tv The O Reilly Factor FOX News September 19, 2014 8:00pm-9:01pm PDT
8:00 pm
o'reilly factor is on. tonight: >> the islamic group today released a propaganda -- >> john cantley delivers a sleekly produced message. >> isis terrorists using the net to spread fear all over the world. tonight, a special report how cyberspace is helping evil and hurting you. >> sending arms to so-called moderate islamic rebels in syria is a fool's errand and only make isis stronger. >> senator rand paul not happy with the way on terror is fought. odds. we will talk with with mr. mccain tonight.
8:01 pm
>> >> man has got a point. they can be cold. >> also ahead megyn kelly under fire from a former guest bill ayers. i will get involved with this. later on. caution, you are to enter the no spin zone. the factor begins right now. ♪ ♪ hi, i'm bill o'reilly. thanks for watching us tonight. how the internet makes evil stronger that is the subject of this evening's talking points memo. we are all living in a dangerous fast-changing world. machines now dominate the lives of americans and are also very useful tools to terrorists all over the world. last nights former president bill clinton nailed it. >> the explosion of information technology and other factors have made power more diffuse. the bad news is the same technology can go to isis and they can become a droid
8:02 pm
on the social media and all of a sudden you see two austrian teenage girls picked up at the airport trying to go there and blow people up for them. >> mr. clinton saying that isis, al qaeda and other killers killers recruit online. instantly worldwide worldwide. showed british national john cantley. forced to make a propaganda video and in grave danger of losing his life. as you know isis has already beheaded james fell toy, stephan sotloff and david haines. the fact that they're for temperaturing mr. cantley speaks for itsful is. the worst part of the internet intrusion is that no one can stop it the terrorists have a nor enormous ant of terror on fingerprints. home depot just announced it's been handle and a 6 million shoppers have their information on cyberspace. comings on the heels of
8:03 pm
target. stolen information from american contractors. edward snowden stole national security secrets and put out on the net. enday jerrying the lives of american operatives all over the world. snowden remains in russia protected by putin. on a more personal note millions of american children are addicted to their cell phones, personal computers, laptops, they can access almost anything. they can see the worst kind of pornography and violence and there is little parents can do to stop it. that's a huge problem. there is no question that for all the benefits of the net, evil is now flourishing there. as american children become adults their intrapersonal skills will be far less than in past generation. narcissism thrives in space all about me. because i hold in my hand all i need to know. in the future those who reject the online addiction will prosper. those who succumb to it will fail. we are looking at a brave new world and believe me,
8:04 pm
you are going to have to be brave to endure it. that's the memo. now for the top story tonight, reaction. joining us from burlington, vermont katie grier online safety expert and from washington, morgan wright, cyber terrorism analyst and founder of the group safe life. ms. wright, i begin with you, am i making any mistakes here. >> you nailed it like you said president obama did. the problem with the internet it's good and bad the way dynamite was invented by alfred nobel for peace purposes it's now been used to create destruction. the internet has created trillions of dollars of wealth. as with home depot and target and human trafficking and online sexual predators it's also caused a lot of grief to our kids. >> is there any way we can protect the country, all right, and individuals from these creeps who are hacking and using it for evil? >> i used to teach a lot of law enforcement how to conduct computer crime investigations and 20 years
8:05 pm
ago. take a cultural shift. take a lot of policy shifts and, bill, one of the biggest things we have got to do is end the ability for these people to operate in countries we can't reach out and legally touch. we need more mutual legal assistance treats in some of these countries. >> what mr. wright is saying is that you can bation your villainy in a country that the united states can control. i mean, we have had some experience here with this. and people routed over to iceland and i don't know about iceland what their situation is, i'm just using this in an example. they go through here and go through there and you have to chase them all over the world. because it is a worldwide phenomenon now. i think this is out of control, ms. grier, i really do. parents are trying to keep their kids away from this awful stuff and you can't. >> bill, i walk into presentations nightly where parents are truly. sometimes walk out crying because it's so overwhelming. it's a virtual cat and mouse game for law enforcement. for parents, for us.
