tv The O Reilly Factor FOX News June 22, 2015 8:00pm-9:01pm PDT
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"hannity." that's all the time we have. we'll see you back here tomorrow. have a great night. "the o'reilly factor" is on tonight. >> we're a white supremacist society, a society that on its face values white people. >> the terror attack in charleston now being turned into an anti-white screen by a number of college professors around the country. we'll show you what's going on. >> we just decide to get rid of the entire tax code and start over with a 14.5% rate. >> senator rand paul wants to put more money in your pocket. but is his plan realistic? charles krauthammer and i will analyze. >> how many years ago do you think dinosaurs became extinct? >> i would say maybe 300 years ago. >> also ahead, watters world, the jurassic world edition.
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this movie is a monster. >> stand there. >> caution. you are about to enter the no spin zone. "factor" begins right now. >> hi. i'm bill o'reilly thank you for watching us tonight. rand paul wants to put money in your pocket. that is the subject of this evening's talking points memo. senator paul slipping a bit in the republican presidential sweepstakes mainly because his foreign policy of quasi isolation controversial in the age of terrorism. so now senator is putting forth a flat tax proposal that has some very attractive components to it. it would shake down this way. paul's plan would mandate a 14.5% income tax rate asupplied to all workers earning more than $15,000 a year. all profitable businesses would be taxed at that rate with capital gains, interest on
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savings and other revenues the feds want a piece of. senator paul would do way with most personal deductions only mortgage and charitable contributions could be written off. business could write off purchases, office equipment, that kind of stuff. overall, senator paul's flat tax proposal is friendly to the american worker. the tax foundation group pro business and conservative says that the senator's proposal would increase the gross domestic product by about 10% over ten years and create at least 1.4 million new jobs. but even if that happened the feds would take in about a trillion dollars less in revenue in ten years than it is taking in now. senator paul says he maybes up that short fall with spending cuts as he is pledging to pay down the national debt. the most controversial part of paul's flat tax is that he wants to do away with the payroll tax, which funds social security and medicare. right now, most american workers pay almost 8% toward those entitlements. paul says you wouldn't pay
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anything and the revenue would be made up by american companies, their tax contributions overall would first go to funding fica and medicare. so if you're a poor american senator paul would keep the earned income tax credit. funds would continue to be paid to low earners. now, talking points does not believe the numbers add up. you could do a flat tax, but it would have to be around 19%. not 14.5%. and you would are to keep some kind of payroll tax, you could drop it 5% would be the very minimum. however, as everybody knows, the american tax system is broken the irs not, not a reliable organization to say the least. and senator paul's proposal separates him from most of the other candidates because he's putting forth something concrete. the next presidential election will be won by the person who convince most voters that he or she will help their financial security. the democrats including hillary clinton are throwing in with the tax the rich and business
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mantra to the fullest extent. so it is more of the same that president obama gave us. talking points believes america needs a flat tax. the question will the folks rally around him? now the top story, reaction joining us from washington charles krauthammer, author of the book "things that matter." let's take the 14.5 rate, you go with that. >> i think the flat tax is a good idea and i like the way he simplifies the code. i do think, though if you go for simplicity you ought to drop the fractions, do it 15%, do it 20%, i would prefer a two-tiered system say a 10% for ordinary folks, 25% for the well heeled. that's what the simpson bowles commission recommended. i think that way you fend off the attack somebody making 50 million pay same rate as somebody who is making 55 --
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>> so the double tiered system. i don't think that's a -- >> don't pay cute with the numbers. 15 20. >> okay. but you have to then kick it in somewhere around 400,000, in there, in that range, right? >> look we -- you could pick a number, we can do the maenlth that's not hard to determine. the one thing i would say is i think he's right, if we just try to remove the loopholes in the tax code it will be like -- there will be every loophole will be protected by a special interest people in congress that's very hard to do. >> you have to drop it if you're going to do that. >> you blow it out, you like blowing it up but the one thing i think he's got wrong is you to eliminate the mortgage interest deduction. i know it is popular. but you said it would come up short a trillion dollars over a decade. well, if you abolish the
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mortgage interest deduction, you take care of three-quarters of that. and don't tell me it will cause a crash in our economy. canada does not have a mortgage interest deduction. and the last time i checked, not living in igloos. >> here is why i think you're wrong on that. it would drastically affect the home building industry which then ripples out to as you know appliances and everything else. i would -- i would keep the home but i would cap it so you can cap it and you can have the home deduction and cap it at $250 or whatever. so that as you said people making $50 million, they don't need a deduction anyway they have to pay it. you don't want to go in and ruin an american industry. canada nobody wins there. compare the population of canada to the united states. we -- the home building industry drives along with with the auto industry drives the economy.
