tv The Five FOX News June 29, 2016 2:00pm-3:01pm PDT
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in the last selveral years of people -- >> we have a long ways to go. >> we got them before they did it. >> long ways to go. senator, so good to see you. >> thank you, trish. >> i will see you all tomorrow on the "intelligence report" on fox business at 2:00 p.m. eastern. i'm greg gutfeld with kimberly gill foild, juan williams, and dana perino. "the five." as another terror attack strikes we see the same response. we need to do more. but wait, what about our freedoms? then the white house pivots to climate change. what we don't hear is let's ban bombs. it's a telling absence when explosives are used, the media easily labels the act terror, but if it's guns, horror is replaced by attacks against self-protection. which leads then to the endless debate that pits safety against
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freedom. does more security mean less freedom? hell, no. look at somalia. an unsecure country also lacking in freedom. you can do anything you want in somalia, but so can everyone else. you can be raped, kidnapped, killed. if liberty and security were contrary, somalia would be the freest place on earth since it has no security. and those states then become threats to others because the bad guys there can ship evil elsewhere. liberty and security don't spar. they strengthen each other. if i'm going to concert where they frisk everyone, does that inhabit my freedom? if there are no security measures, then i won't go so that narrows my choices and freedoms. if you create a secure event next to a nonsecure event, where would you take your kids? it's an easy question. hand wringing over a false conflict blocks our ability to think straight, by not hardening our soft targets for fear of changing who we are. it's like not having a smoke
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alarm because it ruins the look of a den. it's a decision you'll live to regret when it goes up in smoke. >> i think it's time for a montage of people who believe what happened in istanbul, whether it's terror or what we should do about it, it's obama, it's gorka, it's john kerry, michael mccaul. let's roll this. >> it's an indication of how little these vicious organizations have to offer that's beyond killing innocents. they are continually losing ground. they're going to be defeated in syria. they're going to be defeated in iraq. they are going to be on the run wherever they hide. >> they have been explicit in the publications in english, we are going to take the fight to jihadis where there are high concentrations on unarmed civilians. that is right here on u.s. soil. >> it has been more than one year since daesh has actually launched a full-scale military
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offensive. yes, withdryou can bomb and air you can blow yourself up. that's the tragedy. if you're desperate and you know you're losing and you know you want to give up your life, then obviously you can do some harm. >> to say they're on the run absolutely defies reality. they're expanding beyond the caliphate now into northern africa so they are not on the run, they're on the rise. >> dana, care to respond on any part of that montage? >> i think it's true that president obama, the goldilocks effect. he's too cool, no drama. he would say the right, donald trump, is too hot. maybe there's a way to get in the middle on this. i think president obama and his team have been using the same language for several years. they're always saying that isis is on the run or jv or under, you know, fleeing from isis, but they're not. maybe that's true in territory. they talk a lot about tactics,
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but there's little about strategy. and i think that the next president, whoever it is, is going to inherit a huge problem. the question has to be put to both of them, both the candidates, what precisely are you willing to do to change this narrative? we get the exact same commentary every time. the other thing i would add, you didn't include cia director brennan who when it comes to isis, he testified in front of congress i think last week and said we have a very long way to go. >> i didn't make the montage. it wasn't my fault. >> you should consult me. >> i should. >> eric, president obama expressed sympathy to the turkish people then went on to address climate change. that was probably preplanned. it's always after a terror attack they can't let go over the climate change argument. >> earlier, somewhere around 12:30 today, the initial address where all three of them came out, i think it was just nieto and obama if i'm not mistaken. he did 90 seconds on what happened in turkey baseically
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saying we're with the people of turkey and will do whatever it takes to make this stop. nothing specific. then he said on a happier note, and started talking about things the u.s. and mexico and climate change, on a happier note? >> right. >> the first thing you say is -- 90 seconds, on a happier note? here's what we have. on one hand, you have president obama saying, oh, look, we took fallujah back, we must be winning the war against the jv team, isis, and kerry saying they're on the run. simultaneously, the entire intel community, john brennan you talk about at the cia says they're not on the run. thousands of fighters ready to kill westerners. james comey says they're here. we have active investigations on the homeland. isis is here. and you still have mccaul who chairs the homeland security committee says, they're on the rise, they're not on the run. so intel is telling us one thing, the white house is telling us completely different. if the white house would admit that intel is right and they've been wrong, we might all be on the same page and make some decisions on strategy that can
