tv The O Reilly Factor FOX News September 15, 2014 5:00pm-6:01pm PDT
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on yourç commute home on the bus or the train. up next, the o'reilly factor. good night from washington. see you tomorrow night. ♪ ♪ the o'reilly factor is on. tonight. >> no one is picturing u.s. brigade combat teams maneuvering in a western iraqi desert. but we do need to have a presence on the ground. >> how to defeat the isis terrorists. president obama does not want to use ground troops. but, the u.s.a. may have to. we'll spell out the situation tonight. >> >> for the third time in less than a month, a grouch militants known as isis has released a video purporting to show the execution of a western hostage. >> expect more brutality from the isis nazis. how will the world confront them? we will tell you what each country is doing. >> do you ever hear annoying phrases that get your goat?
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>> i coney island i don't even have a goat. >> watters world the cliche edition, at the end of the day you are going to want to strangle watters. >> people really watching this right now? >> caution, you are about to enter the no spin zone. the factor begins right now. ♪ ♪ hi,i'm bill o'reilly. thanks for watching us tonight. fighting to win against isis. that is the subject of this evening's talking points memo. new "wall street journal" nbc poll says just 28% of americans are confident president obama will be able to defeat the isis terror threat. 28%. 68% have their doubts. the reason americans are tentative about their commander and chief is that he has not been assertive in using u.s. power and indeed seems to be somewhat ashamed of it but now with weekly beheadings by isis, the reluctant warrior must wage
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war but not total war, tepid war. >> we are not looking to put troops on the ground. there are troops on the ground that don't belong to us. they are called syrian. the syrian opposition is on the ground. and one of the regrettable things is, it has been fighting isil by itself over the course of the last couple of years. >> and why has it been fighting isis, isil whatever you wanted to call it by itself, mr. kerry? why? because your boss would not help them out. overruling most of his foreign policy advisors including secretary of state hillary clinton. talking points wonders whether john kerry understands he just put his boss in a bad place. anyway, even the national media now understands the president's war plan is foley. >> there is not a single military advisor that has come to you guys and said you can defeat isis and is syria we are seeing very
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good progress thanks to the speaker and the others put together support for what the president has called title 10 program to equip on the ground fighting isil. >> swell. here is the troop. the syrian opposition is not going to key feet isis or assad or anyone else. they are far too weak fighting force no matter what we do. again, everybody in the international arena knows that so why are we playing this game? why? the answer to that question he is complicated and rooted in fear. president obama does not want a wide war on terrorism administration. he wants small ball. isolated attacks on the evil doers. but with the dramatic rise of the isis nazis, that strategy is not enough. >> look. people don't question american power. what people need to be convinced of is american will.
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>> and so what do you think should be done? it sounds to me like you are saying we should be sending u.s. ground troops. >> i don't think we should have arbitrary units on forces we send. look, no one is picturing us brigade combat teams maneuvering in the western, iraqi desert. >> um-huh. >> but we do need to have a presence on the ground. >> of course that's what we need. but, again, president obama doesn't want to put americans in harm's way. it goes against his liberal belief system. so he wants to form a big anti-terror coalition. team up with countries all over the world to get isis and other islamic terror organizations. only mr. obama does not like to use the word islamic. okay. so let's take a look at the proposed coalition. australia, as usual, has stepped up with troops and planes. what a great ally that country is. great britain talks a great game but even though isis beheaded a british subject over the weekend, prime minister cammeron isn't
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really committing much to the fight. maybe that will change. france, if can you believe it, is doing more than britain. saying it will take part in bombing raids against isis. france has also defeated islamic terror threats in africa. so way to go paris. germany as usual not doing much. they sit back and let the u.s.a. and others do the hard work of protecting innocent people. germany is a very selfish country. italy says it will help out a bit. all they can do. canada, not really committed. they might help out a little. maybe. and the muslim world turkey once again turns against their nato allies that country could cripple isis because supplies to the terror group flow through turkey also turkish air bases are very close. they border syria. but the turks fear the jihadists because some of those nuts are living in that country. behind the scenes turkey might help out but quietly. egypt will help a little for all the money we send their military. saudi arabia says the
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syrians can train on its soil. jordan, lebanon none, other small muslim countries will do a little. qatar it remains quite the problem. terror funding going through that little place it says it's a friend to america but the money says differently. president obama should crack down on qatar fast. so you can see, that any big coalition movement is a pipe dream. we are living in a cowardly world. qaeda, other islamic killers get away with what they do. sad truth is and has been that only the united states can lead a fight against evil. rush sharks china, they have power but neither nation is interested in writing wrongs or protecting innocent people. they want more power, money, and a tight hold over their own citizens. they couldn't care less if president obama really wants to protect americans and defeat isis. if he really wants to do it. he himself must become a much stronger presence. is he wishy washy up there. patent and u.s. grant are rolling over. he is dispassionate.
