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tv   The Five  FOX News  February 25, 2015 2:00pm-3:01pm PST

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rare velvet elvis painting you are going nowhere. republicans, democrats, take note. we are putting that guy in charge. 8:00 p.m. tonight. hello, i'm eric bolling along with kimberly guilfoyle dana perino and greg gutfeld. this is "the five." okay, we have a lot of breaking news on the terror threats to america starting with this. just hours ago, three brooklyn residents were arrested after attempting to join isis. the men ranging in age from 19 to 30 planned on traveling to syria to wage jihad alongside the islamic terror group. according to authorities one of the men posted online that if he couldn't make it overseas, he would try to kill president obama if isis ordered him to do so. here's nypd commissioner bill bratton earlier today commenting on the trio's backup plan. >> it was made quite plain based
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on their own statements that if they were not able to go that they would seek to require weapons here handguns machine gun, and seek to attack very specifically police officers. >> but it wasn't even a month ago that the president tried downplaying the threat. >> what i do insist on is is that we maintain proper perspective and that we do not provide a victory to these terrorist networks by overinflating their importance and suggesting in some fashion that they are an existential threat to the united states or the world order. >> overinflating their importance. jv team, now they're plotting to kill the president. maybe it's time they wake up. i mean, enough, right? shake him a little bit. >> i don't know since smelling salts or something because they
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just woke up and we're in the last chapter already. i don't get it. i mean, i think he thinks he can do, like the vulcan mind trick on isis. and if he just minimizes them they'll go away, but that is not the case. we need a proactive hands off approach here and partner with muslim allies that want to defeat them in the middle east. that's what needs to happen here. i don't understand what the president is doing, how he thinks this helps to be honest. i really don't. >> dana you sent us an article a few days ago graham wood's article. shepard had graham wood on his show. and wood outlined what isis's plan is. it's to continue the caliphate. they want a real caliphate. not the fake one 1,000 years ago. they want a global caliphate going forward. the president's saying things like jv team or don't overinflate their importance. does that help -- what's the strategy? >> i understand what he's trying to do, which is to say trust in law enforcement. we've got a handle on this.
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nobody needs to panic. we've got a handle on it. i just think in some ways he's a little bit too lukewarm right? he's trying to be too cool. >> right. >> when people want to know that he's exercised about it. i'm sure that he is. i know they take threats to innocent people in america very seriously. this is an interesting thing today. it's the beginning of what i think will be a series. we will see these types of incidents a lot in the future because the online recruiting for the caliphate is something we've never dealt with before. and even if it turns out that these three in brooklyn are maybe not that sophisticated maybe not very smart perhaps they couldn't have ever actually pulled this off. that will be what the police probably end up telling us. but what we do know is that these are the three that we found today. >> right. >> because of the online recruiting, we don't know how many others there might be out there. so finding -- having the tools available to law enforcement to pull on each of those threads to
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try to track those down is key, but we are dealing with something unprecedented. and so the president's trying to keep everybody calm, but i'm sure that the fbi and others are working feverishly to try to find them. >> one of the other disturbing things that we found today, greg, is they said not on kill the president, they're also interested in killing law enforcement. >> yeah. you know, you look at their names. abdursal, clearly these are wit-wing citizen extremists probably lutheran. the dhs report was quite timely. i think when they arrested these guys, they found them carrying bibles sweet tea and a half dozen clint black cds. so i think we know where the danger is. you know what this is about. you're exactly right. it's about propaganda and message. and i think president obama's being calm but where is our propaganda? where is our message? as a country whose leaders and media are preoccupied with our country's internal sins we have spent the last six years looking
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at how awful we are as a country. and it makes us incapable of selling our greatness and our mission to the outside world. so when you join isis you are part of a hole. when you are in america you are divided into factions which is why in 2016 the idea of unity is a life-and-death situation for this country. because the more divisive we get, the harder it is for us to fight death cults in which unity is the number one selling point. >> right. >> fbi director james comey said that he has open investigations in every single of the 50 states in the union. it's got to be concerning. >> sure, it's concerning. >> why are we more alarmed than the administration? >> oh, because i think that the administration is aremember la ed alarmed, but i don't think you want to blow these guys up into monsters. what we're talking about to me -- >> what? >> -- like, for example, what happened with the boston marathon bombers. >> we're just kind of looking at each other like what do you
