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tv   The O Reilly Factor  FOX News  April 11, 2016 8:00pm-9:01pm PDT

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on. tonight: >> i did something=ró[ yesterdy in philadelphia i almost want to apologize for. >> president clinton backing off his correct assessment of black crime in america. was he pressured by his own party to do that? >> this is a crooked system, folks. i have won twice as much as cruz. i have won millions and millions of votes more. >> donald trump returns to the no spin zone. does he have a plan to bring down his unfavorable ratings? and what does he think of the stepped up media attacks on him? >> what kind of things were they saying to you? >> pretty typical one was just [bleep] you. i was called a [bleep] a lot. >> wow. >> i was called a wore. >> also -- called a whore.
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>> confronted by unruly and sometimes violent students. >> in a couple of schools i was in, i felt no safety. >> caution, you are about to enter the no spin zone. the factor begins right now. ♪ ♪ hi, i'm bill o'reilly. thanks for watching us tonight. the
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african-american children. >> mr. clinton's absolutely correct. the vicious drug world results in millions of americans being harmed. dope pushers and gang members should be insofar as rated. after saying that he may have buckled. >> i said something in philadelphia i almost want to apologize it. but i want to use it as an example of the danger facing our country. >> why would bill clinton almost want to apologize if what is he say something true? hire are the facts. according to fbi data between 1960 and 1990, the rate of violent crime in the u.s.a. surged by 350%. violence in cities like new york, detroit, los angeles, way out of control. and people in the poor neighborhoods took the brunt of it in 1970, convicted murderers in america served a median sentence of just
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3.5 years for murder, for killing somebody, 3.5 years. that was insane. so bill clinton and both political parties finally did something about it they passed tough new sentencing laws. the result violent crime has dropped drastically since the mid 1990s to historic lows today. that's the truth. tough sentencing for violent offenders drove crime down in the u.s.a. big time. now the race question. again, according to fbi data, from 1976 to 1995, black americans identified by police as committing more than half of the homicides in the u.s.a. african-americans make up 13% of the population. in addition a national crime victim's survey that blacks committed robberies at a rate of 60%. again, the black community is just 13% of the entire population.
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what's the beef? if blacks are committing crimes out of proportion other ethnic group. why is there a disproportionate why? forget the drug myth. 99.5% of drug inmates are traffickers not users. 99.5%. so the question becomes why is the democratic party caving in to propaganda put out by radical groups like black lives matter? it's clear that tough sentencing reform spearheadedz# by both parties in the 1990s and signed by president clinton saved perhaps millions of american levees. yet, the entire criminal justice system is now being branded as racist and oppressive. di reaction. joining us from washington charles krauthammer.
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so, charles, a man named barry lathser, professor of criminal justice wrote an excellent article in the "wall street journal" that spurred my analysis of thisn democrat, a more centrist democrat and then he proved it in his presidency. a the crime law and reform and free trade. those are all things that his wife now in campaigning
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is repudiating. the reason i think it's know the result. a dramatic decline over time in the crime rate. >> what is this about the democratic party needing african-american votes. they are pandering despite all of the stats that we gave, which are indisputable, okay all of the stats we gave were in tion in t earlier 1990s in this country where you could not
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walk the streets of a lot of inner city neighborhoods. you couldn't. it was that dangerous. now all of that has see evaporated because they cracked down on these perpetrators. yet, now, the african-american community votes block and the democrats need that, so they crackdown in the 1990s. it's all ideology and it has gone far, far left. >> that's right. radicalized rule. charles thanks as always. donald trump returning to
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the no spin zone to talk about popularity. how the media is treating him. the latest watters on american teachers confronting violent students up ahead. ooh... >>psst. hey... where you going? we've got that thing! you know...diarrhea? abdominal pain? but we said we'd be there... woap, who makes the decisions around here? it's me. don't think i'll make it. stomach again...send!
