tv The Five FOX News April 29, 2015 2:00pm-3:01pm PDT
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union square downtown new york. it's a big protest to show camaraderie with those in baltimore. everyone gets concerned it gets out of hand. hopefully it will not. we shall see. hello, everyone. i'm dana perino and i'm here with kimberly guilfoyle and greg gutfeld and eric bolling and it's 5:00 and this is "the five." streets in baltimore have been relatively quiet and school reopened. at least 35 arrests have been made since last night's 10:00 p.m. curfew went into effect. we have fox coverage of the very latest in the embattled city. leland vitter and rick leaf vanventhal
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and geraldo rivera is going to be joining us. leland first. >> reporter: my source tells me and it's a senior law enforcement source involved in trying to deal with these riots from the very beginning, that they were told by the mayor, the direct quote is let them move. it's only property. and the video tells a very telling tale. this is where i was standing on monday night. this store behind me was looted. the liquor store across the street was looted and it wasn't on for hours. the other liquor store, the green building right there was looted as well. when all of that was happening, the police were standing the whole time. just about at the top of the hill right there, they watched it all happen and did nothing, dana. my source tells me that that was a direct order from the mayor down to the chief of police and then down to their police force to let this happen on monday. let the brick throwing happen and rioting happen. i was told by two additional law
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enforcement officers that on saturday some officers were ordered not to put on certain protective gear and a lot of folks got hurt by the rocks and bottles and breksicks being thrown at them. they were ordered not to put on the protective gear by the baltimore police. >> i was going to bring that up. this is my obvious conclusion. if they were told not to use the riot gear and the riot gear was in short supply you have a number of police officers who are in the hospital. did their injuries result from not wearing the riot helmets because they were so fearful of it looking millitarized? >> reporter: i'm certainly told that on saturday there was a number of orders that went down about what police officers were allowed to wear. you might remember on saturday there were a lot of bricks coming in and those kinds of things. and i'm told that those police were allowed to use their riot
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shields and helmets but were not allowed to use the big sticks that protect you against bottles and bricks and provide some kind of cushion. i'm told that the baltimore police ordered a number of officers including those coming from other places to simply try and help to not wear those protective uniforms. obviously that changed over the next couple of days especially as we saw on tuesday when the police finally decided to really lay down the law. >> leland so mayor rawlings-flake blake said that wasn't the case and then again she said she didn't let them -- give them room to destroy stuff after she actually did say that. we've also heard that she said not only the stand-down order but let them loot. it's only property. did you hear that or is someone else reporting that my source is telling me this quote is
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attributed to the mayor by my source and the second part of this is that there was a true stand stand-down order, that on monday the order went from the mayor, chief of police and down to the commanders all around here dealing with these riot teams. that they were not supposed to engage the protesters or rioters, looters, thugs, whatever you want to call it. the proof is in the video, guys in the fact that the police were 75 yards up there and there was looting and mayhem going on right here. you might remember the burning cars in this intersection and then the looting of that liquor store as proof that the police watched and did absolutely nothing. >> leland the problem is you're talking about an issue of -- i want to go to the issue that greg brought up which goes to the injuries. this is indefensible. you're asking people to go and put their life on the line every day, going out in a situation
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like this which it was very obvious that the situation was escalating. police were not able to wear the proper gear. who is going to get to the bottom of this in terms of the responsibility and who made the call and the fact that the mayor was responding to any direction from the white house or the doj. >> no information in terms of whether this came from the white house or doj or why the mayor may have ordered this procedure to be put in place. i was told by two law enforcement officers on the front lines that they were told don't put on these protective suits and they looked at me and said three of our buddies were hurt and had to be taken care of because they were told not to put these suits on because of the optics of the situation. in some way you have to remember what is more important, there are police officers hundreds if not thousands, from all of the mid-atlantic from baltimore
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to try and restore calm to this city who clearly, up until at least a while ago, weren't allowed to fully protect themselves and in their words, simply take it. >> leland first, i think you've been doing a great job. leland is my roommate in d.c. and i bet your folks are beaming the great job you've been doing for fox. but i wanted to ask, the mayor said she was responding appropriately, especially given that so many of the young people teenagers were involved. do you give any credence to that? >> reporter: juan i don't ever want to disagree with someone i share an office with. my parents were more petrified at times than thrilled. but to answer your question the folks looting these stores and the five-finger discounts on any tennis shoes and leather jackets, liquor they were thugs, for lack of a better term.
