tv The O Reilly Factor FOX News April 25, 2016 8:00pm-9:01pm PDT
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have full coverage tomorrow night, 10:00 until midnight. that is all the time we have left this evening. thanks for joining us. we'll see you back here on a big election night tomorrow night. thanks for joining us. ednesday night 7:00 p.m. eastern. good night. "the o'reilly factor" is on tonight. >> they colluded, and actually i was happy. because it shows how weak they are. it shows how pathetic they are. >> ted cruz and john kasich now working together to derail donald trump. but what does it really mean? talking points, we'll tell you. and that is just a fact. what is the truth about being poor in america? if you don't have a lot of money is it the government's fault? charles krauthammerer will weigh in. >> should the government give people free dope? >> yes, to be honest, yes. also ahead, jesse watters
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asking questions, caution, you are about to enter the "no spin zone." factor begins right now. hi, i'm bill o'reilly. thank you for joining us tonight. derail donald trump, that is the talking points memo. as you may have heard, john kasich and ted cruz are now working together to try to deny donald trump the number of delegates he needs. trump is expected to dominate here in the northeast. so by wednesday he could be close to a thousand delegates leaving him a bit more than 200 delegates short of winning the nod. but now john kasich says he will not campaign in indiana, leaving ted cruz to go one-on-one with trump. in kind, cruz says he
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will not campaign in new mexico and oregon. some believe that strategy could deny trump the delegates, especially in indiana, the winner take all state. and the poll shows trump 39%, cruz 33, john kasich 19. so you can see if some john kasich voters go to cruz he could defeat mr. trump. for his part, trump is sneering at his competition. >> you know, if you collude in business, if you collude in business or if you collude in politics, but if you do that in politics, they did, actually i was happy because it shows how weak they are. it shows how pathetic they are. >> talking points believes there is nothing wrong with cruz and john kasich banning together, sometimes politics is intense. and that is the only way, the
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only way to deny trump the delegates. on the other side, i continue to believe that mr. trump will be very close to winning the nomination outright. and if he arrives in cleveland and is denied, all hell will break loose. of course, the beneficiary of all of this is hillary clinton. locked in the tight battle right now with bernie sanders in connecticut and rhode island, mrs. clinton well ahead in pennsylvania. but she doesn't have to worry about the establishment, they're on her side firmly of the understa -- the gop is in chaos. he may be unstoppable. but at this point anything could happen in cleveland. and that is a memo. now, to the top story tonight reaction joining us from florida, brit hume. so indiana,
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i think is the play here. while it's true that if john kasich doesn't really show up and do any ads and campaign he will still get single digits. but you figure about 10% of his support will go somewhere else. cruz or trump, i guess some could go to trump. >> well, i think some would go to trump, bill, and that is the fly in the ointment in this strategy. you can certainly count on trump getting some of these potential john kasich voters if he doesn't show up and campaign. in order for the strategy to work cruz would have to get the lion's share of the potential john kasich vote enough to overtake trump. i mean, that could happen. that may happen some of the polling showing that could happen. but it's not definite. and that is the problem with the strategy, cruz is in some ways closer to trump than he is to john kasich. and if john kasich is out there campaigning on his own and cruz drops out a lot more of those
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votes may go to trump. and the strategy would then backfire. >> or stay home. i think that there is a definite possibility -- of people -- look, i don't want cruz and trump -- i don't want either of them so i'm not going to show up. >> that is right, bill, for the strategy to work now these people need to come out to vote and vote -- >> vote for the other non-trump candidate. >> it's an anti-trump play, which has been subsiding. i think that movement has been subsiding somewhat in the u.s., have you seen that? >> well, we all feel that right about at this moment, because he had such a big win in new york, now never mind that new york is his home state and he should feel comfortable there. it gives us in the media who love to think about such things a sense of momentum for him. i'm not sure that momentum works at this late stage of the race but there it is and that is the sense we
