tv Stossel FOX News October 13, 2013 7:00pm-8:01pm PDT
7:00 pm
tonight. we'll see you tomorrow. >> how incentive and cold can you >> how incensety and cold can you get? >> that's what i hear by challenging welfare workers. >> we are talking about people we ought to be rushing to try to help. >> the needy get benefit credit cards, ebg cards. free stuff for victims. bill o'reilly gets this one right. >> no matter what the evidence no matter what facts are presented, the ripple line will be the same. it's society's fault. >> a mom blames her parents for her bad attitude. the backstreet boys nick carter blames his drug problems on
7:01 pm
harrhair paris hilton. >> he blames his problems on the c kardashians. >> they say they can't find work. >> is it possible i believe they are not really trying? this woman works for the welfare office. >> you encourage people to be dependent? is>> yes, we do. >> what should be done about that? >> i don't really know. i don't really know. i guess stop giving away the money and they will get a job. >> now, john stossel. >> are you a victim? i won 19 emmy awards for protecting victims by protecting them by exposing sleazy companies like the ones selling these solar powered clothes dry ar. 50 bucks. >> what does that get in the
7:02 pm
mail? a clothes lionel. >> this machine uses chemical sprays to make people feel younger. >> ugly facial things. >> look, there was my job. i am a consumer reporter. i should warn you about scams. nothing wrong with consumer's reports. but the media always goes over board. at 2020 we did. >> phony coffee makers may cause thousands of fires. john stossel on brewing disasters. >> did you happen to catch this news story. >> tamara leitner went under cover to see first hand how this under ground world works. >> 8 people sharing a meal in a stranger's home. clandestine dinner parties like these have become more popular and insiders tell us they are completely unregulated. >> oh my goodness unregulated dinner parties. >> gavin is a columnist for a
7:03 pm
magazine and hates this kind of hype and righwrites about it. >> what gets in their head? >> they are out of touch with the average american. they need to get in there. they don't have a degree they run the numbers. >> anybody who tried to build something a building or a business they wake up to regulation. reporters most have never built anything. now, i notice they took the comment section down from the web page at that news station. you called a reporter up and give her some heat i hope and she said she seemed dubious to my questions. she wouldn't answer the question. >> she wanted to know what my angle was or why i was asking questions with questions. one thing i think reporters are scared of are being exposed. you stick their face up or you call out their name they are
7:04 pm
less likely to go on these witch hunts. >> under cover dinner parties caused a scare. one of the more famous julia roberts portrayed erin brockovich. >> they kill people. they dream about being able to let their kids swim without having a hysterectomy when they are 20. >> this was about a chemical plant supposedly causing cancer. it turned out it probably wasn't causing cancer. the california cancer registry studied cancer rates in that area and found no cancer in if excess. people fall for this because it is intuitive to think being near a power plant is probably bad or all of this pollution is probably bad or being stressed must lead to cancer. when you talk to experts in the field they go really smoking is the only thing you can do to change your genetic makeup.
7:05 pm
if you are going to have cancer you are going to get cancer. >> the lawyers made $100 million off of it despite no evidence. >> give the real erin brockovich credit, i invited her on this program and she came. >> californians have to pay more for electricity to pay off all of these lawyers it looks like a scam to me. >> that is definitely not a scam. with pacific gas and electric being a part of it in the process from the beginning to the end it was a willful egregious intentional conduct on their part. they knew that that chemical was a poison. >>, yeah, the chemical was a poison but they studied 50,000 people at the power plant and were exposed more and they were healthier than average. so media sells it, the lawyers
7:06 pm
get rich everybody pays more or electricity. >> chlorine is a poison. we swim around in it all of the time. it is great. i love poison. >> you wrote about the myth america pageant. what is that about? >> what happened in media they become story tellers they find a villain and set up the princess in the capital story and work backwards and get the evidence there. th they started relying on twitter. the myth america pageant pound teens and said she looks like a terrorist. twitter is a place where they say this house is not zombie proof. >> but there was actual bash r backlash. >> some kids, some 14-year-olds. you check their followers. there was no backlash. they crowbar it in. >> here is an example of media
