tv The Five FOX News October 3, 2014 1:00am-2:01am PDT
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in a moment you're going to hear some fascinating sound from a muslim who says he attended the same mosque where the oklahoma beheading suspect practiced islam. what he says goes on in private in that mosque will shock you. plus, this. >> the teaching that islam allows three choices to be made to nonmuslims and eventually they're all going to have to make that choice to convert to live under islamic rule or die. >> as president bush predicted, we'd be forced to confront an
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enemy far greater than al qaeda if we lift iraq too soon. today he spoke to fox news for the first time about that ominous warning and the state of of iraq today. >> you knew it in 2007. in fact this is george bush, president george bush in 2007 before the surge. >> begin withdrawing before our >5bn%jh?2 oy,lmtjál would be dangerous. it would mean we'd be risking mass killings on a horrific scale. it would mean increasing the probability that american troops would have to return at some later date to confront an enemy that is even more dangerous. >> how did you know? >> well, i know the nature of the enemy. anybody who kills 3,000 innocents and beheads people because of their religion or because of their point of view is dangerous. democracy takes time to take hold, and yet there's an impatience with that process. the lesson of 9/11 is still
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important today as it was right after 9/11. >> also what does he think about president obama's decision to pull our troops out and let terrorists take over the country. here's more from 43. >> reporter: martin dempsey says it's well known the military recommended that we leave a residual force of 10,000 to 15,000, maybe more. did you feel the same way? >> i did, yeah. i agreed with general dempsey's assessment. >> we'll open it to you because we have a lot of sound from president bush. your thoughts on really the first comments since he really predicted what was going on now back in 2007. >> you have to understand where i'm coming from. i don't think any of this would have happened if we hadn't gone to war in iraq. saddam hussein had done things that were bad but not nearly as bad as these guys. qy8rzn!ç=rkwwebv"'asy$7woví1
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to give testimony to the u.n. about why there were weapons of mass destruction. the question really is could 10,000 or 15,000 people have been there and for how long, 10, 20, 30, 40 years and would that really have stopped this? i think it was a bad decision to go in. the end product is we're seeing it today. >> maybe the bad decision was to pull out too soon and as we pointed out, george bush predicted that if we had let the residual force in iraq maybe we wouldn't have americans beheaded. >> if you read thomas jocelyn who writes about the enemy, the grand plan was to build out from afghanistan al qaeda. now you have all these other groups that have metastasized that are being called other names but the truth is it is all al qaeda. there's two things basically. what president bush is saying when he agrees with general dempsey, it's no different than what secretary gates, secretary clinton, secretary panetta and
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general petraeus have all said, the first three of those all in books so they're on record saying that they disagree with the president's decision to leave iraq at the time -- or not to leave more of a force there. bob, that is true. i don't know why you're breathing heavy, but that's true. >> i'm listening to you. >> he breathes heavy all the time. >> you can see from my point of view he's breathing deep. those are facts. the only people who seem to think that was not a good idea were obama, biden and susan rice. now, that's their prerogative but there are consequences for decisions, as you're seeing. the second thing i wanted to mention is we cut the sound bite a little bit too early because i liked the second part of what president bush said. in regards to the lesson after 9/11 is that americans need to understand the west needs to understand that the human condition around the world matters. and it matters to our national security. that is the broader foreign policy thinking of the bush administration. i think it's also important, the president didn't give an interview today to talk about
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this per se, of course he knew he would be asked about it, i guess. the purpose of inviting them down there was to talk about the fourth annual 2015 warrior open that is a big golf tournament that supports iraqi and afghanistan war veterans. >> let me bring these guys in. we have a lot more sound to get to. thoughts on that first interview. >> to bob's point, we have placed troops in countries for decades after wars so it's something that we do to maintain the peace and sometimes it lasts a long time. that war had been won, but it wasn't obama's war to win, so it >0qm'rvxvi;wb@0y#h7?ag/.÷[hm[)t somebody had left the shower curtain behind, but that wasn't his shower curtain so he just got rid of it. that's what he did with the iraq war. >> let me get k.g. on this one. go ahead. >> i just take issue with taking that shot at president bush and trying to disparage him where he's been nothing but a gentleman and a class act, been unbelievably respectful and
