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tv   The O Reilly Factor  FOX News  June 2, 2016 8:00pm-9:01pm PDT

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thank you for being with us. we'll see you back here tomorrow night. tonight -- >> donald trump's ideas aren't just different. they're dangerously incoherent. >> hillary clinton talking foreign policy, but it's all about trump. talking points. we'll analyze. bill was having a hard time understanding how the senate work. we explained that to o'reilly repeatedly but he doesn't seem to want to listen. senator mcconnell insinuating i don't know about case law. >> americans getting punished at the airports. how bad is it?
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watters found out. >> 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, can hillary clinton protect us from villains overseas? that's the subject of this evening's talking points memo. secretary clinton laid out her foreign policy vision, much of it attacking donald trump as a primary enemy of the state. >> 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 views and outright lies. this is not someone who should ever have the nuclear codes
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because it's not hard to imagine donald trump leading us into a war just because somebody got under his very thin skin. >> now, on monday mr. trump will be here, and i'm going to give him one free shot at mrs. clinton for running that sound bite. he'll get 30 seconds. that sound bite ran 30 seconds. but i had to do it because much of hillary clinton's foreign policy speech today concentrated on trump. a few times she veered off into other territory like 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. >> same policy as mr. obama, contain isis using air power and weak allied forces on the ground which can't possibly defeat the vicious terror crew. it's impossible. they can't do it. there comes a point when american voters must recognize
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that policies depending on foreign cooperation rarely work. if we want isis defeated, we are going to have to lead the way. if we don't they will continue to murder people. clinton also discussed russia and china but again brought it back to trump. >> moscow and beiging are deeply envious of our alliances around the world because they have nothing to match them. they would love for us to elect a president that would jeopardize that source of strength. if donald gets his way, they'll be celebrating in the kremlin. we cannot let that happen. >> today's foreign policy speech was not really that. it was an attempt to whip up anti-trump feeling in california which is clinton campaign believes will mobilize voters to choose her over bernie sanders next tuesday. hillary clinton knows the world, no question about that, but so far i'm not seeing many innovative foreign policy pronouncements. she wants to run on what
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president obama has done, fine. and voters will determine the wisdom of that approach. but if secretary clinton has any new ideas, they're still being kept top secret. now to the top story. reaction joining us from washington katie pavlich and from washington mary anne marsh. did i miss any new stuff? did you hear any new stuff? >> no, but i don't think this is the day for it. there's 160 days left in this campaign. plenty of time to lay out policy. what she did was define the election and define trump. her weapon of choice was words. she used words to define herself. that's what today was really about. >> that's fine if she had said it was really about that, but what she did was i got a dispatch from the clinton campaign that said major foreign policy speech. i said i'm interested in foreign policy. i'll tune in.
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all i got was trump's an idiot. what did you get out of it? >> i thought that hillary clinton revisited her reputation of being somewhat hawkish. it was clear to me, as mary anne stated, that she was pivoting toward the general electorate. but unfortunately she did attack trump more than she provided substance. what she said doesn't add up to her record on foreign policy. >> how did you see hawkish in there? i didn't see a lot of hawkish stuff. what do you mean hawkish? >> she talks in a general way about talking on isis, our enemies, but again her record doesn't show that. pointed out in the talking points memo. >> i got people in my neighborhood saying they're going to take out isis and they have water pistols. >> they may do a good job. but hillary clinton will be an extension of the obama foreign policy which she bragged about today in her speech. >> it looks that way. mary anne, were you aware that some of the language that secretary clinton used to attack donald trump was exactly the same language that jimmy carter used to attack ronald reagan in
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his foreign policy statements in 1980? were you aware of that? >> yes, i actually happened to watch you on the five and saw that. >> actually did something good. >> that's a whole other segment, but anyway, the fact is i think hillary clinton used this wisely and her real audience. >> that's not the question. we know you love hillary clinton. you want to vacation with her, you want to go to the mall with her. we know that. >> that's so not true. >> talk about her using the same exact words that jimmy carter used against reagan in her speech? >> i think it's fine she used the same words. >> fine? >> i think it will be a different outcome. >> though jimmy carter said this? >> i think you just did that for her. >> there is a little bit of that involved. >> i think you just did that for her, but i think it was an effective way to go after donald trump. the more interesting thing here, bill, is what is donald trump's response? i know you have him with you on monday night.
