tv Justice With Judge Jeanine FOX News August 15, 2015 9:00pm-10:01pm PDT
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. hello, and welcome to justice. thanks for joining us. tonight my opening a little different. i want you to come along with me as i track the facts of hillary clinton's e-mail scandal. at the end, i believe you will agree there is evidence she'd violated the law and she cannot and must not become president of the united states. so hillary decides to conduct state department business not on a state.gov but on a personal e-mail service butñi a server i her westchester home. the reason? convenience. why carry over pesky
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blackberries. has she been truthful? fact, january, 2009, confirmed she is making and reserving state department records under the federal records act of 1950. a few months later the regulations are updated, requiring if someone uses a non-agency e-mail, they must ensure they're preserved. csr.36.22. nine days after the benghazi attack, congress seeks all information related to that attack. and nothing is handed over. fact, while the state department is requesting thousands of requests, the press, and citizens by you, state department requires swear there is nothing of hillary's to provide and take no steps to ask her for records.
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fact. congressman and u.s. attorneys subpoena hillary clinton's benghazi documents. she denies she was subpoenaed. >> you say you never received a subpoena. you did get one in march. couldn't be more plain. the honorable9)áv r clinton. >> hillary denies there are any benghazi e-mails despite photos of using her blackberry on the way to libya. and this puts truth to the lie she had none. hillary, now in panic mode. she would then go through 61,000 e-mails, deleting 31,000 she says are personal. another 30,000 she hands over, she says there is no classified
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information in them. >> i did not e-mail any classified materials to anyone on this e-mail. there is no classified material. i'm certainly well aware of the classification requirements. >> but the inspector general says in a sampling of just 40 e-mails, four contain classified information. her defense? they weren't marked classified. nothing to see here, folks. move along. truth? it couldn't be marked classified because by not using government servers she actually prevented the government from reviewing her e-mails. had she done so, they would have seen material that was classified and she would not have been able to hit the send button. did hillary clinton make a false statement before congress and
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said there was no classified information on her e-mail? which her lawyer, cheryl mills confirmed in a letter to a federal judge? if it's a lie, it's a violation. and this week, it is revealed. the marking top secret in an e-mail that included satellite locations and drones had been removed before it was sent to hillary. war planning. the inner circle. lawyer cheryl mills, all three of them communicating via that private server. might one of them have removed the marking "top secret"? if so, why? are they co-conspirators in an effort to prevent government e-mails from being captured?
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and why was a clinton connected company and clinton foundation, was that trio on the same server so she can raise money for her not for profit clinton foundation? had she made classified material to a person not to receive it, it is a federal felony. if hillary kept classified information in an unauthorized location, she committed a federal misdemeanor, the statute used to prosecute general petraeus. and some argue, there is no intent. if there is no intent, folks why did she issue a warning to her own employees not to conduct
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state department business on personal e-mails? and if there is no intent, why did she refuse to allow the inspector general, who had oversight into her state department into the state department? i've got news for you. we don't need intent. it is a federal crime to negligently handle classified information. and finally, hillary why did you wipe your server clean? did you delay so you can get rid of evidence? if you did, destruction, tampering. and by the way, i don't know what took the fbi so long to try to get it. but hillary, if that server has been scrubbed so clean, that even fbi experts cannot reconstruct your e-mails, that tells me you did everything you
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possibly could to prevent anyone from knowing what you were doing while you were our secretary of state. my verdict? based on the evidence is guilty. what is yours? and that is my open. tell me what you think on my facebook page or twitter and, joining me now, former indiana governor, united states senator and fox news contributocontribu evening. >> judge, how are you? >> am i wrong? >> all of this has been turned over to the fbi now. they've been making exhaustive analysis of this and with prosecutors will decide if something, the laws been violated. >> why did it take 154 days to turn over the server? that she said she didn't give to a third party? >> i don't know but it has been
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turned over. i think the genesis this had its roots in her desire to maintain some level of privacy. probably an excessive level to maintain privacy. she said first, previous secretaries of state, including colin powell have also maintained personal e-mail accoun accounts. >> but also used government e-mail. come on. you're smarter than that. you're a lawyer. >> well, they did. >> why would she have better privacy in my county, in westchester than a government server? what is the advantage to her? >> to control her personal e-mails. the one thing i don't understand this. let's say she had two blackberries and did what you wanted. chose the personal for personal e-mails and government for government e-mails. personal e-mails would not have been accessible by law.
