tv The O Reilly Factor FOX News October 20, 2014 8:00pm-9:01pm PDT
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a.m. thanks for being with us. and we'll see you back here tomorrow night.xd "the o'reilly factor" is on region of the world. if that were possible, it could make the situation worse. >> the politics of ebola a hot issue. we'll have an update tonight. saying he was in fear for his life. the only gun there was darren wilson's.ó[ >> sharpton continues to convic murder even as new evidence emerges. we'll have a follow-up that may surprise you. >> what do you think about the wholexd ebola controversy? >> from where? >> here in the united states. >> oh, it's nice. >> also ahead, what do the folks jesse waters tried to find out.
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>> ebola. >> what's that mean? >> xdcaution. you are aboutrto enter the no-spin zone.ñi çóñixdñi dchi, i'm bill o'reilly. why americans believe things are out of control.ok that isçó a subject of this evening's talking point[#wñok a new poll of likely voters from states where midteri1 races are tight clearly demonstrates most americans are uneasy with the state of the kounion. when asked by politico which of the following comes closest to your own view? 64% say things in the united states feel like they are out of control righwow.ko 36% a>ñ confident that the country can meet its challenges. next question, thinking ahead severale1 years, are you optimistic or pessimistic about
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and finally, if the election for the house and senatee1 werelp h today, fort( whom would you fáe? 41% democraticjf candidate, 23% don't know yet. now, that last question seems not to be logical. if a whopping 64% of americans think the." country's outh control under the obama , why would anyone vote for a democratic candidate3 the answer is emot!7ñe1 democrats have been very successful it convincing voters that the republican party favors the rich and is anti-woman.e1i] the republican party has not re effectively. thus, in everylp poll, american women continue to favor democrats no matter what happens to the nation. what is certainlye1 true is tha the democratic party and president obama have not been successfule1."xd in makingt( a stronger country. ÷] six years ago. so if you're voting for theñi likely to support the democrats. but if you're voting just for
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yourselfxd and what you can get from thet( government, the opti thexd democrats provide continu entitlementst( is attractive. part of the reason the usa isxdn trouble because president obama puts ideologye1 over tough practical solutions. ebola is a good example. overwhelmingly, americanst( wana travel ban imposed on the countries where the ebola epidemic is raging. but the president dissents.xdçó3 >> trying toe1 seal off an enti region of the worlde1 if that we even possible could actually make the situation worse. g$$t would make it harder to mo health care workers and supplies back and forth.ñr experience shows that it could also cause people in thee1 effecteffect r affected region to change their travel and make the disease harder to track.% >> well, withñi all due eypect, thoseçó arguments are very weak. here are the facts. thet(e1 countries of senegal an nigeria have prohibited west africans in the neighboring ebola-plagued districtsfá from entering. that strategy has been
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effective. senegal and nigeria have largel1 avoided the ebola epidemic. > you know, i've long admired your intellect, your logic. i think that's why folks tune in becausexd you're a man who real has common sense, bill. m case, you nt are looking at some facts in isolationxdc. because you talk about people
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who say, you know, the country's going chaotic situation. more than a decade. >> not at this rate. >> yeah, oh, my gosh. beforenmk >> over 60%. >> it was 82% in may of 2008. that's before the financial collapse. 82% said the country's going in >> there's a difference between wrong direction.q >> it's the same -- ico put he way the po, it. come on, there's a big let's stick on the ebola thing. that's what folks are interested in. talking points. i think that is part of an attack the republicans have trying to undermine obama. undermine confidence in government, trust in government, credibility of government. to say, oh,t( things are out of control because of obama and the democrats. i think, though, when you break ñpout why people don't have tru in government and ask about the economy, republican and democrat, oh, yeah, we have about equal confidence in each other. but when it comes to minimum wage, equal jfxde1pay.