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but what does donald trump say tomorrow in california. >> that she's been crooked and she's always been crooked and whatever country she went to she was crooked in. >> i don't think that's going to be enough. >> mary anne, you may be right, it might not be enough. who knows? whoever wins the debate in september is going to win the presidency, that's how close it's going to be. but the fact of the matter is i would like both candidates, respectfully, to give me more than what they're giving me. i'm not getting anything. >> she's gibbi igiving more tha has. >> it will be in a time in the news cycle where the deals have been proven to old to americans and the world on the basis of lies and she's touting the iran deals a a success. she can't say she'd take on the russians when the iran deal has a direct connection to giving the russians -- >> what she said was there was no other alternative but war to this iranian deal that trump says he's going to throw away.
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that's her point. it's speculative, but it's a legitimate point in the sense that, okay, you don't take the deal. then it's this big israel's going to do this and the united states is going to do that. who knows? but the point of the matter is at this juncture i'm asking both candidates respectfully to stop with the nonsense, all right, and say this is what i'm going to do to protect you from these villains. increasing air power and asking the kurds to fight them, mary anne, is not going to protect us, okay? it's not. and anybody with an iq over 90 knows it. she ought to stop saying it. and calling hillary clinton crooked, katie, isn't going to protect us either. >> it's not. >> so both of them. >> that is true. >> deep breath. letting it out. and getting policies that we can actually embrace and discuss. ladies? >> i would agree. >> thank you very much. appreciate it.
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next on the rundown, an amazing story. the state department deletes a question from fox news correspondent james rosen about the iran nuke deal. rosen will be here. then later mitch mcconnell says i, your humble correspondent, does not know what i'm talking about. don't let dust and allergies get between you and life's beautiful moments. with flonase allergy relief, they wont. most allergy pills only control one inflammatory substance. flonase controls six. and six is greater than one. flonase changes everything.
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times where diplomacy needs privacy in order to progress. this is a good example of that. >> now, after that exchange, somehow, it disappeared from the state department's website as well as youtube. >> a portion of the state department's december 2nd, 2013 press briefing was missing from the video that we posted on our youtube account and on our website. that missing portion covered a sear roifs questions about u.s. negotiations with iran. >> here now to explain further is james rosen. we didn't show the whole thing that disappeared. they took a lot more out of it than we were able to show for time. i think they did this just because they don't like you, am i wrong? >> you're not wrong that i'm not well liked among the senior counsels of the obama administration. i've not suffered from any lack of attention from them over the two terms. but i think the real reason, the
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motivation behind this deliberate censorship of this key exchange, the only known instance of such censorship of any state department or white house briefing in the obama terms that we know of, was because of the content of it and the fact that jen psaki had essentially acknowledged that her predecessor at that poed xwr podium ten months earlier that lied to me and my colleagues about the -- >> what exactly was the lie? >> there's victoria neuland. i asked her in february 2013, we hear reports of direct secret bilateral talks between members of the obama administration and the iranian government, true or false? and she said, the kind of government level contact you're talking about, no. at that time, those direct secret talks were going on for more than a year. >> why is that important? look, there's no question they did not tell the truth. okay. why is it important?
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why would they go to the extent of trying to get that off youtube and get that out of their files? so you lied, rosen caught you in a lie. so what? i mean, then you just -- >> nobody here asserts that the person that issued this order for this censorship was thinking or acting rationally, bill. >> so there's no real reason to do it other than you caught them in the lie, but that was transported all over the country. everybody knew it. who did it? on "the five" i said i was going to beat it out of you tonight. >> yes. >> you must have some -- i don't want you to say this person did it. i want you to say, as sherlock holmes might, here's what i'm deducing happened. go. >> well, bill, i admire your dogged investigative zeal in trying to rubber hose me. that's well placed, i think. look, i'm not prepared to speculate on who issued this order.