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and cloud and hosting services - all with dedicated, responsive support. with centurylink as your trusted technology partner, you're free to focus on growing your business. centurylink. your link to what's next. in the impact segment tonight winning over the voters both donald trump and hillary clinton who lead their respective parties in primary voting have unfavorable ratings hillary clinton in the 50's and mr. trump in the mid 60's. how will the candidates turn that around. joining us from his new york city headquarters is mr. trump. so, if do you secure the nomination, then you have to win over about 63 million americans to vote for you in order to get the presidency. are you going to change your political style? >> well, it's possible it will change a little bit,
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bill. you know, we started off with 17 people. 16 of which were, you know, shooting at me. and they are almost all gone right now. and, you know, when you are hit by 16 differenté people that are accomplished people, senators and governors and, you know, very, very smart people like ben carson who endorsed me by the way a great guy. they are all going after you. you probably don't come off looking so good because you come after them much harder than they went after you. so i think so ronald reagan had very very high orable rating was 30. and jimmy carter was 19 points, or 20 points ahead of him. he wound up winning by 6 points. focus on hillary. i think we are going to do great. >> you know from "killing reagan" that he and you were not in the same universe as far as personality is concerned. ronald reagan was probably the least confrontational guy in the country. you are very confrontational
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guy. so, what i'm trying to get at is. this. nobody knows what's going to happen at the convention in cleveland. it's going to be a mess. it's just going to be a mess. but, if do you get the nomination, then your supporters are used to you, donald trump, the confrontational guy takes no guff from anybody. in order to get those unfavorable down, you will have to be the softer, kindler trump. i don't know if you can do that. i don't know if you can. >> well, i think i am a softer, kindler person if you want to know the truth, bill. again, this has been a very strong competition. if jeb bush was supposed to win and i hit him hard and i won and, you know, walker was supposed to win. they were all supposed to win and they are all gone. and, you know, to be honest i think i the get along with people and i will be a unifier including for the party and we hope to get there some time prior to the convention. so that the convention can actually be a unification project if you want to know the truth. >> it's going to be very
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difficult to do that. >> the republicans need that well, you know, i'm leaving right now, bill. i'm leaving for albany right after this. we have 20,000 people in albany. yesterday we had 17,000 people. >> yeah. i think you will win new york. doing well. >> then you have to go out west again and it's a tougher territory for you out there: let's talk about the minorities. i defended you against tavis smiley last week-did it becauú$f i know you better than tavis smiley knows you. i don't know whether you know him. >> he doesn't know me at all. i have never met him. >> racial arsonist. that's what he used. look, i have known the guy for 30 years i have never seen any of that you have got to give me an example and he couldn't. that's the perception in the,t>÷ african-american precincts that you are a racial guy you don't like them. is there a strategy that you have or that your staff has to negate that?
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>> i don't think it is the perception, bill. i have tremendous numbers of african-americans that work for me. i'm going to bring jobs back to the country. i don't think it's the perception at all i just don't. i think we are going to do well with african-americans and hispanics. >> what's your message. >> my message i'm going to bring jobs back. my message is bringing jobs back to the country and they will have jobs. right now we don't have jobs. china has the jobs. mexico has the jobs. japan has the jobs. everybody has the jobs. we don't have the jobs. the jobs have been taken out of the united states like we're a bunch of babies not only do you havebt to bring prosperity to all americans, not just blacks, but we owe them. we owe the african-americans because of the historical atrocities that they have had to live through, their families, their ancestors, how are you going to deal with that? >> well, i think we are
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going to do fine. again, i think that. >> what are you going to tell them what that comes up. >> you will start to see it i'm telling you, it's an economic message. if you look at president obama, he has been a president for almost eight years. will be eight years. you have with black youth, with african-american youth you have a 59% unemployment with people of prime age it's much higher than. >> how are you going to get jobs for them. many are i will educated and have tattoos on their foreheads and i hate to be generalized about it but it's true. if you look at all the educational statistics, how are you going to give jobs to people who aren't qualified for jobs? >> we're going to bring jobs back. we have apple computers made in this country. >> but you have to have skills to make apple computers and educational=j system. >> we will get the skills. we will develop the skills. we have incredible population. and they don't have the jobs. our good jobs are going to china. they are going to mexico
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want every day. >>. wait a minute, carrier and nabisco and ford and every company you can name, they are building in mexico. they are not here because we have politicians that don't know what they're doing. >> i got it but it's more challenging -- look, when we drive up to yankee stadium we go through harlem, right? it's more challenging for a poor child in harlem without parental guidance in a school that's falling apart than it is for some white kid out in garden city, all right? you say you can bring jobs back. but if the kid isn't qualified to do the job and can't do the work. you have got to get into the infrastructure of the african-american community. do you have any plan to do that? >> well, it is true. and it's about education. but it's also about spirit. a lot of people don't have spirit. not only african-americans, they don't have spirit in our country. i mean, can i tell you plenty of white people that go to college, they borrow a lot of money, they get out and they can't get a job. single biggest question i get from young kids in colleges because i see them
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all over and they want to talk to me and i say what is it? i say before you even talk, i will tell you are borrowed up to the hilt now you have graduate, have you done well in college you can't get a job. >> they said, mr. trump, how did you know? it's a real problem that we have in this country. we don't have jobs anymore. our manufacturing is going to be gone if we keep it up. look at the numbers. look at the recent numbers of manufacturing in the united states? it's going to be gone. >> all going to the service and high
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continuing with donald trump who is in manhattan this evening "boston globe" did a lampoon yesterday on what it might look like to cover you as president. it was pretty nasty. are you used to this stuff yet? are you getting numb to this? >> well, i have become numb. you know, if you are a conservative,!