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empathetic to the difficult job that president obama had. >> hold on, that's a great transition to the next one. what does president bush think of president obama allowing isis to rise in iraq. listen. >> the president has to make the choices he thinks are important. i am not going to second guess our president. i understand how tough the job is. and to have a former president, you know, second guessing is i don't think good for the presidency or the country. >> does president obama call you? >> he called me to tell me that the nation killed osama bin laden -- or the srchl.e.a.l. te got osama bin laden, for which i was grateful. but he's been -- no, he's not on a regular basis, which is okay. it doesn't hurt my feelings. it's a decision he has made. >> i want to get to danny in a second, but go ahead. >> he goes on to say that he understands president obama has developed a relationship over six years with people that he trusts and seeks counsel in so this is the bigger man saying i don't mind. if he needs me, i'm here. the point is there's always
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lessons to be learned from history and past presidents have a history of contacting their predecessors. and with respect to president bush, you didn't see him take a shot and say, told you so. i was right about this. we should have done -- we should have finished the job by allowing the iraqi people to have the benefit of ongoing support so that we could have not made what the veterans fought for in vain. >> just out of curiosity, what former presidents consulted other presidents for big decisions. >> he did. >> for what? >> bill clinton said that bush called him. >> yeah? >> there's one. >> twice a year. >> generally presidents don't -- >> yeah, there's a history of it. >> the reason, bob, in the wall street journal there was a column by bret stephens on tuesday in which it suggested that president obama could benefit with a call to president bush or having a relationship with him but that is based on
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reports from mostly bill clinton but president bush commented on it as well that bush and clinton developed a good working relationship and a friendship and camaraderie during the bush administration. >> that continues to this day. >> the bottom line is president obama took the surge personally and punished us naturally because of a petulant, adolescent reaction. >> can you explain to me -- you say this over and over again. this war was won. how do you mean it was won? the surge worked. >> there was a vote. there was democracy, there was calm. there was a surge and then it all went to hell. >> what about corruption. >> corruption is around in every start of every country, we know that. but if corruption -- >> but because the men and women that served the country valiantly felt that they had achieved the goal and everybody who was there that was on the ground knew that we needed to keep the position strong so that
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they could continue to succeed, otherwise it's like pulling the sheet out from under them. >> let's bring this to the today and now, to terror right here at home. there was a jihad-style beheading here in america a few days ago and the administration can still only call it workplace violence. but listen closely to a man megyn kelly spoke to last night. he says he attended the same mosque where the oklahoma suspect worshipped and the terror was taught there. >> to the public, the mosque will not promote terrorism or any kind of radical acts, but when they're among friends and congregants only, they will teach islam which will include the offer to nonmuslims, the choice, rather, that you must convert, live under islamic rule, or be fought against.
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jihad for the sake of allah. >> he also exposes the congregation's true feelings about bin laden and those horrific beheadings. >> i had two friends at the mosque. one of them is now an imam. the men told me that if osama bin laden came to their door, they would invite him in and protect him because he was a brother muslim and we must protect him from those that don't believe. >> did they ever discuss the subject of beheadings? was that ever discussed? >> the only time that beheadings were discussed was in the means at which you confront the infidel. when you meet the unbelievers, you should smiet at their necks. >> we didn't even need to hear it from him. if this victim was already dead, which i think she was, why did he behead her? because what would be the point? the point is was to spread
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terror, to send a message. and that makes it terror. so why don't we just compromise and call it workplace terror. just get rid of the violence. let's all agree and say it happened at the workplace, it's terror. by the way, we're so focused on his actions, but in hate crimes, we're always focused on intent. why is it with this crime it's all about the action and not the intent? the opposite with hate crimes. >> the thing about this is, and i've been saying this for a long time, a lot of this stuff is going on in a lot of mosques. they raise money for terrorists. some, not all of them, but a lot of them preach a brand of islam that is not acceptable. but this is not new to me. you know, we were pu and i don't think we should have and they're training a lot of people. >> but i don't think you can say all mosques. >> no, i said some of them. >> no. i mean, look, this is again further evidence and further proof.
