tv The O Reilly Factor FOX News July 11, 2016 5:00pm-6:01pm PDT
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nation. that's my off-the-record comment tonight. we will see you tomorrow at 7:00 p.m. eastern. good night. o'reilly factor is next. ♪ ♪ o'reilly factor is on. tonight: >> if you are a normal, white american, truth is, you don't understand being black in america. >> the racial divide in america growing and some are exploiting the hatred. tonight, charles krauthammer and i will debate the issue. >> i love my son with all my heart. i hate what he did. >> the parents of the dallas terrorist speak out. a factor cable news excompliewive. you will hear some of what they had to say. >> tell me what happened with the hillary clinton email situation. >> i have no idea. >> everyone needs to stick to the facts and stop digging up dirt on each other. >> also ahead, jesse watters asking the folk what is they think about the hillary
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clinton email fiasco even as a new abc news poll not good news for secretary clinton. >> 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. the responsibility that comes with protests. that is the subject of this evening's talking points memo. if you have been watching legends and lives the patriots. can you see how effective the protests against the british were in the american colonies. in fact, protests led directly to the freedoms we have today. the civil rights marches led by dr. martin luther king jr. a passivist were also very effective in mobilizing public opinion against jim crowe laws and bias in general. dr. king got a lot of accomplishments before he was assassinated. now, we have another protest situation in the u.s.a.
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whereby many african-americans believe that law enforcement works actively against them. >> if you are a normal white american, the truth is you don't understand being black in america and you instinctively underestimate the level of discrimination and the level of additional risk. >> mr. gingrich is essentially correct. skin color is a very personal situation. every one of my black friends has felt diminished at times because of their complexes, it's wrong. there is no excuse for it, but it happens in every country. enter american law enforcement which is now under seeing for allegedly treating black americans more harshly than white americans. talking points does not believe, does not believe there is a designed campaign of prejudice. what is happening here is cause and effect. bylaws black americans commit far more crimes
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proportionately than whites or other ethnic groups they come into police more often that context sometimes turns volatile. however the key stat in the u.s.a. is that less than 2% of all police civilian interactions result in any kind of physical confrontation. that's extremely low. the issue of incarceration, again, deals with crime. the inner city drug traffic and violence that comes along with that has put american police agencies and law abiding citizens in a dangerous place. it's no surprise that black and hispanic drug traffickers are arrested and incarcerated. no surprise. their numbers are greater proportionally that be white drug traffickers. now, back to the protests. the key group driving violence on the streets is black lives matter. after five police officers were killed in dallas, a black lives matter organizer sir major said this
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according to the associated press. quote: black lives matter doesn't condone shooting law enforcement, but i have to be honest, i understand why it was done. i don't encourage it i don't condone it. i don't justify it. but i understand. had now, that's a provocative statement in the extreme. understanding terrorism? which is what happened in dallas terrorism. it's not difficult. you get an evil human being who kills people. a-year-old understands that maejor says he doesn't condone it what's the point of understanding it. >> a ridiculous, irresponsible statement. we have come to expect that kind of thing from black lives matter which chanted about police here in new york city, pigs in a blanket, fry them like bacon. unfortunately president obama does not seem to understand the vitriol. in a movement like black lives matter, there is always going to be some
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folks who say things that that are stupid or imprudent or overgeneralized or are harsh. and i don't think that you can hold well-meaning activists who are doing the right thing and peacefully protesting responsible for everything that is uttered at a protest. >> with all due respect to president obama, well-meaning activists do not associate themselves with a group that often commits violent acts and encouraging violence through irresponsible rhetoric. dr. king would not participate in a black lives matter protest. of course, a liberal american media, largely sympathetic to the street demonstrations, even if they do turn violent. how many more times are we going to have to see black lives matter protesters
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destroy stuff? how many more times? if you criticize the group you are branded a bigot by far left precincts. do you know shortly after the dallas police were murdered missouri shot. the police chief says an t. was assassination attempt. the accused shooter 31-year-old antonio taylor has a long rap sheet, is he a thug. in minnesota another police officer hit in the head by a concrete bring thrown by a protester on saturday night. you guessed it, the demonstration was organized by black lives matter. so, again, mr. president, you might want to back away from protesters who believe violence is acceptable. summing up, you want to protest? good. make sure you have your facts straight, and don't hurt anybody or destroy any thing. and that's the memo. now for the top story. reaction. joining us from radicalization charles krauthammer. first, do you believe that barack obama is sympathetic to the black lives matter group? >> i think he is sympathetic
