tv Huckabee FOX News May 19, 2014 12:00am-1:01am PDT
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you got to love a teleprompter, right? tonight on huckabee. nearly 300 girls abducted and forced to convert to islam as poll tegzs and celebrities support for their safe return. muslim women on the real war on women and why hash tags will not bring our girls back. plus. from spiritual guru to congressional candidate mary ann williamson said washington needs soul searching. and the music of michael w. smith. ♪
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ladies and gentlemen, governor mike huckabee! (applause) thank you. (applause) >> thank you very much. and welcome to huckabee, from the fox news studios in new york city. one of the groups i spoke to tonight was the mississippi bankers association made up of mostly community bankers. these are the same you sit with in church and talk to at recital asks son's little league and bump into in home depo. they know you and your family and community. but what might surprise you, is that thanks to the geniuses in washington, your local community banker has been saddled with federal regulations created to fix the financial meltdowns of 2008.
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one problem, your local banker had nothing to do with the meltdown other than having to follow other man dates to require them to loan money to people who are buying more than they could afford. when congress was completely in under the democrats under the hands of nancy peel sxeel harry reid. they gave us the dodd- frank banking bill. it was so wonderful senate and house sponsors retired after passing it. too bad they didn't leave congress before they cooked up the pot of burned beans. (applause) now in case you wonder why the punishment was handed down to the local banks who didn't cause it instead of wall street banks whose reckless and feckless mismanagement did, let me break the news to you. washington wasn't going to bite the hands that feeds them.
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instead of putting the bad boyin the time out chair they stuck it to the local bank and you. what used to be a routine loan process of buying a home, starting a business or adding on a rom, that changed. the banker no longer made it on the basis of knowing you and your work and knowing your assets or family. it was reduced to looking at sterile rules designed by the people who don't know you and never will and live a thousand miles from you. basically power was removed from the people who know you best to those who know you least. it is it a loss of your freedom. regulating banks is not completely worthless. making sure your deposits are safe guarded and people's money is cared for is fine. but the best regoulgz of the bank is the customers, one that charged too much for the
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services or will not treat you respectfully when you don't have much or make a reasonable loan. they will not stay in business. you will take your money and business across the street and town. but the federal government thought they anyhow better than red necks like you and me. the wall street journal reported that the average banker sal row is 49500. but the consumer finance board and office of the comptroller was 190,000. that is more than congressman make. and so the people who referee the game get paid on average four times more than the people who play the game get paid. just imagine for a moment. if the guys in striped shirts got paid four times what an nfl player makes. we would say that is stupid. and that my friend, is today's
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lesson from the forest gump school of government. stupid is as stupid does. (applause) on thursday, the state department acknowledged it could acted earlier to desig 98 boko haran a terrorist organization. they are the group that gped over 200 school girls. they are begin new muslim names and great concern that the girls are forced in to marriage. is america doing all it can do to fight the real war on women? joining me is two women of muslim faith. the writer who writes in global mag genes. and also the author of the book their jihad not mine. they are featured in the
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documentary honor diaries, please welcome. >> thank you for being here today. i want to begin wu. the whole world is concerned about the nigeria girls that are kidnapped. but is there a way to negotiate to get these girls back? >> we have to negotiate to get these girls back. the world woke up too late in time. the girls were already kidnapped for a week before the global media got their act together. but they could be my daughters or your sisters. and they have to negotiate that is the first proprietary. >> do you think they are being treated and fairly and groceriesly and kindly. it doesn't look to be going well. >> have you seen the face of the leader of the boko haran? he's ugly as sin and his activities i am sure they are the same. if they are forced to convert to islam the chances of being treatedly are way beyond
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imagination. >> we see the little girls and like she said, they could be our daughters but for the graus of good it would have been. our response has been hash tag diplomacy. is that effective? >> look, i am a believer in social media and a do a lot of social media activism to raise awareness and connect people who are not having the voices heard and certainly dictators and theocrates that are threatened by social media activity. while we see for example, bring back our girls is raising awareness, the actions of the first lady while i understand her interest in participating in that need to be met with a strategy of dealing with the majority of the societies and human rights abuses that happen within them. >> as muslim women, you must be very maybe shocked at some of
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the things you see happening to women in parts of the world where a real radical islam has taken root. what is your worry for muslim sisters. as you think of those marginalized and not allowed an education or drive a car or think for themselves? >> they are going to to regress and not live in the 21st century. they are buried alive again which was how it was 4900 years ago. and the world is not listening. it is not a priority or on the front burner. we need to light the fire under the politicians and leaders and make this a priority up front and center. it is not just muslim women. every woman is affected when she can't be educated and we have to