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have. but mathematically he still has a lot of work to get to 1237. >> you're a football fan, as am i. if you're in the fourth quarter and you are trying to get points you got to throw that ball and take chances. if donald trump is going to clean up in the northeast, there is no doubt he will win most of the states and most of the delegates but if he wins indiana and he is ahead in the polls as you saw it's over. it's over. >> indiana is more important the way things are shaping up than all of the states -- >> so cruz' people know that. they know if trump cleans up tomorrow night which he will and he goes out to indiana then next tuesday a week from tomorrow night and wins a winner take all, so they have to do this. they absolutely have it. >> remember about tomorrow night. remember about tomorrow night. the number of delegates that can be won tomorrow night is not as big as it might seem. because pennsylvania, which is
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the biggest state tomorrow has like 71 delegates or something like that. but only 17 of them will be decided by tomorrow's vote. the other 54, i think it's 54 will go to the convention as non-unpledged delegates. that doesn't mean trump wouldn't get them, he probably will be getting some of them -- >> you figure he will be below a thousand even if he sweeps all the states? >> yeah, that is the way it looks to me. >> but it's a momentum play, you know how the momentum is. the headline on wednesday is trump sweeps all northeastern states. you know, voters are influenced by momentum. they take a look at that. and people like to back winners. and i think there is a lot of psychology involved here in . >> yeah, there is something in that, bill, but i don't think momentum at this late stage is that important. people have seen
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these candidates and have the opportunity to make up their minds about them. trump has a base that is not going to desert him no matter what. and what i see him doing now is every now and then he makes a gesture of being more presidential as people say. but you saw him out there today, with the -- with the colluders, and that type of thing excites his base, but he needs to expand his base at this late stage of the game. >> he just wants to win it and then will think about expanding it. we made an interesting point, when i have interview prospects with him, i don't know what to ask him anymore. i asked him everything. i mean, all right, now i got trump coming on what am i going to ask him? because it is -- i'm exhausted from all of this. you know. but after -- after indiana -- >> yeah, i wondered -- well, no
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one has captured voters' imaginations and all of our imaginations really than donald trump has at least in recent memory. but we have kind of gotten -- we sort of know what he is saying, what he is going to say. we're waiting for the next phase of his campaign in which he changes his tune. as you heard him say the other day he didn't quite know if he wanted to do it just yet. we'll await that moment. >> he himself will be bored with that presentation, be more presidential. he likes being a bomb-thrower. brit, thank you. next on the money rundown, do you have money problems? is it your fault or the government's? charles krauthammerer on that. and later on watters world. he asks people what ♪ in new york state, we believe tomorrow starts today. all across the state, the economy is growing,
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there is no question that senator bernie sanders has competed very well in this election cycle. his message that the economy is being rigged is being widely accepted among democrats. yesterday senator sanders was asked this. >> 17 of the 25 states with the highest levels of income inequality have held primaries. 16 of those states have been won by hillary clinton, not by you, why? >> well, because poor people don't vote. i mean, that is just a fact. a sad reality of american society and that is what have to transform. >> in 2006, 30% of americans making less than 70% showed up to vote. joining us, charles krauthammer, do you think it's rigged? >> no, because i think the word rigged implies a conscious will of those who control the economy to put down the poor. i do think, however, a large
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percentage of what determines if you're poor or not, is the human lottery, where you're born, for example, if you're born in the united states, that is six out of a hundred, you wrong the lottery instead of being born in the congo. if you're born out of wedlock, without a father, or education, that is the lottery, you have lost it. it's very hard. so to some extent it's true that your life chances are not entirely in your hand. i think they are largely out of your hands, nonetheless, there is a way to change the culture -- there is no good answer. >> i have an answer -- >> oh, you do let's hear it. >> i think you're right about the lottery of life and determining economic success in most cases, but not all. i'm an