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want, the easter bunny? >> i just don't see -- if you're talking about, again al qaeda, this is not al qaeda. this is a bunch of losers. this is a bunch of kids who are totally misguided, distorted. and, you know, this whole thing about the internet and the ability of the web to recruit them, we've heard that here at this table this very moment, that's on target. that's how these kids are going. >> very similar. >> they're not kids. >> well they're young people. they're 19 24. >> you're really minimizing it in a frightening way. they're crucifying children. they're beheading people. they're lighting them on fire. >> i'm talking about the threat from these guys specifically. >> right. >> but let me just say this administration has identified young people like this in all 50 states. the big threat we should be talking about is republicans in congress being willing to shut down the department of homeland security. >> you make a very good point. dana brought something up, you followed her into this hole. isis is increasingly turning to
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twitter to spread propaganda and recruit new members. "the new york times" estimates up to 90,000 tweets per day are generated from isis-friendly twitter accounts. congressman ted pope thinks these terrorists should be banned from social media sites. listen. >> why are american companies in the u.s. government allowing social media platforms to be hijacked by terrorists? some suggest that if u.s. government were to shut down terrorist social media accounts, it would be violating terrorists' free speech rights. they are wrong. there are no constitutional protections to those who incite violence. no one supports the bill of rights more than i ut free speech has its limit lagsations just as there are no constitutional protections for child pornography. >> good analogy. you wouldn't allow child pornography on the internet. why would you allow isis propaganda on the internet? >> i don't know if that's a good analogy. unless they're actually making direct threats to people it's
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not against the law. you can go on and push any propaganda you want. and you can say oh we must eliminate it but that doesn't undermine it. it's not going to undermine it. you turn off the faucet it comes out in another faucet. so instead of fretting, because when you fret about something, you add to its allure. that's what president obama's saying. that's what juan is saying. and when you're talking about twitter, it makes you look like you're helpless. instead, undermine it. learn how to deal with them with your own propaganda with your own recruitment. and we need to stop -- we need to stop our media from portraying patriotism and nationalism as cheesy and jingoistic. it is time for us to come out and say that we're proud to be americans and we're going to kill you. >> right. why don't we degrade and destroy the people who have these twitter accounts? how about that? >> okay. >> how about kill all of them that have twitter accounts? i'm not. >> at least they're not tweeting pictures of their dog, eric. over and over again. >> can i -- can you guys pull up the tweet very quick? and here's where i think we draw
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the line. this is an actual twitter account that has been brought down since by allahu akbar. five jews were sent to hell by two grave muslims. allahu, every muslims could kill one jew, everything would change. >> i'd like to see that. i want to know what they're thinking. i want evil to present itself. because when you see evil presented, everybody sees it. if you ban something, you push it underground. that's all you do. >> use the child porn analogy too. you wouldn't allow a pedophile to talk about -- >> it's not illegal. the point is we just went through an entire year of arguing with one another about civil liberties. >> sure. >> and now we're suggesting that it's okay to, like ban a word? you can't ban a word. and also twitter, it is long
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past that they would do more to try to shut these places down. >> i wish they would. >> and the private sector and the government are trying to get these firms to engage. but who gave these firms the idea that it was okay to let people say whatever they want and not track them? okay? we had that whole discussion for a year. why are these firms reluctant? there's a reason for it because they were given permission. >> you know this is what the chinese -- i mean, we have to be very careful about free speech, you know? because when we see our social media go into other countries and they control it, we all object. but i've got to say, i think we come back to greg's point when they are not only advocating violence, but in the case of like the tsarnaev brothers in boston, they said they learned how to build bombs from al qaeda sites online. i don't understand why you wouldn't take that down. that's unbelievable to me. i know people will object out there, but gosh that's too much. >> how do you make someone the thought police, then? as a company -- i think that also we just have to deal with
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reality. that us trying to block people from using the word isis or to stop the videos of beheadings -- of the beheadings or of the burning alive because that is what is fueling, they're always going to find a way to get around it, so we have to be smarter. like what's the next step? what's the leapfrog step? >> here's what you do. where the law steps in and intervenes, it's not going to be protected, which is something that is a specific terrorist threat with a specific plan, i'm going to come at this time this place, you're not allowed to do that. what you do is let them reveal themselves. that's how you whack-a-mole and then you find out someone should investigate and find out who has these twitter accounts. to me that's valuable info people post on twitter and facebook. i use it in a court of law. i used to all the time. oh, really? here's the goods you took from the home. >> that's how you catch people. >> i think the magnitude is amazing. think about paris and the "charlie hebdo" attack.
