tv Hannity FOX News October 6, 2014 7:00pm-8:01pm PDT
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tomorrow, it's our show's first birthday. we have a lookback for you. go to our facebook page for last-minute highlights. welcome to "hannity." tonight, ebola fears spreading across the nation as the infected patient in dallas turns critical. in a moems, amsly're heart will be here -- tonight, we take you inside the mosque of the oklahoma beheading suspect. >> i am the candidate in this race. >> kentucky candidate own staffers tell a very different story and it's all caught on tape. >> she's going to say whatever
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she has to say or do. and that's the way the political game is played. >> back at the "hannity" big board to break down the race. >> i think it's been shamefully too late. >> and piers morgan joins me onset and has surprisingly harsh words for our commander in chief. >> any idea where those missing e-mails are? >> and disgraced irs lois lerner about her missing e-mails. all of that plus we reveal the brand new segment "question of the day". welcome to "hannity." tonight an imam frequented by the man charged with the beheading in oklahoma went on offensive in a sermon on friday targeting a former mosque attendee who revealed some not so flattering details about the mosque in an interview last week on fox news. this is what the imam said. >> i define for that one person who did not identify himself on fox news talking about this very
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masjid, i could find 1,000 people who would rebuttal his testimony. >> now we have extended an invitation to the imam you just heard from to join us on this program. but he declined. and the invitation by the way remains open. joining me now a former member of this mosque who was berated in a sermon. noor, well, who asked us conceal his identity for his safety and joining us the director of jihad watch robert spencer. good to see you both. robert, i know you broke the story. thank you for being with us. >> thank you. >> noor, what was said behind closed doors at this mosque? what was going on behind the scenes? do you believe the person responsible for the beheading could have been influenced by some of the teachings in that mosque? >> absolutely. things that were taught behind closed doors were things like the choice that non-believers are to be offered by muslims to
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either convert, live under islamic domination and be in submission to the islamic state or to be fought against, jihad for the sake of allah. other things that were mentioned were open support, at least among muslims, fellow muslims, for suicide bombings in israel. and it was explained to me that this was the only weapon that the palestinians had and that therefore we do condone them but we will not talk about it with the media. and i was advised not to speak with the media on it because they would not understand. >> did you take the comments this weekend by the imam as a threat to you and your family? >> i take everything that they say as a threat to me. >> i want to go into more detail. you're saying that behind closed doors when you were alone with fellow members of this mosque
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that their ideology is pretty much convert or die? >> absolutely. this is shown in the simple teachings of islam that anyone can find, like among sahi muslim where it specifically says the non-believers are to be offered three choices to convert, live under islamic rule and pay the pole tax or to be fought against. >> basically you're saying the exact things that the christians in mosul were told. >> absolutely. >> convert, pay the tax or die. >> absolutely. i was told that this ultimately is going to be the choice that are going to be offered to all non-muslims around the world including in the united states. >> tell me about the level of media sophistication. in other words, is this something they would say openly? would they only say among members that they trusted? it doesn't sound like the type of thing that an imam during a service would go up there and say. was this done in private?
