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tv   The O Reilly Factor  FOX News  June 1, 2016 5:00pm-6:01pm PDT

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twitter every night. that's all for now. see you again tomorrow night right here at 7:00 p.m. eastern. good night from washington. bill o'reilly is up next. "the o'reilly factor" is on. tonight: >> that zoo horror caught on camera, a child falling into a gorilla exhibit. >> police say they will question the parents of a boy who fell into a gorilla enclosure. >> the little boy gorilla incident at the cincinnati zoo received 50 times more coverage than the slaughter that happened in chicago over the memorial day weekend. tonight, we will take a hard look at that. >> you will find out about the media some day, folks, they are the worst. >> donald trump declaring war on the national media. is he justified? talking points will address it. >> my personal email use was fully above board. it was allowed by the state department as they have confirmed. >> also ahead, hillary clinton on her email
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controversy. we'll analyze fact versus fiction. 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. donald trump and the media that is the subject of this evening's talking points memo. yesterday, mr. trump slammed the national media for questioning his donations to american veterans. the issue stemmed from a benefit mr. trump held last january where he said he raised $6 million to help vets in need. a report by the "the washington post" questioned whether the money had been distributed in a timely manner. so at a press conference mr. trump laid out what his organization did, citing names of the charities and amounts of money donated. then mr. trump lashed the press something he does frequently. >> you know my opinion of the media it's very low. do we like the media?
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>> no. >> do we hate the media? >> yes. >> i think the media is among the most dishonest groups of people i have ever met. [cheers and applause] >> some of the media is terrific. but most of it is, 70%, 75% is sloot dishonest, absolute scum. remember that scum. >> today, the associated press report said some of mr. trump's donations were just recently distributed, including his own 1-million-dollar check. that's legitimate. i did the same thing after the 9/11 telethon which was held to benefit families devastated by the al qaeda attack. you may remember george clooney and a bunch of other stars raised millions, but the money was not distributed in a timely way so i had to get involved. but nowhere did i insinuate that mr. clooney and other celebrities did anything wrong. i simply wanted them to push the united way and other charities for full
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disclosure. very similar to the trump situation. it isn't the reporting of the donations that's wrong. it's the insinuation that mr. trump is a fraud or something. now, the national press should push trump and others to fulfill their obligations quickly. that's it. you don't cast as aspersions. that's what he is objecting to. he should release his tax returns as talking points has stated. although mr. trump is correct when he slams the national press for constantly trying trying to vily him playing the gotcha game. i personally can feel trump's pain because the national press does the same thing to me. the factor is attacked over and over as am i on a variety of bogus charges for years. it's wrong and corrupt. the only reason the national press despises this program is the ideology. we are the most successful
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cable news show of all time. we inventinged the prime time opinion genre. and we are fair and responsible here. you hear all sides. yet, the press looks for any and all reason to denigrate us. so i understand what trump is going through. but i also know that he sometimes gets a bit testy when legitimate reports surface that he doesn't like. donald trump wants to be president, so he will be scrutinized. that's the way it should be in a free society. however, skepticism should not be accusation. and often it is. and that's the memo. now for the top story. reaction, with us here in new york city geraldo rivera and eric bolling. what say you, bolling? >> where do i start, bill? you said the press should push trump and others. the problem with that they do push trump and they push trump hard they don't push others nearly as hard as trump. the clinton foundation is rife with scandal and corruption. there have been accusations. >> they have been reporting on it by the major newspapers. >> did you see how vehement when donald trump explained he went through the 41
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charities that he donated these $5.6 million to. he opens up the questions and they were jumping out of their seat attacking him saying why wasn't it distributed faster? who got the money? why did they get the money? instead of. >> that's legitimate question. >> they are not illegitimate questions. >> and hillary clinton gets a colonoscopy every day by the press. >> if donald trump doesn't vet every one of these charities, sends a million dollars to some dark site with some bad intentions, god forbid it's an isis group, they would say, this is he not fit to be commanders and chief. he did exactly what he should have done. >> one agreement with bolling, i think that particularly when you see how wounded warriors have that very high profile veterans charity with skimming 40% of the $340 million they raised for their own parties and other lavish perks. >> that's inaccurate though. they had administrative cost at 40. they weren't skimming. >> 40%. lavish parties. >> that's not skimming. >> well, what is it?