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>> it's not what i want. it's what the law says she must do. she's the custodian of the records. and you've been in government long enough to know you've got to archive the government records. she's the secretary of state. for her to say, and by the way, 61,000 e-mails. you mean to tell me in all of the years she was the secretary of state, and she's only using her private server, she never sent classified information or top secret information? what the hell is she doing? that is her job. >> well, she said publicly she did not knowingly send classified information. she could have not knowingly received classified information. it looks, from public reports as some of her aides may have inadvertently sent her information that wasn't classified about the time. and without her knowing it. >> so now, we're pushing it
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under. so you're a smart guy. >> that is according to public reports. i'm not making it up. >> if she says, and we have some tapes, maybe you want to listen to this. take a listen to this. >> this is the usual partisanization, which i may have just made up a word, of anything going on, the way it's being used is. and the state department confirmed that i did not send, nor receive, material marked classified. >> today, she nuances this marked classified as to before, she said i never said it would be classified. so if she had her own private server, she didn't give the government the opportunity to review her e-mails so they could have prevented her from sending classified information. >> the server is now in the hands of the fbi.
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>> ah. >> you mean -- >> judge, i'm trying to answer your question. they are trying to determine if a crime has been committed here. i will be surprised if they reach that conclusion and if the decision for the next president is decided by how she used her e-mail service opposed to the economy and things people care about. >> why should general petraeus be indicted and not hillary? they did the same thing. they had classified information not on a government e-mail. same thing, senator. >> i happen to like david petraeus. what i'm about to say is not intended to be toward him. but i do think there is a difference between knowingly sharing information to someone who is your mistress at the time, writing a book.
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>> so because he had a mistress. here is the thing. 61,000 e-mails, not one classified? that tells me she wasn't doing her job or someone knows something. i want to thank you. it's great having you on. >> thank you, judge. and the raise for the white house is in full swing. many presidential candidates chomping on corn dogs to deliver their message at the iowa state fair. now, go pac strategist, good evening, david. >> judge, good to be with you. >> hillary is blaming republicans saying this is all about politics. is she right? >> judge, if clinton were a term in the dags -- dictionary it would be defined evasiveness.
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this is because her changing her story. for republicans we need to make sure an easy layup doesn't turn into a three-point shot and allow the facts to come out because she's on our side. >> i want to you listen to this. >> jeb bush is a puppet to his donors. he's got lobbyists. i know them. >> david, there is no denying that donald trump is on fire. do you wish that your other candidates like jeb, for example, might get some of that fire in the belly? >> there is no questio is flyin. literally, today, as he flies his helicopter into the iowa state fair. candidates are going to all have their ups and downs and certainly, mr. trump is on a high. he, just like all candidates, are going to have to take the enthusiasm they have going right
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now for them, and the crowds he's getting right now and turn them into actual votes when iowa has their caucuses and when new hampshire has primaries. he's got his office open now. and so, we'll see where it's -- where it is in a few months but certainly, mr. trump is on a goodt( high. >> it seems he can get past anything he says that other candidates had said it, i mean, they'd be apologizing for the next six months and probably hiding underneath a rock but not donald. >> he does have a unique appeal and ability to keep the message on what he wants to be talking about, even today, in the iowa state fair. everything is about him. >> well, you know, i wonder, why is iowa so important? by the way? what is it about the iowa state fair? what is that about? >> well, iowa is important because it's the first contest
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in the nomination process. the iowa caucus comes before everything else. and as far as iowa state fair, i don't know how relevant it is, but judge, i've got an idea. why don't we make the iowa fair relevant by gop candidates have to eat at least 15 of the 75 available fried foods in order to be in the next g.o.p. debate. >> if they ate 15 of the fried foods they might not make it to the next debate. you know? anyway, david, thanks for joining us. >> thank you. >> all right. and coming up, a prominent congressman has a message for the president and john kerry as well, about the deal with iran. you'll hear it next. and jen, numbers up in the big cities in the country. is there anti-police sentiment of reason for? i want answers and i'm going to
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go a police chief to get them. and will the e-mail scandal affect hillary clinton's chances of winning the republican primary? here at the td ameritrade trader group, they work all the time. sup jj? working hard? working 24/7 on mobile trader, rated #1 trading app in the app store. it lets you trade stocks, options, futures... even advanced orders. and it offers more charts than a lot of the other competitors do in desktop. you work so late. i guess you don't see your family very much?
