tv The Five FOX News August 4, 2014 2:00pm-3:01pm PDT
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to make sure you have the utmost protection when you're dealing with a patient like that. and that's what they do. >> all right. john roberts thank you very much. we'll keep monitoring this. tonight at 8:00 p.m. whether we're prepared for a worst case scenario the way we're doing it. hello i'm dana perino along with kimberly guilfoyle, bob beckel, eric bolling and greg gutfeld. it's 5:00 in new york city and this is the five. a temporary seven hour cease-fire in the middle east is over and now reports israel and palestinian agreed moments ago to a new 72 hour one to take its place. israel has resumed targeted strikes in gaza after allowing humanitarian aid in today. hamas has been firing missiles and sean hannity knows firsthand because he's in israel and heard the iron dome good of this morning to intercept some
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missiles. sean, can you give us a perspective of what you've seen in 12 hours. >> reporter: i got to tell you. it's an amazing experience what it must be like day-to-day for everybody here in israel and what they face. you know, in the course of our entire team being here we counted some, at least 50 red alerts that came up where rockets are being fired. in the middle of the cease-fire that was taking place earlier today we were at another iron dome location, there's nine of them that literally cover the entire state of israel and preventing rockets from landing in population zones. at one point while the cease-fire was in effect literally we heard an iron dome go off and take one of those missiles out of the sky. we not only were at the iron dome we went to the border of gaza today. we spent a lot of time, one of the more fascinating things beyond the work of the iron dome and how successful it is we learned a lot and we'll show this on hannity tonight where
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nine separate areas protect the entire country. they are synchronized as soon as a rocket is fire they will talk to each other via computer and determine where that rocket they expect will land and then make, the computers will make a determination whether to take it out of the sky or hit an unpopulated area. then we move to right where the board certificate. we had time to go into one of the tunnels that hamas built. what was amazing about this at least 50, 60 feet underground. there was israeli excavation around this tunnel, dana, then you get inside and i think you're running some b roll of it right now. it looks small the area you see going in but when you get inside there i'm six feet tall in lie had to go down a little bit. it literally if you're 5'10" you can walk without drourpg head. it goes on for miles. those tunnels are reinforced
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with concrete, ceiling, the ground. you have tracks so they can bring things in and out of those tunnels meaning where the terrorists go through and goes all the way into gaza. we walked and walked and walked and there was no end in sight. that concrete and the lighting that's inside the tunnel literally is given by israel to the palestinians so they are supposed to build hospitals and schools and homes and infrastructure and yet it's being used for terror. the other big thing that we saw immediately when we came out of the tunnel being on the gaza border we ran idf and just accomplished the mission and pulled back from gaza. i spent time with them talking about what it's like to live under the threat, why they are out there fighting, how important it is from their perspective to get rid of the infrastructure that's the hamas tunnels and rockets and what they are dealing with on the front line. an amazing day. >> let me ask you first, given that you've talked to a few people, i don't know how many
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different types, i know you talked to israelis, any of the palestinian there's. can you give us a sense of the mood from your perspective on the ground? >> reporter: you know, it's funny. dana, it's a great question. on one hand it's like life is normal. people are in their cars. driving around. is going to eat. we went out to eat for ten minutes today. that's about how much time we had. you go into a restaurant. sirens start blaring. i happen to be in the bathroom at the time. that's the shelter inside of that particular restaurant. yet everybody comes in there, a lot of idf people in there and then they go outside. for the 15 seconds they got to get into a secure area they do it. here's the more chilling thing i saw. there was a playground we came early in the day and our cameras caught this and we'll show this tonight. there's a playground and surrounding the entire perimeter of that playground you literally have shelters where the kids are supposed to go as soon as they
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hear the siren goss off. we might have video. doesn't look like much. those shelters are above ground and that's where the kids go. they are taught. that's life for the average israeli. not just this latest battle that they are having with hamas. this has gone for years. every israel i've run into said they are committed they have to destroy the infrastructure hamas has built. one tunnel i saw is one of a hundred that have been dugged. we learned what the political mood s-how people are committed to breaking and feeding that infrastructure. >> the israeli people, the idf, netanyahu, the resolve is strong. but when the u.n. starts pointing the finger, the white house starts pointing the finger and then some of the left wing media in the united states starts pointsing the finger at israel does that change the resolve of the people you're running into whether it's the
