tv The Kelly File FOX News April 25, 2014 6:00pm-7:01pm PDT
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always remember the spin stops here. we're definitely looking out for you. i'm megyn kelly live in new york and tonight, breaking tonight, hints from the white house about what could be the biggest executive action to date. will president obama rewrite our immigration laws? and then. >> as a woman, you're stripped of all of your freedom. for women, it becomes almost a matter of daily life. >> new revelations about brandeis university and exactly who pressured the school to yank an award from the woman you just heard. plus. >> i'm trying to help him knuckle down and buckle down for college. >> new e-mails raising ugly questions about a national news
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network one of the president's closest allies and what was supposed to be an unbias documentary. a big night on "the kelly file" starts right now. breaking tonight, nearly 1/4th of the united states senate rising up concerned over what could be the biggest executive order yet as the white house reportedly plans to by pass congress yet again. welcome to "the kelly file" everyone, i'm megyn kelly. the news broke late last night and not seen much coverage since. the white house may change the rules on deportations all by itself. the president first announced a review of the nation's immigration policies back in march, and just yesterday, 22 republican senators sent a letter to president obama expressing concerns over that review. the letter even accuses the obama administration of displaying quote an astonishing disregard for the constitution. we reached out to the white house for comment, so far no response.
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joining us now to talk about the plan, dennis michael lynch, a documentary film maker that covered the immigration issue extensively including the film, "coming to america." mark, thank you for being here. the reports suggest that the president is getting ready to ease the threat of deportation, that will be phase one but bigger changes will come later in the year that he's going to shorten the time period that an immigrant is considered new in this country and under increased scrutiny for deportation. deeper background checked of detaini detaining, protecting, that's phase one. phase two again, reportedly, the white house not confirming may say more major changes will come then all by executive action. you're thoughts? >> yeah, this is even more than rewriting immigration law. this is basically throwing out immigration law because the most
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consequential things that this sort of first step that they are likely to do is that illeg leeg immigrants in this country that were deported once and came back illegally, they are felons standing on the street corner. it's a felony to come back after being deported. they are talking about taking them off the list of people being deported. so you would basically be home free. the other group, they are talking about basically exempting from deportation is people who had a court date, immigration court but didn't show up. they ignored their deportation order. there are more than 800,000 illegal immigrants wondering around basically, on the land and this policy if it goes through would tell you we're not looking for you, either and if we find you, we're not going to deport you. >> the white house will expect to defend these actions by saying within the president's enforcement powers, they have
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been arguing about the deportations now for sometime saying he gets to prioritize who he is going after first when it comes to limited federal resources and enforcing the law. do you buy it? >> every law enforcement agency has to make choices. you have to prioritize. the irs goes after big money launlders, terrorists, they also have a certain amount of rand comeness to make sure that even an ordinary person who is trying to get out from paying his taxes knows that there is some chance he's going to get caught. what they are doing is the equivalent of the irs saying if you're a regular guy and you just choose not to pay your taxes, we're not going to look for you. that's outrageous. >> this is an end around congress?
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obviously, this is one critical agenda item the president has not been able to get through congress. we just saw john boehner coming out and ripping on his republican caucus for not doing it, but the point is they are not doing it and so the president seems determined to find another way, certain things he can do that on. is this one of them? >> well, the question is can he get away with it? >> can he do it legitimately, that's the question? >> he can't. there are already all kinds of things he can't legitimately do. there is a two-step thing. the next step the ad va kasay groups are pushing him to do is basically, actually legalize all the illegal aliens by giving them work cards, social security numbers, all the rest, supposedly just for a couple years at a time, temporarily but it would be a real amnesty and that's the big thing on the horizon that would, i think, would be an impeachable action, quite frankly, and i think the white house fears it.
