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

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a fake president gets this type of real irate response. this is rome in the final days. i'm convinced. see you tonight. hello. along with kimberly guilfoyle. it's 5:00 in new york city and this is the five. benjamin netanyahu gave his long waited address to a joint session of congress today to make the case against president obama's top foreign policy initiatives, a nuclear deal with iran. as usual he didn't mince his words. >> this deal has two major concessions. one leaving iran with a vast nuclear program and two lifting the restrictions on that program in about a decade. that's why this deal is so bad.
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it doesn't plot the path to the bomb it paves the path to the bomb. >> standing up to iran. >> even if israel has to standalone, israel will stand. but i know that israel does not standalone. i know that america stands with israel. i know that you stand with israel. >> passion, pride of country, concern for the free world. netanyahu gave president obama is lesson in leadership. but does president obama stand with israel. >> i did not have a chance to watch the speech. i did have a chance to take a look at the transcript. and as far as i can tell there was nothing new. on the core issue, which is how do we prevent iran from obtaining a nuclear weapon, which would make it far more dangerous and would give it scope for even greater action in the region, the prime minister
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didn't offer any viable alternatives. >> there were plenty of standing ovations a lot of clapping. on the way into the chamber, he was getting a standing ovation and clapping. members congress and the senate were lining up to shake his hand. >> better than that even. it was thunderous applause. everybody wanted to touch him, like he was a rock star. i thought he did a very good job. i think he's an effective, passionate communicator. a man that delivers a speech with purpose. i believe every word he said he feels. that is the world views he has. and by the way i don't understand why the u.s. is to reluctant to call out iran for who they are. these are people who i think, the world's largest supporter of terrorism is iran. they have provided safe haven for members of osama bin laden
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family. they encourage terrorism wherever they go. this is our one chance this is our shot to get it right. history will not judge this administration kindly if they drop the ball here. >> prime minister netanyahu started by thanking president obama and then he proceeded to e advice rate everything that was going on with the negotiations with iran. >> that's a good politician, right? killing with kindness. i've met him. he is by far the most karz mate ik person i've ever met in my life. >> what about bill clinton? >> more so than bill clinton. >> that's saying something. >> this is a speech that he's been giving for some time. and what i was looking for today was something new that he was going to say that he hasn't said in previous iterations. the problem is that he didn't
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really address exactly how we're going to go about -- listen, i agree. the goal here is to make sure iran doesn't go nuclear. i would have liked to see him lay out solutions. >> senator kerry -- secretary of state kerry warned netanyahu to not leak any plans of that meeting therefore he couldn't really lay out a plan maybe he would be leaking details. i thought it was a fantastic speech. >> i think what the president has changed the benchmark. he said, he didn't give me any specifics that i could go forward with. had netanyahu done that they would have said, how dare you say in the open that would have been the story. what he did is say let's step back for a moment america, and let's think about and discuss the nature of the regime. what we are up against the big moment. you don't give a speech to the nation where you're going to lay
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out the nitty-gritty details. he did say there were three conditions he one, an end of aggression, stop funding terror and stop threatening to eyeannihilate israel. i thought that the speech hit the right mark for what he wanted to do and it was respectful to the president and it didn't disrupt any of the negotiations. >> one of the biggest applauses he got is when he said when it comes to iran and isis, the enemy of the enemy is your enemy. is that a fair comparison? >> well they call this the bully pulpit, but it's not. it's the anti-bully pulpit. he's actually coming out against the world's bullies. this is an opportunity for him
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to say something that the united states hasn't been saying. when you have president obama saying i'm not watching this it's like saying i'm not going to that party if that person is here. that's not presidential. >> no. >> that's adolescent. he's not a world leader. he's not even a scout leader. it just comes off as so lightweight. it's weird. i think there's a message president obama is trying to say through his subtle behaviors. the message is to the islamic world, i am not in israel's pocket, i'm in your pocket. i'm muslim linked. no i'm kidding. he wants to be sympathetic and he does that by keeping his distance with israel. that's what he's been -- >> i want to get some -- >> was it not refreshing to hear a world leader stand up and call it what it is? it's islamic terror and we need
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to stop the aggression. >> this guy's got the biggest target on his back. listen, i'm going to stand with certainty and conviction and courage. i'm not afraid of you. i'm not afraid of words and i have specific actions i want to take. how refreshing. and then our president comes out, we stand with israel yet he's seated like this. what was that? what was that? i mean, it's so disrespectful. i think he was probably advised, don't stand up and give a speech, sit down like this was no big deal. fail. >> netanyahu, one of the other huge applause was if iran wants to be treated like a normal country, let it act like a normal country. president obama is playing around with this nuclear deal. he's saying in ten years, the deal's going to expire. they're giving iran a lot of the things they want. then you have netanyahu saying