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military or the regular israeli folks? >> reporter: you know, eric, another great question. i'm not saying this because you all are my friends. we talked specifically about that school. the people that the israelis have targeted they don't know who had the bombs but they believe they had explosives. that was their take on all of this. they were taking out legitimate military targets that they believe were islamic jihad, more radical wing soeshd with hamas that, again, were trying to bring war to israel. as far as the politics of all this goes, it's very interesting. there's a lot of disappointment. i can say in the administration. i won't get too political today while i'm here there's a feeling that america has always been by israelis side should have a greater sense of moral clarity who are the good guys and who are the bad guys. 3,000 rockets. one of the thing i tried to do since i've been here put myself in the possible sifgs all the
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people that live here. if this is the united states of america and 3,000 rockets being fired into our country on any given day, every day and you got this infrastructure and tunnel system designed so terrorists can come in and kidnap and terrorize the people of our country, i think we would expect a very different response. >> so there's another cease-fire, sean, in hamas which means monday. is anybody taking this one seriously? >> reporter: you know, eric, between what happened last friday and while we were on the air, when i got here today, supposedly i was on "fox & friends" this morning and supposedly we were in the middle of a cease-fire and we heard in the distance an iron dome take out a missile that was fired. so i'm not sure anybody has any faith in any cease-fires that are being built here. the israelis have agred the home. in every case i would make a
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strong argument hamas has broke it. i don't think hamas wants peace. when you see the intricacies of these tunnels and amount of detailing and engineering, it's an engineering feat. imagine 50, 60, 70 feet below grounds and at 40, maybe as many as 100 designed to get into israel and attack the israelis, that's a pretty strong commitment towards war. hi, sean, it's great to see you. you're doing a great job. i want to ask you just some of the perspective, perhaps you're getting there that maybe if people had the opportunity to go to israel like you have done, do you think it would change their minds and their opinion about israel because they've had a tough time, the israelis have of garnering international support on their behalf. >> reporter: you know, i got to believe k.g. it would change your mind because when you hear these sirens day in and day out every day, an you know that
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that's another rocket being fired, you know, the only thing i would say to the american people forget what my politics are or your politics happen to be or even bob beckel's politics or juan williams politics. imagine an american city having sirens blaring, 15 seconds to get to a bomb shelter to protect you and your family. imagine you had an elderly grandparent or couple of young children. i got to imagine the american response would be liberal, conservative, republican, democrat is that you want to find the people that are putting you in that position. you want to deal with them in a pretty significant way and put an end to that threat. i think that's israel's argument. the fact there's world condemnation of israel it's hard to grasp. to me one of the reasons, main reason i wanted to come here, k.g., i feel everything is up and down here.
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like up is down and down is up and black is white and white is black and there seems to be no moral clarity. there's a victim here. there's those that initiated war and those defending their homeland. if you look at the rear rain and i went through this as i researched the on the plane. 8,000 square miles we're talking about in terms of actual space in israel. about 22 or so nation, many of which are enemies of israel and have come out publicly and sworn to their destruction. add to that terror jougroups, a qaeda, hezbollah, isis, and you add iran to the equation which i would say is fighting proxy wars. it is a significant enemy
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against a really small geographic area that we're talking about and it's their job to defend their homeland. and one of the reasons -- i talked to a lot of young kids, 20-year-old girls serving in the idf. i say what do you think of your service. their answer is yeah i rather be living the life of a 20-year-old out having fun, going to university but it is about saving my country from destruction and about the enemies that are sworn to wipe us off the map. it's a real clear present danger in the mind of everybody here. >> sean, let me ask you a question. we know most of these missiles come from the iranians and from syria. the thousands and how thousandsw do they get in there. they don't tom through israel. i assume the only way they can get there is through egypt.