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to what their purported aim. i think the mistake he makes is that he confers upon them the moral authority and purity, if you like, that we saw in the civil rights movement. the reason that king wouldn't have participated in that kind of activity is because he would have led it and he was able to instill the theory and practice of nonviolence. let's remember the difference in conditions between king's day and today. that was a time of official segregation, official discrimination. today we live in a completely changed world. largely as a result of king, that can makes the black-white divide very much more of a blur. as one example, look at the conditions in dallas. highly integrated police, this is not the 50's. this is not the south where it's white police and black communities. you have got the chief who
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is black. you have got the attorney general who is blackened and the president is black. so how are you going to divide this into a white/black issue if so many of the police, for example, in new york, a lot of other big cities are african-american. it just doesn't fit. that's not the model. and obama's mistake is to think that this is a repetition of the civil rights movement. >> see, i think that president obama's failure to condemn the black lives matter movement, all right, is a terrible mistake and has led to a black-white divide. i might point out and charles knows this but some viewers don't. at the time dr. king was protesting, there was a radical black movement led by huey newton, the black panthers. they were racing around all over the place. they were causing a lot of trouble. they were shooting cops. it was very violent. dr. king repudiated that directly. directly repudiated all of that. yet, now, we have now the black lives matter aren't as
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bad as those -- the black panthers but they do associate with the new black panthers. i mean, you know, they are in that group. now, white people as speaker gingrich pointed out, they don't understand and i agree with that. i mean, i want to know if you agree that you we can't put ourselves in the shoes of black americans who when they walk into a store they have eyes on them. it's and i understand that. so, but, if you run with that, if that becomes your whole modus operandi, then we are never going to heal this. >> and we're never going to have equal justice. you can't have a different set of rules because different communities have different experiences. that's a fact in a multicultural, multiracial, multilingual society. i don't know what it's like to be a newly arrived hispanic immigrant or american indian living on a reservation. yet, we try to to pass laws
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that apply equally. look, we are also making tremendously unwarranted assumptions. there is a study that came out of harvard today by a professor rolland fryer, a professor of economics of harvard that had a very surprising result. he studied the use of force, deadly force shootings of block americans by police. and he compared it to white americans. and he found that for black americans, the number is lower. he called it. it's in the "new york times" of all places, the most surprising result of my career. answered he incidentally, the professor is african-american. now, it turns out that other elements of the use of force handcuffing, pushing up against the wall is somewhat higher among african-americans. but shooting, which everybody assumes is higher among african-americans, it is not. >> it is low when compared to white americans. >> exactly. >> right. >> compared to but that's
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against all conventional wisdom. >> i got it. i have got to ask one more provocative question. it's very provocative but i have to ask it to charles. there comes a point when police officers have had enough of disrespect, certain neighborhoods where they walk in. and the dallas police chief said, hey, we are north getting any back up here. i'm not saying it's a colored driven issue. i'm sure whites are disrespectful to police as well. there a simple tremendous amount of disrespect in certain black neighborhoods towards the police and the police react to it. >> they are human fks. and that causes a lot of this tension. >> i'm sure it is so. >> and the other point you indicated in your tog call points there is very disproportionately high rate of crime, shooting, murder, in the black community. and that's the reason why you get cops who are apprehensive and particularly when they have a sense that the
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authorities, the ones above them do not have their back, they feel even more put upon and likely to make mistakes or act out of pressure. >> they are more emotional. >> it doesn't help if at the top you get people who simply don't express sympathy with the cops, sympathy for their dilemma. >> president obama did that. to be fair, he was very sympathetic to american law enforcement. his big mistake and i have got to run, is that he has not said the black lives matter knock it off. no more disruption of property, no more over the top rhetoric. it doesn't help the country. >> hoping new agency does polling on black lives matter. meantime on foxbusiness.com we do have a new poll question. do you agree of black lives matter. very unscientific. we know how it is going to turn out. we want to see the plurality of it next on run down, terrorists speak out.