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to pick up on what you're talking about, yeah, why wouldn't we take him at his word that describe his intent. what his actions were combine wed what was in his mind and his ideology about committing jihad. a symbolic then if in fact she was deceased to cut her head off. that's exactly what he was trying to achieve in that moment. take him for his word and his actions. >> one of the things i really liked about seeing that and appreciating the interview is that right before it, they talked -- they had a reporter out there to the mosque representative, you were about -- you said you would talk to us and all of a sudden you changed your mind. the reason that interview i think is important is that you have very little communication coming out of the mosque. that's why there has been the need to do some sort of surveillance at times that they think was a specific threat. >> an infiltration. >> that was on the merits. so this information that we get firsthand from somebody that was actually there and then goes
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back, that he reveals last night because of a law enforcement request is very interesting. she's going to have a second part tonight. i don't know if she asked but i'm curious about this question. what led him to the mosque in the first place? what was it that he was -- >> this guy? >> what was he looking for? i think that would give us even a different picture. >> and did he come in contact with someone who specifically encouraged him or put the idea in his head. it's all about them inspiring and reaching out and further the tentacles of terror. >> and obviously i know the answer to this question, but why do you have to be in silhouette? you have to be in silhouette because if you're a whistleblower in a mosque about islam, you're likely going to be the next one beheaded. >> you're doa. >> think about all the other whistleblowers that are on tv. they talk about exposing corruption in the government or exposing corruption in a business or a company. but if you expos terrorism in a mosque, you're likely risking your life for it. >> either that or had a bad hair day. >> it looks like he was wearing
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a cap. >> should we go? we'll go. before we go, a programming note, don't miss greta's big interview with the prime minister of israel. he warns about the dire threat of global jihad. here's a peek. >> the problem is that militant islam is trying to dominate the middle east and then take over the world. its number one target ultimately is the united states. they view all these branches, shiites, radical shiites, radical sunnis, they see you as the great state. they call us the small state because we're just a frontal position, a forward position of the united states. they want to destroy us so they can get to you. >> that's 7:00 p.m. eastern tonight. coming up, instead of focusing on the jihad crisis, our president is focusing today on helping his party win the election. dana is all over that here on includes 37% of
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the progress that our country has made over these past six years. it is indisputable that our economy is stronger today than when i took office. i said we would rebuild our economy on a new foundation for growth and prosperity and with dedicated, persistent effort we've actually been laying the cornerstones of this foundation every single day since. >> okay. so, eric, let me start with you, our financial expert. is it not true that you are -- in every recession the country does better six years later. the question is how relative it is to growth and its potential. >> the most important thing is growth and how soon do you get back to normal growth. it took us six years and we may not be there. here's the point, though. president obama used those words. it's indisputable and then went on to say by every economic measure america is better off. he said let's deal in facts. mr. president, i listened to your speech. i'll deal in facts if you want. these are apples to apples
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comparisons from the day he took over to today. median household income is down. that's a fact. household ownership rate is down. that's a fact. gasoline prices are up. way up, that's a fact. milk prices are at an all-time high. up, way up. and the number of americans receiving food stamps is way, way up. we know the numbers about labor participation of course -- labor participation rates is down. i can name 20 different facts that are disputable that america is better off. >> how about some of these facts. >> all i'm saying is he's saying let's deal in facts, say it's indisputable. >> it is indisputable. are you saying the country is not better off than 2008? >> how's this. go to our facebook, the five fan facebook page, whatever it is right now, facebook.com and i'll put all the facts up that show that we're not better off. >> do you mind if i share a few facts too. the number of jobs have grown from 215,000 at a faster pace