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example, i was born to responsible parents. we didn't have any money. and there was a pathway that i was shown. that is the key. so my theory is that public schooling has to lay out a pathway to little children. i mean, 5, 6, 7 years old. and say look, here is where you are in life. this is what you have to overcome. this is how you do it. that has to be drummed, boom, boom, boom, what has to be a course along with math and english and spelling. that has to be a course, you see what i'm talking about? >> no, i don't, and i'll tell you why. >> i think it has to be a course. >> it's not a course, not something you teach. it's something that you get by the lottery of life. i didn't say that the lottery means you have to be -- have rich folks if you want to do well in life. what i said is you have to have the human capital. two parents, married, who inculcate the
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values you're talking about -- >> if you can overcome it -- >> with of course -- come on, are you kidding me? >> i did it when i was teaching high school. i taught high school, they were not poor, but they were working class. basically, we would come in, i would say okay, here is two houses. here is the nice house, here is the shack, where do you want to live? and of course they would say haha, here is what you have to do to get it. and you have to do a, b and c, and this is what you have to do. this is not taught in school or taught anywhere. they come in and the society is already making them victims. oh, you can't succeed. oh, look at your circumstance, oh, you have to be treated differently. what is it? the soft expectation of bigotry. that is what is in play. we can't change it? >> why aren't you still teaching
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it? >> because i have a greater mission to teach people like you, people who fall into the precincts, you can help them but you have to be honest with them. >> i have another theory, because staying in a school system run by the monopoly, the way you get that there are a lot of catholic schools that do that. there are a lot of private schools that do that. problem is, only the rich end up there -- >> i taught in a catholic school and it wasn't rich. it was in opa-locka, florida. >> but the problem is, you have these kids in the inner cities with no dad around, their one chance in life. and this is the only thing that you can do politically is to give them school choice. give them the choices that the rich people have. and it is a crime that we
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don't do that. >> what the charter schools, some of them do well, they have classes in reality. they have classes in success. it's one of the schools that are here, called the success academy. and this is what we have to bring to the poor precincts or -- >> but the -- i disagree. because what you're implying that somehow if you're taught to want something you will do it. you know what schools have to do? not to teach wanting. to teach reading, writing, math -- >> along with that. >> but it's not along with that. right now they're leaving the school system illiterate in an information economy where they have no chance and that is scandalous and cruel. >> that is because you have to motivate them. show them this is the pathway to success. charles, i got to run, we'll debate it more. and debating president
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segment tonight, as we reported last week from 1960 to 19920, violent crime in the usa rose an astounding 353%. so in 1994, president clinton signed into law the violent crime control and law enforcement law. that law mandated much tougher sentences for crime and drug felons. in the following year of 2012, violent crime in major american cities dropped 46%. nevertheless, president obama remained soft on incarceration. >> we know that simply locking people up doesn't make
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communities safer. it doesn't deal with the conditions that led people to criminal activity in the first place, or to return to prison later. president being a socialoligist, not criminalologist. what do you think caused that? >> the exact causes are multiple. but the crime drop began in 1992, two years before the bill was even enacted. so 1994 crime bill is not responsible for the crime drop. we know that much. >> well, we don't know that much. because here are the stats. in '92 to '93, violent crime dropped 1.3%. 1.3%. in 1993 to '94, violent crime dropped 4.5%. so all total that would be about 7.5%. after the
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1994 legislation, that is when the huge drop started to occur. and almost every criminologist says that is because the bad guys were taken off the street and given big-time sentences so they were not able to corrupt others and cause mayhem, do you deny that? >> well, i don't deny what the facts say but what i do think we need to look at is the bigger picture. it's not just about taking quote unquote bad guys off the streets. it took a lot of non-violent drug offenders off the streets, a lot of people who experienced mental issues, and took them off the street. look at the crack disparity. >> well, look at the facts, if your family member was assaulted by a person who was mentally ill, and assaulted them, would you say it was wrong for them to
