tv The Five FOX News April 2, 2015 2:00pm-3:01pm PDT
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to you, a crazy person to you? she is open to days and serving them, has a religious issue with care thing well a wedding for them. fair? palled? the type of person who should be getting death threats? you decide. on fox business, my special guest 8 p.m. tonight. hello, everyone, i'm greg gut field gut gutfield. she buys her clothes at american girl. "the five." so we got a deal. hurray. >> today the united states together with our allies and partners, has reached an historic understanding with iran, which if fully implemented will prevent it from obtaining a nuclear weapon. the islamic republic of iran has been advancing its nuclear program for decades. by the time i took office, iran was operating thousands of centrifuges, which can produce
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the maltteriels for a nuclear bomb and had a covert nuclear facility. we are prepared to resolve this issue diplomatically you only if iran came to the table in a serious watch >> the gist because iran was doing something pad, we must work with them to stop doing something bad. we could bomb them but boo hoo says the president, bombing is pad, so instead, let's talk. yeah, that's our only choice and it's a false one. in short, we didn't force iran to the table. they forced us. the message if you build it we will come. crawling. now, if you dispute the need for diplomacy but diplomacy without muscle is like the set of a cheap western flimsy, one-dimensional facades that no one buys and we have a right to be suspicious. would you be happy over a deal with the place that produced this chap? >> translator: death to america, yes, because america is the main
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cause of these pressures. they themselves, insist on focusing on the economy of our dear nation. what's their aim? their aim is to place the people against the system. >> what a guy. as long as that creep's still around, forgive me if i'm sceptical and putting a ten-year pause on their nukes, like handing an axe to a psychoand saying hold off till i'm gone. the fact is longing for legacy, mr. obama knows he has left the world in a mess that's on par with a teenager's bedroom. hence his need for speed. his definition of comp prom mize, figuring out the other guy's needs and meeting them on bended knee. but really i would love, love to trust obama, but he is the same guy who fibbed on day marriage, happily lied on obamacare grifted us with bergdahl blamed benghazi on a film shielded a dope like sharpton, abandoned iranian citizens ben they needed us most, chose the muslim brotherhood in egypt, all while obsessing over domestic ills as external threats grew. i don't think he wants to screw
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this up but maybe he can't help himself. all right, dana dana kind of gets me down, is the false choice, this idea that if we don't do this, we are going to have war. does that make sense? >> certainly not the case. you could have this or you could have more sanctions. >> yes. >> i have to say -- >> a better deal. >> i think that the administration, whether the leaks that were coming out of the -- in recent weeks were a ploy or not or maybe they were false it does seem that it's perhaps there is more teeth in this than we originally thought. i do think that the choice of venue for his speech today was interesting. i imagine that in the negotiations, the iranians would be so petty that he had to promise the iranians a rose garden. and so, we have 15 months of negotiations that ended up with a vague agreement. and i'm not willing to say it's a terrible agreement yet because i think it took 15 months to get there and we need to spend a little bit more time to look at t >> the republican candidate could say unlike obama, i never promised iran a rose garden. there you go.