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i don't think you want to mess with that of the go ahead. >> the number of people in canada is irrelevant. the fact that it has a functioning high level economy, and it can do it without. i'm not advocating dropping the deduction overnight. you do cap it it is already capped to some extent and you drop the cap gradually over a decade until you end up with a clean system. >> we disagree on that. you can still do what paul wants to do simplify the tax code which we have to do. it is so corrupt. >> the idea -- the idea also you're trying to streamline the economy. you want to take the thumb of the government you know the way it promotes certain industries certain activities you don't want the thumb on the side of home building. in the end, let the market decide. >> i really don't think that that's going to hurt the republicans who get behind the flat tax with the home income. >> it balances the budget. it will balance the budget, though. >> people looking for their own self-interest and they're afraid. if you have say this flat tax
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becomes part of the republican platform all right, so the republican party, i don't even know if that exists anymore, they say, we want this and whoever is going to be within our structure, we're going to try to make sure that person supports it. so then you have a flat tax at about -- whether two-tier one-tier averages out to 19%, something like that against the tax business and the wealthy, the obama/hillary clinton mantra. what do you think? where are the folks going to go as far as the ballot is concerned? are they going to take the flat tax or go with the income division? >> it is not going to be a landslide on either side. but the flat tax, affair tax, eliminating loopholes, treating everybody the same way, i think in the end wins. probably not by 20%, maybe a ten-point margin. >> you think it ends by ten? >> i think it wins by ten. americans know it is a corrupt
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system. americans know the rich in the end will not pay the rates that are posted because they have -- >> i think you're right on that. it is obviously speculation. i have one more question for you -- >> reagan did it in '86. that was hardly unpopular. >> no but it was a different time then it wasn't the class division we have now. one more question, personal question what is going to happen to my account in swifty who maybes an enormous amount of money doing tax returns that nobody can figure out. swifty gets fired, right? >> swifty has to find a way to make an honest living. i suggest, you know there are a lot of jobs in ballparks, a lot of hot dogs need to be sold in hot dogs. >> that's cruel. that's cruel. >> but i think well deserved from what i hear about swifty. >> charles krauthammer. next some outrageous anti-white comments from college professors. then later, watters world, the jurassic park edition, up ahead. ahead.
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hate crimes you will not hear this in the elite media, but they have fallen about 25% in america since 1995. hate crimes have. 2013 last stats available, close to 6,000 hate crimes in the usa. according to the fbi, 3500 based on race. 66% of those against african-americans. the number of hate crimes is relatively small. but you wouldn't know that listening to some far left professors. >> we are a white supremacist society, we are a society on its face values white people what they do and their body their integrity, more than people of color, not just african-americans, but all people of color. we dehumanize people of color in this country. >> racism in this country is as ubiquitous as rain.
