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tv   The Five  FOX News  February 10, 2015 2:00pm-3:01pm PST

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they're fair and balanced. i talked to them all. you hear from this guy and what he is proposing what we do about fixing up ferguson he goes there and helps out. what's that other guy who -- i mean, just me. i'm kimberly gill foi, dana frein know and it's 5:00 in new york city and this is "the five." not only won't president obama you thor the words islamic terrorism, he now refuses to acknowledge that the victims of last month's attack at a jewish deli in paris were targeted for their faith. >> it is entirely legitimate for the american people to be deeply concerned when you've got a bunch of violent vicious zealots who behead people or
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randomly shoot a bunch of folks in a deli in paris. >> and that comment wasn't randomly made by the president. today the white house backed it up. >> the adverb that the president chose was used to indicate that the individuals who were killed in that terrible tragic incident were killed not because of who they were but because of where they randomly happened to be. >> they weren't killed because they were in a jewish deli, a kosher deli? >> these individuals were not targeted by name. that's the point. >> not by name but by religion, were they not? >> john there were people other than just jews who were in that deli. >> do you think that deli was attacked because it was a kosher deli? >> no, john. >> it was a kosher deli. >> i answered the question once, no. >> then why didn't the president acknowledge that? if he knows that and it's obvious, why didn't he say that. >> the president has
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acknowledged it. >> somebody call doctor. all four of the victims killed in the paresian kosher deli were jewish. their funeral held in jerusalem but even the state department stunningly won't acknowledge their religion. >> does the administration really believe that the victims of this attack were not singled out because they were of a particular faith? >> well as you know i believe if i remember this victim specifically, there were -- there were not all victims of one background or one nationality nationality. >> does the administration believe this was an antijewish -- an attack on jewish community in paris? >> i don't think we're going to speak on behalf of french authorities. >> it just keeps getting worse at an alarming rate. taking on these comments and the communications coming out of the white house the state department. >> i've been nearly unable to breathe since i saw that, and i would tell -- you've got to go back and watch the entire state department and white house
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briefing because you cannot believe that they're actually saying what they're saying. they're arguing about the president's adverbs. then after they leave the podium, after those performances they both go back to their desk and they tweet something that says, we have been perfectly clear all along that it was an act of anti-semitism. okay. so is tweeting better than speaking? in this world now are we just supposed to say, okay, let's go to twitter and not believe that what you said at the podium five minutes ago is what the president has asked you to say? the other thing that bothered me, and i don't know how this happened, so that interview that the president gave was on january 23rd. vox then does a whole bunch of hocus-pocus editing makes him look slick. then they don't release it until february 8th or 9th. if you are a staffer for the president of the united states, you are in the room when the president gives an interview like that. it doesn't occur to you that you might have a problem. >> when this happens? >> you don't try to fix it beforehand. all of a sudden they think this
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is a partisan attack on the president. i actually think that the president owes the jews of europe an apology. they deserve better from the president of the united states. anti-semitism is on the rise and somebody must stick up for them. >> how about the jews of the world deserve an apology? take it a step further. eric, your reaction to this. you think they would have a chance to figure it out and fix it. instead, semantics gymnastics. >> that was a couple of weeks ago. >> january. >> it just came out recently. there was a time where they could have pulled that interview down but they choose to go with it. president obama says a bunch of folks, won't say terrorists, killing people a bunch of folks killed some people in a deli in terrorists. then josh earnest backs and fills and says here's why it wasn't anti-semitism, because they weren't mentioned by name. think of every single hate crime that's prosecuted in this country. are you going to -- is that going to be the standard for hate crimes if the victim is mentioned by name before they're
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killed or beat up or done whatever to? so that's ridiculous. here's my problem. josh earnest up until this round has been pretty darn good, i think. he's been respectable. this josh earnest right there that we just saw today reminded me of jay carney and for the first time since he has taken over, what are we about a year now into this. josh, what's going on? josh, you had us. >> save yourself. get a head hunter. get a job. >> yes, terrible. greg. >> well, let's -- this is a very easy way to look at this. they are terror denialists. they deny terror at every place. so when islamists kill jews they blame the butterfly effect. it's like 9/11 was due to fog. this is not a white house this is an outhouse they're so full of crap. if a cop, an american cop shoots someone who just committed a strong-armed robbery they indict the entire justice system.