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country. we have incredible people on the border. border patrol. they have endorsed me by the way 16500 people just endorsed me. they have never endorsed a presidential candidate before first time. and they vendorsed me. we have got to stop what's happening at the border and they talk about it like it's some kind of a joke. >> they don't believe you are going to be able to --d)i the media in general does not believe you are going to be able to deliver on your promise to have mexico pay for the wall. they don't believe that. >> so easy. bill so, easy. >> trade war starts if you stop remunerations going back and all of that. because mexico is our third largest trade partner. going to be economic. that's all speculation. what isn't speculation. >> bill, one thing i would like to respond to that if a trade war starts. trade war only going to start unless they treating us properly. they're treating us like a bunch of dummies in the united states. they are taking our jobs. taking our money. they are devaluing their currencies. look at what china is doing with the currency and japan.uj,r
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currencies and just killing us. >> okay. but. >> now, i don't think we are going to have a trade war but somebody has got to to. theyap i think i can absolutely solve the problem. can't. >> i think some of the media believes i can. i think some of the media leaves can i. >> who? >> can i tell you. i absolutely can. look what they are doing. you look at these countries and what they are doing to us and how they treat us. >> i'm talking about the media now. >> terrible agreements to start off with they are terrible greements. >> so, look, your supporters believe you can too it. your detractors say you can't. >> i will do it for the country. it's called make america great again because our country is going to hell. make america great again. >> you have got to get those hats made in america by the way. >> they are made in america. bill, wait, wait, wait. they are made in california. now, i know. this they are copied all over the place. but they are made in america. believe me, the first thing i said when i did the hats i said you better shake muir
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she are made in america. made by a companyrofu california 100 percent. now, i know they are copied all over the place and i can't help that. but my hats are made in america. >> good. now, i have got to ask you this question. it's a tough question. but it's true. i was at the cbs morning news a few weeks ago and program, they areq that you are leading in the republican precincts. they think you are a as you vulgarian that you don't have the class to run this country. you know that's the perception in a lot of network places. does that bother you? >> well, i don't know the perception. i went to the wharton school of finance. i was a very smart person and student and all of that and hopefully!y am. and, frankly, cbs morning show with charlie rose andg(n all of them, they begged me to go on the show all the time. >> sure. because you deliver high ratings. >> they begged me to go on the show. so i don't think the
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vulgarian is the right word. perhaps they don't like me. they don't like my policies. they don't like my stance on trade. >> you know the new york term in your face? that's what they thinchts they certainly wanted me on their show because they beg. >> you bring high ratings. everybody knows you bring high ratings. that's why. also. i bring a lot of people that want to see our country turn around. >>=bwç÷ right. to see what you have to say. >> as an exampd2+g you look at nafta and what happened to our country or look at nato the way we are spending so much money and we're benefiting all these other countries. we are like, bill, we need a change. we need a change fast. we're not going to have a country left. believe me. >> i have got one more question i have to ask you. don't you understand or do you? maybe i'm wrong because i don't hang with these people. but the precincts,)@
