tv Red Eye FOX News June 18, 2013 12:00am-1:01am PDT
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that. >> we will leave it there. that's it for "the five." thanks for watching. see you tomorrow, everybody. bret baier, "special report" next. welcome to "red eye." it is like "everybody loves raymond" if by raymond you mean greg's special back rubs you could have anytime he wanted if we just move in together. let's go to andy levy for a pre game report. andy, what is coming up on tonight's show, you jerk? >> nice to see you started off with a lie. the leaky geek speaks, but does what he say wreak? we will take a peek. and a psychic ordered by a judge to pay $7 million after falsely telling police a texas couple had a mass grave on their property, but can she foretell whether or not we will get to this story? probably not. and miss utah explains the existence of pay inequality between men and women. if by explain you mean a bunch of words put together mean
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nothing to human kind. >> that's rough on her. >> i feel bad too. >> you know what, i think she did a better job than you would do under similar circumstances. >> you are probably right. and fills out a bikini better. >> i wouldn't go that far. >> thank you, sir. >> no problem. let's welcome our guest. she is so hot that superman shoots her from his eyes. i am here with business and political strategist. and he is so sharp that excaliber pulled him from a stone. his latest book is called "the end is near" and is going to be awesome. how going broke will leave america rich and happy. long title, but i read it and it is better than sex with a hedge hog. bill schulz is in prison for arson. filling in is my hot yoga instructor, joe devito. pleasant. and if insightful commentary were asprin i would swallow him after a night.
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diligence, maker of crowbars, tea sets and hair gel. diligence, by the end of the sentence your family is dead. >> a block. the lede. that's the first story. hey, greg, hr would like to discuss your internet searches. >> that's all they want to discuss. i got off easy. and i did. is he a whistle-blower or screwing us over? one day after british newspaper "the guardian" used its info to reveal the british spied on its allies during the g-20 summit in 2009, that's a lot of letters, leak erred ward snowden held a live q and a. the leaky geek asked if he was spy for china. he said no. why he fled the country? no fair chance of a fair trial in america, he claims and more. when asked why he revealed the nsa spies -- start that over again.
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when asked why he has revealed that the nsa spies on foreign institutions he said, quote, nsa is running network operations against them that affect millions of innocent people. and for what? so we can have secret access to a compute neither a country we are not even fighting so we can potentially reveal a potential terrorist with the potential to kill fewer americans than our own police? he later repeated that charge. bathtub falls and police officers kill more americans than terrorism yet we have been asked to sacrifice our most sacred rights for fear of falling victim to it. snowden's dad spoke to fox news and addressed it directly. >> your family loves you and we want you to come home. i believe firmly that you are a man of principal of the i believe in your character. i don't know what you have seen, but i just ask that you measure what you're gonna do
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and knot -- and not released anymore information. >> but snowden -- when ever i hear snowden i think about having a smore in ski boots. did he get a surprise endorsement from former vice president dick cheney? >> i think he is a traitor. >> meanwhile puppies remain suspicious of any tennis balls that aren't green. >> my thoughts exactly, puppy. mike, this is the first time we have had you on this show since this broke. i want to start by asking you a broad question of how is your diet going? >> so far so good. >> good food? >> when you live in idaho you have access to lots of fresh fruits and vegetables. >> what do you think of snowden and what he has done?