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>> very good. very clever. glad you picked that up. >> i'm very slow today. eric, could i play you a sot? >> sound on tape? >> yes, that's professional term, america. this is obama discussion the framework. >> as president, and commander in chief i have no greater responsibility than the security of the american people. and i am convinced that if this framework leads to a final comprehensive deal, it will make our country our allies and our world safer. >> what do you make of that? >> here's the framework of the deal and i will agree with dana take it one step further, this is a fantastic agreement, a great deal for the united states and p5+1. the problem is president obama tipped his hand, he said if if right there if you can hold the framework of that deal, iranians hold to the framework of that deal, then it is a good deal and i would agree with them, they can't. they don't. they never have. they violated it through and through, up and down, every time the inspector gets close to one of the centrifuges that are
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enriching uranium at a higher level, they get thrown out of country. they -- it falls apart. let me just add a couple things much on page two of the deal, they talk about inspections and transparency. answered goes through five or six, maybe seven things that iran has to do in order to meet their end of the agreement. the iaea will have regular access to all of iran's nuclear facilities and then if you just add this line, that we know of, and you go inspectors will have access to the supply chain, that we know of. inspect letters have access to uranium mines that we know of. the problem is with the iranians, they have so much stuff going on that we don't know of they can't abide to that -- to that deal. one last thought, fine. great deal. but the minute, the minute one thing is violated that they cheat or they hide on one thing, you got to do what he calls snap back, snap back the sanctions immediately and walk away from this deal very fast, before they end up with a bomb. by the way, two to three months before they have a bomb, my guess is them have it two to three months anyway. >> he is talking about unprecedented, he kept saying
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unprecedented verification, that the inspectors will have unprecedented access. i would like to know specifics on what that means. what's going to be different in terms of the investigative process this time that we haven't seen before, that makes the president so confident that we are going to be able to keep tabs on iran in a way we haven't been able to do? i think it's interesting that he has already set up congress to have to accept this. i mean, he said, i'm paraphrasing him, if congress kills this deal, the u.s. will be blamed for a look of a path to diplomacy. once again saying this is the deal that i've achieved. this is the way i want it to go. and congress if you go against this, then you're essentially against diplomacy. you essentially want nuclear weapons. you want iran to have nuclear weapons if you are against this deal. so he said to them basically you have to accept this. and i think congress has been really backed into a corner on this even if they support greater sanctions. >> a good point, juan. i was watching, felt like saying if this doesn't go well, all our fault, always america's fault. why does president obama hate america? why dose hate juan williams, who is great american? >> i don't know.
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i don't know. i'm struck by the fact that you guys actually are giving the president some credit. i'm worried -- >> think we are not fair? >> you know -- >> and balanced? >> what's your problem? >> erik are you okay? >> it is a great deal. >> i don't know if it is great. >> no this -- the deal that they put together is great if they can verify all the -- >> here is the thing -- >> so now now comes -- now comes -- wait. wait. wait. now comes the whine and the sour grape wine. it was a good deal, we don't know we can't trust these iranians, which is true by the way. which is true. >> but we don't know they are telling us everything which is also true. so there are lots of unknowns you have to expect that the president, if he is really gonna get credit for this actually says, oh yeah there's going to be inspections and i can prove it. otherwise, he is a sucker. or just really want -- >> alluding to that. >> or he just really wanted a deal. what's wrong with that? >> okay, you his foreign policy has been a disaster. he set out to say he could solve
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this problem diplomatically. >> so? >> he needed to achieve that. >> so did jimmy carter at camp david, so did, you know, when nixon went to china. >> i will believe it when the iranians stick to the deal. that's what we will all believe. but you got to get up there and take the risk and be the kind of person who says i want peace in the middle east. i do not want iran to have a nuclear weapon. that's why. >> they themselves say within two to three months is their breakout time without this deal unless they are hiding stuff and guess what then it is two to three months with the deal too. >> let me tell you something, they have ground. they have been building up rapidly. >> want >> why didn't deny president obama hates america.