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embezzling? >> it's administrative cost. >> wounded warriors is a listen why you have to be careful. >> absolutely. >> you don't use the word skimming because that's an accusation which i just said you must have heard me, that's not what we do. >> this is not about you, first of all. i notice how you made it about you. >> because there is a relevancy to it. >> trump was late and he was sloppy and that is the fact. i give him credit. >> wasn't sloppy. he was late. >> when he attacked the news reporter and called him sleazy. >> come on. this guy wants to be president of the most powerful country on earth. people are going to ask him tough questions. he has had 1,000, 2,000 lawsuits? he is going to be questioned. >> that's a good point. i mean, in detroit, you will remember, mr. trump told me i should go to a psychiatrist. do you remember that? >> i remember that. he gets a little testy if you ask him. >> that's the beauty of
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trump. he is not politically correct. he doesn't care. >> you say it's the beauty. >> throw it out -- >> would you stop for a minute? shouldn't he be more temp rat in this? >> no. >> i don't mind him going after the press. >> the press was 99% liberal? the press' ideology, you pointed out in their talking points. they don't lean left. they are far left. and they attack republicans. >> did didn't he say he raised 6 million for veterans on the night of the fox news debate? did he yes or no say he. >> yes, he did. >> had he really raised $6 million. the answer is no. >> i have raised millions and millions of dollars for. >> [talking at the same time] >> i also know no good deed goes unpunished. >> asking legitimate question, trump should not have tried to eviscerate. >> he shouldn't have told me i should go to a psychiatrist i'm perfectly normal as everyone knows.
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>> that was a much closer call. >> the wider picture is there is corruption in the press. it is corrupt. you know it's corrupt. you see it every day, especially on the internet where they take stuff and they accuse. >> i know that doers get examined much more than critics. critics don't do, they criticize. >> right. >> i have lived through 20 generations of critics. they come, they go, they take their shots and then they move on. >> the vast majority of them are weasels without courage. >> so why shouldn't trump call them out? >> because this was very specific. this was very specific. he said he raised 6 million. he had not raised 6 million. >> he has been doing this from day one on the press. >> the guy llames who happens to be latino. he says the judge in the trump university case is a mexican. this guy is a latino. >> self-centered. you said doers do. $5.6 million. did he or did he not. >> he did and i congratulate him for it and i applaud him
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for being careful in the vetting. you have to be careful about your exaggerations. >> he may go over 6 million. >> o'reilly thin skinned as trump this program would not still be on the air. >> that's true. i told trump that. you have to be more temp temporat and pick your battles. >> if you are going to tough question and every criticism personally, we are not going to get anything done in this country. >> how smart is this? what have we done for the past two days? we talked about whether donald trump should have said 5.6 million instead of what? trump university? news cycle away foreign minister. >> you came back to where i wanted. there is enough scandal involving trump's other business or i withdraw that word scandal. >> yes. it's not fair. >> there is enough questions raised about issues involving donald trump, it will be. >> questions raised.
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>> plethora of issues for reporters. >> questions raised are fine. accusations and convictions are not. and that's what the press does. >> well, you get the last word >> of course. [ laughter ] >> and if you were the highest rated cable guy you would but you are not. >> i was raised puerto rico can. >> next on the run down, the gorilla shooting in cincinnati gets far more media attention than 69 people shot in chicago over the weekend. we will take a look at it. why north korea apparently loves donald trump. the factor is coming right back. ♪ ♪ it's easy to love your laxative when that lax loves your body back. only miralax hydrates, eases and softens to unblock naturally, so you have peace of mind from start to finish. love your laxative. miralax. put under a microscope, we can see all the bacteria that still exists. polident's unique micro clean formula works in just 3 minutes, killing 99.99% of odor causing bacteria.