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you are in the cia. you understand the importance of secrecy and understand the importance of freedom. >> right. >> and it is a balancing act. do you think he has committed acts of treason or is he a hero? >> if i get asked that question one more time, is he a hero or traitor? i do understand and i am a small government guy. you are right to kick off with that. i understand people's concerns over an overreached government. frankly my concern with in of the nsa collection easers not just now but over the years is that is it being used in a meaningful way 1234* you have to have an investigative ability. nobody argues that. i spent a longtime in operations and even with a relatively small amount of data it is tough to make sense of that in realtime. to get the leads to prevent or minimize something which theoretically is the reason you are doing it. my concern over the collection efforts is more of an operational point of view. snowden an absolute traitor. if you could fire a drone
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missal up [bleep] i would say do it. but we can't do that. we need to bring him home. he has crossed -- he crossed the line when he broke his covenant to keep information secret, but he has done even more damage and i don't think people are oaying attention to what he is doing. they are talking about what we do in national security interests against the chinese state. and mind you the chinese state has spent the last several decades stealing economic intelligence and infrastructure and military secrets from us. that's how you have an economic miracle, you steal everything. >> that is a good point, kevin and riding your book you are a staunch libertarian. you would normally salute a whistle-blower as many people do. a whistle-blower -- it is one thing to tell america what we are doing wrong, but he is going to a foreign country and telling them what we are doing
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to him? wouldn't it be better to tell them what china is dismog. >> one of the problems with civil disobedience is the jackasses doing it. they are often not add mirral -- admirable people, julian uh song. julian assange. but you always need to pay the price for the thing you have done. when he refused to pay his taxes he didn't run off. they put him in jail and he wrote a book about how jail is the only place for an honest man in dishonest times. if he had done this at a press conference in washington, d.c. saying here is why i am doing this and thisth is what i know and take me to jail if that's what you think i should do. >> two quotes we used here. he seems to say in an interview on "the guardian" police are a greater threat to americans than the terrorists. do you agree with him? >> first mistake. mistake number one. let's start with this, when your father has to say please don't commit treason you are
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starting at a deficit. >> that's true. >> my dad would never say, tara, come home, and please don't commit treason. and then the way he was leading, i know you are an admirable person. it was like a sub blip national message. i know you are going to do the right thing. >> so true. >> he is not a hero. he is not the hero gotham needs. >> all my mom said was let the girl go and you won't go to jail. devito thanks for coming in for bill. what do you make of snowden's dad begging him not to release more info? it reminds me of your parents not to do comedy. >> my parents always ask me not to commit treason. sometimes people who do good things are obnoxious jerks.
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he may have done something good here, and at least we are aware of the domestic spying thing that people try to act like it is not happening. the problem i have with it -- first of all, didn't we know? >> we knew. >> they don't want to admit what they know and what they realize is going on. i think it shows that -- >> it was in usa today. >> it is hard to believe we are sitting at the table, and again i understand that it is a different arena which is critical and always important. overreaching government. always having that discussion. i get. it i can't believe we are at a table. he might have done a good thing. sometimes people are [bleep]. how do we get that this point? i am losing my [bleep] mind. >> the thing i like about the wikileaks story and this guy is there is an arms race between wanting to keep things quiet and people who want to get stuff out. the interesting thing to take
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away is you are not good at keeping secrets. >> we have the most transparent intelligence agency bar none. and there are great checks and balances, not perfect, but great checks and balances when you are talking about an organization that is supposed to be out there collecting secrets and working on national security issues. i keep wanting to get this point out because i understand the concern over how this could go wrong and the abuse of authority and the abuse of information. that's a separate conversation from what this individual has done and the damage he is doing drives me crazy. >> and people keep -- i hate to use the word deflate, but lump together his actions and these principals when in fact i do think they are different. >> i am glad we are having a discussion and i'm glad we are having a debate. people like to sweep it under the rug and people don't want to know how they got the meat on the plate. >> come to idaho and you can see how we have the meat on the table. >> i do think we are having it
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on the conversation. the snowden guy, coming over to china and he is having press conferences. some things should be classified. we shouldn't know that there would be an offensive. that's not something that would be out. >> what do you call it the fake internet cafe? that is a great idea. i think it might have been out there, i am not sure. but they found out through what's his name, snowden that there were fake internet cafes in england so the russians would come in. do you think he is a traitor? do you agree with dick cheney? >> i thought dick cheney was a brain in a jar at this point. it was a series of parts being fed jie. he looks great. >> it was his second wind. >> how can a guy who gets new hearts look younger and younger?
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>> younger hearts. >> i don't know. this is mike's area of expertise what call fies somebody as a traitor. what concerns me is the domestic spying. every dollar and every minute spent on that is a resource that should be going to those who are really a threat to the united states. it used to sound paranoid if you said they are doing this for domestic enemies and people doing this for the government. and you say that sounds crazy. and now this irs thing you say well, maybe there is weight to that. >> it is the erosion of trust brought on by the doj and the -- and by benghazi. do we allow the mistrust to take away our national security? why does anybody care? you can't care about the fourth amendment with people in other countries. they don't deserve it. it is ours. >> one thing i want to get to is we throw around the word
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traitor a lot. it is one of the things in the constitution that was defined in the document with a process of determining who s. >> you have to be careful about the use of the word traitor. it was very obscure definition and also very protected in terms of how an act of treason was defined in the original constitution. not the original, but in the constitution. >> they don't want it to be disagreeing with the government. >> beyond the issue of treason and what he is clearly most guilty of is leaking classified information. every senior aid in the white house has leaked information. >> we tolerate some leaks and you create a system in which you are inviting selective prosecution of things. >> when you take a job where you are given the privilege and responsibility of having access to sensitive
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information you sign a large number of pain -- of paper that says as a person of responsibility and character and principal which this man according to his dad syou will honor those until the day you die. we used to do that. people used to go to their graves never talking about it. my father did. have i no idea what my -- i have no idea what my father was involved in until after the fact. that's what you did. the fact that he and others -- you are right. people in the white house can't keep their yap shut. that's true. >> or any white house. >> that's our standard. when you are president you teak an oath of office and when you see stuff on the front page of the new york times, i don't think it was leaked there without the president approving it. >> that's exactly right. some of these leaks that took place, the situation with bin laden, and you look at that and you say of course it is selective leaking, but it is like so many other things. it is the way you punch.
