tv The Five FOX News July 11, 2015 2:00pm-3:01pm PDT
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hockey arena. that's the good thing. yeah. >> bringing more money into detroit which can always use more money. >> absolutely. i mean hockey team. that's the way to go. >> that will do it for us. i'm kelly wright. >> i'm molly. thanks for watching. "the five" is next. >> hello. i'm kimberly guilfoyle along with gerardo rivera. this is "the five." >> 32-year-old indicate steinle was laid to rest yesterday after being fatally shot at the hands of an illegal immigrant deported from the country five times. while the debate of sanctuary cities are at the forefront right now the administration yet again today dodged the issue and placed the game, of course, on republicans. >> there are a lot of people eager to assign blame. i think or eager to try and find some solutions.
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one thing that would help would be comprehensive immigration legislation that passed a city and was blocked by the house of representatives. that does not represent blaming them for a tragic death that obviously occurred. but it is blaming them for putting their own political interests and ambitions ahead of the public safety and national security of the united states. they do it frequently and it is appalling and offensive. >> last night making kelly question why the obama administration continues to cherry pick the tragedies it chooses to highlight. >> when asked repeatedly this week to speak to this case white house spokesman josh earnest declined to weigh in. other than to refer folks to the department of homeland security. a stark contrast to what we saw after michael brown was killed in ferguson missouri. his funeral saw three obama officials in attendance. his death drew comments from president obama personally.
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and the administration also sent in the doj and 40 fbi agents dispatched to missouri after michael brown was killed where is the swarm of agents in san francisco? >> an administration and a president who is cherry picking lives that matter. that's what it looks like to me. dana? >> i think megyn kelly makes a persuasive case and argument. it's interesting to to think about the new attorney general, loretta lynch, who certainly has her handful with a lot of things. i think in this case she might have impact on sanctuary cities. in particular with the sheriffs that is there in san francisco who is actually basically covering his rear end more than anybody else. actually being a buffoon on television. he was so reckless by disregarding the request from the federal government to be notified when he was going to be
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released. it's like firing into a crowd. basically that's what happened. you let him go and then this resulted. i think that she makes a persuasive case on that issue. i think that the white house is going to have to reckon with or just hope the story goes away they have decided to comment on some and not others. that's the danger of doing that. you end up in this situation. >> you make an important point. you bring in a legal distinction, i believe, eric that's important which is they acted in conscious disregard of a known risk with a repeat offender a recidivist and chose to put him back on the streets and put other lives at peril, specifically this young girl. she would be alive breathing today. >> how many more? we outlined yesterday, 300 jurisdictions now that consider themselves sanctuary jurisdictions. so they'rere literally could be half a country as a sanctuary for people who are criminals. forget the fact that they have broken the law by crossing the border. that aside which i think is an
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issue. however, even the felons, the ones that have exited murder drug trafficking, kidnapping, they're going back to these places because they know they're not going to get deported and there in lies the problem. not only not going to get deported by the cities the jurisdiction rsz not going to turn over the information about the criminals to the i.c.e. ats, to the i.c.e. so they can deport them. from there, i don't know why they decided that these cities can violate federal law by harboring these criminals. i mean that's really what they're doing. >> they call it sanctuary, cities it's harboring criminal harboring felons. >> first of all, we shouldn't be calling it cherry picking. we should call it berry picking because berry is doing the picking. good intention could come with a warning label. caution, tolerance gets you killed. >> i don't get that berry getting the picking. >> bury bury. i didn't know you were insulting
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the president. >> i do. >> i wanted to be clear. >> sanctuary cities are a lot like hitchhikeing. in the abstract it feels good until you feel dead. what i'm disappointed is a sheriff. a sheriff is not supposed to be a camp counselor. the sheriff from the village people would do a better job than him. it's really embarrassing. what you're seeing is you're seeing everyday common sense divorced from policy enforcement. you obviously at night would lock the doors to your house. you don't let strangers into your apartment. however, that simple logic has been abandoned by the people that are paid to protect you. it's this divorce of logic that becomes everyday because we see security as an attack on tolerance that somehow it's deemed mean to protect u.s. you. it's wrong to want to be safe and secure in your own country. >> unbelievable. you have to almost apologize for saying please enforce the laws. the laws they're receiving good federal dollars to be able to