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they better start acting like a normal country or we'll do it. they'll do it. >> the rhetoric is great. i love it. i'm so happy for netanyahu. however i still want to know exactly what israel is prepared to do with or without us. if this deal falls apart -- >> they've done it before. >> i get it. if this deal falls apart and let's assume the iranians don't sign off on it there's 20 different scenarios as to how this is going to end in disaster. let's be clear, we are marching towards potential war with iran. and that's what i want -- nobody's talking -- >> israel is marching -- >> no. >> i read that dana, if u.s. won't stand with us, we'll do this alone. >> and he said in the past, that's what we have had to do on this -- one of the differences here is what iran wants to build is an incident continental
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missile. one we would stand with israel and we have an obligation to help protect israel in my opinion. that's what presidents in the past and i think president obama upholds that. nobody wants to put the president of the united states in a position of having to make that particular decision. that's why these negotiations are so important. and the disagreement between netanyahu and the obama administration is this core disagreement about can iran change. president obama is fond of saying, iran needs to get right with the world. they need to join the 21st century. he says that about putin too. their view of the world is not necessarily how our enemies or -- i don't know what you'd call putin at this point. that's not how they see themselves. i think that's the frustration that america is having with president obama and why that's reflect the in the public opinion poll why is it that we can see this threat so clearly but he doesn't seem to.
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then they think, what does he know that we don't know. all you get is just trust me. i don't think that the congress is in a position to say trust you to make a deal you're only the president the next two years. >> i said to your point, i said yesterday that i'm worried that the president wants this deal so badly that he's going to conclude a deal that's not in the interest of our country or the interest of israel or even the sunni powers in the middle east. however, if you don't try and attempt to do something and then see what happens. let's see what happens. >> this is the issue. try to do something. this is the problem. it's like if you took out iran and put in obamacare, this is the same exact story. creating something without any potential or idea about the consequences. as long as we just get something done because blank is broken we must fix it. so they have no idea what's going to happen next. the deal this deal when you
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say deal it implies give and take. when it's with president obama who wants something so badly it becomes give and give. there is no give and take in obama's world. he can cooperate with iran, but not with republicans. we should get the amazing in and hypnotize president obama so he believes iran are actually the republicans and that the republicans are actually iran. we might actually get something done in the united states and be able to deal with people who want to kill us. >> that is a solution. >> i want to go onto the next piece. i think all the democrats are on the same page that a bad deal is no better deal than all. that is flawed thinking. in no scenario. a bad deal is a bad deal. some democrats tried their hardest to discredit the prime minister following his speech. listen to this from the kentucky congressman. >> i'd like to congratulate speaker boehner and prime
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minister netanyahu on an impressive bit of political theater. this was fear mongering at its ultimate. netanyahu basically said that the only acceptable deal was a perfect deal or an ideal deal. it's like the child who says i want to go to disney land every day, eat ice cream and drink coca-cola every day and not go to school. >> i have to say that was a good try at an analogy. he's upset at how the speech was handled. he's more upset about the speech. he's complaining about a mosquito bite while we're being eaten by a bear. do not be fooled about how they're upset about protocol. they're upset because of their prince. that's not to do with rules. they're like a clique from mean girls upset at the star high school student is getting bullied. >> so foolish. that is really counter
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productiontive. i think it is conduct unbecoming someone in congress to blaif in this way. grow up. >> nancy pelosi said she was in tears. when i saw that, wow, that was fantastic, near tears. then she said because she was so offended. >> i thought she was going to say i was in tears because i was so moved. >> i reread it three times. >> that was quite over the top. for the congressman to bring up dick cheney, his staffer was like, i know how we can get attention back home. >> it's dick cheney turrets. >> i would rather have cheney at the negotiating table. >> i would too. >> don't let him have a gun, though. >> that worked out well for eight years. all right. i agree that he shouldn't have said what he said. i have to keep going back to the
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fact that look, when you have first of all, democrats should not have boycotted this speech. that's a really bad thing they all did. >> that's what happened. president obama has pulled the democrat -- >> but -- >> -- so far left now they don't even support israel. >> you can't say that. >> i am saying it. >> they say that about us. >> why not? >> even israel about 50% if not a little less of the population didn't think netanyahu should be giving the speech. >> who cares? who cares? >> half of israelis are anti-their own country. >> they get paid to show up. show up. have some class. >> i agree with dana. it's an absolute disrespect to the state of israel. >> sworn into american aunt his true intentions about helping fight the war against isis. that's next.
