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tv   Shepard Smith Reporting  FOX News  June 2, 2016 12:00pm-1:01pm PDT

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him. >> people judge him versus trump and say marks my god, obama wasn't so bad -- >> continue your debate in the elevator. have a great day. >> good thursday afternoon to you. we're expecting to here at any moment now from hillary clinton and what her campaign staffers promise will be a damning indictment of their republican rival, donald trump. their words. a live look at the stage in san diego. the topic today, foreign policy, and specifically the two dueling visions for the nation's position in the world. secretary clinton campaign aideses say she'll go every donald trump foreign policy positions, for instance when he questioned our involvement in nato or when donald trump suggested he would be okay with japan and south korea developing nuclear weapons. something that goes against decades of foreign policy
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positions. hillary clinton said yesterday that donald trump's policy positions are dangerous, and put the united states at risk. secretary clinton is making her speech in san diego today. days ahead of the california primary. her campaign scramble to add events there, to hold bask what is apparent threat from bernie sanders. in fact the clinton campaign is holding more than 30 events in that state in just five days. but instead of going after sanders today, her team tells us she is set to take on donald trump head on. john roberts has donald trump's reaction -- will have it's over from san jose, california. first let's get to jennifer griffin following human being -- following hillary clinton today. give us details. >> well, right now, you can hear behind me an active duty naval officer's right and is set to introduce hillary clinton. we expect that she will paint a
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picture of why she thinks donald trump is unfit to be the commander in chief. they have been putting out a lot of very strong quotes. james sullivan, who helped her craft a peach, key foreign policy adviser, says that hillary clinton's vision will contrast to trump's trash talking of america. let's go now to hillary clinton. >> thank you, san diego, for that warm, warm welcome. and thanks to ellen for those moving words, her introduction and for reminding us that it's not only our men and women in uniform who serve our country. it's their families and spouses and children, would and year grateful to each and every one of them. want to recognize and thank congressman scott peters for being here. thank you very much.
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[applause] >> and all of the other elected and service members, active duty and retired, national guard, and reservists, veterans, military, spouses, family members, all who are with us today. on monday, we observed member member day, -- memorial day, dave that means a great deal to san diego, home of so many active duty and firmer -- former military and their families. we honor the sacrifice of those who died for our country in many ways, but living our values, by making this a stronger and fairer nation, and by carrying out a smart and principled foreign policy. that is what i want to speak about today. the challenges we face in protecting our country, and the
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choice at stake in this election. it's a choice between a fearful america, that is less secure and less engaged with the world, and a strong, confident america, that leads to keep our country safe and our economy growing. [applause] >> as secretary of state, senator, and first lady, i had the honor of representing america abroad, and helping shape our foreign policy at home. as a candidate for president, there's nothing i take more seriously than our national security. i've offered clear strategies for how to defeat isis, strengthen our alliances, and make sure iran never gets a nuclear weapon. and i'm going to keep america's
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security at the heart of my campaign. [applause] because as you know so well, americans aren't just electing a president in november. we're choosing our next commander-in-chief, the person we count on to decide questions of war and peace, life and death, and like many across our country and around the world, i believe the person the republicans have nominated for president cannot do the job. [applause] donald trump's ideas aren't just different. they are dangerously incoherent. they're not even really ideas.