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since 1999. there's been no inflation. the stock market is up. profits are up across the board. still, the wages on -- >> wait a second, i thought you would hate that. >> what? >> profits. you just had a 400,000 person march against profits. geez, louise. he wants to say the economy is on an upward trajectory. so are north korean missile tests. it's never happened. he's making middle class households poorer. if making people poorer is progress, he is a progressive. it's incredible. i just don't get it, bob, when you say you're for profits one day and you're not the next. >> i am always for profits. i'm not against profits. >> throwing a flag on the play. >> i know profits are necessary for growth. i'm not a communist, despite what you may think. >> you have admitted to being a communist. >> well, i said that in jest. >> not this week. >> the point is that he has got
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the right political thing to do is to move to the economy. he's got some things he can talk about, things he can brag about and that's what the democrats need. >> what i think they're missing and i'm curious where it is, maybe kimberly we'll get you in on this, which is the bigger idea. so let's stipulate that, okay, so we were in a financial crisis and a panic in the fall of 2008. the president takes over. six years later the country -- i'm saying the polling says that they don't feel like it's good enough. so where is the big idea? i see the minimum wage piece. other than that, what is the president talking about? i didn't see anything else that was new today. >> no, of course not but this is only the material that he has to work with. somebody is like here are the cue cards, these are the things we can hit, you have to pivot to the economy. it's a very typical obama policy speech. he's got to seize on what he can because midterms are coming up so this is a point of crisis. he has to go for what at least he can have something positive
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to say. the problem is, the public, the american people, the voters aren't buying it, so there's a disconnect. so he's just hoping that perception is reality if he says it enough. just so you know, the fox news poll -- >> read the exact question. >> voters don't agree with the president's assessment that the country is better off. they dismiss the president's boast as mostly false by a 58-36% margin. that includes 37% of democrats. >> it was not about their own economic situation. >> but, bob, the president who asked -- who posed the question that way. actually we were just quoting the president in that question. >> i want to roll this because the president took a little bit of personal shot at this network today in a speech. take a look. >> there's a reason fewer republicans, you hear them running around about obamacare. because while good, affordable health care might seem like a fanged threat to the freedom of
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american people on fox news, it turns out it's working pretty well in the real world. greg, have you gotten under his skin? >> he bashes at fnc more than isis. if there's anybody in the media that likes the fact that it's not them that he's angry at, you shouldn't be because that means you're a wuss. you're a plient servant in his harem. we're the only network that actually tries to challenge him. >> can i ask you a question? everybody around this table said six months ago, particularly eric, i don't know a single republican that's making a case on obamacare and i don't know any democrats -- >> i don't know what you're reading because a lot of people are not make it a singular issue but it's one of many issues. >> but this was supposed to be the singular issue. >> because -- >> why would you stick with one? . there are ten issues. >> irs, ebola, the southern
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border. >> is ebola his fault too? [ overlapping speakers ] >> the president gets blamed for >> i'm not going to stop yelling. >> that fox news cuff wasn't off the cuff. that was written. we got a copy of that speech and someone actually wrote that line, so wherever they put the speeches together they took a shot at us. >> if i would have ever had a draft speech for the president where it took a shot at msnbc, i think i would have been on the ceiling. the thing is, here's the thing, the president never would have said it. president bush never would have said it. >> can i just respond to bob. ebola, five letters, obama, five letters. >> okay. >> we're going to get an ice bag
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a new website aims to remind everyone that republicans are people too. as if that's really possible. i get it. they don't drink the blood of baby pandas after all. the creator, a former mitt romney guy, said he wanted to humanize the right, which makes sense. the media per pet waits republicans as old and evil, as proxies for the old and evil parents who never hugged them. but righties aren't the only ones trying to change, as elections loom.