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if the people down below see people up here are getting away with crap it creates an eroding culture. >> there is nothing worse than being below somebody when they are leaking. if you are looking for advice on matters of privacy and matters of security i often look to miss alabama who addressed this very problem last night. >> government tracking of phone records has been in the news lately. is this an invasion of privacy or necessary to keep our country safe? why or why not? >> i think that the society we live in today it is sad that if we go to the movies or the airport or even to the mall that we have to worry about our safety. so i would rather someone track my telephone messages and feel safe wherever i go than feel like they are encroaching on my privacy. >> what do you think about that? somebody might say that is a
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contridiction, but i don't know if it is a contridiction. she says i don't want to walk around in fear which in a weird way is a loss of privacy when i know that if they have this massive -- this mass of collected micro-- what is the word? >> meta data. >> that sounds like the name of a dating firm, meta data. anyway, do you think she just nailed it and should be the president of the united states? >> absolutely. i think we need to figure out what we want as a country. i think that's what really needs to happen. we have to decide. to me i think we -- here is that word. we blow terrorism out of proportion. >> blow is a good word for that. >> yes. >> i do think we have made it such a big deal that it is encroaching on our privacy, but people have to decide. when you poll the public on these issues, the public tends to fall on the side of more data collection than not. >> it is a shifting playing field. it depends on if you have a situation like the boston bombing then yes, suddenly it
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moves. which is why you need to have the confrontation on a constant basis. you can't say this is where we are going to be. >> i agree. >> then boom. >> this is a good example. you are right. ultimately it comes down to us. >> it is a good example of what somebody calls a narco-tierney. we have seething cheese because it is six bites per inch, but we can't keep mohamed al-kaboom out with czech visas. if you have a country with an unsecured border who tracks nobody who comes here visa, the real actual threat to the country, but we can track cell phones and monitor every piece of dairy product that croses the border. >> and right now the guys at the nsa are checking al-kaboom. >> last word to joe since i have to move on. joe, the reason i brought up miss alabama is when somebody
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that hot you have to assume she is right. >> actually it is funny you show that clip. have i been tracking her whereabouts for quite some time. you mentioned the situation with the boston bombers and it shows that, yes we have plenty of data. they were not making the right decisions. they were on all sorts of watch lists. these are people who were blatant and not only did we not process this information we had we made them comfortable in the united states. again i think it is easy to go after and say, well, it is tough to go after these people where there might be some political correctness or whatever. let's just look at everyone's information. the average person will not know and not complain. >> it is like the tsa. you have to frisk the old lady before you frisk the other guy. coming up, should ugly people be forced to get plastic surgery to look more attractive 1234* mike baker on his new book "just think, you could all be this handsome, america."
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president robert kraft admitted to the new york post that while visiting saint petersburg in 2005, not not florida one, russian president vaw lad vladimir putin walked off with his super bowl ring. after he was told by the bush administration to claim it was a present so as to avoid an international incident. he said "i took out the ring and showed it to putin and he put it on and he said i could kill somebody with his ring. i put my hand hot and he put it in his pocket and 3kgb men walked around him." when mr. -- what putin says is what mr. kraft said was weird. i was standing 20 centimeters from him and saw and heard how mr. kraft gave it as a ring.
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liar, liar pants on fire. the only thing that is more of a head scratcher than this putin caw nun drum -- >> thousands of years of dry skin. >> i hope that is actually a lizard. if mine looked like that i would see a doctor. who do you think is at fault here? and is -- and should president obama be impeached even though he was not president at the time? >> here we go with putin. first of all i believe with every fiber of my being he took that ring. he took it and he got on that horse with his shirt off and he road around with that ripping. with that ring. >> and it was beautiful. everybody loved that. that's something he does so well. we need more of obama shirtless on a horse. >> no, we really don't. >> i would like to see that.