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much too nuances. not fully engaged. few nation also follow a leader who tells the enemy what he won't do. and whose record of retreat dominates his resume. we need a presidential commitment to kill terrorists wherever they may be, to do that, president obama congress should pass a declaration of war. a declaration of war against islamic terrorists. we have to have an official document that says here we come. but we don't invade, we don't nation build or arm corrupt ineffective fighting forces. we fight smart. taking help from the nations that are willing to give it. and bringing the fight to the enemy in a variety of ways. few american politicians would oppose a declaration of war for fear of their own careers. so let's get rolling. or do we need a few more beheadings? and that's the memo. next on the rundown, brit hume will react. later bernie goldberg, jesse
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any flight, any time. no blackout dates. and with every purchase you'll earn unlimited double miles. now we're getting somewhere. what's in your wallet? and in the impact segment tonight, we continue with the talking points memo. fight the isis terrorists and whether president obama has the will to do it. joining us from washington senior analyst brit hume. where am i going wrong? >> i didn't hear much that i thought was wrong in that commentary of yours, bill. i thought you summed it up quite well and going through the countries one by one was informative. i think the reason we are getting so much resistance from these countries we would like it to be our allies is they sense that the president's plan is half baked and is he really not committed to it. >> that's why we need a declaration of war.
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>> well, perhaps. >> it's a psychological and also it gives him the legal authority to hunt them down. >> how screw a declaration of war signed by a president who says he won't commit american ground forces under any circumstances? >> he has to change his mind, human. -- hume that's why we are on the air tonight. when he cease this transcript tomorrow he will go o'reilly and you are right. >> whether that happens, it will be a cold day in hell, bill. >> we told them early on they would have to bomb in syria. they are going to bomb in syria. the declaration of war absolutely against the jihadists is long overdue. it gives the power then the president, legal authority to go anywhere in the world and do whatever he wants to do. go ahead. >> well, look, i wouldn't resist it if it happened. i'm just saying authorization from congress to go out against isis whether you call it a declaration of war or not would be quite sufficient. the question is really whether the president will
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do it. think about, this bill. suppose for an example that we're able to get forces trained outside of syria to go back in there and fight. who commands them? and who coordinates between american air power and these forces on the ground? and what happens if there is a disagreement in the command structure. what is the command structure. where are these training bases going to be? how many can they train in a year? i heard one person said tonight in an estimate under current circumstances is that we could train about 1800 in a year. now, that might be more, maybe less than that that gives you an idea of how. >> it's so ridiculous. >> how unformed this plan is. >> it's so ridiculous, we train the israeli -- retrain the iraqi army, all right. for a decade. and look what happened to them. all right. so, it's so ridiculous to think you could take, you know, a groups of people who are fighting a guerrilla war against their own government in syria. organize them into the army rangers. you know, it almost makes me -- i don't want to be
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cynical about this. but everyone has to know, including the president, when you throw this out to the world, it may sound okay intelligent people know, you are just bsing them. you are telling them i'm not going to do much. i will get a few of them but i'm not going to take them apart. >> there is real evidence now that the american public kind of gets. this this polling that we are seeing where people are saying that they support what the president has announced. but by very large numbers they doubt that it can work. i heard someone on another network saying tonight that he found that contradictory. i don't. i think what that says is that people support he what is he going to do and they want him to do more because any don't think it's enough. once again, the president is in a situation where i think, you know, this is where he kind of started here, the beheadings awaken public opinion and moved him but didn't move him far enough to solve even the political problem is he facing. >> let's talk about the ground troop situation. because i would oppose tanks, rolling up from kuwait into baghdad and all of that i don't think that's the way to handle this thing.