8:06 pm
how do we keep up with this technology that is changing so quickly? who is going to get there first? is it going to be bad guys? is it going to be the good guys inventing these things. law enforcement that's keeping up with these things and trying to thwart these, you know, terrorists or gang members at home or sexual predators or whoever it may be. it is a virtual cat and mouse game that is going to continue for a long long long time that's for sure. >> here is what really bothers me. sick people who would have been shunned in public before the technological revolution, you know, you all knew who the sick people were and the perverts. were shouldn'ted off to the the -- shouldn'ted off to the side. now they have this power to get whatever sickness they have out to everybody. you have the nazi groups. you have the terrorist groups. and they are reaching people and they are saying know, come with us, come with us. it's like this giant temptation all over the place, mr. wright. and i don't see any way to stop it it. >> right.
8:07 pm
>> you can't stop it. >> look, in the old days willie sutton he was asked why did you rob banks? he said that's where the money was. he had to be physically at the bank. now the internet has created the ability for anybody with an agenda, anybody with the mere access to technology to be able to push their ideology out. take, for example, isis. talking about cyber can do kinetic activities shoot and kill people. use social media to use the internet recruit people. jihad physically traveling somewhere or people in the united states to do lone attacks on our military which was recently reported on fox. >> greer we have children taking pictures of themselves and send it to other children. we see it it every single day. used to be if you want ted use crude language and you everywhere in public you would be confronted. now, i mean the language on the internet, the texting between children is just off the chart because nobody
8:08 pm
sees it. and if the parents go in, it's a complicated process. the kids know how to erase it. they know how to go around it the kids are more savvy than the parents and they have more power in this area. i'm seeing a a deterioration. a tremendous deterioration of the moral fiber of the united states because of these machines. >> i think it's so far reaching. it's a couple problems. it's so far reaching. it's so quick whether they are talking about terrorists or talking about our own kids that it removes that ability, especially for kids to take a minute to stop and think before they send something and post something. not to mention the fact that we are in a whole new world now where what we say, what we post, those pictures that we take, those words that we use can be around forever. now, there are sights out there that boast they erase these things. i as a parent myself i feel for parents dealing with this. it's so hard to keep on top of what our kids are doing. >> take the computer away you isolate the child.
8:09 pm
>> of course. >> the child's friends have the machines. and then the child hates you and they go -- the final thing for you, mr. wright, is that there is an epidemic of credit card theft now. i don't know if you are aware of it? >> absolutely. >> again, all generated by the net. once your credit card goes up on the internet, the hackers come, in they take it and then boom boom boom boom boom and then all of the sudden you have got $2,000 worth of expenditures that you didn't do. is the technology going to be developed to stop that or is the whole financial system going to dissend into chaos? >> yeah, bill, a couple weeks ago i was in dallas talking too insurance brokers how to deal. we have no move to encrypted technology. the way europe has done for a long time. not solve the problem but raise the bar so high at least make the problem so somewhat. imagine stripe technology is 20, 30-year-old. we were victims at home teach poo so i know personally how it feels.
quote
>> very good discussion. i appreciate it next on the run down, senators mccain how to deal with terror abroad. the federal government says it's okay to use welfare money to buy legalized pot. unbelievable. factor is coming right back. ♪ jackie's heart attack didn't come with a warning. today her doctor has her on a bayer aspirin regimen to help reduce the risk of another one. if you've had a heart attack be sure to talk to your doctor before you begin an aspirin regimen.
8:10 pm
8:12 pm
8:13 pm
why? all the flights you want are blacked out. or they hit you up for some outrageous number of miles. switch to the venture card from capital one. with venture, use your miles on any airline, 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? no question fighting terrorism oversea as complicated dangerous situation which president obama and many americans would rather avoid. enter, senator rand paul who believes because the u.s. got involved in iraq and afghanistan and other places, terrorism has been given a big push. recently mr. paul told the daily beast web site that john mccain has actually met with isis representatives in syria. the "the washington post" investigated that claim and found it to be false.
8:14 pm
joining us now from phoenix, arizona is senator mccain. so, let's get the deal with rand paul out of the way first. you fundamentally disagree how to fight terrorism. now it's getting a little personal. what's the deal? >> frankly, i don't understand why senator paul would echo things from the internet. you just had a previous commentaries on it that is absolutely false and conveyed on the internet by enemies of the united states. i would remind that you isis on their internet said that on the internet said that i was their worst enemy. the crusader, john mccain. so what, unfortunately senator paul has made statements about my actions which are totally false. the "the washington post" gave them four pinocchios and said they wish they could give more because it was absolutely false. i don't know why senator paul would do that. all he had to do was come and ask me if it was true.