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personal story segment tonight. as you may know, the dallas terrorist make can a johnson -- micah johnson was killed by police after he wounded 9 police officers and killed 5 others. yesterday johnson's parents gave an interview. >> i don't know what to say to anybody to make anything better. i didn't see it coming. >> he was a good son. he was a good son. >> i love my son with all my heart. i hate what he did. >> joining us now from
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dallas, lawrence jones, a man who interviewed johnson's parents. he works for "the blaze." tell me about the family. we will start with the father. he seems like a regular american guy. he doesn't seem like anybody different from any of the rest of us. >> yeah, bill. the family was a regular family. they were god-fearing people. believed in god. a mixed family amongst different races. his stepmother was white. his mom was black and his dad was black, of course. and they just talked about how much they loved their son and how that this one day shouldn't define their son's legacy. >> of course it will. the army and he was in the army for a while, served in afghanistan. they said he was a troubled guy. i mean, we have gotten reports now. but the family didn't see him that way, correct? >> that's not true. the family didn't say he
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wasn't troubled. they did say that when he went to the military he was about patriotism and the constitution and he was let down in the military some way, some form or fashion. and he changed when he left the military. he became a loner. and he wasn't the same micah that entered in the military. he was let down by not only the military and the government but as well as the veterans administration. >> they d. they say how he was let down? what specifically. >> well, specifically, he had some injuries with his back and he continued to reach out to the veterans administration and the government telling them that he needed help, and they didn't help out. >> all right. >> he also said that they lied a lot. and he was against the lying going on within the military. >> he also had a beef against police that you talked to the family about. let's roll the tape on that. >> he didn't trust the police. >> he did not. >> no.
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>> like many in the black community. >> yeah. exactly. >> my son was sitting in the front of the store eating a sand witch. both of my sons. he was dropping off my youngest son, waiting on his father. the police was called because two suspicious black men were lurking by the store, a place where he went several times every week. the police pulled up, pulled him out of the vehicle questioning him why he was there. >> not an unusual story and certainly not a story that would lead to the level of violence that we witnessed at the hands of mr. johnson. i feel bad for the family. you know, obviously, the father, we saw how emotional but nothing anybody can do. the man -- >> well, bill, it goes back to a conversation that we need to have in america that many people are afraid of having. this relationship problem as it relates to the black
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community and the police. and it's something that is very uncomfortable but is very necessary. and my job was, as a commentator. i am not a journalist, was to give the family an opportunity to tell their story. i didn't reach out to them. they reached out to me. and i'm hoping that through this interview that we'll air wednesday that healing is brought to america and that we can prevent this from ever happening again. >> sure. and did you a nice job, in jones. we really appreciate it. >> thank you. >> the entire interview as mr. jones just mentioned with the family will run on wednesday on "the blaze." directly ahead the political ramifications of the racial divide in america. a look at the perjury charges, alleged charges against hillary clinton. we will talk with representative jason chaffetz upcoming.
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thinks that race issues have gotten worse since he has been in office. this is a tough issue because, you know, you don't want to get too political but today donald trump called himself the law and order candidate. when you look around and see what's happening. people want to know how things are going to get better. the lawlessness that the obama administration has promoted for seven and a half years now is not something i think that independent voters want and
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certainly not conservative voters. >> what do you mean lawlessness? what are you talking about? >> well, you discussed it in your previous segment about black lives matter. you have president obama not condemning the group. you had the dnc last summer not only not condemning it. >> he hasn't been a tough guy on it? >> right. exactly. >> we will have donald trump on tomorrow to talk about the racial divide, mary anne. if you were advising hillary clinton and maybe you are, what would you tell her to say about the situation, specifically? >> well, i think you've heard her talk consistently. >> yeah, it's been with all due respect to secretary clinton, it hasn't been memorable. isn't that kind? what she said about the situation has not been memorable. anybody can say yeah, we have to heal racial wounds and respect the police, anybody can say that. we're looking for specifics here. what would you tell her to say? >> well, have you not heard that from donald trump. >> and absolutely going to be on the grill tomorrow for it. >> well, exactly. there's the difference.