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the observe ma administration's iran nuke deal and the complete lack of transparency about an alleged secret side deal. a new poll shows if it were up to americans 58% would reject the deal. so why does our president insist on closing the deal? earlier i said down with house intelligence committee member congressman mike pompeo who is demanding answers. take a look. congressman, thanks for being with us. now, i want to talk to you obviously about the iran deal, and we had five united states administrations who were, you know, sanctioning iran because of their nuclear program and now we have the obama administration who wants to, you know, cut this deal with them. you hear something that josh earnest said that caused some questions in your-mile-per-hour. take a listen to this. >> in the case of our negotiation with iran the united states doesn't have to make any concessions. this is about the iranian regime
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significantly rolling back key aspects of their nuclear program and agreeing to a whole set of inspections that will verify their complianced with the agreement. >> all right. congressman, is it true that the united states didn't have to make any concessions? >> no, ma'am, i can't imagine that the initial negotiating position was to give souleymane a couple billion dollars to allow the iranians to keep every single centrifuge inside the country, to allow them to continue their ballistic missile development program. those are not only concessions but major concessions to put america's national security interests at enormous risk and to hear the president's spokesman say america made no concessions is absurd on its face and an attempt to mislead the american people in the most fundamental way >> you wrote a letter to john kerry, and i assume you outlined in the letter what you just mentioned. did you get a response from him? >> we've not heard back from secretary kerry. i cannot possibly imagine he's
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going to concur with what the president's spokesman said. i can't believe john kerry doesn't understand the depth of the concessions that the american negotiators do. the american people do. by 3-1 they think the americans gave more than the iranians did. they are convinced that this is a bad deal for our country is and i'm very hopeful when we get back to washington we'll vote to reject this deal and override the president's veto and get back to getting a deal where we actually take nuclear weapons away from the ayatollah. >> right. i understand, and what is disconcerting to so many and is as well is that there are two side deals that the administration has seven different answers on and john kerry says he hasn't seem them that involves the inspection of some of these sites. what do you know about the side eagreements? >> yes, ma'am. senator cotton and i discovered the existence of the side deals, at the core of the agreement about verification. the administration has told more stories about the secret side deals than hillary clinton has told stories about her server.
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it is absolutely the case that these are important parts of the deal. no american has read those side axwreemts. that means that the iaea has read them, the ayatollah has read them, but secretary kerry, our president, no member of congress has had a chance to read those agreements, and how -- how you could vote to support this deal withouting in access to all of the language in the agreement is absolutely beyond me. >> all right. senator lindsey graham says, you know, what if we don't have access to these agreements, i as chair of the senate appropriations won't let out the $88 million that the taxpayers give to the iaea to do these inspections. do you agree with that? >> i think we've got to do everything we can to get access to those documents. it ought to start with asking for them. secretary kerry wrote me in another letter and said that america doesn't even have the right to ask for the documents. i mean, on what planet does one believe that the united states of america doesn't have at least
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the power and the tenacity to request access to important parts of a nuclear deal that the president himself said is one of the most historic deals in the history of the united states? we ought to ask for the documents and withhold funding and do everything it takes to give the americans access to this. >> on the face we have american hostages there. they get to keep their nuclear program and their ballistic missile and they have a side deal with the iaea we don't know anything about and we give them a couple hundred billion dollars. what do we get out of this? >> i say we got nothing. the president would say the alternative to this deal is war. that's a simple bold assertion that is widely known toss false. what we need to do is lead and exert american power and put pressure on the iranian leaders and get the deal the president
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promised us. taking away nuclear weapons from the radical clerics in iran was his his goal and we didn't get it. >> they are still chanting death to america and this commander goes to russia and russia is the main weapons provider to iran. we're getting the money soon and let's go buy some weapons in russia. how come we didn't stop that very quickly? >> i have no idea. the president has repeatedly allowed our enemies to cross red lines. it's why america s has found itself in a weak position. >> congressman mike pompeo, thanks so much for being with us tonight. >> thank you. murders are spiking in major cities around the country. what's the reason and how do we stop it in the former chief of police is with us next. plus, it's an epidemic. two more illegal immigrants accused of brutal murders this week alone. where is the accountability for all of this? an expert joins me next. for fastidious librarian emily skinner, each day was fueled by thorough preparation for events to come.