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ensure in public safety incumbent upon them to secure in the streets, in san francisco and in every city and state across this country. instead they are allowing individuals who are a risk who are a threat to come back in the country, routinely regularly, without any kind of checks and balances. >> it does not surprise anyone watching that i disagree with almost everyone at this table. >> you didn't get my joke. that's the problem. >> because you mispronounced bury as berry. >> to rhyme with cherry. >> that was the problem. no laughing matter. the president of the united states missed a teaching opportunity. first he should have called the family. he should have apologized for any role the federal government's incompetence played in this tragedy, this terrible loss. he's still on the streets. he did three long terms in federal prison for a felony re-entry let's not forget that
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and still came out and released and committed this awful crime. the president could have used it as a teaching moment to say the following. this person in no way represents the undocumented immigrant population in this country. the 11 12 15 million, however many that are here the president of the united states could have said commit fewer crimes than the citizens born in this country. >> which is wrong. >> it is absolutely not wrong. >> inequivalent incorrect. you're completely wrong on this. >> i will debate you specifically. >> i have -- >> i gave him the wand last night. i'll give them to you tonight if you want. >> your statistics tend to come from places like the heritage foundation and centers for immigration study, right wing. >> would you accept -- >> no. >> my turn to make my case and then you can rebut it? >> yes. >> here is what "the washington post" said yesterday. quote, the fact checking the nose thing, on "the washington post." >> pinocchios. >> a range of studies shows
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there is no evidence immigrants commit more crime than native born americans. in fact first generation immigrants predisposed to lower crime rate than native americans. point two, the two cities in this country most impacted by undocumented immigrants you would think would be new york city with over 500,000 and los angeles with a similar amount. both those cities are among the safest in the free world. >> not because anything you cited. it has nothing to do with with what you cited. >> historic low crime rates. new york had the safest month in decades. the cities most dangerous, most deadly in this country and this group can all agree what do they have in common? st. louis, camden newark baltimore, detroit, trenton, new orleans. do you know what they have in common? virtually no latino population. >> all right. >> so this is -- this is where your murderers are coming from. not from this population, the vast majority of whom are
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hardworking, law abiding, decent people. >> wait. let me just respond. you made an important point about the cities. i think you're right. but when you talk of this crime, why do you immediately assume that we're talking about mexican immigrants? that's racist that you would assume that oh -- >> oh. >> when i saw that crime i do oh those darn mexican immigrants. i never said that. >> give me the image -- your personal image, illegal alien, give me your image right now and tell me what you see. >> i have an image of the murderer. i'm not going to buy into that. this is like when you talk about islamic terror you go oh, you're islamic foeb bic because you're dismerging all muslims. no. it's the same argument geraldo. >> the context of trump and his comments. >> i'm not trump. >> it's of a brown tide flowing over the southern border. we are slandering a race of
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people and a nation. >> when somebody talks about the war on terror you go oh, my god, you're attacking muslims. we're not. >> make a community safer, have more undocumented immigrants in it statistically. >> i'm talking about the fact that you're accusing -- >> geraldo is being persuasive and wrong. "washington post" issen you'vically wrong on this. here are the numbers. they represent the illegals. illegals represent 3% of the population right? 11 million, 319 approximately. >> 3.4 1/2%. 3.4% of the population commits 18% of the drug trafficking in america. not just of any subset. >> how do you know that? >> two more. 25% of the kidnapping 56% of all drug possession federal convictions. how do i know it? it's not "washington post" or right wing heritage blogs. here's where it comes from. united states sentencing commission. agency of the judicial branch of the united states government. those are the facts, geraldo. you can bring your "washington
