Skip to main content

tv   The Five  FOX News  September 23, 2014 2:00pm-3:01pm PDT

2:00 pm
p >> hello, everyone, eric bowling, dana perina. this is "the five." last night the u.s. military began air strikes against isis in syria. this morning the president outlined his strategy before he headed to new york for u.n. meetings. >> last night on my orders, america's armed forces began strikes against isil targets in syria. the overall effort will take time, there will be challenges ahead. but we're going to do what's necessary to take the fight to this terrorist group. for the security of the country
2:01 pm
and the region and for the entire world. >> he also noted a coalition of five arab nations assisted in the strikes. >> we were joined in this action by our friends and partners, saudi arabia, united arab emirates, jordan, bahrain and qatar, america's proud to stand shoulder to shoulder with these nations on behalf of our common security. the strength of this coalition makes it clear to the world that this is not america's fight alone. >> one country that didn't take part was turkey, our only nato ally in the region. and what about europe? well on fox and friends this morning, former uk prime minister tony blair stressed the importance of a coalition to back the u.s. >> it's very important that we support america at this time. it's the right thing to take the action against isis, i think there's a very strong feeling in europe too, the single biggest problems we have in the uk with security now is the jihadist
2:02 pm
fighters returning from syria. i think britain will be there are with the u.s., this is a big problem for us so we have got to help shoulder the
2:03 pm
they didn't want to deal with this hot potato. >> the president did send a letter to both chambers in the house saying he has the right to do it under various legal authorities. but is it that, ed, or is it playing the pining of the politics of it? so if he waits six weeks after it's known that's sis is beheading americans, if he waits six weeks, that's six weeks closer to the election. >> i don't think there's any evidence that they did this because of the midterm elections now. i think the biggest reason it appears they did it is because they believe, and we're going to have to press for evidence but they group that we heard about a few weeks ago might be in the final planning of terror attacks here in the u.s. it runs count tore the narrative
2:04 pm
that they were pushing for a while, that separately isis wasn't that big of a threat. and remember a few months ago, president obama was talking got these offshoots of the jv squad, it turns out here going to war to fight the jv squad. so they're not quite the jv squad. >> for the first time you've got arabs bombing arabs and pmy feeling about nato is they wanted to be sure that it wasn't all europeans versus arabs again. >> and they will be joined at a later stage and i predict that turkey will join them as well. nato is not going to sit back and not be involved in this, do you think? >> for now, they haven't done anything. obviously with the nato summit. >> you said they're not doing it, they're working with it right now, working out of -- i mean european alis, i'm sorry. nato as a body decided to stay out. individual nato nations like the
2:05 pm
united kingdom, yes we should acknowledge they're staying -- 2 british had a lot of warplanes, i think he was burned by the tact that he lost that vote in parliament, on bombing and cameron might be a little worried. >> we'll see if you're right. >> ed, some are deeply offended by the name tomahawk being used for a weapon of death. has the president met with activists to discuss this outrage, not to mention the effect these missiles have on the climate, which are devastating. has that come up in any of these discussions at all? and i want you to be perfectly frank. >> in fairness to tomahawks. i'm going to try to get as many phrases as you hate as possible. i think you mentioned climate change, it is kind of interesting because the president today, the big focus was supposed to be his speech about climate change.