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just a series of bizarre rants, personal feuds, and outright lies. [cheers and applause] he is not just unprepared. he is tempermentally unfit to hold an office that requires knowledge, stability, and immense responsibility. [cheers and applause] this is not someone who should ever have the nuclear codes because it's not hard to imagine donald trump leading us into a war just because somebody got under his very thin skin. [cheers and applause] we cannot put the security of
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our children and grandchildren in donald trump's hands. we cannot let him roll the dice with america. this is a man who said that more countries should have nuclear weapons, including saudi arabia. this is someone who has threatened to abandon our allies in nato, the countries that work with us to root out terrorists abroad before they strike us at home. he believes we can treat the u.s. economy like one of his casinos and default on our debt to the regs of the world, which would cause an economic catastrophe far worse than anything we experienced in 2008. [applause] he has said that he would order our military to carry out torture and the murder of civilians who are related to suspected terrorists, even
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though those are war crimes. he says he doesn't have to listen to our generals or admirals, our ambassadors and other high officials, because he has, quote, a very good brain. he also said, i know more about isis than the generals do. believe me. you know what? i don't believe him. [applause] he says climate change is a hoax, invented by the chinese and has the gall to say that prisoners of war, like john mccain, aren't heroes. [booing] >> exactly. >> he praises dictators like vladimir putin and picks fights with our friends, including the british prime minister, the mayor of london, the german chancellor, the president of
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mexico, and the pope. [applause] he says he has foreign policy experience because he ran the miss universe pageant in russia. and to top it off, he believes america is weak and an embarrassment. he called our military a disaster. he said we are, and i quote, a third-world country. [booing] and he has been saying things like that for decade. those are the words, my friends, of someone who doesn't understand america or the world. and -- [applause] -- they're the words of someone who would lead us in the wrong direction, because if you really believe america is weak, with our military, our values, our
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capabilities that no other country comes close to matching, then you don't know america. and -- [applause] -- you certainly don't deserve to lead it. that is why even if i weren't in this race, i'd be doing everything i could to make sure donald trump never becomes president because i believe he will take our country down a truly dangerous path. unlike him, i have some experience with the tough calls and the hard work of state craft. wrestled with the chinese over a climate deal in copenhagener. brokard cease fire between israel and ham mass, negotiated reduction in nuclear weapons with russia, twisted arms to bring the world together in global sanctions against iran and stood up for the rights of
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women, religious minorities mind lgbt people around the world. [applause] and i have sat in the situation room and advised the president on some of the toughest choices he faced. so i'm not new to this work, and i'm proud to run on my record because i think the choice before the more than people in this election is clear. i believe in strong alliances. clarity in dealing with our rivals, and a rock solid commitment to the values that have always made america great. and i believe with all my heart that america is an exceptional
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country. that we're still, in lincoln's words, the last best hope of earth. we are not a country that cowers behind walls. we lead with purpose and we prevail, and if america doesn't lead, we leave a vacuum, and that will either cause chaos or other countries will rush in to fill the void. then they'll be the ones making the decisions about your lives and jobs jobs and safety, and tt me, the choices they make will not be to our benefit. that is not an outcome we can live with. as i see it there are some important things our next president must do to secure american leadership and keep us safe and our economy growing in the years ahead. these are all areas in which donald trump and i profoundly disagree. and they are all critical to our future.
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first, we need to be strong at home. that means investing in our infrastructure, education, and innovation, the fundamentals of a strong economy. we need to reduce income inequality because our country can't lead effectively when so many are struggling to provide the basics for their families, and we need to break down the barriers that hold americans back, including barriers of bigotry and discrimination. [applause] compare that with what trump wants to do. his economic plans would add more than 30 trillion -- that's trim with a t -- $30 trillion to our national debt over the next 20 years. he has no ideas on education. no ideas on innovation. he has a lot of ideas about who to blame. but no clue about what to do.
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none of what donald trump is offering will make america stronger at home and that would make us weaker in the world. second, we need to stick with our allies. america's network of allies is part of what makes us exceptional, and our allies deliver for us every day. [applause] our armed forces fight terrorists together, our diplomats work side-by-side. allies provide staging areas for our military so we can respond quickly to events on the other side of the world, and they share intelligence that helps us identify and diffuse potential threats. take the threat posed by north korea. perhaps the most repressive regular anytime on the planet. run by a sadistic dictator who wants to develop long-range