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>> what is going on? >> you me to weigh in on that part? >> going like this to me. >> i was going to make a point. what began as an international effort to deny them a nuclear capability has over the course of the 15 months turned into the united states legitimizing them having it eventually and there is enough cause for concern that there's confusion especially on the sun set point. john kerry in switzerland says no sunsets. president obama in the rose guard.talks different sunsets and probably was just too soon to actually talk about the details much the one thing that could actually save all of us from a pad deal is if the iranians never miss an opportunity to do something that screws it up for themselves but that, in turn, saves us from our own bad ideas. i would also mention to the republican candidates out there right now being asked by every reporter, will you nullify the deal upon taking office? that is like when president obama said and campaigned on a promise close guilty mow. i think it is irresponsible and premature to say that you would
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nullify a deal that hasn't even been signed yet. do not back yourselves into a corner. i would not answer that question if i were the republicans. >> i'm going to roll some more sound on tape. this is president obama on the iranian sanctions. roll. >> sanctions alone could not stop iran's nuclear program. but they did help bring iran to the negotiating table. because of our diplomatic efforts, the world stood with us and we were joined at the negotiating table by the world's major powers. in return for iran's actions the international community has agreed to provide iran with relief from certain sanctions. our own sanctions and international sanctions imposed by the united nations security council. this relief will be phased, as iran takes steps to adhere to the deal. >> what -- eric, why didn't we just run him into the ground? too keen for a dell? this stuff was working, do what we did to the soviet union, bankrupt him. >> or do what we were doing to them before we decided to stop
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doing it to them for some reason. i don't know. president obama wants a legacy deal. it's clear. you know what's really telling, post -- once this deal was announced. so i believe someone from the european community, i think first came to the podium or the -- to the microphone and then the iranian foreign minister came. he talked for like 25 minutes and he was smiling from ear to ear. very happy. >> he is going to go back to iran and be treat adhere row. >> a hero. got america to legitimize iran getting a nuclear weapon. >> what they wanted. >> you know what i propose guys. a road trip? >> where? tehran? >> no, a road trip. i think all of you want to be there when john kerry is given the nobel prize. >> the only medal he will ever be proud to have. >> oh. >> what he has wanted, right? that is what he has wanted all along. >> that is a nice one. >> gregory, what do you think she said? >> the only medal he was ever proud of. think of kerry's past. >> oh. >> what he did -- >> threw away the vietnam -- oh yeah, yeah.
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but the thing is do you really -- you think all these obama people just wanted medals and honors and legacies? >> you just said we were going to go to the nobel peace prize. i think -- i do think that they think that. possible that they have made the situation for the next president even more difficult and i think the sanctions piece is very important because as i understand it, the europeans get to go first in dropping their sanctions and they want more than anything to start dealing with iran. and it will be very difficult to ever get them to stop, even if our sanctions are delays they are going to start immediately and it will be almost impossible to get them to stop. so that's bummer. >> last question to you should president obama be impeached? >> absolutely. >> okay. >> of course. >> so much for sour grapes. >> just because he potentially has a problem with juan williams. that's why. >> okay. thank you. >> excellent. straight ahead -- i love saying straight ahead. >> what does that mean? >> i have no idea. >> just say ahead. okay. senator bob menendez entered a plea on his corruption charges
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new jersey seine for menendez appeared in court that he gave political favors to a long time friend in exchange for lavish gifts and campaign contribution. he pleaded not guilty to all counts. after mo than 40 years in public service, menendez vowed to fight the charges and said this is not how his career is going to end. >> prosecutors at the justice department were tricked into starting this investigation three years ago with false allegations by those who have a political motive to silence me. but i will not be silenced. i'm confident at the end of the day, i will be vindicated and they will be exposed.
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[ applause ] i am not going anywhere. >> the senator has voluntarily stepped down as the ranking democrat on the foreign relations committee, but the "new york times" eric, has called on senator menendez to actually resign his seat pause they said that he cannot serve his stilts and fight these charges which they detail as very troubling. >> yeah. a culture of corruption in the democratic party but you can make a case it is bipartisan in that respect. for the senator to say i'm not -- these won't bring me down, i mean, i want to hear the details. they are pretty salacious, some of these details, free plane rides parties, prostitutes, some cases the underaged prostitutes. i can't imagine he survives this. i see no scenario where he survives. this by the way, i think he is not up until am i right, '16 or '18. maybe '18.