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what you have to look at, bill, is a little bit of a bigger picture here which is look at the latest fox poll. the election really reflects where the country is hillary clinton has a six point lead but that comes with a big racial and gender divide. her lead amongst african-american voters is 84 points over donald trump. donald trump has a 10-point lead over her with white voters. you start to see. >> you don't know what to tell hillary clinton about the racial divide. i mean, you are giving me fox news poll stats about hillary is more ahead in african-american. >> the dye is cast though. >> i'm looking for some kind of politician to rise up and say something to america that might actually work. what would you tell trump to say, katie? >> i think donald trump said what he want to do say today about being a law and order candidate. >> you go law and order on it. you go tough guy on it? >> let me finish real quickly. as i stated before, the country is sick of president obama and his justice
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department's idea of lawlessness and not enforcing the law in this country and now we are seeing the result of that blaming the police force has resulted. >> law situation at all. i don't. >> it is an enforcement law issue. let me make one more point. >> okay. >> when you take a look at the way the country has spun out of control and the chaos we are seeing, blaming the police first as the justice department and president obama has done on multiple occasions. >> i didn't hear president obama blame the police, katie. >> maybe not today, bill but in the past he has done it multiple times. >> give mary anne a you don't ay question, don't expect to be called on. admit it. >> in this case what hillary clinton has said, which is trying to bring people together get them to work. you may not like that. >>not memorable. it's cliche-ridden. >> the greatest speeches have been given by barack obama and others and here we are. it's not about words anymore, bill. it's about action and doing
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things. that's what people are frustrated by. we have all the speeches. we are here every couple weeks about people getting shot. nothing hasn't changed. governors need to act, mayors need to act. everybody needs to act. >> tell police not to shoot people in low level beefs? come on. >> bill, there needs to be -- you talked about this earlier there needs to be more resources and community policing. police need more help and african-americans and others. >> can't be imposed from washington. >> then why did the president today meet with law enforcement and ask them what more they needed? and they said we need more resources. >> i don't think obama is anti-law enforcement. >> right he is not. >> how you bring the issue to the american people. i have got to go, guys. i appreciate it very lively. tomorrow, as mentioned, we'll have donald trump here on the factor, talking about how he would heal the racial divide in america. it should be fascinating. plenty more ahead as the factor moves along this evening, new poll on the hillary clinton email
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fiasco. not good news for the secretary. some coming people are demanding the fbi look at her for alleged perjury. watters on what the folks know about the email deal. >> what did hillary do with the emails that got her in trouble? >> i really don't know. i don't care. but if she is the person she says she is supposed to be, she should have no problem coming clean with them, right? >> i don't know what that means but we will explore it further. we hope you stay tuned to those reports. asthma symptoms t 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 to help improve breathing for a full 24 hours. breo contains a type of medicine that increases the risk of death from asthma problems and may increase the risk of hospitalization in children and adolescents.
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floating around, donald trump may announce his vp selection this week. as you may know, i have suggested newt gingrich might be the west pick. joining us interest now from austin, texas, to analyze, karl rove. any predictions from you, mr. rove? >> well, look, this is a deeply personal process. so i have got to an idea ohio think it might be at the end of the day think about this. >> at the end of the day? >> yeah. go back a couple of weeks. think about all of the variations we have heard. he vibrated outsider. he has got at least two governors. one or two on this list is he looking at officer and business person. across the board. at the end of the day this is going.
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>> teived do you mean in the evening? after the sun goes down? what's when is he going to make his announcement? in the morning is not going to look good. >> i know you claim to be a simple man of metaphors, maybe a difficult thing for you. that means at the end of the process. snrl that is better than at the end of the day. who is your prediction? >> they are sort of bunched together. >> out with it. if i had to pick. i would pick governor pence of indiana. former member of congress and the member of the leadership. somewhat of an outsider. governor, successful state business person. just something about the personal chemistry when the men are together. >> he has certainly done a very good job in indiana. he is not an exciting kind of guy. he is not -- i just think that gingrich, get gingrich in that mix and is he going to mix it up. he gets a lot of people focused in. conservatives kind of like
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him. i don't know. pence would be an excellent guy in the sense that he knows how to run the state. he did very well. he understands the issues. i don't know if there is enough -- trump, you have got so much, you know high profile stuff there. >> one of the key things here is that what's ironic pence and gingrich has been in public life for a long time. gingrich is well known. one of the things and, look, you are right. likely to be gingrich. i'm just saying that pence is going to be a contender here. but one of the interesting things to me is vice presidents tend to be something new and different about them. al gore. 1988. >> people said wow, that's different. no president has ever been elected whose running mate is from the state next door. >> i think if you want new and different and this would