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kill them. but this bifurcation, it's terrible for -- america's watching going, well, are they on the run? are we beating -- it feels like president obama is telling us they are but everyone that? the know, information, says the opposite. >> well, it's just shameful, total gross incompetence. honestly, might as well be playing for the other team because when you have those intelligence reports, you're privy to all of it. you know the truth yet you go out and lie repeatedly to the american people. no one should feel more safe under these circumstances given the cold, stark reality that isis is not on the run. when you see them do a high-profile attack like this, in fact, right in the face of turkey ander erdogan who soft peddled this. the u.s. asked him to close the borders off to isis. isis able to trade and sell oil back and forth which is a huge problem. you need to choke hold them, choke out the money, cut off the supply routes and stop allowing
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terror and jihad to proliferate. this is problem. we should be in trouble with his own people. so should president obama. this cannot continue. >> do you think, juan, president obama's response is to, in a sense, by playing it down, is t it feels like if he expresses more emotion about it, it helps the terrorists? isn't that kind of the way he always responds? >> i think that's way he thinks. >> yeah. >> i do think that's the way he thinks. let me just begin by responding, saying, i guess you want everyone to have explosives now. >> guns. >> no, no, explosives. you said because people say if it's not guns, you can't protect -- oh, but if it's explosives, no one brings up that argument. >> right. >> you can't buy explosives willy-nilly. >> they are illegal. >> they are illegal. >> they're illegal. >> i agree. so it's not the same as guns. let me just come to eric. >> that's not what i said. >> okay. eric, lets me just say in terms of the intelligence, the intelligence community is saying that in terms of the social media, in terms of the ideology,
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it's not being stopped. that's what they're saying. >> come on, juan. social media ideology? >> yes. >> that's how it's spreaded. >> active investigations in the u.s. -- >> no, what we're -- >> active investigations into the -- >> social media. >> often lone wolf type of characters. >> let him finish. >> mccaul, talking about social media. >> they're talking about the spread of this ideology and how it's so hard to tamp it down. what they're saying to you is, in fact, we are doing a lot. and that's also in response to greg. we are doing a lot. we put additional forces on the ground. we have recaptured territory. if it was the matter of a battle, the united states is winning. >> mccaul say they're on the rise. >> in on the rise in terms of recruiting people who do those horrible things -- >> how about this? they're on the rise killing people, too. >> who's arguing that? >> look at the numbers in the last month. >> you're telling me it's all about social media. i'm telling you it's about body counts. dana made a rational request. let's talk about strategy.
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how to do we stop it? you say, oh, the intelligence community says it's growing. yes, the ideology is not stopping. it's a malignant cancer. in terms of what's happening on battlefield, united states is winning. >> reason why it's going up -- >> tell that to the people that are dead in orlando. 49. >> what's happening -- why is it happening now? it's ramadan. i mean, at least during lent, you give up bad things. but islamists, they -- >> thank you very much. >> can we shorten ramadan, please? i mean, my goodness, islam -- >> a minute. >> yeah. islamists are using that -- that's their excuse, dana. right? people are putting -- >> well, it's a motivator. >> people are heightening risk everywhere because of this. >> it's one of the motivators so if you go to a radical mosque, then you will have an imam who will tell you during the holy month of ramadan, it would be helpful to cause if you carry out one of these attacks. i think the administration runs a risk trying to sort of bury it because if you are a student of
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the administration, and look back five years ago, this all -- i think can all be traced back to that decision by president obama to not enforce the red line against assad. one of the reasons that erdogan did not be as cooperative on the turkish border is because he doesn't want assad there. we didn't help him with that. he was like, fine, you deal with it. now we have the growth of isis, 400,000 innocent sieve ville wrap civilians killed in europe. a situation where the cancer that isis is not being addressed at its source or being attacked by multiple angles. i know they're doing a lot. we're trying lots of things. we're not doing enough to keep ahead of it. >> can i point one thing out? president obama's theory has been not tick off radical muslims by calling them radical islamists. >> that's not right. we don't care an radical muslims. we're trying to eradicate
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radical muslims. >> what we're seeing -- >> most of them are not radical islamists. >> you can't say it fwauz becau fears it will insight more violence and terror. >> why alienate our allies and people we need to fight the radical crazy guys -- >> if he doesn't differentiate, it's lending -- >> what do you mean by that? >> he doesn't say radical islam. >> he does. >> he just says terrorists. it's this amorphous thing that bleeds in, he should be the one who says it's dimpbfferent. >> kimberly and dana point out that turkey has been -- it's a pipeline. literal pipeline. they're picking up oil in iraq. they're driving it through -- they're trucking it right across the border. >> i agree. >> turkey's going, okay, i'm fwo going to long the other way. they're buying it. >> yeah, they're buying it. >> no one has been cracking down. if anyone's been accommodating to isis, it's been turkey. look what happens, they gt blown up, a terrorist attack. >> 165 dead in turkey.