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and so it actually makes perfect sense. so instead of saying this is a lone wolf or someone who we just can't imagine, well he told us why he did what he did and he told us who he hated, and it happens with a great degree of regularity. it is broken. our systems are broken. our institutions and our structures are racist. >> joining us from california mary catherine hamm ron williams. you've been around a long time. when you hear stuff like that how do you react? >> rhetoric cheap rhetoric. i think taking advantage of a very emotional moment in america. exploitative. >> you used the word cheap. why is it cheap? >> race is a serious problem in the country. you can have serious conversation. when you talk in terms of white supremacy, you're conjoining things that are -- they don't fit. this is not -- this is not row rhodesia rhodesia this is not south africa. i don't happen to know bill
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o'reilly by -- i work you work we work together we're friends. i don't understand how you can say that's a white supremacist guy. i grew up here i live here i do not live under somebody's thumb. >> do you yourself in your life have not seen any white supremacy -- >> sure i know white people who think that black people are not as smart, not as trustworthy. >> people feel that way about white people. >> and blacks are the minority. the power, the money is in the white community in this country. that's the overwhelming majority. >> that's not white supremacy. >> that's my point to you. >> that's an economic system that has evolved that way. and as you said that's worth talking about if the fix is in. but as far as mary catherine, these college professors and, you know there are students that listen to this stuff, you know the whole game is rigged it is all white people and somehow can manipulate so you don't get what you should get,
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that's the message here. >> i think introspection is appropriate, maybes people feel better in a terrible and tragic and emotional situation. that's what people are doing. here's what -- when it turns a corner from introspection to writing off all progress that we have made over the last 60 years, and i grew up in the south and there was -- and went to school with people of all different colors and all different socioeconomic statuses, and when we write that off as nothing, that's when i have a problem. the other thing is introspection leads to hey, isn't that half of the country that i politically disagree with causing this kind of tragedy with their political speech? i think that's a real dangerous road to go down. it happens more often with people sort of blaming that on the right, than it does the left. either way it is a bad idea. >> we're going to have right after you guys we're going to have a analysis of how these websites these white driven
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websites how much influence they have. in my life i don't go on the internet. i'm not trolling the internet. to me it is a giant sewer, okay. i want to stay as far away from the sewer as i can. but these white power, nazi websites they exist. but so do the black power panther websites. and i'm saying to myself have they broken out? have these white power websites that are always there since the internet has been invented broken out? have they? >> i think when you see a young man like mr. roof or whatever -- >> he seeks them out. >> he seek them out. i think you have in this country again, a lot of anger. you talked about it as if it is a -- black websites that preach hate. i don't see it that way. i think you have this white ideology and anger -- >> go to farrakhan's website. >> that's again, much smaller in scope than people who believe -- >> i'm not sure of that. >> this young man says this stuff about blacks are taking
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over or you're raping our -- that kind of thinking is bizarre. >> he's a terrorist. >> don't just write it off as sickness. i said earlier, there is a lot of distrust and i think maligning of black people in this society. >> i think that dylann roof this idiot we're looking at now, represents 000.1% of the population. >> i wish. >> that's what i believe. how about you, mary catherine? >> i agree with it is not that there is an absence of a problem. there are certainly people who believe this and roof is proof of that. one of the things we heard in about reports of him is one reason he felt so isolated is because he could not find the people who wanted to do this kind of awful thing with him. i think that is -- lives in south carolina not the place it was, we shouldn't ignore that. >> i wanted to say, we're having a very difficult conversation this evening. i wanted to end on this note. you saw mitt romney say we should take that flag down.
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the confederate flag. you saw people like tim scott, reverend who spoke in the church yesterday, he talked about they wanted a race war and somehow this is bringing black and white people together. i think we sometimes don't celebrate when people come together. >> charleston's response -- >> i got to go. you say the confederate flag is a symbol of hate. you believe that. >> that's the way i feel when i see it. >> okay. absolutely 100% legitimate. for other people who see it in a historical context. >> what is the historical context? >> it represents bravery. >> oh get out of town. bravery, they put it up in anger when they were trying to -- >> you know as well as i do that it represents to some bravery in the civil war, because the confederates fought hard. >> that -- >> that's what it represents. you're right historically in their minds, that's what it represents. in your mind it represents hate. so -- and everybody should know
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what the two sides are believing. that's my job. thank you. the new book end of discussion currently available everywhere. there are hateful groups in the usa. the question is how powerful are they? we'll have a factor investigation. also later, brit hume on hillary clinton changing positions on the pacific trade agreement and her confederate flag position. the factor is coming right back. is coming right back.