2:06 pm
you've got china and india now part palting with the climate change talk. senator kerry has talked about climate change as being a huge national secure threat. but this has woke on the white house up that this terror threat is a lot bigger than climate change. >> actually that was just a joke question, but i was trying to make chicken salad out of whatever the question was. >> he insulted your question. >> i know it wasn't a real question, but i was frying to actually run with something. >> this attack was anticipated well in advance and i'm wondering if isis was able to evacuate, if they were able to spread out and hide their assets. when you go hunting, you don't set up a blow horn before you go hunting. >> he did give isis at least two weeks, maybe longer, but just two weeks ago, he spoke to the
2:07 pm
nation, spoke to the world saying i'm authorizing air strikes in syria, we're going to be going in at a time of our choosing. but once you say that to the world, isis obviously knows it's coming. but we did take out a command and control center, we're taking out unfrom structure, but unfortunately, it's sits could build new infrastructure. the key is going to be taking out some of their key leaders. >> and you said two weeks ago, the president said -- four weeks ago he said we don't have a strategy yet. two weeks ago he warned them this was coming. two years ago, this same action could have taken place under the same legal authorities as they are now describing. but 200,000 syrian civilians have been killed. do they feel any responsibility for allowing a safe haven to grow, to the point that the sign sunni nations pushed -- just last week, you asked joshua
2:08 pm
ennest about the question of credible evidence. maybe they don't want to give the group a heads up. but do they feel any sort of responsibility for saying, like three months ago, they wanted to repeal the authorization to use military force. using the authorization to use military force to take action without talking to the congress. >> he's kind of one voice crying out, but as a democrat, tim kaine of virginia gave another speech saying that the president wanted to repeal this authorization from the bush era and is now using it to say we can go to war, it's an authorization of military force against al qaeda, even though the administration has said this is not al qaeda, it's an al qaeda offshoot, it's an al qaeda affiliate. >> they're getting their orders from al qaeda. >> you said that the sunnis were pushing the united states, it was actually the reverse. >> i disagree, bob, i will tell you that for the last 16 months,
2:09 pm
the sunni nations have been begging the united states to do exactly what they're doing. so the president basically does the same thing he could have done two years ago, but meanwhile, 200,000 syrian civilians were killed. you have more of a problem now because you have an imminent threat, because isil, meanwhile, they're like the worst fighting force we have ever seen, and then you have the khorason basically planning air attacks, this has all happened while al qaeda is on the run. >> do you know the significance of arabs bombing arabs? >> i'm all for it. and i was for the 38 coalition members, i joined president bush and tony blair, that which were insulted in the 2000 election. i actually think that these tune any nations were helping behind the scenes. we didn't make them come out and now they are forced to.
2:10 pm
maybe obama will be applauded as being the best thing for the world. they were building their capacities as a safe haven in syria. >> i think this will go downing as the most historical move, to put the arab planes in the area. >> it's a historical move, but it's not a huge move. >> what if it doesn't work? and bob, what about this? we're going to attack isis, then we're going to attack the khoasons. is this a war on terror or is it a war kind of like -- it's not semantics, that's actually a philosophy. >> they will be, in my view, there will be no isis that will be able to fight by the elections. >> it isn't just watching air strikes without going to congress first. he did not ask congress for this authority to do this. he also passed inversion rules for executive fiat and he's going to the u.n. to talk about climate change, via executive
2:11 pm
fiat, three things circumventing congress. he had a coalition of 38 members who went to congress and not a peep from anyone in congress about sir couple venting about anything that is undefined. >> this is an illegal war. i'm all for the strikes. go for it, bomb the heck out of them. but just admit that they are using the same philosophy that they have den graded for the past eight years. >> it's the same thing though in the media, i was watching this morning in the squlgym, how we' applauding the -- i don't remember this kind of thoughtfulness under bush, back end dissent during the iraq war was just patriotic, now it's just mean. >> the democrats are opposed to this because they're sir couple venting congress. >> by the way, assad today said okay i'm all for going after
2:12 pm
isis, but he had an israeli fighter -- the israelis actually shot one of the syrian warplanes down. so there's a lot else going on in the region that's not getting a lot of attention. >> you know what your first question is next time you've got josh ernest on the air? how come you for weeks, the administration said that's sis is -- there's no credible threat to the homeland, isis or whatever, basically saying we have time, there's been no credible threat. putting off these actual air strikes until now, then they come out and say, it not of was credible, it was imminent, it was about to happen, it was planned. for six weeks they said there's no credible threat to the home land, we have time. are you trying to tell me that josh ernest and other administration officials haven't said there is, quote, no credible threat to the homeland? we have been reporting on that comment. >> isis does not pose a credible
2:13 pm
threat to the homeland. >> but bob, they just said they bombed khorason because of -- >> just something for god's skak. >> isis is credible and khorason, have you everybody heard of this group? no, neither has anybody else. >> i want you to just once say something positive. >> did you ever invite somebody to your dinner table and your family and their guests and you feel like you have had a comfortable moment with them. welcome to the fight. >> i feel left out. >> can i ask you about yemen. coming up, now that we're finally seeing obama's military strategy in action, the question becomes will it actually work. four star general jack keane will be here. you pay your auto insurance premium every month on the dot.