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dems are morphing into republicans firing more guns than yosemite sam and drilling like a black & decker. >> i'm not barack obama. i disagree with him on guns, coal and the epa. mitch, that's not how you hold a gun. >> i'm mark begich. it took five years but i got the road approved. next year, the oil search. i approve this message because sooner or later, washington will figure out that i don't take no for an answer. >> the fact is both the right and left suffer from stereo typical, easily identifiable mannerisms. for liberals, you're a peac peace-crazed whiners. see matt damon, sean penn, rosie o'donnell, liena dunham and madison, wisconsin. for conservatives, you're a white, fundamentalist, fuel loving, gun toegt 1%er. see montgomery burns. but mr. obama was able to take his own party's tired cliches
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and camouflage them with soaring rhetoric and it worked. it's time now for the republicans to do the same. but this commercial is not the answer. you shouldn't be saying we're just like them. you should be saying why you're better than them. you need to focus on why you're right and you need to do so persuasively with wit, intelligence and passion. if that's asking too much, then you don't deserve to win. you continue to continue losing and drinking the blood of baby pandas. >> say you do not endorse that, though. >> it's tasty. don't knock it until you've tried it. it's great for the skin. does this commercial help or hurt the party or is it basically what they call a push. >> okay, i'm going to say it's a little bit of a push. i like the idea of it but i think the musical score is not going to win any award nominations, people. you could have had something very cool. i like some of the imagery. but again you don't want to act like you're so weird that you have to try that hard. >> it's the trying that hard thing that's the problem. and trying to be cool. if you try to be cool, you never
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can be. you did not like this ad. >> he loved it. >> this may be -- i've seen thousands of political ads and i've done some bad ones myself but this is by far and away the worst i think i've ever seen. when you have to tell people republicans are white, republicans are black, republicans are hispanic, republicans are asian, republicans read "the new york times" in public. republicans are -- here's this, republicans are grandmas, daughters and moms. and republicans enjoy gourmet cooking. are you kidding me? >> you know why they do it? >> tell me why they do it. >> they do it because the media has portrayed republicans as anything but human so they have to portray themselves as human. >> why don't they do something that's human. >> oh, bob, you were actually funny up until that point. >> like protect the country? >> i don't think people perceive them as doing things that help people. >> why is that? >> i don't know. >> why they're about to win the midterms. >> i think the next ad that the
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mitt romney guys should do is do an ad and say all democrats are like bob beckel because the name calling against republicans has been outrageous for years. i admire this because i understand -- we are not their target audience, okay? i'm not their target audience. i've been a republican for a long time, i'm comfortable with it. i ignore that. but the younger people, they're trying to appeal to a younger audience. they have to compete. i hand it to them for giving it a shot. and, you know what, this ad might have been more effective with people who are younger. we are old now. you realize that. >> i heard somebody said that it felt like a viagra ad. >> who would say something so provocative. >> i bet with young people in a focus group it would be disastrous. >> the ad seemed to me to say republicans are like liberals. everything that they went through sounded like a liberal. the prius, the new york times. i don't think we need to act more like liberals, i think we
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need to act more like conservatives. >> look we've lost the last several presidential elections. weve got to try something. i'm for that. >> more tattoos. that's all that means. more tattoos. >> that's true. >> there's no rule of enthusiasm in politics. don't remind people of your weaknesses. next on "the five," retired navy s.e.a.l. marcus lit rel has a warning for all those toddlers out there who might want to date his 2-year-old daughter one day. i'm an adult and i'm scared. you'll hear it ahead.
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well, he is one of the toughest navy s.e.a.l.s in u.s. history. you don't want to mess with lone survivor marcus luttrell. he's now a dad of two, including a 2-year-old little girl, and he's already issuing a warning to any little boys out there hoping to date her one day. now in, a facebook post that went viral, he says he's going to make any suitors, quote, paint the house, mend some fence, cut the lawn, rope a tornado, bottle up a hurricane and put out a forest fire with a squirt gun. now that would be something you could earn a date. when he gets done, then he says he's going to let them have the cell number so they can face time while he holds the phone. look forward to seeing the first candidate in about 16 years, he