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don't you feel that when you deal with them? don't you fz?ezq7(:ç that condescension? >> i don't, i don't feel thaxn feel that they disagree with my policies because thx n9q to have open borders. they want -- they don't mind that people are taking advantage of the country. conservative thing. >> no. i think they like my style. i think they really wish they had my style if you want to know4pwu the truth excuse me. that's why most of those people are dying on television. i really think that they don't like open borders and don't like good trade des÷qq because they think it's a bad thing which is -- i look at it differently. i look at america first. america first. >> you are right about that make america great again. >> i just questions. we always appreciate you coming on. i hope you will check in with us as much as you can. you are very provoc1hck9 about itno doubt donald.u, plenty more ahead as the factor moves along this evening. could black and white
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á new program about jacque robinson. watters talking tor=gx teachers under siege. >> did you ever feel unsafe in the classroom? >> all the all thel oq6kbñ time. my desk alwaysdzaq sat by the door so that i can escape. >> we hope you stay tuned to welcome to the world 2116, you can fly across town in minutes or across the globe in under an hour. whole communities are living on mars and solar satellites provide earth with unlimited clean power. in less than a century, boeing took the world from seaplanes to space planes, across the universe and beyond. and if you thought that was amazing, you just wait. ♪
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hume zone se tonight. lots of speculation about the republican convention which will be held in cleveland this coming july. if donald trump does not have enough delegates to win outright, it would be an open convention because ted kasich cannot possibly meet the delegate count. joining us now from poka boca grand, florida, brit hume. i want to talk to you about the donald trump interview. the world vulgarian might be overstating it and mistaken in using those words. the network news and even elite commentators even on this net work, i just get the feeling it's personal against trump. do you see that? >> i think it's some of his personal characteristics that people find objectionable. they think he is ignorant and they think he is rude. and they think -- and they also, i believe, think he is, you know, temperc= for the job of president. and i think that's characteristic of the bluntness. >> you have perceived that, too. but is he not ignorant. trump is a smart guy.
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he is one of the smartest guys that i know. >> yeah. but smart and[+lz ignorant -- bill, smart and knowledgeable are you canga4ñ be very smart and ignorant. >> he is certainly not that. reference about certain things, that can be learned. trump is a smart guy. he is shrewd. look, i think bothçh@ you and i agree that to do what he has done, to come out of nowhere from a background of being a builder andaúss a television personality to become this close to being the republican nominee for president is an extraordinary achievement. wouldn't you agree? >> i do agree. and i$&ld th0xre it's, you know it, is theyájb biggest political storyjsñ of ourçre by far. and he has done this, i think, bill, in two ways. he name recognition that no-é other candidate could equal, except for possibly hillary!6
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clinton.fm8 thirl3tc he had tremendous"wy forceó8 ofytñ personality and a that was tailored to the mood in the republican party. and he put those three thingsgf: for thatly runa[5u(v with this though at the moment he might not quite makecmt it to the convention and win on the first ballot raised all kinds of possibilities? i want allár the viewers to know that i'm trying to be fair to all thek and when i get this per>&g'sjr'k newsñbjf people and the elites and the republican party, you have got to discount the democrats. they just don't like him because of what hepzu me uneasy)xlú and ic";kátj wondering whether he felt the same>x-rr'gabbq because you can deal with trump on issues bases and it's fair issues waives. -- basis. this visceral dislike of him as a and i see it all the time.
