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tv   The O Reilly Factor  FOX News  August 2, 2013 8:00pm-9:01pm PDT

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taking time to talk with us. and thank you for being with us. make sure you go to gretawire.com and let us know what you thought been our interview with rush limbaugh. >> the owe i riley factor is on. tonight... the presence he's going to bring every resource to identify and bring to justice people that are responsible. can you name a single person brought to justice because of benghazi? >> what did some of the possible cover up on benghazi amid reports the cia was there the night of the attack? what did the government know? why secrets? we'll have a report. >> for first 100 days what surprised you the most about the office? humbled you the most? troubled you the most? >> let me write this down. >> main stream media and love affair with president obama continues but the factor is calling them out. >> this is a journalism bell.
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>> what happens if you don't fawn over the president? you won't believe what happened to one reporter. >> there is something more than just the failure of the family or failure of an individual african american to pursue a job. >> tackling the race issue in america. bill's interview with the founder of black entertainment television, robert johnson. the factor begins right now. >> hi, i'm greg gut feld in for bill o'reilly. thanks for joining us. new revelations about the benghazi attack. fox news learned at least five cia employees were forced to sign extra non-disclosure agreements following the attack aimed at preventing
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leaks i guess. cnn reported dozens of cia personnel were in benghazi and now some are being intimidated into staying silent reportedly forced to have lie detector tests as a way to persuade them from saying about what happened that awful night. my opinion, the wrong people are getting the polygraphs why not susan rice? hillary clinton? or the president himself? i only would have one question, who pushed the video? that is it. because underneath the phony denials and blame and cover up, it's one missing truth. why was america told that antiislam video was blamed for a spontaneous attack that wasn't spontaneous at all? we know the answer. a planned terrorist attack before an election doesn't help win that election especially when you're on the twi vegas. pishing the video on us and
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our foolish right to free expression which is why there is still a film maker in jail and trerorists on the lose. now for the top story. joining us from boston colonel david hunt author of the big new book colonel red. i want to address these entity closings in egypt, afghanistan and iraq. colonel hunt why do you think this is happening now? why do we tell everybody about it?. >> we get threats every day, on the hour. what's happening, and this one is our agencies in this community in combination, collaboration with many intelligence agencies said the real likelihood of this happening what we've done though is extend the ban on travel for the end of the month. if i, there is concern this also that there is a concern
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that every other time this happened. >> what do you mean? >> like the scheme at the end of september 11th. you can have every embassy closed in the middle east every day based on threats. so sometimes, from my view it's not just a threat to embassy it's why do you have to close them now? in this length of time z any specific embassies. >> i have to wonder, though, if you say you're closing them don't the terrorists go all right we'll come back monday, when they're open? >> at a partial victory, exactly. following what dave said we haven't closed embassies like this since right after september 11th. dave is a great friend but i disagree. we're sending wrong signals we get threats all the time, true. people like dave and i should be outside of the wire going into these guy asks to take
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them out ask let them come embas you're telling me a couple guy was a crude device make it close to do something are worried about that? yes. we ought to be going at them so we can prevent this. this tells me that we're not out there like we should penetrating these groups and betting ahead of them. >> did you say oddoloop? >> yes. >> what does that mean? >> observe, orient, decide, act. it's an air force term for turning inside enemy's radius to get them before they get you. >> i'm going to use that at the bar tonight. >> i'm embarrassed for my friend tony now. >> what, i want to just ask one more question. why do we these embassies if we can't protect them? aren't they supposed to be like an extension of the united states? it would we have to close them
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it says we have no confidence in protecting our people. >> it's true. and we're there for influence. it does say we can't protect them. i might -- my point is that i think politics being played here. tony is 100% right about how we should be aggressive and haven't been. just a little bit embarrassing how middle east policy is going. this doesn't help. the reason from people i've talked to had to be with a lot of intelligence agencies agreeing this is probably a good idea. >> all right. i want to move on to this cia intimidation story what. do you make of this? we've been told this is a phony scandal but if this is a phony scandal can you image qlain a real one would be like? >> no. i can't. this is as real as it gets. and fox was way ahead of this. very things cnn is talking about fox is reporting on within a week. just taking cnn this much time to pick up. you don't take polygraphs
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every month. there is something wrong. you take a polygraph to be read into a new special program, dave and i took special polygraphs for special programs when get a new access you don't do that for something in the past unless there is an issue. they're trying to figure fought they're talking to media and who they're talking to if they are. and by the way they're trying to get dirt on it. i took home a stapler i shouldn't have. that could be fireable. you stole something. it's trying to get leverage on these guys but make sure they know families are at right after this skpk make them not do what they should, which is fulfill the oath of office by going to congress and telling what happened. >> it's kind of seems like the government is spending more time trying to keep personnel quiet rather than tracking those responsible for attacks. >> yes. it's closely criminal intent here on the part of the administration and benghazi. from policy to lack of trying to help save our guys. on the cia they know a couple