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but then again, i like horses and shirtless men on horses which is why i like unicorns. devito, this is the perfect time to declare war on russia. >> certainly. i can understand the confusion. you think this ring is made for the russians. it is the only super bowl ring with a place to hold ricin. putin is a real bad ass. he is a multiple level black belt in judo. compare that -- we think in the movies like let's have our president -- picture obama launching his air balls and then putin flipping someone. >> the whole black belt thing is a scam. people go to these karate farms and people say i will give uh black belt. >> not in russia. >> it is a karate farm. i tell you. >> do you think putin stole it? >> oh yes. that's the thing he would do. one of these days they will do
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the same with poland and the ukraine and probably alaska and they will say they gave it to us. it was a misunderstanding, but we are going to keep it. after he said he could kill somebody with it he could -- he said i could kill them without it too. >> i honestly think it was a translation problem. if i have time i will tell you a story of what happened to me once. >> there was no translation mishap. putin is probably the smartest politician on the planet right now. he has been playing us for years. he continues to -- he is constantly -- we are getting screwed over by russian policy right now. i remember one time i went over with my first wife. i introduced her to putin. putin walked out of the room with her. >> do i have time to tell two stories? first story, when i wassed store of stuff magazine and we shot j-lo for the cover she
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gave her her -- we gave her a $15,000 belly button ring. at the end of the photo shoot we were standing and we were shaking hands as she was leaving and i could see it was in her belly button. i'm like, that's ours, in my brain as she left. i didn't have the nerve to tell her which somebody should have done that's not your ring or belly button ring. she got in the car with benny medina and they went to no where land. the other story, i had a house warming party when i lived in allentown, pennsylvania. a man came over with a model of a civil war cannon. >> what kind of party was this? >> a house warming gift party. he comes over and says greg, look at this. he handed me this civil war cannon. i said this is awesome. i said thank you and i put it up there. he said, no, no, no. that's mine. i just thought this would be something interesting for your house.
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then he took it. >> are you sure that was a model cannon? >> do you think it was a bong? >> it could have will been. >> darn. it. >> i think you could have taken j-lo down. >> i would have been murdered. i think she probably assumed or forgot. i think she forgot she had it. >> she probably thought it was a gift. >> it is either $5,000 -- >> how do you forget you have a ring in your belly button? >> i had my stomach fatten veal lop it. >> it was either $5,000 or $15. all i know is we were too scared to ask for it and she drove off into the sunset. also with a bathrobe, but that was a gift. >> you have a violent man. we have to take a break. now that we found love, what are we gonna do with it? not just a story, something jarod said to me in the elevator. sorry, not happening. what did miss utah have to say
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city to separate thewed scraps. yes, i said it, separate food scraps for composting. people will be required to use special containers. yes, special containers. yes, special containers to recycle scraps like stale bread, chicken bones or pay toe toe -- potato peels or be subject to fines. they are confident in the smelly plan after pilot programs which has shown high levels of participation. if you can't appreciate it i would appreciate an rsvp. anyway the city plans to get hundreds of tons of scraps a year and there is a plan to make it man-datory in a few years. discuss in the -- >> lightning roooouuuunnnnnndd. lightning round. >> mike, you really think people will keep smelly food scraps in their tiny apartments in new york city?
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everybody lives in shoe boxes. for a week? >> god bless anybody who wants to compost. go ahead and compost. that's why i moved. i don't want to live -- i was in connecticut, a famously mismanaged state. don't impose your own personal personal -- get away. if you want to compost, go ahead and compost. >> they should compost and do it in their apartment. the city says it will save 100 million a year by diverting the food in landfills. do you buy that? >> i can't even do that with a straight face. it is not going to save money. that's ridiculous. i live next to city hall and if they could just get the trash into the trashcan, that would be an enormous improvement. if it goes to a composting thing or somewhere else, that would be good. mostly it is on the sidewalk. there are various animal by products.