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>> let's get to the convention. they all wimpt in there. nobody hasej plurality of delegates and then it's just chaos, right? >> well, that's not a bad description of it.á=bt"p%it's w. couple of ballots, virtually every delegate in the place however he or shp72ñ pleases. and that means that a lot of those delegates that were -- that are pledged to trump on2 trump backers and will stay with him until and unless he@@i releases them. but a lot of them will not be. a lot ofn figures who filled out -- who were part of the slate that must stay with him on the first ballot but are that andts after literally anything can happen. i don't think it's likely that anything -- you know,pgéf this there are all kinds of possibilities that it won't happen. anything theoretically could happen. they did nominate whoever they wanted. >> it's got to be either-i think at this g.p.s. going to be.!6dm >> it's not likely, bill. we haven't like this in a long time but it is possible. party up. what i see and just real
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quick. i see cruz/kasich. cruz making a deal with kasich to come on in. and that will be a formidable opponent for donalduh trump. last word? >> well, that -- that's a possibility. but, remember, we have got 171 rubio delegates. fewer than that kasich delegates although he will probably pick up some more. the great likelihood is that we get to june 7th. which is the last primary. and if mr. trump doesn't have it, that by that time he will have put together a delegate hunting operation of some size, which he doesn't have now, certainly, and what happened over the weekend in colorado establishes that, and he will try to win over some of the delegates who are either pledge to do other candidates or who will otherwise be free to vote for$%apx him. and he will -- and he would stillój!m be the likely winner even if he doesn't have it coming in. >> right. >> but if he doesn't get it, bill, after the first ballot or the first two ballots. >> is he not going to get it. >> it isn't going to happen.
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>> remember, this 1924 democratic party, they took nominating john w. davis who lost tomm:ñ calvin cool age. >> he was too exhaust to do campaign. >> 103. >> brit hume, everybody. when we come back a new documentary about jacque robinson highlights the divide between black and white americans. we will take a look at it watters with american teachers under siege in teachers under siege in classroom. at our retirement plan today. not now! i'm cleaning the oven! yeah, i'm cleaning the gutters! well i'm learning snapchamp! chat. chat! changing the oil... (vo) it's surprising what people would rather do than deal with retirement. pressure-washing the... roses. aerating the lawn! (vo) but with nationwide it's no big deal. okay, your retirement plan is all set. nationwide? awesome. nice neighborhood. ♪ nationwide is on your side nationwide is the exclusive insurance partner of plenti.
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thanks for staying with us, i'm bill o'reilly in the personal story segment tonight, do black and white americans really have a vast%wím divide? first black ballpv? player, major leagues. it was hell for robinson. >> you thought of philadelphia as a city of brotherlily love, yet when you went to&h philadelphia you couldn't stay in the same hotel. you had to find your own and then there was bente chapman andçc/=jt the vicious and uncalled for.? >> now, this week the cityz,x7zy apologizing for the way it treated jacque robinson. with us now here in new yorkh
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city ken burns, director of the pbsm we will get to your program% @&@ out today thaty americans in the gallup survey say they are extremely worried about the st8miá of race relations. that's up from 28% in 2015.q)jz. and president obamaáo@ obviously has not brought the country together. do you think it's that bad? >> i think it'sjydúñ pretty bad. i think it's always been pretty bad. people have been race inñc+yy this country since the very, very beginning. we would like to think that our better angels are called at every occasion andxm)uq' they are. remember when the president sang aty$2yç the charleston memorial amazing grace that was written by an exslaver who had goneó we think of that. but also these old guilts metastasize into anger and distrust of other people. that sort of comes to the fore recently. >> i don't see that in my world. my world is a fairly expansive one. i don't know anyu
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i don't know either black or white people that don't -- hike our staff here is integrated my assistant is black. she has been with me 25 years. i just never see this. >> i'm around in the country, too. i don't think it's as big as the media plays it up. but i know i get a lot of hate mail from people who call me an n lover. >> isn't that a small sliver of craziness. >> i think it probably is. the majority ofú&j are not. >> they are not that way. >> they are not that!p"ñp way. that's who i make my films for. it's not a blue state audience or red state audience. it's a purple state audience. that's what jacque robinson was about too. appealing to the better sense of our angels. >> i think surprise. i went to field while he was playing as a 4-year-old. i think robinson was caught by surprise in the vitriol he had to face. i think is he a true hero tremendously dignified
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manner. what was the most important or the most startling thing you learned in researching this. >> i think i disagree with you first from a very early kid he was faced with discrimination in america. people burning crosses on his lawn in pass deanna, california. the-d$y neighbors throwing rocks at him and things like that. so i think he was prepared for it. he was the,vw( best person that branch could pick because he was willing for those three years to turn the other cheek and at that point he was in quotes a good negro but when he no longer had to do that the same press that had, you know, treated him with, you know, great kindness suddenly turned on him and said he is uppity. i think it's a very complicated dynamic that i think we do a disservice to ourselves when we make it a binary thing black and white. no pun intended. what i have tried in almost all my work because you can't deal with american history as i have tried to do. do deep dives in american history without coming up against race. because we were founded under the idea that all men are created equal. the guy who wrote that
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sentence owned more than. >> i think that america gets a bad wrap in 2016. i think the vast majority of americans are accepting of races and we try to help each others because we are we are going to watch tonight. >> i'm very excited that you will. i went to caen film festival the french would say to us the americans are so racist. we have african-american president. we have al jeerian or turkish president you come and talk to me and that's never going to happen. we have made a lot of progress. we have progress to make. we have k. often learn thousand make that progress in the present by taking the example of people in the past as you know as well as i do and to appeal to our better -- >> -- i robinson. i think is he we'll be%pog watching tonight. thanks for coming in. watters onx(s deck. teachers and [plumber] i need to be where the pipes are. so i use quickbooks and run my entire business from the cloud.