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now total. >> it's false and wrong. >> i don't think they're accommodating, as dana out earlier, they don't want assad and a syrian ray swreegim force in that region and they also have trouble with the kurds as you well know. >> doesn't mean they have to buy the oil. >> they, remember, when the russians came in, in support of assad, guess what, the turks took out the plane. remember, they apologized for that the other day. >> you can still stop the purchases. if you don't want to stop the border, anyone that's caught buying oil from isis goes away. >> you can't say that the turkish people in the government have been friends to isis. that's not true. >> kimberly -- >> the problem is they're complicit, you're buying the oil, that has nothing to do with whether or not they were agreeing to listen to the u.s. that's the problem. it's helping -- >> how am i disagreeing you? i'm saying they should not allow that oil to be sold. >> that's a huge problem because it's funding isis. >> allowing the oil to be sold
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within their country. they're friendly to isis. >> i tell you, isis does not think the turkish government -- let's put it in their terms. i know the turkish government doesn't think of isis as their friends. they're simply doing business. >> isis has access to all the hospitals in turkey to treat their wounded jihad fighters. you know what, i think somebody's learning a lesson from this and it's sad because it's more blood spilled out of ignorance and making a soft target even softer. so, you know, turkey's got to knock it off. coming up, hillary is apparently wooing trump supporters. could clinton's strategy be a sign she's nervous about the tightening race? details ahead. i have asthma...
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♪ despite multiple scandals on the campaign trail, donald trump is closing the gap on hillary clinton. the presidential rivals are at a very tight race as we get closer to the conventions this summer. the latest quinnipiac university poll has the candidates virtually tied 42% to 40%. perhaps clinton is feeling the heat because it seems like she's now making a play for trump's supporters. >> i am sympathetic to a lot of the people attracted by trump's message who are feeling really left out and left behind.
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they have lost faith in their government, in the economy, certainly in politics and most other institutions. >> okay. so obviously a play there. by the way, dana, i think from a communications perspective, a smart one to try to say, let me try and get all the people that are super on the trump train. >> well, it would be -- >> to not try to court them. >> it would be if she were consistent but it's not. last week she was talking about the economy, said she was railing against republicans. there's tape now. so we know everything that's going on at all times. >> not fooling anybody. >> i think she has a funny way of showing she wants to get disaffected republican voters to vote for her. i'm not saying there won't be some people who decide to and actually a couple already announced they will. i think she has a funny way of doing that. chris stirewalt in the halftime report he puts out, the digital politics editor here, he said he thinks hillary clinton is the worst democratic candidate since michael dukakis. >> that's saying something. >> i think that's one of the reasons you say the state polls are tighter than the national
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polls. national polls show a big gap. in the battleground states, ones we know of that we traditionally think of on that map as the ones you look on, look for, that it's just up in the air. there's lots of complaints about the state-by-state polls because there are not as many of them, not as consistent or as good. there is something hillary clinton is going to get on tuesday, next week, july 5th, that will be a new thing for her on the trail. >> new pantsuit? >> no. >> in a way. president barack obama will join her in north carolina for the first time and he will be campaigning hard for her. i guess he'll have to see how that goes, but north carolina ster certainly one of those swing states. >> i think he's extra motivated because he's quite disturbed with the success, measure of trump's campaign so far. what do you make of this? hillary is pandering, answers with inconsistent sames, however, to try to get trump supporters. >> right. this poll -- the last poll i think had two ago was 13-point lead for clinton. the last poll a five-point lead for clinton.