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jen psaki has denied it in a very heated e-mail exchange with me that our readers can see in detail on the foxnews.com website. maria harp who was the spokesperson at that time denied having anything to do with this. the state department says they don't know who did it but they do know it came within the public affairs of the state department and they're able to rule out the white house. the state department also says, for example, they don't have the technology there at the state department building in order to trace all of the calls that came in on the specific timeframe to the person who says they were on the receiving end of this order. i find that hard to imagine because when i was the focus of the obama administration's attentions in 2013 including the state department, the department of justice, all of which was well publicized, they seem to have no problem accessing all the telephone records, all the metadata, all the electronics records they needed. so if they don't have that
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technology now, the state department, that would be a diminution in their capability. >> well, they're not telling the truth. they're trying to make it go away. kerry was the secretary of state at that time, did he take over for clinton yet? >> clinton left in february 2013, just before that critical exchange with victoria neuland. kerry inherited all of this. >> maybe hillary did it? >> i think, bill, that we are not past the season of disclosure with regard to this. i think you're going to see -- >> is it possible? is it possible secretary clinton might have done it? >> she was not within the bureau of public affairs at that time. look, you're going to see members of congress. you're going to see my colleagues in the mainstream news media continue with this story. cnn has picked up on it, "the washington post." these are not right biwing zeals as far as i can tell. >> no. >> and jen psaki is misplaced in saying it's just me wanting air
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time or fox news. >> i'd like to know who is trying to cover stuff up. i think that's important. so we'll stay on it, rosen, and if anybody is mean to you, you let me know and i'll take care of them. >> thank you, bill. mitch mcconnell tells a radio guy i'm clueless when it comes to case law. after that a "factor" investigation. texting in the car, is it killing thousands? americans? right bac ladies, why just dream of worry-free nights? i'm linda, and like millions of women worldwide i trust tena. and with new tena overnight underwear i can now sleep worry free all night. the unique secure barrier system gives me triple protection from leaks, odor and moisture so i can keep being a sweet dreamer. tena overnight underwear and pads. only tena lets you be you. burning of diabetic nerve pain, these feet
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factor follow-up s factor follow-up segment. as you know i have criticized mitch mcconnell for failing to put kate's law to a vote. that law would make it much easier to punish illegal alien aggravated felons who defy deportation. yesterday on the dom giordano
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radio program there was this. >> bill o'reilly comes on today. he has a new book. he said he thinks it's personal with you and o'reilly why kate's law, which is great common sense and people are furious about a beautiful young woman killed by this maniac, allegedly, why not kate's law? what is holding it up? >> bill is having a hard time understanding how the senate works. we voted on a bill that included that. >> sorry to interrupt. but why have sanctuary cities tied to that? why not make kate's law by itself? >> because we can't pass it all by itself. that's the problem. i wish we had 60 votes in the senate to do whatever we want to do. we've explained that to o'reilly repeatedly but he doesn't seem to want to listen. >> joining us from philadelphia is dom giordano. are you buying the senator's explanation point of view that he couldn't get 60 -- i mean, he couldn't overcome the 60-vote
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threshold to get it voted upon? i'm not because he didn't even try. he didn't try to persuade anybody. i talked to democratic senators who told me they would look at the bill and seriously consider it. he didn't do any of that. >> no, that's exactly right, bill. no, i'm not buying it. more importantly when i'm in the ring with a guy like this, i'm trying to advance, hit, i went back with him. i'm talking about anger with him. i felt nothing. he doesn't get why we're so angry about this. to him this is just another thing like all the other things that are out there in washington. he can't get the specifics of it. does this man really understand how hollywood couldn't write this. this is exactly what you talk about, i talk about, viewers and listeners are angry about every day and we want something done. this is a great step, only one step. we're not asking for a miracle. and if washington can't do this, they don't get it. they can't do anything else. >> i just wanted the attempt to be made. >> yes. >> and here's why his argument
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fell apart. he says, if you ever stand alone kate's law, you are not going to get it passed in the senate. well, if you attach kate's law to a sanctuary cities law that punishes san francisco, there's no damn way you're ever going to pass that. mcconnell knew that, did it anyway, it went down. why not put kate's law as a stand-alone and see which senators will spit in the eye of all law-abiding americans are going to insult the steinle family. let a ps see that. >> exactly. >> he didn't see that. >> no, he didn't. i pursued that, bill. i can't believe there are not five or six -- >> there are. there are. >> they would go with this. >> that's right. >> let's get into other motivations. part of the motivation is personal. he called you had an entertainer. these guys call me that, a politician did just yesterday. when they can't handle it, when it's wrong, and they're angry at who we represent, we're just a bunch of entertainer. we don't know. >> i called mcconnell because i