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all right. as debate flares over iran's nuclear ambitions, there's also
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increasing concerns about the country's am additionbitions in iraq. general jack kooen and former cia deputy director are very wary of tehran's role in the campaign. >> they have as much to do with the planning, they're on the ground with the shia militia forces. there's no doubt this is iranian-led and supported operation. >> iran is i think the most effective fighting force inside of iraq. >> there's a real risk here that over the long run, we can defeat isis in iraq, but we might hand iraq to the iranians in a diplomatic sense. >> okay. israel prime minister benjamin netanyahu warns we shouldn't be fooled by iran's common interest in wiping out isis. >> the battle between iran and
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isis doesn't turn iran into a friend of america. iran and isis are competing for the crown of militant islam. when it comes to iran and isis, the enemy of your enemy is your enemy. the difference is that isis is armed with butcher knives, captured weapons and youtube. where as iran could soon be armed with intercontinental ballistic missiles. >> this is a very screwed up situation because -- >> like -- >> the enemy of your enemy is your enemy. for those who said, why aren't the iraqis doing anything they're getting help from iran actually on the ground. >> probably about 24,000 you know ground forces infantry. there's going to probably be heavy casualties. predict substantial loss of life. you've got iran at the helm.
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they have very skilled generals in charge. this doesn't have you know, u.s. dna or fingerprints on it. we're going to have to see what the fallout is. >> that's what i would say. iran's elite army on the ground it cannot necessarily spell good things for our involvement. however, apparently we're mad because nobody told us it was happening until the late stages of the planning. so we're sitting on our hands and we're still not helping. >> the middle east, it's a screwed up situation. 20 years from now, we're still going to be having this conversation. we had this conversation 20 years ago and 20 years before that. the middle east, it's a screwed up situation, come join us. i have a crazy conspiracy. isis was allowed to prosper to make iran look civilized in contrast. can't be that bad. we used to use our civilization
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as a measuring stick now we use evil, we use isis. if you're not as bad as isis you're okay. will isis then become acceptable when something worse comes along. >> let me take you back to 30 years ago when hussein was in power. what they did was go to war against each other. they fought a long war where they killed each other, and they were absolutely the bulk work against aggressions of anybody else because they were too busy going at each other. these people are doing is killing themselves, they can't come and kill us. we decide to get rid of hussein. the best thing we ever did for iran was to allow hussein to go away. he goes to iran. he comes back. he takes over a large part of iraq. and so on and so forth.
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iranians were absolutely allowed to process pep. >> i actually -- i think the thing that allowed the iranians to do this was the fact that we signalled and left too early, before the iraqi government was fully set and the military was ready to go. >> once you're there you might as well finish the job. and that's what happened. we didn't. we left.hat bleeding down from syria. let's not forget something else too. at one point when we were really mad at bashar al assad, we almost armed the rebels against bashar al say sawed. now we're saying we might need him to fight isis back from the north while turkey maybe hits from the side. here's the point. we have to be careful how engaged and how involved we get in it. in my opinion, i know this suspect going to be popular stay with the air war, continue to pound them from the air when you know where they are and we
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do. we have plenty of maps that show exactly where isis is. continue to pound that and i hate this unholy alliance of iranians standing arm in arm with iraq. >> it's terrible. >> we trained that iraqi army. >> this could have been prevented if we made the right moves and made the right calls. we turned iraq over to a babysitter with no credentials. hey, have at it. i think iran right now is -- >> i ran -- >> got to get going. >> if we did put ground troops in, where would they go? >> again there is middle ground in terms of you could have more air strikes, but you have to have people on the ground to tell them where to strike. you can't just do it from the air, but we can do a lot more from the air. you don't have to send in ground troops or do nothing. >> okay. i get the last word.