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>> we had john boehner saying if the president does this by executive action, it's only going to hurt the deal in congress because the republicans aren't going to trust him to abide by the deal they strike. mark, thank you for being here. >> thank you. >> for more, we're joined by dennis michael lynch. your thoughts on this talking about how those who have broken the law will come into the country illegally, they will get deported, a judge will say, you are now deported, sir, they have to leave. then they sneak back into the country again and basically, administration is going to tell them that entire process was meaningless and they can stay and ignore everything the judge said. >> yeah, there is a few things to discuss. first of all, the last two weeks, we heard harry reid and democrats talk about how important this country operates based -- how important it is for the rule of law. >> and judge's orders. >> you got to follow the rule of law? this is breaking the law at every end. we're letting illegal immigrants runaround the country
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disregarding borders. there is no rule of law. this is chaotic. a couple things we have to point out. the beloved ronald reagan says amnesty was the biggest mistake he made. he thought he would give it to one million people. it turned out to be four million people. the government keeps talking about 11 million people running around. if history repeats itself and we know it does, we're looking at 40 -- >> you brought props. >> i bring props all the time. 44 million people. >> where did you get that number from? >> if you take the same thing. they got 11 million people, they have been claiming 11 million for two, three years, yet, everybody from ice and boarder patrol tells you more people are coming over than before. >> because they expect amnesty? >> of course. every time, guarantee you in the next two days, i'll get the e-mails saying 70% because he's talking about he's not going to do deportations. regan thought he was giving amnesty to 11 million people. it turned out to be four. >> what about administration said his deportations, barack
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obama's deportations reached record levels. he's deporting more illegal immigrants than george bush did. >> b.s. he redefined in his obama little way what deportation is. if joe comes over from mexico and he said hey, you got to go back, that's a deportation. and when joe comes back two weeks again, they count him twice, not once. >> it was never that way -- >> never that way before. this guy has redefined everything, and i've said to you how many times have i said this to you on this show? if this happens, it redefines this country in a way that is irreversible. american worker is going to get crushed. >> well, but when you look at this, dennis, and what they are talking about now, protecting immigrants serving in the u.s. military from deportation. you don't expect the american people to rise up over that, do you? >> i expect the american people to rise over the fact they are out of work.
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there is only one way to solve the problem. if i were president lynch, i could solve it in a day. you turn off the work magnet, those people will go home, and if you enforce the rule of law, the hard work is already done years and years ago. you enforce the rule of law, everything will start to go normal again. the impact that this has on schools, hospitals, crime, you -- work, joblessness, the unemployment rate in this country would drop. back in the bush days, let me finish with this, in the bush days when he did raids and swipe 100 people out of a place, the next day americans would be around the block applying for those jobs. >> understood. dennis, we'll continue to follow it and see, again, what the white house confirmed any of this. it is being reported tonight. also breaking, new reaction to a horrific murder in milford, connecticut in a high school this morning. this 16-year-old student, marian sanchez was stabbed and killed
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by another 16-year-old student. the boy stabbed her after she refused to go to the junior prom with him scheduled for tonight. lauren victory is in connecticut with the story tonight, lauren? >> reporter: megyn, tonight was supposed to be the victim's junior prom, a night filled with fun, dancing and music but instead, we're just back from a very solum, somber vigil where hundreds of students and community members gathered to remember marian sanchez killed in the hallways behind me. it started around 7:15 this morning. police say that's when a 16-year-old student approached her in a hallway or stair way and stabbed her repeatedly. she had wounds, police say, to her face, neck, and chest, and she was pronounced dead less than a half hour later after she was attacked. now, staff members detained the 16-year-old boy, they say that did that attacking. he was charged tonight with murder as a juvenile. we did hear that students were
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sent home shortly after this attack while police processed the scene. they didn't clear it until about 5:00 today. police told us late tonight that they found a knife on the scene and did search the suspect's house. again, he's charged with murder, but as a juvenile. >> thank you. we're going to have dr. keith ablow join us later with his take and plus, new revelations about brandeis university and exactly who was pressuring the school to yank that award we told you about, the honorary degree from an activist campaigning for the rights of muslim women. wait until you see what ben shapiro and truth revolt uncovered next. a whistle blower detailed claims about a va hospital boss conspireing to hide the truth behind the deaths of dozens of our veterans. one of america's biggest vet groups joins us with a powerful response tonight. >> well, we don't actually know
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how can she teach at the university of phoenix, not at all harvard, say that with all due respect with graduates from university of phoenix. >> on outspoken professor, lecturer, an advocate for women's freedom and women's rights, particularly in the muslim community. we have reaction from brandeis university, brutality against women in the muslim world. >> we say okay and come up with arguments that help us do nothing about the situation, that what we're really doing is just looking away? >> she was born muslim, raised muslim but a victim of a more radical form of islam and was mutilated as a result.