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things. they say operators take a rating maybe five years. so many guys had taken a signing these letters we're trying to write books. agency were heroic that night. work coming from embassies cia compound to the consulate more people have died they want to tell the story. problem is that congress is not forcing them to -- agency or state department to go. >> gentlemen, thanks a lot. good segment. next on the run down one big smooch. a report reveals details about the love affair between "new york times" and president obama. it will make your ears throw up. how responsible is president obama for the high rate of unemployment among african americans? we're coming right back with those stories. stick around. [ male announcer ] what?! investors could lose
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in the impact segment the media's love affair with the president. a scathing report by washington free beacon concludes whit comes to reporting on the president "new york times" among other media outlets lobs more soft balls than a slow-pitched south paw. readers interested in having perceptions of the world confirmed not challenged that. is a different relationship than the one the bush white house had with the so called paper of record. joining me now my co-host on a
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show called the five, i've never heard of it, dana perino the former white house press secretary. i didn't know that. so first, glad i can -- . >> i also have a dog. >> no idea great job on "the five". a great show today. you were missing something. >> yes. my little friend. >> when you read about the relationship between white house press corps and "new york times" with the president, are you amazed it's still -- this love lasted this among? -- long? it's almost beautiful. >> quite incredible. i don't know how to keep it going because two months ago the media was furious at the idea administration would dare investigate a reporter doing his, or her job. and in which the case of the media so mad "new york times" wrote a scathing editorial bit. then, you cut to this interview, a group interview no one brings it up. they just ask all sorts of
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nice things and it kind of read like conversations i imagine they have. but it's empty. >> i just think it's beautiful how to keep a relationship so fresh, so long, they can just spice it up every year. a beautiful marriage. >> yes. they can write self help book autos there is a part in the washington street beacon piece, where it's about "new york times" reporter is trying to impress president obama, basically up, one uping themselves about who knew a professor better, robert putnam in an amazing moment between president pres and the president. >> right. very never heard of this professor. it probably says a lot more about me than them. reporter says oh, well, you know, robert putnam, of course, blah blah. the president says, yeah. he brought him up first, reporter says i had robert putnam as a professor. and president obama says yes, bob and i are very close.
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interesting thing is that the president, president bush went to harvard, too but he doesn't act or talk like these guys. i'm surprised at questions asked because it seems they're so afraid of president obama's notorious bad news coverage. by the time i became press secretary we expected bad press coverage so if i would give expectations and tell people look that story tomorrow is not going to be good, and in the moshing the president would say, that wasn't as bad. than it was going to be. >> i think it's hard for journalists to ask president obama questions bau they want so desperately for him to like them. >> i think maybe they'd like to work for him some day. many people now work as spokes he people in the administration. >> yes. and share personal agenda with them. >> told them just the other day he has great ideas.
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said that. this week, too, president ob yaum goes to talk to democrats on capitol hill he complains about the liberal left wing media at huffington post for -- it's democrat on democrat violence is interesting. when he gets great coverage he's still, it's not good enough. >> yes. well he's a perfectist. this has to hurt him in some way. he mistakes aassumptions of the media for aassumptions of the americans at large. >> well, i think this is a bigger point which is liberal is supposed to mean open mind whud read "new york times" saturday or sunday, i come away more informed and furious. because every article you read even in the style section there has to be a jab at fly over states or when jim kerry made -- jim carrey made fun of people who might have a gun. they actually are so mean to the rest of america and they don't realize it. they think we're the mean
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ones. >> i want to talk about drew johnson at chattaing intoa times free press fired or a headline of an editorial critical of the president's new jobs plan. title was take your job plan and shove it, mr. president, your policies harmed chatting intoa. now, long headline by the way. newspaper released a statement saying johnson had been fire forward placing a headline outside of normal editing procedures. do you believe this? >> i thought such an overreaction. he was trying to get people to read. that is what you fwhant a good headline writer but i'm surprised because as a former magazine editor, you actually thought because he had not followed procedure that he should get fired but can't you just give him administrative leave? why does he what v.to get fired?. >> i think he was playing off a song. i bet his bogs didn't know the
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song just angered. and angry bit then goes it's not a mean thing. it's a joke. the guy says embarrassed he didn't know the song. >> i think they overreacted said you're fired because they were disgusted by the headline and wanted to protect the president then realized we zrnt a policy that said you have a procedure now we have to say you had one. it's an overy ree yax. he'll go someplace else. >> maybe they meant to say you're fired up, for the weekend? >> there is a good well spell job josb but there is no s? >> that was fantastic. as always a pleasure, we'd like you to vote in the billoreilly.com poll. do you for see emerging, who do you see emerging to lead the republican party?