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post" bs numbers all you want. go to the source. >> you live here. >> okay. >> you live in this city. just look at the numbers the last time you heard of an undocumented immigrant doing something. >> bring me 75 pages. >> you talk about cherry picking. >> we can put them on facebook page and have people can access it. >> united states sentencing commission. ussc. look it up yourself. moving right along into another episode of ineffect shul leadership that is rocked and frocked with political ideology and pc politics making us unsafe in america. let's listen to the useless sheriff from san francisco ross. >> i find it incredibly sad and tragedy is being used as a platform for political gain. we want to set the record straight. two federal courts have held that i.c.e. detainers are not
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legal and violate the fourth amendment. had i.c.e. sought the warrant the san francisco sheriff's department naturally and will always comply. >> unfortunately for the sheriff of san francisco i.c.e. has just released a statement moments ago saying that they strongly disagree with the facts and characterization of this case that that man has just told the people essentially saying you lied. >> federal government is saying that the sheriff is wrong. the mayor of san francisco has actually said that the sheriff is wrong. there's that. i also think we can all agree, whether you're in san francisco or the federal government that having somebody who is a convicted felon reimport into the united states who has a criminal record should not be here. i actually think the most compassionate thing you could do for an immigrant community is make sure the criminals are not allowed to be a part of it which would help make geraldo's point hu suggested the president made
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for a teachable moment. >> they don't want criminals here. no matter what country they come from don't break the laws here. >> but the i.c.e. the last reportable year i'm not sure if it's 2013 or 2014. the last reportable year let 36,000 convicted felons back into the streets before they were deported. rather han deporting them they let them go back to america and find themselves in sanctuary cities. >> for the record president obama's proposed executive order now enjoined by the federal court and now being argued to this day, being argued today, who did he want to help with his partial amnesty? people here for more than ten years, with citizen-born children who have committed no crimes. that's the population that i consider my constituents in a sense. i want to speak for these law-abiding, hardworking people. you see them at the 7-eleven waiting for work. they'll work all day long, ten
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bucks an hour and lunch. they are people who send money back to mexico raising their children. every time i hear one of these an dotes of a horrible act think of all the ones that walk their kids to school. >> geraldo, i totally agree with you but i think there's also a point about compassion, those community communities, those people would be better off if the local officials would work with the federal government to get the criminals out. that's the most important thing we should all be able to agree on. >> illegal path to citizenship following the laws and being here and afforded the great protections by the laws on the books in this country. why has the united states now become in the business of importing and allowing people to come back in importing criminals instead of exporting them? >> that's a great question. i have another question. where is the sanctuary for citizens who live in sanctuary cities? >> end it there. >> russian nesting dolls. it's smaller. coming up america is facing major threats right now. cyber warfare, islamic terror and russia.
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we'll discuss the -- it sounds like the end of the world. i scare myself. we're going to discuss the biggest risk to our national security straight ahead. you're living with diabetes steady is exciting. only glucerna has carbsteady clinically proven to help minimize blood sugar spikes. so you stay steady ahead. ugh! heartburn! no one burns on my watch! try alka-seltzer heartburn reliefchews. they work fast and don't taste chalky. mmm...amazing. i have heartburn. alka-seltzer heartburn reliefchews. enjoy the relief.
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is it russia? here's general during his confirmation hearing to be the next chairman of the joint chiefs. >> my assessment today, senator, is that russia presents the greatest threat to national security. in russia we have a nuclear power. we have one that not only has the capability to violate the sovereignty of our allies and to do things that are inconsistent with our national interests but in the process of doing so so if you want to talk about a nation that could pose an exo steshl threat to the united states i would have to point to russia. >> could bit the cyber threat office of personal management resigned today after 22.1 million current federal employees and families were effected in a major hack. here's what the white house said on that. >> the president believes that this is significant and that this needs to continue the be a priority of his administration. not just at opm but across the federal government, to make sure that all of the agencies in the administration are focused on this priority. >> or is it islamic terror?
