tv The O Reilly Factor FOX News May 19, 2015 8:00pm-9:01pm PDT
8:00 pm
ll the time we have left this evening. we hope you'll set your dvr so you never miss an episode because we will miss you. we'll see you back here, tomorrow night. 00 p.m. >> the o'reilly factor is on. tonight. >> looking back, it would have been better for me to use two separate phones and two email accounts. >> but apparently mrs. clinton did have a second email account. and now there is yet another controversy surrounding the woman who would be president. are you tired of this? we'll put it into perspective. >> the banditos were given the second highest threat level by the department of public safety. >> galvanized by shootout rival gangness texas. tonight we will talk to a former bandido about what's happening there. >> fat. fat. you fatty. >> also ahead, can you can no longer say the word fat
8:01 pm
in the workplace. john stossel will tell us why. caution, you are about too to enter the no spin zone. the factor begins right now. ♪ ♪ hi, i'm bill o'reilly. thanks for watching us tonight. the sad state of american politics. that is the subject of this even's talking points memo. there is a philosophy that countries eventually they deserve. history is littered with with fallen regimes. there are thousands of them. right now in america there are two intense problems that are not solved. first, stagnant wages for working americans. because most folks depend on a paycheck for security and well-being when that paycheck shrinks there are serious side effects. under barack obama, the median wage has fallen despite trillions of dollars in stimulus spending by the feds. talking points will restate the only way wages will rise
8:02 pm
is for business to expand. and the only way expansion will happen is with tax cuts. the way ronald reagan did it in the 1980s the obama administration has done the opposite taxes up big time. last year the federal government took more money in from workers than ever before. but, obviously that didn't help the economy to expand. the second intense problem worldwide terrorism. iran tied in with that because iran trains and funds operations all over the place. now, iran may get a nuke. in the shadow of those two enormous problems, in the shadow is the upcoming presidential election. on the republican side, 15 men, one woman considering a run. that means there will be a brawl in the primary. first republican debate set for august 6th. on the democratic side, it's all hillary all the time. but so far turbulence has defined her campaign. this week reports say that despite mrs. clinton saying
8:03 pm
she used just one email address as secretary of state, two email addresses were used by her in reality. also the "new york times" reporting that one of mrs. clinton's closest friends sydney blumenthal was trying to work some kind of business deal with libya while he was in contact with secretary clinton about the situation. >> he has been a friend of mine for a long time. he sent me unsolicited emails which i passed on in some instances and i see that is just part of the give and take. >> talking points is exhausted with all the hillary clinton stuff. i bet you are too. the ongoing drama is getting tedious and takes away from the serious business of fixing america. finally americans elected president obama twice. his presidency has been anything but smooth. all of us on both sides of the aisle should consider that old saying the next time we vote. country get what they deserve. that's the memo. now for the top story tonight, reaction. joining us from washington. richard good stein who
8:04 pm
advised president clinton's campaign. writer from the pulitzer. all of these hillary clinton controversies and there seems to be one every other day, going to mean anything when the voters show up? >> well, the data from the polls have shown so far they have had a negative impact on her. her approval rating is being honest and straightforward last summer was 38%. that has dropped to about a quarter of registered voters in the most recent "wall street journal" poll that came out this month. and her negatives have gone up. she is up to 42% negative versus about 32% seven weeks earlier. at least on the initial front it hasn't been good for her. on the other hand, i have had some hillary partisans say to me well, we are glad you are writing these stories now rather than next year we will get them all out of the way. people have a short memory and talking about hillary
8:05 pm
partisans mr. goodstein. to me every time i open the paper or watch fox news in the morning, "fox & friends" and i hear another story my head just droops. i think the folks are are just sick and tired of it. >> so, imagine if you are hillary clinton and you think that you can actually help the country improve on current situation you could kind of shrink into a hole where there is all this incoming or you could kind of rise above it and do what she is doing which she is talking about the criminal justice system, about immigration, today about small business understanding what james rosen has said since this email controversy came up and foundation came up since then, her stand something higher among democrats and as good or better against every single republican pitted against in the fox news poll. i would think there is actually no indication that it is hurting her. >> you know that the republican candidates aren't very well known yet. that's why. i'm not denigrating
8:06 pm