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she has now been very critical of radical islam and islam in general. her movie was fierce. they wound up pressuring certain schools like the university of michigan to cancel screenings of the film and now for the first time, brandeis university, the one that revoked her honorary, degree, its president fred lawrence is explaining his decision to take away that intended honor. in an e-mail he wrote a select group quote, outside groups played no role in the ultimate decision. that claim, however is now being challenged. as we have reported, the counsel on islam make relations, also known as care played up an allegation. the refusal to acre knowledge that obvious fact and confirmed fact seems to stretch credibility. care is giving credit for joining in the effort, ben shapiro is editor and chief of
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truth revolt.org. ben, mr. lawrence, fred lawrence sent out this e-mail you got your hands on saying, my focus in revoking this was on listening to the voices of students, faculty, alumni and trustees of the brandeis community. outside groups played no role in the ultimate decision. really? >> i mean, obviously that's untrue. the muslim association was heavily pressed on this and coordinating with folks off campus and as you mentioned, folks like webb who has a pretty long history of his own with association with terrorists. the governor of massachusetts uninvited webb just last year from an enter faith event after the boston bombing bau. they were attending the islam
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culture. the groups pushing for the revocation of this particular degree tie on hirsi ali. >> this guy, webb is a convert to islam, as is hooper, also a convert to islam. i mentioned it because abraham hooper was here condemning fake muslims like hirsi ali. she was raised as a muslim and left the faith. he's a convert to muslim and embraced the faith and out there ripping on ayaan hirsi ali because she's a critic of the religion. >> the problem is the counsel of islam i canlations, they say there is one group that can speak to it. to folks that are less extreme
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than hirsi ali, none of them have anything to say f. you agree with them and don't know anything about islam, that makes you an expert. faculty members at brandeis wrote a letter to the president of brandeis asking that the invitation be revoked, they are apparently experts on husband limb. >> this guy, webb, sent out congratulations, an e-mail to the muslim community for the pressure they put on brandeis. clearly, the president won't admit he's under e nor mouse pr -- enormous pressure to revoke it. he said based on her past statements that condemn islam as a religion, i had to do this. and he said some believe we're applying a double standard because the university rewarded other honorary degrees to people that made controversial remarks to israel but that wasn't on my
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watch he says. >> if it wasn't on his watch, great for him. it would be good to explain that standard before he revoked the invitation. the fact is brandeis gave honorary degrees to guys like tony kusnyer and said that the state israel, tony kusnyer said look, we don't have to agree with everything he said to give him an award. that seems to be a far more reasonable standard than the idea we have to agree with everything you said to give you an award at brandeis university that would rule out everybody on earth. >> it's very interesting defense because a simple google search of ayaan hirsi ali would bring up her comments. you don't have to dig deep and this university president wants us to believe he was completely shocked and had nothing to do with the outside unflew wednesd -- influence of the groups. >> a university may be in trouble after banning a student for handing out copies of the
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constitution. we'll show you why they had such a problem with that. plus, new e-mails raising questions about one of our cable competitors and one of the president's closest allies and what was supposed to be an unbias documentary. >> i got talking to this young man, marquel, and he was so engaging. cars are driven by people. they're why we innovate. they're who we protect. they're why we make life less complicated. it's about people. we are volvo of sweden. nobody ever stomped their foot and asked for less. because what we all really want... ...is more. there's a reason it's called an "all you can eat" buffet.