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there were four people that they were looking for. four terrorists. four perpetrators. and there were 90,000 police and military and fbi and intelligence people working to find four people. that's why i'm saying the magnitude of this -- and to your point is where is our counterpropaganda campaign. that's where i think when president obama is trying to be like oh it's not that big a deal. i think the long-term planning to set up the united states to be on a war footing, on an ideological perspective for the next 40 or 50 years, that's what they should be focused on. >> are people -- let me make this point. they are -- i think the guy who used to run "time" magazine they have people who are definitely doing this. and i must say, i oftentimes hear critics say why are you putting so much effort into social media? you should be killing them killing them. but you should do social media. we do need our propaganda. and we need to do away with it. emotional or religious. >> what critics?
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>> oh, no. >> who are the critics that say you shouldn't do social media? >> dana but some of our colleagues have said it directly to me. >> on facebook. >> can you use hate speech? can you use -- you know speech that is interpreted as being anti-jew anti-semitic? >> it's on campus every day. >> i know, but they pulled those accounts from twitter. shouldn't they pull -- >> not all of them. >> when they find them. >> it has to be alerted and they have to report them. the guy who writes us every day, please stop. the one who has the suggestive things, very aggressive. i have to report him every day. >> that's andy levy. >> those critics. >> so we agree to disagree. >> what do we disagree about? >> everything. >> i think the isis -- anyone associated with anything isis should be banned from -- >> that's impossible. >> but what about that thing in your pocket? >> what?
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>> they don't deserve the first amendment. >> the constitution. >> oh. >> oh, my gosh. >> when you become a terrorist or when you declare jihad on america, you have lost all rights -- >> i know, but what he's saying is that anything about isis. how do you make the decision? like, okay, that's a threat. that's not a threat. we don't have enough people to police that. >> you know what? guys it helps create probable cause. then you go like this. hello, mr. isis supporter. and then they put the little threads together. >> if they're stupid, they will give you the clues, you track them down and you kill them. >> and then you put them on a no-fly list. >> apparently these guys in brooklyn were tracked since last summer. >> we have to leave it there. coming up a guilty verdict in the american sniper trial. some of the jurors explain how they reached their decision. plus the tape of the murderer's chilling confession. that's coming up next.
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♪ young hearts be free tonight ♪ the man who killed american sniper chris kyle and his friend, chad littlefield, will spend the rest of his life behind bars with no possibility of parole. eddie ray routh was found guilty last night of capital murder after a two-week trial. the jury heard this tape of routh confessing to the killings.