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regardless, juan, do you think he is going to step down? ly be pressured? he seemed pretty fiery there. >> i think he is pretty resistant. yesterday, you mentioned dana this is the same public integrity unit the department of charges that brought charges against ted stevens, got a conviction overturned broke the rules and the judge didn't like the way that the prosecutors played. now, from what i'm hearing oh, jeerk the prosecutors feel very confident in this case and outside lawyers are saying they have got a better case against him than they did against bob mcdonnell the former governor of virginia. >> right. >> and the only defense that i'm hearing is not what i thought. i thought the defense was going to be under the kind of speech and debate clause that i can say what i want to say, i'm a member of congress, but instead it is going to be that i was doing personal favors for a friend outside of my official capacity and therefore i'm not subject to this law. >> that defense -- that defense you just mention is what harry reid used as his excuse about lying regarding mitt romney's
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taxes. >> he was on the senate floor though. >> so it is okay to lie about somebody not paying their taxes on the senate floor? i mean the corruption, i think that that issed a bad to me as some of the political corruption, although we will see what the details r there's been questions about the timing of this bob menendez on the foreign relations committee has been very strongly against a lot of president obama's foreign policy, in particular, the iran deal and also on cube pa. do you think that the timing is just a coincidence? >> i think it is a little suspicious pause he has opinion so vocal, not just on this but against lifting travel restrictions to cuba. he supported -- went against the administration when it came to ukraine, he wanted to send weapons to ukraine. repeatedly spoken out against the administration. co-authored the bill to require congressional approval of the nuclear deal. i'm sure obama wasn't really happy that i do think there's potentially something here? yeah, these are serious charges i think that need to be looked into. the fact it is all coming to a head now, could that be potentially a little bit serious? i think so >> what is it about somebody like senator menendez, this
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amazing record of public service, reelected by his constituents over and over again, yet he can't seem to stop himself in regards to these charges, but no one on his staff seems to say whoa, senator, maybe you shouldn't do that? >> i think a lot of these politicians are around people who are way wealthier than they are and that drives them crazy so they take this stuff kind of like as a way to live a life that they themselves can't afford. i think right that they -- he is scandal prone as clean as a jersey land fill. but it is also unfair -- an unfair target by the administration. the white house had looked the other way on menendez because his skeletons were leverage. and he turns out he mocked the skeletons. he didn't play their game. so, now they are going after him. >> they indict him the same day that the nuclear deal is -- >> i have to say if you're in the press office of the white house, you just have to be hitting your head against the wall, really, guys, the timing? sometimes nothing they can do and i do think it was a coincidence. okay, gonna move to the next thing, which is reports that the republican party, we all know,
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eric is very united against defeating the democratic nominee in the presidential election. we all assume i guess at this point, without any other option, that that will be hillary clinton. what do you think is the best -- if you had to draw make a little play book for the republicans right now, what would be the number one thing would you tell them to do? >> nothing. she is doing a great job on her own of destroying her own credibility, her own -- as you pointed out yesterday, her ratings for trustworthiness is that what it is? >> honesty and trustworthiness. >> are plummeting. everything she does destroys if she was here, approval ratings all ticking down. she can't help herself. if i were don, i would say -- >> i should point out, jedidiah that against any republican still beats them handily. not necessarily. she is actually falling below jeb bush in one or two states, even wrapped paul. >> but if you look at her overall favorability, she is still destroying all the
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republicans. so my message to the republicans would be figure out what you stand for worry about your positive message. from what i'm seeing, eric from polling, still seeing she is still taking the lead. in the midst of this e-mail scandal, all the transparency concerns, sorry, those republican candidates should be rising and some of those should be passing her. and why is it juan? because people do not feel that the republican party speaks to them. people do not feel that they are good at messaging, that they are good at public relation. when i go around this country and speak to youth groups, none of them can tell me what the gop stands for. they don't know what the platform stands for and they are confused. so, that's what the republican party should be doing. you know what let hillary crumble. she is gonna be her own demise. when she gets on national tv. and can't defend her up points that is her problem. when you get on national tv, be able to defend yourself and tell everyone what you stand for and bring people to you. >> juan your son, raffi pill yams works at the rnc, doing an excellent job. sought after. you did a great job in raising him. >> he is great. he is. i beat he is head of stop