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>> reporter: it's hard to say. i know there's been different blockade, bob, that have been found. this terror network we're talking about, even different terror networks that have their own personal disagreements, they agree on one thing is that they hate israel, believe it ought to be destroyed and don't think israel has a right to exist. where the weapons are coming from -- for example when nancy pelosi -- i'm not trying to make an argument. when the qataris tell me they are a humanitarian group, the hamas charter is committed to the obliteratation of israel. iran is the epicenter of a lot of instability in the middle east. >> fast follow up. are these tunnels, the way these missiles get in, however they get into gaza they take them in be the tunnels and bring them that way? >> reporter: bob, i literally
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walked down a slope. there was a woman coming up this slope and she couldn't get up. i literally walked halfway down the slope, i grabbed her hand, another press person and i walked her up. it goes down 50, 60 feet fully excavated and then it opens up into the ground. now, we have the entrance of the tunnel and then you see how sophisticated it is on the screen. we'll show everybody about it tonight. when you think about the amount of manpower, money, infrastructure put into something like that that's only one of what they believe is 100. these are tunnels of war. yeah, the answer to your question is yeah that's a possibility. absolutely. >> thank you, sean. we have to leave it there. catch hannity at 10:00 p.m. next on the five the politics get more heated as the white house and state department ratchet up their criticism of israel over the weekend. details coming up.
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keeps saying it stands with israel and its war on terror but dolg out criticism on the offensive. where does it stand? here's white house spokesperson valerie jarrett. >> we're israel's staunchest ally but you can't condone of the killing of these innocent children. so we're very concerned. we're monitoring the situation closely. >> state department spokeswoman went further. saying the united states is appalled by today's disgraceful shelling. >> the sign of strong relationship success able to speak out and convey concerns when we have them. there's more that israel can do to hold themselves to their own standards. >> that to me sounds lie condemnation of israel and not a clear understanding of what
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exactly is going on here, dana. what do you think? >> i'm imagining that what jen is trying to do and valerie jarrett is representing the president of the united states. okay. this is the president of the united states and state department down at foggy bottom trying to figure out a way that they can thread the needle your favorite raise greg's most hated phrase for the day and try to put pressure on israel while also trying to ask like a defender of israel. i thought that was a good point she made a sign of a strong relationship is where you can criticize. however i think it's more helpful to criticize in private because they are already walking down a very shaky path and underneath them is a lot of anger on the israeli side. benjamin netanyahu, the prime minister of israel has an 83% approval rating for activities there and as everyone starts to go to their corners and you noticed today with the cease-fire that was announced it's really the outlines of the
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egyptian plan that israel originally wanted before john kerry came forward and had the one that hamas liked. i think that now maybe the united states is playing less of an important role than it should be but that might be okay. >> eric, how about this juxtaposition for you. you others making this strong statement, criticizing israel, however look on the other side. you have king abdullah the saudi king issuing a very strongly-worded statement on the behalf of israel, you also have egypt lining up with israel. look at the positioning here compared to the united states. >> we talked about that. i think we agree any sort of real cease-fire, any sort of peace in this region would have to come from an egypt negotiated position. egypt offered at any time first time, hamas said no. the fighting started again. here's another egyptian attempt. let's not forget the state house
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and white house one side is a terrorist, one side is our ally. you can't negotiate with terrorists. hamas' goal is for an islamic state standing over every other religion. once you understand that there should be no negotiation. netanyahu said this demilitarize gaza and we can have a deal. here's the $64,000 question right here. do the people in gaza still back hamas. if not. it's time to stand up and get hamas out of their palestinian government and negotiate a demilitarized gaza. >> people in hamas are suffering as well however do they have the political force,litary strength, the wherewithal, the sustenance to be able to seriously take a shot and challenge at hamas, realistic realistically? >> who. >> the people in gaza. >> no. no support anywhere.