7:07 pm
freakout. >> the new winner is facing fierce backlash. >> some people calling her a foreigner, an arab even terrorists. >> she is coming face to face with racism. >> recent comments saying kuwait miss america is a terrorist. >> fierce backlash. >> i looked that women up. she is a little kid. if you look up i hate babies you will find dozens of kids saying that. twitter is full of rhetoric. >> why does the media do this? >> there are a million theories but i think cult vility is not sexy on tv. >> even though it what made our country great it is who we are as a nation. it makes people better to say te it's not their fault they are a victim of circumstance. >> one last thing about media people ripping their hands is about recent kids being bully. >> this kind of bullying is on
7:08 pm
the rise. 1 in 3 kids is being victimized. >> it is a growing epidemic. >> it is on the rise it is an epidemic. >> i was bullied. i assumed it was just a part of school. now there's awareness. i bet there is less bullying. this former teacher says this is an example of the media doing something right. you like this? >> i do. i am a former teacher a former dean. i saw cases of bullying. >> elementary school, high school, college. >> it is a real problem. on occasion you have kids who not only their grades suffer but they condemn plate the idea of them hurting sem they haves. u see kids commit suicide because of this. when it comes to bullying the media and media personalities that have a platform can highlight those cases. for example there was a girl in queens i read a story about a
7:09 pm
girl who did commit suicide because of bullying. the administration wasn't doing proper follow up. the parents tried to alert them to the problem. that's the kind of journalistic coverage that can help the issue and maybe cause terrorists who aren't too zoned into this issue and say hold on a second let me go up to the school to make sure it is okay. >> what about the media that says look. >> they can label things as bullying and label things as serious bullies that aren't necessarily. but there are cases where it is serious. particularly now with the internet age where we have facebook and twitter and cyber bullying. schools ha schools>> >> an anchor said she got a letter you are a bad example for kids you should take care of
7:10 pm
yourself. she complained it is about bullying. >> there are children would don't know better who get mail like minor worse each and every day. the internet has become a weapon. >> she is a hero. the guy just said you should take care of yourself you are not a good example. >> this is an example of hypersensitivity. that that is where the fine line comes in. >> this keeps happening we declare epidemics without running the numbers. it is tragic that a kid killed himself or herself. but let's compare those to bee stings. how serious is this problem? let's quantify -- >> hundreds of americans are killed by deer. >> let's quantify the people who weren't bullied. when you put a protective layer on it you coddle them they are not prepared for the real world. >> now we have the internet and anonymity let's people bully
7:11 pm
you. >> when you are arguing with someone -- this guy called her fat, which she is by the way. >> he didn't even call her fat. >> you are not healthy, sorry. >> there has to be a balance here. >> we are way beyond balanced in our media culture. >> the media has an agenda. we all know that. >> if you would lake to keep this conversation going go to facebook and twitter and use that hash tag. let people know what you think. >> coming up, another bake sale. a racist bake sale. >> that's not right. >> also today what does it mean to be poor in america? >> i have a tv. >> i have a television. >> you have air-conditioning? >> yup. >> cable tv? >> how many channels?
7:12 pm
>> 101. >> 101. ♪ ♪ [ male announcer ] eeny, meeny, miny, go. ♪ ♪ more adventures await in the new seven-passenger lexus gx. lease the 2014 gx 460 for $499 a month for 27 months. see your lexus dealer. fordoes your dog food have?ths. 18 percent? 20? new purina one true instinct has 30. active dogs crave nutrient-dense food. so we made purina one true instinct.
7:13 pm
learmore at purinaone.com if you think a prune is a prune, yothe amazing prune.nsweet, two great ways to enjoy the amazing prune are plum amazins and sunsweet ones. plum amazins diced prunes are great as a snack or on just about anything. i like that! i'd put these on a salad. these would be perfect for cookies. ones individually wrapped prunes are simply irresistible. that is so juicy. it's packaged by itself. that's fantastic. delicious and nutritious my kids are going to love this.
7:14 pm
ones and plum amazins. only from sunsweet, the amazing prune. [ maleghts always be green. [ tires reech ] ♪ [ beeping ] ♪ may you never be stuck behind a stinky truck. [ beeping ] ♪ may things always go your way. but it's good to be prepared... just in case they don't. toyota. let's go places, safely.