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we told you ahead of the fourth of july weekend the intelligence community was warning ability possible attacks on u.s. soil. and now we're learning this. >> confirmation from fbi director james comey federal authorities disrupted an undisclosed number of threats appears to justify warnings from the bureau and homeland security there was a severe and credible threat from isis recruits inside the united states. >> kimberly you watch this stuff pretty close by. the things that you've said things that keep you up at night is worried about the supreme court bysecurity. which one is more concerning to you? >> first of all, okay a lot of things are very concerning. i worry about all of it. i think with good reason. that's why i believe in being vigilant and being able to access data points collect information to keep this country safe. i really seize upon the report from catherine talking about the fact we're able to disrupt several known attacks that were foiled. right? from intelligence from information. that to me says that we're doing something right, that we're able to get that information in in
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realtime actionable information to prevent a terror attack from happening. that is significant. in terms that countries that bother me there's a few. at the top of the list, for sure russia based on my intelligence sources and people within the cia. >> i talked to people today and they said they wouldn't put russia at the top. what do you think? >> maybe third. i got to tell you, the path to the bomb is to be made clear by the obama administration right now, they're the number one export of terror around the world. anything that isis is doing you can trace some way back -- geraldo is going to disagree with me -- some way back to iran. hold on. hezbollah, hamas, al qaeda, they all have ties to iranian money. i think they are the biggest xo exostential threat to the united
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states. >> did they miss anything in the list? >> barack hussein obama is the biggest threat to our country. i kid. but actually -- >> you're not kidding. >> what country was he born in? >> kenya, of course. >> why isn't kenya the biggest threat. >> can you believe it? the biggest threat to president obama is climate change. he says climate change is number one which is why putin and iran and north korea love him because while they're dismantleing the world he's playing hack i can sack with bill nye the science guy. the biggest threat is not on the list. it is our collective self loathing over the past decade that subverted law enforcement, immigration policies it's not that we want fight these threats, it's that we won't. we choose not to fight these threats because we feel somehow that we are unworthy of a defense. we have lost the will or the way because we don't believe in ourselves anymore. that's the real threat. >> i think the real threat is sunni, muslim extremeismeism funded
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by saudi arabia pakistan semi radical sunni state. i worry about -- i don't worry about russia because of mutual destruction, are they going to use the nukes against us and end the world? i doubt it. >> it's not just about nukes. bigger agenda. >> i'm more concerned about saudi arabia than iran. i think we totally get it wrong, backwards. the sihiites can offer no threat to us. >> you can sleep well tonight. ahead on "the five," arianna grand grande is apologizing again. honoring the u.s. women's soccer team after big world cup win. that's next in the fastest seven. staying in rhythm... it's how i try to live... how i stay active.
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first up, after flying for 54 -- you don't like that one? >> i don't know what it is. >> upbeat chipper. after flying for 54 years this morning the confederate battle flag was removed from the south carolina capital grounds. this was how it all went down. >> usa, usa, usa. ♪ good-bye ♪ >> that was quite a moment dana. >> yes, decades in the making. how swiftly this actually got resolved and leadership of nikki haley but also bipartisan group of individuals coming together in the state of south carolina. i think that they handled it with dignity and honor and with the respect of the historical record. >> greg you thoughts? >> i thought it was okay until they sang that song at the end,
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tack i can. >> tacky. >> that's literally a symbolic victory because it's a victory over a symbol. it will not prevent a single act of violence. >> that's the thing. is it going to change anything? would that have prevented what happened? the horrible act of violence murdering the beautiful, innocent people that allowed that killer in to celebrate, to be with them and look what he did, he took their lives. that's not going to change it. was it the right thing to do it was the right thing to do. so let's try and learn and grow from it. >> what could change if we strictly enforce the rules against allowing people with felony arrests pending to have -- to be able to buy weapons the way this dylann roof was able to buy that weapon despite the fact he had a felony -- >> wait can i just clarify. >> violation of federal law. >> people with fell -- pending felony convictions shouldn't be able to buy a gun but they should be able to stay in sanctuary city it is they're illegal. next on the fastest. the timeline goes like this. 4th popular