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this wasn't some kind of free-for-all going on. this was a mob action. second of all, the police were up there. there were hundreds of police officers that we saw on the streets that night. they had riot gear. they had less than lethal weapons to use. they had bean bags tear gas, they had everything else going on. and then they had that arsenal to be able to use to disperse this crowd without causing any real harm. the people doing this are not wayward teenagers who got excited. these people were really involved in an extreme amount of violence. remember juan not only were they going after these liquor stores they were stealing cars and crashing into each other. my crew almost got ran down. this was mayhem and lawlessness on the streets of baltimore allowed to go on at the order of the mayor, i'm told by my source. >> thank you, leland. geraldo rivera covered the protests last night on fox news. listen to this. >> reporter: the deadline has come -- the deadline has come
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and now we will see if the people clear. i'm with the state senate majority leader. come on. get out of the way, man. get out of the way. don't talk into my camera. come on. come on stop it! stop it! you're making a fool of yourself. >> i'm making a fool of myself? >> you're making a fool of yourself. >> do they expect things to be calmer in the city tonight? let's ask geraldo now. tell us what is going on over there. >> reporter: well, dana the people are milling about, not nearly the numbers that tend to happen after nightfall. the police are in a casual mode right now. they have not put on their shields or heavy equipment. they are lounging around as the people are. the test of course will come as we approach the curfew hour. certainly after nightfall, 8:30
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9:00 we'll get a read on whether or not the tension level will rise to the height of last night or worse, monday night. right now, i have to tell you, there is -- it's not a festive air. at least there's one of maybe nervous anticipation. there are preachers on the corner. you might hear them with the megaphones in the background. many grown-ups are around. young people too. school is back in session. they are trying to resume some kind of normalcy in this stricken city but the scars run there are a lot of people with grievances. it's almost as if freddie gray becomes the background sound for people acting out. some real frustrations bordering on rage. >> we saw you yesterday and it was almost a similar type of shot. you were in front of city hall very calm very quiet. how did you find yourself in such a middle -- kind of an agitated crowd and was the
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camera the cause of the agitation? >> reporter: you know that is always the beef about the news media, whether people are playing to the news the cameras, whether the lights agitate or incite are we hear to film the demonstrators here because of us. you know i've been in the business almost 45 years and i still have no answer to that riddle. but the fact of the matter is if this city in this city that is maybe 20 30 years behind say, new york in terms of its social evolution, this is a city trapped in the '70s. it's never recovered from the martin luther king riots of april 1968. you walk down the streets, row upon row of derilicht housing. the parents here are bloods and
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crips and drug dealers. they are the surrogates for the broken families. this is a problem that is festering and is lying invisible until we have a violent outburst. you know i don't know whether the mayor ordered the police to stand down or not. i don't know if they had enough officers on monday night. i wasn't here on monday night. but i can tell you that the rage that i saw last night, the frustration, that's legit, however inappropriate, illegal and absolutely intolerable. >> geraldo, from what i understand last night you had helicopters over the city announcing the curfew and then you had some people who were defying the curfew and had to be arrested. what did you see there? >> reporter: well this was the line right here. the line was right behind me. the police shield what they did was try to contain the crowd in a relatively limited geographic
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area and they succeeded. they said this far and no further. what you saw, as the curfew approached and then passed was a handful of agitators and they seemed mostly young people like the young man mad at me and at fox news. he was acting out -- maybe he was acting also rather than acting out, just a stage act, in a sense. it was so sad, in a way, so melancholy. the cameras will go whether we're agitating or recording, we will leave. but these folks will all still be here. now, when is the next time we'll talk about inner city baltimore and the fact that unemployment among these young people is north of 35%, that there are virtually no fathers in these homes living with the mothers of their children. this is -- this is a crisis that
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is largely invisible. you know i deplore this violence. i condemn it. that young man was in my face and i stood my ground. still, i understand the frustration. i've been around long enough that i get it and i wonder where we go from here. >> well i think you were right on target with talking about so many of the underlying kind of quiet riot situation that we don't cover. that's a fact geraldo. >> reporter: we have our rights too. i have the right to be a reporter and to be here. i have a press pass. we have a camera. we have millions of people tuning in to fox news to see what the reality is. we tell the story straight. i've given these folks plenty of opportunity to vent their frustration and their anger but i will not -- i tell you, if i were the mayor, i would not have permitted what happened on monday night but maybe it's easy
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to be a monday night quarterback. >> right. >> geraldo, having prosecuted so many cases, including the juvenile offenders, i've seen 14 15 16 17-year-olds do horrible things. for people just to say, there's just young people out there, well, there are young people out there arming themselves against the police department and whether they are frustrated with what is going on in the community, it's not a justification to commit lawless acts of violence against the police department or store owners and families that have worked really hard to try and make a living for themselves. i think that's the problem. i hear too much of the dismissiveness. not from you but when you have a 16-year-old with a one-pound brick hurling it at an officer that doesn't have proper equipment, that's not okay.