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they call it a systematic condemnation of a corrupt system, but when an islamist goes to a kosher market and kills a group of jews that's random. they could see root causes in everything except the truth. what are they scared of? what are they frightened of? why won't they say what's happening there? language yet they can't articulate a single truth. i finally realized what it is. all this years that they have been talking about islamophobia. they are truly the islamophobic ones. they have such a profound fear, president obama and his white house, have such a profound fear of islam that it for bids them of identifying actual terror attacks on jews. they can't bring themselves to do it because they're terrified of islam. they are the islamophobes. >> if only we could get a vaccination to prevent this widespread epidemic at the white
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house. bob, what do you think of these comments? how do you even reconcile the fact that they are not even responding or tuning in to the horrifying nature of these statements they're making? >> well, a couple of things. one, i think that racism, the fear of -- i happen to think from obama's standpoint probably the like of. in other words i think he's -- he as i say yesterday grew up in this climate. how can you stand there and say this is a jewish kosher deli. yes, can you not name the people that are shot? what are the chances that the people in that delicatessen are jewish. probably pretty high? >> don't forget that the shooter calls a reporter french reporter afterwards and they say, why did you do it? he said, i wanted to kill some jews. >> how much more clear do you need to be? how much more transparent? >> today josh earnest, these are his words, talking about the people who were killed were
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killed not because who they were but were killed because of where they randomly happened to be. the tweet this is josh earnest's tweet, his words, our view has not changed. it was motivated by anti-semitism. >> then why didn't you say that? >> are we so stupid that we're not going to hold them accountable for within you know, hours that they completely refute the words -- the very words that they spoke to the world really? it's not just america it's to the world. they're at their podium. everyone across every state, every state department across the globe is watching what josh ernest is saying. >> would you imagine if you had to go into the department store and do this or did you have to stop and look at stars of david on everybody's neck. of course you're going to go with the largest concentration of where people who are jewish happen to be. from the beginning it doesn't make sense. i'm going to leave it at that. >> let's see who is left to offend. the christians, the jews don't
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offend the muslims. let's turn to the president's prayer breakfast. >> remember that during the crusade and inquisition, people committed terrible deeds in the name of christ. >> last night bill o'reilly asked obama's former aid david axlerod why he would choose to make such a remark that would rile up christians. axlerod's answer the president knew exactly what he was doing. >> i think he knew what he was saying. he knew that it was provocative, absolutely i think he knew that. >> then why would he do it? >> because his point is that we have a quarter of the world's population islamic and the vast majority, the vast majority of them have nothing to do with extremism. let's isolate the extremists just as we wouldn't blame every christian for the acts of some christians and every jew for the acts of some jews. >> is this a sufficient
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explanation? >> in a way, president obama treated the prayer breakfast the way kanye west treated the grammys. he reminded my of the cliched freshman college students. at dinner err wants to freak everybody out by dropping some knowledge on them. >> in his women's studies class. >> yes. it's always about the powerful versus the powerless. to him a killer bee is a bee that's fought imperialism. >> do you notice how many kids leave as capitalists and come back as communists. >> how does that happen? >> i have no idea. why obama doesn't give near the same answer is what gets me. it was an understandable statement. >> eric, is it as simple as people are saying, that president obama is not doing a very good job this week explaining himself? what's your explanation? >> i'm trying to figure out why, axlerod points this out, he knew what he was doing. if he knew what he was doing,
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why did he, a, do it and b, why did they write this speech for him. this is a prayer breakfast. are you supposed to be provocative about people dying at a prayer breakfast or are you supposed to be praying, uniting? you're laughing but i'm trying to -- >> no. >> i would guarantee you if they had that speech to do over again, that wouldn't be in the speech next time. >> dana he was poking the cage with the christians inside. >> i think we've established that it probably wasn't the best -- if you wanted to have this teachable moment you could have found another place to do it than at the national prayer breakfast. he had the intended effect. what they should have done you have an obligation when you're in the white house to make sure what the president is going to say is true. you can call a couple of historians to check it out. saturday morning february 26th about this speech they quote several historians who say actually very few historians have the view that president obama has. everybody has moved past that. the consensus view by the
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historians, not republicans historians, is how he described it is not how it happened. >> that -- >> i mean they could have done a little bit more fact checking if the president wanted to include that in his speech. they have an obligation to him to help him get it right. >> it was an adolescent comment. it's like a youtube comment on a cat video. there wasn't -- but there was no intellect in that. >> unless one other alternate theory would be that he got so burned when ben carson stood up and took him -- took obamacare apart that this was his moment to make good on it, his moment to get back in the spotlight saying, i've got this now. don't do it to me again and it made it worse. >> they said the president wanted it to be provocative but they didn't expect a full throated day long debate. >> i must be missing something here. they weren't denying there were crusades, right? >> no. the reason for the crusades were not fw going after muslims but about sacred territory. >> i gotcha. >> important to get your facts
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right. the white house confirms the death of a fourth american isis hostage as a former cia official casts doubt on the administration strategy to defeat the terror network next. shopping online is as easy as it gets. wouldn't it be great if hiring plumbers, carpenters and even piano tuners were just as simple? thanks to angie's list now it is. start shopping online from a list of top-rated providers. visit angieslist.com today.