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but, certainly special forces, cia forces, people with embedded our people on the ground embedded with the iraqi and kurdish units. certainly that can be effective. and why president obama would oppose that, i don't think he even does. more than 1,000 u.s. personnel in that area now. probably 5,000 by the end of the year. so, he says one thing but he will put them in. >> well, you still have to ask yourself this question. what if we do our best to train these forces and what if they go in and fight and they fail? is the threat from isis as it is now being described by the president and members of his administration such that failure is simply not an option. if that's the case. >> he doesn't see it that way. >> that's what concerns me and i think that's what concerns others. you have to be ready in case the enemy gets a vote on any forces aren't up to the job, or we can't train them in sufficient number and time, then what are you going to
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do? >> they won't american air power. and the way the war would be constructed is they only go in with overwhelming force, american air. >> how with r. we going to get overwhelming support with the syrian rebels? >> you are not. i'm talking about the kurds and iraqi army. syrian rebels, forget it that's not going to happen. >> do you think the kurds and iraqi army are going to fight in syria? >> well, you know, it's interesting. who is going to stop them? >> well, the question is who is going to stop them. >> who is going to take out the headquarters in syria? >> who is going to stop them if we declare war on isis? who is going to stop those forces from going into syria? >> could be the iraqi government doesn't want them in there. the history of the last half century is if the united states wants something done it, basically has to do it itself with support from allies. >> brit hume, everybody. directly ahead. americans do not have faith as brilt just said that president obama can win the terror war. we will give you the latest polling and juan and mary katharine will weigh in. later goldberg and watters
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personal story segment tent, as why told you in the talking points memo most americans now believe that president obama will not effectively wage war against the isis terrorists. according to the "wall street journal" poll we cited in the t points about 70%. when asked if president obama's speech on the terror war was effective 26 percent said they are more favorable for the president after hearing it 20% less favorable. a whopping 53 percent said makes no difference in their assessment of the president. joining us now from washington, mary katharine ham and juan williams. so, juan, i know you like bullish towards his policies. do you personally believe he can wage an effective terror war? >> yes, i do. that's why i was disappointed to hear you
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talk about reluctant warrior and folly. in fact, bill, what the president is doing, according to the polls is widely supported by the american people. they may have doubts about, you know, will this be enough, but they support what he has done so are if a. what he is doing in terms of the air strikes no, boots on the ground, you know, creating a coalition, potentially having muslims fighting muslims, that's letter and verse what the american people want done. and the american people. >> did you ever hear -- >> -- reluctant warriors except to the extent we don't want to repeat the errors of 10 years ago and get locked intoybñ some ancient dispute. >> as hume and i definitely pointed out, a lot of what the president said he wants to do, arming the syrian rebels is just foolishness, it's not going to happen. most americans don't know that they are not involved with the microof all of this. and old cliche and we have watters doing cliche at the end of the program, mary katharine, can you talk a
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good game. when you strip it away, every military analyst says the same thing. you are not going to get these guys unless you have some americans on the ground helping the other forces directing them right in to get them. that's it. >> yeah. there is a couple things going on here. what's bullying the numbers is a natural inclination by americans to seat horrific acts and go we're the leader in the world and is our part to step up. that is part of who we are as americans. i think there is rally around the president since going on here as well. the american people are okay with air strikes. now, do i think juan is right that there is some ambivalence with the american people and with voters about a long campaign or having boots on the ground. there is also concern about this president being weary about deploying those forces and using them effectively and the idea that the president hasn't felt like he has had a strategy thus far. there has been at love waving back and forth between various different words and various different positions. i think that concerns him. there is also a really deep sense of look theres with