mrs. clinton's appeal to democrats. i mean obviously they like her. they -- most of them will vote for her. but the trustworthiness bothers me. it does. in 25% of the public feels that she is trust worthy. and i think she has earned that. i think she has earned that low number because yes she isn't shrinking but she isn't answering the questions. she is giving -- she gave a memorized answer today about the clinton foundation, mr. good it's stein that you could have written for her and maybe you did. i'm proud of the foundation that does so much good, but never does she address the conflict of interest in helping certain people. you know that. >> yeah. >> these controversies started of coming up against her back in the 1990s. 18 of the past 21 years according to the gallup poll of americans she is the most admired woman in the world. so what that tells me is that yes these questions looming out here and she will have to handle them as
8:07 pm
best she could and frankly i think she is doing pretty well. the public is actually able to look beyond that and see her for the quantities that she has. >> i am one of the most admired men in the world you can't go by that. >> congratulations. >> what i'm trying to say maybe that is not a good barometer here. mr. grimaldi i will let you wrap it up. the american public is going to get what they deserve. i don't think they thought out barack obama. i was hoping he would do well. i was one of the 70 percent after he was first elected that said, look, he won fair and square, i wish him well. he hasn't done well by the american worker, the median income is down. it's down significantly. so, if the americans go to the poll and they elect somebody with a 25% trustworthiness, don't they get what they deserve if she wins? >> well, i'm not sure how to answer that question, bill. >> isn't it compelling question? i mean, the nation is getting what it deserves. >> well, i will say our
8:08 pm
poll did show she is maintaining with democrats and it's a long way to election day next year. so who knows how that will change. but, you know, we are going to keep looking at the clinton foundation and the money that it's received and whether she has done favors for any of the contributors to both her foundation as well as to her family income. >> gentlemen, thank you very much. we appreciate it it next on the rundown, president obama wants to let some criminals out of prison is is that a good idea? motorcycle drug gangs talk with a former my feet felt so heavy at the end of the day. they used to get really tired. until i started gellin'. i got dr. scholl's massaging gel insoles. when they're in my shoes my feet and legs feel less tired. it's like walking on a wave dr. scholl's massaging gel insoles, i'm a believer!
8:10 pm
the real question that needs to be asked is "what is it that we can do that is impactful?" what the cloud enables is computing to empower cancer researchers. it used to take two weeks to sequence and analyze a genome; with the microsoft cloud we can analyze 100 per day. whatever i can do to help compute a cure for cancer, that's what i'd like to do.
8:11 pm
8:12 pm
can be in undermining communities. but this massive trend toward incarceration even of nonviolent drug offenders and the costs of that trend are crowding out other critical investments that we could make in public safety. >> and schools. the president tied the prison spending into the lack of money for schools. with us now here in new york monica crowley from washington. kirsten powers, author of the big new book "the silencing. how the left is killing free speech." so the president is claiming that putting bad guys away, hurting the little kids in the classroom. are you buying that? >> i don't see the connection necessarily. i think they are two unrelated things. the spending on education is not really related to the spending on incarcerating people. >> it would be like giving the teacher an apple instead
8:13 pm
of an orange. >> i guess so. >> you and i have disagreed about -- i do think -- we do have mass incarceration and there are people that don't need to be in prison -- >> -- sure there are always exceptions to the rule. >> i don't really think they are the exceptions. but i also don't think that there is a connection here. i don't think it's -- i don't think there is -- that anybody is thinking that we are not spending enough on education because we are spending too much on mass incarceration. >> spending now $16,000 in student. second highest in the world to switzerland. the switzerland they only have like 18 students. the rest of them are yodeling. so we are spending about 16,000 per student. second in the world. we are not getting any results. now, i think this is as you know the crime rate in this country has fallen dramatically. places here in new york
8:14 pm
city almost every city in the country ever since they started the mass incarceration, particularly of the drug dealers. taking them off the streets. crack wars stopped here in new york. murders down. every violent crime down. i'm not getting let's put them back out. >> the president who signed a lot of those harsh laws. harsh sentences. >> the democratic party is not the democratic party of 1994 of bill and hillary clinton back then. democratic party now has moved totally to the left. and hillary clinton is trying to negotiate her way around that that's why she is trying to make the argument alone -- along with barack obama reducing prison sentencing and repealing. >> the myth is that the federal government is using marijuana users people smoking pot in jail it's not true. we chased it down 00.1% on the federal level local level not. would you let think say they are nonviolent because they are addicted.