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hamas we don't support what you're doing any more. they really need to figure out a way to tell the world, tell the egyptians, that the palestinians in gaza are done with hamas and then peace can, somewhat peace can happen. >> can that happen bob. >> it's difficult. it's a complicated situation. i'm glad to see the egyptians moving within this 72 hour cease-fire holds. it makes sense if it comes from an arab country. only two countries in that region have relations with israel. so i think this one may hold. the last thing you need is john kerry to be over there with all due respect to kerry. he's a kind of guy that doesn't look like ought to be brokering deals. now having said that there's a diabetes made and i'll go out on a limb but it's time to do that. israel is very good militarily. they can target very well. i think there was a way to avoid bombing this u.n. school. even if you had to take some hits for it. you know you're going stir up
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world opinion even more by doing that. so at some point there had to be lot of other targets besides a u.n. school because you knew as soon as you hit the u.n. school you would get condemned around the world. i'm sure israel thought it through and i'm sure there were assets they wanted to get rid of. i'm not so sure picking on a school is the right way to do it. >> i think somebody said earlier no one condones this kind of suffering. that's untrue. around the globe what you see is expression of joy over the suffering of christians and jews. you saw it on 7-7 and 9/11. acts of terror garner the same response that you see after a soccer goal among certain segments of the world. it's not the israelis jumping for joy. we need to destroy the myth were it not for israel there would be no peace. be al qaeda has killed eight times more muslims than
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nonmuslims. not israelis. the last time i checked nigerian girls were muslims. that land would come to resemble all the strife around it. because they are one of the few areas able to establish a peaceful democracy. to what eric was saying. this is the curves an ideology which prevent us from adopting solution. so what if the palestinians agree to a solution. would then hamas -- no because their ideology prevents them through tha prism of faith. >> their actualization comes after their die. israelis are fighting for their lives and hamas are saying fight with us and if you die then
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you'll get -- >> they are fighting for the after life. >> if the palestinians can get what the egyptians -- look we want another vote. we want to go back to the polls and decide whether we want hamas on our parliament or not. i can even remember what the vote it was. it was overwhelmingly in favor of hamas. >> the governance was terrible. >> if egyptians came in and see how the palestinian people really feel if they are with hamas, if they are fight eight out and knock yourself out. if not lay down your arms. >> the palestinians in the west bank are probably much more inclined to do that than the gazans if for no other reason the gazaans are scared to death. >> what is hamas fighting for? >> iran. >> the solution, what you said before very simple. why not just stop firing rockets. it's absurd how you watch the biassed media and protesters find any other solution to say
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stop firing rockets. it's like a drunk giving up everything but the drinking. they can't let go of that one thing. all you have to say is stop firing the rockets problem solved. >> demilitarize it. seems like a reasonable request. coming up liberals let loose yet again on the hill with wild drama over immigration. eric has that next. we never thought we'd be farming wind out here. it's not just building jobs here, it's helping our community. siemens location here has just received
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♪ welcome back remember everybody. we turn now to the other border crisis our own as thousands of illegals flood in, things are heating up on capitol hill. rather than negotiate about the border, they resulted to fingerprinting. listen to this republican. >> under the leadership of the former speaker and under the leadership of their former leader, when in 2009 and 2010 they had the house, the senate and the white house and they knew this problem existed. they didn't have the strength to go after it back then.