8:15 pm
fight against the horrible terrorism which is metastasized syria and iraq. i don't understand why he should say things that are patently false about me and that's, frankly, a bit disturbing because that's not how i'm used to working in the united states senate. >> he is in your party as well. all right, now, you did meet with syrian moderates who were fighting against isis and assad. that's how met with, right? >> yeah. members of the free syrian army and i might point out because of the president's decision not to provide with arms, a number of those brave young men are dead now that i met with, he yes. >> okay. i am skeptical that the free syrian army can defeat isis at this juncture. maybe if we had armed and trained them three or four years ago, possible. but in the now. i don't think that can be done. am i wrong? >> i believe you're wrong
8:16 pm
but it's much more difficult. you are right in that respect. so many of them have been killed because refused to help them. now we are telling them he we will train and equip them and send them about a thousand and, by the way, there are 31,000 isis. >> the numbers don't match. >> but we're sending them into an environment where bashar assad can kill them from the air. that's not fair to them. that's just wrong. >> we should have taken -- long time ago off the gas can. >> you and i are agree on foreign policy with the couple of exceptions, the problem that you you and senator lindsey graham who are going to have segment later on, the problem that you have you were very bullish on the iraq invasion and afghan campaign and a lot of americans say look, it just didn't work to our advantage. so, now, when you talk you have that almost on your back. >> well, first of all, let me point out everyone knows we should have gone to
8:17 pm
afghanistan where the attacks of 9/11 started. >> it's not working out. >> well, actually, if we would leave a residual force behind, it is going to work out. if we don't, it's going to be iraq over again. in the case of iraq, we're the ones that said rumsfeld should resign that we had to do the surge. the surge succeeded. the situation was stable. and if we had left a force behind, the kind that the president should be reconstituting now, we wouldn't be where we are today, bill. >> even if done that. >> we had it won. yes we had won. i guarantee you i was there. there is no doubt about that. >> i agree with you. the price that was paid has southward americans -- sorrowed-soured americans. hard to get their attention to do what is necessary to defeat isis. you see what i'm saying. >> of course. i know exactly what you mean. i hear it from my constituents all the time. i think these beheadings have obviously -- and the
8:18 pm
polls she it. you have echoed, referred to those polls on your show, that there has been a drastic change of attitude because they are deeply concerned about them being able to attack the united states of america as mr. baghdadi said after he left our prison, camp bucca and he said see you in new york. i believe them. and look what is happening in australia as we speak. australia a plot uncovered by authorities to behead people there to send a message. i will give you a chance to talk about people for a second for a brief time. i want to say one more thing on the isis things. i think you agree with me. put together a good member mercenary army. a real first class mercenary army with american advisors and hunt these guys can down. that's how you do it and with help from the air. am i wrong? >> you are right. you have got to take bashar assad air assets. >> that can be done in 24
8:19 pm
hours. it should have been done on the gas situation. all right, ukraine. 35 seconds. why should we care? >> okay. >> the president of ukraine gave one of the most moving powerful speeches i have ever seen to congress yesterday begging for our help. his country has been dismembered and, guess what, we will still not provide them with lethal weapons. that is so shameful i can't tell you, bill. >> all right senator, we appreciate your time and as previously stated rand paul has an open invitation to visit the factor any time he wants. the fed says if you want legalized pot you can use welfare to buy it it what? is somebody high? later, gutfeld mcguirk on celebrities getting post-traumatic stress syndrome. those reports after these messages. [ male announcer ] if you had a dollar for every dollar
8:20 pm
car insurance companies say they'll save you by switching, you'd have, like, a ton of dollars. but how are they saving you those dollars? a lot of companies might answer "um" or "no comment." then there's esurance. born online, raised by technology and majors in efficiency. so whatever they save, you save. hassle, time, paperwork, hair-tearing out, and, yes, especially dollars. esurance. insurance for the modern world. now backed by allstate. click or call.
8:21 pm
quote
8:23 pm
unresolved problem segment tonight. the federal government can cut welfare payments to individual states that will allow people, receiving public assistance to use the cash in liquor stores, casinos and strip clubs. however, the secretary of health and human services sylvia matthews burwell says it's okay to use welfare money to purchase legalized marijuana. the feds have no power to stop that she must be high. who is laughing? fox news senior correspondent -- >> -- must be high. >> geraldo rivera. who has some experience with the bud. >> you are the only person who i know who does not. >> look how smart i am as compared to you, you kept growing. >> oh my god. all right, now, come on. this is serious. i don't want to pay for somebody's i just think thres appalling. >> you know, the marijuana revolution, the marijuana prohibition ending has happened with breath taking speed. like gay marriage swept the country. >> i will agree. >> the federal regulations have simply not caught up.
