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tv   Hannity  FOX News  October 21, 2013 7:00pm-8:01pm PDT

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entire life. good advice to continue looking into it in your area. go to facebook.com/the kelly file. follow me on twitter. tell me what you think. thanks for watching. let me know what's up? here's "hannity." welcome to the white house. you have probably heard health care.gov hasn't worked as smoothly as it was supposed to work. >> the sales man in chief puts the spin on problems plaguing his disastrous health care law. >> even with the problems at health care.gov the website is working for a lot of people. >> it's easy to use and understand. >> will sebelius be held accountable? >> she will have to resign. she no longer has the credibility to do the job. >> the program she's implemented is a disaster. >> former vice president dick cheney is here to talk about his new book. plus his take on the state of washington and more.
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that and ann coulter. quo hasn't starts right here, right now. welcome to "hannity." the obama care roll out disaster. it appears the president is now the salesman in chief. earlier today he spoke in the rose garden and tried to convince you, the american people, that this health care law is still a good idea despite the train wreck of a rollout. watch this. >> through the marketplaces you can get health insurance for what may be the the equivalent of your cell phone bill. the product, the health insurance is good. the prices are good. it is a good deal. people don't just want it. they are showing up to buy it. nobody is madder than me about the fact that the website isn't working as well as it should which means it's going to get fixed. >> three years, $634 million of your hard earned tack dollars.
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that's not all. the president continued to push the democratic-fuelled talking points which have been pushed since october 1. the computer glitches happen because too many people are trying to log in at once. he's not alone. watch the the bouncing ball. >> the number of people has been overwhelming which aggravated problems. >> there has been unexpectedly high levels of interest. we are taking action every day. that's the principle reason there is a b problem. >> it is not unique when you have a large new software program come out that people work to clean it up. so many millions of people rushed to get in. it shows the interest there is. >> it's true what happened is the website got overwhelmed by volume. >> the biggest challenge is keeping our websites up because of the volume. this doesn't show the hunger the american people have to sign up
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for health care, i don't know what does. >> we found out there have been time this is morning where the site has been running more slowly than it normally will. the reason is because more than 1 million people visited health care.gov before 7:00 in the morning. >> why can't they just be honest? report after report indicates it has nothing to do with the number of people trying to log onto the website. there are a dozen reasons including the fact that some reports indicate they used ten-year-old technology and the software wasn't tested until a week before the launch. no matter how hard team obama tries to spin and get surrogates to follow the spinning bouncing ball we'll continue to ek pose what the administration wants to supress starting now if you haven't looked, watch the bottom of the screen. you can see how much premiums are rising for average americans. if you are 27, 50, see how much your premium is going up. on average men are seeing a 99%
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increase. women, 62% according to forbes magazine. joining me marcia blackburn, congresswoman, how are you? >> i'm well. >> i called the number twice today on my radio show. we got through on the number the president gave us today. we got through. two nice operators probably will be fired for talking to me. they said, go back to the website. so the toll free number is president gave to help you directs you to the website that's not working. only government can screw it up this bad. help us out. >> you're exactly right. $600 million plus all of the hsk staff they have invested in this. they have problems. it doesn't work. the president promised people their insurance premiums would go down. they have gone up.
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he said if you like it you can keep it. not true. especially for those of us with health savings accounts. a site that should have cost a half million to build, not a half billion dollars to build. and nobody can make heads or tails of it. they don't want to come and just admit they made a mistake. it doesn't work. they've got a program that's too expensive to afford and the system they are using to show case it has been a failure. so we are looking for answers. >> i had a harvard grad i talked to last week. he said he could build a better system that could have all the capacity they need for less than a million dollars. if i'm the ceo of a company, anybody that's giving that much money and that much time that screws up this bad is getting fired. why isn't kathleen sebelius fired? >> thanks for having me, sean.