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please select one, ahead, excuses, how some of the famous and infamous are trying to rationalize terrible behavior, coming up. some of th and infamous are trying to rationalize their terrible rationalize their terrible behavior. are you flo? yes. is this the thing you gave my husband? well, yeah, yes. the "name your price" tool. you tell us the price you want to pay, and we give you a range of options to choose from. careful, though -- that kind of power can go to your head. that explains a lot. yo, buddy! i got this. gimme one, gimme one, gimme one! the power of the "name your price" tool only from progressive. i don't know. how did you get here? [ speaking in russian ]
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in the percentage story segment addiction excuse. the monster who raped tortured, tormented and enslaved three women in ohio spent 16 minutes talking about his own problems. he became the victim in front of the victims. yes. it was his own addiction to sex that made him do it. he's not a monster, he's just sick. can you blame him? we live in a society where first thing you do when caught is claim victim status. just doing what everybody
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celebrity or fiend does when busted cry about past abuse and addiction. a agree he's sick. if only accepting my remedy it would be a one time injection of lead to the brain. i hear it cures addictions instantly. joining us now from san diego, doctor boris i want to talk about this victimmology thing. if you use the i'm a victim argument with everything in life, doesn't that pretty much negate the defense to make it meaningless? >> i think you're right. i think overused and i think in courts because lawyers have figured out that if they present this sort of evidence, that there is proof now that judges actually are more lenient. i think in this case saying the word addiction or throwing around porn addiction or sex addiction which, by the way doesn't exist it wasn't included in, resulted in possibly him not getting the
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death penalty you can't blame him. you see this victim status stuff everywhere. it's, when did it become okay to use a morbid disorder? i don't remember charles manson doing this. now, anybody who does anything wrong is a victim. >> great point. it's interesting in trying to do research for this segment i was trying to find stats on that. when we started blaming other things i think it started when you have tv, when you have high-level politicians and senators or celebrities going on it became like a manra. oh, i have an addiction. i'm going to go away two weeks then you're going to forgive me, we're going to move on. there is no sense of personal responsibility anymore. you say the words, go through motions and everybody forgives you. >> yes. another side of the point is that as a society, we are supposed to empathize with
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everyone so. it's our fault if we don'ting forrive -- forgive the monster, what is wrong with us?. >> well, i think there is a fine line between addiction and things we should forgive and things we should take into account. i don't know we should for get, greg. i don't know it becomes be all, tell all excuse for bad behavior. i think if you're dealing in the case of aerial castro you're dealing with a situation maybe it means he doesn't get death penalty for someone like a celebrity, lance armstrong just threw it out there i was doing it because everybody else was doing it or tiger woods it was an addiction i'm going to go away, we all forgive him. so we take part in that. >> how do you distinguish between a real addiction and a fake addiction? >> yes. a great question. that is part of the issue right? because sexual addiction doesn't really exist but some someone comes into my office as a patient i say that
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doesn't exist we need to look at depression and you need to take responsibility but they waub down the street and get another mental health professional or someone who agree was them and there have been studies out there showing it is real. they'll spend money to try to get a defense or to get it fixed. part of the issue is there so much science out there. people don't know how to sort through that. >> yes. i was liking at castro's behavior. doesn't seem unhappy about his lot in life. do you think we're incorrect in thinking idea of rotting in jail is a punishment for a psychopath when he'll just like the stuff he is adapt with new surroundings and live a different life when he shouldn't be alive at all? >> well, look. i don't think rotting in jail are being in jail contrary to
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portrayals out there it's not a great life. where he's going from my perspective not a great life. having said that, i do think that it is a bad lot to have to go prison for life. in some senses yes, he does get some of the comforts that a lot of people in our country don't have. so i guess the other side of that we're people say that is not bad enough for him. >> what do you think would be a proper punishment? >> for him? >> yes. >> i think you know it key depends on the victims what you heard the victims say is that they're comfortable with, one, number two, i tend to worry less about punishments at this point in life and say how do we look at aerial castros of the world and prevent the next aerial castro? how do i catch one so they don't victimize more kids? >> all i think about are just punishments and if i controlled prison boy hire the best plastic surgeons remake