2:14 pm
you're like the poster child for paying on time. and then one day you tap the bumper of a station wagon. no big deal... until your insurance company jacks up your rates. you freak out. what good is having insurance if you get punished for using it? hey insurance companies, news flash. nobody's perfect. for drivers with accident forgiveness, liberty mutual won't raise your rates due to your first accident. see car insurance in a whole new light. liberty mutual insurance. there was no question she reminds you every day. but your erectile dysfunction-that could be a question of blood flow. cialis for daily use helps you be ready anytime the moment is right. you can be more confident in your ability to be ready. and the same cialis is also the only daily ed tablet approved to treat symptoms of bph, like needing to go frequently or urgently. tell your doctor about all your medical conditions and medicines, and ask if your heart is healthy enough for sex. do not take cialis if you take nitrates for chest pain, as it may cause an unsafe drop in blood pressure.
2:15 pm
do not drink alcohol in excess. side effects may include headache, upset stomach, delayed backache or muscle ache. to avoid long-term injury, get medical help right away for an erection lasting more than four hours. if you have any sudden decrease or loss in hearing or vision, or any symptoms of an allergic reaction, stop taking cialis and get medical help right away. ask your doctor about cialis for daily use and a free 30-tablet trial. oh hey craig, i need to talk to you. hey jake.
2:16 pm
you know how you won't let me touch your dart? well i've got some things that you can't touch. is that right? whatchya got there? just a crossbow. you can shoot things with it. can't touch it? no, you can't touch it. look at this, my george foreman grill. ah, that cooks meat so good. (buzzing electronic toothbrush) i can't touch the toothbrush that you put in your mouth? (giggling): yoga! you have an operational dvd player? you also can't touch my digeridoo. digeridoo? or didgeridoo?
2:17 pm
. last night president obama launched the first wave of air strikes against itsis militants
2:18 pm
in syria. and he says this is only the beginning. >> while it's not our policy to discuss future operations, i can tell you that last night's strikes were only the beginning. for this reason, there may be some tactics, techniques and procedures that we just won't be able to address here today, to preserve options that we may want available to us in the future. >> by will these strikes work? jack keane, we're really honored to have you here because you know a little bit more than question do about khorasan. >> look, this is the beginning of a long journey, what took place hire is a good thing, particularly as bob was pointing out, this is to the fact of the matter is, these are sunni based countries attacking a tusunni
2:19 pm
based terror organization, that has not happened before. they all have islamic movements inside their country. normally they want to tamp down that movement. this is a -- it will take some time to get the kind of overall results we want from it. and as you have heard many times, while the air campaign will be decisive in terms of 's to be able to be defeated and destroyed, that will take an effective ground campaign and the problem we have with that ground campaign is that we have a weak hand in syria, in the free syrian army, and we have a weak hand in iraq as well, with the iraqis, peshmerga and also sunni tribes. they have never put that together and the iraqi army has collapsed in the face of this enemy. and just this week, they lost 300 fighters in anbar province,
2:20 pm
the iraqi army. so what the military has been trying to do is strengthen what we can inner remark as well as syria. the president is going to arm and train the free syrian army, we have a long way to go with that organization, and in iraq, we have not been able to strengthen it to the degree we want. >> they spent in the iraqi war $700 million training the iraqi military, after they made the decision to break it apart. they did put together a military, now a lot of them are taking their guns and dropping them and running, what does that say about how well our strategy ran in the iraq war? >> there's reasons for that, first of all, we want them to keep our trainers to assist in growth and development there, and they were all pulled out in 2011, that was number one. but number two, we pretty well recognize that maliki was undermining his political opponents, but he also
2:21 pm
dramatically replaced the proven combat leaders that were victorious during the surge which people that were politically aligned with them. they were not effective mill tempora tear leaders. some of these units were only 50% strength. you can't fight without cohesion and people trusting one another. and these cronyings and hacks maliki put in there, they were the first to leave the battlefield. >> we supported maliki, did we not? >> the first time around he was duly elected. the second time around, alawi alawi--here we had maliki for another four years, huge geo political mistake on our part to allow that to happen.