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>> yes. these things were not openly said when they know outsiders are among them, like the media. and most of the time these things were not said in any kind of sermon. there were things approaching a few sermons. the imam now once stated in a sermon that the israelis were trying to collapse a mosque in jerusalem by digging tunnels underneath it. so there is a high level of hatred of israel. but most of the things that were said to me were always said when it was safe to say them, which was among the other muslims. >> tell me that might have been said about 9/11, about jihad, about infidels, you mentioned jews, maybe about christians or maybe about isis, for example, or al qaeda. do you remember any specific things that were said about any of those things? >> there was an instance when i
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was sitting with two members of the mosque, as i mentioned, and they stated to me when the subject of osama bin laden came up that if he showed up at their door, they would invite him in and would protect him because he's a brethren islam and we must protect him from those who don't believe. >> do you -- yeah, go ahead. >> go ahead. >> no, keep going. >> other instances were, as i said, the support for the suicide bombings in israel. i spoke with another individual later after i had left islam but went back at the request of law enforcement about the acts of terrorism that were going on in iraq. and he stated to me that this is their country and they can do what they like to any of the crusaders that come in to try to impose their will on the muslim
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people. >> do you have any doubt that anton nolen was influenced by what went on in this mosque and that this could have encouraged him? do you believe that could have happened to somebody at a mosque like this? >> absolutely. when you promote the true pure teachings of islam as practice for the prophet mohammad, you can't take it any other way unless you're willfully ignorant or you're lying. >> yeah. robert spencer, let me bring you into all this because you obviously broke this story. and i give you a lot of credit for doing this. i know that the president is saying, they actually sent a representative from the white house to this mosque to praise th them. this weekend gave a letter apparently to the president praising this mosque. they just had the funeral of the woman on friday. they claim it was related to the tornado that impacted the area
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going back a couple of years, or last year. do you believe that? >> no, i think that it's directly related to the beheading. it's related to the fact that the obama administration has completely bought into the line spread by groups like the hamas-linked council on american islamic relations and others, any time there's a jihad attack or jihad plot, the real victims are muslims. it's really a very clever ploy they use to deflect attention away from jihad activity. the president sends a letter, a thank you letter, to this mosque now? why now? and why not call for an investigation into what's being taught in the mosque and how much nolen, the beheader, was influenced by what he learned in this mosque? >> you raised some great points. >> 80% of the mosques in states have been shown in four separate and independent studies since 1998 to be teaching hatred of jews and christians and to ultimately replace the constitution -- completely
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plausible, completely in line with what we know. >> this man wanted to convert his co-workers. this man was using islamic phrases as he beheaded this woman. we look at this beheader's facebook page. it's like a who's who of radical islamists and their techniques. i thought you raised some good questions. is there going to be an investigation of the mosque? what about the imam? is he going to be questioned? what about the other beheader? are there any e-mails or phone calls between the imam and the person responsible, nolen in this case for the beheading. an examination of what the teachings are here? i think all of those would be appropriate. are you saying that none of that is happening? >> to the best of my knowledge, sean, at this point nothing's been done. nobody's looked at the beheader's phone records, nobody's looked at his e-mails. nobody's checked if he had any contact with people in the mosque or other people in other groups. it's just been a complete take your word for it situation. the mosque says, oh, this guy didn't learn any of that here. the feds say okay and turn away.
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of course they're committed as a matter of policy to ignoring and deny i denying any jihad or in mosques in the united states. they're committed to denying that. so they don't want to see evidence of it. even when it's right on their doorstep. >> gentlemen, thank you both for being with us. very informative. we're going to continue to follow this. robert, appreciate it. noor, appreciate you being here. coming up, breaking news on the ebola outbreak around the world. we have a full report on the americans infected. that's coming up next. plus, a busy news night on "hannity." kentucky senator rand paul, piers morgan both in studio.
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two ebola patients are fighting for their lives in u.s. hospitals as we now speak. fox & friends co-host ainsley earhardt joins us with the latest on ebola in america. >> thank you, sean. here's the latest, the fifth american to contract ebola from western africa arrived in an omaha, nebraska hospital for that treatment. nbc cameraman ashoka mukpo is being evaluated right now in a biocontainment center at the nebraska medical center. this comes after news broke last week about the liberian national, thomas eric duncan, the first patient to be diagnosed with ebola on american soil. he remains in critical condition in isolation unit at a dallas hospital. health officials are closely monitoring those who had close contact with him. and according to the cdc none of those people who have shown symptoms at this point. but in the wake of that diagnosis concerns are being raised now about the containment of this disease.