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hillary or hate hillary, whatever over there. >> are you on his e-mail list? >> that is the thing, everybody here, especially at fox news, raffi sent me an e-mail today, he never sends me anything. >> raffi sent me a picture of you shirtless. >> i didn't get that one. >> anyway you know, i kind of think the republicans are not dummies on this point, you know negative ads work. and scuffing up your opponent early before people really get to the election, letting people know about the negatives i -- you know, as you know from this table i thought a lot of this stuff about the e-mails was overhyped, but nonetheless it does have some traction in the public mind. suddenly this question about is this woman honest? is it real if it brings pack some of the ghosts of the past. so if you're really trying to set up a fight not a bad idea. i don't find it very appealing i think jedidiah is right. my kind of politics, tell me why i want to vote for you, not why
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i -- >> because this is your -- i think this is your favorite topic. >> yes! what is it? [ laughter ] >> republican device as to what -- >> i think eric and jedidiah are both correct. the more above it all hillary is the faster she falls. the more disconnected she is the worst it gets. being oblivious is not going to work for her anymore. however the republicans need to field a candidate who can fight and win, not just fight. we get enamored by candidates that fight and then lose pause we -- it actually feels great even to lose, but i will tell, the people that peat you they feel a lot better. they feel a lot pert. so you need to think about it you look at your candidate yeah, he can fight, she can fight. but they have got to fight and win and that means being persuasively right, being able to talk to people. i speak to youth groups too, but for entirely different reasons. >> you scare them. >> yes. hopefully will not be the subject of an investigation.
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>> i hope not, too. >> all right, next a terminator, a talk show host and two of the cutest newlyweds you will ever see. if you leave now, you will miss it all in the fastest seven, ahead. i am totally blind. and sometimes i struggle to sleep at night, and stay awake during the day. this is called non-24.
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welcome back. time for -- the fastest 6 1/2 or so minutes on television. three amusing stories, seven animated minutes, one assiduous host. as candidates announce their con tennings, speechwriters might take note of this arnold schwarzenegger's speech when he was inducted into the wwe hall of fame. >> i want to take this great honor on behalf of america, pause america has shown to me as an immigrant that it is the land of opportunity. and i appreciate america so much. this is what is most important for me, always to give something
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pack because we must keep it the number one country in the world. you've given me everything that i have, my body building career, my movie career, gave me the opportunity to be a public servant and to run for office in california and to do everything like this and even to be here today in front of you. thank you america. >> you know what dana, an american immigrant success story that guy empod did it right there. >> right. and so the great thing about it, it was so all the then theic. so, that's what makes a really great speech. you have to like dig deep and just be honest and genuine and your audience will react well and wwe is a great place for him to have given that speech. patriotic people. it is a huge brand. and he knew his audience well. >> if you're a gop speechwriter, you take some of that stuff and go, wow, there's -- there's the passion. >> i say we should change the law so we can make him president but do we really want another foreign-born leader? >> yes. >> we are -- it is always the
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immigrant that tells the best story and you should always consider that when you're talking about immigrant stories. >> immigration. >> and about immigration. because it's the immigrants that really come here and value this country way more than the people, a lot of people that are born here and i think that's important. also lastly, the terminator has predicted everything that's happening in life. 1984, that book, no that movie came out in 1984 and it is -- predicting the way warfare is going. armies are going to be the size basically normal corporation and all the battles are going to be between machines. >> you like this guy, right? >> i do i love the terminator. the terminator has never been so sexy as when he talks about patriotism. i think the bigger message is that patriotism sells. i think americans across the board no matter where you stand on the political spectrum can relit to something like this. many of us have grand parents not on college campuses where they have been inculcated to hate america most people sit back and say i'm grateful for
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the opportunities i have here that i wouldn't have if i live somewhere else. i think candidates like marco rubio talks about the opportunities his parents didn't have coming from cube parks why those candidates resonate, they have a frame of reference for what it means to be american and what it means to have the opportunity here. >> juan? >> wrestling is real? i didn't know, because dana said it was appropriate that he spoke before the wrestling audience. i didn't know. i didn't know it was real. it is very helpful pause now when i watch -- i would love it. because you know what's interesting to me, he said that his pals were bruno san martino and jesse the bod ven ventura and superman -- superstar billy graham. i thought this guy's really -- those are old heroes. >> we need to go on to the next with you. ever wonder what america was thinking electing comedian al franken to the u.s. senate? ever wonder what could be worse? here's franken. >> the incumbent senator current senator there, dan coats, says he is not running