8:15 pm
lenny is addicted to heroin. he sells heroin to other people to support his habit. is he a nonviolent offender to you. >> we had this debate on the program before. i agree with you that i think that all drug dealing offenses should be declared as violent. cocaine. >> you disagree with that powers right? >> i do, yes. >> i don't think that it's necessarily that all drug dealers are addicted to drugs. there are bad people selling drugs and it is a crime. i'm not saying that it isn't. i don't think it's the same thing as a violent crime. not the same as shooting somebody. >> would you put them in jail? >> yeah. i would put them in jail. i don't think -- i wouldn't put on the same level. a violent crime, you are comparing that to shooting somebody. i mean, or attacking somebody. i don't see how that can be. >> at all levels. can you punch somebody in the face and not the same thing as raping them. okay? but there are standards and the guys go away for the big
8:16 pm
time heavyweight dealers. selling the kids let's get into prime minister's mind set here. is he not responsible for anything on the crime. all going down when he took over and it's still going down. all right? but he wants to change it so if it ain't broke why fix it? >> move whole classes of people into victims. what they're trying to do the argument is, let's reduce the sentence. let's stop incarcerating people for what we consider to be minimal crime and turn whole classes of people maybe drug dealers drug users, those busted for distribution possession. let's turn them into victims. the system is persecuting them or prosecuting them too harshly. >> last word for powers? >> nobody is turning them into victims. that's not true. there is a difference
8:17 pm
between saying you don't think somebody should go away, you know, for 20 years versus turning them into a victim. >> >> same thing with three strikes you are out. you have people who have done something you know minimal and it's the third time. they have do three minimal things and going to jail for a long time or to prison. that's not saying they are victims. >> you do know over the last 20 years that larch laws and harsh sentences. >> coincided. some people don't believe that's a reason. absolutely coincided. former member of the ban did does motorcycle gang. laura ingraham will tell us way she changed her opinion on the iraq when eating healthy and drinking water just isn't enough to ease my constipation i trust dulcolax tablets. i take dulcolax for dependable overnight relief and in the morning i am back to myself dulcolax, designed for dependable relief
8:19 pm
your buddy ron is always full of advice. usually bad. so when ron said you'd never afford a john deere tractor you knew better. the e series. legendary quality. unexpected low price. pain from your day can haunt you at night, don't let it. advil pm gives you the healing sleep you need helping you fall asleep and stay asleep so your body can heal as you rest. advil pm. for a healing night's sleep.
8:21 pm
factor follow up segment tonight. police have charged 1740 motorcycle gang people are w. violent crimes in texas. as you may know five gangs shot out. police say police killed nine of the motorcycle guys that has not been coffin firmed. the primary group involved ban did doe motorcycle gang drug dealing outfit based in houston. joining us from michigan, a former leader of the band did bandied ban did doe gang. you were in this gang for 20 years. tell us about the operation. >> i wasn't actually in the club for 20 years. i was an associate for the better part of 20 years. and then i was a member for seven. so. >> what's an associate?
8:22 pm
you just get to hang around on tuesdays or what is that? >> well, there was no banbidos chapter in oklahoma. i lived in oklahoma so i spent a lot of time visiting them and other places when i was out riding my back and i didn't want to leave oklahoma. >> what did they do? authorities tell us a big drug dealing outfit. methamphetamine, pot that kind of thing. is that true? >> no. that's not true. that's about as far as from the truth as it could be. 60% to 70% of the guys are just regular guys that have jobs families, and kids. they go to work each day like everyone else does and they come home. the only thing they are guilty of is having a little too much fun on the weekends. >> was that your status? you didn't commit any crimes you? just wanted to be part of a motorcycle club? >> well, everybody gets involved because of the camaraderie and the brotherhood and the love of harley davidsons to start with but also they are searching for something that they didn't find during their childhood or trying to
8:23 pm
find something they had had when they were in the military. cam radcamaraderie and brotherhood. >> i don't want to glamorize this crew because obviously you saw what happened in waco and a lot of people killed and injured and they are armed. we do know that the banbidos gang in houston does drug deal. a bunch of people convicted for heavyweight narcotic its trafficking from the gang. when somebody says to you gee, you know, you are hanging out with these guys and some of them, you said 60% are just regular guys. that leaves 40% that are doing crimes against the country. >> i don't know if they are doing that on a regular basis, but there is a minority of the club that are committing some crimes but, again it's disorganize organized. people don't know what they are doing and doing it by themselves and not other members of the club. >> did you ever commit a crime in the club? >> not while i was in the banbidoss. i did when i was a young man. when i was drinking too much. i was in my 20's.