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impact segment tonight. there is no question that a 3-year-old boy falling into a gorilla cage leading to the animal being shot to death is a major story. but is it more important than 69 people being shot in chicago over the same period of time? apparently so. as the network news gave the gorilla story 54 times more
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play than the chicago story. >> police say they will question the parents of a boy who fell into a gorilla enclosure at the cincinnati zoo. >> after 10 minutes with the boy inside that exhibit, zoo workers say they had no other choice but to kill the gorilla to save the boy. >> joining us now from chicago, hermene hartman, publisher of i understand dig go magazine and matt mcgill. we will begin with you, matt, this violence in chicago seems never ending. why can't the authorities there stop it. >> you know what? i think the easy answer is you have too many guns on the street. i don't know that any police department can handle it. there is just too much going on. the will to commit crime to shoot to use guns is greater than the ability to cover it. bill. >> how could that be possible though in new york city, which is three times, four times the size of chicago and los angeles, bigger than chicago, other cities around the country who don't have nearly this kind of a problem. so if the authorities can't
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control it in chicago, but they can in new york and l.a., to some extent, what's the difference? >> well, in chicago it's the history of the city and segregation. housing, red lining, separated black people from other communities. it's been easier to choke off resources from one community and make that community more violent. i think when you look at the dynamics in other major cities they are different from chicago. >> no doubt they're different. the problem ms. hart marn is the same. stopping violence in the street. here in new york. giuliani did it. in los angeles bratton did it to some extent when he was police commissioner out there. chicago they have not been able to stop violence in the streets. >> we're not working together, mr. o'reilly. that's part of the problem. everyone is working? silos. the police are working by themselves, commissioners working by themselves. community organizations working by themselves. we keep working on negativity. what we have to do is work in another way.
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we have to come to the table with solutions. we can't keep studying this problem and playing the blame game. chicago right now is a prescription for failure. the city budget, the teacher's union. we don't have a budget in the state of illinois. you close the schools. there are no resources in these communities. fillphilanthropic community ignores the black community and it goes on and on and on. that's prescription for failure. >> isn't it the duty of the leadership of the city and the state -- >> -- but it's all -- the point, mr. o'reilly you can say leadership. what leadership are you talking about? >> i don't know. >> that's my point. it's all leadership. >> have a mayor by the name of rudy giuliani who took control of a city that was in chaos, people getting gunned down in the black neighborhoods, which we have here just like you have mr. mcgill, and they came up with a solution which was based upon community policing and come stat. all right. that solved the problem to a major extent. in chicago you have a democratic mayor, a republican governor in illinois, and these guys don't seem to have a clue,
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mr. mcgill or am i wrong? >> it's not about the party. >> mr. mcgill? >> no, no. but hold on. i will agree that political leadership and leadership in chicago has not done a good enough job. look, i'm black. i live in chicago. this crime is happening in my community. we should be embarrassed as african-americans that we have got the type of crime going on in our community. our young people are dying. just over the last 24 hours a 15-year-old and 16-year-old have been shot and killed in chicago. >> awful. >> what we have to do as a community is police our households first. you know, there is a part of me that wants the police to do the job, bill. but there is another part of me saying wait a minute, guys, this can't happen on our watch. we are responsible community. >> it is very, very hard to impose. and i would like to see the communities, the neighborhoods in chicago police themselves to some extent ms. hartman. wouldn't you? >> that's exactly what he is saying, mr. o'reilly. we can't keep blaming this on the other guy. all hands need to be on deck. parents need to be on deck. teachers need to be on deck. the police department on
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deck. the missions. and we all need to come together. you can't come up with a solution. >> somebody has to coordinate that and nobody is. >> somebody has to pull it together. you know who pulls that together in chicago? it's a minister who pulls that together here. and to the point that matt made earlier the racism here, it's different than it is in new york. new york, it's not as prevalent as it is here. this is happening in certain communities. we are living in some war zones. and if you are living in a war zone, you have got to act like it's a war. and i say bring in the national guard. >> i know you do. and i agree. the national guard should. >> stabilize the community. >> should stabilize the situation and then. >> there you go. then you start working on solutions. >> i agree. i have got to go, guys. you know, i'm going to make a visit to chicago soon. i'm not going to tell anybody i'm going to show up. >> come on my show, bill. >> come see me, bill. >> we will not let the story go. we will see a solution.
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>> we have a gorilla in chicago. talking about the gorilla story the gorilla in chicago is violence. >> that's for sure. surge of illegal across the border stats are. in supporting donald trump for president up ahead. what's it like to be in good hands? like finding new ways to be taken care of. home, car, life insurance obviously, ohhh... but with added touches you can't get everywhere else, like claim free rewards...