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>> reporter: that is why the mother mrs. graham is the hero. that's what we need. the parents that take charge of their own children families that take responsibility for themselves. we need these folks to have the dignity and self-esteem to go forward with the difficulties in life and improve their lot in life. >> geraldo has the mayor visited the injured cops yet? >> reporter: i haven't seen the mayor but i believe she has been here but i don't know if she's visited with the officers. but you know what what is fascinating and frustrating and showing you the complexity of this situation, a black mayor, black police commissioner black majority in city government and yet you still have this disconnect between these folks and what is happening downtown at city hall. this is something that -- >> where is the president of the
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united states? he spoke out in anguish and talked about how awful it is. i agree. that's why i advocate that every police killing be a presumed federal civil rights offense. let's look at everyone who dies in police custody. however, these folks have a responsibility to police themselves as well. that's why that mom is my hero. she is the parent of the year and she should be i think, "time" magazine's man of the year, i think. >> thank you, geraldo. for the first time in mlb history, a ball game was played without any fans. rick leaf vanventhal is live. >> reporter: in the first time in history, the official attendants between the white sox and orioles was zero. the game inside was being played
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in front of no one except players, coaches and media and some security. you see groundskeeper on the field there. the game was very fast. it only lasted 2:03. i heard some people on the radio suggesting that perhaps major league baseball would look at that that the fans are slowing down the games. because the otherrioles one 8-2. it was a short game an important team for the game because they postponed two others earlier in the week. they postponed or pushed the weekend games against tampa to florida. they've been plenty of talk about the money being lost by the team and by the city in terms of revenue from the tickets, from the concessions, the local businesses that would be selling beers right now. and there is also talk dana
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that they acted hastily. last night was fine. today things are very calm in baltimore. it certainly looks like they could have gotten the game in without any issues. >> thanks rick. much more to come this hour. next a vietnam vet with a powerful message for the violent protesters and the mom who publicly disciplined her rioting son reveals what was going through her mind during that now infamous smack-down.
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the riots reveal the difference between real and fake sympathy. you feel real sympathy for the woman watching her place of work get destroyed. >> they didn't have to burn down the store like that. this is our home! it is destroyed! stop the violence please! we don't need this! >> you feel real sympathy for the anguished veteran watching his city burn. >> i love my country. i love my city and i'm an american. i'm not black, white, red, i'm
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american. >> real sympathy for the mother trying to pull her son away from a doomed future. >> get the [ bleep ]! get over here now! >> she's a bleeping hero. so what is fake sympathy? attributing the riots to rage despite the glee the laughter their age. fake sympathy sells of a city that snapped when the attacks were actually planned. fake sympathy is a media indulged in grievance and acting shock when everything burns. sorry. the citizens find no comfort in your enlightened analysis. fake sympathy are the politicians demanding more cash as they ignore the underlying crisis. they prefer money or reality. it's a demand for more and, in effect rewarding destruction. fake sympathy are the creeps who
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find the word thug more evil than rioting or slime like destruction that is a legit action. bengie tweet your action so we can try it out on you. crime is rooted in anger, not opportunity. anger exists but those who care don't torch their town. they operate within a morality that guides their actions. good people suddenly don't turn bad. so what you saw was no uprising but the death of sympathy where youngsters free of family structure, untethered to consequence frankly don't give a damn because they don't have to. k.g. you're a mom. >> i am. >> let's show the bit of that mother explaining her actions after she publicly went after her kid. >> i could see the objects being thrown at the police and i was in like an awe, like oh my god, this is really happening right
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here with me and lo and behold i turn around and look in this crowd and my son is actually coming across the street with this hoodie on and a mask. at that point i just lost it. that's my only son. and at the end of the day, i don't want him to be a freddie gray. >> kimberly, has she just reinvigorated the argument for corporal pun mishishment? >> i like where she is coming from. she has passion and said that's my only son. she doesn't want him to be a victim of consequence because in the wrong place at the wrong time part of the problem committing acts of violence against the police department. we learn this stuff when we are little. two wrongs don't make a right. freddie gray died. let's find out why and make sure it doesn't happen again. are there rough rides going on? what's happening?