8:24 pm
i learned my lesson. >> you didn't do any criminal activity in the banbidos. did you witness it? did you see crimes being committed? drug-dealing and things like that? >> no. that was pretty minor stuff. i saw guys doing a line here or there or smoking a joint or whatever had a gun on them things like that. i saw some fights but almost always they were defensive. had started the fight and they finished it. >> did you get any fights with other rival gangs or even your own gang? >> no. that was, you know, not something that the guys that i ran around with that were members and i did. you know, it was a different aspect of it. it's kind of like, you he know, there is a lot of different types of individuals in a motorcycle club. and there is a lot of clicks in the club. for example the guys that like to drink a lot. they all go to the bar and get drunk every night. the guys that like to smoke pot they go off and smoke pot by themselves. guys like myself that got up and went to work every day the guys i hung out with,
8:25 pm
they did the same thing. >> okay. now, we don't know much about the subculture of motorcycle gangs. when you saw the waco shootout, were you surprised at the acts and the banbidoss were trying to kill each other? >> i wasn't surprised at all. it's been building for a long time. it's all over patch on the back. outlaw motorcycle clubs traditionally wear a three piece pass. the top testimony the name of the club, center patch normally is their icon, their logo and then the bottom rocker typically designates the geographic territory from where they come from. in this case the banbidoss have been wearing a texas rocker for decades and they typically didn't allow other clubs to wear that texas bottom rocker about a year ago stism in 2014, the cossacks told the banbidoss they were putting on a texas bottom rocker. the banbidoss told the rockers they couldn't do
8:26 pm
that and the cossacks have went ahead and did it anyway there have been all kind of squirm issue issueishes and minor assaults. >> isn't that insane to lose your life over a jacket. >> it's not the jacket. it's a bottom rocker. >> isn't that insane? >> yes. give analogy like going back to first grade when you had a couple of bullies on the playground. as long as they stayed in opposite corners everything was fine. >> well, there they are. they are all in jail now. 170 of them and they find the three that got out by mistake. mr. winterhalder. will the feds really execute boston marathon bomber or will he sit on death row forever? is it legal is investigating. and next, stossel says there are now words we cannot say in the workplace and some of those words will surprise you. we hope you stay tuned to those reports if you're an adult with type 2 diabetes and your a1c is not at goal
8:27 pm
with certain diabetes pills or daily insulin your doctor may be talking about adding medication to help lower your a1c. ask your doctor if adding once-a-week tanzeum is right for you. once-a-week tanzeum is an injectable prescription medicine that may improve blood sugar in adults with type 2 diabetes along with diet and exercise. once-a-week tanzeum works by helping your body release its own natural insulin when it's needed. tanzeum is not recommended as the first medicine to treat diabetes or in people with severe stomach or intestinal problems. tanzeum is not insulin. it is not used to treat type 1 diabetes or diabetic ketoacidosis and has not been studied with mealtime insulin. do not take tanzeum if you or your family have a history of medullary thyroid cancer or multiple endocrine neoplasia syndrome type 2, or if you're allergic to tanzeum or any of its ingredients. stop using tanzeum and call your doctor right away if you experience symptoms of a serious allergic reaction which may include itching, rash, or difficulty breathing; if you have signs of pancreatitis,
8:28 pm
such as severe stomach pain that will not go away and may move to your back, with or without vomiting; or if you have symptoms of thyroid cancer which include a lump or swelling in your neck hoarseness, trouble swallowing or shortness of breath. before using tanzeum talk to your doctor about your medical conditions, all medicines you're taking, if you're nursing, pregnant, or may become pregnant. and about low blood sugar and how to manage it. taking tanzeum with a sulfonylurea or insulin increases your risk for low blood sugar. common side effects with tanzeum include diarrhea nausea, injection site reactions cough, back pain and cold or flu symptoms. some serious side effects can lead to dehydration which may cause kidney failure. ask your doctor if adding once-a-week tanzeum is right for you. go to tanzeum.com to learn if you may be eligible to receive tanzeum free for 12 months. make every week a tanzeum week. ♪ if you're looking for a car that drives you...