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was going to give him a list of democratic senators who i talked with who would consider kate's law. all i want to do is get him on the phone. and i've called almost -- every time i call a politician, they get on the phone with me. it's a matter of respect. it's off the record. i'm not going to deal with it on my program. we made that quite clear. he wouldn't even get on the blanking phone with me, this guy. >> when i asked about that, he said, well, a lot of people want to talk to me. we're o not going to just talk to everybody. >> i know. >> remarkable the arrogance. i know a couple of these senators. bob casey jr. in my state. i think he's a guy who is reasonable. >> absolutely. >> if there were enough pressure and if it were public and sometimes the right thing would also be good politics. >> lead, lead. that's what ronald reagan did. he led, he persuaded. he put it forth to the american people. he built consensus so that case
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lawsuit would have to pass. you hit it right on the head. doesn't care. doesn't care about it. it's just another thing for him. it's an annoyance for him. and that's why people are so angry and that's why donald trump has risen. >> make this point, too, i had talked to mcconnell. he had polio as a child. i thought he was showing some emotion. he talked about his mother and yet he still couldn't bring himself to feel this. >> dom, we appreciate it very much. thanks for having me on your program. thousands of americans dying in their cars because they're texting. our truth serum correspondent on the case. and president obama once again going after fox news. dana perino has some thoughts on that. to those reports. we searched billions of flight combinations to make getting here easy. because the hardest part of any trip, should be leaving. expedia. technology connecting you
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truth serum segment tonight. new study released by the a study released by the aaa foundation, car crashes involving teenagers involve some kind of texting or cell phone distraction including talking. some states have loss against using a cell phone driving for any reason but most do not. here in new york city are arthur neville and eric shawn. >> memorial day to labor day 1,000 americans will be killed on our roads by crashes caused by teen arrange drivers and the majority, 60% are distracted by texting, they're on their cell
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phone or talking to friends in the car. 50% by talking to friends or distracted by passengers, 12% by cell phone texting even though kids get the message all the time, don't text, don't talk on your cell phone while driving. >> and there have been some grisly commercials put on the air but the lure and addiction of these things are so powerful that if you get a ping in the car, then you reach for it. i understand traffic accidents and fatalities of all americans are on the rise. >> 30,000 americans are killed every year. it's slightly up, the texting and the kids are up 60%. so it's getting worse with the kids. aaa did a study last year that showed 70% of the kids admit they talk on the phone when they drive. 42% read a text, 30% actually text while they drive. and they did a study. there's something called the live text drive cam. it's a video. this is what the university of iowa researchers did, they
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studied these videos. they look at the last six seconds of a crash, and they can see what the kids were doing. 14.6% talking to passengers. kids are joking around. 12% the cell phone. 10.7%, they call it what if your soda spills or want to change the dial on the radio. that's sadly getting people killed. >> i think all states should have you can't text and drive, you can't talk on a cell phone that's in your hand. you can talk, you know, put it on the dashboard because they have technology to do that. all 50 states should do that. >> they don't. 46% ban texting while you drive. like arizona, texas, missouri, they don't have these laws against texting while driving. >> right. there's a website called backpage.com and it is forefront in human trafficking, underage sex, perverts who want that go to this website, then they get
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the hook-ups, they abuse the children. now it's becoming a major deal in federal circles. what is the story? >> the story is, bill, that in march t state voted because he didn't show up for a senate hearing. he's also subpoenaed is backpage for internal company documents. they wanted to know how they're overseeing these ads for underage sex and how much money they're making on these ads. of course -- i shouldn't say of course, but factually backpage did not respond. >> so the guy didn't respond to a subpoena to show up to testify. >> that's correct. >> and they didn't respond to a subpoena to provide documents about what they're doing. what, can he be put in jail for that? >> at this point we have a statement from his lead counsel saying that his first amendment and constitutional right rs were being violated. so this is a partial statement from liz mcdougal. she said for nearly a year
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backpage.com respectfully asked the senate permanent sub committey on investigations to schmidt these questions to the federal court for resolution and finally it did. pagepage.com now looks forward to an opinion on these key constitutional issues. >> in other words, they want to petty-fy this issue. in your opinion, ms. neville, 71% of suspected child trafficking reports emanate from this website. 71%. so this is a website that should be shut down. >> it's despicable, in my opinion, it's despicable. if you're selling young kids. >> that's what they're doing. >> you just read the stat. that's what they're doing. there's absolutely no place for this. >> the federal government should be able to go in and shut it down with a court order and then they litigate from there.