7:16 pm
mid minimum wage. could you live on that? what point is it so low if you work for that you are a victim? >> people got bills. house payments, car insurance, all of the utilities. and you know, that doesn't -- the minimum wage doesn't cover it. >> it often doesn't. lately there have been lots of protests around the country. restaurant workers complaining about low pay. california passed a bill that raised that state's minimum wage $10 an hour. government must step in to guarantee the victims of greedy employers more money. a living wage. brook is president of the iron rand institute. we know what a selfish person ian rand was. what's your deal?
7:17 pm
you add kate selfishness? >> i am advocating self interests that anybody should be self interested. in that sense many people out there who are interested in working for these grates and indeed what happens when we set the minimum wage so high it is 10 bucks an hour or whatever the rate happens to be, 7.25 is what happens to those people who don't produce $10 an hour. what we create is those who don't find a job who are those people? young inexperienced teenaged inner city youth who are now excluded completely from the work force they will never learn the skills and never get the experience necessary for making $100 an hour. >> why are they excluded? >> if they make 5 bucks an hour no one is going to lose on the employees that they hire. >> restaurant lobbyists ran this
7:18 pm
ad minimum age.com why robots could replace fast food workers demanding higher minimum wage. >> we are seeing this. if you drive up what restaurants will do they need to make the profit. they still keep the price cheap they will replace people with technology. >> mcdonald's response to this they came out with a sample budget a free comprehensive money management tool to provide an outline of what an individual budget may lack like. they can work for minimum wage and still save 100 a month. however it included working two jobs. they took a lot of heat for that. >> it is a little big brotherly for mock donald to tell employees here's what you can do. peeni people are living across this country making minimum wage. people made it on much less than this and they had kids and got
7:19 pm
an education. >> people do around the world. >> they live on much much less. government has no he rono roll dictating. >> they have decided they have a role. >> they have. as a consequence you are seeing youth unemployment in this country at 20 percent. you see national unemployment from those who can least afford it. >> every sass facet of this budget is basically unachievable. >> many people achieve it. the we all started somewhere. i make a lot of money today but i start making less than a minimum wage. i was a foreign student working in graduate school making probably less than this. with two kids. you manage. it is wrong to try to force people to pay a particular wage they have a particular form of income. this should be left for others.
7:20 pm
that's a negotiation. >> as i watch the protestors there is a spring in their step. >> who got the power? >> we got the power. >> they don't act like victims. >> i don't see any of them looking like starving people. we make it more expensive for employers to hire we are not just violating their rights. you see the profit and everything that has to do economically with that but also denying jobs of people who can't accord it. >> listen to the serious protest. >> some people work 80 hours a week and they can't make ends meet or they have no time for anything else all they do is work all week. >> all they do is work all week. >> nobody owes them anything.
7:21 pm
>> we are a rich country. don't we owe the poor something? >> as an individual i feel like i owe people something. >> they are not asking for your help for an individual they are asking it's for the state to bring coercive power and force you to help them. force the employers to help them. >> thank you. coming up, are black people victims in america? do i victimize them further if i run a racist bake sale? >> we have different prices here. if you are asian a buck 50. if you are white a buck. if you are latino or black, $0.50. [ female announcer ] research suggests cell health plays a key role throughout our lives. one a day women's 50+ is a complete multivitamin designed for women's health concerns as we age. with 7 antioxidants to support cell health. one a day women's 50+.
7:22 pm
with 7 antioxidants to support cell health. when ouwe got a subaru.s born, it's where she said her first word. (little girl) no! saw her first day of school. (little girl) bye bye! made a best friend forever. the back seat of my subaru is where she grew up. what? (announcer) the two-thousand-fourteen subaru forester. (girl)hat? (announcer) built to be there for your family. love. it's what makes a subaru, a subaru. i'm bethand i'm michelle. and we own the paper cottage. it's a stationery and gifts store. anything we purchase for the paper cottage goes on our ink card. so you can manage your business expenses and access them online instantly with the game changing app from ink.