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>> i think you're diverting the issue here, juanp'y let's goe1fá over. >> democrats more. they think democrats are more >> the ebola thing isçó very, vd because senegal and nigeria. those countries boarded the epidemic area and they've shut it downçó completely. it's a 21-day incubation per)'d isn't. ÷,fpto you, butg, we're brothers ráhwork, they say it's but president obama, uh-uh, logic doesn't matter, go. >> well, i think here's the issue, the screening process in place didn't work evenfá thoughe were promised it would work. that's when people start going, whoa, we ne2i) to try something else. i'm willing to listen to an epidemiologist who says maybe it's not a gooúó idea. but here's thei] thing, they dot bother to explain that to the stupid little people. why are you racist?fá &háhp &hc% communicate about this. >> you heard the president say, mary i]katherine, tw( be fair - >> yeah,[na weeks later after
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%a=uq this.ed asking questions >> he's confident thatlpt( civis at the airport can stopp) this. f w, juan, do you realize that that -- >> holdron. >> wait a minute, i'll get back. at cjfk in new york, between 10 and 150 west africans come in every day. the editorial in the new york post by the head of the firefighters union says this is insane. my people, firefighters in new york cityt(çó. we respond to all kinds of emergencies. and we don't have the equipment. and we don't know -- and if we have 150 to -- up to 150 west africans coming in every single day, our people are at ÷risk. that's a powerful argument right #ayrñ that's not a powerful argument. >> it's not? >> how many people -- >> blowing smoke? >> no, but let's think about this.c ú-]r; >> ñiokay. but what ebola? there's n/ñf ebola in new york.
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i don't know what he's talking 0m9t the potential existence like -- it existed in dallas. >> this is paranoiaçóçólp and f >> go ahead.rátt)urspáe ground. >> let me speak to juan's point undermining the president, nobody needs to. the facts on the ground show that these clumsy bureaucratic systems are not working. ranaying shed 1 o your cynicism. cynicism is ai] choice, hope is better choice. here's the thing, when you're in government, and this is bipartka91jeui(qáu not to have perfect faith inrsju it will work every second of the r day. you cannotñi govern on hope alo. and when he leaks to thew3 "new york times" and he's super mad about how these thiñçó don't work well, he doesn't have faith. he's undermining faith according to juan in the federal government's response. it's not good at doing these things, does too many things, and if the guy in charge is not willing to look closer and make sure it's doing its job, it ain't going to get done. >> all right. next on "the run6o,n," new evidence in the racially charged ferguson, missouri, murder caseó
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what the folks think about ebola. coming right back.w3 they challenge us. they take us to worlds full of heroes and titans. for respawn, building the best interactive entertainment begins with the cloud. this is "titanfall," the first multi-player game built and run on microsoft azure. empowering gamers around the world to interact in ways they never thought possible. this cloud turns data into excitement. this is the microsoft cloud.
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ask your doctor about farxiga and visit our website to learn how you may be able to get every month free. the ferguson, missouri, shooting death of michael brown. front page article on saturday. says there is compelling evidence that there was a struggleqrbetween the 18-year-od tx' police officer darren wilson the article quotes anonymous c sources, but the inscáspáion people. o cf1 o was pinned in hisc vehicle,q struggling with his gun as mr. brown apparently grabbed for itr then, officer wilson fired twice inside the car. striking mr. brownc in the arm, forensic evidence shows mr. ñi on the óáv1ñ on an
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f the carçó, also uniform. finally, the source in the charges are not likely in the case. that's why we know it's a federal source. now, there was no mention of the other five times michael brown ìáhp &hc%9 what happened after the initial struggle in the car has yet to be defined, at least in this article. and that, of course, is vital to the case. ('acf1 o be stating any conclusions, but they are./ti]xd >> you are askingokt( me to bel áru, and knew he didn't have a gun, ran back at you toward a gun that already shot him?lpr >> how can you justify killingf and shooting down a man in the