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they found out who's been who? cking into our network. guess. i don't know, some kids in a basement? you watch too many movies. who? a small business in china. a business? they work nine to five. they take lunch hours. like a job? like a job. we tracked them. how did we do that? we have some new guys defending our network. new guys? well, they're not that new. they've been defending things for a long time. [ digital typewriting ] it's not just security. it's defense. bae systems.
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unresolved problem segment tonight. new census bureau in 2014 and 20153.1 new illegal immigrants settled in the u.s.a. 1.1 million of those ril legal. those numbers annualized by the center for immigration studies represent a 39% increase in new immigrants from the prior two years. with us now here in new york eboni williams and monica crowley. what are the unintended
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consequences, do you believe, of over a two-year period, 3.1 million immigrants? that doesn't seem like a terribly high number, does it? >> but when you add that number on top of all of the subsequent years or previous years of illegal immigration and legal immigration, the system can only absorb so much. >> you don't think the system. >> enormous strain on education and healthcare in this country and so on by the influx of illegal immigrants. >> absorb 1.5 million immigrants a year. >> the point is to have control over it. i'm not sure that it can. we are seeing enormous strain particularly in the border states that they can't absorb the numbers. >> people coming across needing services what say you eboni. >> i certainly think the administration is aware. president obama is going to remain the nickname deporter in chief. he has deported more than any other sitting president. >> that's a bogus stat. you turn them around and then they put it in as a deportation. >> 2.5 million?
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throwing them out? >> look, if you have a million 1 over a two year period. >> right. >> coming in here and establishing residence, illegally, that's a lot of people. >> right. >> as monica pointed out, you got 15 oh that have done that in the past. so, it doesn't seem that the immigration system is working here. >> i agree with that. >> i want to know what the unintended consequences are. that number over a two year period isn't crazy number. like it was maybe five, 10 years ago. >> 2 million are legal. so certainly the number got here the right way. so we have to as a country fix the broken system and absorb some of them. >> i think the wall would go a long way. i have always been a proponent of the wall. to stopping that traffic coming across. >> of course. of course. >> and at least making it easier for the authorities to know who is here and who isn't. >> your question, bill, is about unintended consequences. let's talk about the intended consequences because both political parties have refused to enforce our immigration laws
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and they want open borders. >> i don't think the republicans want open borders, do they. >> on the right you have groups like the u.s. chamber of commerce. you have other people in big business who want the open borders. they want the amnesty because they want the cheaper labor. on the left, it's all about power. it's not about labor it's about power. they want to lock the zone and lock as many illegal immigrants on dependency of government programs. lock in a permanent democratic liberal majority. >> i want eboni reply. >> i actually agree there are two competing interest for the reasons these relaxed border on the situation on both political sides. it's no incentive. neither side has incentive to fix this thing. every opportunity to fix it, they fail. >> the bulk of the republican party, i believe, does not want illegaln and woule for a wall tomorrow. >> that's grass roots. that's not big business. >> i don't care about that. i'm talking about the fannies on the seats on capitol hill. so the republican party, the
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elected officials most of them want to stop it i think that's a fact. >> well then why haven't they, bill? >> they haven't because why didn't they pass kate's law? >> because they are hearing from big money interests who don't that. >> you can say they are bought. i can't establish that as a fact. if the vote comes up tomorrow for a wall, the republicans vote for it. however, something that neither of you mentioned, the open border people, yeah, they may be a political component in. registered on the democratic party. but they want open borders. the "new york times" wants open borders. >> of course. >> they feel it's inhumane to have any border. you heard john kerry over giving that speech at the graduation. we're living in an open border world. >> right. first of all, that's globalization. that's one part of it. >> they want it. >> left for decades couch their arguments in emotional arguments we need to be compassionate and so on. that's bull. they are all about establishing a permanent democrat voting majority. >> that's some of it. go ahead.