7:23 pm
7:25 pm
but as time passed, i stted to notice max just wasn't himself.e and i knew he'd feel better if heost a little weight. so i switched to purina cat ow healthy weight formula. i just fed the recommended amount... and they both loved the taste. after a few months max's "speal powers" returned... and i got my hero back. purina cat chow healthy weight. ♪ john: if any >> do any people have the right to label themselves victims? first we had slavery then state
7:26 pm
required segregation. then continuing racial discrimination. but the author of backlash argues this focus on the past is terrible for blacks. one says blacks should stand up against progressive tyrants who promote victimhood. destructive progressive tyrants? >> progressive policies are harming the black unity are failing public schools unemployment is over 13 percent over 40 percent of young black individuals. >> they are victims. stand up to the policies that aren't working. they are not victims that's the narrative the left uses all of the time to promote their big government agenda. they don't want to promote liberty certainly responsibility they promote bigger government. they think government is the answer. >> you went to the naacp annual meeting you heard a lot about victim hood. >> through out the entire meeting. >> what i heard when i was
7:27 pm
there, it was an us verses them mentality. i didn't hear any solutions. i heard a lot of victimization a lot of race cards. voter ids are racist. it was us verses them. if you were black you don't stand a chance. >> at the naacp conference where you were not allowed to speak al sharpton mocks people who say the election of president obama means americans are past racist. >> those who were saying that never was profiled in the department store. those that were saying that was never pulled over on a highway. >> here's the point a black man is more likely to be pulled over on the highway, profiled. >> racism is not prevalent across our country. there are idiots out there who are racist. look at people in politics sports, entertainment.
7:28 pm
myself. i em employer aimplore all amer back don't be called a racist or sell out. if you believe in in liberty and you want toed a vance our country forward i implore all americans to speak out. >> let's talk about the killing of trayvon martin. the president said it could have been my son. could have been his son. >> he injected himself in this saying it was about race. >> the fbi concluded that zimmerman was not convicted. early on we had people who promoted it about race. that's what dom neared the headlines. >> the producer at nbc, surprise, surprise, clearly had black victimhood in mind when he edited and zimmerman called 911. here's the actual call. >> this guy looks like he's up
7:29 pm
to no good or he is on drugs or something. it's raining, he's just walking around looking about. >> okay. this >> the editor looked out is he white can blashgs, hispanic which left just this. >> this guy looks like he's up to no good. he looks black. >> in television you are looking to save time. we always make it. >> it was inappropriate and the wrong thing to do. anything about race is emotional and it is in the headlines. early on in this case with the investigation it was always about race. >> haven't blacks been victims in america? >> years ago, john, black individuals didn't have access to education, housing, jobs. times have i think chaed.
7:30 pm
we don't live in that era many more. >> it seems reasonable to me that whites should try to make amends to give a praek to minorities who maybe didn't have the breaks that i had. what is wrong with that? before you answer let's bring in a wihite person. >> she was denied admission to university of michigan because you are white. how do you know because of your race? >> the university of michigan and universities across the country are proud of the fact they use race to help people and hurt others. at the university of michigan when i applied -- >> they are not proud they hurt others but they help some. >> when i applied to the university of michigan they had a point system you needed 100 point to be accepted. a perfect score act 12 points outstanding 1 point. if you are black hispanic you
7:31 pm
are automatically awarded 20 points. more than a perfect act or sat score. it is very obvious how much of a factor race plays. >> you sued over this and took it to the supreme court and you won. >> i did. >> but affirmative action still lives. >> yes. it was a mixed decision where the supreme court said that race preferences could not be used in a mechanical way. there could not be a point system any more. racism could be used as a factor for another 25 years. >> if i was a job applicant a white and black, and they are equal. i probably would pick the black person figuring this person maybe had to over come something in the past. what is wrong with that? >> i think our decision making should be color blind. >> what about the history of discrimination and special privileges for our whites? >> i don't know of any special
7:32 pm
privileges that i have right now. there are three unintended victims. there are people who get a preference and get into college -- or to get a job and don't need it. their residentials are questioned. let's talk about that. you sent us a a 16-year-old girl she had top grades perfect sat scores and she is against affirmative action. >> this causes racial tension and division because what people are going to say we don't get preferences we don't get advantages. they are going to preserecent t minoriti minorities. i don't want people looking at me saying maybe she just got in because of what she looks like not because she is qualified. >> you have heard that before how can you trust this doctor deserves to be a doctor? >> if these policies didn't exist we would know the people who are in positions that hold
7:33 pm
our life in their hands are there because of their merit. >> the other victims you say are people who get the preferences and don't do well in school. >> correct. people who are qualified to get into maybe a second tier school. then bumped up because of preferential treatment they get into a top stairwell. off tyne times they feel su-- d feel successful. better to have people ready to go and graduate and get a degree and feel like a success. >> the third category is this message of victim hood. >> the jesse jackson, the al sharptons. >> if you are told you are a victim you start to act like a victim? >> exactly. you act like a victim you become a victim.