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fight it with the muslim and nonmuslim brothers and sisters. the world needs to rise up. if half of the humanity is dehumanized. are we sit nothing our living rooms just watching hash tags? >> we do see the almost timidity on the part of the state department to call out the radical elements of islam. you are not afraid to do that. you would think that your lives are possibly in danger by those who want to push sharia law. why don't the american politicians and state department honest and bold as you are. >> my relationship to my faith is central to my every day existence and feels like i can fight the evils that make the young women abducted and
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kidnapped enslaved and that motivateds me. >> the reason that people don't speak out. they are held hostage into si leps and they do give in to them. care who have no business who say these issues are not taking place. it is happening under their noses. it is all over the muslim world. the muslim brotherhood and taliban. the boek's haran are the taliban of africa and why is the world silent when they torteur muslim women or any other women for that for example is political correctness none wrong. (applause) in addition to that, for me islam is a source of peace and strength. i am also an american. i am conscious that i was not a part of the world where i use
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my voice without fear of state reprisal. our government is not always perfect. if i don't use my privilege and power to empower others. i don't deserve the air in my lungs. i am motivated by my own sense of what i have been given to act on behalf of women like these who are my sisters and keenly aware that these abuses are taking place in the united states. we are seeing honor killings and female genittalia mutilation and forced marriage. that's why we have spoken out in honor diaries and to raise awareness of that. this is not a small phenom nan. the ideology of those who kidnapped young women is a global end by man date and women in that context are public enemy number one. >> i commend both of you for
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your courage and clarity. it is refreshing to hear your voices and i hope we'll hear them often. i think you are providing a valuable service to help all of us understand that not everybody who embraces islam is radical and wants to kill everybody who is not a muslim. and this is refreshing and i thank you both for being here. it is a delight. thank you very, very much. (applause) >> michelle obama thinks our schools are segreated still. why can't parents choose th
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dvd will be available for your children all about the history of the armed services and in an animated video that your kids will love and learn from it. it will introduce them to learn our history series. go to free military dvd.com, by the way the secret, the folks in the audience will walk away with one of them as well. they will tell you, you will enjoy it. on friday, 60 years after the supreme court decision outlawing segregated schools. first lady obama spoke in a graduation ceremony. >> many young people in america are going to school largely with kids who look just like them and too often, those schools aren't equal especially schools of color.
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crum blipping classrooms and less experienced teachers. >> we lament the idea after so many years of trying to make sure schools weren't segregated we are seeing it happen again. i would call upon the first lady to understand that we created policies that caused parents, especially those who can get out of their schools that are failing to move to private schools and home schools. i was fortunate my kids went to political schools. i was the only government in 50 years in my state that their children went to public schools. i wanted to them to interact with different backgrounds and cultures. many parents believe when you shut out values from the school system, the only choice you leave them is to take the kid out of the secular and hostile environment and put them in a school of their choice. here's my question to the
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liberals. if parents who are wealthy have that choice, why can't every american parent have that choice. why can't the parent of children of color have that choice. we have to work on that in the country and then the schools may not be so segregated. >> i told you about the benam brothers last week. sun trust bank got caught up on the fire storm and ended the relationship with the ben ams and then on friday afternoon, immediately sun trust released a statement saying the decision was reversed and reenstated the listings from the benam brothers. sun trust supp rights of all americans to fully exercise their freedoms granted under the constitution with respect of free speech and freedom of religion. you did that after so many people called and said they would not do business with you
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if you are punishing them with privately held religious beliefs. god bless all of those people who had enough and are not going to take it anymore. that is refreshing. (applause) hot- headed actor alec baldwin made headlines for confronting as and yelling slurs. and got arrested after yelling at cops because he rode his bike against the now of traffic in new york city. here's how it was recreated to go down. (spoking foreign language)
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pelittier was transported to connecticut this week. for the first time she was taken from her family. she was able to spend time with her family on the outside of the state facility. the family attorney gives us the update. it is way too long and tell us where things are with justina pelletier. >> there is significant movement because of the pressure and investigation that is going on and now they moved her from boston to connecticut. and an hour half away from the family. and they were able to go with her and celebrate julia's birthday the sister next to justina in agent. that was a great opportunity to get together. this is 15 months going on. we need to get her home. justina's birthday is may 24th.