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>> achieved that in california and they are achieving it across the country. >> i'm going to defend the position but i'm going to agree with you. political. the g.o.p. giving up on the base of the hispanic community there was a time in this country with hispanic absolutely go for george bush significantly and there is an opportunity there for the g.o.p. >> bush the younger did it and did he it successfully. >> very successfully. you guys are are under estimating this open border movement. >> not me. >> look how well it worked in europe. look at europe. look how chaotic that whole continent is. >> and speaking. >> that will happen here. >> by the way, this has been a silent conspiracy on both sides, damaging the american worker. damaging our national security. speaking of europe, roger daltrey blasted the british labor part for massive labor party. >> roger daltrey. >> damaged my mates and blue collar jobs and -- >> -- who are you. >> it's the politicians are
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underestimating. >> ladies, plenty more ahead as the factor moves along this evening. remember donald trump on the atis? we'll talk to the man who hired him. what does he think of mr. trump now? and miller on north korea supporting trump and the decline of the manly man in america. we're disappearing. hope you stay tuned to those reports. entresto helped more people stay alive and out of the hospital than a leading heart failure medicine. women who are pregnant must not take entresto. it can cause harm or death to an unborn baby. don't take entresto with an ace inhibitor or aliskiren. if you've had angioedema while taking an ace or arb medicine, don't take entresto.
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that the trump phenomenon started with the program "the atis" on nbc. the man who hired trump. the author of the book the right stuff from nbc to autism speaks. he joins us now. are you surprised what has happened to trump? >> i'm surprised that he got in so late. and did so well so quickly. i think he probably thought if i was going to be number 17 in the race, i'm not going to try to be 14 or 13. he came out of the pox and in enormous way. he was number one in 90 days. >> now, whurep -- when you were working with him, did you see traits of leadership. >> oh, yes. >> lead to where is he now. >> i will tell you a story i knew him since the 1986 on when he was trying to build the west side. he was going to be tv city over there. >> west side of manhattan. he wanted nbc to go there, to move there. and we got a seven month
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negotiation on that. we stayed where we were and he went on and built a beautiful apartments and so forth. but, in 19 -- 2002, he came to me, i met all through the time i have been in his apartments, i know his management team. and but in 2002 he called me up and he said, listen, i want -- why dow don't you buy half of miss universe? i have the other half of it and cbs, it's just not working. we can do something much better than. this i got into a situation and i said okay, i will take on the other half of it. we closed in 2002. this is before apprentice. he said to me, he said i can make this show a lot better but you have all these producers. cbs, i have this person to report to and that person. i said, you know, donald, why don't you do. this you take over the show. you run the show. >> and he made it a success. >> he made it a huge success. >> that's why you picked him for the apprentice? >> when it came time for the
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apprentice, which was two years later and i got a call up what do you think about donald? is he really able to do this? i said he is terrific. look what he has done here. i know him personally. he is a leader. there is no question about that. >> do you support him now for president? >> yes, i do. >> why? >> i think there is one fundamental reason here. hillary is a very accomplished person. but too we need another clinton or bush in -- that will be 24 years. >> of clinton bushes. >> 24 years of two families. it sounds like a european country. >> well, the obama interlewd. but if you were working at nbc, i don't know whether you would support trump, he might get in trouble with the board over there. >> well, he is -- i have never seen in any of those -- some of the traits that he is showing here, i think is a media master. he really knows how to get
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attention. >> right and that is serving him well. >> i didn't see any of those explosive traits. i was in his office many times. he treats his people in the office well. >> he wasn't a crazy guy when he was working with you? >> no. not at all. >> finally part of this book is you talk about autism. >> yeah. >> your grandson. >> my grandson. >> has it. what's the main point that you want people to take away on the autism front? >> that a lot can be done. we have done a lot with people. lots of people. >> you have raised a lot of money. >> we have raised a lot of money but we have made things happen, too. we have gotten insurance now in 44 states in the country. that didn't even exist. your insurance was no good. we have gotten $3 billion worth of federal government money sent to the -- nih autism research. >> it's a silent thing. a elevate people don't know what it is and the children suffer. i'm glad you're doing this and i wanted you to come on and promote your book "the write -- wright stuff."
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>> people who have entrepreneurial spirit take responsibility for your own business life. you have to have a lot of passion. and you have to control some of your ideas. you and the factor are a perfect example of something that you could have gone and done it yourself, maybe syndicated over period of years. you could have gone to a smaller company but you went to a big company and you managed to do those three things and that's partly the reason that's the most -- that's the first part of the book, that kind of motivation and passion. >> thank you. i appreciate that compliment, mr. wright. nice to see you. >> thank you. you two. -- you too. >> miller is next.