7:34 pm
and it becomes a type of machine tality. >> to raise people's consciousness about affirmative action i once ran a racist bake sale. >> cupcakes for sale. my price list says asians 1.50. whites $1. latinos and blacks just $0.50. >> that's not right. >> you have got to be out of your gosh darn mind. >> that's stereotyping. >> it is stereotyping. >> it is not right. >> but it is the same principal, right? >> you got their attention. >> i should say once we had a conversation people were saying oh i never thought of it that way. >> frederick douglas was born a slave. he escaped slavery. he was involved in politics. he was an advisor to presidents. he digs daned affirmative action
7:35 pm
and special treatment. if he can do it any one can with hard work. >> the bake sales they highlight the hypocrisy. you can't be for race preferences contracting public jobs and then call what you did outrageous. >> thank you, jennifer and janeane. more on so call victimhood coming up. [ man ] on december 17, 1903, the wright brothers became the first in flight. [ goodall ] i think the most amazing thing is how like us these chimpanzees are. [ laughing ] [ woman ] can you hear me? and you hear your voice? oh, it's exciting! [ man ] touchdown confirmed. we're safe on mars. [ cheers and applause ] ♪ hi. [ baby fussing ] ♪
7:36 pm
[ baby fussing ] stick with innovation. stick with power. stick with technology. get the flexcare platinum. new from philips sonicare. losing thrusters. i need more power. give me more power! [ mainframe ] located. ge deep-sea fuel technology. a 50,000-pound, ingeniously wired machine that optimizes raw data to help safely discover and maximize resources in extreme conditions. our current situation seems rather extreme. why can't we maximize our... ready. ♪ brilliant. let's get out of here. warp speed. ♪
7:37 pm
of their type 2 diabetes with non-insulin victoza®. for a while, i took a pill to lower my blood sugar, but it didn't get me to my goal. so i asked my doctor about victoza®. he said victoza® is different than pills. victoza® is proven to lower blood sugar and a1c. it's taken once-a-day, any time, and comes in a pen. and the needle is thin. victoza® is not for weight loss, but it may help you lose some weight. victoza® is an injectable prescription medicine that may improve blood sugar in adultth type 2 diabetes when used with diet and exercise. it is not recommended as the first medication to treat diabetes and should not be used in people with type 1 diabetes or diabetic ketoacidosis. victoza® has not been studied with mealtime insulin. victoza® is not insulin. do not take victoza® if you have a personal or family history of medullary thyroid cancer, multiple endocrine neoplasia syndrome type 2, or if you are allergic to victoza®
7:38 pm
or any of its ingredients. symptoms of a serious allergic reaction may include: swelling of face, lips, tongue, or throat, fainting or dizziness, very rapid heartbeat, problems breathing or swallowing, severe rash or itching. tell your doctor if you get a lump or swelling in your neck. serious side effects may happen in people who take victoza®, including inflammation of the pancreas (pancreatitis), which may be fatal. stop taking victoza® and call your doctor right away if you have signs of pancreatitis, such as severe pain that will not go away in your abdomen or from your abdomen to your back, with or without vomiting. tell your doctor about all the medicines you take and if you have any medical conditions. taking victoza® with a sulfonylurea or insulin may cause low blood sugar. the most common side effects are nausea, diarrhea, and headache. some side effects can lead to dehydration, which may cause kidney problems. if your pill isn't giving you the control you need ask your doctor about non-insulin victoza®. it's covered by most health plans.