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put them away? >> violent crime deser penalties. it's the crimes that are not really to that extent. such as trespassing, other things like that, where a mentally ill person may not know the boundaries. >> well, i know -- >> i have seen a lot myself. >> you know, as a criminal defense attorney you know if your client is a one or two-time offender, the chances are they're going to get off. you have to do four or five times before the state wants to put the money to put them out. but look, i'm still searching for the drop in violent crime. if it is not the mass incarceration that we have experienced, if it is not that, and president obama clearly doesn't think that it is, what else is it? i mean, community policing here in new york city brought crime down to historic lows, but that involved stop and frisk in the hot spot areas. so president obama doesn't want that. so i'm
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not seeing how he doesn't -- >> the supreme court doesn't want that -- >> 1968 supreme court held that officers can stop and frisk if they have probable cause. >> right, without probable cause, they can't do it. that is the problem, they were just stopping people based on their demographics, black and latino, 86% of the people were stopped. that is what they said. >> but the good cops were not, they were targeting the guys who they knew were causing trouble. but again, what caused this drop in violent crime in the country? what, if not for putting bad guys away for long stretches, what? >> the criminologists point to a number of factors, one thing they point at the increase in police officers who are hired, on the job, patrolling more. that is one of the main reasons. >> all right. >> the other reasons have to do with what we increase education. when we increase funding for
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people with mental illness and other things like that. we take them out of the criminal justice system. and provide alternatives. >> but remember, we spend an enormous amount on education now in a developed world with a fifth most proportional of any countries. so we are there. we appreciate it counselor. >> we're incarcerating more than anyone else. >> but we're much, much safer, that is the trade. >> but the safety doesn't have to do with the incarceration. >> i do, i believe the opposite. good debate. are younger americans affected by the things like death of prince and beyonce's situation? or are kids numb to all of this stuff? then watters asks you about free stuff. >> if the government gave and free hair cut would you take it? >> yeah, if they're giving away anything free, anybody would take it.
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of the internet? here in new york city, kennedy and juan williams, you know, you're in this world. i used to think that bad behavior and questionable behavior on the part of pop stars, filtered down, but now i'm not sure. >> you nowknow, i think they're bombarded with these stories there are so few filters. it is sad but not shocking. and i think we mourn the loss of simpler times, and with that comes a more complex society. >> i worry about the family breakdown, and negative images to those young people who don't have strong family figures to offer mentorship to them. i am especially concerned about young women, black girls, i think beyonce, there has been some issues here. >> in 2014, i said -- i was
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talking to our pal russell simmons, and i said something that all the internet went crazy. they just lambasted me, and here it is, roll the tape. she puts out a new album with a video that glorifies having sex in the back of a limo. teenage girls look up to beyonce, particularly girls of color. she is an idol to them. i am saying why on earth would this woman do that? okay, and there was no legitimate answer, it was actually commerce, that is why she did it. but now i'm revising, as you said now i think these kids because of the net, i think by the age of ten they have seen it all. unless you ban the internet all the way you can't stop it. and we were shocked with janis joplin got killed, and jim morrison, and
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maybe, he should have said you know i'm not going to take the heroin. but now, maybe it's just like, we're sad, he is not around anymore but let's do what we're going to do. >> you're right, when somebody is in the throes of addiction, i don't think they're going to stop and think about prince's life. >> but destructive, i think kids making these decisions they don't have a lot of guidance at home. everybody in this country is presented with temptation. you know, and there are a lot of children who just don't have any guidance at all. oh, yeah, i'll try that. but you would think that maybe prince -- and we don't know whether it was an od or not, but it looks that way. and certainly the talk was he was involved with this narcotics stuff because of a pain thing he had. but you know, kids are seeing this and going well, you know, too bad. >> well, i don't know that they say too bad. i think they may be