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were mistakes during the bush administration very costly. once those mistakes were correct and real gains were made, thotsd gains were frittered away by this president. they are looking at the situation do we want to get into a long situation on the ground. >> complicated situation. it's not like pearl harbor. it's not like -- it's almost like vietnam in a i way. extremely complicated on how to deal with this enemy. all americans want isis. they want them to be defeated. i'm telling you, juan, if you really cut through the investor back. you cut through the bs and you get down to what the president proposed last week, it won't work. and americans instinctively know it they know it won't work. thus the nbc "wall street journal" poll today. >> look. you know, you are such a smart guy. i listened to you. i watch you because you are really worth spending time with. you have got to realize we're talking about maybe 10, 15. last week they said maybe it's 15 or 20. that's it. 20,000 people.
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and they are terrorists, they are not skilled folks. >> we can beat them. that's not the issue, bill. the question is whether or not we take steps that, in fact, turn out to hurt our interests by provoking some reaction we can't anticipate. we don't know what's going to happen. >> unintended consequences have to be taken into account. >> i'm going it tell you right now. you are saying the president who is the one who should go get a declaration of war. congress behind me. they haven't done a declaration of war since world war ii. >> put it to them. let president obama lead. >> your boys won't do it. >> you make fun -- you say you like obama. >> i don't like obama but i come on here and give you a different point of view. >> they all dislike me. >> no. >> i don't have any voice. >> gentlemen, ladies and gentlemen -- >> -- let's put it out there to the president. and to the congress. >> welcomes it. >> a declaration of war against islamic, hello terrorism. >> he welcomes but you know what?
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even today, even today the republicans were saying we're not going to give you rebels. won't do it. won't do it. i will tell you what you have got to say about that bill. >> that's a whole different thing, go ahead, mary katharine are. >> couple things. the numbers by isis by our intelligence. >> about 30,000. >> 30,000, not 15,000. that's a big difference. i think, look, when it comes to this kind of stuff. ij going to disagree slightly with the very smart brit hume. people are saying they want more to be done here. i think the american people they believe in american power but their will does need to be buieed. you have to make that argument. >> you have to make the case. >> i will take it to both of them. you have obama who doesn't want to make the case to congress and congress who is happy to not let him make the case because they do not want their names on it those people are not going to lead the american people to be in favor of a long campaign. >> leadership in the country and isis has exploited and this so has al qaeda. they shouldn't even exist 13 years after 9/11. they shouldn't even be on the earth.
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we haven't been able to figure out a way mainly because they are enabled by pakistan and all of these other muslim countries. and you can't declare war on islam. you can't do that but i'm telling you, there is a way to do. this and there is a way to send a signal to the world. >> but you have got to have a leader to do it? >> declaration of war. >> you have got to have a leader like abraham lincoln who is going to step up and say i know i'm going to be the most hated man in the country. we have got to keep the union together and this is how we are going to do it. >> that's what he did last week. >> oh, come on, juan. >> he made the case. >> his case is not going to defeat the isis terrorists. >> you talk about the will, bill. he has the will to do it. >> it's the question of properly representing the american people who say for now this is enough. you are exactly on target, mr. president. but don't put the boots on the ground. >> the stories from that huddle he had with journalists suggest did he it because the american people are okay with that part. that's not a strategy for war. >> he is not going to win the coalition and training the syrian guys.