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thanks for staying with us. i'm bill o'reilly. in the miller time segment tonight, an editorial in north korea state run media says quote donald trump is a wise politician and far sighted candidate. it seems the north korea despots are supporting trump. joining us now from santa barbara, california, dennis miller. did that surprise that you these tyrants are supporting trump? >> i will tell you what surprised me, billy, is how
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different keith a below looked in that last seeing: has he had some work? >> that was bob wright. it wasn't the doctor. >> i'm sorry. i didn't know it was mr. wright. >> my eyes are going. do you know what i love about kim jong un endorsing trump is he called hillary dull. we amal goal mate a moniker and characteristic or two monikers together and i want to tell kim if he is out there you should call her dullery instead of dull hillary. i saw the spokesman for kim jong un who is by the way, billy, his name is hong yung muk. wasn't that your handle when you drove big rigs or were you a teacher. >> ni was a teacher. i think that's going on here is that kim jong un does not
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want hillary because they both wear those blocky volvo pantsuits from the back page of "parade" magazine. she keeps buying them out before he gets there he doesn't like hillary. here's the thing that i think is going to happen. trump is going to win and rodman is friends with trump. and they use the rodman scenario which i have put on here before but i will refresh it. this is how they overthrow kim jong un. rodman dresses up in the wedding gown like they used to. they send him over again to north korea where is he friends. kim john u.n. starts to dig the way he looks in the wedding gown he asks him to marry him. he becomes the first lady in north korea and then he refuses to give it up unless he disarms. that's my theory. >> all right. it's a very, very good theory. let's get on to manly men, miller. you gov dot something came up with 65% of over 65% of men are completely
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masculine. that you. 65% 65 -- only 2% of men 30 to 44 say they are completely masculine and 30% 18 to 29. younger men are not completely masculine, miller. what's going on, man? >> billy, i'm telling you i don't get the world anymore. so i kind of throw up my hands here and i plead, you know, i read this, that bruce caitlin jenner was the woman of the year for glamour magazine. and i thought well, good for him, he had to make the call and had to have the operation. i found out that jenner still has his male apparatus. and he is the woman of the year. >> right. >> so if you are asking me what's going -- i had no idea 65 years ago when women started, you know, the virginia slim ads and betty for dan and all that the women's librescu movement what they were shooting for was eventually to have the woman women of the area to
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have male apparatus i know i can't say the p word. if they said back then here is what we are shooting for, we would like women eventually to have male appear apparatus. run with that jessica lang was told that she looks like caitlin jenner and usually if you go up to a woman and say you look like anybody who is 67 years old, they will go, hey, what are you talking about? and then if you add on you, jessica lang, look like a 67-year-old guy, she would go get out of here. but she said that's wonderful. so i don't know what the hell is going on in the world. >> i don't either, miller. i have one point. i have to run. if people want to see manly men, they come see miller and me on stage. >> billy, gun show. >> gun show. and it's the ultimate father's day gift who wants to be the president show only three have seats
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matinee mohican sun in connecticut the saturday before father's day. biloxi in mississippi. dad and granddad will love the show. check it out on bill o'reilly.com. martha manning callum on deck. what hillary clinton has said about the emails and what we know to be true. martha, moments away. after a long day, jen stops working, but her aleve doesn't. hey mom! because aleve can last 4 hours longer than tylenol 8 hour. what will you do with your aleve hours? you wouldn't take medicine without checking the side effects. hey honey. huh. the good news is my hypertension is gone. so why would you invest without checking brokercheck? check your broker with brokercheck.
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and there were no security breaches. >> and you say? >> the i.g. says that is not true. the system was hacked twice. the first time the state department deputy of chief was told that the system may have been breached so they took the system down momentarily, and later that day, they said someone was trying to hack us, but they didn't get in, we came back, we were attacked again, we shut the server down for a few minutes. the staff wasn't told anything -- >> notice what the secretary said. she said the system was not breached. that's different from being an attempted hack. >> we don't know if this was only an attempted hack. >> we don't know. we're trying to get the facts. we don't know we don't know. >> she didn't leave the door open. she didn't say there was any potential attack.