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live from america's news headquarters i'm patricia stark. good news for stranded air travellers on the east code. arrivals and departures have been reviewed for 15 minutes or less. the issued were caused by a technical failure at a flight control center in virginia. the faa will continue to gate. former president built clinton, golfing with president obama on martha's vineyard saturday. the obamas and clintoned helped jordan celebrate his ñi80th birthday. he's halfway through vacation, scheduled to return to washington august 23rd. i'm patricia stark and now, back to justice with judge janine. powerful name in news.
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welcome pack to "justice." new fears tonight as murders spike major wide in several major u.s. cities. joining me now former boston police chief. good evening, chief. thanks for being with us. homicides are up in big cities nationwide, new york, baltimore, chicago, detroit, milwaukee. why? >> judge. i think we've had some benefits in the past couple of years where we drastically reduced crime and maybe we're seeing we can't get crime lower than this but we have a new found challenge to law enforcement in america. it hasn't been this way since our troops returned home from vietnam, but individuals want to engage law enforcement in confrontations, and many of those confrontations are violent confrontations. my overs used to chase individuals with firearms. they would try to throat firearms and get away and now they are turning and threatening officers and engaging them in deadly force. >> with those very you know, do you think this is going to get worse before it
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gets better? >> i hope not. i hope it gets better. >> how is it going to get better? >> well, you've got a lot of police officials looking at what can we do to make sure we've trained our officers properly, we've supported them and given them the right equipment and done the community outreach and engainingment strategy to get the community to understand that the police aren't the enemy. the police are actually the people you call when there's an act of violence and when you want somebody to help you and they are there to help and we've got to make sure we're training and quipping our officers and at the same time educating and outreach to the community to make sure they know what we're doing and why. two conversations going on. >> chief, with all due respect, this is nothing new. when i was a kid, and i'm no spring chicken, i mean, was taught to respect the police. now all of a sudden we've got to reach out and ask people to respect the police? >> yeah. it's a respect across our society. we saw a fire fighter shot the other day in inans dent. i represent nurses in massachusetts who are being caughted and threatened by patients and their families. it looks like there's just a
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non-appreciation for authority and non-appreciation for individuals who are out there trying to engage in positive activity, and we've got to change that culture in america. >> well, let me ask you this. is that culture in america and that -- that sense of being wronged by some communities, is that being perpetuated by the white house? >> well, i don't know that. i know that there's huge divisions right now. law enforcement feels like it's on its own and not being backed up, and officers are afraid to go out and do their jobs proactively. at the same time the community feels law enforcement isn't working with them and using overaggressive tactics. we've got to make sure that we have both those conversations together. where we police the community we don't occupy it, but we do it in a way that's safe for the officers and at the same time a way in which the community accepts and wants us to police them. >> but wouldn't you agree that the president going to visit prisons and telling the united states attorneys through eric hold their they are not going to
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prosecute some statutes that were passed by congress, by saying, you know, the drug laws we're not going to enforce them and we're going to take nonviolent criminals out, and i don't know but but pretty mitch every drug case that i handled as a d.a. or prosecutor or investigated involved the use of a gun, some kind of gang operation. i mean, we're talking about violence although the offense may be drug-related. do you think the president is being naive about, you know, the reality of the drug culture in our society? >> i think the drug culture in our society is huge and spent the majority of my career doing narcotic enforcement but the majority of the people in the drug culture are selling drugs to support their habit. there are those who engage in violent activity in the drug culture and that's what we need to focus on, those who engage in violence. those who as you say, judge, have the weapons and those who engage in violent activity. unfortunately, we don't have enough offices and resources to deal with the drug culture america has.