2:22 pm
>> general keane, i'm like you, i don't have a lot of confidence in the free syrian army, and a year from now when they're finally training and they can stand up against the threat of it's si is isis, i think it will be too late. i know we drew the red line ant didn't enforce it. he's a brutal guy and i get it, he murdered a lot of people. but he shows no after tight for power outside of that region. so why not try and cut some kind of deal with assad? i mean if we're launching this brutal air strike, the only way as you point out to gain some of that territory back is if the kurds or assad's army, the syrian army take that back. is that a possibility at all? >> i think you have a moral imperati imperative, this is a brutal dictator that's killed 100,000 of his people. >> so was stallen. >> there's over 6 million people
2:23 pm
displaced, the amount of human suffering that's taken place in steera is really quite exthe record they rary and we haven't come to grips with the humanitarian crisis. i could not fathom us supporting or working with assad with any common objective at all. the free syrian army's got north of 50,000. the 5,000 that we're talking about doesn't represent them, it represents an opportunity to train some people. they also have a huge opportunity with the 3 million people that are in refugee camps to recruit people out of there and get them into this fight. the fact of the matter is, to the free syrian army early on by another name had the momentum and was pushing against assad. and it looked like assad was going to be topled. what happened? russia and assad saw that and they were all in. >> russia has dropped the ball on that completely as far as i'm concerned. do you think that's right, that the obama administration allowed -- didn't allow it, but
2:24 pm
they didn't do enough to deal with it? >> well, there are a number of things we could have zone in establishing some free zones where people could have my gr t grated to and be protected in those zones. >> you said in order to destroy isis, we need an effective ground campaign. they're also calling for arming the free syrian army, a lot of those fighters have come over to isis, so we don't really know who we're arming. do we really want to put more american troops intoa fight? is there ever a chance to beat these guys? will they turn into khorasan and al qaeda? >> the cia has vetted this organization for some time now. and there were doubts about this early on. they were characterized as being
2:25 pm
unreliable and not trust worthy and if we gave them arms, they're going to winds up in the hands of other people. but over time, that is not the case, i have some confidence in the cia's judgment and the department of defense's judgment, it's not perfect, but at the end of the day, we do believe we can arm them and they will fiblght. they have had some success with these organizations, they're the only ones that have taken them on. the fact of the matter is that there's plenty of risk here, they have to deal with isis and at some point they have to deal with assad. and at some point we may get some diplomatic solutions. we have to push isis out of iraq and to the only way you're going to do that is with an effective military force. >> iraqi or t ting advisors dow
2:26 pm
and i think in my own mind, after pat apache helicopters, and then have in your back possibility, combat brigades to go into iraq if this thing fails. the president says we're going to destroy this force and we're going to defeat isis. if the counter offensive in iraq fails and it gets stalled, what are we go to do to regain the initiative? at that point we're out of options except other ground combat brigades. >> dow i was going to ask, why the hell do we give these people a heads up? this is the one thing i don't understand, why the president didn't start bombing the moment he got to the podiumpodium. that must have been a mistake, an uncalculated error?
2:27 pm
>> when i was going home in the car, i thought we missed an opportunity to bomb assad tongtd. they're much better than the old al qaeda in iraq is, but i believe one of his planned assumptions, watching the fact that the administration did not execute air strikes when a redline was crossed in syria a year ago. i think he believed that he could put all the infrastructure in syria and establish a bona fooid -- he's going to pay a price for that. ahead on "the five" president obama announces plans for another war, but this one's not against islamic extremism. @
2:28 pm
2:29 pm
2:30 pm
2:31 pm
at the u.n. today, the president announced that he was ordering fed agencies to
2:32 pm
consider climate change in all federal programs. that is the urgent and growing threat of a changing climate. >> there's one issue that will define the contours of this century more dramatically than any other. and that is the urgent and growing threat of a changing climate. >> i think we can all breathe easier, well just the rich who hate coal but still use it. right now around the world, 4 million people are dying without options. why do upscale lids with access to modern energy wish to deny it from others. it's like the climate creeps from the march. i think we live in a grotesque era of we have everything we want all the time right now. >> we live in a grotesque era of where we have everything we want all the time rilight now. >> i think having les is actually very freeing.