8:24 pm
for example the food stamp benefits or assistance to needy families. those are decided. the regulations are decided who qualifies on a state by state basis. so what happened. the state of washington and colorado legalized marijuana they have not yet gotten around to putting them on the prohibition list. >> it's such bull because you can do that in the blink of an eye. the house passed a bill that says no assistance from the federal government can go to buying marijuana. the states could have done that in a heart beat. he they don't want to do it it a lot of liberal people particularly feel the poor should have equal access to marijuana berkeley marijuana giving it away to free. do you think that's a good idea? do you. >> i think that marijuana use will come to be regarded in the same light as tobacco
8:25 pm
use and alcohol. >> timothy leary here. >> >> california has drafted legislation. they will get around to it. >> it is not an urgent issue. >> it's urgent to me. >> you are a scold. >> i'm not a scold. i don't want my money going here. intoxication is not good for poor people. it is as good for poor people as it is for rich people. >> don't want to pay for it and i don't want to pay for liquor as well. >> fallacious. >> if you are a states rights person talking about human beings. >> you are tall about philosophy. >> if you are poor, the only way out is to fight your way out. that means you have to be sober and disciplined and do everything you can to prove yourself not sit on the couch in a stooper. that is what drives property.
8:26 pm
>> you didn't want to argue the philosophy of marijuana use. so i agreed to debate whether or not marijuana use shut be paid for by federal money. i can say if one state decide who qualifies for snap or temporary assistance to needy families. then the other states can decide whether or not people can be banned from using marijuana. >> they say no, we are cutting off funds to you. what is the senate of the united states on this. sessions says he has a bill drafted. low priority. >> they can't get the border fixed and terrorism. they can't do anything. >> i agree it's a low level priority but i'm looking out for poor people. and that's not the solution to poverty is to give them intoxicants. >> i agree generally speaking with your philosophy that people should work and pick themselves up by their boot straps. as long as the state of colorado and the state of washington consider these
8:27 pm
substances relatively benign or not yet gotten around to banning them. then what does the federal government to do? >> cut it off. stop it, suspend it. >> then there would have to be a bill passed by the house and the senate and signed by the president of united states. >> put the money in escrow and say if you do and comply if it's liquor it has to be the same for marijuana. >> if i -- if i concede your point you have to concede mine. >> the world is changing but not for the better. geraldo rivera, everybody. you can compare him with me. and you can decide agree a mustache as well. >> tea party says criticism of the national football league may be designed to diminish men. wow. gutfeld, mcguirk on the tough life some celebrities have. hope you stay tuned to those reports. guys! you're not gonna believe this!
8:28 pm
watch this. sam always gives you the good news in person, bad news in email. good news -- fedex has flat rate shipping. it's called fedex one rate. and it's affordable. sounds great. [ cell phone typing ] [ typing continues ] [ whoosh ] [ cell phones buzz, chirp ] and we have to work the weekend. great. more good news -- it's friday! woo! [ male announcer ] ship a pak via fedex express saver® for as low as $7.50. [ male announcer ] ship a pak via fedex express saver® when i had my first migraine, i was lucky. that sounds crazy, i know. but my mom got migraines, so she knew this would help. excedrin migraine starts to relieve my pain in 30 minutes.