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we have to focus on the violent individuals and those individuals need to feel consequences and be held accountable when they engage in violence. you can right now carry gun and there's basically no consequences for felons illegally carrying guns. that has to stop. they know that. they have to hold them accountable. >> maybe the u.s. attorneys, again, the white house, making sure that these cases are prosecuted and do the sting operation and gun-running stuff, all the stuff you did and i did as a davmt fine. let me ask you this. homicides going up across the country. in your city of boston as well, and incidents of home-grown terror are -- are occurring more and more. >> sure. >> how are the police going to fight both problems, and what do we do to, you know, give them the morale boost their they need? >> we have to make sure our officers are well-prand, well-equipped and supported. they have a difficult job. we to stand behind them. when they are right, let's support them. when they are wrong, let's hold them accountable and let's make
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sure they were properly trained, properly equipped and properly deployed. we've got two missions right now in the united states of america. we've got homeland where isis is trying to kill us, and we also have hometown secure. we've got to merge those missions and work with our communities to identify individuals who engage in violence, whether it's inspired by some type of islamic fundamentalist isis state or it's a terrorist in the streets of boston who belongs to a gang and indiscriminately fires bullets into parks where there's children. we need to work with all of those and work together as a community to hold those people accountable. >> and you certainly know having been involved in the boston bombing yourself. daniel linskey, thanks so much for being with us. >> judge, thanks for having me. >> my plesh-hour. >> we had scheduled new york city police commissioner bill bratton to join us. he had accepted abut couldn't de
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to police business. two morrill heels involved in murders. this is becoming a regular occurrence. how do we stop the slaughter? with me now is the director of the center for immigration studies mark corkian. good evening. where is the disconnect? we're hearing stories like this every day? why? >> part of the reason is we're hearing about things that used to happen but we didn't know about them before. we actually ironically starting under president bush, put in place a system where when people are arrested and fingerprinted they are now checked with homeland security as well as the fbi. before that wasn't the case, so now we're finding out about lots more criminals who turn out to be illegal immigrants whom the government decides not to take into custody, at least under obama so those people then go out and commit other crimes and
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may kill people and do other things and now the federal government frankly shares the responsibility pause they knew about these people and committed crimes and they were in custody and the immigration service told the local cops we don't want them. let them go. it's sort of the other side of sanctuary cities. in sanctuary cities the cities say we're not going to cooperate with the feds, but what obama has done is also create a kind of sanctuary nation where even those cops who do want to cooperate are told no, we don't want the illegals, just let them go. >> you know, what is amazing about that in the last couple of weeks we had kate sustainle and marian fairies and the last homicide in florida, a 17-year-old girl, her 19-year-old boyfriend and her mother and an unborn baby. that's one illegal and four -- three murders and one of an
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unborn. >> and the interesting thing this most recent killer was from belize in central america, and do you think that down in central america they haven't heard about obama's policy to let people in who cross the border and kind of just give them a peeves paper and led the them go? of course they have. what that does is send the message, look, come and get in while the getting is good. this guy, the killer in florida you just talked about, only snuck into the country from mexico a few weeks or few months ago. it's a relatively recent thing. well, federal border is so well controlled, how did he do that? >> clearly, that's a problem. you know, when you have the president, you know, with his policies and you hear from the border patrol agents we let them in, you know, because they are from central america and they have problems there and we don't have fingerprints, we don't have medical records, we don't know who they are, they have no identification and have ms-13
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tattoos on them, yeah, i'm a murderer, i killed someone, and the policy is we've got to let them in. >> yeah. >> how does this end? >> i mean, it doesn't end well frankly. you know, what we've seen is both last summer it was in the news a lot, but it's also happening now is this surge of people from central america coming in. a lot of them are moms with kids. a lot of them are teenagers or even older who are pretending to be teenagers and there's no way, like you said. they have no documents. we don't know how they had other. they are 17. some of them are 19, 20, 21, and we're just letting them in. in fact, just in the past couple of weeks the detention centers for some of these people in south texas, because a handful of them were in fact detained pending their hearings, well, the judge has now told the government they have to close them and let all those people out so even the minimal kind of pretend enforcement that the
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obama administration has engaging in looks like it may not continue. >> well, you know, the whole idea of, you know, saying you've got to let them out of these centers, this administration is flying them all over the country, into maine, into virginia, and into california. they get a free plane ride, too, and the american people are fed up and hopefully this is going to change because we can't allow ourselves to be victims over and over again of individuals with criminal records and people have to stand up. anyway, mark krikorian, thanks so much for your expertise. >> thank you. >> up next, honeymooning with blood thirsty terrorists. two american newlyweds charged with trying to join isis. why does this keep happening? my next guest tries to give me so (vo) after 50 years of designing cars for crash survival, subaru has developed our most revolutionary feature yet.