2:33 pm
>> i think we have way too much stuff and we use energy like it's never going to run out and it will run out eventually. >> turn everything off. >> everyone turn everything off. >> reporter: everyone turn everything off? but i really need my cell phone. >> well, i don't. >> rachel carson did the same thing with a dbt ban, where there were no bugs it doesn't matter, but where there were bugs, little kids died. president booobama wanted to bee earth guard that -- the climate has gotten hotter, definitely, but it's the climate of terror, and it's something we can definitely reverse. our president must admit that the imminent threat isn't celsius but psychopaths. war may not be your choice, but this is not college anymore. you don't choose the major, the major chooses you. the one thing i notice is that
2:34 pm
there are no poor people in in fight. do you notice, this is not a concern, all they want is to have coal and a warm house and a roof over their head. but it's always these guys with $200 glasses at marches telling you how to live. >> it's very true. and this should be, in fairness, the golden age of climate research, it really should. but the politicians are trying to shut it down because it might int interfear with their political goals. gore has always admitted that there might be mistakes in the climate models. but instead of getting more research, they say the science is settled. one of obama's chief climate experts came out this weekend and said it's not, which they didn't want to acknowledge at all. but i think they should have all the answers. isn't it the height of huberis that you can -- you think about the promises they made with obama care, we gave them
2:35 pm
one-third of the economy, imagine giving them 100% when they're saying just trust us, the science is settled. >> by eliminating coal and pipelines and fracking, president obama is hurting us in the fight against terror because he's -- >> you know i'm pro oil, it's 20 years in that business, it's the best source, it's the most economical source, it's the cheapest source of energy, it will keep us on top globally. but no one is saying push away from renewables completely. we're simply saying it can't be a government man date, it can't be subsidized by the government. when it becomes an economically viable source of energy, but in the meantime let's let our private companies determine when solar and hydro are economical. >> is this climate summit going to go anywhere when the people who are supposed to be there
2:36 pm
aren't there ". >> president obama says we should haven't to take the lead everywhere. i think it would be better if he said you take the lead on climate, i'm going to take the lead on terror. i think that would be a fair trade. then we would deal with the most immediate problem at hand. >> isn't fossil fuels the ultimate renewable energies, it was renewed once, it used to be a dinosaur, now it's fuel. how is that not renewable? >> is it global warming or climate change? >> climate change. >> up next, could a puppy help people stop drinking and driving? budweiser thinks so and they have got a new ad to prove it ahead on "the five." year. berkshire hathaway home services. good to know.
2:37 pm
that's the way i look at life. looking for something better. especially now that i live with a higher risk of stroke due to afib, a type of irregular heartbeat, not caused by a heart valve problem. i was taking warfarin, but wondered if i kept digging, could i come up with something better. my doctor told me about eliquis... for three important reasons. one, in a clinical trial, eliquis was proven to reduce the risk of stroke better than warfarin. two, eliquis had less major bleeding than warfarin.
2:38 pm
and three, unlike warfarin, there's no routine blood testing. don't stop taking eliquis unless your doctor tells you to, as stopping increases your risk of having a stroke. eliquis can cause serious and in rare cases fatal bleeding. don't take eliquis if you have an artificial heart valve or abnormal bleeding. while taking eliquis, you may bruise more easily and it may take longer than usual for any bleeding to stop. seek immediate medical care for sudden signs of bleeding, like unusual bruising. eliquis may increase your bleeding risk if you take certain medicines. tell your doctor about all planned medical or dental procedures. those three important reasons are why eliquis is a better find for me. ask your doctor today if eliquis is right for you. ♪ want to change the world? create things that help people. design safer cars. faster computers. smarter grids and smarter phones. think up new ways to produce energy. ♪ be an engineer.
2:39 pm
solve problems the world needs solved. what are you waiting for? changing the world is part of the job description. [ male announcer ] join the scientists and engineers of exxonmobil in inspiring america's future engineers. energy lives here. on my journey across america, i've learned that when you ask someone in texas if they want "big" savings on car insurance, it's a bit like asking if they want a big hat... ...'scuse me... ...or a big steak... ...or big hair...