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is going to be waiting. he explained why he's so protective of his daughter on fox and friends this weekend. >> the most important thing to me is the fact that i hope she finds somebody who loves her unconditionally and treats her as well and loves her as much as i love her mother. i'm not intimidated by anybody. but one of the most frustrating things and intimidating things i ever had to do was when i asked for my wife's hand in marriage. and it wasn't because i was afraid, i just didn't want to disappoint him. i never wanted to let him down on how i treated his daughter. >> and he does love his wife. he told me a story one time, mellmel knee, his wife, is amazing. i understand his love is deep and very serious about his kids, especially his daughter. now, bob, you have a daughter. >> yes. >> did you do anything to prevent guys from dating her? >> not quite to that extreme but i can understand exactly where he's coming from. you've got a little girl and
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you're thinking about her going out dating. the first thing you think about, at least in my case, is what i was like to date and it was very dangerous. to the first guy she dated, i said, look, her curfew is at 12:00. if she's back here at 12:01, you're dead. after you're dead, your father is dead. so he got her home ten minutes early. but luttrell said there ought to be a chastity belt made with a sale trident that says ask father for key. >> i think he might be making one right now. bolling, you have a son. you treat it different if it's a son, right? >> yeah, i think you do. i'm sure there's never going to be a time where my son brings a girl home and says, dad, is it okay if i date her. he's got to go to her, i get it. more parents should be like marcus luttrell. i listened to him and it was fantastic. it was like, wow, that is really, really cool. he said some things that may be
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considered not poetically correct. who cares. if every father had that attitude, i think kids would be in much better shape. >> and a lot of people watched it, it went viral. i think it's very funny because i love it. i lived this, dana, with my father who was just like what time is the dance over? i'd have to be home like 30 minutes before it ended. forget about it. >> i always came home 30 minutes before it ended. >> you weren't told to but did it anyway. there's the difference between the two of us. >> i think what he was describing about the feelings for his daughter is what every father feels when they find out they're going to have a daughter, when the daughter is born if it's a surprise, so i think it's a good thing. >> i love it. i love the passion and you know that she's going to be well guided by her parents. >> or she's going to be quite a rebellious person. >> we're praying. yeah, greg, what do you have? >> i don't worry much about the attitudes of fathers. i worry about the expectations of modern girls. do they expect less from men these days in how they dress and
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how they act or the idea of being a gentleman, dressing like a man, having a mature behavior. i get the impression that from my limited experience with a niece that we've had a relaxed formality in the name of progress. manners and respect should never go out of style, but i feel that they have. you should not honk your horn when you're picking up a date. you go to the door. you should not wear a baseball cap when you show up to meet the parents. you should always be making eye contact. i get the feeling that lately because the essence of cool has dictated that people can be more casual and more relaxed about their behavior, it's given women less -- i don't know, less elegant options in the world of men and that's a bit sad. so i don't -- i don't worry about the father, i worry about the women. >> and it's true too. you look at the pool out there that's available. these guys where their parents are falling down, they have got their baseball caps on sideways,
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they stink. they don't shave. they're loud mouthed. just unbelievable. i looked out there and thought my daughter has to find a date in this crowd? >> and she's in boulder, colorado. >> and she's in boulder, colorado. >> well, i'm just saying. >> when "the five" returns, we'll have an update on the ebola scare in america. should the u.s. be closing our airports to travelers from infectious countries to keep us safe? stay tuned.
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i've got to be very careful here. the u.s. suspended flights to israel this summer over missile fears. so it begs the question, should we be stopping flights from west africa where countries are battling outbreaks of ebola, particularly since we had one that came into this country. so the question is should we stop flights coming in from countries that have ebola outbreaks. eric, what do you think? >> i like the idea. a couple of months ago when president obama made his speech from the cdc, he said one of the things we're going to do is we're going to talk to other governments and airports and make sure that someone doesn't
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get on a flight, board a flight for the united states that has ebola. clearly we can't stop that now. the numbers are somewhere around 13,000 or 14,000 americans with american passports that are able -- who are in one of these three countries who could come back and not know they have ebola. here's my points. should the feds mandate it? maybe not. should the airlines do it on their own? probably, like british airways did. >> dana, what do you think? >> i think we have to accept br -- separate the two issues. i think the israeli government asked us not to do it but the united states government decided to do it anyway. this is different in that you have a disease outbreak and it is so serious and severe with ebola that i do think it merits consideration to do it. >> i agree with dana wholeheartedly. this seems like an obvious solution. why not err on the side of caution, why wouldn't you, because the alternative is so