8:29 pm
8:30 pm
the shift in the global economy. you know, the kind that capitalizes on diversity across the credit spectrum and gets exposure to frontier and emerging markets. if you convert 4-quarter p/e of the s&p 500, its yield is doing a lot better... if you've had to become your own investment expert, maybe it's time for bny mellon, a different kind of wealth manager ...and black swans are unpredictable. how can i ease this pain? (man) when i can't go, it's like rocks piling up. i wish i could find some relief. (announcer) ask your doctor about linzess-- a once-daily capsule for adults with ibs with constipation or chronic idiopathic constipation. linzess is thought to help calm pain-sensing nerves and accelerate bowel movements. it helps you proactively manage your symptoms. do not give linzess to children under 6, and it should not be given to children 6 to 17. it may harm them. don't take linzess if you have a bowel blockage. get immediate help if you develop unusual
8:31 pm
or severe stomach pain especially with bloody or black stools. the most common side effect is diarrhea, sometimes severe. if it's severe, stop taking linzess and call your doctor right away. other side effects include, gas, stomach-area pain and swelling. bottom line, ask your doctor about linzess today. personal story segment reported earlier this week. new report heritage foundation americans living below the poverty line enormous amount of stuff. plasma tvs, microwaves stuff like that. you are a british subject, right? >> yes. >> you are in the country illegally. i don't have to do a citizen's arrest. >> green card me. >> you have a green card. you are from darby the mid lands of great britain. >> yes. >> scotland votes to stay with london, they don't want to separate. good or bad thing and why should i care? >> this is a very good thing for american.
8:32 pm
>> how? >> if we woke this up morning and find the scotts wanted to be independent, that's bad news for us, for a start, britain starts to break up. that's our foremost ally. europe less stable. we he have a stable europe to go after putin and nato is diminished. you don't want to diminish nato. >> scotland is just a small area. >> hold on a second. the british have nukes. trident submarines. based in scotland. >> they still would be be based there. >> independent scotland want to get rid of them. nonnuclear, get them out. where do they go? nato is diminished. that would have been bad news for america. we woke up this morning, they are not going to be independent. >> it would have been too much money. scotland couldn't raise the money for the infrastructure. so they're going. >> rotten deal for the scotts. >> all right, now, poverty in america, we just talked a little bit with it with geraldo rivera where the feds aren't stopping colorado and washington people from using welfare moneyr@@!pvm)r it's insane. you know it's insane. everybody does. but poverty itself, when you
8:33 pm
look at the study the heritage foundation and all the things that poor people have and when you consider that poor people can get $40,000 and more in some states in welfare payments, i don't think we really have any dessubstitution here anymore. do we. >> i think poor people in america are trapped in a welfare web. you are surrounded by goods put on to you if you don't have a job and lower end of society. >> it keeps them -- >> -- it's an salute trap. if you pay people not to work they don't work. >> if you don't have these things then they would be destitute some of them. some of them are addicted. they are mentally ill and they are children have to suffer almost have to provide some kind of safety net. >> i am not beyond any kind of safety net at all. we just put the bar in the wrong place, the bar at the moment is very high. welfare is very very generous. you can get all kinds of things. >> you would cut it back? what about the kids? what about the children? those homes.
8:34 pm
>> look. you are selective. you make sure you get things right. we just simply lower the level of welfare. it sounds harsh. but what is more harsh, i think, is to keep people in a guilded cage. keep them in the trap. that's harsh. >> some want to be in that cage. they are used to this life. >> you have got to be encouraged to fight your way out. you have got to be pushed out. you have got to get yourself together and fight your way out. that's what you have got to do: the authorities have to do is to offer growth. give this economy growth. you give me four, five, 6% growth for a couple years. you will get a a lot of new jobs and a sense of optimism. >> people have to want to have the job number one and then they have to be capable of performing inside the job. i, from my own experience, know that if you are ill educated and you can't speak english well, and you are not motivated to succeed because you are getting free stuff from the government, that you are going to fail. but how do we -- look, here
8:35 pm
is a question i want to put to you because england has a poverty problem too. it's the same thing. you have government assistance in england keeps them at a certain level not destitute so they can have food on the table and pint or two of guinness. so we have the same system. how do you -- why -- what drives poverty in your opinion? what's the number one driver of it? bad parents? fractured families? bad education? what is it? >> it's a culture of poverty. it's a culture of dependency. that's what i think is clearly wrong here. you're snowed under with offers from the government to help you out. you are under no impetus to get out of it and fight your way out. you are not taught individual responsibility and you are not provided with the real skills that you need to get on that bottom rung of society of our education system. >> how you can be provided with skills? don't you have to go out and acquire skills. >> you have got to want to get them. >> yes, that's right. that's it. >> you have got to get back
8:36 pm
to what america used to be. fight your way up. move up the food chain by your own individual drive and effort. rekindle that somehow or other. do that and you are okay. >> stuart varney, everybody. when we come right back, the most controversial story of the evening. a tea party lady says that the media coverage of the nfl domestic violence situation could be diminishing to men. then, are some politicians overdoing the isis threat?h. he. did someone say burn? try alka seltzer reliefchews. they work just as fast and are proven to taste better than tums smoothies assorted fruit. mmm. amazing. yeah, i get that a lot. alka seltzer heartburn reliefchews. enjoy the relief.