2:40 pm
i think we have our answer. geico. fifteen minutes could save you fifteen percent or more on car insurance. [ male announcer ] when you see everyone in america almost every day, you notice a few things. like the fact that you're pretty attached to these. ok, really attached. and that's alright. because we'll text you when your package is on the way. we're even expanding sunday package delivery. yes, sunday. at the u.s. postal service, our priority is...was... and always will be...you. all right, welcome back to "the five."
2:41 pm
time for the fastest six minutes in news, first up, controversy seems to follow miss america 2015 around, apparently while a sorority sister, kira penned an e-mail to the pledges that promised an evening of name calling, berating pledges for their personal flaws and generally making the recruits e lives a living hell. she described the e-mail that got her kicked out of the sorority this way. >> i wasn't involved with some of those activities while i was at the house. i was hazed and i was kind of brought up through the organization thinking that that's appropriate behavior. in the e-mail, i made a joke. and that was taken out of context. >> what was the joke that you made in that e-mail? >> that we would make the evening scary for the pledges. >> we're going to start with you, first of all, it's around.
2:42 pm
you were an alpha phi. >> i was an alpha phi. if you read the e-mail and you get the details, she was saying, a night of late-night crafts, it's ridiculous, and this angry website that tried to out her, a bunch of angry chicks that really hate on beautiful women. this is a total nothing burger. >> this is the era of the flash mob wish hunt. so rather than confront real evil, none of these people in these blogs write about anything but this. they choose temporary targets and to expose and condemn. then they move on. it turns out she did have a real talent. for her talent portion she should have been spanking somebody with a hair brush. >> i wasn't opposed to that. >> i would just say this never happens on the speech team. >> that's the truth. >> were you a sorority sister?
2:43 pm
>> no, we didn't have sororities there. >> i get in trouble commenting on people who win things. >> rush limbaugh has a call screener named james golden. he's worked for rush for 26 years and he packs quite an opinion punch of his own. >> for most black people, the good old days were the days that -- what liberalism has done to the black communities, it's not a model of the community, is horrific. al sharpton and the rest of that bunch should be ashamed of themselves. for what they have let, how they have let the issue of black life degenerate into a political opportunity issue. >> that opening line, they have's what he said, which was
2:44 pm
they're better off back there in the days of segregation, is to me, and anything he said after that is absurd. >> i think that i am not as qualified to talk about black america as he is, okay, so there's that. but i do think that a focus on safety and crime has got to be the number one thing, then jobs is second and education, there's a study that's come out showing the disparities between the white community and black communities. but still, it's not good enough in america, we have to include that. >> saying blacks are better off before segregation is never an argument winner because you end up tarring all your points. but you don't persuade anybody by saying that, maybe he meant that the last 40 years of government programs has hurt the black community. but saying that, that's not how you persuade people. >> let's also point out that he did call on al sharpton and the ilk for not being helpful to the
2:45 pm
black community. >> and those statements are true. and i agree with greg, when you open that way, you kind of lose me after that a he is right about poll cities that have to do with education, taking away charter schools from foreign minority schools, and taking a -- >> finally, get the klenex out, if you have a dog or if you have a heart, you'll need them with this extremely effective bud ad. ♪ i'll be right here for you when you come home ♪ >> i'll see you later, buddy.
2:46 pm
hey, i'm sorry. i thought i shouldn't drive home last night. i stayed at dave's. >> message loud and clear, don't drink and drive. >> or don't go out at all, just stay home with your dog like i do. >> absolutely. >> well, this is disgusting to me. i mean, i'm for all kinds of marriage, but when a guy and a dog, this is gross. and by the way, how stupid is that dog to think that you can get drunk from budweiser. idiot dog, dumb dog. >> i think the world would be a better place if we all acted more like dogs and showed the love and the loyalty, don't you? >> you don't want that. >> bob, i was tearing up thinking the dog was waiting for a military member to come back. >> it was a very effective ad, i'm glad bud did it. although i agree with greg, i could drink a case of that. is military action in the
2:47 pm
middle east a big surprise? that discussion next.