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cover the demographic weaknesses that the trump campaign should have omarosa should be the vp. woman, african-american, and she -- >> -- is she a registered republican? >> that doesn't matter. is he running on the populist ticket. >> wait a minute. wait a minute a last time the republicans or democrats nominate add running mate who wasn't a member of their party was in 1864 when abraham lincoln picked a war democrat named andrew johnson honchts was promptly impeached. >> threw through -- >> maybe you think omarosa is going to be it. i bet you it's not going to be her if you are willing to bet some money. >> no i have trump on tomorrow. i think you are right. either pence or gingrich. i think both of us could be embarrassed when he announces it. >> we probably will be. >> i hope it's at the end of the day when both you and i are asleep. when we come right back,
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congressman jason chaffetz demanding the fbi investigated hillary clinton for perjury before a congressional committee. watters on how much the folks really know about the email deal. those reports moments away. but i didn't really think it was going to really happen. after one week of chantix, i knew i could quit. along with support, chantix (varenicline) is proven to help people quit smoking. chantix definitely helped reduce my urge to smoke. some people had changes in behavior, thinking or mood, hostility, agitation, depressed mood and suicidal thoughts or actions while taking or after stopping chantix. some had seizures while taking chantix. if you have any of these, stop chantix and call your doctor right away. tell your doctor about any history of mental health problems, which could get worse or of seizures. don't take chantix if you've had a serious allergic or skin reaction to it. if you have these, stop chantix and call your doctor right away as some can be life-threatening. tell your doctor if you have heart or blood vessel problems, or develop new or worse symptoms. get medical help right away if you have symptoms of a heart attack or stroke.
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thanks for staying with us. i'm bill o'reilly. in the impact segment tonight, some republican congressman demanding the fbi investigate hillary clinton for perjury in front of the congressional committee when she explained the email deal. >> did the fbi investigate her statements under oath on this topic? >> not to my knowledge. i don't think there has been a referral from congress. >> do you need a referral from congress to investigate her statements under oath? >> sure do. >> you'll have one. >> new abc news/"the washington post" poll asks the folk dues approve o. disprove of fbi director comey's recommendation that hillary clinton should not be charged with a crime? 35% approve. 56% disprove. 9% don't know anything. joining us from washington is congressman jason chaffetz. so, i got a little -- when i saw that exchange last week, i said does he really need a referral?
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i don't think he needs a referral. he could have gone into that area and see if she had misstated stuff to you. could he not? >> yeah. you don't need a permission slip from congress to find out if somebody violated the law and it is against the law to provide false statements to congress. >> what was all that referral stuff? >> well, what he was very careful, the director comey said that she didn't lie to them. but, you know, the public comments are one area. but when you lie under oath, that's a whole another level. i was trying to get there because i want to do know if that went towards her intent. but to say they didn't even look at it, that was kind of ridiculous. >> i don't understand why he would do that. why wouldn't you investigate the whole totality of the controversy, the email controversy which includes secretary clinton's testimony in front of your committee? i don't understand why he would need a referral if he wants to get to the heart of the matter. do you? >> i have no rational explanation for it. >> all right. >> one of the most shocking things that came out of
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hearing. >> i thought it was shocking and i was disappointed in the director's statement there. you have sent a referral over. >> yes. >> now he has to take a look at whether she mislead your committee, correct? >> yes. as trey gowdy went down the list of all the public statement she made. they are very similar what she statemented under oath. the director has said those statements aren't true. >> she is going to say is he going to back her up. i didn't know at the time that i was misleading. this is the information that i thought was true at the time. and he even hinted that, comby. is he not going to come down with any -- is he not on or about bit of revelation came out of this up to 12 people who didn't have the requisite security clearance that the secretary gave that information to. so, during the hearing he said she might not have been sophisticated enough to know how technology email and
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servers work. >> even so, the thing that struck me about the investigation is i think secretary clinton should have been questioned by the fbi at the top of the investigation not two days before comey came out. don't you? >> well, it's a common investigative tactic to interview somebody at the beginning. do your investigation and then interview them at the end and see what sort of conflict there is. >> yeah. >> he laid it out what he did and the american public gets to make the decision. for me it would be a different conclusion. >> whether they care enough to vote against mrs. clinton, we don't know. but, in my opinion, he is probably going to talk to you guys a little bit. but it's going to be she didn't know at the time when she was misleading that she was misleading. [ laughter ] >> she is the secretary of state. she wasn't that final of wildlife. >> you know what i'm saying to you is true. it's not going to come back your way. >> i can't argue with you, bill.