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today the white house confirmed a fourth american hostage of isis is dead. 26-year-old kayla -- >> weekend. >> clay's parents received a private message from her isil captors with additional information about her death. that information was shared with the intelligence community. they conducted a review and an analysis and after that analysis was completed they concluded that kayla has, in fact, died. >> the terror network claimed mueller was killed by a jordanian airstrike last week but u.s. intelligence has not found evidence of that. the white house reported one other american is being held in the middle east. the news comes as concerns grow over the administration's strategy to defeat isis. here's cia deputy director mike
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morell former. >> one of the things that has happened over the last six months as we have conducted airstrikes against isis in iraq and syria is that their brand is spreading. this is happening at a speed much greater than al qaeda's brand ever spread. the only thing we can do is take the fight to these guys in iraq and syria because as long as there's a perception that they are winning as long as they are doing well there their brand is going to continue to spread. >> and in order to address that spreading, kimberly, the united states is about to embark on another debate about the use of military force. so the white house now finally has put forward language to the senate asking for the authorization to use military force, called an aumf, that they now say that they need. and i think that that's good turnabout, that if we're going to have this debate we should at least have the white house's input. >> yeah, about time and four hostage deaths too late. that's the problem here.
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just like we had the information, direct intel to be able to go and rescue these hostages. the obama administration waited seven weeks. kathryn harris reporting for fox news there were three specific sites and they were being rotated amongst those sites and when you hesitate, you lose. time kills all deals and rescue operations. you have to have that element of surprise. when i see things like this and it's a failure to act, i would hope that we would learn because we shouldn't tolerate anymore of this. there has to be some specific leadership. there were people put in office that we wanted a change in america. let's see them bring about that change and put the pressure on the administration and feet to the fire. >> bob you actually don't think that the administration needs a new authorization to use military force. i think the one from 2001 suffices but the problem for the white house is in july they no longer said they needed that. now isis is on the scene and they say they want a different one. something they've done that is troubling to some democrats apparently, i wonder if you can talk about their concern, is it
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used to be before they sent this language that they were going to limit the geographical area for which you could target people. that actually has been taken out. now i guess that we are back to a global war on terror. >> yeah. i thought that was the most interesting part. also, the existing troops that are there now and i'm curious how many -- this is going to add up to. frankly, i'd find it hard to believe that they didn't act -- if they thought they could save hostages and they had intel and told them where they were, why would they stop doing it? that i don't understand. >> it's in the history of hesitation and failure to act in a timely fashion. that has been well-documented. we have six years of this. doesn't mean that eventually they're going to try to come around to do the right thing, but the element of surprise and timeliness is crucial especially to clandestine operations, bob, and anyone involved in that will tell you that. >> i wanted to ask. it's probably a good thing for the president that the republicans took over the senate. they're more likely to give him what he wants. >> yeah, he'll probably get what he wants.