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she should be fired. this is totally unacceptable. they have had over three years to do this. the president himself, five days before the website launched said it would be just as easy as going to kayak.com and booking a flight. this is the yet another broken promise with this president and this health care law. marcia mentioned people losing their plans which he said wouldn't happen. we had 300,000 people in florida who had their planned cancelled today because of obama care. >> yeah. on average, this is what i don't understand. maybe this goes to the heart of the debate we have had. if men are seeing on average a 99% increase. women a 62% increase. look at delaware. if you're 27 years old, 99.9% increase. why aren't people demanding the savings the president promised? >> i think as people get their renewal notices that's what
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we'll see. obama care started out to be an $863 billion access to insurance program for individuals that didn't have access. that's what they said it was going to b. what it has become is a $2.6 trillion taking of the health care sector of our nation's income. 17% of our economy. this is what people are beginning to realize. you've got to pay for it. all the mandates on the hospital, physicians, all sorts of health care delivery. the cuts to medicare in order to stand this up. somebody has to pay. there is no such thing as free. we are seeing now that it is unbelievable if in the way that it is affecting every single portion of health care delivery and insurance in this country.
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insurance is where people will see the impact first. >> jay carney refused to rule out delaying the individual mandate today. which is all the republicans in the houser with asking for for the whole shutdown. is that a possibility at this late hour? >> i don't see how you can have the irs taxing americans for failing to purchase a product off a government-run website that doesn't work. it's just not fair. we could have done this september 30th. we never would have had a government shutdown. guess what, that will actually save the government according to cbo 35 billion dollars this year. no one's talking about a spending cut that big. to me it's a no-brainer at this point. >> all right, guys. appreciate you being with us. coming up, ann coulter is here. later, former vice president dick cheney will drop by for an exclusive interview. we'll talk about his new book, the state of the republican party, tea party versus establishment.
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when we come back, lawmakers are are preparing to hold kathleen sebelius accountable for the obama care train wreck. should she be fired? she's set to testify this week or next. the debate and the fate of the h hs secretary coming up. you have been voting all day at fox news.com/hannity. your first option was the ohio state marching band playing a tribute to the king of pop. do you want it to win? no matter how busy your morning you can always do something better for yourself. and better is so easy with benefiber. fiber that's taste-free, grit-free and dissolves completely. so you can feel free to add it to anything. and feel better about doing it. better it with benefiber. because an empty pan is a blank canvas. [ woman #2 ] to share a moment. [ woman #3 ] to travel the world without leaving home. [ male announcer ] whatever the reason. whatever the dish. make it delicious with swanson.
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absolutely she should resign. obama care is a disaster. it's not working. it's hurt people. >> her refusal to testify and be transparent is under mining her
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credibility. there may be a point, perhaps not today, but she will have to resign largely because she no longer has the credibility to do the job. senators ted cruz and markco rubio slamming kathleen sebelius yesterday. after the embarrassing, completely disastrous roll out of obama care she over saw calls for her resignation are growing louder by the day. the secretary will testify as early as next week b b about what went wrong. when she knew it regarding the health care website. what will be her fate? here to debate that ebony williams, bright bart news columnist kerry picket better known as lois lane. how are you? >> very well, sean. >> ebony, we spent $634 million. we had three years.
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this is a disaster. on top of being three times what they said it would cost, a b job killer and expensive. why shouldn't she get fired? wouldn't you fire her? >> no. i wouldn't fire her at this point, sean. there is so much we don't know. this roll out -- >> who's in charge? whoa. who's in charge. >> secretary sebelius is accountable, sean. >> how long did she have to get it up and running? >> substantial time. >> three years. >> how much did she spend on it? >> isn't that what this is for? >> we know. three years, $634 million. i have talked to techies saying this is ten years old. she's not responsible? >> she's accountable.