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this encompassed the brexit part of it. fox news will have a post-brexit poll. it's within the margin of error right now. also something to consider, so sanders got about 40% of the democrat vote in the primaries. right? she got 60%. he got 40%. tighter than not, not the delegates but the actual votes. 25% of sanders voters said they could never, ever vote for hillary clinton. right? 40%, times 25%, that's 10% of democrats that are available to donald trump if he can convince them to make that switch. 10% of democrats would swing the vote, would be a win for donald trump. would be a republican win in an election. >> yeah. so that's a great opportunity to try and -- >> opportunity is there. >> -- connect and get them on your side and what we've seen that's worked very well, juan, for donald trump, for his campaign, is really kind of, like, baking in his supporters. he's able to get them and they remain very loyal to him, committed to the point where no
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matter what may come up in the press cycle, they're steady. >> yeah. i think, in fact, there was a longheaded way of viewing the poll numbers during the primaries, people said there's a ceiling for donald trump, in fact, it turned out to be a floor for donald trump then we saw him pushing past 30% and upward. especially in those final primaries when he had fewer opponents. but i think the key thing to remember here is nathat what we see already is a very much consolidation of the democratic vote happening very quickly. in other words, this is faster than what happened with when the contest was between barack obama and hillary clinton and remember, clinton supporters, many of them said exactly what some of the sanders supporters said as quoted by eric, you know, we could never support that guy, hillary's our k candidate. now in this case, the bernie sanders people are coming over in rapid succession to say we are for hillary and i would say one of them, the leading one, is bernie sanders who says now he plans to vote for hillary clinton. >> didn't even mention her --
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>> that's fine. >> in "the new york times," didn't even mention hillary clinton. >> that's a love affair i want no part of it. >> i'm just saying, he has said this. i think you see the movement. i think it's, no question, about the direction. i would say this, i think the big news recently has been trump flip-flopping on his ban on muslims. i wonder what's going on there. oh, gee, maybe he's pandering? i don't know. >> oh, my god. juan, juan, juan. we don't have time for that but we do -- >> yeah, why should we talk about that? >> i got to get him in. >> it should be -- it should be a walk in the park. it should be a walk in the park for republicans because hillary is about as popular as food poisoning. this is where i got to rain on the trump train. nate silver is giving clinton 80% probable of ility of beatin donald trump. if you look at larry savatos, electoral map, it's like a
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runover smurf, like a lot of blue and a little bit of red, right now, it's kind of grim there for trump. that could just mean trump is going to get the popular vote, maybe, but hillary's still going to clean his clock with the electoral vote. so that's -- >> those two guys were wrong, trump, the whole way through. >> nate silver was on fire the last election cycle. >> yeah, yeah. >> got 50 out of 50 states i think in the presidential. but he -- >> this is a different race. >> oh, by the way, sabato, excellent record for six general elections. >> not primary, though. >> look, i was wrong, you were right. this is a different race. >> unlike anything else we've seen before. you can't change the channel. keep it on fox. you never know what's going to happen. directly ahead the headaches intensify for the upcoming olympics in rio, including recession, athletes dropping out and zika fears. are the summer games in brazil doomed in details next. (vo) stank face.
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welcome back. are the olympics in rio headed for disaster? with just five weeks until the 2016 summer games begin, host country brazil is experiencing an avalanche of turmoil. police in rio have this alarming greeting for tourists arriving at the airport. a sign that says, "welcome to hell." why? well, because brazilian emergency responders are protesting unpaid wages. even rio's governor warns the games could become a, quote, failure, as the olympic site faces recession, political unrest, high crime, oh my gosh, and zika fears. meanwhile, athletes are dropping out like flies. one of them golfing sensation rory mcilroy defends skipping rio over zika concerns. >> i've said to people, i have four olympic games a year, you know, that's my, you know,
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that's my pinnacle, that's what i play for, that's what i'll be remembered for. >> i don't think it's embarra embarrassing for the game because most other athletes dream their whole lives of competing in the olympics, winning an olympic gold. and we haven't. we haven't. >> you know, this is interesting to me because serena william, the tennis star, kimberly, says it's a shame the athletes aren't going go, this is an international competition, everybody should be honored to represent their country. >> what an amazing, tremendous opportunity. see the difference of somebody like rory mcilroy, the star of ireland, he's like, i play in what he considers to be four olympic games meaning in the golf matches. >> the masters. >> yeah. throughout the year. it's unfortunate, you'd like to see the best in their field participate and compete. people have worked their whole lives for this one moment -- >> eric, is the shaming of athletes limg s legitimate?