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grave. why wouldn't you do it so we can secure the situation. any people that need to get here, we have the means and ability to transport them like we did the two doctors that were infected and get the right tests done. >> what's your view of it? >> thank you for asking. >> you're very welcome. >> i love this new, new thought we're talking about this thing. i believe this is a serious issue and we must ignore insulting or offending people and ask about travel. >> we should, please. >> and we should ask about their travel history and curtail travel when we have the opportunity to because the outbreak in africa at this point is out of control. we need to contain that. i'm being serious. >> i can't take your -- we need to contain what's going on in africa before, i think we have to stop travel at some point. >> shut it down. >> when that's under control, we open it. nobody should get their feelings
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hurt over there. there should be no political correctness. >> you would perfect in a professor lounge now the way you're dealing with this. all the comments were very smart. i don't think there's any way they know if people have ebola when they get on planes. >> and that is the point that whether you fill out the form or the card that says do you have ebola or have you had contact with someone, if you say no, you may not know you've had contact. >> exactly. >> he knew he did allegedly. >> someone saying they don't have or had contact with ebola. >> especially to get out. he knew he had contact with a pregnant woman that died. that's what i just said. the point is allegedly he filled out the form and said he hadn't had contact with anyone with ebola. >> maybe he didn't realize. >> e bowling on the flight is the real threat. >> we don't have room in the ebolaard for her. she died and he brought her
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all right. time for one more thing, dana is first. one of the biggest stories this week around the world is the protest in hong kong. this is a show of amazing force of how many people are basically gathering. they have been pretty peaceful. that doesn't look peaceful. but they have been actually fairly restrained. tens of thousands of people protesting china's heavy hand in hong kong. support the freedom fighters and people who want democracy over there. >> bobby, you are up. >> michael phelps is a man who won i think seven or eight gold medals in one olympics was stopped for drunk driving in maryland. his blood alcohol level was 0.14.
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85 mile-per-hour in 45 mile-per-hour zone. he failed sobriety tests. now, mike, my boy, you have got a lot of money. can you afford to get yourself a car service to take you around. my proposal on this is pretty simple. if you get caught for drunk driving at that level, you lose your license for one year. the second time you lose it for three years. do it three times you go to jail for five years. it ought to be a felony. because we lose tens of thousands of people to drunk drivers every year. thank god when i was drink drinking and driving i didn't kill anybody but i i think about it all the time. >> greg, you are up. >> on that note, it's time for greg's medical tips. >> oh my gosh. >> well, you know, a lot of people ask me how do i lose weight? i say you don't have to. a very simple way of appearing 20 pounds lighter is do what this little cat did. jump into a little tub, sit there for a little while, almost instantly you appear 20 pounds lighter. he was once a fat cat but look how skinny he is now.
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because of this, that cat is now a highly paid fashion model on every catwalk across the world. >> oh my gosh that's terrible. >> cats don't even like water. >> how dare you. >> all right, you are up. >> serious note. some of you might have been following the legal news today and we were awaiting the sentencing, of course, of joe and theresa judicia, pronunciation. unfortunately they both are going to go to jail. for their kids this is a very sad situation. she has 15 months. this is for bank and mail and wire fraud. and a host of other charges. they ended up pleading guilty. the judge is showing some leniency in allowing her to serve the time after holidays. january 5th. in case you are worrying how this will work with the children. he will serve time after that 41 months. >> 41 months for him as well. >> yesterday we talked about the commencement speech at
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got dard college. check out this one, someone tweeted this to me. let me get his name. his name is jt 88. college course has been university in indiana watching the five. >> they must be learning a lot. >> their parents will be thrilled. >> i'm thrilled. >> if had you had to write a report, can you please send it to us so we can get some viewer feedback? >> if you are in a college classroom and do you watch the five as part of your curriculum, let us know. send me a picture on facebook. >> or post it on the five page. >> only forgive
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>> it is friday, october 3rdrd. a fox news alert. >> nbc news professor now eff t effected with ebola in africa. the fear at home growing by the menu. what is being done to contain that virus in texas. >> isis using social media to target military personnel and their families in their own homes. what the u.s. army is now saying about this threat. >> this high school students will probably think twice before skipping school again. >> guess what i am doing? we are going to go to class
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