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>> all right, congressman. thanks for coming on. >> thank you. >> watters on deck. what do the folks know, really know about the hillary clinton email deal? and then the factor tip of the day. what president obama should say in dallas tomorrow in the wake of the terrorism there. we'll be right back. [ tires screech ] ♪ flo: [ ghost voice ] oooo! [ laughs ] jaaaaamie, the name your price tool can show you coverage options to fit your budget. tell me something i don't know -- oh-- ohhh! she slimed me. which i probably should've seen coming. [ laughs ] for lower arch for relief often leads... here... here... or here. today, there's a new option.
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back of the book segment tonight, "watters world." while people like you that watch cable news and follow what's happening in your country, well know that hillary clinton email story, many americans who are less involved, i'm being nice, less involved and somewhat confused as jesse watters found out. ♪ ♪ >> you got mail ♪ >> tell me what happened with the hillary clinton
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email situation. >> i have no idea. >> i really don't know. i don't care. >> i think everybody is blowing that whole thing out of proportion. everyone needs to stop sticking to the facts and stop digging up dirt on each other. >> that goes without saying. >> what did hillary clinton do with her emails? >> she sent and received emails that anyone of her authority and power should know were classified were stated as classified. >> she should have been a little bit more careful with sending military information, whatever classified information. i was also a marine i had a top secret clearance. >> do you think you would have been treated the same way as a marine hillary was treated. >> absolutely not. i would have been probably a little bit more disciplined. >> thank you, sir, may i have another? >> do you know what happened with the hillary clinton email situation. >> no. i actually don't watch any news at all. i just draw. i don't really think about the president. >> do they have email in your neck of the woods? >> usually it's pigeons that carry little bottles. >> if i could say something here, you look familiar. joey, look at these guy's
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mug. >> yeah. ♪ >> does it concern you what happened with hillary's email at all. >> it does. there is some sort of trust issues there. i would like her to be a little bit more honest. i think she is a lying cheat and i think she will pay off and docheat, and i think she'll pay off and do whatever she possibly can to get in the white house. >> everybody in the world lies, and whoever tells you they don't is full of it. >> i can't lie! >> do you think hillary tells the truth? >> i don't think truth is like black and white, though. i think she omits. >> you're a liar, aren't new. >> i'm a liar in training. >> actually, this will be my first for ray into the trial process. >> what do you think hillary clinton's best quality is? >> her husband. >> tell me the good qualities about hillary clinton. [ clock ticking ] >> i bet you'd like to know. >> what do you think hillary's best qualities are? >> i think she's a people person. i think that -- >> wait. you think hillary is a people person? >> yeah, absolutely. she's definitely a people person. >> hillary clinton?
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>> hillary clinton is a people person. >> i have people skills. i am good at dealing with people. [ clock ticking ] >> has this happened to you before? >> i think she's a nice lady. i liked her husband. you know, i just -- i trust people that i trust, you know? >> all i see is the illusion that is framed around her. i don't feel her spirit. >> where are you from originally? ♪ >> do you know when the election is? >> i have no idea. this year. >> who are you going to vote for? >> trump. he's going to make america great again. >> i'm a trump man myself only because i think he's going to put america in perspective. >> i would definitely vote for hillary. >> all i know is i'm voting for her and not donald trump. >> who are you going to vote for in november? >> i'd like to write bernie in. >> i want to vote for sanders. >> what is your gut telling you about hillary? >> if obama is cool with her, i'm cool with that.
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>> would you consider voting for trump? >> i would not. >> so you'd rather have someone that doesn't tell the truth as president than donald trump? >> yes. >> if it's between hillary and trump, who are you going to vote for? >> i'll probably just do a spontaneous painting instead. >> i call the painting celebration. ♪ >> do you have any idea who i am? i'm watt toteres is this is my world. >> hot damn. >> this is watters' world. >> you are right. you are absolutely -- >> get him out of here. >> all right. so you got a few who knew. >> yeah, a couple. >> you put a percentage on it. talk to ten people or what? >> i talked to about ten people. i'd say maybe four out of ten had an idea of what was going on. then the rest had no idea. people say hillary and e-mail, people hadn't heard those two words in a sentence before. i think one guy was amish. i'm not sure where he came from. >> was he the guy who wanted to
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draw all day long? >> the spontaneous painting. >> drawing pictures of quilts or something. but i was heartened because i didn't even know you were going to get 40% when knew. >> and we found trump supporters in new york city, which was pretty surprising. we usually don't get a lot of those. >> i think trump is running about 35%, 40% here. >> not with people under 30 who i usually talk to. >> that's right. nobody over 30 will talk to watters because they know better and they go, look, i'm not going to talk to you. you're going to mock me with some kind of movie clip, and they're gone. with the under 40s, they're okay. we've got big assignments for watters. he's going to be on almost every night when we're at the convention. factor tip of the day. what president obama should say in dallas tomorrow. the tip, moments away.