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two op-eds try to convince readers that far right terrorism is on the rise and should be considered almost at the same level as extreme muslim terrorism. joining us from irvine california brian levin, director of the center for hate and extremism at cal state. perspective here professor. how influential are these far right hate groups? >> great question. they are influential but in a different way than groups in the past. in the 1920s, the klan had 4.5 million members, about 1 in 8 people in the electorate was tied to the klan. that's no longer the case. so they're much more likely today to inspire violence than to orchestrate it. and they're also interested in hitting angry unstable people to maybe do acts like we have seen in charleston but also to get their conspiratorial and racist message over the fence into websites on the mainstream as
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well. >> all right, but my reporting over the years, classifies them as fringe groups fringe. not mainstream. you have to seek them out. is that accurate? >> yes, but there is this kind of middle ground of groups that have a veneer of mainstream acceptability, but spout conspiracy theories and falsehoods so we classify those as hate groups even though they may appear not to be. >> all right. a guy like david duke has got his organization louisiana. david duke doesn't have any cache in this country, does he? >> no not anymore. you made a great point of what we have seen is a shift away from the brick and mortar organized hierarchical leadership driven hate groups like the ku klux klan of the '80s or more to more leaderless type groups and we have seen some of the major groups aryan nations, national alliance and many klan factions actually implode where they're now serving as much as a vessel for
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folklore and inspiration than they are as a membership. >> that's what i thought. the crew in idaho, they fell apart. a nazi compound with some nutty reverend they're gone. there is a group, the council of conservative citizens that donated money, this guy, holt is the head of it in texas and they donated money to some conservative republican candidates all of whom are now returning the money. what is this crew? >> and rightly so. stay away from this crew if you're running for office. started in 1985 with a guy named gordon bam against integration of public schools. what they did is they had use the mailing list from the white citizens council, which were a klan in neighbor kind of like klan in suits. at their peek they had 15,000 members. interestingly enough they gained a fair amount of political traction in the south. but now they're verboten forget it. racial hatred -- they're a group
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that masquerades as a conservative group, but they're really a hate group. stay away. >> you heard professor hellmann which we used to use her on this program but she got too radical so we couldn't anymore at occidental college say white supremacy is everywhere it is actually moving the dial in america. how do you respond to that? >> well look i think today what we have is a much more diffuse type of bigotry. i sat in reverend vivian's house, the civil rights ledge end legend and he said today a lot of this stuff is subtle and nuanced. we have to be careful, one thing we know about prejudice, who is it directed at and a depth. we have to be careful not to buy into stereotypes that label people who may -- who are certain targets for aggression by hatemongers. most hate crimes are committed by those that are not hardndened
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bigots but prejudices are very shallow. that's where i think we have to be careful of and the implicit biases which all of us have. >> mr. leven, thank you as always. plenty more ahead. fascinateingeing report on hillary clinton changing her position on the transpacific trade agreement. watters, the jurassic park edition. >> do you know how the dinosaurs became extinct? >> well we can attribute is now in this day and age because of global warming. >> all right. we hope you stay tuned for those. those reports. working on my feet all day gave me pain here. in my lower back but now, i step on this machine and get my number which matches my dr. scholl's custom fit orthotic inserts. now i get immediate relief from my foot pain. my lower back pain. find a machine at drscholls.com what about a "win-win-win"? pick up the limited edition metallic droid turbo
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second unresolved segment, will america and the west make a nuke deal with iran. we're not hearing very much right now. so this drama. with us former israeli ambassador to the usa, michael orrin, author of the new book "ally" which comes out tomorrow. what do you know about the nuke deal? are you hearing anything? >> what we do know is very disturbing for us. this it is a deal that would give iran a breakout period of one year the moment they decide they want to rush out, create a
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bomb or -- which is not on timeenough time for the state of israel. >> what do you mean it is not enough time. >> we will not be the first country in the world to -- >> so i don't know if that holds up but certainly israel and netanyahu have opposed this whole iranian negotiation. but i don't know if israel would be happy with any deal with iran. >> i think we would be happy with a -- the alternative to a bad deal is not war it is a better deal. a better deal is -- >> inspections and subterfuge dropping you would get on board with that. >> not just that. >> what about mullahs who say israel has a nuclear weapon why can't we have it? >> it is not threatening to wipe another country off the map, israel is not the largest state sponsor of terrorism in the world. >> true. they don't see themselves that way. they see themselves as liberators from the jewish oppression. >> liberated from american oppression. >> absolutely. >> we're only the little state.
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you're the big state. >> what about president obama. do you believe he's anti-israel. >> i don't. i think he has a lot of criticism. he looks at israel in a mythic way the way he believes it existed before '67. i think israel is more democratic and more open than it was before 1967. but he has a world view. he has an ideology that doesn't accord with many of israel's police. we are -- have a great problem with the whole question of reconciling with iran. real problem for us. this is a country threatening my children my grandchildren. >> the president is a peacemaker or sees himself as such. you've written that he may be influenced by his father and his mother who, you know father was a muslim mother married -- and he might be influenced there. you believe that. >> it is my job to figure out the world view where the president -- how the president saw the world, get inside his head if i could and tell my superiors back in jerusalem -- >> how did you come to him?