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from the world headquarters of fox news, it's "the kelly file" with megyn kelly. chicago tribune broke a big story today about the cnn tv series "chicago land." it's supposed to be a multi-part documentary about chicago, people and politics focussing on the mayor, rob emanuel wilike ts one. >> i got talking to this man,
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and he was engaging. >> he said where am i going? i said home. he said he would take me home. he called my mom. >> he's a wonderful kid. there is something about his personality and i'm taking with it and i'm trying to help him knuckle down and buckle down for college. >> he works in the mayor's office where he gets mentored by the boss himself. >> i'm grateful for it. me and my homey. >> the network says this was all non-scripted. but e-mails obtained by the chicago tribune suggests that the producers coordinated with mayor emanuel's stuff to showcase him as, and i quote, the star he really is. joining me now kirsten powers and columnist for the "daily beast" and served in the clinton administration. you learn something new every day. >> indeed. >> krir stirsten, good to see y. some of the e-mails changed
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clearly are trying to flatter him. he want to show him the star he is, show him the best of who he really is, present him as the star. i mean, that could just be a producer trying to stroke the staff so that they get the access they want. >> yeah, i think in some cases that could be it, but when i read the e-mails, i think some of it did cross the line. you're basically promising we're going to make him look like the star he is. and as it happens, they do, megyn. they make him look like a star. >> the end result is fair. who cares what's said. that's between him and emanuel's office. the ultimate result is criticized. >> exactly. so i think -- if you look at the cnn website it says it's unscripted and it doesn't look unscripted when they say we want to capture his leadership, so we need to have him -- having certain kinds of meanings. we need him in his suv talking
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on the cell phone, that's not leadership qualities but i guess cnn i thinks it is. they are scripting things asking him to do things and promising the more access they get, the better the coverage is going to be. >> uh-huh. >> so i think that that is a little questionable and if you are somebody watching something and being told this is a docuseries. you're assuming you see what they capture. >> you're not supposed to stage news. these e-mails say and you mention the one, we need the mayor on the phone in his suv at city hall with advisors. later, we need conversations between the mayor and a closed a visor. we need him fighting to keep the crime rate down. they are specifically telling him what he's supposed to be talking about. i mean, that's -- you can make a very strong argument that is not documenting news. that's creating news. >> i would say so. also, i think, look, if they said we want to capture him,
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we'll follow him around for a day, it would be great to catch him in meetings, that could be one thing. that's not what they said. they said we want to showcase his leadership qualities, right? they are not just doing it to capture things for the documentary. megyn, i don't know if you saw what robert redford has pretty much said this is meant to highlight how amazing emanuel is. >> it's a shock and the two film makers working for the agency ron emanuel's brother runs. they took a leave and now they are going back but there before. there is a question how objective this was. take wit with a gain of salt. kirsten, good to see you. >> thanks for having me. a question of free speech where they had an issue of a student handing out free copties of the u.s. constitution. what is the world coming to?
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who is that kid? we'll investigate straight ahead. climbs about a va hospital where the woman conspired to hide the truth about the deaths of dozens of veterans. one of america's biggest vet groups is here with a powerful response for her. next. >> we don't actually know what the people on the list died of because we never got a chance to see them or examine them. most i, the long shirt. designed to flatter, with playful hemlines and length for everybody. the new long shirt. visit the shirt boutique, only at chico's and chicos.com. t! [bell rings] this...is jane. her long day on set starts with shoulder pain... ...and a choice take 6 tylenol in a day which is 2 aleve for... ...all day relief. hmm. [bell ring] "roll sound!" "action!"