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missile that could carry a nuclear weapon to the united states. when i was secretary of state, we worked closely with our allies, japan and south korea, to respond to this threat, including by creating a missile defense system that stands ready to shoot down a north korean warhead should it leaders ever be reckless enough to launch one at us. the technology is ours. key parts of it are located on japanese ships, all three countries contributed to it, and this month, all three of ourtart drill to test it. that is the power of allies. [applause] and it's also the legacy of american troops who fought and
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died to secure those bonds, because they knew we were safer with friends and partners. now, moscow and beijing are deeply envious of our alliance us around the world abuse they have nothing to match them. they'd love for us to elect a president who would jeopardize that source of strength. if donald gets his way they'll be celebrating in the kremlin. we cannot led that happen. that's why -- [applause] -- that's why it is no small passing thing when he talks about leaving nato or says he'll stay neutral on israel's security. it's no small thing when he calls mexican immigrants rapists and murderers. we're lucky to have friendly neighbors on our land borders. why would he want to make one of them an enemy? [applause]
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and it's no small thing when he suggests that america should withdraw our military support for japan, encourage them to get nuclear weapons, and he said this. bat war between -- about a war between japan north korea, and i quote. if they do, they do. good luck, enjoy yourself, folks. i wonder if he even realizes he is talking about nuclear war? yes, our friends need to contribute their fair share. i made that point long before donald trump came on to the scene, and a number of them have increased their defense spending. the real debate here is whether we keep those alliances strong or cut them off. what he says would weaken our country. third, we need to embrace all the tools of american power, especially diplomacy and
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development. to be on the frontlines, solving problems before they threaten us at home. diplomacy is often the only way to avoid a conflict that could end up exacting a much greater cost. it takes patience, persistence, and an eye on the long game. but it's worth it. take the nuclear agreement with iran. when president obama took office, iran was racing toward a nuclear bomb. some called for military action. but that could have ignited a broader what that could have mired our troops in another middle eastern conflict. president obama chose a different path. and i got to work leading the evident to impose crippling sanctions. we brought iran to the table. we began talks, and eventually we reached an agreement that should block every path for iran to get a nuclear weapon.
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[applause] now we must enforce that deal vigorously, and as i've said many times before, our approach must be distrust and verify. the world must understand that the united states will act decisively if necessary, including with military action, to stop iran from getting a nuclear weapon. in particular, israel's security is nonnegotiable. they're our closest ally in the region and we have a moral obligation to defend them. [applause] but there is no question that the world, and the united states -- we are safer now than we were before this agreement, and we accomplished it, without firing a single shot. dropping a single bomb, or putting a single american soldier in harm's way.
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now -- [applause] -- trump says we shouldn't have done the deal. we should have walked away. but that would have meant no more global sanctions, and iran resuming their nuclear program, and the world blaming us. so then what? war? telling the world, good luck? you deal with iran? of course, trump doesn't have answers to those questions. donald trump doesn't know the first thing about iran or its nuclear program. ask him. it will become very clear, very quickly. [applause] you know, there's no risk of people losing their lives if you blow up a golf course deal. but it doesn't work like that in world affairs.
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just like being interviewed on the same episode of "60 minutes," as putin was, is not the same thing as actually dealing with putin. so the stakes in global statecraft are infinitely higher and more complex than in the world of luxury hotels. we all know the tools donald trump brings to the table. bragging, mocking, composing nasty tweets. i'm willing to bet he's writing a few right now. [applause] but those tools won't do the trick. rather than solving global crises he would create new ones. he has no sense of what it takes to deal with multiple countries with competing interests and reaching a solution that everyone can get behind. in fact, he isownright
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contemptuous of that work. and that means he is much more likely to end up leading us into conflict. fourth, we need to be firm but wise with our rivals. countries like russia and china often work against us. beijing dumped cheap steel in our markets. that hurts american workers. moscow has taken aggressive military action in ukraine right on nato's doorstep. i've gone toe to toe with russia and china so i know we have to be able to stand our ground when we must, and find common ground when we can. that's how i could work with russia to conclude the new start treaty to reduce nuclear stockpiles and with china to increase pressure on north korea. it's how our diplomats negotiated the landmark agreement on climate change, which trump now wants to rip up.