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middle of thejf street executio style? again, simply because his only crime was walking in the middle of the street.c >> joining us now from los angeles, the@sjwyer from michael brown's@cmily benjamin krump. first of all, what did youw3 thk article? >> well, bill, as the lead attorney for the family, we haven't gotten anything official from any of the investigators, nothing from the prosecutor'sok office. so we are looking atq this allegation just as you and your audience are.q but even iffá we are to accept this allegation is!u true, as correctly said, mr. o'reilly, it doesn't xdexplain the other sho and the fact that michael brown jr., everybody says, he was running aw!vt from the police officer, and so that's what his familyok is beggingxd for and a for charges to be brought so there can be a trial and it can be transparent so they can see 1e transparent so they can see when you read the articleçó in
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obviously leakedq by a federal official, could have been the fbi, we can't speculate. but it's somebody whoñiçó has s this evidence, there's no doubt about it. that article raiseslpq reasonab that's what it does. so it couldn't have been good news for you if you believeok aó injustice was done, and i assume you do. that article could not have been good news for you. >> well, wefá don't seeñzit as that, mr. o'reilly. because, remember, from day one, his friend said that the police officer tried to pull him into get away and there was a shot fired and they took off running. and soçó this is very consisten with what his friends said from the very beginning. >> okay.oklpok it would be very rare.jf >> and i understand that you're going -- that friend has to be takencxdçó, his testimony has t
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looked at. but it's very rare that a police officer tries tot( pull somebod through the window of a car. a police car, too.t( j trying, and i don't want to try the casearñ tv. i just want to make this!o cf1 o s2!2q9 >> yes, sir.lphr(t&háhp &hc% >> if mr. brown is trying to get different story than a police officer pulling him into the car. 1át(oilpw3e1 al sharpton. and i know you've associated i wasj him and surprised to see that, by the way. convicting the police officer in the media. that doesn't seem to be fair to me. >> xdwell, i think, reverend als well as many of hislp supporter are saying that we don'tlaoçóñ this secret proceeding. h2q:uz need isra trial that's very transparent and that due process not only forxd the poli officer, but also for michael brown jr. >> i think he further than that, though? don't you think he goes further than that? and the grand jury is our system here.
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to say we don't need it is a little arrogant. don't you think mr. sharpton and others have gone a little bit further than w3that? they've basically convicted the you haven't. i haven't heard you do it, but they have. and i just -- that makesi=$kk i think makes all fair-minded people a little queasy.r >> well, mr. o'reilly, i think one thing -- in reference to the grand jury, it's a choice by the prus!cutor to take it to the grand jury. >> but it's the systezíñs7ñó >> well, no, because probable éo cause, he can just charge, prosecutors do it every day. especially a lot of people in that community in ferguson, they 9a grand jury, he just charges -- >> but in a case like this. let me defend the prosecutor for a moment.xr in a case like this that is that high profile, they want to make sure that the evidence is heard from an impartial grand jury. and i think that's a responsible way to go. question. you're a stand up guy. you think that.+ >> i won't dodge your question.
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and i enjoy coming on yourñr sh. >> i think many others, including okafrican-americans, don't likeçó okanyone, any amer being convicted in the media by people like al sharpton.ó[e1 >> well, i think it's not justó reverend sharpton. it's everybody hashu an opinio but i think you're right. we should have everybody get their due process. the police officer should beñiñ innocent until proven guilty. and i think all the supporters have been saying that they want their triale1 --çó >> not all of them. >> to be transparent. but then youçó want due process mr. brown. >> certainly. >> we want it to be çot(r). >> absolutely. >> that's what we always talk about. ñ simpatico on that. we'll talk to you again and we appreciate you coming on. on religious people caught upñi in the intense gay marriag controversy. later, carl rovee1 on who
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republicans want to run against hillary clinton for president. up ahead. e announcer ] you change your style. why not your eye color? new air optix® colors prescription contact lenses enhance your eye color for a naturally beautiful look with consistent comfort. find your perfect color and get a free trial offer at airoptixcolors.com.