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but now they are trying to make a political issue out of it now. >> gentlemen will -- >> i did the research on it. you might want to try it. apparently i hit the right nerve. >> watch what was going on flight. his harsh words sent former speaker nancy pelosi into a full bum rush pointing fingers firmly at moreno. >> that was pretty bad violation of house decorum on the floor. >> that's a relative term. they can point to some republicans that violated house decorum like in the state of the union address. after that big friday night dust up the issue dissipated over the weekend. the house and senate are recess. house members are able to say to their constituents we took a vote, the senate didn't vote. tell me if you agree or disagree but at least we did something which is more than the senate
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did. the republicans ended up going home in a fairly good position. >> greg, my new favorite congressman. >> you know what's great if you gave pelosi a broom she would have been margaret hamilton the way she moved. pelosi and the left one general get outrage over your response their previous personal attacks. there's been no nobody more ruthless than pelosi when it comes to demonizing republicans or conservatives or immigration. a tenet to leftism you must tolerate their intolerance. pelosi can launch the rockets and you must take it. >> i'm not related to her any more. small joke. i agree with dana. she must have been super, super upset because she's pretty calm and collect side think this is -- >> she's calm and collected when
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she's not challenged. i think greg has a great point. the day before pelosi said republicans hate poor children. >> exactly. nobody ran after her. >> every action causes a reaction. >> i listened to this guy. he said he did his research. he didn't do it. i think he was a former prosecutor. the point was that it was the house -- when it was under the democratic control did pass an immigration bill. the senate and harry reid that stopped that bill. harry reid made the mistake of sending everybody home for spring break. he's wrong, nancy pelosi did get a bill through the house and he should do his homework. >> listen to this ridiculously cheap shot by gutierrez, a democrat at the gop. >> not only do they treat the children that are in such need of protection, it is almost as though they despise and hate all of our children. because even the children that
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came before them that have pledged allegiance to the flag of the united states all of their life, loved this country and the president has afford them an opportunity to become legal, they want to put them in an illegal situation. >> k.g., republicans hate all our children. >> i want to say his heart is in the right place but he's misguided. that's destructive rhetoric. it's not true. it's inaccurate. it's not helping to help the children or helping the immigration issue. it's divisive. there's zero gain on this. >> exactly right. how do you negotiate a deal when you have people saying stuff like that. >> this whole major issue of immigration has boiled down to 70,000 children. when you get into a debate about children in this get these kind of accusations going back and forth. it was a bad use of words on his part. it's not about these kids, it's a much big are issue, has to do
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with 11 or 12 million people already here. we have to deal with that. we can't sends them home. maybe some people want to send these kids home. i thought it was a good idea. i screwed up. i reversed myself. we still have 11.5 million here and that has to be dealt with. >> it's not about the kids. it's the left's two favorites. they let the border fester until it collapses and then comprehensive reform which doesn't solve the problem. for this to happen you have to create a context for crisis. the administration is the fireman but the arsonist. they start a fire and then they try to sell the water which is fref rcomprehensive. >> the rhetoric has poisoned the well to the point nobody wants to take a drink. they will go home for recess, sober up, come back and decide
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whether it's still a humanitarian crisis or go on for another year. i don't know what they will do. i don't know. >> who is winning this one? >> no one. but if you're a constituent of luiz gutierrez that was an impassioned speech. if that's your guy and you support the position that he's making for you then you think absolutely go for it. and the republicans need to find a communicator on their side without sounding mean. >> the republicans are no closer to getting the hispanic base and that's what they need. >> that's another segment. here on the five today bob has a special birthday wish for one of his favorite presidents. you don't want to miss this one. that's coming up.
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employees caught watching porn on the job? turns out they were bored. the "the washington times" reports workers who got busted as these lusted told investigators they didn't have enough work to do. one fcc worker said he watched up to eight hours of smut a week out of boredom. the gsa employee echoed that. oh, to be in government where you're always getting off early. of course this doesn't reflect all government workers. but it's only the government you can pull this off without getting yanked. if this was a private company you would be on street before you could clear your history. so as the border crisis unfolds and the irs scandal deepens some glassy eyed flack locked behind a locked door. why help when you have your hands full. it's better for these chance to serve porn than do their actual jobs. it's the only urge that trumps the urge for interference. if i were running for office i would run on this, the
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inevitable consequence of an expanding government that's the real pornography. it grows beyond its waist ban every year and each new budget is a newer, bigger sweat suit to hide this bureaucratic blob. no longer there to provide minimal service government is now a comfy man cave leaving bureaucrats with nothing to do but themselves. now, bob, i don't want to say this is the definition of government because there are policemen of great people who work in government that don't do this sort of thing. but i would like to say it is a reflection of the consequences of big government where these things can happen. >> you know, you told me in the green room before we came out here that i better be careful on this segment given what happened last week. i agree with you. i agree with you completely. i'll make a comment. however that monologue, more doubles in there that i can imagine. if i read that it would sound like me on a normal day.