8:37 pm
[chris] tit hugs you.s to your body. [jeffery] i don't have to think about how to get comfortable anymore. [evie] this zips off so i can wash it-yes, please. [robert]dude,tempur-pedic is killing it. [kevin] no more tossin' and turnin', trying to find a comfortable spot in bed. [christi] it's really cool to the touch. [chelsea] my tempur-pedic... cuddles better than my husband does. but,that's just between you and me. [announcer] visit your local retailer and feel the tempur-pedic difference for yourself.
8:40 pm
bill o'reilly factor follow up seeing want tent. processing the domestic violence currently elm embarrassing the national football league. the executive of the tea party news network says all the coverage may be designed to do a very specific thing. with us author of the brand new book "roor, the new conservative woman speaks out." so, what about the national media coverage of the nfl. what are you getting at here? >> well, i'm saying two separate things could be happening. number one the only thing left that the progressives have not yet coward standards nfl. we saw it without the changing of the washington redskins names. we saw it with the gay football player released
8:41 pm
just based on performance. they are upset at roger goodell for not cow telling to them. this is retaliation. this is why they are calling. gloria allred is calling for his resignation. that's number one. they want to sit there and do everything they can and also there is a little bit of money involved in the nfl they are frothing over. they would love to have those dollars in their pockets instead of being spent. >> you say the progressive power structure isn't big fans of the national football. >> i don't think they have pompoms for it there is a bigger picture. >> go ahead. >> number two. weeks ago with the state department going after you and that woman. we saw it with governor walker. i think the sorority house of the hillary clintonites are getting ready to demonize all men. i thought they would do just republicans they knew when you pointed out the truth they wanted to cough you chosen nist and chawfn nist. they are going to take a play from the playbook from the 2012 and sexist.
8:42 pm
>> she needs men to vote for her, hillary clinton. >> she does. >> so i don't know if the progressive strategy can be alienating men. but how does that link into the nfl? i mean, you are putting a political component into what is largely social situation in the sense that the guys in the nfl who have allegedly committed these crimes out of control or damaged people if they did it how are you making the political link? >> you know, the truth be told, listen, i never want to encourage violence to a spouse, to a child, to a pet. that is far from it. why is this all coming out right now? >> because they committed the crimes recently. >> it's been going on forever. i don't think anything that's happened in the nfl has stopped because of this coverage right now. nothing has been stopped. the truth is in reality we are opening up pandora's box here, we are not letting the judicial system take its path. no go on and judge you based
8:43 pm
on it. >> it depends what the evidence is. look, with ray rice and you have a videotape you can't have the guy back on the the field. you just can't, it's outrageous. if he didn't have the videotape goodell the commissioner thought he could get away with a two game suspension and get him back. once the tape came out and everybody saw the tape rice is finished. with the other guys, we don't have a tape. but we have marks on the child's body. these things have been seized upon by the national media to portray men as brutalizers? >> to portray our society being very sexist society exactly truth. we saw in 2008, 2012 all of a sudden and yes there are race issues in america. they sat there and said when people vote for barack obama vote for barack obama they
8:44 pm
either vote because they like the democratic policy represented or absolutely thought we have a race problem in our country. we are going to stop it having a black president would would be a reason to stop it they wanted to be a part of changing history. you will see answers two and three brought back from the playbook. >> it can't be hillary clinton. it's got to be her surrogates. if you don't like hillary or criticize hillary, then you are a sexist. that state department thing, but that back fired on them. >> yes. because it was -- that was you. not everybody else has the platform or the brains of the whit how to handle the situation. we're going to see other situations pop up. they are not going to have your class and intelligence how to handle it it's going to blow up to be a big storm. >> ms. hughes, thank you. the book is roar. check it out. gutfeld mcguirk on deck. post-traumatic stress disorder for celebrities. do i have that? right back. [ female announcer ] we help make secure financial tomorrows a reality for over 19 million people. [ alex ] transamerica helped provide a lifetime of retirement income.