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>> i told her i had to kill a man today. it wasn't a want to. it was a need. i had to. to get out of that situation that i was in today. >> it took jurors less than three hours to deliver the guilty verdict rejecting his insanity defense. some of them addressed the media today. >> evidence shows that there was a real definite pattern there when it came to you know, his earlier convictions before the trial. >> tell us a little bit more about that pattern. >> when i say there's a pattern that we saw, it was you know, he would be -- he would get intoxicated, get in trouble, and then the police would show up and he would say i'm a veteran. i have ptsd. >> bottom line, barrett you all were convinced that he knew the difference between right and wrong when he pulled those triggers. >> yes, sir. >> without a doubt. >> it's interesting because all of this can be used on an
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appellate record to say look, perhaps the jury didn't use the right standard, et cetera. i think the conviction will hold. greg, so the burden is on the defense to prove that he was insane and in fact, specifically did not know the difference between right and wrong at the time that he committed -- the jurors saying hey, we felt like this guy was pulling the same stuff, drinking, drugs. >> yeah. you can be insane but have moments of clarity and know what you are about to do, and that's what i think they're saying. we do have to rethink our mental health system because this guy had been temporarily held and released. and he was a messed-up dude. people knew that. but this is also reminiscent of you know what we're seeing now, how people can gain infamy from killing famous people or doing something shocking. in a way this is no different than the spree killings or mark david chatman or even isis, hideous behavior that gains
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infamy and also gives meaning to an empty life. it's like the assassination of jesse james by the coward robert ford is a great movie about that, about if you feel that you are a nobody this is how you gain some kind of, i don't know, feeling about yourself and you should be punished to the hilt. >> it's a good analogy. eric, you know this is really tough for the family. everything going forward. i mean, not only did she have to go through this trial, taya but also through the trial with jesse ventura. this has been a lot for the family and the kids to take. >> quite a bit. compelling, heartbreaking to hear her at the end of the trial talk about the final moment with chris kyle. can i point something out? i think that justice was served thanks to that one investigator who sat in the room with routh and said, did you -- after you shot him you knew it was wrong correct? and he said yeah. he asked him a second time. but you knew you did something wrong, didn't you? and routh said yep, i knew what i did was wrong. >> yeah and wait till it gets
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out what i did. >> that was really the only burden of proof that they had to, i guess, the defense had to -- >> to meet. >> -- to destroy and they couldn't do it because of that questioning. that was fantastic. >> dana, your thoughts. >> i was struck by a couple of things, about the reference by one of the expert witnesses, the doctors, that said he had signs of schizophrenia prior to this. i agree that justice was served and it was right, but we've been doing the show for four years and we come back to these types of murders several times a year. and there is that common link is the schizophrenia piece. and the mass murders, we say the country needs to have a national conversation about what we are doing with mental health in this country. we had a very compelling segment on this show a couple of weeks ago when greg led in a discussion about whether or not institutions should come back whether we should allow that. i think this is just another one of those stories. i'm glad that this hopefully can be put behind the families now so that they can have some peace. >> there was also some evidence,
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juan, where he was saying though, i don't know what's going on today. i'm feeling really paranoid and really schizophrenic. having tried these cases, you can get defense experts. i could call one right now and say hey, i've got a case. i'll pay you $2,000. i need you to do this. they'd do it. >> you know, when the widow went running from the courtroom was when the defense was making the case that chris kyle should have known that somehow this guy was psycho or whatever. i just don't see this. i don't see it at all. i'm amazed actually -- >> blame the victim? >> well, you know, it can go lots of ways, but that's ridiculous. i must say i'm surprised that he didn't get the death penalty. >> well i think it's complicated, especially when you have the main trigger issue in this case is whether or not he was mentally ill. he's a veteran. >> no, but they said he wasn't mentally ill. >> i understand that, but that is one of the key components that was on trial. it's not who did it. did he -- we have all that. this was just an issue of intent
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and did he meet the requisite intent at the time -- the specific intent. >> the determination though kimberly, was that he did. >> it's not popular to do that with jurors if you have a case that involves insanity and a veteran and ptsd. >> but i must say in texas, i thought -- and you some of chris kyle's buddies are saying once he gets into jail that people in the texas criminal justice that they think they're going to get him. i mean but why -- i'm interested in this notion of mercy for this guy. and by the way, mr. gutfeld mr. guns everywhere, i think there are a lot of guns at a gun range. this didn't stop this guy from killing chris kyle. >> that is like a bizarre comment to make. you're using a guy that was trying to help another man being murdered by taking him to a gun range as an argument against gun. it's important to remember chad littlefield in all of this. >> yes. >> when you die alongside somebody famous, you are often marginalized by the press. the manson family didn't just