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>> and humans. >> new york is not the cleanest big city in the world. and we will make sure we compost everything. >> it is unreal. what makes bloomburg think people will do this? >> i am having so many issues with bloomburg. i am the liberal here. my issue is we have a record number of homeless and he has bikes and composting and it is like let's deal with the realish you as here. there are a lot of bad stuff. people are suffering from sandy and he has people putting pianos all over. he has pea january foes. you can play the old ones. they are art. >> joe, do you think this will happen. and when bloomy leaves will this craziness go away or be replaced by more craziness. >> i hope. he is treating the city a village that comes with an electric train set. the rats of new york city
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thank you. i hope they rip out the stupid bike things. it is impossible to bike for free anywhere in midtown. used to pull up outside the comedy club and run in and have a couple of drinks and drive home. >> one thing about bloomburg is he is a jerk and a meglomaniac, but we will miss him when he is gone. he will probably be replaced by somebody like quinn and it is back to the bad new york. >> or how about anthony wiener? >> wiener is probably the best choice. >> wiener is awesome. >> wiener is soberingly the best choice. >> amazing how quickly we can redeem ourselves. >> it was a picture. >> lying it something that happens once. if you do it again it is in your character.
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>> what does it take anymore to actually have a consequence? for crying out loud, president bill clinton is now the statesman of the democratic party. >> he is the father of the year. he was named father of the year. this is a guy that -- why am i explaining it? i am sitting here going, you remember him, right? maybe there are viewers who have no idea he solicited oral sex in the oval office. >> if my dad got me the apartment he got chelsea, he would be father of the year. >> you think she is composting? >> we have to move on. but things are no longer judged by being economically feasible, right? >> sph -- if it was
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economically feasible, they would have a ton of money. you can be sure that somebody you are looking for, but if somebody tried to they would let them. >> if you tried to do anything like that. why can't we make moonshine then? >> we have to take a break. time for a break. when we come back, we will talk about something. meanwhile, the joy of hate. it has been named the greatest book of all time. by me this morning while weeping. amazon.com autographed copy, g gutfeld.com. i will never look that good again.
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interview powell was asked about pay inequality. the question goes like this. a recent report shows that in 40% of american families with children women are the primary earners yet they continue to earn less than men. what does this say about society? here is her adorable and cringe worthy response? >> we can relate this back to education and how we are continuing to try to strive to figure out how to create jobs right now. that is the biggest problem. i think especially the men are are -- and seem as the leaders of this and we need to figure out how to create education better so that we can solve this problem. thank you. >> if that is not auto tune by tomorrow i will shave my back with a dull butter knife even
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though i am hairless already it doesn't matter. don't these pagents do this on purpose? this is the gotcha question and they know these women are nervous and they know they didn't go to harvard and they didn't spend their time on women studies program so they go like that. what this show needs is one more beauty pageant. >> monday are made for that. >> let's have the debate club make fun of the homecoming queen. it is a chance for less attractive people to make fun of them. it is not called a brains pageant. it is a beauty pageant. extemporaneous public speaking is hard. you can't read your tele prompter. it is in front of me and sometimes i can't understand what i wrote. >> you will see very smart people say dumb, clumsy things. it is a beauty pageant. get over it. >> it is better to say what you feel. i have been telling you this for ages.
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>> she won ms. photogenic and she is still the hottest. isn't that all that matters? >> absolutely it is all that matters in terms of this particular contest. you get her on her own and i bet it is a much better answer that that. than that. >> and you would like that to happen. >> not me. >> you are happily married with children. >> how angry is the winner, miss connecticut, who is getting overshadowed by the girl who lost? >> this is always what happens. this woman will be the real star. when ever you lose you win in these situations. anybody that ends up in youtube they are the winner. and so she will end up getting all of these interviews and getting the spotlight. it is a win-win. she will make out just fine.
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shy guy she will make out with a professional baseball player and that pisses me off. why do they get all of the baseball players. as a good looking person like yourself you must hate anybody who has taken a stumble like this. >> what do the others have to say? >> you know what, what are they asking these -- >> it started with paris hilton i don't watch these beauty pageants. the question was asked by one of the real housewives. she barely made it through reading her question. they are supposed to trip up this -- >> screw everybody trying to hurt people. >> i am so sorry. i didn't take feminist studies. i am at a beauty pageant. >> what is the right answer to that question? it is not like it is a
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question you are asked and it is like 37. >> how do you keep your bottom bikini from riding up your backside? they could give a perfect answer. >> so could you. i saw that view of you in the bahamas. it is called baker and the bahamas. go to fox news red eye.com. or go to fox news.com/red eye. click on submit a video and we may use it. coming up, the post game report. >> tonight's post game wrap up is sponsored by lemurs, the primates of mad do madagascar with large eyes and wooly fur. thanks, lemurs.
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time to go back to tv's andy levy for the post game report. hi, andy. >> thanks, man. >> it looks like the psychic was right. >> she absolutely was -- no, she couldn't predict it. >> she couldn't. therefore she is right. >> true, all right, then. snowden stuff. meek, you said you are tired of being asked if snowden is a hero or a traitor. >> but then you went ahead and said he was a traitor. >> i was tired of being asked.