8:45 pm
so i can focus on what matters most. [ female announcer ] everyone has a moment when tomorrow becomes real. transamerica. [ female announcer ] everyone has a moment when tomorrow becomes real. is all ready the brand ofstate the year.d berkshire hathaway home services. good to know. walgreens knows that heartburn sufferers can sometimes find themselves at the corner of "mmm, home cooking" and "umm, i think that's enough." that's why walgreens offers new nexium 24 hour, protection strong enough for whatever your day dishes out. walgreens makes it easy to treat frequent heartburn. with new nexium 24 hour, now get nexium level protection without a prescription. at the corner of happy and healthy.
8:48 pm
back of the book segment tonight, what the heck just happened. some people believe you can overdo the isis threat. >> this is a war we are fighting. it is not a counter terrorism operation. this is not somalia. this is not yemen. this is a turning point on the war on terror. our strategy will fail yet again. this president needs to rise to the occasion before we all get killed back here at home. >> everybody? here now, gutfeld and mcguirk. mcguirk, let's start with you because gutfeld gave us a second story tonight. did the senator overdo it? >> completely. i think he came off -- the united states senator came off sounding like some shill bed wetting chicken little at a time we need some sober level headed assessment. sending guys off to die. you can't sound like a
8:49 pm
panicked teenage girl and lead the country into war. especially if you did it once before and you were proven wrong a thousand dead soldiers later, it's a disgrace. >> okay. but as i talked to senator mccain about that there is two bodies of opinion. let me defend lindsey graham for a minute. to get people's attention. to get their attention. on monday we have a watters world. sent watters up to boston to talk to what they would do. most americans don't know what isis is. even after all of this. >> i have to disagree with bernie. on three points. one, graham spoke of intentions, not of their means. they want to do exactly what he said. is he speaking to that by the way, is this worse than calling them the jayvee. no one ever loses the war by under estimating the enemy. >> no you can get us into a war we shouldn't be in too fast. >> yeah. but i would much rather overestimate than under
8:50 pm
estimate which is what obama did. this is an interesting point. if you replaced isis with global warming, he would have got a standing ovation. >> the panic of global warming because. >> yeah. >> the seals are warming because the seals are drowning. >> the polar bears are starving. >> you can't misrepresent. you can't state something that's not so. >> he overstated we're not all in danger. but i think these guys want to attack us. >> they do. but the threat is not from these guys on the battlefields. it's from the mutts that go in and fight with them and then want to come back. >> the threat is a 9/11-type threat where there would be enough guys to blow people up. australia just knocked down a whole bunch. >> right. they would come back here and do it. >> we're not all in danger like we would be if there was a nuclear war, but there's enough danger. here's how bad this day was. we had to get a suggestion from gutfeld. we didn't have a second for this segment. suggestion occurred on oprah. >> yeah. >> roll the tape.
8:51 pm
>> use the term ptsd. what do you mean really by that? >> i'm traumatized because i think on some level between famous and wanting fame, there's some trauma. >> did you want it? >> -- then the traumatized person, in this case me, gets traumatized by the very thing that i thought would be the bomb. you know? i thought all would be helped and healed and soothed by fame. >> was she traumatized. that was alanis morisette. >> you can maybe get that by listening to her music, but fame does not cause that. >> did you watch the interview? i didn't see it. what is it she's traumatized by with fame? >> i guess fame's really hard when you get rich and stuff. >> she said it was the sudden fame. and she cited the fact that her hotel room was broken into while she was performing by some
8:52 pm
overzealous fans that took things. >> that was me actually. >> she said she didn't laugh for like two years. >> now, there is an element of stalking in fame. there is an element of insanity because they'll attack you on the internet and say anything about you. >> i'm sorry about that, bill. >> listen, i've been doing it now for 18 years. they can't say anything more because i've already said everything. >> i'm thinking of some new things. >> i'm somewhat sympathetic to her. i think as lindsey graham she overstated it. she doesn't have stress disorder. >> not at all. >> but in this day and age if you're a celebrity, you've got to watch your back all the time. >> there's two points. soldiers, this is a serious issue. >> yes. >> and when you expand the terrain of diagnosis, diagnosis becomes meaningless. >> i agree. >> her song, you ought to know, she represented every disgruntled ex-girlfriend. her voice had the same effect as loraina bobbit's knife had.
8:53 pm
am i right, guys? >> talk about overstating. come on mcguirk. >> oh, my god, i'm running away. >> do we have a bouncer? do we have anyone? do we have security? "the factor" tip of the day, defending megyn kelly. the tip moments away. when i had my first migraine, i was lucky. that sounds crazy, i know. but my mom got migraines, so she knew this would help. excedrin migraine starts to relieve my pain in 30 minutes. plus, sensitivity to light and sound, even nausea. excedrin migraine works.