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>> i'm in conclusion there are certain core issues in the world view. one, these are all foreign policy not domestic. foreign policy reconciliation with iran outreach to the muslim world, which is fine. you can reconcile just not at our expense and unprecedented support for the palestinian state. also support for israel in there including -- >> who does he favor more? the muslim world the jewish world? >> i don't think it comes down to that. i don't think it comes down to that. i think there are times when he does things in the -- muslim world where he was doing things that were very difficult for us. but the administration negotiated for seven months with iran without telling us. that's the bottom line. that's unassailable truth. >> you knew though. >> didn't know what was going on. i didn't know what was going on. but the fact of the matter here again, iran is a government trying to destroy us.
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it is not just saying -- >> listen i well understand -- i well understand how much danger israel is in believe me. the book is ally my journey across the american israeli divide. thank you for coming in. appreciate it. good book. we come back brit hume on hillary clinton facing two tough issues the confederate flag and the trade deal. hume is next. before i had the shooting, burning, pins-and-needles of diabetic nerve pain, these feet grew up in a family of boys... married my high school sweetheart... and pursued a degree in education. but i couldn't bear my diabetic nerve pain any longer. so i talked to my doctor and she prescribed lyrica. nerve damage from diabetes causes diabetic nerve pain. lyrica is fda-approved to treat this pain. lyrica may cause serious allergic reactions or suicidal thoughts or actions. tell your doctor right away if you have these, new, or worsening depression or unusual changes in mood or behavior. or swelling, trouble breathing rash, hives, blisters, muscle pain with fever, tired feeling, or blurry vision. common side effects are dizziness, sleepiness,
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thanks for thanks. i'm bill o'reilly. hillary clinton on a specific trade agreement and her take on the confederate flag. as secretary of state who wants the trade agreement, mrs. clinton said this. >> we are making progress toward finalizing a far reaching new trade agreement called the transpacific partnership. the so-called tpp will lower barriers raise standards and drive long-term growth across the region. >> back then secretary clinton was very bullish on the trade agreement. no longer. joining us from washington, fox news senior political analyst brit hume. you know i'm at the point where no matter what we do and this is not an anti-hillary clinton deal this is a reporting the facts deal but no matter how
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many times you show mrs. clinton as not a sincere person she does flip-flop on issues her supporters don't care. they don't care what she does. am i wrong? >> i think maybe to some extent you are, bill. we're seeing something i don't think many of us expected the extraordinarily large and enthusiastic crowds turning out to hear bernie handers. bernie sanders seemed to be a man not designed to be a presidential candidate. elderly, and he's got his hair flying all over the place, doesn't have a demeanor or a face or voice designed for television. and yet he has intense interest. >> in iowa and in new hampshire, where he's basically campaigning now, yeah you got socialists coming out to cheer him on. bernie sanders goes down in missouri or he goes to tv team in california. no one is going to show up to
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hear him. he's that far out. it is a niche thing. >> that remains to be seen. if you're going for president in either party and doing great in iowa and new hampshire, you're doing great. >> yeah but pat due new hampshire. my essential point is this hillary clinton, i think she's calculating that it doesn't really matter if i contradict myself it doesn't matter what i did as she said in the benghazi hearings. it doesn't matter. bill murray in the movie meatballs, it just doesn't matter. vote for me anyway. >> well i think they'll all vote for her in a general collection. that does not mean even as seemingly unpromising a candidacy as that of bernie sanders cannot give her a lot of trouble getting the democratic nomination force her into positions where she seems to be taking you know constantly further to the left of where she would prefer to be in a general
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election and just have a more difficult and protracted nomination fight than she would like. that's what appears to be the threat to her. that's no small thing. it is no small thing between a coronation and a protracted fight. foibles on her -- >> i don't see it. >> that will all come out. look at the damage to mitt romney to have a long fight four years ago. these things matter. >> i don't know. i just don't see it. let me get to the nikki haley, governor of south carolina senator from south carolina lindsey graham. >> thank you. >> no more confederate flag flying on the state grounds, don't want it. hillary clinton has an interesting history on the confederate flag. did you know the saturday before easter in arkansas is confederate flag day. did you know that? >> i think i did know that. it is also a star in the state flag -- >> that's a different issue.