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>> be careful not to become a warmonger my friend. >> juan? >> juan and mary katharine, everyone. plenty more as the factor moves along this evening. while many americans want to legalize pot, a new study says it deficit states kids. we'll have some new information for you. and then bernie goldberg on the nfl in big trouble as violence off the field continues to mount. we hope you stay tuned to those reports. s charlie. his long day of doing it himself starts with back pain... and a choice. take 4 advil in a day or just 2 aleve for all day relief. honey, you did it! baby laughs!
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factor follow up segment tonight. while many americans want to legalize marijuana evidence mounts it's devastating if children use it. teenagers use it daily 60% less likely to graduate high school. seven times more likely to attempt suicide. in addition, a book by former sect of health joseph callfano says the pot 10 times more potent than what the hippies were using in the 1960's. a psychiatrist and doctor. i believe that marijuana is dangerous to american kids and that fact, is what i believe, has been understated by the media or am i wrong? >> no. i think you are right, bill. we have been hearing a lot in the media about the beneficial effects of marijuana for legitimate, serious illnesses and i think that's true about what we know in the marijuana in the teen brain is one in
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every six teens will become addicted to marijuana. long term marijuana use effects problem-solving, memory and iq. in one study done in colorado what we found is that 75% of youth in a treatment center were getting their marijuana from adults with legal marijuana registration cards. so, it's become more accessible. it's become more socially acceptable and i think it's a big problem. >> do you concur dr. weis? >> i agree that it's significant problem and certainly the harms of marijuana on the adolescent brain are being increasingly documented. and at the same time, teens see it as less risky than ever. less risky than we ever did before. they see it as less risky than alcohol. they see it as less risky than cigarettes. and so that inevitably is going to lead them towards increased use. >> okay. so you are in washington state which now has legalized marijuana. and teenagers then pick up
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that okay, if the old folks can smoke it why can't i? that's just normal. that's what they did with alcohol and that's what they are doing with marijuana. as dr. pointed out the studies say that people with who are buying legal marijuana give it to the kids so we expect that to happen n every state that legalizes, do we not dr. weist? >> the use of marijuana by teens is really a nationwide issue -- >> -- i understand that but it's almost taking on now tsunami like proportions because it has been glamorized by the media it's no question it has been. >> i think the real is that the risks haven't been acknowledged. >> >> that's part of the glamourization. >> teens really do need to. >> to hear it, right. the media doesn't want to do it because the media wants it legalized. dr. bober, when you see a child and as you said 15% of all-american teenagers of all stripes become addicted to marijuana. when you see happen, it's
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not something that's easily overcome, is it? >> no, it's not. there is a lot of evidence to suggest marijuana is a gate way drugs to other drugs the younger they start the worse it is. this is a conversation he we need to be having and we need to focus on both aspects of the argument. >> what about the freedom aspect of it? you know, americans who want legalized marijuana say look, i can could what i want with my own body. i'm an adult and all of this. then society is putting marijuana users in jail which is falsehood. we have debunked that here. but that's a powerful argument that again the media has embraced. >> i think if you are an adult you should be able to do what you want. indirect effect that's happening is that teens are getting their hands on marijuana and we know that teens have a developing brain and it is particularly sensitive to the effect of marijuana. that puts us all at wisconsin when we put our kids at risk. >> dr. weist, when you smoke marijuana, it's a pretty
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pungent situation so you can't do it if you are an adult knit home without your kids knowing about it very famous person told me that's his great regret that he smoked marijuana and his children knew it even though he did it in another room in private, they smelled it and then they got involved with drugs and he feels guilty about it. i think that's inevitable. is it not? >> well, it is often a multi-generational issue. and it's true that if adults don't act as role models for their kids and also dialogue with their kids about the harms of drugs, then kids are going to follow in their footsteps and make bad choices. we really need to mobilize parents and other responsible adults to get involved in the lives of kids in a deep way. in a way that when they talk about the risks of marijuana, those kids are actually going to listen. >> yeah. if they are using it at the same time and their friends and neighbors in colorado and washington state have legalized it and the media is glamorizing it, it's an awful lot for a kid to overcome. it really is the curiosity
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factor alone. and as you said once a teenage mind or the child mind gets involved with intoxicants, boom, their childhood is over. doctors, thank you. when we come right back, bernie goldberg on nfl violence off the field. watters on why america is a cliche nation. >> what about when people say oh, you know it's all good. >> if a woman is saying it's all good, that's not all good. >> that's code it's going to be a major fight. >> it's going to come back to you. >> everything a woman says is in code. >> watters world up ahead. i'm l-i-s-a and i have copd, but i don't want my breathing problems to get in the way of hosting my book club. that's why i asked my doctor about b-r-e-o. once-daily breo ellipta helps increase airflow from the lungs for a full 24 hours. and breo helps reduce symptom flare-ups that last several days and require oral steroids, antibiotics, or hospital stay.