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aware of it. i think you're right. they're more sophisticated in the sense that information is more accessible. they're not shockable anymore. here is the thing about guidance and leadership and role models. i think that when they see the celebrities behave in outlandish ways, and sometimes very tawdry ways, breakups that involve the baby-sitter, i think it's terrible. >> it's worse than that, i think it becomes a joke. >> i think kids are better than we give them credit for. >> better in what way? >> we moved our girls from essentially, suburban areas, to the city. kids here are raised pretty well and have a sense of independence. >> but you're in an upper echelon bracket, you're dealing with another kind of person that juan is talking about. >> but they deal with sections of population that they never
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would have come into contact with. >> i can't quantify if kids are better than 30 years ago, i am worried like you are. i think a woman like beyonce still has a tremendous amount of sway on young girls. and her new album says you know what, my life is not perfect. >> the young girls know who they are, they see the stuff on the cover of albums. >> what about the kids who don't have you? >> i think a lot of parents who don't have you kennedy, who don't have a strong hand or strong sense of morals, the values, they communicate the values, the kids get the values from the corner or from beyonce because they look up to beyonce. i will say this, i don't know that beyonce is talking about the broken marriage so much as saying you go through stages of growth in a life and giving some inspiration. >> i don't care, but the message to the children from the entertainment community is not a positive one now. and that
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translatings into social problems and poverty. kennedy, juan, thank you. when we come right back, watters world asking folks what they want the taxpayers to give them free. watters is next. if you've gone to extremes to escape your nasal allergies. try clarispray. new, from the makers of claritin. with the #1 prescribed ingredient. and nothing is more effective at relieving your sneezing, runny nose and nasal congestion. return to the world with clarispray.
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thank you for joining us, i'm bill o'reilly. in the watters world segment we reported earlier the socialist message of bernie sanders has taken root in younger american precincts. and many of these folks want as much free stuff as they can get from the government. jesse watters went out to find out why. smacking a lot of balls out there. >> yes, i am. >> what free stuff would you like to see the government provide? >> we need health care, every other country does it, why can't we do it? >> do you think health care should be free? >> yes, to tell you the truth, free vascectomys, doesn't the government do that one? >> free for certain conditions,
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yes. >> would you like a free massage. >> are you leading towards something? >> releases the most tension. >> what kind of things would you like to see the government give to people? >> free college tuition. >> do you think we should give people free condoms? >> yes. >> free stair steppers. >> free thigh master? what free stuff would you like to government to give people? >> free bacon. >> bacon is good. >> caesar salad is good. i mean, it's not expensive. >> celery? >> sure, why not. >> cabbage? >> mushrooms? >> should we all name all the vegetables and fruits? does it seem like a good idea? >> what about wine? >> free wine. >> want some wine? >> free self defense classes. >> whoa! >> free yoga or free mind, body
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and spirit tool, to kind of support -- >> downward dog. would you like a free suit for an interview? >> yes. that would be awesome. >> not this salvation army stuff, sometimes you need bette go out and get the right kind of job. >> look at the mouth on that guy. >> should the government give people free dope? >> yes, marijuana is a spiritual drug that helps people be at peace with themselves. >> are you high right now? >> no. >> maybe later? >> yeah. >> are you high right now? >> no, i don't do drugs. >> you are high right now. >> sure. >> that man is a pot head, hanibal. >> would you like a free apartment? >> a bidet? use of it is a compliment.
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>> why should people have this stuff? >> people have to be willing to work for it, instead of having it handed to them. >> do you feel a little entitled? >> no, maybe a little entitled. >> but you want all of this free stuff. how are we going to afford to pay for all of this free stuff for everybody? how are we going to afford to give free weed to everybody? >> it would be great for taxes. >> you think you're special, don't you? >> no. >> a little bit? >> no. >> how are we going to pay for all of this stuff? >> good question, i have no idea. >> we have this thing called the treasury, that is the money we have. eventually it will end up back for the money wheel. >> it always does. the house always wins. >> i think you're special. >> i think you're special. >> i'm watters, i'm watters.