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she will be 16 years of age and hope to get her back quickly. >> matt, i never seen a case that captured my heart and attention. and i have a daughter and grand daughter and i think i would be enraged if someone did this. we are following this story. do you think that massachusetts is slow walking the process just to save face and cover themselves? >> there is no question that is what they are doing. they know they did wrong. but they are not willing to reverse themselves. they have no basis to hold justina and they know that. but they are slow- walking back wards and now taking her close to home where she should have been. she should never been taking to the home. and giving family and justina access to the medical treatment and undercuts the whole reason they took her. she was being treated by experts
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for a medical condition and the psychologist at boston's disagreed. and so for 15 months they treated her psycheicology. and not given her appropriate medical care. and went from a figure skater to being in a wheelchair. her physical condition is frail right now. we need her back home so she can be in the home of her mom and dad. and we need to get her medical care and get her back in school. >> it is good to hear the progress. it is far from over. there are legal things to be dealt with. what legal steps do you anticipate on behalf of the family. >> we are doing a trust but verify. when they gave the plan to the family they leaked it to the media and that shoes political motivations. they want to walk it back. but we'll look in the next couple of weeks. we'll file a motion and ask for
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her to be released and test d~ cf are they serious of getting her home. all they have to do is agree with us. d~ cf could file a paper with the court and she would be back home in an instant. and we'll also after she gets home. we'll make sure people who are responsible for the 15 now 16 month ordeal are held responsible for the unbelievable activity. >> i am glad to hear that. it needs to never happen to another family. anxious to get the updates and we'll see you soon. >> she is a spiritual gur ufrom hollywood. i will ask mary ann williamson how she plans to do what many
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my next guest is a spiritual speaker and authority. she's getting into politics to help heal the political conscious. she is running for congress as an independent. joining me now is maryanne williamson. >> why did you run as a independent. you would caucus as a democrat and why not as a democrat? >> our founding documents don't mention political parties and george washington warned against them. it is unhealthy for our democracy and put a choke hold on the public discourse. abolition didn't come from a major party and civil rights movement didn't come from a major party. the main issue to deal with
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domestic surveillance for sfans and shrinking civil liberties. they are not left- right issue. we need an american conversation and it is interesting being an independent in an open primary, i have to tell you, i go to my campaign events and no one knows who is the democrat or republican and it is lovely and wonderful and like gives us my values are better than yours oppositional adversarial on our own fellow citizens that is not healthy at this point. >> you thought obama care was okay to start but didn't go far enough. that may be out of sync with the americans that think obama care has gone way to far. >> i don't think that the polls show it is going too far. it is not a great program in all ways. and you hear people who are happy about aspects and people who are unhappy about the it.
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i want to see the public option programs that people are dealing with in various states and single payer that vermont and others are talking about. i would like union versal health insurance in the country. that's what i would like to see. >> if the government is the union verse is in which it is operating. are you confident they can run it without screwing up. >> you make a good point. it doesn't have to be government run to be universal coverage. there are various ways to do. that i am not sure, you can say maybe should the government run it or health insurance company? what we have obama care is a bon to the health insurance companies. you don't like overroach by government or corporations either. i don't like overreach. >> you've said we have too much innewence of money and poll
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teches. we agree. i have struggled how do we fix that and what is it about ideas, and not just big dollar fund-raising? at this point, governor, we need a constitutional amendment. it is not easy to a mend the u.s. constitution nor should it be. it took an amendment to abolish slavery and give the women a right to vote. and it will take an amendment to stoeb corporations don't have the lobby hod and get them out of office. campaign finance reform does not go far enough. the public functioning of america is high jacked. money force on our government that is disporpargzate to the will of the side. that is an american issue and not left right issue.
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>> anybody who is willing to put themselves out there on the ballot, you have my congratulations and my thanks for doing it regardless of how this turns out. you have done something a lot of americans never had the guts to down. i will run and try to change it. thank you for joining us here today. >> thank you, governor. >> goat milk makes great goat cheese and that is healthy and popular for you. but one family is making a healthy product out of goat milk.
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my next guest or a family teaching eight children the value of hard work and earning the living and making and selling goat milk soap. on this farm in charlestown, indiana. they live with their kids and their kids. they home school eight children and the youngest is six and the oldest 17. but before and after class, jonas kids go to work in the family business. each child has a specific job in the soap making process from milking the goats to molding and
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cutting the soap and packaging the orders. >> and shipping them out. >> each child gets a salary for the successful business and that is ship out orders to all seven continents. welcome the jonas and their eight children and we'll talk to them in a bit as well. and so nice to have you here. i was inspired by a family that does anything together much less running a business together with eight children. a remarkable story. how did you make stuff about goat's milk. >> i have the children in the the bath tub. and i looked at the baby wash i used and it was filled with chemcheps and i decided to make my own soap and i did a bunch of
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research. i made it and put it in the shower my husbands fingers stopped cracking and splitting. i knew it was goat milk was good to drink. i thought i could make a business out of this. >> i have to borrow the goat milk soap. >> and your wife said we are going to make soap out of goat's milk what was your reaction to that. >> i had no problem making the soap. it did wonders for my skin. and many nights i couldn't have dinner because we had soap piled high on the dining room table and we ended up having a picnic on the living room floor and packaged more stuff. and we grew in to a building and new property and it is
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fantastic. >> my first reaction when i heard of soap out of goat's milk. when i had my mouthwashed out of soap it would have been better. where were you guys way back when? i don't think it is for human consumption, just human use. >> it may look and smell good but tastes like soap. >> i am glad to know that. >> getting the children involved is what makes it work. how many hours a day are you devoting to making special soap? >> it goes depending on the season and year and why we are at. it is something that we take care of the goats first. they are living animals and the children take care of that and then orders shipped out for the day. it depends on the biggest priority. a lot of children's school work is involved with the business.