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let's find out. let's do it the right way because we have laws in place to address these kinds of wrongs. she's doing what she can as a parent which is another part of the equation to make sure that she is living a life of consequence and that her son doesn't learn the lesson in this moment in time that is okay to commit acts of violence and damage other people's properties. that's what she's trying to teach him about tough love. >> you know the most powerful thing i heard from her is she doesn't want her son to be dpred freddie gray. i feel is so deeply myself that it was so important for her to make a clear statement to her son but i think to children all over this country who come from single parent families and who may have been enticed, whether it's by gangs or e-mails or all of the twitter going on. you know what this is the way to destroy your future. now, doi i do have an argument with you. i don't think it's anything to
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do with freddie gray. i think these were kids acting out and taking advantage of the opportunity. >> i agree completely. >> okay. >> i do. you probably thought when i was talking about the media i was talking about me. i'm not really the media. i'm above it. eric robert valentine, the veteran, he seems to me like a voice of the past living in the present and going what's happening? >> voice of reason, though. >> yes. >> on the mother look at the kid, too. don't just look at the mom. look at the kid. you could tell he knew he was wrong. this wasn't a -- >> oh, i'm busted. >> -- a kid who lived a life of a bad kid or a thug. this was a kid who probably started to go wrong right there and she stopped it in his tracks. >> she shut it down. >> bring in the moms i totally agree. burning police cars is a legitimate political strategy.
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nothing says social justice like burning out a building or flipping a police car -- >> what is wrong with lamont? >> what is wrong with those? >> cvs is not run by cops. >> no. and who worked there and guess what it's a franchise and may be black-owned. >> and what about the prescriptions for the elderly people in the community. it's so upsetting that people would destroy -- you just burned your own house down. how do you feel about it? >> dana? >> hardest thing in america is being a single mom. there's a lot of of them and a lot of them in baltimore. i think they absolutely do their best. they can't continue to do their best if businesses flee the city if they can't keep it safe there's no one going to be there and i think what she was thinking in her -- she probably wasn't thinking of this exactly, i don't want my son to be freddie gray. i want my son to be dr. ben carson. he grew up in baltimore, a
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single mom, was able to produce one of the best neurosurgeons. >> i don't think he grew up in baltimore. >> similar. >> you know what drives me crazy, this phrase is being used as a buttress against any kind of criticism. see if you can guess what it is. >> there will be some monday morning quarterbacking on whether they had enough officers out on patrol given freddie gray's funeral yesterday. >> it's easy to monday morning quarterback. do you think it should be any of what we saw could have been prevented? >> i think we actually are not monday morning quarter backing. >> i'm monday morning quarterbacking. that's what we often do. >> at least don lemon is honest. if you can't monday morning quarterback, then incompetence prevails. you have to tell incompetence when they are incompetent. >> and there are consequences for it. >> yes. coming up did baltimore's mayor order police to stand down
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. hours after the funeral of freddie gray police in baltimore were violently attacked and stores were looted and buildings burned down. did the city's mayor allow it to happen as we reported earlier, a senior law enforcement source tells fox news mayor rawlings-blake did, in fact give a direct order to her police chief for officers to stand down. she denied it on america's newsroom earlier today. >> so there was no order to hold back? >> no. >> or was there? >> no. but you have to understand it's not holding back. it's responding appropriately. >> for those who would suggest that you screwed this up what would you say? >> people have a right to their