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kill sharon tate. they killed j.c. bring and abigail foal engineerlger. we should always remember there were two victims. >> his mother spoke elgently. a terrible loss. thanks for bringing that up. coming up hillary clinton is now demanding women get equal pay for equal work. patricia arquette on speed dial right? but she was solid on the wage gap in her own office as senator. that's next. [announcer] if your dog can dream
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side effects, including dehydration, genital yeast infections in women and men, low blood sugar,kidney problems, and increased bad cholesterol. common side effects include urinary tract infections changes in urination and runny nose. ♪do the walk of life♪ ♪yeah, you do the walk of life♪ need to lower your blood sugar? ask your doctor about farxiga and visit our website to learn how you may be able to get every month free. ♪ wait 'round and 'round ♪ ♪ every time ♪ patricia arquette got a lot of attention when she called for wage equality for women at the oscars including the attention of hillary clinton. >> it's our time to have wage equality once and for all and equal rights for women in the united states of america. >> many women are paid less for
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the same work, which is why i think we all cheered at patricia arquette's speech at the oscars because she's right. it's time to have wage equality once and for all. >> but clinton's own track record is in question when it comes to equal pay. according to a free beacon analysis female staffers in her senate office were only paid 72 cents for every dollar the men made. eric, is it worth pointing out the facts of wage -- this wage gap, or are we just going to have this debate for the next two years with her? >> we'll probably have the debate but it goes even further, free beacon points out between 2002 and 2008, six of four years of her senate run, it was even further. it was 62 cents per dollar for every dollar that men made. we talked a little bit about this, though. when you compare apples to apples and oranges to oranges, one year out of college, exact same type of education similar fields, the wage gap is only
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about 7% in america. >> it's 5 cents. >> yeah, yeah, 5 to 7 cents. so things are getting better. >> they are. kimberly, i wanted to ask you about this because there's a variety of reasons that this might exist. discrimination is already illegal, but one of the things that women tend not to do, maybe this is part of our biology is that they typically don't ask for more. if they want to really help women, maybe what they should focus on is helping know how to ask for a razor a seat at the table or whatever it might be. >> that is such a great point. so many just don't want to be the troublemaker, don't be the squeaky wheel. they're afraid to advocate on their own behalf and have kind of that self-esteem and self-confidence to know your worth and be able to ask for it. i think it is so important. i was talking to young women about it. look, you can do these things. anything that a guy can do women can do better. prove me wrong. >> that's sexist. >> i don't care. >> that is so sexist. >> but listen, you have to build up the confidence of young women
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coming forward. it doesn't even matter. we have so many ceos and even heads of state that are women. you have to empower and inform. otherwise they won't be able to do the ask and make the case for themselves. it's true. >> i'm just laughing at anything a guy can do a woman can do better. >> oh, can you think of something? >> believe me, you're right. >> i have tried. >> greg, i don't think that there's any piece of legislation out there that is going to help women, if it makes hiring a woman more expensive, right? i don't think that they're headed down the right path. >> well, i mean, discrimination is illegal. and a lot of women do the hiring. so if you feel you're being discriminated against, you should sue. but be prepared to sue another woman. which will completely destroy the narrative. and won't make it into any oliver stone movie. by the way hillary clinton is a vessel run by consultants. this whole thing was a pathetic attempt to be liked. because she lacks the humor and charisma of her husband she saw this moment patricia arquette,
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and said i'm running on those coattails. i'm going to agree with that. maybe that will help. she saw the speech as an opportunity to add warmth to herself. but it came off to me as incredibly calculated. the one crucial thing that hillary has going for her is not her name or her sense of humor or experience. it's her gender. democrats know this, juan. being a party of firsts is always successful. it plays into the novelty of being first. and for a lot of people, it makes voting an event. >> can i -- before you comment, could i just play one sound bite and then we'll let you wrap the whole thing up. because there is one woman on the republican side carly fiorina, who might actually decide to run for president. she's talking about this in atlanta yesterday. >> like hillary clinton, i, too, have traveled hundreds of thousands of miles around the globe. but unlike hillary clinton i know that flying is an activity, not an accomplishment. so while she's traveled a lot of miles and she's shaking a lot of
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hands, every place in the world is more dangerous today than it was six years ago. >> hillary clinton actually lifted a line from carly fiorina's attempt to run for senate. so maybe there is actually more agreement on this than we think. >> well, i think there is agreement among women. and i think greg's on to something. i think, you know there's a lot of sense that this is a moment for women in america. i think there are a lot of republican women who are saying hmm, hillary clinton, you know last time they thought it was a woman's turn they said it was a black guy that got it. i think it's a powerful element. the second thing i'll say it you know what? i think you guys missed the big target on hillary right now which is as she appoints her senior staff, it's almost all guys. >> right. actually, that is true. >> this money thing -- >> she brought up the money thing. >> what? >> she brought up the money thing. we should bring up the leadership part. if you look at the main hire for jeb bush for his economic messaging is a woman.