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aerial castro as a beautiful woman put him into the general population in san quentin and let him get passed around like a cheese tray in a super bowl party this, is why i'm not allowed to run prison autos that is creative, greg. >> i think bit a lot. thank you, dr. forest. >> bill stirs things up with an interview with the founder of black entertainment television, then, word police out in force in seattle f you go there, don't think of saying the word citizen no, lie. some are saying it's hurtful. please shoot me. we hope you stay tuned for those reports. if you leave very cameras in your homes. we hope you stay tun
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in the first factor flash back segment tonight unemployment rate for black americans stands over 12.5% almost half that for whites. the founder of black entertainment television said
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this. >> this country would never tolerate white unemployment at 14% or 15%. no one would ever stay in office in this nation. but we have that double unemployment for over 50 years. >> robert johnson entered the no spin zone. bill asked him about president obama's popularity among african american autos so here is what i don't understand. 93% of african americans voted for president obama last november. black employment is so high. why? >> yes. well, i think first of all african americans have immense pride in president obama as a president. they see it as a major accomplishment in this country embracing an african american leader. and they're positive and hopeful probably more than anything else that his leadership will make their lives better. >> all right. but it didn't turn out that way. i mean in four years to improve the black unemployment
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rate. and it's not improving. so, you're saying that african american community is voting on a hope? they hope it's going to get better but it hasn't gotten better. >> i would say, bill african americans have been living under this unemployment problem this, gap for over 50 years if you look at the bureau of labor statistics. >> i have them here. >> african american unemployment has been double that of whites for over 50 years. >> let me give you the stats. year 2000, when president owe bush was elected first term, black unemployment was below 8%. it went up a little bit, then down again in 2007. to about 8%, under president obama that has risen from when the president took office it was about 10%. and it has now risen to 14% so. there has been a, with
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everybody else, a ebb and a flow in black unemployment. i believe primary problem in african american problem is out of wedlock birth. 71%. and that drives poverty. it makes educating kids harder because they're not supper viz they had zront a dad in the homes many times, am i wrong in that? >> i think you're wrong in saying it's a primary driver of african american unemployment. it's wuchbt social factors african americans face. to me principle drivers are the failure of corporate america to hire enough african americans who are qualified to get access to capitol to start small businesses which are great engines for creating employment and a legacy of long term institutionalized racism placed blacks in a situation where the past 20 years the wealth gap increased
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by $70,000 among african americans and whites according to the pew research center in addiction african american median income is one tenth of that of white americans when you add the dislocations and economy not all of them are caused in any way by recession but a big part of them global competition, and other things in terms of u.s. manufacturing and business. african americans are usually the last hired and first fired. >> do you believe it's a skin color issue? rather than a performance issue? >> bill, i have been convinced all of my life, i've been in business all of my life quite successful as you might know but i will tell you this, there are hundreds of thousands of african american who's have talent, work ethic, to be successful in jbs or business. but have you to admit that any time you have a situation for
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50 years dating back to civil rights movement when african americans were making huge gains in employment we spent more money in education than any time in african american history there is something more than just the failure of the family or failure of an individual african american to pursue a job. it has to do the fact that this question of race discrimination still lingers on. >> you're laying it on skin color. i can't say yes or no. i can tell thu. i and i are kind of contemp rareys started out in media about the same time. every corporation i've worked for in 37 years actively recruited african americans they want them, qualified african americans they're looking for them. now i don't know whether i don't know if there is racism in oil industry or wampking industry. i don't know. i can't make definite
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statements about it. but it's interesting your point of view. that is why we wanted to have you on tonight. >> we'd like to remind to you check out bill owe rileo' rileo's-o'reilly's column this week. later congressman wrangle says very outrageous things about white people, i would be offended if it wasn't one fifth ewok. now, the white house trying to forth a mommy state complete with a nudge squad. stay tuned.