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i don't get tired of saying he is a traitor. >> you know it is a much more complicated issue than that. he is a traitor. >> you know me and vice president cheney feel the same way on that issue. >> i have this thing where i don't dig what the nsa is doing in the country, but not only do i not care that they are eavesdropping on foreign governments, i sort of think they are supposed to be doing that. >> if the average citizen out there, and i don't think the average citizen watches "red eye," but if the average citizen out there knew how aggressive other nations are in trying to steel our secret, they would stand up and applaud the notion that the nsa is busy trying to do the same thing. >> i think their job should be eavesdropping on foreign countries and stoping them from eavesdropping on us. >> yes.
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>> where does the term -- who is dropping eaves? >> the eaves are on a roof and you would hang by the eaves and overhear people in the house. >> and if you were doing this and if you were doing it in the month of july you would be summer eavesdropping. >> kevin -- >> nice to see you, andy. >> you too. >> you said you would have more respect if he revealed everything in a press conference . he would be pretty stupid to do that though, wouldn't he? >> i don't know. if you have the courage of your convictions and you believe you are doing the right thing then you stand up and you pay the consequences for it. >> all right. >> i guess. >> i am not a big fan of paying the consequences. >> no one really is.
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>> you said snowden made a mistake by saying americans have a greater chance of being killed by police than terrorists except he is right. >> no, he is absolutely right. you go after -- would you go after the police? >> i agree. you hospital really say it, but he is also right you weren't likely to die in a bathtub fall. >> i agree with all of that. i made my point earlier. we have a tendency to over blow the terrorism issue when you have gangs going crazy in chicago. >> i agree with you on that, but i disagree on the police versus terror thing. a cop shoots somebody in the act of a crime or accidentally or whatever and it results in one death. terrorists you get 3,000. >> right except you don't every year. >> well, you know what, you can. >> you can argue saying right
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you are more likely to be shot by a cop because the government is doing this to keep usrists. >> that's a good point. >> it also matters who the police are shooting. they don't kill 3,000 innocent people in a given year. basically it is a dumb comparison. >> 3,000 americans a year don't die in terrorist attacks. >> no, not every year, but sometimes they do. which is why it is a dumb comparison. celebrating somebody getting killed in the course of a crime come beared to those who want to commit mass atrocities is a bone bone -- is a bone headed thing to say. >> for the record i have been monitoring bathroom falls in a series of cameras. it is hilarious video. >> that is the weirdest feet tesh i have ever heard. they are in the falls of other things. mike you said you understand the value of talking about the balance between privacy and security and you can't believe the discussion of snowden.
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we wouldn't be having this discussion at all. >> that's not true. if the public would pay attention on a regular basis and not go chasing after the next shiny new thing and if congress would do their job, then yes we would have this conversation on a regular basis. i just find it disappointing and disgusting his actions because we are having this discussion are okay and he is heroic and we are having a discussion we should be having if we were attentive and aware as we should be as citizens. >> like a reckless driver that hits a number of people which starts a discussion of reckless driving. it doesn't make the reckless driver -- >> i will buy that. >> that was pretty good. i am writing that one down. reckless driver analogy. >> if we learned anything it is the value of public discussion is overrated.
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>> i guess i will skip ahead. did putin steal the super bowl ring in 2005? president obama asked if he should be impeached and he said -- >> that's what every conservative asked me. >> that's all you said though. but answer the question please. >> no. >> baker and all of you said you all think putin stole the ring. i'm sorry, if putin's spokesperson says he didn't steal the ring, he didn't steal the ring. >> and if russia is not providing heavy weapon tots syrians, then fine. >> they admitted that one. they admitted that. >> a couple last points, the recycling program and i think this is how soiling greens started? >> yes, it started with composting. >> and you said there was a chance for the debate club to make fun of the homecoming queen. and let's face. it nothing she said approaches the level of stupid of things
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>> bill: the o'reilly factor is on. tonight: >> i think he is a traitor. i think he has committed crimes. nfrkts, by violating agreement. >> bill: the u.s. closing in on nsa whistleblower edward snowden who is still on the run and still talking about national security issues. we will have the very latest. >> did you do anything personally to make sure that this insidious, discriminatory practice was stopped? yes or no? >> the most aggressive interrogator about the irs abuse is congressman trey gowdy from south carolina. what does he think is really going on? the congressman will be here. also tonight, carl rove, bernie gold
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