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the key was never forgetting who we were dealing with. not friends or allies but countries that share some common interests with us amid many disagreements. donalddonald doesn't see the complexity. he wants to start a trade war with china, and i understand a lot of americans have concerns about our trade agreements. i do, too but a trade war is something very different. we went down that road in the 1930s. it made the great depression longer and more painful. combine that with his comments about defaulting on our debts? and it's not hard to see how a trump presidency could lead to a global economic crisis. and i have to say, i don't understand donald's bizarre fascination with dictators and strong men who have no love for america. he praised china for the
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continue men square massacre. he said you have to give kim jung credit for taking over north korea, something he did by murdering everyone he saw as a threat, including his own uncle, which donald described gleefully like he was recapping an action movie, and said if he were grading putin as a leader he'd give him an a. now, i will leave it to the psychiatrists to explain his aaffection for tire rants i just wonder how anybody could be so wrong about who america's real friends are, because it matters. if you don't know exactly who you're dealing with, men like putin will eat your lunch. now, fifth, we need a real plan for confronting terrorists. as we saw six months ago in san
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bernardino, the threat is real and urgent. over the past year i have laid out my plans for defeating isis. we need to take out their strongholds in iraq and syria, by intensifying the air campaign and stepping up our support for arab and kurdish forces on the ground. we need to keep pursuing diplomacy to end syria's civil war and close iraq's sectarian divide, because those conflicts are keeping isis alive. we need to lash up with our allies and ensure our intelligence services or -- or working hand in hand to dismantle the global network that supplies money, arms, propaganda and fighters to the terrorists and we need to win the battle in cyber space. [applause] and of course with need to strengthen our defenses here at home. now, nat a nutshell is my plan for defeating isis.
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what is trump's? well, he won't say. he is literally keeping it a secret. the secret, of course, is he has no idea what he would do to stop isis. just look at the few things he has actually said on the subject. he actually said, and i quote, maybe syria should be a free zone for isis. oh, okay. let a terrorist group have control of a major country in the middle east. then he said we should send tens of thousands of american ground troops to the middle east to fight isis. he also refused to rule out nuclear weapons against isis. which would mean massivelian casualties. it's clear he doesn't have a clue what he is talking about, so we can't be certain which of these things he would do. but we can be certain that he is capable of doing any or all of them. letting isis run wild. launching a nuclear attack.
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starting a ground war. these are all the distinct possibilities with donald trump in charge, and through all his loose talk there's one constant theme. demonizing muslims and playing right into the hands of isis. his proposal to ban 1.35 billion muslims from even come to go our country just violate the religious freedom our country was founded on. it's a huge propaganda victory for isis. and it alienates the very countries we need to help us win in this fight. a trump presidency would embolden isis. [applause] >> we cannot take that risk. this isn't reality television. this is actual reality. [applause] and defeating global terrorist
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networks and protecting the homeland takes more than empty talk and hand of slogans. takes a real plan, real experience and real leadership. donald trump lacks all three. and one more thing. a president has a sacred responsibility to send our troops into battle only if we absolutely must and only with a clear and well thought-out strategy. our troops give their all. they deserve a commander in chief who knows that. i have worked side-by-side with generals and admirals and visited our troops in theaters of war. i've fought for better health care for national guard, better services for veterans, more support for our gold star families. we cannot put the lives of our young men and women in uniform in donald trump's hands. now, sixth. we need to stay true to our values. trump says over and over again,
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the world is laughing at us. he has been saying this for decades. he didn't just start this year. he bought four-page ads in newspapers across america back in 1987 when reagan was president, saying that america lacked a backbone and the world was, you guessed it, laughing at us. he was wrong then, and he is wrong now. and you've got to wonder why somebody who fundamentally has so little confidence in america, and has felt that way for at least 30 years, wants to be our president. the truth is, there's not a country in the world that can rival us. it's not just that we have the greatest military or our economy is larger, more durable, more entrepreneurial than any in the world. it's also that americans work harder, dream bigger, and we never, ever stop trying to make our country and the world a better place. [applause]
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so, it really matters that donald trump says things that go against our deepest-held values. it matters when he says he'll order our military to murder the families of suspected terrorists. during the raid to kill bin laden, when every second counted, our seals took the time to move the women and children in the compound to safety. donald trump may not get it, but that is what honor looks like. [applause]