8:29 pm
8:30 pm
introducing the first ever gummy multivitamin from centrum. a complete, and tasty new way to support... your energy... immunity... and metabolism like never before. centrum multigummies. see gummies in a whole new light. stossel matter segment tonight, political correctness gone wild. our pal john has a special coming up 9:00 p.m. on the fox business network that will tell americans what words they can no longer say. one of stossel's producers conducted a pc quiz. >> what is the correct way to describe a person who weighs more than most, a fat, b. >> i would use calorically challenged. >> you say chubber? you are going to politically
8:31 pm
incorrect jail for chubber. >> what is the politically correct way to describe people who weigh more than fat. >> my mom taught me to never say fat. >> the correct term is ample. >> ample? >> ample? here now is stossel that rhymes with ample almost. so what other words can you say? >> well, it depends where. i can call you a bossy angry bully. but if you are a woman i could not. says time magazine and i can not call you careerest or cold if you are a woman. >> open season on guys. >> words you can't use in the workplace. sweety cutie you can't say you've lost weight. >> you can't say you've lost weight. what if they have? >> it implies they were fat before. >> no i mean, they could have been a little row fund. >> they row -- were ample.
8:32 pm
>> actually people who come into corporations and say you can't tell somebody looks like you lost a little weight. you can't do that. >> can't do that what else? >> or you can't say are you pregnant? >> generally good advice. manpower. man made, supposed to say synthetic instead. masker bedroom. >> no master bedroom. >> offensive. >> so what is the bedroom now? >> the big bedroom. >> the big bedroom. >> you can't say master bedroom? >> i just know what you can't do. i also know harvard business review did a study of 800 showed that diversity training had no positive evening. >> they were all bored to tears and this or that. let's do a couple of q and as. so if somebody is thin. what do you call them? >> skinny.
8:33 pm
>> can you say skinny? >> i don't have that on my list. can i can say skinny. >> do you own a pet? >> i do. thee -- fiona a dog. >> do you own fiona? >> i own fiona because i paid money. >> you can't own a living creature. you are a pet guardian. >> i'm a pet guardian. but what about i bought the dog. do they give me a redepend? i should get paid for being a guardian. >> one choice. fiona should pay me? >> maybe. and one choice on our test was nonhuman enslaver. >> i have got fish, what is that? >> you are a nonhuman enslaver. >> because i have got the fish? >> yeah. >> what am i supposed to dump the fish out in the bay or what do i do? >> keep the fish you call yourself a fish guardian. >> fish guardian. what's the columbus day properly called? indigenous people massacre day? >> that's catchy. >> explorer's day. >> explorer's day so
8:34 pm
columbus was explorer but you are not giving him his due so you are lumping him in desoto to. >> to give due head massacre person. >> do you think columbus massacre? i don't know of any massacres? >> he killed some people. >> but they were shooting arrows at him. what was he supposed to do? be their guardian? >> >> they spread disease. they killed a lot of people. so explorer's day in october. >> one more. if you are a woman and you are pursuing a career but you are also raising a child, what do you have to call that woman? not a homemaker right? >> not a homemaker. >> no. >> you are domestic engineer. >> a domestic engineer. >> because housewives is demeaning. >> it's demeaning to whom? >> to the housewife apparently. >> not the kids. the kids like mom around. >> they do. but she is more than a housewife. she is domestic engineer. >> do they have to wear a
8:35 pm
train uniform if they are engineer? >>. no we laugh but philadelphia mayor said ex-cons are not ex-cons. >> returning citizens kind of like if you went to bermuda. this is insane. watch stossel's special on friday. when we come right back, is it legal on whether the feds can the boston bomber. legal is next.
8:36 pm
are you doing?" "getting my free credit score at credit karma." "i got great credit." "when was the last time you checked?" "that's a lotta dough daddy-o. we gotta check your credit. hmmm.....your credit is outa sight!" "alright!" "you know credit scores change... aren't you curious to know what yours is now?"