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>> but here's the thing. last word quickly. this guy has websites set up that you can access this from all over the world. >> he's a weasel. >> he's a complete weasel. he lives right now in amsterdam. >> amsterdam, holland, okay. one quick note, on april 22nd, i said that prince likely died if a drug overdose. today that situation confirmed by the a.p. apparently the pop singer died from using too many opioids. dana perino has some thoughts. and the airport edition. >> you know they can see you naked on the body scanner. >> i don't know what they're going to get out of it. scanner. >> i don't know what they are going to get out of it. >> those reports moments >> those reports moments away. fact. there's an advil specially made for fast relief that goes to work in minutes. the only advil with a rapid release formula for rapid relief of tough pain. look for advil film-coated in the white box! relief doesn't get any faster than this.
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"w"well you don't want to live with mom and dad forever, do you?" "she says...bazang!" "ok, good one." "uh, how do i check my credit score?" "credit karma, it's free." "credit karma. give yourself some credit." .... the o'reilly factor, the number one cable news show for 15 years. thank you for staying with us. tonight the economy. as you may know, there are two theories about your financial well-being. president obama and the democrats say he saved us from a great depression when he took over in 2009. but republicans and some independents believe that's bull, that for 7 1/2 years the president strangled the economy by imposing high taxes and
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stringent business regulations including obamacare. yesterday in elkhart, indiana, the president said this about his critics. >> so their basic story is america's working class, america's middle class, families like yours, have been victimized by a big, bloated federal government run by a bunch of left wing elitists like me. and the government's taking your hard-earned tax dollars and it's giving them to freeloaders and welfare cheats. and i haven't turned the on fox news or listened to conservative talk radio yet today, but i turned them on enough over these past 7 1/2 years to know i'm not exaggerating in terms of their story. >> here in new york city, dana perino. you used to work for the president. and if you're guy, bush the younger, had said something that, blamed a network for spreading propaganda about the economy, would you have been
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surprised? >> president bush never did that. he never uttered the call letters of a network. >> not even wkrp in cincinnati. >> i love that show. i love that show. president bush would draw a contrast, though. he would say, here's my record. and he would say, he might use a similar rhetorical device like president obama is doing and try to say compare and contrast. i think obama got several things wrong yesterday. i understand where he's coming from from his perspective, but i think the republicans have a good case to make that with economic growth at 2%, weakest recovery of any recession. >> but he blames your guy for that. he says that i was -- the economy is in such dire straits when george w. bush took office that this is the best i could do, but i did save us from armagedd armageddon. and that's the fallback. the democratic party has embraced that. >> he goes to indiana where the republican governor pence and
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the state legislature feel like they have a lot to do with it. they have taxes that are pretty low. a lot of people moving from illinois into indiana because of the high tax situation. plus president obama sees the economy and government policies. republicans are not attacking him when they talk about smaller government. republicans actually believe in government. >> let's be fair. barack obama gets worked over on talk radio and some precincts here on fox news channel pretty hard. >> yes. >> i haven't heard the lay about queen stuff. i'll touch on it. but it's not a major issue. when you have a colossus like obamacare that tells small business you have to hire a certain amount of people and pay for their insurance, you're going to have less people hired. you're going to drive down salaries. that's where the concentration of criticism has been. >> remember also it was the democrats who try to paint paul ryans a somebody who wanted to push granny over the cliff.