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thanks for staying with us, i'm bill o'reilly in the weekdays with bernie segment tonight. mounting troubles for the national football league. star minnesota vikings running back adrian peterson has been charged with beating his 4-year-old son in texas. peterson missed yesterday's game but has been reinstated and is expected to play this coming sunday there have been a number of nfl players charged with violence off the field. yet some measures remain unfazed. look at this picture, a woman wearing adrian peterson jersey and holding a stick like the one he used on his son. unbelievable. with us is the purveyor of mr. goldberg there was a story with ray rice with
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fans sticking up for him and, you know, i don't understand the mentality, do you? >> yeah. i think i do. actually. first, let -- this would be a good time to remind everybody that fan is short for fanatic and according to my dictionary if a nated particular is someone motivated by an extreme unreasoning enthusiasm. that woman, whose picture you just showed, that is unreasoning enthusiasm. but i think, bill, that the reason sports fans do what they do goes a lot deeper than that i did a story for real sports on hbo about fan violence. i interviewed a sports psychologist. a college professor. and he said that with institutions in america crumbling and breaking down, starting with the family and religion. people go to other things when they find a sense of acceptance and a sense of belonging and very often that something else is a sports team.
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so, and in a lot of cases, the sports team is not only the most important thing in their life, it's the most important thing in their city's life. a lot of cities, the sports team is the most important thing going on. so the fans find this acceptance and this belonging and as crazy as it may sound, the baltimore ravens and ray rice to some fans, not all are family. and it's hard to abandon a family member, even when you acknowledge that he did something terribly terribly wrong. >> all right. but i think you can be a fan which i am and i think you are of certain teams and then when something happens on a team that you favor, you say okay. it's not the team's fault. i mean, not baltimore ravens fault that ray rice did what he did. it's not the minnesota vikings fault that adrian peterson whipped his boy alleged whether i a tree branch. i mean they are eminem
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employees and employees in every company do bad things. you accept that you don't promote it. therein lies the psychological dilemma, because fans i do agree with you, are far t emotionally involved with their team to the point where they are fighting other fans. and people are getting killed. and to the point where they are supporting people who do violent things just because they wear a jersey that they like. >> that's insane. >> that's what my story on real sports. that's precisely what it was about. now, have you ever noticed that people say about there is a game last night and they say hey, we won. and you know people say that to me i say what position did you play? >> i'm with them spiritually. >> yeah, but we won, that tells you psychologically how much they identify with the team -- >> -- sure. >> with the team and the players on the team. all i'm saying. look, i'm not defending at all that woman, that's just
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stupid. that picture that you showed of that woman. that's stupid. you know what? i have got to be careful how i say. this the ray rice people who wore his jerseys, i think that's a little more complicated. they all said is, i heard what the people said i read what a lot of them said. they all said that i read, anyway and heard, what he did was wrong. they say that right off the bat. he should be punished. they say that. but as one woman said, she said, you know, and now, now you are going to just pretend he doesn't exist? i think that's what bothers them. the elites think that these people who wore a ray rice jersey are the great dopey, stupid unsophisticated, unwashed americans. they have no respect for them. but, i think that if you acknowledge what he did was wrong, if you say he should be punished, but all you are saying is don't give him the death sentence, you know
