and that's the crucial thing here, cameron, you are saying, we're not going to know because that testimony will be private. >> we do know that such things such as prism and programs give different analysts an opportunity to look that kind of stuff. if it is synthesized with data records it can reveal information. they are suing the obama administration to purge it off from its records. rand paul, senator from kentucky is trying to organize a class action lawsuit with 10 million phone company customers. what you have to remember is phone and net service providers are prohibited from telling us what they give the government and yet they were granted immunity five years ago, back in 2008 within legislation signed in law and backed by then senator barack obama that gave the telephone companies immunity from prosecution and lawsuit. so if collecting these records
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isn't violation of civil liberties, why would they need immunity? lots of questions. >> all right. when you find out if they are storing remails, let me know. that is the big question that remains unanswered tonight. gentlemen, thanks very much. >> next on the rundown, senator marco rubio will respond and an update on new immigration bill as well. >> later, after a tennessee man feathered 22 children but 14 different women. we're coming right back. you hurt my feelings, todd.
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vo: traveling you definitely end up meeting a lot more people but a friend under water is something completely different. i met a turtle friend today so, you don't get that very often. it seemed like it was more than happy to have us in his home. so beautiful. avo: more travel. more options. more personal. whatever you're looking for expedia has more ways to help you find yours. tonight, ideology is confused by the current kroesht in washington. join is now from nation's capit capital, senator marco rubio from florida. senator, we will talk about the immigration bill at the end. >> okay. >> do you know if the senate is
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taking e-mails and storing them? do you know? >> we've heard their public comments in that regard. i think it is important to hear tomorrow about their public programs. there is information i have read in the press that i know isn't accurate. not necessarily regarding this issue, but in general. i think american people would have more confidence if they knew how the programs were run. >> you are on a committee, you don't know whether they have taken e-mails or staken them and stored them or whatever. you don't know. >> i heard what they said publicly. >> but they do a dance. they don't say for sure whether they do it. we wouldn't break the law, blah, blah, blah. >> right. would you support e-mail taken from here and storing them? >> i'm sorry. the important question is, how are these programs being coordinated? the answer is generally absolutely not.
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no one want to be in a position where the government decide, i'm going into bill o'reilly's e-mails because i'm curious about what he is doing. >> so you wouldn't support that. and i certainly don't support that. do you support the bandeling of phone calls data? not listening, data. just so that -- and storing it somewhere so if they pick up a hot number of a terrorist, they can cross it with someone in the usa. >> there is information that does not paint a full picture of how the programs are conducted. if they would declas fie some of that information, i think it would give people a lot more comfort over how the companies are utilized. this is a tough issue. on one hand we have conditions that are attracting when terrorist are communicating with people in this country. on the other hand, people have privacy expectation or feel like they do, and they don't want to see that misused by this or a future government. it is a difficult balancing act. my hope is they will declassify
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information. >> a lot of pressure to do so. on the irs scandal, do you think the fbi will make criminal arrests in that case? >> i don't know. i think there needs to be a fuller investigation in it. >> well, they are on it now. >> but understand the justice department overseas that and i'm not sure the justice department is in a position to do that in a unbiassed way. >> what you're saying is holder would corrupt the fbi. the fbi has always been independent in this country. >> there is great sway over how these investigations are conducted. i'm general to call for independent counsel on these issues, because i think that also could be misused. i think there is merit in that. i'm not i'm not besmur muching the fbi. >> do you want holder to resign? have you called for his
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resignation? >> i do. i did a year ago on fast and furious. i have less confidence in his ability to dot job now. particularly when it comes to this fbi investigation. >> the proposed new immigration law will be taken up for debate in the senate. that's approved. are you optimistic this will pass? you want it to pass in some form. are you optimistic that's going to happen this year? >> depends on border security and on insuring it doesn't cost the american taxpayers. i think bottom line is, if we can ensure the border and that it doesn't happen again or cost the american taxpayer by people going on welfare and things like that, then -- >> well, you have to do -- the bill has it say they don't get government assistance. has to. >> it does. and it says that already. but there are wayes it tighten that even further. we have identified wayes it make it tighter and offered amendments. on the border security, people have to know this will never happen again. the border will finally be
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secured. >> i don't know who will oppose that. but if someone does, tell me. >> he wants guy friend or partners or whatever, and he is trying to get that rider on the immigration bill. is that going to happen? >> if that happens, the bill is dead. it won't have my support. i respect people's views, but that is not -- this is tough enough as it is. if that gets on the bill, the bill will die. >> thank you senator. please let us know if you get breaking news tomorrow when you hear the nsa guy. he must be real confused on a controversy. he will be here. then pam anderson has offended great britain. we'll show you how she did that. upcoming. it's a brand new start.