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there's so much news that came out in the last 24 hours that the jordanians have now put thousands of troops on the jordan border to kind of thwart any further isis. the uae -- >> iraqi border. >> on their own side of the border, right. but more so to show of force to the isis fighters. also the uae has now started -- has resumed the airstrikes. i'm thinking that a lot of this has to do with jordan being so successful with their airstrikes. a quick thought. the iraqi army has hundreds of thousands of personnel 250,000 kurd peshmerga in the area. the airstrikes seem to be softening them up a little bit. am i crazy to say draw a line saying, i don't know march 1st april 1st whatever the date is. if you're friendly and in the area of isis, your life is at risk. that day just unleash hell on them, drop bombs, carpet bombs.
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if there's collateral damage they've been warned. it seems like -- >> you should write that up. we'll send it over to the pentagon. >> let me get cracking here. we have 1:00 left. i want to get your thoughts. there are generals like general john allen and you have secretary of state john kerry saying everything is goings very smoothly. then you hear from former cia deputy director mike morell saying, no we're not in good shape. what do you think the truth is? morell? >> do you go to those weird bars? do you ever see those drunk guys fighting and there's always a strategy that you wait for the drunk guy to pass out from exhaustion from throwing punches until they fall over. that's their strategy. they keep thinking somehow isis is going to be exhausted. they forget the problem is there's no exhaustion when you keep getting an influx of new fighters. they're never going to get tired especially if they're winning. >> don't get it. every good fighter knows the first punch wins the fight. >> exactly especially in the right spot. my solution is you know police
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have these stings where they send out letters saying you've won a new boat, bob, you've gotten this. you show up at the convention to get a boat and you get arrested because they have an outstands warrant. our government needs to create attractions like a bug lamp to get roaches to come to them whether it is creating a fake outpost or fake magazine like "charlie hebdo" that entices terror to create places for isis to flock to so you can then bomb them whether it's a place that you believe there are aide workers, there are troops. i think we need to be every bit as evil and devious as they are. the difference between jordan and the united states is isis didn't know what jordan would do. with jordan they kicked a hornet's nest. with the united states they've been knocking on a hollow log. it's time to change. >> they've got hundreds of thousands that we changed to the extent of hundreds of millions of dollars and they were the first ones to cut and run in the face of isis. >> i don't want to get into
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that. >> they're our allies. >> geez. >> especially leading them without the training that they need. . how does someone that owes our country millions of dollars in taxes get so much from the president? president obama and al sharpton next. ♪ take you back to where the grass is greener ♪ know that chasing performance can mean lower returns and fewer choices in retirement. know that proper allocation could help increase returns so you can enjoy that second home sooner. know the right financial planning can help you save
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a new report out shows just how close president obama is to the divisive civil rights leader and known tax evader al sharpton. according to the wall street journal the msnbc host couldn't attend nelson mandela's funeral so president obama brought him back a momento. a note praised him for being a fellow worker of justice. he owes millions of dollars in
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taxes. listen to david axlerod try to explain the relationship. >> al sharpton is widely regarded as a leader within the african-american community. >> you think the president respects him? do you think the president respektsz al sharpton? >> well, i think he respects his leadership on some of these issues -- on these civil rights issues, yes, i do. >> he owes millions of dollars to the irs. his organization, millions of dollars. is there any other american in the white house who owes millions of dollars to the white house? >> i don't know i haven't gone through the tax returns of people coming to the white house. >> isn't that strange? >> no, i don't think that's strange. >> man that was a wide ranging interview last night. >> yeah. when faced with islamic terror the president compels us to remember the crusades, which happened 800 or some odd years ago. i would humbly ask him to remember 28 years ago, not too far to the lives ruined.