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ariana grande defiled doughnuts in a bakery. on july 8th she i pol jized smep backs out of singing the national anthem at the mlb all-star game. and late yesterday grande issued her second apology as follows. >> here i am apologizing again. and, you know i was trying to get you to understand where i was coming from when i said what i said. but that's not important. i would rather just apologize. i've actually never been prouder to be an american to be honest with you. the advances that we've made in the past couple of months. >> ah. >> i love how now she's proud of us because of the last couple of months. what a jerk. anyway, she should apologize for that apology and see how many apologies we can get from her because each apology gets -- >> apologize for licking the doughnut. >> i think she already did. look she's ego centric 22-year-old celebrity, normal 22-year-old celebrity. we create these people. we give them the fame and never
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say no to them. that's what you get. monster. >> true. but she can sing. i'm not going to say what i said yesterday. yeah. >> don't say that. >> what did you say yesterday? >> i said she can blow because she can sing. she has a phenomenal voice. now i said it. >> can i point out. i was cutting her slack until i found out her manager is throwing a fund-raiser for hillary clinton. >> oh, my gosh. >> don't do it anymore. >> if that's going to be your bar? >> that is so you. but true. >> ariana grande is a democrat. >> does that apply to anyone who has ever given money to hillary clinton? >> i guess not. >> okay. >> anyway i think we should let ariana grande go. she's a young woman. she's apologized. i think we're all adult to forgive her. >> i'm not. >> all right. note to president obama, american exceptionalism is alive and kicking. check out these moments from the
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ticker tape parade honoring our world champion, world cup winning women's soccer team as they rolled down the canyon of heroes. take a look at that. >> i was just excited and they're so amazing and there he is right up there trying to make it about him. big birding it. >> bill de blasio. >> correct. >> ratings is through the roof. the nba final game of the nba playoffs it is the coming of age of women's sports. >> women kick it harder yeah. >> professional athletes will start being paid what male professional athletes are getting paid. >> i think it's like -- >> four times below or whatever. >> also remember the male sports bring in more revenue. >> this is significant and i think de blasio is smart to have the parade and be there with them. >> piggyback. look. can i just talk about parades
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and how much i hate parades? i hate parades for who you are but i love parades for what you did. that's why this is a good parade because it celebrates an achievement as opposed to who you are. >> are you seeing this? are you seeing de blasio there? >> the worst person in the world today. i tell you. >> yeah. >> like he scored a goal. >> you see him? he's like oh, yeah i was there. it's all about me. >> he's kind of like a dorky guy. running into things. >> giant and hovering over them. >> can you step out of the spotlight for a minute and let them -- soak in some of the glory they earned? >> boy, back off. >> so embarrassing. >> i see your breath on my neck. >> right? hot and sweaty. ew. >> oh, my goodness. >> take him off the screen. >> what position did he play again? >> i don't remember. >> outfield. coming up, facebook friday. ♪ (piano music) ♪ fresher dentures, for the best first impression.
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it's time for "facebook friday" when our producers pick some of their favorite questions you have sent. let's get started. shall we? let's start with you, kimberly. what is your exact address? >> okay. >> what time do you all come to work and get home? this is from sharon m. kimberly? >> this is -- everyone's supposed to answer this? >> yes. >> it all depends. every day is different. depends if i'm doing "o'reilly," just doing this, doing radio. >> this is a bad question because people know that you're not at home. >> this is like asking where she lives. >> this is like a security question. >> i know. >> who are you. >> you're not supposed to answer this on tv. do you guys want to answer this question? >> no. >> i don't care. >> you don't care? >> no. i get here between 7:30 and 8:00 depending on traffic. i leave maybe ten minutes after the show. >> now they know you're not at your house.
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>> i have very, very good security system. >> fortress new jersey. >> you never leave, do you? you just sleep in a shoe box. >> yeah. >> that's well ventilated. >> save money that way. >> that is so true. geraldo? >> 5:45 on friday morning i get up, 6:45. >> you do "fox and friends." right? >> i do radio. two-hour radio show every day. "fox and friends" on friday. >> yeah. >> i'm not answering this question. it was boring. >> it is boring. >> why did you waste all that time? >> i'm sorry. let's go this way now. dana, what were some of your favorite vacations as a kid? >> well, we always went to wyoming. and we had a -- >> that's a state. >> our air conditioning was two windows and 65 miles an hour. as my dad would say when we would complain. you're very good at these country music songs. i'm trying to get him to let me send you one that he's been singing. i love going to wyoming.