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what? i don't think it's great that great. >> you don't want to promote him by wearing his apparel. >> i would not have wore his jersey. >> wrong message. here is another message that sent. the vikings got their butts kicked yesterday. and they -- they virtually have no chance to do anything this year unless peterson is in the backfield. >> yeah. >> so, bang, he is back. even though there is tonight another allegation against peterson, a second one that he beat another son. and so then you get back to money over everything else. >> of course. of course. i mean, in the big leagues, whether it's college or the pros, if you are not that good, and you do something wrong -- >> -- you're done. >> you are done by night fall. >> right. but if you are adrian peterson, now, the second allegation, now this is putting the vikings in a bad spot because they had said he is going to play this
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sunday. he didn't play last sunday, yesterday, but he going to play this sunday. i don't know. and if anybody ever comes up with video of anything going on, then you know -- >> -- then it's over. >> then you know it's over. >> because then the vikings are saying listen, you are innocent until proven guilty. let it play out. again, in the other case -- >> -- that was one. >> it's an allegation though. >> so, he hasn't been convicted of anything but a video, of course, would do him in, there is no doubt about it bernie as always, thank you. watters on deck, cliches are taking over the national discourse. and watters is not happy about it. his world up next. [ male announcer ] automotive innovation starts... right here. with a control pad that can read your handwriting, a wide-screen multimedia center, and a head-up display for enhanced driver focus. all inside a newly redesigned cabin of unrivaled style and comfort.
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back of the book seeing want tonight, watters world, the cliche edition, words like cool, awesome at the end of the day drive me nuts. we hear them over and over again. so we sent watters out to see if other americans agree with me. ♪ gree with me. >> one of the most annoying cliches in my book is when someone does something wrong and they say my bad. >> that is really annoying. i don't go for it. >> it's not even a real apology. >> no. >> just say i'm sorry. >> sorry is like when you killed someone's cat. >> you sleep with someone's girlfriend, you don't say my bad. >> no. i don't think you should say anything. >> i say my bad. >> why don't you just step up to the plate and say i'm sorry? >> i'm cooler than that. >> congratulations. congratulations. >> it's an egotistical thing.
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people have big egos. >> do you have a big ego? >> sometimes. >> me too. >> your bad is having a popped and unpopped collar. >> what kind of person says it's all good? >> same person that says all bad. >> it's street lingo. >> you're a white guy. >> i am. >> you can't say that. things you can get away with, things you can't. >> it started with the african-american community. it's slang. >> it's all good isn't even grammatically correct. >> you're right. >> i'm always right. >> for me it ain't all good. i'd be lying if i tell you that. you know what i mean? >> it's science. >> it's a woman's thing it's all good, it's not all good. >> you know something, i believe you. >> people say kick the can down the road. does that mean they're passing away soon? >> i'm coming to georgia, honey. >> it's to leave your probl to somebody else. >> people in washington kick their can down the road.
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>> yes, yes. >> get a tire and take a strik and run down a street. >> out the can or juice or bottle water, put it in the garbage sgr i think you're taking it too literally. at the end of the day, it's like a ya-da ya-da ya-da. >> that's italian. >> italians made that term up. >> forget about it. >> i thought it was yiddish. >> no. >> bill says that too. >> at the end of the day his butt's in jail. >> you're calling bill out? >> i watch bill all the time, bro. >> i'm in my speed dos. >>?" >> i just want to -- hold on. there we go. at the end of the day -- you look better now, right? he's almost too good looking. >> what about when people say i'm reaching out? >> to me that's a bunch of [ bleep ]. forget about reaching out. how about you're going to do it?