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we have to have proper testim y testimony. >> testimony? >> absolutely. >> what could she say? my dog ate the homework? my tech friend broke it? what could she say? >> nobody is interested in excuses. not you, me or the american people. >> if i'm obama care i'm firing her. where is the leadership here? >> if i was kathleen sebelius i would have been out of it. if the sites just fell down
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which they did she could say, well, the sites fell down. it wasn't my fault the. obama care can blame her now. she will be the sacrificial lamb. she went to a hearing and remember the the obama care waivers she said she didn't know about? she doesn't want to face it under scrutiny in senate hearings where you will have a number of democrats who b will be regretful, handling her with kid gloves. the republicans on the other hand, will want answers. >> ebony, let me go back to you. the average person in north dakota, plus 96% increase in premium. every state. 45 states increases in premiums for people what happened to the savings the president promised? why aren't you angry that the arch man is seeing premiums double. the average woman is seeing premiums go up 62%.
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why aren't you feeling betrayed when the president said we would see a savings of $2500 a year. >> the reason i'm not angry is to me i saw that that was rhetorical politics. >> rhetorical -- >> this the health care package gives us more coverage. that costs more money. >> rhetorical politics? so he knew he was lying? >> i don't know if the president knew he was lying. i have common sense. when a package gives you more coverage -- >> you did the math and figured. >> i'm a young healthy person, i knew i would pay more. >> what about -- does that bother you sp. >> it's a b problem. i'm not thinking the legislation is without a pob. the president -- >> ebony, the problem here right now is a number of people who
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already had health insurance that barack obama said they could keep are now getting letters from their health insurance company saying guess what, you are going to have to go into the exchanges and you will lose the insurance plan you had. that was something barack obama promised wouldn't happen. unfortunately it is happening. >> ebony? >> yeah. that is unfortunate. at the end of the day though something had to be -- >> that's a big unfortunate. >> america was broken. i don't think anybody can dispute it. we had 47 million people uninsured. something has to be done. >> 30 million -- cbo -- >> wait a minute. we have to pay for that. >> cbo says 30 million uninsured. that's a problem. >> let me give you a reality check. >> i'm waiting. >> a lot of people who have plenty of money will get kons seerj doctors and say, we'll pay for our own health care. everybody else will just get low
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quality obama care exchange health care. that's it. >> no. that correlation is unfair. >> that's what will happen. >> with all of this -- three times what the projected cost. people are paying uh up to $7500 more. they are not saving a penny. it's a $10,000 swing. a disastrous roll out. we need to cut our losses and cut sebelius. a disaster. good luck defending this in 2014. all right. thanks. appreciate it. up ethics, we havenext, we night. dick cheney joins us and the always outspoken ann coulter is next with reaction to the president's desperate attempt to defend obama care and how his liberal friends are beginning to turn against their old pal. you can vote for video of the day. the second option, a brawl broke out at met life stadium after the jets beat the patriots in
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welcome back to "hannity." despite the president's best efforts to defend this disastrous health care law earlier today it doesn't seem like many are taking the bait. even liberals are having a hard time defending obama care. over the weekend house minority leader nancy pelosi had this to
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say about the wonderful website. >> the fact is that yes what's happened is unacceptable in terms of glitches. they were overwhelmed to begin with. there is much that needs to be done to correct the situation. this is unacceptable. it has to with be changed. any system that deals with that many millions of people frequently does have a glitch. >> wrong. those comments came just days after former obama propaganda press secretary b robert gibbs called it excruciatingly embarrassing and even some of the obama-loving media is saying so. huffington post said failure threatens health care for millions of americans. and broken website imperils the largest expansion of the american safety net since the great society. coulter. i don't need to say your full
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name. isn't it true only government can screw something up this bad. >> no. this is conservatives' objection to the whole take over of health care to we gin with. it is a law of nature that everything run by the government will get expensive over time. everything run by the private sector gets better and cheaper. the fact that it starts this badly does not bode well. we want health care run on the same system that gave us cell cell phones, flat screens, jerry garcia ch irgs a pets. everything on the free market gets better. look at amazon. this will only get worse. obama care is designed to fail so they can move to a single payer system which will be worse. >> even cbs news said obama is headed for a credibility death spiral. i agree with the analysis. those people that were dooming
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and glooming republicans for the shutdown were wrong. consumer reports, ann. they are telling people to stay away from the website. >> i know. that's right. something you and i haven't been able to talk about on tv. this is why i think the shutdown was magnificent sh run beautifully. i'm proud of the republicans. they have branded the republicans as the anti-obama care party. obama care is unpopular. if you want to over turn it, vote for republicans. we have to take the senate. >> ted cruz goes back to texas and says it's great to be back in america. goes back to texas. i have been out speaking with you and you get a good reaction. >> eight minutes. >> eight minutes straight. a standing ovation. >> who gets an eight-minute standing ovation? rivera didn't get one. >> if i were in the crowd i would have given him and mike lee the same ovation.