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with 48-month financing. sleep number. comfort individualized. thanks for staying with us. i'm greg gut feld in for bill owe rileo who isn't -- o'reilly who isn't here. and now, the magazine cover featuring the boston terrorist. joining us from l.a. leslie marshal with me in new york city is mike galager. so leslie i guess we know that sulry poses of maniacs appeal to the rolling stone demographic. >> i'm upset about this. i'm from boston. everybody talking about they're not going read this, if they wanted to read the article they don't have to buy rolling stone magazine, hello,
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google, twitter. i just, this article and this magazine could have sold perhaps as many copies if they hadn't used the same photograph. it's so offensive to victims and families. >> it just fits into the idea of the cool rock star almost indistinguishable from mick jagger. could it be the only people who bought this image were editors and reporters? because 60,000 people is every editor and writer on both coasts its not a lot but good news for rolling stone this, is the problem. when getting outraged we fuel the product and sell product to these people. i need to learn to walk away, ignore a story not give it -- like the playground kid who cries for attention, we give attention, they get what they want. it's shameful. i talk to boston residents so
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hurt by that cover. i don't know how rolling stone people sleep tonight tonight but i think tokes on a doobie puts them into a good sleep. >> i don't know what you're referring to. >> they sell twice as many copies. a blog on ear wax gets more views than that. so it's rolling stone is on its way out. next story, elliott broncsman doesn't want his colleagues to use words like citizens or brown wag. leslie. will you join me in expressing relief we have gotten rid of these offensive words? >> i think doobie is next on the list. i would like a definition of what that means later, guys. >> i think anyone brings brown bags. you know, listen if people are offended by words like this, we need to be sensitive to
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people that are offended i'm being serious about that. we do. you know, in the past we've been too white and too male for too long. you have to be sensitive. >> that is funny. >> there ought to be two brown bags and one for leslie to put over their heads in expressing such a moronic position. i mean, i would like the crazy liberal who is a member of my family i no longer associated with says she was offended at the term man hole cover. it should be personal hole cover. the fact sthau don't realize how crazy people are offended by brown bag. we better accommodate or citizen. that gets right to the jugular. citizen. the guy is nuts. >> you've got to figure where it's coming from. seattle. i mean they have the space needle. what is that for? space? there is no tear in space have
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you to sew. >> there are some doobies there, either. >> next topic. the federal government wants to create a bee hairor yil insight team looking for ways to influence people's behavior to nudge foam save more money for retirement. among other things. won't they nudge us towards behaviors guaranteeing more government? >> we've been being nudged to we're black and blue back there. everything wrong with the world of government in our lives represented in this goofy story. i've got an idea. why znlt the white house let americans behave the way we want to behave. we don't want barack obama or joe biden nothing us. >> i'll take nothing over fudging. >> true. >> i guess nudging is the better than being forced to do something. >> yes. i just want to say, mike you just said black and blue.
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be careful. that borders brown paper bag. i think he would love this. this is the government saying look we're going to teach you personal responsibility. when i was very young, just a week old, after jimmy carter was president i remember that energy crisis my parents told me shut off the lights and water when brushing your teeth. learn to conserve energy, water, i think it's good to be conditioned to better behavior. >> yes. >> you know funny thing is that you know you will be nudged to combat things like global warming but there will be no nothing to start a business or perhaps not to have children when you aren't married because they'll never make value judgments only certain left wing judgments. >> there is leslie just want be to be nudged by the government to show what you to do. >> i don't, okay, we're off air. >> you're still there.
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i'm going gelt you guys out, now. don't forget about insane billoreilly.com summer sale a huge success. everything marked down big time. you'll save money. i just bought his book killing william hair yi harrison. it's about pneumonia. and coming up, charlie wrangle compares tea party to white crackers who fought desegregation. back with that in just a moment. hey linda! what are you guys doing? having some fiber! with new phillips' fiber good gummies. they're fruity delicious! just two gummies have 4 grams of fiber! to help support gularity! i want some... [ woman ] hop on over! [ marge ] fiber the fun way, from phillips'.