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>> new reaction from one of the nation's largest veterans group about allegations of criminal behavior at the phoenix va center. hospital administrators there covered up ugly details in the cases of at least 40 veterans that died while waiting for care, that whistle blower a former va doctor was here with us last night. >> we don't know what they died
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of. they could have been hit by a bus or had a preventable heart attack we could have done something for. we never know because we didn't get the chance to see them. >> paul, the founder of a veteran group but we'll start with sally, the daughter-in-law of navy veteran of thomas who died waiting to be treated. we showed your tearful sound byte saying you would be better off if we brought him to a veterinarian than a va hospital. he was brought there with blood in the urine and a history in the family of cancer in late september 2013. they sent him home, knew it was urgent and what were the instructions to your father in law? >> they told us, they gave us a card that it was highlighted in a yellow highlighter, primary care, and they said they will call you or if they don't call you, but they will because i
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wrote urgent, then i stated i will be calling starting as soon as we come home -- >> so you went home, and you waited and waited and waited, no call. no one called at all with the primary care physician. you start calling them. >> correct. >> and you finally got your call back on december 6th. unfortunately -- >> correct. >> -- he died. >> it was too late. >> he had died on november 30th. when they called you on december 6th, what did they say? >> hi, may i speak to thomas breen? i said who is calling? they said the va. i said well, i'm sally, his daughter-in-law, i'm his caretaker, and you can talk to me. she said well, we have him ready for a primary care doctor and that's when i screamed at the lady. i did scream. i said you got to be kidding me.
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you're way too late. he died thanks to you guys. >> when you heard these allegations break how they have a secret list. they don't put the vets on the real list because they want to show the wait times are lower, that these administrators are reportedly in on it because they want to look better with corporate in washington, what was your reaction? >> me and my husband watched it. i thought for some reason, i don't know why i thought, but i thought that it was only pop because i felt like he was -- they mentioned he was old-looking for his age at the emergency room. so when we saw it air, i cried my eyes out, and it only confirmed what they did to pop, horrible care. they didn't give him any respect as a veteran. they didn't help him, and they
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neglected him. >> i know he died wondering why he couldn't get the care he needed. >> well, he -- when this happened, i begged him to actually go to the health care closer to where we live, a half a mile, and he said oh, no, no, no, i belong to the vet. i'm a veteran. that's who takes care of me in brooklyn. they are slow but that's who i go to, so i'm not going to you're telling me to go, so i drove him where he wanted to be. >> sally, sorry for your loss and i thank you family for your service, thank you for being here. >> thank you. >> paul served as a platoon leader in iraq. this is unbelievable, paul. >> yeah, it's a new low. it's absolutely outrageous. sally should never have had to deal with this and her father. if there are 39 other stories
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like this, it asks how far should it go. >> that man saying i'm a veteran, i go to the va hospital, they will take care of me and you got people like shar sharon helman, the direct tomorrow who says it was well-aware what was happening to these vets. >> there are reports the head of the va got a $9,000 bonus last year. >> oh, she made $180,000 all told. >> we need a direct response from the president, senator mccain from arizona called for an investigation. our membership supports that. we got to get to the bottom of this. is it just phoenix or other places they are cooking the books? they have two sets of books and veterans should never have to wait. this is absolutely outrageous. >> something just disturbing happened today, speaking of the president because he, he was asked at a press conference, hey, vladimir putin said if he was drowning, he thinks you would save him.