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as you may know, the federal courts aret( legalizing gay marriage all over the country. and in idaho, two christianjf ministers say they're being threatened legally if they do not perform gay wedding ceremonies. )jz has filed a federal lawsuit on the behalf. also in houston, texas, a gay marriage controversy involving let's take the houston situation first. apparently there are church apparently there are church sermons involved or were >> that's correct. there was a subpoena issued in a civil suit in which the city of houston is a defendant. this lawsuit issued a subpoenae
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forq all these religious record, including _ñr sermons of a certain group of ministers who were involved in the activismçó that relates tofá anrordinance that the city passed that these ministers and others are tryinì% to get repealed through a referendum and that's what gave rise to the civil suit. and this and otherçó things. and that caused a big uproar in houston. andt( the mayor has now said we shouldn't ask for the sermons. and she's taken the words thefá basically, there she isç! still stands and is still being -- >> okay. what's in play here is houston passed a city ordinance saying it can't discriminate against anybody, and was led by this mayor who is ançó oám' lesbian. and in order to get that out of thereçó they wanted to vote. the houstonians, some wanted to
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vote on this local law that was passed. >> they wanted to referendum them -- >> to g-ta it t(out. it's obviously a subjective thing. and anybody can bew3 hauled int cou court. things. >> what happened is, bill, they get -- they get the number ofe1 signatures on the petition. >> and they don't want it on thó ballot. >> the mayorxd and her group thw out a lot of theñi signatures saying they were invalid. >> right. >> the pastors and others are suing saying that'se1 not -- th was a false claim. and the thing should go forward and it's in the context of that litigation this subpoena was issued. >> it's my theory that the rulings by thet( federal judgesd legalize gay marriage emboldened these people to run over the constitution. and i'll point to idaho wherer twolp ministers, christians, sa we do+5ñw3jf want to perform ga marriages and then the town going to prosecute you.
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>> yeah, th have axdok wedding chapel calì%u$et( hitching post. it's not ac churchnñá they are ordained ministers, but they have this wedding chapel where they do these weddings, these marriages and they sayxd, think corí!tly, it is against their faith. their religiou3ñf beliefs to perform homosexual marriages. so they are now under threat >> legal -- being locked up ifq they don't o them at the hitching lpokpost. i don't think the city would try it if these were church weddings. but because they've got this qoomercial establishment where weddings are performed. >> but they are christian ministers. >> yes, they are, legitimate ministersé ministers. no doubt about that. and being asked to do something against their faith. >> the whole idea isñrxd the peo in these towns have taken the federal rulings and go, we're going to now come after you us. >> well, i have many doubts, bill, as to what they're trying
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pqntand in court. my guess is it probably will not. the courts will either say on freedom of religion grounds they don't have to do this or the courts could simply say under the freedom and restoration act, which is what the supreme court used in the famous hobby lobby case, they wouldn't have to do this.r >> the ordeal these folks have to go through. >> that's right. they're having to go through this. you're right. >> all right. plenty more ahead as xd"the factor" moves on this ñievening. >> whoñi republicans would likeo run for president in 2016. karl rove on that. and then the ebola edition.d >> do you think the çócdc has de (q.ejáuháo combat ebola here in america? >> i think so. >> do you know who the cdc is? >> correctional? >> stay tuned for those reports. it's monday. a brand new start. your chance to rise and shine. with centurylink as your trusted technology partner, you can do just that. with our visionary cloud infrastructure, global broadband network and custom communications solutions,
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personal story segment. last week, i had a little go about white privilege. that's the liberal theory that says black americas. have a harder time making it because of historical injustice.t(ñi and the white power structure.xd after the debate, i asked fox news contributor stacy dash, thf actress who is mixed race to talk with me about her lifec, which has beenq somewhat difficult. but ms. dash has overcome adversity in an interesting way. >> so i met you for the first ueñ in los emmy thing. and i was talking to you, i was