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and you now what? it also matters when he makes fun of people with disabilities. calls women pigs. proposes banning an entire religion from our country, or plays coy with white supremacists. america stands up to countries that treat women like animals or people of different races, religions or ethnicities as less human. [applause] what happens to the moral example we set for the world and for our own children itch our president engages in bigotry? and by the way, mr. trump, every time you insult american muslims, or mexican immigrants, remember, that plenty of muslims and immigrants serve and fight in our armed forces. [applause]
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donald trump could learn something from them. and that brings me to the final point i want to make today. the temperment it takes to be commander-in-chief. every president faces hard choices every day. with imperfect information and conflicting imperatives. that's the job. a revolution threatens to topple a government in a key region. an adversary reaches out for the first time in years. what due doo you do? making -- what do you do? making the right call takes a cool head and respect for the facts. it takes a willingness to listen to other people's points of view with a truly open mind. it also takes humility. knowing you don't know
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everything because if you're convinced you're always right, you'll never ask yourself the hard questions. i remember being in the situation room -- [applause] -- with president obama, debating the potential bin laden operation. the president's advisers were divided. the intelligence was compelling but far from definitive, and the risks risks of failure were daunting. the stakes were significant for our battle against al qaeda and our relationship with pakistan. most of all, the lives of those brave seals and helicopter pilots hung to in the balance. it was a decision only a president could make. and when he did, it was as crisf leadership as i've ever seen. now imagine donald trump sitting in the situation room, making
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life or death decisions on behalf of the united states. imagine him deciding whether to send your spouses or children into battle. imagine if he had not just his twitter account at his difference suppose sal when he is angry but america's entire arsenal. do we want him making those calls? someone's thin skinned and quick to anger who lashes out at the smallest criticism. do we want his finger anywhere near the button? >> no! >> well, i have a lot of faith that the american people will make the right decision. this is a country with a deep reservoir of common sense and non prize. and we're alkanetting on that. -- we're all counting on that. [applause] because making donald trump our commander in chief would be a
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historic mistake and would undo so much of the work that republicans and democrats alike have done. so make america secure. it would set back everything in our world in recent memory and fuel an ugly narrative about who we are, that we're fearful, not confident, that we want to let others determine our future for us instead of shaping our own destiny. that's not the america i know and love. so we have a lot of work to keep our country secure, and we need to do better by american families and american workers and we will. but don't let anyone tell you that america isn't great. trump's got america all wrong. we're a big-hearted, fair-minded country. there is no challenge we can't
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meet, no goal we can't achieve when we each do our part and come together as one nation. every lesson only our history teaches us we're stronger together. we remember that every memorial day. and this election is a choice between two very different visions of america. one that is angry, afraid, and based on the idea that america is fundamentally week and in decline. the other is helpful, general his, and confident in the knowledge that america is great, just like we always have been. [applause] so, let's resolve that we can't be greater still. that is what i believe in my heart. i went to 112 countries as secretary of state and i never lost my sense of pride and wonder at seeing that blue and
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white plane lit up on some far-off runway with the united states of america emblazen ode on the side. that plane, those words, our country, represents something special. not just to us but the world. it represents freedom. hope and opportunity. i love this country and i know you do, too. it's been an honor and a privilege to serve america and i'm going to do everything i can to protect our nation and make sure we never lose sight of how strong we really are. thank you all very much. [applause] >> candidate clinton ahead of the tuesday primary for the state of california. one where she is neck and neck with her rival, bernie sanders, man not mentioned today. instead maybe the most thorough laundry list of complaints
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against donald trump we have heard since this process began. never heard it late out quite like that. not from any of his rivals in the republican side, and certainly never from hillary clinton, not in a way as thorough as that. she said the republican nominee simply cannot do the job. said his ideas are dangerously incoherent. a series of rants, personal feudses and outright lies and it tempermentally unfit, says hillary clinton, for the office of the presidency. secretary clinton says we cannot put our security in his hands, he has had slow indicated nukes for the saudis, abandoning our allies and nato. she says he would treat our economy like his casinos and default and that would cause economic cat strife. he has aid slow indicated torture and murder of relatives of terrorists against international law and says he doesn't have to listen to his generals because he has very good brain. he will take our country down a dangerous path, says select