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remember the video saying that basically republicans only care about rich people. not true. hyperbole happen on both sides. the republicans have a pretty good case to make. >> i think president obama sincerely in his heart believes that fox news wants to do him ill. >> he thought that from the very beginning. >> right. >> and it's unfortunate, but also he uses it as a foil. if you listen to that tape again, the audience laughs and jeers when he talks about fox news. he has used it to his benefit as well. >> but is it -- look, we, to be honest, you have to be honest, we're absolutely the toughest on president obama of all the networks. >> definitely. >> there's no question about it. but we bring in people like juan williams, i can name 50 of them, alan holmes, on and on and on, to put forth his point of view. and it doesn't seem to me that there's a jihad against him
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here. talk radio might be a little bit different on that. but he certainly has an obsession with us. >> president obama doesn't make a distinction between commentary and reporters. >> but nobody does. >> i do. >> you do. but in the democratic party and in the liberal precincts, they don't make that -- >> we call it the liberal mainstream media. we're all guilty. >> to some extent we're guilty of hyperbole. >> yes. >> word of the day, everyone. dana perino, thank you very much. what is on deck? chaos at the airports. i have asthma... ...one of many pieces in my life. so when my asthma symptoms kept coming back on my long-term control medicine. i talked to my doctor and found a missing piece in my asthma treatment with breo. once-daily breo prevents asthma symptoms. breo is for adults with asthma not well controlled on a long-term asthma control medicine, like an inhaled corticosteroid. breo won't replace a rescue inhaler for sudden breathing problems. breo opens up airways
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man 1: i came as fast as i man 2: this isn't public yet. man 1: what isn't? man 2: we've been attacked. man 1: the network? man 2: shhhh. man 1: when did this happen? man 2: over the last six months. man 1: how did we miss it? man 2: we caught it, just not in time. man 1: who? how? man 2: not sure, probably off-shore, foreign, pros. man 1: what did they get? man 2: what didn't they get. man 1: i need to call mike... man 2: don't use your phone. it's not just security, it's defense. bae systems.
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back of the book segment tonight, "watters world." as you may know the head the head of security for the tsa, the transportation security administration was recently
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removed because it's taking passengers hours to get through security lines in many airports. the situation is so bad thousands are missing their planes. we went out to newark airport in new jersey to take a look. ♪ >> tough time at the airport? >> yes. >> why don't you just drive? >> you're right. >> where are you headed to? >> i'm headed to texas for the weekend. >> oh. romantic getaway? >> yes, actually. >> everything's bigger in texas, they say. >> i hope so. >> let the games begin! where are you coming from? >> coming from detroit. >> are you going back to detroit? so how was your flight experience? >> not very good. >> what happened? >> i was supposed to fly to nebraska yesterday, and i spent the night in chicago with hundreds of other people. >> chicago's a mess, isn't it? >> yes, o'hare is disgusting.
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>> i can reserve you a flight coming back from chicago at 5:55, does that help? >> hi. have we met? >> how was your flight experience? >> terrible. our flight crew was late getting on our flight which caused us to miss our layover. we should have already been in montauk hours ago. >> a bit dodgy. >> roger. >> what's the longest time you ever waited in security? >> i've waited over two hours here at newark airport and the competence was really frustrating. >> right now things aren't so good. >> did you set off the beeper when you went through? >> yes, just went through too fast. >> do you have a problem going too fast? do you like to take things slow? >> i like to go a steady pace. i don't like to rush. >> you'll love the lines here at the airport. >> yeah, i'm going to love it. enjoy every moment. >> traveling through the airport it's just kind of the distance that you have to go. >> you have to flag down one of
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those people that can wheel you around with the carts. >> yeah. >> that's what i do. >> we got there three hours early, so that's the key. >> what did you do that whole time? >> we drank. >> are you muslimuslim? >> yes. >> what is it like going through the airport security? >> i'm just as
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>> you know, it's true. >> it is in text at the same time. >> america has been remarkable patient with this crazeeness. have they not?
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we haven't seen fights break out or riots. that poor woman in nebraska doesn't want to be in chicago. >> if you flew in commercial, which you don't, because you fly private. >> i still fly in commercials but i need a pass. that works. but really. this is wrong. it's wrong. and it should be solved by the federal government. you have to stream line are, stream line, but nobody wants safety compromised but this is insane. it's an intrusion. then, you get on a plane that is built for the "wizard of oz" munchkin people. >> you have not flown commercial in decades. why are you complaining? >> watters is misleading everybody. >> the seats are tiny. >> that is because you're 6, 6.