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>> i'm watters, and this is my world. >> okay, yo, watters world? what's up? how are you doing, man? >> so they don't really know, but they want. >> they want it. but there is no rugged individualism anymore. as one person said to me -- they were so boring we couldn't put him in the piece. but everybody wants free stuff, they need a little boost because there is so much college debt and there are no jobs in this economy. and city living is expensive. they just want a little helping hand. >> so you interviewed ten people. nine out of ten want free stuff -- >> de blasio is the mayor and there you go. all right, jesse watters, everybody we'll see you on thursday. on deck, reaction to the watters piece from a hard-working guy. and the factor
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tip of the day on tom brady. we'll be right back. ♪ in new york state, we believe tomorrow starts today. all across the state, the economy is growing, with creative new business incentives, and the lowest taxes in decades, attracting the talent and companies of tomorrow. like in buffalo, where the largest solar gigafactory in the western hemisphere will soon energize the world. and in syracuse, where imagination is in production. let us help grow your company's tomorrow - today - at business.ny.gov unless you have allergies. then your eyes may see it differently. flonase is the first and only nasal spray approved to relieve both itchy, watery eyes and congestion. no other nasal allergy spray can say that. when we breathe in allergens our bodies react by over producing six key inflammatory substances that cause our symptoms. most allergy pills only control one substance. flonase controls six. and six is greater than one. more complete allergy relief. flonase. 6>1 changes everything.
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back of the book segment tonight, reaction to watters world. joining us from chicago, dr. austin goolsby, you're a hard working guy, i'm a hard working guy. you hear bernie sanders, the giveaway king and the folks they want all that stuff. what do you think about that? >> well, look, i have never been a big fan of socialism. i'm an economics professor. i got the sense you don't want these people getting free air to breathe. you want them mailing in their checks the make sure they work for it. >> me? me, they can have free air, i
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don't want to kill anybody. here is the deal, i grandmother who e me for some reason and gave me 10 or 20 once in a while. all right? i don't have any debt. i never had any debt. it's just my philosophy because of my parents. my parents were depression parents and they didn't run up debt and they paid for everything as they went along. and they said if i wanted certain things i have to work for them. i think that philosophy has made me successful. am i wrong? >> look, you're not wrong that you are successful. i agree with that. and that philosophy may have made you successful. >> right. hard work leads to success. >> look. i think that group of people in not representative of the students i teach who are -- they work hard in my class and they work hard overall. >> don't they want me and you to pay their college tuition though? wouldn't they like that? >> from the days in which people like me or you or grandparents might have gone
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to school, it's a lot more expensive now than it was back then. and i do think that though i'm not a fan of socialism and i'm not a bernie supporter, i do think this idea that he and clinton have been putting forward that high school has been free. us getting education is one of the key things that made america rich. and that won't just cut it alone anymore. we've got to have more people going to school and getting an affordable -- i don't know how you could dispute that. >> poor person and achieve in high school you can get a free ride, and you know it. >> well, i hope you can. >> there is beau coup scholarship money available. i'm not opposed to very low cost student loans and things like that. i'm not opposed to that. but i don't think we owe anybody a college education like bernie sanders does. i don't think we owe anybody that. >> look, i agree. we don't owe. >> and you say school is
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cheaper, you know, when we were going to school. i went to the school in the mid 1990s. i went to harvard in the mid 1990s. that was a lot 6 -- of money. you know what? i didn't whine about it. i wrote them a check. the check would bounce and i would write them another one. but, i wasn't asking for anything. and i'm telling you, when you see those kids in central park, that's not the aberration, doctor. that's not the aberration. that's the rule. >> i don't think that was super sympathetic. i'm telling you if you took some trump supporters and you replaced that with give me a special tax cut, they would sound exactly. >> i don't think so. >> i want a tax cut. >> a tax cut is dinner. if you're a working man and woman, you want to keep as much of your wages that you can. that's normal. but you're working. you went to a trump rally and you go all right how many of you people think the government should hand out free dope?