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>> joey, did i not just tell you to do it? >> are people really watching this right now? >> shut up. >> do you ever hear annoying phrases that get your goat? >> i live over here in coney island. i don't even have a goat. >> the only one i can think of which is starting to get played out is that's what she said. >> that's what she said. >> you know what i'm sayin? >> you know what i'm sayin? >> i don't know what you're saying. please explain. >> do you ever watch watters' world? >> yes, i have. >> a big fan? >> i'm not a big fan. >> you guys ever watch watters' world? >> yes. i love watters' world. kevin costner. he's so sexy. >> did you say something? >> i think costner had his collar up in the back. >> it was a little windy. >> that was a great answer, watters' world. >> she nailed me. >> she had no clue who you were. >> i love watters world.
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are you sure? >> you went to coney island. a pretty good crowd. >> decent people. >> they use a clip of me saying at the end of the day. that was out of context. >> you were accusing me of deceptively editing you. your own producer? >> you want to explain. >> i think it was just for the reason to put you on the spot. >> no. i was mocking it. and he cut out all the stuff around it. >> well, put the full transcript on the internet tomorrow. >> that's the worst. at the end of the day, that's the worst. on tv they continue to say that. >> you nailed me when i first started coming on this show. i think i was trying to book a segment and you walked in and said, watters, you book a b block. i said i'm reaching out to this guest -- you said reaching out, watters? did you fax him? i never used it ever again. >> good. see you learn this thing. next week watters will be back. if you see him, don't mistake him for kevin costner ever again.
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costner's going to be furious. >> i'm furious, actually. "the factor" tip of the day, the first review of "killing patton." the tip moments away. ♪ i thought it'd be bigger. ♪ ♪ ♪ (dad) there's nothing i can't reach in my subaru. (vo) introducing the all-new subaru outback, redesigned inside and out.
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"the factor" tip of the day, the first review of "killing patton." first the mail. bill, it was interesting to watch your face when laura ingraham didn't agree with your war spewing isis analysis. she is correct. about wa? letting the beheadings continue? i don't think that's what lara wants. bill, you don't understand obama's strategy because you don't understand he grew up as an islamic muslim. redundant, marvin. redundant. what i don't understand is why guys like you keep spouting that nonsense. we're about as far away from jihad in hawaii as you can get. tom, gilbert, arizona.
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o'reilly, you're contributing to theexc getting by reporting on the beheadings. i don't know what to say to that. bill, the only way to defeat isis is to be as barbaric as they are. ridiculous, paul. we'll defeat them the say way we defeated the brutal german and japanese regimes, by being tough and smart. cypress, texas, o'reilly, you were rude to dr. carson and wouldn't even let him.x sentence. false. the doctor and i had a spirited discussion about ray rice and we both got our points in. okay. finally tonight's "the factor" tip of the day. you may know my new book "killing patton" out in eight days, september 23rd in the marketplace. but today "new york post" columnist reviewed the book, apparently she liked it. always a good thing. on billoreilly.com. also senator john mccain has a review on amazon. so we hope you check that out as well. we appreciate the senator taking the time and reading the book.
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so here's the tip, you're going to like "killing patton." and if you become a billoreilly.com premium member you get it free and you get it first. i just wanted to let you know. and that is it for us tonight. we have our mad as7*ñhell segme this week by the way. keep that in mind. mad as hell @foxnews.com. we'd like you to spout off about "the factor" from anywhere in the world. o'reilly@foxnews.com. word of the day, do not be supercilious. that brings us to the boldere fresher shows. just two tickets remaining. west virginia october 24th, friday night. charleston. and then we're in philadelphia. like 150 tickets left there. the next night october 25th. if you want to see miller and i, and we're never supercilious, you got to get on.
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again, thanks for watching tonight. ms. megyn warming='sñ up. i'm bill o'reilly. please remember the spin always stops here. we're definitely looking out for you. breaking tonight with alarming polls about presidential leadership and questions about how committed our commander in chief is to this mission, the white house tonight is suggesting that our bombingq'a
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