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what does bob beckel think about government snooping? well, here he is to tell us. snooping, what's what it is when it comes down to it. they are snooping around. >> they are snooping and invading our civil liberties. with the start of the patriot act, we have had more of these investigative units that every time they do something they invied our civil liberties. we don't know what they are doing exactly but i know this, the fourth amendment is clear. what they are doing now is clearly unconstitutional. so you are teed off like aclu. >> absolutely. >> many in your party are not. >> they're not. >> president obama thinks this is a worthy program and they needed to track the terrorist down. are you surprised at his stance? >> well, i'm surprised he would -- if it is so worthwhile,
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why don't you name one of the few people that got caught. >> they have done that today in their hearings. we have a soundbite where he is the head of the national security agency, trying to do that. >> great harm has been done by opening this up. the konts tugs is our security is jeopardizesed. there is no doubt in my mind that we will lose capabilities as a result of that and that not only the united states but those allies said we have helped will no longer be as safe as they were two weeks ago. some of these are still classified and should be. because if we tell the terrorists every way that we're going to track them, they will get through and americans will die. >> so he is saying basically that they have stopped a bunch of terrorist. >> he didn't say that. >> he did in subsequent testimony. they did in new york city the way they wanted to blow up subways and brooklyn bridge
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thing. they obviously didn't get the boston bridge guys. but you have to say that these i goes are trying to protect us. >> i give them credit for trying to protect them. but this program has gone back well into the 50s. if there isn't an intelligent committee that doesn't know the ways and means and methods here, everybody understands that united states picks them out of the air. what is new is the wholesale collection of these things by average americans who have no indication they are terrorist. >> so if you had known about all this back in november, would you still have voted for president obama? it would have been a tough call. >> that's how mad you are? >> that's how mad i am. i've seen these things in the carter administration. in any case, there are people trying to do damage to the united states. in this case, i've not seen one thing, as i said. he said he may have some examples. look what happened with the fbi. they missed fort hood.
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missed 9/11. missed the boston marathon. they will get through. i don't care how much stuff we put in front of them and closing the jersey barrier and lock the front door to the supreme court for the first time in history, what is that all about? >> so you say we are overacting to the terror. >> do you feel there are a lot of people, the government used private information to go after conservatives. the irs violated the law. we expect an arrest there. and it was a ma nef lent thing. let's get conservatives. do you say it is the same thing here with the nsa? >> first of all, i agree it is a m nef lent thing. sorry, i don't have your -- >> few people do. >> the point is, that we do know this much. when the first went up to
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washington as a senior in cincinnati, and doing more -- >> you still don't think it was washington generated irs. >> i think generated in cincinnati but washington followed up and decided to push it. >> but is there the same ma nef lance, constantly trying to harm the nation. >> i think what they are doing is harming lifl liberty which in itself is harming the nagts. with these guys in iraq and afghanistan, to protect our constitution and we daily step on the constitution. >> you sound like eric. are they converting you? are you coming over to their side? >> no. virtually every liberal that i know who have been around for a long time believes in the heart and soul of the constitution and that is not -- >> all right. diane feinstein and others -- >> i don't care what dianne
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feinstein says. >> they will be disappointed to hear that. >> too bad. >> a tennessee man that fathered 22 children with 14 women. we will tell you why. [ male announcer ] erica had a rough day. there was this and this. she got a parking ticket... ♪