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for eight years, they put a star in there to honor the confederate flag. for eight years, they had confederate flag day and bill and hill hey, hey. >> they did not object to that. >> no. she did in 19 -- in 2007 she came out and said she didn't like the flag on the south carolina -- >> this goes to the same thing these other flip-flops go to the question of who is the real hillary clinton. what are her core sets of beliefs? you have bernie sanders out there unabashedly who he is. he's authentic. the soul of authenticity. >> we love him. he comes on he answers the questions, we love bernie. you know people like this. there is a lot of people in the world that don't stand for anything. they stand for themselves advancing themselves. that's it. >> that's why there is misgivings about hillary.
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>> okay. brit hume, everybody. watters on deck the jurassic park edition. the movie is a monster, breaking records. how much do people know about dinosaurs? watters is next. when heartburn comes creeping up on you... fight back with relief so smooth... ...it's fast. tums smoothies starts dissolving the instant it touches your tongue ...and neutralizes stomach acid at the source. ♪ tum, tum tum tum...♪ smoothies! only from tums. your mom's got your back. your friends have your back. your dog's definitely got your back. but who's got your back when you need legal help? we do. we're legalzoom, and over the last 10 years, we've helped millions of people protect their families and run their businesses. we have the right people on-hand to answer your questions backed by a trusted network of attorneys. so visit us today for legal help you can count on. legalzoom. legal help is here.
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back of the book segment tonight, watters world released just two weeks ago the movie jurassic the movie jurassic world taking in nearly a billion dollars worldwide. it's a monster, as they say in hollywood with no pun intended. we asked jessie waters to find out how much the folks know about the jurassic period. ♪ >> why are dinosaurs so excited?
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>> the way they roar. >> i'm scared of anything bigger than me. >> so you are frightened of me? >> not really. >> you must have been the tallest in your class. >> a great movie. huge dinosaurs you see them out there, like oh my god huge dinosaurs. >> did you scream like a little girl? >> if three seconds i'm going to scream like a little girl. >> how many human beings have dinosaurs eaten over the course of history do you think? >> 2,000. >> cavemen, definitely cavemen. >> more than like a thousand people. >> i guess trillions or zillions. >> tens of billions. >> 100,000. >> 100,000. >> really? >> i don't think that human beings existed in dinosaur times. ♪ >> do you know which cities dinosaurs have destroyed?
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>> i'm sure some of africa. >> east coast. >> where did you read that? >> i learned it in school. >> tokyo. tokyo. >> australia. >> australia. i'm going to go with that. >> not technically a city. >> oh sydney. there you go. >> i would think kansas. >> i have a feeling we're not in kansas anymore. >> you mean kansas city. >> i mean kansas city. >> how do you think the dinosaurs became extent? >> they ate each other. >> the last one said he had nobody to eat. he just starved. how many years ago did the dinosaurs become extinct. >> 1300 years ago. >> dinosaurs were roaming around with george washington.