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>> bob has a point. >> now to the point. every sentence. >> you can hear it in your head. >> the way you read it. >> well, let me just say you're right. easy to go out and find one or two people that do this thing. the military is part of the government. homeland security is part of the government. vast majority of the people in the government don't do this. to pick these people out and say it's emblematic of government is a mistake. >> where are you getting your research. >> the issue is they will keep their jobs where if you were in a private sector you wouldn't. >> this is the point. why do you think we're so bad on so many things on the government level. >> because they are watching pornography >> no. follow the whole lead here, bob. >> i'm trying to. >> there's no accountability because it's jobs that are arroganted. there isn't any oversight. you get promoted if you're
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really bad regardless. that's the whole thing. it doesn't foster any kind of excellence or quality control because if you were in the private-sector you would lose your job. >> nobody in the private-sector watched pornography on the job. >> if they do their job well they can watch it. that's the point. >> their reward. >> sure, that's okay. >> there's something in common between government employees who like to do this a lot. these stories keep coming up every couple of weeks. tenure, union. there you go. >> here we go. >> a government employee is a unionized employee that can't get fired. if you introduce failure to do your job and you're fired then guess what, probably no more people watching porn. maybe not that. teachers would teach better and we would all be better off. >> if it wasn't for those unions, yeah, sure. >> can i get to dana.
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interesting thing about these people that watch this stuff they have to clear their internet history so they don't get caught whereas with dana's she has to add things to her internet history to make it took interesting. >> oh, poor thing. >> i can help you out on that. >> i thought it was red envelope but no that's a gift site where you buy things for people. >> the police, fire, military -- >> here's the thing. if they want to watch porn all day don't do it on your government computer. that's the problem. use your own phone plan and go in the bathroom and do what you have to do. don't use the government computer. that shoes inepitude. >> nobody in the government watches pornography >> didn't they find that out? wasn't that another story we did. >> remember this was treasury department employees. our economy is so good right now they don't have to do any work, they can sit around and watch porn and you get to pay for it.
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>> coming up. does happiness get better with age? we'll ask bob next. scary. she needed a good meal and a good family. so we gave her purina cat chow complete. it's great because it has the four cornerstones of nutrition. everything a cat needs for the first step to a healthy, happy life. purina cat chow complete. share your rescue story and join us in building better lives. one rescue at a time. with my $7 a month android plan from tracfone? email the school. call the doctor. text the groomer. find gear for soccer. send invites to a party. post karate pics. help sean with history. battle of hastings: 1066. all that with my android from tracfone for as low as $7 a month. [ male announcer ] unbeatable nationwide coverage, no contract. for a limited time, save $50 on the samsung galaxy centura. now just $79.99.
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longer the case. those in their 50s were less stressed than younger folks and enjoying life more than previous decades. eric you went past the big 5-0. what do you think? >> i don't know. i'm one year in. pretty good. has a lot to do with your financial status as you get older hopefully you put some money away. and your kids are getting out of the house. >> and your hair gets spikier. >> you get yelled at by the producer. >> dana, you're a long way from there, what do you think? >> i'm not that far away. it's very good news indeed. right? because that way when i turn that age -- not really that far away. >> that age. that age. greg, what about that age? >> this is from "people" magazine, right? >> today. >> yeah. so these are basically 50-year-old editors who ten years ago did fit and 40.