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next year and, look, when people come to me they say, young people, say how do you become a united states senator and i say well, do about 35, 40 years of comedy and then run for the senate. [ laughter ] i think he should run. i would like -- [ applause ] >> franken liberal comedian -- >> i think letterman would make a perfect democratic candidate. he got a head start sleeping with the interns. there's that. >> there's that. there you go. >> letterman, i mean, enough. we need a letterman, too? senator letterman? >> letterman, boy, his name recognition, got some money and he has always been indiana loving on his show. he would be -- >> not bad choice, for the democrats. yeah. i think it would be really entertaining. the only thing more entertaining for this is if joe biden runs for the presidency. i want to see comedy. >> enter taping. >> franken's not great, but i
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think letterman would be funny. i guarantee you people would vote for him, too if he were to run in a place like hollywood, people love that slebity werety component. take you right to the -- >> do this one. finally, john legend wants to raise money for his show me campaign benefiting education awareness. he is throwing a special concert for people who donate as little as ten bucks but here is a video promoting that concert. ♪ give your all to me, i'll give my all to you ♪ ♪ you're my end and my beginning ♪ ♪ even when i lose i'm winning ♪ ♪ 'cause i give you all of me ♪ ♪ and you give me all of you, oh ♪ [ bleep ]. >> all right. well, dogs and models that's our formula. john legend's copying our
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formula. heidi and -- >> i love it. i love it it's so romantic. i mean if this does not make you all warm and fuzzy inside, then you must be greg gutfeld, all i got to say. heartless. >> did dana produce this? >> i could never imagine giving jasper away at the aisle. the altar. >> jasper and freedom got married? >> no. no. no >> both boys. >> i think it's cute, whatever. a cute idea to raise money for his charity. i love it. so kitschy though. >> this is completely and utterly immoral. >> what? >> it is as dam and eve, not lassie and toto. what are you guys thinking? i reserve the right not to make a dog day wedding cake for that wedding. it is disgusting. better not be same-sex dogs or my head will explode. >> jasper and freedom did get married, we would have pizza from that pizza rhea. >> against god, dogs and man. >> i hope they don't try in
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a verdict was handed down in the school cheating trial in yesterday in atlanta. 11 defendants, including a former principal teachers and other administrators were convicted of conspireing to change test scores to collect bonuses or keep their jobs. one other was acquitted. they now face up to 20 years in prison and the judge showed very little sympathy. >> they are convicted phelps, as far as i'm concerned. i don't like to send anybody to jail. it's not one of the things i get a kick out of but they have made their pedestrian and they are gonna have to lie in it. and it starts today. >> you know, eric, my hope is
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that this verdict that showed some accountability will send a serious message about not only changing test scores, but about grade inflation in general, which is something that happens across the country all the time. >> amazing, you spend a lot of time in teaching, these teachers, they were cheating, basically stealing pause the inflated test scores, doing it so they could ingratiate themselves with some money but they are doing it -- using the kids to do it and that's really the heart of the problem. they are teaching kids that it's okay to do all those things if they are -- if the ends justify the means and the means were terrible. teaching a kid how to be a chief or a politician. >> yep. >> dana you know what was horrible, the teachers that battled against this were facing retaliation or threats of retaliation. so even within the communities, if you had teachers that recognized that this was a problem, they didn't know where to go. if you have administrators in on it, where do you go to challenge what is happening in the school? >> i think there is outrage and curious of juan's input on this what they are doing is stealing from the children. >> there you go p couldn't do it
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more. just quickly pick up on what dana said, the ultimate victims in this case are young people who were given social promotions, false test scores and therefore, the illusion that they were actually capable of rising up that ladder of upward mobility, doing something with their lives. these kids couldn't really -- didn't deserve to get out of school because they didn't have the educational background. these teachers were cheating the kids who were the most vulnerable, poor, minority kids. this is in atlanta. >> that's big got try. >> the standardized test scores are linked to school funding so what happens if they elevate these scores, not only do they want promotions but they want more money from the federal government, these public schools. so, is that the problem? >> no i think you guys are all wrong. this whole scandal helps kids. think of all the new math problems they are learning. for example, 180 employees accused of wrongdoing from 44 schools. how many employees is that per school? 4.1. 4.1. of the 180 employees accused, 38 were principals, please frame that in a percentage.