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would you save vladimir putin? i realize it's a joke. it's a light-hearted moment. they took time to ask our president about that today, no one bothered to ask him about the dead veterans on american soil at the va in phoenix. >> there have been stories coming out of the va for years and very little accountability, very little oversight. almost no response from the president. we've been talking about the backlog for years, over 350,000 vets -- >> backlog is bad enough. >> yeah. >> this is affirmative behavior to hide the backlog knowing you may be costing lives. >> yeah. >> take this to another level. >> we need them to call every member of the senate and get involved in the care. you'll see a lot of folks running for office this year and you won't talk much about veterans care. we need them to be held accountable. there are over 20 million veterans and we got a suicide problem. today, bad nufmbers came out of the pentagon. we got about four co-sponsors
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right now in the senate. we need everybody to get on board with the bill and show they care about the veterans. >> we need to do better and i said it many times, being the daughter of a veteran nurse, most of these employees love the veterans and spend their whole lives trying to take care of them. it's not all of them but a few bad apples can cause a lot of damage. paul, good to see you. >> thank you. at the university of hawaii where a student is in big trouble for handing out copies of the u.s. constitution. why? trace gallagher, why? >> well, the university of hawaii held an event for the students to better know their clubs and organizations on campus, megyn. they held it in the center plaza, tables set out front and as students walk down the path they can talk to them. merit birch and her group were back here. after a couple hours of getting in foot traffic, she walked out here and started handing out copies of the constitution. no students complained but a
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school official said get back behind her table and directed her to the free speech zone, a small, often muddy area to the back of the university. when merit asked about the low traffic at the free spooeeech z, she said it's not really the 60s anymore, people can't really protest like that anymore. times have really changed. she could hand them out if she got written permission. she was told that takes about seven days, instead it took her 16 days. here is the group backing her lawsuit. listen. >> it's amazing how often administrators act like there is no first ameantment in the first place, and if it exists it's a bad thing. students believe they can get in trouble for what they say when the case law is incredibly clear you have really broad first amendment rights on a college campus. >> incidentally, we reached out to the university of hawaii,
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three separate departments and nobody chose to speak to us freely. ambassador john bolten on iran and a country where women are executed for adultery and considered half citizens got a big role weighing in on the rights of women everywhere. that's next. [ male announcer ] this is joe woods' first day of work.
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indicted. the republican has been under investigation for alleged campaign finance allegations. his lawyer says this was a politically driven vendetta. he denied any wrongdoing. >> developing tonight, what is being call add slap in the face to women around the world. iran has now scored a seat on the commission on the status of women. that's the united nation's body dekat dedicated to getter equal day. iran, a country where women can be executed for adult tri, where one women received a debt sentence for the crime of stabbing a man who was trying to rape her. i yesterday spoke with john bolten, a foreign u.s. ambassador to the united nations and fox contributor. iran, they will enforce women's rights in countries around the world, the one that tells us how we need to treat women? >> right, i know some people are
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probably outraged by this and it is inexplicable unless you know the united nations. the real take away, this is nothing new. this is a dog bites man story. this is the way the u.n. is. it operates this way out time. so if you're outraged by this, it's not because the u.n. was humming along doing just fine and suddenly a mistake was made. this is what goes on day in and day out. >> how can this be? why did we not object? because our ambassador samantha came out and sent out a tweet expressing her outrage with this saying and i quote, this is an outrage, but that's about it. you can see she said yet again, it happened. this is an outrage and people are wondering why she didn't do anything about it. >> because the way the u.n. electoral system works, it's a regional group system. there is rarely a vote on anybody. in this case, the group had so many seats on the status for women and put up a number of
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candidates exactly equal to the number of seats, so there was no opposition at all. this is part of what is inherent in the un system of i'll scratch your back if you scratch mine. and it goes with what is fundamentally wrong with the un, the solve earn equality, one nation, one vote, they are all equal. they are not in reality but they are in the un world. >> this is such a joke. iran enforced the penal code and values women's testimony in a court of law as half that of a man. it values the women's life after half that at as a man. girls can be married at age nine. no woman can get married without the okay of her husband. in july of 2011 a female prisoner commented suicide after violent beatings including with electronic batons and their representatives are going to speak for women across the world. >> absolutely. why do countries like cuba and the sudan get elected to the un human rights commission?