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i disagree with some -- and i don't think you are one of them -- the republicans saying they are chickens. what's the point in banging your head against the wall? it's brilliant. funding 80% of the government. fund all the government except obama care. then fund all of government plus obama care but delay it for a year. then the last week is because democrats don't want to live under obama care. they got crossed arms, no negotiation from democrats and all the name calling. republicans played it beautifully. there was no point to carrying it on. the lesson that needs to be learned we have to elect republicans. >> you're fine in the end. i'm mad at john mccain, bob corker. >> the ones who criticized. >> if republicans could hold the line like democrats, hold the ranks on principle because it is bad for the country they would have won. >> i would expand it to a lot of
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the media on our side. one of my points in favor of the shutdown was there was no drudge report in 1995, no fox news, no internet. >> isn't that crazy? >> we have a lot of what we refer to as our media spending all their time critiquing ted cruz. i would put it to you this way. if the parties had been reversed. if republicans on a strict party line vote passed a massively unpopular law instantly democrats won a huge majority in the house and democrats say we'll fund the whole government except your unpopular law do you think nbc, abc, cbs and the new york times would have critiqued their way say we disagree with your tactics and you're crazy and going too far. no. there is a reward in this society for criticizing republicans. whether it is alleged rhino republicans or conservati debat
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discussion we are having. i want more ted cruzez elected. i want the conservative solution caucus formed. >> right. >> they have to be willing to fight on principle. this was principle to me. >> i agree. i love these guys. we should be proud. tea partiers should be standing tall. and the last two polls by gallup and one by nbc/wall street journal it was propaganda not polling. any pollster will tell you a poll of all adults is irrelevant. it includes people who can't name the vice president, people who don't know we have a supreme court. the only polls that matter are likely voter polls. those showed the public roughly split. as for your caucus, that's fine. first let's get a majority. don't waste our oh time primarying our guys. >> some deserve it.
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>> our energy and money should be spend on taking out mary landrieu, taking west virginia seats back. >> i agree. we'll get it. we're going to have a date soon where we'll be together. >> and i will be on "the view" tomorrow. i'm happy. >> exciting. >> i can't wait to see elisabeth hasselbeck. >> jenny mccarthy. >> what happened to elisabeth? >> oh, stop. she's on fox & friends. >> we're going to talk about politics, obama care, the gop and more with dick cheney. first what you have selected as tonight's video of the day. you have a truck swerving violently on a busy bridge as the driver tries not to plunge over the side. vote for that on hannitylive.foxnews.com. on twitter @seanhasn't. cleermz . wow. [ under his breath ] that was horrible. pays you cash when you're sick or hurt? [ japanese accent ] aflac.
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and global broadband network free you to focus on what matters. with custom communications solutions and responsive, dedicated support, we constantly evolve to meet your needs. every day of the week. centurylink® your link to what's next. welcome back. now former vice president dick cheney's health struggles have been well known for years.