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>> yes. >> april or amy ponaroo. >> and the fact that jeb bush has his chief political adviser is a woman. it's interesting that hillary in '08 when she was running against obama had mostly women in top positions. now it's mostly guys. what does that say? >> what does that say, juan? you say it. >> again, it's not my role on this show. i'm waiting for you guys. >> republicans need to have their own first. they should nominate a robot that only says no. and i would vote for it. >> okay. all right. >> that's what you've been waiting for? >> yeah, a robot that says no would save this country. we call it calvin coolidge 2000. >> okay i've got to run. ahead on "the five," does science guy bill nye just blame jews or the growing anti-semitism in europe? greg is going to play that tape next.
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♪ you hope a word the left loves to use is denial when describing those with flawed global warming predictions. bill nye the science guy will call you a climate change denier linking it to the holocaust. it's creepy given that nye is also a denier. on bill maher's show when the topic of fearful jews fleeing europe came up, nye scoffed at the threat and instead get this, blames the jews. >> netanyahu is asking european jews to come to israel. >> come home to israel. that's what he said right? >> yeah. >> yeah. >> well, i mean -- >> but the people have never been there. they grew up in whatever, in germany or in france. >> it's a shame that they should have to move. >> well, they probably won't either because it's not their home. what do you do about it? i think you get to know your neighbors. it's going to take -- does it
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take a century, something like that? >> so the cure for anti-semitism is for jews to get to know their neighbors. maybe bring them some matzo ball soup? in fact, it's not radical jews storming cafes and killing customers. the science is settled. jews are the leading target of abuse here and in europe. and new research finds that 27% of british muslims sympathize with the paris gunmen. nye's pithy denial minimizes such evil. now with a new report with semitism soaring on colleges, i suppose nye blames those students, too. perhaps they're not being friendly enough. maybe they shouldn't wear yarmulkes. it's like a woman in a short skirt. they're just asking for it. replace it with a little bowtie instead. and i guess bill missed this, too, a jew abused as he walks the streets of paris.