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al sharpton ended in death. the crown heights riot ended in looting and injury that was with al sharpton. yankle rosenbaum murdered after al sharpton protests. then you have linton lu and rafael ramos. they were killed only two months ago after there were protests led by al sharpton. i would ask president obama to remember that in the context of his -- of whatever beliefs he has if he can. maybe that should inform his decisions about who he has in the white house. >> can i bring this to bob? bob, if i evade my taxes i get an invite to rikers. al sharpton gets an invite to the white house. >> the one thing i will say, i want to come to axlerod's defense. whether we like sharpton or not, it is the black community that
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makes the decision on who their leader is. we can think what a dumb thing it is, but it is what it is. among the black community al sharpton is seen as a leader. that can't be taken away from him. >> nobody is trying to take that away from him. we want to know why he's invited to the white house a lot. >> that's true from his perspective. owing the taxes doesn't bother them. the only thing that bothers them is there are legitimate nonparty tea party groups wanted recognition. that would have been my follow-up question. >> i can answer this question. why al sharpton and not alan west or mia love or thomas soul or ben carson is because they aren't liberal. and they aren't accepted by the media. >> they're not cool. >> they're not in the bag for the president and with the mainstream media. >> do we not have a problem with al sharpton literally saying he ed in
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picking the next attorney general and the attorney general prosecutes tax evaders. >> loretta lynn, we should go after him. >> wouldn't that be good? >> that would be amazing. she should. you have to uphold the law. i don't understand why this guy is given a pass. this is the ultimate, hey we're bffs, tonight worry you don't have to pay uncle sam. it's all good. i'll make up the difference from the tea party folks. i think the president actually likes this guy. look at his face and his smile. i don't even think he's faking it. >> it's genuine. >> it's genuine. it's not african-american groups like him liberal groups like him, community groups. it's not. he likes this guy, i'm telling you. >> every community however, has its own fraud to embrace. you have to remember the crooked evangelists from the 70s and 80s. sharpton might be a long line of them. >> sharpton, he, is liberal. the black community is overwhelmingly liberal. that's probably why. >> they are very conservative.
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pro life, against gay marriage. >> why are they not campaigning? why are republicans not campaigning? >> they have. >> they're making in roads. >> romney didn't. >> did great. >> they're making in roads. >> what's the name of -- who's your senator again? i'm sorry. >> rand paul. >> rand paul went to detroit. >> he's not my senator. else' the kentucky senator. >> senator at heart. >> ted cruz. >> the american sniper murder trial coming up next then lots of speculation on the brian williams situation. we're going to tell you what we know and don't know. >> do we know a lot? ah! come on! let's hide in the attic. no. in the basement. why can't we just get in the running car? are you crazy? let's hide behind the chainsaws. smart. yeah. ok. if you're in a horror movie, you make poor decisions. it's what you do. this was a good idea. shhhh. be quiet. i'm being quiet. you're breathing on me!
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the mother of chris kyle's alleged killer warned the world that her son was a danger. frantically calling the police about his behavior. he was placed in psych care but
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released days later. we know what happened next. chris kyle's murder was shocking given the victim but not so surprising when you hear this from the "journal of the american medical association." today's state run psych patients hold 3500 patients, less than 1/10 since 1995. that's a 95% drop. which may be why as crimes drop we still hear of grisly acts committed by people who shouldn't be on the streets. the problem is we have nowhere to put them. it's the fake logic of closing gitmo. we shut something down with no thought of a replacement. and, so the sick wander and bring anguish to their families. there are many examples unbalanced men pushing women in front of subway trains, overmedicated teens shooting up schools, loners flashing pe des stree ans. why is there no place to put them? there's enough blame to put them around. decades ago mental health asylums were scary.
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we closed them down making the street their home. as the researchers point out, it's time to move beyond stigmas and rebuild these institutions. asylum should be a good thing and it might have saved chris kyle had it been a real thing. k.g., you are the legal mind and you lived in california. that state shut a lot of places down. there was an expectation that communities could have handled them but it wasn't. there was no plan. so we have people on the streets who are dangerous to themselves and others. >> yeah. the problem is people ran from it, right? instead of trying to fix it or make it better make it a place where people could go and get actual treatment, we didn't do it. so you have seen a tremendous amount of people that suffer from mental illness being housed essentially in the criminal justice system. >> right. >> studies have shown that they're woefully inadequate.
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misconduct, behavior problems they end up getting put into solitary confinement which exacerbates the problem worsens the condition and it's a spiral they are unable to get out of. when they are released they are even more incapable of coping and they re-offend. the recidivism. >> the guy that punched the guy to death in union square in and out of prison. the guy that killed the police officers. all of these people. bob, both political parties in my view of guilty for this. you have the left who fought for patient rights and conservatives who saw it as an argument to cut government spending. what should be done? >> well two things happen here almost simultaneously here. a number of court cases brought forward to try to release these people. they won. they were released. geraldo rivera did a string of nasty stories. the problem is you put them out and they're out on the street.