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[ laughter ] >> asking me? >> 23%. >> i was pad at math. >> lemonade from lemons a new study shows black home-schooled students outperformed white public schoolers what do they control for? the setting. could it be that the public school actually prevents kids from getting any schools whatsoever? and the reason is it an incubator of incompetence. time to introduce choice everywhere because that introduces competition and you get great teachers. >> can i hug mr. peck? that's great. i mean, that's exactly right. let's get more competition. and let's be honest. you know, it used to be in the old days actually, gonna make me unpopular you before no child left behind, they used to wipe off the kids who were said to be -- that kid can't learn that kid comes from aed home or whatever, then let's be honest let's give parents more power through choice. improve schools give america's children a chance. >> the only way you can do it through competition.
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>> what do you mean you're not going to be popular? that is a popular view. >> not with a certain segment. >> cheers to accountability for bounce. we often read stories there is no accountability. these people will pay the price thankfully i'm optimistic about the future. next, her coaches took her off the volleyball court and now one teen is taking the league to court. should charges be brought against referees in sports disputes? bell talk about it next.
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should the courts intervene in youth sports disputes? 16-year-old athlete odd dry dimitru voined a volleyball club in virginia with hopes to impress varsity coaches and possible college recruiters too when her coach benched her and her league told her she couldn't join another team, she and her family sued. i'm not kidding. she sued the league. here's the teen and her mom. >> can i play good volleyball? >> yeah. i would like to think so. i mean, i've been playing for about five years so i mean i would say that, you know i know how to play. >> my family, the coaches for the team, the club director, we all agree that it was in audrey's best interest to move teams, to change to another club. the purpose of going to court was to get an injunction to allow audrey to play for the
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rest of the accept a there's no monetary suit or anything like that. >> wow. so, do we have a situation here, jedidiah, where youth sports is becoming a business? >> about the money though right? these parents invest a ton of money. this mom saying she spent $6,000 a year on team travel. they are looking forward to college scholarships. if you take her off the field it make her less likely to get that. so, they are thinking about the money. i think this is all about the money when you look at it. >> played some sports. >> yeah. no. no. i think she should be allowed to play -- coach cuts her and sit the bench, she should be allowed to go to another team. >> i agree. actually, i agree, but the rules of the league, the league says no so then you go sue? >> like she said, she is not suing for monetary relief. >> but it is about the money that they are thinking about in the future. not saying money they are going to get from this. >> high school sports so competitive, sometimes better not to be on the high school team, it is better to be on an aau team or travel team, soccer
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or other sports, so if you don't like the rules, you know, okay, so you sue to see if you can get the rules changed, if you can, you can. but i hate this idea where a kid gets cut, she can't go play for another team. that's not free. not a free market. >> but i'm also thinking, without -- just viscerally, i think you know what kid, you got cut you got cut you know life. grow up. >> that was my first reaction, too, though i do think if they didn't know the rules before hand that would be something. but if they signed on to the league rules and that's what they are, i don't know if the court is the right way to go. i'm glad they are not suing for money. >> greg said if it was your kid, what would you do? >> as you know i volunteer as a volleyball coach at the women's prison. and this is -- i hate volleyball. volleyball is evil it is based on an arbitrary conclusion that getting a ball over the net is somehow superior to under the net. who is to say that that has to be a score? why can't you get the ball under the net?