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>> it's like a polar bear mr. nye. you can see it with your own eyes. kind of hard to ignore that ugly climate. on it say such dmital is anti-semitic, but you just denied that, too. bill nye denial guy. it has a naess ring to it. so k.g., why do people like bill nye continue to deny anti-semitism when the science is settled? >> because that's what he likes to do. it's in his dna. he's the denial guy. that is so awful what he said. i mean why aren't they waging war on him on social media? you know? i mean it's awful. i don't understand why people
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are so cruel and so horrible to jews. i really -- it's very sad to see someone walk down the street and be subjected to that kind of hate-filled rhetoric. it really bothers me. i don't like to see it against anyone. i want to say to them, who raised you? >> well, juan this college survey is pretty crazy. this rise in anti-semitism. where do you think that's coming from? do you think it's imported, that it's coming from somewhere else? >> no. what do you mean? >> i don't know. i'm asking you. >> it's an american problem. and i think it's now exacerbated by all the kind of political divisions rising over israel. >> that's my point. >> oh. that's what you were trying to say. >> there are a lot of activist groups, pro-palestinian, anti-israel groups on campus. >> what's interesting to me is a lot of these people, then, adopt a language almost from the civil rights era. oh, it's the oppressed people of color, you know, and i'm thinking, you know you look back at that movement, boy, i'll tell you jewish-americans were at the forefront of standing up
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for rights for others. >>sad? how ungrateful. >> eric, do you think climate change could be responsible for bill nye's bigoted inference? >> i'm not sure why people are listening to bill nye on climate change or how to solve the anti-semitism in europe. but i will tell you why is anti-semitism growing here? we have a president who will not meet with bibi netanyahu when he comes here. he said he didn't have the time. meanwhile, also the first place president obama went, what was his first speech outside the united states? in cairo talking about opening his arms to -- to -- to the muslim population of the world. >> is that a bad thing? >> but we know that there is a certain group of muslims who hate jews. now, bibi netten yew haw n, bibi netten yew haw netanyahu has not been very friendly with the obama administration. he supported mitt romney in 2012. there's a divide there. right? am i --
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>> that's fair. >> is that not true? >> the president not meeting with netanyahu netanyahu didn't even tell him he was coming to see him. >> do we know that young people in colleges are predominantly liberal? yes? >> i think the academy is predominantly liberal. >> if president obama is anti-israel, why wouldn't liberal, young people -- >> he's not anti-israel. the united states is not anti-israel. >> all right. dana, it's the jews' fault. can't we just agree? >> well, you know, the jews themselves are taking it upon themselves to -- we have a picture here from a story that ran from the a.p. this morning in prague where jews are being taught self-defense. because of this very problem. and actually, since we're talking about this, i'm going to be on megyn kelly's show tonight talking about where do you go from here with all the controversy about the speech, how can you get over the speech and move forward as a country? i've got that coming up. how about that? i teased my own self. >> she teases herself.
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somebody has to. ahead, should you be honest with your partner if you don't like the way he or she looks? of course not. anyway, our answer is next. toenail fungus? don't hide it... tackle it with fda-approved jublia! jublia is a prescription medicine proven to treat toenail fungus. use jublia as instructed by your doctor. once applied jublia gets to the site of infection by going under, around and through the nail. most common side effects include ingrown toenail, application-site redness itching, swelling, burning or stinging, blisters, and pain. tackle it! ask your doctor now if jublia is right for you.
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♪ don't blame it on me ♪ ♪ don't blame it on me ♪
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is honesty always the best policy when it comes to a relationship? well, should you tell your significant other the truth? if they ask your opinion on how they look in something? one "new york they look in something. one "new york post" writer says he tells his girlfriend if he doesn't like her style choices. is that a good idea if you want a lasting relationship? now, when you came out and i said oh that green looks so lovely on you did you think i was lying? >> no i waited until you got out of the bathroom out of your robe. this guy is full of baloney. remember mad, mutually assured destruction? that's what a relationship is. you have the truth, she has the truth. the feelings that you harbor inside you about your spouse she feels the same exact way about you. if you actually decide to go there, that's when you have a blow-out fight. all the stuff comes out. you hear the stuff and yeah,
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she's right. the responsibility in a couple is that you don't tell these -- you don't say these things. know that they're true but you keep them to yourself because that is love. we'll be right back. >> okay dr. ruth. >> what do you do? >> lie. >> now you're in trouble. >> no, no no. because there's nothing good that comes out of -- does this make me look heavy? >> what can you say but positive to adrian? >> no my wife is gorgeous, she's beautiful. she looks great in everything. when she says should i change this you don't say yes. >> oh, i do. living dana's truth. >> change it or leave it on -- >> maybe it's different -- i think it's different for men and women, especially different after you've been married 18 years. if you walk in wearing shoes that look like clown shoes and they're yellow instead of brown, you say i wouldn't wear those. we bought these shoes in canada and they looked different in the window. anyway they're in the good will
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bag now. >> this is sexist. women can do this, men can't. >> let me ask you something. >> yeah. >> if your son says do you, mom -- >> what? like he doesn't like your outfit? no, he's very vocal about what i wear. he focuses on two areas. he can't see the rest, he can't even see the color. it's just top and bottom. >> wow. holy smokes. i don't have anything to say. i'm going to shut up now. >> what do you do? >> what do i do? you know i think i've been married now 38 years. there's a reason for that. >> right. keep your mouth shut? >> i sure do. >> i'd rather know. i'd rather know, put on something tantalizing if that's possible. more tantalizing. >> there's no upside. you're going to get smooshed. mutually assured destruction. what have you heard from the men on this panel? it's true.