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travels to dallas in a moment. but first we have had a surge of billoreilly.com premium members and i think it's because of the nose pin news which is a separate daily newscast for p.m.s only. in that segment i can say things that i can't say on tv because of time constraints, things like that. we're devoting the no spin news to primarily the election, but also things like racism and terrorism. so we hope you consider becoming a billoreilly.com premiere member. you get a free book, a free copy of the constitution, big discounts on all our stuff. now the mail. ron, o'reilly your comments about our governor mark dayton were right on point. he made things worse, rons. and minnesota voters should remember that. everyonen, o'reilly, top notch analysis, black lives matter works hard to promote tension with law enforcement. they whip up hatred. true, ethan. but now law enforcement has to emphasize restraint. especially at traffic stops and
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low-level beeves like selling cigarettes. the police must be part of the solution. they've got to be real aware of this and go out of their way not to inflame anything. nigel, new zealand. i love the usa but it has the highest death rate from guns in the -- there are only 4.4 million new zealanders. that's it. here in new york city alone, there are close to 9 million people, so it's much easier for you guys down there to isolate and control that behavior. dave, san mateo, california. o'reilly, i sent this message to my senator boxer and feinstein. i am perplexed by your vote against kate's law. i'm a registered democrat, and putting dangerous criminals in prison seems reasonable to me. why is it not reasonable to you? you should have used the word "foreign" in front of criminals, dave. other than that, great letter. pithy, right to the point. christine, napeles, florida. after watching legends and lies, the patriots, i'm hooked.
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i never liked history, but the series is really excellent. i appreciate that, christine. mary, ft. myers, florida. legends and lies should be required viewing in all public schools. wouldn't thatting great, mario? the urchins would actuall learned about their country and be entertained at the same time. they could read the books that go along with the tv series on billoreilly.com. if you buy legends and lies, the patriots, you get 50% off legends and lies, the real west, which we did last year. great deal. and finally tonight's factor tip of the day. president obama will speak in dallas tomorrow afternoon. president bush the younger will also be there. we expect very respectful, somber speeches. but i would like the president to acknowledge that although racism does exist in the usa, america has made tremendous strides in leveling the playing field for all citizens. and now we have a decision to make. all americans have a decision to make. whether we become more divisive or try to work out the remaining problems.
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if you missed the top of the broadcast, i excoriate black lives matter. they are not part of the racial solution. i hope president obama will realize that finally and take this country in a more benign direction. factor tip of the day. i'm always here for the president and for all the senators, all the congress peoplement i'm here for you. you know that. and that is it for us tonight. please check out fox's factor website, different from billoreilly.com. spout off from anywhere in the world. o'reilly@foxnews.com. name and town if you wish to opine. word of the day, do not be a phyllis teen when writing to factor. that came to my attention because they have unearthed some skeletons in israel that they believe are philistines. they are not in good condition. now tomorrow on the factor as mentioned, donald trump, and we'll talk to him about the racial divide in america. should be very interesting.
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i am bill o'reilly, and always please remember this. that the spin stops here because we're definitely looking out for you. breaking tonight, it has been less than four days since the murder of five police officers in dallas, texas, and still the protests, the violence, and the threats against law enforcement continue to build in a handful of american communities. tonight we have gathered a special group together to try to find out why. welcome to a special kelly file, everyone. i'm megyn kelly. we are less than 24 hour as way right now from an incredible tribute to the officers murdered in dallas as two presidents, one current and one former, prepare to speak to the nation in one of their view joint addresses since president george w. bush left the white house. but tomorrow's tribute comes after a weekend of angry clashes that resulted in the arrests of more than
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