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the texas governor rick perry addressed the issue today appointing a task force now to monitor and to contain it in his state. >> today, i issued an executive order creating a texas task force on infectious disease preparedness and response. a team charged with studying and improving our existing plans, to enhance our ability to quickly and effectively halt the spread of emerging infectious diseases of all types. >> now, the governor of the lone star state went onto call for enhanced screening procedures at entry points along the u.s. border as well. meanwhile, president obama met with health officials today for an update on the outbreak and said he is working on additional protocols in the u.s. to contain this virus. but despite several requests, the white house press secretary, josh earnest, confirmed today the administration is not considering a travel ban because of the ebola outbreak. to put it all into perspective, sean, we should be reminded just
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how very deadly this virus can be. in west africa in gena, liberia, sierra leone, combined the death toll now at 3, 439, that's out of 7,500 cases. we're going to continue to stay on the story and monitor the outbreak worldwide and hope that it is contained here at home at least. sean. >> very chilling report. thanks so much. appreciate it. and now that ebola is in the united states, can the american people trust the government to contain this? now, nbc news host chuck todd pressed white house advisor dan fifer about exactly that very question. >> why should we trust what you're saying about the cdc is able to handle this? you understand why there's more skepticism than normal. >> i understand people have been growing skepticism about institutions for a long time including government. people should know we deal with
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it forcefully. >> there's always a good reaction. ebola needs to be pro-action. >> that's exactly what we're doing. the only way to deal with this is to stop it at its source. which is why we have deployed -- we're deploying up to around 3,000 troop there is to bring them relief. >> don't we need more? >> that's what the pentagon believes we need right now. and we'll constantly evaluate that. >> here to tell us if we can trust the government's handling of ebola, dr. mark siegel and dr. gill mobley with us. you went to hartsfield airport in atlanta, full bioprotection gear, goggles, written on the back the cdc is lying. do you think this is far worse than the government is telling us? >> either they're lying, sean, or grossly incompetent. numbers have shown, statistics, that the chances were overwhelmingly that we would be importing ebola to the united states by the end of october. yet the president was saying
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there's a very small chance, just a week before the first patient came. and it just makes sense that as a million people are in quarantine on the continent of africa right now for ebola and 10,000 people leave that continent a day, the whole world will be seated eventually with this. and my concern is once it gets into guatemala city and mexico city, the cdc is not sending planes in to take care of it. >> do you think america could be overwhelmed with ebola? >> absolutely. >> you believe that? >> yes, sir. it's going to consume every third world country on the planet. they have deplorable sanitation and distrust of the government. the same perfect storm is going to consume every third world country like it has africa. at that time we'll be importing ebola on an hourly basis. >> america should be worry. this is coming to a community near us? is that what you're saying? >> it seems inevitable. >> that's a chilling prognosis. >> we live next door to one of
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the biggest third world countries in the world and the doors are wide open. >> there's a part in me that doesn't trust the government, as the doctor's saying here they can't even put a website together, dr. siegel, as you know. we're not going to keep our plans, we're not going to save our money and keep our doctors, that's never a lie. social security never had a lock box. i think there's a natural distrust. why not have a travel ban and our borders insecure? those two things alone tell me we're not being smart and prudent here. >> let me go over this for you. first of all, it's clear to me that the president and the u.s. government was late to the game here. that months ago they knew about the ebola epidemic in west africa and now they're first bringing the military in. the military should have been brought in months ago. the military is adept at controlling emerging contain gents. that may be for political gain. after all, how many other things is going on? let's talk about the science of this for a second.