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tonight new details in yet another case of home-grown terror. they look like normal mississippi newlyweds. 19-year-old jaylen delshaun young and 22-year-old muhammad oda dakhlalla arrested by the fbi on the way to the airport. they said that they were on their way to their honeymoon destination in turkey but instead the lovebirds were planning to travel to syria to join isis. with me retired u.s. marine lieutenant colonel dr. zasser. she's an honor student, a cheerleader and daughter of a cop. he's a psychology student and his father a well-known muslim parrot crashing. why are we seeing more and more of this and what is happening to these kids? >> well, judge, it's because it's insanity. it's the same thing over and
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over and we keep expecting different results and we're baffled and you see the quotes from "new york times" and the papers writing how do the normal kids become this way and the bottom line is we're ignoring the rat callization that's happening because the lens, judge, the lens that we're used to go look at these cases, be it the tsarnaev brothers in boston or the other individual arraigned in california who was going to join isis and others, the bottom line is the lens we're using is one of violent extremism, and long before the last few months of radicalization these two youths were getting into a separatist ideology, a belief in the islamic state. she told the fbi agent that she celebrated with the chattanooga terrorists did the marines and she said she wanted to go give little cubs for the islamic state and if you look at the mosque of the father, i'm not saying they preached violence, but the mosque, is linked to hudah-tv and the home page has a
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page that says islam does not believe in the free speech of the west but believes in a different system, a different system. it took me only five minutes, judge, because i understand this and i'm trying to fight it but we're bare. we're not fighting it. and allowing them to being pulled into islamist nationalist. >> a lot of people say they are young and impressionable and want adventure. is the isis allure because they feel disenfranchised? why don't they have an allure for america and the american dream? why are they rejecting us? this young girl knew that the subjectgation of women and rape is common. she's not out of her mind. >> because the program coming from 56 countries of the oic is about demonizing america, about demonizing israel, demonizing democracy and freedom. they are being told -- she was going saying her new husband was going to go correct the image of isis because the western media was portraying them as enslaving
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women and beating them and they want to correct that so, therefore, you say what's on the other side of the coin. pro-american freedom and pro-liberty coming from our mosques and islamic not happening, because all we're countering is the symptom of violence.ik it's just like the drunk parents who say oh, our drinking or alcoholism at home has no effect on why our kids are caught drunk driving. we're in complete denial. our government doesn't want to pay attention to it. the media is apologetic, saying islam is a religion of peace. meanwhile, we can't. engage reformers and expose that. maybe we need to look at the islamic center of mississippi in starkville and say, wait a minute. what's ideology, why are there so many wa hauby videos that might have for years been radicalizing these individuals. >>es it wouldn't be politically correct for us to do that kind of thing.
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thanks so much. it's your last chance to vote tonight. will the e-mail scandal affect hillary clinton's chances of winning the democratic nomination. we're coming right . i'm sorta marge... you're not marge? we both drive a stick, we both like saving money on car insurance, and we both feel integrity, such as, that of healthcare in the america of the us and therefore. yes. thank you. no. no.
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will the e-mail scandal affect hillary clinton's chances of winning the nomination. nancy says, the past is gone, let it go. donald is entertaining, but when it comes to hillary, she has the background we need. and the only success she's had is in raising money using her position in government. hey, you tell me what successes she had. maybe i just didn't hear about them. rosemary says she has so many people lying for her she might get through this scandal. and sydney says sweet mercy. i can't imagine this is the kients of person we want in the white house. and karn said i would love to say yes with an absolute, but i'm afraid she has such a well-oiled machine, it will cover her and make her out to be the victim. jen, this should not even be an issue. she released her e-mails, and on
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top of that agreed to appear in front of gowdy, hello! appear in front of gowdy, she denied she even got the subpoena. and finally, release the e-mails, she lied and said she didn't have any. and then she scrubs her server. thanks for great responses. i love reading what you guys think. check out my thoughts and pictures and all the news throughout the week, plus right behind the scenes photos. you all love my dogs, nikki and lance lot. thanks for joining us. facebook, and follow me on twitter, ♪
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powders may take days to work. for gentle overnight relief, try dulcolax laxative tablets. ducolax provides gentle overnight relief, unlike miralax that can take up to 3 days. dulcolax, designed for dependable relief. >> it is 9:00 p.m. on the east coast and a mom . it is 9:00 on the east coast, and the moment of truth has arrived. >> okay, guys, it's a big night for us. let's have a great show, here we go. >> i'm bret baier, live from quicken loans arena. >> megyn, i need you to make a sports reference. >> lined up one right after another, like you might do at a sporting event? >> yeah. yeah. >> nice, nice, jump in. say you're in the home of the calf leevalier cavaliers. the crowd will love it. >> we are in the arena where the
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