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opinion. >> well this is the same mayor who admitted this weekend she instructed police to give protesters enough quote, space to destroy. former mayor rudy giuliani would have handled things much differently. >> you shouldn't have a cooling off period. you should arrest the first person who throws a rock, arrest the first person who tries to burn something. people have a right to protest and make their opinion. they can be very upset about what they consider to be a murder of a person in custody but you cannot destroy property. first person does it goes to jail. >> k.g. that was a fantastic interview. >> yeah. >> he said his police were instructed the first person that throws a rock gets arrested the second and third and fourth get arrested as well. he said don't give them any room. it's a wrong way to live. >> i think he's right. it's like a tipping point of policing. if the first guy throws it is it okay for them to throw a punch? no. you have to jump on it right
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away. we'll have a zero tolerance policy. what gives you the right to in injure or destroy or incite? you cannot use your hands to commit acts of violence or destruction of property. no way. >> juan can we learn from this and say that this cooling off period is a bad idea going forward? >> i think it was a terrible idea. i must say, it's very interesting because, look i don't put property over human life okay? if you want to destroy property i don't approve of it but if she is saying that she felt like this is going to lead to a violent conversation between police and these criminals, is what they are, then i understand what she was doing. >> no no no. >> well because, look she does not want this to blow up into some kind of -- >> let them burn buildings down? >> i just told you i thought she made a mistake, didn't i? >> it turned out to be an
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accelerant on the situation instead of calming things down. >> okay. i'm not taking her side necessarily. however, because of the previous situations that she's seen in other cities in her way, she was trying to get ahead of it and it was a mistake and i think she's basically admitting that but also focusing on the fact that they have to deal with the situation right now. the thing i wonder about is it wasn't a spontaneous eruption. it was like having a five-day forecast of a major natural disaster that is coming. so there was time to prepare and to get advice from people that surround you, like your chief of police or maybe even someone in the federal government that could advise a local community of how to deal with a situation like this. i think that's where the biggest failing was, failing to prepare not for just the inevitable but for the he have tableevitable? is that a word. >> now it is. >> she screwed the police in a big way by leaving them ill-equipped and she's lying.
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she created the substitute teacher syndrome when authority all of a sudden is under shaky ground because there's no backup and that encouraging anarchy and outburst. once the police have no control, then they can just take over. they treat them like substitute teachers. but this to use a liberal phrase is a teachable moment. liberals ruin cities. it's not black or white. it's red and blue. cities are destroyed under democrats because they don't know how to deal with the constituency there. >> i'm throwing this out there and i hope it's not taken the wrong way. mayor stephanie rawlings-blake is not just the mayor. she's also the secretary. >> someone needs to ask. >> it may not be that much of a stretch after all.
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>> ask. we know that happened at hurricane katrina. you do know -- >> that was precedent for this. >> this actually happens. cnn anchor blames the military and veterans for the riots. now she's walking all of that back. so if you have a flat tire dead battery need a tow or lock your keys in the car, geico's emergency roadside assistance is there 24/7. oh dear, i got a flat tire. hmmm. uh... yeah, can you find a take where it's a bit more dramatic on that last line, yeah? yeah i got it right here. someone help me!!! i have a flat tire!!! well it's good... good for me. what do you think? geico. fifteen minutes could save you fifteen percent or more on car insurance.
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whole foods feeds the oppressor". >> this is just outrageous. of course whole foods should be helping out. if they care and invest in the community, they had every right to be supportive of those officers. >> greg? >> these losers are from their company purge on twitter are saying don't help the situation. they themselves are not helping. i guess they would feel better if whole foods had supplied the rioters with gluten-free rocks to throw. >> oh my gosh. kale. we have other bad behavior in the press. let's take a listen to cnn anchor brooke baldwin. >> i like our veterans but they come back from war and don't now how to be in the community. >> stumped.