8:37 pm
"still got it." "credit karma, get your free score now." i am totally blind. and sometimes i struggle to sleep at night, and stay awake during the day. this is called non-24, a circadian rhythm disorder that affects up to 70 percent of people who are totally blind. talk to your doctor about your symptoms and learn more by calling 844-824-2424. or visit your24info.com. don't let non-24 get in the way of your pursuit of happiness. [meow mix jingle slowly and quietly plucks.] right on cue. [cat meows] [laughs] ♪meow, meow, meow, meow...♪ ♪meow, meow, meow, meow...♪ it's more than just a meal it's meow mix mealtime. with 100% complete and balanced nutrition and the taste, textures and variety cats love,
8:38 pm
it's the only one cats ask for by name. introducing the new can-am spyder f3. with a cruising riding position and the most advanced vehicle stability system in the industry... ...you'll ride with a feeling of complete freedom and confidence. visit your can-am dealer and test drive the spyder f3 today.
8:39 pm
thanks for staying with us, i'm bill o'reilly in the is it legal segment as you may know tonight, the boston marathon bomber 21-year-old dzhokhar tsarnaev has been sentenced to death by a jury in boston. this is a federal beef and many believe the young man will never be executed. that's because since is the year 2000, only three individuals have been put to death by the federal government. oklahoma bomber timothy mcveigh, ron raoul several murders as part of a drug ring and louis jones who murdered and raped an army private tracy joy mcbride. with us attorneys and fox news analysts kimberly guilfoyle and lis wiehl. clearly the federal government doesn't want to
8:40 pm
execute people. how many people on death row now. >> 612 people are on death row right now. >> 61 federal waiting to die. >> more than half of them have been sentenced more than a decade ago. so you are looking at people that have been sentenced decades plus. >> what holds up? >> appeals. >> they could get those appeals done quicker. >> not really. >> 61. >> you have got all these appeals that come -- automatic appeals that go to it a whole new set of lawyers. they will appeal the judge the sentencing. they will appeal jury verdicts. they will appeal incompetence of the counsel. so many appeals. >> you both were prosecutors. you prosecuted on a state level in california. >> um-huh. >> on death penalty cases. >> and the way the federal government has its structured though, they don't really want to executes anybody in my opinion. they don't. >> it almost seems as if they have put in deliberate road blocks obstacles to prevent an efficient process is of the judicial system here which i think really harms the victims and victims rights here and families because it seems like they just put up a
8:41 pm
preference on the defendants and they try and make every argument they can and i get it we have the compelling. >> if you are from the state of california. i don't know if it california executes anymore. >> on death row. >> if this guy was in texas probably next valentine's day he is toast literally. >> people against it are upset about that because they say there is lack of uniformity. disparity between executions and how they are handled. >> one more question on this because it's so high profile and because they did kill timothy mcveigh they have to kill this guy. >> they have to. >> the average sentence. these three guys six and a half years. looking at probably another six and a half years. >> the guy still won't be 30 years old. amtrak sliding off the track going very fast. the engineer in charge doesn't remember what happened. never a good thing. >> no. so lawsuits are flying. let me ask you a personal question guilfoyle. if you were on this train and you got injured, you know, say you broke your leg or something like that, would you sue them?
8:42 pm
>> why wouldn't right? if you were injured and there was a specific case where you could show that there was some kind of negligence on part of the train or the conductor why wouldn't you be entitled to compensation. >> would you do it as a person? as a person would you do it? >> i would join if there was action. >> i know you would. >> hey okay. >> if i'm on a train and get hurt their negligence, their recklessness. >> as soon as the guy driving the train said i don't remember anything every red flag in the world. >> you want to have an assistant to be able to it address these wrongs and compensate people. there is 22-million-dollar cap. when you have the lost of lives and extent of injuries it's quite enormous. >> i think that may be changed. 200 million cap. >> that might be changed. >> kimberly is right. i don't think 200-million-dollar cap is enough. >> the federal government runs amtrak.