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young men listen, listen. "one more thing" is coming up. stay with us.thank u for being a sailor, and my daddy. thank you mom, for protecting my future. thank you for being my hero and my dad. military families are thankful for many things. the legacy of usaa auto insurance could be one of them. our world-class service earned usaa the top spot in a study of the most recommended large companies in america. if you're current or former military or their family, see if you're eligible to get an auto insurance quote.
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♪ help northern china reduce its reliance on coal fire heating plants and prevent 60 million tons of co2 emissions? when emerson takes up the challenge it's never been done before simply becomes consider it solved. emerson. time for "one more thing." i'm going to go first. it turns out there was a guy outside standing his name is robert hickox, and he painted this amazing picture. >> so cool. >> the guy stood out there like
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15-degree weather yesterday. you can find his work at artist 01.com or artist robert hickock on facebook. >> he was standing outside yesterday. >> the guy does great work. >> very nice. >> dana. >> i was going to tell everybody about a podcast you might want to listen to. you might be familiar with nina easton. she's a fox news contributor. you can see her on special report panel. watch has probably been on air with her. she's also a fellow at the centered for strategic and international studies and she started a podcast called smart women, smart power. it does in-depth interviews with women and she had an interview with the first lady of afghanistan. that is definitely worth listening to. i listened to a few of them today. i suggest it highly. put it on your list of things to listen to. >> greg, you've up. >> she's a fellow? this word is upside down. what's happening? greg's medical tips.
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>> my god. >> i want to talk to you about the weather. it's freezing. it's freezing cold out here. it's very important that you dress warmly. for example, i have tape of dana going out this morning after she had gotten dressed. she wore the requisite three layers. this is her trying to get to work this morning. of course she needed help. that's her handler mrs. stevens. this is how she keeps her warm. she throws kimberly around. >> kimberly? >> you're in front of me. look at dana. >> that's before i get makeup. >> oh my god. >> i'm going to send out some love, high five to eddie henry. eddie had a health issue recently but he's come around the curve and he's rounding third base doing great. you may know him because he's the dad of our ace white house correspondent, ed henry. you see him there at yankees stadium. that's his favorite place in the
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world. with grandsons frank and patrick. there he is with christine his lovely wife who's been helping him through this health episode. we just love you and your son. get better. we're rooting for you, buddy. >> he's a great guy. they love watching "the five" too. all the best. >> k.g. you're up. >> who would like to buy some snow or water that was snow and melted, because boston -- let me tell you, boston strong they turned it into something positive, the snow. you've got a massachusetts man selling this record-setting snow for $89. this is capitalism in the free market people. he's found a way to pack it and get it anywhere in the u.s. >> one bottle is $89? >> yeah that or get the actual snow and make snow balls and throw it at people in california. also love you to watch hannity tonight. and also hearts i leave behind that is benefitting the chris kyle foundation just hit number one on the country music charts.
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>> i've got to say, three one more things in one. that's a record. >> i had to make up for the other day. >> set your dvrs so you never miss an episode of "the five." "special report" on deck. the secretary of state says americans have never been safer as three suspected terrorists are taken into custody in new york city. this is "special report." good evening welcome to washington. i'm brett baier. we have new signs tonight of how much the obama administration wants to minimize the potential impact of the upcoming speech to congress from israeli prime minister benjamin netanyahu. at the same time, a bold statement by this country's top diplomat, seemingly minimizing the threat of terrorism and other forces to americans. chief white house correspondent ed henry sorts it all out for us tonight.

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