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hillary clinton had a very untransparent way of doing business. did she have things she wanted to hide? that's ahead. i'm type e. i know what my money is doing. i rebalanced my portfolio on my phone. you know what else i can do on my phone? place trades get free real time quotes and teleport myself to aruba. i wish.
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>> did hillary use personal e-mail only for government business as secretary of state, registering the account on the day of her confirmation hearings? now she since turned over 55,000 pages of these e-mails to the government, but only after he aides looted the best stuff. it's like leaving the tapioca from a day old buffet. why didn't she use government e-mail? was it too hard to log on? did she forget her password? was she worried we'd see her
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favorite websites? or was it just her smug pride? she was always above the rest of us. she called here's transparent but happyily skirted the rules. on the day this news broke the artist who painted the official portrait of bill clinton confesses he snuck a shadow of monica lewinsky's dress into that work of art. like that dress, e e-mails revealed a height of carelessness, only a few can reach. how do you know she didn't transmit classified info? we'll never know because those e-mails are gone. can you blame her for being so covert? after all, the clintons have to keep secrets because they have so many to keep. >> i'm going to go to the lawyer first. no kidding. she broke the law?
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>> yes. because there's specific codes for this. that have been enacted to say under the federal records act that you have to comply with this and keep it. we want to know what they're up to especially in a position like the state department. john kerry is in fact using the government e-mail and they are properly archiving it. now what we have is no accountability or transparency. it was obvious the reason why. they knew she would be running for president of the united states. you have other candidates like jeb bush releasing a trove of e-mails. here, what do we have this from the clintons. this is underhanded. not appropriate. just like taking money from foreign countries. >> we all have personal e-mail accounts. i use mine to communicate with troubled teens. >> is that what you do with them? >> is she done? i get the cents that it's the democrats that are going to
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abandon her. she's finished. >> no, she's not done. let's take a look at some polls. i bet this isn't going to sink her -- >> really? >> yeah. there's no excuse for this kind of behavior. let's look at the timeline. if you remember the bush administration on its way out had a scandal. >> oh boy. it's not the same. >> listen. >> no, no, no. do i have an opportunity? >> of course. >> i want to talk about it. >> there's -- the e-mail issue in the bush administration was about archiveing specific e-mails and had those not been dealt with appropriately. we said, our it might not been as good. guess what? all those e-mails were found. >> that is a separate thing. >> as a matter of fact, he said it's not appropriate that you would have government work done on a private e-mail. >> that's right. >> so the issue was in the
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political office, you have to have two e-mails. people were overcompensating and trying to do both. that is three years before hillary clinton takes over an entire department in which she is in charge and those e-mails do not belong to her. >> you're making my point for me. this was -- >> but it's not the same. >> wait a second. >> an i tirks issue is totally different thanning making a decision to not have a government e-mail. >> there was a political scandal in the mush white house. i'm saying that because people were criticizing that or because people like the clintons were criticizing that the fact that she went ahead and did the same thing is inexcusable. >> you're actually -- >> it's not the same. all the e-mails were found and turned over. >> the private e-mails? >> twha were found -- the ones going to the rnc political office, yes.