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stunned, and i really mean that, about how tough your upbringing was.ñixd all right. let's start with your biological parents.i] both of them were drugraddicts. is that correct? >> yes. to understand it? >> growing up, i couldn't understand why they weren't around or why certain things xd happening or moving so much. and, you know, just didn't understand. >> when youxg told me that you were an angry girl. >> yes. >> and how did that manifest itself? mad than sad. you know, when you have so much sadness, it's justñifáçó -- it' excruciating. and i found if i were çóangry, motivated me more. >> how did that demonstrate itself? >> it did in just my actions. >> and then fights break out? >> well, yeah. i had to fight a lot. >> why? >> i had toq/jut that i w going to be pushed around.e1 >> why would theyb/uár you
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around? you look like a nice person?$xl% >> well, because they call me an oreo or -- >> because you were mixedt( racá >> yeah,t( thought i was betterr than somebody or whatever. >> so you were physically fighting? >> yeah. physically fighting. i'd find the biggest one, the biggest bully and that's therone i'd takei] out. >> and kick the biggest bully's -- tqt rñ i'm not going. i'll take you out fast. >> you were a tough, crude >> and then finally, you get into high school. >> i wentçó toi] catpo3% schoo los angeles.lp then i came to jersey and went to the public school. >> public school. okay. but something happens to you, right? >> %/gwell, i was always a good student. i was always a good student. because inçó sixth grade, mr. t( ackerman, my teacher, he inspired me so much.7oo and made me love learning. >> and then you run away? >> i wasxnangry because i was a
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ballerina, and i got accepted to the dancet( studio and my mom wouldn't let me go. i thought, nothing i do is going to be good enough. and i couldn't have that mentality. >> where did you run away to? >> you graduated from high school and decided to become an actress? >> yep. >> how did yout( get "clueless"? that was your big break. >vxdñr at least i wouldn't skin pt when i read it, i knew i pacf wouldçeet it. >> then you get the movie and you become a movie star. of some note. >> of some note. >> okay. after xdthat, you have childrenf your own, right?jf >> yes. >> bunchlp ofçó turbulent relationships with men. >> yes. >> so your world is still kind of chaotic, right? >> but then something happens to straighten it out. >> really just happened recently in the past four or five years. and i realized thatçó angerjf i unsustainable.
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it couldn't keepjf motivating m. so i had to find another way.ñr and i just got closer to god. i just decided to surrender.çóxd >> to let god map out your life for you and accept what happens? >> yes. >> once you did that, all right, >> doors opened that i never thought would. >> give me an example. >> this job.lp ii] never in a million years wod iáuá+ycçói] news. >> how hard is it to grow up biracial? it's no different. kpit's how you. >> it's true. >> how you execute it, how you live your life. what you are. >> you bring a different perspective from a point of view that's hard scrabble. >> right. >> you correct me if i'm wrong. but you don't believe that sh!qeueñ you down, do you? >> no, i don't. now all we have to do is walk in the opportunity.ñi but what has to happen is the disenfranchised and the
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uninformed need to be educated. >> but youçó seexwprofessv)s li cornell west and princeton and very well-educated people saying to minority people, you know what, no matter what happens, it's not your fault. it'sñi white privilege. >> no, and that's the propaganda that's ñrfalse. then that makes it someone else's fault. . your life, your destiny, is dependent on someone else. that's not true. >> are you a happy person now as an adult?w3 >> yes. to me, i say everybody has stuff. everybody has stuff. and you got to koovercome it. >> that's it. >> and you have. >> it's your responsibility. >> i'm so happy. >> very interesting interview, i thought. against hillary clinton in 2016c later, college kids goingñr wild in new hampshire. wait until@2suu$is moments away. i'm not afraid. i can face my 3rd grade class trip. tying shoes, fixing pigtails.