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with five heart attacks and recently a transplant. now for the first time ever the former vice president is poping up about his medical conditions and his 35-year battle with heart disease. his brand new book which he cowrote with his cardiologist is in stores tomorrow. he joins us for his first cable interview. how are you? >> great to be back. >> i remember -- i'm trying to put the time in my mind with the book. i interviewed you at your house after you left office. >> right. >> you were in bad shape. >> that was a rough patch. i left in january of 2009. over the next 17 months i went from a serious heart patient but at the end of 17 months i was in end stage heart failure, near death. >> you were telling me you were on with dr. oz today. >> yeah. >> he had all different sized -- >> he's a heart surgeon and
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knows about the business. he had a tray covered with a blue cloth. then some gloves, you know. they pulled back the cover and there were three real hearts. not models. a little one that was normal size. a mid-sized one that had an lvad, the pump i had and then a big one. of course mine by the end -- and it lasted me 70 years. it was more than twice the normal size. he had a vivid display. he'd pick up a heart and hand it to me and what do you think of that. i would pass it off to john. >> you took a picture of how big yours was at the end. how big? >> close to six inches across. normal size would be about the size of two hands clasped together. after five heart attacks, seven cardiac arrests, a defibrilla r defibrillator, an lvad, a clasp
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that kept it working. all the work that was done to it over the years, it's gone now. the only thing left that shows i was a heart patient is i have a scar down the middle of my chest where they went in three times to do open heart surgery. i have a new heart inside and all the mechanical and electronic gear and so forth is gone. >> you have dedicated among the people in the book also to the person who donated it. >> the donor, absolutely. and the donor's family. i don't know anything. but i know their heart was in better shape than mine. a year after the surgery they do a complete catheterzation of the new heart. they are perfectly clean. no blo kaj of any kind. i haven't had a heart that clean since i was a teenager. >> what's the difference in how you feel? probably a basic question. what's the difference? >> well, first of all, i reached
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the point where, you know, you adjust after you have had heart disease that long. i was convinced eventually i would die of heart disease. that we'd run out uh of time, out of treatment, the technology wouldn't keep ahead of my disease. now all of the sudden when you get the new heart your life opens up before you again. you don't know how long you're going to live. you are back to the normal expectations. you can't set a date certain you're going to hang it up. the other thing is the sense that i can get back and do what i wanted to do. i reached a point on the old heart where i had trouble getting out of a chair. all i wanted to do was get out of bed in the morning, walk to my office and sit back down in the chair. now i throw 50 pound bags of horse feed in the back of the pickup truck. i don't even think about it. i'm doing those things. the only thing i can't do is ski. but that's because i have bad knees. >> bad legs. >> yeah.
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>> you said you believed you were approaching the end of your days. you were pain-free, at peace and felt you led a remarkable life. were you resolved to the thought that you thought you were going to die? do you believe that? >> i did. i reached the point of end stage heart failure. the heart was so after five heart attack, sudden cardiac arrest and the surgeries and so forth there were no options left. except that's when the lvad pump came on the scene. i knew given where i was at that it was only a matter of days and eventually hours. when they put the pump in to sustain the heart i was -- my kidney and liver were shutting down. the heart wasn't moving enough blood to feed my organs. they worked on me nine hours on an emergency basis one night. used over 20 units of blood. it was the toughest pronl i had to go through.
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part of it was because i was weak because i was so sick. my heart had worn out. i came back out of that. i had pneumonia as i recovered. i was on a respirator for weeks, heavily sedated. had to work my way to get back to the point where i was healthy enough for a transplant. >> when this first started, you had your first heart attack at 37. >> 37 years old. >> was that -- i have heard somebody describe it like a car on your chest. was that what it felt like to you? >> no. with me i had a tingling sensation in two fingers of my left hand. that was it. no chest pain. i didn't sweat or anything like that. i woke up in the middle of the night. i was on a campaign in cheyenne, staying with a friend. the thing that triggered was i had a first cousin who was a doctor himself who had a bad heart attack a few weeks before. that triggered the thought that i needed to have it checked out.