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>> how do we know they were all found? >> oh, my god. >> she was there. >> can i give another motive? >> yeah, sure. >> be my lawyer here. >> is this a conspiracy theory? how weird is it? >> it's not that weird. she's the only -- granted other secretaries of state have used private e-mails. but she's the only one who's used only a private e-mail. what does that tell you? she had things that she wanted only her to see. juxtapose that with some of the things i mentioned yesterday 60 different companies that made donations to the clinton foundation. many of them had been made after arranging some amazing deals with foreign countries with foreign companies that hillary clinton had brokered. she brokers a deal. somehow u.s. companies were benefiting from these deals end up making donations to the clinton foundation. all that business was done via
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private e-mail. and the aides to hillary clinton have chosen most likely not to turn over those e-mails. >> right. >> she's turn over the old tapioca. >> does everybody realize that? >> correct. >> presumably you have to be in charge. thanks, obama. the other thing, if she was sending an official e-mail, she was sending it to somebody with a state department e 345i8, so therefore those people are responsible. the burden of proof is not on the recipient of the e-mail. it's on the sender of the e-mail. >> state department e-mails don't go back to the state department, they go to private companies, they go to private individuals. we don't have a right to see that? >> talk about a pattern. this also happened in the epa. >> a fake name. >> she had a fake name. >> she was -- she had a fake e-mail to communicate with the
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greeb green groups inappropriately illegally. she then quietly re-signs and no one ever follows up on it. it's not just a hillary clinton problem. this goes straight to the top. she works for him, president obama, and they should have to answer. >> lo is learner -- >> they're going to find out she was sending those chain e-mails about president obama being born in kenya. >> i promise -- >> i need one of those -- >> last week. right? kill me. bam. >> did you see the pictures he sends me. >> but you ask for those. >> that is true. political correctness just trumps safety on one college campus. that's next on the five. in new york state, we're reinventing how we do business so businesses can reinvent the world. from pharmaceuticals to 3d prototyping, biotech to clean energy. whether your business is moving, expanding or just getting started...
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university of minnesota has caved to pc pressure by making a major change to its security policy on campus. they're no longer including race in crime alert e-mails unless there are more details to help identify the suspect or group of suspects. there were weeks of student-led protests claiming it led to unfair stereotypes. your mouth is open already. >> my mouth is opened because i'm shocked. if somebody wanted me and describe me in detail, they should be able to do that. that should be the case for everybody. the point is to apprehend people. physical appearance is part of that apprehension. >> can they profile you at the airport? you're suggesting it's okay they want to arrest you using your ethnicity. could they do that for, i don't
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know people -- could they do that at the airport? >> tread carefully here. >> profiling a different. >> isn't that what you -- >> no. if i say -- >> after the crime -- >> somebody fitting eric's description, this is what he looks like. if i'm a terrorist, i know what you're getting at. if i'm a terrorist, i'm not going to be dumb enough to put somebody dressed in full. >> that's why you have random attacks because she just might have done that. >> then we take it one step further. stop and frisk. which would go against your profile where the crime has to happen -- >> but you're talking about this particular thing -- >> i'm expanding it. >> stop and frisk again, fyi is legal, okay. new york, i was being weird. >> i agree. if there is a crime and you're trying to find a suspect it could be a matter of a lot of urgency and you're trying to
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warn people or alert us to this person or be concerned if you see this person -- have to have some sort of way to describe them. >> what about virginia tech? don't -- right? you have to have the right suspect description especially if somebody is running around or has a gun. this is so crazy. >> like a bad experiment. >> they're endangering public safety on that k578 pus. >> what is wrong with you? >> a lot. >> i think that you guys are so -- you're so racist. i don't think it should stop there. i don't think it should stop there. did i cut you off? >> no. >> i'm sorry. what's your name again? whenever they say it's an adult male or just -- why does it have to be male? why do we have to talk about gender? >> saying it's an adult. >> and the aassumption it is always a male. it could be a woman with really
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short hair. a little, a lot of times we call criminals animals. what if literally they were animals. we shouldn't even be calling them humans. we should be calling them undocumented earthlings so we don't offend animals that might be -- >> did you smoke a joint before -- >> no. it's called absurdity. now it's a fire hose of foolishness. this is just nuts. when you're faced with nuts, try to take it as far as you can go. >> be prepared when the rapist goes out to rain someone else. >> we should punish the victim if they actually use skin pigment in the description right? isn't that the end result? >> yes. >> what about heavy set? >> oh that's terrible. awful. why do heights? that's offensive to me. average height. a man of average height.
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>> you're a man of -- >> it always says average build. >> yes. >> you stand for the guys of average height? >> i said average build. how dare you. >> i was trying to throw out a few more offensive things along the way. do you find it hard to resist that second glass of wine? why stopping at just one drink might help your chances with who you're trying to get, of whatever sex. after that. it's a fact. kind of like shopping hungry equals overshopping. whether you need a warm up before the big race... or a healthy start before the big meeting there's a choice hotel that's waiting for you. this spring, choose choice twice, get a night at no price
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many of us drink k408, yeah to loosen up when we're out on dates. there's a fine line between how you feel versus how you actually look. according to a new study people look more attractive after one glass of wine than they do completely sober. that all changes after the second glass. beer goggles i believe exist. after the fifth glass, you're slobbering, you're drunk and look terrible. maybe you should turn it off after the second drink?