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thanks for staying with us. i'm bill o'reilly, and the election 2016 segment tonight. it is widely believed that hillary clinton will run for president onq the democratic ticket. but who will chalte7bujuñt( new poll from the "washington post," abc news asked republicans who they support.lpa mitt romney, 21%. look at that.r
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jeb bush, 11%,çói]q mike huckabd 9%, chrisñic christie, 6%, marc rubio, 6%, ben carson, 5%, paul ryan, 5%. joining us now from las vegas karl t( rove. does thatñi poll surprise you? >> a little bit, but not in the way you'd expect.lpfá i would expect mitt romney to have ae1 higher number than ñi2. my suspicion is if people thought he was running, his ljt. but i think most republicans have concluded from what he said over the last two years that he's not a candidate, will not be a candidate, is not going to be a candidate. particularly when his wife said as she said recently that they're done, done, done with that. but i -- if he were a candidate or perspective candidate or people assumed that he was goin( to run, i think hisy1 number wod be higher. >>txd all right. r @r(t&háhp &hc% u(uq- >> you are a too sensitive kind of guy. >> why would any human being on
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this planet get up at 5:00 in the morning to talk t+á chris wallacejf on fox news sunday ife or she was not running for president as mitt romney recently did?xd >> he's been very energetic -- >> no, he's talkinglp about himself. >> i know, but i was with him on friday. people asked him that question. he said, look, i owe it to these one of the first people in the state senate tot( endorse me. i feel an obligation to these people. >> you believe that romney's not running for president? >> look, i -- i -- look, i think this. i think right now, he doesn't want to be a jfcandidate. i think there might be circumstances he might accept a draft. but we don't have drafts in modern american politics.jl!r(t% >> he's goingxt you, wait and see. let's turn over to the senate and some races are tightening. this is stunning.ñi the denver post, all right, the marijuana-laced newspaper.%/g has endorsed the republican b(i was stunned.w3 >> yeah, it was a powerful
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endorsement. lot.hp &hc%s don't matter a t&há but when they run counter to type and the denver post is seen as ak center left paper and strongxd endorsement. they say he was a candidate of a new generation of leadership of the state.çó they pointed to his ability to work across party lines to his fiscal conservatism. and, look, they also hit mark lp 1j55uur @r(% campaign. asked the senatort-t he knew he was being referred to as senator uterus becausexd all he was emphasizing was abortion and óa% >> yeah, war on women. >> and it fell flat. the point was, women are conomyçóñi, the security of thet( country, health, health care, a lot of things and not -- >> are you willing to predict that he loses? >> i think he is going to lose. >>pcyñright. >> real clear politics average -- the real clearçó politics arrange 46%, 43%, gardner in front.
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and if you look at it since octoberxd 1st, the gap was a pot and a half. today it's a kothree-point gap. imbalance. -!il-in ballots. everyone mails in their i]ballo. if you take a look, as of last night, republicans were 46.8% of t/ose wh71t$áqáurned their ballots thus far.xdi] >> xdinteresting. i only have two minutes to get in three races, all right? new hampshire, scott brown, gaining you say. kerjuáy the real clearxd politics avera has him down 2.5%, as the first of october, he was down 4%. this is a state where retail campaigning matters. he's the best retail campaigner on the republican side. he's closing, the question is, will he close fast enough and far enough?c hagan, theok incumbent still ráh @r(t&háhp &hc% getting txuq). >> yeah.c much tighter. tom ñixdtillis was 4.2% behind the october 1st real clearñi politics average. and today, he's down 1.2%.
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and interesxjyenough, he's running the bill o'reilly play. ebola, isis and a late-breaking scandal that was discovered thai senator hagan's husbandxdq took $400,000 in stimulus monelsjf literally a couple of months after she went to the united states senate andxdçó voted for state --e1 and turned around an took the ]y00,000 to modernize his manufacturing plant and hired his son to do the programs. and took the $400,000. and when the son cameq in ñr $114,000 under budget, thet( ñ]%1e rather than returning thd money to the federal government, pocketed the unused money. >> that's not good. i have now, 20 seconds in iowa.á joanieñi ernst, does she win? >> she's up by ;÷2.5%, which is where she was at the beginning of the month. but interestingly enough, the democrats have returned 11, about 400,000 of the 1 million voters are going to vote early.