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so i woke up the people we were staying with. they drove lynn and i to the hospital. i walked into the emergency room, sat on the table and passed out. i was having a heart attack. that's the only symptom i had was just the tingling sensation. >> i guess a big part of the story is that you ended up quitting smoking then and technology stayed one step ahead of you. >> exactly right. >> explain that part. >> if you think of the things that kept me going, cholesterol-lowering medicine in '88. >> statin. >> it was a miracle drug. that was one of my problems was a high cholesterol level. the implantable defibrillator like the paddles they use to restart you when you go into cardiac arrest. my doctor who coquote the book with me, jon reiner. he was wise enough to suggest
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back in 2001 that i should have an implantable defibrillator. like a pacemaker but with the added feature of being able to measure heart rate and shock it into normal rhythm. eight years later, that's exactly what happened. that saved my life. >> they had to reprogram -- >> well, there was a problem. because the latest version which i had by then was capable of being programmed remotely which was a nice feature in terms of being able to manage it. as vice president the concern was -- >> somebody would kill you. >> somebody on a rope line with the right device could interfere with that implantable defibrillator and cause it to go into sudden cardiac arrest. some years later, in fact on an episode of "homeland" bad guys did kill the vice president by tampering with his implantable defibrillator. >> one of the number one killers of everybody. great advice here.
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great council sell. >> i hope it convey it is notion that there is hope. >> yeah. >> there are 80 million americans out there with heart disease. i look at the audience when i make a speech. i can say with a fair degree of accuracy every fourth person has or will have a heart problem in their life. part of the story we want to tell is to show the dramatic improvement in our capabilities of dealing with heart disease over the last 40 years. >> amazing. you have stayed one step ahead. you were the guinea pig the whole way. >> it was far enough along so it worked for me. obviously there was a lot of luck involved. prayers from a lot of people. went through the rough spots. my family was unbelievable. lynn had to nurse me every day. had to change my dressing for 20 months while i was living on a pump. that's tough. it was a lot of people contributing to the effort. for that i will be grateful, especially to the donor. >> talking about health care.
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this battle between establishment and tea party when we come back. we'll have more with vice president dick cheney after the break. later tonight, you have been voting all day. at the end of the program we'll reveal what you have chosen as the video of the day. that's coming up. helps you be ready anytime the moment's right. you can be more confident in your ability to be ready. and the same cialis is the only daily ed tablet approved to treat ed and symptoms of bph, like needing to go frequently or urgently. tell your doctor about all your medical conditions and medications, and ask if your heart is healthy enough for sexual activity. do not take cialis if you take nitrates for chest pain, as this may cause an unsafe drop in blood pressure. do not drink alcohol in excess with cialis. side effects may include headache, upset stomach, delayed backache or muscle ache. to avoid long-term injury, seek immediate medical help for an erection lasting more than four hours. if you have any sudden decrease or loss in hearing or vision, or if you have any allergic reactions such as rash,
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welcome back to "hannity." we continue with dick cheney. his new book "heart, an american medical odyssey" is out in stores tomorrow. there is a battle obviously ted cruz, rand paul, mike lee, marco rubio in this battle versus, quote, the establishment republicans. where do you see the battle? >> well, i'm not unsympathetic to the frustration that's led many americans to sign on for or become part of the tea party.
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i'm as frustrated as anybody else can be. but i think we have a situation where the circumstances in washington, the inability and unwillingness of the this administration to come to grips with our basic long-term debt problem, for example. the frustration out there is very, very high. so when i see people talking about the tea party, i don't think of the tea party as extremists the way some of the folks in washington want to describe them. the extremist in washington is barack obama. he's the guy that wants to fundamentally transform the health care system. he's done enormous damage to america's standing in the world. to the extent there is an extremist or radical political view in washington i believe it is the president of the united states. >> i agree with you. you know, i guess as a conservative first and i'm a registered conservative in new york. if you don't fight on health care which is the holy grail of the progressive movement for the last hundred years where are you going to fight? the fact that cruz was willing
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to stand up in the end will be a good thing. i wish some other republicans stood with him instead of attacking him. i was surprised at that. >> well, it's not that unusual. >> that's true. it's he'd run three times when he got elected he had a novel notion house republicans could be the majority. we hadn't been majority for 20 years. newt broke a lot of china in early days. period lick we need to rejuvenate the party and need to have, and attract new talent. lots of times there is china broken in the process. i think what's happening today is that we're moving to that point now. and my daughter liz is running for united states senate from wyoming. we need a new generation of leaders and need that next group along. when getting folks in there, sometimes