8:43 pm
200 million for everybody who is on the train. the families of people who died and the people who got hurt. >> there is a law based on 1997 so you can think about cost of inflationary. >> how many people are in play? do we know? >> five lawsuits so far that we know. that's what's in play now. these people the five lawsuits that we know about five or six all involve people that were injured. not families of people who were killed. >> in totality -- >> -- so far five or six people. >> no totality how many potential sewers? >> hundreds. >> hundreds. and they range in age from 23 to 64 years of age. so think about loss of life. and compensation for that family. >> all right. remember the video that sparked the benghazi riots according to the obama administration which turned out not to be true. innocence of muslims and portrayed the prophet mohammed in a very negative way. we will not even say what it did because it's so disrespectful. there was an actress wiehl in this video that sued to
8:44 pm
have it taken off google because she i guess is afraid that she -- there she is. yeah, that she could be killed or harmed because she is in the video. >> the problem is she sued under federal court for copyright. she is saying copyright. and the judge in this from the ninth circuit judge martha mccune said wait, this isn't a copyright issue. you are actress. you are paid to do that role. you don't have copyright over the film. if she had sued for breach of contract that could be different. that could be different. she didn't know what she was doing. dubbed over her words. >> portrayed herself in a way that wasn't actually seen in the video they door things to her. >> right. unfortunately she wasn't able to get relief just on the copyright claim. >> because she lost it. and that video is still up, right? >> it's back up now. the lower court said you can't put it out there. this court said you can on a 10 to 1 position. >> 10-1 they shut it down and said too bad lady.
8:45 pm
>> first amendment right. >> thanks very much. we appreciate it laura ingraham on deck. she supported the u.s. invasion of iraq, as did i. laura has now changed her opinion. we will find out why when we come back. how do i get hotel deals nobody else gets? trust me i'm a great negotiator. price-line ne-go-ti-a-tor! 60% off! 40! 60! 40! 60! 40! 40! 60! trust me, they can't say 'no' to me. i've been doing this for 20 years... can i get an upgrade? trust me, and you'll never overpay again. seriously? i'm trusting you. exclusive hotel deals up to 60% off. priceline.com. the citi double cash card. it earns you cash back now and cash back later. with 1% when you buy and 1% as you pay. with two ways to earn on purchases, it makes a lot of other cards seem one-sided.
8:46 pm
8:48 pm
back of the book segment tonight, as we told you in yesterday's talking points memo the iraq issue is vexing some republican politicians as well as hillary clinton. jeb bush got hammered on it and mrs. clinton voted for the war but against the surge. she was also secretary of state when president obama pulled all the troops out of iraq resulting in the isis intrusion. joining us from washington laura ingraham. so you and i and i remember these discussions that we had were simpatico when the
8:49 pm
war began. we both believed the intelligence that was put forth. you actually went to iraq, so did i. then it did not turn out well for the u.s.a. when did you change your opinion for the operation? >> i was trying to go back in my notes and so. interviews you and i did. i think back in 2007 i think i was on with you and we were talking about the need to bring the american people along with what was going to be the surge the change in strategy george bush gave the big speech to the nation in 2007, saying, look, things haven't gone the way we wanted. we have all the sectarian violence. we have a new plan in place. but the country had turned against the war, and it never really turned back. i think at that point when we spent billions training the iraqi troops. we had some men and women who
8:50 pm
died in alain bar. the public wasn't convinced it was making us safer at home. i was worried it was making us weaker and would make us weaker on the world stage. i'm not a military expert i don't pretend to be. we have to learn the lessons of the past and we see now how difficult it is to undertake this idea of nation building and trying to put together a complicated set of ethnicities and cultural diversity in a situation like we saw in iraq. david brooks has an interesting piece today in the new york times where he does a 180 on his view of the issue of nation building. i see a lot to what he said on this. it's not -- retreating from the rest of the world, no one for doing that. we have to be smart when we engage engage. >> there are people who are
8:51 pm
isolationists and don't want to get involved overseas. this isis crew which emerged after barack obama made that terrible mistake, i said yesterday that history will judge. both president bush and president obama made big mistakes in iraq. that's true. anyway that isis now has to be confronted but it's hard to do it because americans don't want us in that country any more. it was so bad the first time around. >> yeah i mean i think we have to remember, the war, you could argue was lost when we lost the public. and then barack obama won the presidency. the argument of time was the economy's going in the toilet we're spending all this money overseas we've been in this a decade plus and we're not winning. obama gets elected on the promise of pulling out of iraq. he campaigned on bringing the troops out of iraq and he did that. i don't know if we would have
8:52 pm
won if the troops were there, but the public didn't want them there. we can't continue in this perpetual war footing if the public is not in favor of it. not as long as we were there. >> i would have kept them there, even if i had made the promise, i would have said that things have changed, and that we need a stabilizing force here to fight the terror threat which is obviously across the border in syria. every one of his advisers every one told him, do not take everybody out, because this government cannot hold without an american president. he reversed himself in afghanistan. in afghanistan, he was going to do the same thing, we're leaving 10,000 we could have left 10,000 in iraq we made all the difference. >> looking forward. bob bear was on my radio show today. we have to stop isis we have to have a regional plan to stop isis. it can't be political. this has to be realistic, iraq he said is gone. we may be able to do some things
8:53 pm
with the kurds, iraq as we knew it is gone. we can't throw good money after bad, but we can stop isis from becoming that massive regional power, without empowering iran to come in with 3,000 iranian militia members in the last couple weeks rushing in to try to beat them in ramadi we can't empower iran that would be a cataclysmic problem and we've already gone a long way to doing that. they have to be stopped. >> iran is in iraq and they ain't getting out. and that's -- >> then what do we do? >> what a mess what a mess. laura ingram everybody. factor tip of the day, a new show that may bring back your childhood. the tip moments away.