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we would go to in particular mt. rushmore and also the black hills area. it's in south dakota just across the border, 80 miles east. the flintstones national park? it's right there. and it's closing after this year. so get there soon because you can actually drive a car and things like that. >> eric? >> every year -- we didn't have a lot of money. we drove from chicago to miami. it was one week. >> did you have air conditioning? >> i don't remember. i don't think we did. >> probably not. >> roll the windows down. i remember it was 17 hours. we would try to go straight through, mom and dad would switch off driving. when we got there, in miami there's an old hotel called the thunderbird hotel. make a long story short. about a year ago they just redid the thunderbird hotel and it's beautiful right now on south beach. >> we were very modest means. and we didn't -- i remember only one vacation, a camping vacation upstate new york. what we did, my dad built a homemade swimming pool in the
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backyard when we moved from brooklyn to long island. >> i think that's called a ditch. >> it was that. it was a very funny, very rudimentary -- >> that's neat. >> -- little pool in the backyard. >> so my favorite was when we drove to disneyland. and my brother and i were sitting in the backseat with a big green bean bag or like beating each other up. it's like "national lampoon's vacation." but it was super fun. we had never been there. that was the first time i went to los angeles. the next time was as a prosecutor. >> now kids go to paris. >> but that's the same as me. '64 mercury station wagon from san mateo on highway 5 to l.a. me and my sister would sit in the back. you'd have the seat that faces the rear window so you'd be staring at people. stare at them the whole time. >> lincoln continental. >> i would never blink. write stuff like "send help." >> dorothy. all right. i'll start because i've been last. no. what's the best class or course you ever took. i'll start with you, eric, since i can't think of one. >> is this all you guys could come up with? >> it's unbelievable. >> i'll tell you again, it was
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an economics course. 20 people in the class. they paired people off so two people per team. ten teams. and the whole semester was you had a corporation. you got to decide what your product was, how you're going to market it. it was graded at the end of each whatever week. then at the end it was the most successful -- the stock price would go up and down depending on that. it taught me about everything to do with business. >> the losers were shot. >> a comparative religion course at the university of arizona because it showed how muslim, jew, christian, how similar they are. they all have their own creationist myths. the fact that so many have died in the name of religion i always found so bitterly ironic. >> k.g.? >> this is a true story. u.c. davis, rhetoric in communications. a public speaking class. i was assigned a book reading. you have a message by roger ales. then i became obsessed with him and took that book and came here and asked him for a job. >> so you're a stalker. >> yeah, totally. >> dana. >> you know i loved school. i loved all classes.
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but i think if i had to pick one today, i love the history of journalism class. that was pretty good. >> really? >> yeah. great professor at university of southern colorado. now uc pueblo. >> i loved school. >> i took a course in slovic lit. i read a lot of russian lit. >> i know you know, right? >> then you married a russian. >> then he found a russian wife. >> see? you're a stalker, too. >> my russian is quite good. >> is that it? do you want me to go to the next one? >> coming up. >> you're silly. oh, you mean this. coming up, donald trump isn't ruling out running as a third party candidate. for the 2016 presidential race. we discuss next.ca ndidate. for the 2016 presidential race. we discuss next. ♪ ♪ when you're living with diabetes steady is exciting. only glucerna has carbsteady clinically proven to help minimize blood sugar spikes. so you stay steady ahead. if you're running a business legalzoom has your back. over the last 10 years we've helped one million business owners get started.
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♪ whoa what are you doing? putting on a movie. i'm trying to watch the game here. look i need this right now ok? come on i don't want to watch that. too bad this is happening. fine, what if i just put up the x1 sports app right here. ah jeez it's so close. he just loves her so much. do it. come on. do it. come on! yes! awww, yes! that is what i'm talking about. baby. call and upgrade to get x1 today.
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♪ my friend and i still my friend, and i still consider him my friend donald trump has been taking criticism i think justly, not only from democrats but by some in his own party. so if he does not win the republican nomination, will the donald consider a third-party run or will he throw his support behind the gop nominee? sean hannity asked him last night. >> i have to see who wins. i'm
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every politician is immediately not a politician. supposed to say absolutely. i have to see who wins. and frankly, i think we're going to win. >> you're not thinking about an independent run. you're thinking about winning this republican primary. that's what you're thinking about today. >> i want to win the -- i want to win because that's our best ch democrats. with that said, everybody wants me to do that. i have had so many people wanting me to do that. our best chance of defeating the democrats and getting this country going again is if i win the republican nomination. >> okay. i want him first apologize to the mexican-american population. but, dana, the father of your former boss, george h.w. bush, bush 41, lost his re-election bid because of a rich eccentric billionaire charming in his own way ross perot. >> what was he most against? nafta. okay? there are similarities. there are people who dispute 41 actually lost because of perot. perot got 20%. >> at this point a third party is not a path to the presidency.