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maybe not as smooth as they ought to be, sometimes there are major differences between folks there and newcomers coming in. but we're going to have i think a stronger party. i think it's very important to have a tea party movement inside of the republican party, not outside. >> reporter: what do you think of reagan challenginggerald ford. >> sure. >> so this is not new. what do you think of these more, these younger newer, i guess, antiestablishment, if you will, those willing to break china what do you think of them? >> i don't know them that well. marco rubio, i know fairly well, mike lee i don't know. i hear good things about him. i sort of my basic attitude is that they're going to have to try their things -- wings. sometimes, they'll be successful, sometimes, they won't. some will adjust and become
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more effective. others role will be as outsiders. john mccain has been pretty much an outsider. most of his time in the senate he wasn't sort of thought of internally as part of the team, so much as someone out there who was willing to take positions, sometimes, i agreed with him, sometimes, i didn't but i don't think we should northbound a position as a party where what we're seeking is unity only unity, all the time. especially when we're at a noint history where we've got major challenges. the basic fundamental values and beliefs we care about. my daughter is running in wyoming because she believes strongly in fundamental values and barack obama is taking away from them and we need to get back to the corner stone of success for america you look and you start without new york, pennsylvania, california,
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washington, oregon. that is a big chunk, then have you to run the naibl ohio and win maybe indiana. and have you to win florida. and then, run, run the south for the most part. the conventional wisdom among many is that well, the more moderate person can win. and my opinion, there is nothing moderate about the way reagan ran or governed the count tri what. is your answer to that? >> i think it's a question of having a program, or a set of values that we believe in. as americans, as conservatives, i think that is important to go forward with. but i don't think the answer is to be more like democrats. the democrats will tell us that all the time. what if you were more like us, you'd win more elections we haven't done too bad over the years and do have the house of
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representatives and great presidents. on our side of the aisle. i also think it's partly a matter of, as that next generation comes along, and new people come of age to be able to vote we get them involved and convince them that values we stand for are the ones that they want to support. same with dealing with the democratic -- demographic changes. we have to make certain we have success with the hispanic vote that george bush did, getting 44% of the vote at one point. it's a point of mobilizing people. some have gotten fed up and don't participate because they're sick of what's happening now. we've got to be able to persuade them, we have a direction we want to go. if they sign on, they can get a government they can be proud of. >> mr. vice president, you look healthy as i've seen you. >> i feel great, sean. >> great book.
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>> thank you. >> i think a lot of people will benefit from it. >> thank you. >> coming up, what you have chosen as video of the day as "hannity" continues. thank you orville and wilbur... ...amelia... neil and buzz: for teaching us that you can't create the future... by clinging to the past. and with that: you're history. instead of looking behind... delta is looking beyond. 80 thousand of us investing billions... in everything from the best experiences below... to the finest comforts above. we're not simply saluting history... we're making it. (dad) just feather it out. (son) ok. feather it out. (dad) all right. that's ok. (dad) put it in cond, put it in second. (dad) slow it down. put the clutch in, break it, break it. (dad) st like i showed you. dad, you didn't show me, you showed him. dad, he's gonna wreck the car! (dad) he's not gonna wreck the car. (dad) no fighting in the road, please. (d) put your blinker on. (son) you didn't even give me a chance! (dad) ok. (mom vo) we got the new subaru because nothing could break
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>> don't see the moon walk? maybe we should have closed in on that. all right that. is all of the time we have left this evening. thank you for being with us, let not your heart be troubled. we'll see you again tomorrow night. thanks for being with us. live factor is on. tonight: >> the web site that is supposed to make it easy to apply for and purchase the insurance is not working the way it should for everybody. there is no sugar coating it. >> president obama admitting the obvious but still not taking much action against those who screwed up the rollout of obama care. charles krauthammer and brit hume on that. >> what would you say to the people who pulled the trigger? >> shame on you. there is a whole section of my heart that's gone. >> the epidemic of violent black youth crime continues. >> how would you respond to the veterans that are aoffended by the removal of these lights. >> also a wealthy

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