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>> it will be my humble duty. >> have you been drinking? >> not at all. >> do you know why dinosaurs went extinct. >> in some parts of the universe it is considered cool to know what's going on in the world. >> how many years ago did dinosaurs go extinct. >> 20 years ago. >> 65 million or something. >> 65 million. >> nailed it on the head. >> do you know how dinosaurs became extinct. >> we call it global warming. >> because they became hot and sweaty and croaked from the hot sun. >> you are sweating profusely. >> i didn't know i was going to have a social studies lesson. >> you know what my favorite is. >> ve loss raptor. >> rip your throat out of your
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face. >> i'd cry. >> a lot of people cry. what's scarier? >> i like bill o'reilly. bill o'reilly. >> you are in any world right here. >> jurassic world. >> i don't know whether to laugh or get in to this. >> just laugh. >> okay. [ laughter ] ♪ >> all right well, they are all good sports, watters right? >> you like that one. >> that was pretty funny. but, again i mean, people just don't -- >> -- 20 years ago. that's when dinosaurs went extinct, so i'm 35, i said. they were alive when i was growing up. >> i think they say anything at this point when you show up. there were no women in. >> there there were a lot of females going to in there. >> there were a lot of females going to see jurassic world. i tried to get you know. i look for women to interview
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and didn't find any. >> there weren't any bikini clad women in the theater. >> if there were i would have found them. >> watters on thursday subbing for me. >> yes. >> okay. >> i could go extinct. >> is that why you're sweating? >> profusely. >> do you have a strategy? >> my strategy i'm just worried about my caution. that's all i've been working on. >> maybe you don't want to do that. maybe do the -- the little thing you do with your hand. it's my world. >> is my voice really that high? >> yeah yeah. sometimes it gets to be that high. you're not going to wear the collar up right? >> is that a rule? >> yes. and the final thing is that if you don't feel you're up to it don't show up. we'll get somebody else. we'll get somebody else. >> like a chair with clint eastwood. >> watch watters world, the factor edition, as he subs on thursday. big news day with the supreme court and everything else. >> hopefully it will fall right in my lap. >> there is everyone oh boy,
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time for the tip of the day. learning about a dangerous subculture in america in a home. first, richard federici terrorist, bill? roof is demented. mass murderer. don't buy into the liberal notion. frank, chicago, o'reilly talking points 100% correct. the solution is to remove criminals from their guns not honest citizens. david, sugarland, texas, bill your solution of federalizing all gun crimes is a good one that sheriff clark endorsed however the gun registration idea is deeply misguided. that's a slippery slope. it is the only way criminals carrying guns can be immediately taken out of society, dave. that's why the sheriff endorsed
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it. ask any law enforcement person in the country. if they arrest or pull over someone who has a gun, a registry of legal gun owners gives authorities a quick way to detain and make an arrest bing. if you want to solve gun violence in america, you have to make consegs scessions and drop the theoretical stuff. mr. o'reilly i agree with your gun violence solution but what about prison overcrowding. there is plenty of space and the cost savings to this country would run in the billions if violent criminals were put away for long periods of time. that talking points memo on gun violence is posted on bill o'reilly.com. i was gratified to see most premium members thought it was worthy. we depend on you for feedback. dr. scott parker we're pretty conservative here so you would not fit in smart move not taking the don't be a pin head
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show here. miller and i sold out our show in indy doc. so who's the pin head? in the fall the show in charlotte, just as a few premium seats available. meet us. st. louis nearly sold out as well. chicago, south florida, phoenix, vegas, seats going fast. so please check it all out on bill o'reilly.com. maureen sharp, sacramento california we're taking a cruise my grandson will be reading lincoln's last days. my husband killing patton and i will read killing jesus. you can all trade. can't thank you enough. have a great vacation. happy birthday to margaret mary illinois 100 years old. way to go margaret mary! finally tonight, the tip of the day, it is my job to tell you the truth about what is going on in america in a blunt and vivid way. we have been doing that for about 19 years now. and continue to dominate the cable news ratings.
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sometimes the topics are very difficult to assess. and gang violence in america, gangs are closed societies, not press friendly especially the latino gangs in los angeles, which are extremely dangerous. now, a new book called all involved a novel, but it is extremely well reported by the author ryan gattis. it is a very harsh book not for the timid, but extremely realistic. if you're interested in why violent gang crime continues to plague america, you might want to check out all involved. factor tip of the day. that is it for us tonight. please check out the fox news factor website, different from bill o'reilly.com. we would like you to spout off about the factor anywhere in the world. name and town if you wish to. word of the day, do not be a quisling from astrid lund in san diego, who i'm sending a signed copy of hitler's last days. again, thanks for watching us.
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tonight, miss megyn up next. i'm bill o'reilly. always remember the spin stops right here. we're looking out for you. breaking tonight, dramatic new fallout in the shocking fall from grace for nbc news anchor brian williams. as the critics unload o network is handling his public mea culpa. good even. welcome to "the kelly file." i'm megyn kelly. on friday williams broke his silence for first time since being suspended by nbc news without pay in february. after being caught misleading viewers with inaccurate statements that exaggerated his experiences in the field, including a story about a helicopter he was traveling on during the iraq war. tonight, the kelly file has exclusive reaction from one of the soldiers who first helped break this story, who was on the
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