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>> i love the idea of pro athletes in the olympics. tennis, basketball, those are pros, they represent america. i want the best athletes that we have even if they're pros there, i want to beat the rest of the world. that said, gymnastics, synchronizing swim, they don't have that fortune. when a guy like rory mcilr tennis star or basketball star saying i'm not going over there, that's a great opportunity for somebody else. they chose not to do it, that's fantast fantastic. another young amateur to represent the country. i think it's great. brazil, very quickly, they're in deep trouble. they're in a massive, massive recession. they were hoping the olympic games would save this. >> dana, the world health organization says, oh, by, you know, the olympics starts, it will be colder in rio because that's the southern hemisphere, it's winter so there will be less mosquitos, less zika virus, so should i buy the ticket? >> i get my worst mosquito bites
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in september or october. >> i was trying to help. >> i think this is a lesson for the international olympic committee. which is always biased against americans. remember president obama went over to switzerland -- was it switzerla switzerland? he maded presentation. he was trying to bring that home to chicago. that would have been this year. the olympic committee is so against americans, they want to be so politically correct they send it to a place like rio. they didn't know about the zika virus, but all the other problems like eric mentioned. the crew team the other day rowing down the river ran into a couch. it's not a good thing. >> hey, but didn't they say the same thing about -- >> maybe one of them needed a couch. >> didn't they say sochi was going to be a disaster? didn't turn out -- >> in the intro you said the athletes were dropping out because of flies. what is worse, rio or chicago? a mosquito or get shot?
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>> you're mr. guns. >> i am, but not by gangs. here's the consequence, what's happening is the consequence of the organic versus chemical fallacy. the zika virus could have been wiped out by eliminates mosquitos through the use of ddt, got rid of malaria, came up with the argument it affected the thinness of bird shell eggs, the shell of their eggs so they banned it. millions died from malaria because of this. what you're seeing is the consequences of not using ddt to kill mosquitos. that's the mistake. >> can i add that's the exact same reason the democrats are holding up zika virus bill in the senate right now? because of environmental concerns. >> crazy. >> i thought they were -- >> other mosquito-born illnesses like west nile. >> right, exactly. >> i don't know. >> i'm going to watch, though. i think you'll watch, too, right? >> yep. next, my good friend, my fellow co-host, mr. eric bolling just wrote his first book. it's terrific. "wake up america." eric is going to give you a special preview of what's
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welcome back. this is a very special week for me because my first book came out yesterday. "wake up america." it warns about the radical left socialist agenda and gives the readers a roadmap on how to take our country back. i'm extremeextremely, extremelyd to share some of what's inside this book with you. the america we live in today isn't the america i grew up in. >> it's our job to rein in the excesses of capitalism so it doesn't run amok. >> break up the big banks. break them up. >> have got to go, hey, hey. >> we need a political revolution.
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>> if you got a business, you didn't build that. somebody else made that happen. >> i dedicate "wake up america" to you, mr. president, to stop you and your fellow big government gods from achieving the socialist utopia you seek. i was born and raised poor on the northwest side of chicago to working-class parents who did everything they could to make a better life for my sister and me. i was taught hard work would put me on the path to prosperity. it did. i started off small selling lemonade and later mowing lawns and shoveling snow. after college, i was drafted by the pittsburgh pirates and then when an injury put an end to my baseball ambitions, i answered the big leagues of capitalism trading stocks on wall street. that eventually led to my rewarding tv career. i've been truly blessed. it's 5:00 in new york city. this is sq"the five."
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everyone, i'm eric bolling. the radical left wants to punish those like me who worked hard to get what we have. >> this country does best ben everybody gets a fair shot. everybody's doing their fair share. >> when everyone's contributing their fair share, america has always grown. >> give everybody economic opportunity in america. >> capitalism's out. socialism's in. >> this system of capitalism has proven itself illegitimate. >> america's millennials think everything should be provided by the government for free. where'd they get that idea? >> i'm going to do everything i can to make sure that the wealthy pay for debt-free tuition, for childcare. >> 12 weeks of paid family leave. colleges and university should be tuition-free. >> i wrote "wake up america" to help us fight back. how do we do it? remembering the values, the
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virtues that make us the greatest nation on earth. nine, all essential to my personal success. grit. when americans get knocked down, we get back up. profit. it's a dirty word for the left, but the motive for profit makes people work harder, innovate, take risks and succeed. manliness. the rugged spirit that enabled our pioneers to carve america out of the wilderness. thrift. living within your means and staying out of debt. the less answer to every problem is to spend more money. that's why the country is almost $20 trillion in the hole. individuality. think, speak and believe freely. dominion. the left places more importance on the rights of trees today than people. nature is under the control of humanity, not the other way around. merit. succeed on your own skills and talents, not entitlements from a nanny state. pride. have love of country. we're the greatest nation on
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earth with the greatest military in the world. and always remember, freedom is not free. and finally, providence. belief in something bigger than self. i believe rights come from god, not government. these nine virtues are a roadmap back to american exceptionalism. i came from nothing, took some risks and made a life for myself and my family in a way that could only happen in america. please don't let the radical left destroy your american te . dream. now is the time to wake up, america. >> i just want to say a special thank you to susan who does those packages. they're fantastic. thank you to the producers for putting that together. thank you, everybody. i really did dedicate the book to president obama. >> you sent him one? >> i'm going to sign this one, says, mr. president, thanks for making this book so easy to write. i'm going to sign it right here. >> you know the address. >> 1600 pennsylvania avenue.