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i know a number of them are friends are mine. a lot of these people have no more reason to be out there than a serial killer. they're ticking time bombs ready to go off. >> affecting society and public safety. >> the sick wander and they wander into the e.r.s. they're slammed and they don't have beds, they're medicated sent back out on the streets until they wander back in or a bed opens up. help me out, dana. the congressman or he ran for congress in maryland or virginia. his son -- >> craggy. >> there was a great documentary. his son had to keep looking for a bed. no beds available. four or five days later there would be a bed available. turns out what happened was he went out and tried to kill him and he was subsequently killed and he was shot. it's a problem. what is the answer? >> yes. >> in this documentary, it points out unless you're willing to step up and spend a lot of
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money, there is no answer. >> we roman at this size the idea of your individual rights. you're allowed to be on the streets. the homeless man becomes symbolic. >> virginia tech. everyone was afraid to offend him or turn him in. they knew they had this problem. it costs lives. you're turning your back on people with serious mental illness. they're vulnerable. we deserve to be hemmed.lped. we should do more of it. >> the compassionate side should do something. there is a public safety cost/benefit. if you want to get technical about the budget you might be able to do that. i think this would be the right thing to do for the working and middle class. craggy should be able to work the system and get his son
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somewhere. people in the working class, middle health, they say, i think my son is in danger. they have no support. they're lost and need help. the compassionate thing would be to help those families and in the name of public safety help everybody else. >> such a good point. >> these states that house people who sell marijuana in small amounts or get arrested for distributing marijuana they should clean out those people and get some beds available for these people. that is a great -- >> county jail not state prison unfortunately. >> whatever. there is some bed space if you get those lower end marijuana users -- >> devote the fund. got to go. next, if brian williams doesn't make it through his war story scandal, matt drudge thinks he knows his replacement. that's ahead.
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a big drop in respect for brian williams. he was 23rd most trusted person in america according to influential research firm.
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now he's down to 835. >> wow. >> no decision yet on his fate but the drudge report is suspecting that savannah guthrie could be first in line to replace him. kimberly, what do you think? >> i like savannah. she's a friend of mine. i think they're looking at her because of her white house contact and her time reporting on the hill. she has some great elements in that aspect but i don't know. isn't she on the "today" show? who's going to replace her there? >> some say the "today" show is more important than the nbc news. what do you think? >> nbc says they're going to make an announcement fairly soon on what they're going to do. lester holt, love that. i hear he's at the top of the list. that would be my pick if i were nbc management. we're burying the lead that brian williams is 835th on the list for trust factor. that ties with willie robertson. that is just so unfair to willie. willie should be so much higher than brian williams. >> how long is that list?
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>> i'm not even -- 835 in this building. 4. >> you're behind the unicorn with the fan anynifanny pack. >> i know i'm in front of -- >> wait. >> what would you like to see? >> it's a no brainer. you have rosie o'donnell leaving "the view." >> because of stress. >> because of stress. >> doing an hour of show is stressful. >> put her in and brian williams can do "the view" and he can regail them with their stories because he wants to be liked and "the view" is the place to do it. >> what a swap. >> dana, you have a favorite? >> no. >> in who should replace brian wills williams. >> we don't know that he is going to leave. he keeps saying he made mistakes. mistakes -- you can make a mistake once, but i don't see embellishing a story and lying about it as a mistake. i don't understand how we've
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turned it into a mistake. >> he keeps saying he saw all of these dead people. he's like that kid in "the sixth sense." >> whether he is he stays on or former, sense. >> whether he stays on or he's the former, does it really matter anymore? the network anchors are just not nearly as important as they used to be. >> you said that yesterday. i guess they're not, but i love the news. >> if i had a psychiatric problem. i don't think it's that big a deal. >> i have always loved the news. network new, cable news. >> hughy lewis should replace him and they should call it hughey lewis and the news. that's the solution, america. >> better than rapping the news. >> one of the other problems is that he was managing editor of the editorial voice that is nbc
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news, too, and when you have the guy who is managing editor whose been found to be fraudulent in the past admitted to be fraudulent in the past, they've lost a lot of crede bability. credibility is all they have at 6:00, 6:30. >> also got his name on it. >> and savannah a did just do the interview with the president. >> how about matthew mcconaughey mcconaughey? >> he's good in every role he plays. >> okay, i'll say it tomorrow. one more thing, up next. at ally bank no branches equals great rates. it's a fact. kind of like shopping hungry equals overshopping. what makes it an suv is what you can get into it. what makes it an nx is what you can get out of it. introducing the first-ever lexus nx turbo and hybrid.