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media and crazed die deal logical zel oughts about all of the controversy in washington. last night we washed james carville about whether he want attorney general holder to resign. >> should he resign? >> look, the president doesn't want him to resign. he works at the -- >> if you were the president, would you have him resign? >> i'm not going to answer that. >> why? >> because i don't want to. >> why? >> because i don't want to. >> are you embarrassed? >> no. >> are you loyal to your party? >> i didn't get elected president. >> joining us, kate overshane and kistin powers. powers, i understand you are okay with the accumulation of phone call data. how about e-mail data? you okay with gathering that? >> no. i'm not comfortable with the prism, and that's what is taking up content. i am comfortable it a point of
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phone data getting connections and a warrant if they node to go further. what i'm not comfortable with is storing dataer. cuity. once they sift through it and there is nothing there, then they should get rid of it. >> i heard a rumor you were going to be on the cover after new magazine called fascism today. >> there is nothing fascist about that. >> aclu doesn't like your stance. >> that true. they don't. to be honest, i'm squishy. if it ends up as illegal as aclu is arguing -- >> as long as you don't listen to the conversation. >> as long as there is a warrant and it is legal, and they need -- >> there isn't a warrant. they are accumulating the data of where and when without -- they have a big general warrant to do it. but they don't have a specific -- >> right. but a computer is running through the numbers trying to find patterns. not -- and if they find anything to go further, they have to get
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a warrant. >> and lenny working for god knows what contractor and pull down numbers and fund find out where people are and have been. >> but you don't know what numbers are attached to. >> believe me, these gnomes can do this kind of stuff. >> that's a fair criticism and that's why sand is squishy. i think it is something that you have to have extreme oversight for. >> overshane, how about the e-mail thing? whistle-blower now in china, i think. is saying that the nsa is taking e-mails. american e-mails and reading them and storing them. he you can't be for that, are you? >> of course not. i have a problem with all of this and i understand why kaerson is squishy about it because the administration might say it is handling this legally. this comes on top of an administration that says it would never target conservative
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groups, no data collection programs for americans. issue after issue, the administration has been caught. >> it is not just the obama administration. you can't trust any government agency. >> right exactly. benjamin frankly was right about sacrificing liberty -- >> you have to sacrifice a little bit but you can't have them doing this. >> this is a philosophical argument. i want to get into stuff -- >> it is not philosophical to say there is a pattern of lying to the american people about targeting adversaries. >> they are taking on water big time, and they should. but all administrations take the truth and spin it around. >> this isn't spinning, bill. this is lying. >> you got a million square foot facility being built in utah, powers. a humungous thing. and i'm going, why? why are they building that?
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for what reason. all up until last year. the nsa was able to operate in mir land or whatever they are. but now they have to spend tens of millions of dollarses building this big facility for what. >> that's my point. i'm not comfortable with them storing this data. >> that's the point about what this is or why they are doing it. >> and they shouldn't be allowed to store the data. it doesn't belong to them. you know, it is information, we have given them a little bit of space to try to go through this and find out if there is any terrorist connections there. but after that, it should be disposed of. >> so if your opinion, there should be a time line. they can have it for this amount of time. >> once they are done with it, they can go through it. >> we need it there for 18 years. >> well, no, that's not going to work. >> both of you want wine holder to resign? both of you? >> darn right.
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>> all right. so everybody so far in this program except carville who won't say what pulled her out of there. >> all right, ladies, we have a brand new bill o'reilly poll question for you. do you support or oppose the data mining e-mails. there f they do prove there is data, they will say it is because of anti-terror stuff. >> when we come right back, it will be corolla going after a guy in tennessee which fathered 22 children in tennessee. corolla is up next. i'm phyllis and i have diabetic nerve pain. when i first felt the diabetic nerve pain, of course i had no idea what it was.