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there's about maybe if it's underreported somewhere between 10,000 and 20,000 cases in west africa. there's over 100,000 cases of -- fever every year, that's a cousin of ebola. and we're not seeing the kind of problems with lassa, that dr. mobley, we need resources from all over the world. >> you think he's overstating the problem? or potential -- >> but he could make the problem worse. when you talk about travel bans, here's what we need. we need heavy screening. >> think of this, air france, france did it, england did it, saudis have done it and i would suspect spain is not long to follow. >> grant it. but i look at ebola as a medical terrorist. we need to look at someone coming into an airport and saying could that be that terrorist? could they have ebola? let's take their temperature here in the united states. let's put them aside and give them the big questionnaire. >> did they swallow a bottle of
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tylenol or something to reduce their temperature. >> but sean, fair enough. but if we cut off the borders there, there's going to be panic. there's going to be widespread panic. and when people panic, they spread more disease. >> england and the saudis did it. do you want to respond? >> i think there's a compromise. we can get the personnel, the equipment in with military craft and cut out all nonessential travel. that will allow us to possibly contain it. but already the horse is out of the barn. it's already spread person-to-person in spain. the nurse taking care of the priest has already got it. >> this is a very hard virus to spread with one case in the united states we should not cut off all air travel. but we should heavily restrict it. at some point if he cuts off air travel now -- >> we got to run. quick response. >> ask the cameraman how easy it is to get. >> we don't know what the cameraman was exposed to. >> that's exactly right. they don't have any idea. >> they don't use toilet paper in africa. >> ask the --
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>> we don't need widespread panic here. we don't need it there. >> we need the truth. >> obama and the cdc says if we get another -- >> if you were listening to nbc news, they are saying imposing a travel ban on ebola countries would be racist. which is silly. >> i'm not saying that. >> i know. >> i'm saying restricting. >> fascinating debate. good to have you both. appreciate it. midterm elections less than a month away. bill hammer back at the billboard to break down the heated race in the state of kentucky and other races as well. plus tonight -- >> i see the ads where allison is up there talking about how she supports the coal industry and i start thinking to myself -- >> she has to because in kentucky if you don't support the coal industry, you're dead. >> right. >> caught on tape, staff members of allison lundgren grimes. this is not pretty. we'll check in with kentucky start rand paul. and later tonight, "hannity"
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welcome back to "hannity." we are less than 30 days away from the election day 2014. one of the most highly contested races taking place in the state of kentucky. mitch mcconnell is battling democrat allison lundgren grimes to hold onto that seat. back with us to break down what that race means for the balance of power in the u.s. senate, america's newsroom, the "hannity" big board room -- >> oh, i thought it was the billboard. >> are we going to fight over the name of this? >> check the trademark on that, sean. what i wanted to do, last week we talked about what is -- the whole story come early november is the balance of power on the senate side. so we put a what-if scenario into play here. all these 16 states lit up. you got a 55-45 majority.
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republicans need to get six seats. so what i wanted to do tonight was take all the races head-to-head where the republican challenger is either at four points or greater right now in the real clear politics average. on the republican map here shelly, she's up 17 in west virginia, you're up 46. mike rounds in south dakota's up 13, you're at 47. steve up 20 in montana, you're now at 48. okay. so we still need to get three more in order for the senate to flip from democrat to republican. right now in arkansas tom cotton's right about the four-point mark right now. now you're at 49. louisiana, bill cassidy, little tricky right now. if bill cassidy is head-to-head with mary landrew. he wins that race right now. >> louisiana will go -- sorry. i don't want to do that. louisiana will go to december, no doubt. >> into the month of december. just so your audience knows, the candidate has to get 50% of the
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vote, if not you get a runoff. if you get a runoff right now, he wins that. alaska dan sullivan up 4.5 points right now. you're at 51-49. what's everybody talking about on the democratic side? colorado. >> what about kentucky? >> so put kentucky on hold for a second. everybody's focused on greg orman right now and the problems pat roberts is having in kansas. if that goes from red to blue, right now you're back to 50/50. that's a possible scenario. in iowa remember last week we talked about joni ernst. >> she was up four points last week. >> yes. but earlier today it was around two points for joni ernst. say she takes iowa, back to 52-48. i think last week you said -- >> i'm going here. >> 53-47, corey gardener. >> i said 52 or 53. north carolina, kay hagan still in the lead. >> colorado had a debate earlier
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today, mark udal and cory gardener. in kentucky right now, okay, you mentioned this race. this is mitch mcconnell and allison lundgren grimes, the real clear politics average is about 4 or 4.2 points. there was a poll that came out earlier today in the bluegrass poll that puts her up by two points. >> i would argue that's an outlier. >> could very well be. and to back up your point, mcconnell's been in the lead on the two polls prior to the one today. >> it was tape released today which i'm going to throw to here in a second, but i think will be a game changer. i think will be very difficult. >> you know, last week we talked about money. this race between these two candidates and all that outside money, $100 million. you know what else they think might top $100 million for a single senate race? >> where?