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clinton. his plan toed a to the national debt no ideas on education or inknow vacation and size some we leave it to the psychiatrist to explain his affection for tyrants and say donald trump can not be president. he cannot do it. he doesn't understand the military and doesn't understand america. jennifer griffin is on the campaign trail and is a long-time pentagon correspondent for us and overseas reporter. i just wonder what your sense is, whether some of these attacks that are military related will be able to stick. >> reporter: well, i think it's very interesting, shep that, she chose to give this speech in nation which -- in san diego which is home to the u.s. navy seals and military bases, tons of military people in the community here. that was on purpose and very interesting that it was a bit of a risky move since she is in such a tight race with bernie sanders, and sanders' supporters who she has shown to be just within one or two points hate of
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sanders, sanders supporter does not necessarily believe in a strong military or involvement overseas so she, decided after memorial day to come out swinging against donald trump, to move this race into the general election, to basically put the primary behind her, even though june 7th is still a few days away and she has not yet secured the democratic nomination. today's speech she came out swinging. she wasted no time. she began the attacks immediately, and the audience laughed and booed at many of her applause lines. it was a feisty speech, and i'm sure we are -- will hear more from donald trump. >> we have and i will get to that. want to let our viewers know. the president was speaking today at the air force academy, give thing commencement address there for grade situation. we can till the audio --
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graduation, and a tragedy happened. an air force thunderbird jet crashed while in a flyover of the academy. the commentment being attend bid president obama. we'll have a live report. we'll have analysis of the speech from unbusse but as secretary secretary clinton made her speech paul ryan announced he will vote for donald trump for president. the man third in line for the presidency has said he notice ready to endorse trump and haven't. he says he has more common ground thanked disagreement for trump and will be voting for trump goes no further. yet his spokesperson, paul ryan's spokesperson, tweeted minutes ago we can all call it an endorsement. well, in case he is watching he can't call it an endorsement. an endorsement is a thing that does not exist. should paul ripe ann doors anyone we'll make that part of our report.
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then 12 minutes into the clinton speech trump went to twitter saying crooked hilary -- disbefore the speech bank the presumptive republican nominee tweeted with all of the crooked milliary clinton's foreign policy experience she has made some many mistakes, and i mean monsters. here's what sea aid last night. >> hillary clinton who lies -- i mean, she lies. remember that, i start -- she lies. she lies. she made a speech, and she is making another one tomorrow. and they sent me a copy of the speech. and it was such lies about my foreign policy. >> again, that was last night. trump also said that hillary clinton is not presidential material. john roberts is covering him in san jose, california, where the donald is set to hold a rally tonight. >> good afternoon to you, shep. this is an area where trump wants to make sure that hillary
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clinton doesn't get any traction, which is why he was pushing back so forcefully more than 12 hours before the gave the speech. he continued to tweet during her speech saying things like, quote, crooked hillary to longer has credible to much failure in office, people will not allow another four years of inpresence, she doesn't even look presidential. not a lot there on policy, substance, but one of the reasons why donald trump wants to make sure she doesn't get traction while his supporters would readily be on board with his foreign policy, which is just a collection of statements about strength and ambiguity and uncertainty and shake upping the status quo, notable foreign policy icons as james baker has been highly critical of his plans such as reducing america's commitment financially at least to nato. this idea that japan and south korea might be responsible for their own nuclear deterrence, which could mean nukes in eastern asia. that's why donald trump is so forcefully attacking not just
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the message but the messenger. listen to what else he said last night. >> she is one of the worst secretaries of state in the history of our country. now she wants to be our president. look, i'll be honest. she has no natural talent to be president. this is not a president. they talk about me -- a lot of people think i look extremely presidential. >> we're expecting he is going to talk more about that tonight here in san jose. one quick word about the paul ryan endorse. versus non, probably as close to the world endorse. you'll hear him get. >> that may a encloses as we'll hear but he has not gotten there. when he gets there we'll say it an endorse. he can't have if both ways. there's a lengthy column out today in a hometown newspaper and then his spokesman says that's an endorsement. no, it isn't. we'll talk with john busse about the hillary clinton speech and we'll get to the air force
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academy where our correspondent is live. the thunderbird jet did crash south and east of on airport. the pilot ejected. we don't know conditions. a lot going on. our live coverage continues right after this
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the hillary clinton foreign policy speech has concluded and it appears the general elect has begun with a very, very thorough listing of her problems with trump. let's bring in john bussey. never heard anybody say all the things trump has said and give it back to him with analysis. >> what you said and jennifer griffin said earlier, this is hillary clinton moving the campaign out the primaries and into the general election. it's right. certainly wants to appear that way going into a neck and neck conflict with sanders in the california primary. she wants to look like i've already got it. i'm already presidential. and wants to begin to define the landscape or the debate with trump.