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this is bill o'reilly and the rolling with corolla segment tonight. 3 3-year-old orlando shaw who is broke, unemployed, has fathered 22 children with 14 different women. >> i love my kids. i could care less of what anybody thinks about it. >> are you able to pay child support? >> i can't pay no child support right now. they know i can't right now. >> what about contrasepg? >> i was young, ambitious. i was just young and ambitious and i love women. >> joining us now from lax los
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angeles for w guidance from mr. shaw. i want you to talk to orlando. get him on the path to sanity here. >> first off, orlando get over your latex allergy. secondly, if it were up to me, i would put a denver boot on your junk. i don't trust you. you should never be able to have sex again. thirdly, i would like to parade you around as an example of the world's worst father and possibly human being. we stopped judging people like you a long time ago because some idiot else to us we couldn't judge. we need to bring back judging and i'll start with you. you get an f. >> okay. there are a million and a half child support cases on the rolls in the united states. 17 million children are affected by people like orlando. mostly men. who father children and won't pay for them. i think orlando should go to jail for ten years.
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that's only six months for each child. you say, if he goes to jail, he will never be able to pay it back. here is the bulletin, he is never going it pay it back anyway. he will never support these children. as you said, he is a menace, a danger. he doesn't care. he thinks it's a joke. he likes the attention. let's gut him aby for ten years for child abuse. >> by the way, just locking up his gentilea -- >> i don't know if can you do that. in 17th century massachusetts they could do that. i think they can in pakistan, but i'm not sure here in tennessee. >> i think i could work a version of the iron maiden out for him. but the point is, we won't have more kids outside of the joint, but as society and bigger peck tires bill, this is the biggest problems we have in our society. >> huge. >> i guess i have to start judging. >> absolutely. judge and prosecute. this is child abuse.
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he didn't work. he doesn't care. >> we judge smokers more harshly than dead beat dads. >> i concur. the other thing we should do is have sandra follow him around. bay area has the store bridge elementary school, they add toy gun buyback. >> reporter: kids lined up today to hand over their toy guns. >> this is awfully big gun you got here. gosh. in exchange they got books and the chance to win a new bike. twist on the gun buyback. the goal is to teach churn, guns are not toys.
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>> so this is very politically correct out in california. where you live, corolla. >> i can already see the homicide numbers plummeting in the next ten years because they kids happening in their fake guns. first of off, could you imagine hanging in a kid who traded in his toy for the book. let the wedgies begin. secretarily, we have gone completely insane. i had to coach my son's basketball team at the y. i walk out on the court and the woman who ran the y said, what are you doing? i said i'm the assistant coach for my son's basketball team. she said, no you're not, you can't do it until you are fingerprinted. we need to print you first. athought, my god, what have we become? then you know, everyone says, oh, man, imagine what the founding fathers who think of
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this. forget about founding fathers. think about what you would have thought of this in 1999. >> is getting scary. >> we are going off a cliff. >> we are. happy father's day to you. we don't know either, we just don't know where he is, but he will be back next wednesday in his slot. going on sail tomorrow? nashville, friday, october 11th. jacksonville florida, san za, october 12th. caesars, las vegas, as always. buy tickets in advance. they go on sale tomorrow. up next, great britain saying no to pamela anderson. woman: everyone in the nicu --
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did you see that? if you have travelled to great britain you know their television is pretty liberal. they have nudity, cursing, all kinds of stuff. but they do not have, they do not have, this tv ad starring pamela anderson. >> gentlemen, if you want this business it stay on top we have it stay at the forefront of the internet. thanks. internet. david? cream? thanks. ♪ i'm crazy for you >> i mean -- >> and here now to explain why that ad has been banned? >> do you have to explain why it's been banned? really? >> i'm letting you handle all that. >> really? >> it was for a website called crazy domains. you never figure thad out because all you're doing is watching cleavage.