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>> north carolina. north carolina may spend more money than kentucky. we're watching to see what happens. >> good to see you. now, in what seems like an attempt to distance herself from president obama, democratic challenger allison lundgren grimes has long campaigned on her support for that state's coal industry and has claimed time and time again to be the pro-coal candidate in that race. however, conservative filmmaker james o'keeffe caught some of her staff on hidden camera admitting something, well, quite different. take a look at this. >> i see the ads where allison's up there talking about how she supports the coal industry. and then i start thinking to myself -- >> you know she has to say that. because in kentucky if you don't support the coal industry, you're dead. >> right. >> politically. and i know that that's true. and i know that's why she has to say that. you know, politics is a game. you do what you have to do to get to point b.
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and then you do, i mean, it's a lying game unfortunately. >> so she's saying something positive about coal because she wants to be elected. >> right. >> in the state of kentucky if you're anti-coal, you will not get elected, period. >> joining me in studio with reaction to this and much more, kentucky start rand paul. great to see you in new york. how are you? >> great to see you. >> i looked at that tape and if i'm a person in kentucky, that's a game-changer if i was considering allison lundgren grimes for senate. >> we've lost several thousand jobs in the mining industry. it's a big industry in kentucky. when the democrats say we'll support coal and yet we ask them are you going to vote for harry reid when you get up there? they say, yeah, i got to vote for harry reid. if that happens, we'll never get any relief. this kind of, i think, blows the truth away here and lets you know, you know what, it looks like even though they say one thing in public. in private maybe they aren't so supportive. >> basically all admitting she's
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just lying. well, you can't say you're against coal in kentucky. >> think about where their money comes from. talk about $100 million in this race, it's coming from hollywood, people who would shut down the coal industry. and really it's a big deal in kentucky. our economy's really suffered. we have some counties with 20% unemployment. mining jobs are actually pretty good paying jobs. you can make $75,000, 85,000 a year sometimes just out of high school. >> she keeps saying i'm not with barack obama, but she'd vote with harry reid. how big a problem? >> it's a huge problem. when the president said he'd run for office he said he'd bankrupt coal. he basically said he'd bankrupt coal. and most people in kentucky feel he is trying to bankrupt us and doesn't care about our jobs. she would almost have to say i'm no longer supporting him and i won't vote for harry reid is about the only way she'll have a chance. >> mark pryor said that. were you surprised mark pryor -- >> i know. i wonder how genuine that is. because most of their voting records are well over 90% with
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the president. >> i notice a lot of big names in the senate, ted cruz and others, are going into kansas to help pat roberts. have you been asked would you go if asked? >> yeah. and i'll be there towards the end of the month. and i was in north carolina last week. so i'm doing everything i can to make sure we have a republican majority. >> if you had to guess now, i mean, i find this a volatile year, difficult to read, what do you think we're going to end up with? >> i kind of agree with the chart bill was showing. there's at least three states we're going to pick up, west virginia, south dakota and montana. there's five or six that hang in the balance beyond that. but the wind's at our back. i think the president's very unpopular. not only has he been somewhat of a feckless leader for foreign policy leader for the nation, he's also been somebody who's run rough shot over the constitution. >> i think that's the biggest deal. and you say that all the time. i was really glad to see reince priebus, the first item was to withhold the constitution, which i think the president has been bypassing. i'm looking at alaska, i believe
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joni ernst will pull it out in iowa. >> one of those count the votes and stay up late. >> we appreciate you being here. coming up, an interview you'll only see here on "hannity." i go one-on-one with piers morgan and why he thinks president obama has committed "professional suicide". >> chance to apologize, ms. lerner. you didn't hesitate -- but you're hesitating to speak. why? >> a "hannity" exclusive. disgraced irs official lois lerner couldn't get away soon enough. he's going to share that tape with us straight ahead. guys! you're not gonna believe this! 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.
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more good news -- it's friday! woo! [ male announcer ] ship a pak via fedex express saver® for as low as $7.50. a >> test >> test >> test >> test >> test >> test >> test >> test >> test >> test >> test >> test >> test >> test his campbell's chunky soup. hi, baby! hi, mama! take us home! wow! it's new chunky beer-n-cheese with beef and bacon soup.