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>> not on this show ever. but it's never okay. there is no reason to ever make that mistake. i know she tried to walk it back saying i made a mistake, i shouldn't have said that. but you cannot say that about the military that are keeping you safe so that you are okay to say dumb live things on television. i just think that there's something deep-seeded if you are able to make that mistake. you know what i'm saying? >> something seriously wrong. not quite right, in fact. >> very deep-seeded. >> she was perpetuating a vicious slur against the military. and this -- i'm sure cnn has done lots of stories about how hard it is for veterans to find jobs. this is one of the reasons because of this type of rumor mongering, a stereotype against the veterans that is unproven and there are exceptions -- some violence. we know that ptsd is a problem for some of our veterans but most of them serve honorably and
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make excellent citizens. cnn should be ashamed of themselves. >> she should apologize like 150 million times. >> she should also hope the next time she gets a police officer to her house, maybe he or see will be a general studies major. baltimore's mayor refers to the rioters as thugs and some say that's equivalent to referring to them as the "n" word. that's next. (vo) around age 7, the glucose metabolism in a dog's brain begins to change. (ray) i'd like to see her go back to her more you know social side. she literally started changing. it was shocking. she's much more aware. (jan) she loves the food. (ray) the difference has been incredible. she wants to learn things. (vo) purina pro plan bright mind
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one of baltimore's biggest sports icon just issued an important message to the city's rioters. here's ray lewis. >> please go home stay home! you don't have no right to do what you're doing. too many hardworking people built this city. we put this city together and put them on our backs. we know there was wrong done. we know we're not getting the right justice. we know all of these answers. but rioting in our streets is wrong. it's dead wrong. >> that's not the kind of responsible language we're hearing from one of baltimore's
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city elected officials. he dropped the "n" word. >> she's are children who have been set asighed, marginalized, so calling them thugs just call them [ bleep ]. just call them [ bleep ]. >> we bleeped that out but the man was using the "n" word on live tv. >> you know it's bad when ray rice is your voice of nonviolent reason. he's not a leader. he's a meek cowering mouse crumbling under the weight of political correctness. they add voe indicated their authority to preserve their own power. they don't have the guts. eric? >> so they should not worry about what the president uses the word thug or we use the word thug. it really doesn't matter. the "n" word doesn't matter.
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66% of african-american kids are growing up without a father in the household. that is what they should be talking about rather than -- >> i was going to say, they have this -- if i was press secretary, cross the line from protester into what? what can you say? and maybe we need a new word if you could come up with one or something. >> kimberly? >> i really like -- i haven't been in love with ray lewis in the past but i like what he had to say. he took stance and tried to reach young people and said don't do this. they are only hurting themselves. you can see the frustration and passion in his voice. all they've done is cut more funding to schools, to other things because somebody has to pay to clean all this up. so now you've just screwed yourself. oh sorry, we're going to have to cut back on school lunches, on these after-school activities
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or encourage good teachers to come into districts like that. >> the other answer the liberal answer is raise taxes on the few that are willing to pay taxes, raise taxes on the business owners. >> people that are struggling. >> give more money to failing programs. >> i think that the councilman is so off target. president obama used the word thug and so did mayor rawlings. he's basically worried about white people thinking that they are using the "n" word and can substitute thug. he should be worried about the fact that there is actual thuggish behavior going on. >> the word thuggish is color blind. that's the thing.
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time now for "one more thing." . i've been away on my book tour. i've been with president bush at the library and the book is part memoir and advice and a lot of it has to do with my team at the white house and this just in i get to read this. "the new york times" best seller list came out. number one, the combined hard cover and e-book list for a week from sunday may 10th happy mother's day, mom. >> i knew you were not going to be happy but i never expected to be number one but i am very
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happy. >> we are very happy for you. >> you get to be number two. >> all right. it's time for greg's fox news. we've got some breaking fox news here. let's roll the tape. in the ukraine, we have a fox who's finally evolved to the fact that he can make a ham sandwich using his mouth. this is the kind of news you don't get anywhere else. fair and balanced with the meat and the bread. you get 50% meat and 50% bread. that's fair and balanced. good news is he's going to be opening a subway in the ukraine. >> that looks delicious, actually. kimberly you're up next. >> yum. okay it's a very heartwarming story. it's been 70 years since a world
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war ii veteran played football. he made an appearance at the university of kansas. that's the big guy going in for the touchdown, baby. you love it? look at him. >> they might use him. >> he does it with a smile. >> i'm going to forego my time to juan. >> okay. go ahead. juan? >> look at this picture, everybody. look at this picture. this picture has gone viral. it's a young man in baltimore offering a bottle of water to one of the police officers. he must be from whole foods. no. he's one of us. he's saying thank you to police officers who are keeping his community safe. we saw that lady crying earlier in the show. here's a young man stepping up and saying here's a different view a different vision not only for the rest of the world to look at in for his peers, for other young people in the city.
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so thank you young man. and thank you to who put that picture out there. >> we'll give you extra time tomorrow eric, for your "one more thing." >> all right. that's it for us. "special report" is next. ♪ the calm after the storm. the baltimore simymphony after the death of a suspect in police custody. i'm bret baier in washington. the symphony's performance was one of the most unusual sites in baltimore but not the only one. police and national guard troops are becoming commonplace there. they are out in force again tonight. yesterday's tension has mostly dissipated. as you can
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