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who -- who created this sport? and why is it on sand? >> especially if you can just walk under the net. >> who needs a net? why do we have a net for volleyball? why? >> it is racist. >> it is racist. racist little person. >> everything is racist. >> i thought you were going to say sexist. >> sizist. >> have you seen a beach volleyball game? >> yeah. johns sole plays in central park. >> no. >> yes he does. >> yes he does. >> not what was on juan's mind. >> i was thinking greg's prison volleyball p. >> ever want to come and check out game more than welcome. >> you are very kind to me. old man like i am. one more thing coming up next.
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time for one more thing, let's go to dana. >> let's do. in two week, my book will come out it called "the good news is." today, i announced book tour dates. i don't have a bus, like greg, i turn it had down it first off in washington, d.c. at a ei. if you go to dana perino.com, you can find out other dates, a lot of places where you can rsvp and i'm going to california, colorado, florida, new york, pennsylvania, texas and we will see where else. >> dana perino.com? >> or our facebook page at the five. >> okay. that's great. eric? >> okay. so greg would say april fool's jokes on april fools' day are lame. that said, the white house released this. here's president obama doing his
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best frank underwood. >> hello everybody. this is not frank underwood. this is barack obama. happy april fools' day. frank learn it had from me. >> i don't know if i would actually brag about that. what are they thinking >> validates my point. >> how big is this ego though? >> wow. >> holy cow. >> he learned what from him? >> still trying to figure out what that was. >> gave me nightmares. jedidiah? >> full name. i have an awesome april fool's segment jimmy kimmel put together. >> you didn't watch "the five" yesterday. >> by saying i didn't do anything to the coffee and just watch what happened. just watch. >> by the way, i didn't do anything to the coffee. >> oh my god. what did you do to it? >> nothing. >> oh, my god, what an idiot. >> april fool's.
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>> april fool's. >> what did you give me? >> april fool's. >> new york city. coffee, tea. >> [ bleep ] [ bleep ]. >> i love this pause i'm so paranoid, if you told me that i would start to taste things in that coffee, my imagination -- one guy does. he tastes -- what did you do to my water? >> what didn't i do? >> water. >> water. >> to my water. >> hey, juan. >> my chance. so i'm going to tell that you mcdonald's announced that they are going to increase their minimum wage $1 above any local minimum wage beginning july 1st. and that means that 90,000 people are going to get a pay hike by 2016. the average pay for a mcdonald's worker will be about ten bucks, above the federal minimum wage by 7.25.
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mcdonald's, target, walmart again ikea all increasing minimum wage in this country. i think this is wonderful. >> i think great. these teenagers supporting their family of four on that first rung job going to appreciate it. all those electronic devices you put your order into now, huge demand in china. i love mcdonald's though. >> how can you not love mcdonald's. the best diet coke? they have the best formula for the diet coke. >> diet coke is different depending on where you go. >> absolutely. >> you learn something new every day. >> that is anti-learning. >> no. >> pie asocialing that thought, you learned less. >> i lost another one? >> quick self-promotion on my part i'm on tonight with -- gonna do that first. my new column up on operate bart.com confessions of a self-conscious conservative. it is kind of interesting. i suggest you check it out. and i'm on with mcgurk on o'reilly, talking complete and utter nonsense. >> i think i'm on o'reilly before you. >> you are on o'reilly before me
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and you basically put everybody to sleep. we came in and live.it had up. >> gee thanks. >> terrible. >> that's it for us. special report is next. president says the deal prevents iran from having a bomb, it is verifiable and features the most robust and intrusive inspections in history. critics are saying the deal is bad for america and the world. also the vicious slaughter of christian students in kenya just before the easter weekend. it is part of a trifecta of terrorism. an islamic extremist group executes christians in kenya. shiite rebels
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