2:48 pm
2:49 pm
2:50 pm
2:51 pm
one topic and one very sexy post. i suggested there's going to be a lot more. what's the president's grade from f too a. >> i'll give him an a for what he's doing, but i give you an f for what you're doing. >> i want to know, like, did the white house pass out classified information to democratic surrogates so he could make it on the drudge report saying there's an october surprise? >> nobody predicted arabs were going to be in the air. >> i think you and i both said we would like to see turkey, saudi arabia and we would like to see iran involved. >> the answer is no, nobody leaked any classified information. >> saying there is an october surprise is like reading a horosco horoscope, the information is so generic that it cannot be false. you might be going on a trip next month, you might meet something interesting, of course because that's what happens in
2:52 pm
life. >> you might eat chinese food. >> that's a constant, sadly. >> i think the white house probably did not have that big of a heads up on this one. it sounds to me like the department of defense gave the president the authority to do it. i don't know why they're saying thls the october surprise. what is surprising though is that we bombed instead of isis, the khorasan group. it sounds like a sponsor of the npr group. 25 years of providing low interest loans. who the heck is that? >> there will be more specifics on greg's argument about what will happen. >> isn't the definition of the october surprise is that it's surprising enough that it might influence the november elections? >> okay, one more thing is up next. [ hoof beats ]
2:53 pm
2:54 pm
2:55 pm
i wish... please, please, please, please, please. [ male announcer ] the wish we wish above all...is health. so we quit selling cigarettes in our cvs pharmacies. expanded minuteclinic, for walk-in medical care. and created programs that encourage people to take their medications regularly.
2:56 pm
introducing cvs health. a new purpose. a new promise... to help all those wishes come true. cvs health. because health is everything. you heard of tinder and all these nash sites. but now there's cudler and it allows you to cuddle with people. kennedy went to times square to ask people if they would use the cuddler app. >> i don't like to cuddle with strangers. >> i'm okay. i'm okay. >> reporter: you don't need to cuddle? you want to cuddle? there's a new app called cuddler. where you just find each other and cuddle.
2:57 pm
do you want to cuddle? >> no, not really. >> eventually she did find somebody to cuddle with. yeah. and it was really fun. yeah, we used the cuddler app. there we are cuddling all over the fox news channel. awe, friends. 9:00, greg rowe. it's time for -- >> greg's sports corner. >> because you know i love my sports, take a look at the mighty might football players, they're just finished winning a game, the parents decided to do something good for them, they made a banner for them, plus they made the banner out of vinyl, and you can't break through vinyl, can you, look at these kids running through that, probably injuring themselves.
2:58 pm
it's a terrible things. the good news is they did win their home game. 24-0. the bad news, all the parents are in jail for abuse. u you're right, i pressed charges, no, i didn't, i'm kidding. i'm going to shut up now, mabel i won't. >> this went out to a bunch of democrats, there's an effort, there's the first full screen, stand with sandra, stop rush limbaugh. it's the stop rush limbaugh petition that they want people to sign up for. look who's sponsoring it right there, the dccc. what that means is that sandra and the democratic party are ganging up, hooking up by fund raising attacking rush. >> for those of you wrote are dog lovers, you know i'm a suspect of not being one. but in 1952, richard nixon was
2:59 pm
in serious trouble because his wife got a cloth coat or something. he went on national television to get himself out of trouble as vice president. and here it is. >> we did get a gift after the election, it was a little cocker spaniel dpaug. and our little girl named him checkers. and i just want to say this right now, regardless of what they say about it, we're going to keep him. >> there you go, dick, if you would have just kept your hands off watergate, you would have been better off. >> he hates dogs. >> in's something wrong with people that don't like dogs. warning sign, run from people who don't like them. dana? there's all the news about what's happening over in the middle east. but there's an important op-ed, if you care about the economy, growth and you care about the republican party and reaching out to a broader audience of economic growth, mike lee and marco rubio are are talking
3:00 pm
about pro family, pro growth, basically trying to address the feeling of working hard but never getting ahead and policies they would put in place to do that. so i would just recommend that because we didn't have time to talk about it. >> that's it for us, "special report" is up next. president obama pulls the trigger on isis in syria, bringing along some of his new closest friends. but what about the new imminent terrorist threat the administration is now talking about? this is "special report." good evening, i'm brett baier, a new imminent terrorist threat to the u.s. or europe forced u.s. war planners to add a different terrorist group to their strike list inside syria monday night. president obama promised a broad coalition in his fight against isis terrorists. overnight five

117 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on