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morgan wrote president obama has committed "professional suicide" and a british term" slapdash secret service detail isn't what's wrong with the white house, the real scandal is a president who is so complacent about protecting americans." it's time he got off the damn golf course, got up to speed with his intelligence briefings and focused on wiping out isis, before they wipe out more of the people. >> good seeing you. >> i look at you as a colleague. i'm glad you -- you're here. there's a lot of hostility in this business. we never had that. >> we didn't. we spoke in a restaurant, i was dining out one night and you were very chivalrous about our supposed rivalry. and i appreciated that. yeah, we're in the same game. >> first of all, from my standpoint you saying this seems like a reversal. in other words, i feel like i understood barack obama in 2007 and '08.
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but for you, you now are like waking up. it's like what is he doing? i have felt like that the whole time. >> i feel with obama his real issue is what is his legacy going to be and what kind of america does he stand for and represent. and that's where i think he's been a big disappointment. and he must be to himself because what will be his legacy? you know, i have big issues with him personally over issues like gun control. you and i disagree over that. but with obama i watched him go to newtown, look those families in the eye and promise i will get action and deliver precisely nothing. so if you were a believer in obama's ability to deliver, that was a pretty crushing disappointment on an issue dear to my heart. a piece online this week, it struck me obama when he threw james clapper under the bus and the entire 200,000 -- >> he blames everybody but himself. >> it was -- why a president would say they about his own intelligence services and not
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we, why he would think this has nothing to do with me. and when i look at the spread of isis through the middle east, a lot comes back seems to me through obama's foreign policy strategy i like to lead from behind. america should go away from being the global policeman to being the leader from behind. america shouldn't be leading anything from behind. america is at its best a great superp superpower. whether dealing with ebola on a humanitarian level or isis on a terrorism level, america has to be confident, strong and decisive. it's that lack of decision making that i think leads to the issues we now face. >> what frustrates me, ft. hood is still officially in this country an example of workplace violence. what happened in oklahoma, you watched -- you've read this guy's facebook page. it's all about jihad. they won't say it was an act of terrorism either. isis is not islamic, according to the president. and we're not at war with isis even though we're bombing them. >> this is all just nonsense,
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rhetoric. because isis clearly is an islamic fundamentalist organization. it's a terror group. when they start beheading american and british citizens in these gruesome snuff movies they're making and releasing them to the world taunting -- >> horrible. >> -- taunting these countries, it's not good enough to simply say, yeah, i'm really upset about this beheading. and then seven minutes later as obama did go to a golf course and goofing around on the first tee. that really hit home to me. someone did a survey this week, they counted up the number of hours that obama has been playing golf since he was president. it was about 850 hours, if you base it on a five-hour round. >> more time than his intelligence briefings. >> he attended 42% of his daily briefings. he spent 200 more hours whacking a golf ball than attending his daily briefings. now, it's not as simplistic as that. obviously he would get other briefings. but such horrible image to me
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and i've basically been reasonably supportive of him. what does it do to groups like isis and others intent on causi america and britain serious harm. >> i don't think he understands the nature of the enemy. and i think it's evil in our time. otherwise no human being with a conscience or soul could do that. because i don't have you very long, i want to switch gears. cable news. >> yeah. >> i thought you came out of the box strong. you had two media giants in this country, oprah winfrey, howard stern, great gets as we say in the business. you were deferential to larry king. a little bluster when you came out, trying to pick a fight with me. >> yeah, of course. >> notice i didn't bite. >> i did. i tried everything. i tried all my normal british wiles. >> and it didn't work. why do you think cnn is not doing so well? >> i think it depends what your yardstick is for success at cnn. i have quite a big issue really
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with the constant attention to say cnn's ratings. because unlike -- tends to be pretty constant and has an audience that sticks with it day in and day out to hear a particular brand of journalism, which i think folks to its credit does with great confidence and verve and production -- i have to watch your show, i want to shout at you myself from my couch. >> you do notice that the woman, the second woman saved in oklahoma was saved because somebody had a gun. but we're not going to turn this into a gun debate. >> we can a gun debate another time. but when big things happen, the ratings are huge at cnn. i would get ratings ten times the normal ratings for stories like the boston marathon bombings and that would last three, four weeks, bin laden's death, the arab spring, so on. but in the prior to periods the brand is so associated with breaking news when there wasn't breaking news and social media now answers that question for most consumers, people don't tune in very much.