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we have no idea is the point. and the interesting thing here is, the inspector general acknowledges in this report that the state department knew that she had this server, because they were in fact informed that the server may have been attacked. >> state department has a lot of guilt here and i'm going to say that i believe mrs. clinton is guilty, not i can't define how much. but the evidence is pretty big. you can't convict her yet. you have to wait until the fbi. here's sound bite number two. >> the people in the government knew i was using a personal account. the people i was e-mailing too on the dot gov system knew. and they would respond to me on my personal e-mail. >> okay. >> she's right about that, when they received hillary clinton e-mails she wasn't on the same
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system they were. she said what i did was allowed. the state department confirmed that and the state department said the people who oversee security, did not and would not have ever approved the system that they had. >> that's a deficit that mrs. clinton is going to have to explain to the fbi. it was not allowed. and the inspector general said it was not allowed. but they're saying was. >> she's saying, they didn't ask for approval. the state department knew what she was doing and they didn't say anything. they allowed her to do what she was doing. it doesn't mean there was classified information left vulnerable. >> here is the final sound bite. >> my personal e-mail use was fully above board. it was allowed by the state department as they have
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confirmed. >> above board, allowed by the state department. >> they said they never permitted her to have this -- >> she's suggesting that she spoke to them, that they approved it, they condoned what she was doing, and that's absolutely not true. the reason all this matters is security, classified information, and the benghazi information, because there were 30,000 e-mails destroyed in this she wouldn't even talk to the inspector general no, she did not. even though she said she would speak to anyone any time. >> is your own town stealing money from you? the tip, moments away.
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legends and lies. best selling book in america right now. we thank you all for that. the book's companion begins sunday evening, 8:00 p.m. right here on fox news channel. first episode, samuel adams and paul revere. >> when most people think of debating on the floor, of some ledgive body. the first american patriots did their organizing in a bar in boston in a tavern called the green dragon. not yet for independents. but for equal treatment. ♪ >> wait until you see what sam adams was really like.
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the good things and the bad things about the patriots. the failure of case law in congress has a simple disenchantment of that body. it symbolizes the apathy . >> shoot your simple minded talking points fulling of holes. augusta main is a sad fact. democrats would block it, and president obama would veto it. i do believe the number of democratic senators would support it, eliminating a filibuster, if mr. obama vetoed it, the world would take notice, believe me. >> ken fiore even know, it's your fault case law did not pass, you propose it, some in congress will not be pushed
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around by a bold threat guy. how immature. the guerrilla was only there -- couldn't he have been tranquilized. it could have agitated the animal. you don't take risks when a little boy could have been killed. you're the top rated opinion show, fiction always outsells nonfiction. no it doesn't. the killing books outsell all the fiction books. the only fiction here is putting your letter on the air. bill, you gave my dad a great father's day present. he's a retired naval aviator and he was touched.
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>> you are a good son. i hope others follow your example. in frisco texas, if you get a traffic ticket. you will pay dearly. >> 39 miles an hour in a 30 mile an hour zone. >> he fought the ticket in court. >> i decided to take it all the way to a jury trial and lost. >> that wasn't the end of the story, it was the beginning. >> i decided i might as well pay with pennies and we'll make a big spectacle of it. >> he hammered $220 worth of pennies from their rolls. then shoveled them into 5 gallon buckets. despite the clerk's plea, delivered 22,000 pennies in dramatic fashion to the frisco
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municipal court. >> think about it, the guy was going nine miles over the speed limit, it cost his $222. i think the guy is right to protest like that. i can tell you from personal experience, this is happening all over the u.s. parking tickets in some places, $150. speeding tickets can go up to $1,000. we should not be shaking each other down. punishment should fit the crime. factor tip of the day. knock it off. that is it for us tonight. please check out the factor news site different from bill o'reilly. thanks for watching us tonight. tomorrow we're going to have a factor on texting.
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it's killing people on the roads. it amazes me how much texting costs please remember the spin stops here. we are looking out for you. breaking tonight, new questions about whether democrats are feeling some political panic over their white house hopes. as president obama suddenly jumps into the 2016 presidential race. welcome to the kelly file, everyone many i'm megyn kelly. a new national poll shows mrs. clinton and donald trump running neck and neck. president obama travelled to elkhart, indiana for a speech on what he called the clear choice in this election. that makes mr. obama the first sitting president to campaign for the party's likely nominee in decades. it follows a 1-2 hit for the clinton campaign. not ott only did this new survey