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who have requested early ballots than republicans. and xd3,han returned them. but compared tm3 four years ago the democrats then had a 23,000 advantage on requests, had a 17,000 advantage on ballots returned, andh(vey still lost the lpelection. they lost the governor's race, 53, 43, and the senate e1race, 63-33. board into the casino. don'txdw3 try, the bouncers wil grab you. >> i don't gamble. i don't gamble.(a besides -- >> your prediction record.r that is a wise move. >> oh, that was -- that wasqe1,u know, that was personal and petty.xdt( that was personal and petty.ñi >> that's me. karl rove, everybody. waters on deck. he has the ebola edition for us. a> then college kids chaos in new hampshire. say it three times.xd colleq%&kids chaos. right back with those reports. ig a pm pain reliever
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back of the book segm waters worldt( polls show mt americans are well aware of the ebola situation, and many are very concerned. so we sent waters through the port to sample what the folks are saying.xdçó >> what do you think about this whole ebola controversy. >> from where? >> here in the united states. >> oh, it'se1 nice. >> comes from the dirty water. heard of ebola? >> no.xd >> it's a deadly virus. >> oh,t(jf like a bugxd virus. because i had itt( re%reeáey i was vehyx sick. i found myself sick toñi my stomach. very catchy, çótoo. >> that'sc scary. >> xdpersonally, i think people are overreacting aboutx
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>> i think it is the conspiracy. >> how does the conspiracy work? >> networking.jf due to science.q >> how do you get ebola? >> juices, fluids, sex.xd >> your eyes turn very red. >> how do i know i have it? >> your eyes turn very red, you get headaches, you get stomachaches. >> it's sort of like a bleeding fever. it's very scary. i wish there was more information available publicly to let me know what i could do. >> what are you so nervous about? >> what country did ebola come from? >> united states. >> europe? >> does not come from europe. >> south america. >> south africa, right? >> in africa, i believe the animals in the jungle and stuff like that, they've been doing a lot of experiments.
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>> now, do you ever ride the bus? >> yeah, i just rode the bus. >> the cdc says you can give ebola to someone on the bus but you can't get ebola from someone on the bus. >> really? that's weird. >> did you know you can give ebola on a bus but you can't get ebola on a bus? >> what you talking about, willis? >> do you think the cdc has done enough to combat ebola here in america? >> i think so. >> do you know who the cdc is? >> the correctional -- i don't know. >> center for disease control. that's what the cdc is. >> they don't talk like that where i come from. >> where do you come from? >> i come from heaven. >> god bless you. the president just czar to oversee the ebola crisis. do you think that's a good idea? >> ever since he's been president, he knows exactly what he's been doing. >> do you know what a czar is? >> no. >> oh, she's adorable. >> the person that he's
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appointed has some knowledge. >> actually, "the czathe czar ta appointed has no medical knowledge what soevewhatsoever. >> do you think obama has done enough for people here in america? >> he got people jobs. >> does that fight ebola? >> he's done what he can, he's signing bills left and right. >> do you think president obama has done enough to combat ebola? >> no, we wouldn't be here. now that it's here, it's too late. >> do you watch "bill o'reilly"? >> no. >> obama is controlling this interview right now, then? >> he is controlling this interview. >> the president is telling me something. okay. thank you, mr. president. did you ever watch "water
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world"? he wants to know. >> yes. yes, i did. >> there's always one guy in the locker room that's going to run aroundxsnapping towels at the other guy's privates zch. >> here's a piece of advice. don't mock the interview subject in new york city on the street. >> you're giving me advice about mocking people? >> not there. if you want to mock it here, that's for sure. anyway, it's the same old story, right? >> they don't know anything. >> they don't watch the news, they don't read the newspaper. >> it's understandable because the cdc is confused about what ebola is, and that's why people are confused, too. >> on a bus you can give it but you can't get it? >> it doesn't make any sense. >> we have a halloween assignment you're going to like. a week from today, okay? >> sounds spooky. >> we're asking to you vote in our brand newbi bill o'reilly
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poll, should jesse watters guest host the factor? yes or no. kids going wild at the pumpkin fest. you got to see it. the tip, moments away. i hadn't been successful. quitting smoking this time was different because i talked to my doctor and i... i got a prescription for chantix. along with support, chantix (varenicline) is proven to help people quit smoking. it was important to me that chantix was a non-nicotine pill. the fact that it reduced the urge to smoke helped me get that confidence that i could do it. some people had changes in behavior, thinking or mood, hostility, agitation, depressed mood and suicidal thoughts or actions while taking or after stopping chantix. if you notice any of these, stop chantix and call your doctor right away. tell your doctor about any history of mental health problems, which could get worse while taking chantix. don't take chantix if you've had a serious allergic or skin reaction to it. if you develop these, stop chantix and see your doctor right away as some can be life-threatening. tell your doctor if you have a history of heart or blood vessel problems, or if you develop new or worse symptoms. get medical help right away if you have symptoms of a
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heart attack or stroke. use caution when driving or operating machinery. common side effects include nausea, trouble sleeping and unusual dreams. i am very proud. i love myself as a nonsmoker. ask your doctor if chantix is right for you. ♪ [safety beeping] ♪ [safety beeping] ♪ [safety beeping] ♪ the nissan rogue, with safety shield technologies. the only thing left to fear is your imagination. ♪ nissan. innovation that excites. i'm saving a ton of time by posting them to my wall. oh, i like that one. it's so quick! it's just like my car insurance. i saved 15% in just 15 minutes. i saved more than that in half the time. i unfriend you. that's not how it works.