8:54 pm
8:55 pm
expand or relocate to new york state pay no taxes for 10 years. all to grow our economy and create jobs. see how new york can give your business the opportunity to grow at ny.gov/business ♪ devour food that's good for you, the same way, you devour food that's not good for you. ♪ fact. advil is not only strong it's gentle on your body too. no wonder doctors and patients have trusted advil... for their tough pains for over 30 years. relief doesn't get any better than this. advil. a new broadway show you may like in a moment. but first the mail mr. o'reilly why are you spreading the false narrative that
8:56 pm
america's exhausted from the iraq war. only one percent of this country has any contact with the military. come on i put forth just about every factor viewer millions of folks, has emotiond in to dead and wounded military people people. the invasion of iraq was the greatest strategic blunder in u.s. history. vietnam far worse. so is the isolationism of the 1930s that allowed the third reich to grow in power. buddy, president bush acted on intelligence he had been given, the war eventually produced a free state in iraq. mr. obama acted against the military intelligence. you tell me which sin is greater. aaron bennett, monroe georgia, i saw two things i thought impossible. you outsmarted krauthammer and i
8:57 pm
agreed with something senator feinstein said. charles is smarter than you. keeping it pithy, i like that. lisa guy from huntington massachusetts. shame on you, making one of quakers, you should apologize. i can't make fun of quakers? >> mr. o i'm eight years old, would you please ask jesse waters to wear a quaker hat the next time he's on? i will ask him, j.j. jesse waters is so sweet, patient and smart much what? janice poulsen, you are a pinhead, i hate it when you call children urchins. that would be urchins. i'm 26, just passed my citizenship test. i'm a proud american and know
8:58 pm
more history than my american friends. jesus, my wife just gifted me premium membership for my birthday. nice jesus, you get any one of my history books free of charge to choose. hard to choose but you'll like them all. or even the now legend and lies book. you can listen to the factor. here is a factor letter of the day. farmington minnesota, i'm 13 and see students at my school not standing for the pledge of allegiance what should i tell them? gently ask them why they are not standing. debate the issue. point out how lucky they are to be in this country where they can pursue happiness.
8:59 pm
>> enjoyed your signed copy of legends and lies. broadway having a good season here in new york city. if you visit you may want to check out the show finding never land i saw it last week with a bunch of urchins. laura michelle kelly delivers star performances. it's amazing to me how talented these guys are. how difficult it was for him to create those unbelievable characters. what amazed me about never land is the talent. i mean i really -- my jaw just dropped. factor tip of the day, you mahon watt to check it out. spout off about the factor from anywhere in the world. eye riley at foxnews.com. name and town if you wish to
9:00 pm
opine. do not be opaque when writing to the factor. thanks for watching us tonight. miss megan is next. please remember the spin stops here. king out for you. breaking tonight, there is growing outside from vets and military families after terrorists capture an iraqi city that americans died to deliberate. and the white house tonight dismissing the loss as a minor setback. >> just last night on this broadcast, we brought you the islamic state terror flag being raised over ramadi. the terrorists captured the prize over the weekend. today we got a copy of this video, iraqi soldiers scrambling in a chaotic retreat. more than 200 million soldiers were killed in rah
147 Views
IN COLLECTIONS
Fox News West Television Archive The Chin Grimes TV News Archive Television Archive News Search ServiceUploaded by TV Archive on