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♪ osteo bi-flex, ready for action. time now for one more thing. how you doing? okay if you missed it, you want to see this. you're going to want to go to our facebook page and watch the entire thing because head eye had an all-star cast last night. you've got to see it. >> joining me now to discuss, we have former cia operative, john baker, sheppard smith, geraldo rivera, charles payne, oliver north, the ledge tear actor, nicolas cage john mccain. rounding out the panel, actor writer and political commentator, ben stein. rosie o'donnell, and finally, rand paul.
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we're now being told in my ear we've run out of time. >> not that that ever happens on cable news. watch the whole thing on the five facebook page. >> that was a good one. how do you get on that show? >> she's going to be busy with "nbc nightly news" though, so take that one for the reel. >> when we were talk inging about super bowl commercials, i think i said my favorite one was lock tight. apparently, they're fans. fans enough to know my unicorn horn is broken and they sent me some glue, but sent me a fannie pack for my unicorn. he carries his chap stick, a small handgun and a neck massager that he ordered from the back up of parade magazine. it's only for his neck though. >> i just don't understand how special report follows us. >> what are you supposed to do with this thing. >> all right. >> are the horns made of hair or
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is it -- >> ivory, i think. >> it's ivory? >> i don't know. >> i just wanted to know what flavor chap stick. that's the thing. >> strawberry. >> strawberry? >> we are unicorn -- >> okay so as you know we've been updating youer tuesday on the geraldo's participation on celebrity apprentice. last night vivica fox was fired leaving just two. we >> we called it. >> this task is the do or die for me. from now on, i'm in charge of every shot, i'm sorry. this is [ bleep ]. >> geraldo and leeza and next week's the finale. >> it's a live finale. very exciting. >> you know. it's a family show. >> you've ruined it. go geraldo, we're rooting for
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you! yeah, bring on the victory to fox news. bob? do your best to restore some credibility to this show. >> right to executions. in the state of oklahoma, the home state of our producer, which makes some sense when you hear the story, oklahoma's case this front of the supreme court because they botched an execution using injections, so there was a case taken against. well, a woman not wanting to be outdone gets this. they're going to introduce two bill in the oklahoma state legislature to bring back the gas chamber. now, that is forward thinking on the part of oklahomans. >> maybe they have good reason to consider that. >> trying to gas chamber from 19, you know, 20. >> yeah. >> gas is gas baby. >> what did the guy do? >> huh? >> he stepped on a unicorn. >> i'm sure he did something far
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worse. i don't know. should have looked that up. >> are we out of time here? >> i'm going to try and save this show. i don't know if i can do it or not. i may need some lock it or tight it. but i've got a happy story for those of you that want to smile. >> i do. >> all right, so, a young man was going for a job interview at chick-fil-a and he needed to tie, so he went to his target store to pick up a clip on tie that are very handy, but they were out, so he had to buy a regular tie. he didn't know how to tie it. that's where dennis roberts, an employee at the store, helped him put on the tie. the whole deal and this young man then returned back to this target store to be able to thank everybody for this. i sure hope he gets a job. >> yeah, hire him. >> one of the best days, when he told me his advice, got my confidence back.
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not just strangers that you never met before. >> chick-fil-a hire yasir moore. is next. the death of an american aid worker in isis custody is confirmed. president obama readies his pitch to congress for the use of force and the white house and state department spin to create something the president said in an interview. good evening. president obama says american aide worker kayla mueller epitomized all that is good in our world and he's vowing to bring her isis captors to justice. we received

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