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see if he gets it. >> i see your business card's in there, too. >> my business card. in case he wants to -- i have some great authors at the table. i'm following in all your footsteps. >> wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, you have great authors on the back of the book. >> oh, yeah. bill o'reilly, sean hannity, donald trump, mark cuban, mark levin. >> that's kind of the spectrum. >> i got to say congratulations first of all. >> thank you. >> i just wonder about manliness. what do i have to do? what can i do? >> not wear that tie. >> oh. oh, yeah. coming from a real man over there. >> i did a radio hit this morning on don imus' radio show. beforehand i'm listening on iheart, whatever the radio app is. i heard one say i'm not going read that book. i'm like, why aren't you going to read the book? he's just, i'm not going to read. the first thing i say, connell, read the manliness first. >> chapter three. >> manliness doesn't have to do with which restroom you choose
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to use. has everything to do with a spirit. a rugged spirit. it could be a female and be manly margaret thatcher -- >> oh my god. what's happening here? >> i think every -- >> take it. >> every successful female, especially at this table, can be manly. is that bad? >> kimberly, you can be manly. >> who knew? >> yeah, but stay out of my restroom. >> bruce jenner became womanly. >> i try to keep people out of my restroom. >> any words of advice? >> did you enjoy writing it? first book is the hardest. >> i swear to god it was the easiest part of the process. writing it was the easiest -- the edits, the hey, you should, you know, concentrate more on this, i put personal stories in there, history as well, and most of it's politics. >> yeah. so, yes. >> the other stuff is harder. >> there's something -- sometimes when your book comes out, there's some sort of serendipitous use event that
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happened. i was laughing because hillary clinton tweeted one of her new poll cities is free wi-fi for everybody is at train stations, bus stops, bus stations, and the airports. right in what you're talking about. >> more giveaways. k.g.? >> make it easier to steal people's information, easier for terrorists to operate over wi-fi and detonate bombs. okay. sorry. congratulations, eric. very, very exciting. >> forget about obama. did trump say anything? >> he wrote on the back of the book, wrote, "wake up america" is a huge book that will help make america great again. i have to go. i hope to be as successful as you guys. >> congrats. well done. directly ahead, left-leaning lawmakers are apparently trying to get in the way of you enjoying cool stuff like ride-sharing companies like uber and lyft. could the regulatory assault backfire? details next.
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often, popular services leading to an explosion of black market ride sharing they're calling it. chicago and new york state have giving it the okay, but with a lot of restrictions. and greg, we've been trying to do this for a while, but you think blocking the sharing economy is a terrible idea. sthz is one of the greatest capitalistic advances of long time and liberals have been telling us how cold capitalism is, you're always working for man. here you get this advance, where uber destroys that reality, where you become your own boss, where your family becomes a family business. where the daughter can drive in the daytime, you can drive at night. here's a thought experiment. remember the tv show "taxi?" the meanest, cheapest character was hlieuy, the dispatcher. imagine the show with him gone. they removed the taxi
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dispatcher. so you can make your own hours. make your own money. this is huge. the liberals should be behind this. >> but oddly enough they're not. you're really crushing people's entrepreneurial spirit. this is tying their hands behind their back. >> one of the things that's happening is you have laws and regulatory regimes that are not keeping up with technology. in new york, you have the unions being mad about uber because there's a taxi union. then you have hoteliers that have to pay a hotel tax, and people that have air b&b don't have that, so they're trying to make it evened out but they're making it worse. >> that's because they love the nanny state. with uber, they say they can't control who's driving what kind
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of car. they want massive government control over everything, and therein lies the problem with uber and air b&b. also, it's competition to what the standard taxis and hotels, so they hate that, too. they don't like competition, free market. >> they had to evolve juan, because now the taxis have services now where you can call ahead and make sure you reserve a taxi. they are trying to sort of innovate them southeaselvethems. >> historically, they have argued this regulation acts to inhibit poor people, because medallions are expensive, and they are what you have to have and it's an initial cost before you can go into the cab driving business. >> due agree? >> wait a second. in a city like chicago, you have people renting their apartments
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out under air b&b, and it drives up rent, it disrupts communities. if it was in my neighborhood and people are bringing all these crazy people that want to party -- >> what does that sound like? >> what do you mean? >> i don't know, all these people moving into my neighborhood. >> i wasn't talking in racial terms. >> i said what does it sound like if >> i'm talking about people who want to party? [ overlapping speakers ] food for thought is next. house calls. >> absolutely. >> uber massage. [ laughter ]
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♪ americans are buying more and more of everything online. and so many businesses rely on the us postal service to get it there. because when you ship with us, your business becomes our business. that's why we make more ecommerce deliveries to homes than anyone else in the country. the us postal service. priority: you built a sandcastle?id? ha, no, i switched to geico and got more. more?