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so this is a self-selecting kinds of news thing that they do make themselves feel better as they get closer and closer to that void called death. you create these on theics for yourself to say things aren't as bad even though i can see ten of my life. this is life. >> oh, my gosh. >> from right here, when you're getting older you don't see the end. once you get around 50 you can see ten. it's all downhill. you start telling yourself it's great, it's great. >> he's like woody allen don't listen to him. you're 20 years away. >> i'll go couldn't a limb. i'm going predict that i will be married again by the time i'm 50. >> maybe more than once. let me just say someone who has gone well past 50, exactly right. i feel great. nothing stresses me. no big deals. >> you can't remember anything,
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"vocce vanduccos!" "when your favorite food starts a fight" "fight back fast" "with tums." "relief that neutralizes acid on contact..." "...and goes to work in seconds." ♪tum, tum tum tum tums! "and now, try great tasting tums chewy delights." "yummy." it's time for one more thing. i want to kick it off. today james s. brady passed away. he was 73 years old. he was the white house press secretary for ronald reagan. he was shot on march 30th of 1981 when reagan was shot as
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well. jim brady was an amazing person and there's a picture here after the briefing room was remodeled or going remodeled and there's tony snow, a lot of the press sex. a courageous person. the country was lucky to have someone like him who was willing to serve and who ultimately was injured quite seriously. thankfully he was able to live a nice long life and survived by his wife and daughter missy who i'm sure will miss him very much. the white house called me today. there will be a statement later with lots of the former press secretaries we all came typing shove unity. >> without trying to start a political debate, james brady did more for hand gun control than any two people in the world. >> that's true. brady briefing room is named after him at the white house. >> we talked about that today. god bless him and his family. here's a little advice to some parents out there.
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forget disney, universal, water parks, theme parks. go the national parks. we did this with my son, eric climbing up w-we went from 1,000 elevation to 7,000. eric hanging over the side straight down one mile down with no ropes or nets. one more very quickly. on the top of the mountain. quickly. then one more. and then -- >> you want to frack all those places. >> that was awesome. what did you say. >> you want to frack those places, don't you. >> frack you. >> i hope you get in as much as trouble as i did. >> greg you ready? >> i don't have one more thing.
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i'm protesting. i had a great video of vladimir putin getting pooped on. we can show that. none of the producers bothered to tell me it wasn't real. so i sat here great and then they send me the article that says it's fake. they were willing to let me do this. >> which makes it funny. >> somebody spit on the guy. kimberly? >> i'm so sorry for your greg and i would gladly share my one more twhing. >> what is it? >> kim and kanye celebrate 73 days together married. that is one day more than her marriage to kris humphreys who she filed for divorce and it was very sad. 72 days being married and took them 536 days to settle it. how about that? >> that's good for lawyers, right? >> 72 days too long for boston those people. the queen of plastic surgery --
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>> bob, remember last week and let's move forward with your fabulous one more thing. >> well, i do want to wish a very special happy birthday to the president of the united states, president obama turns 53 years old today. i think he'll go down in history as one of the best presidents. i know most of you will laugh but i think he's a very good president. on this birthday happy birthday mr. president you have a tough job and you're doing it well. >> you're right. in your 50s you relax and you don't worry. >> in your case you get married 15 more times. >> you're jealous. >> i don't want to be married again. >> i wasn't asking you. >> jasper hasn't come up today. >> almost made it. almost made it without that dog. >> you know what else? it is bret baier's birthday. set your dvr so you never miss an episode of "the five." a "special report" with the
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birthday boy up next. happy birthday to bret. this is a fox news alert. i'm bret baier in washington. right now a patient in the new york city hospital is being tested for the ebola virus. this could be a game changer in the fight to keep an outbreak of one of the deadliest diseases in the world confined to west africa. senior national correspondent john roberts is in atlanta tonight with up-to-the minute details. good evening, john. >> reporter: good evening. officials at mount sinai hospital tell fox news a man walked in this morning with a high fever and gastrointestinal symptoms when he reported he recently was in west fredrick. they put him in isolation and tested him for
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