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>> watters, don't believe a thing he says. a tip about the factor, moments away. ♪ ♪ ♪ take on the unexpected with a car that could stop for you. nissan safety shield technologies, available in the altima, sentra and maxima. and i'm still struggling with my diabetes. i do my best to manage. but it's hard to keep up with it. your body and your diabetes change over time. your treatment plan may too. know your options. once-daily toujeo® is a long-acting insulin from the makers of lantus®.
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it releases slowly to provide consistent insulin levels for a full 24 hours. toujeo® also provides proven full 24-hour blood sugar control and significant a1c reduction. toujeo® is a long-acting, man-made insulin used to control high blood sugar in adults with diabetes. it contains 3 times as much insulin in 1 milliliter as standard insulin. don't use toujeo® to treat diabetic ketoacidosis, during episodes of low blood sugar, or if you're allergic to insulin. allergic reaction may occur and may be life threatening. don't reuse needles or share insulin pens, even if the needle has been changed. the most common side effect is low blood sugar, which can be serious and life threatening. it may cause shaking, sweating, fast heartbeat, and blurred vision. check your blood sugar levels daily while using toujeo®. injection site reactions may occur. don't change your dose or type of insulin without talking to your doctor. tell your doctor if you take other medicines and about all your medical conditions. insulins, including toujeo®, in combination with tzds (thiazolidinediones) may cause serious side effects like heart failure that can lead to death, even if you've never had heart failure before.
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don't dilute or mix toujeo® with other insulins or solutions as it may not work as intended and you may lose blood sugar control, which could be serious. ask your doctor about toujeo®. big victory for us. but first, we'd like to thank all of you for making "legends & lies" outsold every book last week. its hardcover is number one at barnes & noble. this begins sunday evening right here on fnc at 8:00. >> that's him! >> get him! >> get him! >> for the rule of the crown and
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the protection. >> i will blow through this mob. if you continue to interfere in the king's business, i will be first to defend him. >> a warning shot across the bow. >> first episode will feature samuel adams, a wild and crazy guy, old sam, as well as paul revere. we hope you check it out, the book and the series. get "legends & lies" free of charge. trump gets testy. he calls a reporter a sleaze and
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others scum. what if dethat to you, bill? >> well, i believe he told me to see a psychiatrist. "bill, the only person blasting trump for criticizing the media are you and other elitists." i believe i blasted trump on that. i explained what happened. chris, new york, "please chuck geraldo off the factor." "bolling is a kool-aid drink." "the killing of a defenseless animal is news." but the chicago slaughter is a national disgrace and underreported by the press. roger, orlando, florida, your tip left out the fraud of
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cameras at stoplights. not only is it a big money maker for the cities, you have to pay the fine even if you're not driving the car. that's right. they get your plate even if your brother is driving, you've got to pay it. diane williams, new jersey, i bought "legends & lies for my 14-year-old grandson but he'll have to wait until i finish it. very, very interesting." i appreciate that. "you and miller were certainly mainly-men at the who wants to be a president show in florida." were you surprised in manly men. tickets for the four remaining who wants to be president shows make exceptional father's day gifts. denver, atlanta, at the fox theater in buloxi, mississippi. in may, we were the top rated cable news program in the country by far.
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that's been the situation since december 2000. 15 1/2 consecutive years. now, here's a tip. we're smart enough to know that it is you, the factor viewer, who propels our success. we always keep you in mind when we're putting this program together each day and executing it on the air. we don't pander. you know that. but we are aware that you are watching. respecting people loyal to you is a good thing. and that is it for us tonight. please check it out. "the factor" website different than o'reilly.com. name and town if you wish to opine and here is another word of the day, tome, is the first one. please know impiety when writing to "the factor." it's a little delicate.
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again, thanks for watching us tonight. please remember, the spin stops right here. definitely looking out for you. breaking tonight, donald trump under fire at this moment for an unbelievable shot at an hispanic judge hearing the fraud case for him. first, a no-holds bar preview. good evening and welcome to a busy "kelly file." good evening. i'm megyn kelly. building over this past week in culminating today the two front-runners fiercely attacking the other's qualifications to be the next commander in chief. just hours ago in a highly anticipated speech in california, mrs. clinton delivering a nearly 40-minute