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in the unresolved problems do you remember when congressman charlie rangel said this two weeks ago. >> i think it's possible a black zimmerman the question is whether they would have beat him to death. then throw handcuffs on him
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and dragged him into the streets. >> well, today reports that more inflammatory comments from the 83-year-old congressman n an interview with the daily beast, a web site not an actual beast he talked about defeating the tea party quoted this way. the same group we fwaised in the south with those white crackers. white crackers not only redundant but offensive to wheat thins we put in calls and e mails for the quote. one staffer said mr. rangel was taken out of context but still no official from the office. he must hate short people. with me now, fox news analyst. what? seems like this has been going on a long time. gotten worse, right? >> this is outrageous, you're comparing tea party activists to segregationists,
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segregationists were democrats. tea party activists, i take great offense to what charlie rangel has said. these are freedom loving american who's oppose big government and nsa spying on it. irs intimidating us. that is what tea party is all about. how dare charlie rangel make these statements? >> isn't the real problem charlie rangel has with the tea party is desire to shrink the government, if you shrink that, you shrink charlie rangel? >> it's about power, money, influence, control. you've been in office what? 100 years? what has he done for harlem? it's in horrible shape with jobs public schools, crime on the streets. he's own enriched himself for
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self fulfilling need. which is why he's been in office so long. people continue to vote for him. >> i don't understand the phrase white cracker, it seems redundant. >> i find it offensive, i'm for all americans to push back on this nonsense we have to talk going on all the time. in the black community and it's devicive. i'm with freedom work we have a project called empower.org for black conservatives to get action in grass roots and hold politician as ktable. it's not helping our country or race relations what he has said has done nothing for jobs in the black community. unemployment is over 14% for blacks. these comments are not helping economy or job autos what is the nature about black conservatives that seems to
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the liberal establishment? it scares the hell out of them. why is that? >> we're a threat we stand for empowerment, personal responsibility, i support school so choice there are black liberal who's do not support school choice. if you zront a quality education what are these kids supposed to do? they can't read and write. it's deplorable. >> has there been a meeting of the minds between black liberals and black conservatives? >> i went to the naacp convention i tried to get a speaking slot on their agenda i was denied. i tried to get booth space, told they were sold out whchl i got there, there was plenty of space available for me to set up a table. so they don't want our message of liberty and empowerment to be communicated to the black community because that blow as way their narrative there is
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rampant racism in america and blacks need special treatment. there are clowns out there who are racist. but when you have people like charlie rangel making these comments, jesse jackson, al sharpton talking about jim crow, come on, push back on these and hold them accountable. >> they need to be held accountable, slautly. >> thank you. >> thank you. >> when we come back american fathers have they turned into wimps? that report, moments away. turned into wimps. that report moments away. ♪
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kids. >> so you got five kids in ten years. >> five kids, there might be more, i haven't talked to my wife in an hour after the third kid, people stop congratulating you. >> what's the best part about being a dad for you. >> dads are the vice president of the executive branch of the family, which surprised me. you know, the mom is the presid clinton feeling their pain. so we're al gore, the nerd telling them to turn off the lights. my wife has instituted this open door policy, where if one of our kids has a nightmare, they're welcome to come in our room and p pee in the bed. >> as ralph crandell put it --
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>> things have definitely changed, my dad, essentially just brought home the bacon. by that he didn't even shop for the bacon or bring it home and cook it. it's not that my generation of fathers didn't do anything, it's just that they didn't feel guilty. >> i'm bringing the flank steak home, and occasionally a lobster tail gets in the mix. >> with my books, i'm like with your kids. >> with my book, dad is fat, the title came from my now 7-year-old's and he showed it to me, and i put it up for adoption. >> as well you should. i wrote a column last week about my son's little league team, and
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we lost because they were hot. you know, they couldn't play. it's hot. >> right. >> you know, where's the air conditioning on the field. so it's a softer generation. and their expectations of dad are not the same. that they were. why do you think that so many parents these days put their kids on a pedestal, and they're almost adoring of the child, where again, post world war ii, '50s, '60s, those kids were there to do casts and shut up. now they're like little idols, and i don't know really what happened there. >> i think that every generation, we try to figure it out. they go all right, the baby should sleep on its stomach, the baby should sleep on its back. i mean we're trying to figure it out. all i have to do is good one for five, i've got a lot of pancakes to ruin. >> babies are a lot of work. i try and pitch in.
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i do diapers, i don't change them, but i go, you got to do this diaper. >> final question, you live in new york city, when you're not hobnobbing. >> god knows, we live in a two bedroom apartment. i thought it through, but it's not like we're setting a goal. it's just ended up that we're still in a two bedroom and my wife, whenever she has her an yul baby, that kind of steers the relocation off a little bit. >> so that you can afford to live out in the suburbs where i am. the book is dad is fat. two bedrooms, five kids. while we're pushing books, don't
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forget mine, "the joy of hate" each book comes with 330 page numbers. next is bill o'reilly, and don't forget, the spinning stops here because we're looking out for you. >> tonight, now is the single best time and best opportunity to defeat obama care. >> if the president's not going to implement the law, we're not going to fund it. >> welcome to groundhog day in the house of representatives. >> this law is not working, you would have to take republicans word for it. >> taking something like

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