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24/7 access online, on the phone or with the geico app. that is more. go get some mud... all that "more" has to be why they're the second-largest auto insurer. everybody likes more. mhm, i think so. geico. expect great savings and a whole lot more. time for one more thing. i'm going to kick it off with a stat. if you've been involved in conservative politics over the past ten years, you probably knew the name mike flynn. you either saw his byline, and i think he was the first editor at breitbart's big hollywood. he was a very astute writer and a good person to drink with. he passed away unexpectedly last week. he was young, 48. he's just a very funny, smart person. thoughts go out to his family
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and just a shock. >> wow, god bless him. that's way too soon. >> yep. >> k.g.? >> the justice department still investigating hillary clinton for possible criminal wrongdoing regarding her private e-mail server. so why would the woman in charge of that investigation meet privately with clinton's husband? well, it happened on monday. here's attorney general loretta lynch. >> i did see president clinton at the phoenix airport. as i was leaving and he spoke to myself and my husband on the plane. our conversation was a great deal about his grandchildren. it was primarily social and about our travels. there was no discussion of any matter pending before the department. >> fox is told the meeting was not previously scheduled and was described as a "crossing of paths." tomorrow and friday at 2:00 p.m. eastern, i'm filling in for gretchen carlson.
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and tomorrow, it is an all-star lineup with john mccain, sean hannity, greta, and eric trump. >> dana, are you next? >> i am. you know when you go to a bookstore and they don't have coff coffee, beer and wine and you want to leave? now they're going to add like a full restaurant, all the wine, beer you can drink, greg, and then there's books. i love this story, because when peter and i met on the airplane and he lived in england, i lived in d.c., he came over to the states about nine times. he would arrive at 6:00 on a friday night and take me to cramer books and i could buy anything i wanted. and then we went to dipper there. so the couple that reads together stays together. >> probably a cool hookup place for singles. >> they can change the name to
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bar and nobles. juan? >> so last night i went to the yankees' game with bill o'reilly. he works here. yankees aren't doing so good, with you we had a splendid time. you'll see some pictures. there i am. and jesse watters. but bill and i were talking about july fourth and swimming. there was a story here in new york about a man who pulled his kids out of a riptide, then had a heart attack when he got back to shore. o'reilly told me once he was pulled out by a tide and had to just tread water for 45 minutes before anyone realized he's not there and come rescue him. so this july fourth, as we get into the pool or the ocean -- >> hot tub. >> take care, be wise. thank you. >> spin zone. >> that's why you have to have the buddy system. >> some great news for fox news on our 20th year. number one in primetime.
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as far as cable news goes, 58 quarters number one. this year is a 23% gain in audience. congratulations. >> "special report" is up next. this is a fox news alert. good evening. i'm bret baier. donald trump's numbers are slipping a bit following a campaign shakeup this month, as the gop presumptive nominee tries to redirect his campaign towards a win in november. the latest fox news poll and the first national poll completely post brexit vote shows that donald trump is six points behind hillary clinton in the head-to-head matchup. and after pulling ahead of clinton in may, his numbers have slipped seven points from 45% to 38%. when it comes to party unity, clinton does well with 83% of democrats saying they support her. nearly three quarters
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