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if you're a human rights violator, if you believe in the principles i lran does on the status of women, protect yourself against criticism from other people who think maybe a women's testimony should be equal. >> they said in march, just last month, they adopted only one resolution critical of any country on earth for violating women's rights. you know which country? israel for violating the rights of women. what power does it have? >> it's irrelevant like most un bodies and people need to understand, there is nothing aberration about iran winning. when people say in the future we should entrust this question to the united nations, think again. >> we're doing it. is there any -- can they really affect people's lives or is it more problems of omission, they don't do anything to correct situations like we see in their
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country? >> in fact, to the extent they do have an impact. it's true passing resolutions critical for example of israel. they are really using these institutions, not for what their purpose is but for a different political agenda, delit jit miezing israel. it's rarely reported because let's face it, in this country we don't pay attention to what is going on in the un and it's there like a coral reef building up over the years undermining the values. >> really incredible. what propaganda and what a joke. ambassador, good to see you. >> good to be here. up next, dr. keith ablow on the tragic stabbing death of a high school student on prom day. ♪ ♪ no matter what kind of business you own,
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a 16-year-old student marian sanchez went to school this morning in connecticut by 7:15 a.m. by 7:43 a.m. she was dead, stabbed to death by a fellow student who reportedly asked her to tonight's prom but was rejected. dr. keith ablow is a psychologist and fox news contributor. reports, he asked her, she said no, she had a date already. he began to strangle her and pushed her down a flight of stairs and then he stabbed her to death. how are we supposed to make sense of that one? >> well, we make sense of that one, megyn, by looking at the psychiatric history if there is one. we don't know if this is somebody in treatment, the assailant, we don't know other factors that may have come into play, drug use, for instance, was there any? we'll learn that over time and we shouldn't forget that our mental health care system is indeed, shattered and if he was
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trying to get help for psychiatric illness, how rare that comprehensive help would be and of course, this case, like some others might be instructive to the anti gun lunatics who could see how it's the person and not the weapon responsible for terrible carnage. >> interesting point, all the anti-gun laws in the world wouldn't stop this kid from bringing a knife to school and killing this girl. what does it tell you they were reportedly friends, that they were friends on facebook and one of the students reported that they were friendly. i mean, is there any way of, you know, predicting that kind of snap? >> well, there may well turn out to be data from which this could have been predicted. i will also make this point, all such acts occur in a social context. crime occurs in a social context. and psychiatry unfolds in a social context. this is a world of narcotic sisd
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they are building fake lives online. it's injurious to the core when a young man is rejected and has other problems, it can leave him more vulnerable than ever because he's synthetic because his ego is everything. these kids are trained to delete people. >> she was synthetic to him, too. >> exactly, you cross it and it's tough to cross mback. when you can block them at will and delete them and you're the inflated god of your artificial universal and playing video games, well, killing a real person, the terrible tragedy of that may not register with you until you see the blood. >> dr. ablow, got to do better there, too, thank you, sir. >> all right. my friend, take care. >> we'll be right back. i've always kept my eye on her...
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and our classic lasagna. plus unlimited soup or salad and warm breadsticks. signature favorites, just $10 all week long, at olive garden. >> well, in 1492 columbus sailed the ocean blue but in 2014 columbus day died, at least in minneapolis. they voted unanimously to stop celebrating. some believe it is offensive to
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native americans to credit christopher columbus with finding america. people will feel really good about how we're ad racially equal agenda. do we have to go to work? thanks for watching. welcome to our special audience edition of "hannity." stoned america for the entire hour. we'll discuss the ramped increase of marijuana and the call for more states to legalize the drug. we have people on both sides of the issue but before we bring them in, our producers recently traveled to denver for the annual 4/20 pot smoking event. tonight, we're taking the conversation to a whole new level and it starts right here, right now. ♪ ♪ >> i love
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