7:39 pm
7:40 pm
conditioned to adopt a slave mentality. i don't own myself and i am not free. it is sad in a free country we are even calling ourselves poor. i got caught up in it. the goodies are get be much broader and much more expensive to the tax payer. >> people who get government saaid often say the solution to their problem is more government said. this is what i was told outside of a food kitchen in harlem. >> give us more jobs and opportunities to those less fortunate. >> government should create mob r jobs? >> more jobs. >> more food stamps. >> morewelfare. >> it is this impression that good comes from government. >> that is the disconnection. i never lived on it when i was on welfare. we have taken the shame out. you can live tax payer dependent and no one will know it. housing for the poor has been
7:41 pm
improved. you can't tell it's government paid for. >> you said you lived pretty well when you were on welfare? >> it is a mentality. people aren't connecting to their own lives and their own well-being. you will make due concerning slavery you will make due when you are owned by someone else they are putting barriers around their lives so they can't live free so you move from one benefit to the next. >> check out this cool californ surfer dude who uses his card to buy lob sdster and sushi. >> you go just like that. all paid for by our wonderful tax dollar. >> he had no interest of getting a job? >> is it is not something that appeals to you. >> no. >> i did it for a long time it wasn't until a christian
7:42 pm
conversion that i changed my life and engaged in my own well-being. work hard. we don't want to award ill behavior. >> they usually claim they are saving people but once i found one that admitted what she does leads people to not bother to work. >> you think you and human resources encourage people to be dependent? >> what should be done about that? >> i don't really know. stop giving away the money and they will get a job. >> and you work for the government? >> that is right. that is a pretty unusual reaction. >> don't work don't save don't get married. that's the rules of welfare. >> but the bureaucrats don't admit that usually. when you were collecting were people serious? >> they p weren't serious. they didn't admit it out in
7:43 pm
public. my caseworker told me did she ever ask if anybody came to my house to make sure they didn't pay what they were paying she wanted to go to lunch with her friend. >> one starving actress made this video. ♪ ♪ >> what we bleeped obviously was a word for sexual intercourse. the point is having more babies wins you benefits. >> you get pregnant you get a check. before welfare program you get pregnant at 14, 15, 16. not only do you get a check you get money to help you move from
7:44 pm
your parent's setting. >> you think a 14-year-old girl says i am going to get pregnant because i am going to get this monthly check? >> what we have done is incentivized this type of behavior. they are conditioned to believe they are victims. when you are 14 and you get pregnant and your mama was 14 when she got pregnant a broken spirit a broken environment a tragedy, you can say why not live more tad. next thing you know you are in the same cycle of dependancy. >> the media and the left, are they the same thing? they are culprits. >> there are other things that could be on the table before you pick a program that is feeding the nation's poor children. >> how insensitive and cold can you get? >> how insensitive and cold you
7:45 pm
must be to suggest these cuts. >> the best medicine ever is a cancer in our society. the people who are promoting to keep the status quo are part of the system. a oo we declare war on poverty and we have a collapse of marriage and communities in total ruins. you have those voices that keep insisting we continue this madness. >> thank you star parker. we do seem to continue madness. coming up the truly helpless deserve assistance. but government assistance? it creates more victims.
7:46 pm
i'm a careful investor. when you do what io, you think about risk. i don't like the ups and downs of the market, but i can't just sit on my cash. i want to be prepared for the long haul. ishares minimum votility etfs. investments designed for a smoother ride. find out why 9 out of 10 large professional investors choose ishares for their etfs.
7:47 pm
7:49 pm
♪ john: are you isabled? so disabled you can't find work? i >> you can't find work? i am a stutterer. the disability laws were there when i was trying to get work maybe i would have given up and collected a government check. i am glad the disability laws didn't exist them. without them i have struggled but i am good. the laws exist now and coincidentally more americans
7:50 pm
are disabled. >> a couple years ago at wal-mart i over hear a conversation between two women. i hear one woman say to the other ifkd take a pay cut or i could go for disability. it struck me as an analyst who delves into various government programs. i thought she spoke of that as if it was an either or. the numbers have exploded. when you started looking program we are not more disabled we are not a blue collar comedy. >> more people left manual labor. how can we be spending all of this more money for disability and have all of these people applying for disability. you have the kato chart that shows money spent the last 50 years. people say, oh, when the economy
7:51 pm
gets better then it goes down. it pairly went down in the 80s. basically it has gone up. >> you have parents trying to get kids on the psych tropic medications in in hopes they will gettincrease their odds of qualifying for a check. >> you start to feel like a sucker if you don't. >> look at the megs sandaling, i am disabled. as they become adults what is the first thing they are taught? >> it used to mean you were paralyzed you had a severe yo injury. now it means depression, back pain? >> it is stress, like any other government show gram it comes booe
7:52 pm
good intentions. the disability program is supposed to benefit those ages 50 to 64. a transition into regular materials. >> you see an increase for back page mental illness and nonexerti nonexertion>> i have a pinched nerve and that's a good chance i could qualify if asked hard enough. a oo most of the claims are things like anxiety, february lus. they give disability handouts lawyers make big bucks. >> passed unique social security benefits. don't try to get them on your own. we help people get disability bens fits.