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>> i'm not -- i'm looking at you because you're out there in the world. >> in the world. >> having drinks. >> well i like red wine. >> that's all you have to about that. >> you like red wine. >> i can drink a lot of wine. i had a situation this weekend, though, where i was given some blueberry moonshine sauce to put over ice cream and i loved it. it just destroyed me. i then got sick and i will never have blueberry moonshine sauce again. nobody looked more attractive than me. >> now you have a conditioned food diversion that triggers if you smell and see that you will feel sick and freak out. >> the science of this is sketchy. >> a trend here in new york i have a friend who wants to pitch a reality show called "to catch
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a cougar" because women get wasted and then they go after hot men like yourself. >> something that i have to deal with constantly. i would rather not talk about it. it is not about how you look when you drink but how other people look when you are drunk. this study misses the point. it's like baldness. it skips generation. the first drink you look good second drink you look bad, third great. >> who can drink six drinks? >> no problem. are they trying to say first drink your inhibitions come down and then the second one you are distorted? >> they are saying you don't look as good after your second drink. >> i misread the study. i thought as i drink -- >> probably because you are wasted and don't look so good.
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>> after my first drink i look worse. >> you look good after the first drink. >> you are still tan. >> what happens after six or seven? >> in the bathroom holding your hair. >> honestly. >> if you have a good tan you can get away with like more than one or two. >> airbrushing is the key to the study. >> i love how they have people in the study that volunteered to get drunk. >> of course. all studies like this originate in britain because -- >> maybe people flirt a little better when they are loosened up and buzzed a little. >> alcohol is necessary for creation. it's for love, for marrying and procreation. there are many people, billions of people who are too shy to approach other people who ask them out. alcohol is the lubricant. >> now we know how greg gutfeld got married. "one more thing" is up next.
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does a freshly printed presentation fill you with optimism? then you might be gearcentric. right now, buy any two 10-ream cases of paper and get one free. office depot & officemax. gear up for great. time for "one more thing." >> time for this, the gretchen carlson backwards walking olympics. gretchen carlson is the world's greatest backward walker. the latest competition where she has been backward walking every
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day for the past three months. it's like she has eye balls in the back of her head. she has yet to fall down once. when you walk backwards you do not burn calories you gain weight when you walk backwards because you are really taking the calories. it's a joke, kimberly. she is going to go to china 2016 to compete. >> in the news person category. in the things that make you go awe, a blind dog was rescue in alaska. it was lost for two weeks. it wandered away from his home. it is 11 years old. the owner was very worried. another dog owner heard it whining. it lost 14 pounds and it is healthy and reunited with its owner. >> does the dog know it's blind?
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>> going to keep me up all night. >> i don't know. >> this is the weirdest show ever. >> i love the law. i love a judge with a firm ruling. judge judy is amazing. she is so amazing its in its 19th season. this is a great show. international brand. this is a show that i guess for the past five years number one daytime talk show by far, by far. she kills everybody even dr. phil. >> i like her book too. >> number one daytime tv show. >> i think she made like $45 million. jon stewart is retiring from the daily show but may have a future. watch. >> nice. >> you don't think i learned
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anything? ♪ >> stewart! >> that was on monday night raw. >> so in the worst nightmare come true to life a place off japan called ioshima with 20 humans and like 120 cats. i'm deathly allergic to cats and i think it is scary because it is like alfred hitchcock. >> look at that. >> it's a video mill. that's all we do is film cats nonstop. >> that is better than the musical "cats." >> if that is your worst
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nightmare things are pretty good. >> i didn't know you were allergic to cats. >> we got to go. >> don't miss an episode. "special report" is on deck. the head of the world's only jewish state stands in the well of america's house and warns our president isn't doing enough to confront the nuclear ambitions of a, quote, dark and murderous regime. this is "special report." good evening. welcome to washington. i'm bret baier. israeli prime minister benjamin netanyahu becoming the second foreign leader to deliver his third address to a joint meeting of the u.s. congress. winston churchill was the first. the israeli prime minister seized the occasion to issue the dire warning about the

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