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how many hands are going to raise? >> i'm going to agree. pretty classic. >> one guy wants a massage. he wants free massages for everybody. come on. >> they propose to him do you want a free massage. >> he didn't really know what he was talking about but he wanted that. but my point of the matter is, you deal with very bright students and you're in an environment of achievement. if you go out of that environment of achievement into the regular street precincts and you talk to the millennial generation say, under 30, they have a sense of entitlement. they want free stuff. they are buying bernie. they are buying it all the way. last word. >> i'm against free stuff. socialism doesn't work. and we have got to make sure that people can go to school and can are afford to get as much schooling as they are able to get because that's good for the country. >> we have got community colleges here in new york city. you can go prek to grad
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school free. i mean, we have got a lot of stuff going on here and it's never mentioned. hey, doc. always good to talk to you. thank you. factor tip of the day tom brady back in the news. the tip moments away 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! if you're living with frequent, unpredictable diarrhea and abdominal pain, you may have irritable bowel syndrome with diarrhea or ibs-d - a condition that can be really frustrating. talk to your doctor about new viberzi. a different way to treat ibs-d. viberzi is a prescription medication you take every day that helps proactively manage both diarrhea and abdominal pain at the same time. so you stay ahead of your symptoms. viberzi can cause new or worsening abdominal pain. do not take viberzi if you have or may have had pancreas or severe liver problems, problems with alcohol abuse, long-lasting or severe constipation, or a blockage of your bowel or gallbladder.
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biotene can provide soothing relief and it helps keep your mouth healthy too. remember, while your medication is doing you good, a dry mouth isn't. biotene, for people who suffer from a dry mouth. factor tip of the day. tom brady may be in trouble again. mother's day coming up. father's day right behind it we have great stuff for mom and dad in the bill o'reilly.com store. welcome patriots door matt very nice display sends a message. you will like it. also, if you would like me to sign books for your parents or grandparents. get those orders in now to bill o'reilly.com. they make terrific gifts. if you buy a copy of killing reagan you get 15% off any book. become a premium member get any book free. now the mail: first, public safety dictates that substance
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designed solely to intoxicate, drugs, be controlled so the odds of you dying, kristin, in a road don't ghen issue in. second, narcotics are designed for one thing only, to alter consciousness. guns have protected uses in case you haven't noticed. jeff townsend, burnett, texas: private pot use is such low level offense it's not worth the time and money to pursue it use marijuana in public, you should be fined: all we can do is pray for her, steve, our society simply does not feel the outrage at the drug industry anymore.
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>> i didn't hear beck but i said the two most surprising and most surprising political stories in my lifetime are the assassination of president kennedy and the rise of trump in dominating the republican party. why would anyone have an issue with that opinion? what a great wife you are, barbara. see you on september 24th. fairfax virginia coming in two weeks. mow he can son connecticut father's day weekend. reno, atlanta, biloxi. tickets make smashing gifts as they say in london. bill o'reilly.com has details. finally tonight the factor tip of the day, an appeals
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brady's suspension should go forward. as you may know, the nfl docked mr. brady, quarterback for the new england patriots four games after investigating charges he ordered some footballs deflated so he could throw them better in a playoff game. brady denies it i don't know what happened. but you have to trust the system to some extent. that's not to say the system isn't bad and corrupt in some places. it is. however, there is some evidence around that the appeals court ruled that way. if i were the head of the nfl, i would cut the suspension in half, two games drop the whole thing. factor tip of the day. and that is it for us tonight. please check out the fox news factor website which is different from bill o'reilly.com. also, we would like you to spout off about the factor from anywhere in the world. o'reilly at foxnews.com. name and town if you wish to opine. word of the day do not be goe -- gauche?
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no one. that's it factor tonight. the spin stops here because we are definitely watching out for you. breaking tonight with less than 10 hours to go from the first votes in the next critical primary, g.o.p. frontrunner donald trump is blasting his rivals as pathetic as they join forces in an attempt to block his path to the republican nomination. good evening and welcome to "the kelly file," everyone. i'm megyn kelly. we are now just hours away from the battle for the east as voters in pennsylvania, maryland, delaware, connecticut and rhode island head to the polls. while donald trump is expect to do do very well team night, that is not what people are talking about tonight. hours ago, trump unloading on senator ted cruz and governor john kasich. yesterday their campaigns announcing that they will work together to defeat donald trump in some of
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