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>> you try to be little different and say the other hosts on cnn and give an opinion. i did think it was a mistake -- i have carried a gun -- i'm not turning this into a gun debate, more than half my life. >> are you carrying now? >> yes, sir. and i have done this -- i have been around weapons, my parents with law enforcement in a peripheral way since i was a kid. and it would be like me going to great britain. i don't understand your love of the monarchy. and for me to be critical of that is going to the core of a tradition. >> because the monarchy are not going to kill you, right? is the first thing. >> i thought you never understood it. >> i understood it completely. quickly about guns, the reason it was such a passionate thing for me was when i run a newspaper in britain, i ran one for rupert murdoch, but we had our version of newtown, 16 young kids, 5 years old, killed by a
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lone gunman. here's what happened. it was never a political issue in britain. left and right came together. and we all campaigned. i drove the paper i was on to do this. we banned all guns. there hasn't been a school shooting in britain since that day. my argument about sandy hook is, i think, probably the gun control is the problem. how do you make america which has a massive gun culture, law-abiding gun owners, how do you make it a safer place. >> doing exactly what i didn't want to do. >> how do you make it a safer place? >> i would love to invite you back. >> yeah. >> because it's something that i can't argue with you quickly. i hear your side. i just felt you were so passionate and didn't understand america's reaction. >> can i go with my census and move on? very similar thing that happened. absolutely nothing changed. and i found that
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unconscienceable. some crazy kid from walking into walmart or wherever it may be and walking into a school and -- there have been 70 school shootings in america since sandy hook. i think that is a huge issue. >> i'll let you have the last word. listen, very nice to really meet you. >> good to see you. >> come back again. i appreciate it. coming up next tonight right here on "hannity". >> don't feel bad. you were using the government as a weapon to try to crush political defense? anything? >> could you call the police, please? >> disgraced irs official lois lerner confronted by jason matera he is here tonight to explain what she told him. that's coming up next. and we are debuting a new segment on the show. question of the day, what could it possible be? coming up.
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>> great, sean. >> thanks for having me. >> tell you what. >> just a made up scandal and it's part of politics. lois lerner actually broke her silence recently and made herself out to be the victim. it's unbelievable. that's why i confrontedlerner m the victim,xd incredible. tea party members need to go on the offense sitting back and being an elected punching bag.
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>> the video was a proxy for her time at the irs, almost. she tried to barge in an elderly woman's home to avoid the question. seemed like a stranger. the woman is explaining to lois lerner i just had surgery i can't let you in. she was pounding on the door and trying to get into the garage. she has no concern for this woman's privacy rights it's almost a proxy about her time with the irs. her desires or the rest of us can take a hike. >> thank you. appreciate it. coming up a new segment, question of the day. what does it mean? how do you get involved? you'll find out next, straight ahead. it's monday.
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time for the question of the of the day. you get to know about me. the question is who is your favorite late-night host? now, my answer should come as no surprise. king of late night who should have never been let go twice by nbc. and it's 84-year-old woman in florida won the $590 million power ball. as for how much tax she's going to have to pay the irs says it's too soon to tell they don't know whether she's a republican or democrat. >> you're about to head out to pasture. just wanted to see what you looked like before you got to the gate. >> i want to tell you something else. >> what?
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>> your zipper is down. >> head over to facebook. you can tell me who is your favorite? >> that is all the time we have left this evening. on. tonight: >> mother load of bad[ applause] >> it's ugly. >> big shootout between two big liberals. mar and affleck over whether islam is destructive to the world. we will tell you what we think. someone could get off the flight and practices witchcraft. >> a level of ignorance which we should not allow in our media. >> a pbs correspondent attacking andrea tantaros and fox news for reporting the truth. we'll take that man to task tonight. >> so you are
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