8:54 pm
8:55 pm
do you have something for pain? of performance and innovation. i have bayer aspirin. i'm not having a heart attack, it's my back. i mean bayer back & body. it works great for pain. bayer back & body provides effective relief for your tough pain. better? yeah...thanks for the tip! i would like to thank everybody in las vegas, boston and now philadelphia because the bolder fresher shows there are just about sold out. in philly there are a hundred tickets left. we expect them to be gone over the weekend. so that leaves just one bolder fresher show with tickets available this year on friday night october 24th at the charleston, west virginia, going to be a great show. fall foliage is there. i'm looking forward to it. now to the mail, new jersey, enjoyed the segment on lack of trust in the media.
8:56 pm
you were on point about nasty remarks, o'reilly. all you have to do is read the hatred the left puts out there. to be honest some on the right traffic smears as well, but the left does it more. lake havasu, arizona, i don't trust the media because they exaggerate stories and lean left. mary, alabama, o'reilly, you and laura are both wrong. women are capable of as much violence as men. when some american indian tribes wanted to torture captives, the women did it. i'm with you, bill, my first thought was wipe isis off the face of the earth, but my second thought was like megyn. bill, referring to megyn's outfit as something that reminded you of a nun. you need to resign. i do? i should? maybe over the weekend, nancy. tune in monday to find out. robert, bettendorf, iowa, bill,
8:57 pm
i had 12 years of catholic schooling, never saw none that looked like megyn. vancouver, bill, you may denigrate canada's contributing to the war against terrorists -- i'm not denigrating. just saying canada could probably do more. apple valley, california, just read the first few pages of "killing patton" on billoreilly.com. i had no idea patton may have been murdered. nobody does. well not know one, but very few people do. that's why i wrote the book. pueblo, colorado, i can't wait to read "killing patton." stalin was on a part with hitler and both men are featured in the book. paul, buffalo, new york, nobody cares who killed patton. well, we'll see on tuesday when the book's released, won't we, paul? and i don't want to imitate the
8:58 pm
late-paul harvey that i really liked, but i want to acknowledge eldora celebrating 66 lt wedding anniversary and number 69 for mary ann and stetway. "the factor" tip of the day, you may remember ms. megyn kelly interviewed bill ayers. a weather underground terrorist, is a bad guy, and megyn brought it out. so yesterday ayers said "i have never even seen megyn kelly. she struck me as a very strange person. she's like a cyborg constructed in the basement of fox news. she's very striking, very metallic, but eyes are very cold. in response megyn said this last night. >> well, i looked up cyborg and it says superhuman being so i'm choosing to take that as a compliment. striking, well, ayers certainly knows a thing or two about that. ask little john murtagh whose home ayers group bombed when he
8:59 pm
was 9 and at home asleep in his bed. >> now, here's the deal on this. there is no truth to the rumor that megyn kelly was constructed in the basement of fox news. i have been down to that basement. and the only person constructed there is brian killmi. secondly, ms. megyn is not a cyborg. she is a scorpio. be accurate when trying to smear somebody. that sit for us. check out the fox news factor website which is different from billoreilly.com. word of the day, brand new word, don't be a harerel when writing "the factor." do not be a haverel when writing to us. again, thanks for watching tonight. ms. megyn is in the basement. but she is walking up the stairs. she'll have a bunch of cyborgs on tonight to interview.
9:00 pm
i'm not sure. but she is next. i am bill o'reilly. please always remember the spin stops here. we're definitely looking out for good evening and welcome to a "the kelly file" special report on the coming war in the middle east. i'm megyn kelly. in the last couple of weeks president obama has spelled out his initial strategy for taking on the terror army known as isis. a plan involving what he calls a broad coalition of countries, a series of u.s. air strikes and support for fighters in both iraq and syria who are supposed to battle the terrorists on the ground. but what is getting the most attention is what the plan does not involve, a growing chorus of top military leaders asking why this president is ruling out the option of using american troops in combat. we are seeing headlines like
186 Views
IN COLLECTIONS
Fox News West Television Archive The Chin Grimes TV News Archive Television Archive News Search ServiceUploaded by TV Archive on