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that would not be the choice i would choose if you actually want to be president. a third party is not going to do it. plus, what would that third party stand for? >> would he do it for spite do you think, eric? >> i think he just said he wasn't going to do that. i think he said let's see what happens with the republican nomination. by the way, in your intro you kind of ad libbed around a little as well, geraldo, you forgot to mention public policy poll has him number one in north carolina. >> true. >> the economist has him, slash, mygov has him number one nationally ranked now. donald trump taps into the feeling of people who are sick of big government. people who want change, don't like the direction of the country. and they see him as someone who might be able to bring that change where some of the others that are running against him may not have that. will he flame out as everyone seems to think he's going to do? i don't know. >> the third party you think is a nonstarter? >> according to him right now, no. >> i didn't hear a no there, kimberly. >> i thought he said no, that he wants to win and be the republican nominee for the office of president of the
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united states of america and he wants to win. >> he did not say i will not accept the third party -- >> i do not think that he wants the third party. who's going to fund it? i don't think he's going to throw his money at that. >> sean's effort for him to renounce any possibility greg gutfeld of a third party run. >> i think what everybody is saying about trump is that he speaks for the currently angry, which is kind of what perot did. but anger does not win an elections. what it does, it buys another house for jon stewart. anger is the red clip on nose that conservatives and liberals put on their face. as conservatives we're supposed to reject feelings. feelings are empty. whether they are feelings of like emotional goodness or just anger, it doesn't work.empty. whether they are feelings of emotional goodness or anger. it doesn't work. you have to have a vision. anger is an energy and it does not win elections. >> a very special one more thing is up next. don't go away. is up next. don't go away.
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possible without all of you. cut cake and pass out peanuts. >> you have cut a lot of cake. >> i really have. the internet can prove it. there are some unfortunate things. >> usually, you don't do that unless you marry someone. >> i want to be good at it keep practicing and don't want to lose my touch. i am going to freeze a piece of this. >> we are going to thank everybody. >> don't periscope it zs it periscope up. >> you have the two puerto ricans and one with a knife. this is not good. >> anyone have reflection sns. >> it has been a lovely ride. >> it is a six week temporary show. every two years, i would change. >> i hope you don't jinx us.
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>> i think it is great. >> eric? >> four years, four more forty more. it has been great. >> we will be dead by then. >> i am going to need a lot more hair and makeup by then. >> remember how we almost had like a heart attack? >> giraldo? you like a good party. >> i was announced as being on the original cast and it took four years. >> when you have a dream, you hold on to it. patience at the plate. geraldo likes a full count. i want to say thank you to the fans and everybody that has sat at this table to make it such a huge success. to our producer who have been phenomenal doing a great job for us to do a fine show all of you have written that you enjoy. now, we're going to have "one more thing." supersize your "one more thing." >> i have two quickies. be sure and catch the show on
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saturday and 10:00 p.m. a lot of awesome stuff. the 50th anniversary of the etch a sketch is this weekend. i love the etch a sketch. i would spend days just drawing all sorts of things. in honor of the anniversary, i went and got my etch a sketch. i did a quick little drawing this morning. as you can see, pretty good uh-huh? >> i would never shake and erase. this is beautiful. i did it in about 15 minutes. >> there are no words. the love lives on. why do i feel like you have a weird little space in your basement? >> it is not little. >> a lot of people have ended up there. >> i am honored. >> you can have that. just don't shake it.
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>> i want to wish a happy birthday to wyoming, 125 years old today. an amazing state. photographs from jason whitman an amazing photographer in wyoming, a state that became july 10th 1890 it was the first state in the united states to give women the right to vote the first national monument at devil's tower and also yellowstone national park is there and my family's ranch, homestead is there. congratulations to wyoming, a great state! >> my turn? >> so today, showtime released a trailer for the fifth season of homeland. here is a piece of it. >> keep america safe. >> you are being stupid. something you never were before. >> i am just trying to do good work.
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>> greg that could catch up on season four and five. by the way, tyrant on fx if you are wanting that kind of tv it is awesome. >> i have always loved outer space. i have been fascinating since captain video and the space rangers and buck rogers and star truck. i was at the last shuttle launch the "atlantis." it was fantastic. >> did you cover the moon landing live? >> pretty close. i did apply to be the reporter in space. they had a contest. i made the first cut and then the challenger disaster happened in 1986. we have a probe called new horizons going past pluto, which used to be the ninth planet in the solar system. tuesday, pluto. >> make a date with pluto and make a date with me if you are
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feeling lucky, 2:00 to 3:00 tomorrow at the villages. where else? spend your day in florida with me. i'll sign the book. i'll take a picture. who knows what it could lead to. thank you. we hope you never miss an episode of the five. that's it for us. hello. welcome to a brand new hour inside america's news headquarters. i'm arthel neville. >> i'm eric shawn. we are awaiting a major speed with our republican presidential candidate, donald trump, at a packed event at the phoenix arizona center. he is pushing the outspoken stance on immigration even harder. they have faced a share of the immigration issues the southwest. >> they are punching back at critics over
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