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>> i thought it was a milk commercial. >> i mean i have to say -- >> so it's raunchy and suggest irv, but as i say, in great britain, they have a lot of that stuff. why did they pull this? >> they felt, i think justifiably so, it's suggestive. >> none of the other ads do that? >> it has nothing to do with the product crazy domain. >> the british were offended. is that dudley moore? i thought dudley passed away. >> he does look like dudley. >> is that a dudley moore clone? >> is that some sort of conspiracy against pamela anderson? >> they run raunchy stuff all over the place. >> so are you upset? >> i don't care. i don't care what you think. i'm also mystified it was
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banned. >> it was also launched in the uk. >> banned in australia there. that's a pretty wild place down there. it was when i was there anyway. there's a pro-gun outfit, second amendment outfit and they put this out there. >> look. grandma. there's someone outside. >> quick, kids. let's go. >> 911, what's your emergency. >> there's someone in the house. he's in the house now. >> a unit has been dispatched. >> protect yourself and your children. it's your constitutional and god given right. >> all right. so they're saying women should be arming themselves inside the home. who put this out? >> this is the citizens community the right to bear arms. it will be running over the next three weeks on cable and internet. >> so they're actually going to buy time on programs to run
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this. >> yes. >> mm-hmm. >> the problem i have with this is unless you have a hollywood texas flick director doing this, you run the risk of it being a little comedic. it reminds me. the first thought i have is, help, i've fallen and i can't get up. >> a little hokey. i've always said americans have the right to defend themselves and they should. it's your choice on how to do so, but if you're going to defend on the authorities to protect you, you're going to be sadly -- >> the message gets lost. t it's a little low brow. >> perhaps if pamela anderson was in the closet. >> she's banned in everything. >> back to tip of the day. a stunning, i mean stunning bit of patriotism you should know about. the tip moments away. ♪ ♪ ♪
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moment but first most dads, be nice to them. dad will like killing kennedy, killing lincoln, keep it piffy. thank you very much for making that happen. also on billo'reilly.com check out the gear. dads will like the hats and shirts. chew ka manga, california, give me a break, o'reilly. you say nothing is getting done in washington. it has nothing to do with republican obstructism? jerry, you want to be a party zealot? fine with me. i'm not interested in that. gary, i thought it was a spin-off. spent a lot of times badgering james, gary. nothing else i can do. i cannot hit him. that would be a felony. ron miller, fresno, california.
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people you get som on the factor that makes sense and bill makes fun of carville. eric holder and he have lost credibility in my eyes. no one was held accountable for the fast and furious scandal and no one will be in the current scandals. and the media has already cop victoried george zimmerman. it feeds into their anti-gun mindset. if zimmerman had stayed in his car as ordered by the 911 operator, there would have been no confrontation and trayvon martin would be alive today. now, now, now, now. i've been doing this for 18 years, red a thousand of your e-mails. do not reach conclusions in this trial until the evidence is presented and cross-examined. we here are going to cover this case fairly. most other media will not do that. they will exploit it.
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but not us. carson buck, canned ler, north carolina. i read "killing lincoln" and it's a good book. i'm 9 and thing you should be president, mr. o'reilly. that's why the voting age is 18, karson. but because you're a good kid, i'm signing a copy of "kennedy's last days" which is out this weekend. >> mr. o'reilly, i'm 13. i watch the factor with my dad. i know more about the world than most adults. bill, you describe the guardian newspaper as far left. really, john? it is truly, truly a far left publication. and finally tonight the factor tip of the day. as you know we're trying to get high-tech wheelchairs for wounded warriors. they can go anywhere so they can take their kids to the beach, hunting and fishing, and regain
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some control over their lives. now the chairs cost $15,000 each and so far factor donors have donated $2 million for this fine cause and that doesn't count what i'm about to tell you. the ceo of alaska structures, richard holtz, there he is, has donated $1 million to buy track chairs. an incredible display of patr t patrioti patriotism. hotes has an yore yags. check it out. rwh if foundation.org. factor tip, patriotism should always be acknowledged. again, thank you, mr. hotes, for the donation for the track chairs. that is it. we'd like you to spout off anywhere. name a town if you wish to opine. were that they were not to pre vary indicate.
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in writing. that's it. thanks for watching. please always remember that the spin stops right here. we are definitely looking out. and this a fox news alert. the 10-year-old girl from pennsylvania whose family fought to change organ donation rules sarah murnaghan is out of surgery and according to her family has successfully undergone a double lung transplant. coming up in the program we will exclusively speak with sarah's mom. you do not want to miss this interview, some good news tonight. always on capitol hill, they tried to get answers about the controversial nsa spy programs that were exposed last week. now the agency's director general keith alexander was grilled by politicians on both sides of the aisle. he promised to provide as much information as he could about the secret surveillance

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