7:53 pm
it is important to you wa -- th act now. >> sometimes when i am at the j gym i notice program after program contain these commercials or these folks. they don't make a ton of money especially law firms. if you run enough of them. >> binneder and binneder made 80 million. >> they made it easier for nonlawyers to represent people in afeeling a claim. they hired a bunch of lawyers and such and they rushed people through. the system they figure out the system and they collect little bits of money. >> and you pay. thank you, ted. coming up a doctor proposing rat music but try to fight. i love having a free checked bag
7:54 pm
with my united mileageplus explorer card. i've saved $75 in checked bag fees. [ delavane ] priority boarding is really important to us. you can just get on the plane and relax. [ julian ] havg a card that doesn't charge you foreign transaction fees saves me a ton of money. [ delavane ] we can go to any country and spend money the way we would in the u.s. when i spend money on this card, can see brazil in my future. [ anthony ] i use the explorer card to earn miles in order to go vis my family, which means lot to me. ♪
7:55 pm
♪ [ male announcer ] eeny, meeny, miny, go. ♪ ♪ more adventures await in the new seven-passenger lexus gx. lease the 2014 gx 460 for $499 a month for 27 months. see your lexus dealer. fordoes your dog food have?ths. 18 percent? 20? new purina one true instinct has 30. active dogs crave nutrient-dense food. so we made purina one true instinct. learmore at purinaone.com and honestly, it was a little scary to go down to one income. so, i had to get creative. i made some missteps. i switched to some weird bargain detergent instead of tide but no matter how much i poured, our clothes were missing that tide clean we were used to. iean, what would my grandma say if she saw the kids looking dingy?
7:56 pm
[ smoke alarm beeping ] oh! [ daughter ] mom burned the muffins! i hope you're not watching this, nana. [ female announcer ] one cap of tide gives you more cleaning power than 6 caps of the bargain brand. also available in powder with acti-lift crystals. [ mom ] that's my tide. some kind of... this is... an alien species. reality check: a lot of 4g lte coverage maps don't really look like much at all. i see the aleutian islands. looks like a duck. it looks like... america... ish. that's a map. that's a map of the united states. check the map. verizon's 4g lte is the most reliable, and in more places than any other 4g network. i've got the good one! i got verizon! that's powerful. verizon. the lg g2. featuring an intuitive rear-key design and 13 megapixel camera.
7:57 pm
>> now is time to have occurred and take responsibility for reactions in that year life the way it should be live. john: liv >> live your life the way it should be lived. that music is not from a pre foggiesnal singer be it is from a doctor from a clinic in ohio. got the idea from the kids you saw? >> i got this idea that started in my youth. i started working at fast track
7:58 pm
er. a lot of kids come in with problems. pregnancy, std's, drugs we develop a bond. i started talking to them. >> you would say why did you live like this? you were just a straight doctor. >> times they isn't have a way to go. i decided to use the rap music the think that he do it. that is what with we do. the let's play a clip from what if. >> what y ♪ >> you really think your music could make a difference? >> this is new. given the chance i guarantee you it will make a difference. some of the kids come back after
7:59 pm
the third show and say dock, i am so glad you spoke to us this way. a lot of people aren't doing that. you keep it real and dreet and we love it. there's a plaque community, most so-called victimings in america are right people. joe biden's niece was arrested for throwing a punch at a cop. she is addicted to alcohol and pills but doesn't take responsibility for her actions she blames them on the pressure she faces because her uncle is the vice president. give me a break. america succeeded because it was founded by people who were the opposite of have you beening times. people over coming obstacles is the root of prosperity and happiness, too. >> 3 years for all of you.
8:00 pm
that's our hoe. me. thanks for watching. tonight on huckabee. >> denying military death benefits. >> putting military families, war which dose in the cross-hairs of a political shutdown someone should be fired. >> national park rangers using scare tactics to deny paying customers access. >> you can feel the element of fear. >> as washington plays political games, real americans are left to deal with the real consequences. and is health insurance went up to $10,000. he says obama care raped her future. real americans how the affordable care act is make life unaffordable.
191 Views
Uploaded by TV Archive on
![](http://athena.archive.org/0.gif?kind=track_js&track_js_case=control&cache_bust=54876840)