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that's not how any of this works. [ male announcer ] 15 minutes for a quote isn't how it works anymore. with esurance, 7 1/2 minutes could save you on car insurance. welcome to the modern world. esurance. backed by allstate. click or call. "the factor" tip of the day, college kids gone wild at the pumpkin fest in new hampshire. first, we are on our annual campaign college kids gone wild at the pumpkin fest in new hampshire. first we are on our campaign to convince you to become a bil billoreilly.com member. you get any of my books free. also you can directly speak with me on the message boards. we hope you check it all out on billoreilly.com. o'reilly, you seem obsessed with a travel ban.
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has it ever crossed your mind that thomas duncan was unaware that he had ebola when he entered the usa? >> here's what's on my mind. mr. duncan knew he had helped a woman who eventually died of ebola. he knew that. he also knew he had been exposed to the disease but he did not tell american immigrant officials. in fact, they lied to him. and they had no way of verifying his story. the incubation period of three weeks. all countries should honor the ban. another one, bill, your analysis of the obama administration's foot-dragging on the travel ban has been excellent. mr. kurtz said some on the right believe the president is not instituting a travel ban because he's sympathetic to africans. you should have asked him to identify those people.
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bill, regarding your tip. in my house, we, too, had to clean our plates. my mom said there were starving kids in africa. i said name one. i, too, spent some time in my room. bill, just finished killing patton and was reminded how the unchecked evil of hitler and stalin is ever present in the world today. i'm going to be in charleston and i'm geeked up about it. i don't know what geeked up means, but we'll be there, too. and i promise you you'll like it. in new hampshire, the annual pumpkin fest was held over the weekend. unfortunately, it was raided by college kids who got rowdy after drinking heavily. in covering the story, this is what happened. >> the festival coordinator is on-site here. she's not letting me do my job and report to you. she would not like me to tell you what is going on at king state college. >> so if you think inciting
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these people is a good idea, i'm going to pull the plug on you. because you're here as a guest of king pumpkin festival and i assigned you this spot. >> you heard it here, first, buddy. when you report the news, when you report the reality, the people in charge want to shut you down. this is against freedom of the press, folks. >> quite a live shot. but here's a tip of the day. we continue to tell all 4ujáták that if you become er intoxicated in public, it is very likely that that will be captured on a cell phone and put out there on the net where it will remain forever. anything you do in the public arena can now ruin your life. some of those keene students are going to be expelled. not a great thing to have on your resume. wise up, stay sober. please check out our website,
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billoreilly.com. word of the day, do not be a jackanapes. again, thanks for watching us tonight. i'm bill o'reilly. please always remember that the spin stops right here. we're definitely looking out for you. out for you. breaking tonight, the centers for disease control orders a dramatic change when it comes t breaking news tonight, the centers for disease control orders a dramatic change when it comes to handling ebola, ditching the rules it was defending on this broadcast less than a week ago and raising new questions about how they are dealing with this virus. good evening, everybody. i'm martha mccallum in tonight for megyn kelly. the cdc made an announcement, that they've outlined tough new standards for anyone coming in contact with ebola. it was just last week that thomas frieden was on "the kelly files" defending the
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