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back of the book segment tonight, watters world, the video has surfaced in beaumont, texas, showing a high school teacher hitting a student. >> graduate you idiot [bleep] >> why you did this? [shouting] >> that teacher mary hastings has been suspended and charged with misdemeanor assault. all over the country teachers are being confronted with students who may or may not overstep boundaries. that may not be the case for miss hastings. we are not going to try it here. student violence scenarioly an epidemic. we sent watters out to get theeú story. ♪ ♪ >> dallas skyline high school teacher was attacked in class. >> 17-year-old spring hill student is facing felony
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charges for attacking a teacher in the middle of class. >> the confrontation that ends with a teacher on the ground. >> how you have seen kids in the classroom change over the course of time? in the beginning, the children were as i was raised, where everyone was obedient, they listened to the adults. as time went on, the parents became younger parents so their teaching skills were a little different so the children became more aggressive. >> were you disrespected in the classroom? >> yes, definitely. >> what did that behavior look like? >> anything from being sworn out to having things thrown at you. i was called a [ bleep ] a lot. >> wow. >> i was called a [ bleep ]. i was called a [ bleep ], [ bleep ]. i was called a [ bleep ]. many many multiple languages. >> i've had fights erupt in class, fights spill into my classroom from outside the classroom. >> this is my classroom. [ yelling ] >> what kind of gang activity
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was present in the school system? >> i worked at one school where the entire school was one gang or the other. so when one got into a fight, the entire school emptied out to fight the other gang. >> i was running a basketball practice with another coach one time and we got shot at and, you know, we had to duck and run. >> shot at? >> we got shot at, yeah. >> what are the consequences? >> usually a week or two suspension. the children know all i have to do is spend a week at home or week in-school suspension and it's all over, i can come back and do it again and that's all that will happen. >> how would you discipline a student who swore at you? >> you'd have to call security, have them escorted down to the dean of behavior. that was really all you could do. >> i have taken weapons away from students, like in a backpack or fallen out of a pocket or something. those weapons have always been defensive weapons for kids who have to travel to school through the very dangerous streets.