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and they do math and learning financials about the business and customer service and learn how to speak with people and answering e-mails and phone calls. >> i want to meet the kids and i would love to find out how much the government takes in taxes. that would be interesting. i want to start down here at this end. tell me your first name and what you do in the soap- making progress. >> i am brett i ship out the orders quickly. >>in jade i do bagging. >> i will skoulter and i make the soap. >> i am the barn manage and i sweep the hall and feed the goats and milk them. >>im indig. and i run the rom. >> and i am fletcher and i am the tour guyed which means i am responsible for showing everybody around. i am graden and i feed the baby goats. >> i am hadden and i milk the
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goats. >> they are all hard- working young americans. >> they are all learning responsibility and learn how to run a business. and things that are obviously people elected to the congress who haven't learned what these guys know. i wonder if we could pass on the wonderful lessons. did you think it would grow as big as it turned into? >> i had no idea it would roach that scope. i wanted to teach the children that work was a good thing and i wanted toous goat milk stuff if you can find work to help people and you enjoy doing that the best kind of work there is and doing it together as a family, doesn't get better than that. >> what a beautiful story and great to have you here and thank you for joining us. >> thank you for having us. >> the jonas family and goat milk stuff. stay with us
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>> my next guest is one of the most popular christian artist anywhere. it is the first worship album recorded since 2008. would you welcome michael w. smith. they love you here. >> thank you. >> one of the things about the album that is colis that there is a connection with the project involved rocket town. how is that connected to sovereignty, the album? >> i love kids and i always reflect on just rocket town and what is going on down there. it is called club and almost a 40,000 square to the facility in downtown nashville with
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a indoor skate board and dance studio and indormusic venue and try to roach kids and our main thrust to reach kids from troubled homes and who just need to be loved. loved. no matter what they've done, where they've come from. >> a safe place for kids to be. we're going to hear a cut from the new album. this is one called "sovereign over us." here we go. michael w. smith. ♪ there is strength within the sorrow. beauty in our tears ♪
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♪ and you meet us in our mourning with a love that casts out fear ♪ ♪ you are working in our waiting sanctifying us ♪ ♪ beyond our understanding you're teaching us to trust ♪ ♪ your plans are still to prosper you have not forgotten us ♪ ♪ with us in the fire and the flood ♪ ♪ you're faithful forever you're sovereign over us ♪
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♪ you are wisdom unimagined who could understand your ways ♪ ♪ reigning high above the heavens reaching down in endless grace ♪ ♪ you're the lifter of the low ly compassionate and kind ♪ ♪ you surround and you uphold me and your promises are my delight ♪ ♪ your stans are still to prosper. you have not forgotten us ♪
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it was real, and 40 years later, still ticking and clicking. just a year into our marriage, she was diagnosed with cancer in her spine. well, three children and four wonderful grandchildren together, that seems like a long time ago. we paid $40 a month for our apartment, and it was way overpriced. we saved quarters to do laundry at the laundromat and got
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20-cent tacos. we saved hard, and things are going well now. we entered into our marriage truly believing that it was for life. we did not consider divorce. from the days we actualed wondered how we could afford $14 of baby food, we believed we owed at the minimum at least ten cents out of every dollar to god. it's easier to realize that it is god's. and my wife janet is here today. we welcome here. and my thanks to my wife. who has put up with all i've dragged her through these 40 years. and great hopes for several more
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to come. happy anniversary. that's it for now. this is mike huckabee from new york. good night and god bless. next week. i'm maria bartiromo, stay with fox#mediabuzz with hour kurtz next. >> i have exclusive new details as to why "the new york times" fired jill abramson after she claimed being paid less than male editors. we'll go behind the pr nightmare for the nation's most influential paper. karl rove questions hillary clinton's health and is widely attacked for a low blow. >> look, she had a serious episode, and i don't know about you, but if you go through a serious health episode
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