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she wants to do it in a place like san diego, with a big military component. she wants to appeal to moderates and independents and that is what this speech was about articulating the difference between her and trump and unscoring the word, he's dangerous you. heard that repeatedly through her speech. he would take us down a dangerous path. he is not prepared to be commander in chief. >> she spoke -- it feels like the heart of the argument may be this. listen. >> donald trump's ideas aren't just different. they are dangerously incoherent. they're not even really ideas. just a series of bizarre rants, personal feuds, and outright lies. [applause] >> the laughter and cheering but not the first to say those matters of substance. >> that's right. when gets into detail, the difference between her and trump
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on issues like nato, the middle east, on north korea, relations with russia, and she goes beyond that. she is appealing again to a large military audience, not just viewing but in san diego. when she says it's not just on the substance, it's on the values of america -- this is what she attempting to do -- she says -- she reminds people of how the seals, when they were attacking bin laden's home, made sure to keep the families safe. the kids and the wives of bin laden safe, as opposed to donald trump saying that perhaps families should be killed. family's terrorists should be killed. she says donald trump may not get it but that is what honor looks like. a direct appeal to american values and the military that is viewing this. >> a lot of people don't believe him. polls from quinnipiac, trump's plan to build a wall on the border and make mexico receive, he'll try and will be able. to only 24% believe that most
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believe he will try and will not be able for or won't try. trump's plan to temporary temporarily ban muslims. if you ever thought this was real thing, you know. come on. kind of illegal thing. never happened in the history of the country. >> that's right. but that quinnipiac poll asks will hillary hold wall street to task the way -- >> that is the next one. number four. >> people take note of that, too. they don't think that she -- that poll kind of -- >> number four it put -- >> how the public doesn't necessarily believe what politicians say they're going to do during a campaign will actually become policy. >> it is astounding when you see a demagogue pull together some many millions and millions of people with such a ran bid following. it's d -- rabid following. >> the pole with nbc found that 56% of people think that hillary clinton will do a better job at foreign policy than trump.
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29% of people said that he would do a better job. ef by 10 was the preferred percentage points. that's just foreign policy. there's a lot of other issues. >> our coverage continues after this. on your phone? wouldn't more people buy homes? and wouldn't those people need to fill their homes with household goods? and wouldn't the makers of those goods have phones from which they could easily secure mortgages of their own? further stoking demand as our tidal wave of ownership floods the country with new homeowners, who now must own other things. anyway. that's what we were thinking.
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more on the fighter jet -- actually a thunderbird jet that crashed in cost after the fly overow air force academy's commencement where the president spoke. some video of the flyover itself. look. >> it's my understanding -- these are air force thunder byrds on behind to help celebrate graduation. it's my understanding it was not moments after that one of these thunderbirds crashed.
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ally -- alicia how the pilot. that's the actual jet. that not after the crash but that's the jet. >> from what we're hearing from peterson air force base it's been confirmed that the pilot was able to eject safely and has experienced some very, very minor injuries. and that was a point that was put on this report to us. that these are minor injuries. right now that pilot is being evaluated by the fire department there. the medics on staff. and these pilots, as you mentioned, they're so skilled in their choreography and they're safety so much so this pilot was able to get to the ground as low as possible and slide on the belly, and the plane is also still largely intact. according to the air force. and from what we are understanding that pilot is okay physically. >> that's very good news. there's lots going on this afternoon. should news break out we'll break in because breaking news changes everything on fox news
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channel. the markets will close here in new york. just about three minutes from now and the dow has had a nice turn-around. "your world" is up next. every time i drive. ...want my number? and cash back for driving safe. and the power to automatically find your car... i see you car! and i got the power to know who's coming and when if i break down. ...you must be gerry. hey... in means getting more from your car insurance with the all-powerful drivewise app. it's good to be in, good hands.
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incoherent. they're not even -- >> hillary clinton unleashing an all--out assault on donald trump over national security. how will trump respond? one of his backers, governor rick perry, is here. welcome everybody, i'm in for neil cavuto and this is "your world." the gloves are off and we are all over it. rick perry in a moment. first to jennifer griffin in san diego and john roberts in san jose where the campaign clash is going down. we again with jennifer. >> reporter: it was 35-minute speech here in balboa but didn't take hillary clinton long to come out swinging within the first couple of minute shoes