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>> in a couple schools i was in, i felt no safety because they didn't do anything. now that they're allowed to use their phones, they will literally get on the phone and call their parents on you. >> they dial up their parents in the classroom to tell on you, the teacher, for holding them accountable? >> oh, yeah. yeah. >> a teacher shoved and tossed to the ground by a student nearly twice her size. >> do you believe you're psychologically damaged from this experience? >> all of those moments really do take a toll. i got my hair fell out, the stress was making me not sleep. i was getting sick all the time. i had four co-workers in a span of three months that had miscarriages. >> oh, my god. >> it had a lasting effect. >> my desk always sat by the door so i can escape if i needed to. >> what's the solution to this? >> i really don't know. >> it almost sounds like you're saying it's a lost cause. >> i think it's just, we need a complete revamp of everything. >> and we're protecting your identity. why is that? >> because i'm still teaching
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and because i want to keep teaching. >> why did you end up leaving teaching? >> it got it be a very dangerous place to be. children were coming in with guns and different things and i was at the age where i could retire and i said, i'd rather go with my sanity and my health and my life than to stay here and try to be a martyr, so i left. >> all right. here's watters. here in new york city, the city council wants to even lessen the suspensions because they don't want the kids to feel alienated. >> right. >> or distance themselves from the system. but at the same time, the ichin situation gets worse and worse and worse. >> the restorative justice approach, you're supposed to talk about your feelings and play patty cake but if you're not disciplining the students, they're going to keep acting out. we had this story even last year, the guy got body slammed in the hallway and he was just suspended for a week. he was never really -- a lot of
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these kids love getting suspe suspended because they can hang out and play video games. >> the solution to the problem if there's an assault verbally or physically on a teacher, the police should be called. >> right. >> that's a solution. and then the system takes over and because if you don't, that infects the whole school, the other kids and the school discipline drops. that's the solution. police are called. teachers aren't police officers. >> right. >> they're not supposed to be. they can't be put in the profession whe position where they're assaulted. watters, thank you. "factor" tip of the day. christianity under siege. the tip, moments away. everyday millions of women worldwide trust tena with their bladder matters. thanks to its triple protections from leaks, odor and moisture. tena lets you be you ♪
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ask your heart doctor about entresto. and help make tomorrow possible. ♪ you're only a day away ♪ "factor tip of the day." christianity getting hammered, in a couple minutes. first i received a letter asking if i would stop mentioning my books for one week. if i did that, gary, great
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charities would lose donations. all money from billo'reilly.com, including book sales given away. if you buy a copy of "killing reagan "out get 50% off any other "killing" book this week. helps the poor and the afflicted. now the mail. marshall feeney, st. louis, one of the famous fraeds phrases i don't justify bad behavior by pointing out other behavior, yet you do that when you say donald trump donated money to politicians to get things done in new york city. that is wrong and shouldn't be done. i simply am reporting trump did that for business, not ideological reasons. that's the truth and my job to illuminate the truth. you can decide the issue based on what happened. jermaine, sacramento, california, o'reilly, great interview with cruz. surely he knowses if you don't grease wheels in new york, you can't build anything. diane frazier, danny frazier, i should say. sarahland, alabama.
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mr. o., shame on you for not calling geraldo out when he called ted cruz's comments anti-semitic. are you sure you're watching "the factor," danny. abraham, focus you, everyone knows cruz is great friend to israel and to the jewish community who serves in texas. catherine carter, reno, nevada, just bought tickets to see o'reilly and miller here for father's day gift. my husband is thrilled with it. i told him to be grateful he's not getting another golf shirt. yes. right on, catherine. we'll see you guys september 23rd. denver the next night, saturday september 24th. atlanta, biloxi, mississippi, october. fairfax, virginia, may 7 president. that's coming up. no heeg check the shows out on billo'reilly.com. barbara, tacoma, washington,
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when does the second season of "legends and lies begin"? sunday, june 4th. we focus on the patriots who won freedom for america. you'll be surprised what we found out. all the polls say the same thing, the usa is losing its religion, secular folks wielding influence, the nation changing draftically because of that. even worse the roots of christian philosophy which the founding fathers rely upon to make policy and law are rarely taught or mentioned. dr. william bennett, education czar, under president reagan, has written a fascinating new book called "tried by fire." and that is the story of christianity's first 1,000 years. "factor" tip of the day, this book will teach you plenty. that is it for us tonight. please check out the factor website. different from billo'reilly.com. spout off about the "factor," oriley.com if you wish to opine. word of the day, do not be
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fractious when writing to the "factor." all right. tomorrow we have our "is it legal" people on the gay laws that are causing a lot of controversy. thanks for watching us tonight. miss megyn is next. i'm bill o'reilly. please remember the spin stops here because we're looking out for you. breaking tonight. now fallout in a white hot political fight after ted cruz wins colorado and donald trump cries foul. welcome to "the kelly file," everyone, i'm megyn kelly. donald trump rallied more than 10,000 supporters in good old albany, new york. the next state to hit the polls in what is predicted to be highly favorable territory for the new york businessman. this comes after two setbacks for the trump campaign. first, a loss in wisconsin and then a rough weekend in colorado where ted cruz won every delegate in a system that donald trump says is rigged. watch. >> we have a rigged system so in